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Vol. 34, No. 41
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Published
Every Friday
CITY COUNCIL: Tough talk by Finance
Committee, city officials on tax override
Even if Prop. 2/12 override passes, cuts in city
personnel, services still likely, all agree
By Steve Freker
A
s he recited the projected
numbers, department
by department, the air seemed
to leave the room quicker with
each digit, finally getting to the
last one.
When he added them up, he
might as well have been swinging
a sledgehammer.
"Yes, about 60," Malden City
Controller Chuck Ranaghan
told Finance Committee chairperson
Carey McDonald, when
asked directly how many municipal
jobs were projected to
be on the chopping block if local
voters ultimately declined to
approve a proposed Proposition
2 1/2 property tax override.
"That is sobering news, for
sure," Councillor at large McDonald
said, after Ranaghan gave a
scenario of potentiakl force reductions
in the Malden Police
Department, Malden Fire Department,
Malden Public Library
staff, Department of Public
Works and general city staff.
The Malden City Council's Finance
Committee convened
Tuesday night for the first time
since last week's historic full
TAX | SEE PAGE 13
Firefighters battle triple-decker
home blaze; family displaced
By The Advocate
O
n Friday, October 3, 2025,
Malden firefighters responded
to a three-alarm fire at a multifamily
residence at 88 Fairmont
St. While no serious civilian injuries
were reported, one firefighter
was hospitalized with minor
injuries, likely from smoke inhalation.
The three-story building
sustained heavy damage, displacing
multiple residents.
Malden Firefighters were dispatched
at around 4:19 p.m.
to 88 Fairmont St. Upon arrival,
crews found heavy fire on all
three floors of the triple-decker
home. Due to the deteriorating
conditions, firefighters initially
shifted to a defensive, exterior-only
operation before reentering
the building. The fire extended
to a neighboring home,
causing minor roof damage, before
it was extinguished. Assistant
Fire Chief Leonard Dunn
noted that homes in the area
BLAZE | SEE PAGE 8
A firefighter is shown exiting to the ladder from inside the Fairmont
Street home.
W
hen Massachusetts voters passed Proposition 2 1/2, placing
a 2 1/2 percent limit on the amount a community could raise
its property tax levy amount each calendar year, it was designed to
make the taxes predictable on an annual basis. When it went into
effect in 1982, there was a backlash of layoffs and other budget cuts
not seen before in Malden and many communities across Massachusetts.
At last week’s Malden City Council meeting, Mayor Gary
Christenson made history when he formally requested the support
of the City Council in placing a Proposition 2 1/2 Override question
on the ballot in a future Special Election.
The Mayor and members of his administrative team presented a
case for an override request of $5.4 million from Malden taxpayers,
being sought to fund a structural deficit estimated at $8.4 million
in the present FY26 municipal budget. With another $3 million forecast
to be saved by the City of Malden enrolling in a new and different
group health care plan, a successful tax override of $5.4 million
would ensure the structural budget gap would be filled, just
to maintain city services until the end of this fiscal year, which concludes
on June 30, 2026.
At Tuesday night’s Malden City Council Finance Committee meeting,
the stark news presented at the jam-packed Council Chamber
last week turned even more grim. The message from city officials
and confirmed by City Councillors was clear: This is not a drill. Malden
is in deep financial trouble, its money woes are indeed very real.
Malden’s chief financial officer, City Controller Chuck Ranaghan, told
City Councillors on Tuesday night that even with the $8.4 million —
if it is raised from health care savings and an override — there would
EDITORIAL | SEE PAGE 3
617-387-2200
Friday, October 10, 2025
EDITORIAL:
This is NOT a drill:
Malden’s $$$ woes are real
City officials paint grim picture in
plea for Prop. 2 1/2 Override
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
Malden legislators approve $234M to support fiscally
strained hospitals and community health centers
Special to The Advocate
S
tate Senator Jason Lewis and
State Representatives Paul Donato,
Steven Ultrino and Kate Lipper-Garabedian
joined their colleagues
in the Massachusetts Legislature
to enact a supplemental
budget bill that prioritizes care for
the state’s most vulnerable populations
by strategically targeting
$234 million to support fiscally
strained hospitals and community
health centers. The legislation
addresses a widening funding gap
in the Health Safety Net program,
which pays acute care hospitals
and community health centers for
Gerry
D’Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
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necessary medical care for low-income,
uninsured and underinsured
Massachusetts residents.
The supplemental budget bill was
signed into law by Governor Maura
Healey on September 22, 2025.
Reckless federal policies and
funding shortfalls have exacerbated
the fiscal strain on these vital institutions
that serve people most
in need, but this funding will provide
critical relief to hospitals and
community health centers, distributing
aid based on criteria that directs
funding to vulnerable populations
most in need of assistance.
“While chaotic policies from
the Trump administration put our
American public health system at
risk, Massachusetts stands firm
in our support of science-based
health policy and our financial
support of hospitals and community
health centers,” said Senator
Lewis. “This funding will provide
critical services to those who
need it the most as rising healthcare
costs continue to strain our
communities and healthcare institutions.”
“The
approval of $234 million in
funding is a critical lifeline for our
hospitals and community health
centers,” said House Second Assistant
Majority Leader Donato.
“These facilities are pillars of our
healthcare system, providing essential
services to our most vulnerable
residents. By investing in
them, we are safeguarding access
to care and strengthening public
health in Malden.”
“Our community hospitals and
health centers are on the front
lines of care, serving residents
who too often have nowhere else
to turn,” said Representative Ultrino,
who is House Chairperson of
the Legislature’s Joint Committee
on Emergency Preparedness and
Management. “By providing relief
from an evolving fiscal strain, we
are sending a clear message: Massachusetts
will continue to support
access to care while strengthening
the safety net for our most
Jason Lewis
State Senator
Steven Ultrino
State Representative
Paul Donato
State Representative
vulnerable neighbors.”
“This legislation directs key investments
to aid local hospitals
and community health centers
across Massachusetts that provide
quality care to all, contrastKate
Lipper-Garabedian
State Representative
ing the Trump administration’s actions
to defund our public health
systems,” said Representative Lipper-Garabedian,
who is Chairperson
of the House Committee on
Ethics. “Community hospitals like
MelroseWakefield are bedrocks
in their communities, and I’m glad
that this legislation directs an additional
$792,534 into the 32nd Middlesex
District, reflecting the Commonwealth’s
longstanding commitment
to ensuring everyone has
access to affordable health care.”
The bill allocates $199 million
for eligible high public payer
acute care hospitals across the
Commonwealth through an approach
that maximizes federal financial
reimbursements, stabilizes
the Health Safety Net Trust Fund
and makes targeted payments to
hospitals to maximize the impact
of taxpayer dollars. An additional
$35 million will be used to relieve
community health centers, which
continue to support the Commonwealth’s
greatest share of vulnerable
populations while facing federal
funding delays, Medicaid cuts
and rising pharmaceutical and
other medical costs.
׉	 7cassandra://pOxwoN718gTQkjM5UuloxW0UWlvjqJLJHpM7UDPy3dA7` hEd}}Ax0׉E)THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
~ Guest OP-ED ~
Page 3
When is a News Source not a News Source
By Craig Spadafora
W
ith the decline in traditional
media sources, there has
come an increase in reliance
on various online platforms for
news and information.It has for
the most part brought far more
options to the masses to stay
up to date, but it’s not without
its challenges. While traditional
news sources adhere to codes
of conduct and when it comes
to FCC regulated stations, even
more scrutiny, Facebook ‘news’
sources can become the wild
wild west.In Malden, we have
Malden News Network, or as
one prominent Maldonian put it,
the Malden Snews (Snooze) Network
for its rambling incoherent
style of reporting.
The Snews as I’ll refer to it advertises
itself as “News for Maldonians,
by Maldonians” while extoling
the virtues of fair reporting.The
site’s content is driven
by four individuals, each a failed
candidate for local office, in
some cases multiple losing campaigns.The
site has turned into a
political advertising site for the
candidates favored by those in
charge, begging the question,
is it ethical for a site to advertise
itself as “news” and “fair reporting”
while reporting editorial hit
piece after hit piece unrestricted
by the truth aimed at damaging
those they don’t support politically.Many
have drawn parallels
to the Everett Leader Herald and
the $1.1 million dollar settlement
for making up news stories.That
case set a clear expectation that
all news sources, not just the big
outlets, are expected to tell the
truth or risk personal bankruptcy.
Snews, pay attention.
Political campaigns are reEDITORIAL
| FROM PAGE 1
still have to be cuts made. These
cuts in both personnel and other
budget line items would be necessary,
he said, in this year’s FY26
budget, with more cuts expected
when the next city budget, FY27
(covering July 1, 2026, through
June 30, 2027) is formulated. City
services would be diminished in
many departments, he said, and
quired to report in kind contributions
on campaign finance reports,
which according to campaign
finance laws includes free
advertising.Is reporting done in
coordination with a campaign in
an attempt to portray that candidate
in a positive light advertising?At
worst, ethical journalism
calls for that to be disclosed
so that the reader knows what
they are reading is in fact an
editorial.Throughout the trash
strike there were many complaints
throughout the community
that there were an awful lot
of coincidences whereby Snews
Network and their favored candidate
were at the right place at
the right time.This type of coordinate
activity, if the allegations
are true, really hurts those news
sources who are striving to report
fair and balanced news.
Recently a Maldonian pointed
out something to me that
highlighted how clear the motives
are that are at play.During
the trash strike, the Snews and
its contributors were vocal that
the City should cancel the contract
and bring in a new vendor,
even after the City had indicated
that doing so would cost over $2
million more per year at a time
the city could least afford it.As
soon as the strike ended, Snews
ditched that narrative and shifted
to complaining about the
City wasting money.You can’t
make this up.
On a personal level, I was most
recently a victim of the Snews
Smear as it has become known
across Malden.Snews reported
that I was one of the key drivers
behind the proposition 2
½ proposal. This is a flat out,
bold-faced, made-up lie meant
to hurt me in my at large race
he and all of the City Councillors
who spoke at Tuesday’s twohour-plus
committee meeting
agreed that discussions and follow-up
actions forthcoming in
the near future “will be painful.”
There is no doubt, when
talking about career city employees
potentially losing their
jobs or jeopardizing the quality
and quantity of city services, that
prophecy is correct.
against the Snews preferred
candidate KCH.When I confronted
the lead Snewser, he simply
said ‘that’s what I was told’.Now
there’s some solid reporting for
ya.Aside from being a lie about
me, this lead Snewser left out
the fact that I had voted against
the budget because of concerns
for overspending, while
the leading Snews beneficiary
KCH shepherded the budget
through as Vice Chair of Finance
without so much as an attempt
to bring spending in line.In fact,
a review of the minutes from
the four meetings held by the
Committee KCH vice chairs reports
zero comments, contributions
or concerns by KCH.Zero.I,
on the other hand, am on the record
as needing to see increased
revenue and cuts before an override
should be considered.All of
this somehow escaped reporting
by the Snews.Maybe there
is more checking being done on
this than ‘that’s what I was told’?
Remember, news is news, editorials
are opinions, and campaigns
are campaigns.When you
smash them all together in Malden
you get the Malden Snews
Network!
(Note: Craig Spadafora is a Malden
City Councillor-At-Large)
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
SCHOOL COMMITTEE: Malden Public Schools
Accountability Report outlined at Mondy meeting
School Committee approves MHS future trip to Costa Rica; announces MPS
AI Community Forums through Technology Committee
By Steve Freker
T
here was an iconic 1980s television
commercial for Wendy’s
burgers where the familiar
refrain was always, “Where’s
the beef?”
Following an initial presentation
on the Malden Public
Schools Accountability Report
from the Mass. Department of
Elementary and Secondary Education
(DESE) by Assistant Superintendent
for Teaching and
Learning Komal Bhasin, a Malden
School Committee member
had a different take. “Where’s
the math?” said Ward 5 member
Kathleen Hortie, in reference to
the latest Grade 10 results from
Malden High School. “I sat here in
April and asked, along with Vice
Chair [Jennifer] Spadafora what
was being done to improve our
mathematics [instruction]. We
didn’t think it was enough and
now we have this.”
Ward 5’s Hortie was referring
to Massachusetts Comprehensive
Assessment System (MCAS)
results from Grade 10 students,
which DESE reported has decreased
in achievement numbers.
