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CAT
D
Vol. 25, No.49
CAT
LIGHTING UP SAUGUS CENTER
I
TE
-FREE- www.advocatenews.net Published Every Friday 781-233-4446 Friday, December 8, 2023
The challenge of
Consensus
Locating any marijuana establishments in
Saugus will take a unanimous vote when
hearings resume next Tuesday night
By Mark E. Vogler
t’s been two months since
the hearings of seven
companies seeking to obtain
a special permit to open a
retail pot shop in Saugus ended
acrimoniously. The failure
to notify the abutters of each
of the businesses involved
prompted the Board of Selectmen
to continue their Oct.
7 hearings until after the Nov.
7 town election.
Instead of hearing more testimony
and voting on the issuance
of up to three S-2 permits,
then-Board of Selectmen
Chair Anthony Cogliano
engaged in 15 minutes of bitter
discourse with then-Vice
Chair Debra Panetta. They accused
each other of unethical
conduct in a divisive argument
that may have contributed
to a major power shift in
the board’s leadership. Voters
reelected all fi ve incumbent
selectmen for a third consecutive
two-year term.
But Panetta – not Cogliano
– will be presiding as chair
when the board resumes the
hearings for the S-2 permit
at 7 p.m. Tuesday (Dec. 12) in
the second fl oor auditorium
at Saugus Town Hall. Cogliano
lost the chairmanship position
he’s held for the previous
two terms when he fi nished
fourth in a fi eld of seven
candidates – 759 votes beCHALLENGE|
SEE PAGE 2
Pitching in for the environment
Youth & Recreation Department Director Crystal Cakounes was decked out with reindeer
antlers festooned with bright portable Christmas lights as she gathered with a crowd of
Saugonians last Friday (Dec. 1) despite the rainy weather to celebrate the town’s annual
Tree Lighting and Festivities. Please see inside for the story and more photos. (Saugus Advocate
photo by Mark E. Vogler)
Selectman Anthony Cogliano joined the cleanup crew organized
last Saturday at Crescent Marsh by WIN Waste Innovations,
which removed more than 10,000 pounds of
waste. Please see inside for more photos and story. (Courtesy
photo to The Saugus Advocate)
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Christmas and
Prosperous New Year!
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 8, 2023
CHALLENGE | FROM PAGE 1
hind his chief political rival,
Panetta, who got 473 more
votes than the runner-up in
the selectmen’s race.
Panetta said she expects
the hearings will go much
smoother when they resume
Tuesday night than at previous
hearings. “We have seven
applicants for marijuana retail
licenses. Each applicant will
come before the board and
they will have an opportunity
to speak,” Panetta told The
Saugus Advocate this week.
“I anticipate the board voting
on Tuesday. All the abutters
have been notified along
with the applicants,” she said.
Cogliano declined to comment
on next week’s session.
Selectman Michael Serino,
who was critical of the way
Cogliano had presided over
the previous hearing sessions,
also did not wish to comment.
Selectman Corinne Riley
maintained a positive outlook
on the potential for one
or more retail pot businesses
locating in Saugus. “The marijuana
hearings have been
going on for several months.
There were several good candidates
that, in my opinion,
were a good fit for our town,”
Riley told The Saugus Advocate
this week.
“I look forward to wrapping
up the hearings, if the board
decides to do so, and getting
one or two establishments on
Route 1 for additional tax income,”
she said.
If a company receives the
unanimous backing of the
four selectmen who will vote,
the next step would be to
enter into a host community
agreement with the town
manager. And, finally, the
Cannabis Control Commission
would have to issue them
a license. (Selectman Jeff Cicolini
recused himself from
participating in the hearings
because of a potential conflict
of interest – one of the seven
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companies is a client of his accounting
firm.)
It’s possible that the hearings
may end without selectmen
issuing an S-2 permit,
which will require a unanimous
vote of the four selectmen
who will be voting. S-2
permits require four-fifths approval.
Getting
all four remaining
selectmen votes poses a challenge,
though, as Selectman
Michael Serino had previously
said that he would prefer to
see a ballot question be put
before Saugus voters. If Serino
sticks to that position, the
board won’t have the necessary
votes to issue any S-2
permits.
Even if Serino decides to
participate in a vote, consensus
remains a huge challenge,
especially for Uma Flowers,
which was the unanimous selection
of the seven-member
Marijuana Establishment Review
Committee (MERC). In
its report, the MERC ranked
Uma Flowers as the best-suited
location for an adult-use
cannabis business in Saugus.
With a proposed location at
24 Broadway (Route 1 North),
Uma Flowers achieved a perfect
score of 140 total points,
based on an “exceptional” rating
by each member in each
of the five categories that
were considered.
But Cogliano has publicly
criticized the MERC report
and its top recommendation
of Uma Flowers. Cogliano said
he disagrees with the MERC
for only recommending two
permits, when it could have
three. “I don’t agree with that
report, whatsoever,” Cogliano
said. He said the committee
failed to do thorough research
before making its recommendations.
“That
report is inconclusive.
It makes no sense to me,” Cogliano
said.
Cogliano also said the MERC
report was unfair and “vindictive”
toward the businesses
where he had disclosed a potential
conflict.
Panetta and Serino have
questioned how he could be
objective in voting with his
potential conflicts of interest.
There is also the matter of
the town’s zoning bylaw that
prohibits the locating of two
recreational marijuana retail
establishments within 1,000
feet of each other. Cogliano
has openly supported the application
of Bostica LLC, with
a proposed site at 44 Broadway,
the site of the former Donatello
Ristorante and Oye’s
Restaurant. It is situated close
to Uma Flowers’ site.
Attorney Valerio Romano,
who represents Uma Flowers,
noted in a letter to the board
that “it is a reasonable inference
that despite the MERC’s
independent assessment,
the chair believes that Bostica’s
S-2 application should be
awarded and Uma’s should be
denied.”
With only four of five selectmen
voting, it appears
possible that neither Uma
Flowers nor Bostica can obtain
enough votes for an S-2
permit.
Both Selectmen Panetta
and Serino said they believe
comments Cogliano recently
made about Uma Flowers
could cost the town financially.
“Quite frankly, I think we’re
going to end up in a court
battle here,” Serino said, referring
to the detailed letter
from Attorney Romano,
which challenged several criticisms
Cogliano made about
Uma Flowers.
Here is a summary of the
MERC report’s ranking of the
seven companies vying for
the three S-2 permits. The review
committee used a point
system in recommending
the two establishments that
members believe were best
suited for doing business in
Saugus.
· Uma Flowers, LLC with
a proposed location at 24
Broadway (Route 1 North)
– the site of a former house
that was torn down – was the
unanimous selection of the
seven-member committee,
achieving a perfect score of
140 total points, based on an
“exceptional” rating by each
member in each of the five
categories that were considered.
The site is considered
ideal, as it is the farthest north
on Route 1 near the Lynnfield
line and the farthest away
from the Malden dispensary,
which is already open and operating.
The site abuts conservation
land, is already zoned
appropriately and does not
pose residential or school issues.
·
Sanctuary Medicinals, with
a proposed location of 181
Broadway (Route 1 South),
also received a favorable recommendation
to be issued a
special permit for zoning by
selectmen to locate at the site
of the former 99 Restaurant.
The business received a total
of 118 points out of a possible
140. “The Respondent’s
proposed location is advantageous,
and its extensive cannabis
experience and current
vertical integration business
model are significant benefits,”
the committee concluded
in its analysis.
“The Respondent appeared
to be one of the strongest positioned
to open, succeed,
CHALLENGE| SEE PAGE 4
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Page 3
Rep. Wong plans to seek another term at
the statehouse next year
By Mark E. Vogler
S
tate Rep. Donald Wong
said he plans to seek an
eighth two-year term
representing voters of the
Ninth Essex House District.
“As long as I can still get
things done for my community,
I will continue to run,” the Saugus
Republican said in an interview
last Friday (Dec. 1) night as
he stood near the entrance of
Saugus Town Hall, waiting for
the town’s Annual Tree Lighting
Ceremony and Festivities.
“Once I feel as though I can’t
get things done for my district,
I will step down. But right now,
I am able to get things down
for communities and the Commonwealth.
Precincts
1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and
9 in Saugus make up the core of
the district, which also includes
parts of Lynn and Wakefi eld.
Wong has faced no opposition
during the last two (2020
and 2022) elections.
“I’m pretty fortunate in being
able to work and get things
done working with people on
both sides of the aisle,” said
Wong, who is the ranking minority
member of the House
Committee on Rules, the Joint
Committee on Labor and Workforce
Development, the Joint
Committee on Racial Equity,
Civil Rights and Inclusion, the
Joint Committee on Rules and
the Joint Committee on Tourism,
Arts and Cultural Development.
Wong,
who will turn 72 in
January, has been a community
leader for more than two
decades. And since his election
to the Legislature in 2010,
HIS HOLIDAY BEST: State Rep. Donald Wong (D-Saugus)
wore a festive Christmas tie last Friday night as he stood
near the entrance of Saugus Town Hall, waiting for the
town’s Annual Tree Lighting and Festivities to begin.
Wong said he plans to seek reelection to his Ninth Essex
House District seat next year. (Saugus Advocate photo by
Mark E. Vogler)
he’s been a local leader for three
communities.
“Pretty soon, we will be working
on the state budget for the
next fi scal year [which begins
July 1, 2024]. I’m already talking
to offi cials in three communities
I represent to see what they
need,” Wong said.
Before getting elected to the
State House, Wong served as
chairman of the Saugus Board
of Selectmen (2007-2011) and
was a member of the Saugus
Annual Town Meeting (20052007).
He is a third generation
Chinese American. He, along
with state Rep. Tackey Chan
(D-Quincy), were the fi rst Asian
Americans elected to the state
Legislature in 2010.
Wong and his wife Jeannie
have three grown children. He
is a businessman and president
of Kowloon Group, Inc. which
manages the Kowloon Restaurant
– a popular Route 1 restaurant
owned by three generations
of his family at the same
location for seven decades.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 8, 2023
~ The Old Sachem ~
Sachems in the early Seventies Seasons
T
By Bill Stewart
he Lynn Item recently
had two items of
interest; the first was
for listing their all-time football
players of the year: John
Dancewicz (1966), Dan Hearey
(1970), John Nicolo (1975),
Joe Barressi (1987) and Raphael
Zammit (1998). The second
was listing Art Spinney, who
was All-Scholastic in 1944 in
their all-time list.
Hockey was once again a
prime sport in the winter season.
The 1970 Sachems won
the N.E. Conference ChamGerry
D’Ambrosio
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pionship with a record of 11
wins, 1 loss to Beverly, and
ties to St. John’s Prep and Winthrop.
The first line of George
Lasquade, Dan Heaney and
Bob Tilley were outstanding,
as were the defense of Mike
O’Hearn and Bill Babcock, and
Bud Merrifield in net. In 1972
the Sachems’ record was 115-4
and they beat Woburn
in double overtime 3-2. Captains
were Mike Ferreira, John
O’Neil, Rich Murphy and Jeff
Blanchard. Other players included
Mike Whyte, Keven Wall
and Jeff Blanchard.
The 1971 soccer team was
the first ever for the Sachems.
The 1974 squad was the first
SHS soccer team to play in
the league, which they won.
The team included Will Stewart,
Jimmy Scannell and the
Couterier boys, Scott and Dave.
