׉?4ׁB!בCט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://UGtxRFaFqKoBZ3xWdWfIy8itorZn1WvTgHJD97M5Z74 `)׉	 7cassandra://QdT099wvVF8Wi9aeCdFqwgI8nEuGWjuEgWXjBl5sg0E͛`J׉	 7cassandra://ZI7MgMtDbDMOI07jt9greOEOU_F9F4fhwIxSk66V-j0/`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://FGui_KO5Zp4HCHsb6LrAwterzh0Kb8WT7hfEb6NJMDs mi͠cj!>/נcj!>5 	ہf9ׁHhttp://www.angelosoil.comׁׁЈנcj!>4 9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈנcj!>3 @|9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈנcj!>2 @n9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.neׁׁЈ׈Ecj!>׉E,SAUGUS
Advocate Online at: www.advocatenews.ne
Advocate Online at: www.advocatenews.net
Vol. 25, No. 8 -FREE- www.advocatenews.net Published Every Friday 781-233-4446 Friday, February 24, 2023
DEFENDING HIS HONOR
WIN Waste
Signature
Controversy
Cogliano said he expects to
“be cleared of any wrongdoing”
By Mark E. Vogler
B
oard of Selectmen
Chair Anthony Cogliano
said he was recently
contacted by the state Ethics
Commission regarding his
eff orts to help WIN Waste Innovations
defend itself in a
federal lawsuit. But Cogliano
said he doesn’t expect anything
to come from the commission’s
apparent probe into
whether he acted improperly
as a public offi cial by gathering
signatures for WIN (formerly
Wheelabrator Technologies)
from Saugus residents
whose testimony could challenge
the lawsuit’s claims that
WIN’s trash-to-energy plant on
Route 107 was causing odor,
Board of Selectmen Chair Anthony Cogliano made a public statement at Wednesday
night’s (Feb. 22) meeting, declaring he did nothing improper by collecting signatures
of Saugus residents to help WIN Waste Innovations challenge a federal lawsuit
that alleged the company’s trash-to-energy plant caused odor and noise problems.
(Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
~ Home of the Week ~
SAUGUS....Nice Colonial offers spacious
kitchen with maple cabinets, granite
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       
      
     
    
    
      
       
to Saugus Center.
  
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of
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dust and other problems.
“Judging by the questions
I was asked, I’m confi dent I’ll
be cleared of any wrongdoing
because I’m not paid by WIN
and the town is not a party
to the suit,” Cogliano told The
Saugus Advocate Wednesday
night.
Earlier in the evening, Cogliano
read a brief statement
to fellow selectmen, disclosing
that an Ethics Commission
representative contacted
him last Friday (Feb. 17) seeking
answers to two questions.
“Number One: ‘Are you employed
and get compensation
from Wheelabrator?’ The answer
was “No,’” Cogliano said.
“Question Number Two:
‘Is the Town of Saugus party
to that class action lawsuit?’
The answer was ‘No.’ The gentleman
from the state Ethics
Commission said ‘Thank
you Mr. Cogliano. Have a nice
weekend,’” he said.
“So, for those of you who
want to make a big issue out
of it, best of luck to you. That’s
the truth and I guarantee
nothing will come out of it.”
Lawsuit cites alleged
conflict of interests
A motion filed in U.S. District
Court in Boston earlier
this month on behalf of Brenda
Sweetland and others involved
in a 2021 class action
lawsuit against WIN over noxious
odors and other quality
of life issues seeks to have the
declarations obtained by Cogliano
excluded as evidence in
the case. “Despite this obvious
conflict of interest between
Mr. Cogliano’s role as a public
representative of Saugus
residents and his support of
Wheelabrator, and a new Host
Community Agreement that
will net the town millions in
revenue, Wheelabrator solicited
Mr. Cogliano to procure
declarations that Wheelabrator
intends to use in opposition
to this lawsuit,” the court
motion alleged.
WIN WASTE | SEE PAGE 3
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`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://smq05prvozcFJxiNL9D9Tbg6t7fiqaJeFOX_unFwXmI 0~͠cj!>7נcj!>: '9ׁHhttp://www.roller-world.comׁׁЈ׉EPage 2
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2023
Pioneer Charter School
hosts 16th
and Engineering Fair
(Editor’s Note: The following
info is from a press release issued
this week by the Pioneer
Charter School.)
Focusing on precinct issues is the goal of “Saugus Over Coffee.”
A Saugus TV camera crew fi lmed the forum on Precinct
2 last week. Please see inside for more photos and stories.
(Saugus Advocate Photo by Mark E. Vogler)
$3.48 The COVID-19 Update
GALLON
We accept: MasterCard * Visa *
& Discover
Price Subject to Change
without notice
100 Gal. Min.
24 Hr. Service
781-286-2602
Town reports 20 newly confi rmed cases;
no new deaths
By Mark E. Vogler
T
here were 20 newly
confi rmed COVID-19
cases in Saugus over
the past week through
Wednesday (Feb. 22). The
new cases reported by the
state Department of Public
Health (DPH) over the past
week increased the overall
total to 10,532 confirmed
cases since the outbreak
of the global pandemic in
March of 2020, according to
Town Manager Scott C. Crabtree.
This week’s total was a
decrease of three over the
number of newly confi rmed
cases reported last week.
There were no new
COVID-19-related deaths
over the past week, as the
death toll remained at 109.
“Our hearts and prayers go
out to those families aff ected
by this health pandemic,”
Crabtree said.
Earlier this month, the campuses
of the Pioneer Charter
School of Science (PCSS)
in Everett (PCSSI) and Saugus
(PCSS2) hosted the 16th Annual
Science and Engineering
Fair. This year’s theme was
“Reimagining Your Daily Life,” a
concept celebrated by nearly
300 student participants.
All of PCSS’ 6-12th grade students
participated in a preliminary
event in December, and
then students were selected
to participate in the fair. Judges
for the fair were recruited
from the STEM community in
the Boston area, including MIT,
MIT Lincoln Labs, New England
Biolabs, Omega Pharmaceuticals,
BU and Northeastern.
Each year the Fair aims to allow
students to use the scientific
method or engineering
design process to investigate
a question or problem that interests
them outside the general
class curriculum. This also
serves as a method for students
to complete an independent
research project as part
of the PCSS college readiness
program and assists students
in developing the necessary
skills in verbal and written scientifi
c communication.
The mission of PCSS is to prepare
educationally under-resourced
students for today’s
competitive world. PCSS helps
students develop the academic
and social skills necessary to
become successful professionals
and exemplary community
members through a rigorous
academic curriculum emphasizing
math and science. Balanced
by a foundation in the
humanities, a character education
program, career-oriented
college preparation and
strong student-teacher-parent
collaboration, PCSS will meet
its mission.
Annual Science
Pioneer Charter School 2 eighth graders Grace from Saugus
(left) and Lianna from Everett (right) are trying to solve the
problem of single-use plastic waste from water bottles by creating
a solar water distillation system to provide safe drinking
water when none is otherwise available. (Courtesy Photo to
The Saugus Advocate)
Manoogian Files A “Citizens
Right To Speak” Article for May’s
Annual Town Meeting
By Mark E. Vogler
N
early a dozen taxpaying
Saugus residents
were denied a chance
to speak on an article at a Special
Town Meeting last Oct. 24
when Precinct 6 Town Meeting
Member William Brown
made the motion to “move the
question.”
“That motion passed by one
vote,” Precinct 10 Town Meeting
Member Peter Manoogian
recalled.
“As a result, the long-standing
tradition of not silencing
the public on matters before
Town Meeting was broken,”
Manoogian said
Manoogian has authored
an article for the May 1 Annual
Town Meeting that would
prevent such occurrences in
the future. The proposed bylaw
would require a 9/10 vote
to shut out Saugus residents
seeking the fl oor, according to
the proposal. If the Moderator
determines that no Saugus residents
are seeking to be heard,
then the 2/3 vote will remain.
Citizens can fi le articles for
consideration by Town Meeting
up until April 4 when the
warrant closes.
׉	 7cassandra://DFTH1XQrjkZD8Lpe53_qL2f99r3lQ6WAzdEcg_OwEs4,`̰ cj!>׉ETHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2023
Page 3
WIN WASTE | FROM PAGE 1
Board of Selectmen Chair Anthony Cogliano (second from the left) off ers a public explanation at Wednesday night’s meeting on his role in obtaining signa“So,
the signatures that I put
“Jack Walsh, a subcontractor
responsible for community
outreach for Wheelabrator,
approached Mr. Cogliano
to ask if he knew anyone
who could dispute the claims
against Wheelabrator.”
The motion also alleged that
Cogliano “forged” the signatures
of family, relatives and
friends he knew instead of
getting actual signatures from
them. Later, an attorney representing
WIN asked Cogliano
to have the Saugus residents
he had initially contacted sign
their own declarations, which
said that they didn’t experience
any problems at the plant.
In his statement to the board
Wednesday night, Cogliano
sought to explain why he believes
the signatures controversy
is no longer an issue.
Cogliano readily admitted to
signing declarations himself,
while insisting he had permission
from every person whose
signature he signed in his own
handwriting. “I got their permission
to sign affi davits on
their behalf and later had affi
davits signed by them, and
they were submitted to the
plaintiff’s attorney,” Cogliano
said.
But the affi davits that Cogliano
personally signed were
not submitted as evidence,
he stressed.
on those papers were not part
of any federal court case; they
will not appear anywhere,”
Cogliano told his colleagues.
“In addition to the attorneys
not using the documents
that I signed, I also demanded
that they eliminate all the
signatures that I solicited. All
my friends and family members
had signed those declarations.
They are all eliminated
from the court proceedings
as well,” he said.
“Not a Board of Selectmen
issue”
A federal judge is expected
to rule on the motion to
exclude from evidence any
of the signatures obtained
by Cogliano to challenge the
claims in the pending lawsuit.
Other selectmen had an
opportunity to share their
views on the WIN signatures
controversy. Only Selectman
Corinne Riley, Cogliano’s closest
ally on the board, made a
comment on the situation.
She read the following statement:
“The
only matter involving
WIN that is in front of the
Board of Selectmen now is
the Host Community Agreement.
First, the Board of Selectmen
is not involved in
any Class Action Lawsuit with
WIN. Nor does that lawsuit
have any bearing on a potential
Host Community Agreement.
So, there is no reason
for me to comment on it.
“Second, with regard to the
signatures, the only time the
Board of Selectmen has any
authority is when they are in
session. The signatures were
gathered outside of session.
So, again, it’s not a Board of
Selectmen issue.
“Further, Mr. Cogliano is
not only a selectman, but like
each of us, he is a private citizen
as well. Elected offi cials
don’t lose their rights to have
an opinion on an issue. So, if
he chose to work with WIN,
that is his decision, just as any
other private citizen gets to
make their decision.
“Mr. Cogliano has said that
he should have handled it
better and has publicly apologized
to all involved. I accept
that. The Board of Selectmen
should move on and go about
the business of the town.”
Two selectmen told The
Saugus Advocate last week
that they found Cogliano’s efforts
to help WIN Waste Innovations
defend itself against
a federal lawsuit a troubling
confl ict of interest. “It is deeply
concerning that the Chairman
of the Board of Selectmen
would get signatures
for WIN Waste knowing that
there is a pending Civil Action
lawsuit fi led by Saugus
residents,” Board of Selectmen
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Vice Chair Debra Panetta said
last week.
Panetta did not comment
on the situation at this week’s
meeting.
“His top priority should be
the people of East Saugus. He
should be protecting their interests
and not doing the bidding
for WIN Waste,” Selectman
Michael Serino said last week.
Serino remained on vacation
and was unable to attend this
week’s meeting.
Selectman Jeff Cicolini
didn’t comment at Wednesday
night’s meeting. Last week, he
declined to talk about matters
related to the ongoing lawsuit,
other than to say he didn’t
think the case would have any
bearing on the town’s eff orts
to reach a host community
agreement with WIN.
tures for WIN Waste Innovations to challenge a federal lawsuit. Pictured from left to right are Selectmen Debra Panetta, Cogliano, Jeff rey Cicolini and Corinne
Riley. (Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2023
~ Letter-to-the-Editor ~
Wait, they want to fi ll in Lake Q??
T
he School Building
Committee for Wakefield
High School has
announced that they are siting
the new high school in the
middle of Lake Quannapowitt.
