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Vol. 31, No.38
-FREEwww.advocatenews.net
Free
Every Friday
Calling it â€œbittersweet,â€
Zambuto returns to City Council
By Adam Swift
A
familiar face returned to
the City Council Monday
night, as Anthony Zambuto
was sworn in to fi ll the remaining
term of Councillor-at-Large
George Rotondo, who died unexpectedly
on Sept. 11.
In the 2021 municipal election,
Zambuto narrowly lost the
fi fth and fi nal at-large seat to Rotondo
in a race that went to a recount.
Under the council rules,
the candidate with the next
highest vote total in the most
recent election is elevated to
the council if there is a vacancy.
Zambuto remembered Rotondo
as a friend on Monday
night, and he told voters that
he would continue to serve as
he had for more than two decades
before being narrowly defeated
last year. â€œThis is certainly
mixed emotions â€“ bittersweet,â€
said Zambuto. â€œFirst and foremost,
I want to say a few words
about my friend and colleague
781-286-8500
Friday, September 23, 2022
National Real Estate Advisors, Cathexis
and HYM secure $150M construction
loan for Suffolk Downs redevelopment
Financing to complete capitalization of Amaya, the fi rst multifamily
residential building in the new Beachmont Square
Councillor-at-Large Anthony
Zambuto addressed the City
Council Chambers audience
after being sworn in to fi ll the
remainder of the late George
Rotondoâ€™s term. (Advocate photo by
Adam Swift)
George Rotondo. We sat next
to each other for a long time;
he was a friend, a colleague. We
ZAMBUTO | SEE Page 22
Voting precinct could
return to Satter House
By Adam Swift
A
polling location could return
to the Jack Satter
House on Revere Beach Boulevard
by the 2023 municipal
elections. Monday night the
City Council approved sending
a home rule petition to the
state legislature that would reestablish
a voting sub-precinct
at the Jack Satter House. The
sub-precinct was eliminated
for the 2022 elections as part
of the redistricting and re-precincting
process following the
The architectâ€™s drawing of the Amaya courtyard is shown above.
Advocate Staff Report
N
2020 federal census.
Currently, there is a sub-precinct
in Ward 2, precinct 3 because
the precinct is split between
State Representatives
Jeff Turco and Jessica Giannino.
â€œWhen the redistricting was
done before I came onboard,
that had been two sub-precincts
in Ward 5, but there was
no necessity because all of
Ward 5 is now represented by
one state representative,â€ said
Election Commissioner Paul
ELECTIONS | SEE Page 16
ational Real Estate Advisors
(â€œNationalâ€), Cathexis
and The HYM Investment Group
(HYM) announced that they
have secured a $150 million construction
loan for Amaya, a 475unit,
415,000 square foot multifamily
residential building, the
fi rst of many set to be delivered
at Suff olk Downs. The funding
was secured by JLL and provided
by Ullico Inc., a labor-owned
insurance company that invests
in high-quality construction and
commercial real estate projects
across the country.
Situated just steps from the
Station, Amaya was designed by
ICON Architecture and will feature
a range of apartment styles
from micro studios to two-bedrooms.
The property will also
feature 34,000 square feet of
amenity space and 24,000
square feet of ground-fl oor acMBTA
Blue Lineâ€™s Beachmont BUILDING | SEE Page 9
Lady Pats Volleyball
on top of their game
TEAMWORK: Revereâ€™s Tassya DaCosta, right, works to return the ball as teammate Lea Doucette
directs her teammates to the other side of the court at the RHS Fieldhouse on Wednesday. The
Lady Patriots took the win over Malden 3-1. See pages 12&13 for photo highlights. (Advocate photo
by Emily Harney)
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2022
City Council honors resident
for Signore Square clean up
By Adam Swift
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S
ignore Square is a cleaner
part of the city today beLike
us on
Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
cause of Marilena LoGrasso.
Monday night the City Council
awarded a Certifi cate of Appreciation
to LoGrasso for her cleanup
of the square, which is a veteransâ€™
memorial to the Signore
Brothers located on the corner
of Signore Terrace and Patriot
Parkway.
â€œSignore Square needed some
upkeep, and my friend Marilena
got tired of looking at it every
day, so she decided to go to
Home Depot and got mulch and
solar lights and whatever else
she needed to clean up that area
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Revere resident Marilena LoGrasso is shown with Ward 3 Councillor
Anthony Cogliandro and City Council President Gerry Visconti
after receiving a certifi cate of appreciation for cleaning up
Signore Square. (Advocate photo by Adam Swift)
out of her own pocket and with
her own time,â€ said Ward 3 Councillor
Anthony Cogliandro, who
recommended LoGrasso for
the certifi cate. â€œI know that she
made the neighborhood happy.â€
Cogliandro said LoGrasso also
had plans to clean up Patriot
Parkway.
â€œI was just walking my dog
and decided, just let me clean
this up today,â€ said LoGrasso. â€œI
really didnâ€™t expect this [certifi -
cate]. I appreciate it a lot.â€
In other business on Monday
night, Ward 2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky
probably wishes the
MBTA was more like LoGrasso
when it comes to cleaning up
messes. Novoselsky introduced
a motion asking the mayor to
request the MBTA to repair Flaherty
Square Park â€“ at the site
of the former bus stop on Beach
Street at North Shore Road â€“ to
its original condition. The MBTA
recently eliminated the bus stop
at this location and did not repair
the park where the shelter
was once located, Novoselsky
stated.
The Ward 2 Councillor also
voiced some general frustration
with how the MBTA operates in
the city. â€œOnce again, the MBTA
is not doing the best for the residents
of Revere,â€ said Novoselsky.
â€œThey are eliminating our
bus stops, and they are causing
our businesses on Broadway to
be put aside with a bus lane at
certain times on it.â€
Novoselsky said he disagrees
with the Revere Traffi c Commissionâ€™s
recent decision to permanently
allow a permanent bus
lane on Broadway on weekday
mornings. â€œIt is obvious that [the
MBTA] really doesnâ€™t care about
people in Revere or the businesses,â€
he said. â€œThe MBTA has
not been very friendly to Revere,
even though we have been
friendly to them. Iâ€™m disappointed
in the traffi c commission for
helping them make their goals,
not our goals.â€
As to the motion he presented,
Novoselsky said the MBTA
broke up a traffic island on
Beach Street across from Peterâ€™s
Super Beef when they removed
a bus shelter. Novoselsky said he
would expect the MBTA to repair
the area and bring it up to
the same condition it was when
the city gave it to them to use as
a bus shelter.
For Advertising
with Results,
or Info@advocatenews.net
call The Adv
call The Advocatocate
Newspapers Newspapers
at 781-286-8500
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://1YeNvc-eX_9V-JOrUGxYiODTo3bfP8AKBWABkugxa18Í0Í`Ì°Í ×c,Þ`yÎ¼÷Î×‰EÚ\THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2022
Page 3
School Supt. Dr. Kelley earns high marks on evaluation
By Adam Swift
S
uperintendent of Schools
Dr. Dianne Kelly received
high marks from the School
Committee on her latest performance
evaluation.
State school committees are
required to conduct a public
review of their districtâ€™s superintendent
of schools, produce
an evaluation report and work
with the superintendent to defi
ne and/or refi ne the superintendentâ€™s
annual performance
plans and goals for the coming
year. The evaluation consists
of two parts, one which focuses
on the progress towards the
superintendentâ€™s stated goals
and one which looks at standards
in broad categories of skills
and performance relative to the
work of the superintendent.
Previously, the School Committee
approved goals for Kelly
in the areas of professional
practice, student learning and
student improvement, according
to School Committee Member
Stacey Bronsdon-Rizzo. â€œWe
feel Dr. Kelly has met her professional
practice, student learning,
and district improvement goals,â€
said Bronsdon-Rizzo. â€œDr. Kelly
approaches her role as a leader
for the Revere Public Schools
with fi delity and high standards
and expectations. She has obviexemplary
leader for our school
district and she is tireless in her
advocacy on behalf of the children
and families of our community.â€
Kelly
was rated profi cient in
the standards of instructional
leadership, management and
operations, family and community
communication and professional
culture.
Mayor Brian Arrigo thanked
DR. DIANNE KELLY
Supt. of Schools
ously devoted much time and
energy towards achieving her
professional goals and providing
the committee with supporting
evidence, demonstrating
the attention to detail with
which she approaches every aspect
of her role in the district.â€
Bronsdon-Rizzo said Kellyâ€™s
visionary leadership creates an
equitable and inclusive school
community to meet the needs
of all students. â€œEnough canâ€™t
be said about her leadership,
along with our mayor, in building
a new Revere High School
complex,â€ she said. â€œWhether it
has been Covid, the Revere High
School program meetings, or
the new administrator search
at Revere High, she has always
included the community for input.
Dr. Kelly continues to be an
BBB warns of moneyflipping
scams
M
oney-flipping cons have
long been popular on Instagram
and Twitter. But as TikTokâ€™s
popularity grows, so do
the con artists. Watch out for
this TikTok scam, which promises
to turn a few hundred dollarsâ€™
worth of cryptocurrency
into thousands in no time at all.
BBB is seeing many new reports
in BBB Scam Tracker related to
this money-fl ipping scam. Hereâ€™s
what you need to know.
How the scam works
You are scrolling through TikTok
when you come across a
video showing a pile of cash.
The creator says they earned
the stack of money in just a few
days by investing in cryptocurrency.
You may not know much
about cryptocurrency, but this
â€œinvestorâ€ can help you get the
same kind of return for a modest
fee. Better yet, they have a 100%
guarantee that they can triple
your money in less than a week.
When you contact the supposed
investor, likely through
WhatsApp, Telegram, or another
messaging app, they will be
polite and professional. They will
ask you to send money â€“ usually,
a few hundred dollars to start
â€“ through a digital wallet service
like PayPal, Zelle or Venmo.
They may even ask you to purchase
the cryptocurrency yourself
and send it to them. Then,
they â€œinvestâ€ your money in the
stock market, where it allegedly
starts multiplying right away.
As always, the scam isnâ€™t what
it seems. When you try to get
your money back, the scammer
will claim you need to pay
fees. At fi rst, these amounts may
seem harmless. Since your few
hundred dollars now turned
into a few thousand, whatâ€™s the
harm in spending a couple hundred
in fees, right?
Scammers try to extend this
con for as long as possible to
get as much money as they
can. They may ask for fees several
times, always promising you
will get much more back than
what you are spending. If you
question them, they may resort
to scare tactics, telling you that
if you donâ€™t pay, youâ€™ll miss out
on the giant return or that they
can take legal action. Unfortunately,
any money you send will
end up in the scammerâ€™s pockets.
You wonâ€™t be getting a return
on your investment, and
SCAMS | SEE Page 4
Kelly for her partnership with
the city administration. â€œI have
the opportunity to meet with
and talk to a lot of other folks
that are in my position, and I
hear the challenges that many
of them face with their districts
and with the schools in general,â€
said Arrigo. â€œTo have such a leader
as Dr. Kelly on our behalf is an
immense help for me and she
has been an incredible partner.â€
Kelly thanked the mayor and
members of the School Committee
for their kind words and
the time they put into the evaluation.
â€œI know it is not an easy
task, any educator will tell you
that the evaluation system in
the public schools is always a
bit daunting, both for the person
being evaluated, but also
for the people doing the evaluation,â€
said Kelly. â€œI will certainly
take the feedback from the surveys
from the evaluation forms
Join us at our
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that you all fi lled out and from
the survey you sent out and take
that to my heart and really let it
inform my practice.â€
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2022
Winthrop Republican Town Committeeâ€™s â€˜Meet Your
Congressional Candidatesâ€™ wrap-up
O
n Wednesday September
14, the Winthrop Republican
Town Committee (WRTC)
held a â€œMeet Your Congressional
Candidatesâ€ evening. The
reason the WRTC presents these
nonpartisan events is to educate
the public on the policies
and initiatives their political
leaders will promote. As quoted
by WRTC Chair Paul Caruccio
at the event, â€œAn educated voter
means better leadership and
a better America.â€
Con gressional Candidate Caroline
Colarusso was eager to
meet and address the residents
of the community and the District.
Unfortunately, after multiple
communications and contacts,
Congressional Candidate
Clark neglected to commit to
the event and the community.
Candidate Clark has now refused
to address the public on
eight separate opportunities
by eight diff erent organizations.
However, as planned, the
event continued with WBZ Chief
Investigated Reporter Cheryl Fiandaca
moderating and peppering
Congressional Candidate
Colarusso with eight quesber
of Justices.
6. What do you see as the biggest
foreign policy issues facing
the US?
7. Recent elections have been
mired in controversy, leaving
many wondering about integrity
and honesty of our elections.
What is the solution to
resolving concerns some have
that our elections are secure in
the future?
8. Many are concerned about
our massive spending and our
national debt and the resulting
tax increases. Can you comment
on your position on spending if
you are elected in November?
From the audience Town
CAROLINE COLARUSSO
Congressional Candidate (Photo
courtesy of Paul Caruccio)
tions about how to improve the
dilemma the state and country
are now in. After the eight questions,
the audience also had an
opportunity to ask questions.
The eight questions:
1. Americans have seen soarPAU
L CARUCCIO
WRTC Chair
(Photo courtesy of Paul Caruccio)
ing gasoline and home energy
prices severely hurting working
families. As our congresswoman
what would you do about soaring
energy prices?
2. Most people are shocked
about what is happening at
our borders. What is your position
on our border situation and
what would you propose?
3. Over the last two years it
has been common to hear calls
to release the incarcerated, defund
the police and not prosecute
some crimes. What is your
philosophy on this topic?
4. Infl ation is at a 40 year high.
Can you comment on infl ation,
its causes and possible solutions
from Congress?
5. Please comment on the Supreme
Court and on the logic, if
any, on expansion of the numSCAMS
| FROM Page 3
you wonâ€™t be getting your initial
deposit back either.
How to avoid money fl ipping
scams
â€¢ Use good judgment. Getrich-quick
schemes and investments
that are guaranteed
to give you a huge return are
nearly always scams. If an off er
sounds too good to be true, it
probably is.
â€¢ Do your research. Before you
contact someone through TikTok
or another social media platform,
look up their name, phone
number, and company name
(if they have one) online. If they
have conned others, youâ€™ll likely
fi nd complaints online about it.
â€¢ Donâ€™t give into scare tactics. If
an â€œinvestorâ€ contacts you, they
may try to convince you the investment
will only work if you
act right now. Or, if youâ€™ve already
sent them funds, they
Councilor Rob DeMarco questioned
Candidate Colarusso
about school issues and responsiveness
to studentsâ€™ individual
needs. Resident Doreen Bonacorso
asked Colarusso about her
position on tuition forgiveness.
For a full video of the event and
responses, go to the Facebook
site Winthrop Republican Town
Committee.
Membership to the WRTC is
open to any community Republican.
Associate participation is
available to unenrolled community
members. If you are interested,
message the WRTC
Facebook site or email WinthropRTC@gmail.com.
