׉?4ׁB!בCט U Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://dn8tNEYkVE-PFerH0r8CppPmlbwWWGqaTr7nGwX8vTk `'p׉	 7cassandra://fo0vlgTufPuahy7KOJdSuVwMh4kZpdBjcNHLGBCJXcYͣ5`׉	 7cassandra://X96tZnOvelRhS_AYGwZ4Lt39sXN-JO1v7CzqZPl9Zq05!` j,4Ĳ(Eנj,4Ĳ(E 9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈ׈Ej,3Ĳ(E ׉ECongratulations Class of 2026 Graduates!
Vol. 35, No. 23
-FREEwww.advocatenews.net
Published
Every Friday
617-387-2200
Friday, June 12, 2026
Congratulations MHS Class of 2026
SKIES THE LIMIT: As their final act, the members of the Malden High Class of 2026 performed the traditional “hat toss” signifying their graduation from high school
during their recent commencement ceremony at Macdonald Stadium. See inside for graduation highlights. (Advocate Photos/Henry Huang)
Malden High School graduates 458
with the Class of 2026
The 182nd Commencement held at Macdonald Stadium Sunday
as this year’s seniors ‘Started Here... Making it Everywhere!’
By Steve Freker
T
hey were winners before they
even took their seats on Sunday
by defying a dire weather
forecast. That was far from what
the Class of 2026 has “won” in
their many accomplishments
in the past four years here. All
of that and more was on display
at Macdonald Stadium on
Sunday for the 182nd Malden
High School Commencement
Exercises. Slightly overcast skies
and temperatures in the low 70s
graced the afternoon, with family
and friends packing the stands
as 458 members of this year’s Senior
Class of 2026 were awarded
their diplomas.
Malden High School Principal
Chris Mastrangelo praised the
members of the Class of 2026 in
his remarks, noting the strides
they have made in their four
years at MHS and their overall
excellence in academics, extracurricular
achievements and athletics.
The MHS principal, who is
departing after nine years at the
MHS helm, stressed the “fantastic
relationships” he and his staff
have had with so many members
of the Class of 2026. “The
GRADUATES | SEE PAGE 12
Malden resident awarded
scholarship from MassCPAs
Special to The Advocate
T
he Massachusetts Society of
Certified Public Accountants
(MassCPAs) announced that Malden’s
Jonathan Lin was awarded
the Past Chair Scholarship
through the MassCPAs Educational
Foundation’s 2026 Scholarship
Program. Lin, a student at
UMass Lowell, was one of 50 students
selected to receive a scholarship.
The students were honored
for their awards at MassCPAs’
annual, member-wide netJonathan
Lin
SCHOLARSHIP | SEE PAGE 5
awarded Past Chair Scholarship
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 12, 2026
StonehamBank empowers young entrepreneurs at Malden High School
Special to The Advocate
B
ig ideas, bold pitches and a
real-world twist — Malden
High School students stepped
into the spotlight with their very
own “Shark Tank”-style program,
powered by a dynamic partnership
with StonehamBank! This
exciting collaboration gave students
the chance to turn their
creative ideas into real business
concepts, pitch them like pros
and learn what it takes to succeed
in the world of entrepreneurship.
“StonehamBank’s
Shark Tank
competition is something that
motivates business management
students all year at Malden
High School,” noted MHS
Business Teacher Kelle Griffin.
“This hands-on experience chalCongratulations
Class
of
2026 Graduates!
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lenges and motivates students
to design and pitch a business
model that is desirable to consumers,
feasible to execute, and
financially viable. This unique
partnership with StonehamBank
provides students with a rare opportunity
to transform a mundane
school project into a high
motivation launchpad for Malden’s
next generation of business
leaders.”
Student -entrepreneurs
pitched their products to StonehamBank
team members Chris
Macomber, Shawn Kelley, Jeana
DiBenedetto and Rob Berkovitz,
answering questions and
explaining processes.
“We love having the opportunity
to see students present
their business ideas to us,” noted
Berkovitz. “I know, I truly enPictured
with Malden High School students: Business Development Officer Jeana DeBenedetto (back,
second from left); from right: VP/Commercial Loan Officer Chris Macomber, Asst. VP/Loan Systems
Administrator Rob Berkovitz, VP/Business Development Officer Shawn Kelley and MHS Business
Teacher Kelle Griffin. (Courtesy photo)
joy listening to how enthusiastic
and excited the students are
about their ideas!”
Student Ruth Mekonnen, cofounder
of this year’s winning
partnership — named Flora &
Fabric — noted after the event,
“It was nice to develop a business
about something for which
I was passionate and to project
how it could come to life. When
I got the money, I was inspired to
actually start the business.”
Added her project partner,
student Taya Rubin-Wilson, “It
was a really fun experience to
learn what starting a business
is all about and presenting it to
people.” She also expressed an
increased interest in pursuing
business-focused classes in the
future as a result of her Shark
Tank experience.
This partnership is just one example
of StonehamBank’s ongoing
commitment to financial literacy
and empowering the next
generation. By investing in programs
like this — and through
a similar “Shark Tank”-style collaboration
with Stoneham High
School — the bank is helping
students build confidence, develop
real-world skills and turn
smart ideas into bright futures.
Friends of the Malden Public Library schedule
T
he Friends’ last meeting before
their summer recess was
on June 2, 2026. Their next meeting
will be in September. Please
find the Friends of the Malden
Public Library (MPL) at the June
events listed below and reach
out if you would like to volunteer!
•
Juneteenth pop-up: Friday,
June 19, from 11 a.m.-3 p.m. at
Salemwood Fieldhouse.
• Summer Reading Kick off:
Thursday, June 25, from 1-2 p.m.
at MPL.
• Malden Pride pop-up: Sunday,
June 28, from 12-4 p.m. at
Coytemore Lea Park.
Like us on Facebook advocate
newspaper
Facebook.com/
Advocate.news.ma
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Page 3
Forestdale Park’s Alzheimer’s Trivia
Night raises over $1,000
F
orestdale Park’s recent Alzheimer’s Fundraiser
gathered 50 guests for an evening of trivia,
refreshments, raffles and fun. Honored host Miss
Massachusetts USA 2025, Perianne “Peri” Caron, led
guests — including the winning team “Somerville
Stars” — in raising $1,760 of the community’s ongoing
$5,000 goal. This special event helped Forestdale
Park’s continuous fundraising efforts for
the Alzheimer’s Association, whose mission is to
end the disease through advanced research and
quality care. Forestdale Park participates in the association’s
annual Walk to End Alzheimer’s, which
takes place each fall.
Forestdale Park’s EnrichedLIFE Director, Molly
Spindler, shared, “We are incredibly grateful to everyone
who participated and supported this important
cause, and we look forward to continuing
our fundraising efforts throughout the year.”
Visit ForestdalePark.com to learn about more
special events offered by the community.
Creative Malden launches Malden
Center Public Art Walking Tours
R
esidents and visitors are invited
to experience Malden’s
growing public art scene in a
new and engaging way this June
as Creative Malden presents two
Malden Center Public Art Walking
Tours. The tours will showcase
the murals, painted utility
boxes, community art installations
and other public artworks
that have transformed Malden
Center into an open-air gallery.
Participants will learn about the
artists behind the works, the stories
that inspired them and the
role public art plays in creating
a more vibrant and welcoming
community.
Over the past several years,
Miss Massachusetts 2025 “Peri” Caron and other
event attendees
Creative Malden, in partnership
with local artists, businesses, city
leaders and arts organizations,
has helped bring dozens of public
art projects to life throughout
the city. The walking tours offer
a unique opportunity to explore
many of these pieces while gaining
insight into the creative process
and community collaborations
that made them possible.
“Public art helps tell the story
of Malden,” said organizers.
“These artworks celebrate our
diversity, creativity, and sense
of place while making everyday
spaces more beautiful and
inviting.”
Two tour dates are being offered:
Tuesday, June 16, at 6:00
p.m.; Saturday, June 20, at 10:00
a.m. The tours are open to all
and cost $5 per person. Advance
registration is required through
Eventbrite. For more info and
TOURS | SEE PAGE 21
50
Pictured from left to right: Claire Benoit, Pasquale Micciche, Miss Massachusetts 2025 “Peri” Caron
and Thor Stigsson.
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you $20 a month.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 12, 2026
Mass. House passes new ‘Location Shield Act’
as part of comprehensive data privacy legislation
Massachusetts Consumer Data Privacy Act provides consumers with greater control over their own data
O
n June 4, 2026, the Massachusetts
House of Representatives
unanimously passed
comprehensive legislation establishing
essential consumer
data privacy rights, incorporating
fully legislation filed and
championed by State Representative
Kate Lipper-Garabedian
(D-Melrose) to establish a blan8
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ket ban on the sale of precise,
personal geolocation data. In the
previous legislative session, the
House had unanimously passed
a narrower version of Representative
Lipper-Garabedian’s Location
Shield Act. This session, she
invited State Representative David
Vieria (R-Falmouth) to co-file
the bill, underscoring the bipartisan
nature of data privacy. The
bill passed with the support of
Representatives Steve Ultrino
(D-Malden) and Paul Donato
(D-Medford). The Massachusetts
Consumer Data Privacy Act provides
consumers with greater
control over their own data. The
bill increases accountability for
companies, grants user data privacy
protections to residents of
and those present in Massachusetts
and includes strong privacy
protections for minors.
“This legislation protects the
autonomy, privacy, and security
of people in our Commonwealth
and is a win for all those
who come here seeking care,
safety, and freedom,” said Repwww.810bargrille.com
resentative
Lipper-Garabedian.
“That includes those who travel
here seeking reproductive care,
gender-affirming care, and the
freedoms that our Commonwealth
upholds. At a time when
13 states have full bans on abortion
care and more than 1 in
3 women of reproductive age
legislation ensures that our commitment
to personal autonomy
is not just a promise but a protection
with real meaning. I am
proud to have championed the
Location Shield Act and to have
delivered this protection for our
residents. We each deserve to be
the author of our own story, and
I will continue to make sure our
Kate Lipper-Garabedian
State Representative
lives in a state that has enacted
an abortion ban at six weeks of
pregnancy or less, with the protections
of the Location Shield
Act in place, Massachusetts will
remain a place of refuge.
“The comprehensive Location
Shield Act also holds particular
importance for those
from marginalized communities
- religious minorities, immigrants,
domestic violence survivors,
people in recovery, and
judges and public safety officers
who risk their lives to protect
us. And it matters for everyone.
Every day, each of us produces
a digital footprint that currently
can be purchased by anyone
for the right price. With this
legislation, we prevent corporate
entities from collecting and
weaponizing our personal information
in ways that undermine
our fundamental freedoms. This
laws reflect that.”
“The Massachusetts Consumer
Data Privacy Act centers the
consumer and is a must for the
21st century. Through the technology
that we have come to
rely on daily, companies collect
and legally sell our data, including
sensitive data, without our
knowledge or consent,” said Representative
Tricia Farley-Bouvier
(D-Pittsfield), who is House
Chair of the Legislature’s Joint
Committee on Advanced Information
Technology, the Internet
and Cybersecurity. “The Massachusetts
Consumer Data Privacy
Act is a critical step to hold companies
accountable, protect minors,
and establish strong consumer
protections. It is the result
of public hearings and thoughtful
deliberation with privacy experts,
advocates, and industry
representatives.”
Following is an overview of
the bill:
ACT | SEE PAGE 5
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is Here!
10 Everett Ave., Everett
617-389-3839
Celebrating 67 Years in Business!
n
Roofing fng
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Page 5
ACT | FROM PAGE 4
• Requires that personal data
collection must be proportionate
to providing requested services,
and data must be protected
and deleted when no longer
necessary or required by law.
• Requires that data subject
rights extend to all residents in
Massachusetts. These rights include
the right to access their
personal information, the right
to correct inaccurate information,
the right to opt out of certain
processes, such as targeted
advertising, the right to transport
personal data and the right
to delete certain information.
• Specifies that sensitive data,
as defined below, cannot be
sold or shared without a user’s
affirmative consent. Companies
cannot sell sensitive data
without additional unambiguous,
affirmative consent from a
consumer.
SCHOLARSHIP | FROM PAGE 1
working event, Connect 2026,
on May 13, 2026.
“It’s truly inspiring to see the
talent and drive of this year’s
scholarship winners,” said MassCPAs
President/CEO Zach Donah,
CAE. “Their commitment to
excellence gives us great confidence
that the accounting profession
in Massachusetts will
continue to thrive under their
leadership. We are honored to
play a role in their success and
extend our deepest gratitude to
the donors and volunteers who
make this investment in our future
possible.”
These scholarships are funded
100% through donations to
the MassCPAs Educational Foundation.
The mission of the Foundation
is to inspire and support
the next generation of CPAs in
Massachusetts. Since the program’s
inception in 2006, the
Foundation has awarded 500
scholarships to aspiring CPAs,
Sensitive data includes information
like biometric or genetic
information, precise geolocation
data, health and wellness
information, reproductive
and sexual health data,
data of a minor under 18, government-issued
identifiers, and
data that reveals an individual’s
racial or ethnic origin, national
origin or citizenship or immigration
status, religious beliefs,
sex life, sexual orientation, status
as transgender or nonbinary,
union membership, status
as a military service member
or veteran and status as a victim
of a crime.
• Provides special protections
for individuals under 18, including
a prohibition on targeted advertising
to minors.
• Includes a ban on the sale
of precise geolocation data. Restricting
the trade of location
data helps protect people from
surveillance, stalking and the
ranging from $1,000-$10,000
and totaling more than $2,250
million. MassCPAs scholarships
are available for both undergraduate
and graduate accounting
students who are attending
a college or university in Massachusetts
or attending an out-ofstate
college or university while
having a permanent residence
in Massachusetts. Scholarship
funds are issued directly to the
students and can be used for
tuition, books, interviewing expenses
or other needs.
“Empowering students
through these scholarships is
at the heart of our mission to
build a robust and resilient accounting
workforce,” said MassCPAs’
Director of Academic and
Career Development, Allie Orlando.
“We are thrilled to celebrate
this year’s recipients and
look forward to seeing the significant
contributions they will
make to the profession.
About MassCPAs: The Massachusetts
Society of Certified
Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
misuse of sensitive personal information.
This protection is extended
to both residents of Massachusetts
and visitors, which is
especially important now to protect
people who travel to and
within Massachusetts, including
for reproductive and gender affirming
health care.
• Grants the Attorney General
rulemaking authority and includes
a private right of action.
A private right of action allows
consumers to hold the largest
data holders accountable for
any violations they might make.
