×‰?4×B!›×‘C‘×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://7wJsDddAKFEcH_O3qxSxxORiD2YM2khaH-rrLEif0zoÎ ˆ\Í`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Tmq6HJdAL8PJna7JOfKwRkm5vLw7UcRcmbldNJhzwqMÍYÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://VxKXNyZWkrqA4WKqzF5un5uAbxM4YPFE2bDmX50kNmcÍ-òÍ`Ì°Í ×fµÃÕ\iŸ‘× ×fµÃÕ\iŸ Í€ÍÌ¾9×H»http://www.advocatenews.net××Ðˆ×ˆE×fµÃÕ\iŸì×‰EÚYOUR LOCAL NEWS & SPORTS ONLINE. SCAN HERE!
Vol. 34, No.32
-FREEwww.advocatenews.net
Free
Every Friday
Waterâ€™s Edge property to be reviewed
by Board of Health for condemnation
following history of gross negligence
Owner has failed to address life safety violations since 2022,
with other violations dating back to 2017
Special to Th e Advocate
T
he City of Revere is taking decisive
action to protect the
residents of Waterâ€™s Edge Apartments
on Ocean Avenue, moving
for a condemnation hearing
following ongoing violations
and gross negligence by the
property owners, Waterâ€™s Edge
Limited Partnership. A public
hearing by the Revere Board of
Health will be held on August
29 at 6:00 p.m. in the City Council
Chambers to review current
status and act on the health and
safety risks posed to residents
at the 364 Ocean Ave. property.
For the past two years, the City
of Revere has attempted to work
with building ownership to address
the serious health, safety
and maintenance issues at Waterâ€™s
Edge Apartments. Following
a June 2022 fi re and subsequent
condemnation at 370
Ocean Ave. â€” another property
under the same ownership with
a history of safety and maintenance
violations â€” hundreds of
Revere residents were displaced.
Following an inspection in 2022,
the City of Revere took legal action
against Waterâ€™s Edge Limited
Partnership to force repair
work to be completed, to no
avail. Ownership has failed to
make meaningful eff orts to repair
the property, which remains
in a state of disrepair and has fallen
into severe fi nancial troubles,
including mechanics liens, back
taxes and other unpaid debts.
Deputy Fire Chief Paul Cheever,
Revereâ€™s Chief Fire Inspector,
said, â€œThe building continues to
have ongoing public safety issues
related to the fi re protection
systems and safe building
egress. At this point, we can no
longer risk the safety of the residents
of the property.â€
Conditions at 364 Ocean Ave.
have deteriorated to the point
that Waterâ€™s Edge had to be required
to stop renting additional
apartments, leaving the building
more than half empty: The
City of Revere estimates that
approximately 40 units are currently
occupied. On Monday afWATERS
| SEE Page 2
RHS student Yasmi Granados Flores brings
a touch of Revere Beach to Senior Center
By Melissa Moore-Randall
Y
asmi Granados Flores is
winding down her summer
and getting ready to begin
her junior year at Revere High
School. Born to parents from
El Salvador and Honduras, Yasmi
has been spending her summer
at the City of Revere Senior
Center creating a mural of Revere
Beach.
Yasmi created the mural of Revere
Beach based on the suggestion
of Revereâ€™s seniors. â€œIn
creating this piece there were
multiple takes before creating
RHS student Yasmi Granados Flores in front of her mural at the
Revere Senior Center
GRANADOS | SEE Page 3
â€œOperation Ride Rightâ€ leads to arrest,
seizure of illegal mopeds and motorcycles
By Th e Advocate
R
evere police have launched a
campaign to crack down on
illegal mopeds, motorcycles and
scooters, which have plagued
cities and towns throughout
the country. Residents and
motorists have faced the twowheeled
riders recklessly operating
on streets and sidewalks.
Last month, â€œOperation Ride
Rightâ€ began with a Monday
crackdown targeting the illegal
use of mopeds, motorcycles and
scooters in Revere â€” leading to
OPERATION | SEE Page 3
the seizure of eight mopeds, an
arrest of an individual fl eeing
from police on a stolen moped
and several citations being issued.
The operation will continue
for the remainder of the year.
WELCOME: Mayor Patrick Keefe welcomes Bonnie Curren and
Mark and Charlotte Ferrante at the mayorâ€™s Summer SoirÃ©e
at Dryft. See photo highlights on page 8â€“9. (Advocate photo)
781-286-8500
Friday, August 9, 2024
Shown above is the aftermath of the multi-alarm fi re at the 370
Ocean Ave. apartment building in July 2022. (Courtesy photo/City
of Revere)
Mayor hosts Summer
SoirÃ©e Fundraiser
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://VxKXNyZWkrqA4WKqzF5un5uAbxM4YPFE2bDmX50kNmcÍ-òÍ`Ì°Í ×fµÃÕ\iŸí×fµÃÕ\iŸìÍ
PÍ€×‘C’×˜š   Í(Í€u×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://eFOERiEUK2glCKBUxgrq5jPqAt66-gdhOApQEQkqVyoÎ ÁÌÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://aKXaoUGtoNi2RChtjEjJSZNW-WVZCAs3glSBawIRK9QÍ§õÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://EY40HB5eDHlvnybqEvQrrrneZuJGoEdHvwd6zssjsIUÍ.ÓÍ`Ì°Í ×fµ‚ÃÕ\iŸ×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://0JT8SfFOR_-eJTvg3kyweNRkaUkYtYsqKyPG7ehWDtwÎ ArÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://sJAkHXV7RH4tW7AdRqTlN7Jrne0qHMKilrzQuybjYPwÍ” Í`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://LhPaAm6denqyszq-K0mc8yXdnRpR0nTI0WDUtk8WT8EÍ,PÍ`Ì°Í ×fµ‚ÃÕ\iŸ“× ×fµ‚ÃÕ\iŸ ÍéÍÌÍ9×HÚ  http://www.bostonnorthdental.com××Ðˆ× ×fµ‚ÃÕ\iŸ Í¤Í,Ìð9×H¾http://www.everettaluminum.com××Ðˆ× ×fµ‚ÃÕ\iŸ Í¬Í¢Ìÿ9×HÚ  mailto:lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net××Ðˆ×‰EÚÀPage 2
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2024
WATERS | FROM Page 1
Mid-grade
Regular
$3.87
3.17
73
64
Over 45 Years of Excellence!
Full Service
$2.99
Order online at
angelosoil.com
In 2022, Suff olk County District
Attorney Kevin Hayden (left)
addressed the media as thenMayor
Brian Arrigo looked on
at a press conference at 370
Ocean Ave. (Advocate fi le photo)
Need a hall for your special event?
The Schiavo Club, located at
71 Tileston Street, Everett is
available for your Birthdays,
Anniversaries, Sweet 16 parties
and more?
For more info,
call (857) 249-7882
Dan - 1972
ternoon, Revere Department of
Public Health staff visited each
residence to notify tenants of
the status of the building, direct
them to legal resources and begin
discussions about alternative
housing options. The City of Revere,
Housing Families, Inc., The
Neighborhood Developers, and
the Revere Housing Authority
will host informational sessions
outside the property this week to
provide residents with critical information
and support services.
Revere Chief of Health and Human
Services Lauren Buck was
one of the many City employees
who delivered this information
to residents on Monday afternoon:
â€œWe are working with all
tenants and will connect them
with all housing resources and
support available to us.â€
The City of Revere remains
committed to the safety and
well-being of its residents, encouraging
all tenants of Waterâ€™s
Edge Apartments to attend the
public hearing and the informational
sessions to understand
their rights and the available resources.
License
Commission addresses residentsâ€™
noise complaints, parking issues
Shirley Ave. restaurants hear complaints
of late-night music, disrurbances
By Barbara Taormina
T
he Licensing Commission, at
their July meeting, reigned in
several local businesses that appeared
to be clashing with residents
in surrounding neighborhoods.
Lupitaâ€™s
on Shirley Avenue and
La Hacienda on Revere Street
Celebrating 51 Years!
We Sell Cigars & Accessories!
Chris 2023
* Travel Humidors * Desk Top Humidors * Many Types of Lighters * Ash Trays * Juuls * Vapes
* Glass Pipes * Rewards Program * CBD Infused Products * GIFTS UNDER $30 - GIFT CERTIFICATES
ALL MAJOR BRANDS
Singles * Tins * Bundles * Boxes
SMOKERâ€™S DELIGHT! 15 HANDMADE CIGARS!
Four-Year-Old Tobacco * 100% Long Filler * Cellophane $49.95
STORE HOURS: Mon. - Sat.: 9AM - 7PM Sunday & Holidays: 9AM - 6PM
R.Y.O.
TOBACCO
&
TUBES
ON SALE!
SPECIAL
SALE!
TRAVEL
HUMIDORS
&
ALL
BONGS!
A.B.C. CIGAR
170 REVERE ST., REVERE
(781) 289-4959
--------HUMIDORS
ON
SALE!
STARTING
AT $99.
COMPLETE!
--------were
ordered by the Commission
to scale back hours of operation
and hours of entertainment
in the face of complaints from
neighbors near both places that
cited excessive noise, fi ghts, disorderly
conduct, gluts of cars that
take all residential parking and alleged
drunken driving.
Residents on Shirley Avenue
say itâ€™s impossible to sleep with
the music coming from Lupitaâ€™s
and with the noisy crowds that
gather on the street and in the
parking lot as they leave the restaurant.
Several residents spoke
to the Commission and stressed
the neighborhood is home to
many seniors, veterans and children
whose lives are being disrupted
by the late-night disturbances.
Lupitaâ€™s
owner said he is planning
on insulating and soundproofing
the building and he
submitted an estimate for the
work to the commission. He also
said Lupitaâ€™s is not the only restaurant
and bar in the Shirley
Avenue neighborhood and patrons
of other places are also taking
parking spaces. But residents
who live close to Lupitaâ€™s say they
no longer feel safe coming home
from work late at night and walking
through aggressive crowds to
get to their front doors.
Commissioners felt Lupitaâ€™s,
which was initially opened as a
restaurant, had exceeded the limits
of its license and was operating
as a night club.
Commission Chairman Robert
Selevitch said had Lupitaâ€™s owners
come before the commission
to expand their entertainment
license, he suggested he wasnâ€™t
sure it would be approved.
â€œItâ€™s gone too far,â€ said one
neighbor who works at night in
Boston and can never fi nd a parking
space when he gets home.
â€œThe problem for Lupitaâ€™s is the
noise never stops.â€
Lupitaâ€™s owner agreed to roll
back the hours for music having
it end at 11:30 pm and closing the
doors at midnight. Commissioners
encouraged the owner to live
with the new hours for a couple
of months and if all goes well, he
can apply to extend those hours.
A second hearing was held to
discuss a set of similar complaints
neighbors have made about La
Hacienda on Revere Street. Residents
complained not about the
music of a mariachi band which
plays until 11 pm, but about a
disc jockey who takes over at 11
pm and pumps up the volume
until 2 am. Revere Street residents
also have the same problem
with noisy late-night crowds
and no parking left for homeowners
and residents.
The big diff erence between Lupitaâ€™s
and La Hacienda is that the
owners of La Hacienda have tried
to work with the neighborhood
to address concerns.
But the Commission pointed
out that the restaurant did not
have an entertainment license
for a DJ. La Hacienda agreed with
the Commission that the quickest
and easiest solution is to eliminate
the DJ which would solve
the noise and crowd issues. They
also agreed to scale back closing
times to 1 am and to return to the
commission if they wanted to
add a DJ with the proper license.
The Commission also held a
hearing on a complaint about
serving customers past closing
time at Capri on North Shore
Road. But the complaint was a
year old and the only complaint
fi led against the restaurant. The
owners said it was a mistake and
they have been cautious ever
since. The commission said the
complaint would be kept on fi le
and would return if there were
any other problems.
Commissioners acknowledged
that some of these problems
were crowd issues not the direct
problem of the establishments.
But residents argued that residential
neighborhoods are not
an appropriate site for a night
club.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://EY40HB5eDHlvnybqEvQrrrneZuJGoEdHvwd6zssjsIUÍ.ÓÍ`Ì°Í ×fµÃÕ\iŸî×‰EÚnTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2024
Page 3
Lawrence A. Simeone Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
~ Since 1989 ~
* Corporate Litigation
* Criminal/Civil
* MCAD
* Zoning/Land Court
* Wetlands Litigation
* Workmenâ€™s Compensation
* Landlord/Tenant Litigation
* Real Estate Law
* Construction Litigation
* Tax Lien
* Personal Injury
* Bankruptcy
* Wrongful Death
* Zoning/Permitting Litigation
300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
A mural of Revere Beach at the Revere Senior Center by RHS student Yasmi Granados Flores
GRANADOS | FROM Page 1
the fi nal drawing. I tried taking
some known landmarks of Revere
Beach, what itâ€™s known for,
and whatâ€™s the fi rst thing that
comes to mind when you think
of Revere Beach. I also wanted
to bring something back from
the past for the seniors like Old
Wonderland, the Cyclone and
Amusement Park.â€
â€œIâ€™ve loved art since I could pick
up a crayon. My stepmom went
to art school and sheâ€™s been a really
big inspiration for drawing.
OPERATION | FROM Page 1
According to a statement by
Revere Police, offi cers participated
in the fi rst full week of â€œOperation
Ride Right,â€ a new safety
enforcement initiative with zero
tolerance, at the direction of Police
Chief David J. Callahan. The
safety initiative targets mopeds,
electric scooters, and motorcycles
that are unregistered, operated
by underage operators,
driven in a negligent and dangerous
manner, and used to conMy
uncle is a really good artist.
When I was little, he would always
teach me new things. My
mom has always encouraged
me to be creative and has always
been so supportive of my
art which Iâ€™m truly thankful for.â€
â€œWhen I heard about this opportunity,
I was so excited because
itâ€™s hard nowadays to be
able to create a mural at such a
young age. I remember the day
I got the email that my drawing
got picked for the mural. I was
so excited and I thanked God
for the opportunity. I got to celduct
illegal activity. This initiative
is undertaken by Sergeant
Zingali and Officers DiCenso,
Kingston, Tiso and Taborda.
â€œThe purpose of this operation,â€
said Chief Callahan, â€œis to
conduct high visibility zero-tolerance
enforcement for any violations,
including but not limited
to speeding and aggressive driving
while educating the public
on unsafe operation.â€
In the fi rst full-week of this operation,
offi cers seized 29 unregistered
mopeds and moEverett
Aluminum
10
Everett Ave., Everett
617-389-3839
â€œSame name, phone number & address for
over half a century. We must be doing
something right!â€
â€¢Vinyl Siding
â€¢Carpentry Work
â€¢Decks
â€¢Free Estimates
â€¢Fully Licensed
â€¢Roofing
â€¢ Fully Insured
â€¢ Replacement Windows
www.everettaluminum.com
Nowâ€™s the time
to schedule those
home improvement
projects youâ€™ve been
dreaming about
all winter!
ebrate with my mom since she
was the one that encouraged
me to do the drawing. Although
I love drawing and mom encourages
me to pursue art, my
heart is set on being an architect
when Iâ€™m older where I get to be
creative and crafty and bring my
art to life.â€
Senior Center Director Debbie
Digiulio applauded Yasmi for her
work: â€œWe are thrilled that we
have a student from RHS painting
a mural our seniors chose.
This is something that will be enjoyed
for many years to come.â€
torcycles for various traffi c violations.
Most of the operators
of those mopeds and motorcycles
were found to be unlicensed.
Also, offi cers had incidents
with an additional nine
mopeds and motorcycles, with
the operators refusing to stop
for police, with one fl eeing moped
attempting to deliberately
â€œrun-overâ€ a policer offi cer. This
brings the weekly total to 38 interactions
with unlicensed, unregistered
and criminally operated
mopeds and motorcycles.
Celebrating 66 Years in Business!
Summer
is Here!
Eastern Bank Building on Rte. 1S
605 Broadway, #301 * Saugus
(781) 233-6844 www.bostonnorthdental.com
Dr. Priti Amlani
Dr. Bhavisha Patel
* Restorative Dentistry
* Cosmetic Dentistry
* Implant Restoration
* Zoom Whitening
* Teeth in a Day - All on 6
* Invisalign
* CEREC Crowns
(Single Visit Crowns)
* Root Canal Treatment
* Sedation Dentistry
~ Full Mouth Rehabilitation ~
Before
After
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://LhPaAm6denqyszq-K0mc8yXdnRpR0nTI0WDUtk8WT8EÍ,PÍ`Ì°Í ×fµÃÕ\iŸï×fµÃÕ\iŸîÍ
PÍ€×‘C’×˜š   Í(Í€u×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://jxLm7VyhPoPBlv_BlEPAWKXUxR6SzTWEdBMLovDAQpkÎ ¼.Í`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://YFbh9jXsRcMeQoVVMS-EvOHwfRQAeftHn4X3IfyrL30Í“æÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://ZhNtQTg_lr0gqic6sy5j3EZcw_ZLC1jvp6DD6qKtn2gÍ*Í`Ì°Í ×fµƒÃÕ\iŸ×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://lCp5rCEXvIMavz-LpYNJwFjtJ9664fNXivmebtiH1fEÎ FÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://gs_nHF9U5KE8DBpE42XbEGKX9d6skVMJo8xC5cf3iUoÍ‹òÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://ZkV_ytt0pgok-tVdAqpcrfVmBEj8YS0zaNISwCkaAsgÍ+dÍ`Ì°Í ×fµƒÃÕ\iŸ‘× ×fµƒÃÕ\iŸ Í›ÍÍV9×H»http://WWW.SABATINO-INS.COM××Ðˆ×‰EÚ%ìPage 4
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2024
Daryl Gagne
the dinner table, or simply enjoying
the everyday moments
that made life special.