Malden was among the
91% of all districts statewide that
showed a decrease in mathematics
MCAS test scores.
Hortie said that there was not a
separate Director for mathematics
budgeted in the Malden Public
Schools for FY26, this school
year. “We have a STEM director,
one of them, not two, and no
director for math.” The acronym
STEM represents Science, Technology,
Engineering and Mathematics.
Malden has one STEM
director for grades K-12 who has
been in place since July 1. Nearly
all of the Gateway Cities like
Malden, Everett, Revere, Chelsea
and others have Directors
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with the same title, STEM Director,
though Everett has a Mathematics
Director for Grades K-8.
On the fact that Malden does
not have a Director of Mathematics,
and the 2025 MCAS
mathematics results, Ward 5’s
Hortie continued, “I have two
children who attend Malden
High School and that’s not what
I want for them.”
“I have neighbors who have
children in grades 6, 7 and 8
and when they say ‘I don’t know
about Malden High,’ I can’t say
to them ’everything is great,’“
said School Committee member
Hortie.
Assistant Superintendent Bhasin
responded to the School
Committee member’s remarks
by reiterating that many steps
were already taken and in place
to support and expand instruction
in mathematics at Malden
High School. Included were
more math coaches (teacher assistants),
increased instructional
time with the elimination of
99% of the “Direct study” periods
at Malden High School and a
new Director of Intervention and
Support Christina Balter-Scarlatos,
who is also focusing on
mathematics as well. The intervention,
Asst. Superintendent
Bhasin reported, included “greater
allocation of central office
time to math and science support
than in prior years.”
Also included in the additional
focus on math and science, according
to Asst. Superintendent
Bhasin are:
— A more consistent approach
to intervention
— Reallocation of grant funds
to hire more math assistants
— Targeted professional learning
aligned to implementation
of high school math curriculum
— Grant-funded Open Sciwww.810bargrille.com
ence-Ed
curriculum training opportunities
The
MCAS results were from
10th graders only from the
spring of 2025, about 400 students
of the 1,870 at Malden
High School in all. Malden was
Malden High School educator
Shauna Campbell Valade saw
her Tornado Travelers trip to
Costa Rica in spring 2028 receive
unanimous approval on Monday
night. (Malden Public Schools Photo)
among the state leaders in attendance
for the MCAS testing;
between 98-99% of all who were
required to take the test did fulfill
the requirement.
One factor that was not mentioned
at the meeting Tuesday
was that this was the first time in
31 years that a passing score in
MCAS testing was not required
for eventual high school graduation.
A number of reports indicate
this might have been a factor
in the massive number of districts,
91%, which showed a decrease
in scores.
Another part of the DESE report
had some very favorable
news for the Malden Public
Schools: The ACCESS Testing
scores, which is testing 100%
taken by English Learners, who
make up between 25-30% of the
Malden High population. DESE
reported that across the board,
at Malden High and in all grade
levels, ACCESS Testing showed
“significant growth, well beyond
peer district and state trends.”
Malden School Committee
approves Tornado
Travelers trip to Costa Rica
Malden High School educator
Shauna Campbell Valade
has been organizing the Tornado
Travelers Club for the past
nine years, supervising many
trips involving hundreds of local
students. On Monday night, the
Malden School Committee approved
what is expected to be
another exciting trip, this time in
the spring of 2028 to the country
of Costa Rica.
Ward 4 School Committee
member Elizabeth Hortie expressed
her endorsement for
the trip, noting her own two children
will be attending this trip
and that she has also attended
parent informational meetings
on this trip.
School Committee Vice Chairperson
Jennifer Spadafora also
endorsed the trip after receiving
assurance it would be covered
by trip insurance up to one
year for full refund if it had to be
cancelled. “We appreciate all the
time and commitment you put
into this program,” Vice Chair
Spadafora said.
The School Committee approved
the Tornado Travelers
trip to Costa Rica by a unanimous
vote.
Malden Public Schools
Community Forums
on AI set for October
21 and October 27
Ward 6 School Committee
member Joseph Gray announced
at Monday’s meeting
that the Technology Committee
he chairs is hosting two Artificial
Intelligence (AI) Community
Forums in the coming weeks.
According to Ward 6’s Gray, the
meetings will encompass:
— An Overview of Malden’s
use of Instructional Technology
— Introduction to AI
— Opportunities for sharing
and discussion
The Community Forums are
set for:
— Tuesday, October 21, an
in-person meeting at the Beebe
School, 556 Pleasant St., from
6:00-7:30 p.m.
— Monday, October 27, Virtual
Zoom Meeting from 6:007:30
p.m. Link address: bit.
ly/4q4upxw.
׉	 7cassandra://90ZNaRrmrLpJW6Af6lExUNEQg3tTUHbgoEf_5JF9E-w6\` hEd}}Ax2׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
Page 5
EDITORIAL: MCAS still being used as a standard bearer,
but minus a true performance incentive
C
onsider this scenario. Imagine
running the iconic Boston
Marathon and after conquering
Heartbreak Hill and steaming
into Kenmore Square —
way ahead of the pack — and
much to your dismay, there are
no crowds waiting to cheer for
you at the designated end of the
race, not a soul. Further, there are
no Roman-esque wreath crowns
to be given to the first-place
finishers, no trophies, basically
no acknowledgement, period.
Heck, there is not even a finish
line anymore!
But get this, runners’ times were
still being recorded held up in
comparison to times they had
run in the past, and how they
compared to their fellow runners
that day. “What’s up with that?”
one might ask. Against the timeworn
adage, this scene seems like
“No risk AND no reward.”
Some might say this is the same
fate that befell one of the most
successful innovations and additions
ever made to the Massachusetts
public schools: the Massachusetts
Comprehensive Assessment
System (MCAS). For the 31year
run in this Commonwealth,
a passing score in the English
(ELA), Math and Science MCAS
tests has been a mandatory requirement
to be awarded a high
school diploma.
A lot has changed in less than
a year when it comes to measuring
academic performance by
public school districts in Massachusetts.
Call it “MCAS Rebellion”
— what happened at the ballot
box in Massachusetts in November
2024. Voters in our state voted
nearly two to one, 59 percent to
41 percent, to end MCAS results
as a graduation requirement. The
most expensive ballot question
battle in Massachusetts history
cost $16.4 million spent on the
winning side, nearly all of it —
some $15.7 million — coming
from the Massachusetts Teachers
Association, about $134 for every
one of its 117,000 members.
Led by hefty donations by philanthropist
Michael Bloomberg and
Mass.-based charter school supporters,
over $5 million was spent
on the “Vote No” side of the ballot
question seeking to keep the
graduation requirement in place,
which lost nearly a year ago.
For many years, through several
political administrations and
numerous state secondary education
Commissioners and other
highly placed academic leaders,
one shining light has been that
Massachusetts has been either #1
or close to it — nationally — as an
academic performer. This status
has been determined through
achievement on some national
standardized testing platforms,
but primarily, through evaluations
of Massachusetts students’
performance on MCAS. That time
looks to be ending sooner rather
than later.
Reason being? The true performance
incentive locked into
MCAS results for over 30 years has
been abolished, and everyone
knows it: students, parents and
caregivers, all school personnel.
So what happens now?
Well, despite the graduation
requirement piece gone by the
wayside, the Mass. Department
of Elementary and Secondary Education
(DESE) is continuing to include
MCAS testing results in its
Accountability Report. Not only is
this not fair to anyone involved, it
is also not accurate. Since the November
2024 vote ending the
MCAS graduation requirement,
DESE has stated it would provide
new graduation requirement
guidance for school districts.
Nearly a year later, the districts
are still waiting.
Malden Public Schools’ results
were presented at Monday
night’s School Committee
meeting and, like in an estimated
91% of all 350-plus districts in the
Commonwealth, they showed a
decrease in previous results and
little progress, especially at the
high school level. Not a word was
mentioned by anyone Monday
night about the collateral damage
to the newest MCAS results,
caused by the abrupt removal of
the most pertinent motivator for
performance for the first time in
over 30 years.
Looks like another race that
took away the finish line.
Save the date! Malden Community Health Fest
Family-friendly health fair
M
alden Community Health
Fest is a family-friendly
health fair that started last year
in Malden, and this year it will
take place in the spirit of National
Health Education Week.
Date: Saturday, October 25
(rain date, Sunday, October 26).
Time: noon to 4 p.m.
Location: Lincoln Commons,
333 Cross St., Malden.
Over 20 vendors have confirmed
so far. There will be local
businesses, nonprofits and community
groups, offering food,
music, flea markets, face painting,
balloons, a bouncy house, a
touch-a-truck event courtesy of
Cataldo Ambulance and valuable
information from people who are
looking out for the health of the
community. The event is open
to the public and free to attend.
Malden Disabled American
Veterans (Malden DAV) Chapter
85 was generous enough to
seek and receive funding for the
event from Malden’s new Community
Connections grant program,
which is funded by Malden’s
surrounding community
agreement with Encore Boston
Harbor. This has allowed the
event to be more accessible. Registration
for all Malden-based entities
is free, including businesses,
this year. Vendors from outside
Malden are also welcome for a
nominal fee.
Attending vendors and weather
announcements can be found
on the event’s Malden Community
Health Fest - MA Facebook
page. Vendor application
forms are available on the Malden
Community Health Fest (Fall
2025) Facebook event page, or
they can be requested by emails
sent to MaldenCommunityHealthFest@gmail.com.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
~ Malden Musings ~
The Robert S. McCarthy Jr. Conversation
By Peter Levine
R
obert S. McCarthy Jr., he’s
our man! If he can’t do it, nobody
can! He’s your hardworking
Ward 2 School Committee member
hailing from one of the finest
families to ever call Malden
home. He bleeds Malden, Edgeworth,
the Big A and family. Get
to know him better with these
words; 25 not so probing, not so
hard-hitting questions to get the
conversation started:
1. My full name is...Robert S.
McCarthy Jr.
2. I am currently...Ward 2
School Committee member.
3. I am saving for...a new car.
4. My home is...in the Edgeworth
section.
5. I love people who...are kind
to each other.
6. Something I say a lot is...“Hey,
how are ya?”
7. I consider myself to be... a
hard worker.
8. I need to have...coffee in the
morning.
9. My favorite movie of all time
is...‘Miracle’ (1980 USA hockey
team).
10. My all-time role model is...
my dad.
11. I respect people who...tell
the truth.
12. I am happy when...work
gets done in a timely fashion.
13. I find (Dave Russo) funny/
hilarious!
14. I am named after...my pops.
15. I have...0 kids.
16. The farthest I’ve ever been
from home is...Florida.
17. My special talents are...my
interpersonal skills.
18. I have...0 pets.
19. I played sports as a youngster
on...regional travel hockey
teams.
20. Where would you most
like to buy a one-way ticket to?
Ireland!
21. What person living or deceased
would you like to have
dinner with? My grandfather
Jack Glynn or Uncle Joe (McCarthy).
My note: Uncle Joe was a
We simply call them The Malden Brain Trust. Left to right: Robert S. McCarthy Jr., Robert S. McCarthy
Sr. and Malden Police Officer and Original Son of Edgeworth Sal Gennetti. Ward 2 Councilor Paul
“Hoss” Condon is seated.
man I was lucky to know.
22. What is one piece of advice
you would give your younger
self? Work hard and stay humble!
23. What is the one thing you
want to be remembered for?
Kind person/hard worker.
24. Growing up in Malden,
most admired or most inspirational
mentor? Most admired,
my grandfather, Jack Glynn!
25. Growing up, what was your
Mid-grade
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It is said in “Malden Musings”...
• One of my favorite people
of all time — Newland Street’s
MaryAnn “Smitty” Smith —
speaks shortly after attending
a girls’ softball mini-reunion:
“Malden was home to a thriving
Women’s Softball League during
the 1970s and 1980s, alongside
a Men’s League, featuring exceptional
athletes from the area. On
warm summer nights, the atmosphere
was lively, with spectators
and friends invited to ‘grab
a six pack and come watch some
awesome softball.’ The league
featured talented players from
Malden and surrounding communities
like Melrose, Everett,
Medford, Wakefield, and more.