Rulemaking authority will allow
the Attorney General to
keep up with the pace of technological
change and provide
greater clarity in areas where it
is needed.
Last September the Massachusetts
Senate had unanimously
passed a version of the bill. It
now goes back to the Senate for
further consideration.
Public Accountants, Inc. is the
state professional association of
certified public accountants, representing
over 11,500 members
in public accounting practice,
industry and business, government
and education. The Society
works to develop and maintain
high professional standards
and offers a wide array of legislative,
technical and referral services
to its members.
Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 12, 2026
~ Malden Musings ~
Mr. Edgeworth Dom Fermano Remembered
By Peter Levine
M
alden took a punch to the
gut on the morning of
May 28 as news of Dom Fermano’s
passing spread like wildfire
throughout the city he loved so
much. Things will never feel quite
the same again. The San Rock
Feast will never be quite the same
again. The Italian American Citizens’
Club on Pearl Street will never
quite be the same again also.
Truthfully, for many of us, life itself
will never quite feel the same.
The number of lives Dom
touched during his long, generous
and unforgettable life is impossible
to measure. His friendships,
kindness, stories (did Dom
have stories!!), laughter and presence
stretched across generations.
He had a way of making
people feel special, welcomed
and part of the gang — whether
you knew him for 50 years or
five minutes.
Personally, I’m heartbroken. A
small but meaningful piece of
my world feels shaken by this
loss. Some people leave behind
memories. Dom leaves behind an
imprint on an entire community/neighborhood.
Sheila, please
know you are not alone. So many
people are carrying this sadness
with you and holding your family
close in their hearts.
Heroes Among Us Remembered:
City of Malden Inspectional
Services Director — the
one, the only — Nelson Miller
speaks on the passing of a very
good “Friend of Malden,” Wayne
Martineau:
“Many of you know that Wayne
Martineau had been courageously
battling cancer. That fight came
to an end this weekend, when
Wayne passed away peacefully
at home.
“Wayne was a Maldonian to his
core. He took great pride in his
upbringing in ‘the projects’ and
remained deeply committed to
the people and community that
shaped him. It is no coincidence
that he chose a career dedicated
Left to right: Standing: band leader the late Phil Longo, Peter F. Levine, Malden Recreation Director
Joe Levine; seated: the late famous restauranteur Richie Cremone, former Malden City Clerk and
local legend Dom Fermano and Dickie Drinkwater.
to improving the health and safety
of others’ homes, work that reflected
his lifelong commitment
to helping those around him.
Serving others wasn’t just part of
what Wayne did; it was central to
who he was, and he carried that
purpose with him to the very end.
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6/4/26
6/11/26
6/18/26
6/25/26
Country Night Cornhole Tournament
Makers and Music
Backyard Olympics with Twisted Fate
Putt Like a Pro
“Anyone who had the privilege
of knowing Wayne can attest
to his kindness. He was, simply
put, one of the nicest people
you could ever meet. He loved
his family fiercely, and even in
the face of profound personal
loss and hardship, he maintained
a remarkable sense of gratitude
and positivity. It was often hard
to comprehend how one person
could endure so much, but
Wayne was extraordinary in that
way. Saying he will be missed
feels insufficient, it feels more like
we’ve lost a part of ourselves that
cannot be replaced. Please keep
Wayne’s family in your thoughts
during this incredibly difficult
time.”
It is said in Malden Musings...
• As I stroll the corridors of our
beautiful City Hall, one stop I always
try to make is the second
floor where the Karen Anderson
Memorial Quilt (handcrafted by
Karen and donated and dedicated
in June of ’24) lines the wall
outside the Clerk’s Office. It is
there that I take a moment and
reflect on Karen’s legacy in Malden.
I place hand to glass and
thank Karen for what she has
meant to Malden for well over
50 years — a fitting tribute and a
beautiful work of art for us to remember
a Maldonian who can
never, ever be replaced. Here’s to
you, Karen, Malden Musings remembers.
•
In the See Click Fix can be
wicked fun department, I bring
to you this week’s SCF that is sure
to bring a smile to your face: “Man
parked his car between the no
parking signs. Sat on the steps
and smoked his marijuana making
the houses smell. He threw his
blunt on the street and walked
down the street.”
• I get a text last week from old
paisan Joe “Pez” Pisaturo. Pez is
living the dream — cruising the
Adriatic Sea with his lady love
and a crew of lifelong goombahs,
soaking in the RPPC beauty of
Croatia, a half a planet away from
little old Malden. So, there he is
at the Captain’s Dinner aboard
the yacht, the sun melting into
the Balkan coastline, prerecorded
sounds floating through the
warm night air before the live
band takes over. And wouldn’t
ya know it…as former M.H.S.
Principal Dana Brown says, “all
roads lead back to Malden.” Because
suddenly, echoing across
the sparkling Adriatic comes a
song created not in some fancy-schmancy
Hollywood studio,
but on a front stoop on Highland
Ave. across the street from Amerige
Park — “More Than Words” by
Gary Cherone and his partner in
greatness, Nuno Bettencourt. Pez
says Gary and Nuno would probably
laugh and say, “ka-ching!”
Pez turns to Paula and says, “May
I have this dance me lady?” And
moi? With all due respect to Croatia,
the Adriatic and every billionaire
yacht floating nearby (insert
shameless plug), I’m looking forward
to Smokin’ Joe at the IACC
(open to the public) on Saturday
night, June 13. Insert smiley face.
• Malden, if you can tell me
׉	 7cassandra://LxzScpbcwyG2UEJZG_2sUHZ2P46zW2s3zT6tAZm2NTA1` j,3Ĳ(E׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 12, 2026
Page 7
what “RPPC” stands for (everybody
but you, Frankie) the next
Bud’s on me. Insert smiley face.
As Peter Falk’s iconic TV character
Columbo would say, “Just
one more thing, sir” — in the better
late than never department...
Happy belated birthday to the
late, great Karen Anderson. In
2023 Malden mourned the (very)
deep loss of our former City Clerk
(and much more) after her having
served Malden for well over 30
years; dedicating herself to Malden
doesn’t even begin to do it
justice. Especially known for her
wise advice and guidance (raising
hand, me also), her commitment
to Malden and for her knowledge
of everything and anything
Malden (and that ain’t no bull!).
Whether analyzing voting results,
discussing laws and ordinances
or performing a marriage ceremony,
Karen’s focus was always
to help residents, assist staff and
make Malden a better place. She
captured the hearts of many and
her positive impact on our community
will last for many, many
years to come. Happy birthday,
Karen, Malden remembers and
loves you!
Postscript: On a very personal
note, and for all to bear witness
right here in black and white, I’d
like to express my love for Dom.
Over the past 20 years or so, Dom
became much more than a friend
to me. In many ways, he was a father
figure — someone whose
guidance, wisdom, encouragement
and unwavering friendship
impacted my life immeasurably.
I was not fortunate enough
to have been close to Dom until
the recent past when he took this
half Jew(ish), half Italian kid from
the other side of Highland into
his inner circle. We immediately
hit it off. I knew I was part of the
“in” crowd a few years later when
I received a coveted invite to one
of Dom and Sheila’s legendary
4th of July Backyard Hoedowns.
I finally made it in Edgeworth!
Soon after, I pledged fealty to one
of the wisest, one of the kindest,
one of the most generous hearted
men I have ever known (did
I also mention he was like wicked
smaht?!). Many’s the time he
talked me off the ledge, particularly,
the time a very local social
club mocked the Saint Rock Procession
in their newsletter, and I
wanted guns to come out a blazing
in our next newsletter? Dom
says, fuhgeddaboudit! His years
of wisdom behind him guiding
this extremely principled man,
much like Master Po in the 1970s
“Kung Fu” TV show convincing
me (paraphrasing), “grasshopper,
this too shall pass.” Dom
spoke softly (for the most part),
and his words resonated with
me much like they did with master
student Kwai Chang Caine.
In conclusion, ti amo Dom. I will
personally make sure Maldonia
never, ever forgets you (and I am
sure Sheila will also). Till we meet
again (hopefully) in the Highland
Café/I.A.C.C./San Rock Festa in the
next world, thank you, Mr. Edgeworth,
for bringing me into the
inner sanctum, for being such a
mensch, and more importantly,
for being Domenic Fermano!
May your memory be a blessing.
—Peter is a longtime Malden
resident and a regular contributor
to The Malden Advocate. He
can be reached at PeteL39@aol.
com for comments, compliments
or criticisms.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 12, 2026
Malden High School Class of 2026 Graduates
ABDULALIM,MENAL
ABDULGHANI,HALA
ABDULGHANI,SHAHD
ABRHAME, TESFU ELDANA
ABUKASSEM,DOUAH
ACOSTA GANAN,ZAHIRA
ADAMES, JAVIER DANIEL JUAN
ADEFRIS,GEZAHEGN DAWIT
ADHIKARI ,ARYAN
AGBONOGIEVA, HANNAH
AGBONOGIEVA, OSAZE
AGUILOS, BABAYLAN PATRICK
AHMED, NOHA
AL RUBAYE, DHULFIQAR
ALAM, FABIHA
ALAM, FAIYAZ A
ALARCON VASQUEZ, KATHERINE
ALAYANE LIMA, JOSEPH
ALAZIZI,AYA
ALDANA, IVAN DAVID
ALI YUSSUF, ZAKARIYA
ANDRADE MAGALHAES THALYTA
ANDRE,
BRANLY
ANGOMAS RAFAEL ANTHONY
ANTERO BATISTA, ANA GABRIELA
ANTOINE,
JAZIARRA
APONTE, MARIA ANGELIE
ARANGO ALVAREZ,NICOL
ARIAS ORTIZ KLIVER OSTHIN
ARRUDA-CIULLA, CHRISTOPHER
ARTHUR, MIRACLE NICOLE
ASSIS DE OLIVEIRA, EDUARDA
ASSLI ,YASSINE
AUGUSTE, MALAIKAH
AYALA, LIANA CAMILA
BAILEY ST MICHAEL, ROBERT
BANNON, JADEN LANDON
BARBOSA RIBEIRO,ANA BEATRIZ
BEECHIN, ROSE LORELLA
BEKELE, EPHREM ADONAY
BEKRINE,ADAM
BELATRECHE, HATEM YASSER
BERNAL, ALEXANDER
BOLCONT MARIANO, SOPHIE
BOLLING, CHACE
BONILLA AREVALO, SHEYLA
BOSWELL, ANNA DAGNY
BOSWELL, MASON KAIL
BOSWELL, JAMES LINCOLN
BOUAM, SALAH
BOUCHER NONAN, SNOW
BOUDREAU, DERICK
BOULAL, JAVIER JORDAN
BRAGA SILVEIRA ,NICOLY
BRIZUELA ARRUE, ELIU
BROWN DALANO, CAMERON
BROWN, SEMAJ
BROWN SHAKUR ,AMARU
CAETANO DE AGUIAR, SAMUEL
CANDELARIO DA COSTA, MATTHEW
CAO,
THOMAS
CAPLIS, JORDAN
CARDOSO NASCIMENTO ,JULIA
CASIANO,JONATHAN
CASIMIR, NATAVIUS
CASUY ORTEGA , ABIGAIL
CATARY COLMENAREZ, THIFFANY
CAZEAU,
FILS
CAZIMIR,LUCMANE
CHALATTE,SHIVENSKY
CHAN DEVERA, JASON
CHAN, SOPHIA
CHARLES, JEMIAH
CHARLES, NELY
CHAU, NATALIE
CHAU,VIVIAN
CHAWQUI,LENNA
CHEN, YA NAN ANNA
CHEN ,CRYSTAL
CHEN ,YU-PING ETHAN
CHEN, GRAY HUAREN
CHEN, EN JESSICA
CHEN,JINGXIN
CHEN,SANIA
CHERINET, CALEB
CHEUNG, YUBONG RYAN
CHHETRI ,AVANI
CHOISEUL,RUTH
CHOUIKI,OMAR
CINE, CLAIRE-ELIE BERENICE
COATES, MARIE HAILEE
COCHRAN, NICHOLAS SEAN
COFFILL, JAMES PATRICK
COLES,WAINA
CONTI, THOMAS
COOK, ROSE MADISON
CORTEZ FUERTES, VICTOR
CORTEZ GAMONAL, JOSEPH
CORTEZ GAMONAL, ANDERSON
COSTA AISPURO,MERCEDES
COSTA BARRETO,JULIA
COUTINHO LOPES, SAMIRA
COUTO MARTINS, MARIA
CRUZ CERNA,CARLOS
CUELLAR VILLANUEVA, GISELA
CURRY, DEONTE
CYPRIEN,TIMOTHY
DA SILVA REUS, EDUARDO
DANGERVIL,SABRINA
DARISSE, BRENDA
DAVIS, CHRISTOPHER
DAVIS, SHAVON SILVER-SKY
DE ALMEIDA SILVA,BRENNO
DE FARIAS, VICTOR
DE LA CRUZ.DAVID
DE LIMA SERRAO, RENATO
DE LIMA ALVES, ARTHUZA
DE OLIVEIRA DEGOIS, DANIEL
DE SOUSA RIOS,NATHAN
DE SOUZA, MAYARA
DEARBORN,KAYLANA
DELVA , JEUD
DENNIS, MARANDA
DESOUZA,ISRAEL
DESSOURCES,NEVAEH
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DEVITTO, ANTHONY
DHINGBHU, TENZIN
DIAZ GOMEZ, JASMIN
DIAZ OSORIO, KENNETH
DIAZ SANCHEZ , KELLY
DIAZ VENO, NEVAEH
DIAZ MANUEL, ANDRES
DIAZ KIMORA,MILILANI
DO ,DAO
DO, LINH
DOMINGOS PORTO, LUIZ
DORISTIN,MILCA
DORJEE,YESHI
DORSAN ,JORGENSEN
DOS SANTOS, MARIANE
DRINKWATER, ALEX
DUARTE,AMANDA
DUMAS, JAELL
DUNN, MICHELLE
EARLE, ADAN
ECKER, CHRISTOPHER
EDMUNDS, VANESSA
ELBAHLAWAN, ISMAIL
ELEUTERIO ALCANTARA, ALEXA
ELFEKY, YOUSSEF
ELMYR, LENTZ
ELSHAFEY, SANA
ELWAFY,MARWA
EMMANUEL,KENNY
ESTIVERNE, OLIVIER
ETIENNE, ELIJAH
ETIENNE,WASLIN
EUGENE, BENIEL
FAN,HENRY
FANFAN , MARVENS
FEDE, CHARLINE
FELIX, MIKE
F ERNANDE S D I AS VA -
LADARES,KAUA
FERREIRA, YASMIN
FERREIRA ALVES, LAUANY
FIGUEIREDO DA SILVA,LUCIANA
FLEITAS LLERENA. VICTOR
FLORES, JOSUE DANIEL
FLORES, FERNANDO
FONDULIS PANAYIOTA, ATHENA
FONSECA POROCA, JULIA
FONTAIM BORGES, SARAH
FRANCILLON DAMIEN, JAHIEM
FRANCISCO PAULINO,EUDY
FRANCOIS,EDYSSON
FREEMAN, CIARA
FUENTES, JACOB
FUMICELLO, SALVATORE
GALLAGHER, LIAM
GAMARRA, REBECA
GARCIA, ANTHONY
GAVIN,WILLIAM
GAZZONI, PIETRO
GEORGES, NEVAEH
GHANI, BILAL AHMED
GHANI, AFTAB UMER
GHIMIRE ,RAJ BINAYAK
GHIMIRE,SANDESH
GLAUDE, ABIGAIL
GOLD GERVAISE, PHI
GONCALVES DOS SANTOS, BIANCA
GORDON,
SYDNEY
GRONDIN, ERIN
GUERRIER,ASHLEE
GUYLLAUME,NEICHKA
HALAISSI,YASSIR
HAMPTON, JACOBY
HARRINGTON, DANIELLE
HASSAN ABDIRISAQ, RAUF
HATCH ,JOSEPH
HE,SHENQUAN
HERNANDEZ ESCOBAR, CLAUDIA
HERNANDEZ,
ELIZABETH
HIENG, JOSEPH
HOLLAND, NORA LEE
HOSEEN ESMAIL, MARIYAH
HOWARD JANAAT, NOUR
HOWSE, ESTHER
HUANG,MENG YAO
HURD ,JACOB
HUYNH, SOPHIA
HYRE, RENEE KETURAH
IDMBAREK TENORIO, OMAR
ISLES, JOSEPH
JAAYFER,MALAK
JAAYFER,NOUR
JAMKATEL,BHAIRABNATH
JEAN MARDY, OLIVIER
JEAN-BAPTISTE,ANGELINA
JEAN-BAPTISTE,EDHAN-ROOD
JEAN-JACQUES, ALIJAH
JEANNOT,LUDERSON
JEUNE,NAMAICKA
JOBSON, JAYLIN KYLA
JOHNSON, LOGAN
JOHNSON, JEAN ZOEY
JONES, ISABEL
JOSEPH, LOVE MIKE
JOSEPH,MITJI
JUARBE-VALDEZ, JOSE
K C,RASHMI
KARANJA, DAVIDSON
KAYA, CEREN FEYZA
KEINKEDE, IGBEYE
KHATRI,ABHUSHAN
LABONTE, LUKE
LAMARRA,ALIVIA
LANE, JANIYAH
LAURENT DJIANINI, NOAH
LAUTURE, TALIYAH
LAVALLE, KIMBERLY
LE,HALEY
LE,HOANG NAM
LE, NGUYEN KHA HAN
LE, NHAT KHANG
LECONTE, ABIGAELLE
LEE,ADRIAN
LEE, JIA MATTHEW
LEMUS, SOFIA GABRIELLA
LENARES,PAOLO
LEON ,ALIAH DESTINY
L'ESPERANCE,SONIA
GRADUATES| SEE PAGE 10
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Page 9
Malden High School Class of 2026 Graduation
Thomas Conti was Class
Orator— as the #3-ranked
student. He will attend Harvard
University as a QuestBridge
Scholar in the fall.