They made the state tourney
for the first time but were beaten
by a team that had played
the game for years, Newton.
The boys’ gymnastic team
of 1971 recorded 9 wins and 2
losses. Captains were Andrew
Johnson and Gerald Desisto.
The 1972 boys’ basketball
team qualified for the state
tourney. Their captain was Bill
MacDonald. Vern Spinosa and
Scott Millea were selected to
the Northeastern Conference
All-Stars. Their record was 14
wins and 6 losses. In the State
Tourney, they beat Lynn English,
59-58, then lost to AnCHALLENGE
| FROM PAGE 2
and provide minimal or mandover
36-55. The 1974 team
had a record of 15 and 3, second
place in the N.E. Conference,
and in the Tech Tourney,
they beat Chelmsford
and lost to Melrose. Rick Lanney
was the star and Mike Spinosa
and Doug Ross contributed
largely.
Girls’ sports were getting attention
in the fall seasons of
the seventies. The Sachems
had a field hockey team in
1973 that made it to second
place in the Northeastern
Conference. Their record was
5 wins, 2 losses and a tie. The
captains were Joan Romejko
and Margaret Crotty. Other
players were Joanne Maheris,
Maureen Sullivan, Maura
Mansfield, Betty Hubner, Beverly
Howard, Audrey Golden,
Felice Napolitano, Denice
Marshall, Sandy Dorgan, Julie
Wright, Nancy Barrett and
Kathy LeGrow.
The girls’ gymnastic team
competed for the first time in
1973 led by seniors Janet and
Jeanne Keohane and Debbie
Smith. The squad in 1974 was
captained by Andrea Pelosi
and Kathy Cargill, who competed
in state competition.
Girls’ basketball had a successful
season in 1971 with a
record of 8 wins and 3 losses.
Captains were Meredith Maxwell
and Debbie LeDrew. Other
players were Lew Anne Wall,
Linda Scaramozzino, Christine
Rossetti, Susan Canfield, June
ageable impact to the surrounding
neighborhood,” it
“The Old Sachem,”
Bill Stewart
(Courtesy photo to The Saugus
Advocate by Joanie Allbee)
Cristiano, Krista deSteuben,
Darlene Barrett, Rose Marston,
Diane Carr, Susan Bishop, Pat
Melchianno and Kathy Koschei.
The 1972 team ran a record of
9 and 1. Margaret Crotty and
Joan Romejko were captains
and Scaramozzino was the
star with 104 points. The team
included Terry Green, Judith
Tremblay, Deborah Kornatowski,
Kathryn Bucold, Penelope
Boucher, Krista de Steuben,
Theresa Colyer, Beverly Stead,
Wendy Waybright and Kathleen
Koschei.
(Editor’s Note: Bill Stewart,
who is better known to Saugus
Advocate readers as “The Old
Sachem,” writes a weekly column
about sports – and sometimes
he opines on current or
historical events or famous
people.)
noted.
The committee concluded
that the other five companies
that responded to an
RFI earlier this year “did not
meet the criteria necessary
to earn a recommendation
from the Review Committee
at this time.”
Committee members included
Town Manager Scott
C. Crabtree, Police Chief Michael
Ricciardelli, Fire Chief
Michael Newbury, Director of
Public Health John R. Fralick
III, Procurement Director Michele
Wendell. Vice Chair of
the Saugus Planning Board
Jeanette Meredith and Building
Commissioner Michael
LaVecchia. The Review Committee
spent more than 65
hours as a group – totaling
more than 455 individual
hours – that entailed reviewing
RFIs, conducting research,
meeting the Respondents,
performing site visits and listening
to presentations. The
CHALLENGE| SEE PAGE 6
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 8, 2023
Page 5
Parson Roby Chapter of NSDAR receives gifted
heirlooms of Bell and Gavel
T
he National Society
Daughters of the American
Revolution (NSDAR)
Regent Gail Cassarino
rang the original bell once
used at the Roby Elementary
School, bringing back some
fond childhood memories. As
she shook the more-than-acentury-old
bell at the Dec. 2
meeting of the Parson Roby
Chapter of the NSDAR, history
rang out sweetly amidst
melodic applause at the MEG
Center.
Gail told us the story about
her neighbor Julia Hurll Aston.
Julia’s mom, Mrs. Margaret
Hurll, was a teacher at the Saugus
Roby Elementary School.
Gail, the 2023 Founders Day
Woman of the Year, recalled
her childhood days when she
had Mrs. Hurll as a third grade
teacher.
“When we went to school,
they would ring the old fashioned
bell to begin school, for
recess and to end school,” she
reminisced.
“Some years later, the electric
bell system was installed
and Mrs. Hurll was given the
original bell. Her daughter
Julia kept it after her mother’s
death. She often thought
about giving it to the Historical
Society, but after our ‘ringing
of the bells’ event, Julia
asked if we would be interested
in that original bell to ring
at future events,” Gail said.
The NSDAR regent was referring
to this past Constitution
Day (Sept. 17) observed
at Saugus Town Hall when
she and others who attended
the ceremony rang bells
to mark the occasion in what
she hopes will be the start of
a town tradition.
After the bell ringing and
reminiscing at the monthly
NSDAR meeting, there was
more history to experience.
Member Janice Jarosz gifted
the Parson Roby Chapter a
gavel carved out of the Parson
Roby tree.
(Editor’s Note: This info is from
an article was submitted by
Joanie Allbee, recording secretary
and photographer for the
Parson Roby Chapter of NSDAR.)
Gail
Cassarino, regent of the Parson Roby
Chapter of the NSDAR, rang the antique
Roby Elementary School bell that her neighbor
Julia Hurll Aston recently gifted to the
chapter. (Courtesy photo of Joanie Allbee)
Janice Jarosz (left), a member of the Parson
Roby Chapter of the National Society
of the Daughters of the American Revolution
(NSDAR), recently gifted a gavel
carved out of the Saugus Parson Roby
elm tree. Regent Gail Cassarino (right) accepted
it on behalf of the chapter. (Courtesy
photo of Joanie Allbee)
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 8, 2023
A Saugus police offi cer from a legacy lawman’s
family gets lieutenant’s promotion
F
red Forni, a third
generation Saugus
Police officer, was
recently promoted to
lieutenant. Forni is a 27year
veteran of the department,
serving the last
decade as a sergeant.
Law enforcement runs
deep in the Forni family.
Lt. Forni’s father – the
late Frederick Louis Forni
– served for 11 years as a
patrolman. His career as a
cop was cut short in 1969
when he was seriously
wounded in a gun battle
with three armed robbers
that claimed the life of
Saugus Officer Augustine
Belmonte. Patrolman Forni
died in August 2021 –
52 years later – from complications
of his gunshot
wound to the chest.
The new lieutenant
is the grandson of the
late Frederick Forni, who
served as Saugus Police
Chief from 1963 to
1978. He was in charge
when his son suffered
the career-ending bullet
wound.
Saugus Police Detective
Stacey Forni is married to
Lt. Forni. She was hired by
the Police Department in
1995 and worked as a patrolman
until 2013 when
she was assigned to a detective
position. She specializes
in handling domestic
assault and domestic
violence cases. The
Fornis have two children.
Lt. Forni’s brother, Michael,
is a trooper with
the Massachusetts State
Police.
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PROMOTED: Recently appointed Saugus Police Lt. Fred Forni (center) is congratulated by
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to The Saugus Advocate)
CHALLENGE | FROM PAGE 4
committee also created a Respondent
Evaluation Rubric,
which ranked the respondents
on fi ve key categories: their response,
business model, impact,
location and direct experience.
Triple
M Ventures finished
third in the ranking, with 92
points. The committee expressed
major concerns about
the proposed dispensary site
at 1393 Broadway, the current
home of All Tune & Lube
car repair services. The proposed
site is not able to support
enough parking for the
proposed dispensary. There
are concerns about access
off of Route 1. The site also
abuts a residential neighborhood
and is located very close
to the Saugus Middle-High
School.
Conclusion: “The proposed
location does not meet the
Town’s zoning by-laws. In addition,
the Respondent did
not submit what was required
in the RFI related to the planning,
approvals, and time required
to make the proposed
premises at 1393 Broadway a
viable site. However, the Review
Committee found the
Respondent’s retail cannabis
business experience and operations
were professional.”
Olde World Remedies finished
fourth in the ranking
with 35 points. The committee
noted in its report that
the proposed location at 173
Main St. – a current exotic car
dealership – “presents several
challenges.” The location is
within view of the Saugus Middle-High
School. Access to the
site has a Main Street off ramp
curb cut.
Conclusion: “The Review
Committee has serious concerns
about the Respondent’s
proposed Saugus location and
the challenges present during
the Lynn site visit.”
Northeastcann fi nished fi fth
in the ranking with 32 points.
The committee found the proposed
site at 1529 Broadway,
the current Avalon Motel, as
“adequate.” But the committee
was concerned about its
proximity to existing cannabis
retail businesses operating
in Malden and Melrose. Access
to the site is diffi cult, due to
signifi cant traffi c congestion
in the immediate area. In addition,
the current and future
development of Essex Landing
has already added significant
traffi c and roadway layout
challenges, according to
the committee.
Conclusion: “The lack of an
open retail cannabis business
and verifi able cannabis retail
experience are a concern to
the Review Committee. In addition,
the proposed location
presents negative impact concerns
and challenges.”
Bostica, LLC finished sixth
in the ranking with 25 points.
The proposed site at 44 Broadway,
the site of the former Donatello
Ristorante and Oye’s
Restaurant, raised some concerns
for the committee, particularly
its close proximity to
local residences.
Conclusion: “The Respondent
has no retail operational
cannabis business experience.
While the Respondent
has substantial investor financing
in the Lynn grow/cultivation
facility and it seems
promising, the lack of a proven
track record and specifi c details
about how its retail cannabis
business would operate
is a concern to the Review
Committee. The Respondent
lacked adequate and/or no direct
experience in the industry
of Adult Use Marijuana Retail
Establishment dispensaries.”
Broadway Cannabis fi nished
last in the ranking with 0
points. Its proposed location
at 1268 Broadway, the site of
the former Out of Asia restaurant,
presents signifi cant challenges,
according to the committee.
The site is located close
to residences and there are access
issues. There are existing
cannabis businesses already
open and operating nearby in
Malden and Melrose.
Conclusion: “The Respondent’s
proposed location is not
ideal, and the Response was
missing key pieces of information.
The proposal was non-responsive
to parts of the RFI.
The Review Committee has serious
concerns about whether
this Respondent could successfully
complete the buildout
necessary to open a dispensary.
Furthermore, the Respondent
has no experience
operating an Adult Use Marijuana
Retail Establishment.
The Respondent lacked adequate
and/or no direct experience
in the industry of Adult
Use Marijuana Retail Establishment
dispensaries.”
׉	 7cassandra://3HDqAtyF2ahozU6rt_ibYh0RVVliwJzcHbFTkb_hRv8)`̰ er@oh@׉E1THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 8, 2023
Page 7
WIN Waste leads cleanup
Volunteers help company remove more than 10,000 pounds of waste strewn across Crescent marsh
A
work crew of community
volunteers, local
veterans, elected officials
and WIN Waste Innovations
employees collaborated
last Saturday (Dec. 2) on
a cleanup of Crescent March,
which is situated on Massachusetts
Department of Transportation
(MassDOT) land on
Route 107 in Saugus. By the
time the three-hour cleanup
had been completed, the volunteers
had removed more
than 10,000 pounds of waste –
including everyday litter, tires,
mattresses, car seats and rugs.
