׉?4ׁB!בCט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://whQLcTB1km1KuGsF1-JuZwhsbTLa3NQSpVmSL5bGONg i`)׉	 7cassandra://6fDXFcvWdjO4CS6axmbJqJKVMExGNGcB0pGXb2EcNb0͒E`J׉	 7cassandra://6VM9CbRmA9-sWitX18LZXk0A_8fjFRsdp2hEh7BoAp8-`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://IDi66OKKZWbc5bqhGjurZR3A51yZLiUuuDgCpa8oGGM 5͔n͠cj!>Țנcj!>Ƞ 	ہf9ׁHhttp://www.angelosoil.comׁׁЈנcj!>ȟ &H9ׁHhttp://CarpenitoRealEstate.comׁׁЈנcj!>Ȟ 9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈנcj!>ȝ @|&9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈ׈Ecj!>Ȅ׉ESAUGUS Advocate Online at: www.advocatenews.net
C TE
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CAT
Vol. 25, No. 7 -FREE- www.advocatenews.net Published Every Friday 781-233-4446 Friday, February 17, 2023
FILLING A RESTAURANT VOID
~ The Advocate Asks ~
Paul Delios is back in the restaurant
business with this month’s opening of
Paolo’s; he discusses the Italian restaurant
that East Saugus needed “to fi ll a void”
Editor’s Note: For this week’s
column, we sat down with Paul
Delios, who recently returned
to his roots of running a restaurant.
He opened Paolo’s on Feb.
1, trying to replicate the original
Paolo’s he ran in Charlestown
for several years. He’s the former
president and co-owner of
Kane’s Donuts, a business that
his late dad began about six decades
ago. He talked about his
career as an accomplished chef,
a book called “At The Greek Table”
and some of his recipes. DeLios,
a 1979 Saugus High School
graduate, was born in Lynn, grew
up in Saugus and is a Wakefi eld
resident. He has been married for
25 years to Jean (Johnson) Delios,
who retired as town manager
in Reading. She was previously
town planner in Saugus
(1993-2003). He took courses at
Salem State College, but didn’t
complete his degree. Earlier in
his life, Paul Delios took a course
through the American Quality
Control Society that helped him
get certifi ed as a quality control
engineer in the computer industry.
While living in his hometown,
Delios was active in Saugus local
government, serving on the Conservation
Commission and three
terms as a Town Meeting member
representing Precinct 3.
According to the book that
includes Delios’ recipes, he has
spent his life in the restaurant
and food service industry and
has a talent for creating timeless
Mediterranean recipes, developed
from his family’s deep-rootASKS
| SEE PAGE 2
Saugus native and accomplished chef Paul Delios has gone back to his culinary roots by opening
“a neighborhood restaurant” for East Saugus that specializes in Italian food. Please see inside
for more photos and this week’s “The Advocate Asks.” (Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
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and Laura Eisener’s “Saugus Gardens in the Winter.” (Courtesy
photo to The Saugus Advocate by Laura Eisener)
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, FEbrUAry 17, 2023
ASKS | FROM PAGE 1
ed relationship with food. He
earned his restaurant training
at three restaurants his family
owned in and around Boston, as
well as at his own company : Rosamarina’s
Catering, which began
in 1990. Meze Estiatorio, the
230-seat restaurant he opened
with investors in 2003, became
Boston’s premiere Greek restaurant.
In 2004, he began a professional
relationship with Culinary
Entertainment Group’s Simon
Malls’ “Super Chefs Live!” tour.
He later appeared with Mary Ann
Esposito, host of PBS’ “Ciao Italia”;
Guy Fieri, Jacques Pepin and
Martin Yan. In 2007, he took over
the daily operations of his family’s
donut shop on Lincoln Avenue
in Saugus. Under his management,
Kane’s has consistently
been named one of the nation’s
10 top donut shops by MSNBC,
Bon Appetit magazine and the
Travel Channel’s Donut Paradise.
In 2014, Kane’s expanded with a
second donut shop at International
Place in Boston’s financial
district along the Rose Kennedy
Greenway. In 2009, he teamed up
with Fotios Stamos to publish his
recipes at AtTheGreekTable.com,
leading to the publishing of the
cookbook that bears that name.
Q: When did you launch your
restaurant career?
A: I started working in my
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dad’s restaurant, peeling potatoes
when I was four. But, officially,
it was in 1995. I had a
restaurant in Lynn at the Gannon
Golf Course, and I had the
original Paolo’s in Charlestown,
which started in 1999. And I
opened up Meze Estiatorio in
2003 and it later became Boston’s
premiere Greek restaurant.
Q:
How did you arrive at this
location in Saugus, at 304 Lincoln
Ave., and how long have
you been here?
A: Paolo’s opened up here
officially on Feb. 1. There have
been a handful of establishments
at this location – roast
beef and pizza shops. It dawned
on me that Saugus needed a
good Italian restaurant on this
side of town, so I felt as though
having grown up in East Saugus
that a void needed to be filled.
All too often in today’s day and
age, families have grown up going
out to the chain restaurants
and not experiencing what authentic
cuisines taste like. And
given that I’ve grown up on this
side of Saugus, a part of town
with a rich Italian heritage, I
felt it would be a no-brainer to
open up a restaurant that embraces
and embodies the cuisine
of Italy.
I feel very confident about it
because I know my way around
the Italian kitchen. In 2003, I
was asked by the Italian Culinary
Institute to come and
cook for them in New York City.
I’ve cooked in several different
places and have cooked with a
number of chefs, whether New
York City, Chicago, Naples, Florida,
Los Angeles …any number
of places. The other thing
that made this so easy for me –
I know so many people in Saugus.
Being here in Saugus is always
like having a loved one’s
arms wrapped around you. I
feel very comfortable here, because
it’s where I grew up.
And in the short time we’ve
been open, we’ve already begun
replicating the old menu
of the original Paolo’s, but we’re
also adding to it.
Q: So, what are you cooking
up?
A: We’re doing steak tips, because
it’s more of a North Shore
item. Steak tips grew out of
poverty – basically Italian immigrants
who took lower cuts
of meat and seasoned them
and made them very palatable.
It was more of a North Shore
item. Now it’s popular throughout
New England, but it’s more
popular here; but if you go to
other parts of the country, you
won’t find steak tips.
Q: So, do they still use lower
cuts of meat?
A: It used to be lower cuts
back at its inception. But today
we use sirloin.
Q: Please tell me a little bit
more about what makes Paolo’s
special.
A: We also feature fresh pastas
and pizza. Our friends over
at Lilly’s in Everett make the
pasta for us: Lilly’s at 208 Main
St., Everett.
Q: Please tell me about your
staff.
A: On any given night, there
will be at least 10 people working
here. It could be upwards
of 12.
Q: What is the seating capacity?
A:
It’s 50 people. When we
were in Charlestown, it was 48.
The old Paolo’s is now Monument
Tavern. I worked at the
original Paolo’s in Charlestown
for seven years: from 1999 to
2006. We brought back an old
favorite in Charlestown – lamb
shank – 28 ounces. The bone
probably weighs more ounces.
We have the MVP pork
chop, which is two ribs thick –
served with vinegar peppers,
onions and roasted potatoes.
It’s a classic New England–style
dish. The other dish we’re doing
– a Piedmontese sirloin filet.
It comes from cattle raised
in Italy. It’s served with a piece
of bone marrow, grilled asparagus
and roasted potatoes with
a marsala peppercorn sauce.
We also do a little healthier version
of a Polenta dish, which is
traditionally served with sausage,
but we serve it with grilled
shrimp and caper sauce. It’s a
little more healthier.
Also on the more decadent
side, we have Botto-Botto,
which means bong bong calamari,
that’s drizzled with a
sweet Balsamic vinegar glaze
and garlic aioli. It’s absolutely
delicious.
Q: Please tell me more.
A: We have our Neapolitan
pizzas – 12 inch pizzas. They’re
not wood-fired but bake off
in a gas-powered Heath oven.
We also have salad dressings
available for takeout. We have
our homemade pasta sauces,
whether it be marinara or Bolognese.
Q:
And, what else can you
tell me about the special food
preparation that goes on here?
A: Our focus is to try to use
as much fresh and local ingredients
as possible. This is the
same philosophy I’ve carried
forward in all of the ventures
I’ve had over the years. I truly
believe that we should know
the source of the products and
the supplies. By doing so, it
translates into healthier, more
affordable, quality-oriented
products for the consumer. For
instance, the tomatoes come
from a farm in Maine. I make the
bread fresh every day. And the
pasta is local. We feature Vanilla
ice cream from Richardson’s
with our bread pudding. We
do fresh and local as much as
we can. It’s the best recipe for
success.
Q: What’s your work schedule
like?
A: I’m 62 years old now. At the
donut shop, I was putting in 80
to 90 hours a week. Today, it’s
nine- to ten-hour days six days
a week for about 60 hours total.
We are closed on Sunday. Our
staff consists of eight full-timers
and six part-timers.
Q: What else?
A: The flour is imported from
Italy. The mozzarella is domestic.
Q:
What is your most popular
dish?
A: Our most popular dish is
probably Chicken Bana Stana –
an organic chicken breast with
spinach-prosciutto, with mushrooms,
mozzarella cheese and
roasted potatoes.
Q: What is your second most
favorite dish?
A: Ultimate Chicken Parmigiana.
And our most favorite
pizza is Pepperoni. That cups
up a little when it’s cooked in
the oven. Our most popular
pasta dish is Chicken Broccolini
and Ziti. The broccolini is a
thin broccoli. The second most
popular pasta dish would be
the Shrimp Scampi with Jumbo
Shrimp.
Q: As an accomplished chef,
do you play a key role in the
kitchen?
A: On the weekends, I’m behind
the lines, banging it out.
During the week, I’m in and out,
making sure everything is running
smoothly.
Q: What is your most popular
desert?
A: Bread pudding, followed
by tiramisu.
Q: What are your hours?