MHS Class of 2026 President
Linh Do
Malden High Principal Chris
Mastrangelo addressed the
audience at graduation.
Mayor Gary Christenson
embraced the Class of 2026
“Stronger than Bricks” class
theme.
Superintendent Dr. Timothy
Sippel addressed the audience.
Rebecca Gamarre was all
smiles entering the graduation
ceremony at Macdonald
Stadium. (Advocate Photos/Henry Huang)
The scoreboard said it all for the seniors, Class of 2026, at
graduation on Sunday. (Advocate Photos/Henry Huang)
Lincoln Boswell was Class
Salutatorian — as the #2-ranked
student. He is headed to Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute (RPI).
MHS Class Valedictorian — as
the #1-ranked student — Kelly
Ye delivered her address. She is
headed to MIT.
ON THE STAGE: From left, Malden Mayor and School Committee Chairperson Gary Christenson, Superintendent of Schools Dr. Timothy Sippel, Assistant Superintendent
Komal Basin, Assistant Superintendent Dr. Sarah McLaughlin, Malden High Scholarships Inc. administrator Greg Lucey and Malden Public Schools Director of Guidance
Erin Craven. (Advocate Photos/Henry Huang)
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 12, 2026
Malden seniors celebrate graduation from PCSS,
prepare for next chapter of their lives
O
n Friday, May 29, Pioneer Charter School
of Science I (Everett) and II (Saugus) honored
their Class of 2026 in a joint graduation
ceremony at the Great Hall at Faneuil Hall
in Boston. Among the graduates were nine
students from Malden. The event celebrated
this resilient and high-achieving group
of students, who are now headed to some
of the country’s most prestigious colleges
and universities.
This year, 108 seniors from both PCSS
campuses were accepted to 140 distinct
colleges, including Yale, Northeastern, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology and Boston
University, and received more than $20
GRADUATES | FROM PAGE 8
LEVRAULT, NAVAYAH
LHALOUI.MOHAMMED-AMINE
LI KWAN, WO
LI, NICHOLAS
LICONA CRUZ, ISAAC
LIMA , LORENA
LIN,IVAN
LIN,ZERONG
LITTLEJOHN, ERICA
LIU ,ALFRED
LIU ,JIA JUN ANDY
LIU,DENNIS
LIU,JENNIE
LNU, CHOEZOM
LONDONO RAMIREZ,VALERIA
LOPES-TEIXEIRA, AALIYAH
LOUIGENE, ALECIA
LUC, EASON
LUC,OSCAR
LUGO CAMARGO, PAULA
LUGO, ELIJAH
LUM,LUCAS
LYNCH, THOMAS
LYU, YIHAO
MABOIS,MIRALDIE
MAFFE, NIKI
MAMOUZETTE, NARCK-HAYLEE
MARTINS, MATHEUS
MASMELA RODRIGUEZ, FEDERICK
MCGOVERN,
RICHARD
MCMAHON, LIAM-LEONARD
RYAN
MEI,JOHNNY
MEJIA PIMENTE,L JOSEILY
MEJIA,ASHLEY
MEJIA, DIEGO
MEKONNEN, YELEUL
MELO BERNARDO,VICTOR
MEMEUS, MAX
MENTOR, MARIE
METELUS,CHRISTIAN
MIRANDA CARVALHO,THAYLA
MIRANDA MATA, GISELLE
MITALA NANUNGI,SANYU
million in total scholarships. This year’s graduating
class included three Thrive Scholars,
one QuestBridge Scholar, a Posse Scholar
and a Gates Scholar.
According to the PCSS website, PCSS is a
rigorous college preparatory charter school
that aims “to prepare educationally under-resourced
students for today’s competitive
world…. You can apply to one or both
of the schools.
“Preference will be given to students from
Chelsea, Everett, and Revere at PCSS-I (Everett)
and to students from Danvers, Lynn,
Peabody, Salem, and Saugus at PCSS-II (Saugus/Beverly).
MLILA,
YASSINE
MOCO LOURENCO, LUIZA ANA
MOLINA YANES, ONEYDA
MONDARDO DE FREITAS,KAUAN
MONDARDO DE FREITAS,LAURA
MONDESTIN,MARVIN
MORELLI, MEGHAN
MORENO, JENAYAH
MORRISON, JACOB
MOUIHA HOLM, CAMELIA
MOUKARA, AHMED
MOURAO,YGHOR
MOURCHID ,JIBRIL
MOUSSAOUI, NADIR
MUKASA NAMUBIRU, PATRICIA
NACEUS,LEICA
NASCIMENTO MACHADO ,VITORIA
NASH,
MADISON
NDAGHA NWAJANG ,EIKAWEI
NGUYEN, ETHAN
NGUYEN, KHAI
NGUYEN, PHAN
NGUYEN,PHUONG ANH
NGUYEN, PHI RANDY
NGUYEN QUOC, THANG
NGUYEN,QUAN
NIE, HELEN
OCCEAN,BETCHAIDA
OGE,FABRUNA
OJEDA MEDRANO,RODRIGO
OKHIHAN, CHRISTABEL
OKOTH, COLIN
OLIVEIRA SOUZA, BEATRIZ
OLIVEIRA DA SILVA, RENAN
OLIVER-DESTINE,A NDIAYE
OLIVIER ,WEDLY
ONYEJIAKA,LAURA
ORCINO REYES, RAPHAEL
OUTAZGUI ,ACHRAF
PADUA-PEREIRA DE, CHLOE
PANNULLO,GIANFRANCO
PARADA ARAUJO, DAVID
PARINI CORDOVA,GABRIELA
PARLEE,JAKE
PARREIRA LOPES, ERICK
PAUDEL, SHUBHAM
Malden students (from left to right): Christian Ulysse, Hemam Henok, Sana
Hasaba, Maria Alves, Dinesh Babu, Aldair Bernadin, Aarush Karmacharya,
Stacy Abraham, Josie Sapini.
PAUL,RHAYANA
PEGUERO, ALEXANDER
PEREIRA BATISTA, HENRIQUE
PEREZ ALVAREZ, BRYAN
PEREZ,ANAIS
PEREZ, MANUEL ELIEZER
PHAM,DUNG
PHEJARASAI,ETHAN
PHU, M. JOHNNY
PIERRE TOUSSAINT, WED
PIERRE,DJEETERSON
PIERRE, CLAUTY LATOYA
PINEDA,JOSUE
PIRES DOS SANTOS, PEDRO
PLAISIR,JEFF
PORTILLO ESCOBAR, ALEJANDRA
PORTILLO
RAMOS, OSCAR
POSADAS VILLANUEVA, IRENE
PUN,DIPAK
QRANFAL,FARRIS
QUISPE MENDOZA, MADELEY
RAMIREZ SANCHEZ,JULIETA
RAMOS MIRANDA,AMAIAH
REDJEM,SELSABIL
REDJEM,SOUNDOUS
REN,MATTHEW
RENDON LAPOP, TAIRY
RESENDES, DANTE
RETAMERO GRANJA, AMANDA
REYES MERINO,KARLA
ROBINSON-MCCASKILL , CHRISTINA
RODRIGUES
MADRONA, OLIVIA
RODRIGUES MADRONA,SOPHIA
ROGERS, JUSTIN
RUAN, Y EVAN
RUIZ ANDRES JR EDWIN
SADA,SALMA
SAEL,ALLVENS
SAGET,NEHEMIE
SAIDI,CHOUAIB
SAINT ,JEAN JAMESLEY
SAKHTA, AHMAD RAYAN
SANCHEZ MARTINEZ, RAPHAEL
SANCHEZ-MEJIA, ANGEL
SANGARE,ABDULRAMANE
SANTOS, CAROLINE
SATERIALE, OLIVIA
SAUNDERS, KIERAN
SAVIN, ELLA
SEDAN, NICO
SEELEY,HAYLEE
SEKHRI, ANNAS
SHEPHERD-COOK, DOMINICK
SHI ,MICHELLE
SHOWSTEAD, ACE
SILVA DE ARAUJO,GUILHERME
SILVA RIVAS, KIARA
SILVA BERCAN ,GUILHERME
SILVA SOARES, LYNKOLNN GUSTTAVO
SOARES
LAPORTE , GUILHERME
SOLAGE,HANLEY
SON, SKYLER
SOUSA JUNIOR HENRIQUE FESTA
SOARES DOS REIS, LUIS
SOUZA SILVA,BRYAN
SOUZA DE OLIVEIRA, MCKAYLA
SPADAFORA, GINO
SPRIGGS, SEAN'NAJAH
STASKIEWICZ, RYAN
STELMACH , MATTHEW
SUPLICE, SAVANNAH
SYLVESTE,ANDERCLEEF
TALIC,ALDINO
TEJADA HERNANDEZ, NATHALY
TESFAW, HASET
THAI, ASHLEY
THELEMARQUE,JOSIAS
TIAHI,ANAS
TINOCO DA SILVA,YOHANNA
TO JAZINDA-HOM. MAILEE
TONELI SANTOS SOUSA.VALENTINA
TOOMEY,
CADEN
TORO BERNAL.SOPHIA
TOURKANTONIS, JACKSON
TRAN, MAN
TRAN, JOHN
TRAN, LADY JOYCE
TROCATE FERREIRA, DANYEL
TRUONG JOSHUA
TSE YAT LONG
TURCIOS MELGAR DANIEL KENNY
ULYSSE
DESLY THEMA
VALLADARES LANZA ALEXANDRA
RACHEL
VALLE HERNANDEZ ANTHONY
BRIAN
VARGAS KALEB
VENANCIO PAIVA,NICOLAS
VENANCIO DORNELES, ALEX
VENTURA VAZ VITOR
VENTURA CAMILO JOHNATHAN
VETREE,LAUREN
VICTOR KURTUS WUD-MAYER,
JEAN
VICTOR,JUNINHO
VIEIRA ALVES BARBOSA , LUISA
VIEN, DUC KEITH
VILLARD, WOODJENES
VILME,RICHARD
VO, VAN HAI
VO, NGUYEN KATELYNN
WAHIDI,UMAIMA
WALLACE ,LEE DEVON
WANG ,IVAN
WARNER, JANIYAH
WILLCOX, KINGSTON
WONG,ANYA
WONG, CI LAM CECII
WONG ,JIAN ETHAN
WONG, CHI KENNETH
WU,IRENE
XIE,XITONG
YANG, ETHAN
YANG,OLIVIA
YAPHEL,KARMA
YE,KELLY
YOHANNES, ABRAHA DELINA
YOUMELL,FIONA
YOUSFI,YUNUS
ZAPATA MARIN,SEBASTIAN
ZEB,SHANEEL
ZENG, ZI ASHLEE
ZHANG,ADA
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׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 12, 2026
Page 11
Congratulations MHS
Class of 2026 Graduates!
