׉?4ׁB!בCט U Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://9fHKoZiaqEF9ZR14ymjzdxPkdZB8ro2fqbHyRJplNis A`'p׉	 7cassandra://TvO9G4083jyXxn-OFtI7TtXIoHVV-wSWgO5bTwq0jUUͷ`׉	 7cassandra://AXB5yJAhEfGhx7KsPnbInbNS-9IlGUSJt9MuY13Hu0E8` imu|հÑנimu|հƁ #9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈ׈Eimu|հ׉EQCommon Sense • Fiscal Responsibility • Experience
ANTHONY T. ZAMBUTO
Name on the Ballot
Common Sense • Fiscal Responsibility • Experience
5th
paid political advertisement
Vol. 35, No.44
-FREEwww.advocatenews.net
oca
Free
Every Friday
City Council seeks historical landmark
designation for Columbus statue
By Barbara Taormina
F
ive years ago, there were
calls and a petition to remove
the statue of Christopher
Columbus at 250 Revere
St. at St. Anthony of Padua
Church. Some residents argued
that Columbus participated
in the murders and enslavement
of millions of Indigenous
people and the statue
at the Church was a tribute to
genocide and colonialism.
This week the City Council
joined together to sponsor
and support a motion to request
that state Rep. Jeff rey
Turco and the Mass. Historical
Commission collaborate
with the Archdiocese of Boston
to nominate Revere’s statue
of Columbus as a national
historic landmark. Ward 1
Councillor Joanne McKenna,
COLUMBUS | SEE Page 7
Statue of Christopher Columbus at St. Anthony of Padua Church
(Advocate fi le photo)
ELECTION 2025
Three Challengers vie
for At-Large Council seats
By Barbara Taormina
W
hen voters head to the
polls next month, they
will choose fi ve people from a
slate of eight candidates in the
city councillor-at-large race.
Five of those candidates, Robert
Haas, Juan Pablo Jaramillo,
Michelle Kelley, Marc Silvestri
and Anthony Zambuto, are incumbents
seeking reelection.
And the three new faces in the
at-large race are not really new.
Ward 1 Councillor Joanne McKenna,
Anthony Parziale and
Wayne Rose, who are running
at-large, have histories of community
service and activism.
ELECTION 2025 | SEE Page 6
Daylight Savings Ts Time Endsme Ends
Sa
ht Sav
Saturturday Night!
Tu
gh
Turn Your Clock
BacBack 1 Hourk 1 Hour!
781-286-8500
Friday, October 31, 2025
Councillors support motion
for citywide message boards
promoting Election Day
By Barbara Taormina
T
he City Council supported
a motion from Ward
1 Councillor Joanne McKenna
that the Police Department
place electronic message
boards around the city
reminding residents there
is an election and to vote
on Tuesday, November 4. It
has been a quiet election
cycle with most of the campaigns
playing out on people’s
front porches as candidates
stump door-to-door.
Turnout in Revere for elections
with no mayoral or
presidential race has been
low. Even in 2023, with the
hotly contested mayoral race
been Mayor Patrick Keefe
and former City Councillor
Dan Rizzo, only 31 percent
of the city’s registered voters
turned out. Back in 2021,
with no big races on the ballot,
only 20 percent of the
electorate went to the polls.
Election Commissioner
Danielle Pietrantonio said 200
people have come in to vote
early and there were 1,700 requests
for mail-in ballots. As of
Tuesday, Oct. 28, 940 Revere
voters have cast early ballots.
This year’s races for both
City Council and School Committee
are heavy with incumbents.
Five of the eight atlarge
candidates are councillors
seeking reelection. The
only race for a ward councillor
seat is in ward 1; incumbents
are running unopposed in the
other wards.
SUPPORT | SEE Page 4
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2025
Because
you deserve
a voice who
listens,
cares, and
stands up
for you!
ELECTION DAY — TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4TH
(Polls Open 7 AM – 8 PM)
Locations:
• Beachmont School, 15 Everard Street (entrance via Bennington Street)
• American Legion Post 61, 249 Broadway
This election isn’t about big headlines —
it’s about our neighborhood, our families, and our future.
       