A: Five to nine on Monday
through Thursday and 5 to 10
ASKS | SEE PAGE 6
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Page 3
Working With WIN Waste
Court motion alleges Cogliano “forged” signatures on documents in federal court case
By Mark E. Vogler
W
hen WIN Waste Innovations
needed
evidence to defend
itself in a federal lawsuit,
it approached Board of Selectmen
Chair Anthony Cogliano
last summer for help. WIN
asked Cogliano if he could collect
signatures from residents
who lived near the plant who
could testify that they had
experienced no odor, dust
or other problems related to
its trash-to-energy plant on
Route 107.
After contacting the residents
by telephone whom
he believed had no problems
with WIN, Cogliano said, he
filled out the documents and
signed them himself instead
of having the residents sign
them. Later, an attorney representing
WIN asked Cogliano
to have each of the residents
personally sign the declaration,
which said they did not
experience any problems at
the plant.
But a motion filed in U.S. District
Court in Boston last week
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. “Defendant’s hurried effort
to patch up its boondoggle
at the last hour did nothing
to remedy the confusion and
misunderstanding that Defendant’s
misguided solicitation
campaign had wrought,” the
motion alleged. “Defendant’s
Supplemental Declarations
were obtained through misleading,
coercive and abusive
means, and they should accordingly
be excluded.”
A federal judge is expected
to rule on the motion and
determine whether the signatures
obtained by Cogliano
can be used as evidence
to challenge the claims in the
pending court case.
In addition to blocking the
admission of the declarations
as evidence, the motion also
seeks $4,304.25 in out-ofpocket
expenses which were
needed to discover information
on what Cogliano did to
obtain the signatures.
“Plaintiff seeks a very limited,
narrowly tailored and
completely justified sanction
against Wheelabrator for its
unacceptable conduct in employing
a prominent local politician
with conflicts of interest
who procured forged signatures,
that it attempted to
produce as evidence,” the motion
stated.
In an interview this week
with The Saugus Advocate,
Cogliano denied any wrongdoing.
“I still don’t have a problem
with doing this,” Cogliano
said. “But if I had to do it over
again, I probably would not
want to be put in that situation.
To me, it all boils down to
aggravation I don’t need. But I
still don’t think I did anything
unethical, and I have no problem
with that,” he said. “I didn’t
sign anything that I didn’t
have permission to sign. And
I said I would speak to family
and friends. I’m trying to create
a partnership and relationship
with them [WIN]. This
class action lawsuit is a farce.”
But the motion filed in Federal
District Court last week alleged
that the 19 people who
later signed the declarations
were not fully informed about
the ongoing lawsuit, or that
Cogliano was seeking their
testimony for use in an ongoing
civil lawsuit. “Many of the
purported Initial Declarants
never authorized Mr. Cogliano
to sign their name for them, let
alone under penalty of perjury,”
the motion claimed.
“For example, when presented
with his Initial Declaration
for the first time, John Cooper
testified that ‘I didn’t authorize
anyone to sign anything like
this’,” the motion noted.
Craig Serino, a cousin of Saugus
Selectman Michael Serino,
said he didn’t recall authorizing
Cogliano to sign his name
to the Initial Declaration.
In a deposition related to
the recent court motion, Cogliano
branded the Sweetland
lawsuit as “bogus.” “I’ve lived
there my whole life. And outside
of the 70’s, I’ve never had
any problems with anything
from Wheelabrator,” Cogliano
said in his court deposition.
“In the 70’s, we used to get
soot in my pool. They’ve installed
scrubbers there in the
80’s and I’ve never had a problem,
and I own property close
by. I own another piece of
property very close to Wheelabrator,
but I’ve never had an issue
with it,” he said.
Cogliano has been lobbying
hard for several years to create
a special Wheelabrator Subcommittee
because he wanted
to work with Wheelabrator,”
according to court papers.
“For years now, as Co-Chair
of the Wheelabrator Subcommittee,
Mr. Cogliano has been
pushing for a host agreement
that would allow the town to
benefit financially from the
operation of the Wheelabrator
Facility,” court documents
state. It adds that he sees a
Host Community Agreement
with WIN Waste bringing in
“about a million dollars a year
plus.”
“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.
“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.”
Statement From WIN Waste
Innovations
WIN Waste Innovations issued
the following statement
to The Saugus Advocate:
“In connection with a meritless
class action lawsuit, representatives
of WIN Waste approached
Saugus and Revere
WIN WASTE | SEE PAGE 16
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, FEbrUAry 17, 2023
Local residents among Northeast Metro Tech students
rebuilding kiosks for Woburn trails and conservation areas
Advocate Staff Report
W
AKEFIELD – Superintendent
David
DiBarri is pleased
to announce that Northeast
Metro Tech Carpentry students
repaired and rebuilt four
kiosks to welcome visitors to
conservation areas in Woburn.
Gerry
D’Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
Is Your Estate in Order?
Do you have an update Will, Health
Care Proxy or Power of Attorney?
If Not, Please Call for a Free Consultation.
14 Proctor Avenue, Revere
(781) 284-5657
Northeast Metro Tech senior Carpentry students stand with a kiosk they renovated for the
Battle Road Woodlands in Woburn. From left are Nick Iandolo, of Malden; Shane McLaughlin,
of Wakefield; Alexander Bedrosian, of Wakefield; Jason Natareno, of Chelsea; Nick Palladino,
of Revere; Instructor Bobby Calla; Heidi Perlera, of Saugus; Thalia Picon, of Woburn; and Francesco
Guarino, of Saugus. (Courtesy Northeast Metro Tech)
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Sheila makes a PJ donation to the collection bin at Saugus Public
Library. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate by Amy Melton)
T
he 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 benefit the Department of
Children & Families’ Wonderfund
and Cradles to Crayons.
The Saugus Library’s goal
is to collect 100 pairs of new
pajamas, according to Amy
Melton, Head of Children’s
Services. Many of the donated
pajamas will benefit 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 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.
Saugus Public Library
Joins Boston Bruins
PJ Drive
Carpentry students gained
experience repairing, rebuilding
and restoring the kiosks
while working as a team in the
community. Under the direction
of instructors Richard McGinnis,
Robert Jepson, Armen
Khodaverdian and Bobby CalREBUILDING
| SEE PAGE 5
׉	 7cassandra://X8pyj_dwJLYNwjt1A9Q4NqrVdKvIABNz0B2ax8adTCU2D`̰ cj!>Ȉ׉ETHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, FEbrUAry 17, 2023
~ Letter-to-the-Editor ~
Page 5
Sierra Club of Massachusetts expresses concerns over new Voke School site
Dear Editor:
The Sierra Club, Massachusetts
Chapter, is concerned about
the siting of the new Northeast
Metro Tech school at 100 Hemlock
Rd, Wakefi eld, MA. We are
troubled for a number of reasons,
the top three being: environmental
destruction of an important
habitat; building accessibility
and safety; and equity of
the decision-making processes.
From an environmental perspective,
the siting of the new
building in an urban area with
signifi cant habitat and biodiversity
is deeply disturbing.
Having viewed the property
and, more importantly, looked
at the siting alternatives, we
do not understand this choice.
The proposed site contains mature
oak and pine forests, forest
core habitat, and rare species
habitat listed in BioMap3.
Construction of the school
on over 13-acres of rock outcrop
forest will involve removing
over 2000 trees and centuries-old
root systems in water-fi
lled bedrock. Removal of
these trees will impact a vernal
pool cluster, springs, seeps,
ephemeral streams, isolated
and bordering vegetated wetlands
and amphibian migration
pathways. The forested
hilltop is documented Priority
Habitat 1550 […] for Hentz’s
Red-bellied Tiger Beetle and
supports a newly documented
population of state-listed
Eastern Whip-poor-will, in
addition to a number of Species
of Greatest Conservation
Need. Siting a 5-story building
on the hilltop lacking bird-safe
glass and illuminated at night
for adult evening classes will
pose an ongoing risk to birds
and nocturnal wildlife.
We also are concerned about
potentially serious accessibility
and safety issues. The way
we understand this project, it
is not a spatially inclusive design.
For example, due to extreme
elevation diff erence between
the playing fi elds and
REBUILDING | FROM PAGE 4
la, students applied what they
learned in class about framing,
roofi ng, fi nishwork and
setting posts as they worked
on and reinstalled the kiosks.
Rebuilt kiosks are located
at the Battle Road Woodlands,
165 Cambridge Road;
the Tarky School Trail entrance,
225 Russell St.; and
at the Community Gardens
entrance, 96 Lexington St. A
fourth kiosk that is being reparking
lots designated for
students at the base of the hill
and the closest entrance to the
building, there will be over 100
stairs creating a hardship for
many building users.
Furthermore, the north-facing
orientation of the stairs and
the 735 ft ADA ramp will most
likely create icing in the winter
and dangerous conditions.
Additionally, we understand
that this site has not been reviewed
by the Massachusetts
Historical Commission for cultural
signifi cance, despite it being
an area known by the Department
of Conservation and
Recreation (DCR) for archaeological
sensitivity and early Indigenous
sites. At the very least,
this should require an on-location
archaeological survey to
document and mitigate the archaeological
resources that will
otherwise be lost to blasting.
Finally, we question the process
by which this forested hilltop
was selected. We are told
that initially three sites were
under consideration. The current
site was selected because
it had the least impact on athletic
facilities and preserves
space for a future ice rink.
We can appreciate the desire
to ensure optimal (and competitive)
athletic facilities, but
the decision has unrealistically
minimized the consequences
of selecting the hilltop. It is
important to weigh not only
the benefi ts, but also the enormous
negative outcomes for
this choice.
More importantly, this process
should involve all stakeholders
that will be utilizing
and paying for the project.
For example, sending-communities’
disability commissions,
town councils, planning
boards, conservation commissions,
etc., as well as individual
residents in surrounding
areas, should all be aware of
the project and alternatives,
and should have an authentic
voice. It does not appear as
built will be installed later at
the city’s new fi re headquarters.