Professionally, Daryl was the
O
f Revere. It is with profound
sadness that we announce
the passing of Daryl P. Gagne,
47, who lost his short battle with
cancer on July 27, 2024. Daryl
was born and raised in Somerville,
MA to parents, Rene and
Joan Gagne. Daryl was the devoted
and loving husband of
Kelly A. Gagne, and the proud
father of their beloved daughter,
Madeleine â€œMaddieâ€ Joan
Gagne. His love for Kelly and
Maddie was boundless, and his
greatest joy in life was the time
he spent with his family, whether
traveling to new destinations,
sharing laughter around
Director of Security at the Fairmont
Copley Hotel in Boston,
where he worked with dedication
and pride. He was known
for his unwavering commitment
to hospitality and protecting
people and assets at the hotel.
He had meticulous attention to
detail and was respected by his
colleagues both at the hotel and
within the city of Boston. Darylâ€™s
colleagues admired him not
just for his professionalism, but
for his integrity, warmth, and
straight-foward delivery.
Beyond his work, Daryl was
a lifelong fan of the Star Wars
and Marvel Universes. He loved
watching movies, and loved the
anticipation of a new movie or
book release. Daryl always had
a book in his bag, and enjoyed
reading science fi ction, fantasy,
and detective fi ction. He was a
skilled cook who loved experimenting
in the kitchen, and
some of his best dishes included
jambalaya, salted-caramel
brownies, and savory biscuits.
RONâ€™S OIL
Call
For
PRICE
MELROSE, MA
02176
NEW
CUSTOMERâ€™S
WELCOME
ACCEPTING VISA, MASTERCARD & DISCOVER
(781) 397-1930 OR (781) 662-8884
100 GALLON MINIMUM
OBITUARIES
Daryl was most proud of his
girls, Kelly and Maddie. He was
a supportive husband, dance
dad, and fierce protector. He
fully embraced being a husband
and father. Whether it
was hiding love notes in Kellyâ€™s
luggage for her work trips or
surprising Maddie with fatherdaughter
days in the city, he
was always present and thinking
about them. His legacy will
live on through Maddie with
their shared sense of empathy,
a strong will, and caring nature.
Though his life was tragically
cut short, Darylâ€™s legacy of love,
strength, and devotion will live
on in the hearts of those who
knew him best. He leaves behind
his wife Kelly, his daughter
Maddie, family members,
friends, and colleagues who will
forever cherish his memory.
A celebration of life will be
held for close family, colleagues,
and friends. In lieu of fl owers,
the family requests that donations
be made to Maddieâ€™s
college fund, to honor Darylâ€™s
memory.
Christine Searle
O
f Revere. With profound
sadness, we announce the
passing of Christine A. Searle,
a beacon of sincerity and quiet
strength who departed this
life on August 2, 2024. Born on
January 20, 1949, in Lynn, MA,
she spent her formative years
in Lynn before fi nding her forever
home in Revere. A dedicated
wife and a pillar of her family,
Christine left an indelible mark
on all those who were fortunate
enough to know her.
Christine A. was a woman of
many talents, and her career
was no exception. She dedicated
many years in service to the
College of Optologyâ€™s fi nancial
department, demonstrating an
unwavering commitment to
her work and those she served.
Always one to find joy in the
small things, Christine A. cherished
the thrill of casino trips,
the gentle sway of the Horizons
Edge boat in Lynn, and traveling
with her adored husband,
Charles Searle. Her love for family
was paramount, and she upheld
this sentiment as the cornerstone
of her life.
To meet Christine A. was to
know a woman of quiet resolve,
sincerity, and a heart full
of love. Her presence was calming,
and her spirit was invigorating.
She was known for her quiet
demeanor, yet she possessed
an inner strength that radiated
outward, touching the lives of
everyone around her. Christine
A. was a woman of few words,
but her actions spoke volumes
about the love she had for her
family, her passion for her work,
and her zest for life.
Christine A. is survived by her
loving husband, Charles Searle,
who was her rock and partner
in all things life had to off er. Her
step-children, Frank and Charles
Searle, and her sister Sandra.
She was predeceased by her
brother Terrance Corcoran.
All Services were held privately.
Irene
DeVincent
O
f Hallandale, Fla, formerly of
Revere. Died peacefully at
AUGUST 2024
7/29
Please visit us on
Facebook at
RPSDiningservices
or https://x.com/rpsdining
for more information
and updates!
Revere Summer Lunch
Program free meals for
children upto 18 years old,
at the following sites:
* American Legion Lawn12-1
(Monday-Thursday starting
July 8-August 8)
*Hill School 11-1
*Paul Revere School 11-1
Monday-Thursday
*Revere Beach Bandstand 11-1
*Sonny Meyers Park 11:30-1
*RHA Rose St 11:30-1
*RHA Adams Ct 11;30-1
*Ciarlone Park 11:30-1
*Louis Pasteur Park 11:30
*Costa Park 11-1
-1
*DeStoop Park 12-1
8/5
Whole Grain Chicken
Nuggets w/Fries
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Ice Cold Milk
î´î¬î­î®
Whole Grain Chicken
Nuggets w/Fries
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Ice Cold Milk
Whole Grain Chicken
Nuggets w/Fries
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Ice Cold Milk
7/30
Whole Grain Pizza
Crunchers w/ Dipping
Sauce,
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Animal Crackers
Ice Cold Milk
8/6
Whole Grain Pizza
Crunchers w/ Dipping
Sauce,
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Animal Crackers
Ice Cold Milk
î´î¬î­î¯
Whole Grain Pizza
Crunchers w/ Dipping
Sauce,
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Animal Crackers
Ice Cold Milk
7/31
All Beef Frank
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
8/1
Nachos & Cheese
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
î´î¬î³
All Beef Frank
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
8/8
Nachos & Cheese
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
8/2
â€œSicilian Styleâ€ Pizza
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Ice Cold Milk
8/9
â€œSicilian Styleâ€ Pizza
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Ice Cold Milk
the Kaplan Family Hospice following
a brief illness. She was 95
years old. Irene was born in Boston
on April 2nd,1929 to her late
parents, Peter Cullen and Victoria
(Koslowski) Cullen. Irene was
raised in Somerville along with
her brother and sister. She was
an alumna of Somerville High
School Class of 1947. On October
31st,1956, Irene married her
husband Robert DeVincent and
settled in Revereâ€™s Beachmont
section. They had three children
and Irene happily raised her
family. She was a very present
mother in her childrenâ€™s lives
and enjoyed being surrounded
by her grandchildren and later
her great grandchildren. Irene
and her husband were snowbirds,
and wintered in Florida
before making Hallandale, Florida
their home. She would enjoy
her visits up north in off months
but her heart was in Florida. She
was an avid Bingo player as well
as enjoying her trips to the casinos.
Her love for her family was
always most important and she
will be cherished forever.
She is the beloved wife of
î´î¬î­î°
Chicken Filet
Sandwich
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
î´î¬î­î±
Nachos & Cheese
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
î´î¬î­î²
â€œSicilian Styleâ€ Pizza
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Ice Cold Milk
Thank You for participating in Revere Summer Eats Program! Enjoy the
rest of the summer, see you all the first day of school!
All meals come complete with fruit, veggies and milk.
î€¾î†µî…¶î„î…š î€„î…¯î†šî„žî†Œî…¶î„‚î†šî…î‡€î„žî† î…½î„¨î„¨î„žî†Œî„žî„š î„šî„‚î…î…¯î‡‡î— îžî†µî…¶ î„î†µî†šî†šî„žî†Œ î„‚î…¶î„š î€ºî„žî…¯î…¯î‡‡ îžî„‚î…¶î„šî‡î…î„î…šî• î€’î…šî„žî„žî†î„ž îžî„‚î…¶î„šî‡î…î„î…šî• î¤î†µî†Œî…¬î„žî‡‡ îŽ˜ î€’î…šî„žî„žî†î„ž îžî„‚î…¶î„šî‡î…
î€‘î†Œî„žî„‚î…¬î„¨î„‚î†î†š î…î† î†î„žî†Œî‡€î„žî„š î„‚î†š î€¬î…î…¯î…¯ îžî„î…šî…½î…½î…¯ î„¨î†Œî…½î…µ î´î„‚î…µî²îµî—î¯î¬î„‚î…µî²î„î…½î…¶î„šî„‚î‡‡ î†šî…šî†Œî…½î†µî…î…š î€¦î†Œî…î„šî„‚î‡‡î•
î—î„‚î†µî…¯ îšî„žî‡€î„žî†Œî„ž îžî„î…šî…½î…½î…¯ î´î„‚î…µî²îµî—î¯î¬î„‚î…µ î„î…½î…¶î„šî„‚î‡‡ î†šî…šî†Œî…½î†µî…î…š î¤î…šî†µî†Œî†î„šî„‚î‡‡î˜
î…šî•
î€‘î†Œî„žî„‚î…¬î„¨î„‚î†î†š î…î…¶î„î…¯î†µî„šî„žî† î„‚ î‡î…šî…½î…¯î„ž î…î†Œî„‚î…î…¶ î…î†šî„žî…µî• îª î„î†µî†‰ î„¨î†Œî†µî…î†š î…½î†Œ î­î¬î¬î¹ î…©î†µî…î„î„žî• î‡‡î…½î†µî†Œ î„î…šî…½î…î„î„ž î…½î„¨ î…µî…î…¯î…¬î• î„¨î„‚î†š î„¨î†Œî„žî„ž î…½î†Œ î­î¹î˜
î„î„žî…¶î†µî† î†î†µî„î…©î„žî„î†š î†šî…½ î„î…šî„‚î…¶î…î„ž î„‚î…¶î„š î…¯î…½î„î„‚î†šî…î…½î…¶î† î…µî„‚î‡‡ î„î„ž î†î†µî„î…©î„žî„î†š î†šî…½ î„î…¯î…½î†î„ž î„šî†µî„ž î†šî…½ î…î…¶î„î…¯î„žî…µî„žî…¶î†š î‡î„žî„‚î†šî…šî„žî†Œ î„‚î…¶î„šî¬î…½î†Œ î†‰î„‚î†Œî†šî…î„î…î†‰î„‚î†šî…î…½î…¶î˜
î…½î…¶î˜
î¤î…šî…î† î…î…¶î†î†šî…î†šî†µî†šî…î…½î…¶ î…î† î„‚î…¶ î„žî†‹î†µî„‚î…¯ î…½î†‰î†‰î…½î†Œî†šî†µî…¶î…î†šî‡‡ î†‰î†Œî…½î‡€î…î„šî„žî†Œî˜
the late Robert DeVincent, Sr.
of 59 years. The loving mother
of Robert â€œBobbyâ€ DeVincent
Jr. and his wife Judy of Saugus,
Kenneth â€œKennyâ€ DeVincent
and his wife Jodie of Revere
and Pamela DeVincent of NC.
The cherished grandmother
of Steven DeVincent Sr. and
his wife Erica of Saugus, Justin
DeVincent and his wife
Kellie of Wakefi eld and Victoria
DeVincent of Everett. She
is the treasured great grandmother
of Steven DeVincent,
Jr., Layla DeVincent and Lorenzo
DeVincent. She is the dear
sister of the late Henry Cullen
and Helen Giuffre. Also lovingly
survived by several nieces,
nephews, grandnieces, and
grandnephews.
Family & friends were invited
to attend a visitation on
Wednesday, August 7th in the
Vertuccio Smith & Vazza, Beechwood
Home for Funerals, Revere
followed by a Funeral Mass
in St. Anthony of Padua Church,
Revere. Interment in Holy Cross
Cemetery, Malden.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://ZhNtQTg_lr0gqic6sy5j3EZcw_ZLC1jvp6DD6qKtn2gÍ*Í`Ì°Í ×fµÃÕ\iŸð×‰EÚÚTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2024
Page 5
Former Revere student
Claire Dew pursing
her Hollywood Dream
By Melissa Moore-Randall
W
hen Claire Dew was a fi fthgrade
student at the former
McKinley School, she constantly
told her teacher and
classmates she wanted to go to
Hollywood. No one ever doubted
her ability to one day be in
front or behind the camera.
When her teacher invited Fox
25 news anchor Gene Lavanchy
and former anchor Doug â€œVBâ€
Goudie to spend the day as
â€œteachers,â€ Claire was featured
on the Fox 25 segment, and thus
her â€œHollywoodâ€ career began.
Dew, 29, is the founder of Dew
Media Productions, which is a
broadcast media production
company that specializes in long
form and short form media. â€œWe
Dew Media,â€ which is the companyâ€™s
tagline, handles productions
from pre- through postproduction.
Some of their most
notable clients and partners are
Kevin Hart, Naâ€™im Lynn, Diplo,
Rick Mahorn, Lauren Gray, Vice
TV, Warner Brothers, MTV, Advertising
Week New York, Hartbeat
productions, Netflix and
Kin Community.
Former Revere resident Claire
Dew is making her Hollywood
dream come true.
â€œDew Media is a creative force
in the entertainment industry.
With years of experience and a
passion for storytelling, we specialize
in bringing bold, new
ideas to life. Our team comprises
talented writers, directors,
producers, and artists who understand
what it takes to create
compelling and engaging content.
Whether itâ€™s a feature fi lm,
television series, or digital content,
we approach every project
with an eye for detail and a commitment
to excellence. At Dew
Media, storytelling has the power
to change the world. So, weâ€™re
DREAMS | SEE Page 10
SABATINO/MASTROCOLA
INSURANCE AGENCY
519 BROADWAY
EVERETT, MA 02149
Auto * Home * Boat *
Renter * Condo * Life
* Multi-Policy Discounts * Commercial 10% Discounts
* Registry Service Also Available
Sabatino Insurance is proud to welcome
the loyal customers of
ALWAYS READY TO SERVE YOU: Our Staff are, Emma Davidson, Jeimy Sanchez,
Josephine Leone, Marie Dâ€™Amore, Rocco Longo, Zâ€™andre Lopez, Anthony DiPierro,
Darius Goudreau, Laurette Murphy, Danielle Goudreau and Tina Davidson.
PHONE: (617) 387-7466
FAX: (617) 381-9186
Visit us online at: WWW.SABATINO-INS.COM
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://ZkV_ytt0pgok-tVdAqpcrfVmBEj8YS0zaNISwCkaAsgÍ+dÍ`Ì°Í ×fµÃÕ\iŸñ×fµÃÕ\iŸðÍ
PÍ€×‘C’×˜š   Í(Í€u×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://qaQ3ZTXsTxG5tiW6gFNh-f8M9oTP-odPSKwPgn3admIÎ ¥ëÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://RTaswnsUaSUn3Ki8ek6HEG61y8m6iA8RkBpr127ogkQÍ›Í`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://MRT5BDvpVQ_GSgQeFhBVNOjK8wybSO3z_VFWvmI_JIwÍ-ŽÍ`Ì°Í ×fµ„ÃÕ\iŸ×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://kYoEOu15i1sfDO6cK5MSgP27Arjvzgi2Pz-oipZlpLMÎ DŒÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://L9dzSu0m6AFTHtQWb8l9NArMqd9_pEHgbhdVsnrmZ7AÍ•ìÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://oHCn-e9PTBCJefA9TGpfswwXEClaGITU0GtLcTinYmgÍ+aÍ`Ì°Í ×fµ…ÃÕ\iŸ‘× ×fµ…ÃÕ\iŸ ÍŠÍÍA$9×H»http://www.810bargrille.com××Ðˆ×‰EÚËPage 6
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2024
NHTSA Reminds Drivers: Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over
R
EVERE, MA â€” From August
1st through September 15,
which includes the Labor Day
holiday weekend, the U.S. Department
of Transportationâ€™s
National Highway Traffi c Safety
Administration (NHTSA) will
be working alongside local law
enforcement for the Drive Sober
or Get Pulled Over high-visBallroom
and Latin Dance Classes
Childrenâ€™s classesâ€”ages 4 and up
Beginner Classes from September to June
Competitive training with some of the top
teachers of the world.
Champions Dance Sport Club
â€¦ where sport and art come together ...
165 Chelsea Street
Everett, MA 02149
Phone: 781-219-7273
Web site: championsdancesportclub.com
E-mail: champions_dance_sport_club@yahoo.com
î€­î€‰
î‚‡ î€µîˆîîŒî„î…îîˆ î€°î’îšîŒî‘îŠ î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆ
î‚‡ î€¶î“î•îŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î€©î„îî î€¦îîˆî„î‘î˜î“î–
î‚‡ î€°î˜îî†î‹ î€‰ î€¨î‡îŠîŒî‘îŠ
î‚‡ î€¶î’î‡ î’î• î€¶îˆîˆî‡ î€¯î„îšî‘î–
î‚‡ î€¶î‹î•î˜î… î€³îî„î‘î—îŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î€·î•îŒîîîŒî‘îŠ
î‚‡ î€ºî„î—îˆî• î€‰ î€¶îˆîšîˆî• î€µîˆî“î„îŒî•î–
î€­î’îˆ î€³îŒîˆî•î’î—î—îŒî€ î€­î•î€‘
ibility enforcement
campaign. The goal
is to deter impaired
driving and prevent
the tragedies seen in
previous Labor Day
weekends from happening
again.
During the 2022 Labor Day
holiday (6 p.m. September
2-5:59 a.m. September 6), there
were 490 crash fatalities nationwide.