Let’s show that when Revere comes together,
we can make real change right here at home.
VOTE JIM MERCURIO
For Ward 1 City Councilor
A New Vision - A New Voice - A New Revere. (Paid Pol. Adv.)
For Advertising with Results, call The Advocate Newspapers
at 781-286-8500 or Info@advocatenews.net
call The Advocate Newspapers
MASS. HOUSE PASSES
LEGISLATION TO PROTECT
PUBLIC TRANSIT WORKERS
FROM ASSAULT
Bill strengthens protections for public transit
workers by expanding current laws on
assault and battery against public employees
B
OSTON — Wednesday, October
22, 2025 — Today,
the Massachusetts House of
Representatives passed legislation
that strengthens protections
for public transit
workers by expanding current
laws on assault and battery
against public employees.
The bill, An Act relative to assault
and battery upon a transit
worker, ensures that transit
employees receive the same
legal heightened protections
as other public employees
while performing their jobs.
“This bill responds to growing
concerns from transit
agencies and labor advocates
about the rising number of attacks
on workers, making the
passage of this legislation critical,”
said House Speaker Ronald
J. Mariano (D-Quincy).
“The House remains committed
to protecting workers and
supporting those who serve
the Commonwealth in essential
roles. I’m grateful to Chairman
Day and Chairman McGonagle
for their hard work,
and to all my colleagues in the
House for recognizing the importance
of this bill.”
“Our public transit system
runs because of the dedication
of workers who show up
every day to serve us,” said
Representative Michael S.
Day (D-Stoneham), House
Chair of the Joint Committee
on the Judiciary. “Today
we affi rmed the House’s continued
commitment to protect
those workers who are
essential to the success of the
Commonwealth and our everyday
lives.”
“Our transit workers provide
critical services all over
the Commonwealth, yet are
many times assaulted by the
very customers they serve. I
am so thrilled to have this bill
passed to provide our transit
workers with the protections
they deserve,” said Representative
Joseph W. McGonagle
(D-Everett). “The right
to feel safe and supported on
the job is just that, a right. I’m
grateful today that my colleagues
in the House can join
me in supporting this right. I’m
also extremely grateful to the
brave men and women who
came forward to share their
stories. Thank you especially
to Mr. Speaker, Chair Day and
all those who helped get this
bill passed.”
“Protecting our public transit
workers is about safeguarding
the people who keep Massachusetts
moving every single
day,” said Representative
Jessica Giannino (D-Revere).
“The Carmen’s Union has been
tireless in their advocacy for
those on the front lines, standing
up for the safety, respect,
and dignity of their members
and all transit employees. I’m
grateful to Speaker Mariano
for his steadfast leadership,
and to Representative McGonagle
for championing this
MASS HOUSE | SEE Page 4
׉	 7cassandra://Na3-nnuLBpcfmDZcJ0QY5LydUpFapqjjqc-IyVMUsg48` imu|հ׉ETHE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2025
Page 3
House Passes Bill to Enhance Child Welfare Protections
Bill strengthens oversight, transparency, and accountability
within the Commonwealth’s child welfare system
B
OSTON — Wednesday,
October 22, 2025 — Today,
the Massachusetts House
of Representatives passed
comprehensive legislation to
strengthen oversight, transparency,
and accountability
within the Commonwealth’s
child welfare system. An Act
Enhancing Child Welfare Protections
modernizes the Department
of Children and
Families’ (DCF) statutory reporting,
clarifies the independence
of the Offi ce of the
Child Advocate (OCA), improves
educational stability
for children in care, and updates
the state’s child fatality
review process.
“Every child in Massachusetts
deserves safety, stability,
and opportunity,” said
House Speaker Ronald J.
Mariano (D-Quincy). “This
bill strengthens oversight, improves
coordination between
agencies, and ensures that
children in state care receive
the support that they need to
thrive. I’d like to thank Chairman
Livingstone for his work
on this bill, and all my colleagues
in the House for supporting
it.”
“This bill strengthens the
systems that protect the Commonwealth’s
most vulnerable
children, said Representative
Jay D. Livingstone (DBoston),
House Chair of the
Joint Committee on Children,
Families and Persons
with Disabilities. “It gives
DCF, the Legislature, and the
public more tools to better
understand what’s working,
identify where improvement is
needed, and continue improving
outcomes for children. I
want to thank Speaker Mariano
and Chair Michlewitz for
their commitment to these issues,
as well as my House colleagues
for supporting this important
legislation.”
“I’m proud to join my colleagues
in supporting this
important legislation that
strengthens protections for
children and families across
the Commonwealth,” said
Representative Jessica Giannino
(D-Revere). “Under
Speaker Mariano’s leadership,
the House continues to
an independent state agency.
It further expends the OCA’s
authority to examine disproportionality,
partner with
agencies while safeguarding
oversight, maintain a public
mandated reporter website,
and conduct systemwide reviews
of DCF.
Additionally, the bill
Jessica Giannino
State Representative
take meaningful action to ensure
that every child in Massachusetts
is safe, supported,
and given the opportunity
to thrive. By improving
oversight and accountability
within DCF and empowering
the Offi ce of the Child Advocate,
we’re building a stronger,
more transparent system
that truly puts the best interests
of children fi rst.”
“The most important job
we have as a government is
to protect the most vulnerable
members of our society;
our children. I am grateful that
Speaker Mariano has made reform
of our child protection
system a top priority. This important
legislation increases
transparency and reporting
requirement so that we, as
policy makers, are better, and
more timely, aware of defi ciencies
in the system and further
will provide greater accountability
across the system,” said
Representative Jeff rey Rosario
Turco (D-Winthrop).
This legislation expands
statutory reporting by DCF to
include disability and disaggregated
demographic data,
breakdowns of 51A reports
by reporter role, ADA accommodation
and complaint metrics,
and refined placement
and permanency measures. It
also adds reporting requirements
on outcomes for youth
aging out of DCF’s care, behavioral
health boarding, and education
metrics, such as individualized
education program
counts, attendance, and graduation
rates.
Jeff rey Rosario Turco
State Representative
The bill passed today allows
for the creation of a DCF
Education Unit, tasked with
academic monitoring, support,
and strengthening coordination
with school districts.
It also requires DCF
and the Department of Elementary
and Secondary Education
(DESE) to establish
clear enrollment timelines
and record transfer standards
for children in DCF custody
who change schools.
The bill passed today also
clarifi es the role of the Offi ce
of the Child Advocate (OCA) as
strengthens the Child Fatality
Review System by establishing
joint leadership between
the OCA and the Department
of Public Health (DPH). It further
updates the membership
to include the Department of
Early Education & Care (EEC)
and codifi es the structure of
local review teams.
Lastly, the bill improves timely
notifications to children’s
counsel following placement
changes, hospitalizations, 51A
reports or school disciplinary
events. It also requires reporting
on children who remain in
psychiatric care beyond medical
necessity, including length
of stay and licensure/training
requirements for DCF social
workers.
The bill passed the House of
Representatives 159-1. It now
goes to the Senate for consideration.
Lawrence
A. Simeone Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
~ Since 1989 ~
* Corporate Litigation
* Criminal/Civil
* MCAD
* Zoning/Land Court
* Wetlands Litigation
* Workmen’s Compensation
* Landlord/Tenant Litigation
* Real Estate Law
* Construction Litigation
* Tax Lien
* Personal Injury
* Bankruptcy
* Wrongful Death
* Zoning/Permitting Litigation
300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2025
SUPPORT | FROM Page 1
This year, the School Committee
begins electing ward
representatives. Most of
those races are either unopposed
incumbents or unopposed
candidates. The
at-large School Committee
race is a slate of four candidates,
three of whom —
Stacey Bronson-Rizzo, John
Kingston and Frederick Sannella
— are incumbents.
Ralph DeCicco is also in the
race. Voters select two of
the four.
There is one nonbinding
ballot question — asking
voters if they feel the City
Council should consider repealing
the ban on recreational
marijuana establishments
in Revere. Councillors
have been inclined to revisit
the question, in part because
of the potential revenue
it could bring to the city.
8 Norwood St.
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Scan & Follow Us on Facebook!Scan & Follow Us on Facebook!
M&T Bank to Host Revere First-Time
Homebuyer Seminar at Rumney
Marsh Academy on November 6
R
EVERE, MA — M&T Bank, in
partnership with the City
of Revere’s Aff ordable Housing
Trust Fund Board, will host
a seminar for those interested
in learning more about becoming
a fi rst-time homeowner.
The event will be held at
Rumney Marsh Academy, 140
American Legion Highway in
Revere, on Thursday, November
6, from 5:30-8:30pm. Spanish
and Arabic translation will
be available for those who
need it.
The event is designed to offer
an overview of the process
MASS HOUSE | FROM Page 2
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critical legislation that ensures
our public transit workers have
the protections they deserve.”
“I am pleased to support
long overdue legislation to
provide added criminal protections
for violence against
our public transportation employees.
Hearing the stories of
MBTA workers being assaulted,
threatened, and spit on is
heartbreaking and at the same
time infuriating. I am hopeful
that this legislation will
promptly make it to the Governor’s
desk for her signature and
we can make a fi rm statement
that this conduct isn’t to be tolerated
in our Commonwealth,”
said Representative Jeffrey
Rosario Turco (D-Winthrop).
and answer questions about
those interested in the journey
to homeownership. Peter Katsarakes,
Assistant VP and Mortgage
Loan Offi cer at M&T Bank,
along with a team of experts,
will discuss requirements for
qualifying for a mortgage and
the process for applying, and
will answer questions you may
have. They will also share information
about the ONE+ Mortgage
program, designed to be
an attainable and aff ordable
mortgage option for incomeeligible
fi rst-time homebuyers
in Greater Boston.
“We thank the House for
voting in favor of this important
legislation to protect our
MBTA train and bus operators,
and all public transit employees,”
said Jim Evers, President
of Boston Carmens Union
Local 589. “Protecting transit
workers is essential to maintaining
a safe and quality public
transportation system. This
bill will ensure the safety of the
essential workers who keep
our communities moving every
day. We look forward to
swift passage in the Senate
so that these vital protections
can be signed into state law to
safeguard transit workers for
generations to come.”
Current Massachusetts law
imposes heightened penalties
on individuals for assault
In addition to representatives
from M&T Bank, representatives
from the City of Revere
will be on hand to share
information about the First
Time Homebuyer Downpayment
Assistance Program
and other resources available
for those seeking aff ordable
homeownership opportunities.
For
more information or to
RSVP, please contact either:
Peter Katsarakes, M&T Bank:
pkatsarakes@mtb.com or
Joe Gravellese, City of Revere,
jgravellese@revere.org
and battery against public employees
including police offi -
cers, fi refi ghters, emergency
medical personnel and other
government workers. This bill
adds public transit workers to
that list.
The bill also clarifies and
broadens the defi nition of assault
by specifi cally recognizing
that projecting bodily fl uids,
such as spitting or throwing
substances like urine, constitutes
assault against a public
worker. Off enders would face a
sentence ranging from a minimum
of 90 days to 2.5 years in
a house of correction, a fi ne between
$500 and $5,000 or both.
Having passed the House
of Representatives 160-0, the
bill now goes to the Senate for
consideration.
Monogram D4 Double siding
׉	 7cassandra://eJJRv03kMifPVQCuiYOEXSUXeooQFHIA879Rons6AFI9Z` imu|հ׉ETHE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2025
Page 5
~ POLITICAL ENDORSEMENT ~
Electricians Union Local 2222 Endorses Michelle Kelley
for Re-Election as Revere City Councillor At-Large
T
he International Brotherhood
of Electrical Workers Local
2222, one of the largest telecommunications
and technology
workers unions in New England,
has announced its endorsement
of Michelle Kelley’s re-election
campaign for the At-Large
seat on the Revere City Council,
stating that “the residents of Revere
deserve a strong Councillor
At-Large.”
As a lifelong Revere resident,
attorney, and small business
owner, Michelle Kelley has built
widespread support since her
2023 election by honoring her
commitments and actively engaging
with voters. She has
championed transparency and
accountability in local government,
consistently listening to
residents and ensuring their
voices are heard.
The union, representing thousands
of skilled telecommunications
and technology workers
across Greater Boston, formally
endorsed Kelley, citing her courage
and vision for Revere. Andrew
Farr, Treasurer, stated, “[Kelley’s]
history of advocating for
working people is inspiring and
unimpeachable.”
“We know that you will represent
the people of Revere with
dedication and distinction,” Farr
stated.
Kelley, raised in a union family
in Revere and who worked her
way through school, said she
was honored to receive the support
of Local 2222.
“It means a lot to me that the
men and women of Local 2222
want me to have their backs on
the City Council,” Kelley said.
“They don’t want a councillor
who’s going to cave to what
outside developers want to pad
their bottom lines; they want
someone who’s going to fi ght
for what’s fair.”
Criticizing proposals that routinely
bend the municipal zoning
code authored by Revere
residents, Kelley has raised concerns
regarding infrastructure,
congestion, and keeping quality
of life for Revere residents a
priority.
“People want someone who
listens to their concerns and
stands up for them without fear
of intimidation. They want transparency.
They want responsiveBricklayers