Mayor
Gary Christenson
& The Malden City Government
State
Representative
Steven
Ultrino
Candidate for State Senate
Councillor-At-Large
Carey
McDonald
Councillor Ward 6
Stephen
Winslow
Ward 1 School Committee
Michael
Drummey
Ward 2
School Committee
Rob
McCarthy
Malden Trans / Malden Taxi
781-322-5050
BUSINESS
ACCOUNTS
WELCOME
Lester, Peggy &
David Morovitz
24 Hour
AIRPORT
SERVICE
PACKAGE
DELIVERY
State
Representative
Paul
Donato
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
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 12, 2026
PCSSII student honored with STEM award
at Mass. Science and Engineering Fair
Middle Schooler Aarti Ravikumar of Malden earns 2026 Broadcom Coding with Commitment Award
P
ioneer Charter School of Science
II (PCSS II) was proud
to announce that one of its students
has received the 2026
Broadcom Coding with Commitment®
Award. The prestigious
honor was presented at
the Massachusetts Science and
Engineering Fair, which was
held recently at Clark University.
Aarti Ravikumar, 14, of Malden,
gained recognition for her
project, Fractal Exploration, in
which she used self-built code
to tackle real-world research.
Using advanced mathematics,
coding and image analysis, Aarti
explored how fractal patterns
GRADUATES | FROM PAGE 1
Class of 2026 members, 20 years
from now, may not remember
all the lessons they learned, but
they will most definitely remember
the people who taught them
and the many close relationships
they made along the way,” Mastrangelo
said.
Mastrangelo noted that over
50 percent of the graduating
class of 2026 had achieved a
grade point average (GPA) for
their high school careers of over
3.0 (Honor Roll, all “Bs”) and of
those, some 118 of the 436 graduates
showed a GPA of 4.0 (all
“As”) or higher. This is reflected
in the fact that over 85 percent
of the members of the Class of
2026 are headed to either fouryear
or two-year colleges or universities
after high school —
the highest percentage in years
— or a certificate-granting program,
with a number of others
headed for the trades or military.
Of those taking the higher
education route, five MHS Class
of 2026 graduates are heading
to prestigious Ivy League destinations,
such as Harvard and
Princeton, with others off to MIT,
Northeastern, Rutgers, UMass
Amherst, Tufts and University of
Miami, among others.
Earlier in the ceremony, Malden
Mayor and School Committee
Chairperson Gary Christenson
addressed graduates at his
15th MHS Commencement in
the city’s top elected post, emcan
support real-world applications
in areas like medicine and
research. Through the development
of her own program and
analysis tools, Aarti investigated
complex mathematical concepts
while thoughtfully examining
the strengths and limitations
of image comparison models
and AI systems.
The Broadcom Coding with
Commitment® Award is presented
by the Broadcom Foundation
to a middle school student who
uses coding and STEM skills to
solve a real community problem
— one that connects to the United
Nations’ 17 Sustainable Debracing
the class of 2026 theme,
“2026: Stronger than Bricks.”
“You have worked together as
activists, advocates for causes
and most importantly, helping
each other to be successful,”
Mayor Christenson said. “That is
what stronger than bricks really
looks like.”
Superintendent of Schools
Dr. Timothy Sippel also congratulated
the graduating seniors
and noted the energy and excitement
of the day, addressing
the audience at his second Commencement
Exercises since first
assuming the reins of the district
just before the start of the 20242025
academic year. “All of you
have shown commitment and
collaboration along the path that
has brought you to success, and
you will continue to succeed if
you continue on the same path.”
“Continue to collaborate with
each other; we are not meant to
succeed in isolation,” Supt. Sippel
added. “Continue to collaborate
with each other, rely on
each other.”
Over 100 seniors received a record
amount of over $135,000
in scholarships at the recent Senior
Awards Night. On Sunday,
the Malden High School Scholarship
Corporation (in existence
since 1909) awarded individual
$5,000 scholarships to a total
of 35 recipients, another new
high mark — $170,000 — as announced
by Trustee Greg Lucey.
The three top-ranked Malden
High School students and the
velopment Goals. It celebrates
young innovators who don’t just
learn to code, but code to make
a difference.
Judges praised Aarti’s work
for its depth, strong technical
understanding and exceptional
presentation skills, with one
noting Aarti’s “confidence and
excitement for the work.” The
project also stood out for its educational
potential and future
vision, with judges encouraging
further development into
accessible or web-based tools
that could help others engage
with these concepts more easily.
“We are incredibly proud of
Class of 2026 Senior Class President
also addressed their classmates
and the audience. The
#1-ranked student was Valedictorian
Kelly Ye. She is headed to
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
this fall, the third topranked
MHS student in as many
years ticketed for one of the best
institutions of higher learning in
the world.
Lincoln Boswell, the #2-ranked
student, addressed the crowd as
the Salutatorian. He is headed to
RPI to study robotics in the fall.
The #3-ranked Thomas Conti delivered
the Class Orator address.
He will attend Harvard University
in the fall on a full, four-year
QuestBridge Scholarship.
Malden High Class of 2026
President Linh Do also delivered
remarks on Graduation Day,
making special mention of Class
Advisor Nancy Wentworth and
her untold hours and days of assistance
to the members of the
Class of 2026.
All four of the student speakers
also took the time to say a heartfelt
“thank you” to MHS Principal
Chris Mastrangelo for his individual
support of each of them and
the support of their classmates.
Class of 2026 Advisors seeing
off their charges at graduation after
four years of mentoring were
MHS educator Nancy Wentworth
and administrative staffer Jeanne
Marquardo.
Those attending Sunday’s
Commencement were also treated
to some special performances
Aarti. By focusing on an area she
is truly passionate about, she delivered
a standout project that
really highlights her talents,” said
Pioneer Charter School of Science
CEO Barish Icin. “Her accomplishment
reflects the very
mission of our school: preparing
students for success in college
and life by developing strong
academic skills, resilience, and
a love of learning. Aarti embodies
the dedication, ambition, and
character we strive to cultivate in
every PCSS student.”
Through a rigorous curriculum
with an emphasis on STEM
and the humanities, PCSS preprovided
by the MHS Choral Arts
Society, under the direction of
Todd Cole, and the MHS Band, directed
by Lauren Foley. Traditionally,
the members of the Class of
2026 who were part of those performing
groups left their graduation
rows briefly to participate
in the vocal or instrumental displays,
some in both.
Following the speeches, the
458 members of the Class of
Aarti Ravikumar with her
2026 Broadcom Coding with
Commitment® Award (Photo Courtesy of
Pioneer Charter School of Science II)
pares students for excellence
in any path they choose. The
school looks forward to seeing
Aarti, as well as all its students,
continue to reach their highest
potential.
2026 received their diplomas,
and at the conclusion the traditional
“cap toss” followed.
The new graduates’ family and
friends then flooded onto the
Macdonald Stadium field to
offer their congratulations to
the strains of what now has
become the official theme
song of Malden High Graduation
Day: Journey’s “Don’t Stop
Believin.’“
׉	 7cassandra://uqG9CVYJC5mkDqSpFxTGi7MS7FU7OXPxFbY9LRgg07k1` j,3Ĳ(E׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 12, 2026
Page 13
Sen. Lewis announces Virtual
Office Hours for June
S
tate Senator Jason Lewis
will be holding Virtual Office
Hours on Monday, June 15, from
2 p.m. to 3 p.m. Any constituent
of Senator Lewis is welcome to
attend Office Hours, with no appointment
necessary, to discuss
any personal issue or legislative
feedback with the Senator and
his staff. Virtual Office Hours are
held on Zoom. Each constituent
meets privately with the Senator
during the Zoom session.
To join the meeting, please
visit SenatorJasonLewis.com,
use the following info or enter
the meeting information on
Zoom: https://us06web.zoom.
us/j/83854164671?pwd=eWZWQWU0VkZjcE9XSXl5Rk1BRVd5Zz09
Meeting
ID: 838 5416 4671
Passcode: 234270
Senator Lewis also holds regular
in-person Office Hours in
each community of the district
(Malden, Melrose, Reading,
Stoneham, Wakefield and Winchester).
For further information
or any questions, visit SenatorJasonLewis.com
or contact his
State House office at 617-7221206
or Jason.Lewis@masenate.
gov.
For Malden High School Teens, Leading
Tours Through the Malden Public
Library’s Art Galleries is a Teaching and
Learning Experience
A
group of Malden High School
(MHS) students has been
crossing the street this year for a
unique educational opportunity
at the Malden Public Library. The
students are serving as docents
for the Library’s extensive art collection,
leading tours through
the building’s art galleries, answering
visitors’ questions, and
getting people excited about
the treasure trove of artwork on
display.
Docents are guides found in
museums, galleries and cathedrals.
The word comes from the
Latin “docere,” meaning to teach.
While some docents are paid, the
majority are volunteers, like the
current group of MHS students.
This volunteer opportunity was
the brainchild of Library Trustee
Frank Molis, who runs a community
program through the
Malden YMCA, getting teenagers
involved in meaningful serMaldonians
achieve Fairfield
University’s spring Dean’s List
T
he following Malden residents received Dean’s List honors for
the spring 2026 semester at Fairfield University in Connecticut:
Grayson Kamadeu and Zachary Marion-Brown. In order to be placed
on the Dean’s List, students must have completed a minimum of
12 credit hours in a semester, have no outstanding or incomplete
grades for that semester and have attained a semester grade point
average of 3.50 or better.
vice projects.
“The docents are getting a
first-hand look at the Library’s
incredible art collection, learning
about art, history and community
through this volunteer
work,” Molis explained. “Plus,
they’re learning important skills,
like being a strong communicator,
how to think on your feet
when visitors ask questions and
how to engage with all types of
people on their tours. These skills
will serve them well throughout
their schooling – and in whatever
they do beyond high school.”
For the students, taking the
role of docent allows them to
create an engaging experience
with people visiting the MPL’s renowned
art collection – many of
whom are there for the first time.
Docent Benny Mei, a sophomore
at MHS, says he enjoys seeing
the surprise that first-time visitors
experience when they see
the Library’s collection.
“A lot of people didn’t know
about the art galleries. I like introducing
them to what they’re
seeing,” Mei explained. “My favorites
are the pieces by Frank Stella.
I love that he’s from Malden. His
mother has artwork here, too.”
But these teens are learning as
much as they are teaching – especially
about the history of their
community.
“Being a docent is really interesting.
My favorite part is seeing
the history of Malden,” explained
docent Thomas Phan, a junior
at MHS. “I love the old picture of
the YMCA, the way it used to be.”
Phan said visitors ask not only
ask about the artwork itself, but
also about his favorite paintings,
and about the local philanthropist
who established the Library.
Before beginning their jobs, the
docents learned the story of Elisha
Converse and how his son’s
tragic death led him to create a
world-class public library and set
aside a generous fund to pay for
its upkeep, books, artwork and
more. The trust is overseen by
nine Trustees, who volunteer
their time.
“I grew up here, so it’s interesting
to learn all this historic
information,” said docent Terrance
Zeng, a junior at MHS. “In
school, we learn about worldwide
history and major events.
At the Library, we’re learning
details about Malden’s history
– things we didn’t study in
class.”
Because Malden High School
sits across the street, many of
students rely on the Library as
a quiet place to study and do
homework.
“We have such a strong partnership
with the Library. So
many of our students use it on
a daily basis. Whenever we can
return the favor and help them,
it creates a balance of services,”
said Chris Mastrangelo, Principal
of Malden High School. “To
have such a beautiful and safe
space for our students that is literally
steps from our front door
is a blessing.”
The Malden Public Library is
located at 36 Salem Street in
Malden. For more information,
visit https://maldenpubliclibrary.org.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 12, 2026
across the commonwealth.”
“From significant investments in pubBeacon
Hill
Roll Call
By Bob Katzen
THE HOUSE AND SENATE: Beacon Hill
Roll Call reports local representatives' and
senators' votes on roll calls from the week
of June 1-5,
$1.35 BILLION SUPPLEMENTAL
BUDGET (H 5470)
House 153-0, Senate 37-3, approved
and sent to Gov. Maura Healey a $1.35 billion
fiscal 2026 supplemental budget that
includes $558 million for education and
$794 million for transportation.
Some of the funding will come from
the $1.3 billion generated by the 2022
voter-approved constitutional amendment,
known by supporters as the Millionaire’s
Tax and the Fair Share Amendment,
which imposes a surtax of an additional
4 percent income tax, in addition
to the current flat 5 percent one, on taxpayers’
earnings of more than $1 million
annually. Language in the constitutional
amendment requires that “subject to appropriation,
the revenue will go to fund
quality public education, affordable public
colleges and universities, and for the
repair and maintenance of roads, bridges
and public transportation.”
Education provisions include $152
million for special education reimbursements;
$150 million for making childcare
more affordable and accessible; and $40
million to help young learners read, including
$20 million for high-dosage tutoring
and $20 million for classroom programs
designed to accelerate reading
skills for kids in kindergarten through
third grade.
Transportation provisions include
$595 million for the MBTA including $450
million to keep the T running; $60 million
for maintenance and upgrades to physical
infrastructure with an emphasis on
commuter rail improvements; $50.4 million
to improve workforce and safety;
$20 million to make fares more affordable
for low-income riders; and $15 million
for water transportation infrastructure
across the state.
Other provisions create a new tax exemption,
capped at $35 million per year,
on building materials used in the construction
of affordable, moderate-income
and middle-income housing projects; a
permanent extension of the state's temporary
20-cent fee on Uber, Lyft and other
rideshare trips; $100 million to help cities
and towns recover from major storms
over the winter; $1 million to help public
school districts implement bell-to-bell
cell phone-free policies; and $1 million
toward free legal services for immigrants
and refugees who need help navigating
the courts.
“This legislation reflects exactly the responsible,
forward-looking governance
that Massachusetts families deserve," said
Senate President Karen Spilka (D-Ashland).
"It makes significant investments
in our schools and transit, paired with fiscally
prudent steps to protect our state
finances during a period of uncertainty.
From making childcare more affordable
to keeping the T running to helping
immigrants access legal protections, this
package addresses the needs of residents
lic transportation and public education,
to support for Department of Transitional
Assistance caseworkers and expenses
related to the World Cup, to fiscally prudent
tax conformity measures – this legislation
is representative of the responsible
approach that Massachusetts must continue
to take during this period of significant
fiscal uncertainty, while still ensuring
robust state support for vital projects,” said
House Speaker Ron Mariano (D-Quincy).
“Reflecting the priorities of my Senate
colleagues, this package makes meaningful
investments in education and
transportation that touch all corners of
the commonwealth,” said Sen. Mike Rodrigues
(D-Westport), chair of the Senate
Committee on Ways and Means. “The bill
prioritizes municipal winter relief and targeted
tax incentives to jumpstart housing
production. With its passage, we are
bolstering our public transportation system,
supporting statewide education initiatives,
training the next generation of
doctors and teachers and taking proactive
steps to responsibly mitigate the fallout
from federal tax changes.”