Some of the women in the photos
(on Facebook) played in the
league, forming lasting connections
and showcasing their
remarkable skills. We played a
tough, straightforward brand of
softball, unencumbered by hair
ribbons, makeup, or elaborate
eye shadow. Yesterday’s lunch
reunion was a delight, and it was
wonderful to reconnect with everyone.
Those were truly some of
the best times of our lives, love
you all.”
• Another sad day in Malden
history as Congregation Agudas
Achim–Ezrath Israel bids
adieu to their longtime home
on Bryant Street for a new, smaller
location on Florence. Mayor
Gary Christenson, sexton Wayne
Freedman and Rabbi Mark Newton
made it official on (I believe)
Sunday, August 31, as the Torah
scrolls were carefully removed
Be prepared before the next power outage.
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׉	 7cassandra://RWN8m8ZdkMEK0bwOetlItvNRKcokfEqoI5zVyw3c9E45` hEd}}Ax4׉E!CTHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
Page 7
and packed for crosstown travel.
Mazel Tov.
• I ran into a fan of this column,
one Denis Taylor, at City Hall last
week. His dad was a bartender
at the Highland Café. Thank you
for the kind words, Denis, it is appreciated.
More on the Taylors at
a later date.
• The IA Labor Day Road Race
(5K Division) results continue...
Al Macy finished 61st, Mayor
Gary Christenson finished 62nd
at 30.46 with 9.52 miles, Edgeworth’s
Mike Scibelli finished
64th at 30.46 with 9.54 miles,
Green Street’s Donny “Spidder”
Lockhart came in 85th at 33.14,
and Julie Galvin was 93rd with
34.33 miles. Great job, folks!!
• Marvin Hoffman, 89, of Boynton
Beach, Florida, formerly of
Malden and Marblehead. According
to his obit, Marvin had
baseball skills, earning him an invite
to a NY Yankees tryout. May
his memory be a blessing.
• I recently mentioned the exceptional
pie that Joe Crowley
and his outstanding crew pump
out at Pisa Pizza. I can personally
attest to that by the small cheese
with onions and peppers, extra
sauce I ordered last Friday night!
Bafangool! It was SO good. Anyway,
I may have given the impression
that PP was the only
joint in Malden serving great
pie. My apologies if you got that
impression. We are a city with
many fine choices for good pizza.
It would be criminal of me not
to mention Pearl Street Restaurant
and the 621 Tavern & Grille
as two other places in M-Town
that serve outstanding pie. Try
them, you will not be disappointed!
Not. One. Bit!
• Many thanks to the Gordon
Food Service truckdriver who
was kind enough to move his
monster truck for me in a timely
fashion after boxing me in on
Pleasant Street last Friday morning.
So, I park across the street
from the Granada Theatre then
run across the street to play my
number at Store 33/One Stop
Mart (the same number I have
been playing since 1978 with
no luck so far, a story for another
time). I returned within minutes
to find a truck that stretched
from the Granada almost to All
Season’s Table neatly boxing
me and about eight other cars
in. The young man unloading
with an electric pallet jack could
not have been nicer and agreed
to move the truck immediately.
Thanks again, sir! I was in a hurry
to go nowhere, but you made
my day with your understanding
and cooperation.
• By the way, doncha just love
the gentleman (proprietor?)
who works the front counter
at One Stop Mart? Good people,
as we used to say down the
“connah.”
• Apropos of nothing... Happy
58th anniversary to the release
of what many hail as one of the
defining films of the 1960s, “In
the Heat of the Night,” starring
the incomparable Sidney Poitier
alongside Rod Steiger. The
film became one of my favorites
the first time I witnessed, “They
call me Mr. Tibbs!!” Gobsmacked
I was as I watched this scene unfold
— many years ago — on
the third floor on Charles Street!
Powerful words uttered in a vastly
different world than today. The
“slap heard round the world” cemented
my lifelong love affair
with this movie and Mr. Poitier.
His presence, his strength and
his ability to command truth
through a single line forever tied
me to this masterpiece, a film
that spoke boldly to its time and
still resonates powerfully today.
• As Rocket J. Squirrel once
said, “And now it’s time for another
special feature” ...great
call received last week in my
role as Clerical Administrator in
Ron “The Hoganator” Hogan’s
Parking Department! The caller
said there was an unwanted car
parked in his parking lot at 302
North Main St. After I told him
there is no NORTH Main Street in
Malden, he questioned whether
I know my job and the streets
of Malden or not. I assured him
I am familiar with Malden as a
longtime resident, but he insisted
that his car dealership is
at 302 N Main St. and there was
a car parked there illegally. Cue
Blue Oyster Cult’s “Don’t Fear
the Reaper” as cow bells go off
when he mentions a car dealership
at 302 N Main St. I ask
where exactly he is calling from,
he says Mauldin, South Carolina!
Seems he called information,
they transferred him 947
miles away to Malden, Mass. We
had a hearty shared laugh as I
wished him well and good luck.
FYI...Mauldin, S.C. has a population
of 29,746, is 12 square miles,
and its most famous resident is
Kevin Garnett.
• Happy birthday to Craig
Spadafora (10/8), Beverly Curry
(10/10) and Mariana DiMarco-Cavuoto
(10/11).
• Lois Cucinotta passed away
on August 14th of this year. She
was a lovely woman who, although
I hadn’t seen her in many
years, my memories of her and
her wonderful husband Peter are
held near and dear to my heart.
Rest peacefully, Lois.
• I was rapping with my good
pal Chris “Keeper of the Linden
Flame” Moro, and in between
searching out the last existing
bottles of Ballantine Ale for me
and being second in command
as Vice President of the National
Italian American Sports Hall of
Fame (Mass. Chapter), he is busy
writing his memoirs. Expect entertaining
tales of yesteryear Linden
and much more when he
finishes (Chris says there will be
“no dirt!”). Chris gave me some
little-known Steve Moro trivia
when he mentioned that Steph
ran 26 Boston Marathons during
his life! Twenty-six!! Who knew!?
• Look for a great story from
Chris having to do with an encounter
with Red Sox legend, the
late, great Johnny Pesky.
• I remember Larry Amoroso
from the old Y. I became friends
with Larry while playing many
games of hoop in that tiny room
at the old Y we lovingly called a
“basketball court.” We cherished
every second of our time spent
on that small piece of parquet.
It was the best of times! Larry
brought intensity to the game
— tough to cover. I always liked
Larry on my team as opposed to
having to cover him and his tricky
left hand. I was saddened to hear
of Larry’s passing on July 24. Larry
was a really good guy, and on the
dance floor I heard Tony Manero
had nothing on him! You will be
missed, my friend.
• I hear through the Edgeworth
grapevine that there is an interesting
story to be told floating
around Maldonia that must be
brought to daylight. It has to
do with one of the best hoopsters
to ever call Malden home
(Louise Arthur’s husband Buddy),
one of the best hoopsters
to ever suit up for the Celts (Larry
Bird) and our very own Italian
American Citizen’s Club. Stay
tuned for details.
• Happy belated birthday
to Cindy Burgess-Kelly (9/28),
Timmy Carey (9/27) and Jamie
Forbes (9/27).
As Peter Falk’s iconic TV character
Columbo would say, “Just
one more thing, sir” — if you’ve
been reading me for a while,
you already know my columns
aren’t exactly “Meet the Press.”
They’re more like “Meet me
at the I.A.C.C. and let’s swap a
few stories.” If you’re looking for
hard-hitting investigative journalism
that shakes the foundations
of City Hall, I hate to disappoint
you — but my shovel only
digs deep enough to plant a few
tomato plants.
Now, every so often, I’ll dabble
and interview a local politician
(see above) or a hopeful
candidate, but let’s be clear: I’m
not asking them to break down
tax codes or recite zoning ordinances.
My mission is simple: humanize
them a little, maybe get
a chuckle or two. Think of me as
Malden’s unofficial ambassador
of softball questions. In fact, over
the past 15 years or so I’ve floated
more softballs than Scott Rutledge
and Donny Boyce combined
— and those two practically
made an Olympic sport of it.
So, to the Maldonian who
grumbled about my Steve
Winslow interview — next time
you spot Steve (and trust me,
you can’t swing a Big A meatball
sub without hitting him somewhere
in this city), feel free to
pepper him with the hard-hitting,
life-or-death questions you
think I missed. Consider it my gift
to you. No thanks necessary.
As for me, I’ll keep bringing
you a column that proudly embraces
the art of “nothingness”:
everyday Malden observations,
trivial nonsense, esoteric Maldonia
minutia. Jerry Seinfeld would
be proud — this is, after all, a
show/article about nothing…
with just enough Maldonian
flavor to keep it saucy (like a Big
A saucy sub at 35 cents back in
the old days?). Insert smiley face,
raise a glass of Ballantine Ale, carry
on and (channeling my inner
Malden School Supt. the late
great Paul Phaneuf) “very well.”
—Peter is a longtime Malden
resident and a regular contributor
to The Malden Advocate. He
can be reached at PeteL39@aol.
com for comments, compliments
or criticisms.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
Boda Borg Boston celebrates
a decade in Malden
Special to The Advocate
B
oda Borg Boston recently celebrated 10
years in the heart of Malden! Boda Borg
occupies the former Sparks Department
Store located at 90 Pleasant St. Over the last
decade, Boda Borg has provided countless
families, schools and business groups from
around the globe with immersive, interactive
one-of-a-kind entertainment and puzzling
challenges. Boda Borg participants are
transported into a real-world gaming environment.
Since its rollout in 2015, Boda Borg
has become more than just an entertainment
venue — they contribute to local foot traffic,
help support businesses in Malden Square
and most notably have been the leading
force in creating Malden’s Gaming District.
Boda Borg never ceases to amaze with their
constant change up of fresh and engaging
quests — no two are alike!
To “Experience the Quest” or for further information
please visit www.bodaborg.com.
BLAZE | FROM PAGE 1
are only a few feet apart, making it difficult to prevent the fire from
spreading.
Multiple mutual aid departments assisted in battling the fire. The
Lynn Salvation Army provided support to the displaced residents.
The cause of the fire is under investigation.
A Malden firefighter is shown breaking windows to ventilate the
structure.
Mayor Gary Christenson with Boda Borg owners Trish
Blais and Chad Ellis (Courtesy photo)
A deputy chief is shown atop the ladder as firefighters battle the
blaze on the roof of 88 Fairmont St.
Smoke and flames are shown emanating from the triple-decker
fire on Friday. (Advocate photos by Mike Flynn)
׉	 7cassandra://pwPP9XCeG4X8sFsAJjpIbLraA8981vWKfWku2ULWf6g/h` hEd}}Ax6׉E;THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
Page 9
Mayor Christenson's Formal Request
to City Council on Prop. 2/12 Override
To: The Honorable Malden City
Council
From: Mayor Gary Christenson
Over the past several years, I
have shared concerns about the
sustainability of our annual budget.
As you know, we have always
been a city that has to do
"more with less". Despite being
comparatively low with spending
in most key areas as compared
to similar cities, we have
found ourselves challenged every
year trying to fund core services.
The availability of American
Rescue Plan (ARPA) dollars
provided some short-term relief
as we were able to use that as a
funding source for eligible expenses
that would have otherwise
placed more strain on our
annual budget. With that having
come to an end, and coinciding
with increasing costs across the
board, we find ourselves at a critical
point.
For (the present) Fiscal Year
2026, we have funded $8.4 million
of our budget using sources
that our one-time in nature.
Specifically, we funded $3.2 million
with the final amounts remaining
in ARPA funds and the
remaining $5.2 million from reserves.
We acknowledged at that
time that there would need to
be a more permanent solution
to this problem. We are now at
that point where we must identify
a longer-term fix to avoid completely
depleting our reserves
followed by a drastic cut in services
across the board.
A large portion of our budget
is funded through property taxes
and as you know, we are restricted
by state law to an annual
2.5% increase to our tax levy
limit. The time has come to ask
our residents to approve an override
to the restrictions provided
by our Proposition 2 ½, specifically,
a levy limit override. I support
an override approach that
provides an amount that, when
combined with other steps we
are taking, would structurally
balance the FY26 budget. This
amount would not solve all unmet
needs, will not address future
budget deficits, and certainly
won't fund new initiatives.
It will, however, stabilize our finances
in the short term at current
service levels while we continue
working to identify future
revenue growth and expense
containment opportunities.