The committee spokesperson
said that they have every right
to do so because the public voted
for a new school. He went on
Gerry
D’Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
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to say that this siting information
was available to everyone
who attended the committee
meetings. A resident who lives
beside the lake said that, while
she supported a new school,
she assumed it would be built
in the same location as the existing
school. When asked why
the public was not better informed
about this siting decision,
the committee spokesperson
said, “We complied fully
with the public process and the
decision will not be revisited.”
When asked about the millions
of additional dollars that it will
cost to prepare the site, which
entails fi lling the lake with soil
and creating a new channel to
the Saugus River, he declined
to comment.
Fortunately, this is not true.
However, imagine the outrage
if it was!! Lake Quannapowitt
is considered our town’s most
valuable natural resource. We
value it as a beautiful backdrop
to our town, a place to
walk, run, kayak, sail, or just
take a break from a busy day.
The lake defi nes our town and
we have spent millions of dollars
over the years to protect its
shores and water quality. To fi ll
it would be unthinkable, a loss
that could never be undone, a
permanent change in the character
of our town.
But do you know that we
have another natural resource
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of equal or greater value than
our lake? You may not be as familiar
with this resource because
it is less visible than our
lake. This area includes 30 acres
of forest located on the hill to
the right of the entrance to the
Metro Tech and Breakheart Reservation.
This forest earned the
highly prized state designation
as “forest core habitat,” a designation
reserved for the most intact
forests least impacted by
development and essential for
animals and plants dependent
on remote habitat. (For information
on Core Habitats, see
MassGIS Data: BioMap.)
This 30-acre hilltop forest is
part of 60 acres of Breakheart
that was transferred in 1965
from the state to the Metro
Tech. As a school district, this
land is public and not private as
Metro Tech Superintendent-Director
David DiBarri continuously
states. Only individuals
and corporations can own
private land. Metro Tech cannot
build on this land without
public consent because taxpayers
are paying 100% of the bill.
If it were private, as with other
private properties, the owners
would foot the bill.
The Metro Tech is located on
the lower 30 acres of this transferred
land. Many don’t know
that their vote in January 2022
for a new Metro Tech was also a
stealth vote to destroy the hilltop
forest even though an excellent
alternative site (C-2) is
available on the existing developed
land. In fact, on their website,
the Metro Tech Building
Committee stated that “If approved,
the new school will be
located on the same site as the
existing school” (archived website
available upon request).
While Lake Quannapowitt is
a prized community asset, its
water and sediments are polluted
by nutrients, salt and other
contaminants that fl ow into
stormwater drains. There are
few wetlands near the lake to
fi lter out pollutants. The lake is
not a habitat for endangered
species and does not capture
carbon from the atmosphere.
While the lake helps to control
fl ooding, it does not slow
stormwater runoff or use its
water to nourish a high-quality
ecosystem. Yet, we rightly
value the lake and are willing
to expend hard-earned money
to protect and enhance it.
The Metro Tech Forest (as
we’ll call it although it’s public
land) may not be as visible,
but it serves our environment
well. This hilltop forest is home
to a vast array of species, including
endangered insects,
plants, and birds. It is home to
macroinvertebrates, salamanders,
and other animals that
live in healthy wetlands and
vernal pools. Many of its trees
are mature oaks, keystone trees
that provide food and shelter
for hundreds of wildlife species.
The forest prevents erosion
and absorbs rainwater,
which fi lters through the soil
to provide purified water to
wetlands and vernal pools and
to streams that replenish larger
streams, including the Saugus
River. The forest provides
air-quality benefi ts by absorbing
air pollutants and its trails
provide much needed relief
from our busy daily lives.
This forest also plays an important
role in mitigating the
effects of climate change by
storing carbon as biomass and
sequestering carbon from the
atmosphere. According to a
UMass report, current forests
about 100 years old store 60
to 80 metric tons of carbon per
acre. As forests age, they store
more carbon, up to 100 to 120
metric tons per acre (Catanzaro
and D’Amato, 2019, “Forest Carbon:
An Essential Nature Solution
for Climate Change,” UMass
Amherst).
So breathe a sigh of relief that
Lake Quannapowitt will not be
fi lled in for the new Wakefi eld
High School, but consider what
you can do to stop the needless
destruction of our only
forest core habitat and Wakefi
eld’s only other natural gem.
For more information, go to
NEMTforest.org or “Save the
Forest and Build the Voke” on
Facebook.
Alison Simcox, PhD
Environmental Engineer
Wakefield
Saugus residents named to UMass
Amherst Fall 2022 Dean’s List
A
MHERST, Mass. — The University
of Massachusetts
Amherst releases their list of
students named to the Dean’s
List for the fall 2022 semester.
In order to qualify, an undergraduate
student must receive
a 3.5 grade-point average
or better on a four-point
scale. Saugus residents that
UMASS AMHERST | SEE PAGE 5
׉	 7cassandra://uviVUSWt8c2ZM_44-pro8kvcfn4mjtJEs2AlKwn2tOs.`̰ cj!>׉EnTHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2023
~ Letter-to-the-Editor ~
Page 5
DANGERS at the new Northeast Metro Tech
T
he HILLTOP location
proposed for the new
Northeast Metro Tech
High school imposes several
severe safety oversights that
will result in school users getting
hurt needlessly, on a regular
basis. The proposed new
Voc HILLTOP location disregards
the 2016 Pre-Feasibility
Study recommendations and
will cause added construction
and maintenance costs, in addition
to undue risk of injuries,
compared to the Voc option
to build on the athletic fi elds.
To quote another concerned
Wakefi eld resident who happens
to be an architect (Brian
Thomson): “Vertical movement
is inherently more diffi cult and
potentially more dangerous
than horizontal movement,
and by locating the NEMT
building on the hilltop, it is unavoidable,
expensive and exposes
them to serious liability.
This is but one of a number of
serious design and campus planning
fl aws and mistakes that are
inherent in the present plan to
build on the hilltop”.
The proposed Voc HILLTOP
location will require 100 north
facing stairs (10 fl ights) just to
reach the lower-level entrance
of the new 5 story building OR
they can access hilltop school
by 730’+ ELEVATED ramp OR
they will walk up the main front
access road that has no sidewalks
(because it is too steep
for sidewalks). These three options
will negatively impact
school accessibility and add to
the daily risk for all building users
forever.
If the Voc cannot install a
sidewalk along the new north
UMASS AMHERST | FROM PAGE 4
achieved the honor for the
fall semester were Serena Marie
Cacciola, Kyle J Cocorochio,
Christopher John Denovellis,
Ronald DiBiasio Jr, Ava
Eileen Fiorino, Shaylin Elisabeth
Groark, Mikayla Chelsea
Hashem, Josh Jain, Jenna Susan
Linehan, Kiara Angela LoNigro,
Anthony David Macone,
Gianna Rose Macone, Gina
Giovanna Pasquale, Emma
Rose Peacock, Vi Nhat Pham,
Lauren Marie Pozark, Matthew
James Roscoe, Samantha J Szczesny,
Samy Timouyasse, Dominic
Rocco Trabucco, Favio Vreka
and Caitlin Debra Wright.
The University of Massachusetts
Amherst is a worldclass
research institution with
a revolutionary spirit that inspires
our academics to chaluphill
entrance driveway to
school because access road is
to steep, what do you think is
going to happen when you mix
cars, bicycles, buses and pedestrians
and bad weather? It
is glaringly obvious that safety
was not a design priority,
and it will be it is just a matter
of time before someone is seriously
hurt, needlessly. (Note:
The Wakefi eld Traffi c Advisory
Committee did suggest a
sign on the front access driveway
from Hemlock Road stating
“NO PEDESTRIANS”).
I am disappointed that anyone
thinks it is acceptable to
build a $325 million school
with no sidewalk along main
front entrance from Hemlock
Road which is steep, curving
and has no shoulders. This critical
oversight that should not
be allowed! The steep front
driveway connecting Hemlock
to top of hilltop campus will
have guard rails on one side
and a rock fall catchment and
drainage swales on the other
side, that result in pedestrians
and cars on same driveway.
Another real danger that
should not be overlooked is
the real danger to the emotional
well-being of all school
students and employees who
will be subject to many weeks
of massive blasting of bedrock
while they are in school.
Of course, the Voc states they
will do everything safely and
will be closely monitored by all
parties, with an expert explosive
contractor. While the HILLTOP
is blasted the construction
truck traffi c down the access
road through the current
student parking lot to delivlenge
convention, rethink expectations,
and work tirelessly
to change the world. Our
students are the artists, scientists,
change-makers and leaders
of tomorrow whose commitment
to their community
drives them forward. Our faculty
members are leaders in their
fields, working on groundbreaking
research with graduate
and undergraduate students
across all academic disciplines
to redefi ne what’s possible.
With programs for fulland
part-time students both
on and off campus, interdisciplinary
majors, a robust online
learning community, the intimate
Commonwealth Honors
College and connections with
the Five College Consortium,
UMass Amherst has opportunities
for every student to reshape
their world.
er blasted rock to be crushed
behind the current school is
also a safety issue hazard for
students and summer visitors
to Breakheart. The disruption
to academic and emotional
well-being of school users
will be clearly jeopardized by
the extensive and prolonged
blasting of very hard bedrock
fi lled hilltop within 150 yards
of school.
The last danger I want to
point out are the 600’+ cliff s
being made around new
school when they blast the
top 35’ off the HILLTOP to build
new school. These cliffs require
15’ rock fall catchment
zones below. Why create this
hazardous situation when
much better and less expensive
options exist?
Why build school on subpar,
functionally compromised
HILLTOP location at
outrageous expense (20% of
school budget is for site prep)
when the Voc already has had
a tragic fatal pedestrian accident
in 2009? Shouldn’t safety
be the top design priority. We
all want a new Voc, but not a
new Voc with multiple significant
inherent safety and accessibility
issues built in that
will destroy the ONLY Forest
Core habitat in Wakefi eld.
The safety of all school users
should be top priority with
safety built in from the start.
Please speak up and let town
offi cials and Voc Supt. DiBarri
know that the safety should
be designed in from the start.
You can also help build a safer
and far more accessible Voc by
visiting the following website
www.nemtforest.org. We can
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money, if we don’t build on the
dangerous and less accessible
HILLTOP location.
Signed,
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Wakefi eld, MA
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2023
WINTER WALLOP: Region gets smacked
with messy mini-nor’easter overnight Thursday
Two days after temperature was 62 degrees,
winter charges back and dumps 4 inches of snow: most snowfall of season so far
By Steve Freker
A
messy mini-Nor’easter
complete with heavy
snow, sleet and cold
rain smacked the Greater Boston
and North Shore region
hard in the early morning
hours Thursday. The late-developing
storm began with a
drastic drop in temperature
into the mid-30s by midday
Wednesday,
followed with a
slushy mix of sleet, rain and
snow up until about 1:00 a.m.
Thursday.
The thermometer went
well below freezing into the
high 20s after midnight, and
heavy snow fell from about
1:00 to 5:00 a.m., dumping up
to four inches of snow in The
Advocate readership area of
Everett, Malden, Revere and
Saugus. This was the largest
snowfall in one day in the entire
2022-2023 winter to date,
in what has been a relatively
mild season. Just two days
earlier on Presidents’ Day,
SLOPPY COMMUTE: The timing of the mini-nor’easter made
for a sloppy commute in Malden Square and around the region
on Thursday morning.
Monday, Boston set a new
February 20 high temperature
record of 63 degrees.
All the elements of weather
combined to make it into
a mini-nor’easter and sloppy,
slow commute for the hunNeed
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dreds of thousands of residents
making their way to
work early Thursday morning.
The snow continued in
light fashion for several hours
more during the day on Thursday,
with not much accumulation.
City and town DPW crews
and hired help were out in the
early morning hours clearing
the streets and roadways and
spreading salt and sand for
safety. State and local police
reported a number of motor
vehicle accidents both on the
highways and in cities and
towns due to the hazardous
travel conditions and timing
of the storm.
The local communities did
Everett, MA
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dodge a potential major issue
which could have posed
a problem, as all public and
parochial schools in the region
were closed this week
due to February School Vacation.
While personnel were
out clearing the snow from
the school facilities as usual
during the storm, it most
defi nitely would have been
a “Snow Day” for schools due
to the timing of the snow and
other weather conditions. It
would have been highly unlikely
the snow could have
been cleared around sidewalks
and on the stairs of
the schools to make for safe
passage.
The weather pattern is forecast
to remain sketchy — and
more wintry! — for the rest of
the month, into March. Colder,
more seasonal temperatures
in the high 30s and low
40s are sticking around for
the next two weeks, accordGETTING
SOME DISTANCE: Malden High School Head Custodian
Steve Krzywicki got some distance on the snowblower
early Thursday morning.