“The use of these one-time surplus
funds provides us with a unique opportunity
to better strengthen the commonwealth
in numerous ways,” said Rep. Aaron
Michlewitz, (D-Boston), chair of the
House Committee on Ways and Means.
“By further improving our educational
and transportation sectors, we will build
off the work we have done in the last several
budget cycles with a judicious use
of the Fair Share funds. The tax changes
contained in this bill will help support the
state’s economic competitiveness, while
giving us time to absorb the expected
loss in revenue.”
"The supplemental budget included
a legal defense fund for non-citizens, as
well as tax provisions that prevented tax
relief for residents—the very people funding
that defense fund through their own
taxes and who could face penalties if they
tried to reduce their tax burden,” said Sen.
Ryan Fattman (R-Sutton) one of only three
legislators to vote against the budget.
Sens. Kelly Dooner (R-Taunton) and
Peter Durant (R-Spencer), the other two
senators who voted against the budget,
did not respond to repeated requests by
Beacon Hill Roll Call asking them why they
voted against it.
"Only in Massachusetts, do they pass a
supplemental budget while passing their
annual budget at the same time,” said Paul
Craney, executive director of the Mass Fiscal
Alliance. “This short term budget was
filled with policies that would exclude
tax benefits that were passed by Congress,
in order for Statehouse politicians
to keep more of our tax dollars. It once
again shows how Statehouse lawmakers
can never tax you enough."
(A “Yes” vote is for the $1.35 billion budget. A
“No” vote is against it.)
Rep. Paul Donato
Yes
Rep. Steven Ultrino Yes
Sen. Jason Lewis
Yes
$4.58 BILLION FOR TRANSPORTATION
PROJECTS INCLUDING $300 MILLION
FOR LOCAL ROADS AND BRIDGES
(H 5375)
House 152-0, Senate 39-0, approved
and sent to Gov. Healey a measure that
authorizes $4.58 billion in bonding for
various local, regional and state transportation
programs. The package includes
$300 million for cities and towns
for local road and bridges -- $200 million
which will be distributed to all municipalities
based on the standard Chapter
90 Program distribution formula and another
$100 million which will be distributed
to all municipalities based solely on
road mileage.
Other provisions include $500 million
for the Lifecycle Asset Management
Program which aids non-federally funded
roads and targets the pavement and
bridges across the state that are in the
worst condition; $200 million for capital
projects to support housing development,
including stormwater management,
culverts and bike and pedestrian
improvements; $200 million for a new
accelerated deferred maintenance and
modernization program for infrastructure
under the care and control of the
Department of Conservation and Recreation;
and $200 million for the MBTA for
the procurement of electrically powered
locomotives.
The legislation also reauthorizes $3.18
billion in funding for several programs included
in the 2022 Transportation Bond
Bill including $2.3 billion for projects on interstates
and other federally aided highways;
$800 million for improvements to
non-federally aided roadways and bridges;
$65 million for the Municipal Pavement
Program for engineering, permitting,
design and climate change adaptation
on municipal ways; and $12 million
for grants for the Shared Streets Program
for improvements to municipal streets to
create additional capacity for pedestrians
and cyclists.
“Today, the Legislature is taking action
to fix potholes, repair local bridges
and build on the progress Massachusetts
public transit has made,” said Senate President
Karen Spilka (D-Ashland). “At the
same time, this legislation will help ease
serious financial burdens on cities and
towns that are navigating a difficult financial
landscape.”
“Providing funding for critical infrastructure
projects through investments
in the commonwealth’s public transportation,
roads and bridges is one of the most
important responsibilities that we have as
members of the Legislature,” said House
Speaker Ron Mariano (D-Quincy). “I’m
proud of the support for local infrastructure
repairs that this legislation provides,
and of the funding included for the MBTA.”
"I am proud to see another annual
Chapter 90 bill fund the commonwealth's
immediate municipal roadway and transportation
needs,” said Rep. Michael Finn
(D-West Springfield), House Chair of the
Committee on Bonding, Capital Expenditures
and State Assets. “This year's legislation
also gives the Administration the flexibility
to deploy additional funds towards
large-scale transportation investments
which may arise over the next few years.”
“Grateful that we can say the winter of
2026 is finally in the rearview mirror, the
Legislature has moved forward in addressing
long-term capital projects for
roadways and bridges all across the commonwealth,”
said Sen. Mike Rodrigues
(D-Westport), chair of the Senate Committee
on Ways and Means. “This bond
bill provides support for critical capital
projects in transportation that will spur
housing development, make our roads
and bridges safer and continue to build
and improve upon the MBTA’s ongoing
railway improvement projects.”
“As we head into peak construction
season, local leaders from every region
and corner of the commonwealth greatly
appreciate the Legislature’s prioritization
of this vital transportation and infrastructure
package, which includes critical
funding to support local road, bridge,
sidewalk and culvert repairs,” said Massachusetts
Municipal Association Executive
Director Adam Chapdelaine. “The essential
Chapter 90 local road and bridge program
has a direct positive impact on public
safety, economic development and
quality of life in every single city and town
in Massachusetts, especially as many municipalities
face serious fiscal challenges.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the $4.58 billion package.)
Rep. Paul Donato
Yes
Rep. Steven Ultrino Yes
Sen. Jason Lewis
Yes
AUDIT THE LEGISLATURE AND
MORE (H 5469)
House 125-28, approved and sent to
the Senate a bill that would narrow the
scope of a voter-approved legislative audit
and create a formal process to govern
public access to legislative records. Democratic
leaders argued the bill preserves
the constitutional separation of powers
between the legislative and executive
branches, where the auditor's office is positioned.
Democratic State Auditor Diana
DiZoglio and the Republicans disagreed
and argued the bill goes against the will
of the voters who, in the November 2024
election, approved Ballot Question 1 asking
them if they favor allowing the state
auditor to audit the Legislature. The question
passed overwhelmingly by 72% of
the vote. It has now been 19 months since
the voters approved the audit but an audit
has yet to take place.
According to the State House News
Service, the bill would limit the auditor's
power to investigate the branch to four
categories of administrative functions,
rather than the more expansive language
outlined in the 2024 ballot law. And the
legislation would also create a new statute
establishing a legislative records request
process and codifying which records
would be public — most of which
are already publicly available — and subject
the governor's office to the public records
law from which they currently claim
an exemption. The bill also stops Secretary
of State Bill Galvin's office (who usually
oversees public records inquiries) from
interfering in requests to the Legislature,
but allows a path of judicial review, while
simultaneously barring the courts from
resolving disputes between the auditor
and lawmakers.
"For you all know, the House does not
oppose an audit," said Speaker Ron Mariano.
"The House is already audited every
year by an independent auditing firm, the
results of which are posted on the Legislature's
website upon completion. What
we oppose is a politically motivated audit
conducted in violation of the Constitution,
which is why we didn't see a path
forward until recently, when the auditor
finally specified the scope of the audit before
the Supreme Judicial Court."
Rep. Todd Smola (R-Warren), the ranking
minority member of the House Ways
and Means Committee, questioned the
process. He said, “Nobody saw this legislation
24 hours ago," adding that the
committee had 34 minutes between
when the poll landed in their inbox and
they had to vote on it. "Yet, we had to respond
to that poll and ultimately weigh in
as members of the committee.” said Smola.
“We had members on both sides of the
political aisle that were calling each other
back and forth to say, 'Can you explain
this portion?' That's how confusing some
components of this legislation were when
we saw it for the first time yesterday."
All 25 Republicans voted against the
bill. All Democrats but three voted for it.
Five Democrats did not vote. The three
Democrats who voted against it were
Reps. Mike Connolly (D-Cambridge),
Jim Hawkins (D-Attleboro) and Alan Silvia
(D-Fall River). Rep. Susannah Whipps
(U-Athol), the one non-party affiliated
member in the Legislature, voted for the
legislation.
“This legislation was drafted in partnership
with good government experts
to increase access to public records from
the executive and legislative branches,
and to establish a clear framework for
legislative audits conducted by the state
auditor,” said House Speaker Ron Mariano
(D-Quincy), the chief proponent of
the measure. “These measures will build
on the rules reforms that the Legislature
adopted earlier this session, and will ensure
greater transparency while respecting
legislative privilege and the separation-of-powers
principles outlined in the
state Constitution. We hope this legislation
will put an end to protracted litigation,
address an issue that may otherwise
come before voters on the ballot
and allow the Legislature to refocus on
the many issues facing Massachusetts
residents.”
DiZoglio disagreed. "The people have
a co-equal right with the Legislature to
create laws, and the courts have a constitutional
right to adjudicate laws,” she responded.
“With this proposed bill, and under
the guise of transparency, your state
representatives are not only throwing the
72% voter-mandated law in the dumpster
– they're taking a match and lighting
that dumpster on fire, violating the
people's constitutional rights and undermining
democracy.” She said House leaders
were "painting this as some sort of a
transparency measure" while "essentially
negating everything that you voted
for in the November 2024 ballot question.”
"They are conducting a victory lap
right now for themselves, patting themselves
on the back for helping to ensure
transparency and accountability, and using
all the buzz words.”
“The speaker is acting like an authoritarian,
and I am calling on him to resign,”
DiZoglio said on Boston Public Radio.
She also urged Gov. Healey to veto the
bill if it ever reaches her desk. She continued,
“The speaker needs to retire, resign,
move on. We need new leadership in our
state government, in our state Legislature.”
She said lawmakers “need to move
on” if they “don’t think they need to answer
to anybody.”
A spokesperson for Mariano responded,
“The speaker is calling on the auditor
to tone down the rhetoric. Personal attacks
will not solve the fundamental flaws
with the audit ballot question — the legislation
that the House passed this week
does exactly that.”
"This legislation represents a significant
step forward in strengthening legislative
transparency in the commonwealth,”
said Rep. Alice Peisch (D-Wellesley),
House Chair of the Special Committee
on Initiative Petitions, who supported
BHRC | SEE PAGE 16
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Page 15
Eagles Advance to State Championship
with 3–2 Semifinal Victory Over Cohasset
By Emily Brennan
T
he Mystic Valley Regional
Charter School boy’s tennis
team continued its historic postseason
run Monday afternoon,
defeating Cohasset, 3–2, in the
MIAA Division 4 State Semifinals
at Newton North High School.
The victory sends the Eagles to
the state championship match
for the first time in school history.
Mystic Valley took control early
in singles play. Jay Raj earned
a decisive 6–0, 6–0 victory at first
singles before Wes Cunningham
TRUSTS AND SECOND MARRIAGES
Ethan Co
Wes Cunningham
A
key part of today’s estate
planning often involves
Jay Raj
followed with a 6–1, 6–1 win at
second singles, giving the Eagles
a 2–0 advantage. Cohasset
responded at second doubles,
where Grant Hill and Harrison
West defeated Eli DeTore and
Henry Cao, 6–2, 7–2, cutting the
Mystic Valley lead to 2–1.
The deciding point came at
first doubles, where Ryan Co and
Miguel McCurdy battled through
three sets to defeat Alex Hill and
Cooper Aberbach: 6–2, 2–6, 6–4.
The victory secured Mystic Valley’s
third point and clinched
the match, sending the Eagles to
the Division 4 state final. Following
the clinching point, the third
singles match between Ethan
Co and Dax Aberbach was retired
with the score tied at one
set apiece and the third set even
at 5–5, as the overall team result
had already been decided.
With the win, Mystic Valley
earned its first-ever berth in
a MIAA State Championship
match. The Eagles will take on
Hamilton-Wenham in the Division
4 State Championship on
Saturday, June 13, at MIT. Match
time is to be announced.
The team and fan; the team members are Adam Cheng, Agani
Fabo, August Dan, Aarush Shrestha, Arul Kallam, Aum Chamaria,
Eli DeTore, Ethan Co, Henry Cao, Jay Raj, Mason Zhang, Miguel
McCurdy, Nick Farias, Ryan Co, Ryan Hu, Shane Morris and Wes
Cunningham.
the use of Trusts in order to
provide for a surviving spouse
in a second marriage and the
children of a decedent from a
previous marriage. If all of the
assets of the decedent spouse
are simply left to the surviving
spouse of the second marriage,
there exists the possibility
that the surviving spouse
will simply leave all of the assets
he or she receives to her
own biological children, thereby
disinheriting the decedent’s
biological children.
If the married couple agrees
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to execute a joint revocable
Trust, upon the first spouse
to die, the Trust will then become
irrevocable. Alternatively,
an irrevocable Trust
could be executed from the
start. In either case, provision
within the Trust can provide
for the right of the surviving
spouse to receive income
generated from the Trust, or
the right to use, occupy and
possess real estate constituting
the principal residence,
for example. The Settlor(s) of
such a Trust can provide for a
child of the decedent spouse
to serve as a Co-Trustee with
the second spouse upon the
death of the first spouse to
die. In this event, there is at
least a check on whether or
not income distributions and
principal distributions for
health and welfare are not inappropriate.
This might apply
if the two individuals executing
the Trust are not absolutely
sure that the surviving
spouse will not disinherit
the decedent’s biological children
and will in fact follow the
terms of the Trust and the parties’
original intentions.
Also, in a first marriage situation
with all of the children being
of the marriage, inserting
a testamentary special power
of appointment provision in
the Trust allows the surviving
spouse to exercise this power
of appointment via his or her
Last Will and Testament in order
to reallocate the remaining
assets in the Trust upon his or
her death. For example, if the
surviving spouse felt that one
child needed a larger share
of the Trust assets in order to
survive financially, that child
would receive a larger share
of the Trust assets than he or
she was entitled to pursuant
to the terms of the Trust. This
special power of appointment
provision may be entirely inappropriate
when dealing with
a second marriage. The reason
is that the power could
be exercised by the surviving
spouse to leave assets to his or
her own children and thereby
leaving out the children of the
deceased spouse of this second
marriage.
Every family and marriage
is different. Only after discussing
all of the issues and family
dynamics in a second marriage
context can you arrive at
the optimum set of Trust documents
that will best meet your
objectives.
Joseph D. Cataldo is an estate planning/elder law attorney,
Certified Public Accountant, Certified Financial Planner, AICPA
Personal Financial Specialist and holds a master’s degree in taxation.