“As a sustainable environmental
services company, illegal
dumping is something
we hate to see in our communities,”
WIN Waste Innovations
Senior Director of Communications
& Community Mary UrMary
Urban of WIN Waste Innovations loaded tires that
were removed from the marsh area. (Courtesy photo to The
Saugus Advocate)
ban said in a press release issued
by the company.
“We appreciate the opportunity
to work with MassDOT
and area residents to clean up
this area and keep this trash
from entering the marsh and
our waterways. We are constantly
striving to make a positive
impact in the community
and we appreciate all those
who welcome and support
our efforts,” Urban said.
The cleanup was an extension
of WIN Waste Innovations’
Adopt A Highway and
Visibility Project partnerships
with MassDOT. Through those
agreements, WIN Waste contributes
to the upkeep of land
on both sides of Route 107 in
the Rumney Marsh Area of
Critical Environmental Concern.
Veterans
from VFW Post
2346 in Saugus joined the
cleanup, as did Saugus Selectman
Anthony Cogliano, Revere
Councillor-at-Large Anthony
Zambuto and members
of the Belle Isle Rotary.
“I was happy to participate
in The cleanup of Rt. 107 along
with my friend and Revere
City Councilor, Tony Zambuto,”
Cogliano told The Saugus
Advocate.
“The cleanup was part of
WIN Waste Innovations ‘Adopt
a highway’ program in conjunction
with the MassDOT.
Thanks to all the volunteers
that participated. Much appreciated,”
Cogliano said.
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Some of the volunteers who participated in the cleanup (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate)
Judge
orders Saugus man to pay back more than $18,000
he stole while working as a postal clerk in Marblehead
W
hile working as a
sales associate for
the Marblehead
Post Office, Zeon Johnson
stole more than $18,000 in
government funds – including
cash funds paid by customers
for stamps and issuing United
States Postal Service (USPS)
money orders payable to himself.
But the 28-year-old Saugus
man won’t have to do any jail
time after striking a plea agreement
with the U.S. Attorney’s
Office in Boston.
Johnson pleaded guilty on
Sept. 6 to one count of conversion
of government money.
U.S. District Court Judge
Patti B. Saris sentenced Johnson
to time served (one day in
prison) and two years of supervised
release. Johnson was also
ordered to pay $18,206 in restitution
to USPS, according to a
press release issued this week
by the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
“For much of his employment,
Johnson engaged in
a premeditated, recurring
scheme to convert money
from the US Postal Service by
taking money that customers
paid for stamps and money orders,
providing voided money
orders to customers and issuing
fraudulent money orders
to himself,” prosecutors wrote
in a sentencing memo.
Beginning in approximately
August 2018, Johnson worked
as a Sales and Service Distribution
Associate for USPS at the
Marblehead Post Office. As part
of his job, Johnson sold stamps
and processed money order
transactions for USPS customers.
From approximately July
2019 through June 2020, Johnson
converted over $18,000 in
USPS funds for personal use
by stealing cash funds paid by
customers for stamps and issuing
USPS money orders payable
to himself. As part of his
fraudulent scheme, Johnson
sold a $1,000 money order to
a customer, who later learned
that his payment was rejected.
Investigators said Johnson
had sold the customer a money
order that he had cashed
previously.
Investigators said Johnson
had minimized his crimes,
telling them in a 2020 interview
that he only stole $3,000
in fraudulent money orders.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 8, 2023
Fun in the rain
Wet weather doesn’t dampen spirits at Saugus Center; Santa and
petting zoo draw crowd for Tree Lighting event
A
large crowd showed
up early to Saugus Center
last Friday (Dec. 1)
for the town’s Annual Christmas
Tree Lighting and Festivities.
Hundreds gathered on the
lawn outside Saugus Town Hall
to enjoy three hours of community
fun and fellowship that featured
Santa Claus’ arrival, the
popular petting zoo, hot chocolate
cookies, continuous holiday
music, tractor-drawn sleigh
rides, bounce houses, a trackless
train, an opportunity for kids to
get their photos taken with Santa
Claus and the fi rst night’s display
of thousands of colorful holiday
lights in downtown Saugus
to welcome the holiday season.
Guy Moley brightened the holiday
spirits of many Saugus kids
and their parents as he played
the part of Santa Claus for this
year’s event, sitting back in a
chair set up in the library’s front
entrance. (Saugus Advocate photos
by Mark E. Vogler)
Braydon Berdy-Baker, 4, of Saugus, tried to make friends
with Harley, a 1-year-old female bunny that was held by
Jeannie Meredith underneath the tent covering the petting
zoo.
Domenic Bruzzese, 8, a second-grader,
tried to relate
with this big brown chicken
that perched on his arm.
Joline Jurczyk, of Winchendon’s Animal Craze Traveling
Petting Zoo, cuddled Pecan the pig.
Joe Vecchione and his
daughter Amelia, 3 ½, are
shown near Frosty, the giant
infl ated snowman.
Board of Selectmen Chair Debra Panetta (right) admired
the big brown chicken held by Jeannie Meredith.
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Page 9
Youth & Recreation Department staffers Melvin Hernandez,
Kate Grant, Emily Grant and Liza Manuele waited on
the crowd at the hot chocolate table.
Crystal Surette held her 1-year-old baby, Madeline,
during her visit with Santa. She got to see him as an
infant last year.
Brian Cross did the honors
again, as the DJ of the night,
playing holiday music.
Lily Erikson, 8, of Saugus, got to be the first kid to greet
Santa Claus this year.
Brielle Doherty, 3, sat with Santa Claus at last Friday
night’s Tree Lighting Ceremony and Festivities.
Santa waves to the
crowd.
Annual Tree Lighting and Festivities
Children gather near the entrance at Town
Hall to turn on the switch.
The Saugus High School Band performed
in the rain underneath a tarp set up on the
front lawn at Town Hall.
The crowd waits for Santa Claus.
The Christmas lights go on, marking the start of the holiday season
in Saugus.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 8, 2023
Two Saugus Youth Cheer teams, including Saugus and Revere
residents, compete in Nationals
By Tara Vocino
F
or the 2023 season, two
Saugus Youth Cheer
teams flew to Florida
this past Wednesday for a
chance to take home a National
Championship for Saugus.
They performed their routines
at Belmont STEAM Academy
on Sunday night for families
and friends.
“This is the ultimate goal
and dream for any cheerleader,”
Cheer Director/12U Sachems
Coach Charlene Berridge
said. “Win or lose, I am
always so proud of each and
every cheerleader in our program.”
Saugus
Youth Football
& Cheer President Greg
Bluestein said the journey
began this spring when the
cheer program hosted its first
ever spring clinics. The interest
in the program shot up, thanks
to the dedication of Berridge
and Cheer coaches. “Since
August, these 63 girls have
worked with great enthusiasm
and energy,” Bluestein said.
“Our coaches are incredible
and spend countless hours,
unpaid and on their own time,
to help these athletes reach
their goal.”
Agreeing, Summer O’Brien,
a U12 Sachems cheerleader
from Saugus, said it’s really exciting
to make it to Nationals.
“Some of us have been cheering
together since kindergarten,
so it means even more to
go together,” Summer said.
Bluestein said the families
are incredibly supportive and
“the best fan section” at every
competition. And he added
that Berridge is invested
and dedicated to make this
the best cheer program in the
North Shore.
Berridge said she feels so
blessed to get a front row
seat to watch all of the teams
at practices, games and competitions.
“These
cheerleaders have
had such an outpouring of
support from our community,”
Berridge said. “Many have
contributed so much to these
families in order to offset the
cost of this expensive and
last-minute journey. Then,
many came out to see them
perform on Sunday for the
last time in Saugus at a pep
rally along with NCYFC Elite
and Beverly.” Berridge said
she wishes all of the teams the
best of luck.
The U8 cheer team is
coached by Head Coach Jenn
Kohr alongside Assistant
Coaches Jill Lauziere, Stephanie
Bluestein, Stephanie Marquez
and Courtney Whitehurst
and Junior Coach Audrina
Giglio. “The team took first
place in all four of their competitions
this season, which
included first place at the Regional
Championship,” Berridge
said. “This team of young
athletes pushed hard all season
putting together a spectacular
routine.”
After each competition,
they came back stronger than
ever. Berridge said she is so
proud of the coaches and athletes
and all that they accomplished
this season. “They may
be young but they are fierce,”
Berridge said.
The U12 Cheer Team is led by
Head Coach Charlene Berridge
alongside Assistant Coaches
Allison DiPietro, Casey Alexandre,
Jennifer Westerfield
and Brooke Brennan and Junior
Coaches Camryn Berridge,
Kateri Byrd and Katie Barletta.
“This team took first place at
three out of their four competitions
and took third place at
the Regional Championship,”
Berridge said. “Many of us have
been together for many cheer
seasons.”
This team of 33 athletes is
made up of 22 returning cheerleaders
and 11 new. This team
of athletes seemed to really
complement one another.
They remained determined
and focused on preparing for
each competition, according
to Berridge.
U12 Sachems cheerleader
Hannah Strout said this is her
first season as a cheerleader,
and she never expected
to make so many friends and
have such great memories.
“I’m so excited to have earned
our place at Nationals,” Hannah
said. “Hopefully, we come
home with a trophy.”
The NCYFC Elite team is
coached by Carrie Stanley
(NCYFC Cheer Director)
alongside Heather Mason
(Beverly), Stacy Vercellini
(Melrose), Brooke Brennan
(Saugus) and Kelliegh Moses
(Charlestown).
“This is NCYFC Elite’s first
cheer season, which included
cheerleaders from Saugus,
Peabody, Revere, Melrose
and Beverly,” Berridge
said. “Two of our own Saugus
cheerleaders, Aryanna
DiPietro and Holly Berridge,
both tried out and made the
Elite team.”
This team has showcased
this season at three competitions
and is now heading to
Nationals.
NCYFC Director Carrie Stanley
said the NCYFC is excited
to announce its first ever Elite
Cheer team – “16 girls from
five towns in our organization
will come together and make
history, as they represent for
the first time the NCYFC at AYC
Nationals,” Stanley said.
Stanley said of the Beverly
Panthers that they’re mini but
mighty; these six athletes ages
eight to 10 from Beverly will
compete in Florida this weekend
for a chance at the National
Title.
“It’s been a team effort,
and we have beaten some
amazing towns to represent
New England in Nationals,”
Bluestein said. “At the end of
the day, these amazing young
athletes are the ones on the
mat doing these incredible
stunts and executing their
routines.”
(Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
12U Sachems Flyers, shown from left to right: Summer
O’Brien, Erica Mpwagi, Mia Powers, Holly Berridge, Liliana
Fronduto and Brayleigh Caruso.
Northeast Elite in action: Coach Stacy Vercellini and Isabella
Marin basing, Holly Berridge flying, Olivia Natale
backspotting, Jaylena Funez and Addison Cioffi basing
and Lily Burby backspotting.
The 8U Sachems displayed their regional trophy.