Of these 490 traffi c
crash fatalities, 39% (190) involved
a drunk driver, and a
quarter (25%) involved drivers
who were driving with a BAC
almost twice the legal limit
(.15+ BAC). Among drivers between
the ages of 18 and 34
who were killed in crashes over
the Labor Day holiday in 2022,
î€¶
î€¯î€¤î€±î€§î€¶î€¦î€¤î€³î€¨ î€‰ î€°î€¤î€¶î€²î€±î€µî€¼ î€¦î€²î€‘
î€°î„î–î’î‘î•îœ î€ î€¤î–î“î‹î„îî—
î‚‡ î€¥î•îŒî†îŽ î’î• î€¥îî’î†îŽ î€¶î—îˆî“î–
î‚‡ î€¥î•îŒî†îŽ î’î• î€¥îî’î†îŽ î€ºî„îîî–
î‚‡ î€¦î’î‘î†î•îˆî—îˆ î’î• î€¥î•îŒî†îŽ î€³î„î™îˆî•
î€³î„î—îŒî’î– î€‰ î€ºî„îîŽîšî„îœî–
î‚‡ î€¥î•îŒî†îŽ î€µîˆî€î€³î’îŒî‘î—îŒî‘îŠ
î‚‡ î€¤î–î“î‹î„îî— î€³î„î™îŒî‘îŠ
îšîšîšî€‘î€­î„î‘î‡î€¶îî„î‘î‡î–î†î„î“îˆî€îî„î–î’î‘î•îœî€‘î†î’î
î‚‡ î€¶îˆî‘îŒî’î• î€§îŒî–î†î’î˜î‘î— î‚‡ î€©î•îˆîˆ î€¨î–î—îŒîî„î—îˆî– î‚‡ î€¯îŒî†îˆî‘î–îˆî‡ î€‰ î€¬î‘î–î˜î•îˆî‡
î€™î€”î€šî€î€–î€›î€œî€î€”î€—î€œî€“
î€§îˆî–îŒîŠî‘îŒî‘îŠ î„î‘î‡ î€¦î’î‘î–î—î•î˜î†î—îŒî‘îŠ î€¬î‡îˆî„î– î—î‹î„î— î„î•îˆ î‚´î€ªî•î’î˜î‘î‡î– î‰î’î• î€¶î˜î†î†îˆî–î–î‚µ
î€¯î„î‘î‡î–î†î„î“îŒî‘îŠ
47% of those drivers
were drunk, with
BACs of.08 or higher.
â€œWe want our community
members to
understand that itâ€™s
our fi rst priority to keep
people safe, so weâ€™re askm
u
ou
ing
everyone to plan ahead if
they know theyâ€™ll be out drinking,â€
said Chief David J. Callahan
â€œThe Drive Sober or Get
Pulled Over campaign is an
awareness effort to get the
message out that drunk driving
is illegal and it takes lives.
Letâ€™s make this a partnership
between law enforcement
and drivers: Help us protect
the community and put an
end to this senseless behavior.â€
Drivers should be safe during
this Labor Day holiday by planning
ahead if they intend to
drink. They shouldnâ€™t wait until
after drinking to plan how to
get home. Impairment clouds
a personâ€™s judgment. Drivers
should secure a designated sober
driver or call a taxi or rideshare
for a sober ride home.
If a driver fi nds they are unable
to drive, they should give
their keys to a sober driver so
that person can get them home
safely. When a friend has been
drinking and is considering driving,
friends should be proactive
â€” take away the keys and help
them get a sober ride home.
If anyone spots a drunk driver,
contact local law enforcement.
For more information on impaired
driving, visit www.nhtsa.gov/risky-driving/drunkdriving.
Resilient
Mystic
Collaborative communities
secure over $12M
in Municipal Vulnerability
Preparedness Grants
for climate resilience
G
overnor Maura Healeyâ€™s announcement
of $52.4 million
in FY2025 Municipal Vulnerability
Preparedness grants
included just over $12 million
in funding for community-designed
projects to prevent
harm to residents, workers
and resources in Resilient
Mystic Collaborative (RMC) cities
and towns. Convened by 10
Mystic River watershed communities
and the Mystic River
Watershed Association (MyRWA)
in September 2018 and
now led by senior staff from 20
cities and towns and nongovernmental
partners, the RMC
designs and completes onthe-ground
projects to protect
our most vulnerable residents
and public services from
harm due to increasingly extreme
weather.
â€œThe MVP program connects
local leaders with state
resources to protect our most
vulnerable communities from
extreme weather,â€ said Executive
Offi ce of Energy and Environmental
Aff airs Secretary
Rebecca Tepper. â€œThe Resilient
Mystic Collaborative exemplifi
es regional teamwork,
demonstrating how collective
eff orts can drive climate
adaptation. We are proud to
fund critical initiatives such
as fl ood management, resilient
community centers, and
forest health. Weâ€™re proud to
award the most funds in MVP
history to such a strong set of
projects.â€
These MVP grants bring the
total resources secured for
RMC climate resilient projects
to nearly $140 million in state,
federal and foundation grants
since the voluntary partnership
began. â€œWhat is extraorMYSTIC
| SEE Page 7
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://MRT5BDvpVQ_GSgQeFhBVNOjK8wybSO3z_VFWvmI_JIwÍ-ŽÍ`Ì°Í ×fµÃÕ\iŸò×‰EÚTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2024
Page 7
~ LETTER-TO-THE-EDITOR ~
Summer Block Party Fundraiser for
Tunnel to Towers A Noble Cause
By Sal Giarratani
T
his past Saturday, August 3,
I found myself over at the
Mottolo Post VFW 4524 for
what turned out to be a great
block party celebrating all that
we have to be grateful for as
Americans and to also help
a cause close to the hearts of
our veteran community, the
Tunnel for Towers Foundation.
Weâ€™ve seen their TV commercials
and we have seen the
work this organization out of
Staten Island, NY has been and
continues to do.
Too often duty and sacrifi ce
get forgotten. This organization
has been there to help
both fi rst responders and our
military veterans. In their hour
of need, we need to be there
for them and one way to do
it is to help organizations like
the Tunnel to Towers Foundation.
This
past Saturday was a
great day to gather together
and have fun but also not to
forget those who served and
those who sacrifi ced their all
and now could use our help.
When people fall, we help
them up.
Kudos to Mottolo Post VFW
4524 helping to raise funds for
this noble cause. We cannot
forget. We wonâ€™t forget.
MYSTIC | FROM Page 6
dinary is that about three
quarters of all the funding
weâ€™ve secured are for regional
projects,â€ said MyRWAâ€™s Julie
Wormser, who helps facilitate
the RMC. â€œThese are critical
investments that communities
canâ€™t accomplish without
partnering with their
neighbors.â€ Multiple FY2025
MVP grants build on the accomplishments
of prior successful
proposals.
By far the largest grant â€”
the maximum $5 million allowed
for regional projects
â€” went to the Island End
River coastal fl ood management
project, a multiyear effort
by Chelsea and Everett
to protect environmental justice
neighborhoods and critical
regional infrastructure,
including fruit and vegetable
distribution for all of New
England and the Canadian
Gerry
Dâ€™Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
Shown from left, are, Isaac McDaniel, Revere Director
of Veterans Services (center) with Sal Giarratani,
left, and Michael Leonard from the Abraham
Lincoln GAR Post 11 in Charlestown.
Shown from left, author Andrew Biggio with
block party organizers, Matt Cunningham and
Anthony Cruciotti.
Is Your Estate in Order?
Do you have an update Will, Health
Care Proxy or Power of Attorney?
If Not, Please Call for a Free Consultation.
14 Proctor Avenue, Revere
(781) 284-5657
8 Norwood St.
Everett
(617) 387-9810
Open Tues. - Sat.
at 4:00 PM
Closed Sun. & Mon.
Announcing our Classic Specials
Dine In Only:
î‰î•î•î‘î”î€›î€î€î“î†îˆîŠî”î•î†î“î€î„î‚î‘î•î–î“î†î‘îîŠîî•î€î„îîŽî€î“î†îˆî€î„î‚î•î€î‘î“îîˆî“î‚îŽî€îîŠî”î•î€î…î†î•î‚îŠîî€î„î‡îŽî€ î”î†î‚î”îîî€îŠî…î€žî€”î€’î€•î€”î€”î€‡î‘î“îîˆî“î‚îŽî€îŠî…î€žî€“î€”î€’î€’î€•î€”î€˜
î€µî€¨î€ªî€¬î€¶î€·î€¨î€µ î€²î€±î€¯î€¬î€±î€¨ î€¤î€·î€
* FREE Salad with purchase of
Entree, Tuesdays & Wednesdays
* Cheese Pizza - Only $10
Catch ALL The
Live Sports
Action On Our
Large Screen
TVâ€™s
Scan & Follow Us on Facebook!
Maritimes. â€œThe Island End
River fl ood barrier will protect
thousands of residents in
Chelsea and Everett and billions
of dollars in infrastructure,â€
said Chelsea City Manager
Fidel Maltez. â€œThis $5
million grant will advance
this project and ensure that
our cities remain viable economic
engines for the foreseeable
future, while also
beautifying the area for locals
to enjoy.â€
â€œWhat our communities are
accomplishing together is
nothing short of miraculous,â€
said MyRWA Executive Director
Patrick Herron. â€œExtreme
weather mocks municipal
boundaries. Municipal staff
and local non-profi ts are pulling
together to protect people
and infrastructure at the
scale of the challenge.â€
An emerging goal for MysMYSTIC
| SEE Page 17
www.810bargrille.com
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://oHCn-e9PTBCJefA9TGpfswwXEClaGITU0GtLcTinYmgÍ+aÍ`Ì°Í ×fµÃÕ\iŸó×fµÃÕ\iŸòÍ
PÍ€×‘C’×˜š   Í(Í€u×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://S0O6PohHCuHNQvyvxtxDVbf1nSQNA7jnV91V4PUo4zQÎ FÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://uK1oKl1ixGFECabLVn2ln8vyVyrL94z_cjFSlDAeDWAÍ‘¯Í`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://QaanxyP7YpfEwkpJm-X6dtLKptuY41lOX9a2pYAHZWcÍ.áÍ`Ì°Í ×fµ…ÃÕ\iŸ×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://bnNoWv-6oluTfhqr96iYkB_yhcMKtxeAgdG_6AbbrbQÎ ØþÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://VUAW9oHXCmsploTNYqWgMceOPzk-jvGYURpS-VHoJiEÍŠÊÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://SrCj1A-qTUlHAMPHVQJS_N2DuBDgJOzbDZOf3KeNnx4Í+|Í`Ì°Í ×fµ…ÃÕ\iŸ‘× ×fµ…ÃÕ\iŸ ÍPÍ^Ì‚9×H¼mailto:Info@advocatenews.net××Ðˆ×‰EÚPage 8
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2024
Mayor hosts Summer SoirÃ©e at Dryft on Revere Beach
Councillor-at-Large Tony Zambuto
stopped by Dryft to support
Mayor Patrick Keefe.
State Rep. Jessica Giannino is welcomed
by Mayor Patrick Keefe.
Mayor Patrick and First Lady Jennifer Keefe (third and second from right) welcome guests, from left
to right: Ward 5 Councillor Angela Guarino-Sawaya, Lucille Keefe, Ward 1 Councillor Joanne McKenna
and Jimmy Nigro.
State Rep. Jeff Turco introduces
Mayor Patrick Keefe.
Former Revere Fire Chief Gene
Doherty with Mayor Patrick Keefe.
Former School Committee member Mike Ferrante, Ward 4 Councillor
Paul Argenzio and City Council Vice President Ira Novoselsky
(Ward 2) join Mayor Patrick Keefe.
Mayor Patrick Keefe was joined by candidate for Suff olk County
Superior Court Clerk Allison Cartwright, Police Chief Dave Callahan
and State Rep. Jeff Turco.
Mike LaBerge and Anastasia
Kolesnyk at Dryft
Shown are Catalina Muriel, Wilson Correa, Fire Captain Kevin
Oâ€™Hara, Boston City Councillor Erin Murphy, Michael McLaughlin
and Mayor Patrick Keefe at the mayorâ€™s Summer SoirÃ©e at Dryft.
(Advocate photo)
State Rep. Jeff Turco introduces
Mayor Patrick Keefe, describing
the mayorâ€™s dedication to Revere
and the citizens he serves.
Mayor Patrick Keefe with some supporters: Rick Dow, DJ Stevie
Ray and Jim Nigro.
Mayor Patrick Keefe welcomed guests Kirk and Jessica Reed and
Lynn and Rich DiMarzo.
Mayor Patrick Keefe with John Dunderdale from Local 56, City
Council Vice President Ira Novoselsky, and Hector Rivera from
Local 2168.
In his opening remarks, Mayor
Patrick Keefe thanked everyone
for their support. He
went on to describe his view on
leading Revereâ€™s future, bringing
growth in the economy and
moving forward in education
of Revereâ€™s children.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://QaanxyP7YpfEwkpJm-X6dtLKptuY41lOX9a2pYAHZWcÍ.áÍ`Ì°Í ×fµÃÕ\iŸô×‰EÚ%THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2024
Page 9
Mayor Patrick Keefe welcomes Revere businessman
Kevin Chiles and his son, Kevin, Jr.
Revere Police Detective Robert Impemba (left) and Joe
DeFeo joined Mayor Patrick Keefe at Dryft.
Mayor Patrick Keefe with Christine Cavagnaro and Revere
Fire Captain Kevin Oâ€™Hara.
Joining the guests at Dryft: John Festa and
Michelle and Sibby Birritteri.
Greeting her guests at Dryft: First Lady
Jennifer Keefe with Kerri Abrams Perullo
and Annie Nagle.
RevereTV Spotlight
T
une in to the RevereTV Community
Channel to get the
first look at this yearâ€™s Farmersâ€™
Market! Hear from some
of the vendors and community
leaders at opening day. Revereâ€™s
Farmersâ€™ Market is at Revere
Beach through September
27 every Friday from 12 to
4 p.m., rain or shine, at Waterfront
Square! The market accepts
SNAP, HIP, WIC and Senior
Vouchers. For assistance with
signing up for these programs,
visit the Revere Beach Farmersâ€™
Market Facebook or Instagram
or call 3-1-1. If you canâ€™t catch
the walkthrough on television,
you can also fi nd this yearâ€™s video
on the RTV YouTube page.
Donâ€™t miss this opportunity to
buy fresh local fruits and vegetables
for the whole family at the
Revere Beach Farmersâ€™ Market!
Over the next few days, you
will see video coverage of some
community events posted to
all RTV outlets. Per usual, National
Night Out will be edited
to a highlight reel, which will
play in between programming
on the Community Channel. If
you missed the Ecuadorian Flag
Raising Ceremony at City Hall,
replays will be scheduled to the
Community Channel soon and
the recording will stay on YouTube
to view at any time.
Community member Judie
VanKooiman submitted her
August episode of â€œLife Issues.â€
Watch this monthâ€™s episode
about the Walnut Street Center
on Thursdays at 6:30 p.m. and
Sundays at 1:30 p.m.
The Revere Chamber of Commerce
will be in the studio to record
another episode of â€œThe
Wave.â€ This program airs at least
once daily, as it is produced in
partnership with RevereTV. Each
episode features a local business
owner and member of the
Chamber to highlight what the
community can off er residents
in various areas of commerce.
This new episode and all others
can be watched at your convenience
on YouTube.
The RTV Community Channel
is currently scheduled with
some replays of popular coverage
from this past year. As the
summer slows down a bit, enjoy
replays of the Revere High
School Class of 2024 Graduation
Ceremony and spring concerts
from RHS, Garfi eld Middle
School, and Rumney Marsh
Academy sprinkled throughout
the schedule. Every dayâ€™s rotation
also includes a few cooking
shows from this season.
The various cooking programs
scheduled are special episodes
from â€œFabulous Foods with Victoria
Fabbo,â€ â€œWhatâ€™s Cooking,
Revere?â€ and a few student-focused
shows from last school
year. The Community Channel
is 8 and 1072 on Comcast and
3 and 614 on RCN.
RTV GOV is scheduled with replays
of the latest local government
meetings. There have only
been a few live meetings over
the past few weeks; they played
live on RevereTV and are now
added to the replay rotation. To
watch meetings at your convenience,
go to RTVâ€™s YouTube
page. As a reminder, you must
be a cable subscriber in Revere
to watch RTV GOV on television.
The channel is 9 on Comcast
and 13 and 613 on RCN.
For Advertising
with Results, call
The Advocate
Newspapers
at
781-286-8500
or
Info@advocatenews.net
First Lady Jennifer Keefe (center) with Library Director Diana Luongo, Director
of Elder Aff airs Debbie Peczka DiGiulio, Adrianna Keefe and Teri Gustat.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://SrCj1A-qTUlHAMPHVQJS_N2DuBDgJOzbDZOf3KeNnx4Í+|Í`Ì°Í ×fµÃÕ\iŸõ×fµÃÕ\iŸôÍ
PÍ€×‘C’×˜š   Í(Í€u×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://S4_pZXThxkymDDoDRoMhDu1y2RzhrKeYJsDpSFjyWDsÎ þkÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://t-EC7wM9MrRdj7JUuX-30Bg-SjZ8BavhTmQRUBmYqiUÍ†§Í`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://yw84364T9vMJtWh7Y6VIIJvm9_2jAMKCVY0ogYbbSnwÍ(Í`Ì°Í ×fµ†ÃÕ\iŸ ×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://OF1qNqihuKoekDR2ZnKMhRPWPThWpfyb9hmfLPmSxoIÎ Æ5Í`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://diO7LP0SwSy6PBpftfmzSFtfCiMpMzkI__cnNCjCIF8Í•fÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Z4kOHCs7snyQAqkLJNyA-Znf2QmUhLkbTvqBVbaReesÍ+nÍ`Ì°Í ×fµˆÃÕ\iŸ!‘× ×fµˆÃÕ\iŸ& ÍGÍ«ÍZ"9×H¸mailto:Tonys9942@aol.com××Ðˆ×‰EÚØPage 10
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2024
Salary ranges will now be posted for most Mass. job
listings, thanks to new law
By Janice Jarosz
A
new law enacted last week
will require most employers
to provide a salary range,
a move that Governor Maura
T. Healey says protects wage
equality for women and people
of color.