Longtime Malden Public Schools employee Jovan Walcott was
out in front of Malden High School Thursday morning clearing
the main entrance stairs. (Advocate Photos)
ing to Accuweather, with more
snow expected mid-to-late
week, March 1-3, and again,
snow is forecast for March 8-10
as Ole Man Winter apparently
wants to get his last blasts in
before spring offi cially arrives
on Sunday, March 20.
׉	 7cassandra://jiqi_ybjF21N0Cpbnx9aDci9EAGKsWRS4811Dymrslg,5`̰ cj!>׉ETHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2023
Page 7
A Saturday Afternoon Celebration of the Arts
Saugus Public Library hosts a classical music concert tomorrow and a reception for a photographer
(Editor’s Note: The following
info is from a press release issued
by the Saugus Public Library
this week.)
W
e will be celebrating
the arts on Saturday,
February 25,
starting at 2:00 p.m. at the
Saugus Public Library. We are
hosting a classical music concert
with Rasa String Quartet
in the Community Room and
a reception for photographer
Eileen Estrich in the 1st Floor
Reading Room.
Formed in 2019, the Boston-based
Rasa String Quartet
consists of violinists Maura
Shawn Scanlin and Kiyoshi
Hayashi, violist Emma Powell
and cellist Mina Kim, who are
graduates of the New England
Conservatory, the Shepherd
School of Music and Yale University.
Rasa String Quartet is
the 2022-23 ensemble in residence
at Phillips Exeter Academy
(New Hampshire) and won
the 2022 Associazione Europea
Di Musica E Comunicazione
International Chamber
Music Competition (Italy), the
2021 Music Teachers National
Association Chamber Music
Competition (Atlanta) and the
2020 Chamber Music Yellow
Springs Competition (Ohio).
Inspired by the connection
between music and storytelling
at the heart of folk traditions,
Rasa String Quartet creates
engaging and fresh programs
that are approachable
for a wide range of people, are
inspired by a variety of diff erent
cultures and highlight unknown
composers.
The Rasa String Quartet will
play from 2:00 to 3:00 p.m. The
program for their concert:
Jerod Impichchaachaaha’
Tate: “Pisachi” (Reveal).
Astor Piazzolla: “Four Seasons
of Buenos Aires — Primavera
Porteña, Invierno Porteño”
Komitas Vardapet: “Selections
From Armenian Miniatures”:
•“Oh
Nazan...”
• “The Red Shawl”
• “Song of the Little Partridge”
• “Girl’s Dance” (Shoushiki)
• “Stalk Along!” (Qele Qele)
Sergei Prokofiev: String
Quartet No. 2 in F Major “Kabardinian.”
Eileen
Estrich is a Revere
Rasa String Quartet will perform a concert tomorrow (Saturday, Feb. 25) from 2 to 3 p.m. in the
Community Room of the Saugus Public Library. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate)
photographer who captures
the beauty of local beaches
and environs. “Ebee” says she
is “inspired daily by the natural
beauty along the shoreline.
Photography has been a constant
interest for me since I fi rst
used a 35 mm at 18 years old,
and I still delight in capturing
the natural beauty of light &
color, on textures and shapes,
especially along a beach.
“This appreciation of nature’s
gifts also applies to my
other artistic works in charcoal,
pastels, pen & ink, acrylics,
stationary, and ceramics.
My happiness grows when I
can bring a smile to someone
with a gift of beauty, as with a
piece of art.
“My memberships include
GALA (Galleries At Lynn
Arts), The Greater Lynn Photographic
Association, Lynn
Shutter Society, Revere Community
Arts Partnership, and
Marblehead Arts Association.
It was an honor to have been
asked to exhibit large prints
of historic Lynn in their esteemed
Lynn Public Library,
and Lynn City Hall, which
have been there for a few
years now.
SATURDAY AFTERNOON | SEE PAGE 16
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2023
Saugus Over Coff ee
Precinct 1 resident offers some advice for making better use
of Stackpole Field as recreational resource
By Mark E. Vogler
The TV logo for “Saugus Over Coff ee.” (Courtesy photo to The
Saugus Advocate by SaugusTV)
M
ark Stevens, a retired
letter carrier
who worked for the
U.S. Postal Service in Saugus
for 30 years has a recommendation
on how to get the best
use of Stackpole Field.
“Probably the best thing we
could do would be just tear
down those big iron stands,
and open it up view wise,”
Stevens told Precinct 1 Town
Meeting members last month
during a “Saugus Over Coff ee”
forum held in the Community
Room of The Saugus Public
Library.
“I think people who are using
the park would feel more
secure. Just cosmetically, it
would look a lot nicer to remove
those stands that would
probably never be used again.
The more space we have, the
better off ,” he said.
Stevens was one of a handful
of residents to off er advice
on how to improve the precinct.
He got to drink coff ee
and talk to Precinct 1 Town
Meeting Members Susan C.
Dunn and Mark J. Bell.
The forum was the fi rst in a
series of 10 that are being cosponsored
by The Saugus Advocate
and The Saugus Public
Library.
Precinct 3 will be the focus
of the next forum, which
is set for 6:30 p.m. March 13
in the Community Room of
the Saugus Public Library. All
town residents are welcome
to attend, but Precinct 1 residents
will be given the chance
to question and off er advice
to their Town Meeting members,
who talk about what they
consider to be priority issues.
Those who attend will get to
drink coff ee with their Town
Meeting members.
During the Jan. 30 forum,
Precinct 5 Town Meeting
Member Ronald M. Wallace, a
former resident of Precinct 1,
off ered some advice on how
to make the precinct better.
Wallace suggested it was
time to clean up Appleton’s
Pulpit, a historic landmark on
Appleton Street that he called
“a mess.”
“I think it would be awesome
if we had a cleanup day
there. Maybe give it a little respect,”
he said.
Wallace grew up in Precinct
1, attended the Roby School,
skated on Prankers Pond and
enjoyed concerts at the Saugus
Ironworks National Historic
Site. He said his mother still
lives in the precinct.
He also suggested that Precinct
1 residents should monitor
future development in the
Mill District.
He said development “is
Saugus Public Library Director Alan Thibeault gives the introductions
at a recent fi lming of “Saugus Over Coff ee.” The
forum is cosponsored by The Saugus Public Library and The
Saugus Advocate. (Courtesy photo by Saugus TV to The Saugus
Advocate)
really going to change that
neighborhood … 222 Central
St. could potentially be a ton
of apartments.”
Regarding potential uses of
the old Roby School Administration,
Margaret Young said
she would like to see a restaurant
or “a little ole breakfast
place there.”
Town Meeting Member Bell
said he’s concerned about a
potential dumping problem at
Stackpole Field. He mentioned
a bumper discarded there.
“We don’t want to see Stackpole
Field turned into a place
where people throw things,”
Bell said.
“One person mentioned to
me that they’d like to see it
turned into Veterans housing
because it’s right near the
Legion Post. And people said
they’d like to see it turned into
a restaurant,” he said.
Bell provided an inspirational
moment to shy people who
lack confi dence in their ability
to speak out on issues publicly.
“I’m a lifelong stutterer,” Bell
said.
“I’ve stuttered since I was 3
or 4, and I still stutter to this
day. Those people who don’t
want to get into Town Meeting
or any kind of public policy,
if I can do it, you can do it.
PRECINCT 1 | SEE PAGE 16
׉	 7cassandra://K6MJ9AlxH0dmM0_AwSy4CQSPUZNGgoB6nXmGHBMjEY8*`̰ cj!>!׉ETHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2023
Page 9
Saugus Over Coff ee
Cliftondale Revitalization draws heavy discussion during Precinct 2 forum
Precinct 2 Town Meeting Members (left to right) Peter A. Rossetti, Jr., Christopher P. Riley, Joseph
John Vecchione IV and Christine M. Moreschi (Courtesy photo by SaugusTV to The Saugus Advocate)
By Mark E. Vogler
T
he fi ve Town Meeting
members who represent
Precinct 2 cited
a number of issues of concern
to their neighborhood,
but Cliftondale Revitalization
drew more discussion than
the rest of them did collectively.
Cliftondale Revitalization
clearly dominated the
50-minute forum — “Saugus
Over Coffee” — held in the
Community Room of the Saugus
Public Library last week
(Feb. 13). This was the second
in a series of 10 monthly
programs fi lmed by Saugus
TV that will air now through
October.
“We do have a unique position
that we are less than
a mile from places like Overlook
Ridge and some of the
other big developments and
big developments that are
coming,” veteran Town Meeting
Member Peter A. Rossetti,
Jr. said.
“At some point, Caddy Farm
will be developed. When
that gets developed, there’s
going to be a lot of apartments.
Right now, Overlook
Ridge has approximately
3,000 apartments. Granada
Highlands has a number of
apartments,” he said.
“For those people, it’s actually
easier to come to Cliftondale
than it is to go to the
North Shore Shopping Center
or some of the other stores
that are local. The traffi c is just
horrendous for them, especially
around dinnertime. So,
we have some unique opportunities,”
he said.
Board of Selectmen Vice
Chair Debra Panetta praised
Precinct 2’s Town Meeting
members for their active involvement
with issues that
affect the precinct and the
town. “Clearly, all fi ve of you
are incredibly passionate not
just about your precinct and
the people who live in your
precinct, but about the whole
town and how Precinct 2 fi ts
into our town,” Panetta told
the Town Meeting members.
“All of you spoke eloquently
tonight,” she said.
But as active as this group
of Town Meeting members
has been, some of the members
noted the citizen apathy
and lack of participation
in their precinct.
The Town Meeting members
from Precinct 2 outnumbered
the Precinct 2 citizens
5-2, and most of the dozen
people in the audience were
from other precincts. Precinct
1 Town Meeting Member
Sue Palomba and Precinct
9 Town Meeting Member
Judith Worthley attended
the forum.
“All of us here were elected
by default,” Town Meeting
Member Joe Vecchione said,
noting that there were only
five candidates running for
the fi ve Town Meeting seats
in the town elections two
years ago. In four of the precincts
(1, 2, 6 and 7), only fi ve
Town Meeting candidates ran
for offi ce.
“There wasn’t a lot of competition.
I like competition.
My fi rst term in 2019, eight
people were running for fi ve
spots,” he said.
Town Meeting Member
Robert J. Camuso, Jr. chided
the public for not getting
more involved with their
town government. “A lot of
people like to complain about
how things are done in this
town,” Camuso said.
“Instead of complaining on
Facebook, get involved. That’s
the biggest problem in this
community. It’s easy to be a
keyboard warrior. Go to the
meetings and get involved.
The more people involved,
the better this community is
going to be,” he said.
Panetta credited Camuso
with being at “the forefront”
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of the Caddy Farm issue for
more than a decade.
While noting that Cliftondale
Revitalization is an important
issue for the precinct,
Town Meeting Member
Christine M. Moreschi said, “I
am against more housing in
Cliftondale. I think we have
enough down there.”
“I just think we need to
think of the older generation
where they can walk there
rather than drive down to
Route 1,” she said.
Town Meeting Member
Christopher P. Riley said traffi
c is a big concern. The town
needs to make the streets and
sidewalks safer.
He said that improvements
at the Anna Parker Playground
are needed and also
agreed that Caddy Farm is a
big issue.
Vecchione said he would
like to see eff orts to incentivize
property owners in Cliftondale
Square to invest.
He also noted that there are
“plenty of code issues in Cliftondale
related to the Americans
with Disabilities Act.”
“ADA is a huge problem in
Cliftondale Square,” he said.
Selectman Corinne Riley, a
Precinct 2 resident, shared an
observation she’s made since
childhood days. “When I was
a kid, there were fi ve houses
on the street and there were
six cars,” she said.
“Now, there are 11 houses
on the street and 11 cars. It’s
all about people having multiple
automobiles where they
live,” she said.
TOP ISSUES
Cliftondale Revitalization,
neighborhood concerns
about public safety, traffic
congestion, need for playground
upgrades, making
sure the Caddy Farm development
in Revere is monitored
so that traffi c doesn’t
cut through local streets, lack
of interest in candidates running
for Town Meeting.
WE'RE
OPEN!