“A
major part of our teaching
at Northeast Metro Tech
is encouraging students to
use what they are learning to
benefi t their communities because
it’s so valuable for those
communities and the students
alike,” said School Committee
Chairwoman Deborah
Davis, of Woburn. “These Carpentry
students did exactly
that and I congratulate them
on a job well done.”
We’ll be closed Monday, February 20th in observance of the holiday. You can
access your accounts using our ATMs and Online & Mobile Banking. Thank you!
though the public was brought
into this conversation until after
the site was selected, at
which time they were only told
why they should vote “yes.”
In moving forward with this
location, the already high sitework
costs, which now exceed
20% of the building costs,
are likely to go even higher
once blasting begins – funds
that could be better spent on
the school itself. Massachusetts
School Building Authority
(MSBA) reimbursement
only allows for 8% of building
costs going to sitework. It
makes more sense to change
location to one of the other
two locations that also fulfi ll
the District’s educational program
goals than to go ahead
with a potentially catastrophic
project.
Collectively these conditions
not only needlessly destroy sensitive
wildlife habitat, but they
create issues of equity for students,
staff and faculty as well
as the taxpayers who ultimately
pay for this, particularly given
that there are other options. Our
children deserve not only the
best schools that we can provide,
but they are entitled to inherit a
world in which we have intentionally
reduced our impact on
the very ecosystems that sustain
life, including our own.
The Massachusetts Sierra
Club therefore requests that
the School Building Committee
along with the Massachusetts
School Building Authority
(MSBA) and relevant oversight
authorities (i.e. MSBA Board
of Directors), place a moratorium
on this project until such
time that they can conduct a
thorough review and inclusive
stakeholders assessment to ensure
that the broadest set of
needs are met.
Thank you for your consideration.
Deb
Pasternak
State Director
Sierra Club Massachusetts
Chapter
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, FEbrUAry 17, 2023
Two Selectmen question Cogliano’s eff orts to help defend WIN against federal lawsuit
By Mark E. Vogler
A
t least two selectmen say
they find Board of Selectmen
Chair Anthony
Cogliano’s eff orts to help WIN
Waste Innovations to 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
Vice Chair Debra Panetta said
this week.
“I also don’t understand why
he would sign resident names
to the declarations for WIN
Waste. As elected offi cials, residents
should always come fi rst.
As elected offi cials, we should
be held to higher standards,”
she told The Saugus Advocate.
“With this clear confl ict of interest
along with the Class Action
Lawsuit, it would be in
the Town’s best interest for the
Board of Selectmen not to entertain
any additional discussions
of a WIN Waste host agreement,”
she said.
Selectmen were expected
to discuss the Host Community
Agreement (HCA) at next
Tuesday’s meeting, which is
scheduled for 7 p.m. in the second
fl oor conference room at
Town Hall.
The Saugus Advocate reached
out to each of the selectmen for
comment in response to recent
reports of Cogliano acting
as an agent for WIN Waste
and whether it could aff ect the
ongoing talks between selectmen
and WIN Waste on a proposed
HCA.
When reached for comment
this week, Selectman Michael
Serino said he was limited in
what he could say because he
was away on vacation in Florida
and had not yet read the recent
federal court documents.
“I haven’t had the opportunity
to review them yet, but when I
do, I will have more to say,” Serino
said. “From what I’ve heard,
I think it’s a serious situation for
a selectman allegedly going
around forging signatures on
documents in a federal lawsuit,”
he said, referring to the recent
court papers that mentioned
Cogliano.
“His top priority should be
the people of East Saugus. He
should be protecting their interests
and not doing the bidding
for WIN Waste,” he said.
“Of course, I have questions”
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Selectman Jeff Cicolini said he
had reviewed last week’s court
filing and Cogliano’s deposition.
“At this time, I will only
comment on your question if
these matters will impact a potential
community host agreement
with the town,” Cicolini
told The Saugus Advocate.
“Obviously, I do not have all
of the facts at this time to opine
on anything offi cially. I read the
documents and, of course, I
have questions I would like answered,”
Cicolini said.
“However, based on what
I have read thus far, the host
community agreement does
not appear to hinge on the outcome
of the pending class action
lawsuit against WIN. Litigation
against WIN is nothing
new. The lawsuit is ongoing,
and in my opinion, the claims
in the lawsuit do not preclude
me from doing what I was elected
to do in my role as a member
of the Board of Selectmen,”
he said. “That being said, I will
do my research to make certain
I continue to make decisions
that I feel are in the best interest
of the residents of Saugus.
Selectman Corinne Riley declined
comment. “This is a legal
matter which doesn’t concern
the Board of Selectmen. I
wouldn’t feel comfortable making
a comment,” she said.
“A clear confl ict of interest”
Precinct 10 Town Meeting
Member Peter Manoogian, a
former selectman and a longtime
critic of WIN Waste, said
he believes Cogliano’s involvement
with WIN Waste raised
some serious questions in
the public’s mind. “I am in receipt
of Selectman Cogliano’s
deposition and have carefully
read it. It is clear that Selectman
Cogliano has acted
as an agent for WIN by soliciting
statements and allegedly
forging signatures on those
statements all to assist WIN’s
defense in a class action lawsuit
in which WIN is named as
defendant,” Manoogian said.
“This lawsuit, filed by the
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very people he is elected to
represent, has occurred concurrent
to his eff orts to fi nalize
a Host Community Agreement
with WIN that would reASKS
| FROM PAGE 2
on Fridays and Saturdays.
Q: Do you have any longtime
people on your kitchen
staff ?
A: I’ve got one guy who has
been with me from the original
restaurant.
Q: Do you have any loyal
followers from the original
sult in 20 more years of ash disposal,”
Manoogian said. “This is
a clear confl ict of interest and
should not be tolerated by his
fellow Selectmen, and in particular
Selectman Cicolini and
Selectman Riley, or the residents
of Saugus. One must
wonder what other dealings
Selectman Cogliano has or
has had with license holders,
would be marijuana establishments,
developers, and others
seeking permits and approvals
for projects such as multi-story
apartment buildings up and
down Route 1.”
Selectmen last September
approved an HCA with WIN
Waste Innovations that would
enable the company to extend
the life of the ash landfi
ll adjacent to its trash-to-energy
plant on Route 107 by
two decades. But the amended
HCA, which selectmen supported
by a slim 3-2 vote at the
September meeting, included
substantial changes – including
a provision off ered by Cicolini
that the Town of Saugus
receive free tipping fees
for waste disposal over the
life of the agreement. Cogliano
and Selectman Corinne Riley
voted in favor of Cicolini’s
amendment which created the
current proposal last September.
Board of Selectmen Vice
Chair Debra Panetta and Selectman
Michael Serino – both
staunch opponents of any expansion
of the ash landfi ll –
voted against it.
WIN Waste Innovations indicated
last month that it is willing
to accept a revised HCA
with the town that would
waive the tipping fee. But WIN
offi cials want the contingency
clause restored to the agreement,
which would enable the
company to reduce the tipping
fee benefi t to the town if the
company is required to spend
more than $5 million in capital
improvements to extend the
life of the ash landfi ll.
At last month’s meeting, a
majority of selectmen agreed
with Cicolini that WIN Waste
needed to present more fi nancial
information, and the board
voted to table the ongoing discussions
until WIN provides
more detailed data on how
Paolo’s?
A: On the fi rst night that we
were open, we had people from
the original Paolo’s.
Q: So is this restaurant where
you are going to wrap up your
career?
A: I don’t plan on retiring anytime
soon. Hard work never
killed anyone.
Q: What’s the age range of
WIN’s proposal would aff ect the
benefi ts to the town.
A major obstacle to any deal
will be whether the Massachusetts
Department of Environmental
Protection (MassDEP)
will allow extending the life of
the ash landfill. MassDEP offi
cials have stated repeatedly
over the past year that existing
environmental laws and regulations
do not permit expansion
of the ash landfi ll at the WIN site
near its trash-to-energy incinerator
on Route 107.
Ultimately, Town Manager
Scott C. Crabtree and the Board
of Health would be involved in
the fi nal decision on any deal
with WIN.
Cogliano briefs selectmen
This week, Cogliano send
an email to his fellow board
members, briefing them on
his involvement in helping
WIN Waste in defending itself
against the federal lawsuit. Here
is Cogliano’s statement:
“As you all know by now I
was asked by representatives
of WIN to speak to Saugus residents
to see if they’d speak on
behalf of the company in their
pending class action lawsuit.
I said I would. I made several
calls to family and friends and
asked them if they have any issue
with smell, noise, soot, or
any other issues that negatively
impact their quality of life.
“If they said no, I asked them
if they’d be willing to sign a
declaration stating that fact
and they said yes. I then signed
the declarations on their behalf
and submitted them to
WIN along with their phone
numbers and email addresses
so their Attorneys could contact
them. I was told by a WIN
representative that would be
suffi cient.
“I was later contacted by
their Attorney Richard Ortmeir
that they needed to sign
the declarations themselves
so I went house to house and
had them sign and resubmitted
them.
“If you have any questions
about this matter feel free to
email, text or call me. I’d be happy
to answer your concerns.
“Respectfully;
“Anthony”
your kitchen staff ?
A: The youngest is probably
in the early 20s and I’m probably
the oldest.
Q: Are you still active with
Kane’s Donuts?
A: Because it’s in litigation, all
I can tell you is that I resigned
from any day-to-day operaASKS
| SEE PAGE 7
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Page 7
Swatting incident disrupts classes at Saugus High
(Editor’s Note: The following
story is based on a press release
issued by the Saugus Police Department.)
T
he
Saugus Police Department
responded
to an incident of swatting
that briefly interrupted
classes at Saugus High
School.
On Wednesday (Feb. 15)
at 1:09 p.m., Saugus Police
ASKS | FROM PAGE 6
tions. I still own 20 percent of
the business, and that’s still being
negotiated.
Q: I notice you are selling
cookbooks here.
A: Yes, I got the cookbooks.
And I will probably be writing
another one to go with this
restaurant as well.
Q: Any goals for the new
Paolo’s?
A: We’re doing what we intended:
We’re a neighborhood
restaurant for East Saugus;
we’re fi lling the void that needed
to be fi lled.