One example of this will
be for us to move from being
self-insured to providing
health insurance to our employees
through the Group Insurance
Commission (GIC). This
is in our view one of the most
balanced ways our employees
can be part of the solution
to address the budget shortfall
without layoffs. Current estimates
are that this initiative
will save us approximately $3
million per year. This number
is highly dependent on the enrollment
choices made by our
employees but it's not the best
estimate we have at this time.
Even with that change, it will
not be enough, which is why
I am recommending that we
ask the voters to approve an increase
to the annual tax levy limit
of $5.4 million such that when
combined with the $3 million
projected health insurance savings,
we could start the FY27
budget with a structurally balanced
FY26 budget.
Through the Finance Committee
and with the subsequent involvement
of the Citizens Engagement
Committee, I would
expect the City Council to gain
important public feedback that
will further inform the approach
to this challenge. It is our goal to
have in place a direction from
the voters at the ballot box before
March 1. That will provide
time, but not a lot of time,
to construct an FY27 budget
with the results of this initiative
known. To keep to this schedule,
here is a proposed timeline:
September 30, 2025— City
Council Dockets Paper, Referred
to Finance Committee (Consider
a Joint Finance and Citizens
Engagement Committee approach)
October
7-28, 2025— City
Council Finance Committee discusses
proposal and approach
(Recommend using Citizens Engagement
Committee and FiMayor
Gary Christenson is shown addressing the City Council recently.
nance Committee for outreach)
December 2, 2025— Voted
out of Finance Committee (Driven
by Holiday Schedule)
December 9, 2025 —Voted
out of Full City Council (Driven
by Holiday Schedule)
January 6, 2026— Last day to
notify City Clerk (Must be 35 days
before scheduled vote)
February 10, 2026— Special
Election Held
I look forward to working collaboratively
on this important efStop
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the Fiscal Year 2027 budget and
know that our finance team is
prepared to provide whatever
information is helpful as you
evaluate this challenge and this
proposal.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
Rich history of Bell Rock Cemetery evoked on a walking tour
Special to The Advocate
R
esidents learned about the
Historic Bell Rock Cemetery
last weekend on a tour led by local
historian and Malden Historical
Society Board member Mark
Linehan. Participants were givMark
Linehan leads a Bell Rock Cemetery tour. (Courtesy photo)
en the opportunity to explore
one of Malden’s oldest burial
grounds while learning about
our fascinating past.
Located at 60 Medford St. and
one of Malden’s most significant
historical landmarks, Bell
Rock Cemetery dates back to
Malden’s establishment in 1649
and is the final resting place of
many of Malden’s early settlers
and prominent figures. As one
of the oldest burying grounds in
the country, Bell Rock Cemetery
serves as a window into the rich
history of the city and its role in
early Massachusetts, and as one
of the highest concentrations of
17th-century headstones of any
burying ground in the country.
Residents visited the graves
of Revolutionary War soldiers
— highlighting Malden’s contribution
to American independence
— and learned about notable
residents and early community
leaders who once called
Malden home. Mark provided insights
into 17th- and 18th-century
burial practices and customs
along with architectural
and artistic features of the historic
gravestones and monuments.
Sadly, many of the gravestones
have been damaged and have
disappeared over the years.
There are two more chances
this month to take a walking
tour with Mark in Bell Rock
Cemetery: Saturday, October
18, from 10-11:30 a.m., and Sunday,
October 19, from 1-2:30
p.m. The tours are free thanks
to the Malden Historical Society
and a Malden Community Connections
Grant from the City of
Malden. No advance registration
is required, but the tour is
not recommended for persons
younger than 10. For more information,
please email linehan.
mark@gmail.com.
Malden’s 1st Italian
Heritage Month Festival
From left to right: Special Assistant to the Mayor Maria Luise, Ward
5 Councillor Ari Taylor, Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Coordinator
Kashawna Harling, Mayor Gary Christenson, Communications
Director Elaina Savino, Public Health Director Laura Vlasuk and
Pete Caso. (Courtesy photo)
Special to The Advocate
T
o kick off Italian-American
Heritage Month (October),
the City of Malden held its first
ever Italian Heritage Celebration
on City Hall Plaza on a beautiful
fall evening last week. The event
was organized by the Mayor’s
Office in conjunction with the
Health and Human Services Department
and sponsored by
Ward 5 Councillor Ari Taylor. Attendees
enjoyed traditional Italian
music and sampled favorite
Italian foods for free. Hundreds
of residents enjoyed Piantedosi
Bakery’s bread tasting table with
olive oil dips. Sausages with peppers
and onions were provided
courtesy of Bianco & Sons, and
The Traveling Acoffeecary provided
coffee. The longest line
might have been for the delicious
cannoli that were supplied by
Uncle Joey’s Cannoli. There were
also cultural displays and a very
popular children’s coloring table.
Event organizers hope to make
this event an annual celebration!
Subscribe to the Advocate Online!
www.advocatenews.net
׉	 7cassandra://n7-WSXwwRbY8ybW8yUfCJ1ldkdvCrfzjHu-_jX1gRlc33` hEd}}Ax8׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
Page 11
October is
Italian Heritage
Month
Mayor
Gary Christenson
& The Malden City Government
State
Representative
Steve
Ultrino
Spadafora
Councillor-At-Large
Craig
Ward 1 School Committee
Michael
Drummey
BUSINESS
ACCOUNTS
WELCOME
State Senator
Jason
Lewis
Rob
McCarthy
Malden Trans / Malden Taxi
781-322-5050
Lester, Peggy &
David Morovitz
24 Hour
AIRPORT
SERVICE
PACKAGE
DELIVERY
State
Representative
Paul J.
Donato
Ward 2 School Committee
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
Malden’s 7th Annual Public Safety Day
Special to The Advocate
H
undreds turned out last Sunday
for the city’s Public Safety
Week event hosted by the
Malden Fire and Police Departments.
Families enjoyed fun and
interactive ways to learn about
staying safe. There were bouncy
houses and “touch a truck”
events where children climbed
on fire engines and ladders, police
cars, an ambulance and DPW
trucks. Free pizza, hot dogs, slush
and pumpkins were handed out.
Everyone received goody bags
and many children participated
in the raffles where five iPads
were awarded.
Several City of Malden departments,
including the Board
of Health, Recreation Department,
DPW and the Tree Warden,
hosted tables providing information
and fun goody bags.
The event was sponsored by Cataldo
Ambulance, Malden Housing
Authority, Piantedosi Baking
Co., Stop & Shop and the MWRA
Water Fountain, Kayem Foods,
Anthony’s of Malden, Ward 8
Councillor Jadeane Sica, Councillor-at-Large
Craig Spadafora
and Malden Girl Scouts.
The Fire Department also
hosted their annual Smoke
Pictured (from left): Mayor Gary Christenson with members of
the Health and Human Services Department: Assistant Recovery
Specialist PJ Bell, Clerk Caroline Gwokyalya, Public Health Nurse
Maria Tamagna, Health and Human Services Coordinator Bridget
Furlong, Special Assistant to the Mayor Maria Luise, Public Health
Director Laura Vlasuk and her son James. (Courtesy photo)
Detector Installation Program
during Fire Prevention Week,
where they installed 60+ smoke
and carbon detectors for Seniors
65 and older. Fire Prevention
Week is observed every October
in remembrance of the Great
Chicago Fire that began on October
8, 1871, and killed more
than 250 people, along with
destroying more than 17,400
structures across 2,000 acres. In
1911, 40 years after the fire, the
Fire Marshals Association determined
that the anniversary of
this fire should be observed annually
to generate awareness
about fire prevention.
Ride to Defeat ALS: Our Mission,
Our Impact, Our Community
A
LS – those 3 words I learned
at the age of six when my beloved
grandfather Charles Bent,
a man who served as a definite
role model, succumbed to this
awful disease after a lengthy battle.
Sadly, ALS (Amyotrophic Lateral
Sclerosis also known as Lou
Gehrig’s Disease) has negatively
impacted our Malden Catholic
Community with the passing
of Christopher Snow ’99, Timothy
Paquette ’07, and Brother Joseph
Comber, C.F.X., Ph.D. Well,
for the past three years I have
fundraised and participated in
a 40 or 50-mile bike ride called
the Ride to Defeat ALS, an annual
event beginning and ending
at the Longfellow Tennis and
Health Club in Wayland, MA. In
addition, MC has held an annual
Dress Down Day, which this
Sen. Lewis and Mass. Senate
pass Massachusetts Data
Privacy Act
Special to The Advocate
O
n September 25, 2025, State
Senator Jason Lewis joined
his colleagues in the Massachusetts
Senate to pass An Act establishing
the Massachusetts
data privacy act with a bipartisan
vote of 40–0. This landmark
data privacy legislation is poised
to lead the nation in consumer
protections, keeping pace with
a digital landscape that increasingly
puts Massachusetts residents’
sensitive personal information
at risk. On September
29, the House of Representatives
referred the Massachusetts Data
Privacy Act to its committee on
Ways & Means.
The Massachusetts Data Privacy
Act limits the collection of
personal data and establishes
clear rights for residents regarding
their personal data, including
the right to know what information
is being collected and the
ability to opt out of having their
data used for targeted advertising
or sold to other companies.
Protected data includes health
care information, face scans and
fingerprints, precise geolocation,
information about a person’s religion
or ethnicity, information
related to a person’s immigration
status and information pertaining
to a child. Additional enhanced
protections apply to minors,
including a full ban on the
sale of a young person’s personal
data.
“Corporations and nefarious
actors collect and sell people’s
personal data every day, without
regard for the people whose
information is being used,” said
Senator Lewis. “This vital legislation
defends your personal privacy,
prevents exploitation of
your sensitive data, and gives
control of your personal information
back to you.”
Highlights of the Massachusetts
Data Privacy Act:
● Guaranteeing the consumyear
contributed $2,192.50 to
our Team MC. On Saturday, September
20th, I presented Ms. Hallie
Cunningham, Manager, Ride
to Defeat ALS, with our check.
Thank you to everyone who participated
since together we will
Defeat ALS!
er’s right to know if their personal
data is being collected, and allowing
them to see what data is
collected and who their data has
been shared with
● Giving people control over
their personal data through new
guaranteed rights to correct inaccurate
data, delete personal
information and opt out of having
their personal data sold to
others
● Banning the sale of sensitive
data by any kind of entity,
including businesses and nonprofits,
and limiting the transfer
of sensitive data without explicit
consent. Protected categories
of sensitive data include
the following: precise geolocation;
health care information;
biometric data, such as face
and fingerprint scans; citizenship
or immigration status; information
revealing someone’s
sex life; any information about
a person’s race, color, ethnicity,
religion, sexual orientation,
gender identity, or national origin;
and information that pertains
to a child.
● Constraining companies’ unfettered
collection of personal
data by limiting them to only collecting
what is reasonably necessary
in order to provide their
product or service; for certain
sensitive types of data, including
biometrics, precise GPS location,
and health care data, businesses
could only collect this information
if it is strictly necessary.
● Establishing opt-out rights
for targeted advertising by giving
consumers the right to opt
out of having their personal data
collected or processed for the
purpose of targeted advertising
or for sale to third parties
● Banning the sale of children’s
personal data and blocking targeted
ads for minors
● Creating strong enforcement
power by giving the Office
of the Attorney General regulatory
authority to enforce the
provisions of the Massachusetts
Data Privacy Act
׉	 7cassandra://LJAjS4mbPZvuNthtQfslo9bQZ0fxCsYL86PhbVZmMnM3` hEd}}Ax:׉E!THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
Page 13
Sign-up now for the Housing Families Fun Run!
J
oin us for a day of fun, connection
and community spirit!
The Housing Families Fun Run
is perfect for friends, families, kids
and dogs. Whether you walk, run
or cheer from the sidelines, you’ll
TAX | FROM PAGE 1
Council meeting where Mayor
Gary Christenson formally requested
Council approval of a
ballot question calling for a Proposition
2/12 override.
Mayor Christenson's request
for the specific amount of $5.4
million, coupled with an estimated
$3 million saved with a municipal
employees' health plan
switch, would cover an an $8.4
million structural deficit in this
year's FY26 city budget
The $5.4 million raised would
add up to an estimated $346 in
one-time increase in property
tax for the average homeowner,
with Malden's single-home's median
price at $653,000, according
to figures provided by the Mayor
and his team last week.