(WBZ
and Fiandaca do not
necessarily reflect the opinions
from Meet the Candidates
Night.)
may threaten you with legal action
if you donâ€™t pay their fees. In
any case, donâ€™t give in to scare
tactics. Recognize them as the
hallmarks of a scam.
â€¢ Understand how digital wallet
services work. Treat any money
you send through a digital
wallet service like cash. Once
you send the money, there
will be little you can do to get
it back if it turns out you were
scammed. Itâ€™s best to use these
apps only with people you know
and trust.
For more information
Read up on more investment
scam techniques and money-fl
ipping scams. If you spot
a scam on TikTok or elsewhere,
report it to BBB Scam Tracker,
even if you didnâ€™t lose any money.
Your report helps boost consumer
awareness about the issue.
Check out more crypto tips
and money advice on BBB.org.
Like us on
Facebook
advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
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Page 5
A $30 million savings?
Saugus Selectmen approve a tentative deal with WIN Waste
Innovations that would eliminate tipping fees for waste disposal
in return for 20 more years of ash landfi ll
Gerry
Dâ€™Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
Is Your Estate in Order?
Do you have an update Will, Health
Care Proxy or Power of Attorney?
If Not, Please Call for a Free Consultation.
14 Proctor Avenue, Revere
(781) 284-5657
Saugus selectmen listen as WIN Waste Innovationsâ€™ Vice President of Environment, Jim Connolly,
explains the economic benefi ts that Saugus would receive under a Host Community Agreement.
(Saugus Advocate photos by Mark E. Vogler)
By Mark E. Vogler
T
he Board of Selectmen this
week approved a Host Community
Agreement (HCA) with
WIN Waste Innovations that enables
the company to extend
the life of the ash landfi ll adjacent
to its trash-to-energy plant
on Route 107 by two decades.
But the amended HCA which
selectmen supported by a slim
3-2 vote on Tuesday night (Sept.
20) includes substantial changes
â€“ including a provision that
the Town of Saugus receive free
tipping fees for waste disposal
over the life of the agreement.
The town currently pays about
$900,000 in annual tipping fees
to WIN Waste Innovations.
But the annual savings to the
DEAL | SEE Page 10
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î‚¡ îƒîƒ«îƒ¬îƒ¶ îƒ¤îƒ¦îƒ¦îƒ²îƒ¸îƒ±îƒ· îƒ¬îƒ¶ îƒ¤îƒ¹îƒ¤îƒ¬îƒ¯îƒ¤îƒ¥îƒ¯îƒ¨ îƒ·îƒ² îƒ¤îƒ¯îƒ¯ îƒ±îƒ¨îƒº îƒ¦îƒ¸îƒ¶îƒ·îƒ²îƒ°îƒ¨îƒµîƒ¶ îƒ¤îƒ±îƒ§ îƒ©îƒ²îƒµ îƒ¨îƒ»îƒ¬îƒ¶îƒ·îƒ¬îƒ±îƒª îƒ¦îƒ¸îƒ¶îƒ·îƒ²îƒ°îƒ¨îƒµîƒ¶ îƒºîƒ¬îƒ·îƒ« îƒ±îƒ¨îƒº îƒ°îƒ²îƒ±îƒ¬îƒ¨îƒ¶ îƒ²îƒ© î¸î€£î€žî€†î€žî€žî€žî€„ îƒŠîƒ±îƒ±îƒ¸îƒ¤îƒ¯ îƒ™îƒ¨îƒµîƒ¦îƒ¨îƒ±îƒ·îƒ¤îƒªîƒ¨ îƒ¢îƒ¬îƒ¨îƒ¯îƒ§ î‚¥îƒŠîƒ™îƒ¢î‚¦ îƒ¬îƒ¶ îƒ¤îƒ¦îƒ¦îƒ¸îƒµîƒ¤îƒ·îƒ¨ îƒ¤îƒ¶ îƒ²îƒ© îƒ·îƒ«îƒ¨ îƒ§îƒ¤îƒ·îƒ¨ îƒ³îƒ²îƒ¶îƒ·îƒ¨îƒ§ îƒ¤îƒ±îƒ§ îƒ¤îƒµîƒ¨ îƒ¶îƒ¸îƒ¥îƒ­îƒ¨îƒ¦îƒ· îƒ·îƒ² îƒ¦îƒ«îƒ¤îƒ±îƒªîƒ¨ îƒºîƒ¬îƒ·îƒ«îƒ²îƒ¸îƒ· îƒ±îƒ²îƒ·îƒ¬îƒ¦îƒ¨î€„ îƒ˜î„Ÿîƒ¨îƒµ îƒ°îƒ¤îƒ¼ îƒ¥îƒ¨ îƒºîƒ¬îƒ·îƒ«îƒ§îƒµîƒ¤îƒºîƒ± îƒ¤îƒ· îƒ¤îƒ±îƒ¼ îƒ·îƒ¬îƒ°îƒ¨î€„ îƒ–îƒ¬îƒ±îƒ¬îƒ°îƒ¸îƒ° îƒ²îƒ© î¸î€£î€žî€†î€žî€žî€ž îƒ¬îƒ¶
îƒµîƒ¨îƒ´îƒ¸îƒ¬îƒµîƒ¨îƒ§ îƒ·îƒ² îƒ²îƒ³îƒ¨îƒ± îƒ¤ îƒ–îƒ¬îƒ¯îƒ¨îƒ¶îƒ·îƒ²îƒ±îƒ¨ îƒœîƒ¤îƒ¹îƒ¬îƒ±îƒªîƒ¶ îƒ¤îƒ±îƒ§ îƒ¨îƒ¤îƒµîƒ± îƒ·îƒ«îƒ¨ îƒ¤îƒ§îƒ¹îƒ¨îƒµîƒ·îƒ¬îƒ¶îƒ¨îƒ§ îƒŠîƒ±îƒ±îƒ¸îƒ¤îƒ¯ îƒ™îƒ¨îƒµîƒ¦îƒ¨îƒ±îƒ·îƒ¤îƒªîƒ¨ îƒ¼îƒ¬îƒ¨îƒ¯îƒ§î€„ îƒîƒ¨îƒ¨îƒ¶ îƒ¦îƒ²îƒ¸îƒ¯îƒ§ îƒµîƒ¨îƒ§îƒ¸îƒ¦îƒ¨ îƒ¨îƒ¤îƒµîƒ±îƒ¬îƒ±îƒªîƒ¶î€„
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2022
~ REVERE BEAUTIFICATION COMMITTEE HONORS ~
Beautification by the Beach
Committee presents September Beautiful Home Award
RBC member Carol Haney, Homeowner
Kelly McDermott and RBC
Treasurer Karen Knapp.
T
www.eight10barandgrille.com
We Have Reopened for
Dine-In and Outside Seating
every day beginning at 4 PM
enthusiastic landscaper who,
along with her partner Mary,
spends at least an hour a day
sprucing up the property.
Kelly changes her fl owers and
WE'RE
OPEN!
8 Norwood Street, Everett
(617) 387-9810
STAY
SAFE!
Home Award winner Kelly McDermott
and wife, Mary.
decor with the seasons. Her current
arrangement features vincas,
lavender, mums, hydrangeas,
and impatiens, accented
by buoys, a lobster trap, and
two Adirondack chairs that are
over thirty years old. A resident
of Delano Avenue for fi ve years,
Kelly also does beautification
work at the Point of Pines beach.
We are delighted to present this
monthâ€™s home award to someone
who clearly takes a great
deal of joy in beautifying their
home and community.
Please check out our website
(www.reverebeautifi cation.org)
and social media pages (Instagram
& Facebook: RBC_02151)
about the work of our committee.
he
Revere Beautification
Committee is proud to present
its September Beautiful
Home Award to Kelly McDermott
of Delano Avenue. Her
beautifully maintained home
stands out due to her bright
fl oral arrangement and subtle
nautical decorations. Kelly is an
Monogram D4 Double siding
Cedar impression half rounds
Harvey Vinyl
64
Replacement Windows
Custom Aluminum Trim work
Windows
& Doors
Top quality
Vinyl Siding!
â€¢Vinyl Siding â€¢Carpentry Work â€¢Decks
â€¢Roofing â€¢Free Estimates â€¢Replacement Windows
â€¢Fully Licensed â€¢Fully Insured
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Page 7
State Reps take part in Fire Ops program
Special to Th e Advocate
O
n Sept. 20, State Representatives
Jessica Giannino
and Donald Wong joined local
and state offi cials across the
commonwealth and participated
in the Professional Fire Fighters
of Massachusetts (PFFM)â€™s
Fire Ops program with Revere
Fire Departmentâ€™s own Captain
Kevin Oâ€™Hara!
According to Rep. Giannino, â€œIt
was a hands-on training where
my colleagues and I had a unique
opportunity to learn about the
profession. We learned skills like
cutting apart a car using the jaws
of life, extinguishing an apartment
fi re, performing CPR (on a
mannequin), as well as learning
more about fi re gear and equipment.
Growing up with family
members on both the police
and fi re departments in Revere,
I have an acute understanding of
and admiration for these selfl ess
professions. Today, after training
with a live fi re and using powerful
tools that can save lives, I discovered
a new level of appreciation
and deeper gratitude for
these skilled professionals who
run into emergency situations
when others run out. I am so
grateful for the members of Saugus
Firefi ghters Local 1003 & Revere
Fire Fighters Local 926 IAFF.
Thank you for all that you do.â€
Rep. Gianninoâ€™s family are no
strangers to public safety as her
grandfather, Christy Giannino
was a Revere fi refi ghter and her
dad, Chris is a longtime Revere
Police Sergeant.
State Rep. Jessica Giannino and a PFFM instructor.
~ HELP WANTED ~
î€¶î‘î’îšî…îî’îšîˆî• î€‰ î€²î˜î—î‡î’î’î• î€°î’î—î’î• î€¶î‹î’î“
î€¶îˆîˆîŽî– î€©î˜îî î„î‘î‡ î€³î„î•î— î€·îŒîîˆ î€«îˆîî“î€‘
î€¤îîšî„îœî– îšîŒîîîŒî‘îŠ î—î’ î“î„îœ î‰î„îŒî• îšî„îŠîˆî–î€‘
î€µîˆî—î„îŒî î€¶î—î’î•îˆ î€«îˆîî“ î€ºî„î‘î—îˆî‡î€‘
î€©îîˆî›îŒî…îîˆ î€«î’î˜î•î– î€¤î™î„îŒîî„î…îîˆî€‘
Boats & Motors
î€ºî„îŽîˆî‚¿îˆîî‡î€ î€°î€¤
State representatives Jessica Giannino and Donald Wong are pictured with Revere Fire Dept. Kevin
Oâ€™Hara, left, and Capt. Bill Cross of the Saugus Fire Dept. (Photo courtesy of Joe Brooks)
Revere, let us wrap your
home in energy savings all
year round.
î€¦î„îî î€‹î€šî€›î€”î€Œ î€•î€—î€˜î€î€–î€“î€›î€“
As a part of National Gridâ€™s
Community First partnership, Revere
residents are eligible to save 75% or more on
approved insulation and no-cost air sealing. Just think
of insulation as a comfortable sweater for your home keeping the
air you want in and air sealing as a jacket keeping dust and allergens out.
Air sealing and insulation work together to save energy all year long.
î€»îîîš î—î™î–îŽî™îˆî” îžîî“î“ îîŒî“î— î™îŒîšîî‹îŒî•î›îš î“îî’îŒ î î–îœî€¡
Better manage
energy use.
Increase comfort
all year long.
To get started, schedule your no-cost
Home Energy Assessment today.
Learn more at î”îˆîšîšîšîˆîîŒî€•îŠî–î”î€–î•î–î™î›îîšîœî‰ˆ î–î“î’
or call 1-866-527-SAVE (7283)
Make your home more
environmentally friendly.
Keep out dust
and allergens.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2022
Hispanic Heritage Month flag raising celebrates independence of
Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico and Nicaragua
Councillors Steven Morabito and Ira Novoselsky alongside Giovanni Vargas saluted
to the American National Anthem. During the ceremony they also played the anthem
of each Central American country. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
By Tara Vocino
A
pproximately 100 people attended
the Hispanic Heritage Month
celebration, which celebrated the independence
of Costa Rica, El Salvador,
Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico
Councillor-at-Large candidate Christian Majano Ortez, who is from El Salvador,
and El Salvadoran Consulate General in Boston offi cials Abelino Chicas Rodriguez,
Jakelinne Corleto and William de LeÃ³n are shown during last Thursday nightâ€™s Hispanic
Heritage Month fl ag raising outside of City Hall.
and Nicaragua -- all Central American
countries â€“ last Thursday outside
of City Hall.
Dancers proudly displayed their cultural fl ags.
Giovanni and Joseph Vargas waved the Costa
Rican fl ag.
Revere Dept. of Public Works staff raised the Central American
fl ags.
Christian Majano and Ana Rodriguez saluted to the El Salvador
National Anthem.
El Salvadoran Consulate General
in Boston offi cial Abelino Chicas
Rodriguez said â€œvivaâ€ Central
America.
Reinaldo Santos is a Salvadoran
citizen that they highlighted
and thanked that last year.
Environmental League of Massachusetts
Political Director
Juan Jaramillo said there
are more than 65,000 Central
American descendants who live
in Massachusetts.
Event co-organizer Christian
Majano, who is a former Ward
5 councillor candidate, represented
El Salvador.
Ester Najera represented Guatamela.
Councillor-at-Large
Steven
Morabito said they celebrated
the independence of six countries
â€“ Costa Rica, El Salvador,
Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico
and Nicaragua â€“ all Central
American countries.
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Page 9
BUILDING | FROM Page 1
The architectâ€™s drawing
of the Amaya exterior is
shown above.
tivated retail space. The buildingâ€™s
outdoor amenities will feature
two landscaped courtyards
with a pool, fi re pits and outdoor
kitchen with grilling stations. Indoor
amenities will feature a fully
equipped fi tness center and
yoga room, as well as a game
room and arcade. Amaya is set
to be delivered in 2024.
John Moriarty and Associates,
National, Cathexis and HYM
broke ground on Amaya in May
2022 â€“ as well as 100/150 Salt
Street, a 280,000 square foot life
science facility that will also be
completed in 2024. The groundbreaking
ceremony served as
the official kickoff for Suffolk
Downs, one the largest real estate
projects in Massachusettsâ€™s
history, and began the transformation
of the 161-acre underutilized
site into a thriving new urban
district that will serve the
communities of East Boston, Revere
and beyond.
The redevelopment of Suffolk
Downs will ultimately deliver
over 10 million square feet
of residential development (approximately
10,000 units), which
will be the largest single delivery
of housing in Greater Bostonâ€™s
history. These residential
buildings will include a mix of
apartments, condominiums,
senior housing and aff ordable
housing.
â€œNational is proud to partner
with The HYM Investment
Group and Cathexis on Amaya
as we continue to expand our
residential portfolio throughout
the Greater Boston region.