Q: Was it hard to replicate the
original Paolo’s restaurant here?
A: It wasn’t a long process. I
received a call from an unknown
male who claimed to
have a fi rearm and an intent
to do harm to those at Saugus
High School, according
to Police Chief Michael Ricciardelli.
All available Saugus
Police Offi cers responded
immediately to Saugus
High School, which was immediately
placed into lockdown
in accordance with
preestablished policies and
pulled out the notes from my
Charlestown restaurant and applied
them to my hometown.
And it kind of made sense.
Q: When did you decide to
get out of the donut business?
A: I pretty much decided in
March of 2022. I was contemplating
getting out of the donut
business and getting back
to what I love doing: cooking
and putting a smile on peoples’
faces. And we got the same
menu as we had in Charlestown
with a couple of new things.
Putting a smile on peoples’
faces always tells me that it’s a
job well done. Nothing speaks
more volumes than seeing people
smiling.
Q: Anything else that you
procedures. Saugus Police
searched both the building
and grounds of Saugus High
School to ensure there were
no unauthorized individuals
on the campus, and they
quickly determined the call
was one of more than a dozen
hoax calls that have been
made across the Commonwealth
so far this week. Classes
at Saugus High School returned
to normal approxiwant
to share?
A: I want this place to be an
asset to the community: a place
where people can come and
gather – not only to enjoy a
meal – but also visit with each
other, break a little bread.
Q: How many diff erent cooking
disciplines do you have?
What are the countries that you
can cook from?
A: Greek, Italian, Asian, Southwest.
I also dabble in straight
Mexican and cook some Asian
cuisine as well. If you are going
to be a chef in America, you
better learn how to cook a couple
of diff erent disciplines.
Q: I notice a lot of people
from Charlestown frequenting
this place. How is that?
mately 29 minutes after the
lockdown was put into place.
“I am pleased by the quick
and coordinated response
that both Saugus Police and
Saugus Public Schools had to
this incident, and I’m relieved
to report that the call was just
a hoax,” said Chief Ricciardelli.
“We nevertheless responded
in accordance with preestablished
policies and procedures
that we have reA:
It’s all been word of mouth
or the Internet.
Q: I guess cooking must be in
your genes.
A: Both of my grandfathers
and my dad did it, and my
mother was a tremendous
cook. For a lot of Greek families,
it’s a part of growing up at a
very young age. My father had
a diner in Chelsea, Tony’s Spa in
Bellingham Square. Both of my
grandfathers had their own little
restaurants over the years.
My father also owned a donut
shop in Lynn called Mrs. Foster’s.
Then, later, he and mom
purchased Kane’s Donuts. They
bought Kane’s in 1988.
In 2007, I was headed to New
York City to chef at a restaurant,
hearsed together before because
the safety and security
of students and staff in Saugus
Public Schools is our top
priority,” the chief said.
“Swatting,” according to Oxford
Languages is “the action
or practice of making a prank
call to emergency services in
an attempt to bring about
the dispatch of a large number
of armed police offi cers
to a particular address.”
and my dad asked me to stay
and run the donut shop as president
of the company. I took it
from $500,000 to $8.1 million
in annual sales.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, FEbrUAry 17, 2023
Saugus girls take unbeaten Tanners to OT
By Greg Phipps
R
iding the momentum
of an eight-game winning
streak, the Saugus High
School girls’ basketball team
came close to knocking off
the Peabody Tanners on the
road Tuesday night. Peabody
is unbeaten in Northeastern
Conference (NEC) play and
was able to escape with a 7362
overtime victory over the
Sachems.
Saugus owned a 15-13 lead
after one quarter with the help
of two baskets by Madi Femino
and a three-pointer by Ashleen
Escobar at the buzzer to
end the period. The host Tanners
raced out to an early 11-2
lead before the Sachems rebounded
to tally 13 of the next
15 points in the opening quarter.
Ahead by five at halftime,
Saugus held on to the advantage
through the third quarter
and entered the final quarter
up by a 43-42 count. Both
teams had opportunities to
win the game in the final minute
of the fourth quarter, but
neither team could muster the
winning points. Saugus’s Jessica
Bremberg made a huge defensive
play that helped force
the extra session.
Peabody took control in the
OT period and pulled away
for the win. “We ultimately ran
out of steam in the overtime,”
said Saugus Head Coach Mark
Schruender. “It was a great
contest from start to finish, but
unfortunately we just couldn’t
get over the hump.”
Guard Peyton DiBiasio
scored 19 points to lead Saugus’s
offensive attack. Taylor
Deleidi tallied a career-high 12
points on four three-pointers.
The loss left the Sachems at
13-5 on the season with two
games against Lynn Classical
– on Thursday night on the
road and next Wednesday at
home – to end the regular season.
Playoff-bound Saugus finished
tied with Winthrop for
first place in the NEC’s South
Division with a 9-4 league record.
Last
Thursday at home, the
Sachems rolled to a 60-27
win over Danvers. It was the
100th career coaching victory
for Schruender. The Sachems
possessed a commanding
22-2 lead after one quarter
and pretty much cruised from
Saugus’s Taylor Deleidi finished
with a career-high 12
points in Tuesday’s overtime
loss at Peabody.
there. DiBiasio was once again
the team’s top scorer with 18
points, followed by Juliana
Powers with eight and Ashleigh
Moore with six. All told,
the Sachems knocked down
12 three-pointers in the contest.
Local
resident named to Dean’s
List for Fall 2022 Semester
M
ANCHESTER, N.H.–
Saint Anselm College
has released the Dean’s List
of high academic achievers
for the first semester of the
2022-2023 school year. To
be eligible for this honor, a
student must have achieved
a grade point average of
3.4 or better in the semester
with at least 12 credits
of study which award a letter
grade. A total of 471 students
representing 21 states
and six countries received
this honor.
Mark W. Cronin, Dean of
the College, announced that
the following student has
been named to the Dean’s
List for the fall 2022 semester
at Saint Anselm College:
Julia Azzari of Saugus, Class
of 2023, Biology major
About Saint Anselm College:
Founded in 1889, Saint
Anselm College is a four-year
liberal arts college providing
a 21st-century education in
the Catholic, Benedictine tradition.
Located in southern
New Hampshire near Boston
and the seacoast, Saint
Anselm is well known for its
strong liberal arts curriculum,
the New Hampshire Institute
of Politics, a highly successful
nursing program, a legacy
of community service and
a commitment to the arts.
׉	 7cassandra://CFXoxtMWgomHDYvt4GD2Oqmaq8rTww9lnSUgX6f1cjs+`̰ cj!>Ȍ׉ETHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, FEbrUAry 17, 2023
Page 9
Sachem boys drop two hard-fought league games
By Greg Phipps
D
espite falling short in
their last two Northeastern
Conference games,
the Saugus High School
boys’ basketball team is
looking like it will be a formidable
foe in this year’s
playoff tournament. The
Sachems staged a spirited
comeback before losing in
overtime by an 83-82 margin
at Danvers last Thursday
and battled a tough Peabody
team on Tuesday night
at home before succumbing,
65-53.
The defeats left the Sachems
at 12-7 overall with
one regular-season game
remaining. Saugus plays at
Triton Friday night and then
prepares for this year’s playoff
tournament.
Tuesday’s Senior Night loss
to the Tanners saw Saugus
fall behind by nine in the fi rst
half before clawing back to
within one on two consecutive
three-pointers by Chris
Flynn. Peabody ended up
taking a 30-24 advantage
into the break. The Sachems
stayed within striking distance
in the second half but
couldn’t overtake the visiSaugus
senior guard Ben Tapia-Gately tried to battle his
way past a Peabody defender on Tuesday.
tors, who improved their record
to 14-5 overall. For Saugus,
Flynn connected for 16
points while Ben Tapia-Gately
and Josh Osawe each added
15.
“It was a back-and-forth
game, and every time we
were about to get over the
hill Peabody sparked a run of
their own,” explained Saugus
Head Coach Joe Bertrand.
“I’m proud of our team and
our seniors. We have been a
team that has relentless effort
on off ense and defense.
We have great senior leadership,
specifi cally [from] our
captains Max Anajjar and
Ben Tapia-Gately.”
The team’s fi ve seniors players
– Anajjar, Tapia-Gately,
Flynn, Osawe and Isaiah
Garcia – were recognized
before Tuesday’s game.
In last Thursday’s loss at
Saugus senior Chris Flynn
got off a three-point attempt
over an outstretched Peabody
defender on Tuesday.
Saugus senior guard Max
Anajjar looked to penetrate
to the basket in Tuesday’s
game against Peabody.
Danvers, the Sachems were
behind by a 70-55 margin
after three periods. But
they fought back and tied
the contest on a Cam Soroko
basket with 14 seconds
to go in regulation. Saugus
climbed to a four-point lead
early in the extra period before
Danvers regained the
lead and eventually held on
for the victory. The Sachems
nearly pulled off the win
when a three-point try in
the waning seconds of the
OT rimmed out. Three players
finished with double figures
for the Sachems: Tapia
Gately’s 18 points, Osawe’s
15 and Garcia’s 13.
The COVID-19 Update
Town reports 23 newly confi rmed cases; no new deaths
By Mark E. Vogler
T
here were 23 newly confi
rmed COVID-19 cases in
Saugus over the past week
through Wednesday (Feb. 15).
The new cases reported by
the state Department of Public
Health (DPH) over the past
week increased the overall total
to 10,512 confi rmed cases
since the outbreak of the
global pandemic in March of
2020, according to Town Manager
Scott C. Crabtree. This
week’s total was an increase of
four 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 affected
by this health pandemic,”
Crabtree said.
WE'RE
OPEN!
8 Norwood Street, Everett
(617) 387-9810
Saugus senior Josh Osawe begins a drive to the hoop
against Peabody.
www.eight10barandgrille.com
OPEN DAILY FOR DINNER AT 4 PM.