& Allied Craftworkers Local 3 and Teamsters Local 25
join local residents in support of Michelle Kelley candidate for reelection
for Councillor at Large during a standout event at St. Mary’s
Church on Washington Ave earlier this month. (Courtesy photo)
ness,” Kelley said. “My agenda is
nothing else but working for the
people and enacting their will.”
Demonstrating resilience in
tackling complex issues during
her fi rst term, Michelle Kelley requested
a fi scally prudent review
of the new high school’s costs,
expanded the senior work-off
abatement program, successfully
closed a mechanical parking
loophole, advocated for strict adherence
to Revere’s zoning regulations,
endorsed term limits for
elected offi cials, and consistently
stood with residents, amplifying
their voices by often casting
the lone ‘no’ vote against proposals
they opposed.
Kelley vowed that, after reelection,
she will keep guiding
Revere with fi scal responsibility,
thoroughly investigating intricate
issues and posing challenging
questions. She is dedicated
to performing her role boldly,
steadfastly supporting residents
on all issues impacting their lives,
unafraid of obstacles or pressure.
Kelley stated, “I will continue
to serve the residents of Revere,
listening to their concerns
and standing fi rmly with them
on all issues aff ecting their lives.”
The fi rst person in her family to
graduate college, Kelley attended
Revere Public Schools and
worked her way through both
college and law school, receiving
degrees from Salem State University
and New England School
of Law. She is admitted to practice
in Massachusetts state and
federal courts.
With roots in the 19th century,
Local 2222 represents thousands
of telecommunications
and technology workers across
Greater Boston, belonging to
the International Brotherhood
of Electrical Workers. The local
prides itself on its commitment
to improving the lives of workers
and their families, as well as
advancing training and cuttingedge
technologies.
For more information or to get
involved with Kelley’s campaign
for Councillor At-Large, please
visit her Facebook page @Michelle
Kelley, Revere Councillor
at Large or call: 781-854-1717.
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
3rd Name on
the Ballot
th
vo
3rd Name on
“I’vemade sure yourvoiceswere
heard. Ikeptmypromisesand
protectedyounotoutside interestsand
Iwillcontinuedoingwhat’sright, not
what’seasy!Ihumblyaskforyour
vote onNov4 . Thankyou!”
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2025
ELECTION 2025 | FROM Page 1
Meet the candidates:
Joanne McKenna
Ward 1 Councillor Joanne
McKenna has represented
Beachmont for the past 10?
years. Although the former
Revere High teacher is fi ercely
committed to her ward and
neighbors, she now wants to
shift her focus to advocating for
the entire city.
And it makes sense. Much
of McKenna’s work on the City
Council has been for the benefi t
of all of Revere. McKenna is committed
to protecting Revere’s
unique environment and wildlife.
She spearheaded the plan
to convert the retired Beachmont
fi re station into a community
arts center. During the past
10 years, McKenna wrote 17 ordinances
that have had an impact
on the entire city. She successfully
pushed to implement
a ban on plastic bags, polystyrene
and billboards; she developed
regulations for Airbnbs
and short-term rentals; she
managed to extend yard waste
and street sweeping through
December, and she called for
the use of less invasive rat poison
to protect wildlife and domestic
animals.
McKenna spent much of the
summer knocking on doors. Despite
a late summer case of covid,
she said, it’s been a wonderful
experience. She said she’s
knocked 3,700 times and she
has loved it. “I don’t take anyIf
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Joanne McKenna
Anthony Parziale
thing for granted,” she said. “If
you want something, you work
for it.”
The campaigning has brought
her back in touch with former
students and coworkers from
the school departments as well
as many people she hadn’t seen
for years.
“People are concerned,” she
said, adding that overdevelopment,
the cost of the high school
and the fact that residents can’t
park in front of their homes are
issues residents frequently mention.
And then there are taxes
and water and sewer bills that
worry many residents. “I understand,”
she said. “I live here too.”
“Many concerns are the result
of overbuilding,” said McKenna,
adding that these are not
great times.
“We would be in better shape
if Suff olk Downs was completed,”
she said.
McKenna has invested 43
years in service to the city, fi rst
as a teacher then as a city councillor.
She hopes to continue
working as a councillor-at-large
to make Revere safe, clean and
beautiful. “If God wants me to do
this, I’ll do it,” she said.
Anthony Parziale
Many in Revere fi rst met Anthony
Parziale when a transitional
shelter for the homeless
was proposed in his Arcadia
Street neighborhood. Residents
acknowledged the need for the
shelter, but they opposed locating
it in their residential neighborhood
packed with families
and children. Parziale led the
opposition to the shelter, and
it was strong and steady. The
City Council said the project
was governed by state regulations,
and they had no authority
to stop it. The plan was withdrawn,
and another location
was sought.
“It felt like the people on Arcadia
Street didn’t have a voice,”
said Parziale. “Every resident deserves
the right to take part in
government that makes decisions
that aff ect them.”
Parziale was also surprised by
the City Council’s position that
the shelter was a state project
over which they had no authority.
“Those words don’t make
sense to me,” he said, adding
that if he were a councillor, he
would negotiate with state or
federal offi cials and agencies on
behalf of constituents.
In the wake of the Arcadia
Street debate, Parziale ran for an
at-large seat on the City Council
in 2023. He came in sixth, which
in Revere means if any elected
councillor-at-large cannot serve
the term, Parziale would be appointed
to that seat. Parziale began
attending every meeting.
He feels city government
should start with the small
things. “If we do the little things
right, picking up the trash, answering
311, then when a big
issue comes along, we’ll be able
to work together and handle it,”
he said.
Still, Parziale watches the big
issues unfolding in the city. “I’m
a huge fan of commercial development,”
he said. “We get the
revenue without a huge strain
on infrastructure.”
He’s also clear on development
within neighborhoods.
“If the neighborhood doesn’t
want it, that’s an easy no for me,”
he said.
Parziale also has some ideas
on the Community Investment
Trust Fund, which collects contributions
from developers to
offset the impact their projects
have on the city. The sums
are substantial and often pay
for major city projects, but Parziale
has proposed distributing
some of that money to residents
directly aff ected by developments.
“We can do a little
more for abutters,” he said. “Let’s
do right by the people.”
Parziale also thinks mitigation
money should go straight
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Page 7
still others may know Rose as a
sharply critical watchdog who
has harshly criticized public offi
cials and projects in the past.
“In this race, I’ve changed,” he
said. “I had to change.” Rose acknowledges
in the past he has
been overly negative.
“I’m not a politician, I’m a
Wayne Rose
into the high school stabilization
fund. “At least we’ll know
it’s being used for a good cause,”
he said.
Parziale said he’s hopeful
about the high school, but he
believes the city needs to be
proactive about fi nding funds
to support it. “Residents are worried
about an override,” he said.
“I’ll vote no on that.”
Parziale would also like to begin
a discussion about capping
property taxes for seniors. He
said he would have to work with
the CFO. “I believe there’s a way
to pay for the school without
burdening residents,” he said.
Parziale is the deputy superintendent
of public works for the
city of Woburn. “Other people
will talk about infrastructure, I
know about it,” he said.
And his job allows him to tell
voters, “I’m blue collar, I work
just like you. Your issues are my
issues.”
Parziale’s broad goal is to
make local government transparent
and fair. “I want things
to be easy,” he said. “I don’t want
residents to guess what’s going
on in the budget. People need
to be heard.”
Like other candidates, Parziale
has been knocking on doors,
and he said he’s feeling really
good about the response from
voters. “I think people want
some change,” he said. “When
we have change, we have hope.”
Wayne Rose
Many in Revere may know
Wayne Rose for his work starting
the Safe Saturdays program,
which gave kids a safe
night in a gym rather than on
the streets. Safe Saturdays ran
for 30 weeks, and Rose hopes
to restore the program. Others
may know Rose for fighting
against parking meters on
Revere Beach. Others may recall
he raised $3,000 and delivered
a meal to residents at Jack
Satter House during covid. But
street guy,” he said, adding that
he’s learned how to change.
“I’ve learned from knocking
on doors and talking to people,
and that’s what I’ll move forward
with,” he said. And according to
Rose, one of his big takeaways
from talking to residents is that
people are “really mad.”
“We need change,” he said.
“The traffi c, the development
— we need small buildings not
apartments on top of apartments.”
Rose
acknowledges the city
needs some development,
some aff ordable residential and
commercial development. He
said the cost of living in Revere
is pushing older residents out of
the city. “Everything is a fee,” he
said, “parking fees, trash fees…”
And Rose questions the way
the city is spending its money.
He worries that the ultimate
cost of the new high school
could be exorbitant, and he
questions why the city is giving
the Suff olk Downs development
a $15 million tax break but can’t
fi nd the money for school buses.
Rose also has experience tackling
quality-of-life issues.
“I’ve fought the rat population
for 10 years now,” he said.
Rose believes the problem is
open dumpsters at restaurants,
properties on Revere Beach, at
the Hill and A.C. Whalen Schools
and the police barracks. He said
nothing is done to regulate the
dumpsters while residents receive
fi nes if their trash barrels
are not closed tightly.
When the Department of
Conservation & Recreation installed
parking meters on Revere
Beach, Rose harnessed residents’
anger and organized and
led rallies and protests. “People
came out, gathered and held
signs,” said Rose.
And they were heard. “We
got the meters off the beach.”
And Revere regained its standing
as the fi rst public beach in
the United States with free and
open access to all.
Rose’s campaign material
highlights his and his family’s
working-class roots. His pitch to
voters is “I’m a blue collar citizen
like you…A vote for Wayne Rose
is a vote for the people.”
COLUMBUS |
FROM Page 1
one of the original sponsors
of the motion, gave a brief
history of the statue commissioned
by the Knights
of Columbus and sculpted
by Belgian artist Alois Buyens
in 1892. It was originally
installed at the Cathedral
of the Holy Cross in Boston,
but in 1925 Cardinal William
O’Connell ordered the statue
to be moved to Revere as a
gift to the city’s Italian American
residents. The statue was
intended to symbolize the
importance of Columbus to
the city’s immigrant community,
and it has stood at
St. Anthony’s for more than
100 years.
McKenna also shared the
harrowing story of her family’s
escape from Italy during
World War II. “The statue
is a tribute to my mother
and what the Italian people
endured,” said McKenna,
adding that the timing of the
motion was especially significant
since October is Italian
American Heritage Month.
Ward 5 Councillor Angela
Guarino-Sawaya said she
regularly attends St. Anthony’s
church, and the statue
is personally meaningful to
her. “It’s an important part of
my heritage and history,” she
said, adding, “This is special
to my heart.”
Ward 3 Councillor Anthony
Cogliandro described himself
as a proud Italian American.
“Five years ago, there
were threats to take the statue
down. Now we are trying
to make it a historical landmark.
This is a proud day, and
I’m proud to be part of that,”
said Cogliandro.
The eff ort to remove the
statue was also clear in the
memory of Councillor-atlarge
Anthony Zambuto.
Zambuto said he remembers
the horror of someone
saying during a political rally
that the statue has to go.
“It was horrifying to hear
someone say that. If we go
through with this motion,
that will never happen,” said
Zambuto, who referred to
the move throughout the
country to remove certain
statues and monuments.
“This is our heritage, our
history, and it’s not going to
be erased,” added Zambuto.
McKenna said she discussed
the motion with
church offi cials at St. Anthony’s,
and they support the
plan.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2025
~ REVERE HISTORY ~
THIS TUESDAY
NOVEMBER 4TH
VOTE TO -RE-LECT
T
President George Washington’s
Little Known Brief Journey
Through Revere in 1789
By John J. Henry
JARAMILLO
City Councillor At-Large
Juan Pablo
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wo hundred and thirty-six
years ago, in 1789, the Town
of Chelsea (now Chelsea, Revere
and Winthrop) had a total population
of 472 residents, with a
majority of the population living
in the Revere section of the town
near the current Revere City Hall.
At that time the Revere section
of Chelsea was predominantly
a farming community consisting
of approximately 30 homesteads.
Also, in those days, the
northernmost section of Revere
was known as the “Pan Handle,”
due to the peculiar geographical
shape of the land extending
from current North Revere along
a long narrow half-mile-wide
corridor extending four miles in
length all the way to South Reading
(now Wakefi eld). It consisted
of one thousand acres with only
fi ve homesteads.
In 1789, following his inauguration
as the fi rst President of the
United States, George Washington,
“The Father of Our Country,”
decided to take a road trip traveling
to the then 13 colonies, in an
eff ort to unify the new states into
a new nation. Historian Nathaniel
Philbrick describes Washington’s
long journey, by the former
commander in chief of the Continental
Army as using his prominence,
prestige and leadership
to convince newly minted Americans
to put aside their parochial
colonial past and move forward
as citizens of a new nation.
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ington used his star power to reassure
the citizens of the new nation
that they were on the right
path. Washington took his show
on the road, traveling on horseback
and by carriage along rutted
dirt roads and across rising