Ullicoâ€™s financial commitment
to Amaya is a critical step for this
transformative redevelopment
project and allows us to continue
working towards generating
good returns, creating good
jobs and delivering high-quality
real estate projects for our investors
across the country,â€ said National
President/CEO Jeff Kanne,
on behalf of its clients.
â€œAccess to high-quality, transit-oriented
housing options
is critical to greater Boston residents
now more than ever,â€
said HYM Managing Partner/
CEO Thomas N. Oâ€™Brien. â€œWe are
grateful to our partners at Ullico
and JLL who are helping us
meet this need for critical housing
infrastructure through the
delivery of Amaya and we look
forward to off ering many excitî€­î€‰
î‚‡
î€µîˆîîŒî„î…îîˆ î€°î’îšîŒî‘îŠ î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆ
î‚‡ î€¶î“î•îŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î€©î„îî î€¦îîˆî„î‘î˜î“î–
î‚‡ î€°î˜îî†î‹ î€‰ î€¨î‡îŠîŒî‘îŠ
î‚‡ î€¶î’î‡ î’î• î€¶îˆîˆî‡ î€¯î„îšî‘î–
î‚‡ î€¶î‹î•î˜î… î€³îî„î‘î—îŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î€·î•îŒîîîŒî‘îŠ
î‚‡ î€ºî„î—îˆî• î€‰ î€¶îˆîšîˆî• î€µîˆî“î„îŒî•î–
î€­î’îˆ î€³îŒîˆî•î’î—î—îŒî€ î€­î•î€‘
ing residential options at Suff olk
Downs that will serve the surrounding
Revere and East Boston
communities.â€
â€œWe are honored to have had
the opportunity to arrange construction
financing for Amaya,
the fi rst of many developments
within Suffolk Downs.
Ullico immediately recognized
the strong attributes of this proposed
development including
its design, quality and strength
of the sponsorship team. We at
JLL have been associated with
the redevelopment of Suff olk
Downs from the very beginning
and appreciate our longstanding
relationship with National,
HYM and Cathexis and look forward
to seeing this exciting project
come to fruition,â€ said JLL Executive
Managing Director Riaz
Cassum.
â€œThis project is a win for a
great Boston neighborhood, for
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î€¶
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2022
DEAL | FROM Page 5
town could be considerably
more if the agreement receives
the required backing of the Massachusetts
Department of Environmental
Aff airs (MassDEP), the
Board of Health and Town Manager
Scott C. Crabtree. â€œMy estimate
is somewhere between
$20-$25 million over 20 years,
on the low end and $30 million
on the mid to upper level,â€ Selectman
Jeff rey Cicolini told The Saugus
Advocate of the potential savings
to the town as a result of the
amendment he crafted.
Cicolini, who said he opposed
the agreement off ered by WIN
Waste Innovations and recommended
by the Board of Healthâ€™s
Landfi ll Subcommittee, recommended
these changes:
â€¢ Elimination of the $15 million
lump sum payment to the town
within 30 days of obtaining fi nal
approval to operate the landfi ll
beyond the current Valley Fill expiration
date of December 2025.
Cicolini changed the lump sum
to $1 million.
â€¢ The agreement will not exceed
20 years â€“ not the 25 years
in the deal off ered by WIN Waste.
â€¢ Eliminating the tipping fees
paid by Saugus to WIN Waste for
residential waste disposal during
the entire agreement, which
would begin at the end of 2025
when the landfi ll is expected to
reach its capacity.
â€¢ The removal of the provision
that stipulates WIN Waste would
reduce the amount it pays the
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Attorneys at Law
î€ î€³î€¨î€µî€¶î€²î€±î€¤î€¯ î€¬î€±î€­î€¸î€µî€¼ î€ î€µî€¨î€¤î€¯ î€¨î€¶î€·î€¤î€·î€¨
î€ î€©î€¤î€°î€¬î€¯î€¼ î€¯î€¤î€º î€ î€ªî€¨î€±î€¨î€µî€¤î€¯ î€³î€µî€¤î€¦î€·î€¬î€¦î€¨
î€ î€³î€¨î€µî€¶î€²î€±î€¤î€¯ î€¥î€¤î€±î€®î€µî€¸î€³î€·î€¦î€¼ î€ î€¦î€¬î€¹î€¬î€¯ î€¯î€¬î€·î€¬î€ªî€¤î€·î€¬î€²î€±
14 Norwood St., Everett, MA 02149
Phone: (617) 387-4900 Fax: (617) 381-1755
î€ºî€ºî€ºî€‘î€°î€¤î€¦î€®î€¨î€¼î€¥î€µî€²î€ºî€±î€¯î€¤î€ºî€‘î€¦î€²î€°
John Mackey, Esq. * Katherine M. Brown, Esq.
Patricia Ridge, Esq.
Saugus Selectmen Anthony Cogliano and Jeff rey Cicolini listen to
WIN Waste Innovationâ€™s Host Community Agreement (HCA) off er.
town if the company is required
to invest more than $5 million
due to regulatory requirements
or capital improvements. Under
Cicoliniâ€™s amendment, the townâ€™s
benefi ts would not be decreased
if WIN Waste is required to pay
more than $5 million for major
upgrades of the plant.
â€œI do not share the view that
this vote tonight has anything
to do with the support of or approval
of extending the ash landfi
ll,â€ Cicolini told his colleagues
before off ering his amendment.
â€œIâ€™ll say it again. If the DEP asks
me my opinion, I would prefer
to not see expansion of the ash
landfi ll. I donâ€™t know how many
times I can say that and, hopefully,
have it sink in to individuals,
but I can tell you this has nothing
to do [with HCA].â€
â€œMy vote is for my role on the
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Board of Selectmen as a chief
policy maker and as the highest
elected board in town, because
itâ€™s a host agreement that would
require our approval â€¦ There
has to be some kind of trust in
the Board of Health and the DEP,
who know a lot more about this
stuff than I ever will and I care
to,â€ he said.
While he opposes expansion
of the ash landfi ll, Cicolini said he
supported an amended agreement
based on the improvements
at the plant â€œalthough not
the same as building a new facility.â€
He said he hopes MassDEP
and Board of Health make sure all
of the health and environmental
impact concerns are addressed.
Board of Selectmen Chair Anthony
Cogliano and Selectman
Corinne Riley voted in favor of
Cicoliniâ€™s amendment. Board of
Selectmen Vice Chair Debra Panetta
and Selectman Michael
Serino â€“ both staunch opponents
of any expansion of the ash
landfi ll â€“ voted against it.
WIN Waste â€œpleasedâ€ with
the vote
WIN Waste Innovations off ered
no immediate reaction after
Tuesday nightâ€™s vote but issued
a brief statement on Wednesday
(Sept. 21) expressing satisfaction
with the vote. â€œWe are
pleased that the Board of Selectmen
approved a Host Community
Agreement (HCA) for continued
use of the ash monofi ll that
will deliver substantial economic,
environmental and community
benefi ts to Saugus,â€ said WIN
Waste Innovationâ€™s Vice President
of Environment, Jim Connolly.
â€œAs with any agreement of
this kind, there are details of the
HCA to fi nalize and we look forward
to doing so in the coming
days and weeks. We thank the
Board of Selectmen for facilitating
a substantive, comprehensive
and transparent discussion
and for creating a framework for
a mutually benefi cial public-private
partnership between Saugus
and WIN Waste for years to
come,â€ Connolly said.
â€œWe are grateful for, and humbled
by the large number of Saugus
residents who took the time,
in both letters and attendance at
Board of Selectmen and Committee
meetings, to voice their
support for the HCA,â€ he said.
Ten of the 16 speakers who
testifi ed at Tuesday nightâ€™s twohour
public hearing said they
supported the HCA; six opposed
it. As of Wednesday, all but one of
the 35 letters submitted to the
Board of Selectmen were in favor
of the WIN Waste proposal.
A major obstacle to any deal
would be whether MassDEP will
allow extending the life of the
ash landfi ll.
State Rep. Jessica Giannino (DRevere),
whose district includes
Precincts 3 and 10 in Saugus,
and State Rep. Jeff rey Turco (DWinthrop),
along with the Alliance
for Health and the Environment,
are hosting a meeting
set for 6 p.m. Sept. 28 in the second
fl oor auditorium of Saugus
Town Hall at 298 Central St. The
hosts have invited MassDEP offi -
cials to appear at the meeting to
answer questions about the future
of the landfi ll. Citizens may
submit questions in advance to
allianceforhealthenvironment@
gmail.com.
vote
Panetta sought to delay HCA
Board of Selectmen Vice Chair
Panetta made a motion at the
outset of the hearing to continue
the hearing until after the boardâ€™s
Nov. 1 regular meeting. â€œI never
received a copy of the proposal
that we are supposed to discuss
tonight,â€ Panetta said, reading
from a statement explaining why
she believed the board wasnâ€™t
adequately prepared to vote on
the HCA. â€œThere isnâ€™t even a proposal
in our Selectmen packages
or in our Selectmen offi ce. We
advertised a public hearing, and
the proposal is not available to
the public. We donâ€™t have copies
at Town Hall or the library for
people to read, there are no copies
in the Selectmenâ€™s offi ce, the
proposal is not on the Townâ€™s
website, and there are no minutes
posted on the Townâ€™s website.
I think we should continue
this hearing until the documents
are made available so that everyone
can read the proposal to understand
what we are discussing
ahead of this meeting,â€ Panetta
said.
â€œSecondly, I still believe we
should wait to hear from the DEP
prior to meeting. The DEP was
very clear in the letter to Representative
Turco that they would
allow no further expansion on
the landfi ll, especially since it is
located in an area of critical environmental
concern,â€ she said.
â€œLastly, I would like to hear
from Town Meeting now that
we are calling a Special. I feel
that this vote is extremely important
for our Town, and we
should have all the information
before moving forward. I also
would like to have a separate
BOS meeting to discuss this topic
after the October 24th (special)
DEAL | SEE Page 11
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://lehR1QziEEKenQJOiZqXeaHWjmE_tz2rQ_rSJHZig6YÍ(Í`Ì°Í ×c,Þ`yÎ¼÷Ö×‰EÚ%ÆDEAL | FROM Page 10
town meeting.â€
The deal WIN Waste offered
the town provided $18.8 million
in direct payments â€“ a lump
sum payment of $15 million plus
$125,000 in 25 annual payments
(for total addition value of $3.8
million). However, WIN Waste
said it would pay the town $10
million in a lump sum if required
to invest more than $5 million
due to regulatory requirements,
including:
â€¢ Approximately $10 million
paid at a rate of $2.50 per ton of
ash disposed.
â€¢ Capital improvements made
at the facility would generate additional
tax revenue.
The total value of the deal,
including investments made
by the company in capital improvements
and environmental
enhancements, is about $30
million.
In addition to providing economic
benefi ts, the HCA stipulates
that WIN Waste would reduce
NOx
and other emissions
below the current permit limits,
which are already protective
of public health and the environment.
It off ers to reduce its
current NOx
permit limit of 185
ppm to 175. The company said it
would spend about $7.2 million
over the term of the agreement
to achieve the lower limit.
The company would also install
a stand-alone ambient NOx
monitoring
station in Saugus and request
that the Massachusetts Department
of Public Health update
its 2016 health study.
WIN Waste also off ered to voluntarily
reduce permitted emissions
levels of lead (400 to 140
ppm), cadmium (35 to 10 ppm),
dioxin (30 to 13 ppm) and particulate
(25 to 20 ppm) to levels
required of new waste to energy
units under the federal clean air
regulations.
Revere Councillor-at-Large
supports agreement
Among the 10 citizens speaking
in favor of the HCA was Revere
Councillor-at-Large Anthony
Zambuto. The councillor, who
spoke in favor of the agreement
at a hearing of the Saugus Landfi
ll Committee, said it would be
improper for a Revere city councillor
to â€œdictate toâ€ Saugus selectmen
how they should vote on a
Saugus issue.
â€œHowever, Revere certainly is
part of the discussion because
Revereâ€™s waste is picked up curbside
in Revere and brought to
WIN Waste for disposal,â€ Zambuto
said.
â€œAnd itâ€™s disposed of in the
most energy and environmentally
effi cient way, from waste to
energy,â€ he said.
Zambuto said he wants to challenge
the use of the words â€œtoxic
wasteâ€ to describe the wastes
produced at WIN Wasteâ€™s ash
landfi ll. â€œToxic waste is a lie,â€ Zambuto
said.
â€œItâ€™s not toxic waste. â€¦ DEP,
the people â€¦ I was in construction
for many years â€“ the people
who made me move piles of dirt
that babies could actually eat are
the same people that called this
â€˜non-toxic ash.â€™ So, Iâ€™m very offended
when I hear offi cials calling
it toxic ash. Facts and science
are important. And some people
get up here and talk emotionally
about what they think [are] the
health causes and the health effects
of the plant. This is fully permitted
and itâ€™s in compliance in
all areas,â€ Zambuto said. â€œMy biggest
fear is that the nontoxic ash
will have to be trucked through
Revere to Shrewsbury, and thatâ€™s
the equivalent of 40 trucks a day.
And to my environmental friends,
I say, â€˜Howâ€™s that to your carbon
footprint?â€™ The biggest problem
I have with that is itâ€™s going to
probably put 30 bucks a ton on
our tipping fees. And thatâ€™s going
to make seniors homeless.
Okay? Because they are on fi xed
incomes. Thirty bucks a ton is
probably going to compute to
300 bucks on the tax bill.â€
Precinct 8 Town Meeting Member
William E. Cross III, a Saugus
Fire Department captain who
served on the Landfi ll Subcommittee,
also spoke in favor of the
WIN Waste deal. â€œIâ€™m not going
to beat a dead horse,â€ Cross said.
â€œThis is a vote to send it to the
DEP. I think we have to trust in the
DEP. If this is dangerous, if this is
bad for the environment and this
is leaching into the salt water,
then the DEP should tell us that
and this thing should shut down.
â€œBut that being said, I donâ€™t
see that happening. After weâ€™re
gone, this is going to be here for
a long time. So, I urge this board
to take this vote, push it to the
DEP. Let the people who are experts
in this fi eld decide whether
this can move forward,â€ he said.
Precinct 6 Town Meeting Member
William S. Brown recalled
how bad things were at the landfi
ll years ago when he was growing
up. â€œIt was awful. The smell
was awful; I donâ€™t know how
the people in the surrounding
neighborhoods could put up
with that,â€ Brown said, recalling
the rats and seagulls converged
on the area
â€œBut moving forward, Iâ€™d say
that WIN-Wheelabrator has proven
themselves to be good neighbors.
And they worked hard to
try to clean up their act. There
isnâ€™t much they can do with their
building. Itâ€™s the ugliest thing Iâ€™ve
ever seen,â€ Brown said.
â€œBut I think itâ€™s time that the
Town of Saugus takes a diff erent
tact on this. The past 40 years has
been an adversarial relationship
with Wheelabrator and WIN. I
think the door is open now a little
bit for us to maybe try and work
together a little bit, and I would
urge the board to show the leadership
that this town needs and
support this agreement.â€
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2022
Brown said that perhaps in
time, â€œa genius at MITâ€ might fi gure
out a future use for the ash.