CATCH THE CELTICS, BRUINS &
NCAA SPORTS ON OUR
6 LARGE SCREEN TV'S!
om
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, FEbrUAry 17, 2023
Saugus Gardens in the Winter
Here’s what’s blooming in town this week to make your walks more enjoyable
By Laura Eisener
T
oday is an important
date in town history. On
February 17, 1815, the
area which is now Saugus officially
separated from Lynn and
became incorporated as its
own town. Saugus had been
the native American name for
the overall area, including what
is still known as Lynn, but the
settlements around the present
Saugus Center had been called
the West Parish once a new
meeting house was built.
Nationally, we are at the start
of a long weekend, since Monday
is Presidents’ Day when we
celebrate George Washington’s
birthday (actually Feb. 22) and
Lincoln’s birthday (Feb. 12). The
thin sheet of ice which has off
and on covered parts of our
ponds this winter has once again
melted. With the warm temperatures
of recent days, perhaps
we will soon be celebrating the
bloom of some of the first bulbs,
such as snowdrops.
The most common seagull
species, the American herring
gull (Larus smithsonianus or
Larus argentatus smithsonianus),
always makes me think
of summer days at the beach,
but they are actually year round
residents. You will surely see
them on coastal walks at any
time of year, and even some
distance inland as they also
are often found on freshwater
ponds and even large parking
lots, where they may congregate
on the pavement or perch on
the lampposts. Herring gulls are
scavengers and can eat a wide
range of foods. Their natural diet
consists mostly of small fish and
shellfish, and they can often be
seen flying over rocks and concrete
to drop clams and break
their shells. They also seem quite
happy to eat leftover food from
people’s outdoor meals, and
sometimes scavenge in dumpsters
for leftover French fries and
pizza. While they can eat bread
and crackers, this could not be
a very nutritious diet for them.
Given how often they are seen
today, and how well adapted
they appear to the presence
of people, it may be surprising
to think that they were fairly
scarce in the 19th century due
to people collecting their eggs,
and in the early 20th century
their eggs were among the most
impacted by DDT, making the
shells fragile and likely to break
before the chicks hatched. In the
latter part of the 20th century,
the gull population rebounded
but now seems to have leveled
off somewhat. European herring
gulls are very similar in appearance
to our birds, but scientists
disagree on how closely related
they actually are, a controversy
reflected in the two different
scientific names that are used.
Herring gulls most often nest
on islands, like Egg Rock off the
coast of Lynn and Nahant, but
also on cliff edges and even
rooftops on the mainland at
times. Gulls can often be seen
in Saugus sitting near the river
waiting for the lobster boats,
swimming in the tidal parts of
the river or on ponds like Birch
Pond and in large parking lots
along Route 1.
It takes four years for a bird to
mature from hatching age to an
adult of breeding age. Immature
birds have brownish speckled
patterns on their feathers, while
mature birds are mostly white
with gray wings and black and
white patterned tails. They are
large birds, often a little over two
feet in length.
One of the tree features that
can be most appreciated in winter
is interesting bark colors and
textures. While New England’s
iconic paper birch (Betula papyrifera)
does not tend to have
a long lifespan in southern New
England due to a couple of
insect pests, we do have bright
white bark on the native gray
birch (Betula populifolia), which
is fairly common in this area. The
peach to grayish colored peeling
bark on some river birch varieties,
especially ‘Heritage’ river
birch (Betula nigra ‘Heritage’)
can be seen in many landscapes
from residential gardens to commercial
sites on Route 1.
A little more unusual is the
peeling cinnamon colored bark
on the paperbark maple (Acer
griseum). Two trees of this species
near the front entrance of
the Senior Center may be the
best examples in Saugus. During
the growing season, they have
compound foliage with three
leaflets, which is common on
many Asian maples but not
what we usually think of when
we picture maple leaves here.
Paperbark maple is native to
central China. The foliage turns
bright red in fall. Like all maples,
the fruit is a winged seed known
as a samara, which can whirl
away in the wind to disperse
seeds to new growing sites but
may in some cases linger on the
branches for several months.
Editor’s Note: 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 also
a member of the Saugus Garden
This trio of herring gulls in a Route 1 parking lot include an adult on the left, a nearly
mature bird in the middle and a younger bird on the right. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus
Advocate by Laura Eisener)
A “palm tree” sways in the
breeze in balmy Lynnhurst.
(Courtesy photo to The Saugus
Advocate by Laura Eisener)
An adult herring gull on the town pier near Vitale Park
keeps watch for the fishermen to return with their catch
on the Saugus River. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate
by Laura Eisener)
The cinnamon colored peeling
bark of paperbark maple
(Acer griseum) stands
out in the winter landscape
next to the Senior Center.
(Courtesy photo to The Saugus
Advocate by Laura Eisener)
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.
Bright white birch bark stands out in the winter landscape
along the rail trail near the Saugus River. (Courtesy photo to
The Saugus Advocate by Laura Eisener)
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Page 11
Legal Notice
Legal Notice
Department of Housing and Community Development
Summary of Settlement Notice
January 2023
Who should read this?
Read this if you are applying for or getting EA shelter from the Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD).
What is this summary about?
There is a class action lawsuit against DHCD about the EA shelter program. The case is called Garcia v. DHCD. DHCD has agreed to make
changes to try to improve the EA shelter program. That agreement is called a Settlement Agreement. On March 28, 2023, the judge will hold a
hearing to decide whether to approve the Agreement. But first, the class members have a right to learn about the Agreement and tell the judge if
they disagree with any part. This summary tells you about the Agreement and what to do if you disagree.
What is the case about?
In December 2016, a group of homeless families filed a class action lawsuit against DHCD. They are the Plaintiffs. The case is about the process
for families to get into shelter, placing families close to their home communities and kids’ schools, and getting more appropriate shelter placements
for people with disabilities.
Who is a class member?
The class includes everyone who is in EA shelter or has a Temporary Emergency Shelter Interruption (TESI). The class also includes everyone who
applies for EA shelter and has not been denied. It also includes people who have tried to apply for EA shelter but haven’t been able to get in. But it
does not include people who have applied for EA shelter and have been denied, if they have appealed the denial and they lost their appeal, or if the
appeal deadline has passed.
There is also a sub-class. The sub-class includes all families who are in the class, who are eligible for EA shelter, and who have a family member
who has a disability.
What is in the Agreement?
The key changes that DHCD intends to make are:
• DHCD will make the application process easier. You will be able to leave a voicemail instead of waiting on hold. DCHD will call back the same day.
If you call late in the day, DHCD may call you back on the next business day. You will also be able to apply in person at DHCD offices.
• When people apply for shelter, DHCD will ask if they need any help because of disabilities or limited English ability or other reasons.
• DHCD will let families into shelter even if they do not have all their documents. But first each family will have to prove three things: their identities,
relationship to each other, and that at least one family member is a resident of Massachusetts.
• If families are eligible for shelter and contact DHCD by a certain time each day, DHCD will guarantee that they can get a safe place to stay that
night.
• DHCD will make it easier for people to request accommodations for disabilities. DHCD will help people with the paperwork. DHCD will keep track of
people who are waiting for an accommodation. For families with disabilities, DHCD will make it easier to avoid noncompliances and terminations.
• A lot of families need a shelter transfer so that they can be closer to their home community, or closer to their kids’ schools, or because of disabilities.
DHCD will improve its systems for shelter transfers. It will keep track of families who are waiting for a transfer. It will use clear priorities to make the
transfer waiting list as fair as possible.
• While families are waiting for a transfer, DHCD may transfer them to a hotel room, or help them with transportation, or give them some protections
against noncompliances and terminations.
• DHCD will try to get new shelters in different parts of the state, if a lot of families are waiting a long time for transfers.
• DHCD will communicate important information more clearly.
The Agreement will probably last for 4 to 5 years. During that time, DHCD will give information to Plaintiffs’ lawyers so that they can make sure
DHCD does what it agreed to do. Also, the judge will have the power to make sure that DHCD follows the Agreement.
DHCD will pay $1.5 million to the Plaintiffs’ lawyers for lawyers’ fees and for expenses already paid by the Plaintiffs’ lawyers.
What does this mean for me as a class member?
If the judge approves the Agreement, all class members will be bound by its terms. This means you can’t sue DHCD to try to get DHCD to change its
systems for the things covered by the Agreement, while the Agreement is in effect. You can still sue DHCD if it violates your individual legal rights.
If you agree with the Agreement, you do not need to do anything. If it is approved, you will get the benefits of the Agreement. If you do not agree with
any part of the Agreement, you can object.
Fairness Hearing
There will be a Fairness Hearing on March 28, 2023 at 2:00 p.m. before Judge Douglas Wilkins in Courtroom 25 of the Norfolk County Superior
Courthouse, 650 High Street, Dedham, MA 02026. The judge will listen to objections or other statements before deciding whether to approve the
Agreement. At the hearing, the judge will also decide the amount of lawyers’ fees, if any, to be paid to Plaintiffs’ lawyers.
What should I do if I want to object and/or talk at the Fairness Hearing?
If you want to tell the judge that you disagree with any part of the Agreement, including the payment of lawyers’ fees, or you have something else to
say to the judge about the Agreement, you must mail the judge a statement by March 20, 2023.
The statement must say the name of the court case (Rosanna Garcia et al. v. Department of Housing and Community Development,
16-84-CV-03768); your name and address; what you disagree with and why, or what you want to say at the hearing. If you are writing about an
objection, state whether you want to say something to the judge at the hearing.
Send the original statement to: Suffolk County Superior Court, Attn: Margaret Buckley, 3 Pemberton Square, Boston, MA 02108.
Send a copy of the statement to: Laura Massie, Greater Boston Legal Services, 197 Friend St., Boston, MA 02114. You can also email it to
Lmassie@gbls.org.
If you can’t send a statement or miss the deadline, you can still come to the hearing on March 28, 2023. Ask the judge to excuse you from the
requirements and explain why you could not send your statement by the deadline. The judge can change any of the deadlines in this notice if you
show good cause.
How can I get more information?