rivers to bring his message directly
to the citizens in every village
and town that he visited
along the way. Washington often
dressed in his most impressive
Continental Army uniform and
rode on his favorite white stallion
into the villages and towns
that he visited — always greeted
by cheering citizens. During
his journey, Washington spoke
of his hopes for the new nation
and how he needed the support
of every citizen to make the new
nation a reality.
President Washington arrived
in Boston on October 24, 1789,
and for fi ve long days and nights
of orations, receptions and parades,
received the cheers, admiration
and devotion of the citizens
of Boston. The president departed
the Town of Boston on
October 29, 1789, and moved
on, escorted by a detachment of
the Boston Corps of Horse, traveling
through Charlestown and
Medford and then proceeding
into the Town of Malden, traveling
along Salem Street with his
entourage.
During the early days of the
Colonial era, the boundaries between
each town were not clearly
delineated, so on October 29,
President George Washington
with his white charger Prescott,
the horse he rode while serving
as President (Courtesy photo)
1789, unbeknownst to the President
of the United States, he departed
from the Town of Malden
and entered the North Revere
section of the Town of Chelsea, at
the present location of the combined
Malden/Revere fi re station
on Salem Street. Like President
Washington, the then residents
of the “Pan Handle” were also totally
unaware that the President
of the United States was briefl y
passing along Salem Street, via
the “Pan Handle,” through their
sparsely populated neighborhood
and into Lynn (now Saugus)
on his journey to Salem and
Marblehead.
Although history does not
record Washington’s passage
through North Revere, based
upon the unusual length and
width of the “Pan Handle,” in direct
proximity to the Town of
Lynn (now Saugus), President
Washington could not have entered
the Town of Lynn, (now
Saugus) without first passing
through the North Revere section
of the Town of Chelsea. From
there, according to Saugus historians,
Washington then made a
brief stop at the “Rising Sun Tavern,”
then located at the intersection
of what is now Lincoln Avenue
and Ballard Street, Saugus,
before moving on to Salem and
Marblehead.
And that’s the way it was.
(John J. Henry served as City
Clerk of the City of Revere for 32
years, from 1977 to 2009. He has
written numerous articles about
Revere and its people.)
׉	 7cassandra://GvovBIQLKUCrTx82NaOJmyY2Z4iV9hqi0xly-9MSSTg5` imu|հ׉ETHE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2025
Page 9
Councillors propose toll booths to ease traffic congestion
By Barbara Taormina
C
ity councillors continually
craft motions to ease traffi c
congestion, among other issues,
throughout the city. This
week, a motion from Councillors
Anthony Cogliandro
(Ward 3) and Joanne McKenna
(Ward 1) took the fi ght against
traffic down another route.
The councillors propose that
the City Council, the mayor,
the city planner and any other
relevant stakeholder begin
a formal discussion on the feasibility
of implementing tolls
on certain city roads. Multiple
state highways run through
the city, putting a signifi cant
strain on the city’s residents
and its infrastructure without
any financial compensation
from Massachusetts.
Cogliandro and McKenna
stressed Revere is a cutthrough
city used by Bostonbound
commuters throughout
the North Shore and the
city doesn’t receive any fi nancial
aid or support to help with
the traffic volume problem
that causes. They believe tolls
would cut down traffic and
create a significant revenue
stream that would help pay
for the new high school and
bolster the city’s infrastructure.
Revere residents and city
employees would be exempt
from any local tolls.
Ward 2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky
said local tolls would
never happen because they
would need to be approved
by MassDOT. Novoselsky said
a toll was approved for Ocean
Avenue in 2009, but it hasn’t
been implemented yet.
Councillor-at-Large Juan
Pablo Jaramillo praised the
motion and said dynamic
pricing would encourage the
use of public transportation,
one of the best ways to control
traffi c.
Ward 5 Councillor Angela
Guarino-Sawaya also fully
supported the idea and
felt the fi rst toll should be on
North Shore Road. GuarinoSawaya
figures if every car
paid 50 cents and even if 40
cents went to the state and
Revere only kept a dime, the
toll would generate millions
of dollars. And it would reduce
traffi c and increase safety.
Novoselsky insisted that if
toll booths went up on state
roads, the city wouldn’t see a
penny. “Maybe we might get a
few bucks, but no way do I see
this going through,” he said.
Cogliandro said Revere deserves
to be getting some revenue
and support because of
all the state roads and traffi c.
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He said the motion is only calling
for a discussion on tolls.
“Let’s start a bigger conversation,”
he said.
City Council President Marc
Silvestri proposed requesting
that the mayor start a conversation
with MassDOT to
give Revere its share of existing
tolls.
McKenna said she has fi led
that motion three times and
it goes nowhere. “They don’t
even look at us,” she said.
“So, we’ll give it one more
shot,” said Silvestri.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2025
Jack Satter House Bocce Banquet
O
n Sunday, October 26,
2025, the Jack Satter
House celebrated the end
of another successful Bocce
Season thanks to the effort
of bocce organizer Ernie
Brown. A delicious brunch
and good time were had by
all at the Marina Restaurant
and Wharf.
Frank Sarro, Stevie Ray and Fred Sannella
Dale Willet, Mike Prizzio and Bill Reedy
Bocce organizer Ernie Brown
and Joe DeCicco
Second Place Team: Claudio Corneille, Phylis Prizzio, Barbara Martel,
and Charlie Aronson
First Place Team: Billy Reedy, Stevie Ray, and Joe DeCicco
Third Place Team: Frank Alfano
and Chet Wozniak
Fourth Place Team: Maureen Willet, Kathy Bennett, and Frank
Sarro
Gladys Galves, RoseLee Vincent and Bocce organizer Ernie Brown
Be prepared before the next power outage.
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Millie Schettino, Kathy Smith and Phylis Prezzio
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with qualifying purchase*
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Janice del Grosso, Liz Kirby, and Kathy Bennett
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Page 11
~ REVERE CITY COUNCIL ROUNDUP ~
By Th e Advocate
Register to rent
T
he City Council supported a
verbal motion from Ward 4
Councillor Paul Argenzio to ask
the mayor to create a working
group to establish an ordinance
for a registry of all rental properties
in the city.
A registry would generate a
comprehensive list of all rental
properties in the city and allow
for an inspection schedule.
Argenzio said property owners
would pay a registration fee,
around $40 or $50, and a reregistration
fee in subsequent
years, approximately $15.
“This would be a substantial
revenue stream,” he said.
According to Argenzio, Lynn
and Boston have registries that
work on a fi ve-year cycle with
20 percent of rental units being
inspected each year. Failure to
register would be considered a
violation.
“That would give the city
some teeth and require everyone
to register,” said Argenzio
adding the registry would help
the inspectional services department
and ensure all rental
units are inspected.
“It gives the city some responsibility
to make sure everyone
in Revere has safe living conditions,”
said Argenzio. “A lot of
cities do this, and it’s proven to
be useful.”
Several councillors raised concerns
that fees generated by the
ordinance would be passed on
to tenants, but Argenzio said the
fees were minimal.
The council also unanimousT
he
City of Revere’s municipal
election is coming up
soon! Mark your calendars for
Tuesday, November 5, and look
up your polling locations on
the Elections and Voting webpage
of the city’s website. In the
meantime, you can get to know
your candidates by watching
RevereTV. All candidates were
given the opportunity to record
or submit their own video
statements of up to fi ve minutes
long. These statements are now
airing in between programming
on RTV GOV and are also posted
to the RevereTV YouTube page.
The videos will remain on television
until Election Day.
On election night, tune in to
RevereTV for live election coverage
that starts at 8:00 pm,
ly approved a motion recommended
favorably by the Legislative
Aff airs Subcommittee for a
home rule petition allowing the
city to set penalties and liens for
violations of the rooming house
& certifi cate of fi tness ordinance.
Sign of the times
T
he council accepted the favorable
recommendation of
the Legislative Aff airs Subcommittee
and voted to repeal the
ordinance dictating when and
how political signs may be posted
on private property. The Supreme
Court has ruled political
signs are protected under
the First Amendment and the
guaranteed right to free speech.
However, because of an objection
by Ward 2 Councillor Ira
Novoselsky, who feels the ordinance
has kept Revere clean
during the fall, the motion was
tabled.
Protection against
Wage Theft
T
he council unanimously approved
an ordinance from
Councillor-at-Large Juan Pablo
Jaramillo and favorably recommended
by the Legislative Affairs
Subcommittee amending
wage theft policies in Revere.
The ordinance creates protections
for workers who are not
paid according to wage and
hour laws. According to Jaramillo,
low-wage workers and workers
in dangerous jobs are most
vulnerable to wage theft. Common
types of wage theft include
unpaid overtime, failure to pay
for all hours worked including
training and meal breaks, Illegal
deductions from paychecks
and withhold fi nal paychecks after
termination or resignation.
Welcome aboard
T
he following appointments
from Mayor Patrick Keefe
were referred to the council’s
Appointments Subcommittee.
The reappointment of Ellie Vargas
to the Disability Commission
and the appointments of David
Leary, Nicholas Gauvin, Jacklyn
Damiano, Wilson Correa, Natalia
Ardagna and John Shannon
Bianchi to the Parks and Recreation
Commission.
AI arrives in Revere
T
he council agreed to a motion
from Councillor-at-Large
Michelle Kelley to invite Mr.
Vamshi Paili to present his AIpowered
public data accessibility
platform designed specifically
for Revere. Kelley said the
platform is packed with useful
information for residents and
councillors.
Ban on Crypto ATMs
C
ouncillors supported a motion
presented by Council
President Silvestri to request
the City’s Policy Writer & Analyst
to draft an ordinance banning
cryptocurrency ATMs and
kiosks from being operated in
the City of Revere. Silvestri also
proposed that the City Council
send a letter to the Joint Committee
on Financial Services in
favor of H.1247, An Act Relative
to Preventing Fraud and Establishing
Regulations on Certain
Virtual Currencies. Silvestri said
the motion is not against crypRevereTV
Spotlight
right when the polls close. The
audience will be greeted and
led through the results live as
they come in by hosts Jessica
Giannino and Kathi-Anne Reinstein.
You can watch this special
program on RTV GOV and YouTube.
RTV GOV is channel 9 for
Comcast subscribers and channels
13 and 613 on RCN.
RTV GOV is also where you
fi nd all of Revere’s local government
meetings. These meetings
play live and then replay over
the following weeks. All meetings
stay posted to the RevereTV
YouTube page to be viewed at
your convenience. The current
rotation of October meeting replays
includes the Commission
on Disabilities, License Commission,
Traffi c Commission, Zoning
Board of Appeals, RHS Building
Committee, Legislative Affairs
Sub-Committee and Revere City
Council.
Revere has had many Halloween-spirited
community
events over the past few weekends.
Most recently, the Revere
Beach Partnership held its
Annual Pumpkin Dash on the
beach. RevereTV was there to
catch some of the events, including
the award ceremony
for runners and costume wearRevereTV
| SEE Page 21
C
tocurrency, but rather the ATMs
which have been known to target
seniors with get-rich-quick
schemes only to steal their life
savings.
Chris Chavarria
Playground
ouncillors unanimously supported
a motion presented
by Councillor Anthony Cogliandro,
Councillor Robert Haas,
and Council President Silvestri
that the Early Childhood Playground
at the Lincoln School be
dedicated in memory of Chris
Chavarria. Cogliandro read an
email from someone who wanted
to remain anonymous that
explained the reasons for the
dedication.
“I believe the new early childhood
playground at the Lincoln
School should be dedicated to
Chris Chavarria because his life
and spirit represent the best of
our community,” read the email.
“Chris was a bright, kind, and
joyful spirit who once walked
the halls of the Lincoln School as
a fi fth grader. Even while facing
rare and aggressive leukemia,
he showed remarkable courage,
positivity, and love for others.”
Traffic signal fixed
W
ard 5 Councillor GuarinoSawaya
fi led a motion to
request MassDOT to resynchronize
the traffi c signalization at
the intersection of Revere Street
and North Shore in the interest
of public safety. GuarinoSawaya
told fellow councillors
that the traffi c signal had been
adjusted, and the motion was
placed on fi le.
Turn up the lights
T
he council approved a motion
from Ward 5 Councillor
Angela Guarino-Sawaya that
the City Engineer and/or the Department
of Public Works, work
in coordination with National
Grid, to evaluate the street
lighting conditions along Breed
Street near St. Anthony of Padua
Church, specifi cally in the area
west of the chapel toward the
rear parking lot, to determine if
additional or upgraded lighting
is needed to improve nighttime
visibility and public safety.
Go Revere Bocce
M
otion presented by Councillor
Robert Haas and Councillor
Angela Guarino-Sawaya
that the City Council award
Certifi cates of Commendation
to the Revere Bocce Team in
honor of their victory over their
‘friendly’ rivals in the Revere vs.
Chelsea Bocce Tournament this
past September.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2025
Revere League for Special Needs’ Halloween party spooky fun
G
hosts and goblins danced
around the dance fl oor doing
Sunday’s Revere League
for Special Needs Halloween
party at Anthony’s of Malden.
(Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Shown from left to right are Geneva Street residents Valesay Spence
dressed as Sarah Sanderson from “Hocus Pocus,” Michael Kamara
as himself, Angela Shell dressed as a witch and Thomas Hickey
dressed as a pimp.
Sharon Duncan dressed as a
pepperoni pizza and Kevin Currie
dressed as a bat
Shown from left to right: Fred Adamson, Pamela Blyakhman, Steven