Northeast Elite, shown from left to right: Front row: Holly
Berridge, Charlotte Harrity and Daesha Mercier; middle
row: Olivia Natale, Aryanna DiPietro, Addison Cioffi, Avery
Mason, Katherine Aborn and Coach Stacy Vercellini; back
row: Cheer Director Carrie Stanley, Head Coach Heather
Mason, Lauren Carson, Gianna Vercellini, Lily Burby, Isabella
Marin, Sophia Keane and Coach Kelliegh Moses.
׉	 7cassandra://cqy8wrvqSslFtgcxSJqJY5b1a5G69MhYAyfwQDP7IxI- `̰ er@oh@׉ETHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 8, 2023
Page 11
8U Sachems, shown from left to right: Front row: Charlotte
Applegate, Lillian Lopresti, Aaliyah Velasquez, Hadley
Nichols, Avaleigh Kohr, Evelyn Powers and Giabella Lorenzo;
second row: Caroline Gianatassio, Audrey Gregorio,
Grace Whitehurst, Tatum Hoy, Francesca Lincoln, Isabella
Bluestein, Grace Lester and Julianna Damico; third row:
Elena Melon, Karen Boyd, Evelyn Lauziere, Melissa Santos,
Mila McDonough, Alessandra Mactaggart, Brynn Clifford
and Olivia Zawadzki; fourth row: Dakota Dost, Anaya
Boyd, Madison Giglio and Josephine Vitiello; back row:
coaches Stephanie Bluestein, Courtney Whitehurst, Audrina
Giglio, Jenn Kohr, Jill Lauziere and Stephanie Marquez.
Missing from photo: Faith Harrington and Stella Bac.
12U Sachems, shown from left to right: First row: Liliana Fronduto, Brayleigh Caruso,
Bianca Catanzariti, Summer O’Brien, Reese Bruno, Aubrey McKay, Aris Emmanuel and
Anya Scandone; middle row: Holly Berridge, Ellie Miranda, Amelia Westerfield, Anna Ly,
Hannah Strout, Samantha Williams, Adriana Amoroso, Frankie Bashaw, Sarah Mendes
and Isabella Pagliarulo; back row: Kallyanne Kim, Aryanna DiPietro, Erica Mpwagi, Keira
Mannetta, Alana MacTaggart, Julianna Cascio, Kaylee Durand, Mia Powers, Sky Gerardi,
Giuliana Frost and Averie Ancrum. Coaches, shown from left to right: Allison DiPietro,
Jennifer Westerfield, Camryn Berridge and Charlene Berridge. Missing from photo:
Coach Casey Alexandre, Sophia Alexandre, Sophia Machado and Viviana Barrera.
School Committee Member-Elect Stephanie Mastrocola (far left) congratulated the two
Saugus teams at Belmont STEAM Academy on Sunday night.
The 8U Sachems in action: Flyers, shown from left: Hadley
Nichols, Avaleigh Kohr, Charlotte Applegate, Giabella
Lorenzo and Amelia Lewis made a pyramid, and their
leg is in a hitch.
The Northeast Elite
in action: Daesha
Mercier flying, Olivia
Natale front
spotting, Avery Mason
and Katherine
Aborn basing, Lily
Burby backstopping
and Gianna
Vercellini doing
motions in front.
Parents cheered on the cheerleaders
during their performance.
Teams in members in red, white and blue: NCYFC and Northeast Elite (athletes from Saugus, Revere, Peabody, Beverly & Melrose), pictured from
left to right: First row: Avery Mason, Daesha Mercier, Charlotte Harrity and Katherine Aborn; second row: Olivia Natale, Sophia Keane, Addison Cioffi,
Isabella Marin, Jayelna Funez and Lily Burby; third row: Gianna Vercellini and Lauren Carson; back row: NCYFC Cheer Director Carrie Stanley,
Northeast Elite Head Coach Heather Mason, Beverly Asst. Coach Angel Martin and Beverly Head Coach Erin Deschenes. Beverly athletes (black/orange
uniforms), shown from left to right: Sage Blanchard, Pyper Jayne Liacos, Karissa Mezakowski, Daphne Reilly, Gisselyz Suazo and Alisha Rodriguez.
Saugus athletes (red uniforms), shown from left to right: Front row: Grace Whitehurst, Charlotte Applegate, Madison Giglio, Lillian Lopresti,
Audrey Gregorio, Melissa Santos, Evelyn Powers, Giabella Lorenzo, Grace Lester, Amelia Lewis, Elena Melon, Olivia Zawaszki and Alessandra
MacTaggart; second row: Caroline Gianatassio, Josephine Vitiello, Karen Boyd, Julianna Damico, Brynn Clifford, Tatum Hoy, Mila McDonough,
Evelyn Lauziere, Aaliyah Velasquez, Avaleigh Kohr, Hadley Nichols, Francesca Lincoln and Isabella Bluestein; third row: Dakota Dost. Saugus athletes
(black uniforms), shown from left to right: Front row: Mia Powers; second row: Ellie Miranda; third row: Alana MacTaggart, Kaylee Durand,
Summer O’Brien, Bianca Catanzariti, Brayleigh Caruso, Holly Berridge, Hannah Strout, Averie Ancrum, Amelia Westerfield, Frankie Bashaw, Aryanna
DiPietro, Isabella Pagliarulo, Aris Emmanuel and Kiera Manetta; fourth row: Erica Mpwagi, Selina Jiang, Liliana Fronduto, Anna Ly, Samantha
Williams, Reese Bruno, Sarah Mendes, Julianna Cascio, Guilianna Frost, Adriana Amoroso, Sky Gerardi, Aubrey McKay, Kallyanne Kim and Anya
Kim; fifth row: Coaches Charlene Berridge, Camryn Berridge, Stephanie Bluestein, Stephanie Marquez, Jennifer Westerfield and Allison DiPietro.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 8, 2023
Tree Lighting drew good crowd on a bad night
Spirits not dampened as raindrops kept falling on their heads; Santa and the petting zoo were the big draw
By Mark E. Vogler
S
ome town officials overseeing
the preparations
for last Friday night’s annual
Tree Lighting and Festivities
worried that the rainy
weather might keep many
Saugus residents at home.
But Jen Erikson disagreed
any suggestion that the rainy
weather spoiled the night for
Saugus residents who converged
on Saugus Center. “I
think the rain added something
to it,” said Erikson, who
waited in the rain outside the
entrance to the Saugus Public
Library as her eight-year-old
daughter spent some time
with Santa Claus.
“There’s a lot of people
here. This is a good crowd.
The weather doesn’t matter,”
she said.
That was clear from the
large number of parents
pushing baby carriages covered
with plastic to keep their
tots dry.
Crystal Surette, a 2003 Saugus
High School graduate,
said the weather wasn’t bad
enough to keep her one-yearold
daughter Madeline away
from seeing Santa. “This is her
second time and she’s happy
to be here,” Surette said.
“She came as an infant last
year. And this has been a family
tradition for 10 years now,”
she said.
The weather didn’t keep Joe
Vecchione from enjoying the
night with his three-year-old
daughter Amelia. “I did it as a
kid for many years; now I’m
doing it as a dad,” Vecchione
said as he held his daughter
as she admired the giant inflatable
snowman.
“I love seeing her face. She
looks forward to seeing all of
these lights. It’s a kickoff to
Christmas. And like most kids,
she’s obsessed with Christmas,”
he said.
A parking lot tragedy
DA says father who died of knife wounds may have accidentally
stabbed himself outside Kowloon restaurant
I
nitially, police thought Patrick
Kenney, Jr. was a stabbing
victim of a potential
crime when he was found
in the parking lot of Kowloon
Restaurant last Saturday (Dec.
2) night, bleeding from an apparent
knife wound. There
were concerns about a suspicious
death because of a
Thanksgiving Eve fight that
forced the owners to close the
restaurant bar early. Four people
have been charged in connection
with that incident. But,
as investigators viewed the
scene, there were no apparent
signs of foul play.
Kenney, 42, a Milton father
Event Date: 120523
Event: Saugus vs Revere
Location: Saugus High
School/Middle School
Photographer: Emily Harney
Score: Scrimmage
of young twins, was rushed to
Massachusetts General Hospital,
where he was pronounced
dead a short time later.
“This incident appears to be
accidental, and no additional
parties are believed to be involved,”
said a press release issued
this week by Essex County
District Attorney Paul F. Tucker’s
Office. “It remains an active
and ongoing investigation by
the Essex County District Attorney’s
Office State Police Detective
Unit and detectives from
the Saugus Police Department.”
Tucker’s office gave no further
explanation of Kenney’s
suspected accident, which
occurred sometime before 9
p.m. last Saturday. Meanwhile,
there have been media reports
that said Kenney accidentally
stabbed himself with a knife
fastened to a lanyard around
his neck.
“The DA has nothing new at
this time to add and we cannot
confirm the cause of death
as it is still under investigation
pending the OCME reports,” the
DA’s Chief of Staff, Sharyn Lubas,
said yesterday. Lubas was
referring to the Office of the
Chief Medical Examiner, which
is reviewing evidence in the
case before making an official
ruling on the cause of death.
Underneath a tarp that covered
the petting zoo, fouryear-old
Braydon Berdy-Baker
was preoccupied with Harley
– the one-year-old girl rabbit
– one of 17 animals that Animal
Craze of Winchendon,
Mass., brought to Saugus.
The boy’s grandmother, Alice
Berdy, said the weather
was much better last year. But
the rain didn’t matter to Braydon
or his family. “We know
the petting zoo is his favorite,”
said Berdy, a Saugus resident
who moved here four years
ago from New Jersey.
The weather did present
a special challenge to Brian
Cross, the DJ for the event.
He had to leave some of his
audio equipment at home so
it wouldn’t get damaged by
the rain. He loaded about 100
Christmas and holiday songs
into his cell phone and had
it hooked up to the speakers
set up at the top of the Town
Hall steps. “The favorite song
is probably ‘Santa Claus is
Coming to Town,’” said Cross,
a 2013 Saugus High graduate.
But last night was just a warmup
for Cross, who is looking
forward to working as DJ for
the town’s Christmas Eve parade,
something he’s been doing
since 2014.
THIS WEEK ON SAUGUS TV
Sunday, Dec. 10 from 9–11 p.m. on Channel 8 –
“Sunday Night Stooges” (The Three Stooges).
Monday, Dec. 11 all day on Channel 8 – “Movie
Monday” (classic movies).
Tuesday, Dec. 12 at 8:30 p.m. on Channel 22 – Boys
Basketball vs. Lynnfield from Dec. 10.
Wednesday, Dec. 13 at 4:30 p.m. on Channel 22 –
Color Day 2023.
Thursday, Dec. 14 at 1 p.m. on Channel 22 – Girls
Basketball vs Georgetown from Dec. 7.
Friday, Dec. 15 at 8:30 p.m. on Channel 9 – Library
Board of Trustees from Dec. 14.
Saturday, Dec. 16 at 1:30 p.m. on Channel 22 – “Our
Infinite Universe: Is there other life?” documentary.
Saugus TV can be seen on Comcast Channels 8
(Public), 9 (Government) & 22 (Educational).
***programming may be subject to change without notice***
For complete schedules, please visit www.saugustv.org
Revere vs Saugus Basketball
Nathan Soroko goes up for a
basket for the Sachem’s.
Saugus boys’ basketball coach Joseph Bertrand chats with his
team before the took on Revere in the last scrimmage before
the season opener.
Danny Shea with the ball for the Sachem’s.