8 Norwood Street, Everett
(617) 387-9810
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2023
Saugus Gardens in the Winter
Here’s what’s blooming in town this week to make your walks more enjoyable
By Laura Eisener
A
mong the most popular
indoor plants these
days are succulents
and cacti. Part of the reason
is that they are very forgiving
to those who forget to water
their plants! Having evolved
in desert or near desert environments,
they have developed
many adaptations,
including an ability to store
moisture in their cells. While
some of the many species
in each category can flower
in home conditions, owners
often enjoy their shapes
and textures in every season
whether or not they are in
bloom. Some have fuzzy or
waxy surfaces that help prevent
evaporation of moisture
in arid conditions. Leaves may
be any shade of green, but
some are variegated with
white or yellow, or have reddish
undertones to their foliage.
They are sometimes
grown as individuals in their
own pots, but it is also possible
to plant several diff erent
succulents that like similar
growing conditions together
in a large tray so they look
like a tapestry of diff erent colors
and textures. The popularity
of succulents these days
goes far beyond actual plants
though, since it is common to
fi nd plastic versions of many
popular succulent varieties
available as decorations.
One popular succulent for
indoor gardens is a small rosette
of fuzzy leaves called
plush plant, chenille plant
or Mexican hens and chickens
(Echeveria pulvinata). The
leaves are green but sometimes
have reddish hairs at
the edges. There are many
species in the Echeveria genus,
but all are succulents
with a rosette arrangement
of foliage and come from
South and Central America or
Mexico. Quite a few of these
have become popular indoor
plants because of their colors,
shapes and textures, and like
most succulents they don’t
need frequent watering. They
do like bright light, such as a
sunny window, and seem to
do well in average home temperatures.
Plush plant is especially
popular because of
its warm and fuzzy appearance.
Like hens and chickens
(Sempervivum spp.), which
many gardeners are familiar
with outdoors in our climate,
the plant develops taller
stems when it blooms. In
the case of the plush plant,
the fl owers are orange. Unlike
the hens and chickens,
Accustomed to blooming in winter, snowdrops close in cold and snowy weather, but can reopen
when the daytime temperatures warm up. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate by Laura Eisener)
however, they can produce
fl owers many times — hens
and chickens rarely recover
completely from blooming
although there are usually
younger off shoots nearby
that can continue to live
in the garden.
Members of the cactus family
(Cactaceae) originated in
the Americas. There are almost
2,000 species, spread
across over 100 genera, in this
prickly family. This family includes
the tall saguaro (Carnegiea
gigantea), a native of
Arizona, Mexico and southern
California, which is famously
represented in Saugus by the
old Hilltop Steakhouse sign
on Route 1. Most have small
sharp spines, which help protect
them from predators and
may also help collect dew in
arid climates.
There are many cactus species
that can be low-maintenance
house plants. One
of these is dragonfruit, also
known as white fl eshed pitahaya,
queen of the night
and strawberry pear (Selenicereus
undatus, formerly Hylocereus
undatus). While you
may expect dragonfruit to
more often be found in the
produce aisle, it also makes
a very charming houseplant.
Dragonfruit is native to Mexico
and the Honduras and is
cultivated both for its tasty
fruit and as an ornamental
climbing vine. The stems
have soft ribs and very small
spines. Cactus fan Monique
Todd is especially charmed
by this plant’s texture. “Pet
it!” she commanded, and indeed
the plant is surprisingly
soft, pliable and pettable,
and even the spines are not
especially sharp. Outdoors,
dragonfruit is only hardy
to zone 10, but it can climb
as tall as 30 feet on a supporting
structure or plant.
The vines can produce fragrant
night blooming white
fl owers, which develop into
the bright pinkish fruit with
white fl esh and edible black
seeds that can be found in
markets.
Outdoors, there are indications
that spring is on its
way despite snow and cold
snaps. Unlike last year, when I
did not see any until March, it
seems the “fair maids of February”
are raising their heads
before the month is over.
These very early bulbs — usually
called snowdrops (Galanthus
nivalis) — are sometimes
overlooked because they are
the same color as the snow.
The group shown above has
spread over several decades
in the garden of Allen Humphries
in Cliftondale. The
small white drooping fl owers
can bloom any time between
December and March,
depending on weather, and
may continue to bloom for
several weeks until temperatures
become too warm.
Editor’s Note: Laura Eisener
The fuzzy succulent plush plant growing in a whimsical pot on
my countertop demands very little attention. (Courtesy photo
to The Saugus Advocate by Laura Eisener)
A dragonfruit’s marble-look
ceramic pot seems right at
home on the granite countertop.
(Courtesy photo to The Saugus
Advocate by Laura Eisener)
This young dragonfruit growing
indoors has soft and fl exible
stems. (Courtesy photo to
The Saugus Advocate by Laura
Eisener)
is a landscape design consultant
who helps homeowners
with landscape design, plant
selection and placement of
trees and shrubs, as well as perennials.
She is a member of
the Saugus Garden Club and
offered to write a series of articles
about “what’s blooming
in town” shortly after the outbreak
of the COVID-19 pandemic.
She was inspired after
seeing so many people taking
up walking.
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Page 11
Saugus girls battle unbeaten Rams
in preparation for playoff s
By Greg Phipps
C
oncluding the
regular season
with consecutive
games against the undefeated
Lynn Classical
Rams, the Saugus
High School girls’ basketball
team may have
received a worthwhile
prep course for the upcoming
Div. 3 playoff
tournament. The Sachems
lost both contests
but showed their
grit in Wednesday’s second
meeting at the Saugus
gym, losing a hardfought
48-42 aff air.
The Rams got out of
the gate fast by pulling
away to an 18-7
lead early in the second
quarter. Saugus struggled
on off ense in the
fi rst half before eventually
settling down and
coming back to take a
lead in the second half.
“It was a back-and-forth
game. We were playing
well, I thought [in
the fi rst half] but were
just unable to fi nish our
shots,” said Saugus Head
Coach Mark Schruender.
Three-pointers from
Saugus’s Ashleen Escobar connected for 11 points
in Wednesday’s loss to Lynn Classical in the regular-season
fi nale.
Saugus’s Ana Silva nailed a big three-pointer in
Wednesday’s game against Lynn Classical.
Peyton DiBiasio (a teamhigh
14 points) and Jessica
Bremberg (seven
points) helped the Sachems
climb to within
four at the break. The
second half mainly consisted
of both teams
trading hoops and the
lead. At various stages
of the fi nal 16 minutes,
a basket by Ashleen Escobar
(11 points) and a
hoop from beyond the
arc from Ana Silva gave
the hosts the lead.
Schruender said the
Rams, who went 20-0 in
the regular season, always
came back with an
answer any time the Sachems
were able to pull
in front. “They made the
last run of the game and
were able to prevail,” he
pointed out.
Classical defeated
the Sachems by a 47-28
margin in the fi rst meeting
between the two
squads last Thursday.
Wednesday’s loss left
Saugus with a 13-7 overall
regular-season record.
The Sachems, who
have no senior players
on this year’s team,
fi nished as co-champions
of the Northeastern
Conference’s Lynch
Division.
The state’s Div. 3 power
rankings had Saugus
as the 22nd ranked team
with the playoff brackets
— and the Sachems
fi rst-round opponent —
yet to be determined as
of midweek. Schruender
said Saugus could see
tourney action as early
as later this week.
Sachem boys ready for playoff s after win at Triton
C
By Greg Phipps
oming off a modest twogame
slide, the Saugus High
School boys’ basketball team
was determined to finish the 202223
regular season on a winning note
before entering this year’s state Div.
3 playoff tournament. The Sachems
succeeded in earning a 51-48 win
last Friday night at Triton to close
out the regular campaign. But it
wasn’t easy.
Despite jumping on top 6-2 early,
the Sachems found themselves
on the short end of a 28-18 margin
at halftime. Saugus was able to regain
its offensive punch in the second
half by outscoring the hosts by
12 in the third quarter and entering
the final eight minutes with a twopoint
edge.
It took a clutch steal and lay in by
Max Anajjar in the final 15 seconds
of the game to give the Sachems a
three-point lead they would not relinquish.
“Triton called a timeout
[but] our defense was able to get the
Isaiah Rodriguez chipped in with nine
points in last Friday’s victory at Triton.
stop,” observed Saugus Head Coach
Joe Bertrand. “[Triton] really picked
it up on defense, slowing us down
as we went into halftime. We made
the adjustment to a full court press
[in the second half] and our speed
caused some turnovers.”
Josh Osawe had another productive
outing by finishing with a teamhigh
19 points for the Sachems. Ben
Tapia-Gately added 16 and Isaiah
Rodriguez chimed in with nine.
The win gave Saugus a fi rst-place
finish in the Northeastern Conference’s
Lynch Division, the fi rst fi nish
of its kind for Saugus boys’ basketball
since 1991. The victory also left Saugus
with a 13-7 overall record heading
into the postseason tourney. Bertrand
said that, as of Tuesday, the team was
ranked 12th in the Div. 3 power rankings,
meaning the Sachems would
likely host a round-of-32 playoff game
at the Saugus gym.
Bertrand added that another set of
rankings are going to be released on
Friday. The fi nal playoff brackets will
be determined on Saturday. “We are
going to work hard in practice and focus
on sharpening our skills until we
know who our opponent will be,” the
coach said about his team’s postseason
preparation.
Senior captain Ben Tapia-Gately
scored 16 points in last Friday’s regular-season
fi nale at Triton.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2023
The Sounds of Saugus
By Mark E. Vogler
Good Morning, Saugus!
As my deadline approached
yesterday, Jimmy Carter, the
39th president of the United
States, was still hanging on in
hospice as he was nearing the
end of life at age 98.
During my younger days as
a reporter, I got to meet Jimmy
Carter when he was running for
president. Well, sort of. I actually
got roughed up by Secret Service
bodyguards while trying to
interview the then-Democratic
presidential candidate.
Back in the fall of 1976, I was
working in Williamsburg, Va.,
for a local paper that was covering
the debate. While hanging
around outside a hotel, I noticed
Jimmy Carter walk out to
remove luggage from a car and
greet his wife, Rosalyn. I rushed
toward him, with notebook and
pen in hand. One of the goons
wearing a suit and sunglasses
pushed me to the ground, spoiling
my chance to grill Jimmy.
I had a legitimate reporter’s
pass issued to me by the Newport
News Daily Press. But the
Secret Service got spooked because
I had a diff erent colored
pass than the one worn by a
group of photographers.
My brief encounter with Carter
was a pleasant one. He struck
me as a well-intentioned, decent
man. Perhaps the best human
being to ever serve in the
White House.
Carter and his wife Rosalyn
spent about 40 years working
as volunteers alongside Habitat
for Humanity. During that time,
they helped to build and fi x up
more than 4,000 homes in 14 different
countries. A remarkable
retirement for mankind.
Saugus over Coff ee
I have been disappointed at
the low turnout of Saugus residents
during the fi rst two “Saugus
Over Coff ee” forums. These
forums give residents in the
precinct that is being spotlighted
a chance to meet their Town
Meeting members and ask them
questions about their priorities
and top issues in their precinct.
But even if just a handful of people
show up, these forums are
being videotaped by SaugusTV
—Contest—
CONTEST SKETCH OF THE WEEK
for future airing on local cable
television.
How popular are they?
I checked yesterday to see
how much interest they have
drawn. The fi rst forum on Jan.30,
cosponsored by The Saugus Advocate
and Saugus Public Library,
featuring Precinct 1, drew
106 viewers, according to the
Saugus TV website. The Precinct
2 forum on Feb. 13 attracted 65
viewers. That’s a lot more than
the number of people who show
up in the Community Room at
the library. But I expect that the
in-person meetings will pick up
as we draw closer to the town
elections in the fall.
Stay tuned for more information
as “Saugus Over Coffee”
continues.
Here is the remaining schedule:
Precinct 3 — March 13; Precinct
4 — April 17; Precinct 5 —
May 8; Precinct 6 — June 12; Precinct
7 — July 10; Precinct 8 —
Aug. 14; Precinct 9 — Sept. 11;
Precinct 10 — Oct. 23.
Please check with The Saugus
Advocate or library for any changes
in dates. Residents can check
the programming guide on the
station’s website (www.saugustv.
org) for dates and times. A video
of the forum will also be available
for viewing on the station’s vimeo
page within a day or two after
the event (www.vimeo.com/
saugustelevision).
The Breakheart/Benjamin
Newhall Johnson legacy
On Wednesday, March 8, the
Saugus Historical Society will
hold a program on Breakheart
Reservation and the Legacy of
Benjamin Newhall Johnson. It
will be held at 30 Main St., the
headquarters of the Saugus Historical
Society and Saugus Cable
Television. Doors open at 6:45
p.m. and light refreshments will
be served. The meeting will begin
at 7 p.m. The Saugus Historical
Society’s team of experts
on Johnson and Breakheart include
Brett Power, head ranger
of Breakheart Reservation;
Doug Heath and Alison Simcox,
who count among their books
“Breakheart Reservation” and
“Murder at Breakheart Hill Farm”;
and Ron Wallace, who has recently
restored Johnson’s tombstone
at Riverside Cemetery.