Messina dressed as a postal carrier and Disc Jockey Alan LaBella
sang.
Shown from left to right: Seated: Kara Albuzetian, Antonietta
LaRosa dressed as Michael Myers, Jennifer Johnson dressed as
Hello Kitty and Cathy Cordaro dressed as a cowgirl.
Shown from left to right: Thomas
Stack dressed as Pennywise,
Juliet Onyighichi and Sandra
Sturrock.
Enjoying appetizers, shown from left to right: Washington Avenue
residents Anna Maria Sarro dressed as a pumpkin, Sabrina Cataldo
dressed as Minnie and Kathy Green dressed as a cat.
David Tufo, dressed as a ghost,
and Ralph Tufo, dressed as a sailor,
circled around the dance hall.
Anthony Caduva (second from right) enjoyed dancing to Halloween
music.
Shown from left to right: Cheryl
Raneri, Rosalia Raneri dressed
as Super Kitty, Annabella Raneri
dressed as Rumi, Julianna Raneri
dressed as Super Kitty and Revere
League for Special Needs
President Marianne Pesce.
Gerald Capurso dressed as
Charlie Brown with Martha
Capurso
Fred Adamson dressed as a
pumpkin during Sunday’s Revere
League for Special Needs
Halloween party at Anthony’s
of Malden
Shown from left to right: Fred Adamson, Amanda Leone, who celebrated
her birthday, Ralph and David Tufo, Disc Jockey Alan LaBella
and Mark Brown tore it up on the dance fl oor.
׉	 7cassandra://BydPKaoofxUw8C8qXvbqB1ctPClisRfh63ZdKW81aa0=v` imu|հ׉E,THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2025
Page 13
Revere outlasts Malden, 40–36,
behind powerful ground game
and dominant line play
By Dom Nicastro
evere’s off ense found
its rhythm Friday
night at Harry Della Russo
Stadium, and it came
at just the right time:
on Senior Night and after
a three-game losing
streak.
The Patriots pounded
out a season-high 350
rushing yards and held
off Malden, 40—36, in
front of an energized
home crowd.
The win snapped a
three-game skid and lifted
Revere to 2—5 overall
and 2—3 in the Greater
Boston League. The
Patriots still give themselves
an outside shot at
the postseason, needing
to win their fi nal regular-season
game on Halloween
Night against
Everett, which visits at
5 p.m. If Revere wins,
they’ll have an outside
shot should the ratings
system put them in the
top 16 in Division 3.
Revere beat Everett
last season for the fi rst
time since 1991 — and
a win this week would
mark the first back-toback
victories over the
Crimson Tide in recent
memory.
“We needed that,” Revere
coach Lou Cicatelli
said about the win over
Malden. “They played really,
really well. We just
got through watching
the fi lm, and the off ensive
line was getting to
their blocks fi nally, and
other assignments. It
took us a while, but they
did everything right for
the most part.”
The Patriots’ off ensive
line — a unit Cicatelli
has been waiting to see
hit full stride — was the
story of the night. The
starting group includR
~
RHS PATRIOTS SPORTS
ROUNDUP ~
Revere field
hockey snaps
seven-year
drought, heads
back to state
tournament
By Dom Nicastro
T
TEAM LEADERS: Seniors shown front row, from left to right, are: Emerson Baires,
Capt. Walter Franklin, Capt. Jackson Martel, Capt. Mario Ramirez, Capt. Bryan Fuentes,
and Kouwen Kuy. Shown back row: Omar Espinoza, Marcelo Fermin-Cuartas,
Arce Didler, Adalberto Martinez, Diego Leal Robles, Louis Forte and Head Coach
Louis Cicatelli. (Advocate fi le photo)
ed sophomore center
Bryan Maia, sophomore
right guard Silvio Neto,
senior right tackle Louis
Forte, senior tight end
Bryan Fuentes, senior
left guard Walter Franklin
and junior left tackle
Ceaser Herrera.
“They had a good
week of practice, and
they played really, really
good in the game
too,” Cicatelli said. “They
turned it on. They were
getting downfi eld. The
big thing with the offensive
line, if they can
get to the second level,
clear the fi rst level, they
cause problems — and
they did that.”
Revere’s backfield
committee dominated
from start to fi nish. Mario
Ramirez and Reda
Atoui each scored twice,
while Anthony Pelatere,
returning from a lingering
hip injury, also had a
breakout night with two
touchdowns of his own.
“It was a blessing in
disguise to get this kid
back,” Cicatelli said. “Anthony
Pelatere finally
played. He was out just
about the whole year,
and he came back from
a bad hip injury. He had
two touchdowns, he
had over 100 yards running
the football, he had
six catches for about 60
yards. He laid out for a
ball — 45-yard touchdown
pass on a 3rd
-and-6
— and it changed the
whole game. It was an
ESPN catch. Unbelievable.”
Quarterback
Jose
Fuentes added 130
rushing yards and another
100 through the
air, spreading the ball
around eff ectively while
leaning on the line’s consistent
protection.
Malden stayed within
striking distance most
of the night, driven by
a strong performance
from its sophomore running
back, Jayden McGuffi
e — a player Cicatelli
said is “being looked at
by Syracuse.” But with
the Golden Tornadoes
driving late for the tying
score, Neto made the
play of the game.
“They were driving for
the tying score,” Cicatelli
recalled. “The quarterback
went to throw the
ball — Silvio was in his
face all night, couldn’t
get him — and the ball
slipped out of his hand.
Silvio, I don’t know how
he did it, it was just
about to hit the ground.
He’s a big kid, he bends
down, he intercepts it,
runs 20 yards, and we
get down to about the
15-yard line. Reda gets
pay dirt, and we’re up
by two scores. That was
the game.”
Revere gave up a late
touchdown as Cicatelli
rotated in players to
celebrate Senior Night,
but the win showed
the progress he’s been
preaching.
“The line really set the
tone,” he said. “We needed
it. They played really
well all week in practice,
and it carried into
the game.”
The coach hopes that
energy carries over into
this Friday’s Halloween
matchup with Everett —
a game that holds both
history and emotion.
“It would be the fi rst
time, I think, in God
knows how long — maybe
history,” Cicatelli said
of the chance to beat
Everett twice in a row.
“I mentioned that at today’s
fi lm. That’s another
milestone for these kids
to hopefully meet.”
he Reve re High
School fi eld hockey
team completed one
of the program’s best
comeback seasons in
years, earning a state
tournament berth for
the fi rst time since 2018.
Under fi rst-year head
coach Victoria Correia,
who served as an assistant
last fall, the Patriots
fi nished 10-7-1 after
going 4-11-1 a year ago.
The team also captured
the Greater Boston
League crown, finishing
unbeaten in league
play at 3-0-1. Revere
earned the 35th seed
in Division 2 and were
scheduled to travel to
Dartmouth to face 30thseeded
Bishop Stang on
Wednesday, Oct. 29.
Correia said the turnaround
was fueled by a
determined senior class
that led both on and off
the fi eld.
“ They ’re go- getters,”
she said. “Whatever
they wanted, they
worked for. They kept
pushing and believed in
what we were building.”
That senior core —
captains Isabella Mendieta,
Gemma Stamatopoulos
and Ava Morris,
along with Ashley Garcia,
Sonia Haily, Kathy
Nguyen, Danni Hope
Randall and Bianca
Rincon — gave the Patriots
balance and leadership
across every position.
Mendieta,
who set a
program record with
more than 50 career
goals, anchored the offense
with her drive and
intensity.
“As soon as she gets
that ball, she wants it
in the net,” Correia said.
“She will do whatever
it takes.”
Stamatopoulos joined
Mendieta as one of the
team’s top scorers, while
Morris provided stability
on defense.
“Ava ran the D,” Correia
said. “She talked constantly,
let everyone
know who was open —
she was our leader back
there.”
Senior goalie Sonia
Haily also played a key
role in Revere’s success,
posting several strong
performances and making
critical saves in tight
games.
“She had an unbelievable
turnaround this
year,” Correia said. “If the
ball got through, Sonia
was always there.”
SPORTS | SEE Page 14
Revere fi eld hockey captains, left to right, Ava Morris,
Isabella Mendieta and Gemma Stamatopoulos
and coach Victoria Correia.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2025
Music “From the New World”
Highlights North Shore Philharmonic Fall Concert
C
zech composer Antonin
Dvorak’s famous Symphony
No. 9, “From the New World”
will be the featured work
when Music Director Robert
Lehmann conducts the North
Shore Philharmonic Orchestra
The North Shore Philharmonic Orchestra begins its 77th season Sunday, November 16, 3 p.m. at Swampscott High School with a program
that includes Dvorak’s ‘New World” Symphony.
Music Director Robert Lehmann
conducts the North Shore
Philharmonic Orchestra in
the NSPO’s Fall Concert Sunday,
November 16, 3 p.m. at
Swampscott High School, featuring
music of Antonin Dvorak,
Heitor Villa-Lobos, Amy Beach,
and Heather Hastings.
“Fall Concert” on Sunday, November
16, 3 p.m. at Swampscott
High School.
The concert marks the start
of the NSPO’s 77th season.
Tickets can be purchased online
at www.nspo.org, or at the
door, $35 for adults and $30
for seniors and students. Admission
is free for children 12
and under.
Also featured on the program
will be the Massachusetts
premiere of “The Golden
Hour”, a contemplative piece
that evokes the gentle texture
of landscape bathed in golden
light. The piece was composed
by Maine native Heather
Hastings. Ms. Hastings has
written numerous works for
band, chamber orchestra, and
orchestra. Earlier this year she
won the ‘Women Band Directors
International Commission
Competition.”
“Bachianas Brasuileiras
No. 4” by Brazilian composer
Heitor Villa-Lobos and the
“Bal Masque for Orchestra”
by American composer Amy
Beach complete the concert
program. Amy Beach, a native
of New Hampshire, became
the fi rst female composer to
have a symphony performed
by a major orchestra when the
Boston Symphony Orchestra
performed her “Gaelic” Symphony
in 1896.
Dvorak composed his “New
A Complete Continuum of Care
World Symphony” in 1893
after a journey to America,
where he was infl uenced by
Native American music and African-American
spirituals. The
Symphony No. 9 is considered
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Chelsea
for their season with an early
win over Everett, a team that
has historically been a tough
matchup for Revere. The two
teams met again late in the season
and tied 2-2, securing Revere’s
outright league title.
“It was our game to be champions,”
Correia said. “That was
the best game from every single
one of the girls that I’ve
seen.”
Correia, a 2018 Revere graduate
and former varsity player,
said the journey back to
the postseason carried special
meaning.
“When I played, we never
made the tournament,” she
said. “To help these girls do it
now means a lot.”
The team’s best nonleague
win came against Greater Lowone
of the most popular of all
classical symphonies.
The North Shore Philharmonic
Orchestra, founded in
1948, is now in its 77th season
providing aff ordable access
to quality classical music.
The Orchestra, staff ed primarily
by volunteers, strives
to develop, train, and provide
opportunities for young musicians,
while performing programs
that span the full range
of symphonic and Pops repertoire
for a diverse public. Programs
are funded in part by
a grant from the Swampscott
Cultural Council, a local agency
supported by the Massachusetts
Cultural Council, a
state agency.
For full concert information
and more about the NSPO, visit
www.nspo.org or contact
info@nspo.org.
ell, a 9-1 victory that Correia
called a statement performance.
“We
didn’t know much
about them going in,” she said.
“We came out hot, and everything
clicked.”
The roster features a strong
mix of veterans and underclassmen:
juniors Victoria Ackles,
Leilaney Chicas, Kyle Lanes,
Nicole Miranda and Genevieve
Zierten; sophomores Lena
Morris and Zacharania “Zizi”
Kalliavas; and freshman Siobhan
Zierten. With that youth
returning next fall, Correia said
she expects the program to
keep trending upward.
“My message to the team
before Bishop Stang is simple,”
she said. “Go out, have fun and
do what you’ve been doing all
season. You’ve earned this.”
SPORTS | SEE Page 21
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Page 15
A.C. Whelan School celebrates 29 students
for demonstrating friendship
By Melissa Moore-Randall
T
he A.C. Whelan School held
their Monthly Morning
Meeting (MMM) Team, which
brings the school community
together each month to
highlight a core value: Friendship,
Respect, Growth Mindset
and others. The team creates
a Zoom lesson that is shared
with the entire school to introduce
and explore that month’s
value. Throughout the month,
staff members look for students
who consistently demonstrate
the value and nominate
them to be recognized
at our celebration.
Last week they celebrated 29
amazing students who were
nominated by their teachers
for truly demonstrating our
Friendship Look Fors, including
kindness, inclusion and
support for others.
During the “Crowning Our
Friends” ceremony, students
A.C. Whelan students who were recognized for demonstrating friendship
were recognized for being role
models of friendship at A.C.
Whelan. Each student received
their own crown and even
decorated a second crown
for a friend of their choosing
in honor of their nomination.
The celebration concluded
with a joyful Friendship
Parade through the hallways
as the entire school cheered
on our nominees; a moment
filled with smiles, laughter
and pride.
The Friendship Nominees:
Catherine Newton, Dylan Scibilia,
Luicana Penta, Aliah De Jesus
Escobar, Willa Kondakind, Ami
Lopez Vasquez, Ronald Malfy,
Hannah Ponce, Sofia Gough,
Yahya Maazi, Gabriela De Los
Santos, Thomas Stetson, Lisa
Le, Julieta Ortiz Taborda, Adam
Benlakhal, Rhuan Dantas, Lily
Ruiz, Leyla Benavides Cabrera,
Rita Filocamo, Fatima Valle Rodriquez,
Israa Arat, Ariana Pena
Ayala, Simon Jaramillo Giraldo,
Agatha Jacob, Nathaly Cano,
Asia Suy, Adelaide Malfy, Melanie
Rojas Godoy and Jayden Rivera
Hernandez.
A.C. Whelan students with teacher Kayla DeMattio celebrating
their “crowning” moments
A.C. Whelan students celebrating their nominations for kindness
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2025
be by use of a bodily substance
such as spitting or throwing
By Bob Katzen
If you have any questions about this week’s report, e-mail us
at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com or call us at (617) 720-1562
THE HOUSE AND SENATE:
Beacon Hill Roll Call records local
representatives’ and senators’
votes on roll calls from the
week of October 20-24.
The Senate votes include roll
calls from several budget vetoes
made by Gov. Maura Healey
to the $60.9 billion fiscal
2026 state budget for the fi scal
year that began July 1, 2025.
The Senate overrode more
than $70 million of Healey’s
$130 million worth of budget
vetoes. The House already
overrode the same vetoes and
the funding now stands and remains
in the budget.
“We are very confi dent that
by overriding the governor’s
vetoes, we can continue to
fund services and programs