â€œTear it down; build a new one.â€
Precinct 10 Town Meeting
Member Peter Manoogian said
he is â€œappalledâ€ by the low standard
selectmen are willing to
accept for NOx
emissions. â€œIf the
plant was torn down and built
brand-new, it would be 45 parts
per million,â€ Manoogian said.
He added, â€œ170 (ppm) â€“ for
them to agree to that is not a win
for Saugus. The health study that
theyâ€™re suggesting be enhanced
only looks at cancer rates. NOx
is
a cause of asthma, particularly in
young children.â€
â€œTheir Baltimore plant â€“ their
City Council in Baltimore sued
the plant and passed a regulation
to have NOx
emissions much
lower â€“ below 100 [ppm]. They
ended up settling and theyâ€™re
around 110 [ppm] now. There
are plants that are 45 parts per
million,â€ Manoogian said.
â€œLet me cut to the chase. What
I would suggest you consider
is what we did back in 1990
when everybody said we canâ€™t
get scrubbers on the plant because
itâ€™s grandfathered. Well,
what had to happen is legislation
had to take place that required
every community to pay
its fair share,â€ he said. â€œI have no
problem with an incinerator that
meets the lowest attainable rate,
such as 45 parts per million. But
170 is wholly inadequate to protect
the public health and environment.
I wouldnâ€™t celebrate
this 170 as an environmental victory.
Itâ€™s not. 50 [ppm] is the standard
and new incinerators are at
45 [ppm].â€
Manoogian suggested that
Page 11
Saugus consider having the current
incinerator replaced. â€œHave
a Host Community Agreement
that says, â€˜Okay, we want the best
for Saugus.â€™ Tear it down; build a
new one and pass the costs on
to the member communities.
Saugus cannot keep subsidizing
the trash disposal costs with our
health,â€ he said.
Precinct 10 Town Meeting
Member Martin Costello said
the town should take heed of climate
change and weather conditions
that threaten the future
of the ash landfi ll. â€œClose this facility
as soon as possible,â€ Costello
said of the ash landfi ll, reading
from a letter he wrote to MassDEP
back in 2018.
â€œWeâ€™re at sea level here in Boston.
It wouldnâ€™t take much â€“ the
climate change that weâ€™re dealing
with right now â€“ for this ash
pile to suddenly become seaworthy,â€
he said.
WIN Waste should consider
an exit plan and closure instead
of expansion of the ash landfi ll,
he said.
Jackie Mercurio, the lone member
of the Landfi ll Subcommittee
to vote against the HCA, said she
would like to see â€œa more concrete
community agreementâ€
before selectmen vote on it.
â€œThe site suitability is at risk for
future ash,â€ Mercurio testifi ed.
â€œIâ€™ve asked WIN how they
would propose to make the site
suitable. They have no answer,
â€œshe said. â€œCurrently, the ash
landfi ll sits on an environmentally
critical area. It cannot expand
in height nor expand wider,
based off of Massachusetts
law. We have no answers about
what the plan would look like.
How can offi cials support all the
unknowns?â€
Mercurio questioned why
there was no proposal being
considered to bring the incinerator
to current standards.
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New Milestone Savings Account. Go to everettbank.com for details.
* This account is available to all new customers and for existing customers with new monies of $50,000. Annual Percentage Yield (APY) is accurate as of the
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earn the advertised Annual Percentage yield. Fees could reduce earnings.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2022
Lady Pats volleyball beat Malden, 3-1
Tassya DaCosta for the Revere Patriotâ€™s works to return the ball
during their match up with Malden on Wednesday.
Ayra Vranic hammered a spike at Maldenâ€™s defense during their match on Wednesday.
Tassya DaCosta (L) and Fiona Musaraj for Revere work hard to return
the ball as a player from Malden crowds the net.
Players from Revereâ€™s Volleyball team celebrate after taking the lead 2-1 during their match up with
Malden Wednesday. (Advocate photos by Emily Harney)
Revereâ€™s volleyball coach Lianne Mimmo directs her team during
the match up Wednesday with Malden.
Fiona Musaraj for Revere is surrounded by her teammate and still up the air after returning the ball
during their match up and win over Malden Wednesday.
Ayra Vranic with the serve for the Revere Patriots.
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Page 13
GREATER BOSTON LEAGUE
NOTEBOOK: Battle for soccer
supremacy already under way in GBL
Ayra Vranic gets ready to serve
for Revereâ€™s volleyball team
during their match up with Malden
on Wednesday at the RHS
Fieldhouse. The Patriots took
the win over Malden 3-1.
Somerville booters unbeaten in boysâ€™ standings; Medford atop the
girls list; Malden fi eld hockey leads GBL standings
Sabrina Indorato serves up the
ball for Revere during their
hard-fought win over Malden
Wednesday.
By Steve Freker
T
he battle is already
underway fo r
Greater Boston League
â€œSoccer Supremacyâ€ after
just two weeks of
the regular season. On
the girlsâ€™ side, the Medford
High Mustangs are unbeaten at 5-0 in GBL
play (5-2 overall), following Sept. 20â€™s 5-0 win over
host Malden at Pine Banks Park. In GBL girlsâ€™ soccer,
Somerville is in second place, also unbeaten
at 2-0-1 (3-0-1 overall), while Revere is third at 1-12
in the GBL action (2-1-2 overall). Revere fell to
unbeaten Medford, 4-0, in its season opener, tied
Somerville, 2-2, and Lynn Classical, 1-1, and then
defeated Lynn English in league play, 5-0.
Everett girlsâ€™ soccer is at 1-2-1 overall, its lone win
Keiren Fernandes with the
serve for the Revere Patriots.
Stephanie Espinoza works hard
to return the ball for Revere
during their match up with Malden
on Wednesday as her teammate
Lea Doucette looks on.
GBL BOYSâ€™ SOCCER
Team League
Somerville 2-0-0
Medford 1-1-2
Revere 0-1-2
Everett 1-1-1
Chelsea 0-1-1
Lynn Classical 0-1-1
Lynn English
0-2-1
Malden 0-3-1
GBL GIRLSâ€™ SOCCER
Team League
Medford 5-0-0
Somerville 2-0-1
Revere 1-1-2
0-1-1
Lynn Classical
Everett 0-2-1
Chelsea 0-2-1
0-2-0
Lynn English
Malden 0-4-0
Overall
5-2-0
3-0-1
2-1-2
0-1-1
0-2-1
0-2-1
0-4-0
0-5-0
against Malden on Sept. 13, 5-0. Malden (0-5) is
still seeking its fi rst win at 0-4 GBL and 0-5 overall.
On the boysâ€™ soccer side, perennial GBL title challenger
Somerville is atop the list with a 2-0 record
in league play, including close wins over Revere,
2-1, and Chelsea, 3-0. Malden is at 1-3-1 GBL (1-51
overall) and was on the road at Lynn Classical on
Thursday (4:15 p.m.) â€“ after Advocate press time â€“
following a loss to Medford on Tuesday.
Malden leads the standings in GBL field
Tassya DaCosta puts the ball up
for her teammate Lea Doucette
to close in and return the ball
to Malden during their match
Wednesday.
Ayra Vranic returns the ball for
Revereâ€™s volleyball team during
their match as two players from
Malden close in.
Meet Dieff Bonhomme, Everett High Schoolâ€™s
â€œBoys Soccer Player of the Week,â€ who is described
as a hardworking student who always
works well with his teammates. (Courtesy/Everett Athletics)
hockey
In
GBL fi eld hockey, Malden High is 1-0 and leads
the league and is 1-3 overall with non-league losses
to St. Maryâ€™s and Bishop Fenwick. Everett is 0-1
overall with two postponements after opening
the season with a 4-1 loss to Waltham. Revere
fi eld hockey is 1-2 with a GBL loss to Malden (4-3),
a non-league win over Greater Lowell (7-0) and a
non-league loss to Malden Catholic (4-0).
Overall
2-0-1
1-2-2
0-1-2
1-1-1
0-1-1
0-1-1
0-2-1
1-5-1
Members of the Revere Patriotâ€™s Volleyball team celebrate after
the hard-fought win over Malden 3-1 Wednesday.
Malden High School Field Hockey opened its season with a 4-3 win over visiting Revere High. (Advocate
Photo)
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2022
Meet the 2022 Malden High School/Revere High
School Varsity Golf Co-Op Golden Tornadoes/Patriots
Malden High School Varsity Golf team members, pictured
from left to right: Standing: Sal Fumicello, Chris
MacDonald, Ryan Coggswell, Saul Kruckenberg, Billy
Galvin and Head Coach Richard Malatesta; kneeling: Bo
Stead III and Dante Federico.
Captains, pictured from left to right: MHS Captain Ryan Coggswell,
RHS Captain Ryan Willett and MHS Captain Saul Kruckenberg.
The lone senior, Ryan Willett (in center) during
their recent meet at Mount Hood Golf
Course
Members of the Revere High Varsity Golf team. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Co-Captains and coach, pictured from left to right:
MHS Captain Ryan Coggswell, Head Coach Richard
Malatesta and MHS Captain Saul Kruckenberg.
Malden/Revere High School Varsity Golf Co-Op Team, pictured from left to right: Back row: MHS Head Coach Richard Malatesta, Jonathan Wells, Gerry Cookson, Saul
Kruckenberg, Billy Galvin, Ryan Willett, Ryan Coggswell, Bo Stead III, Frankie Annunziata, RHS Head Coach Brandon Pezzuto and Coach Paul; front row: Sal Fumicello,
Ollie Svendsen, Cristian Lynch, Chris MacDonald, Alessandro Trichilo, George Sacco, Brady Nelson and Harrison Rua.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Lm5pSpQMD5H_E7fpL-395vFITxLJn8mwnT2GIK7dG64Í1>Í`Ì°Í ×c,Þ`yÎ¼÷Ú×‰EÚ,THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2022
Page 15
Football Pats' 2nd-half rebound not enough against Panthers
By Greg Phipps
I
t took more than six quarters
of football before the Revere
High School football team
scored its fi rst points of 2022.
The Patriots got off to a rough
start again last Friday night in
their home opener at Harry Della
Russo Stadium. The visiting
Plymouth South Panthers took
advantage of Revere turnovers
and blew out to a commanding
28-0 lead by halftime.
The promising aspect of last
Friday's aff air was that the Patriots
rebounded in the second
half and put up three touchdowns,
outscoring Plymouth
by a 20-7 count. But it wasn't
enough to overtake the Panthers,
who came away with a
35-20 victory.
A 52-yard punt return for a TD
and an 80-yard scoring jaunt
from Plymouth's star running
back Justin LaChance highlighted
the fi rst half that was dominated
by the Panthers, who improved
to 2-0 on the season.
Meanwhile, the Patriots, who
dreau was also on the receiving
end of a two-point conversion
pass.
Revere head coach Lou Cicatelli
told the press this week
that he was looking for his
squad to carry some of the momentum
from last Friday's second-half
into this Thursday's
Greater Boston League (GBL)
opener at home against 0-2
Medford (scheduled 6 p.m. kickoff
, after press deadline).
Cicatelli reported that star
player Max Doucette may not
play this week due to an injury
to his wrist but that veteran
running back Davy Barreto,
who missed the fi rst two contests,
should return to the lineup
Thursday against Medford.
After this week's game, the
Patriots have another GBL clash
ROUGH START: Patsâ€™ quarterback Carlos Rizo, Jr. is shown checking out the defense as running back
Sami Elasri gets set during a recent game against Peabody. (Advocate staff photo)
fell to 0-2, struggled early on
and would commit five turnovers
in the game, four of those
via interception.
The performance got better
for the Patriots over the fi nal 24
minutes. Revere ended up accumulating
163 yards of total
off ense, including 131 through
the air. Quarterback Carlos Rizo
connected on scoring passes
of 10 yards to Sami Elasri and
40 yards to Domenic Boudreau.
The Patriot QB also scored himself
on a one-yard plunge. Bouagainst
Lynn English at home
on Sept. 30. They then take on
neighboring rival and perennial
powerhouse Everett on
the road Oct. 7th. The Crimson
Tide came out on top in last
year's meeting between the
two teams.
Patriot boysâ€™ soccer lose GBL clash to Everett
The Patriots came
out strong in the
opening 40 minutes.
For the most part,
they owned the territorial
play and peppered
the Everett
goal. Led by frontline
players Kevin Flores,
Kaue Vieira, David
Tamayo, Joao Victor
Cunha and Rogerio
Filho, Revere had several
good scoring opportunities
but could
only cash in on one of
them.
Filho notched ReRevereâ€™s
Rogerio Filho battles
an Everett defender for ball
possession.
By Greg Phipps
T
hrough its fi rst fi ve games of
the season, the Revere High
School boys' soccer team has
been involved in close games.
That included a scoreless tie at
Lynn Classical last week and a
season-opening 1-1 deadlock
against Medford.
On Tuesday at the Revere High
School Field, the Patriots suffered
a 3-1 league setback to the
neighboring Everett Crimson
Tide. It was a contest where the
fi rst and second periods turned
out to be very diff erent.
vere's lone score with about
25 minutes remaining in period
one. The Patriots had to be
feeling good about their fi rsthalf
eff ort. But that quickly faded
over the fi nal 40 minutes. The
Tide came alive and switched
the scenario, suddenly taking
control of the territorial play and
pressuring the Revere end.
Two break-in goals in a span
of about two minutes put Everett
on top to stay at 2-1 with approximately
20 minutes left in
the contest. The fi nal goal came
with just over 10 minutes to go
and secured the victory for the
visitors. The Patriots struggled
to mount any serious off ense
in the second half.
Entering Tuesday's clash, Revere
was coming off its first
win of the season - a 2-0 shutout
of Lynn English. The team's
other loss was a 2-1 decision
against Somerville. As of midweek,
Revere stood at 1-2-2 on
the season and is still very much
in the hunt for a 2022 playoff
berth under head coach Manuel
Lopes.
The Patriots hosted Chelsea
on Thursday (after press deadline),
and then travel to take on
Malden on Saturday in a 12:30
p.m. start at McDonald Stadium.
Patriotsâ€™ midfi elder David Tamayo tries to split the Everett defense
in fi rst-half action Tuesday.
Revereâ€™s Joao Victor Cunha looks to rush upfi eld against Everett
on Tuesday.
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BBB warns con artists are posing as
tech experts who are eager to help
resolve your computer problems
I
n this support scam twist, con
artists are posing as tech experts
who are eager to help resolve
your problem â€“ for a price.
The â€œissueâ€? Someone in your
house has been watching online
pornography. The Better Business
Bureau (BBB) is seeing an increasing
number of similar cons reported
to BBB.org/ScamTracker.
How the scam works: Something
is wrong with your home
computer or internet connection,
so you search online for a
customer support phone number.
In a rush, you click to dial the
phone number listed in a top result.