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Page 13
The Sounds of Saugus
By Mark E. Vogler
Good morning, Saugus!
The management of Chestnut
Woods Rehabilitation &
Healthcare Center in Saugus
has a unique way of getting involved
in the Christmas spirit of
giving. In a recent press release,
officials announced a program
they’re calling “Operation Santa
Paws.” It’s essentially a pet supplies
drive they are running to
help needy pets at a local animal
shelter.
A flier that lists “acceptable
supplies for donations” asks
members of the community to
“Help us give back this holiday
season as we collect pet supplies
to donate.”
“Through Dec. 22, the skilled
nursing facility at 73 Chestnut
St. welcomes donated
items such as blankets and
towels, dog and cat beds, unopened
pet food/treats, pet
toys, grooming products, collars
and leashes, and food/water
bowls,” the press release noted.
“Therapy animals play a vital
role in long-term care residents’
lives, particularly those living
with dementia and Alzheimer’s.
Benefits of animal therapy
for seniors include emotional
uplift, increased self-esteem,
improved social skills, and reduced
risk of depression and
anxiety.”
If you have friends and loved
ones at this hometown nursing
home who benefit from
animal-assisted therapy visits
– or if you just genuinely
support this noble cause, you
might want to check it out. For
more information, visit ChestnutWoodsRehab.com.
Happy
Hanukkah
A year ago, an anti-Semitic
banner displayed on a Route
1 overpass declared “JEWS DID
9/11,” prompting a public outcry.
It motivated then-Board of
Selectmen Chair Anthony Cogliano
to call for a public Menorah
Lighting Ceremony on
the front lawn of Saugus Town
Hall. Cogliano said he hoped it
would become an annual holiday
tradition in Saugus, which
hadn’t been done in years.
Looks like the tradition has
continued, at least for another
year. Yesterday (Thursday, Dec.
7) was the first day of Hanukkah,
which will end next Friday
(Dec. 15). At press time yesterday,
town officials, members of
the Jewish faith and supportive
town residents were preparing
for the second annual Menorah
Lighting Ceremony on the lawn
in front of Saugus Town Hall.
Congregation Ahavas Shalom’s
William and Maureen Appel
were expected to lead the
community in lighting the Menorah,
which in Judaism symbolizes
the rededication of the
Second Temple in Jerusalem in
the second century BCE when
the Jewish people successfully
rebelled against the Seleucid
Empire. The lighting of the
Menorah serves as a symbol
of hope and resilience that reflects
the triumph of light over
darkness.
In the spirit of the holiday
season, we will share with you
some upcoming holiday events
that residents can enjoy this
weekend.
Breakfast with Santa
The Saugus Knights of Columbus
and the Saugus Catholic
Women’s Guild are sponsoring
a “Breakfast with Santa,”
which will be held tomorrow
(Saturday, Dec. 9) from
9:30 a.m. to noon at the Blessed
Sacrament Hall (14 Summer
St., Saugus). Santa will arrive
at 10:30 a.m. The morning will
consist of crafts, raffles, baked
items, shopping and family fun.
Among the marvelous raffles
available to win are two Christmas
trees with gift certificates,
gift cards or lottery tickets.
Living Nativity Scene
tomorrow
The New Hope Assembly
will present a “Living Nativity
Scene” tomorrow (Saturday,
Dec. 9) from 2 to 5 p.m. at 9 Assembly
Dr. in Saugus. This is a
family-friendly event. Visitors to
the event will get to experience
live animals, complimentary
refreshments and festive music.
All are welcome and everything
is free! New Hope desires
those who come to be able to
take a break from the busyness
of the holiday season; to come
breathe and share in the joy of
Christmas. Church leaders invite
Saugus residents to visit
the Living Nativity.
Santa visits Breakheart on
Sunday
If you didn’t have the chance
to take your kids to see Santa
Claus or get their picture
taken with old Saint Nick at
last Friday’s annual Tree Lighting
and Festivities, you still
have another opportunity.
Plan on dropping by the Christopher
P. Dunne Visitor Center
at Breakheart Reservation at
177 Forest St. in Saugus. Santa
Claus will be visiting Breakheart
between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. on
Sunday, Dec. 10.
A flier distributed by the
Friends of Breakheart Reservation
offers this invitation to the
community: “Come by to meet
FIRST SNOW OF THE SEASON: “Wallace the Pumpkin” at the Saugus Iron Works National Historic
Site received a light dusting of snow early Wednesday (Dec. 6) morning. Laura Eisener
captured a photo of the first snowfall of the season that the town had seen before it melted
away. (Courtesy photo of Laura Eisner)
Santa and take a picture with
your phone or camera. Spend a
few minutes by the roaring fire
enjoying the season and majesty
of Breakheart. Candy canes
from Santa and light refreshments
will be served.”
The state Department of Conservation
& Recreation (DCR),
the Friends of Breakheart Reservation
and Peter A. Rossetti
Insurance are sponsoring the
event. For more information,
please call 781-233-1855 or
781-233-0834.
Holiday event
announcements welcomed
Does your organization,
church or business have plans
for a holiday or holy event that
they would like to publicize this
month? Feel free to email an announcement
or press release
to mvoge@comcast.net, headlined
“Holiday Happenings and
Blessings.”
Food Pantry notes
The Saugus United Parish
Food Pantry is open today (Friday,
Dec. 8) from 9:30-11 a.m.
Legion Breakfast today
There’s a good breakfast deal
for Saugus veterans and other
folks who enjoy a hearty
breakfast on Friday mornings.
The American Legion Post 210
at 44 Taylor St. in Saugus offers
Friday morning breakfasts
for the 2023-24 season. Doors
open at 7:30 a.m., with breakfast
served from 8-9:00 a.m. for
an $8 donation. Veterans who
cannot afford the donation may
be served free.
Special “Shout Outs”
We received several this week:
Precinct 5 Town Meeting
Member Ron Wallace: “I would
like to shout out to Fuddruckers
which is closing on December
23rd after 35 years in Saugus.
So many fundraisers and
car shows, too many to count.
A place that will be missed by
so many!
“Also shout out to Guy Moley
and his ‘Mom’s Cancer Fighting
Angels’ for putting on a rocking
party last Saturday night!”
Precinct 6 Town Meeting
Member Jeanie Bartolo offered
two “Shout Outs: “The
Saugus Veterans Council Commander,
Steve Castinetti, and
all us Council members want
to send out a huge ‘Shout Out’
and thank you to Saugus Cable
TV’s John Prudent for the
video he created honoring our
Veterans for Veterans Day. A lot
of hard work went into making
this video and was watched
many times over by the Veterans
and Saugus residents to
rave reviews.
“This second ‘Shout Out’ goes
to the Town’s DPW Department
for the great job they did putting
up this year’s Christmas
lights. They absolutely outdid
themselves, Saugus Center
looks like a winter wonderland!
Thank you for all your hard
work not just at Christmas but
all year long.”
Want to “Shout Out” a
fellow Saugonian?
This is an opportunity for our
paper’s readers to single out –
in a brief mention – remarkable
acts or achievements by Saugus
residents or an act of kindness
or a nice gesture. Just send
an email (mvoge@comcast.net)
with a mention in the subject
line of “An Extra Shout Out.” No
more than a paragraph; anything
longer might lend itself
to a story and/or a photo.
Compost/Recycling DropOff
Site closes tomorrow
The Town of Saugus Compost/Recycling
Drop-Off Site
will be closed after tomorrow
(Saturday, Dec. 9, 2023) and
will reopen for recycling on the
third Saturday of January, February
and March 2024 weather
permitting. Please note the following
dates that the site will
be open during the period from
8 a.m. to 2 p.m.:
Saturday January 20, 2024
Saturday February 17, 2024
Saturday March 16, 2024
Please contact Scott Brazis,
Director of Solid Waste/Recycling,
with any questions at 781231-4036.
Who
is “Walter the
Pumpkin?”
Laura Eisner, author of “Saugus
Gardens,” which runs weekly
in The Saugus Advocate, was
very determined to get this
photo. “I couldn’t let the first
snow of the season go by without
a picture! Here is ‘snow on
Wallace the Pumpkin’ at Saugus
Ironworks, taken this morning
before the light dusting we
got melted away,” she wrote me
in an email Wednesday (Dec.6).
Why do they call him “Wallace
the Pumpkin,” I asked Laura.
“The park rangers named the
pumpkin Wallace after Wallace
Nutting, an important figure in
the Saugus Ironworks preservation
story,” Laura wrote back.
“To make a long story short,
Nutting was a famous producer
of nostalgic prints, wrote several
books on historic sites in
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 16
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 8, 2023
Saugus athletics director hopes fall’s sports triumphs
are launchpad for winter success
By Dom Nicastro
T
he 2023 fall athletic
season at Saugus High
School was filled with
progress. The girls’ soccer team
made the Round of 16 in the
Division 3 tournament, falling
to the No. 1 seed. The football
team won five games after
winning one in the last two
seasons. The volleyball team
made the postseason for the
first time.
Terri Pillsbury, Saugus’s athletics
director, reflected on
these accomplishments and
shared some insights into the
upcoming winter sports season
in an interview with the
Advocate this week. With fall
sports concluding on a high
note, Pillsbury expressed both
pride in the accomplishments
and optimism for the challenges
of the winter season. She has
been super impressed with the
tenacity of Saugus’s teams thus
far after one season for this
school year and the community’s
collective spirit behind
its teams.
Fall season recap
Girls’ soccer: The team exhibited
remarkable tenacity
by holding a 0-0 score against
North Reading in the opening
round of the tournament.
The teams battled to a scoreless
draw after two halves and
two overtimes before Saugus
came on top in penalty kicks. It
next faced the No. 1 seed, Medfield,
and competed before falling,
1-0.
Pillsbury praised the team’s
emotional resilience. “It’s very
easy for a team to have a little
bit of an emotional letdown after
that North Reading game,”
she said, “but our girls showed
up; they played so well.”
Volleyball: Saugus’s volleyball
team, under the direction of
alumna and first-year coach Mikayla
Niles, reached the tournament
for the first time in its history,
a significant achievement.
The bus carrying the Sachems
to their tournament game may
have stalled – yes, right on the
Mass. Pike – but the team certainly
moved forward this season.
It battled Chicopee in the
postseason before falling, 3-2,
ending its campaign with 11
wins.
Football: There is a new sense
of hope within the football program,
with Pillsbury attributing
the success to the dedication
of the players. “Kudos to
this year’s senior class,” she said.
“Those guys went out and ...
they really did work hard, and
they should absolutely be commended
for it.”
In football, the focus is on
rebuilding the team and recruiting
new talent. Pillsbury is
hopeful, despite the challenges:
“We had a number of kids
who either hadn’t ever played
football before... or hadn’t been
playing here in Saugus, and
they were guys that went out
and really worked hard to get
in and get going,” she said.
Winter season outlook
With games starting up this
weekend, Pillsbury shared
some thoughts on the winter.
The girls’ basketball team will
be featuring a new coach – program
alum and former assistant
Joe Lowe. He takes over
for Mark Schruender, who steps
down to focus on his family after
10 seasons as varsity coach.
Reflecting on the coaching
transition, Pillsbury highlighted
the legacy left by the retiring
coach, noting the consistent
success under his tenure:
six straight tourney appearances
and around 13-14 wins per
season in that span. “That’s a
testament to Mark and his way
of doing things,” Pillsbury said.