Benjamin Newhall Johnson
GUESS WHO GOT SKETCHED! Got an idea who was sketched
this week? If you do, please email your name, address and
the answer to mvoge@comcast.net or leave a phone message
at 978-683-7773. Anyone who answers correctly between
now and Tuesday at noon qualifi es to have their name put
in a green Boston Red Sox hat with a chance to be selected
as the winner of a $10 gift certifi cate, compliments of JIMMY’S
STEER HOUSE at 114 Broadway (Rt. 1 North) in Saugus.
(Courtesy illustration to The Saugus Advocate by a Saugonian who
goes by the name of “The Sketch Artist”)
was born on June 19, 1856, in
Lynn but grew up in Saugus. He
became a prominent Lynn businessman
and in 1891 teamed
up with two other Lynn businessmen
to operate a hunting
lodge in the woods of Saugus.
They moved a log building
from Maine to the site and
created two ponds and a rhododendron
garden on the site.
In 1881 he had married Ida Oliver
of Saugus, and they had
two children. After her death
he married Virginia Vernon Newhall
and they had three children.
His second wife also predeceased
him. Johnson died on
February 19, 1932. The 600-acre
wooded site of their hunting
lodge was sold by the heirs to
the Metropolitan District Commission,
and it eventually became
the state park operated
by the Department of Conservation
and Recreation that we
know as Breakheart Reservation.
Breakheart has been a popular
recreational site in Saugus
for generations with its popular
beach and wooded scenic trails.
The park has endured last summer’s
drought, fi res and other
challenges, but the citizens look
forward to enjoying it for generations
to come.
Seeking Hall of Fame
nominations
Do you know of a former Saugus
High School athlete who deserves
to be inducted into the
Saugus High School Sports Hall
of Fame? If you do, nominations
are open for the Hall of Fame
from now until March 28.
Previously, there have been
263 athletes inducted since the
Hall of Fame’s inception (1987).
The hall’s fi rst class included
Arthur Spinney, a Saugus High
football great who played for
two NFL championship teams
with the Baltimore Colts in 1958
and 1959.
A Saugus High athlete has to
be out of school for at least 10
years before he or she can be
nominated. Anyone looking to
nominate a former Saugus High
athlete can mail their letter of
nomination to Barbara Wall at 28
Pleasant St., Saugus, MA 01906.
Library joins Boston Bruins
PJ Drive
The Saugus Public Library and
the Boston Bruins are teammates
again. From now through
March 15, the library will be accepting
donations of pajamas
for the Boston Bruins PJ Drive
to benefi t the Wonderfund of
the Department of Children and
Families (DCF) and Cradles to
Crayons. The Saugus Public Library’s
goal is to collect 100 pairs
of new pajamas, according to
Amy Melton, Head of Children’s
Services. Many of the pajamas
donated will benefi t local homeless
kids and teens, she said.
Melton said there are two
ways to donate: This year you
can donate either by making a
monetary donation directly to
the pajama drive, or by shopping
for them yourself. The library
is collecting new pairs of w
pajamas for children and teens:
size 2T through adult medium.
The library asks that people not
donate holiday pajamas.
The most-needed sizes:
• GIRLS: 5/6 — 18/20 or adult S
• BOYS: 7/8 — 18/20 or adult M
There is a collection bin at the
library.
SAVE 2023 Environmental
Scholarship
Saugus Action Volunteers for
the Environment (SAVE) is very
pleased to announce that it is
off ering a $1,000 Environmental
Scholarship to Saugus residents
of the Graduating Class
of 2023 or to Saugus residents
r
who are currently fi rst-year college
attendees. This is a scholarship
for students who will be
or are attending a two/four-year
college or other educational institution
and pursuing a degree
in an area that would positively
impact the environment.
Applicants can download the
SAVE 2023 Environmental Scholarship
Application Form found
at www.saugusSAVE.org
Together with the completed
application form, please include
a separate sheet (identifi ed with
your initials only) that provides
a brief summary of any of your
activities relating to the environment
and describe how you
feel your career choice will positively
impact the environment.
Please email (preferred method)
your application — no later than
midnight on April 21, 2023 — to:
SAVE Co-President Ann Devlin at
adevlin@aisle10.net or mail your
r
application (postmarked by
April 21, 2023) to: SAVE, P.O. Box
908, Saugus, MA 01906. Again,
the deadline to submit your application
is April 21, 2023.
Comedy at the Kowloon
The Kowloon Restaurant has
its latest comedy lineup set, and
it will feature Mike Donovan today
(Friday, Feb. 24) at 8 p.m.
Here’s next month’s lineup:
March 3: PAUL D’ANGELO — 8
p.m. — $20.
March 10: COREY RODRIGUES
— 8 p.m. — $20.
March 24: JIMMY DUNN —
8 p.m. — $20.
Tickets are $20 and show time
is 8 p.m. at the Kowloon Restaurant
(Route 1 North in Saugus).
For tickets, call the Kowloon
Restaurant at 781-233-0077.
Bingo is back!
The Kowloon Restaurant announces
Bingo every Wednesday
from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Hong
Kong Lounge. Prizes will be given
away each week with a grand
prize set at the fi nale in March.
A full Chinese gourmet spread
is available during Bingo — fea׉	 7cassandra://VTnQpS3NfPlwQmI1GcEIVGb4cAqbo3TJ8vxqrHtP32Q'`̰ cj!>%׉E%THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2023
Page 13
turing pupu platters, egg rolls,
crab Rangoons, Saugus Wings,
General Gau’s chicken, lobster
sauce, fried scallops, lo mein, moo
shi pork, salt and pepper calamari,
and sushi — along with a full bar
menu, including the signature
mai tais and scorpion bowls.
Celebrating
the Saugus High band
The Saugus Historical Society
is planning its spring season of
programs and a new exhibit that
will open in March. The exhibit
will feature Saugus High School
Band memorabilia from several
time periods and some Color
Day posters recently donated
to the society. Anyone who was
a band member at any time, or
who had an ancestor who was a
band member, is invited to share
some of their memories. Please
call Saugus Historical Society
President Laura Eisener at 781231-5988
to share your story.
“We are looking for some anecdotes
and stories from people
involved in Saugus High School
Band at any time,” Laura says.
“The Historical Society is putting
together a display of band
uniforms, parents’ jackets, photos
etc. which will be ready by
the fi rst meeting in the
Spring,” she said.
Help this Eagle fl y
It sounds like Jake D’Eon of
Saugus Boy Scout Troop 62
has a great public service project
in pursuit of his Eagle Scout
Badge — scouting’s highest
honor. His project involves the
construction of eight new picnic
tables that are handicap accessible
at Pinetops picnic area
at Breakheart Reservation.
“My project will improve access
for people with disabilities
to this area of Breakheart,”
Jake wrote in a recent letter to
selectmen, inviting them to attend
a special fundraiser.
Jake is also appealing to the
public for a little help in getting
the supplies he needs for
his project: lumber, paint and
other materials.
If you want to help Jake out
while also enjoying a night
of a few good laughs, then
check out the Pizza and Comedy
Show in the Giggles Comedy
Club set for Prince Pizzeria
on March 9 at 6:30 p.m. There
are basketball raffl es for adults.
Tickets cost $35. All proceeds
go to Jake’s picnic table project.
Check it out!
Jake, 16, has spent a decade
in scouting, beginning with the
local Cub Scout pack.
Being an Eagle Scout myself
(Troop 26 of Swansea, Mass.,
back in 1968), I love to shine a
public spotlight on these outstanding
young men who accomplish
something achieved
by about only six percent of the
boys involved in scouting.
I interviewed Jake about
four years ago when he was a
12-year-old tenderfoot scout
competing in a Pinewood Derby
race. And I remember him
expressing high aspirations
to one day become an Eagle
Scout. Well, this project should
help put him in that elite category
that will serve him well as
he embarks on his college education
and his chosen career.
It was in scouting that I
earned a journalism merit
badge for articles I wrote about
troop activities for local newspapers,
and that planted the
seeds for a 50-year career as a
newspaperman.
“Quite an impressive young
man,” Selectmen Jeffrey Cicolini
said at Tuesday night’s
meeting. He hailed Jake’s Eagle
Scout public service project —
“a Herculean eff ort.”
Food Pantry
The Saugus United Parish
Food Pantry is open today (Friday,
Feb. 17) from 9:30-11 a.m.
We have a winner!
Congratulations to Jean Lyons
for making the right identifi
cation in last week’s “Guess
Who Got Sketched” contest.
Jean was the lone reader to answer
correctly after the sketch
had readers stumped the previous
week. Jean wins a $10
gift certificate, compliments
of JIMMY’S STEER HOUSE at
114 Broadway (Rt. 1 North) in
Saugus. Here’s the correct answer
offered by the person
who goes by the name of The
Sketch Artist:
“The answer to the mystery
Valentine’s Series sketch that
had readers stumped two weeks
ago is Ron and Karen Tamulonis!
“Ron and Karen are celebrating
over 56 years of marriage
and still counting! Both longtime
Saugonians call Saugus
their home going on 58-plus
years. Ron is a Veteran and
served as a past member of the
Conservation Commission. Ron
retired from the Dept. Of Environmental
Engineering.
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 14
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2023
THE SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 13
“Ron said he has enjoyed a-lot
WHY IRREVOCABLE TRUSTS ARE
MOST OFTEN A BETTER CHOICE
OVER LEGAL LIFE ESTATES
B
y placing your home,
rental property or other
assets into an irrevocable
trust, the fi ve year look
back period will begin. Five
years later, the assets in the
irrevocable Trust will not be
countable for MassHealth eligibility
purposes. Furthermore,
not only is probate
avoided upon the Settlor’s
death (i.e. the creator of the
trust), but probate would
also be avoided if a child/
benefi ciary were to die prior
to the Settlor (i.e. parent).
The predeceased child’s children
or even grandchildren
would become a beneficiary
of the trust and that
child’s benefi cial interest in
the trust would escape the
probate process. If that child
leaves minor children behind,
the trustee would follow
the terms of the trust
and pay for items such as
medical expenses, educational
expenses, house expenses,
etc.
If, on the other hand, a
parent chooses to deed the
home or rental property to
his or her children directly,
while reserving a life estate,
and one of the children
were to predecease the parent,
that child’s remainder interest
in that property would
be part of his or her probate
estate. As estate planners,
we try to avoid the probate
process whenever possible
for many reasons, such
as cost and time delays. This
could present a problem
many years down the road
if no one takes steps to probate
the estate of the predeceased
child.
Furthermore, in a legal life
estate situation, the parent
would need the consent of
the child who has a remainder
interest in the property
in order to sell the property.
With an irrevocable trust, the
child has no current ownership
interest. The trustee is
free to sell the real estate any
time without the consent of
the child. If the trust is drafted
as a grantor-type trust,
the capital gain exclusion of
$500,000 on the sale of the
principal residence will still
be aff orded to the Settlor of
the trust. If it was rental property
that was sold, the entire
capital gain would still be reported
by the Settlor on his
or her tax return. The children
would not be reporting
any of the capital gains
transactions on their own
of tent camping. Karen spent
many years as a Cub Scout Den
Mother. She worked at Oaklandvale
School, a shop called ‘Lady
Grace’ and was front desk Customer
Service Representative
at ‘Partner’s in Rehabilitation.’
(These were all Saugus Businesses.)
“Ron
and Karen are seen in
tax returns. The trust would
actually fi le a tax return as a
grantor-type trust and then
issue a grantor letter to the
Settlor (also referred to as a
Grantor).
With a legal life estate, the
capital gain on the sale of
a home or rental property
would have to be allocated
to the parent who reserved
the life estate and the children
who are the remaindermen.
The computation for
IRS purposes is based on the
Book Aleph table and the
IRS Section 7520 interest
rates. For MassHealth purposes,
at least for now, the
computation is based upon
the Social Security POMS tables.
Hopefully, MassHealth
will agree to use the IRS tables
as the IRS tables are
much more favorable to the
life tenant if the home were
to be sold,
for example, as
less of the net sales proceeds
will be placed back on
the table for the life tenant
only to be included as a
countable asset for MassHealth
eligibility purposes.