Tuesday's meeting consisted
largely of questions and, sometimes,
suggestions, regarding
what might happen financially
and what might be done to lessen
the impact on the community,
namely cuts in personnel and
services.
The timeline of the discussion
ranged from present day —
real time— to the next coming
months, and projected into the
next fiscal year, FY27, and even 5
years from now.
Councillor at large Carey McDonald,
the chairperson of the Finance
Committee, was methodical
in running the meeting, which
was one of longest committee
meetings of the years at twoplus
hours, and used a step-bystep
approach to ensure that all
Councillors and any department
heads from the city were heard.
Ranaghan, who is the city's
Chief Financial Officer (CFO) as
the controller, spent the majority
of the time at the Council podium,
fielding questions and often
referring back to other city leadership
team/department heads
in the audience for either confirmation
when answering or additional
information to complete
an answer.
Like last week's full Council
be part of something bigger: a
community working together in
support of housing equity.
Tickets include complimentary
lite bites and drinks at the race
day after-party and a 2025 Fun
meeting, it appeared every municipal
department head was in
attendance, as was Mayor Christenson
and his top mayoral leadership
team of Chief of Staff Maria
Luise and Chief Strategy Officer
Ron Hogan.
It is the first time in recent
memory that a Malden mayor
has been in attendance at two
consecutive municipal meetings
convened by the City Council,
owing to the present gravity
of the city's financial situation.
Unlike last week's full Council
meeting, where the discussion
centered on the "nuts and
bolts" of the override request,
namely, "how much" "why" and
Run athletic shirt. There will be
pre-run yoga, face paint, games,
cornhole, music, raffle and more!
Sign up at https://housingfamiliesfunrun2025.funraise.
org/?mc_cid=50165f46c0&mc_
offering
a slide and chart showing
that Malden spends the least
per capita than five other peer
communities, far less, than Everett,
Revere, Somerville, Peabody
and Salem.
Councillor at large Craig Spadafora,
who has been the most vocal
Councillor on the city's financial
status and future, both this
term of office and for many years
he has served in the past, made
it clear that this request for a $5.4
million override was for this year's
budget and that "We are chasing
something we are not going
to catch."
What Councillor Spadadora
was referring to with the last
eid=5d55242d5c
In-person participants: Be at 200
River’s Edge Dr. in Medford on Saturday,
November 15, from 10:30
a.m.-2:30 p.m. to complete the
Fun Run along the Malden River
wall the city faces in state education
funding. "Something has to
be done. We are out of time and
we're still facing the same situation.
"
Councillor Winslow recalled
his former employment with the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
in another period of financial
turmoil. "I was laid off myself
(by the state). We are talking
about people's lives, their careers.
We must explore every avenue
to address this serious situation,"
he said.
Ward 2 Councillor Paul Condon,
who has served in parts of
five different decades on the City
Council, in two separate lengths
at the beautiful River’s Edge Park.
Virtual participants: Follow
Housing Families Inc. on social
media to share photos from your
run. Virtual participation will be
open all weekend long!
should do right now."
Councillor at large Karen Colon
Hayes asked Ranaghan if he
or any of the other city leaders
knew of any actions the Council
could take right now to alleviate
the deficit situation now, or in the
near future.
"What can we do now? We
would like to know if the City
Council can do anything , any actions
we can take to help," Councillor
Colon Hayes said. "We are
ready to act, please tell us how
we can address this."
In some specific suggestions
where cuts could be made, Councillor
Condon referred to some
jobs that were added to the city
side with American Rescue Act
(ARPA) funds, then kept on the
budget. "We should look at those
jobs first," Councillor Condon said.
Ranaghan explained that there
only about 2 full time and several
part-time grant-funded jobs.
Ward 1 Councillor Peg Crowe
Malden City Controller Chuck Ranaghan, at the podium, answers questions from the City Council
at Tuesday night's Finance Committee meeting including, from left Councillors Stephen Winslow
(Ward 6), Peg Crowe (Ward 1), Council Clerk of Committees Lisa Cagno Councillor at large and Finance
Committee Chair Carey McDonald, and Councillor at large Karen Colon Hayes. (Advocate Photo)
"when"Tuesday's committee
used more stark terms.
"We are in an emergency situation,"
said more than one Councillor,
the first that term had been
used publicly.
Ranaghan stressed that all financial
numbers and all information
regarding the proposed
override are available to all on
the city's website:www.cityofmalden.org
under the tab on the
front of the website: Proposition
2 ½ Override Proposal Fiscal
Year 2027
Ranaghan and others made
a strong point of referencing
previous statements made last
week by members of the public
regarding what "type" of dilemma
the city faced. "This is not
spending problem, this is clearly
a revenue problem," he said,
statement was the vast gap —
which he estimated last week
and this week at $30 million—
between State Chapter 70 funding
for the Malden Public Schools
and what other Gateway Cities
such as Everett, Chelsea and Revere
were receiving.
"We are going to be missing
that funding every year as long
as the (Chapter 70) formula does
not change and we keep falling
further and further in the hole,"
Councillor Spadafora said.
Spadafora, McDonald and
Ranaghan all pointed to the fact
that city of Malden is mandated
by the state to provide 51 percent
of all school budget expenditures
Ward 6 Councillor Stephen
Winslow reiterated points made
by Councillors Spadafora, McDonald
and others on the brick
of service, recalled when Proposition
2 1/2 first came into effect
in the early 1980s. Heavy personnel
layoffs followed in Malden, including
police and fire positions,
as well as over 35 teachers from
the Malden Public Schools.
"That was a very painful time
for our community. Those are
people who have mortgages,
college tuitions, rents, car payments,
you name it," Councillor
Condon said. "This problem is not
going away, we have to do something
now."
"We don't have the money,
plain and simple. How can we
pay money (for our schools) they
say we are mandated to pay if it
doesn't exist?" Spadafora said.
"We are done asking, we should
go to the Governor's office and
demand relief. That is what we
brought up the Community Preservation
Act program, which
sets aside a certain percentage
of property tax revenue for use
on vetted, designated municipal
projects each year. "I'm not advocating
for it, but is it possible
to pause the Community Preservation
Act for a year or more?"
Ranaghan, after consulting
with another department head,
said that he would have a more
complete answer next week, but
did verify that the CPA hold was
about $1 million, which goes directly
from property tax revenues
to the CPA fund.
Ranaghan said he would be
able to provide more information
on all of the suggestions and
questions that needed a more
complete answer at next week's
meeting.
After the last Councillors asked
their questions and Ranaghan
made his final points, Councillor
McDonald announced that discussion
on the override would
continue at a future Finance
Committee meeting, probably
next Tuesday evening, October
14.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
CITY OF MALDEN DRINKING WATER NOTICE
— Some homes have high levels of lead —
This notice contains important information about your drinking water. Have someone translate it for you or speak with someone who understands it. Contact
City of Malden at 617-865-2273 for assistance with the translation.
此通知包含有关您的饮⽤⽔的重要信息。请别⼈为您翻译或与能理解的⼈交谈。聯絡莫頓市，电话：
617-865-2273 以获得翻译方面的帮助。
Este aviso contiene información importante sobre su agua potable. Pídale a alguien que se lo traduzca o hable con alguien que lo entienda. Póngase en
contacto con la Ciudad de Malden al 617-865-2273 para que le ayuden con la traducción.
Este aviso contém informações importantes sobre sua água potável. Peça a alguém que o traduza para você ou fale com alguém que o entenda. Entre em
contato com a City of Malden 617-865-2273 para obter assistência com a tradução.
Avi sa a gen enfòmasyon inpòtan sou dlo wap bwè. Fè yon moun tradui li pou ou oswa pale ak yon moun ki konprann li. kontakte
City of Malden nan 617-865-2273 pou asistans ak tradiksyon
Thông báo này chứa thông tin quan trọng về nước uống của bạn. Nhờ ai đó dịch giúp bạn hoặc nói chuyện với người hiểu được. Liên hệ với City of Malden
theo số 617-865-2273 để được hỗ trợ dịch thuật.
Cet avis contient des informations importantes sur votre eau potable. Demandez à quelqu'un de le traduire pour vous ou parlez-en à quelqu'un qui le
comprend. Communiquez avec la Ville de Malden au 617-865-2273 pour obtenir de l'aide pour la traduction.
Our water system exceeded the lead drinking water action level. We routinely monitor for lead in water in homes with lead service lines as they are more
likely to have elevated lead levels. We are required to collect 20 samples between July 1, 2025 and October 31, 2025. Three of these higher risk homes had
elevated lead levels. The results of these routine samples for lead indicate a level of 0.0179 mg/L (or 17.9 parts per billion). This level exceeds the lead action
level of 0.015 mg/L (or 15 parts per billion). This means that more than 10 percent of the lead samples collected were above the lead action level.
What does this mean?
Our system's water mains that carry the water to you are made mostly of iron, and therefore do not add lead to water. However, lead can get into tap water
through the service line that connects your home to the water main if it is made of lead. Lead may also come from lead solder used to connect pipes in home
plumbing, and from some faucets and fixtures.
There is no safe level of lead in drinking water. Exposure to lead in drinking water can cause serious health effects in all age groups, especially pregnant
people, infants (both formula-fed and breastfed), and young children. Some of the health effects to infants and children include decreases in IQ and attention
span. Lead exposure can also result in new or worsened learning and behavior problems. The children of persons who are exposed to lead before or during
pregnancy may be at increased risk of these harmful health effects. Adults have increased risks of heart disease, high blood pressure, kidney or nervous system
problems. Contact your health care provider for more information about your risks.
What should I do to reduce my exposure to lead?
· Use only cold, fresh water for drinking, cooking, and preparing baby formula.
Run the water for at least 1 minute or until after it turns cold. For more guidance on
the use of filters, cleaning aerators, how to flush your water lines to reduce lead in drinking water exposure, and how to
have your water tested, see this MassDEP webpage https://mass.gov/info-details/guidance-for-single-family-residentsat-risk-of-lead-in-drinking-water-exposure
·
Do not boil the water to remove lead.
· Check whether your home has a lead service line. IF YOU DO, HAVE IT REMOVED. Please contact the City of Malden
Engineering at 781-397-7040 for more information about your home's service line, how to have it removed, or for information about plumbing
materials in your home that may contain lead.
· Learn what your service line material is by checking your home address at the
City of Malden's water service line map by scanning the QR code or at
https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/689872da76974ad4a43e84a1e5576ec9
· Conta.ct your health care provider if you have any health-related questions or contact your local health department to find out if
your child needs to be tested for lead.
What is our system doing?
Our public water system is taking the following actions to address the situation:
· The City of Malden replaced an average of 290 lead service lines per year within the last 5 years and is looking to remove all remaining lead lines
within the next 10 years. The City of Malden is currently in the process of multiple lead service line removal programs and will continue
investigating homes with elevated levels. The City will provide free water testing and inspection upon request.
For more information, contact City of Malden Engineering at 781-397-7040 or
leadinfo@cityofmalden.or org
at 215 Pleasant St, Room 320, Malden, MA 02148
For more information on lead see [
MWRA information on Lead]
Please share this information with all the other people who drink this water, especially those who may not have received this notice directly (for example,
people in apartments, nursing homes, schools, and businesses). You can do this by posting this notice in a public place or distributing copies by hand or
mail.
This notice is being sent to you by City of Malden.
PWS ID#: 3165000
Date distributed 10/07/2025
October 10, 2025
׉	 7cassandra://BJiSmfXFmi6BfZpCxYAkbztm3hAD9uNPIEqpBGD4Jts*m` hEd}}Ax<׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
Page 15
Walk the (Art) Line: Malden’s New Public Art Guide Is Now Available
A free, new guidebook reveals the hidden world of the city’s public art, inviting visitors and
residents to discover murals, sculptures and community projects across the city’s neighborhoods.
Created to support a vision for a stronger cultural future, the guide offers the stories behind
the artists and serves as a rallying call for keeping the arts vibrant and alive.
By Lorna Garey
D
id you know that legendary
minimalist Frank Stella,
whose work “Point of Pines” sold
for a then-record $28.08 million,
was from Malden? And that he
designed not one but two murals
for his hometown?
Malden is highlighting its identity
as a cultural destination with
the release of a free guide to
the city’s public art, including
the Stella murals. The booklet,
a shared initiative between Creative
Malden and Malden Arts, is
available at The Gallery@57 now.