Terri Pillsbury
SHS Athletics Director
“He puts forward a consistent
product, and a team that works
hard and does the right thing.”
Saugus also has three coop
programs for the winter:
boys’ hockey is with host Peabody
for the second straight
year; about 17 Saugus wrestlers
will host about the same
number of Peabody athletes;
and Saugus athletes will compete
for host Northeast Metro
Tech swim. The hockey team, a
program that won three state
titles in a short span about 25
years ago, aims to reinstate
its own program eventually. It
has about nine Saugus hockey
players it sends to Peabody
this winter.
Pillsbury is also excited about
the prospects of the basketball
program led by two Saugus alums:
Joe Bertrand for the boys
and Lowe for the girls. Each
program last season won the
Northeastern Conference Lynch
Division.
The athletics director also
noted the resurgence of the
track programs, with about 60
athletes combined for the boys’
and girls’ squads. That’s up nearly
100% from last winter.
The discussion with Pillsbury
underscored the resilience of
Saugus High School’s athletic
programs, cooperative program
or not. Pillsbury’s reflections,
brimming with pride and
an unwavering commitment
to her teams, promise a winter
season full of potential. “We’ve
got a small but mighty list of Sachems
for Saugus High School
athletics for the winter,” Pillsbury
said. “It’s such a thin season
for us. We don’t host teams
like hockey, but eventually we’d
prefer to host it. I would absolutely
welcome that. I just need
the numbers in order to be able
to support it.”
Farewell to a fixture: Saugus High’s Schruender ends tenure with lasting legacy
By Dom Nicastro
time in decades. The team won
I
n a candid conversation
reflecting on a decade-long
coaching journey,
Mark Schruender shared
a wealth of insights, tying together
the threads of personal
growth, team development
and the bittersweet emotions
accompanying his departure
from Saugus High School’s
girls’ basketball program. After
10 seasons at the Sachems’
varsity post, Schruender called
it quits this season. The Saugus
Middle School teacher and
North Andover resident has
a seven-month-old daughter,
Addy, and the prospects
of putting in 6 a.m. to 10 p.m.
workdays on winter basketball
nights didn’t seem appealing.
Tough to blame him.
Schruender’s teams were a
consistent commodity in the
postseason, making it the last
six seasons. One of his teams,
in 2017, won the Northeastern
Conference title for the first
16 games, matched only by the
2020 team, in the past six seasons.
Schruender’s teams never
won fewer than 12 games
in a season since that 2017
squad put 16 wins in the record
books.
Schruender’s coaching philosophy,
underscored by consistency
and player development,
led to an impressive
track record. His strategic guidance
propelled the team to six
straight tournament appearances,
a testament to the enduring
success achieved under
his watch.
With humble beginnings
marked by seasons with only
a handful of wins, Schruender’s
story is one of transformation.
From three victories in his first
year to commanding a respected
program, he fostered a culture
of resilience and perseverance,
demonstrating the
potential of a well-cultivated
team spirit. “We had some
down years, too, but the process
was really rewarding,” he
reflected, highlighting the
journey from underdogs to
achievers.
The coach did not shy away
from acknowledging the rough
patches, including the challenges
posed by the COVID-19
pandemic. The team’s ability
to maintain momentum and
secure a place in the tournament
for the last six seasons is
a stark reminder of its adaptability
and tenacity in an uncertain
time.
Schruender takes pride in
the holistic development of
his players, celebrating their
success beyond the basketball
court. His players’ transition
to impactful careers and
high-character individuals is
a source of immense satisfaction
for him. This focus on character-building
resonates deeply
with Schruender’s coaching
ethos. “Seeing what they became
... they made an impact
on me,” Schruender said.
His retirement decision was
not taken lightly, with family
considerations at the forefront.
The birth of his daughter
marked a new chapter,
prompting a shift in priorities.
Schruender’s choice underscores
the universal conflict
many face between professional
aspirations and family
commitments, an aspect he
addressed with the statement,
“It’s a lot of time to be away,”
when teaching and coaching a
high school team in a different
town from your family.
The incoming coach, Joe
Lowe, is set to inherit a robust
program, and Schruender’s
confidence in his successor is
palpable. With Lowe’s familiarity
with the team dynamics and
his own Saugus roots, Schruender
anticipates a seamless
transition, confident that the
program’s legacy will continue
to flourish.
Schruender highlighted the
crucial role of community support
in building a strong athletic
program. Schruender comFAREWELL
| SEE PAGE 18
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Page 15
Saugus Gardens in the Fall
Here’s what’s blooming in town this week to make your walks more enjoyable
By Laura Eisener
T
hrough December and
early January, many gardens
in Saugus are lit up
with lights in trees, on structures
and illuminated figurines
and statues in front yards. They
give a charming atmosphere to
the landscape, and it is worth
viewing the same neighborhoods
in daylight and nighttime.
The long nights will be illuminated
for several weeks after
days have begun to grow
longer. The trees in the center
and Cliftondale were lit up last
Friday, and the first candle on
the menorah was lit last night.
While the calendar says it’s
December, there are many
trees and shrubs that still have
some beautiful fall color. A cultivar
of the native common
ninebark (Physocarpus opulifolius
‘Coppertina’), which
has copper tones in its foliage
during the summer months,
has turned a burgundy color,
and many of its leaves are
still on the plant. While wild
ninebarks usually have green
leaves, the varieties most popular
in nurseries have deep red
leaves in the growing season;
for example, ‘Diabolo’ (Physocarpus
opulifolius ‘Diabolo’)
and the more compact ‘Little
Devil’ (Physocarpus opulifolius
‘Little Devil’). This species has
small white flowers in June that
attract bees, and small seeds
later in the summer that provide
some food for birds. Once
the leaves have fallen in winter,
the peeling bark provides a bit
of seasonal interest until new
leaves emerge in spring.
Last Friday afternoon when
the preparations were in full
swing for the tree lighting,
there were penguins and reindeer
on the lawn of Town Hall
and the library, but around
the corner next to the granite
foundation of the old Central
Fire Station it looked more
like spring, since several dandelions
were blooming in the
stored warmth between the
pavement and foundation.
A few are still blooming this
week, even with night temperatures
going below freezing.
Some
birds are able to stay
through the winter if they have
shelter and an ample supply
of food. Depending on their
preferences, birds may compensate
for the lack of summer
fruits and insects by eating
crabapples, holly berries, weed
and flower seeds and other
foods that still may be found
in our woods and gardens. Besides
what is naturally available,
seeds in bird feeders can
help supply their nutritional
needs. Hot pepper coated seed
is not palatable to most squirrels
and mice, but birds don’t
mind so it is a good way to feed
your feathered friends without
attracting rodents. The birds
come at intervals throughout
the day to eat at a few feeders
in my garden. Some prefer the
higher hanging feeders while
others feel more at home on
Deep burgundy fall color lingers
on the leaves of ‘Coppertina’
ninebark in my backyard.
(Photo courtesy of Laura
Eisener)
the ground.
Mockingbirds (Mimus polyglottos)
are one of the few
birds who really enjoy holly
berries, and you are likely to
enjoy their songs all winter if
there are some holly shrubs
nearby, since the fruits remain
edible until spring. A hedge
of holly (Ilex meservae) in the
Saugus Iron Works parking
lot supplies berries through
the winter.
Mockingbirds are known
Tonya Chadwick’s front lawn on Appleton Street is full of winter
wonders. (Photo courtesy of Laura Eisener)
for mimicking songs of nearby
birds and have a large repertoire.
They and some other
members of the Mimidae family
can even copy other sounds
in their environments; for example,
car alarms, squeaking
machinery and even sounds
made by frogs and crickets.
They also have some songs
that have specific purposes,
such as alerting other mockingbirds
to threats. Males sing
more than females, and when
looking for mates they seem
to sing longer and louder
than they do once they have
found one. Mockingbirds can
be aggressive about defending
their nests and often team
up to chase off predators, such
as hawks. The Mimidae family
includes the gray catbird (Dumetella
carolinensis), which
got its name because it often
sounds like it is meowing,
though it can also sound more
like quacking ducks when
frightened.
Editor’s Note: Laura Eisener is
a landscape design consultant
who helps homeowners with
landscape design, plant selection
and placement of trees and
shrubs, as well as perennials. She
is a member of the Saugus Garden
Club and offered to write a
A mockingbird is poised to sing on the holly in the Saugus
Iron Works National Historic Site parking lot. (Photo courtesy
of Laura Eisener)
During the tree lighting, several dandelions bloomed beside
the old fire station on Hamilton Street. (Photo courtesy of Laura
Eisener)
series of articles about “what’s
blooming in town” shortly after
the outbreak of the COVID-19
pandemic. She was inspired after
seeing so many people taking
up walking.
This blue jay is happy with a spicy peanut at my bird feeder.
(Photo courtesy of Laura Eisener)
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 8, 2023
SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 13
New England (Massachusetts
Beautiful was one), and owned
the Appleton-Taylor-Mansfield
house, often called the Ironworks
House, from 1915 until
about 1920, and had a studio in
the old factory next door which
is now a storage warehouse,”
she said. “If you are looking for a
single word, ‘antiquarian’ might
be the best way to describe Wallace
Nutting. There’s quite a bit
on Wikipedia about him. Nutting
prints are still pretty collectible,
and he was certainly
part of the reason the Ironworks
site was chosen for preservation.”
What’s
new at the Saugus
Public Library?
There’s always something in~
Legal Notice ~
Petition for Joint or Identical Pole Locations
Notice is hereby given that the Saugus Board of Selectmen will conduct a public hearing
on the application of National Grid requesting permission to locate poles, wires, and
fixtures, including the necessary sustaining and protecting fixtures, along and across
the following public way:
Lincoln Avenue – National Grid to install 1 JO pole on Lincoln Avenue beginning at a
point approximately 55 feet west of the centerline of the intersection of Endicott St, and
Central St. Installing 1 new Pole.
Wherefore it prays that after due notice and hearing as provided by law, it be granted
a location for and permission to erect and maintain poles to be erected substantially in
accordance with the plan filed herewith marked – Lincoln Avenue, Saugus, MA.
No.# 30868148 November 8, 2023.
Also, for permission to lay and maintain underground laterals, cables, and wires in the
above or intersecting public ways for the, purpose of making connections with such
poles and buildings as each of said petitioners may desire for distributing purposes.
Your petitioner agrees to reserve space for one cross-arm at a suitable point on each
of said poles for the fire, police, telephone, and telegraph signal wires belonging to the
municipality and used by it exclusively for municipal purposes.
This public hearing will be held on December 19, 2023 at 7:10 at the Saugus Town Hall,
298 Central Street, Saugus, MA, second floor auditorium.
Signed: Debra Panetta, Chairman
Janice K. Jarosz, Temp Clerk
December 08, 2023
~ PUBLIC HEARING ~
PETITION FOR JOINT OR IDENTICAL POLE LOCATIONS
Notice is hereby given that the Saugus Board of Selectmen will conduct a public hearing
on the request of Massachusetts Electric Company d/b/a National Grid and Verizon New
England, Inc, for permission to locate poles, wires, and fixtures, including the necessary
sustaining and protecting fixtures, along and across the following public way:
Central St – National Grid to install 1 JO Pole on Central St beginning at a point
approximately 65 feet north of the centerline of the intersection of Lincoln Ave and
Central St. Installing 1 new pole & Anchor.