and agencies that make up the
fabric of our commonwealth,
all while remaining fi scally responsible
and living within our
means,” said Sen. Jo Comerford,
Vice Chair of the Senate
Ways and Means Committee.
“Beacon Hill politicians spent
the better part of a year warning
about fiscal uncertainty
from Washington, and now
that those cuts have arrived,
they’re ignoring their own
warnings,” said Paul Craney, Executive
Director for the Massachusetts
Fiscal Alliance. “Instead
of learning to live within
our means, the Legislature
is proving once again that its
only solution to a budget problem
is more spending.”
Craney added, “The governor’s
vetoes were an extremely
small step toward restraint,
but the Legislature can’t even
handle that. When state spending
increases by billions year
after year, even small, reasonable
cuts become politically
impossible. That’s why Massachusetts
keeps lurching from
one budget crisis to the next
racking up one of the highest
debts-per capita in the country.”
PROTECT
PUBLIC TRANSIT
WORKERS FROM ASSAULT
AND BATTERY (H 1877)
House 160-0, approved and
sent to the Senate legislation
that would expand the current
law which punishes anyone
who commits assault and battery
against a public employee.
Current law applies to attempts
to disarm a police offi -
cer; assault and battery upon a
police offi cer; and assault and
battery on a public employee
when they are engaged in the
performance of their duties.
The bill would specifically
add assault and battery on
transit workers to the current
law. It also provides that the assault
in any of these cases can
substances like urine.
“Our transit workers provide
critical services all over
the commonwealth, yet are
many times assaulted by the
very customers they serve,”
said sponsor Rep. Joe McGonagle
(D-Everett). “I am so thrilled
to have this bill passed to provide
our transit workers with
the protections they deserve.
The right to feel safe and supported
on the job is just that, a
right. I’m also extremely grateful
to the brave men and women
who came forward to share
their stories.”
“Our public transit system
runs because of the dedication
of workers who show up
every day to serve us,” said
Rep. Mike Day (D-Stoneham),
House Chair of the Committee
on the Judiciary. “Today we affi
rmed the House’s continued
commitment to protect those
workers who are essential to
the success of the commonwealth
and our everyday lives.”
“We thank the House for voting
in favor of this important
legislation to protect our MBTA
train and bus operators, and
all public transit employees,”
said Jim Evers, President of the
Boston Carmens Union Local
589. “Protecting transit workers
is essential to maintaining
a safe and quality public transportation
system. This bill will
ensure the safety of the essential
workers who keep our
communities moving every
day. We look forward to swift
passage in the Senate so that
these vital protections can be
signed into state law to safeguard
transit workers for generations
to come.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the bill.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
Rep. Jeff Turco Yes
ENHANCE CHILD WELFARE
PROTECTIONS (H 4645)
House 159-1, approved and
sent to the Senate a proposal
that supporters say would
strengthen oversight, transparency
and accountability within
the state’s child welfare system.
Provisions include consolidating
reporting by the Department
of Children and Families
(DCF); clarifying the independence
of the Offi ce of the
Child Advocate; improving educational
stability for children
in care; and providing for the
creation of a state child fatality
review team.
“Every child in Massachusetts
deserves safety, stability
and opportunity,” said House
Speaker Ron Mariano (D-Quincy).
“This bill strengthens oversight,
improves coordination
between agencies and ensures
that children in state care receive
the support that they
need to thrive.”
“This bill strengthens the
systems that protect the commonwealth’s
most vulnerable
children,” said Rep. Jay Livingstone
(D-Boston), House Chair
of the Committee on Children,
Families and Persons with Disabilities.
“It gives DCF, the Legislature
and the public more
tools to better understand
what’s working, identify where
improvement is needed and
continue improving outcomes
for children.”
“DCF is being weaponized
against potential foster parents
of Christian faith and laws
are beginning to encroach
on religious freedom,” said
Rep. John Gaskey (R-Carver)
the only member who voted
against the measure. “Buried
in this legislation is a requirement
for gender affi rming care.
We should be moving away
from this practice and moving
toward gender confi rming
care. Gender dysphoria is still
a mental health problem that
children need help navigating
through and toward a healthy
lifestyle. Foster children are our
most vulnerable children and
they need our protection.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the bill. A
“No” vote is against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
Rep. Jeff Turco Yes
UNION REPRESENTATION (H
4645)
House 159-1, approved an
amendment to ensure that
DCF social workers have union
representation on the state’s
child fatality review team.
“As a licensed DCF social
worker with nearly 25 years
of experience, I know firsthand
the importance of hearing
the voices of frontline
care workers in policymaking,”
said amendment sponsor
Rep. Jim O’Day (D-West
Boylston). “Therefore, I fi led a
successful amendment to ensure
that DCF social workers
have union representation on
the state child fatality review
team. Ultimately, I’m proud of
the work that the House is doing
to strengthen our state’s
child welfare infrastructure
and prevent future tragedies.”
“This amendment sought to
include another member to a
review board that is a union
administration person,” said
Rep. John Gaskey (R-Carver)
the only member who voted
against the amendment. “I
am not opposed to union representatives
standing up and
assisting in the defense of a
member, but they should not
be a part of a review board.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the amendment.
A “No” vote is against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
Rep. Jeff Turco Yes
$1.5 MILLION FOR SEWER
RATE RELIEF (H 4240)
Senate 38-0, override Gov.
Healey’s veto of the entire $1.5
million for the Commonwealth
Sewer Rate Relief Fund which
was established in 1993 to
help reduce the rising costs of
sewer services in the Bay State.
“This veto would eliminate
important funding that is used
to reduce [consumers’] sewer
and water rates, and for the
commonwealth’s cities and
towns utilizing the MWRA systems,”
said Sen. Jo Comerford
(D-Northampton), Vice Chair
of the Senate Ways and Means
Committee. “These reductions
directly affect the financial
wellbeing of our residents. We
have made this funding available
for several years to lower
the amount that individual
ratepayers owe, ensure proper
disposal of wastewater and
process timely payments of
debt service. It’s critical that
we make these investments
now to support the commonwealth’s
long-term environmental
and fi nancial goals.”
In her veto message, Gov.
Healy said, “I am vetoing this
׉	 7cassandra://CLcFbhk7XWSj77k1NiHT8Q5EauP0RfTO2H6BGuIzfc8.s` imu|հ׉E#THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2025
Page 17
item to an amount consistent
with my House [budget] recommendation.”
(A
“Yes” vote is for the $1.5
million.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards Yes
$300,000 FOR PROGRAMS
FOR THE BLIND (H 4240)
Senate 38-0, overrode Gov.
Healey’s $300,000 veto reduction
(from 8,864,721 to
8,564,721) in programs for
the blind.
“This particular veto would
eliminate earmarked funding
for maximizing the independent
living skills of legally
blind residents,” said Sen.
Comerford. “The earmarked
funding is intended to support
rehabilitation programs, housing
assistance services, adjustment
counseling services and
devices, software and technology
training for the blind.
This funding represents a crucial
piece of the Senate’s commitment
to providing a robust
system of supports for blind
and visually impaired residents
of the commonwealth.”
In her veto message, Gov.
Healey said, “I am reducing
this item to the amount projected
to be necessary. This reduction
is not expected to impact
planned programming.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the
$300,000.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards Yes
$2.5 MILLION FOR SUBSTANCE
ABUSE (H 4240)
Senate 38-0, overrode Gov.
Healey’s $2.5 million veto reduction
(from 8,864,721 to
$6,364,721) in programs for
the Bureau of Substance Addiction
Services.
“This veto would reduce
funding earmarked for low
threshold housing, for homeless
individuals with substance
use and mental health
disorders who are also at risk
of HIV,” said Sen. Comerford.
“The funding supports both
continued programming and
expansions of low threshold
housing units. Low threshold
housing units represent
an approach to homelessness
that is more supportive of individuals
with substance and
mental health disorders. Many
senators in this chamber value
these kinds of programs.
Fully funding low threshold
housing programs is a critical
aspect in creating an increasingly
public health led
and equity focused response
to homelessness in the commonwealth.”
In
her veto message, Gov.
Healey said, “I am reducing
this item to the amount projected
to be necessary to support
continued programming.
This operating funding overlaps
with signifi cant alternative
funding sources to support
expansions in low-threshold
housing units and related
supports.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the $2.5
million.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards Yes
$1.5 MILLION FOR EARLY
INTERVENTION SERVICES (H
4240)
Senate 38-0, override Gov.
Healey’s $1,530,735 veto reduction
(from $39,250,384 to
37,719,649) in early intervention
services.
“This particular veto would
reduce funding for the early
intervention program, which
provides crucial support to infants
and toddlers experiencing
or at risk for developmental
delays, as well as supporting
their families and caregivers,”
said Sen. Comerford.
“Since the COVID-19 pandemic,
families have faced signifi -
cant challenges to accessing
and using these early intervention
services. This funding represents
a critical component of
the Legislature’s ongoing commitment
to increasing the program’s
capacity for the sake of
the children and their families
across the commonwealth.”
In her veto message, Gov.
Healey said, “I am reducing this
item to align with current utilization
trends.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the
$1,530,735.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards Yes
$2.3 BILLION FISCAL 2025
SUPPLEMENTAL BUDGET (S
2575)
Senate 39-0, approved a
$2.3 billion supplemental budget
to close out the books
on state government for fi scal
year 2025. The actual cost
to the state will be $795 million
after revenue from federal
reimbursements has been
sent to the state. The House
has approved a diff erent version
of the supplemental budget
and a House-Senate conference
committee will eventually
hammer out a compromise
version.
A key provision provides
$2.04 billion for MassHealth,
the state’s Medicaid program
that provides health care for
low-income and disabled persons
— with a net cost to the
state of only $539 million after
reimbursements from the federal
government.
The bill restores $18.3 million
in funding for student fi -
nancial aid assistance ahead
of the spring semester and
proactively protects additional
support for community college
students earning degrees
through the MassEducate program.
A new Public Higher Education
Student Support Fund
ensures that a key stipend for
books and supplies remains
fully funded.
Other provisions include $12
million to support the universal
meals program for school
children; $12.5 million to cover
no-cost phone call communications
for incarcerated people;
$14 million to aid people
in treatment for substance
use and alcohol addiction;
$18.5 million to support public
health hospitals; $5 million
for reproductive health care;
$60.7 million for snow and ice
removal expenses; $75 million
for the Housing Preservation
and Stabilization Trust
Fund which supports aff ordable
rental housing in the Bay
State; creation of an investigation
of sheriff s’ fi scal year 2025
spending in response to sharp
annual growth in the sheriff s’
spending defi cits; and protection
for federal workers and
Armed Forces service members
to prevent them from losing
their housing to a residential
eviction or foreclosure during
the federal government
shutdown.
“I’m proud the Senate has
taken this opportunity to support
our residents and insist
on important transparency
measures in this closeout supplemental
budget,” said Senate
President Karen Spilka (DAshland).
“We are reconfi rming
our commitment to public
higher education by restoring
and protecting key funding to
support college students’ success.
We are protecting our residents
from dangerous federal
actions by ensuring they have
access to the vaccines they
need to keep themselves and
their families safe.”
“With uncertainty persisting
in the federal government, it is
important to demonstrate the
state’s fi scal integrity,” said Sen.
Mike Rodrigues (D-Westport),
Chair of the Senate Committee
on Ways and Means. “That is
why, today, the Senate responsibly
closed the books on fi scal
year 2025 with a fi scally sound
closeout budget that ensures
the commonwealth meets its
obligations while continuing
to support critical programs
that serve Massachusetts residents.
This budget also establishes
fi scal oversight of all
county sheriff s’ departments, a
necessary step to rein in years
of overspending that has significantly
escalated in fiscal
year 2025.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the budget.)
Sen.
Lydia Edwards Yes
REQUIRE REPORT ON THE
EMERGENCY ASSISTANCE FAMILY
SHELTER SYSTEM (S 2655)
Senate 38-0, approved an
amendment that would reinstate
the requirement that the
Healey Administration submit
a biweekly report on the cost
and occupancy of the emergency
assistance family shelter
system. The previous requirement
of reports lapsed at the
end of fi scal year 2025.
Sen. Bruce Tarr (R-Gloucester),
the sponsor of the amendment,
said one of the things
both parties have always held
as a shared value in the Senate
chamber is accountability. He
noted that when we entered
a diffi cult time in our shelter
system, we required more information
about the cost and
occupancy of the shelter system.
He said it helped us understand
what was happenBHRC
| SEE Page 19
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person looking for a shop where your skills can be valued?
          