Most employers in Massachusetts
are now required to
post a jobâ€™s salary range under
the legislation signed into law
last week (July 31) by Governor
Healey, a move advocates
praised as a step toward wage
equity. The law applies to public
and private employers with
A KEY CONTRIBUTOR: Former Lieutenant Governor Evelyn Murphy, co-chair of the Wage Equity
Now Coalition, addressed the audience at the bill signing ceremony for the new Wage Equity Law
last week. Governor Maura T. Healey cited Murphyâ€™s decades of work on the issue and credited her
for helping to pass the law. (Courtesy photo of Janice Jarosz)
more than 25 employees.
These employers are also
A NEW LAW: Governor Maura T. Healey last week signed into law
legislation that increases equity and transparency in pay by requiring
employers to disclose salary ranges and protecting an employeeâ€™s
right to ask for salary ranges. (Courtesy photo of Janice Jarosz)
now required to provide a salary
range for an employee who
is off ered a promotion or transfer,
under the new law. Employees
are also able to ask the salary
range of current employees
or people applying for the role,
Healeyâ€™s offi ce announced.
â€œI want to give a shout-out
to former Lieutenant Governor
Evelyn Murphy for her leadership
over decades on this, and
itâ€™s a privilege to be able to sign
this important bill for womenâ€™s
equity,â€ Healey said.
Murphy, who became the
fi rst woman in Massachusetts
to hold a constitutional offi ce
while serving under Governor
Michael Dukakis (1987 to
1991), is now co-chair of the
Wage Equity Now Coalition.
â€œGender and racial wage
gaps are real,â€ Murphy said in a
statement. â€œThey cause wealth
gaps. With this legislation, Massachusetts
claims lead position
in building economic prosperity
through equitable treatment
of every worker.â€
The legislation requires public
and private employers with
25 or more employees to disclose
pay ranges in job postings,
provide the pay range of
a position to an employee who
is off ered a promotion or transfer
and, on request, provide the
pay range to employees who
already hold that position or
are applying for it. The Attorney
DREAMS | FROM Page 5
dedicated to creating content
that challenges the status quo,
pushes boundaries, and inspires
audiences. So, whether youâ€™re a
studio executive, a brand looking
for innovative marketing solutions,
or a storyteller with a vision
of your own, weâ€™re here to
help you bring your ideas to life,â€
added Dew.
Claire was born to Nigerianborn
parents in Worcester, Massachusetts,
and is one of four
sisters. She grew up in Revere,
where she attended the former
McKinley School until moving
to Boxford in middle school. A
graduate of Masconomet ReGeneralâ€™s
Offi ce will conduct a
public awareness campaign on
these new rules.
The Attorney Generalâ€™s Offi ce
will also be given enforcement
authority and the ability to impose
fi nes or civil citations for
violations of this law, and employees
will receive protections
against retaliation for asking for
salary ranges when applying
for a job or promotion.
The legislation also requires
public and private employers
with 100 or more employees
to submit wage data reports
to the state, which will then be
published through aggregate
wage reports by the Executive
Offi ce of Labor and Workforce
Development.
(Editorâ€™s Note: Janice Jarosz, a
lifelong Saugus resident, former
town offi cial, writer and frequent
contributor to The Saugus Advocate,
attended last weekâ€™s bill
signing ceremony for the new
wage equity law as a guest of former
Lieutenant Governor Evelyn
Murphy, who is also a fi rst cousin
of Jarosz.)
gional High, Dew attended
Franklin Pierce University, where
she majored in Mass Communications
with a minor in Public
Relations.
â€œMy plan is to become the
next Walt Disney and go beyond
his legacy. I plan to create a media
production company that
exceeds the boundaries and box
in which it is in now. I plan to unearth
some of the hidden gems
and stories that have been lost
or forgotten and expand on the
authenticity of human life, culture
and innovation. I strongly
believe that if you have a dream
that you should actively pursue
it! And if you have to bet on anyone,
always bet on yourself!â€
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://yw84364T9vMJtWh7Y6VIIJvm9_2jAMKCVY0ogYbbSnwÍ(Í`Ì°Í ×fµÃÕ\iŸö×‰EÚéTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2024
Page 11
Former Saugus Little League World
Series hero Dario Pizzano to host MS
charity event next month at Fenway Park
With the Minnesota Twins in town, MS4MS will take center stage
at the Sept. 21 Red Sox game
By Joe McConnell
D
ario Pizzano is coming
home, sort of. The 2003
Saugus American Little League
Williamsport all-star, who,
along with his teammates,
came into national prominence
when they marched
together as one all the way to
the United States Championship
Game at Lamade Stadium
against East Boynton Beach,
Fla. As it turned out, they were
the last Massachusetts team to
do so, now going on 21 years.
Since those Little League
glory days, Pizzano went on
to attend Malden Catholic
and Division 1 Columbia University,
which led to him being
picked by the Seattle Mariners
in the 2012 MLB Draft.
He spent the next 10 years as
a player in the Mariners and
New York Mets organizations,
before retiring last year. Also
in 2023, he was inducted into
the Columbia University Athletic
Hall of Fame.
Rhode Island man charged
with allegedly stealing $13K
in chips from Encore Casino
E
VERETT â€” A
Rhode Island
The second annual #spreadingORANGE MS4MS charity event will be
held at Fenway Park on Saturday, Sept. 21 in conjunction with the
Red Sox game that day against the Minnesota Twins. Former Saugus
American Little League 2003 World Series hero Dario Pizzano,
the charityâ€™s director, right, is with his mom, Tracie, and Sam Greenberg,
the MS4MS CEO, at last yearâ€™s Fenway event. MS4MS (Mission
Stadiums for Multiple Sclerosis) is a charity that Dario got behind
when he was a player in the Seattle Mariners organization, because
of his mom, who has been living with MS since 1998. (Courtesy photo)
The Saugus native is currently
working for JP Morgan
in Manhattan, and is living in
Hoboken, N.J. But baseball remains
in his blood. While in the
minor leagues, he helped established
the MS4MS (Mission
Stadiums for Multiple Sclerosis)
charity, a cause thatâ€™s close
to his heart, because his mom,
Tracie, has been living with MS
since 1998. It now brings him
SPORTS | SEE Page 16
man was arraigned
Wednesday on
charges of larceny
over $1,200 and larceny
from a building
for allegedly
stealing thousands
of dollars worth of
chips from a table
at Encore Boston
Harbor Casino after
causing a distraction
on Tuesday night. A plea of not
guilty was entered on his behalf
following his arraignment
at Malden District Court.
According to Boston 25
News, Gary Hunt, 35, of Woonsocket,
Rhode Island, was arrested
in a nearby parking lot
after Encore Boston Harborâ€™s
Security Control Center and
local law enforcement were
informed that a patron, later
identifi ed as Hunt, stole a large
quantity of chips from a table
game and fl ed the scene.
Witnesses reported that
Hunt was sitting at the table
where he allegedly told other
patrons that someone won
Gary Hunt, 35,
of Woonsocket,
Rhode Island
was arraigned on
larceny charges.
(Boston 25 News)
a large sum of money.
When the other
patrons became
distracted, police
say Hunt reached
over the table and
allegedly stole 13 orange
chips valued at
$1,000 apiece from
the dealerâ€™s tray.
Hunt then reportedly
ran from the
scene but was soon
found in a parking
lot near the casino after a description
of Hunt was broadcast
to nearby offi cers.
According to the Boston 25
News story, Hunt was found
to have several $1,000 orange
chips. Three additional orange
chips were located using security
video and authorities say
he discarded two chips from
his sneaker after leaving the
casino. A brief search of the
area did not locate any additional
items.
At the request of prosecutors,
a judge ordered Hunt to
stay away from the casino. He
is due back in court on September
16.
Tony Bartolo, Owner
Email: Tonys9942@aol.com
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Z4kOHCs7snyQAqkLJNyA-Znf2QmUhLkbTvqBVbaReesÍ+nÍ`Ì°Í ×fµÃÕ\iŸ÷×fµÃÕ\iŸöÍ
PÍ€×‘C’×˜š   Í(Í€u×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://IAJH9tqseoHAyat_FPkG2c18OB6GV1cwTElbU-iwLA0Î µþÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://3UZEohtqRTQpwdBwTj69jUpGzpaKH0ogkWnsFABzrgkÍ–]Í`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://vpRfqww_4wP2GXvuOImQ06UJHXHsUkl5RFAdPpO8dqoÍ0Í`Ì°Í ×fµˆÃÕ\iŸ#×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://-JXVJBoR0Im4Ndf9XJnj-MCEkykW7frM7DqCCZtC_EgÎ 9Í`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://YShH2rkNLLbAYTSztacbFqRZEFipzkDpOJofHMBLwZ0Í˜"Í`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://n-iJt6t9cO9Q5VfSXfwcRZLHfPr365uFBO_au5eKnaMÍ/Í`Ì°Í ×fµˆÃÕ\iŸ$×‰EÚ Page 12
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2024
Mayor Patrick Keefe and the City of Revere
celebrate National Night Out
The Fiore kids, Stephen and his sister
Lucia, had a great time at the Garfi eld
Schoolâ€™s hosting of National Night Out
last Tuesday evening.
Checking out the latest tattoos were Antonella
Alvarez and Salome Londono.
Pictured from left to right: Targetâ€™s Robert Bent, City Council Vice President Ira
Novoselsky of Ward 2, Mayor Patrick Keefe and School Committee Treasurer Anthony
Caggiano.
Representing Women Encouraging Empowerment
with information: Maria UreÃ±a and Claudia Cen talking
to Claudia and Emilia Cardona.
Farah Ganish with her
pink fi refi ghters hat
From The Neighborhood Developers: Jan Dumas, Rash Mikhael and Kenzie Bins.
The Suffolk
County Sheriff
â€™s Dept.,
headed by
Sheriff Steven
Thompkins,
received a visit
from Mayor
Patrick Keefe,
Police Chief
Dave Callahan
and the
Mayorâ€™s Chief
of Staff , Claudia
Correa.
Gabriella Duran and Sarah Gonzalez with members of the Revere Fire Department:
FF Tyler Stuart, Lt. Erin Leary, Lt. Mike Warren, FF David Stankowski and FF
Eric Gibson.
Revere Superintendent of Schools Dr. Dianne Kelly and School Committee Treasurer
Anthony Caggiano joined the workers of the popular Summer Eats Program
around the city: Kitty Adams, Pauline Lyons, Elaine Pelton, Donna Gigliello
and Joanne Kirk.
Target in Revere is a big supporter of National Night Out.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://vpRfqww_4wP2GXvuOImQ06UJHXHsUkl5RFAdPpO8dqoÍ0Í`Ì°Í ×fµÃÕ\iŸø×‰EÚTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2024
Page 13
Sgt. Matt Leslie and Offi cer John Papasodora keeping
Denise Papasodora safe but overdressed; Denise was
wearing a Revere Police SWAT vest and helmet and
communications headset.
Staff of the Suff olk County District Attorneyâ€™s Offi ce:
Amanda Padilla, Katherine McCarthy, Connie Valenti,
Ann Benenah, Joe Benenah and Felipe Barria.
Police Offi cer John Papasodora with Mohamad and
Kareem Ahmed
Revere Police Community Service: Chantal and Clark
Ragucci, Denise Papasodora and Carole Andreotti.
Walgreens was on hand with lots of handouts for the
event: Camila Mercurio, Courtney Azera and Kathern Alba.
Top Dog and Chief of Public Relations Charlie made
his rounds â€” greeting lots of local children at National
Night Out.
Mayor Patrick Keefe with Police Chief David Callahan joined Revere Police Offi cers and staff members at National
Night Out last Tuesday evening at the Garfi eld School.
Massachusetts State Police Troopers Robert Padellaro,
Christopher Zengo and Max Marchino with Maryangel
Garcia on a Harley-Davidson.
Emmanuel Garcia tries on his new ride for the evening.
Making National Night Out a great event â€” meeting with Revere citizens in a very informal venue â€” were
State Representative Jeff Turco, Ward 5 Councillor Angela Guarino-Sawaya with Charlie, Ward 4 Councillor
Paul Argenzio, Councillor-at-Large Tony Zambuto, Police Chief David Callahan, Revere Police Lt. Sean Randall,
Mayor Patrick Keefe, Police Offi cer Johan Taborda and School Committee Treasurer Anthony Caggiano.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://n-iJt6t9cO9Q5VfSXfwcRZLHfPr365uFBO_au5eKnaMÍ/Í`Ì°Í ×fµÃÕ\iŸù×fµÃÕ\iŸøÍ
PÍ€×‘C’×˜š   Í(Í€u×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://f2AT1PSTgcAAt6BuiRGMdZRjCPJzOyLAoXTtTQ8gFe4Î 	ðæÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://h5ktP1oCIbANfELdXIWaBDHa8Nd5YWbhpQc5DQDMaMMÍ‘WÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://2vEgDkhUGlqP-WsZF4BEeZvM_pmoxvkiEgO5Xw3OK2MÍ$¡Í`Ì°Í ×fµ‰ÃÕ\iŸ'×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://3RO6s1V310gtCsMLVCoZEwKaNDYAaprhgPalDOfFEKoÎ ÒÍ` ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://TgAnaubN8v2vNQoZJ7Gim3rPjBpmUFWDmZN50hkDacoÍ–@Í`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://7820iPyla9vx-K3BYgJ-mmjrVYP2iFg9H4IB91Ujef8Í$WÍ`Ì°Í ×fµ‰ÃÕ\iŸ(‘× ×fµŠÃÕ\iŸ, Í	3Íè;9×H¯http://call.com××Ðˆ×‰EÚ&NPage 14
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2024
By Bob Katzen
If you have any questions about this weekâ€™s report, e-mail us
at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com or call us at (617) 720-1562
GET A FREE SUBSCRIPTION
TO MASSTERLIST â€” Join more
than 22,000 people, from movers
and shakers to political junkies
and interested citizens, who
start their weekday morning
with MASSterListâ€”the popular
newsletter that chronicles news
and informed analysis about
whatâ€™s going on up on Beacon
Hill, in Massachusetts politics,
policy, media and influence.
The stories are drawn from major
news organizations as well as
specialized publications.
MASSterlist will be e-mailed to
you FREE every Monday through
Friday morning and will give you
a leg up on whatâ€™s happening in
the blood sport of Bay State politics.
For more information and
to get your free subscription,
go to: https://massterlist.com/
subscribe/
THE HOUSE AND SENATE: Beacon
Hill Roll Call records local
representativesâ€™ and senatorsâ€™
votes on roll calls from the week
of July 29-August 2.
CREATE COMMISSION TO
STUDY MISREPRESENTATION
OF A SERVICE ANIMAL (H 4917)
House 158-0, approved and
sent to the Senate a bill that
would create a special commission
to review current federal,
state and local laws and procedures
governing the use and
misuse of service animals by
individuals with disabilities in
the Bay State. The commission
would recommend the possible
introduction of legislation
prohibiting and civilly penalizing
service animal fraud and determining
the feasibility of certifi
cation, registration or licensing
of service animals.
Supporters said that more
than half the states in the nation
already have laws prohibiting
misuse of service animals. They
argued it is time for Massachusetts
to begin the step toward
adopting a similar law. They noted
that there are currently no
penalties for people who misrepresent
a non-service dog as
being a service dog.
Sponsor Rep. Kim Ferguson
(R-Holden) did not respond to
repeated requests from Beacon
Hill Roll Call asking her to comment
on passage of her bill.
(A Yesâ€ vote is for the bill.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes Rep.
Jeff Turco Yes
$7.5 MILLION FOR TOMORROWâ€™S
TEACHERS (H 4800)
House 134-24, overrode Gov.
Maura Healeyâ€™s veto of $7.5 million
(reducing funding from $10
million to $2.5 million) for scholarship
and loan repayment for
students seeking a teaching
degree in the stateâ€™s public colleges.
The Senate did not act on
the veto.
â€œI am reducing this item to the
amount projected to be necessary,â€
said Healey in her veto
message. â€œThe amount as adjusted
here, in combination with
the available balance from fi scal
year 2024, is suffi cient to meet
projected demand and result in
no reduction in fi scal year 2025
planned spending for this item.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the $7.5 million.
A â€œNoâ€ vote is against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes Rep.
Jeff Turco Yes
$250,000 FOR FINANCIAL LITERACY
(H 4800)
House 154-4, overrode Gov.
Healeyâ€™s veto of the entire
$250,000 for a grant program
to school districts to support
the implementation of financial
literacy courses and standards
for students in kindergarten
to grade 12, including training
and developing programs
to assist teachers in incorporating
appropriate fi nancial literacy
concepts into classroom curriculum.