A company â€œrepresentativeâ€
answers and asks you a few standard
questions about your deTHE
REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2022
ELECTIONS | FROM Page 1
vice, such as the make and model
number. The call seems normal at
fi rst, but it soon takes a turn. This
â€œtech support repâ€ has some creative
stories to explain the issue.
They may insist that someone in
your house has been watching
pornography, and that has resulted
in your computer being
hacked. In one recent report, the
â€œrepresentativeâ€ asked if the caller
had a teenage son and then
insisted the boy was to blame.
In another case, â€œtech supportâ€
claimed that â€œthousands of peopleâ€
had been using the callerâ€™s
IP address to view pornography.
This scam is a setup for sellPROBLEM
| SEE Page 17
Help Wanted - Grocery Delivery Assistant
î€ªî•î’î†îˆî•îœ î€§îˆîîŒî™îˆî•îœ î€¤î–î–îŒî–î—î„î‘î— î‰î’î• î‘î’î‘î“î•î’î‚¿î— î“î•î’îŠî•î„î î…î„î–îˆî‡
îŒî‘ î€°î„îî‡îˆî‘ î—î‹î„î— î‡îˆîîŒî™îˆî•î– îŠî•î’î†îˆî•îœ î’î•î‡îˆî•î– î—î’ î–îˆî‘îŒî’î• î†îŒî—îŒîîˆî‘î–
î„î‘î‡ î‡îŒî–î„î…îîˆî‡ î•îˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î—î–î€‘ î€¬î‘î‡îŒî™îŒî‡î˜î„î îî„îŽîˆî– î‡îˆîîŒî™îˆî•îŒîˆî– î„î‘î‡
î–î˜î“îˆî•î™îŒî–îˆî– î™î’îî˜î‘î—îˆîˆî•î– î—î’ î“î„î†îŽî„îŠîˆ î’î•î‡îˆî•î–î€‘ î€±îˆîˆî‡ î™î„îîŒî‡
î‡î•îŒî™îˆî•î– îîŒî†îˆî‘î–îˆî€ î„î…îŒîîŒî—îœ î—î’ îîŒî‰î— î€•î€˜î€î€–î€˜ î“î’î˜î‘î‡ î…î’î›îˆî–î€‘ î€”î€— î‹î•î–î€’
îšîŽî€ î€·î˜î€ î€·î‹î€ î€© î€”î€•î€î€—î€ î€º î€”î€•î€î€™î€‘ î€±îˆîˆî‡ î‡î•îŒî™îˆî•î– îîŒî†îˆî‘î–îˆî€ î„î…îŒîîŒî—îœ
î—î’ îîŒî‰î— î„î‘î‡ î†î„î•î•îœ î€•î€˜î€î€–î€˜ î“î’î˜î‘î‡ î…î’î›îˆî–î€‘ î€³î„îœ î•î„î—îˆî€ îîŒî‘î€‘ î€‡î€”î€˜î€’
î‹î•î€‘ î€·î’ î„î“î“îîœî€
î€¨îî„îŒîî€ îŠî„î…î•îŒîˆîîî„î€‘î–î—îˆîîî„î†îŽî€£î…î•îˆî„î‡î’îƒ€îŒî‰îˆîî„îî‡îˆî‘î€‘î’î•îŠ
Fahey. â€œI wasnâ€™t here 10 years
ago, but when that was set up
in 2012, there was a need for
three sub-precincts. Currently,
there is only a legal requirement
for one, which is 2-3a.â€
The redistricting created a
problem in Ward 5, precinct 1,
where there was no legal requirement
for a 5-1a sub-precinct
at the Jack Satter House.
â€œThe reality â€¦ is that the Jack
Satter House has been a very
active polling location, with
close to 300 people there registered
to vote under the 5-1
confi guration,â€ said Fahey.
The residents registered at
the senior housing development
are now required to travel
to the Point of Pines Yacht
Club to vote, Fahey said. â€œWhat
we did in this [primary] election,
and what we will do in
November in addition to mailin
voting and early voting under
the Votes Act, is special early
voting sessions at the Jack
Satter House,â€ said Fahey. â€œWe
had a fairly good turnout there
over the one week that we had
early voting for the primary,
and under state law, we will
have two weeks of early voting
for the general election.
We will have our regular early
voting location in or near City
Hall [and] we will also be back
at the Jack Satter House.â€
While there will be early voting
at the Jack Satter House,
Fahey said the election board
and the Mayorâ€™s Offi ce have
discussed the reestablishment
of the sub-precinct there.
â€œThere is no requirement that
there be a sub-precinct, but
we want to serve those people
and the people in that neighborhood,â€
said Fahey, adding
that that is what is being proposed
in the home rule petition.
At
its regular meeting, the
City Council approved sending
the home rule petition to
the state legislature for a vote.
Ward 2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky
noted that he would
like to see the city working toward
a consolidation that eliminates
the 2-3a sub-precinct,
which has fewer than 200 registered
voters, and combine it
with Ward 2, precinct 2.
â€œIt is by far the smallest precinct
in the city,â€ Fahey said,
noting that the city would continue
to work with Novoselsky
on the issue.
If the state legislation is approved
by next spring, Fahey
said, the sub-precinct at the
Jack Satter House should be
in place for the 2023 municipal
elections.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://QpuyM-Zm84eOvoAemHHThZsxinNeG8QaVN73vN7BXaEÍ(ÊÍ`Ì°Í ×c,Þ`yÎ¼÷Ü×‰EÚ(€THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2022
PROBLEM | FROM Page 16
Flu Vaccines That
Are Recommended
for Older Adults
Dear Savvy Senior,
I just turned 65 and would like to learn more about the stronger
fl u shots I see advertised for older adults. What can you tell me about
them and how are they covered by Medicare?
Senior Novice
Dear Novice,
There are actually three diff erent
types of senior-specifi c fl u
shots (you only need one) that
the CDC is now recommending
to people age 65 and older.
These FDA-approved annual
vaccines are designed to offer
extra protection beyond
what a standard fl u shot provides,
which is important for
older adults who have weaker
immune defenses and have a
greater risk of developing dangerous
fl u complications. Hereâ€™s
more information on these
three vaccines.
Fluzone High-Dose Quadrivalent:
Approved for U.S. use
in 2009, the Fluzone High-Dose
is a high-potency vaccine that
contains four times the amount
of antigen as a regular fl u shot
does, which creates a stronger
immune response for better
protection. According to a study
published in the New England
Journal of Medicine, this vaccine
was proven 24 percent more effective
than the regular dose
shot at preventing fl u in seniors.
Fluad Quadrivalent: First
available in the U.S. in 2016, this
adjuvanted vaccine contains an
added ingredient called adjuvant
MF59 that also helps create
a stronger immune response. In
a 2013 observational study, Fluad
was found 51 percent more
eff ective in preventing fl u-related
hospitalizations for older patients
than a standard fl u shot.
You also need to be aware
that both the Fluzone HighDose
and Fluad vaccines can
cause more of the mild side
effects that can occur with a
standard-dose fl u shot, like pain
or tenderness where you got
the shot, muscle aches, headache
or fatigue. And neither vaccine
is recommended for seniors
who are allergic to chicken
eggs, or those who have had a
severe reaction to a fl u vaccine
in the past.
Also note that the CDC does
not recommend one vaccination
over the other.
FluBlok Quadrivalent: For
older adults that are allergic to
eggs, FluBlok, which is a recombinant
vaccine that does not use
chicken eggs in their manufacturing
process is your best option.
This vaccine is proven to be
30 percent more eff ective than a
standard-dose infl uenza vaccine
in preventing fl u in people age
50 and older.
All of these vaccines are covered
100 percent by Medicare
Part B as long as your doctor,
health clinic or pharmacy agrees
not to charge you more than
Medicare pays.
Pneumonia Vaccines
Another important vaccination
the CDC recommends to
seniors, especially this time of
year, are the pneumococcal vaccines
for pneumonia. Around 1.5
million Americans visit medical
emergency departments each
year because of pneumonia, and
about 50,000 people die from it.
The CDC recently updated
their recommendations for the
pneumococcal vaccine and now
recommend that everyone 65
and older who has not previously
received any pneumococcal
vaccine should get either PCV20
(Prevnar 20) or PCV15 (Vaxneuvance).
If PCV15 is used, this
should be followed by a dose of
PPSV23 (Pneumovax23) at least
one year later.
Or, if youâ€™ve previously received
a PPSV23 shot, you
should get one dose of PCV15
or PCV20 at least one year later.
Medicare Part B also covers
two different pneumococcal
shots â€“ the fi rst shot at any time
and a diff erent, second shot if
itâ€™s given at least one year after
the fi rst shot.
COVID Booster
If you havenâ€™t already done so,
you should also get a COVID-19
booster shot this fall. Both Moderna
and Pfi zer have developed
new bivalent booster vaccines
that adds an Omicron BA 4/5
component to the old formula,
which provides better protection.
Send
your senior questions to: Savvy Senior,
P.O. Box 5443, Norman, OK 73070, or visit SavvySenior.
org. Jim Miller is a contributor to the NBC Today show
and author of â€œThe Savvy Seniorâ€ book.
ing expensive computer security
software, typically costing victims
between $200 and $900.
Unfortunately, it does nothing
to fi x your computer or internet
issues. In some cases, the scammers
will also want remote access
to your computer. Allowing
them remote access enables
them to install malware that records
passwords, keystrokes or
other fi les that contain personal
information.
How to protect yourself from
tech support scams:
â€¢ Never open attachments or
links in emails from unknown
senders. These can generate fake
warning pop-ups that prompt
you to make a call to scammers.
If you get a suspicious pop-up
alert, donâ€™t click on anything
and restart your computer, tablet
or phone.
â€¢ Never give strangers remote
access to your computer. You
should only allow remote access
to technicians of trustworthy
companies you contacted
through a legitimate customer
service number or chat.
â€¢ Avoid clicking on pop-up boxes
or ads stating that something
is wrong. If a pop-up wonâ€™t go
away, disconnect from the internet
and Wi-Fi by shutting off
the device immediately and restarting
it.
For more information: Many
tech support scams use similar
techniques. See BBBâ€™s article
on tech support scams. If youâ€™ve
been the victim of a tech support
scam, report it to BBB Scam Tracker.
By reporting your experience,
you can help others avoid falling
for the same scam.
Do you want more information
about how to avoid getting
scammed? Check out the Spot a
Scam page and sign up to receive
weekly scam alerts.
Page 17
- LEGAL NOTICE -
î€¦î€²î€°î€°î€²î€±î€ºî€¨î€¤î€¯î€·î€« î€²î€© î€°î€¤î€¶î€¶î€¤î€¦î€«î€¸î€¶î€¨î€·î€·î€¶
î€·î€«î€¨ î€·î€µî€¬î€¤î€¯ î€¦î€²î€¸î€µî€·
î€³î€µî€²î€¥î€¤î€·î€¨ î€¤î€±î€§ î€©î€¤î€°î€¬î€¯î€¼ î€¦î€²î€¸î€µî€·
î€¶î˜îµµî’îîŽ î€³î•î’î…î„î—îˆ î„î‘î‡ î€©î„îîŒîîœ î€¦î’î˜î•î—
î€•î€— î€±îˆîš î€¦î‹î„î•î‡î’î‘ î€¶î—î•îˆîˆî—
î€¥î’î–î—î’î‘î€ î€°î€¤ î€“î€•î€”î€”î€—
î€‹î€™î€”î€šî€Œ î€šî€›î€›î€î€›î€–î€“î€“
î€§î’î†îŽîˆî— î€±î’î€‘ î€¶î€¸î€•î€•î€³î€•î€“î€˜î€šî€¨î€¤
î€¨î–î—î„î—îˆ î’î‰î€ î€¯î€¬î€¯î€¯î€¬î€¤î€± î€¦î€‘ î€¤î€±î€§î€¨î€µî€¶î€²î€±
Dî„î—îˆ î’î‰ î€§îˆî„î—î‹î€ î€“î€”î€’î€”î€šî€’î€•î€“î€•î€•
î€¦î€¬î€·î€¤î€·î€¬î€²î€± î€²î€± î€³î€¨î€·î€¬î€·î€¬î€²î€± î€©î€²î€µ
î€©î€²î€µî€°î€¤î€¯ î€¤î€§î€­î€¸î€§î€¬î€¦î€¤î€·î€¬î€²î€±
To all interested persons:
A Petition for î€©î’î•îî„î î€¤î‡îî˜î‡îŒî†î„î—îŒî’î‘ î’î‰ î€¬î‘î—îˆî–î—î„î†îœ î„î‘î‡ î€¤î“î€
î“î’îŒî‘î—îîˆî‘î— î’î‰ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î„î î€µîˆî“î•îˆî–îˆî‘î—î„î—îŒî™îˆ î‹î„î– î…îˆîˆî‘ î‚¿îîˆî‡ î…îœ
î€¦îœî‘î—î‹îŒî„ î€°î€‘ î€¶î„îî˜îˆî of î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆî€ î€°î€¤ requesting that the Court
enter a formal Decree and Order and for such other relief as
requested in the Petition. The Petitioner requests that:
î€¦îœî‘î—î‹îŒî„ î€°î€‘ î€¶î„îî˜îˆî of î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆî€ î€°î€¤ be appointed as Personal
Representative(s) of said estate to serve î€ºîŒî—î‹î’î˜î— î€¶î˜î•îˆî—îœ on
the bond in î˜î‘î–î˜î“îˆî•î™îŒî–îˆî‡ administration.