“The two groups came together
because we have that connection,
that love of art, that love of
public art, engaging the community,
engaging these spaces,”
said Grace Julian-Murthy, an
artist and creative director for
downtown art venue The Gallery@57.
“It’s kind of a nice introduction
to Malden overall, to
be able to highlight pieces that
orate on the booklet and is gearing
up to further the city’s art
they might not see in their everyday
life.”
Julian-Murthy pointed out
that even longtime residents
may find something new in areas
where they don’t normally
travel. There are sculptures and
murals highlighted in the book
that are tucked away throughout
the city, such as Coytemore
Lea Park’s “Wise Owl.”
Ryan O’Malley, president of
Malden Arts, said the 20-yearold
group was happy to collabscene
with new permanent art
— sculptures, murals and community
hubs — with some dynamic
art installations also on
the agenda. “I think that the arts
in Malden has really changed the
community for the better,” said
O’Malley. “It makes it an interesting
place to live, and it helps
really strengthen the fabric of
our community, but the proof is
in the pudding. So getting people
out to look at the art is the
big thing.”
This booklet aims to do just
that by not only showing the
range of art installations in the
city but also discussing the
artists, their motivations, and
clueing readers in on the city’s
ArtLine and the switchboxes
and Little Free Libraries dotted
around neighborhoods. There’s
also a call to action on how to
help keep the arts alive in Malden.
Upcoming
children’s programs
at the Malden Public Library
O
The booklet complements
Malden’s new Downtown Public
Art Strategy, which was unveiled
in August and includes an
official inventory and map of existing
installations.
“We’re currently fundraising
for a mini amphitheater that’s
going to go along the bike path
or adjacent to the bike path,
where there’s going to be a stone
in memory of Jeff Taylor, a community
member and poet who
was recently lost,” said O’Malley.
“The organization received a
grant for that project, and we’re
continuing to fundraise.”
Julian-Murthy says artists, or
individuals or property owners
looking to host a mural or other
public art, or simply contribute,
can reach out to either organization
using the contact info in the
booklet, or by dropping by The
Gallery@57.
“It’s great to be able to highlight
all these different artists
who have been able to enhance
and beautify Malden, if but for
a brief moment, because that’s
sometimes what happens with
public art,” said Julian-Murthy. “It
really encourages people, I think,
to stop and enjoy beauty in their
everyday life. Maybe this is the
start of something wonderful.”
~ HELP WANTED ~
Type of Person Needed:
* Are you an experienced/willing to learn, motivated
person looking for a shop where your skills can be valued?
A local company with a fleet shop is a busy, family-owned
business dedicated to providing high-quality transportation
services and public State inspection services. We are seeking
a talented Automotive Technician or mechanical knowledge to
join our close-knit crew. If you are dependable and proficient
in automotive technical work with a passion for excellent
customer service, we want to talk to you.
Location:
Malden, MA
h no! Did your child miss making SLIME or
meeting the Museum of Science’s ROBOT DOG
at the Malden Public Library? Stop by the library to
pick up the October program calendar (or better
yet, register to receive it by email) and never worry
about missing a program again! Some of our
upcoming children’s programs appear below. For
more information, please call the Children’s Room
at 781-388-0803.
PRESCHOOL STORYTIME (ages 3-5): Thursdays
at 10:30 a.m.
SONG & RHYME TIME (ages 6 months–4): Tuesdays
and alternating Saturdays at 10:00 a.m.
BOOK BUNCH book club for 2nd & 3rd graders:
3rd Thursday (sign up required).
BOOK SQUAD book club for 4th & 5th graders:
1st Thursday (sign up required).
TEETH TIME (ages 5-7): Friday, October 17, at
3:00 p.m.
LEGO CLUB (ages 5-10): Wednesday, October
22, at 3:00 p.m.
MUSIC AT THE BLISSFUL (all ages): Saturday, October
25, at 3:00 p.m.
HALLOWEEN CRAFT TIME (ages 3-10): Thursday,
October 30, at 3:00 p.m.
Job Description:
* Be able to acquire and maintain a certification for the
State Inspection License. Perform light duty mechanical
preventive duties, including Fleet preventive maintenance.
* State Inspection Services
* Miscellaneous shop duties
Requirements:
* Valid driver’s license with good driving history
* Possess or pass the required State Inspector License
Hours:
Tuesday through Friday, 8:30 AM to 5:30 PM
Saturday 8:00 AM to 3:00 PM
* 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 MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
Mystic Valley’s Lucia Antonucci
Reaches Historic 100-Goal Milestone
By Emily Brennan
W
hat once felt like a dream
became reality Monday
night for Mystic Valley senior
midfielder Lucia Antonucci, who
etched her name into program
history with a milestone performance.
In the Eagles’ 4–1 victory
over Lynn Classical, Antonucci
scored a hat trick to reach 100
career goals, becoming just the
second player in program history
to achieve the feat.
The atmosphere reflected the
magnitude of the moment. Fans,
friends and classmates filled the
stands with handmade signs and
cheers, eager to witness history
unfold. Midway through the second
half, the long-awaited moment
arrived: Antonucci broke
through the defense and fired
the ball into the back of the net
REVOCABLE TRUSTS
T
he basic purpose of a revocable
Trust is to avoid probate
and, if necessary, provide
provisions within the Trust document
to eliminate or greatly
reduce federal and Massachusetts
estate taxes. A revocable
Trust is a Will substitute but far
superior in many of its features.
The goal is to eliminate or greatly
minimize the amount of assets
that fall into the probate
estate requiring the filing of
the original Last Will and Testament
at the appropriate Registry
of Probate along with the required
forms and filing fees. A
probate asset would be an asset
owned directly by the decedent
in his or her name only
at the time of death, or if the
decedent did not provide for a
beneficiary on an IRA account,
401(k) account or life insurance
policy. Alternatively, the primary
beneficiary named may
have predeceased the decedent
and no contingent beneficiary
was named. There are instances
where you might want
to have a probate estate. For
example, if you name the estate
the beneficiary of your IRA
account and have already begun
taking your required minimum
distributions, and you are
concerned about your surviving
spouse going into a nursing
home, then naming your
estate as the beneficiary and
creating a Testamentary Trust
within your Last Will and Testament
for the benefit of your surviving
spouse, the assets in that
Trust would be protected from
the nursing home. The Trustee
of the Testamentary Trust
spouse would then be required
to take required distributions
from your IRA based upon your
“ghost” life expectancy. This
was made possible under the
Secure Act. The Trustee could
then make distributions of not
only income to your surviving
spouse, but also distributions
of principal. If you died without
having reached your required
beginning date of 73 years of
age, the Trustee of the Testamentary
Trust would have to
deplete the IRA account by the
end of the fifth year following
the year of your death. Therefore,
you must meet your required
beginning date for this
strategy to work.
For tax purposes, the person
who creates the Trust may use
his or her social security number
when opening up a bank account
or brokerage account in
the name of the Trust. No separate
tax returns need to be filed
for a revocable Trust. Appreciated
assets such as real estate
or stock held inside a revocable
Trust receive the so-called
step-up in cost basis upon your
death equal to the fair market
value of the assets at the time
of your death. Therefore, a subsequent
sale of the assets after
your death would result in little
or no capital gain, depending
upon future appreciation
of the assets.
Keep in mind, since the Donor
or Settlor of a revocable
Trust has total control over the
Trust assets and retains the ability
to alter, amend or revoke the
Trust, there is no nursing home
protection with these Trusts. An
irrevocable Trust would be necessary
to achieve that objective.
Upon the death of the Donor or
Settlor of a revocable Trust, the
Trust would then become irrevocable
requiring the filing of
Trust tax returns if there is income
being generated by the
Trust. A federal ID number for
the Trust would then have to
be applied for.
Joseph D. Cataldo is an estate planning/elder law attorney,
Certified Public Accountant, Certified Financial Planner, AICPA Personal
Financial Specialist and holds a master’s degree in taxation.
CONGRATULATIONS, LUCIA: Pictured are Christian, Kenny, Sofia,
Andrea, Lucia, Wanda and Bianca Antonucci.
HAPPY 100TH: Lucia Antonucci
is shown with the ball she
scored her 100th goal with last
Monday night. (Photo courtesy of Emily
Brennan)
for goal number 100. When the
final whistle blew, she celebrated
with teammates, coaches, family
and fans.
Although she plays midfield,
Antonucci has consistently been
one of the Eagles’ most dangerous
scorers. A four-time CAC AllStar,
two-time league MVP, and
varsity starter since eighth grade,
she now leads the team as captain
with 20 goals already this
season. With her 100th goal secured,
she’s chasing the program
record of 114 set by Reilly Hickey
(Class of 2023).
While Antonucci’s milestone
stole the spotlight, Monday’s win
was also a showcase of team efLady
Eagle Lucia Antonucci
is shown with a bouquet of
flowers and a ceremonial ball
marking her 100th goal last
Monday night.
fort. Kaylee Rodriguez tallied her
first goal of the season, and Emily
DeLeire anchored the defense
in net, limiting Lynn Classical to a
single score. After a 1–1 halftime
tie, the Eagles surged in the second
half, outscoring their opponent
3–0 to remain unbeaten.
With the victory, Mystic Valley
improves to 8-0 and currently
holds the No. 22 spot in the
2025 Division 4 Girls Soccer Power
Rankings.
Next up: The Eagles travel to
face Academy of Notre Dame on
Thursday (4:30 p.m.) before hosting
Greater Lowell Tech on Monday
(4:00 p.m.).
׉	 7cassandra://I39md5exM8rTzISP9p5xozABh8ZcXEPgEXn8LdOzEhA3` hEd}}Ax>׉E'THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
Page 17
MALDEN HIGH SPORTS:
Tornado Girls Soccer, Girls Volleyball are ‘En Fuego!’
Soccer has 7-game unbeaten streak, soars to 8-2-1;
‘Lucky 7’s: 7 wins in a row for Girls Spikers
Malden Boys Soccer sweeps Somerville in 2-1 win
By Steve Freker
E
n Fuego!!
There is no other way to describe
the way the Malden High
School Golden Tornado Girls Volleyball
and Girls Soccer teams
have taken the Greater Boston
League by storm the past twoplus
weeks. Both Coach Rick Caceda’s
Soccer girls and Coach
Dan Jurkowski’s Volleyball squad
are riding massive 7-game winning
streaks, heading into this
week of play. Malden Girls Soccer
was 6-0-1, while Girls Volleyball
won 7 straight games and
is now squarely in the mix for a
possible GBL title.
The Tornado Volleyball girls
have recorded wins over Arlington
(3-1), Lynn English (3-1),
Medford (3-2), Everett (3-1) and
Somerville (3-1), and shutout
wins over East Boston (3-0) and
Chelsea (3-0 on Monday). “What
has been especially important is
that [five] of those games were
on the road. We have really been
working well together and it is a
good time of year to string some
wins together,” Coach Jurkowski
said, with his team improving to
9-4 overall, 6-3 GBL.
Malden was poised to clinch
an MIAA Girls Volleyball Division
1 State Tournament berth
with a win on the road at Lynn
Classical (after Advocate press
time) on Wednesday. Malden
also had a road game at Lowell
today at 5:30 p.m. Malden
returns home Wednesday, October
15 against Lynn English
at 5:15 p.m. in the Finn Gym
at Malden High. Senior Night
is Monday, October 20, at Finn
Gym versus Medford.
Malden High Girls Soccer is
on a 7-game unbeaten streak
to improve to 8-2-1 overall. Included
were shutout wins over
Everett (5-0), Medford (6-0) and
Lowell (5-0).
“We are playing well on both
ends of the field and our goalkeeper
[freshman] Sofia Leon
has been outstanding all year,”
Malden Head Coach Rich Caceda
said.
Malden needs just three more
standings points (2 points win/1
point tie) to qualify for an MIAA
Division 1 State Girls Soccer Tournament
berth and could have
achieved that on the road at
Medford yesterday (after Advocate
press time) and Tuesday, October
14, at Lynn Classical. Both
are 4:15 p.m. starts.