     
services and public State inspection services. We are seeking
a talented Automotive Technician or mechanical knowledge to
         
in automotive technical work with a passion for excellent
customer service, we want to talk to you.
Location:
Malden, MA
Job Description:
          
      
preventive duties, including Fleet preventive maintenance.
   
* Miscellaneous shop duties
Requirements:
* Valid driver’s license with good driving history
        
Hours:
       
     
* Rate will be based on experience
Contact:
Ed Hyde or David Morovitz
Call: 781-322-9401
Email: ehyde@maldentrans.com
Website: www.maldentrans.com
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2025
1. On Oct. 31, 1962, what
film starring Joan Crawford
and Bette Davis debuted
in the USA?
2. What sport has involved
walking teams in age categories
from over-50s—
70s and had a World Nations
Cup in October?
3. How are Shakespeare’s
“The Comedy of Errors”
twins and those in the
Laurel & Hardy fi lm “Our
Relations” similar?
4. November is National
Pomegranate Month; are
pomegranates in the Bible
or Torah?
5. Where is Jerome — the
USA’s largest ghost town
and “Wickedest Town in
the West”?
6. What does the symbol of
an 8 on its side mean?
7. On Nov. 1, 1938, what
horse with a name including
a food name won
a “race of the century” at
Pimlico in Baltimore?
8. Halloween derived from
Samhain, which was what
kind of festival: Celtic,
French or German?
9. Why wasn’t there much
Halloween celebrating
during World War II?
10. November 2 is Statehood
Day in what two states
named after a Native
American tribe?
11. What is Allhallowtide?
12. Reportedly, the term
“trick-or-treat” originated
in what century: 18th
,
19th
or 20th
?
13. On Nov. 3, 1956, what
1939 fi lm with a dog actress
named Terry fi rst appeared
on TV?
14. In the satire “Pumpkinification
of the Divine
Claudius,” who was Claudius?
15.
November 4 is Election
Day; historically, what
dessert was popular on
Election Day?
16. In what Shakespeare play
about a dictator is “And
graves have yawn’d, and
yielded up their dead...
And ghosts did shriek and
squeal about the streets”?
17. On Nov. 5, 1940, FDR was
elected to which of his
four presidencies?
18. The “shih” in the shih tzu
dog breed is derived from
a Chinese word for what
animal?
19. Where are the islets of
Langerhans: Germany,
“Gulliver’s Travels” or the
pancreas?
20. On Nov. 6, 1860, Abraham
Lincoln won election with
about what percent of the
popular vote: 40, 58 or 85?
Answers
How to Use Medicare’s Star
Ratings System During
Open Enrollment
Dear Savvy Senior,
What does Medicare factor
into their star rating system?
I need to find a new Medicare
plan during the open enrollment
period and want to get
it right this time.
Medicare Shopper
Dear Shopper,
If you’re shopping and
comparing Medicare Advantage
plans (the alternative
to original Medicare)
or Part D prescription drug
plans during the open enrollment
(Oct. 15 – Dec.
7), you’ll likely find a dizzying
number of options to
choose from. The Medicare
star rating system is a terrific
tool to help you narrow
down your choices. Here’s
what you should know.
Understanding
Star Ratings
The Medicare star ratings,
which you’ll find in
the Medicare’s online Plan
Finder tool at Medicare.
gov/plan-compare, offers
a shorthand look at how
Medicare Advantage and
Part D plans measure up
for quality and member experience.
In
this annual rating system,
five stars means excellent,
four means above average,
three means average,
two means below average,
and one means poor.
Medicare Advantage
plans (but not Part D plans)
that get at least a four-star
rating get bonus payments
from Medicare, which they
can use to provide extra
benefits.
You should also know
that plans that get fewer
than three stars for three
consecutive years, can be
terminated by Medicare,
so plans are incentivized to
keep their quality up. Such
low-performing plans show
up on Plan Finder with an
upside-down red triangle
that has an exclamation
point inside.
People in these low-performing
plans can switch
to ones rated three stars or
better during Medicare’s
Special Enrollment Period
for Disenrollment, which is
between Jan. 1 and Dec. 31.
How Ratings
Are Comprised
Part D and Medicare Advantage
star ratings comprised
up to 40 or 30 quality
and performance measures,
respectively. Ratings
for both types of plans are
based partly on member
experience, customer service,
and plan performance.
Part D ratings also assess
prescription drug safety
and pricing, while Medicare
Advantage ratings also look
at whether members are
staying healthy and if ones
with chronic conditions get
the tests and treatments
typically recommended to
them.
Be aware that five-star
plans are few and far between.
The Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services
(CMS) has revised the
Medicare star rating methodology
in recent years,
making it extremely hard
for a plan to earn five stars.
In 2025, just 2 percent of
people with Medicare Advantage/Part
D plans and
5 percent in stand-alone
Part D plans have five stars.
Four-star plans are much
easier to find, as more than
70 percent of people with
Medicare Advantage are
enrolled in them.
Shopping Tips
Here are some tips to
consider when evaluating
Medicare Advantage and
Part D star ratings during
open enrollment:
• Don’t choose or reject
a Medicare Advantage
or Part D plan only because
of its star rating.
Costs and access to services
or health providers
should be your top priority
when choosing a plan.
But a star rating could
be your deciding factor
when choosing between
two plans with similar
out-of-pocket costs and
coverage.
• Don’t panic if a plan’s
2026 star rating is
slightly lower than its
2025 rating. The downgrade
could be due to a
blip in the way the ratings
are computed from year
to year. It’s best to look at
a plan’s star-rating history
over several years.
• If you’re fine with the
cost and coverage of
a plan but concerned
about its star rating,
click through the Medicare
Plan Finder for the
star ratings subcategories.
You’ll be able to
see how the plan scored
in the specific quality
and member satisfaction
yardsticks that matter
to you.
If you have questions
or need help choosing a
plan, contact your State
Health Insurance Assistance
Program (877-8392675,
ShipHelp.org), which
offers free unbiased Medicare
counseling in person
or over the phone.
Send your questions or comments to questions@savvysenior.org,
or to Savvy Senior, P.O. Box 5443, Norman, OK 73070.
1. “What Ever Happened
To Baby
Jane?”
2. Walking football
(soccer in the USA)
3. The plot involves
two sets of twins
being confused for
each other.
4. In both
5. The Black Hills in Arizona
6.
Infi nity
7.
Seabiscuit (FDR
stopped a cabinet
meeting to listen
to the race on the
radio.)
8. Celtic
9. The USA was cut off
from many sugar
suppliers, resulting
in sugar rationing.
10. North and South
Dakota
11. The evening of Oct.
3I – Nov. 2: All Saint’s
eve, All Saints’ Day
(All Hallows’) and All
Soul’s Day.
12. 20th
13. “The Wizard of Oz”
(The dog Toto was
played by Terry.)
14. A Roman emperor
15. Election cake; reportedly,
it was a
very large cake like
a fruitcake.
16. “Julius Caesar”
17. Third
18. Lion
19. Pancreas
20. 40 ( There were
three candidates
opposing him.)
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Page 19
BHRC | FROM Page 17
ing so we knew what we had
to plan to do to respond to that
crisis. He argued it is time to reinstate
that system.
(A “Yes” vote is for the amendment.)
Sen.
Lydia Edwards Yes
ALSO UP ON BEACON HILL
HANDICAPPED PARKING
SPACE (H 3613) — The Transportation
Committee held a
hearing on legislation that
would establish a special commission
to study the feasibility
of setting time limits for handicapped
parking placard use in
metered spots. The commission
would include legislators,
state offi cials and appointees
of the governor, who would be
tasked with gathering input
from experts and the public. Its
purpose is to explore potential
benefi ts, impacts and options
such as reduced or standardized
fees after time limits
expire.
“I fi led this legislation to promote
fairness and improve accessibility
in metered parking
spots,” said sponsor Rep. Bruce
Ayers (D-Quincy). “Establishing
this commission to study
the feasibility of time limits for
handicapped placard use will
help ensure that these spaces
remain available throughout
the day for as many people as
possible who rely on them.”
SMOKING IN NON-SMOKING
APARTMENTS (S 1137) —
A bill heard by the Judiciary
Committee would create a legal
assumption about whether
there has been smoking in
a non-smoking apartment.
The assumption relies on the
fact that there is no legitimate
reason why a renter should
take down, unplug or cover
their smoke detectors. If a
renter does this, they will be
assumed to have been smoking.
The landlord must prove
the detectors were there
when the renter moved in.
A third party, like the fi re department,
must testify or provide
a report that the detectors
were not there after the
incident.
“This bill would provide
property owners with the ability
to address smoking complaints,
which in turn, protects
tenants, neighbors and public
health,” said sponsor Sen. John
Keenan (D-Quincy). “It closes
a statutory loophole which
causes tenants and property
owners to struggle when faced
with complaints against tenants
for smoking in non-smoking
buildings.”
COMMITTEE ON CONSUMER
PROTECTION AND PROFESSIONAL
LICENSURE HOLDS
HEARING ON SEVERAL BILLS
INCLUDING:
PROHIBIT HEALTH BOARDS
FROM UNILATERALLY BANNING
THE SALE OF LEGAL
PRODUCTS (H 371) — Would
prohibit municipal Boards of
Health from banning the sale
of any legal consumer product
by authorized retailers without
authorization of the local town
meeting or city council.
“This bill seeks to ensure that
local boards and committees,
be they elected or appointed,
don’t overstep their authority
to pursue idealistic, but
potentially unconstitutional,
bans on consumer products,”
said sponsor Rep. Joe McKenna
(R-Sutton). “It maintains
the ability for a community
to come together through its
ordinary legislative process,
whether city council or town
meeting, to pass such a local
bylaw should the constituency
of the community want it.
Government entities must respect
individuals’ rights and
liberties and ability to choose
to live their life free of onerous
government mandates or
restrictions.
FLAVORED HOOKAH TOBACCO
PRODUCTS (S 270) —
Would exempt flavored and
menthol hookah tobacco from
the 2019 law that prohibits the
sale of any fl avored or menthol
tobacco products.
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
BUYER1
Blyde, Oscar
Connolly, Anntoin C
Pacheco, Yaqueline V
Padalkar, Nakul R
BUYER2
Blyde, Gisela S
Connolly, Andrew B
Gaviria, Jhonatan B
SELLER1
Cook, Anthony N
Hayes, Mhairi L
Elia, Manuela
Eastmen LLC
SELLER2
Cook, Rafael S
ADDRESS
350 Revere Beach Blvd #2X
34 Endicott Ave
230 Crescent Ave
36 Florence Ave #2
10.07.25
Revere
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
DATE PRICE
10.08.25 610000
87500
10.09.25 920000
10.06.25 730000
“This bill will ensure that
small businesses and consumers
are responsible in the sale,
purchase and consumption of
certain fl avored tobacco products,”
said sponsor Sen. Patrick
O’Connor (R-Weymouth). “This
would place regulations on the
sale of certain tobacco products
that will ensure the safety
of the business themselves,
and their consumers, while allowing
for an exemption from
the flavored tobacco ban in
Massachusetts. Overall, this bill
is meant to protect our members
of the public and ensure
responsibility when participating
in recreational tobacco.”
DIGITAL GROCERY COUPONS
(H 470) — Would mandate
that all grocery food stores offering
digital coupons also offer
identical paper coupons to
shoppers. It also requires digital
coupons to be automatically
applied to the purchases
of any consumer over the
age of 65, or any consumer
who asks about available digital
coupons. Violators would
be fi ned $2,500 for the fi rst offense
and $5,000 fi ne for each
subsequent off ense.
“This bill seeks to create fairness
for senior citizens who
might not have access to a socalled
smart phone and thus
currently do not have access
to electronic coupons,” said
sponsor Rep. Jeff Turco (DWinthrop).
BAN
COSMETICS WHICH USE
ANIMAL TESTING (S 263) —
Would prohibit a manufacturer
from selling any cosmetic
product in the Bay State that
the manufacturer knew, or reasonably
should have known,
that animal testing was used
to produce the product.
“The testing of cosmetic
products on animals is shocking
and inhumane, supporting
abusive environments and
tortured lives for rabbits, primates,
dogs and other types
of animals that can feel pain
and experience emotions,” said
co-sponsor Sen. Mike Moore
(D-Millbury). “This legislation,
which I am proud to co-sponsor,
would disrupt the status
quo and encourage companies
to be better by disallowing
the sale of products that
were created at the expense of
these innocent animals.”
The chief sponsor of the bill,
Sen. Mark Montigny (D-New
Bedford), did not respond to
repeated requests by Beacon
Hill Roll Call asking him
to comment on his bill and
why he thinks it should be approved.
HOW
LONG WAS LAST
WEEK’S SESSION?
Beacon Hill Roll Call tracks
the length of time that the
House and Senate were in session
each week. Many legislators
say that legislative sessions
are only one aspect of
the Legislature’s job and that a
lot of important work is done
outside of the House and Senate
chambers. They note that
their jobs also involve committee
work, research, constituent
work and other matters that
are important to their districts.
Critics say that the Legislature
does not meet regularly
or long enough to debate
and vote in public view on the
thousands of pieces of legislation
that have been fi led.
They note that the infrequency
and brief length of sessions
are misguided and lead to irresponsible
late-night sessions
and a mad rush to act on dozens
of bills in the days immediately
preceding the end of an
annual session.
During the week of October
20-24, the House met for a total
of four hours and 41 minutes
and the Senate met for a
total of eight hours.
Mon. Oct. 20 House 11:00
a.m. to 11:12 a.m.
Senate 11:38 a.m. to 12:14
p.m.
Tues. Oct. 21 No House session.
No
Senate session.
Wed. Oct. 22 House 11:01
a.m. to 3:16 p.m.
No Senate session.
Thurs. Oct. 23 House 11:01
a.m. to 11:15 a.m.
Senate 11:07 a.m. to 6:31
p.m.
Fri. Oct. 17 No House session.
No Senate session.
Bob Katzen welcomes feedback
at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com
Bob
founded Beacon Hill Roll
Call in 1975 and was inducted
into the New England Newspaper
and Press Association
(NENPA) Hall of Fame in 2019.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2025
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~ School Bus Drivers Wanted ~
7D Licensed School Bus Drivers
Malden Trans is looking for reliable drivers for
the new school year. We provide ongoing training
and support for licensing requirements. Applicant
preferably lives local (Malden, Everett, Revere).
Part-time positions available and based on AM &
PM school hours....15-30 hours per week. Good
driver history from Registry a MUST! If interested,
please call David @ 781-322-9401.
CDL SCHOOL BUS DRIVER WANTED
Compensation: $28/hour
School bus transportation company seeking
active CDL drivers who live LOCALLY (Malden,
Everett, Chelsea and immediate surrounding
communities).
- Applicant MUST have BOTH S and P endorsements
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Good driver history from Registry a MUST!
- Part-time hours, BUT GUARANTEED 20-35
HOURS PER WEEK depending on experience.
Contact David @ 781-322-9401.
AAA Service • Lockouts
Trespass Towing • Roadside Service
Junk Car Removal
617-387-6877
26 Garvey St., Everett
MDPU 28003 ICCMC 251976
ADVOCATE
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781-286-8500
advertise on the web at
www.advocatenews.net
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
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 
     