î€¬î€°î€³î€²î€µî€·î€¤î€±î€· î€±î€²î€·î€¬î€¦î€¨
î€¼î’î˜ î‹î„î™îˆ î—î‹îˆ î•îŒîŠî‹î— î—î’ î’î…î—î„îŒî‘ î„ î†î’î“îœ î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ î€³îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘ î‰î•î’î
î—î‹îˆ î€³îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘îˆî• î’î• î„î— î—î‹îˆ î€¦î’î˜î•î—î€‘ î€¼î’î˜ î‹î„î™îˆ î„ î•îŒîŠî‹î— î—î’ î’î…îîˆî†î—
î—î’ î—î‹îŒî– î“î•î’î†îˆîˆî‡îŒî‘îŠî€‘ î€·î’ î‡î’ î–î’î€ îœî’î˜ î’î• îœî’î˜î• î„î—î—î’î•î‘îˆîœ îî˜î–î— î‚¿îîˆ
î„ îšî•îŒî—î—îˆî‘ î„î“î“îˆî„î•î„î‘î†îˆ î„î‘î‡ î’î…îîˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ î„î— î—î‹îŒî– î€¦î’î˜î•î— î…îˆî‰î’î•îˆî€
î€”î€“î€î€“î€“ î„î€‘îî€‘ î’î‘ î—î‹îˆ î•îˆî—î˜î•î‘ î‡î„îœ of î€”î€“î€’î€•î€™î€’î€•î€“î€•î€•î€‘
î€·î‹îŒî– îŒî– î€±î€²î€· î„ î‹îˆî„î•îŒî‘îŠ î‡î„î—îˆî€ î…î˜î— î„ î‡îˆî„î‡îîŒî‘îˆ î…îœ îšî‹îŒî†î‹ îœî’î˜
îî˜î–î— î‚¿îîˆ î„ îšî•îŒî—î—îˆî‘ î„î“î“îˆî„î•î„î‘î†îˆ î„î‘î‡ î’î…îîˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ îŒî‰ îœî’î˜ î’î…îîˆî†î— î—î’
î—î‹îŒî– î“î•î’î†îˆîˆî‡îŒî‘îŠî€‘ î€¬î‰ îœî’î˜ î‰î„îŒî î—î’ î‚¿îîˆ î„ î—îŒîîˆîîœ îšî•îŒî—î—îˆî‘ î„î“î“îˆî„î•î„î‘î†îˆ
î„î‘î‡ î’î…îîˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ î‰î’îîî’îšîˆî‡ î…îœ î„î‘ î„îµ¶î‡î„î™îŒî— î’î‰ î’î…îîˆî†î—îŒî’î‘î– îšîŒî—î‹îŒî‘
î—î‹îŒî•î—îœ î€‹î€–î€“î€Œ î‡î„îœî– î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ î•îˆî—î˜î•î‘ î‡î„îœî€ î„î†î—îŒî’î‘ îî„îœ î…îˆ î—î„îŽîˆî‘ îšîŒî—î‹î’î˜î—
î‰î˜î•î—î‹îˆî• î‘î’î—îŒî†îˆ î—î’ îœî’î˜î€‘
î€¸î€±î€¶î€¸î€³î€¨î€µî€¹î€¬î€¶î€¨î€§ î€¤î€§î€°î€¬î€±î€¬î€¶î€·î€µî€¤î€·î€¬î€²î€± î€¸î€±î€§î€¨î€µ î€·î€«î€¨
î€°î€¤î€¶î€¶î€¤î€¦î€«î€¸î€¶î€¨î€·î€·î€¶ î€¸î€±î€¬î€©î€²î€µî€° î€³î€µî€²î€¥î€¤î€·î€¨ î€¦î€²î€§î€¨ î€‹î€°î€¸î€³î€¦î€Œ
î€¤ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î„î î€µîˆî“î•îˆî–îˆî‘î—î„î—îŒî™îˆ î„î“î“î’îŒî‘î—îˆî‡ î˜î‘î‡îˆî• î—î‹îˆ î€°î€¸î€³î€¦ îŒî‘
î„î‘ î˜î‘î–î˜î“îˆî•î™îŒî–îˆî‡ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî’î‘ îŒî– î‘î’î— î•îˆî”î˜îŒî•îˆî‡ î—î’ î‚¿îîˆ î„î‘
îŒî‘î™îˆî‘î—î’î•îœ î’î• î„î‘î‘î˜î„î î„î†î†î’î˜î‘î—î– îšîŒî—î‹ î—î‹îˆ î€¦î’î˜î•î—î€‘ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î– îŒî‘î—îˆî•îˆî–î—îˆî‡
îŒî‘ î—î‹îˆ îˆî–î—î„î—îˆ î„î•îˆ îˆî‘î—îŒî—îîˆî‡ î—î’ î‘î’î—îŒî†îˆ î•îˆîŠî„î•î‡îŒî‘îŠ î—î‹îˆ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî’î‘
î‡îŒî•îˆî†î—îîœ î‰î•î’î î—î‹îˆ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î„î î€µîˆî“î•îˆî–îˆî‘î—î„î—îŒî™îˆ î„î‘î‡ îî„îœ î“îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘
î—î‹îˆ î€¦î’î˜î•î— îŒî‘ î„î‘îœ îî„î—î—îˆî• î•îˆîî„î—îŒî‘îŠ î—î’ î—î‹îˆ îˆî–î—î„î—îˆî€ îŒî‘î†îî˜î‡îŒî‘îŠ î—î‹îˆ
î‡îŒî–î—î•îŒî…î˜î—îŒî’î‘ î’î‰ î„î–î–îˆî—î– î„î‘î‡ îˆî›î“îˆî‘î–îˆî– î’î‰ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî’î‘î€‘
î€ºî€¬î€·î€±î€¨î€¶î€¶î€ î€«î’î‘î€‘ î€¥î•îŒî„î‘ î€­î€‘ î€§î˜î‘î‘î€ î€©îŒî•î–î— î€­î˜î–î—îŒî†îˆ î’î‰ î—î‹îŒî– î€¦î’î˜î•î—î€‘
î€§î„î—îˆî€ î€¶îˆî“î—îˆîî…îˆî• î€”î€—î€ î€•î€“î€•î€•
î€©î€¨î€¯î€¬î€» î€§î€‘ î€¤î€µî€µî€²î€¼î€²
î€µî€¨î€ªî€¬î€¶î€·î€¨î€µ î€²î€© î€³î€µî€²î€¥î€¤î€·î€¨
î€¶îˆî“î—îˆîî…îˆî• î€•î€–î€ î€•î€“î€•î€•
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2022
If you have any questions about this weekâ€™s report, e-mail us at
bob@beaconhillrollcall.com or call us at (617) 720-1562
Senate last week.
This week, Beacon Hill Roll Call reGET
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THE HOUSE AND SENATE: There
were no roll calls in the House or
ports on the number of times in the
2021-2022 session each senator
sided with Republican Gov. Charlie
Baker and voted to sustain the governorâ€™s
31 vetoes of items, mostly in
the fi scal 2022 and fi scal 2023 state
budgets. A vote to sustain means
the senator supports Bakerâ€™s veto.
A vote to override means the senator
voted to fund the item despite
the governorâ€™s veto.
The current makeup of the Senate
is 37 Democrats and three Republicans.
A two-thirds vote is required
to override a gubernatorial
veto in the 40-member Senate.
The governor needs the support
of 14 senators to sustain a veto if
all 40 senators votedâ€”and fewer
votes if some members are absent
or there are vacancies.
Baker fell far short of that goal as
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î€²î‰¤î†îˆî€ î€‹î€šî€›î€”î€Œ î€•î€–î€–î€î€•î€•î€—î€—
î€¦îîˆî„î‘î€î€²î˜î—î–î€„
î€ºîˆ î—î„îŽîˆ î„î‘î‡ î‡îŒî–î“î’î–îˆ
î‰î•î’î î†îˆîîî„î•î–î€ î„î—î—îŒî†î–î€
îŠî„î•î„îŠîˆî–î€ îœî„î•î‡î–î€ îˆî—î†î€‘
î€ºîˆ î„îî–î’ î‡î’ î‡îˆîî’îîŒî—îŒî’î‘î€‘
î€¥îˆî–î— î€³î•îŒî†îˆî– î€¦î„îîî€
î€šî€›î€”î€î€˜î€œî€–î€î€˜î€–î€“î€›
î€šî€›î€”î€î€–î€•î€”î€î€•î€—î€œî€œ
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eight votes was the most support
he received on any veto. The Senate
easily overrode all 31 vetoes, including
eight that were overridden
unanimously.
The vetoes had no support from
28 of the 37 Democrats who never
once voted to sustain Bakerâ€™s veto.
Only nine Democratic senators voted
to sustain any of the governorâ€™s
vetoes. The Democrat who voted
the most times with Baker to sustain
his veto is Sen. Walter Timilty
(D-Milton) who voted with Baker
fi ve times. Sen. Marc Pacheco (DTaunton)
voted with Baker three
times. Sens. Sonia Chang-DÃ­az (DBoston),
Nick Collins (D-Boston), Diana
DiZoglio (D-Methuen), Anne
Gobi (D-Spencer), Jason Lewis (DWinchester)
and Mike Rodrigues
(D-Westport) and John Velis (DWestfield)
each voted with Baker
once.
None of the three Republicans
voted with Baker 100 percent of the
time. The Republican senator who
voted the greatest number of times
with Baker was Sen. Ryan Fattman
(R-Sutton) who voted with Baker
20 times. GOP Minority Leader
Sen. Bruce Tarr (R-Gloucester) was
a close second and voted with Baker
17 times. Sen. Patrick Oâ€™Connor
(R-Weymouth) voted with Baker
only eight times, the least number
of times among the three Republicans.
NUMBER
OF TIMES SENATORS
SUPPORTED GOV. BAKERâ€™S VETOES
IN THE 2021-2022 SESSION
Gov. Baker vetoed 31 proposals
that we approved by the Legislature
in 2021-2022.
Here is how your senator fared
in his or her support of Gov. Baker
on the vetoes.
The percentage next to the senatorâ€™s
name represents the percentage
of times that he or she supported
Baker. The number in parentheses
represents the actual
number of times the senator supported
Baker.
Sen. Lydia Edwards
0 percent (0)
ALSO UP ON BEACON HILL
2.9 BILLION IN TAX RELIEF IS ON
ITS WAY â€“ State Auditor Suzanne
Bump has certified that the Department
of Revenueâ€™s (DOR) fi gures
are correct and Massachusetts
must return $2.9 billion to
taxpayers based on Chapter 62F,
a 1986 law approved by the voters.
That law requires that tax revenue
above a certain amount collected
by the state go back to
the taxpayers. Bump has determined
that the net state tax revenues
of $41,812,654,358 for the
fiscal year ended June 30, 2022
is $2,941,499,731 above the allowable
state tax revenues of
$38,871,154,627.
â€œOur review requires us to do
more than check DORâ€™s math,â€ said
Bump. â€œAs has been done each year
of my tenure, we apply generally
accepted government auditing
standards in our review to verify the
accuracy and completeness of the
report provided by DOR. This provides
us with reasonable assurance
required by those standards that
DORâ€™s fi gures are correct.â€
â€œStronger-than expected state
tax revenues have led to a major
surplus for fiscal year 2022, and
we are pleased to be able to return
nearly $3 billion in excess revenue
to the taxpayers,â€ said Gov.
Charlie Baker. â€œWith families facing
continued pressure from high prices
and infl ation, these returns will
provide some needed relief. Even
with nearly $3 billion going back
to taxpayers, signifi cant state and
federal resources remain, and we
look forward to working with the
Legislature to invest this funding
into our economy, communities
and families.â€
According to the Baker Administration,
the $2.9 billion will be returned
to eligible taxpayers by the
DOR in proportion to personal income
tax liability in Massachusetts
incurred by taxpayers in 2021. â€œEligible
taxpayers will receive a credit
in the form of a refund that is approximately
13 percent of their
2021 personal income tax liability,â€
said a statement released by
the Offi ce of Administration and
Finance. â€œThis percentage is a preliminary
estimate and will be fi nalized
in late October, after all 2021
tax returns are fi led. To be eligible,
individuals must have fi led a 2021
state tax return on or before October
17, 2022. An individualâ€™s credit
may be reduced due to refund intercepts,
including for unpaid taxes,
unpaid child support and certain
other debts.
â€œThat our tax cap has been dormant
for over three decades until
today shows that it is working exactly
as it was designed to do,â€ said
Chip Ford, executive director of Citizens
for Limited Taxation which
sponsored the 1986 ballot question.
â€œOur tax cap was intended
as an automatic release valve for
when revenue surpluses reach an
unnecessary level, especially such
an extraordinary level as recently.
It was meant as a check on unlimited
taxation and unsustainable
spending.â€
â€œItâ€™s unfortunate that our late-executive
director Barbara Anderson,
who worked so hard for adoption
of our 1986 ballot question (and so
many other tax reforms) is no longer
with us to celebrate this success
she achieved for all taxpayers
of Massachusetts,â€ continued Ford,
â€œBut Iâ€™m confi dent sheâ€™s up there
joining us joyfully in spirit.â€
â€œThis is a tremendous victory
for all taxpayers of the commonwealth,â€
said Paul Craney of the
Massachusetts Fiscal Alliance. â€œWe
were fully prepared to bring the auditor
to the Supreme Judicial Court
to enforce this certifi cation and are
even more thrilled that theyâ€™ve
made this certifi cation ahead of the
September 20 deadline.â€
â€œThe 1986 law was regressive
when it passed before I was born,
and it is regressive today,â€ said Jonathan
Cohn, the policy director at
the group Progressive Massachusetts.
â€œIt is incumbent upon the
Legislature to ensure that the implementation
of such a law does
not make inequality in our state
worse, as it undoubtedly will if it is
used to disproportionately benefi
t the highest-income residentsâ€”
those who bear the impact of infl
ation and economic turbulence
of any kind the leastâ€”as Gov. Baker
proposes.â€
â€œI support the idea to deliver $2.9
billion in relief checks to taxpayers
this fall,â€ said Rep. Mike Connolly
(D-Cambridge). â€œHowever,
Chapter 62F would send the largest
checks to the stateâ€™s top income
earners, while those most impacted
by infl ation would get the smallest
checks. Thatâ€™s not just inequitable,
itâ€™s also bad economic policy.
Moreover, 62F only authorizes
tax credits for next year, not checks
this fall. Thatâ€™s why I am calling on
legislative leaders to return to formal
session as soon as possible to
adjust the 62F distribution formula
so that middle-income residents
and the working poor are prioritized,
as they are the ones who are
being most crushed by infl ation.
At the same time, I think the legislature
should take action to legally
authorize the distribution of
these checks this fall. Otherwise,
Gov. Bakerâ€™s rebate scheme could
get tied up in the courts.
REDUCED TRAFFIC FATALITIES
AND PROTECT PEDESTRIANS AND
BICYCLISTS (H 5103) â€“ The House
and Senate approved and sent to
Gov. Baker a bill designed to protect
â€œvulnerable road usersâ€ which
includes pedestrians, constructions
workers, emergency responders bicyclists,
skateboarders, roller skates
and wheelchair users. A key provision
requires vehicle drivers, when
passing a vulnerable user, to pass
at a safe distance of not less than
3 feet when the motor vehicle is
traveling at 30 miles per hour or
less, and an additional foot of clearance
for every ten miles per hour
that the vehicle is traveling above
30 miles per hour.
Other provisions include establishing
a process to lower the default
speed limit to 25 mph on state
highways and parkways in thickly
settled or business districts; requiring
higher-visibility mirrors
and lateral sideguards on certain
state-owned, state-operated and
state-contracted trucks; creating
a uniform reporting tool for crashes
involving a pedestrian or cyclist;
and requiring bicyclists to have red
rear lights.
â€œ[The bill] strengthens traffic
safety regulations, making our
roads safer and taking critical steps
to save lives, and reduce crashes
that needlessly put people at
risk,â€ said Rep. Christine Barber (DSomerville),
sponsor of an earlier
version of the bill.â€œWith an emphasis
on enhancing safeguards for pedestrians
and bikers, the commonwealth
positions itself as a leader in
road user safety and promotes alternative
modes of transportation.â€
Others sponsors of earlier versions
of the bill, including Reps.
Michael Moran (D-Brighton),Bill
Strauss (D-Mattapoisett) and Dave
Rogers (D-Cambridge) did not respond
to repeated requests from
Beacon Hill Roll Call to comment
on the bill being approved and sent
to Gov. Baker.