Malden Boys Soccer
sweeps Somerville with
2-1 win; Belatreche is
solid in goal (9 saves)
in Tornado debut
Malden High Boys Soccer got
a first-half goal by senior captain
Mike Joseph and the eventual
game-winner by junior AbMalden
Boys Soccer celebrated after Tuesday’s
2-1 win over Somerville, completing a season
sweep. (Courtesy/Malden Athletics)
dul Kalefa with 7:53 left to play
in the second half to take a 2-1
win over Somerville at Pine
Banks Park on Tuesday. Senior
Mateus Martins assisted on
both goals. Senior captain Yasser
Belatreche made his debut in
goal for Malden and was sensational,
making 9 saves and leadMalden
Girls Soccer Head Coach Rick Caceda
talked with the team after a recent win. (Courtesy/
Malden Athletics)
ing his team all the way.
“We needed that game. We
played most of the way to get a
win in other recent games, but
could not finish it off,” Malden
Head Coach Jeremiah Smith
said. “Today we did. Yasser [Belatreche]
really stepped up and
showed a lot of leadership today.”
Malden
improved to 3-5-4
overall with the win, needing
8 more standings points over
its final 6 games to qualify for
the MIAA Division 1 State Boys
Soccer Tournament, based on
2 points for a win and 1 point
for a tie.
Law Offices of
JOSEPH D. CATALDO, P.C.
“ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELORS AT LAW”
• ESTATE/MEDICAID PLANNING
• WILLS/TRUSTS/ESTATES
• INCOME TAX PREPARATION
• WEALTH MANAGEMENT
• RETIREMENT PLANNING
• ELDER LAW
369 Broadway Everett, MA 02149 (617)381-9600
JOSEPH D. CATALDO, CPA, CFP, MST, ESQUIRE.
AICPA Personal Financial Specialist Designee
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
Savvy Senior
by Jim Miller
What Seniors Need to Know About This Fall’s Vaccines
Dear Savvy Senior,
With a longtime vaccine critic
leading the nation’s health departments,
can you give me updated
information on which vaccines
are recommended for Medicare
seniors this fall?
Medicare Mary
Dear Mary,
Even though the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) is undergoing major cultural
changes and upheaval, the overall
fall vaccine recommendations for
“older adults” resembles last year,
with exception of the Covid shot.
Here’s what you should know.
Flu Shots for Seniors
Just as they normally do, the
CDC recommends a seasonal
flu shot to everyone 6 months of
age and older, but it’s especially
important for older adults who
have weaker immune defenses
and have a greater risk of developing
dangerous flu complications
compared with younger,
healthy adults.
For people age 65 and older,
there are three different FDA
approved flu vaccines (you
only need one) that are recommended
over traditional flu
shots. These include: the Fluzone
High-Dose Quadrivalent,
Flublok Quadrivalent (recombinant,
egg free vaccine), and Fluad
Quadrivalent.
These vaccines are formulated
to create a more robust immune
response, helping the body produce
more antibodies, which
makes them more effective in
preventing the flu.
All flu vaccines are covered 100
percent by Medicare Part B as
long as your doctor, health clinic
or pharmacy agrees not to charge
you more than Medicare pays.
RSV Shots
In addition to the flu shot, the
CDC also recommends a single-dose
of RSV (respiratory syncytial
virus) vaccine for all adults
age 75 and older, as well as to
high-risk adults between ages
50 and 74. These are people who
have chronic heart or lung disease,
weakened immune systems,
diabetes with complications,
severe obesity, or who live
in long-term care facilities.
RSV is responsible for 6,000 to
10,000 deaths and up to 150,000
hospitalizations each year.
The three RSV vaccines approved
and available in the U.S.
– Arexvy, Abrysvo and mResvia
– are all covered under Medicare
(Part D) prescription drug plans.
But note that if you got an RSV
shot last year, or when it first became
available in 2023, you do
not need to get a second dose
this year. For now, only one dose
of RSV vaccine is recommended.
Covid Booster
If you haven’t had a Covid
booster shot lately, the Food
and Drug Administration recently
approved the 2025–
2026 Covid-19 vaccine, which
has been updated to target the
dominant strain.
This vaccine has been recommended
for all adults 65 and
older and younger people that
have a health condition that
makes them vulnerable to severe
Covid. But the new, CDC
Advisory Committee on Immunization
Practices just announced
that they are no longer
recommending Covid shots. Instead,
they are recommending
65 and older adults and immunocompromised
younger people
should decide individually
or with a doctor.
Covid still causes at least
40,000 hospitalizations and approximately
47,000 deaths in
the U.S. each year. Covid shots
are covered by Medicare Part B.
Pneumonia Vaccines
If you haven’t been vaccinated
for pneumonia, you should also
consider getting the pneumococcal
vaccine this fall. These vaccines
are now recommended by
the CDC to adults age 50 and older,
instead of age 65, which was
the previous recommendation.
Pneumonia causes a whopping
1.2 million people to visit
medical emergency departments
in the U.S. each year and
causes roughly 50,000 deaths.
If you’ve never been vaccinated
for pneumonia, the PCV20
(Prevnar 20) or PCV21 (Capvaxive)
are the top choices because
they cover the most common
serotypes.
Medicare Part B covers pneumococcal
shots, and you only
need to get it once.
Side-Effects and Safety
You should be aware that all
these vaccines can cause mild
side effects like pain or tenderness
where you got the shot, muscle
aches, headache, fever or fatigue.
Also note that it’s safe to receive
these vaccines at the same
time, but it may be best to
spread them out a week or two
because multiple vaccinations
on the same day may cause increased
side-effects.
Send your senior questions to: Savvy Senior, P.O. Box 5443, Norman, OK 73070, or visit SavvySenior.
org. Jim Miller is a contributor to the NBC Today show and author of “The Savvy Senior” book.
1. October 10 is World Mental Health Day; which Roman emperor
was described as crazy: Caligula, Hadrian or Valerian?
2. What kind of animal is the title character of the 1995 film
“Babe”?
3. On Oct. 11, 1884, what First Lady was born who was called “First
Lady of the World”?
4. Which South East Asia country has the world’s most skyscrapers?
5.
What song that Frank Sinatra recorded was also in the 1993
movie “Hocus Pocus”?
6. How are “The Skeleton in the Closet,” “The Candy Country” and
“Little Women” alike?
7. On Oct. 12, 1901, what president changed the name of the Executive
Mansion to the White House?
8. How are Candy Land, Uncle Wiggily and Go similar?
9. The 1953 play “The Crucible” is based on what historical events?
10. On Oct. 13, 1903, what team that became the Red Sox won the
first World Series?
11. What group originated the 1970 song “I Me Mine”?
12. How are Bumble, Ed and Peabody similar?
13. On Oct. 14, 1644, what advocate of religious freedom founded
a current Commonwealth in the USA?
14. What is a mummer?
15. In the novel “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,” what is the
“perfect candy bar”?
16. October 15 is Global Handwashing Day; what soap ingredient
is almost identical to a cartoon character’s name?
17. What Salem author wrote, “There is no season when such pleasant
and sunny spots may be lighted on, and produce so pleasant
an effect on the feelings, as now in October”?
18. What 1962 single of Bobby “Boris” Pickett and the Crypt-Kickers
was a “monster” hit?
19. Reportedly, Pliny the Younger invented homework: practicing
math, oratory or writing?
20. On Oct. 16, 1847, what Brontë sister wrote a novel with a woman’s
name as the title?
ANSWERS
1. Caligula
2. Pig
3. Eleanor Roosevelt
4. Hong Kong (550+)
5. “Witchcraft”
6. They are works by Louisa May Alcott.
7. Theodore Roosevelt
8. They are board games.
9. Salem Witch Trials
10. The Boston Americans
11. The Beatles
12. People known as Mr. (workhouse boss
in “Oliver Twist,” talking horse on TV series
and dog genius in “Peabody’s Improbable
History” cartoons, respectively)
13.
Quaker William Penn (Pennsylvania)
14. An actor or person going “merrymaking
in disguise during festivals” (Merriam-Webster)
15.
Wonka Bar
16. Olive oil (Olive Oyle of “Popeye” [originally
called “Thimble Theatre”])
17. Nathaniel Hawthorne
18. “Monster Mash”
19. Oratory
20. Charlotte (“Jane Eyre”)
׉	 7cassandra://QHPrLJgelAFlDISDnUmVhP1NhJ-MDmfEcMEoqrgvwz81` hEd}}Ax@׉E"THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
Page 19
Resilient Mystic Collaborative presents
a vision for a changing waterfront
Special to The Advocate
T
he waterfront along the lower
Mystic River could be one
of Greater Boston’s crown jewels:
a shining example of a resilient
working waterfront that is also
widely accessible to the public
and naturally beautiful. This vision
of the lower Mystic waterfront
— based on two years of
deep community engagement
across multiple municipalities
— is detailed in a new report
published by the Resilient Mystic
Collaborative (RMC), a collective
of 20 cities and towns in the
Mystic River watershed working
together to address the region’s
climate challenges, in partnership
with the Consensus Building
Institute and Stoss Landscape
Urbanism. The project focused
on a section of the Mystic
River at the heart of Boston’s
working waterfront, with critical
infrastructure that supports
Greater Boston and the broader
New England region.
The lower Mystic, which refers
to the tidal portion of the watershed
below the Amelia Earhart
Dam, spans five municipalities:
Boston, Chelsea, Everett, Somerville
and Revere. Future projections
show that coastal flood
risks will extend above the dam
into the cities of Medford and
Malden, along with others. Together,
these communities account
for 70% of the total watershed
population. They have
faced unique historic challenges
and are now preparing for
new ones — growing demands
for waterfront access, local jobs,
housing affordability and climate
protection.
The City of Chelsea served
as the fiscal host for the funding
for this project, which was
awarded through the Massachusetts
Vulnerability Preparedness
grant program. The project team
worked with a resident-led steering
committee and spoke with
community members across the
region to develop a report documenting
a shared regional vision
for this part of the waterfront.
These recommendations are being
taken up by the RMC and will
inform the organization’s future
resilience work.
A vision for a thriving,
inclusive, and climateresilient
waterfront
The Lower Mystic Waterfront
Vision report draws from climate
data, municipal plans, community
voices, businesses and other
stakeholders to knit together
ideas and aspirations toward a
collective blueprint for the waterfront’s
future. Highlights from
the report cover the following
themes:
● Resilient and Climate-Ready
Communities: Elevate shorelines,
update building codes,
address flooding and use nature-based
solutions.
● Connected and Continuous
Water Access: Improve path
networks, neighborhood access,
recreation and other multimodal
transportation.
● Inclusive and Active Open
Spaces: New accessible parks,
lighting, signage, bathrooms
and waterfront programming.
● A Thriving Working Waterfront:
Economic development,
regional coalition-building and
local workforce development.
To implement the recommendations
across the four themes,
new governance and coordination
structures are needed. Currently,
there are no institutional
mechanisms to support collective
planning for the lower Mystic.
The region requires a shared
framework to vision, plan and
align efforts across communities
while respecting each municipality’s
autonomy.
The report recommends creating
a more formal institutional
arrangement that can act on
these recommendations in stages
over time; in order to do this,
we must:
● Form working groups to advance
near-term actions
● Incorporate the four themes
of this vision into our own planning
efforts at the municipal, regional
and state levels
● Complete a working waterfront
economic development
vision
● Formalize an efficient, coordinated,
resourced regional
entity that can advance Boston
area waterfront planning, projects
and consistency across jurisdictions.
The
full report can be found at
https://resilient.mysticriver.org/
lower-mystic-vision-report. As
part of the project, the Consensus
Building Institute produced a
podcast episode that highlights
the voices of local residents and
workers. It can be accessed on
Spotify and Apple Music.
MYSTIC VALLEY AREA BRANCH NAACP
To Fight Prostate Cancer and Spread Awareness
to more Black and Latino Men
W
OBURN, MA – The Mystic
Valley Area Branch of the
NAACP will host its annual Prostate
Cancer Awareness program
in partnership with the AdMeTech
Foundation. Local partners
Belmont Against Racism
(BAR) and Association of Black
Citizens of Lexington (ABCL) will
also be collaborating on this program.
Event will be held virtually
on Thursday, October 16th from
6:30 PM – 8:00 PM, available here:
www.admetech.com. St. John’s
Baptist Church in Woburn will
also be hosting a live viewing
party. Please call (781)-935-4314
or email: sjbcpubrel3840@gmail.
com for more information about
the viewing party.