The Senate did not act
on the veto.
â€œI am vetoing this item to an
amount consistent with my
House [budget] recommendation,â€
said Gov. Healey. â€œOther
sources of funding for fi nancial
literacy appropriated in this
budget will mitigate the eff ects
of this veto.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the $250,000.
A â€œNoâ€ vote is against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes Rep.
Jeff Turco Yes
PARENTAGE EQUALITY (S
2906)
Senate 40-0, approved and
sent to Gov. Healey a bill that
supporters say would ensure legal
parentage equality by protecting
LGBTQ+ families, and
children born through surrogacy
and assisted reproduction, in
forming the legal bond of a parent-child
relationship. They said
the measure would dismantle
archaic legal barriers to basic
parenting responsibilities for
modern families, opening the
door to legally attend and make
decisions during medical appointments,
manage a childâ€™s fi -
nances, participate in educational
decisions and provide authorizations
for a childâ€™s travel.
â€œToday we acted to ensure
that if you are a parent, whether
a biological parent or not, the
law will recognize you as a parent
just as society does,â€ said Rep.
Mike Day (D-Stoneham), House
Chair of the Committee on the
Judiciary. â€œThis bill will remove
one of the last vestiges of the
law that treats same sex parents
and parents who engaged in assisted
reproduction diff erently
from every other parent. It is a
good day for all families in Massachusetts.â€
â€œWith
unprecedented and
alarming action in other states to
strip away the rights of LGBTQ+
people and our families, Massachusettsâ€™
outdated and heterocentric
parentage laws put LGBTQ+
families at risk every day,â€
said Sen. Julian Cyr (D-Truro).
â€œThe Massachusetts Parentage
Act is personalâ€”LGBTQ+ families
like mine face excessive and
expensive hoops just to ensure
our children have the security
of legal parentage. The Legislatureâ€™s
passage of this bill is a critical
step to guarantee that all children
can benefi t from the stability
of a legal parent-child relationship
no matter how they came
to be in this world.â€
(A Yesâ€ vote is for the bill.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards Yes
DOG KENNEL SAFETY â€” OLLIEâ€™S
LAW (S 2929)
Senate 40-0, approved a bill
that would allow the Massachusetts
Department of Agricultural
Resources to establish
rules and regulations for
dog kennels in the Bay State,
to ensure animal welfare, protect
consumers and keep kennel
staff safe. A person who violates
the regulations would
be fi ned $500 for a fi rst off ense
and $1,000 for a second or subsequent
offense. The House
has already approved a diff erent
version of the measure and
the Senate version now goes
to the House for consideration.
Required regulations would
include obtaining a license
from the municipality, an annual
inspection, dog to staff
ratio specifi cations, injury reporting,
indoor and outdoor
physical facility requirements,
insurance and minimal housing
and care requirements.
Supporters said that currently,
the state has no oversight
of dog daycare or boarding
kennels. They argued it is estimated
that a dog is injured
or killed every 9 to 10 days in
Massachusetts at these kennels.
They noted that many
families have suff ered the loss
or injury of an animal at a dog
daycare or kennel that could
have been prevented by commonsense
regulations over
these facilities.
The bill was fi led in memory
of â€œOllie,â€ a 7-month-old labradoodle
who was attacked by
other dogs at a boarding kennel
in East Longmeadow. Ollie
needed round-the-clock
care and surgery and was in
the hospital for two months
before succumbing to his injuries.
While the facility was
shut down by town offi cials,
Ollieâ€™s owner Ann Baxter was
stunned to learn that there
were no state regulations regarding
boarding facilities,
and soon took up the fi ght to
help ensure tragedies like this
never happen again.
â€œPets are family who provide
boundless love and aff ection
that we are lucky to receive,â€
said Sen. Mark Montigny (DNew
Bedford), Senate sponsor
of the bill. â€œFor this reason, it is
critical that we ensure all businesses
entrusted with the care
of our family adhere to proper
health and safety protocols
no matter what town they operate
in across the commonwealth.
Too often, we have
heard devastating stories of
pets like Ollie who have been
injured or killed due to negligent
care. These people have
no place caring for such precious
creatures and itâ€™s time
that we implement consistent
standards across Massachusetts.â€
(A
â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards Yes
ALSO UP ON BEACON HILL
FISCAL 2025 STATE BUDGET
(H 4800) â€” Gov. Healey, after
vetoing several items, signed
into law a $58 billion fiscal
2025 state budget for the fi scal
year that began July 1,
2024. The price tag represents
a 1.97 billion or 3.5 percent increase
over last yearâ€™s fiscal
2024 budget.
â€œMassachusetts is the leader
in innovation and education,
the best place to raise
your family or grow a business,â€
said Healey. â€œBut we also
face challenges, so we arenâ€™t
resting â€” weâ€™re going on offense.
This budget delivers on
our shared priorities and drives
our state forward with urgency
and purpose. It invests in areas
that we are already leading on
and makes them better â€” including
our number 1 ranked
schools and our nation-leading
childcare strategy. Weâ€™re
also tackling our biggest challenges
by lowering household
costs and improving transportation.
Weâ€™re doing all of this
responsibly, staying within our
means and in line with the rate
of infl ation.â€
â€œOnce again, the Massachusetts
budget is the latest state
budget to pass in the country
and once again, itâ€™s the largest
state budget in our commonwealthâ€™s
history,â€ said Paul
Craney, spokesman for the
Mass Fiscal Alliance. â€œWhat
should also concern every
Massachusetts taxpayer is the
fact that the Legislature and
governor are spending over
a billion dollars a year on the
illegal and inadmissible migrants,
which comes out to be
about $3 million dollars a day.
Every town and city in Massachusetts
could use that money
for their workers, schools and
first responders but instead,
Statehouse leaders are spending
these valuable taxpayer resources
on illegal and inadmissible
migrants.â€
WAGE TRANSPARENCY (H
4890) â€” Gov. Healey signed
into law a bill, named the Frances
Perkins Workplace Equity
Act, in honor of the fi rst woman
to serve as U.S. Labor Secretary.
The measure would require
employers with 25 or
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://2vEgDkhUGlqP-WsZF4BEeZvM_pmoxvkiEgO5Xw3OK2MÍ$¡Í`Ì°Í ×fµÃÕ\iŸú×‰EÚ+þTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2024
Page 15
more employees to disclose a
salary range when posting a
job position. The measure also
would require employers with
100 or more employees to fi le
annual employment data reports,
including information
on employee demographics
and salaries, with the state.
â€œI have long supported wage
equity legislation and, as attorney
general, I was proud to
work together with the business
community to implement
the 2016 Equal Pay Act,â€ said
Gov. Healey. â€œThis new law is
an important next step toward
closing wage gaps, especially
for people of color and women.
It will also strengthen the
ability of Massachusetts employers
to build diverse, talented
teams.â€
â€œI am proud that we as a
commonwealth are taking
concrete and nation-leading
steps to close long-standing
gender and racial wage gaps
that persist across our economy,â€
said Sen. Paul Feeney (DFoxborough)
a lead supporter
of the bill. â€œThese gaps not only
erode the integrity of work in
the commonwealth but also
continue to exacerbate an uneven
economy for working
people, especially women and
people of color who have historically
faced persistent and
glaring inequities in the workplace.
By bringing partners in
labor, business and community
together to establish common
sense wage and workplace
transparency, we will ensure
Massachusetts can continue
attracting and retaining
diverse and skilled workers
that enable our commonwealth
to compete and thrive.
With the signing of this bill,
workers are empowered and
businesses are supported.â€
$1.26 BILLION BOND FOR INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY (H
4889) â€” Gov. Healey signed
into law a bill that would invest
in information technology (IT)
upgrades, improvements and
new projects across state government.
The measure authorizes
$1.23 billion in bonded
spending and $400 million in
anticipated federal funds.
â€œWeâ€™ve talked a lot about
this administrationâ€™s desire to
lean into applied artifi cial intelligence
in ways that benefi
t not only the way the state
delivers services to residents
and businesses, but also the
way that our businesses and
economic sector are able to
thrive,â€ said Healey. â€œAnd we
think that making applied AI
a cornerstone of our economic
development bill is really important.
Itâ€™s further supported
by this FutureTech Act.â€
â€œWhen it comes to advancing
the delivery of government
services for our residents and
for our state and municipal
workers, information technology
opens that digital door to
meet people where they are,â€
said Chief Information Offi cer
and Technology Services Secretary
Jason Snyder. â€œThe impact
of IT on the services the
commonwealth provides cannot
be overstated. To that end,
we are already hard at work on
many of the investments in
this legislation.â€
DISABILITY PENSION FOR
POLICE OFFICERS (H 2536) â€”
Gov. Healey signed into law
legislation that would provide
police offi cers who have suffered
a violent act injury, 100
percent regular compensation
and pension benefi ts, until
they reach the age of mandatory
retirement. Violent act
injury is defi ned as â€œa serious
and permanent personal bodily
injury sustained as a direct
and proximate result of a violent
attack upon a person by
means of a dangerous weapon,
including a fi rearm, knife,
automobile, explosive device
or other dangerous weapon.â€
â€œOur first responders go
above and beyond to keep
our communities safe and respond
to emergencies,â€ said
Gov. Healey. â€œThatâ€™s why itâ€™s
critical that we support them
when they experience emergencies
of their own. This legislation
ensures that fi rst responders
who are injured in
the line of duty have access
to the pay and health care, including
mental health care,
that they need to support their
families and their road to recovery.â€
Supporters
said that under
current law, a first responder
forced to retire due to a violent
act injury can only receive
benefi ts through the local
retirement board via the
home rule legislative process.
They said this process is onerous
and has resulted in disparate
benefi ts being granted on
a case-by-case basis.
â€œThis legislation ensures that
fi rst responders who are forced
to retire due to a violent injury
received in the line of duty
do not struggle to make ends
meet,â€ said Sen. Cindy Friedman
(D-Arlington). â€œFrankly,
this cannot come soon
enough. Recognizing the extreme
burden placed on these
fi rst responders and their families,
mandating 100 percent
compensation until retirement
age is the right way to honor
their service and sacrifi ce.â€
Rep. Steve Xiarhos (R-Barnstable)
said workers who are
the victims of traumatic events
at work would also be eligible
to receive certain mental
health services to assist with
their recovery. â€œThe bill was
inspired in part by several recent
cases of fi rst responders
who suff ered serious injuries
in the line of duty, including retired
Somerville Police Detective
Mario Oliveira and Springfi
eld Police Offi cer Nestor Santos,â€
said Xiarhos.
BAN ELEPHANTS AND OTHER
ANIMALS (H 4915) â€” The
House and Senate approved
and sent to Gov. Healey legislation
that eff ective January
1, 2025, would ban elephants,
bears, lions, tigers, leopards,
jaguars, cheetahs and other
wild animals from being used
in traveling circuses and other
traveling shows in Massachusetts.
Violators would be fi ned
between $500 and $10,000.
The ban would not apply to
zoos or to performances that
take place at other non-mobile,
permanent facilities if
the covered animal is a resident
animal at the same facility
in which the performance
takes place.
â€œWeâ€™re ecstatic that after so
many years of advocating for
the state to take a stance on
the suff ering of animals, as well
as the public health and safety
risks. The bill to prohibit elephants,
primates, bears, giraff
es and big cats in traveling
animal acts passed both chambers
in the Legislature unanimously
and is on the governorâ€™s
desk,â€ read a press release
from the MSPCA. â€œThis is truly a
testament to the perseverance
of advocates and legislators to
speak for those who cannot.
Weâ€™re optimistic that the governor
will sign the bill and put
an end to these archaic acts in
our state.â€
QUOTABLE QUOTES
â€œWe were absolutely thrilled
to witness the signing of the
bill, standing shoulder to
shoulder with Gov. Healey,
our legislative champions, advocates
and survivors from
across the commonwealth. At
a time when so many states
are weakening their legislative
responses to gun violence,
we are so proud to see Massachusetts
take this tremendous
step forward. We are also
so proud to have been a part
of this advocacy every step of
the way. This law ensures that
Massachusetts will continue
to lead the way, showing other
states the impact and importance
of taking a comprehensive
approach to preventing
gun violence.â€
--- Ruth Zakarin, CEO of the
Massachusetts Coalition to
Prevent Gun Violence on Gov.
Healey signing the bill changing
the stateâ€™s gun laws.
â€œMassachusetts voters sent
these elected offi cials to Beacon
Hill to stand up for our
health, to protect us from corporate
greed and to safeguard
our climate. On all counts, the
Legislature has failed. Despite
two years of mounting evidence
from experts, advocates
and offi cials in the Healey administration
sending a clear
signal that itâ€™s time to move
beyond gas, the House failed
to adopt reasonable measures
from the Senate to move the
commonwealth off of gas.â€
--- Mark Dyen of Gas Transition
Allies.
â€œEgos may be bruised at
the Statehouse, but taxpayers
should be feeling pretty good
right now. Legislative leaders did
not get their way with a handful
of pieces of legislation and the
taxpaying residents of Massachusetts
were the winners. MassFiscal
is pleased to have played
an important role this legislative
session with a voice protecting
the taxpayers. We are the fi rst
and the last wall of resistance before
another set of tax hike policies
become law and we will not
break. Our commitment lies with
the taxpayers and we will continue
to disrupt the plans of Statehouse
leaders.
--- Paul Craney, a spokesman
for the Massachusetts Fiscal Alliance.
â€œInstead
of letting fear or hate
drive the narrative around immigrants,
we need to embrace the
facts: Immigrants without status
contribute hundreds of millions
of dollars in state and local tax
dollars to our region, fueling the
services so many of us depend
on. Granting those without status
work authorization is a common-sense
reform that would
dramatically increase tax revenues,
while helping immigrants
feel more safe and welcome in
the state and nation they already
contribute so much to.â€
--- Elizabeth Sweet, Executive
Director of the Massachusetts
Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy
(MIRA) Coalition, citing a study
by the Institute on Taxation and
Economic Policy showing that
Immigrants without status contributed
nearly $650 million in
state and local taxes to Massachusetts
in 2022.
â€œSince October 7th, antisemitism
has skyrocketed across
the country and continues to
spread through our Massachusetts
communities and institutions.
Schools have posed a special
area of concern, as eff orts
continue to inject anti-Israel and
anti-Jewish content into curricula.
In a strong demonstration of
leadership and support for the
Jewish community, several Massachusetts
legislators took initiative
to ensure Massachusetts
confronts this dangerous hate.â€
---From a statement by the
American Jewish Committee
New England on a section in the
recently approved state budget
that establishes a Special Commission
for Addressing Antisemitism,
and prompts the creation
of curricula, resources and professional
development opportunities
to support antisemitism
education.
HOW LONG WAS LAST WEEKâ€™S
SESSION?
Beacon Hill Roll Call tracks the
length of time that the House
and Senate were in session each
week. Many legislators say that
legislative sessions are only one
aspect of the Legislatureâ€™s job
and that a lot of important work
is done outside of the House
and Senate chambers. They note
that their jobs also involve committee
work, research, constituent
work and other matters
that are important to their districts.
Critics say that the Legislature
does not meet regularly
or long enough to debate and
vote in public view on the thousands
of pieces of legislation
that have been fi led. They note
that the infrequency and brief
length of sessions are misguided
and lead to irresponsible latenight
sessions and a mad rush to
act on dozens of bills in the days
immediately preceding the end
of an annual session.
During the week July 29-August
2. the House met for a total
of 34 hours and 8 minutes and
the Senate met for a total of 36
hours and 32 minutes.
Mon. July 29 House 11:00 a.m.
to 3:35 p.m.
Senate 11:10 a.m. to 4:01 p.m.
Tues. July 30 House 11:02 a.m.
to 7:35 p.m.
Senate 11:05 a.m. to 7:58 p.m.
Wed. July 31 House 12:17 p.m.
to 11:59 p.m.
Senate 11:07 a.m. to 11:59 p.m.
Thurs. August 1 House 12:01
a.m. to 9:19 a.m.
Senate 12:01 a.m. to 9:57 a.m.