BALLOT QUESTION ASKS VOTERS
TO REPEAL THE NEW LAW ALLOWING
DRIVERâ€™S LICENSE FOR
UNDOCUMENTED/ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS
(H 4805) â€“ The new law
that would allow, starting July 1,
2023, undocumented/illegal immigrants
to apply for a Massachusetts
standard driverâ€™s license is going
to be on the November ballot
for voters to decide whether to repeal
it or leave it intact. â€œFair and
Secure Massachusetts,â€ the group
spearheading the repeal campaign,
submitted 71,883 voter signatures
to get the question on the
ballot, far more than the 40,120 signatures
required.
The law would require an applicant
for a driverâ€™s license â€œwithout
legal presenceâ€ in the United
States to provide the Registry of
Motor Vehicles (RMV) with a foreign
passport and at least one of
fi ve other documents: a driverâ€™s license
from another state, a foreign
driverâ€™s license, a birth certifi cate, a
foreign national identifi cation card
or a marriage certifi cate or divorce
decree from any U.S. state. The bill
became law when the House and
Senate on June 9 overrode Gov.
Charlie Bakerâ€™s veto of the bill.
Maureen Maloney, whose son
Matthew Denice was killed by a
drunk driver who did not have legal
status in the United States, is
the chair of the repeal campaign.
She said that Massachusetts roads
â€œwill be much more unsafeâ€ if the
law takes eff ect. â€œVoters lined up to
sign our petition, they voiced to us
their reasons for opposing the law,â€
Maloney said.
BEACON | SEE Page 20
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://T4LC07k-Dk2It_gm0mRXB3dRcKjEbWWRFHqLTAnAcG8Í&{Í`Ì°Í ×c,Þ`yÎ¼÷Þ×‰EÚ!5THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2022
Page 19
OBITUARIES
Anthony L. Albano
Scott, and Jenna. Jamie was pursuing
her doctorate in science
and was working as a Dog sitter.
All Services were held privately.
Muriel E.
(Carpenter) Roos
O
f R e ve re
passed away
on Sep 13, 2022
at the age of 79.
â€œTonyâ€ was born June 4, 1943
to the late Joseph and Antonetta
(Mazzerella). Cherished Father
of Christine Albano-Martorelli
of Revere and the late Anthony
F. Albano. Loving Grandfather
of Michael Martorelli and his fi -
ancÃ© Jacqueline Noel, Matthew
Martorelli, and Delayna Albano.
Dear Brother of Carmen Albano.
Father in-law of Mark Martorelli.
He also leaves behind many loving
nieces and nephews.
After proudly serving in Vietnam,
Tony returned home to Revere
where he worked in the Insurance
business. He provided
insurance for the Big Dig project
in Boston and also worked for
Prescott Insurance. Tony loved
to travel, enjoyed going down
to the beach, and always liked
watching football on Sundays
with Santos. Most of all, he loved
being a grandfather.
A Visitation and Prayer Service
was held at the Paul Buonfi glio
& Sons-Bruno Funeral Home,
Revere, on Tuesday, September
20, 2022. Relatives and friends
were kindly invited. Interment
Puritan Lawn Cemetery. In Lieu
of fl owers, the family asks that
donations be made to Veterans
Charity-Non Profi t for Veterans:
Wounded Warrior Project in Anthonyâ€™s
name.
Jamie Gauthier
O
f Revere. Passed away on
Sunday, September 11th
at the Newbridge on the Charles
Nursing Facility. Muriel died
peacefully and was found in a
manner that shows her true spirit;
she was found kneeling by her
bedside, all showered and done
up as if going to church-undoubtedly
praying to Jesus, she
was 94 years old.
Muriel was born in Chelsea
on November 21st, 1927, to her
late parents, Orlando Carpenter
& Florence May (Parsons) Jones.
Muriel is the loving mother of
Dianne Nowell & late husband
Paul Nowell of Stoneham, Donna
Schiller & husband Stephen
Schiller of Weymouth, and Judy
Russi & husband Lawrence â€œLarryâ€
Russi of Revere. Muriel was a
cherished grandmother of Skipper
Carino, Matthew Carino &
wife Genevieve Phelps, Audra
DeBaets & husband Kevin DeBaets,
Amanda Schiller, Coralie
Russi & husband Joseph â€œJoeâ€
Agron, and Sarah Russi. Adored
great-grandmother of Shane,
Davey, Karina, Adam, Mia, and
Alexander. Dear sister of the late
Margery L. Warford, Doris Carlino,
& June Semon. She is also lovingly
survived by many nieces,
nephews, grandnieces & grandnephews.
O
f
Revere, formerly of Minnesota,
passed away unexpectedly
on September 12 at
the age of 36. Jamie was born on
June 16, 1986 in St. Paul Minnesota
to Tracy Gauthier and Edward
Fitzgerald.
Jamie was predeceased by
her infant son Luka Bustillo. She
was also the dear sister of Sonya,
Muriel was raised and educated
in Everett and later lived in
Malden at the Heritage Senior
Building before living at the Jack
Satter house on Revere Beach.
She was formerly married to
Harold P. Roos, with whom she
began her family. She was a devoted
housewife and mother of
three daughters. She worked various
jobs while raising her girls,
later holding a job she adored as
a Customer Service Representative
at the Bible Gift Shop located
in Maplewood Square in Malden
a place for her to evangelize
to others when she wasnâ€™t busy
taking the train into Downtown
Crossing to tell people about Jesus.
Muriel was a woman with
profound faith, known by many
as a â€œprayer warriorâ€. She would
often pray for people and minister
to the homeless and help
encourage people who were
downtrodden by spreading the
Gospel of Jesus Christ. Her family
looked to her for strength,
wisdom, & guidance because
she was a strong, loving, and
faithful mother, grandmother,
and friend. Muriel was a member
of many churches and a devout
supporter of ministries and
outreaches. She never missed
an opportunity to usher someone
up to an â€œAltar Callâ€-to give
themselves to the Lord. Having
met Muriel means having been
asked, â€œDo you know Jesus?â€. As
the trumpets sound off in heaven
for the arrival of a new Queen
Muriel, let us all remember one of
her favorite verses, â€œ16 For God so
loved the world that He gave His
only begotten Son, that whoever
believes in Him should not perish
but have everlasting life. 17 For
God did not send His Son into
the world to condemn the world,
but that the world through Him
might be saved.â€ (John 3:16-17)
Family & friends are respectfully
invited to attend a Graveside
Service on Thursday, September
15th at 11:00 a.m. in Puritan
Lawn Memorial Park, 185
Lake Street, Peabody.
Muriel always carried a $1, $5,
or $10 bill for someone in need
on the street, perhaps we can
all add that to our pockets in remembrance
of Muriel and pass
on her spirit of caring for those
in need.
A graveside service was held
on Thursday, September 15th
in Puritan Lawn Memorial Park,
Peabody.
In lieu of fl owers, remembrances
may be made to Glendale
Christian Lighthouse Church, 701
Broadway, Everett, MA 02149.
Lea (Frassica) Sasso
1. On Sept. 23, 1938, at the
New York Worldâ€™s Fair, a time
capsule was buried with artifacts,
including a newsreel
of what kind of college
sports event?
2. How are Sherlock Holmes,
Beaker and The Electric Mayhem
similar?
3. In what city would you fi nd
â€œMiracle Mile,â€ which was designed
to appeal to automobile
drivers?
4. On Sept. 24, 1956, what
kind of transatlantic cable
was completed?
5. What U.S. president stated,
â€œNo man ever listened himself
out of a jobâ€?
6. Who was Adam and Eveâ€™s
third child?
7. On Sept. 25, 1690, â€œPublic
Occurrences Both Forreign
and Domestick,â€ the
first American multipage
newspaper, was published
where?
8. A lollipop man, which
was a sign holder in Formula
1 racing, is also a name
for a crossing guard in what
country?
9. What birdâ€™s name is equivalent
to a minus three in
golf?
10. On Sept. 26, 1949, LAâ€™s
â€œHollywoodâ€ sign was
Answers
changed from what to that
name?
11. What does the zip in zip
code stand for?
12. Mark Twain, in â€œLife on
the Mississippi,â€ stated that
what kind of race is â€œthe most
enjoyable of allâ€?
13. On Sept. 27, 1912, â€œThe
Memphis Blues,â€ the first
published blues, went on
sale in Memphis; who composed
it?
14. What Notre Dame football
star said, â€œWhen the going
gets tough, the tough
get goingâ€?
15. What is the worldâ€™s longest
motorway?
16. Who appeared as Sherlock
Holmes in many fi lms
and later in the quiz show
â€œYour Lucky Clueâ€?
17. On Sept. 28, 1850, Congress
abolished what punishment
on merchant vessels
and in the U.S. Navy?
18. What Bing Crosby song
is the best-selling physical
single?
19. What initially promoted
itself as â€œThe Vacation Kingdom
of the Worldâ€?
20. On Sept. 29, 1982, what
Boston show about a bar
premiered on TV?
O
f Revere. Passed away on
September 14, 2022 at the
age of 85. Beloved wife of Robert
J. Sasso. Cherished mother
of Stephen L. Marino, David
Marino and his wife Debbie,
Robert Sasso, Maria Schena
and her husband Tony and
the late Leanne Sasso Lusso.
Dear sister of Marie McCarthy
and late her husband Robert of
CA. Loving grandmother Robert,
Peter, Drew, David, Michael,
Christopher, Ronnie, Joseph,
and Larissa. Also survived by
many loving friends and family
members.
Leaâ€™s commitment to her family
and her faith is what supported
her throughout her life. Leaâ€™s
home was always home central,
the place her family sought for
sharing happiness, sadness and
everything in between. Sunday
dinners and her grandchildren
brought her such joy. She
touched countless lives with her
warmth and compassion.
Visitation was held at the Paul
Buonfi glio & Sons-Bruno funeral
Home, Revere on Saturday,
September 17th. Followed by
a Funeral Mass at the Immaculate
Conception Church, Revere.
Interment will be in Woodlawn
Cemetery. Relatives and
friends are were kindly invited
to attend.
In Lieu of fl owers donations
may be made in Leaâ€™s memory
to the St. Judeâ€™s Children Research
Hospital, 501 St. Jude
Place, Memphis, TN 38105
1. A football game
2. They are Muppet
characters.
3. Los Angeles
(Wilshire Boulevard)
4.
Telephone
5. Calvin â€œSilent
Calâ€ Coolidge
6. Seth
7. Boston (It was
shut down by the
government four
days later.)
8. United Kingdom
9. Albatross
10. â€œHollywoodlandâ€
11.
Zoning Improvement
Plan
12. Steamboat
13. W. C. Handy
14. Knute Rockne
15. Pan American
Highway
16. Basil Rathbone
17. Flogging
18. â€œWhite Christmasâ€
19.
Disneyland in
Florida
20. â€œCheersâ€
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2022
BEACON | FROM Page 18
A newly formed group, The Yes
for Safer Roads Coalition, is spearheading
the campaign to reject
the repeal effort and keep the
law intact. â€œThis law is about more
than just operating a motor vehicle,â€
said Middlesex Sheriff Peter
Koutoujian, a member of the coalition.
â€œIt enhances safety on our
roadways, but just as importantly
it allows individuals to get to their
work and medical appointments
as well as to kidsâ€™ school and after
school activities. Thatâ€™s why I
am proud to stand with the broad
coalition of law enforcement colYour
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~ HELP WANTED ~
Experienced Oil Truck Driver wanted.
Hazmat and CDL required.
Must present driverâ€™s record history.
Please send resume to:
dina@angelosoil.com
or call 781-231-3500
leagues, public health professionals,
advocates and legislators who
worked to pass this crucial law.â€
2022 COASTSWEEP BEACH
CLEANUP â€“ The Baker Administration
announced the kickoff of the
2022 COASTSWEEP beach cleanup
program which runs through
from September 17 to early November.
Since 1987, thousands of
volunteers have participated and
removed hundreds of tons of marine
debris and other trash from
Massachusetts beaches, lakes, rivers
and the seafl oor. COASTSWEEP
is part of the International Coastal
Cleanup initiative that is organized
by Ocean Conservancy and draws
hundreds of thousands of volunteers
to coastal cleanups in more
than 150 countries worldwide.
Volunteers also record data about
what they fi nd into Ocean Conservancyâ€™s
international marine debris
database, where it helps researchers
and policymakers better
understand the sources of global
marine debris and develop solutions
for its prevention.
â€œThroughout the commonwealth
are incredible beaches,
waterfronts and shorelines that
are enjoyed and appreciated by
so many, and the COASTSWEEP
program off ers a great way for everyone
to give back to these treasured
natural resources,â€ said Energy
and Environmental Affairs
Secretary Beth Card. â€œThe BakerPolito
Administration encourages
everyone to get out and get involved
with a cleanup or gather
some friends and organize your
own this fall season.â€
Volunteers can organize their
own cleanup or volunteer at a
scheduled cleanup. All supplies,
including bags, gloves, data cards
and pencils are provided free of
charge. To join an existing cleanup
or to organize one, go to https://
www.mass.gov/service-details/
coastsweep-cleanup-list or email
coastsweep@mass.gov
POLYCYSTIC OVARY SYNDROME
AWARENESS (H 3735) â€“ The House
approved and sent to the Senate
a bill making September Polycystic
Ovary Syndrome Awareness
(POSA) Month. According to
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the Mayo Clinic website, POSA is
a problem with hormones that
happens during the reproductive
years. â€œThe exact cause of PCOS
is unknown,â€ notes the website.
â€œEarly diagnosis and treatment
along with weight loss may lower
the risk of long-term complications
such as type 2 diabetes and
heart disease.â€
The bill was approved by the
House on September 15, 2022,
when half the month of September
was already over. It still needs
the initial approval of the Senate
and another round of approval in
both branches, as well as the governorâ€™s
signature as the month of
September continues to roll on.
It was originally fi led 16 months
ago on May 6, 2021 but September
2021 went by without passage
of the bill.
Rep. Nika Elugardo (D-Boston),
the sponsor of the bill, did not respond
to repeated requests by
Beacon Hill Roll Call to comment
on her bill and explain why it has
been stalled in the House for 18
months.
U.S. LABOR SECRETARY MARTY
WALSH TALKS UNIONS AND
THE FUTURE - The momentum
of labor, including the growth of
unions and the increased leverage
of workers, is reshaping the traditional
workplace dynamic In Massachusetts
and beyond. Join Labor
Secretary Marty Walsh and Massachusetts
labor leaders for a special
event hosted by the State House
News Service and MASSterList that
will explore the important labor
trends: laborâ€™s gains, goals and the
outlook for the future. The in-person
event is Wednesday, September
28, at the Massachusetts Continuing
Legal Education (MCLE) at
10 Winter Place (Downtown Crossing)
in Boston. Doors open for networking
and light refreshments
at 7:30 a.m., with the program
kicking off at 8:15 a.m. Register at
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/
the-new-power-of-labor-in-massachusetts-and-beyond-tickets414176953417?aff
=BHRCSept
QUOTABLE QUOTES
â€œWe remain committed to delivering
support to local offi cials
who understand the positive effect
of sustainable roadway safety.