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@advocatenews.net
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 12, 2026
BHRC | FROM PAGE 14
City Clerk’s Office
215 Pleasant Streets, Room 220
Malden, Massachusetts 02148
Phone 781-397-7116
www.cityofmalden.org
City of Malden
Massachusetts
MALDEN CITY COUNCIL
PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE
The Malden City Council will hold a public hearing in the Herbert L. Jackson Council
Chamber, Room 106 on the first floor of Malden City Hall, located at 215 Pleasant
Street at 7:00 P.M. on Tuesday, June 23, 2026 on the petition of DMS Trinity, LLC
on behalf of Charles Street Realty Trust 2020, Roseanne J. Spinney, TRS, seeking
to amend the special permit granted in Case #77-25 allowing marijuana retailer
in the Industrial 2 zoning district, to reissue the special permit and/ or transfer the
rights authorized by the special permit to a different entity at the property known as
and numbered 36 Charles Street, Malden, MA and also known by City Assessor’s
Parcel ID #062 239 910. Petition and plans are available for public review in the City
Clerk’s Office, 215 Pleasant Street, Room 220 and on the City website under Permit
Application # CMID-040598-2021 at https://maldenma-energovweb.tylerhost.net/
apps/SelfService#/search
By:
Carol Ann T. Desiderio,
City Clerk
June 05, 12, 2026
~Legal Notice~
~Legal Notice~
the bill. “It establishes a formal public records
framework for the Legislature and
allows the state auditor to review legislative
administrative functions. This measure
is designed to balance two fundamental
principles of democratic governance,
the public's right to understand
how government operates and the Legislature's
independence in carrying out
its lawmaking responsibilities. Transparency
and constitutional integrity are not
competing values; they are complementary
ones. When thoughtfully balanced,
they strengthen public trust, reinforce accountability
and increase confidence in
our democratic institutions And I believe
this bill strikes that balance."
“The voters of Massachusetts made
their voices clear when they overwhelmingly
supported giving the state auditor
the authority to audit the Legislature,”
said Rep. John Gaskey (R-Carver) who opposed
the bill. “This bill does not honor
that mandate. Instead, it creates a system
where legislative leaders maintain control
over what information can be reviewed,
who can be interviewed and whether disputes
can ever be challenged in court.
An audit without enforcement is not accountability,”
Gaskey said. “If the Legislature
can decide what information to provide,
deny requests without meaningful
review and prevent the courts from stepping
in, then the people of Massachusetts
are not getting the independent audit
they voted for.”
"What the Massachusetts House of
INVITATION FOR BID
CITY OF MALDEN - OFFICE OF THE CONTROLLER
The City of Malden invites sealed bids in accordance with M.G.L. c 149 from Contractors for:
HISTORICAL MASONRY RESTORATION - 139 OLIVER STREET
Contract Documents will be available by email request at purchasing@cityofmalden.org
after 10:00 A.M. June 17, 2026
Sealed Bids will be received until 2:00 P.M. July 8, 2026, at the City of Malden Controller’s
Office, 215 Pleasant Street, Malden MA 02148. Bids will not be accepted nor may
submitted Bids be corrected, modified, or withdrawn after the deadline for submission.
Following the submission deadline, Bids received within the time specified will be
publicly opened and read aloud.
All bids must be accompanied by a bid deposit in an amount that is not less than five
percent (5%) of the value of the bid, bid deposits, payable to the City of Malden, shall
be either in the form of a bid bond, or cash, or a certified check, or a treasurer’s or
cashier’s check issued by a responsible bank or trust company.
All bids are subject to the provisions of M.G.L. c149, §§44A to 44J. Wages are subject
to minimum wage rate determined by the Massachusetts Department of Labor
Standards pursuant to M.G.L. c149, §§26 to 27H. The successful bidder will be
required to furnish both a Labor and Materials Payment Bond, each in the amount of
50% of the contract total.
The City may reject any and all bids in accordance with the above referenced General
Laws. In addition, the City reserves the right to waive minor informalities in any or all
bids or to reject any or all bids (in whole or in part) if it be in the public interest to do so.
CITY OF MALDEN
Office of the Controller
June 12, 2026
Representatives is doing today is choosing
solutions over constitutional stalemates,”
said Rep. Andres Vargas (D-Haverhill)
who supported the measure. “Building
on best practices and working with
good-government experts, this bill ensures
that the governor's office will be
subject to the existing public records law
— a longstanding goal of public records
advocates. And the House is taking the
historic step of subjecting the Legislature
to a new public records requirement
and process — one that is consistent with
leading constitutional scholars, and that,
for the first time, creates a clear process
and a statutory right for the public to access
legislative records. This is the constitutional
path to transparency."
“This is exactly the kind of Beacon Hill
insider maneuver voters thought they
were rejecting,” said bill opponent Paul
Craney, Executive Director of the Massachusetts
Fiscal Alliance. “You have politicians
taking a law passed by 72% of voters,
watering it down behind closed doors
and then getting applause from organizations
that claim to stand for transparency
and accountability. Calling this a transparency
bill doesn’t make it one. It is a rebranding
effort designed to give cover
to an attempt to weaken accountability,
and it is disappointing to see organizations
that present themselves as watchdogs
lending credibility to it. These outside
groups like to describe themselves
as watchdog organizations, but they
prove to be nothing but lapdogs for the
Legislature.”
“Transparency in government is a cornerstone
of a strong democracy, but
to achieve it requires good policy,” said
Geoff Foster, Executive Director of Common
Cause Massachusetts who supported
the measure. “That’s why we’re thrilled
to have worked on legislation that is being
advanced by the House that would
take the historic step of finally subjecting
both the governor’s office and the Legislature
to a public records law which has
been a top legislative priority for Common
Cause Massachusetts and our members
for decades.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the bill. A “No” vote is
against it.)
Rep. Paul Donato
Yes
Rep. Steven Ultrino Yes
CHANGE ARCHAIC LANGUAGE REFERRING
TO PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES
(H 5474)
House 150-0, approved, Senate approved
on a voice vote without a roll call,
and sent to Gov. Healey legislation that
would modernize and remove archaic
language in state laws to reflect the evolution
of terminology relating to persons
with disabilities.
Changes include replacing “handicapped
persons” with “persons with disabilities;”
replacing “the mentally retarded”
with “persons with an intellectual disability;”
replacing “retarded children” with
“children with an intellectual disability;”
and replacing “disabled American veterans”
with “American veterans with disabilities.”
“Removing
out-of-date and offensive
language from the Massachusetts General
Laws to describe people with disabilities
is an important step in ensuring that
our values are also reflected in our statutes,”
said Rep. Jay Livingstone (D-Boston),
House chair of the Committee on
Children, Families and Persons with Disabilities.
“As legislators, it is our job to help
make sure that people with intellectual or
developmental disabilities feel included,
accepted and embraced for who they are,
and this is an important step in doing so.”
"I am proud to support [the bill] and
take this long-overdue step toward ensuring
the laws of the commonwealth
reflect the dignity and humanity of every
person,” said Rep. Mike Finn (D-West
Springfield), sponsor of the House bill.
“Our General Laws still contain outdated
language that demeans our neighbors
with intellectual and developmental disabilities,
and that language has no place
in the statutes of a state that has always
led on civil rights and inclusion. Updating
these words is an affirmation that Massachusetts
stands for the respect and dignity
of all its people.”
“Language is constantly changing."
said Sen. Pat Jehlen (D-Somerville), the
sponsor of the Senate bill. "And it's changing
because of the activism of people who
were ignored and demeaned for too long,”
said Sen. Pat Jehlen (D-Somerville), the
sponsor of the legislation. “When people
tell us they feel insulted and offended by
the use of outdated words, we worked to
change the legal language.It took a long
time because we kept finding more examples
of offensive language. Language
and activism will continue to evolve, and
there'll always be more work to do, but
this is a gigantic step forward in respect.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the bill.)
Rep. Paul Donato
Yes
Rep. Steven Ultrino Yes
MOVE “LAST CALL” FOR ALCOHOL
TO 3 A.M. (H 5478)
House 150-0, approved and sent to
the Senate legislation that would enable
Massachusetts bars to push their “last
call” to as late as 3 a.m., this summer, from
BHRC | SEE PAGE 17
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Page 17
BHRC | FROM PAGE 16
June 8 to July 31, if they get local approval
from their city or town. The measure
would also allow municipalities to establish
designated public consumption districts
for expanded alcohol purchase and
consumption.
Rep. Carole Fiola (D-Fall River), the
sponsor of the bill, did not respond to
repeated requests from Beacon Hill Roll
Call asking her to comment on the bill
and its passage.
“With the World Cup and 250th anniversary
celebrations slated to take place
in Massachusetts this summer, this pilot
program won’t just allow us to better understand
the one hour last call extension,
it will also ensure that businesses are able
to take advantage of the influx of visitors
– creating a better experience for everyone,”
said House Speaker Ron Mariano
(D-Quincy).
“Extending serving hours through this
legislation will help enhance the exciting
summer activities that will be occurring
all across the commonwealth,” said Rep.
Aaron Michlewitz (D-Boston), chair of the
House Committee on Ways and Means.
“By making these changes, it will create
a fun atmosphere for residents and tourists
alike and will enhance the economy
for all our residents.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the bill.)
Rep. Paul Donato
Yes
Rep. Steven Ultrino Yes
DATA PRIVACY (H 5479)
House 146-0, approved a proposal
that would guard personal privacy and
provide data protection for Massachusetts
residents.
The Senate has already approved a
different version of the measure and the
House version now goes to the Senate for
consideration.
The House proposal gives all Bay State
residents the right to access their personal
information; the right to correct inaccurate
information; the right to opt out
of certain processes such as targeted advertising;
the right to transport personal
data; and the right to delete certain information.
A
key provision would prohibit sensitive
data from being sold or shared without
a user’s consent. Sensitive data includes
information such as biometric or
genetic information, precise geolocation
data, health and wellness information, reproductive
and sexual health data, data
of a minor under 18, government-issued
identifiers, and data that reveals an individual’s
racial or ethnic origin, national
origin or citizenship or immigration status,
religious beliefs, sex life, sexual orientation,
status as transgender or non-binary,
union membership, status as a military
service member or veteran and status
as a victim of a crime.
Other provisions include requiring that
personal data collection must be proportionate
to providing requested services,
and data must be protected and
deleted when no longer necessary or required
by law; special protections for individuals
under 18, including a prohibition
on targeted advertising to minors; and
giving the Office of the Attorney General
broad regulatory authority to enforce
these new laws.
“The Massachusetts Consumer Data
Privacy Act centers the consumer and is
a must for the 21st century,” said Rep. Tricia
Farley-Bouvier (D-Pittsfield), House
chair of the Committee on Advanced Information
Technology, the Internet and
Cybersecurity. “Through the technology
that we have come to rely on daily, companies
collect and legally sell our data, including
sensitive data, without our knowledge
or consent. The [bill] is a critical step
to hold companies accountable, protect
minors and establish strong consumer
protections. It is the result of public hearings
and thoughtful deliberation with privacy
experts, advocates and industry representatives.”
“This
bill is first and foremost a consumer
protection bill,” said Majority Leader
Rep. Mike Moran (D-Brighton). “This bill is
an important step forward to ensure data
privacy and gives consumers control of
how their personal information is collected
and used by companies and the right
to access, correct and delete their data.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the bill.)
Rep. Paul Donato
Yes
Rep. Steven Ultrino Yes
TEACHERS’ RETIREMENT BENEFITS
(S 3109)
Senate 39-0, approved legislation
that would allow longtime public school
teachers the opportunity, until mid-2027,
to join “Retirement Plus” and buy into an
enhanced savings program if they missed
out when the program was first established
in 2001.
“For too long, teachers who missed the
original Retirement Plus enrollment period
because of confusing procedures, inadequate
notice, administrative errors or
time spent on maternity or medical leave
have been denied benefits they believed
they were working toward,” said Sen. Liz
Miranda (D-Boston), the sponsor of an
earlier version ofthe legislation. “In many
cases, these educators have had to delay
retirement, faced with the impossible decision
between working well into old age
and retiring without the security of knowing
if there’s enough in the bank. This legislation
creates a fair, one-time opportunity
for these educators to enroll in Retirement
Plus.”
"I was proud to be lead co-sponsor of
this legislation and I am thrilled to see us
get one step closer to fixing this issue for
thousands of teachers in my district and
across the commonwealth," said Sen. Sal
DiDomenico (D-Everett). "Due to administrative
confusion when the Retirement
Plus program launched, many teachers
lost out on their opportunity to join this
essential program. Thanks to this legislative
fix we passed through the Senate,
up to 8,500 eligible teachers will have a
one-time window until June 30, 2027, to
buy into the program and secure the enhanced
retirement benefits they deserve
and should have received decades ago."
“My staff and I have family and friends
that are educators, and I know how rewarding
and challenging of a profession
it is,” said Sen. Patrick O’Connor (R-Weymouth).
“The wraparound services that
educators provide now for students are
the most comprehensive they’ve ever
been, and I wanted to let you know how
much I appreciate the work educators do.
The journey for this bill has been quite
long, with many ups and downs, and I’m
thrilled that the Senate was able to get
this bill across the finish line this session.
Massachusetts educators do some of the
most important work in our society, and
they deserve the right to opt-in to Retirement
Plus.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the bill.)