If you have questions or want a copy of the Agreement, please contact Laura Massie at Greater Boston Legal Services (GBLS), 197 Friend Street,
Boston, MA 02114; (844) 625-7313, TTY (617) 371-1228, toll-free (800) 323-3205; or by email:
Lmassie@gbls.org. The Agreement is also posted online at www.MAShelterSettlement.com.
February 17, 2023
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, FEbrUAry 17, 2023
The Sounds of Saugus
By Mark E. Vogler
Good Morning, Saugus!
The town elections aren’t
until November. But we already
have a couple hot potato
issues to surface less than
two months into the new year.
Board of Selectmen Chair
Anthony Cogliano – the most
popular vote-getter in the last
two town elections (2019 and
2021) – already sparked some
controversial debate late last
year in an “Advocate Asks” interview
when he mentioned
he would devote time this
year to laying the foundation
for a Charter change that he
hoped would see the Town
of Saugus become a city with
a mayor. Last week, Cogliano
became the focus of more political
controversy when federal
court papers revealed that
last summer he assisted WIN
Waste Innovations by securing
the names of people who lived
near the trash-to-energy plant
on Route 107 who didn’t experience
any quality of life problems
with the plant.
Cogliano also admitted in a
deposition that was released
with the court papers that
he signed documents – instead
of the residents named
in declarations – that would
be used as evidence to help
WIN defend itself in a pending
class-action lawsuit. WIN later
directed Cogliano to drive
into the East Saugus neighborhood
to get actual signatures
of the people he signed for.
East Saugus residents and
two of Cogliano’s colleagues
on the board have already
raised questions about the
ethics and optics of the situation
– how can the chair of
the Saugus Board of Selectmen
who is also co-chair of a
subcommittee assembled to
—Cont est—
CONTEST SKETCH OF THE WEEK
work on issues related to WIN
Waste Innovations be acting
as an agent of the company
while representing the town?
For his part, Cogliano insists
that he did nothing ethically
wrong or improper and takes
great umbrage with anyone
suggesting that he did.
He plans to run for reelection
this fall. And he’s already
linked to two hot-button
issues in a town election
campaign that traditionally
doesn’t heat up until the summer.
It should be an interesting
election year.
Saugus over coffee
In case you were curious
about how the latest edition
of “Saugus Over Coffee” turned
out, check out https://vimeo.
com/saugustelevision or tune
in to Channel 8.
The Saugus Advocate and
the Saugus Public Library are
cosponsoring this special series
of forums which will spotlight
one precinct a month
through October. Precinct 2
was the focus of last Monday
night’s forum.
As the moderator of the forums,
here’s my take on how
things went:
The best part: All five Town
Meeting members appeared
and offered their views of
what they see as top issues
affecting the neighborhoods
they represent.
Also a very positive aspect
of Monday night’s forum is
that folks who can’t attend
can still view Vimeo Saugus
TV on Channel 8 via a computer
at any time during the
day or week. And, clearly,
from the feedback I’ve been
getting, there are more folks
at home who will tune in to
the program instead of going
down to the library to watch
the event live. So, making arrangements
with SaugusTV
to televise all 10 of the forums
was a great idea.
The most disappointing
GUESS WHO GOT SKETCHED! If you know the right answer,
you might win the contest. In this week’s edition, we continue
our weekly feature where a local artist sketches people,
places and things in Saugus. Got an idea who’s being
sketched this week? If you do, please email me at mvoge@
comcast.net or leave a phone message at 978-683-7773.
Anyone who identifies the Saugonian sketched in this
week’s paper between now and Tuesday at Noon qualifies
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 certificate,
compliments of Hammersmith Family Restaurant at 330
Central St. in Saugus. But you have to enter to win! Look for
the winner and identification in next week’s “The Sounds
of Saugus.” Please leave your mailing address in case you
are a winner. (Courtesy illustration to The Saugus Advocate by
a Saugonian who goes by the name of “The Sketch Artist”)
part: that less than a handful
of Precinct 2 residents
showed up. And only one Precinct
2 resident – Selectman
Corinne Riley – got up and
spoke during the public feedback
period. Here’s an opportunity
for residents of Precinct
2 to meet their Town Meeting
members and share a conversation
over coffee. Yet, more
people from other precincts
showed up than Precinct 2
residents.
Public feedback: We received
this email from Sue
Fleming: “I watched the Precinct
2 presentation today and
found it very informative. I had
planned on attending but life
got in the way and I couldn’t
make it. My husband and I
have been residents of Precinct
2 for over 35 years. It was
good to hear the Town Meeting
members speak about the
concerns, specifically Cliftondale
Square. It would be great
to see some small businesses
in the square. Thank you for
coordinating these presentations
for each section of Saugus.”
We
still have eight more forums
to go over the next eight
months before the town elections.
But it’s pretty clear that
a disappointing turnout out in
the Community Room at the library
doesn’t detract from the
overall success of the forums.
Civic-minded Saugonians who
are interested in what their
Town Meeting members have
to say on the issues always
have the option to checkout
SaugusTV and watch a video
of the forum.
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).
Stay tuned for more information
as “Saugus Over Coffee”
continues.
One-day trash pickup
delay
The Town of Saugus announces
that trash and recycling
collection will run on a
one-day delay next week for
the Presidents’ Day Holiday.
Trash and recycling will not be
collected on Monday (Feb. 20)
due to the holiday. Collection
will resume on a one-day delay
on Tuesday (Feb. 21). Residents
are kindly asked to leave
trash and recycling curbside
by 7 a.m. the day after their
normally scheduled collection
day.
The Town of Saugus would
like to thank everyone for their
cooperation. Please contact
Solid Waste/Recycling Coordinator
Scott A. Brazis at 781231-4036
with any questions.
Town Hall closed Monday
Saugus Town Hall, other municipal
buildings – including
the Saugus Public Library –
and Saugus Public Schools will
be closed on Monday (Feb. 20)
in observance of Presidents’
Day. The holiday kicks off February
vacation week for local
students.
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 first 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.
Comedy at the Kowloon
The Kowloon Restaurant has
set its latest comedy lineup
featuring Paul Gilligan on Feb.
17 at 8 p.m. Here’s the rest of
the February lineup: Feb. 24:
MIKE DONOVAN – 8 p.m. – $20.
Here’s the comedy lineup
for March:
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 781233-0077.
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 finale
in March.
A full Chinese gourmet
spread is available during
Bingo – featuring pupu platters,
egg rolls, crab Rangoons,
Saugus Wings, General Gau’s
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 13
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Page 13
THE SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 12
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
which 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 781-231-5988 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 first meeting
in the
Spring,” she said.
Craft Fair/Flea Market
tomorrow
The Knights of Columbus
Council 1829 will host an indoor
craft fair and flea market
tomorrow (Saturday, Feb. 18)
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at 57 Appleton
St. in Saugus. A snow
date has been set for Feb. 25.
Vendors/table cost: $25. There
will be refreshments, a cash
bar and raffles.
To reserve a table or obtain
more information, please call
Paul Giannetta at 978-2391392.
Help
this Eagle fly
It sounds like Jake D’Eon has
a great public service project
in pursuit of his Eagle Scout
Badge. His project is doing
picnic tables at Pinetops at
Breakheart Reservation.
But Jake is appealing to the
public for a little help in getting
the supplies he needs for
his project. 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 set for Prince
Pizzeria on March 9 at 6:30
p.m. There will be basketball
raffles for adults. Tickets cost
$35. All proceeds go to Jake’s
picnic table project.
Check it out!
Food Pantry notes:
The Saugus United Parish
Food Pantry is open today (Friday,
Feb. 17) from 9:30-11 a.m.
“Shout Outs”
We received nominations
from our readers for two Saugus
residents deserving of
“Shout Outs” for their respective
contributions for the betterment
of Saugus: Kenney
and Margaret Young made
the following nomination:
“We would like to thank our
Precinct One Town Meeting
member, Mark Bell for his followup
regarding the unsafe
conditions, specifically the pot
holes, that exist at the Hamilton
Street Plaza.
“The issue was raised at Precinct
One’s “Saugus Over Coffee”
get together at the library
on Monday,1/30/2023. The
condition improved somewhat
after the asphalt patching
due to Mark contacting
the landlord and subsequently
the maintenance contractor.
Many thanks.”
Precinct 6 Town Meeting
Member Jeanie Bartolo – our
most prolific “shout out” contributor
and the reader who
initiated the idea to this column
several years ago – offered
the following praise: “I
have a “Shout Out” for Michael
Hashem for stepping up to the
plate as School Superintendent.
Thank you Mike for once
again coming to the rescue!”
She was referring to Hashem’s
willingness to accept the
role as acting superintendent
while Saugus Public Schools
Superintendent Erin McMahon
remains on paid leave
pending the outcome of an
investigation into alleged
misconduct. In 2016, Hashem
stepped aside as Saugus High
School principal to assume
the role as an interim superintendent.
THE
SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 14
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, FEbrUAry 17, 2023
THE SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 13
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.
Stumped by “The Sketch
Artist”
We had no winners this past
week. With “The Sketch Artist”
taking a break this week,
we decided to run last week’s
sketch. Anyone who identifies
the Saugonian sketched in this
week’s paper between now
and Tuesday at noon qualifies
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 certificate,
compliments of JIMMY’S
STEER HOUSE, 114 Broadway
(RT. 1 North) in Saugus.
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 afford the meal
to enjoy a free breakfast. Bon
appétit!
- LEGAL NOTICE -
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT
Essex Probate and Family Court
36 Federal Street
Salem, MA 01970
(978) 744-1020
Docket No. ES23P0390EA
Estate of: KENNETH EDWIN NADEAU
Also known as: KENNETH E. NADEAU
Date of Death: 11/27/2022
CITATION ON PETITION FOR
FORMAL ADJUDICATION
To all interested persons:
A Petition for Formal Adjudication of Intestacy and Appointment
of Personal Representative has been filed by Dorothy Nadeau
of Saugus, MA requesting that the Court enter a formal Decree
and Order and for such other relief as requested in the Petition.