With an irrevocable trust,
if the home or rental property
is sold and converted to
cash, the cash is safe inside
the irrevocable trust. There
is no risk of the trust assets
becoming countable. If the
parent decides to serve as
trustee and there is a trust
provision allowing for use
and occupancy of any real
estate held in trust, then
any real estate abatement
off ered by the city or town
will remain intact. It will not
be lost due to placing the
home into trust. The trust
must be absolutely clear
that there can be no principal
distributions to the Settlor
under any circumstances
and that the Trustee must
strictly adhere to the terms
of the trust and comply with
each and every fiduciary
duty owed to the remaindermen
of the Trust.
many places together participating
in, and supporting events.
Many of the same events where
years ago they were volunteers
and Leaders. I asked this humble
couple what a few of their secrets
were for their marriage success
and if they had any words
of advice for Newlyweds. They
gave these tips that they themselves
do:
• “listening to each other
• “Never go to bed angry
• “respect each of their wishes
“Thankyou
“Wishing you many more happy
years together!
“Yours Truly,
“The Sketch Artist”
Another “Zoom” session on
Cliftondale Wednesday
Precinct 2 Town Meeting
Member Joe Vecchione has
scheduled another public informational
meeting and public
feedback session for his proposed
zoning of Cliftondale
Square for Wednesday (March
1) via Zoom videoconferencing.
This one is set for 7:30 p.m.
Here are some excerpts from
an email Joe put out earlier this
week:
“Thank you all who attended
last month’s session regarding
the article I intend to put
forth in this year’s ATM to create
a zoning overlay for Cliftondale
Square in order to incentivize
and provide the required fl exibility
needed to realistically revitalize
Cliftondale Square. This
overlay is a result of 8 years of
work studying multiple reports
procured over 40 years, a yearlong
eff ort with the Cliftondale
Revitalization Committee, attending
Main Streets America
conferences, and studying the
square day in and day out. As a
Precinct 2 representative, an architect,
and mostly, a resident
of the area, I will do everything I
can to get this passed come May
as I want to see this neighborhood
begin to turn around after
decades of decline and inaction.”
“From this meeting, given the
ATM warrant closes on April 3rd,
I will begin formalizing the fi nal
draft of the overlay which will
be available to you all to review
well before the ATM. Additionally,
I will be reaching out to you all
throughout March to solicit your
opinions, concerns, thoughts
and insights ahead of the ATM. I
want everyone to have a chance
to ask questions and provide
feedback ahead of the ATM. The
last meeting yielded some great
feedback, much of which I will
incorporate. I hope many of you
can attend on March 1st to give
your constructive feedback. Instead
of coming to the meeting
saying ‘I don’t support this
because’ — let’s work to make
this something we can support
through a collaborative eff ort.
“As we approach Session 2, I
did want to clarify a few misconceptions
that I’ve seen get out
there in recent weeks whether
through the paper or social
media. I’ll be happy to elaborate
more on March 1st as well with
more detail:
“1. I am not proposing residential
only development or
simply want ‘low income housing’.
Commercial use will be required
on the ground fl oor and
the housing component is not
there just to be there. It is to provide
fl exibility and economic viability
to property owners looking
to improve their property to
provide a steady source of revenue
in their development given
the high demand for housing.
Small scale, low rise infi ll development
has become very popular,
especially in Downtown
Districts. I recently assisted on a
three-story mixed use infi ll development
in Downtown Melrose
at 524-530 Main. See for
yourself what we could potentially
attract if we allow that
fl exibility in our zoning to simply
allow what we used to build:
https://www.bergmeyer.com/
work/mixed-use-developmentat-524-530-main-street.
This was
not a developer funded project.
It was the owner of a local construction
company funding and
constructing the project.
“2. I’m not proposing ‘high
rise, high density’ apartments.
The maximum allowed stories
by right will be 3 (no change to
the current B-1 district or nearby
Waterfront mixed-use district)
in line with the scale of the
rest of Cliftondale Square which
is predominantly three story (including
surrounding residences).
This regulation also permits
by code economically effi cient
Type 5 wood frame construction
which can be utilized in low rise,
infi ll development of three stories
or less and under 50 feet. In
unique cases where there are dimensional
issues on site based
on dimensional regulations (setbacks,
driveways, irregular plots)
with a 4/5 vote, the BOS may
grant a special permit allowing
4 stories, 50 feet, consistent with
the amendments passed overwhelmingly
by Town Meeting
last May and still well within the
context of Cliftondale Square as
the heights of multistory buildings
(including residential plots
vary from 35-63 ft in height. The
proposed density is 20 units per
acre which is consistent town
wide per Town Meeting’s vote
last May. The current average
density in Cliftondale is roughly
22 units per acre. As no property
in Cliftondale is close to an
acre, no development will actually
contain 20 units. I have done
a calculation of the total number
of possible units in the proposed
boundaries along with a calculation
of what would realistically
be developed and the overall
potential impact from both
a traffi c and congestion standpoint
given the existing infrastructure
and traffi c generation
produced by small scale infill
development would be negligible
to what exists today. I think
the benefi ts this overlay brings
far outweigh the fear of compounded
congestion which will
likely not be a signifi cant factor
here. I can provide specifi cs on
March 1st.
“3. I am not proposing a zero
parking minimum and long
term parkers will not be utilizing
municipal lots, private
lots or street parking to satisfy
their minimum parking requirements.
Long term parking
for residents and employees will
be required within any development
calculated per unit and
per employee / square footage
depending on the use. The purpose
and intent is to provide a
realistic parking count that satisfi
es long term parking for residents
and employees while allowing
for short term visitors
and business patrons to park in
municipal lots and on streets.
The fi nal parking count is at the
discretion of the Planning Board
as is typical. For example, the
Planning Board is requesting
5 more parking spots than required
by the zoning bylaw at
180 Central given the context of
the area. Parking needs to be approached
on a case by case basis
given the variation of property
and existing conditions.
“4. Please feel free to contact
me prior or after March 1st with
any comments, questions, or
clarifi cations. I very much look
forward to speaking with all of
you and urge everyone to keep
an open mind when it comes to
the potential opportunities that
exist in Cliftondale if we give it
the fl exibility in needs to thrive
People interested in the latest
“Zoom” session can type into
https://bergmeyer.zoom.us/
j/81492967217?pwd=RmRiVVhTNWs4QU12R2l4QSs1YVRBQT09
The
meeting ID is 814 9296
7217. The Passcode is 666546.
Or call Joe on his cell phone at:
781-520-9859.
“Shout Outs”
We didn’t receive any reader
nominations for “shout outs” this
week. And it is always a shame
whenever that happens, because
there are always worthy
׉	 7cassandra://o_0LcEsqOoOjknjfasJkvnV-norzjs6v1op_siVq158%g`̰ cj!>'׉E*"THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2023
Page 15
candidates — particularly unsung
heroes — to cast a public
spotlight on.
So, the Editor’s Choice this
week goes to a newborn, sixth
generation Saugonian — Leila
Capano Cross — who was
born on Feb. 21, weighing in at 8
pounds and 4 ounces. She is the
second child of Mike and Gabriela
Cross. Her sister, Luciana, was
born on March 16, 2021. They
are both sixth-generation Saugonians
and the granddaughters
of Board of Selectmen Chair
Anthony Cogliano, who received
congratulations from his selectmen
colleagues when the announcement
was made at Tuesday
night’s meeting.
“Nothing I like better than
being a grandfather and now I
have another one,” Cogliano told
his board members.
Excessive recesses
If you look at the video on the
Saugus TV website for Tuesday
night’s Board of Selectmen’s
meeting, it looked like the meeting
lasted just under 50 minutes.
But it actually took an hour
and 38 minutes to complete the
meeting because of three recesses
that were called, which
totaled about 48 minutes.
With an otherwise light agenda,
the meeting nearly doubled
timewise because the board was
at the mercy of time slots for several
public hearings. Board of Selectmen
Chair Anthony Cogliano
suggested the board would
be better off in eliminating specifi
c time slots on the agenda.
Want to “Shout Out”
a fellow Saugonian?
This is an opportunity for our
paper’s readers to single out —
in a brief mention — remarkable
acts or achievements by
Saugus residents or an act of
kindness or a nice gesture. Just
send an email (mvoge@comcast.
net) with a mention in the subject
line of “An Extra Shout Out.”
No more than a paragraph; anything
longer might lend itself to
a story and/or a photo.
Legion breakfasts
on Friday mornings
Saugus American Legion Post
210 hosts its popular breakfasts
from 8-9 a.m. on Fridays. The Legion
requests a donation of $8
from those who are looking for
a delicious meal at Legion Hall.
The Legion also welcomes veterans
who can’t aff ord the meal
to enjoy a free breakfast. Bon
appétit!
Shakespeare play hits
Saugus stage
The Theatre Company of Saugus
(TCS) presents “The Comedy
of Errors,” one of William Shakespeare’s
most popular plays.
Performances are the fi rst two
weekends of March 2023.
“The Comedy of Errors” is a
farce about two sets of identical
twins who were separated in
a shipwreck shortly after birth.
Now adults, Antipholus of Syracuse
and his servant, Dromio
of Syracuse, arrive in the town
of Ephesus, which happens to
be where their long-lost twins,
Antipholus of Ephesus and Dromio
of Ephesus, live. When the
Syracusan twins encounter the
friends and families of their siblings,
a series of mishaps based
on mistaken identity result in
wrongful beatings, a near-seduction,
the arrest of the Ephesian
twins and false accusations
of infi delity, theft, madness and
demonic possession. Eventually
it all gets sorted out!
TCS is pleased to have
Waltham resident Francine Davis
as the director of the show
and a troupe of talented actors
from all over the North Shore of
Massachusetts. TCS welcomes
some performers new to the
group: Reading resident Bryan
Deroo asAntipholus of Syracuse,
Ryan Marchant from Arlington
as Antipholus of Ephesus, Amanda
Flicop of Malden as Adriana,
David Lee Vincent of Newburyport
as the Duke, Roland
“Boot” Boutwell of Winchester as
Egeon, Shelove Duperior of Malden
as the Courtesan and Olga
Karasik-Updike of Newbury as
the Foreign Merchant. TCS welcomes
some returning veterans
of its stage to the show: Billy
Jenkins of Stoneham as Dromio
of Ephesus, Vi Patch of Wakefi
eld asDromio of Syracuse, John
Leonard of Andover as the Map
Seller, Kaycee Renee Wilson of
Brighton asLuciana, Kathy Rapino
of Saugus as the Abbess, Larry
Segel of Winthrop as Angelo and
Sherri Wilcauskas of Middleton
as Nell. Lauren Lyon of Natick is
the stage manager.
Performances of “The Comedy
of Errors” are on March 3-4-5
and 10-11-12, 2023, on Fridays
and Saturdays at 8 p.m. and at
Sunday matinees at 2 p.m. Tickets
purchased at the door are
$22-$24. Tickets purchased in
advance are $19-$21 — online
at TCSaugus.org/tickets.
The venue is the American
Legion Post 210 at 44 Taylor
St. in Saugus, Mass. The performance
space is not wheelchair
accessible, but it does feature a
bar serving alcoholic and soft
drinks. Snacks and raffle tickets
are available for purchase
before the show and during intermission.
For more information,
see the TCS website at TCSaugus.org.
Compost/Recycling
DropOff
Site open tomorrow
The Town of Saugus Compost/Recycling
Drop-Off Site
is closed for the winter season.
But the site will reopen for recycling,
weather permitting, on
Saturday, March 18, 2023, from
8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Please contact
Scott Brazis, Director of Solid
Waste/Recycling, at 781-2314036
with any questions.
by Jim Miller
What’s happening at the
Saugus Public Library
For schoolchildren looking
for interesting projects and programs
to participate in this fall,
there’s plenty to do at the Saugus
Public Library. There are
some very good programs offered
for grownups, too.
Join our Teen Advisory
Board: first Tuesday of each
month at 6 p.m. in the Teen
Room; Grades 5 and up; meet
with the Teen Librarian once a
month to talk about what you’d
like for programs and materials
at the library. Your opinion matters!
No registration required.
Snacks provided! sauguspubliclibrary.org
— 781-231-4168.