INSPECTIONAL SERVICES
215 Pleasant Street, 3rd Floor
Malden, Massachusetts 02148
(781) 397-7000 ext. 2030
City of Malden
Massachusetts
MALDEN SITE PLAN REVIEW COMMITTEE
for ACCESSORY DWELLING UNITS
PUBLIC HEARING
The Malden Site Plan Review Committee for Accessory Dwelling Units will
hold a public hearing in Malden City Hall, 215 Pleasant Street, Malden, MA,
Mayor’s Conference Room, 4th Floor, at 6:00 P.M. on Tuesday, June 23, 2026,
on the petition of Qing Sun, on behalf of Central SD LLC, filed in Permit Application
#RES-076713-2026 under Title 12, Code of the City of Malden, Section 12.32.030.D,
seeking Site Plan Review and Site Plan Approval of a proposed Accessory
Dwelling Unit to be constructed on the second floor of a proposed two-story
detached garage building, to replace the existing single-story garage accessory
to the existing two-family dwelling, at the property known as and numbered,
585 Highland Ave., Malden, MA, and by City Assessor’s Parcel Identification
#015 036 606. Petition and plans are available for public review in the Inspectional
Services Department, Malden City Hall, 215 Pleasant Street, Room 330, Malden,
MA and through the City website under Permit Application # RES-076713-2026 at
https://maldenma-energovweb.tylerhost.net/apps/SelfService#/home
By:
Nelson Miller
Chair, Site Plan Review Committee
June 05, 12, 2026
INSPECTIONAL SERVICES
215 Pleasant Street, 3rd Floor
Malden, Massachusetts 02148
(781) 397-7000 ext. 2030
City of Malden
Massachusetts
MALDEN SITE PLAN REVIEW COMMITTEE
for ACCESSORY DWELLING UNITS
PUBLIC HEARING
The Malden Site Plan Review Committee for Accessory Dwelling Units will
hold a public hearing in Malden City Hall, 215 Pleasant Street, Malden, MA,
Mayor’s Conference Room, 4th Floor, at 6:00 P.M. on Tuesday, June 23,
2026, on the petition of John Duran, JD Consulting and Design Inc., on behalf
of Margarita Restrepo, filed in Permit Application #RES-075944-2026 under
Title 12, Code of the City of Malden, Section 12.32.030.D, seeking Site Plan
Review and Site Plan Approval of a proposed Accessory Dwelling Unit
to be constructed on the first floor of the existing single-family dwelling, at the
property known as and numbered, 368 Ferry Street, Malden, MA, and by City
Assessor’s Parcel Identification #084 404 406. Petition and plans are available
for public review in the Inspectional Services Department, Malden City Hall, 215
Pleasant Street, Room 330, Malden, MA and through the City website under
Permit Application # RES-075944-2026 at https://maldenma-energovweb.
tylerhost.net/apps/SelfService#/home
By: Nelson Miller
Site Plan Review Committee Chair
June 05, 12, 2026
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Savvy Senior
by Jim Miller
Still Working at 65? Here’s
How to Handle Medicare
Dear Savvy Senior,
My wife and I are approaching
65, but I’m still working and have
good health coverage through my
employer. Do we need to enroll in
Medicare at this point?
--Almost 65
Dear Almost,
If you or your spouse is still
working past age 65 and have
health insurance through your
job, you may be able to delay enrolling
in Medicare without a late
enrollment penalty. However, the
rules depend largely on the size
of your employer.
First, a quick refresher: Remember
that original Medicare has
two parts. Part A, which covers
hospital care and is premium-free
for most people. And Part B,
which covers doctor visits, lab
tests, and outpatient care and has
a monthly premium of $202.90 in
2026. Higher-income individuals
(over $109,000) and couples (over
$218,000) pay more.
If you’re already receiving Social
Security, you’ll automatically
be enrolled in Parts A and B
when you turn 65, and your Medicare
card will arrive in the mail. It
will include instructions on how
to return it if you have employer
coverage that allows you to delay
Part B.
If you’re still working
Start by talking with your benefits
manager or HR department to
understand how your employer
insurance works with Medicare.
In most cases, it makes sense to
enroll in Part A since it’s free. However,
if you contribute to a Health
Savings Account, enrolling in Part
A will stop those contributions.
Whether you should enroll in
Part B usually depends on your
employer’s size.
Small employer
If your employer has fewer
than 20 employees, Medicare
becomes your primary insurance.
In this case, you should enroll
in Part B during your Initial
Enrollment Period, which lasts
seven months: the three months
before your 65th birthday, your
birthday month, and the three
months after.
If you aren’t receiving Social
Security, you’ll need to apply for
Medicare. You can do this online
at ssa.gov/medicare/sign-up, by
phone at 800-772-1213, or in
person at your local Social Security
office.
If you miss your Initial Enrollment
Period, you’ll need to wait
for the General Enrollment Period,
which runs January 1 through
March 31. Coverage begins the
first day of the month after you
enroll, but a 10 percent penalty is
added to your Part B premium for
each full year you waited. Signing
up on time helps you avoid both
coverage gaps and added costs.
Large employer
If your employer has 20 or more
employees, your group health
plan remains your primary insurance
while you’re actively working.
In this case, you generally
don’t need to enroll in Part B at
65 if your coverage is adequate. If
you do enroll, Medicare will serve
as secondary coverage.
Once your employment or employer
coverage ends, you’ll have
an eight-month Special Enrollment
Period to sign up for Part B
without penalty.
Check drug coverage
You should also review your prescription
drug coverage. Ask your
benefits manager if your employer’s
plan is considered “creditable.”
If it is, you don’t need to enroll in a
Medicare Part D plan. If it isn’t, you
should sign up for Part D during
your Initial Enrollment Period to
avoid a penalty – typically 1 percent
of the national average premium
for each month you delay.
You can compare Part D plans
at medicare.gov/plan-compare.
Need help?
For free guidance, contact your
State Health Insurance Assistance
Program at 877-839-2675
or shiphelp.org. You can also call
the Medicare Rights Center helpline
at 800-333-4114.
Navigating Medicare while
you’re still working can be confusing,
but a quick check with
your employer and a clear understanding
of the rules can help you
avoid costly mistakes. Taking the
time to get it right now will ensure
you have the coverage you
need, without unnecessary penalties
down the road.
Send your senior questions to: Savvy Senior, P.O. Box 5443, Norman,
OK 73070, or visit SavvySenior.org. Jim Miller is a contributor to
the NBC Today show and author of “The Savvy Senior” book.
Christopher Rosa
Tree Warden – City of Malden
June 12, 19, 2026
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 12, 2026
BHRC | FROM PAGE 17
Sen. Jason Lewis
Yes
ALSO UP ON BEACON HILL
BAN CANCER-LINKED CHEMICAL
FROM IV BAGS (S 3106) – The Senate
approved, on a voice vote without a
roll call, and sent to the House a bill that
would ban the use of DEHP, a toxic chemical
which is commonly added to plastic
intravenous bags and tubing and linked
to breast, liver, lung and testicular cancer.
Many IV bags currently contain DEHP,
which is added to improve the plastic’s
flexibility but can pose serious health dangers
to patients.
“When a patient is in a hospital bed
receiving IV therapy, the last thing they
should have to worry about is whether
the equipment itself is making them
sicker,” said Sen. Joan Lovely (D-Salem),
the sponsor of the measure. “DEHP is a
known carcinogen. Safer alternatives already
exist and are being used by major
health systems right here in Massachusetts.
This bill simply says we are going
to catch up with the science. Patients deserve
nothing less.”
COMMERCIAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS
(S 3107) - The Senate approved, on
a voice vote without a roll call, and sent to
the House legislation that would create
optional state licensure for commercial
interior designers, a step that supporters
say would empower smaller designers to
bid individually for certain projects rather
than having to contract with a larger firm.
Currently, smaller interior design operations
have to contract with larger firms
that have architectural licenses in order
to bid on certain projects.
“Massachusetts is home to five colleges
with nationally accredited interior
CITY OF MALDEN
Forest Dale Cemetery
150 Forest Street
Malden, MA 02148
Telephone: 781-397-7191 / Fax: 781-388-0849
Christopher Rosa., Superintendent of Cemeteries / Tree Warden
LEGAL NOTICE
CITY OF MALDEN
PUBLIC TREE HEARING
In accordance with the provisions of Massachusetts General Law, Chapter 87, Section 3, notice is
herewith given that a public hearing will be held at 6:00 P.M. on Monday, the 22nd day of June
2026 at Malden City Hall Conference Room 105, 215 Pleasant Street, Malden, Massachusetts
for the purpose of determining if the seven (7) public shade trees shall be removed or remain per the
Tree Warden of the City of Malden. The trees are located at or around the address identified below:
Address Street
99 CRYSTAL STREET
99 CRYSTAL STREET
205 MAPLEWOOD STREET
551 LYNN STREET
551 LYNN STREET
551 LYNN STREET
306 HIGHLAND AVE.
DBH (IN)
22
20
24
6
14
16
3
Common Name
HONEYLOCUST
HONEYLOCUST
HONEYLOCUST
BRADFORD PEAR
GREEN ASH (DEAD/EAB)
GREEN ASH (DEAD/EAB)
NORTHERN RED OAK
OBJECTIONS TO THE REMOVAL OF ANY TREE(S) MUST BE RECEIVED IN WRITING
BY THE TREE WARDEN AT THE ABOVE LISTED ADDRESS PRIOR TO OR AT THE
TREE HEARING.
design programs,” said sponsor Sen. Joan
Lovely (D-Salem). “We are training talented
professionals and then telling them
they cannot fully practice their craft in
their own state. This is not right, and [the
bill] fixes that. It creates real economic opportunity,
especially for women and minority-owned
businesses, and it keeps
our graduates here where they can grow
their careers and contribute to our communities.”
“[The]
bill is the result of real collaboration,”
said Sen. Pavel Payano (D-Lawrence),
Senate chair of the Committee on Consumer
Protection and Professional Licensure.
“Architects, engineers, building officials
and interior designers came to the table
and worked through the hard conversations.
What emerged is a commonsense
framework that gives commercial interior
BHRC | SEE PAGE 19
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Diep Thi Nguyen
Of Malden. Passed away on Monday,
June 8th, at
the age of 83.
She was born in
Thanh Hoa, Vietnam
in 1942, the
daughter of Nhat
Van Nguyen and
Thanh Thi Pham.
She spent the
majority of her
life in Vietnam, and moved to the
United States many years ago, settling
in the Malden area. She worked
in the warehouse operations for TJ
Max for many years. Diep loved gardening,
and was very faithful to her
Church. She was a very kind person
with a great sense of humor, and
enjoyed telling stories of her life in
Vietnam.
She is survived by her children,
Hai Duy Nguyen of Malden, and
Hoai Duy Nguyen of Malden, her sister
Doa Thi Pham of Saugus, and her
grandchildren, Thuy Duy Nguyen
and Christina Nguyen.
Funeral services will be held from
the Weir -MacCuish Funeral Home,
144 Salem St, Malden on Saturday,
June 13th at 9:30 AM, followed by a
Mass of Christian Burial in St. Clements
Church, Medford, at 11 AM. Interment
to follow in Holy Cross Cemetery,
Malden. Visitation will be held
at the funeral home on Friday, June
12th, from 4 – 8 PM.
Eugene “Gene”
Pinkham
It is with deep
sadness that we
announce the
sudden passing
of Malden,
on June 6, at the
age of 68. Gene
was a devoted
husband to his
beloved wife, Karen Jones (MacGregor);
the cherished son of Stella (DanTHE
MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 12, 2026
BHRC | FROM PAGE 18
tes) Pinkham and the late John E.
“Jack” Pinkham; a loving father to Evelyn
Rose; and a proud grandfather
to Marcelo Romero. Family was at
the center of Gene’s life, and he took
great pride in the people he loved.
Born and raised in Malden, Gene
graduated from Malden High in
1975 and continued his education
at Boston College, Bentley University,
and Bunker Hill Community College.
Throughout his life, he was
known for his dedication to family,
faith, community, and music. Music
was one of Gene’s greatest passions.
A talented drummer, he performed
with the Golden Tornados Band in his
younger years and continued playing
with local bands throughout his
life. Whether behind a drum set, preparing
a meal, or lending a helping
hand, Gene had a gift for bringing
people together and making everyone
feel welcome.
Gene worked for the City of Malden
as a Traffic Supervisor. He also enjoyed
cooking at the Italian American
Club, where he combined his love
of food, friendship, and community.
His commitment to serving others
was evident in everything he did.
Gene proudly served as President of
the Knights of Columbus at Immaculate
Conception, was an active member
of the Lions Club, and dedicated
many years to Bread of Life, helping
ensure that those in need received
care, compassion, and support.
Gene will be remembered for his
warm heart, generous spirit, love of
music, and unwavering devotion to
his family and community. He leaves
behind countless memories, lasting
friendships, and a legacy of kindness
that will continue to live on in the
hearts of all who knew him. He will
be deeply missed, lovingly remembered,
and forever cherished.
Funeral from the A. J. Spadafora
Funeral Home, Malden on Thursday
June 11th followed by a Mass of
Christian Burial celebrating Gene's
life in the Immaculate Conception
Church, 600 Pleasant Street, Malden.
Visiting hours were held at the funeral
home on Wednesday. Interment
will be private.
designers the recognition they deserve,
establishes clear professional boundaries
and protects consumers. Massachusetts
has talented practitioners in this field who
have built careers and businesses without
a clear path to licensure. This legislation
changes that.”
CLEFT PALATE AND CLEFT LIP (HD
4385) – The House referred to the Committee
on Financial Services a bill that
would amend and expand current law
which mandates coverage for the expense
of treatment of cleft palate and
cleft lip for children under the age of 18.
The bill would expand the law to include
patients over the age of 18.
Supporters said that current law results
in individuals over the age of 18 born with
INSPECTIONAL SERVICES
215 Pleasant Street, 3rd Floor
Malden, Massachusetts 02148
(781) 397-7000 ext. 2030
Page 19
a cleft palate and/or cleft experiencing a
“cliff effect,” where their insurance will automatically
stop covering medically necessary
treatments and surgeries despite
appeals from both the patients and their
medical providers.
“Expanding coverage for cleft palate
and lip treatments would improve the
lives of many and provide them with
the support, dignity and care they deserve,”
said sponsor Rep. Steven Ultrino
(D-Malden).
$10.1 MILLION TO CITIES AND TOWNS
FOR FIBER NETWORKS - The Healey Administration
announced $10.1 million in
grants to Massachusetts cities and towns
to help them build or complete municipal
fiber networks, enabling modern, efficient
technology infrastructure and stronger
cybersecurity capabilities.
“Investments in municipal fiber networks
improve the efficiency and cost
effectiveness of local governments,” said
Administration and Finance Secretary
Matthew Gorzkowicz. “These fiscal year
2026 grants will help Massachusetts communities
close critical infrastructure gaps,
gain economies of scale and upgrade to
more modern and resilient technology.”
“Municipally owned fiber networks are
critical to help cities and towns modernize
operations, strengthen cybersecurity and
deliver more reliable public services,” said
Technology Services and Security Secretary
Jason Snyder. “Through the Municipal
Fiber Grant Program, we are helping
cities and towns close critical connectivity
gaps, improve the resiliency of local
government technology systems and
BHRC | SEE PAGE 21
City of Malden
Massachusetts
MALDEN SITE PLAN REVIEW COMMITTEE
for ACCESSORY DWELLING UNITS
PUBLIC HEARING
The Malden Site Plan Review Committee for Accessory Dwelling Units will
hold a public hearing in Malden City Hall, 215 Pleasant Street, Malden, MA,
Mayor’s Conference Room, 4th Floor, at 6:00 P.M. on Tuesday, June 23,
2026, on the petition of Vernice Biscalquim, filed in Permit Application
#RES-076554-2026 under Title 12, Code of the City of Malden, Section
12.32.030.D, seeking Site Plan Review and Site Plan Approval of a proposed
Accessory Dwelling Unit to be constructed in the basement of the existing
single-family dwelling, at the property known as and numbered, 27 Church Street,
Malden, MA, and by City Assessor’s Parcel Identification # 133 683 318.