The Petitioner requests that:
Dorothy Nadeau of Saugus, MA be appointed as Personal
Representative(s) of said estate to serve Without Surety on the
bond in unsupervised administration.
IMPORTANT NOTICE
You have the right to obtain a copy of the Petition from
the Petitioner or at the Court. You have a right to object
to this proceeding. To do so, you or your attorney must file
a written appearance and objection at this Court before:
10:00 a.m. on the return day of 03/15/2023.
This is NOT a hearing date, but a deadline by which you
must file a written appearance and objection if you object to
this proceeding. If you fail to file a timely written appearance
and objection followed by an affidavit of objections within
thirty (30) days of the return day, action may be taken without
further notice to you.
UNSUPERVISED ADMINISTRATION UNDER THE
MASSACHUSETTS UNIFORM PROBATE CODE (MUPC)
A Personal Representative appointed under the MUPC in
an unsupervised administration is not required to file an
inventory or annual accounts with the Court. Persons interested
in the estate are entitled to notice regarding the administration
directly from the Personal Representative and may petition
the Court in any matter relating to the estate, including the
distribution of assets and expenses of administration.
WITNESS, Hon. Frances M. Giordano, First Justice of this
Court.
Date: February 08, 2023
PAMELA A. CASEY O’BRIEN
REGISTER OF PROBATE
February 17, 2023
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 first 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 infidelity,
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
as Antipholus 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
Wakefield as Dromio of Syracuse,
John Leonard of Andover
as the Map Seller, Kaycee
Renee Wilson of Brighton
as Luciana, 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.
The site will reopen for recycling
on the third Saturday
of the month in February and
March, weather permitting.
The dates are Saturday, February
18, and Saturday, March
18, 2023, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Please contact Scott Brazis,
Director of Solid Waste/Recycling,
at 781-231-4036 with any
questions.
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.
Just Sew! Saugonians are
welcome to join a monthly
sewing class for adults that is
held the third Monday of each
month from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. in
the Community Room of Saugus
Public Library. The next
meeting is Monday, Feb. 20.
The class will cover basic topics
like sewing buttons, hemming
clothing and mending
torn fabric and will move on
to more advanced topics in the
coming weeks. This class is free.
(See sauguspubliclibrary.org)
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
781-231-4168 or stop by the
Reference Desk (https://www.
sauguspubliclibrary.org/newmanga-anime-club.../)
– 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 781-2314168
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 floor.
Book Sale Special continues:
Library Director Alan Thibeault
offered the following
announcement: “Due to popular
demand, the New Friends
of the Saugus Public Library are
extending their January Book
Sale special – $4 for a bag of
books – through the month of
February.
“Come to the ongoing Book
Sale in the Saugus Public Library’s
Community Room and
bring your own bag (or purchase
one of ours) and fill ’er
up for just $4.
“Also…we are still accepting
donations of adult fiction and
children’s books – in excellent
condition only, of course. We
regret that we cannot accept
non-fiction titles, encyclopedias,
text books, workbooks,
instruction manuals etc. And,
please…no yellowing, mold,
mildew, excessive wear & tear,
stains, or unpleasant odors.
“Proceeds from the Book Sale
benefit the New Friends who
support programs and other
offerings here at the Library.”
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 first 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.
Scholarship available to
Saugus High students
Greater Lynn Senior Services
(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
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 15
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Page 15
Saugus boys’ basketball Senior Night
Saugus senior Isaiah Garcia and family
Saugus senior Chris Flynn and family
Saugus senior Ben Tapia-Gately and family
Saugus senior Max Anajjar and
family
THE SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 14
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 firmly rooted
in his compassion for people.
He measured success by
the quality of his service to
~ Legal Notice ~
NOTICE OF TIER CLASSIFICATION
860R Broadway
Saugus, Massachusetts 01906
MassDEP RTN 3-37283
A release of oil and/or hazardous materials has occurred at this location, which is a
disposal site as defined by M.G.L. c. 21E, § 2 and the Massachusetts Contingency
Plan, 310 CMR 40.0000. To evaluate the release, a Phase I Initial Site Investigation
was performed pursuant to 310 CMR 40.0480. The site has been classified as TIER
II pursuant to 310 CMR 40.0500. On February 14, 2023, GrandeVille at Saugus, LLC,
filed a TIER II Classification Submittal with the Department of Environmental Protection
(MassDEP). To obtain more information on this disposal site, please contact Kevin L.
McAndrews, LSP, Clean Soils Environmental, Ltd. at 978-356-1177.
The Tier Classification Submittal and the Disposal Site file can be viewed at MassDEP
website using Release Tracking Number (RTN) 3-37283 at
https://eeaonline.eea.state.ma.us/portal#!/search/wastesite or at MassDEP,
Northeast Regional Office, 205B Lowell Street, Wilmington, MA 01887, 978-694-3200.
Additional public involvement opportunities are available under 310 CMR 40.1403(9)
and 310 CMR 40.1404.
February 17, 2023
and advocacy for others,” said
Kathryn C. Burns, GLSS’ Chief
Executive Officer. “I believe in
Vince’s theory that one’s individual
success is directly related
to the benefits 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
Saugus senior Josh Osawe and family
guidance office or can be completed
online at www.glssnet/
LiqueScholarship. Completed
applications are due on or before
Friday, April 7.
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 nonprofit 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
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, goldfish, 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@
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 18
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, FEbrUAry 17, 2023
Saugus Cheerleaders Senior Night
Saugus senior
Saugus senior cheerleader
Alex Couseillant and family
cheerleader McKenna
Zell and family
Saugus senior cheerleader Keira O’Keefe and family
WIN WASTE| FROM PAGE 3
FREE STUFF! FREE STUFF!
Free Yard Sale Giveaway
Saturday, Feb. 18th
12 Noon - 5 PM
134 Cottage Street, Everett
Everything Must Go - FREE!
Chairs, Furniture, Metal,
Wood, Tools, Garden Tools,
etc! First Come, First Served!
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
SAUGUS BOARD OF SELECTMEN
PUBLIC HEARING
Notice is hereby given that the Saugus Board of
Selectmen will conduct a public hearing on the
application of Mr. Charles Arakelian, 65 East India
Row, Unit 7C, Boston, MA 02110 for a Special
Permit (S-2) to operate Stretch Zone, at 171
Broadway, first floor, Unit 5, Saugus, MA 01906.
This public hearing will be held at the Saugus
Town Hall, second floor, 298 Central Street,
Saugus, MA 01906 on Tuesday, March 14, 2023 at
7:15 PM.
Anthony Cogliano, Chairman
Janice K. Jarosz, Temp. Clerk
February 17, 2023
residents to confirm there are
no odor or dust impacts from
our Saugus facility. As part of
that process, a representative
of WIN Waste asked Mr. Cogliano,
a lifelong resident of the
neighborhood nearest the facility,
to voluntarily ask fellow
residents if they had experienced
any such impacts, and,
if not, would they be willing
to provide a statement to that
effect.
“When attorneys for WIN
learned that Mr. Cogliano, after
speaking with residents,
had signed some of the declarations
for them, we immediately
notified the plaintiff’s
attorneys. WIN Waste then requested
that Mr. Cogliano ask
the same residents to personally
sign the declarations, which
they did, indicating there were
no odor or dust impacts.
“We value our relationship
with the town and will continue
to search for opportunities
to have mutually beneficial
partnerships. Working with
the Landfill Committee and
Board of Selectmen, we have
advanced the concept of continuing
to use our landfill and
share the resulting environmental
and economic benefits
with the Town. We look forward
to making the environmental
case for the project and engaging
in a thorough, transparent
and fact-based evaluation by
state and local officials.
“The essential work of diverting
waste from landfills
and creating renewable energy
will continue at the Saugus
waste-to-energy facility. We
hope to continue the use of our
adjacent monofill so that we
can avoid truck traffic over local
roads and continue supporting
Bear Creek Wildlife Sanctuary.”
Cogliano’s response to
allegations
Cogliano presented the following
statement to the newspaper,
in response to the court
motion and allegations that he
forged the signatures on documents
in a federal lawsuit.
“As part of the process in defending
itself from a proposed
class action lawsuit, I was approached
by representatives
of WIN Waste to see if I could
find Saugus residents willing
to say they are not and have
not been negatively affected
by the facility. I then called
some friends and neighbors
and asked if they had any negative
quality of life issues as a
result of WIN’s operations. Everyone
I spoke with said that
they had no negative impact
from WIN. I then asked if they
would put their names on an
affidavit about this; if they said
yes I wrote their names down.
Later I was asked by the attorney
for WIN if I could have each
person sign for themselves, so
I drove from house to house
and each person I spoke with
was willing to sign the affidavit.
The final papers were then
submitted back to the attorney.
“I believe this is an attempt
to attack my integrity and my
commitment to Saugus. I have
been dedicated to my hometown
for my entire life, serving
on the Selectboard for 14
years, or as an active parent
and grandparent also served
as a coach in this town for 25
years. There are some in town
who would rather tear down a
person who they disagree with
rather than even trying to work
together. For over 46 years, our
town has had no relationship
with WIN Waste, and we have
not received any of the most
basic benefits that virtually
any other town gets through
a host community agreement.
46 years of lost revenue and
yet WIN continued its operations
under the rules and regulations
of the state – that’s millions
of lost dollars for an operation
that has been continually
renewed by the town every
year. So now, after we have
completed a community driven
process to begin the conversation
on an HCA, when the
town has taken its first steps in
getting some benefit from the
plant on the Salem Turnpike,
this lawsuit pops up and I get
personally attacked.
“As to questions about my
commitment to the town I
have spent my entire life in and
serving - I find it offensive. If
you have spent any time looking
at my work, you will see
that I have always put Saugus
and its residents first. Those
who would say otherwise are
pushing the failed agenda of
the last 46 plus years to stick
their head in the sand and pretend
that ignoring WIN Waste
will make them go away.
“No one in this town has
done more than me to get our
fair share out of WIN Waste financially
and environmentally....and
I will continue to lead
the charge for a better Saugus.”