Fri. August 2 No House session
No Senate session
Bob Katzen welcomes feedback
at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com
Bob
founded Beacon Hill Roll
Call in 1975 and was inducted
into the New England Newspaper
and Press Association (NENPA)
Hall of Fame in 2019.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://7820iPyla9vx-K3BYgJ-mmjrVYP2iFg9H4IB91Ujef8Í$WÍ`Ì°Í ×fµÃÕ\iŸû×fµÃÕ\iŸúÍ
PÍ€×‘C’×˜š   Í(Í€u×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://3SrVPX71vcg90Ka8uJgauzxn5MekgjjzpseZtuS0e5wÎ 	‰ªÍ` ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Scztks_uD2ektF5iYgaeSEDtrXvbPrwUvMaa9bcxJVwÍ‘íÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://ltYP8iIrOtDlQ7K1b3xmaV90ENk9JHO0LMnYHUQri0MÍ'tÍ`Ì°Í ×fµŠÃÕ\iŸ-×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://y4SorGHVK3bCewEt62gOTO1m2H-h_LvnHtB7G98fE00Î °ÔÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://SEFkjMzq4keUHF1lrUpyH-9XqS6mOvADvbQ7pDWvZBUÍ™ÀÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://iEhiKv_suA1xiMKl95sNRRWMURfK0kSmFpw_-nVMMv8Í)™Í`Ì°Í ×fµŠÃÕ\iŸ.’× ×fµ‹ÃÕ\iŸ2 Í<ÍÌ9×H±https://ms4ms.org××Ðˆ× ×fµ‹ÃÕ\iŸ1 ÍÍ„ÌÏ9×H½http://www.thewarrengroup.com××Ðˆ×‰EÚ'ñPage 16
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2024
MVES awarded grant to ease
behavioral health crisis
î€·î•î„îµ¶î† î€¦î’îîîŒî–î–îŒî’î‘ î€³î˜î…îîŒî† î€«îˆî„î•îŒî‘îŠ
î€¤î˜îŠî˜î–î— î€”î€˜î€ î€•î€“î€•î€—
Notice is hereby given in accordance with the provisions of
Chapter 185 of the Acts of 1983, and Chapter 13 of the Acts
î’î‰ î€”î€œî€›î€—î€ î—î‹î„î— î—î‹îˆ î€¦îŒî—îœ î’î‰ î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆ î€·î•î„îµ¶î† î€¦î’îîîŒî–î–îŒî’î‘ îšîŒîî
î†î’î‘î‡î˜î†î— î„ î€³î˜î…îîŒî† î€«îˆî„î•îŒî‘îŠ î’î‘ î€¤î˜îŠî˜î–î— î€”î€˜î€ î€•î€“î€•î€— î„î— î€˜î€î€“î€“ î“î€‘îî€‘ îŒî‘
î—î‹îˆ î€¦îŒî—îœ î€¦î’î˜î‘î†îŒîîî’î• î€­î’î–îˆî“î‹ î€¤î€‘ î€§îˆî î€ªî•î’î–î–î’ î€¦î’î˜î‘î†îŒî î€¦î‹î„îî…îˆî•î– î’î‰
î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆ î€¦îŒî—îœ î€«î„îî î•îˆîî„î—îŒî™îˆ î—î’ î—î‹îˆ î‰î’îîî’îšîŒî‘îŠ î“î•î’î“î’î–îˆî‡ î„îîˆî‘î‡îîˆî‘î—î–
î—î’ î—î‹îˆ î“î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠ î„î‘î‡ î—î•î„îµ¶î† î•îˆîŠî˜îî„î—îŒî’î‘î– î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ î€¦îŒî—îœ î’î‰ î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆî€
Public Hearing:
î€”î€‘ î€·î‹îˆ î€°î„îœî’î• î•îˆî”î˜îˆî–î— î—î‹î„î— î—î‹îˆ î€·î•î„îµ¶î† î€¦î’îîîŒî–î–îŒî’î‘ î„î“î“î•î’î™îˆ
î—î‹îˆ îŒî‘î–î—î„îîî„î—îŒî’î‘ î’î‰ î„ î–î“îˆîˆî‡ î…î˜îî“ î’î‘ î€ºî„îî‘î˜î— î€¤î™îˆî‘î˜îˆ îŒî‘
î—î‹îˆ îŒî‘î—îˆî•îˆî–î— î’î‰ î“î˜î…îîŒî† î–î„î‰îˆî—îœ î‰î’î• î—î‹îˆ î€¶îˆî‘îŒî’î• î€µîˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î—î– î’î‰
î€˜î€“ î€ºî„îî‘î˜î— î€¤î™îˆî‘î˜îˆî€‘
î€•î€‘ î€·î‹îˆ î€°î„îœî’î• î•îˆî”î˜îˆî–î— î—î‹îˆ î€·î•î„îµ¶î† î€¦î’îîîŒî–î–îŒî’î‘ î†î’î‘î–îŒî‡îˆî• î„
î‚³î€±î’ î€¯îˆî‰î— î€·î˜î•î‘î‚´ î’î‘ î€±î’î•î—î‹ î€¶î‹î’î•îˆ î€µî’î„î‡ î—î’ î€¦î’î™îˆ î€¶î—î•îˆîˆî—
î‡î˜î•îŒî‘îŠ î–î†î‹î’î’î î‹î’î˜î•î– î€‹î˜î‘îîˆî–î– îœî’î˜ î„î•îˆ î„ î•îˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î—î€Œ î’î‰ î€¦î’î™îˆ
î€¶î—î•îˆîˆî—î€‘ î€·î‹îˆ î—î•î„îµ¶î† î†î’î‘îŠîˆî–î—îŒî’î‘ îŒî– î’î˜î— î’î‰ î†î’î‘î—î•î’î î„î‘î‡
î‡î„î‘îŠîˆî•î’î˜î–î€‘ î€¹îˆî‹îŒî†îîˆî– î…îî’î†îŽ î—î‹îˆ îŒî‘î—îˆî•î–îˆî†î—îŒî’î‘î€ îî„îŽîˆ îŒîîîˆîŠî„î
î€¸î€î—î˜î•î‘î–î€ î„î‘î‡ îŒî‘î†îˆî–î–î„î‘î—îîœ î…îˆîˆî“ î‹î’î•î‘î– îšî‹îŒîîˆ î–î—î˜î‡îˆî‘î—î– î„î•îˆ
î—î•îœîŒî‘îŠ î—î’ î†î•î’î–î– î—î‹îˆ î–î—î•îˆîˆî—î€‘ î€¶î—î„î‘î‡îŒî–î‹ î€µî’î„î‡ î†î„î‘ î‹î„î‘î‡îîˆ î—î‹îˆ
î—î•î„îµ¶î† îƒ€î’îš îî˜î†î‹ î…îˆî—î—îˆî• î—î‹î„î‘ î€¦î’î™îˆî€‘
î€–î€‘ î€¤îîˆî‘î‡ î€¶î†î‹îˆî‡î˜îîˆ î€»î€¬ î’î‰ î€·îŒî—îîˆ î€”î€“ î€«î„î‘î‡îŒî†î„î“î“îˆî‡ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘
î€³î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠ î…îœ î„î‡î‡îŒî‘îŠî€
î€•î€›î€› î€¦î•îˆî–î†îˆî‘î— î€¤î™îˆî‘î˜îˆ î€†î€”
Acting Chairman: Frank Stringi
î€¤î˜îŠî˜î–î— î€œî€ î€•î€“î€•î€—
~ 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
î„î– îšîˆîî î„î– î€°î„î–î–î„î†î‹î˜î–îˆî—î—î– î–î†î‹î’î’î î…î˜î– î†îˆî•î—îŒî‚¿î†î„î—îˆî€‘
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.
T
he aging population in
Massachusetts is increasing
while at the same time the
number of older adults with behavioral
health problems is rising.
Massachusetts is not alone
â€” U.S. offi cials have described
older Americans as facing a behavioral
health crisis.
As part of its ongoing eff orts
to support emotional well-being
during the aging journey,
Mystic Valley Elder Services
(MVES) was awarded a $150,000
grant from the stateâ€™s Behavioral
Health Outreach for Aging Populations
(BHOAP) program. â€œBehavioral
health conditions skyrocketed
during the COVID-19
pandemic. Those issues didnâ€™t
simply vanish when quarantine
was lifted, especially for
our communityâ€™s aging population,
who are more likely to remain
socially isolated,â€ observed
MVES CEO Lisa Gurgone. â€œWeâ€™re
proud to receive the BHOAP
grant, which will help our team
support those who are in critical
need of care.â€
Central to the behavioral
health crisis is the need for treatment.
While an estimated one in
four older Americans has a behavioral
health condition not associated
with normal aging, less
than 33 percent of this population
receives services to address
their diagnosis. Within Massachusetts,
BHOAP aims to address
this problem.
SPORTS | FROM Page 11
back to the Boston area next
month for the second annual
#spreadingORANGE MS4MS
charity event of which Dario
is its director. It will be held
at Fenway Park on Saturday,
Sept. 21 in conjunction with
the Red Sox game that day
against the Minnesota Twins.
â€œTwo of my college teammates
â€” Mark Heil and Harrison
Slutsky â€” work in the Red
Sox front offi ce, so they made
the intros and connections to
the right people to get this
thing going,â€ said Pizzano. â€œWe
have a live link (https://ms4ms.
org/spreadingorange-dayat-fenway-park-2024/)
to buy
tickets for the section next to
More than half of those enrolled
in home care programs at
MVES reported having a behavioral
health diagnosis, and MVES
has identifi ed an increase in diagnoses
over the past decade.
The BHOAP grant enables MVES
to build on its existing outreach
eff orts and work to overcome
barriers to care, including:
â€¢ Coping with other chronic illnesses
and physical frailty
â€¢ Transportation limitations
â€¢ Cost of care
â€¢ Social isolation
â€¢ Technological barriers
â€¢ Cultural differences in approaches
to behavioral care
â€¢ Societal and/or generational
stigma
â€œStigma is a major obstacle
to any individual receiving
treatment, but it can be a barrier
thatâ€™s especially difficult
for the aging population,â€ explained
MVES Director of Clinical
Services Lisa Felci Jimenez.
â€œPeople dismiss these issues by
saying, youâ€™re just lonely or you
just worry too much. Part of our
teamâ€™s mission is to overcome
these misconceptions and ensure
people receive the care
they need. Depression and anxiety
are not an inevitable part of
the aging process.â€
MVES has provided access
to behavioral health services
through its Complex Care team
since 2005. The BHOAP grant
empowers MVES to expand its
the Sam Adams lounge, and
are hoping to get 300-plus attendees
to go there this year.
â€œWe raise the most money
through corporate sponsorships,â€
added Pizzano, â€œand at
this yearâ€™s event we are also
partnering with another charity
â€” Morganâ€™s Message. Morganâ€™s
Message is an organization
that helps advocate and
raise funds for those struggling
to adjust to normal life after
their athletic careers are over.â€
Dario mentioned that Pete
Maki, the Twins pitching coach,
is also helping out with the onfield
batting practice passes
for sponsors and those
who are battling MS, before
the Sept. 21 game. Maki was
the Columbia pitching coach,
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission
from the publisher, The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com
BUYER1
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
SELLER1
BUYER2
Martinez-Feeley, Asalia J
Feeley, John M
22 Burnham Street LLC
Ramirez-Marquez, Mario J Marquez, Lina M Uzi Mag Realty LLC
Ramirez-Marquez, Mario J Marquez, Lina M Uzi Mag Realty LLC
Zeng, Tinghui
SELLER2
ADDRESS
22 Burnham St
Rz Wonderland Rt Zeng, Jianjing
362 Mountain Ave
360 Mountain Ave
34 Thorndike St
DATE PRICE
07.18.24 600000
07.18.24 940000
07.18.24 940000
07.16.24 1000000
Complex Care team and better
serve the aging population in its
service area, which includes Everett,
Malden, Revere and eight
other communities.
The Complex Care team focuses
on increasing access to
home- and community-based
counseling to address a wide
range of issues, including hoarding,
depression, anxiety, adjustment
to loss, substance abuse
and more. They develop a personalized
plan for each individual,
connecting them to the
care they need and monitoring
each case over time. By working
closely with other departments
at MVES, the team ensures
the individual receives any
other support they need, such
as transportation assistance or
social engagement. The Complex
Care team also off ers bilingual
support and works to build
awareness and partnership
throughout the community.
â€œOur team ensures health providers
and community organizations
are aware that MVES offers
a range of services to support
aging and that behavioral
health is a key part of our offerings,â€
explained MVES Complex
Care Team Manager Jennifer
Shacklewood. â€œWe want to
improve that 33 percent of older
adults who are receiving the
treatment they need. The best
way to do that is together, as a
community.â€
when Pizzano was a Lion.
Danielle Stein, another MS
Warrior ambassador, who is in
sports broadcasting after serving
an internship with the Red
Sox, is working on getting the
organizers to appear on the
NESN broadcast during the
game to further promote the
charity.
For the game, the Red Sox
are providing custom-made
caps, with an orange â€œBâ€ Red
Sox logo and the charityâ€™s emblem
embroidered on the back
of it. Pizzano hopes this yearâ€™s
Fenway charity event raises
between $40,000 to $50,000
for MS.
For more information on the
charity, go to the MS4MS website
at https://ms4ms.org.
Revere
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://ltYP8iIrOtDlQ7K1b3xmaV90ENk9JHO0LMnYHUQri0MÍ'tÍ`Ì°Í ×fµÃÕ\iŸü×‰EÚ–THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2024
Page 17
MYSTIC | FROM Page 7
tic communities has been to
reinforce critical facilities that
serve priority populations: residents
and workers disproportionately
aff ected by extreme
weather. Medford and Somerville
are working regionally
to develop a network of resilient
community centers that
can provide on-going public
services (e.g., afterschool
programs and food pantries)
while providing food and shelter
during heat waves and extreme
storms.
â€œThese projects are examples
of how benefi cial it has
been to have municipal and
environmental justice nonprofi
t staff working together,â€
said GreenRootsâ€™ Director of
Climate Justice & Waterfront
Initiatives, John Walkey. â€œEvery
year we are getting better and
better choosing and designing
projects with and for the people
who need our work most.â€
The Town of Reading submitted
a regional grant to help
17 communities stormproof
key community facilities. The
Metropolitan Area Planning
Council (MAPC) is sponsoring
a regional pilot program
to understand how best governments
can communicate
with hard-to-reach vulnerable
residents â€” like unhoused
or socially isolated people â€”
before and during extreme
weather.
â€œWith one of the hottest
summers on record weâ€™re excited
to continue to advance
local and regional preparedness
for extreme heat in the
lower Mystic,â€ said MAPC Principal
Planner Sasha Shyduroff .
â€œThis $490,813 grant will fund
critical partnerships between
municipalities, public health,
and community-based organizations
to develop culturally
relevant communications
and strategies to talk about
extreme heat.â€
RMC communities are also
increasingly investing in
healthy open space and urban
trees. Cambridge is sponsoring
a regional grant to increase
forest health across the
Mystic River Watershed, and
Medford is drawing up a resilient
urban forest plan. Watertown,
Everett, Arlington, Chelsea
and Malden secured funds
for community-designed public
cooling solutions.
â€œWicked Cool Mystic--SÃºper
Fresco MÃ­stico is a $687,000
grant for Everett, Arlington,
Chelsea, and Malden to implement
community-designed
outdoor cooling solutions,â€
said Everett Mayor Carlo DeMaria.
â€œOur last grant asked
people what they most wanted;
this funding lets us follow
through on their requests.â€
â€œThese grants use state resources,
municipal support,
and community leadership to
bring resources to the people
who suff er most during heatwaves,â€
said Everett Community
Growersâ€™ Civic Engagement
and Advocacy Manager,
Nicole Fina. â€œI look forward
to working with the City and
with residents to help implement
the outdoor cooling solutions
they chose for their
communities.â€
Finally, communities are
working to manage fl ooding
from intense rainstorms and
higher seas. Stoneham is restoring
a freshwater wetland
to improve fl ooding and habitat
near its high school, while
Boston and Revere are partnering
to manage coastal
fl ooding into neighborhoods
around Belle Isle Marsh. â€œRevere
is eager to continue to
work with the Boston Planning
Department on the regional
fl ood risk reduction planning
for Bennington Street/Fredricks
Park and adjacent neighbors
and businesses,â€ said Revereâ€™s
Open Space and Environmental
Planner, Elle Baker.
â€œUsing FY24 MVP funds we
were able to conduct a thorough
alternatives analysis. This
follow-on grant will let us select
the most eff ective alternative
and deliver benefi cial
resiliency and outdoor recreation
to our communities.â€
More about the
Mystic River
watershed
The 76-square-mile Mystic
River watershed stretches
from Reading through the
northern shoreline of Boston
Harbor to Revere. â€œMysticâ€ is an
Anglicized version of the Pequot
word missi-tuk (â€œlarge rivCall
today and r
FREE SHOWER
PLUS $1600 OFF
1-844-609-1066
With purchase of a new Safe Step Walk-In Tub. Not applicable with any previous
walk-in tub purchase. Offer available while supplies last. No cash value. Must present
offer at time of purchase. CSLB 1082165 NSCB 0082999 0083445
1. How are Bourbon, High and
Fifth similar?
* Crack Repairing * Pot Hole Filling
* Striping Handicapped Spaces
* Free Estimates
Tomâ€™s Seal Coating
Call Gary: 978-210-4012
2. What 1927 baseball team
had a lineup of six batters
known as Murderersâ€™ Row?
3. On Aug. 9, 1854, what book
having a title that is the
name of a New England
pond was published?
4. What bird with a name starting
with â€œptâ€ has species that
are the state birds of Alaska
and Nunavut province?
5. How are the snatch and the
clean & jerk similar?
6. August 10is National Lazy
Day; what singer cowrote
â€œ(Sittinâ€™ On) The Dock of the
Bayâ€?
7. What city has hosted the
Summer Olympics at the
highest altitude?
8. What chocolate cake is
named after a hotel in Vienna?
9.
On Aug. 11, 1934, the fi rst
convicts arrived at what
prison known as The Rock?
10. Who was Gorgeous George,
who was known for â€œPomp
and Circumstanceâ€?
Answers
11. On Aug. 12, 1961, what
country started to construct
the Berlin Wall?
12. How are slippery, American
and cedar similar?
13. What is Jutland?
14. On Aug. 13, 2004, what
American chef died whose
TV kitchen was donated to
the Smithsonian?
15. How are cinnamon, cloves,
fennel seeds, pepper and
star anise similar?
16. What baseball player was
nicknamed Mr. November
after hitting MLBâ€™s fi rst November
homer?
17. On Aug. 14, 1959, Magic
Johnson was born; he was
a star in what sport?
18. What fi lm features 15 puppies
kidnapped by Cruella
De Vil?
19. The name â€œearthâ€ is native
to what people: Anglo-Saxons,
Egyptians or Greeks?