Wherefore it prays that after due notice and hearing as provided by law, it be granted a
location for and permission to erect and maintain poles and wires, together with such
sustaining and protecting fixtures as it may find necessary, said poles to be erected
substantially in accordance with the plan filed herewith marked – Central St. Saugus,
Massachusetts.
No #30868147 November 2, 2023.
Also, for permission to lay and maintain underground lateral, cables, and wires in the
above or intersecting public ways for the purpose of making connections with such poles
and buildings as each of said petitioners may desire for distributing purposes.
Your petitioner agrees to reserve space for one cross-arm at a suitable point on each
of said poles for the fire, police, telephone, and telegraph signal wires belonging to the
municipality and used by it exclusively for municipal purposes.
This public hearing will be held on December 19, 2023 at 7:20 at the Saugus Town Hall,
298 Central Street, Saugus, MA second floor auditorium.
Signed: Debra Panetta, Chairman
Janice K. Jarosz, Temp Clerk
December 08, 2023
teresting going on. Here’s a few
activities with checking out:
Interested in learning a little
about the Saugus Annual
Town Meeting? In representative
Town Meetings, members
elected by the citizens of their
precinct participate and directly
vote on legislation. Are you a
new Town Meeting Member or
just an interested citizen who
would like to learn more about
Town Meeting? From Robert’s
Rules of Order to how to get
your articles on the ballot, these
sessions will help and inform
you on the what, why and how
of Town Meeting.
One class was recently held.
A second session is planned
for Monday, Dec. 11, from 6:30
p.m. to 7:30 p.m. in the Community
Room of the Saugus
Public Library at 295 Central
St. in Saugus. Intended for new
Town Meeting Members (as
well as any other interested citizens)
and hosted by Precinct
10 Town Meeting Peter Manoogian,
these sessions are free of
charge and all members of the
public are welcome – no registration
required.
Math Tutoring, grades K-12:
Students from the Pioneer
Charter School of Science 2
will offer tutoring in mathematics
for grades K-12. There is no
charge and students from all
schools are welcome. The next
tutoring is scheduled for Monday
(Dec. 11) from 3:45 to 5:45
p.m. in the Community Room
of the Saugus Public Library. Tutoring
sessions are also scheduled
for the same place and
time on Dec. 18 and Dec. 19.
Adult Coloring Group: This is
an opportunity for grownups
to take time to unwind, be creative
and have fun. No experience
necessary. Just show up
on Wednesday (Dec. 13) at 10
a.m. in the Brooks Room on the
second floor of the Saugus Public
Library. Pencils, gel pens and
coloring pages will be waiting
for you.
An Owl for the holidays: The
Saugus Public Library is offering
a special art class for kids
from ages 11 to 18. Learn how
to paint an awesome owl! Keep
the finished painting for yourself
or give it as a holiday gift.
The special class is set for Tuesday,
Dec. 12, from 4:30 to 6 p.m.
in the Brooks Room on the second
floor of the Saugus Public
Library. Space is limited. Please
register ahead. Call 781-2314168
or sign up on the online
Event Calendar – sauguspubliclibrary.org/Events
– for more
information, contact Lisa LeJeune,
the Young Adult/Reference
Librarian.
December Art Exhibit: Local
artist Joanie Allbee, AKA “The
Sketch Artist, who for several
years had her sketches featured
anonymously in The Saugus Advocate,
has more sketches on
display in the Reading Room of
the Saugus Public Library. Each
week The Advocate published
one of these works and invited
readers to guess who the subject
was. This month’s exhibit
in the Reading Room features
sketches done in 2023 and 2023
Sketches of Our Saugonian Luminaries.
About
The Saugus Advocate
We welcome press releases,
news announcements, freelance
articles and courtesy photos
from the community. Our
deadline is noon Wednesday.
If you have a story idea, an article
or photo to submit, please
email me at mvoge@comcast.
net or leave a message at 978683-7773.
Let us become your
hometown newspaper. The
Saugus Advocate is available in
the Saugus Public Library, the
Saugus Senior Center, Saugus
Town Hall, local convenience
stores and restaurants throughout
town.
- LEGAL NOTICE -
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT
Docket No. ES23P3496EA
Estate of: ERIC JOSEPH LIWANAG
Also Known As: ERIC J. LIWANAG
Date of Death: October 14, 2023
INFORMAL PROBATE
PUBLICATION NOTICE
To all persons interested in the above captioned estate, by
Petition of Petitioner Joanna S. Liwanag of Saugus, MA
Joanna S. Liwanag of Saugus, MA has been informally
appointed as the Personal Representative of the estate to
serve without surety on the bond.
The estate is being administered under informal procedure by
the Personal Representative under the Massachusetts Uniform
Probate Code without supervision by the Court. Inventory and
accounts are not required to be filed with the Court, but interested
parties are entitled to notice regarding the administration
from the Personal Representative and can petition the Court in
any matter relating to the estate, including distribution of assets
and expenses of administration. Interested parties are entitled
to petition the Court to institute formal proceedings and to
obtain orders terminating or restricting the powers of Personal
Representatives appointed under informal procedure. A copy of
the Petition and Will, if any, can be obtained from the Petitioner.
December 08, 2023
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Page 17
OBITUARY
Philip Geotis
ESTIMATED TAX PENALTIES
Taxpayers are often surprised
when the IRS assesses penalties
for the underpayment of estimated
tax payments throughout
the year. Fortunately, taxpayers
can take advantage of
the estimated tax payment safe
harbor.
If you meet the IRS safe harbor
guidelines, you will not be
assessed an underpayment of
estimated tax penalty. The IRS
will not assess an underpayment
penalty if you pay at least
90% of the income tax you
owe for the current year ratably
throughout the year, or 100% of
the income tax you owed for the
previous calendar year, also having
been paid ratably throughout
the year, whichever is less.
Furthermore, there is no penalty
assessed if the balance due
on April 15th is less than $1,000.
Keep in mind that if you do not
pay the tax owed on your current
year’s income tax return
in full by April 15th, the IRS will
assess interest and “late payment”
penalties until such time
as the full balance of the tax is
paid. The late payment penalty
is a separate penalty from the
“underpayment of estimated
income tax penalty”. Also note
that if you earn your income
ratably throughout the year as
a self-employed individual, for
example, you cannot lump all
four of your required estimated
income tax payments into the
fourth and fi nal estimated tax
payment, which is due on January
15th of the following year,
and avoid the underpayment
penalty. Estimated tax payments
are due April 15th, June
15th, September 15th and January
15th of each year.
If, however, your adjusted
gross income for the previous
calendar year is over $150,000
for joint fi lers and $75,000 for
single and married fi ling separate
fi lers, then you must pay
the lower of 90% of the total
income tax for the current year
throughout the year, or 110% of
the total income tax you owed
for the previous calendar year.
There are exceptions to the
underpayment of estimated income
tax penalty. You can eliminate
or greatly reduce the penalty
if you did not receive your
income evenly throughout the
three children, Nicholas and
his wife Rebecca, Taylor and
his wife Kiley, and his youngest
son Alec. He is also survived
by his brother Paul
Geotis, nieces Melissa Ciampa,
Jenn Abell, Stacey Geotis,
and nephews Adam and
Kevin Geotis among many
loving friends and extended
family members.
The family of Phil wishes
to extend our sincere thank
you to the doctors and nurses
at Mass General Hospital
for their dedicated and loving
care.
Visitation was held at
year. For example, if you operate
a seasonable business and
the bulk of your income is generated
during the last quarter
of the calendar year, or if you
sold investment property late
in the year and realized a sizable
capital gain. Another example
would be if you withdrew
a lump sum from a retirement
plan late in the year and
you did not have federal and
Mass withholdings taken out at
the time of withdrawal.
IRS Form 2210, Underpayment
of Estimated Tax by Individuals,
Estates and Trusts
should be prepared as part of
your tax return to determine if
you are indeed subject to the
penalty. If you complete Schedule
AI, Part One, on page two of
this form, you will be able to insert
the information necessary
to prove to the IRS when during
the year you earned the income.
In eff ect, you compute your adjusted
gross income for the fi rst
3 months of the year and annualize
it, the fi rst 5 months of the
year and annualize it, the fi rst 8
months of the year and annualize
it and then for the entire
year to see if you meet the annualized
income exception to
the penalty.
You can also avoid the penalty
due to a casualty, disaster
or other unusual circumstance
which would make it unfair to
assess the penalty. You can request
a waver of the penalty
in these situations by checking
off box A of Part II, page one, of
Form 2210, and submit documentation
supporting your reason
for the waiver.
Joseph D. Cataldo is an estate
planning/elder law attorney,
Certifi ed Public Accountant, Certifi ed
Financial Planner, AICPA Personal
Financial Specialist and holds a
masters degree in taxation.
f Saugus. Passed away
peacefully on November
26, 2023, surrounded by
his closest family.
Philip, better known as
O
Phil, was born to Evelyn and
Spiros Geotis on March 28,
1966, in Saugus, MA. He married
his high school sweetheart,
Barbra Geotis, on May
16, 1987. He was a loyal employee
as a truck driver for
EZ Disposal for over 20 years.
His countless “colorful” stories
from the road reflect his
charismatic personality and
love of driving. He loved nature-especially
bird watching,
being outdoors, campfires,
canoeing, and riding
bikes. As any true Bostonian,
he was a passionate (and
profane) sports fan, a huge
movie buff, and was Aerosmith’s
number one fan. You
could always count on Phil to
throw movie quotes into any
conversation, probably while
holding a glass of Pepsi. Phil
was the best at making people
laugh and his own laughter
was incredibly contagious.
He lit up every room
with his sarcastic and animated
personality. Phil’s favorite
pastime was spending
time making memories with
his family. He was especially
proud of his three boys and
loved, more than anything
in the world, talking about
memories of them growing
up.
Philip is preceded in death
by his Mother Evelyn, his father
Spiros and his siblings
Karen Ciampa and George
Geotis. Philip is survived by
his loving wife, Barbra and
the A. J. Spadafora Funeral
Home, Malden on Saturday,
December 2.
In lieu of flowers, donations
can be made to Phil’s
favorite place in his memory
to the Mass Audubon’s
Ipswich River Wildlife Sanctuary
at https://tinyurl.com/
massaudu and direct your
gift to Ipswich River or by
mail at Mass Audubon to Ipswich
River Wildlife Sanctuary,
87 Perkins Row, Topsfield,
MA 01983.
O
f Saugus. Passed away
unexpectedly at her
home in Saugus on December
01. Born in Somerville,
she was the daughter of the
late Walden and Constance
(Merlin) Boudreau. A painter
by trade Susan was a member
of the local union and enjoyed
spending time with family
and friends. She is survived
by her beloved brothers James
and Ricky Boudreau of Saugus.
Relatives and friends are invited
to attend a memorial service
in the Bisbee-Porcella Funeral
Home, 549 Lincoln Ave.,
Saugus, on Saturday, December
9th at noon.
Susan A. (Boudreau)
Tracy
ANNOUNCEMENT
The Saugus Board of Selectmen is accepting
applications for appointments to the Saugus Cable
Television (SCTV) Board of Directors, for the Town
of Saugus. This is a volunteer/ non paid position
for Saugus residents.