A neat teen group called
Manga & Anime Club: The
Manga & Anime Club, from all
accounts, is a lot of fun for kids
in Grades 6 and up. So, if you
are curious, check out the Teen
Room. Chat with friends! Make
crafts! Try Japanese snacks! Club
meetings will continue on Saturdays
through May from 10-11
a.m. They will be held on March
4, April 1 and May 13. Please
sign up in advance; call 781-2314168
or stop by the Reference
Desk (https://www.sauguspubliclibrary.org/new-manga-animeclub.../)
—/ Saugus Public Library,
295 Central St., Saugus, Mass.)
Adult Coloring Group: Come
relax with the continuing Adult
Coloring Group. It’s a great opportunity
to take time to unwind,
be creative and have fun
— no experience necessary!
There are pencils and coloring
pages ready and waiting.
See you there! Space is limited;
please call 781-231-4168 x 3106
to register. When: Wednesday,
March 8, at 10 a.m. Where: Saugus
Public Library, 295 Central
St., Saugus, Brooks Room on the
second fl oor.
First Baptist Church
presents “Can We Talk…”
First Baptist Church Pastor Leroy
Mahoney invites troubled
people to join others in a special
program called “Can We Talk …
Community conversations on
Trauma and Healing” the fi rst
Thursday of every month from
6 to 7 p.m. at Rev. Isaac Mitchell
Jr. Fellowship Hall (105 Main St.
in Saugus). “Join us as we gather
in community to share our
stories, thoughts and feelings
about whatever you are going
through,” Rev. Mahoney states in
a written announcement.
“As always, it is a safe space
to come together in community,”
he says.
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 16
Could You Have a Thyroid
Problem and Not Know It?
Dear Savvy Senior,
What are the symptoms
of thyroid disease? I’ve been
dealing with a number of
health issues over the past few
years, and a friend of mine recently
suggested I get my thyroid
checked because it might
be causing my problems.
Almost 66
What to Know
The thyroid is a small butterfl
y-shaped gland located
at the base of your neck that
has a huge job. It produces
hormones (called T3 and
T4) that help regulate the
rate of many of your body’s
activities, from how quickly
you burn calories to how fast
your heart beats. It also infl
uences the function of the
brain, liver, kidneys and skin.
If the gland is underactive
and doesn’t produce
enough thyroid hormones, it
causes body systems to slow
down. If it’s overactive, and
churns out too much thyroid,
it has the opposite effect,
speeding up the body’s
processes.
The symptoms for an
underactive thyroid (also
known as hypothyroidism)
– the most common thyroid
disorder in older adults – will
vary but may include fatigue
and weakness, unexplained
weight gain, increased sensitivity
to cold, constipation,
joint pain, a puff y face,
hoarseness, thinning hair,
muscle stiffness, dry skin
and depression. Some patients
may even develop an
enlarged thyroid (goiter) at
the base of the neck. However,
in older adults, it can
cause other symptoms like
memory impairment, loss of
appetite, weight loss, falls or
even incontinence.
And the symptoms of an
overactive thyroid (or hyperthyroidism)
may include
a rapid heart rate, anxiety, irritability,
fatigue, insomnia,
increased appetite, weight
loss, tremors of the hand,
frequent bowel movements,
sweating, as well as an enlarged
thyroid gland. Too
much thyroid can also cause
atrial fi brillation, aff ect blood
pressure and decrease bone
density, which increases the
risk of osteoporosis.
Those with the greatest
risk of developing thyroid
disorders are women who
have a family history of the
disease. Other factors that
can trigger thyroid problems
include: autoimmune
diseases like Hashimoto’s or
Graves disease; thyroid surgery;
radiation treatments
to the neck or upper chest;
and certain medications including
interferon alpha and
interleukin-2 cancer medications,
amiodarone heart
medication and lithium for
bipolar disorder.
Get Tested
If you have any of the
aforementioned symptoms,
or if you’ve had previous
thyroid problems or notice
a lump in the base of your
neck, ask your doctor to
check your thyroid levels.
The TSH (thyroid-stimulating
hormone) blood test is used
to diagnosis thyroid disorders
but depending on what
they fi nd, additional blood
tests may be necessary.
If you are diagnosed with
a thyroid problem, it’s easily
treated. Standard treatment
for hypothyroidism
involves daily use of the
synthetic thyroid hormone
levothyroxine (Levothroid,
Synthroid and others), which
is an oral medication that restores
adequate hormone
levels.
And treatments for hyperthyroidism
may include
an anti-thyroid medication
such as methimazole
and propylthiouracil, which
blocks the production of
thyroid hormones. Another
option is radioactive iodine,
which is taken orally
and destroys the overactive
thyroid cells and causes the
gland to shrink. But this can
leave the thyroid unable to
produce any hormone and
it’s likely that you’ll eventually
become hypothyroid and
need to start taking thyroid
medication.
For more information on
thyroid disorders, visit the
American Thyroid Association
at Thyroid.org.
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 “The Savvy Senior” book.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2023
THE SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 15
Scholarship available
to Saugus High students
Greater Lynn Senior Services
Left to right, retired postal worker Mark Stevens shares his views with Town Meeting Members
Mark J. Bell and Susan C. Dunn during a “Saugus Over Coff ee” forum last month. (Saugus
Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
PRECINCT 1 | FROM PAGE 8
Please don’t be intimidated
by it,” he said.
Town Meeting Member
Dunn is a lifelong Saugus resident
who worked for four
town managers in 23 years
before retiring. She said she
got involved with Town Meeting
to give back to her hometown.
“We’re
working to make
Saugus what it should be,” she
said of the role of her and others
in Town Meeting.
Dunn said she shared
many of the same views as
Bell about what the precinct’s
most pressing challenges
are.
Dunn stressed that it was
important for citizens in Precinct
1 to work through their
Town Meeting memes to address
important issues in
their neighborhood.
“When we start to have
Town Meeting, let us know
how you feel, because if we
don’t hear anything, we vote
by our hearts and what we
think is right for the town,”
Dunn said.
“We’d like to know your
opinion. Because unless we
hear, we might not think of
it,” she said.
Town Meeting Members
of Precinct 1
Susan C. Dunn 781-233-7844
Anthony Roger Arone 781443-4650
Christopher
Jones 617-8519554
Mark
J. Bell 781-454-8210
Sue Palomba 617-877-4553
TOP ISSUES
Keeping an eye on potential
harmful development in the
Central Street Mill area, protecting
what’s left of Prankers
Pond, considering possible reuses
of the Roby School Administration
Building, the future
of Stackpole Field
(GLSS) is accepting applications
from high school seniors
through the Lique Human Services
Scholarship. Two $5,000
scholarships will be awarded to
students who have an interest
in or are considering a career in
human services and who have
made an impact in their community
or the world through
community service. The Lique
Human Services Scholarship
will be awarded to two seniors
who attend one of the eight
high schools located in GLSS’
service area — including Saugus
High School.
The scholarship is named in
memory of Vince Lique, the
Agency’s long-time Executive
Director, who devoted his career
to helping others, particularly
vulnerable senior citizens
and people of all ages with disabilities,
demanding that all
people be treated with dignity
and respect.
“Vince’s legacy is fi rmly rooted
in his compassion for people.
He measured success by the
quality of his service to and advocacy
for others,” said Kathryn
C. Burns, GLSS’ Chief Executive
Offi cer. “I believe in Vince’s theory
that one’s individual success
is directly related to the benefi
ts received by those around
us. The Lique Human Services
scholarship honors the man
and his service by encouraging
others to do the same.”
Applications are available
through each high school’s
guidance offi ce or can be completed
online at www.glssnet/LiqueScholarship.
Completed applications
are due on or before
Friday, April 7.
A fl oral sample of Eileen Estrich’s photography; the Saugus Public Library will host a reception
for her tomorrow (Saturday, Feb. 25) from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Reading Room. (Courtesy
photo to The Saugus Advocate)
SATURDAY AFTERNOON | FROM PAGE 7
“Now it is an honor to share
these beautiful images with
the Saugus Public Library.”
Ebee’s reception will take
place from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. in
the Reading Room. Come listen
to some excellent music
and join other art lovers enjoying
images of local beauty.
Complimentary light refreshments
will be available. Both
events are free and open to
the public.
Healthy Students-Healthy
Saugus
(Editor’s Note: The following
info is from an announcement
submitted by Julie Cicolini, a
member of the Board of Directors
for Healthy Students-Healthy
Saugus.)
Who we are: Healthy Students-Healthy
Saugus (HS2)
is a nonprofi t group of volunteers
who are helping to offset
food insecurity in households.
HS2 provides students/
families who enroll in the program
a supply of nutritious
food for when school lunches
and breakfasts are unavailable
to them on weekends.
How HS2 can help you: HS2
Revere photographer Eileen Estrich loves to shoot beach scenes like this one. The Saugus
Public Library will host a reception for her tomorrow (Saturday, Feb. 25) from 2 to 4 p.m. in
the Reading Room. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate)
bags are distributed at Saugus
Public schools on Fridays to take
home. Bags include such items
as peanut butter, canned meals/
soups/tuna/vegetables, pasta,
fruit cups, cereal, oatmeal, goldfi
sh, pretzels and granola bars.
All food is provided to children
free of charge. It is our hope
these resources will support the
health, behavior and achievement
of every student who participates.
To sign up go here to
complete online form: https://
forms.gle/gmMGguycSHBdziuE9
Want to partner with us: We
would love to partner with
organizations, sports teams,
youth groups, PTOs, businesses
and individuals to assist in
feeding students of Saugus. To
learn more about how you can
partner with us, visit the Healthy
Students-Healthy Saugus Facebook
page or email us at HS2Saugus@gmail.com
HS2
relies on donations to
create take-home bags for a
weekend full of meals. Checks
can also be sent directly to:
Salem Five C/O Healthy Students-Healthy
Saugus, 855-5
Broadway, Saugus, MA 01906.
Online donations can also be
made at https://givebutter.com/
HealthySaugus
About The Saugus Advocate
We welcome press releases,
news announcements, freelance
articles and courtesy photos
from the community. Our
deadline is noon Wednesday. If
you have a story idea or an article
or photo to submit, please
email me at mvoge@comcast.
net or leave a message at 978683-7773.
Let us become your
hometown newspaper. The
Saugus Advocate is available in
the Saugus Public Library, the
Saugus Senior Center, Saugus
Town Hall, local convenience
stores and restaurants throughout
town.
Let’s hear it!
Got an idea, passing thought
or gripe you would like to share
with The Saugus Advocate? I’m ?
always interested in your feedback.
It’s been six and a half
years since I began work at The
Saugus Advocate. I’m always interested
in hearing readers’ suggestions
for possible stories or
good candidates for “The Advocate
Asks” interview of the
week. Feel free to email me at
mvoge@comcast.net.
Do you have some interesting
views on an issue that you
want to express to the community?
Submit your idea. If I like it,
we can meet for a 15- to 20-minute
interview over a hot drink at
a local coff ee shop. And I’ll buy
the coff ee or tea. Or, if you prefer
to continue practicing social
distancing and be interviewed
from the safety of your home
on the phone or via email, I will
provide that option to you as
the nation recovers from the
Coronavirus crisis.
If it’s a nice day, my preferred
site for a coff ee and interview
would be the picnic area of the
Saugus Iron Works National Historic
Site.
׉	 7cassandra://KIzWpoNaYGf4VY_IEGuwohg2pU6A1jm_bnINZ81gl44&1`̰ cj!>)׉E!THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2023
Page 17
banned Galileo Galilei from
teaching what?
9.
In what country did
1.
On Feb. 24, 1799,
“midnight rider” William Dawes
died; he rode to what town
to alert residents that British
troops would march into the
countryside?
2. According to
Guinness World Records, what
is unusual about the eyelashes
of Coco, a “newfypoo”
(Newfoundland/poodle cross)?
3. In Alaska what
is the special meaning of
“sourdough”?
4. Reportedly, many Civil
War veterans were affected
with Soldier’s Disease, which
was what?
5.
On Feb. 25, 1870,
Hiram Rhodes Revels became
the fi rst African American in
the U.S. Senate; what state
did he represent: Illinois,
Massachusetts or Mississippi?
6.
Where did the fi rst
retail specialty pushcart
program in the United States
start in 1976?
7. What American sports
event has the most betting?
8.
On Feb. 26, 1616,
the Roman Catholic Church
the Giant Omelette Festival
organized by the Knights of
the Giant Omelette originate?
10. Do bananas grow on
trees?
11.
decided that Athens would
become a “Sister City” to what
city that was once called the
“Athens of America”?
16. What NBA player
has the most all-time regularseason
points?
17.
On Feb. 27, 1807, what
author of “Tales of a Wayside
Inn” was born?
12. In what sport would
you fi nd professional teams
named Avalanche and
Lightning?