Program will stress both the
importance of early detection
and education necessary to save
more people from prostate cancer
that disproportionately impacts
Black and Brown communities.
Resources available from
urologists to trust and the ProsNAACP|
SEE PAGE 20
A longtime
resident of Malden,
passed
away on Monday,
October
6th, after a brief
illness.Patr i -
cia was born in
Malden on August 3rd 1948, the
daughter of Joseph and Elizabeth
Grace.She was raised and educated
in Malden, graduating from
Malden High School. She married
her childhood sweetheart William
"Billy" Rosmarinofski, and the two
raised their family in Malden. She
then became a CNA and went to
work for the Dexter House in Malden,
where she worked for many
years until her retirement in 2007.
Patricia enjoyed going to the casino
and playing bingo, and adored
her Boston Terrier Rosie.
She is survived by her children,
Debra Santo and her Fiance' John
of Methuen, Kelly A. Rosmarinofski
of Manchester, NH, Elizabeth
Schroeffel and her husband George
of Revere, Dennis Rosmarinofski
and wife Dawn of Haverhill, her sisters,
Rita LaCount of Lynn and Karen
O’Brien of NH, her grandchildren
Jessika, Samantha, Jeremy, Dennis
Jr, and William "Billy" III, and her
great grandchildren Dominic, Mia,
Shane, and Ace. Also many nieces
and nephews.
Patricia was preceded in death
by her husband William Sr. And
her son William Jr, and her siblings,
Betty Fitzpatrick, Barbara Murray,
Mary Lussier, Joseph Grace, and
Gary Grace.
Funeral Services will be held
graveside at Holy Cross Cemetery,
185 Broadway, Malden on Tuesday,
Oct 14th at 11 AM
Raymond
L. Benson
A longtime
resident of Malden,
passed
away on Monday,
October
6th.Ray was
born in Chicago,
IL in 1957, the
son of the late
Lowell and Phyllis
Benson.At an
early age the
family moved to
Bridgeport, CT, where he was raised
and educated.After high school, Ray
enlisted in the US Military, serving
OBITUARIES
Patricia A. (Grace)
Rosmarinofski
first in the Marine Corp, then in the
US Army and the Army National
Guard.Ray had over 20 years of service
to our country. He came to the
Malden area in the mid 70’s, and in
1977 he married his sweetheart, Linda
Cunneen.They settled down in
Malden to raise their family.Ray and
Linda shared nearly 50 years of marriage
together.Outside of his military
services, Ray had worked in the
maintenance department for Atria
Health Care in Malden.Health issues
forced his retirement in 2020.Raymond
enjoyed taking cruises with
his wife Linda, watching his children
and grandchildren play sports, and
was active with the 182nd Association,
a group from his time with the
National Guard.
He is survived by his wife Linda,
his children, Raymond L. Jr and wife
Lauren of Beverly, and Caitlin Lynch
of Wakefield, his siblings, Peggy
Claus, Theresa Lipka, Pattie Maiorino,
Gary Benson, Lowell Benson JR,
Timothy Benson, and the late Russel
Benson, and his grandchildren,
Bradley, Cameron, Austin, Kennedy,
and Lowen.
Funeral services will be held on
Friday, Oct 10th, at 11 AM, with visitation
beginning at 10 AM. Private
interment at a later date in the Veterans
section of Forest Dale Cemetery.
In lieu of flowers, donations
can be made to The National Kidney
Foundation or Wounded Warriors
Project in Ray’s honor.
Stacy Plumley
Of Malden.
Died peacefully
on October 2nd,
2025, surrounded
by friends
and family. She
was 52. Born in
1973, she was a
beloved wife, sister and friend. She
enjoyed traveling, sports, and socializing
with those close to her. She
was the daughter of the late William
and Judith Poole. She is survived by
her husband, Michael, and stepchildren
Mathew and Nicole, sister Sarah
and nephew Deacon.
Visiting hours will be held at A.J.
Spadafora Funeral Home, 865 Main
Street, Malden, Massachusetts on
Saturday, October 11th from 1:00
to 4:00pm. A service will be held at
3:30pm during the visitation. Relatives
and friends are respectfully
invited to attend. In lieu of flowers,
donation to the Wounded Warrior
project would be welcome. https://
www.support.woundedwarriorproject.org
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
Humane Removal Service
COMMONWEALTH
WILDLIFE CONTROL
ANIMAL & BIRD REMOVAL
INCLUDING RODENTS
CALL 617-285-0023
NAACP | FROM PAGE 19
tate Cancer Equity Program will
also be presented.
Terry Carter, Poet Laureate of
Steps Stoops Rebuilt or Repaired
Chimney Rebuilt or Repaired
House Foundation Leaks Repaired
All Basement Repairs
Chimney Inspection
Roofing & Siding
Masonry Repairs
Window Installation & Repairs
Drywall & Carpentry
Waterproofing
West Medford will present original
poetry, focused on health in
communities of color. Rev. Ryan
Tankersley and his St. John’s Baptist
Church of Woburn will join.
Rev. David Killpatrik, long-time
Pastor at West Medford Baptist
and 2nd Vice President of the
Mystic Valley Area Branch of the
NAACP will share some remarks.
Didier Moise, President of Belmont
Against Racism (BAR) will
speak at the event. President Jillian
Harvey of the Mystic Valley
Area Branch of the NAACP will
speak on behalf of the branch
who has been a champion of
civil rights advocacy in the region
for over forty years. Representative
Sean Garballey, Representative
Paul Donato, and Representative
Sal DiDomenico renowned
champions of Prostate
Cancer Advocacy will be present
and be honored for their advocacy
in prostate cancer awareness.
The
theme of this year is Love.
Courage. Hope. The NAACP believes
health is an integral civil
right and it is essential that we
do more to combat the fact the
Black and Brown men are two
times more likely to die from
this cancer.
To attend this event, or learn
more information about the
event and the Mystic Valley Area
Branch of the NAACP, please
visit www.mva-naacp.org or
email us at info@mva-naacp.org.
Please tune into the event live
at www.admetech.com.
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
BUYER1
Adamu, Kidmalem
Choi, Jasmine
Daba, Nadia B
El Ghanjawi, Fatiha
Kamali, Sharan
Maiti, Payel
Montoya-Rodriguez, Anibal
Tadele, Thomas
Wang, Choushi
Wu, Philip
BUYER2
Fanfan, Carl
Boulahlib, Youcef
El Ghanjawi, Rajaa
Chiluwal, Sumitra
Wright, Jeffrey A
SELLER1
Adamu, Abyot
Hames 3rd, John W
Sarikhani, Mohsen
Brussard Jr, Alan
Fernandez, Maria C
Brandt, Andrew C
Bowie, Glenn E
Doran Ft
Zhou, Limin
Ren, Zihan
Salvato, Deborah A
SELLER2
Khakpour, Iman
Celi, Deanna J
Lessard, Kristine M
Bowie, Joy A
Lombardo, Rosemary F
~ 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
as well as Massachusetts school bus certificate.
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.
The Kid Does
Clean Outs
From 1 item to 1,000
* Basements * Homes * Backyards
* Commercial Buildings
The cheapest prices around!
Call Eric: (857) 322-2854
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.
ADDRESS
Mengste, Muluemebet W 2 School St
Hames, Gina M
6 Grant Rd
29 Brentwood St
206 Columbia St
52 Wheeler St
121 Cross St #3
45 Princeton Rd
231 Bainbridge St
41 Webber St #2
44 Park St
CITY
Malden
Malden
Malden
Malden
Malden
Malden
Malden
Malden
Malden
Malden
DATE
09.09.25
09.10.25
09.10.25
09.10.25
09.12.25
09.11.25
09.10.25
09.09.25
09.12.25
09.08.25
PRICE
300000
690000
675000
750000
655000
610000
818000
585000
870000
950000
׉	 7cassandra://z1LQVA_yjcwWt1VfSt8SQUm_iIdI6rcDbBCutdC1xdU5Q` hEd}}AxB׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
Page 21
Discount Tree Service
781-269-0914
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 / www.americanexteriorma.com
Windows, Siding, Roofing, Carpentry & More!
All estimates, consultations or inspections completed
by MA licensed supervisors. *Over 50 years experience.
*Better Business Bureau Membership.
Insured and
Registered
Complete Financing Available.
No Money Down.
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
FIRE • SOOT • WATER
Homeowner’s Insurance Loss Specialists
FREE CONSULTATION
1-877-SAL-SOOT
Sal Barresi, Jr. - Your fi rst call
617-212-9050
Licensed
& Insured
Free
Estimates
Carpentry * Kitchen & Bath * Roofs * Painting
Decks * Siding * Carrijohomeimprovement.com
Call 781-710-8918 * Saugus, MA
General Contractor * Interior & Exterior
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@advocatenews.net
J.F & Son Contracting
Snow Plowing
No Job too small! Free Estimates!
Commercial & Residential
781-656-2078
- Property management & maintenance
Shoveling & removal
Landscaping, Electrical, Plumbing, Painting, Roofing, Carpentry, Framing,
Decks, Fencing, Masonry, Demolition, Gut-outs, Junk Removal & Dispersal,
Clean Ups: Yards, Garages, Attics & Basements. Truck for Hire, Bobcat Services.
Advocate
Call now!
617-387-2200
advertise on the web at
www.advocatenews.net
Professional
TREE
REMOVAL
& Cleanups
24-HOUR SERVICE
AAA Service • Lockouts
Trespass Towing • Roadside Service
Junk Car Removal
617-387-6877
26 Garvey St., Everett
MDPU 28003 ICCMC 251976
Frank Berardino
MA License 31811
● 24-Hour Service
● Emergency Repairs
BERARDINO
Plumbing & Heating
Gas Fitting ● Drain Service
Residential & Commercial Service
617.699.9383
Senior Citizen Discount
Clean-Outs!
We take and dispose
from cellars, attics,
garages, yards, etc.
Call Robert at:
781-844-0472
Classifieds
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
׉	 7cassandra://6J2gM60DEP2Jo8bWefw3GiCuNlPIAZLHo9g3fAnsSYY9` hEd}}AxD׉EITHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
Page 23
- LEGAL NOTICE -
City of Malden
Massachusetts
Board of Appeal
215 Pleasant Street
Malden, Massachusetts 02148
Telephone 781-397-7000 x2104
MALDEN BOARD OF APPEAL
PUBLIC HEARING
Advocate
Call now!
617-387-2200
advertise on the web at
www.advocatenews.net
The Malden Board of Appeal will hold a public
hearing on Wednesday, October 15, 2025, 6:30 pm
Eastern Time (US and Canada) at Malden City Hall,
215 Pleasant St, Room #106 Herbert L Jackson Council
Chambers, Malden, MA on Petition 25-012 by
Troy Ferrio, seeking a variance under Code of the
City of Malden as amended – Title 12.16.010 Table
of Intensity Regulations: Specifically: Front
Yard Setback for a Dwelling, Single Family as
per Plans Res-073614-2025 at the property known
as and numbered 65 Davis St., Malden, MA and
also known by Assessor’s Parcel ID #167-543-344
Additional information, Petition & plans available for public
review in the Office of Inspectional Services, 215 Pleasant St., 3rd
floor, Malden, MA or online at www.cityofmalden.org or https://
maldenma-energovweb.tylerhost.net/apps/SelfService#/home
Nathaniel Cramer, Chair
October 03, 10, 2025
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
TRINITY REAL ESTATE
321 MAIN STREET | SAUGUS, MA | VILLAGE PARK
TrinityHomesRE.com
No Tricks,
Just a Treat!
Find out your homes value this Fall!
Offering a FREE
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781.231.9800
13 Seaview Avenue
Saugus, MA 01906
Listed by: Lori Johnson Cell: 781.718.7409
5 rooms
3 Bedrooms
1 Full bath
976 Sq ft
LISTED FOR: $489,900
317 Lynn Street
Malden, MA 02148
Listed by: Lucia Ponte Cell: 781.883.8130
8 rooms
3 Bedrooms
3 Full bath
1,484 Sq ft
LISTED FOR: $799,900
Providing Real Estate Services for Nearly Two Decades
Servicing Saugus, Melrose, Wakefield, Malden, all North Shore communities, Boston and Beyond.
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
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FURNISHED ROOM FOR RENT
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Classifieds
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, October 10, 2025
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