20. On Aug. 15, 1955, the fi rst
management contract between
Colonel Tom Parker
and what singer was
signed?
er with wind- and tide-driven
wavesâ€). Now the Mystic is one
of New Englandâ€™s most densely
populated, urbanized watersheds.
The Mystic is facing
growing climate-related challenges:
coastal and stormwater
fl ooding, extreme storms,
heat, drought and unpredictable
seasonal weather. The watershed
is relatively low-lying
and extensively developed,
making it prone to both freshwater
and coastal fl ooding. Its
21 municipalities are home to
600,000 residents, including
many who are disproportionately
vulnerable to extreme
weather: environmental justice
communities, new Americans,
residents of color, elders,
low-income residents and employees,
people living with disabilities
and English language
learners.
Revereâ€™s
Napolitano
receives IWLCA
Academic Honor
Roll award
R
evere resident Kiana
Napolitano was among
eight members of the Endicott
College womenâ€™s lacrosse
program to earn Intercollegiate
Womenâ€™s Lacrosse
Association (IWLCA)
Academic Honor Roll
awards for their eff orts in
the classroom during the
2023-24 academic year. To
be eligible for this honor,
student-athletes must be a
junior, senior, or graduate
student and have earned a
cumulative academic GPA
of 3.50 or greater.
1. They are names of famous
streets (in New
Orleans, England and
NYC [Fifth Avenue],
respectively)
2. New York Yankees
3. â€œWaldenâ€ by Henry
David Thoreau
4. Ptarmigan
5. They are weightlifting
contests at the
Olympics.
6. Otis Redding
7. Mexico City
8. Sacher torte (Hotel
Sacher)
9. Alcatraz
10. A pro wrestler who
used that music for
his entrance
11. East Germany
12. They are types of elm
trees native to America.
13.
A peninsula in Denmark
14.
Julia Child
15. They comprise traditional
Chinese fivespice
powder.
16. Derek Jeter
17. Basketball
18. â€œ101 Dalmatiansâ€
19. Anglo-Saxons (from
eorthe and erda, which
mean the ground below)
20.
Elvis Presley
SPECIAL OFFER
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://iEhiKv_suA1xiMKl95sNRRWMURfK0kSmFpw_-nVMMv8Í)™Í`Ì°Í ×fµÃÕ\iŸý×fµÃÕ\iŸüÍ
PÍ€×‘C’×˜š   Í(Í€u×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://SATCPAr6O3_3f3_-Lu1xVe0dkkil43jSEO5FwfbV6ScÎ ºkÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://YiXrjtWmQh6BijpZdG31RZXmBSKYDx7F_xMxkn0v4TEÍ«ñÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://PV0CZ-H-nhmV2Y8NdaVPubhXTU4EUTi5o5F8wk6DcxYÍ4ÈÍ`Ì°Í ×fµ‹ÃÕ\iŸ3×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://EW3TDxk8v5jtHTqZHF5QTqB6qX9c_6Ok4M3rzMhJ7XQÎ ô'Í`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://AQmSQwOKY3fpHoLWopenYIbnIhyNg86zhfzJjkpg9eMÍ|ÜÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://GonudieUOnnrjnm_1WzBFRKGW-QYESsJwBX5azIGo38Í)Í`Ì°Í ×fµŒÃÕ\iŸ4’× ×fµŒÃÕ\iŸ7 ÍÍ#ÌÑ9×H»http://www.advocatenews.net××Ðˆ× ×fµŒÃÕ\iŸ6 Í×Í	Í9×HÚ !http://Carrijohomeimprovement.com××Ðˆ×‰EÚ¢Page 18
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2024
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 / îšîšîšî€‘î„îîˆî•îŒî†î„î‘îˆî›î—îˆî•îŒî’î•îî„î€‘î†î’î
î€ºîŒî‘î‡î’îšî–î€ î€¶îŒî‡îŒî‘îŠî€ î€µî’î’îƒ€î‘îŠî€ î€¦î„î•î“îˆî‘î—î•îœ î€‰ î€°î’î•îˆî€„
All estimates, consultations or inspections completed
î…îœ î€°î€¤ îîŒî†îˆî‘î–îˆî‡ î–î˜î“îˆî•î™îŒî–î’î•î–î€‘ î€î€²î™îˆî• î€˜î€“ îœîˆî„î•î– îˆî›î“îˆî•îŒîˆî‘î†îˆî€‘
î€î€¥îˆî—î—îˆî• î€¥î˜î–îŒî‘îˆî–î– î€¥î˜î•îˆî„î˜ î€°îˆîî…îˆî•î–î‹îŒî“î€‘
Insured and
Registered
Complete Financing Available.
No Money Down.
Licensed
& Insured
Free
Estimates
Carpentry * Kitchen & Bath * Roofs * Painting
Decks * Siding * Carrijohomeimprovement.com
Call 781-710-8918 * Saugus, MA
General Contractor * Interior & Exterior
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
î€©î•î„î‘îŽ î€¥îˆî•î„î•î‡îŒî‘î’
î€°î€¤ î€¯îŒî†îˆî‘î–îˆ î€–î€”î€›î€”î€”
î‚‡ î€•î€— î€ î€«î’î˜î• î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆ
î‚‡ î€¨îîˆî•îŠîˆî‘î†îœ î€µîˆî“î„îŒî•î–
î€¥î€¨î€µî€¤î€µî€§î€¬î€±î€²
î€³îî˜îî…îŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î€«îˆî„î—îŒî‘îŠ
î€µîˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î—îŒî„î î€‰ î€¦î’îîîˆî•î†îŒî„î î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆ
î€ªî„î– î€©îŒî—î—îŒî‘îŠ î‚‡ î€§î•î„îŒî‘ î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆ
î€™î€”î€šî€‘î€™î€œî€œî€‘î€œî€–î€›î€–
î€¶îˆî‘îŒî’î• î€¦îŒî—îŒîîˆî‘ î€§îŒî–î†î’î˜î‘î—
î€­î€‘î€© î€‰ î€¶î’î‘ î€¦î’î‘î—î•î„î†î—îŒî‘îŠ
î€¶î‘î’îš î€³îî’îšîŒî‘îŠ
î€±î’ î€­î’î… î—î’î’ î–îî„îîî€„ î€©î•îˆîˆ î€¨î–î—îŒîî„î—îˆî–î€„
î€¦î’îîîˆî•î†îŒî„î î€‰ î€µîˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î—îŒî„î
î€šî€›î€”î€î€™î€˜î€™î€î€•î€“î€šî€›
î€ î€³î•î’î“îˆî•î—îœ îî„î‘î„îŠîˆîîˆî‘î— î€‰ îî„îŒî‘î—îˆî‘î„î‘î†îˆ
î€¶î€³î€¤î€§î€¤î€©î€²î€µî€¤
î€¤î€¸î€·î€² î€³î€¤î€µî€·î€¶
î€­î€¸î€±î€® î€¦î€¤î€µî€¶
î€ºî€¤î€±î€·î€¨î€§
î€¶î€¤î€°î€¨ î€§î€¤î€¼ î€³î€¬î€¦î€® î€¸î€³
î€šî€›î€”î€î€–î€•î€—î€î€”î€œî€•î€œ
î€´î˜î„îîŒî—îœ î€¸î–îˆî‡ î€·îŒî•îˆî–
î€°î’î˜î‘î—îˆî‡ î€‰ î€¬î‘î–î—î„îîîˆî‡
î€¸î–îˆî‡ î€¤î˜î—î’ î€³î„î•î—î– î€‰ î€¥î„î—î—îˆî•îŒîˆî–
î€©î„îîŒîîœ î’îšî‘îˆî‡ î€‰ î’î“îˆî•î„î—îˆî‡ î–îŒî‘î†îˆ î€”î€œî€—î€™
AAA Service â€¢ Lockouts
Trespass Towing â€¢ Roadside Service
Junk Car Removal
617-387-6877
26 Garvey St., Everett
MDPU 28003 ICCMC 251976
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
ADVOCATE
Call now!
781-286-8500
advertise on the web at
www.advocatenews.net
î€¶î‹î’î™îˆîîŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î•îˆîî’î™î„î
î€¯î„î‘î‡î–î†î„î“îŒî‘îŠî€ î€¨îîˆî†î—î•îŒî†î„îî€ î€³îî˜îî…îŒî‘îŠî€ î€³î„îŒî‘î—îŒî‘îŠî€ î€µî’î’îƒ€î‘îŠî€ î€¦î„î•î“îˆî‘î—î•îœî€ î€©î•î„îîŒî‘îŠî€
î€§îˆî†îŽî–î€ î€©îˆî‘î†îŒî‘îŠî€ î€°î„î–î’î‘î•îœî€ î€§îˆîî’îîŒî—îŒî’î‘î€ î€ªî˜î—î€î’î˜î—î–î€ î€­î˜î‘îŽ î€µîˆîî’î™î„î î€‰ î€§îŒî–î“îˆî•î–î„îî€
î€¦îîˆî„î‘ î€¸î“î–î€ î€¼î„î•î‡î–î€ î€ªî„î•î„îŠîˆî–î€ î€¤î—î—îŒî†î– î€‰ î€¥î„î–îˆîîˆî‘î—î–î€‘ î€·î•î˜î†îŽ î‰î’î• î€«îŒî•îˆî€ î€¥î’î…î†î„î— î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆî–î€‘
WASTE REMOVAL &
BUILDING MAINTENANCE
â€¢ Landscaping, Lawn Care, Mulching
â€¢ Yard Waste & Rubbish Removal
â€¢ Interior & Exterior Demolition (Old
Decks, Fences, Pools, Sheds, etc.)
â€¢ Appliance and Metal Pick-up
â€¢ Construction and Estate Cleanouts
â€¢ Pick-up Truck Load of Trash
starting at $169
â€¢ Carpentry
LICENSED & INSURED
Call for FREE ESTIMATES!
î€²î‰¤î†îˆî€ î€‹î€šî€›î€”î€Œ î€•î€–î€–î€î€•î€•î€—î€—
Clean-Outs!
We take and dispose
from cellars, attics,
garages, yards, etc.
Call Robert at:
781-844-0472
Classifieds
î€‡
î€‡
î€‡
î€‡
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://PV0CZ-H-nhmV2Y8NdaVPubhXTU4EUTi5o5F8wk6DcxYÍ4ÈÍ`Ì°Í ×fµÃÕ\iŸþ×‰EÚ#THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2024
Page 19
î€­î€¸î€¶î€· î€¶î€²î€¯î€§î€„ î€¶î€·î€¸î€±î€±î€¬î€±î€ª î€–î€î€¥î€¨î€§î€µî€²î€²î€° î€«î€²î€°î€¨
î€¬î€± î€¶î€¤î€¸î€ªî€¸î€¶î€ î€°î€¤ î€©î€¬î€±î€§î€¶ î€±î€¨î€º î€²î€ºî€±î€¨î€µî€¶î€„
î€‡î€˜î€œî€œî€î€“î€“î€“
î€µî€²î€²î€°î€°î€¤î€·î€¨ î€ºî€¤î€±î€·î€¨î€§ î€¬î€± î€¦î€¯î€¨î€¤î€±î€ î€´î€¸î€¬î€¨î€·
î€«î€²î€°î€¨ î€²î€± î€¨î€¶î€¶î€¨î€» î€¶î€·î€µî€¨î€¨î€·î€ î€¶î€¤î€¸î€ªî€¸î€¶
î€µî’î’îîî„î—îˆ îšî„î‘î—îˆî‡ îŒî‘ î†îîˆî„î‘î€ î”î˜îŒîˆî—î€ î“î•îŒî™î„î—îˆî€ î†î’î‘î™îˆî‘îŒîˆî‘î— îî’î†î„î—îŒî’î‘ î’î‘ î€¨î–î–îˆî› î€¶î—î•îˆîˆî—
î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î– î‘îˆî„î• î€°î€¥î€·î€¤ î€—î€•î€™ î…î˜î– î–î—î’î“ î„î‘î‡ î™îˆî•îœ î†îî’î–îˆ î—î’ î€µî—î€‘ î€” î„î‘î‡ î„î•îˆî„ î„îîˆî‘îŒî—îŒîˆî– î–î˜î†î‹
î„î– îšî„îîŽîŒî‘îŠ î—î•î„îŒîî€ î„î‘î‡ î“î„î•îŽî€‘ î€·î‹îŒî– î†î’îî‰î’î•î—î„î…îîˆ îˆî‘î™îŒî•î’î‘îîˆî‘î— îœî’î˜ îšîŒîî î–î‹î„î•îˆ îšîŒî—î‹ î„î‘
î„î†î—îŒî™îˆ îšî’îî„î‘ îŒî‘ î‹îˆî• î€™î€“î–î€‘ î€¼î’î˜î• î€”î€“î€‘î€˜î€… î› î€”î€”î€‘î€˜î€… î…îˆî‡î•î’î’î î‹î„î– î„ îŠî’î’î‡ î–îŒîîˆ î†îî’î–îˆî—î€ î„
î…îˆî‡î€ î„î‘î‡ î„ î†î‹î„îŒî•î€‘ î€¼î’î˜ îšîŒîî î–î‹î„î•îˆ î—î‹îˆ î…î„î—î‹î•î’î’îî€ î—î‹îˆ î‰î˜îîîœ î„î“î“îîŒî„î‘î†îˆ îˆî„î— îŒî‘ îŽîŒî—î†î‹îˆî‘î€‘
î€ºîŒ î€©î€¬ î„î‘î‡ î†î„î…îîˆ îŒî‘î†îî˜î‡îˆî‡î€‘ î€²î‰î‰ î–î—î•îˆîˆî— î“î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠ îŒî‘î†îî˜î‡îˆî‡î€‘ î€·î’î—î„î îî’î™îˆî€îŒî‘ î†î’î–î— îŒî– î€‡î€•î€˜î€“î€“
î€‹î€”î–î— îî’î‘î—î‹î€ î€‡î€”î€“î€“î€“î€ î–îˆî†î˜î•îŒî—îœ î‡îˆî“î’î–îŒî—î€ î€‡î€”î€“î€“î€“î€ î…î•î’îŽîˆî• î‰îˆîˆî€ î€‡î€˜î€“î€“î€Œî€‘ î€³î•î’î–î“îˆî†î—îŒî™îˆ î—îˆî‘î„î‘î—
îî˜î–î— î‰îŒîî î’î˜î— î–î—î„î‘î‡î„î•î‡ î•îˆî‘î—î„î î„î“î“îîŒî†î„î—îŒî’î‘î€ î“î•î’î™îŒî‡îˆ î•îˆî†î’î•î‡î–î€ î„î‘î‡ î“î„îœ î€–î€•î€‘î€œî€˜ î‰î’î•
î†î•îˆî‡îŒî—î€’î…î„î†îŽîŠî•î’î˜î‘î‡ î†î‹îˆî†îŽî€‘ î€¶î‹î’îšîŒî‘îŠ î…îœ î„î“î“î’îŒî‘î—îîˆî‘î— î’î‘îîœ î’î‘ î€¶î„î—î˜î•î‡î„îœî– î‰î•î’î î€”î€• î—î’
î€• î€³î€° îŸ î€ºîˆ î„î‡î‹îˆî•îˆ î—î’ î€©î„îŒî• î€«î’î˜î–îŒî‘îŠ î€ªî˜îŒî‡îˆîîŒî‘îˆî–î€‘ î€¦î„îî î€³îˆî—îˆî• î€šî€›î€”î€î€›î€•î€“î€î€˜î€™î€œî€“
î€™ î€ªî•î„î‘îŒî—îˆ î€µî‡î€ î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î– î€°î€¤ î€²î€³î€¨î€± î€«î€²î€¸î€¶î€¨î€ î€¤î˜îŠî˜î–î— î€”î€” îŸ î€”î€•î“î î€ î€•î“î
î€ºîˆîî†î’îîˆ î—î’ î—î‹îŒî– î†î‹î„î•îîŒî‘îŠ î€›î€î•î’î’îî€ î€–î€î…îˆî‡î•î’î’î î‹î’îîˆî€ î‰îˆî„î—î˜î•îŒî‘îŠ î„ î†î’îîœ î‰î„î•îîˆî•î€Šî– î“î’î•î†î‹ î„î‘î‡ î–î“î„î†îŒî’î˜î– î•î’î’îî–î€‘ î€·î‹îˆ î‰îŒî•î–î— î‰îî’î’î•