13. How are “Shed A Little
Light,” “Happy Birthday” and
“Why (The King Of Love Is
Dead)” similar?
14.
On Feb. 28, 2013,
who became the fi rst Pope to
resign since 1415?
15. Last year it was
RON’S OIL
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On March 1, 2021,
Massachusetts eased some
restrictions on what?
18. What painter (of
“Whistler’s Mother”) brought a
libel suit that was to bankrupt
himself and send his critic,
John Ruskin, into a severe
breakdown?
19. What is the name of
the sport in which teams slide
stones on ice toward a target?
20.
On March 2, 1904,
Dr. Seuss was born in what
Massachusetts city?
ANSWERS
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We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
781 233 4446
1. Lexington (Dawes is not famous for
sounding the alarm due to the popular
Longfellow poem “Paul Revere’s Ride.”)
2. They are the longest eyelashes ever
found on a dog (seven inches).
3. Someone who has lived in Alaska for
several winters
4. Addiction related to amputation
5. Mississippi
6. Boston’s Faneuil Hall
7. Super Bowl
8. That the earth orbits the sun
9. France (in Bessières; the first festival
was in the 1970s, and the event has
spread [no pun intended] to other cities)
10. No; the banana plant is a giant herb.
11. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
12. Hockey (teams in Colorado and
Tampa, respectively)
13. They are song tributes to Martin
Luther King, Jr. (performed by James
Taylor, Stevie Wonder and Nina Simone,
respectively)
14. Benedict XVI
15. Boston
16. LeBron James
17. COVID-19
18. James Abbott McNeill Whistler (born
in Lowell, Mass.)
19. Curling
20. Springfield
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2023
THIS WEEK ON SAUGUS TV
Sunday, Feb. 26 from 9—11 p.m. on Channel 8 — “Sunday
Night Stooges” (The Three Stooges).
Monday, Feb. 27 all dayon Channel 8 — “Movie Monday” (classic
movies).
Tuesday, Feb. 28 at 8:30 p.m. on Channel 8 — What’s Cookin’?
With Lamia.
Wednesday, March 1 at 8:30 p.m. on Channel 22 — The Graff
Report.
Thursday, March 2 at 5:30 p.m. on Channel 8 — Jesus Center
for Good News.
Friday, March 3 at 8 p.m. on Channel 8 — Empire Pro Wrestling
with Evo.
Saturday, March 4 at 8:30 p.m. on Channel 22 — SHS Hockey
vs. Winthrop from Feb. 18.
Saugus TV can be seen on Comcast Channels 8, 9 & 22.
***programming may be subject to change without notice***
For complete schedules, please visit www.saugustv.org.
~ HELP WANTED ~
FULL TIME DRIVER WANTED
MONDAY – FRIDAY; 8:00 AM – 4:00 PM
SCRUBBING BOARD
104 HANCOCK ST
EVERETT * 617-387-4838
~ Help Wanted ~
VENDING MACHINE MOVER
$500.00 Signing Bonus for All New Hires
Driver with clean driving record for the greater Boston
area to move and service vending equipment. Must
have a valid driver’s license. Any Electronics experience
is helpful but not necessary. Salary commensurate with
job experience. Our company was established in 1961.
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         
         
. No phone calls please.
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Saugus Middle School Sachems Hockey Team Caps
Successful Season with Playoff Game Tonight
By Meghann Breton
Special to the Saugus Advocate
B
season that landed them in 4th
ack at it again, the Saugus Middle School
hockey team will compete in the playoff s
this weekend. After a successful regular
place overall, the
kids are ready to take it all and come out on top.
The team is comprised of 18 talented kids all
from Saugus. This year’s playoff s will consist of
three games with a single elimination rule. The
fi rst game will be held tonight (Friday, Feb. 24)
at 8:30 p.m. at Hockey Town in Saugus, and it
will be against Gloucester Tonno. The Semifi -
nals will be held tomorrow (Saturday, Feb. 25t
at 8:30 p.m. at the Chelmsford Forum in North
Billerica, Mass., and the Championship game
will be held on Sunday (Feb. 26) at 7:45 p.m. at
the Haverhill Valley Forum.
The Saugus Middle School hockey team is
a part of the Valley Hockey League and consists
of the following kids, all coached by Marc
Magliozzi of Saugus: Demitri Rosales, 11 years
Moving the puck in an earlier game this season
was Johnny O’Donnell, of the Saugus Middle-High
School hockey team. (Courtesy photo
to The Saugus Advocate by Meghann Breton)
old; 12 year olds Cole Alexander, Domenic Magliozzi,
Jack Cuddy, Drew Ferreira and Emmerson
Keefe; 13 year olds Demetri Breton, Cameron
Marchand, James Caruso, Conor Lacey, Louis
Migliore, John Morello, Alex Rinaldi, Dalton
Diozzi, Johnny O’Donnell, Trey Riley and Andre
Rosales; and Jaedyn Encarnacao, 14 years old.
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Page 19
OBITUARIES
John T. Gorman
Of Saugus. Died on Monday,
February 20th at the Briarwood
Rehabilitation and Healthcare
Center in Needham at the age
of 75. He was the husband of
the late Beverly A. (Stagno)
Gorman. Born in Boston, Mr.
Gorman was the son of the late
Richard E. and Mary M. (Walsh)
Gorman. A graduate of Bentley
University, he was retired from
the City of Boston Treasurer’s
Department. John was a member
of the Malden Anglers and
of the choir at St. Margaret’s
Church. He was also a U.S. Army
Vietnam Veteran.
John is survived by his two
sisters, Regina Spadoni and her
husband Edward of Norwood
and Mary-Ellen Trethewey and
her husband Robert of Dedham;
was the loving uncle of
Claire, Lauren, Peter, Erin and
Caitlin and seven great nieces
and nephews; as well as many
other family members friends.
Relatives and friends were invited
to attend visiting hours
in the Bisbee-Porcella Funeral
Home, 549 Lincoln Ave., Saugus
on Thursday. A funeral will
be held from the funeral home
on Friday at 9:30 a.m. followed
by a funeral mass in St. Margaret’s
Church, 431 Lincoln Ave.,
Saugus at 10:30 a.m. Interment
in Woodlawn Cemetery in Everthe
Chestnut Woods Rehabilitation
and Healthcare Center
in Saugus on Tuesday, February
14th. She was the wife of the
late Howard A. Littlefi eld.
Born in Hiratsuka-Mura, Tokyo,
Japan, Mrs. Littlefi eld was
the daughter of the late Chikazo
and Moya (Nakajima) Yoshimura.
Mrs. Littlefi eld is survived by
her brothers and sisters in law
as well as many nieces, nephews
and grand nieces and
nephews.
Relatives and friends were
invited to attend a graveside
Just Listed! OPEN HOUSE
Sun, Feb 26 12-2pm
112 Irving Street, Everett MA 02149
mangorealtyteam.com
38 Main St. Saugus
(781) 558-1091
20 Railroad Ave. Rockport
(978)-999-5408
14 Norwood St, Everett
(781)-558-1091
Boston, MA: East Boston
Location! Would you like to own in
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foyer on the first floor apartment along
with 3 bedrooms. Patio out back,
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Convenient location to bus line, orange
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Saugus
Would you like to own a business in the heart
of East Boston?? Next door to Spinelli's and
direct access to the street. Ideal for business
use with 2 additional levels that offers the 3
bedroom apartment. East Boston is a city
that is thriving with new restaurants, stores,
cafes, and much more. The first floor
commercial space offers a 1/2 bath with
washer and dryer hook up. This building has
3 levels with a beautiful rooftop
deck..Imagine working and living in the same
place. Short walk to everything. Did I
mention that its close to the airport,
transportation, and accessible to the blue
line?? ...849,000
ng with n
c
ng w
ch
h
cial p
nd d ye
n dry
ia space
d
l spa
drye
ac
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er h
men
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ment Ea t Bos
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floor
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Featuring this 1950's, 7 room- 1,512
square foot colonial, located on an
attractive corner lot in a highly desirable
Saugus Center neighborhood. $559,900
For more information call
Peter at 781-820-5690
ett. In lieu of fl owers, donations
in John’s memory may be made
to St. Margaret’s Parish, 431 Lincoln
Ave., Saugus, MA 01906.
Mrs. Eiko (Yoshimura) Littlefi eld
Of Saugus. Age 100, died at
service on Thursday at Riverside
Cemetery, 164 Winter St.,
Saugus. Arrangements by Bisbee-Porcella
Funeral Home.
The Mango Minute
We at MANGO recognize that it is our mission to get
our clients “highest and best” price for their
property. While there may be challenges such as
location and property conditions, there is also one
challenge that the homeowner can overcome prior to
placing their property for sale. That challenge is
clutter. The late comedian George Carlin joked about
America’s obsession with “stuff.” We see whole
industries based on America’s obsession with “stuff.”
Self-storage and junk haulers come to mind.
Cluttered properties are less attractive for potential
buyers. It can be hard to see past the clutter to
visualize the potential and imagine the space as their
own.
Buyers may also be concerned about the cost of
removing and disposing of the clutter and potentially
dangerous items. Our advice to property owners who
plan to sell soon is to begin de-cluttering at least 3
months before offering the property for sale. Waiting
to the last minute can cost you a lot more than the
value of the “stuff” you want to save.
Rentals Available
Saugus, 6 rooms, 3 bedroom for $2900.00
3 bedroom in Peabody $3500.00, washer dryer hookup
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Call Christine at 603-670-3353
Looking for Store front commercial property in Everett?
Call now at 617-877-4553 ask for Sue
Everett, 6 room 3 bedroom with washer, dryer
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Like us on Facebook advocate newspaperFacebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2023
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        
       
     

FOR SALE
FOR SALE- 3 BED 1 BATH, 1500
FT.², COMPLETELY REHABBED.
NEW SIDING, WINDOWS,
KITCHEN, BATHROOM, FLOORS,
PAINT, ROOF. NEW DRIVEWAY
NEW HEAT/AC.SAUGUS $599,900
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
LOOKING TO
BUY OR SELL
CALL
RHONDA
COMBE
CALL HER FOR ALL
YOUR
FOR SALE
NEW CONSTRUCTION
FIVE NEW HOMES FROM
HAMMERTIME CONSTRUCTION.
GET IN SOON AND PICK YOUR
LOT AND YOUR HOME. SAUGUS
STARTING AT $895,000 CALL
ANTHONY FOR DETAILS
857-246-1305
REAL ESTATE NEEDS
781-706-0842
WE ARE HIRING! WE ARE
LOOKING FOR
SOLD
UNDER
CONTRACT
FULL - TIME AGENTS IN
OUR SAUGUS OFFICE.
OFFERING A SIGN ON
BONUS TO QUALIFIED
AGENTS! CALL KEITH
781-389-0791
UNDER CONTRACT
SOLD
UNDER
CONTRACT
FOR SALE
THINKING OF BUYING OR SELLING SOON? CONFUSED ABOUT THE CURRENT
MARKET AND WHAT IS GOING ON WITH INTEREST RATES AND INVENTORY?
WE ARE HERE TO HELP! GIVE US A CALL TODAY!
MOBILE HOME
FOR SALE-BRAND NEW 14 X
52 UNITS. ONLY 2 LEFT!
STAINLESS APPLIANCES AND
FULL SIZE LAUNDRY. 2BED 1
BATH. FINANCING AVAILABLE
WITH 10% DOWN
DANVERS $199,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
FOR RENT
FOR RENT- LOCATED ON THE 2ND
& 3RD FLOOR, THIS 3 BED, 1
BATH RENTAL IS CLOSE TO
DOWNTOWN AND PUBLIC
TRANSPORTATION. HARDWOOD
FLOORING THROUGHOUT. FRONT
AND BACK PORCHES. COIN-OP
LAUNDRY IN THE BASEMENT.
EVERETT $3,050
CALL CHRIS (781) 589-9081
FOR RENT
FOR RENT - 3 ROOM, 1 BED, 1
BATH, 2ND FLOOR UNIT, COIN
LAUNDRY IN BMNT, NO SMOKING.
STORAGE. 2 OFF STREET
PARKING
SAUGUS $2100
CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE- 3 ROOM, 1 BED, 1 BATH NICELY UPDATED HOME WITH
NEW PITCHED ROOF, ELECTRIC, HOT WATER AND MORE.
SAUGUS $119,900
FOR SALE-4 ROOMS, 2 BED, 1 BATH, NEW ROOF AND FURNACE.
DESIRABLE PARK. NEEDS SOME UPDATES. PEABODY $119,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
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