  

    
American Exterior and
Window Corporation
Contact us for all of your
home improvement projects
and necessities.
Call Jeff or Bob
Toll Free: 1-888-744-1756
617-699-1782 / 
     
All estimates, consultations or inspections completed
       
   
Insured and
Registered
Complete Financing Available.
No Money Down.
  
      
        
           
Clean-Outs!
We take and dispose
from cellars, attics,
garages, yards, etc.
Call Robert at:
781-844-0472
ClassiClassifiedsfieds
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Page 21
Sports | FROM Page 14
Rupp, Hamdani
close out Revere
cross-country careers
The Revere girls’ cross-country
team wrapped up its home
schedule last week against
Somerville, falling 22-37 but
showing continued progress.
Head coach Katie Sinnott
said the meet, held on a rainsoaked
Belle Isle course, showcased
the team’s growth and
dedication.
Senior captain Olivia Rupp
and fellow senior Rania Hamdani
each came within seconds
of personal bests despite
the wet, windy conditions.
“I have so enjoyed coaching
both of them over their crosscountry
years,” Sinnott said.
“They’re tremendous students
and leaders who work hard at
every practice.”
Junior Emma DeCrosta
turned in another personal
best home course time, while
Tram Vu, Valeria Acevedo Estrada
and freshman Adis Cordero
Canela rounded out the
scoring. Sinnott said DeCrosta’s
steady improvement this
season has made her a reliable
scorer for the team.
“Week to week, she’s getting
faster and stronger,” Sinnott
said. “That’s exactly what you
want to see as a coach.”
Revere was set to compete
next in the Greater Boston
League meet on Oct. 29, followed
by invitational races on
Nov. 1 and Nov. 8.
RevereTV | FROM Page 11
ers! Participants were invited to
dress up in costume as they ran.
Tune in to this coverage, which
is now playing on the Community
Channel, to check out some
of the costumes and support
this year’s runners.
October is Italian-American
Heritage Month. The City of Revere
in collaboration with Ward
5 Councillor Angela GuarinoSawaya
and the Italian Heritage
Month Committee of MA
celebrated outside City Hall on
Thursday, October 16. RevereTV
recorded the welcome ceremony,
which included many speakers
and community members
you might recognize. Watch the
Community Channel or follow
RevereTV on YouTube for the
full video.
    
   
   
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   
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
Humane Removal Service
COMMONWEALTH
WILDLIFE CONTROL
ANIMAL & BIRD REMOVAL
INCLUDING RODENTS
CALL 617-285-0023
1 bedroom, 1 bath furnished room for rent.
$275. per week rent. Two week deposit
plus 1 week rent required.
Call: 617-435-9047 - NO TEXT
Discount Tree Service
781-269-0914
Professional
TREE
REMOVAL
& Cleanups
24-HOUR SERVICE
FURNISHED ROOM FOR RENT
EVERETT
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2025
Revere Veterans
Committee
Host 20th
annual
Veterans Day
Program Nov. 9
The Revere Veterans
Committee in cooperation
with Mayor Patrick Keefe
will conduct their 20th annual
Veterans Day program
on Sunday, November
9, 2025 at the Casa Lucia
Function Hall, Lucia Avenue,
Revere, MA at 5:00
PM on behalf of the Veterans
of Revere.
Invited guests are retired
military personnel from the
Chelsea Veterans Home.
A Chinese food buffet
will be served at a cost of
$25.00 per person. Anyone
wishing to purchase a complete
table of 10 in advance
may call 781-244-7430. Individual
or group tickets
are being sold by Al Terminiello,
Jr. and Ira Novoselsky.
Payments must be made
by Thursday, November 6,
2025. Dancing will follow
the event and dinner to the
music of DJ Alan LaBella.
Emilio Digitale
OBITUARIES
and Pasquale, who always laid
protectively at his feet. He was
a beloved friend to many —
trustworthy and loyal.
Emilio came to the United
O
f Revere. Passed away
peacefully at home on October
23 at the age of 71. He
was born in Fontanarosa, Italy,
in 1953 to Mario and Gilda
Digitale. He was married
to the love of his life, Rosanna,
for 44 years. Together
they had five beautiful children:
Vanessa, Mario, Emilio,
Amanda and Kassandra. They
were his world and greatest
joy. He was the best Nonno to
his fi ve grandchildren: Eliana,
Vito, Lino, Lucy and Theo. He
adored his grand pups, Arya
States from Venezuela where
he started his own tile business,
which he had a passion
for. He was a true artist
and took pride in his work.
He was a man of faith and a
proud member of St. Anthony’s
of Padua Parish. He loved
watching and playing soccer,
cooking, spending time with
his grandchildren, and eating
pasta on Sundays surrounded
by his family. Emilio will always
be remembered for his
optimism, his beautiful smile,
his warmth, his stories and his
love for his family.
Emilio was preceded in
death by his parents, his sister,
Carmelina, his daughter,
Vanessa, his son, Mario, and
is survived by his wife, Rosanna,
son, Emilio, daughter-inlaw
Nicole, daughter, Amanda,
son-in-law Stephen, daughter,
Kassandra and his brother,
Michele.
A Funeral Mass held at St.
Anthony of Padua Parish, Revere
on Monday, October 27.
Interment Woodlawn Cemetery.
Donations can be made
to: St. Jude’s Children’s Research
Hospital, 501 St. Jude
Pl, Memphis, TN 38105-9959
or at www.stjude.org, a cause
very dear to Emilio’s heart.
Manguben Patel
grandmother was born to
Surajben and Keshavdas in
Dingucha, Gujarat, India on
February 1, 1933. She was a
courageous and hardworking
woman. She got married
to our amazing grandfather,
Bechardas and settled in
Mokhason. She worked hard
alongside our grandfather to
build a future and provide for
their children.
She was a loving wife, mothO
f
Revere. It is with deep
sadness that we announce
our beloved grandmother,
Manguben Bechardas Patel
passed away on Wednesday,
October 22nd, 2025. Our
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er, sister, daughter, daughterin-law,
grandmother, great
grandmother and a friend to
all. She was very caring, fearless
and strong and had immense
love for all her family
especially her great grandchildren.
Her eyes would light up
when she saw her great grandchildren
running around. She
is survived by her younger sister,
Puriben, and families of
her fi ve children, Jayaben, Late
Mahendrabhai, Vishnubhai,
Dineshbhai and Geetaben.
Services were held on Saturday,
October 25th 2025 at
the Buonfi glio Funeral Home
in Revere.
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Page 23
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2025
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