׉	 7cassandra://fMr1RAtMq23WcaXFhG36-qq9Xjx8CKkwzeDpHbTq7YQ,`̰ cj!>Ȕ׉E8THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, FEbrUAry 17, 2023
Page 17
8.
On Feb. 19, 2016,
what author of “To Kill a
Mockingbird” died?
9.
1.
February 17 is
Random Acts of Kindness Day;
what 1800s author (who died
in Concord) said, “You cannot
do a kindness too soon, for
you never know how soon it
will be too late”?
2.
The company of
Madam C.J. Walker – an
African American who was
America’s first female, selfmade
millionaire – sold what
product?
3.
The first toothbrush
with bristles was made in
China; what animal were the
bristles from?
4.
In what movie does
Ilsa say, “Play it, Sam. Play ‘As
Time Goes By’”?
5.
On Feb. 18, 1847, in
Faneuil Hall, Bostonians met
in response to news of the
worsening of what famine?
6.
What does
penultimate mean?
7.
What is light
amplification by stimulated
emission of radiation more
commonly known as?
What was the first
video on MTV by a Black
artist?
10.
What word game was
originally called Criss Cross?
11.
On Feb. 20, 1962,
John Glenn became the first
American to orbit earth; how
many orbits did he make that
day: one, two or three?
12.
Who was the only
unanimously elected U.S.
president?
13.
Mark Twain helped
what U.S. president write his
memoirs?
14.
federal holiday mandated
by Congress: Washington’s
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Which is a permanent
Birthday or Presidents’ Day?
15.
On Feb. 21, 1927,
what housewife who wrote a
newspaper column called “At
Wit’s End” was born?
16.
In what business
would you find a machine
called an Enrober?
17.
In New Orleans, what
is the traditional Mardi Gras
dessert?
18.
How are Knights of
Momus, Mistick Krewe of
Comus and Twelfth Night
Revelers similar?
19.
ANSWERS
In what song would
you find Little Jackie Paper”?
20.
On Feb. 22, 1980, in
an upset victory at the Winter
Olympics, what team defeated
the Soviet ice hockey team?
Frank Berardino
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CLASSIFIEDS
1. Ralph Waldo Emerson
2. Cosmetics
3. Pig
4. “Casablanca”
5. In Ireland (In 1847, Catholic and
non-Catholic groups in Boston sent
aid to Ireland.)
6. The second to last of a series of
things
7. Laser (an acronym)
8. Harper Lee
9. “Billie Jean” by Michael Jackson
10. Scrabble
11. Three
12. George Washington
13. Ulysses S. Grant
14. Washington’s Birthday
15. Erma Bombeck
16. Primarily candy making, as its
function is to coat something with
chocolate
17. King cake
18. They are social organizations that
parade during Mardi Gras in New
Orleans.
19. “Puff, the Magic Dragon”
20. U.S.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, FEbrUAry 17, 2023
OBITUARIES
Adam C. Lew
lings, Ryan Jones of Tewksbury,
Donna Bruch of NH,
Shannon Jones of ME, David
Lew of Peabody and Heather
Lew of Revere, as well as many
nieces and nephews. He was
predeceased by his brother
Scott Jones.
Service Information: Relatives
and friends are invited to
attend a visitation in the Bisbee-Porcella
Funeral Home,
549 Lincoln Ave., Saugus on
Sunday, February 12th from
12-3 p.m. For condolences visit
www.BisbeePorcella.com.
O
f Salem.Formal of Saugus.
Died on Saturday,
January 28th at the age of 35.
Born in Melrose, Adam was
the son of the late Jason Lew
and Corinne (Zubris) Jones.
Adam is survived by his sibGeraldine
C. (Venuti)
Petzke
O
f Saugus. Age 79, died
on Thursday, February
9th, at the Lahey Clinic in Peabody.
She was the wife of the
late Austin Petzke. Born in
Boston, Mrs. Petzke was the
deceased by her sister Geraldine
Rizzo.
A graveside service was
held on Thursday, February
16 at Puritan Lawn Memorial
Park, Peabody.
Rose M. (Palmitesta)
Belmonte
O
daughter of the late Virgilio
and Cecilia (Pazyra) Venuti.
Mrs. Petzke is survived by
her two sons, David Petzke
of Melrose and Brian Petzke
of Saugus; two grandchildren,
Kasandra and Andrew;
her brother, Rick Cataldo of
Saugus; her brother-in-law,
Mario Rizzo; as well as many
aunts and uncles. She was preTHE
SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 15
~ 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.
We offer competitive wages, a 401k and profit-sharing
plan, health & dental benefits, paid holidays and paid
vacations and many other benefits. Full time, plus OT
available. Random drug testing and background checks
are performed. Must be able to speak English fluently.
Apply in person Monday thru Friday, 9am to 4pm @
83 Broadway, Malden, MA – Or send your resume to
jmagee@actionjacksonusa.com. No phone calls please.
Your Hometown News Delivered!
EVERETT ADVOCATE
MALDEN ADVOCATE
REVERE ADVOCATE
SAUGUS ADVOCATE
One year subscription to
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Clip & Mail Coupon with Credit Card, Check or Money Order to:
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Sandy Juliano
Broker/President
comcast.net or leave a message
at 978-683-7773. 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.
f Saugus.Passed away
peacefully at Massachusetts
General Hospital
on February 10, 2023. Beloved
wife of Joseph J. Belmonte
Sr. Loving mother of
Joseph J. and his wife Penny
Belmonte & Michael A. and
his wife Mary Belmonte. Sister
of Ellen Venditto, Margaret
DeSisto & Robert Palmitesta
and the late John,
Peter, Vincent Palmitesta.
Cherished daughter of the
late Maria (DeSaro) and Felice
Palmitesta. Rose is also
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
survived by many nieces,
nephews & good friends.
Visiting hours were held
from Salvatore Rocco &
Sons Funeral Home, Everett
on Tuesday, February
14.A Funeral Mass was
held in St. Anthony Church
in Everett on Wednesday.
Interment in Woodlawn
Cemetery, Everett.
“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 interTHE
SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 19
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY SALES & RENTALS
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׉	 7cassandra://OCkHvZiJPYHsDDVvDxYG43mRfKVdR-GUCjw35aFqJcc-[`̰ cj!>Ȗ׉ETHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, FEbrUAry 17, 2023
Page 19
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission from the publisher, The Warren Group.
For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com.
BUYER1
Adrien, Gerly
Davis, Christopher J
BUYER2
Lindsey Jr, David
SELLER1
A&w Properties LLC
30 Vine Street Saugus LLC
SELLER2
ADDRESS
10 Sim Rd
30 Vine St
CITY
Saugus
Saugus
THE SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 18
view over a hot drink at a local
coffee shop. And I’ll buy
the coffee or tea. Or, if you
prefer to continue practicing
social distancing and be interviewed
from the safety of
your home on the phone or
DATE
01.23.23
01.23.23
PRICE
920000
636000
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 coffee and interview
would be the picnic
area of the Saugus Iron Works
National Historic Site.
THIS WEEK ON SAUGUS TV
Sunday, Feb. 19 from 9–11 p.m. on Channel 8 – “Sunday
Night Stooges” (The Three Stooges).
Monday, Feb. 20 all day on Channel 8 – “Movie Monday”
(classic movies).
Tuesday, Feb. 21 at 8:30 p.m. on Channel 22 – SHS Hockey
vs. Beverly from Feb. 16.
Wednesday, Feb. 22 at 4 p.m. on Channel 8 – A Finished
Work.
Thursday, Feb. 23 at 1 p.m. on Channel 8 – Saugus
Catholics Collaborative Service from Feb. 19.
Friday, Feb. 24 at 8:30 p.m. on Channel 9 – Board of
Appeals Meeting from Feb. 23.
Saturday, Feb. 25 at 8:30 p.m. on Channel 22 – SHS
Hockey vs. Stoneham from Feb. 22.
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.
While it is true that real estate is about property, we at MANGO believe it is more about people.
Understanding the needs and wants of the people we come in contact with is critical to our success and the
happiness of our clients.
We have found that since the pandemic our clients expect, as they should, that we will provide service that
sometimes goes beyond simply listing and marketing their property. More than ever, people want to be heard,
mangorealtyteam.com
38 Main St. Saugus
(781) 558-1091
20 Railroad Ave. Rockport
(978)-999-5408
want to share their hopes and sometimes their fears about complex issues such as downsizing, dealing with large
volumes of personal property or clutter, or how to resolve indecision about finances and future living
arrangements.
Our agents continually work to best listen to our clients, not only what they say with words but what they
communicate in other ways. Not only do we owe you loyalty and diligence we owe you a willingness to understand
your situation, to be available and responsive to you, or make suggestions for you to consider. Our Google reviews
bear testimony that at MANGO we put people over property
Coming Soon
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3Page 20
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, FEbrUAry 17, 2023
AnnMarie Wilcox
North of Boston.... Well Established Pilates Studio.
Topo -of-the Line equipmentf,
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SAUGUS - 7 room, 3 bedroom Garrison Colonial offers 2 ffe
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e her a Top o
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full baths, 1st �oor bedroom, o�ce, eat-in kitchen
w/granite counters and ct �ooring, detached 1 car
garage with heated loftf , corner lot ..............$609,900
COMING SOON
COMING SOON- 3
BED 1 BATH, 1500
FT.², COMPLETELY
REHABBED. NEW
SIDING, WINDOWS,
KITCHEN, BATHROOM,
FLOORS,
PAINT, ROOF. NEW
DRIVEWAY NEW
HEAT/AC. SAUGUS
CALL KEITH
781-389-0791
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
LOOKING TO
BUY OR SELL
CALL
DEBBIE
MILLER
CALL HER FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS
617-678-9710
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
FOR SALE
NEW CONSTRUCTION
FIVE NEW HOMES FROM HAMMERTIME
CONSTRUCTION. GET IN SOON TO PICK
YOUR LOT AND YOUR HOME. SAUGUS
STARTING AT $895,000 CALL ANTHONY
FOR DETAILS 857-246-1305
FOR SALE
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
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!
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