Those interested may submit letter of interest /
resume, to the selectmen no later than January 2,
2024.
Saugus Board of Selectmen
Saugus Town Hall
298 Central Street, Suite 4
Saugus, MA 01906
December 08, 2023
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
SPECIAL PERMIT REQUEST
SAUGUS BOARD OF SELECTMEN
PUBLIC HEARING
Notice is hereby given that the Saugus Board of
Selectmen will conduct a Public Hearing on the
application for a Special Permit (S-2) under Chapter
40 A, Section 9, and under Section 12.D of the
Zoning By-Laws, to allow for the operation of a
business with a drive-through window, at 799 and
799R Broadway, Saugus, MA.
Petitioner Raising Cane’s/property owners George
Nikole Family Trust, Rudbeckia Properties, LLC and
Timothy Gann.
This hearing will be held in the Saugus Town Hall
Auditorium, second floor, 298 Central Street,
Saugus, MA, on December 19, 2023 at 7:00 PM.
Debra Panetta, Chairman
Janice K. Jarosz, Temp. Clerk
December 01, 08, 2023
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jPage 18
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 8, 2023
Clean-Outs!
We take and dispose
from cellars, attics,
garages, yards, etc.
Call Robert at:
781-844-0472
FAREWELL | FROM PAGE 14
mended the local youth programs
and community efforts
for their part in the team’s
achievements, illustrating the
symbiotic relationship between
a town’s sporting culture
and its high school triumphs.
While
Schruender is content
with his current role as
Frank Berardino
MA License 31811
a supporter and a parent, he
leaves the door open for a potential
return to coaching. His
passion for the game and the
impact of coaching on his life
is evident, suggesting that his
story in basketball may have
future chapters yet unwritten.
“I really am probably the
biggest fan there is of the
players on the team right
now,” Schruender said. “That’s
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what I like to say anyway, and
I want to be there. If their staff
needs anything, if Joe needs
anything this year, I want to
be there to help him out.”
Ultimately, Schruender saw
his time in Saugus as a vivid
tapestry of high school athletics’
transformative power.
It was about building something
larger than the sum of
its parts – a winning program,
yes, but also a nurturing environment
where young athletes
are groomed for life’s
myriad challenges.
As Schruender steps back
from the coach’s clipboard,
his legacy at Saugus High
School remains intact, in the
lives shaped by a decade
of guidance, on and off the
court.
“And, as far as basketball
goes in the future, who
knows?” Schruender pondered.
“I might miss it more
than I realized this year. And
I could be back sooner rather
than later. But I think right
now I’m very happy to be
where I’m at.”
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Driveways
from $35
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uTHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 8, 2023
Page 19
hat?
1. On Dec. 8, 1933, what
comedian/actor was born
who famously portrayed
“Geraldine”?
2. A “slider” participates in
what winter sport?
3. Boston’s offi cial Christmas
tree comes from what
Canadian province?
4. On Dec. 9, 1998, what
international organization
declared anti-Semitism a type
of racism?
5. In 1892 “The Nutcracker”
ballet premiered in what
country?
6. In what fi lm did Rex
Harrison portray a teacher of
phonetics?
7. Candy canes were shaped
to resemble what?
8. On Dec. 10, 1768, the oldest
continuously revised and
published work (in English)
had part of its fi rst edition
published; what is it called?
9. What fi ctional cat wears a
red bowtie and red and white
10. What had a smokers’
lounge, a lightweight piano
and lavish meals and was
the last rigid airship used for
commercial transport?
11. On Dec. 11, 1913, what
Leonardo da Vinci painting
was recovered after it had
been stolen two years before?
12. What animals have baleen?
13. What former basketball
player was called “Dr. J”?
14. On Dec. 12, 1891, the
fi rst game of basketball was
played in what Massachusetts
city?
15. What Latin phrase means
“my fault”?
16. In the 19th century,
the German tradition of
the Christmas tree was
popularized by what European
couple?
17. On Dec. 13, 1774, who
rode to Portsmouth, N.H., to
warn that the redcoats were
coming?
18. What continent is the
planet’s driest and has Wolf’s
Fang Runway?
19. In space is it dark?
20. On Dec. 14, 1779, what
U.S. president died who had
a whiskey distillery on his
estate?
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial Record, a weekly trade newspaper.
It is reprinted with permission from the publisher, The Warren Group.
BUYER1
Darocha, Gisely
Milch, Kayla M
For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com.
SELLER1
BUYER2
Rodrigues, Gessandro T
Tchen, Michael
Duarte, Wellington
Brawner, Joseph W
SELLER2
Brawner, Raina
ADDRESS
1 Rebels Way
26 Highland Ave
CITY
Saugus
Saugus
DATE
11.22.23
11.15.23
PRICE
440000
575000
ANSWERS
1. “Flip” Wilson
2. Luge
3. Nova Scotia
4. The U.N. General Assembly
5. Russia
6. “My Fair Lady”
7. A shepherd’s staff
8. “Encyclopedia Brittanica”
9. “The Cat in the Hat”
10. The Hindenburg (destroyed by
fire in 1937)
11. The “Mona Lisa”
12. Whales (in the mouth)
13. Julius Erving
14. Springfield
15. Mea culpa
16. Queen Victoria and Prince Albert
(who was German)
17. Paul Revere
18. Antarctica
19. No; it is bright, necessitating
sunglasses.
20. George Washington
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, DECEmbEr 8, 2023
Carpenito Real Estate is now
LYNN $2,799,900
6 newly completed storefront
facades consisting of two condos.
ALL occupied – great income.
SAUGUS $675,000
Expanded cape with fireplace,
hardwood, central air, and a garage,
located in desirable Indian Valley.
Once again, we are collecting
TOYS FOR TOTS
Drop off toys at our office
335 Central Street, Saugus
Thank you!
COMMONMOVES.COM
335 CENTRAL STREET, SAUGUS, MA | (781) 233-7300
SAUGUS $329,900
New 2 bedroom condo with a granite
kitchen, central air, gas heat, new
windows, and off-street parking.
SAUGUS $319,900
Austin Court offers a 2 bedroom
condo with 4 rooms, fresh paint, and
an inground pool.
REVERE $299,900
Affordable 2 bedroom condo offers
galley kitchen, open concept,
inground pool, convenient location.
SAUGUS $250,000
Conveniently located 3 room condo
offers 1 bedroom, updated kitchen
and bath, and new flooring.
©2023 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently owned and operated franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and
the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of Columbia Insurance Company, a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate.
Equal Housing Opportunity.
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- NOTHING TO DO BUT MOVE IN! COMPLETELY
REHABBED 2 FAMILY FEATURING 2 LEVEL OWNERS UNIT
WITH 3 BEDS AND 2 BATHS. 3RD FLOOR MASTER SUITE
WITH BEAUTIFUL CUSTOM TILED SHOWER, SITTING AREA
AND WALK IN CLOSET. BOTH UNITS HAVE CUSTOM BUILT-IN
ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS WITH FIREPLACE AND WIFI TV'S.
NEW KITCHENS WITH QUARTZ COUNTERS AND STAINLESS
STEEL APPLIANCES. NEW SOLID OAK HARDWOOD
FLOORING THROUGHOUT ALL THREE LEVELS. BOTH UNITS
HAVE IN-UNIT WASHER/DRYER HOOK UPS. FRESH PAINT
THROUGHOUT. NEW ROOF, NEW VINYL SIDING, NEW
WINDOWS, NEW EXTERIOR AND INTERIOR DOORS, NEW
MAINTENANCE-FREE DECK OVERLOOKING LARGE PRIVATE
LOT. NEW HEATING SYSTEMS, NEW CENTRAL AC SYSTEMS,
NEW WATER HEATERS, ALL NEW PLUMBING, EACH UNIT HAS
ALL NEW 200 AMP ELECTRICAL, NEW ASPHALT DRIVEWAY.
NEW BATHROOMS WITH CUSTOM TILE BATHS/SHOWERS AND
QUARTZ COUNTERS. SPRAY FOAM INSULATION AND SOUND
INSULATION IN BETWEEN FLOORS, 2 CAR GARAGE WITH NEW
ROOF, NEW SIDING, NEW DOOR AND MOTOR.
SAUGUS $ 999,999 CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
LOOKING FOR EXPERIENCED AGENTS
WHO WANT A NO HASSLE,
NO NONSENSE OFFICE.
WE ARE LOOKING FOR AGENTS WHO WANT TO MAKE A DECENT PAY WITHOUT PAYING
HIGH FEES. ARE YOU A GO GETTER? PERHAPS BI-LINGUAL? CALL US TODAY!
KEITH
781-389-0791
UNDER CONTRACT
MALDEN
COMING SOON
COMING SOON-BRAND NEW CONSTRUCTION
COLONIAL LOCATED ON A
NICE SIDE STREET NOT FAR FROM
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS AND THE CENTER
OF TOWN. 4 BEDS, 3.5 BATH WITH
HARDWOOD THROUGH-OUT. BEAUTIFUL
KITCHEN AND BATHS. EXQUISITE
DETAIL AND QUALITY BUILD. GARAGE
UNDER.
SAUGUS CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
UNDER CONTRACT
SAUGUS
UNDER CONTRACT
SAUGUS
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- REMODELED 4 BED, 2 BATH CAPE
WITH NEW KITCHEN WITH SS APPLIANCES
AND QUARTZ COUNTERS. RE-FINISHED HW
FLOORING, NEW HEAT, NEW 200 AMP
ELECTRIC, ALL NEW PLUMBING, NEW HOT
WATER. NEW AC. NEW BATHS WITH QUARTZ
COUNTERS AND TILED TUB/SHOWERS.
FRESH PAINT THROUGHOUT. PLENTY OF
ROOM IN BASEMENT FOR EXPANSION. 1 CAR
GARAGE. WALKING DISTANCE TO SAUGUS
CENTER, RAIL TRAIL AND THE VETS SCHOOL.
SAUGUS $649,900
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
UNDER CONTRACT
FOR SALE-FOUR FAMILY INVESTMENT
PROPERTY IN DOWNTOWN SQUARE
AREA CLOSE TO PUBLIC
TRANSPORTATION. EACH UNIT IS
RENTED WITH LONG TERM TENANTS
AND EACH UNIT HAS IT’S OWN
SEPARATE ENTRANCE. TWO NEWER
GAS HEATING SYSTEMS, SEPARATE
ELECTRIC METERS, 2 DRIVEWAYS AND
PARKING FOR UP TO 8 CARS. WILL BE
DELIVERED OCCUPIED. PEABODY
$975,500 CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
SPACIOUS 2 BEDROOM IN NEED OF TLC. GREAT FOR HANDYMAN. HEAT AND A/C NOT
WORKING. LARGE ADDITION.2 CAR PARKING. DANVERS $99,900
LAUREN BARTON
781-835-6989
CALL HER
FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS
YOUNG ONE BEDROOM IN GOOD CONDITION IN A DESIRABLE PARK WITH 2 PARKING
SPOTS. SOLD AS IS. SUBJECT TO PROBATE DANVERS $99,900
UPDATED 2 BEDROOM WITH NEWER KITCHEN, BATH, RUBBER ROOF, WINDOWS, SIDING
AND APPLIANCES. FULL SIZE LAUNDRY. DANVERS $99,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
SOLD
PEABODY
LOOKING TO
BUY OR SELL?
MOBILE HOMES
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