Petition and plans are available for public review in the Inspectional Services
Department, Malden City Hall, 215 Pleasant Street, Room 330, Malden, MA and
through the City website under Permit Application # RES-076554-2026 at
https://maldenma-energovweb.tylerhost.net/apps/SelfService#/home
By:
Nelson Miller
Building Commissioner
Site Plan Review Committee Chair
June 05, 12, 2026
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
BUYER1
Cashore, Walter
Darbari, Arsalan
Hadwen, Jill
Oo, Aung Hein
Parthasarathy, Naveen L
Portillo-Castaneda, Nery J
Wight, Lindsay Ann
Wilichowski, Matthew
Meakin, Sarah
Farivar, Tanaz
Huynh, Cathy Tien
Kamal, S Do Musthafa
Portillo, Christopher R C
Scalera, Amy
BUYER2
SELLER1
Chipmunk Prop Mgmt LLC
Macdonald, James E
Sampson, Carolyn R
De Aragao, Sueli R
Sawchuk, Roxolana M
Deassis, Roberto
Driscoll, Maureen T
Williams, Craig J
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial
Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission from the publisher,
The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property
information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com.
SELLER2
ADDRESS
34 Grimshaw St
Macdonald, Margaret M 36-38 Albion St
23 Pebble Pl #23
10 Dell St
59 Cherry St
Deassis, Scheila
Williams, Emily M
1135 Salem St
10 Crestview Dr #10
301 Forest St
CITY
Malden
Malden
Malden
Malden
Malden
Malden
Malden
Malden
DATE
05.22.26
05.19.26
05.22.26
05.22.26
05.19.26
05.22.26
05.22.26
05.18.26
PRICE
770000
1260000
625000
700000
832000
800000
575000
640000
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 12, 2026
Carrijo Home Improvement, Inc.
General Contractor
1. On June 12, 1939, the Baseball Hall of
Fame opened in Cooperstown in what
state?
2. What famous Roman assassin’s name
includes the Roman word for June?
3. In what country is the longest lasting
existing written government charter?
4. What Depression era U.S. president
said, “Baseball has become, through the
years, not only a great national sport
but also the symbol of America as the
melting pot”?
5. How are bullion, meme and shilling
similar?
6. June 13 is National Sewing Machine
Day; what is a sewing machine feed
dog?
7. How are Dolley, Grace and “Mamie”
similar?
8. On June 14, 1892, NYC immigrant Nathan
Handwerker was born; he became
famous for what food?
9. What language is most common?
10. What dog breed’s name includes the
name of a New England city?
11. On June 15, 1864, Arlington National
Cemetery was formed from what general’s
estate?
12. Where is the largest USA stadium?
(called The Big House)
13. What is ERA, which was first proposed
in 1923 but has not yet been formally
ratified?
14. On June 16, 1933, FDIC was formed;
FDIC stands for what?
15. How are Dudley Do-Right, Peabody’s
Improbable History, and Fractured Fairy
Tales similar?
16. How are “Crazy Rich Asians,” “Mamma
Mia!” and “The Sound of Music” similar?
17. On June 17, 1775, was what first major
American Revolution battle?
18. What is herpetophobia?
19. What two non-presidents are on U.S.
currency?
20. On June 18, 1942, what musician was
born who wrote “Band on the Run” with
his wife?
ANSWERS
Frank Berardino
MA License 31811
● 24-Hour Service
● Emergency Repairs
BERARDINO
Plumbing & Heating
Gas Fitting ● Drain Service
Residential & Commercial Service
617.699.9383
Senior Citizen Discount
~ School Bus Drivers Wanted ~
7D Licensed School Bus Drivers
Malden Trans is looking for reliable drivers for
the new school year. We provide ongoing training
and support for licensing requirements. Applicant
preferably lives local (Malden, Everett, Revere).
Part-time positions available and based on AM &
PM school hours....15-30 hours per week. Good
driver history from Registry a MUST! If interested,
please call David @ 781-322-9401.
CDL SCHOOL BUS DRIVER WANTED
Compensation: $28/hour
School bus transportation company seeking
active CDL drivers who live LOCALLY (Malden,
Everett, Chelsea and immediate surrounding
communities).
- Applicant MUST have BOTH S and P endorsements
as well as Massachusetts school bus certificate.
Good driver history from Registry a MUST!
-
Part-time hours, BUT GUARANTEED 20-35
HOURS PER WEEK depending on experience.
Contact David @ 781-322-9401.
AAA Service • Lockouts
Trespass Towing • Roadside Service
Junk Car Removal
617-387-6877
26 Garvey St., Everett
MDPU 28003 ICCMC 251976
J.F & Son Contracting
Snow Plowing
No Job too small! Free Estimates!
Commercial & Residential
781-656-2078
- Property management & maintenance
Shoveling & removal
Landscaping, Electrical, Plumbing, Painting, Roofing, Carpentry, Framing,
Decks, Fencing, Masonry, Demolition, Gut-outs, Junk Removal & Dispersal,
Clean Ups: Yards, Garages, Attics & Basements. Truck for Hire, Bobcat Services.
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
* Interior & Exterior Carpentry * Kitchen & Bath
* Roofs * Painting * Decks * Siding
* Licensed & Insured * Free Estimates
Carrijohomeimprovement.com
Call 781-710-8918 * Saugus, MA
FIRE • SOOT • WATER
Homeowner’s Insurance Loss Specialists
FREE CONSULTATION
1-877-SAL-SOOT
Sal Barresi, Jr. - Your fi rst call
617-212-9050
1. New York
2. Marcus Junius Brutus
3. USA (U.S. Constitution)
4. FDR
5. Types of coins
6. Metal teeth that position fabric in place
7. First names of First Ladies (last names are
Madison, Coolidge and Eisenhower, respectively)
8.
He founded a Coney Island hot dog stand
and later on expanded it to “Nathan’s Famous”
9.
English
10.
Boston Terrier
11. Robert E. Lee
12. The University of Michigan in Ann Arbor
13. Equal Rights Amendment (in 2025 a Congressional
resolution proposed establishing
its ratification)
14. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
15. Recurring segments on TV show “The Adventures
of Rocky and Bullwinkle and
Friends”
16. They are movies with wedding scenes.
17. Battle of Bunker Hill
18. Fear of reptiles
19. Benjamin Franklin ($100) and Alexander
Hamilton ($10)
20. Paul McCartney
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Page 21
BHRC | FROM PAGE 19
build scalable networks that will support
municipal operations for years to come.”
HOW LONG WAS LAST WEEK’S SESSION?
Beacon
Hill Roll Call tracks the length
of time that the House and Senate were
in session each week. Many legislators
say that legislative sessions are only one
aspect of the Legislature’s job and that a
lot of important work is done outside of
the House and Senate chambers. They
note that their jobs also involve committee
work, research, constituent work
and other matters that are important to
their districts.
Critics say that the Legislature does not
meet regularly or long enough to debate
and vote in public view on the thousands
of pieces of legislation that have been
filed. They note that the infrequency and
brief length of sessions are misguided
and lead to irresponsible late-night sessions
and a mad rush to act on dozens of
bills in the days immediately preceding
the end of an annual session.
During the week of June 1-5, the
House met for a total of 13 hours and
27 minutes and the Senate met for a
total of six hours and four minutes.
Mon. June 1
House 11:00a.m. to 11:12 a.m.
Senate11:02a.m. to 11:09 a.m.
Tues.June 2
No House session.
No Senate session.
Wed. June 3
House 11:00a.m. to4:50 p.m.
No Senate session.
Thurs. June 4
House 10:59a.m. to6:24 p.m.
Senate11:07a.m. to5:04 p.m.
Fri. June 5
No House session.
No Senate session.
Bob Katzen welcomes feedback at
bob@beaconhillrollcall.com
Bob founded Beacon Hill Roll Call in
1975 and was inducted into the New
England Newspaper and Press Association
(NENPA) Hall of Fame in 2019.
Copyright © 2026 Beacon Hill Roll Call.
All Rights Reserved.
FURNISHED ROOM FOR RENT
EVERETT
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
www.mastrocola.com
American Exterior and
Window Corporation
Contact us for all of your
home improvement projects
and necessities.
Call Jeff or Bob
Toll Free: 1-888-744-1756
617-699-1782 / www.americanexteriorma.com
Windows, Siding, Roofing, Carpentry & More!
All estimates, consultations or inspections completed
by MA licensed supervisors. *Over 50 years experience.
*Better Business Bureau Membership.
Insured and
Registered
Complete Financing Available.
No Money Down.
BUDGET
SERVICES
RUBBISH REMOVAL
* Interior-Exterior Demolition
Bathroom/Kitchen/Decks, Etc.
* All Types of Debris Removed
* Pick-up Truck Load of Trash
starting at $239.
~ Licensed & Insured ~
Call (978) 494-3443
Clean-Outs!
We take and dispose
from cellars, attics,
garages, yards, etc.
Call Robert at:
781-844-0472
TOURS | FROM PAGE 3
Steps Stoops Rebuilt or Repaired
Chimney Rebuilt or Repaired
House Foundation Leaks Repaired
All Basement Repairs
Walkways, Driveways & Patios Installed
Chimney Inspection
Roofing & Siding Installed
Masonry Repairs
Window Installation & Repairs
Carpentry & Waterproofing
1 bedroom, 1 bath furnished room for rent.
$275. per week rent. Two week deposit
plus 1 week rent required.
Call: 617-435-9047 - NO TEXT
The Kid Does
Clean Outs
From 1 item to 1,000
* Basements * Homes * Backyards
* Commercial Buildings
The cheapest prices around!
Call Eric: (857) 322-2854
617-955-5164
toughbuildmasonryandconstuction.com
toughbuildjohn@gmail.com
ticket purchases, scan the QR
codes on the event flyer or go to
www.eventbrite.com and search
Explore Malden Center’s Public
Art. The tours are presented by
Creative Malden in partnership
with The Great Malden Outdoors,
Malden Arts, the Malden Cultural
Council and the Mass Cultural
Council.
Whether you are a longtime
resident, a newcomer to the city
or simply someone who enjoys
art and local history, the Malden
Center Public Art Walking Tours
offer a fresh perspective on the
creativity that continues to shape
downtown Malden.
For Advertising
with Results,
call The Advocate
Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@
advocatenews.net
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 12, 2026
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Page 23
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TRINITY REAL ESTATE
321 MAIN STREET | SAUGUS, MA | VILLAGE PARK
TrinityHomesRE.com 781.231.9800
~Let our team of experienced REALTORS® assist in all your real estate needs~
8 Lincoln Ct, Saugus, MA 01906
581 Proctor Ave, Revere, MA 02151
List Price: $1,415,000
Listed by: Annemarie Torcivia Cell: 781.983.5266
Solid brick 4-unit mixed-use investment at 581 Proctor Ave
& 233 Washington St featuring 3 residential units and a
2000+ sq ft commercial dance studio with long-term tenant
of 39 years. Residential units include two 4-room/2bedroom/1-bath
apartments and one 6-room/3-bedroom unit
with office or den. Common laundry room. Property
currently operating at a strong 9% cap rate. All tenants are
Section 8 with reliable income stream. All Delead
Certificates in hand. Excellent cash flow, durable
construction, and exceptional tenant stability make this a
true investor opportunity. Dance studio leased till 2029.
46 Hesper Street, Saugus, MA 01906
List Price: $659,900
Listed by: Lori Johnson Cell: 781.718.7409
Inviting split-entry ranch featuring a bright, open floor plan with sunny living
& dining room. The updated kitchen offers refinished cabinets and new
laminate flooring. The main level includes three bedrooms an updated full
bath with newer tile flooring. Additional living space in the lower level offers
a family room, home office or potential fourth bedroom, convenient laundry
room, half bath with potential to make full, and direct access to the one-car
garage. Additional features include hardwood flooring, generous closet and
storage space, and central air conditioning. Step outside to enjoy the private,
fenced, terraced yard complete with a deck and storage shed. Exterior
improvements include vinyl siding, updated roof, and solar panels. Nicely
situated in desirable Lynnhurst neighborhood.
List Price: $519,000
Listed by: Diane Horrigan Cell: 781.526.6357
"Opportunity is Knocking" at 8 Lincoln Court! Bring your vision and
unlock the potential of this solid home, ideal for contractors, investors, or
buyers looking to build instant equity. While updates are needed, the
property offers great bones, generous living space, high ceilings, and
abundant natural light throughout. Hardwood floors are believed to be
under the carpeting. The finished lower level features two rooms, a
kitchenette, full bath, and laundry area, providing flexible living options.
A walk-up attic offers additional expansion potential. Major
improvements include a roof and heating system approximately 7 years
old, plus a newer hot water tank. Conveniently located with quick access
to Routes 1 and 99, making commuting to Boston a breeze. Close to
restaurants, shopping, and everyday conveniences. Property is being sold
strictly as is. Buyers and their agents to perform their own due diligence.
Always a free and no pressure market analysis
on your home.
Contact us to see what your home is worth!
“Treating your home as our own and each client like family”
FOR
SALE
FOR
SALE
FOR
SALE
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 12, 2026
#
1
“Experience and knowledge
Provide the Best Service”
SAUGUS - 1st AD
$549,900
Conveniently located
7 room Cape Cod style
home offers 4 bedrooms,
2 baths, hardwood
flooring, garage.
LYNN - NEW PRICE!! $499,900
RARE opportunity to own mixed use building! Large store front on 1st floor,
spacious 3–4-bedroom residential unit on 2nd floor, garage, off st. parking.
CHELSEA - $439,900
Millcreek Condos offers this 2 bdrm , 2 bath unit, new flooring
and light fixtures, freshly painted, pool, gym on site.
SAUGUS - $689,000 - 1st AD
Iron Works Neighborhood offers this 7 rm, 3 bdrm, Cape Cod
style home, 1 ½ baths, hardwood flooring, inground pool. Great
Home – Great Location!
SAUGUS AFFORDABLE - $364,900
Suntaug Estates offers this beautiful 3 room condo, updated
granite kitchen, large bedroom with walk-in closet, pool.
COMMONMOVES.COM
335 CENTRAL STREET, SAUGUS, MA / (781) 233-7300
LYNN - $639,000
Veterans Village offers this wonderful 3-bedroom home,
fireplace living room, eat-in kitchen, 1st floor family
room addition, open deck and covered deck.
LYNNFIELD - $2,449,999
UNIQUE Mixed-use property, 4-bedroom home plus rear
building, great corner lot with ample off-street parking, many
possibilities! Call for details.
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