îŒî‘î†îî˜î‡îˆî– î„ îîŒî™îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’îî€ î‡îŒî‘îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’î îšîŒî—î‹ î‡î’î˜î…îîˆ î–îîŒî‡îŒî‘îŠ î‡î’î’î•î–î€ îŽîŒî—î†î‹îˆî‘î€ î„î‘î‡ î„ î–îî„îî î•î’î’îî€ î“îî˜î– î‰î•î’î‘î— î„î‘î‡ î•îˆî„î• îî˜î‡î•î’î’îî–î€‘
î€§îŒî–î†î’î™îˆî• î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡ î‰îî’î’î•î– î˜î‘î‡îˆî• î—î‹îˆ î†î„î•î“îˆî— î—î‹î•î’î˜îŠî‹î’î˜î—î€‘ î€¸î“î–î—î„îŒî•î–î€ îœî’î˜î€Šîî î‰îŒî‘î‡ î—î‹î•îˆîˆ î…îˆî‡î•î’î’îî–î€ î„î‘ î„î‡î‡îŒî—îŒî’î‘î„î î•î’î’îî€ î„î‘î‡
î„î†î†îˆî–î– î—î’ î„ îšî„îîŽî€î˜î“ î„î—î—îŒî† î‰î’î• î–î—î’î•î„îŠîˆ î’î• îˆî›î“î„î‘î–îŒî’î‘î€‘ î€¨î‘îî’îœ î’î˜î—î‡î’î’î• îîŒî™îŒî‘îŠ îšîŒî—î‹ î„ î‡îˆî†îŽ î„î‘î‡ î‡î•îŒî™îˆîšî„îœî€‘ î€¸î“î‡î„î—îˆî– îŒî‘î†îî˜î‡îˆ î„ î‘îˆîš
î•î’î’î‰ î€‹î€•î€“î€•î€”î€Œî€ î‰î•î’î‘î— î–î—î„îŒî•î–î€ î„î‘î‡ î•îˆî„î• î‡îˆî†îŽî€‘ î€¦î’î‘î™îˆî‘îŒîˆî‘î—îîœ îî’î†î„î—îˆî‡ î‘îˆî„î• î€¥î’î–î—î’î‘î€ î—î•î„î‘î–î“î’î•î—î„î—îŒî’î‘î€ î„î‘î‡ î—î‹îˆ î„îŒî•î“î’î•î—î€‘
î€§îŒî–î†î’î™îˆî• î—î‹îŒî– î†î‹î„î•îîŒî‘îŠ î‹î’îîˆ î‘îˆî–î—îîˆî‡ î’î‘ î„ î…îˆî„î˜î—îŒî‰î˜îî€ î—î•îˆîˆî€î–î—î˜î‡î‡îˆî‡ îî’î—î€‘ î€·î‹îˆ
î‰îŒî•î–î— î‰îî’î’î• î‰îˆî„î—î˜î•îˆî– î„ î–î˜î‘îîŒî— î‰î„îîŒîîœ î•î’î’îî€ î“îˆî•î‰îˆî†î— î‰î’î• îŠî„î—î‹îˆî•îŒî‘îŠî–î€ î„î‘î‡ î„î‘ î’î„îŽ
îŽîŒî—î†î‹îˆî‘ îšîŒî—î‹ îŠîîˆî„îîŒî‘îŠ î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡ î‰îî’î’î•î–î€‘ î€·î‹îˆ îî„îŒî‘ î…îˆî‡î•î’î’î îŒî– î„ î—î•î˜îˆ
î•îˆî—î•îˆî„î— îšîŒî—î‹ îŒî—î– î’îšî‘ î“î•îŒî™î„î—îˆ î…î„îî†î’î‘îœ î„î‘î‡ î‹îŒî–î€î„î‘î‡î€î‹îˆî• î†îî’î–îˆî—î–î€‘ î€ºîŒî—î‹ î€•î€‘î€˜
î…î„î—î‹î–î€ î„ î–î“î„î†îŒî’î˜î– î‡îˆî†îŽ î‰î’î• î’î˜î—î‡î’î’î• îˆî‘î—îˆî•î—î„îŒî‘îŒî‘îŠî€ î„î‘î‡ î„ î†î’î‘î™îˆî‘îŒîˆî‘î— îŠî„î•î„îŠîˆî€
î—î‹îŒî– î‹î’îîˆ î’î‰î‰îˆî•î– î…î’î—î‹ î†î’îî‰î’î•î— î„î‘î‡ î‰î˜î‘î†î—îŒî’î‘î„îîŒî—îœî€‘ î€¨î‘îî’îœ î„ î–îˆî•îˆî‘îˆî€ î“î•îŒî™î„î—îˆ
î–îˆî—î—îŒî‘îŠ îšîŒî—î‹ î„ î–îˆî—î€î…î„î†îŽ îî’î†î„î—îŒî’î‘î€ îšî‹îŒîîˆ î–î—îŒîî î‹î„î™îŒî‘îŠ îˆî„î–îœ î„î†î†îˆî–î– î—î’ î„îî
î„îîˆî‘îŒî—îŒîˆî–î€‘ î€©î’î• îî’î•îˆ îŒî‘î‰î’î•îî„î—îŒî’î‘î€ î†î’î‘î—î„î†î— î€¦î‹î•îŒî–î—îŒî‘î„ î„î— î€™î€“î€–î€î€™î€šî€“î€î€–î€–î€˜î€– î’î•
îŒî‘î‰î’îšîŒî—î‹îî„î‘îŠî’î€£îŠîî„îŒîî€‘î†î’îî€‘
î€‡î€•î€î€œî€“î€“î€’îî’î‘î—î‹
î€¶î“î„î†îŒî’î˜î–î€ î“î•îŒî™î„î—îˆî€ îŒî– î‰îî’î’î• î€• î…î€‘î•î€‘
î„î“î„î•î—îîˆî‘î— î•îŒîŠî‹î— î’î‘ î…î˜î– îîŒî‘îˆ îŒî‘
î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î–î€‘ î€• îŠîˆî‘îˆî•î’î˜î– î…îˆî‡î•î’î’îî–
îšîŒî—î‹ îŠî•îˆî„î— î†îî’î–îˆî— î–î“î„î†îˆî€‘ î€¯î„î•îŠîˆ îˆî„î—
îŒî‘ îŽîŒî—î†î‹îˆî‘ îšîŒî—î‹ î„îî“îîˆ î†î„î…îŒî‘îˆî—î–
î„î‘î‡ î•îˆî‰î•îŒîŠîˆî•î„î—î’î•î€‘ î€¯î„î•îŠîˆ îîŒî™îŒî‘îŠ
î•î’î’îî€‘ î€·î‹îŒî– îŒî– îˆî”î˜îŒî™î„îîˆî‘î— î—î’ î‹î„îî‰ î„
î‹î’î˜î–îˆî€‘ î€¥îˆî„î˜î—îŒî‰î˜î î‰îˆî‘î†îˆî‡ îŒî‘ îœî„î•î‡î€
î’î‰î‰ î–î—î•îˆîˆî— î“î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠ î‰î’î• î€• î†î„î•î–î€
îî„î˜î‘î‡î•îœ î‹î’î’îŽ î˜î“î–î€‘ î€¶îî„îî î“îˆî—
î„îîî’îšîˆî‡ î˜î‘î‡îˆî• î€•î€˜ îî…î–î€‘ î€‡î€•î€î€œî€“î€“ î€’
îî’î‘î—î‹î€‘ î€©îŒî•î–î—î€ î–îˆî†î˜î•îŒî—îœ î„î‘î‡ î€”
îî’î‘î—î‹ î…î•î’îŽîˆî• î‰îˆîˆî€‘ î€¦î•îˆî‡îŒî— î„î‘î‡
î…î„î†îŽîŠî•î’î˜î‘î‡ î†î‹îˆî†îŽ î•îˆî”î˜îŒî•îˆî‡î€‘ î€¦î„îî
î€³îˆî—îˆî• î€šî€›î€”î€î€›î€•î€“î€î€˜î€™î€œî€“
î€¦î€²î€±î€·î€¤î€¦î€· î€¸î€¶ î€©î€²î€µ î€°î€²î€µî€¨ î€¬î€±î€©î€²î€µî€°î€¤î€·î€¬î€²î€±
î€šî€›î€”î€î€˜î€˜î€›î€î€”î€“î€œî€” îŒî‘î‰î’îšîŒî—î‹îî„î‘îŠî’î€£îŠîî„îŒîî€‘î†î’î îšîšîšî€‘îî‘î„îŠî’î•îˆî„îî—îœî—îˆî„îî€‘î†î’î
î€‡î€™î€—î€œî€î€“î€“î€“
î€·î‹îŒî– î†î‹î„î•îîŒî‘îŠ î‹î’îîˆ î‰îˆî„î—î˜î•îˆî– î„ îîˆîŠî„î î„î†î†îˆî–î–î’î•îœ î‡îšîˆîîîŒî‘îŠ î˜î‘îŒî— î‰î’î•
îˆî›î—îˆî‘î‡îˆî‡ î‰î„îîŒîîœ î’î• î•îˆî‘î—î„î îŒî‘î†î’îîˆî€‘ î€·î‹îˆ îî„îŒî‘ î‰îî’î’î• î‹î„î– î„ î…îˆî‡î•î’î’î î„î‘î‡
î‰î˜îî î…î„î—î‹î€ îšîŒî—î‹ î—î‹î•îˆîˆ îî’î•îˆ î…îˆî‡î•î’î’îî– î˜î“î–î—î„îŒî•î– î„î‘î‡ î„î‘ î„î†î†îˆî–î–î’î•îœ î˜î‘îŒî— î’î‘
î—î‹îˆ îî’îšîˆî• îîˆî™îˆîî€‘ î€«î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡ î‰îî’î’î•î– î„î‘î‡ î„ îŽîŒî—î†î‹îˆî‘ îšîŒî—î‹ î–î—î„îŒî‘îîˆî–î– î–î—îˆîˆî
î„î“î“îîŒî„î‘î†îˆî–î€ îŒî‘î†îî˜î‡îŒî‘îŠ î„ î‘îˆîš îˆîîˆî†î—î•îŒî† î–î—î’î™îˆî€ î“î•î’î™îŒî‡îˆ îî’î‡îˆî•î‘ î†î’î‘î™îˆî‘îŒîˆî‘î†îˆî€‘
î€¯î’î†î„î—îˆî‡ î‘îˆî„î• î€°î„î•îŽîˆî— î€¥î„î–îŽîˆî—î€ î—î‹îˆ î†î’îîî˜î—îˆî• î•î„îŒîî€ î–î‹î’î“î“îŒî‘îŠ î†îˆî‘î—îˆî•î–î€ î„î‘î‡
îî„îî’î• î‹îŒîŠî‹îšî„îœî–î€ î†î’îîî˜î—îŒî‘îŠ î„î‘î‡ î„î†î†îˆî–î– î—î’ î‡î’îšî‘î—î’îšî‘ î€¥î’î–î—î’î‘ î„î•îˆ îˆî„î–îœî€‘
î€¨î‘îî’îœ î—î‹îˆ î“îˆî•î‰îˆî†î— î…îîˆî‘î‡ î’î‰ î–î˜î…î˜î•î…î„î‘ î—î•î„î‘î”î˜îŒîîŒî—îœ î„î‘î‡ î˜î•î…î„î‘ î„î†î†îˆî–î–îŒî…îŒîîŒî—îœî€‘
î€‡î€˜î€œî€œî€î€“î€“î€“
î€¸î‘î‡îˆî• î€¤îŠî•îˆîˆîîˆî‘î—
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://GonudieUOnnrjnm_1WzBFRKGW-QYESsJwBX5azIGo38Í)Í`Ì°Í ×fµÃÕ\iŸÿ×fµÃÕ\iŸþÍ
PÍ€×‘C‘×˜š   Í(Í€u×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://5Ata2g6gtEQ0HPluKG9M4ULOx5bM0BHnqhihsI7gONoÎ †"Í`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://ZO16BflMHjj6SD7Hh3rU69SDEPWNwzQjij_doxyMwZkÍ~ƒÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://VTFRlAkf2uLcjYpLnMbrsE0pmqc-SBjcOSgnlz4811kÍ(Í`Ì°Í ×fµŒÃÕ\iŸ8×‰EÚwPage 20
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2024
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- WELL-MAINTAINED COLONIAL STYLE HOME.
1ST FLOOR FEATURES UPDATED KITCHEN WITH SS
APPLIANCES, LEADING TO A WRAPAROUND SCREENED
IN PORCH. DINING ROOM WITH SLIDERS TO A LARGE
DECK GREAT FOR SUMMER ENJOYMENT. LIVING ROOM
AND AN UPDATED HALF BATH. 2ND FLOOR OFFERS 3
BEDROOMS WITH A SPACIOUS UPDATED FULL BATH. 3RD
FLOOR OFFER A GRACIOUS MAIN BEDROOM WITH 2
WALK IN CLOSETS, VAULTED CEILING, AND A BEAUTIFUL
FULL BATH WITH DOUBLE VANITY, TILED WALK-IN
SHOWER WITH A HAND WAND AND JETTED SOAKING
TUB WITH LIGHTING AND A CIRCULATOR FOR MAINTAINING
WATER TEMP. THIS HOME OFFERS GAS HEAT
AS WELL AS CENTRAL AIR ON THE 1ST TWO FLOORS
AND A MINI SPLIT FOR THE MAIN BEDROOM. THERE IS
A NEW ON DEMAND HOT WATER HEATER, FURNACE,
MAIN DRAIN, PLUMBING AND ELECTRIC AS WELL.
SAUGUS $750,000
CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
FOR RENT
COMMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE FOR RENTPRIME
LOCATION. PROFESSIONAL BUILDING
JUST OUTSIDE OF SAUGUS CENTER. PLENTY
OF PARKING. THIS SPACE IS PERFECT FOR
LAWYERS OFFICE, INSURANCE COMPANY,
REAL ESTATE OFFICE, MORTGAGE COMPANY.
WALK IN AREA, SEPARATE OFFICES, RECEPTION
AREA, MENS AND WOMAN'S BATHROOMS,
COMMON CONFERENCE ROOM.
CONVENIENT TO ROUTE 1. SPACE COULD BE
SHARED, SPLIT OR THE ENTIRE SPACE COULD
BE LEASED. SAUGUS $25
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
MOBILE HOMES
â€¢ GREAT YOUNG ONE BEDROOM UNIT IN A VERY DESIRABLE PARK IN MOVE IN
CONDITION. 2 CAR PARKING. LOW PARK RENT OF 410 DANVERS 79,900
â€¢ LOT AVAILABLE IN DESIRABLE FAMILY ESTATES COOPERATIVE MOBILE PARK.
APPROX 120' X 30' SEWER AND WATER BRING YOUR UNIT AND HAVE A BRAND
NEW BEAUTIFUL HOME....COOP FEE IS ONY 300- 350 A MONTH PEABODY $84,900
â€¢ LARGE SPACIOUS 2 BEDROOM ON CORNER LOT. NEW RUBBER ROOF. PEABODY
$89,900
COMING SOON
COMING SOON- BRAND NEW
CONSTRUCTION! TWO TOWNHOUSE
CONDOS. EACH UNIT HAS 3
BEDROOMS, 2.5 BATHS, HARDWOOD
FLOORING, GAS HEAT, CENTRAL AIR,
FINISHED LOWER LEVEL AND
GARAGE.
SAUGUS
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
DANIELLE
VENTRE
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- CONTRACTOR SPECIAL!
NEEDS WORK, BUT WORTH THE EFFORT,
HOUSE HAS GREAT POTENTIAL. BRING
YOUR IDEAS TO THIS 3000 SQFT
COLONIAL FEATURING 6 BEDROOMS AND
2 BATHS WITH OVER 3 FLOORS OF LIVING
SPACE (NOT INCLUDING WALK-OUT LL).
BEAUTIFUL ORIGINAL WOODWORK, 5
FIREPLACES, 10â€™ CEILINGS. VINYL SIDING,
NICE SIZE LOT. PARKING FOR 6+ CARS.
SAUGUS $799,900 CALL KEITH
781-389-0791
978-987-9535
CALL HER
FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE
NEEDS
â€¢ BEAUTIFUL UPDATED HUGE DOUBLE LEVEL YARD. MANY NEW FEATURES
INCLUDE NEW FLOORING THROUGHOUT, NEW SIDING AND SKIRTING, NEW OIL
TANK AND HOT WATER, NEWER ROOF, NEWER SHED NEW AC .THIS WAS
ORIGINALLY A 2 BEDROOM, AND CAN BE CONVERTED BACK TO 2 BEDROOM
PEABODY $169,900
LOOKING TO
BUY OR SELL?
â€¢ VERY WELL MAINTAINED AND UPDATED UNIT IN VERY DESIRABLE PINE GROVE
MOBILE PARK. LARGE PORCH AND DECK, SHED GREAT LEVEL YARD, NEWER
FLOORING AND WINDOWS. LAUNDRY HOOK UP SHOWS PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP.
PEABODY $169,900
â€¢ BEAUTIFUL HOME IN PINE GROVE MOBILE PARK OFF OF ROUTE 114 MUST BE
SEEN. UPDATED THROUGHOUT WITH SHINY HARDWOOD FLOORS, HUGE
CORNER DOUBLE LOT 2 YEAR OLD PITCHED ROOF, 4 CAR PARKING, FULL SIZE
LAUNDRY PEABODY $182,900
â€¢ TWO NEW PRE CONSTRUCTION MANUFACTURED HOMES. BOTH ONE BED WITH
MANY UPGRADES FROM CAR PARKING TO FULL SIZE LAUNDRY, SO MUCH MORE.
DANVERS $199,900
â€¢ SHADY OAKS PHASE 2 NEW CONSTRUCTION: 2 NEW MANUFACTURED 2 BEDROOM
UNITS DANVERS $249,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- TWO BEDROOM TWO BATHS NEW PAINT
BRAND NEW HEATING SYSTEM. TOP FLOOR. TWO
CAR PARKING ONE IN GARAGE. ELEVATOR LOCATED
ON BUS LINE TO BOSTON.
REVERE $459,900
CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
BUILDABLE LOT
â€¢ SAUGUS $125,000 CALL KEITH 781-389-0791 FOR FURTHER DETAILS
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://VTFRlAkf2uLcjYpLnMbrsE0pmqc-SBjcOSgnlz4811kÍ(Í`Ì°Í ×fµÃÕ\iŸ ×ˆE×fµÃÕ\iŸ×fµÃÕ\iŸ Í
PÍ€,»Revere Advocate  08/09/2024»Revere Advocate  08/09/2024×fµ«å}\þ‰N