Every tool made possible by todayâ€™s
grants empowers police to
educate the public about our commonwealthâ€™s
laws, reduce speeding,
renew our commitment to
wear seat belts and properly address
all forms of distracted and
impaired driving.â€
---Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito upon announcing
$10.9 million in federal
grant funding to cities and towns
to improve road safety across the
state.
â€œThis report is a powerful tool for
state leaders with clear, measurable
and aspirational recommendations
that focus on areas that are
especially important for advancing
equity to ensure all students have
access to high-quality opportunities
from birth to early adulthood.â€
---Edith Bazile, Executive Director
of Black Advocates for Educational
Excellence on the release
by the Massachusetts Education
Equity of a report â€œThere Is No Excellence
Without Equity: A Path
Forward for Education in Massachusetts,â€
calling on state leaders
to make tackling the stateâ€™s longstanding
educational inequities a
top priority.
â€œAfter two challenging years,
we rebounded stronger than we
could have expected.â€
---Massachusetts Convention
Center Authority (MCCA) Executive
Director David Gibbons announcing
that the authority just
completed its most successful fi -
nancial year in history, following
two years of empty gathering halls
because of COVID-19.
â€œWe are honored by this award.
A commitment to diversity is a
commitment to a culture of continuous
improvement.
--- Umass Lowell Chancellor Julie
Chen on the school being named
a recipient of the 2022 Higher Education
Excellence in Diversity
award recognizing U.S. colleges
and universities that demonstrate
an outstanding commitment to diversity
and inclusion on campus.
HOW LONG WAS LAST WEEKâ€™S
SESSION? Beacon Hill Roll Call
tracks the length of time that the
House and Senate were in session
each week. Many legislators say
that legislative sessions are only
one aspect of the Legislatureâ€™s job
and that a lot of important work
is done outside of the House and
Senate chambers. They note that
their jobs also involve committee
work, research, constituent
work and other matters that are
important to their districts. Critics
say that the Legislature does not
meet regularly or long enough
to debate and vote in public view
on the thousands of pieces of legislation
that have been fi led. They
note that the infrequency and brief
length of sessions are misguided
and lead to irresponsible late-night
sessions and a mad rush to act on
dozens of bills in the days immediately
preceding the end of an annual
session.
During the week of September
12-16, the House met for a total
of 54 minutes and the Senate met
for a total of one hour and four
minutes.
Mon. Sept. 12 House 11:05 a.m.
to 11:23 a.m.
Senate 11:03 a.m. to 11:28 a.m.
Tues. Sept. 13 No House session
No Senate session
Wed. Sept. 14 No House session
No Senate session
Thurs. Sept. 15 House 11:04 a.m.
to 11:40 a.m.
Senate 11:03 a.m. to 11:42 a.m.
Fri. Sept. 16 No House session
No Senate session
Bob Katzen welcomes feedback
at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com
Bob founded Beacon Hill Roll Call
in 1975 and was inducted into the
New England Newspaper and Press
Association (NENPA) Hall of
Fame in 2019.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2022
Page 21
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îPage 22
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2022
ZAMBUTO | FROM Page 1
didnâ€™t always agree. We certainly had our
diff erences.â€
At the recount last November, Zambuto
said, he and Rotondo agreed that
no matter what happened, the councillors
would remain friends.
â€œGeorge was someone who truly
cared about people, cared about the
city,â€ Zambuto said.
As a councillor, Zambuto said, he will
continue to tell it like it is, even if not
everyone agrees with his viewpoints.
â€œEverybody knows what they get with
Tony Zambuto,â€ he said. â€Iâ€™ve been here
two decades; I always tell you the truth.
That doesnâ€™t always go over well. I donâ€™t
sugarcoat anything, and I never tell you
what you want to hear.â€
Zambuto said every decision he
makes on the council is based on science
and fact. â€œAny position I take is one that
is reasoned,â€ he said. â€œYou might not always
agree with it, and a lot of people
donâ€™t agree with some of my positions,
but the bottom line is I do what is best
for the city. I will continue to do that,
and Iâ€™m grateful to be back, obviously
under unfortunate circumstances, but
I will continue to contribute to the city
of Revere.â€
City Council President Gerry Visconti
welcomed Zambuto back on behalf
of the council.
Zambuto is the second longtime
councillor to return to the City Council
Chambers following their defeat in the
2021 municipal election. Ward 5 Councillor
John Powers won a Special Election
earlier this year to fi ll the remainder
of Al Fioreâ€™s term. Fiore defeated Powers
in 2021, then resigned earlier this year
due to medical concerns.
City Clerk Ashley Melnik swore in Councillor-at-Large Anthony Zambuto before
Mondayâ€™s City Council meeting. (Advocate photo by Adam Swift)
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission
from the publisher, The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com
BUYER1
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
SELLER1
BUYER2
Couto, Stephanie A
Farrer, Julie
Porî†Ÿ llo, Mario C
Bingham, Maî†© hew
Porî†Ÿ llo, Juana A
Salgado-Gonzalez, Wilmer A Zavala, Zavala J
Salvador, Morales J
Smee, Michelle L
Tejeda, Henry V
North Shore Condos LLC
Celata, Maureen
Morales, Mendez M Henry, Beverly A
Bannister, Nicholas C Fifi eld, Dwight
Delacruz-Diaz, Rosanna US Bank NA Tr
SELLER2
ADDRESS
1133 N Shore Rd #405
95 Levereî†© Ave
Cipollone, Debra M Cipollone, Luciano 36 Kingman Ave
Frederick S Rupp FT
Rupp, Frederick S 75 Vane St
Henry, Michael 286 Fenno St
DATE PRICE
08.31.22 380000
09.02.22 690000
08.31.22 840000
08.29.22 710000
08.29.22 415000
Fifi eld, Barbara 360 Revere Beach Blvd #202 09.01.22 580000
33 Pemberton St
08.29.22 400000
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Page 23
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2022
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REVERE/SAUGUS line - 1st AD - Wonderful New Construction 8 rm Cenî—îˆî•
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î‰î„îîŒîîœ î•î’î’îî€ î–î“î„î†îŒî’î˜î– îî„î–î—îˆî• î–î˜îŒî—îˆî€ î€•î‘î‡ îƒî’î’î• îî„î˜î‘î‡î•îœî€ î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡ îƒî’î’î•îŒî‘îŠ
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MALDEN - 1st AD 6 rm, 3 bdrm Colonial, 1 Â½ baths, updated kit with granite
counters, mini split A/C systems, 2 heated sunrooms, large, deck, shared
1 car garage, located on Medford lineâ€¦............................................$599,900.
SAUGUS - 1st AD - Spacious 7+ room Cape Cod style home
î’ï‚‡îˆî•î– î€— î…îˆî‡î•î’î’îî–î€ î€• îƒ² î…î„î—î‹î–î€ î€”î–î— îƒ€î’î’î• î‰î„îîŒîîœ î•î’î’îî€ î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡î€
î˜î“î‡î„î—îˆî‡ î•î’î’î‰î€ î„îî„î•îî€ îîˆî™îˆî îî’î—î€ îî’î†î„î—îˆî‡ î’î‘ îŠî•îˆî„î— î‡îˆî„î‡î€
îˆî‘î‡ î–î—î•îˆîˆî—î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€˜î€”î€œî€î€œî€“î€“î€‘
SAUGUS - 8 room Colonial offers 3 bedrms, 4 baths, master bdrm w/private
î…î„î—î‹ î€‰ î–îŒî—î—îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’îî€ îƒ€î‘îŒî–î‹îˆî‡ îî’îšîˆî• îîˆî™îˆîî€ î‰îˆî‘î†îˆî‡ îœî„î•î‡ îšîŒî—î‹ î„î…î’î™îˆ îŠî•î’î˜î‘î‡ î“î’î’î î€‰
patio, great location, close to everything!.................................................$799,900.
SAUGUS - 7 room, 3 bedroom Garrison Colonial offers 2 full baths, sunroom,
îŽîŒî— îšî€’î†îˆî‘î—îˆî• îŒî–îî„î‘î‡î€ îƒ€î‘îŒî–î‹îˆî‡ îî’îšîˆî• îîˆî™îˆî î’î‰î‰îˆî•î– î‰î„îîŒîîœ î•î î„î‘î‡ î–îˆî†î’î‘î‡ îŽîŒî—î†î‹îˆî‘
updated roof, easy access to all major Routes & shoppingâ€¦.........$539,900
DANVERS - 1st AD - 6 room Colonial, 3 bedrooms, open concept, living
î•î’î’îî€ î‡îŒî‘îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’îî€ î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡ îƒî’î’î•îŒî‘îŠî€ îšî„îîŽî€î˜î“ î„î—î—îŒî†î€ îˆî‘î†îî’î–îˆî‡ î“î’î•î†î‹î€
corner, level lot, needs TLCâ€¦......................................................$459,900.
î€¶î€¤î€¸î€ªî€¸î€¶ î€ î€·î€ºî€² î€©î€¤î€°î€¬î€¯î€¼ î€˜î€’î€š î•î’î’îî–î€ îšî’î’î‡ îƒî’î’î•îŒî‘îŠî€ î–îˆî†î’î‘î‡ îƒî’î’î• î˜î‘îŒî— î‹î„î– î’î“îˆî‘
îƒî’î’î• î“îî„î‘ î„î‘î‡ î†îˆî‘î—î•î„î î„îŒî•î€ îˆî‘î†îî’î–îˆî‡ î„î‘î‡ î’î“îˆî‘ î“î’î•î†î‹îˆî–î€ î˜î“î‡î„î—îˆî‡ îŠî„î– î‹îˆî„î—î€ îîˆî™îˆîî€
corner lot, convenient locationâ€¦...............................................................$599,900.
WONDERING WHAT YOUR
HOME IS WORTH?
CALL US FOR A FREE
OPINION OF VALUE.
781-233-1401
38 MAIN STREET, SAUGUS
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
LYNN - 1st Ad - Affordable Condo Alternative Ward 1. 2-bedroom Colonial offers
îŠî•îˆî„î— î–î“î„î†îˆî€‘ î€ªî„îîîˆîœ î€®îŒî—î†î‹îˆî‘î€ î€¶î˜î‘ îƒ€îîîˆî‡ îîŒî™îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’î î„î‘î‡ î‡îŒî‘îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’î îšîŒî—î‹ î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡
îƒî’î’î•îŒî‘îŠî€‘î€•î‘î‡ îîˆî™îˆî î’î‰î‰îˆî•î– î€• î…îˆî‡î•î’î’îî– î„ î–îŒî—î—îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’î î„î‘î‡ î‰î˜îî î…î„î—î‹î‚«î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€–î€˜î€“î€î€“î€“î€“î€‘
WOBURN - 1st AD - Nicely renovated 7 room, 4 bedroom cape cod style home,
granite kitchen open to sunken famrm/dnrm, NEW full bathroom, NEW roof,
nothing to do by move in! You wonâ€™t be disappointedâ€¦.....................$599,900.
LET US SHOW YOU OUR
MARKETING PLAN TO
GET YOU TOP DOLLAR
FOR YOUR HOME!
LITTLEFIELDRE.COM
WE ARE HAPPY TO
WELCOME OUR
NEWEST AGENT
ANTHONY
COGLIANO
FOR SALE - 3 BED, 2 BATH MULTI LEVEL COMPLETELY
RENOVATED WITH 1 BED 1 BATH CARRIAGE HOUSE
SAUGUS $799,000 CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
CALL HIMFOR
ALL YOUR REAL
ESTATE NEEDS!
(857) 246-1305
COMING SOON
FOR SALE - BEAUTIFUL EXPANDED CAPE LOCATED AT THE ENTRANCE OF AN ESTABLISHED
NEIGHBORHOOD. THIS UPDATED HOME FEATURES 3 BED, 2.5 BATHS AND HARDWOOD
FLOORING AND CUSTOM DETAILING THROUGH-OUT. THE KITCHEN OFFERS GAS COOKING,
STAINLESS APPLIANCES AND GRANITE COUNTERS AND IS OPEN TO BOTH THE FAMILY ROOM
AND DINING AREA WITH A FIXED OVERSIZED ISLAND. FRENCH DOOR OFF THE FAMILY ROOM
TO DECK AND LEVEL FENCED YARD. GRANITE FIREPLACE IN LIVING ROOM. SPACIOUS PRIMARY
SUITE WITH WALK-IN CLOSET AND LARGE BATH. BUDERUS GAS HEAT, GAS HOT WATER,
C/A, UPDATES ELECTRICAL & PLUMBING. LYNNFIELD $799,900 - CALL DEBBIE 617-678-9710
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
FOR SALE - 2 PLUS ACRES OF RESIDENTIAL LAND.
WATER AND SEWER AT SITE SAUGUS $850,000 CALL
RHONDA FOR DETAILS 781-706-0842
â€¢ FOR RENT -1 BED,1 BATH FULLY FURNISHED STUDIO
APARTMENT IN NICE NEIGHBORHOOD SAUGUS $1,500
â€¢ FOR RENT -1 BED, 1 BATH WALK IN LEVEL APARTMENT
WITH LIV/DIN COMBO NEIGHBORHOOD TAW
SAUGUS $2,200
â€¢ FOR RENT - 2 BED,1 BATH 3RD FLOOR WALK UP IN
MAPLEWOOD SQUARE, LIV, DIN, EAT-IN KIT. OWNER
OCCUPIED BUILDING TAW MALDEN $2,000
FOR SALE - 3 BED 1.5 BATHS RANCH W/ GREAT POTENTIAL!
LARGE ROOMS. GAS COOKING, C/A.LOCATED ON GOLF
COURSE LYNNFIELD CALL KEITH FOR DETAILS 781-389-0791
FOR SALE - 3 BEDROOM 2.5 BATH FULLY
RENOVATED HOME LOCATED ON NICE SIDE
STREET LOCATION ON A CORNER LOT.! SAUGUS
$749,900 CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
â€¢ FOR RENT 1 BED WITH EAT-IN KITCHEN & LAUNDRY
IN UNIT ON STREET PERMIT PARKING. EVERETT $1700
â€¢ FOR RENT 3 BED 1 BATH OPEN CONCEPT. PETS
WITH APPROVAL MALDEN $2500
CALL RHONDA FOR DETAILS 781-706-0842
FOR SALE - BRAND NEW MANUFACTURED MOBILE
HOMES. TWO CUSTOM UNITS LEFT, ALL UNITS ARE 2 BED ,
1 BATH 12 X 52, DANVERS $199,900 CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
COMING SOON - 2 BED,2.5 BATH 2 LEVEL TOWNHOUSE
RARELY AVAILABLE PHEASANT HILLS CONDOS
SAUGUS CALL DANIELLE 978-987-9535
FOR SALE
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