׉?4ׁB!בCט U Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://X_3t5XeoFGc3SWfAggEiZbMZwZdolZtv3LCmq43YKrM R`'p׉	 7cassandra://X0PK4IM697BtnEb5HM4KeyuTJf36H-LO5KJRq8JeE-k͹l`׉	 7cassandra://LejT7HjtNEOgqxiah1DzNk5ZNibBeC4aVLc-SSvD9Wo:Q` h8h;3Jנh8h;3M P9ׁHhttp://during.ThׁׁЈ׈Eh8h;30׉EMalden firefighters battled 4-alarm
blaze on Ferry Street Wednesday
Mutual aid crews from Everett, Revere, Saugus and five other
communities on scene at inferno which destroyed 4-family home
By Steve Freker
A
s early evening arrived, a
large American Flag fluttered
along a trellis on the front porch,
most likely an ode to just-passed
Memorial Day.
There did not seem to be
much else left intact on Wednesday
after a four-alarm fire ripped
through a multi-family residence
on Ferry Street in the late afternoon
hours.
Malden firefighters battled
the blaze, which initially sent
flames shooting out the top of
the roof plus clouds of billowing
smoke, beginning about 3:30
p.m. Wednesday.
BLAZE | SEE PAGE 4
Holocaust survivor Janet
Singer Applefield visits MHS
AERIAL VIEW— Firefighters battled a four-alarm blaze at a Malden
multi-family residence at 206 Ferry St. Wednesday afternoon.
Courtesy/ Channel 7 News
Malden Boy and Cub Scouts Pack 603
Pictured from left to right: Mayor Gary Christenson, MHS Social
Studies Teacher Leader Kurtis Scheer, Janet Singer Applefield and
MHS Principal Chris Mastrangelo.
Special to The Advocate
participate in City’s Memorial Day Observance H
olocaust survivor Janet Singer
Applefield recently visited
Malden High School for a presentation
to students. Janet has
met with more than 4,000 students
over the years — speaking
about her experiences and
her life. As it was also the occasion
of her 90th birthday, Mayor
Gary Christenson presented her
with a citation.
Janet’s life story is nothing
less than awe inspiring. Born
Gustawa Singer in 1935 in Krakow,
Poland, as World War II
was developing, her parents
made the heart-wrenching decision
to leave her with a disHOLOCAUST
| SEE PAGE 18
The Malden Boy and Cub Scouts from Pack 603 participated in the Memorial Day Observance at Bell
Rock Memorial Park as they displayed the US flag during.The scouts joined the Malden community for
a ceremony honoring the men and women who gave the ultimate sacrifice for our Nation’s freedom
on Memorial Day.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 30, 2025
Malden High School to hold 181st Commencement
ceremony on Sunday for Class of 2025
By Steve Freker
T
his Sunday, June 1, Malden
High School will recognize
and honor the approximately
400 members of the Class
of 2025 with its 181st annual
Commencement Exercises.
Graduates, families and
friends will gather at Macdonald
Stadium (15 Pearl St.) for
the 2:00 p.m. ceremony with
much “pomp” and lots of “circumstance”
as Malden High’s
newest “alumni-to-be” are welGerry
D’Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
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14 Proctor Avenue, Revere
(781) 284-5657
comed into the ranks of graduates.
This
year’s MHS Class of 2025
has a vibrant collection of successful
and talented students
with success in many areas, including
academics, social activism,
athletics and the arts.
“This Malden High School
Class of 2024 has faced and
met many challenges and we
have no doubt this will be a
group of highly successful
graduates,” said Malden High
School Principal Chris MasCecii
Wong
Valedictorian
trangelo, who will be presiding
over his eighth MHS Commencement
Exercises. Mastrangelo
will be joined by
Mayor and School Committee
Chairperson Gary Christenson,
Superintendent of Schools
Timothy Sippel, Ed.L.D. and
other city and state dignitaries.
Dr. Sippel, who took the reins
of the Malden Public Schools
on July 1, 2024, will be attending
his first MHS Commencement
Exercises.
Graduation Day marks a jampacked
Senior Week of activiHailey
Tran
Salutatorian
ties, which kicked off last week
with Senior Prom on May 21
and continued this week with
Senior Scholarship Night on
Tuesday, National Honor Society
Induction on Wednesday
evening and the annual
Senior Cookout in the Malden
High School Courtyard yesterday
afternoon.
At Senior Scholarship Night,
over 100 members of the Class
of 2024 received a school record-high
$130,000-plus in
scholarship awards. An additional
$50,000 in scholarship
Kathleen Yick
Orator
awards from Malden High
School Scholarship Inc. will be
announced at Sunday’s Commencement
as well by representative
Greg Lucey.
This year’s class speakers include
some remarkable students,
with #1-ranked Class
of 2025 senior Cecii Wong
serving as Valedictorian. She
is headed to MIT in the fall.
Hailey Tran is the #2-ranked
MHS Class of 2025 senior and
will deliver the Salutatorian
address and will attend
Brandeis University in the fall.
The #3-ranked senior is Kathleen
Yick and will speak as
Class Orator. She will also attend
Brandeis.
Some special performances
at Sunday’s Commencement
will be provided by the MHS
Choral Arts Society, under the
direction of Todd Cole, and the
MHS Band, directed by Lauren
Foley.
Parking is limited in the neighborhood
around Macdonald
Stadium, and those attending
are urged to arrive early and to
consider alternative means of
transportation, such as public
transportation, as the stadium
is located directly adjacent
to the Malden Center MBTA Orange
Line Station, which is also
a public bus hub.
There is a rain date, Monday,
June 2 at 4:00 p.m., should the
need arise, though the weather
forecast is picture-perfect
for the big day on Sunday, with
sunny skies and pleasant, mid70s
temperatures.
׉	 7cassandra://-78oS1KafXfqA0B8Wud3w7F107gOUfo1i4LngGwPZKE6` h8h;32׉E{THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 30, 2025
Page 3
New mural on the bike path honors the work
of Erle Stanley Gardner, creator of Perry Mason
“I think crime pays. It keeps coming back, like a bad penny.”Erle Stanley Gardner
By Joy Pearson
A
s you bicycle, run, or walk
along the Bike to the Sea
bike path, you’re in for a surprise.
A new mural celebrating
the world-famous Perry Mason
author, Malden native-born Erle
Stanley Gardner, has been added
to two existing murals on the
trail near the Main Street intersection.
The new mural was unveiled
by Malden Arts on May 19
in a celebration of both the mural
and the extraordinary person
it honors.
Malden Arts was formed in
2006 and has made public art
its focus since 2016. Board member
Sharon Santillo said, “public
art is truly uplifting for all in the
fense lawyer featured in the early
television series of the same
name. Dorothy B Hughes, his biographer,
said Gardner was “one
of the wealthiest mystery writers
and most widely-read authors of
his time.” His life’s work, as champion
of the underdog, also had
a significant impact on the U.S.
criminal justice system.
Erle Stanley Gardner was born
in 1889, in Malden, Massachusetts.
At age 10, he and his family
moved west following his father’s
profession of mining engineering.
Gardner’s schooling was
MURAL | SEE PAGE 14
If We Happen To
Meet By Accident ...
You’ll Be Glad You Found Us!
The Malden Public Library's
copy of the "The Court of Last
Resort." The library holds copies
of many of Gardner's novels.
(Photo by Joy Pearson)
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Gardner was born at 5 Dale St. in Malden (pictured, left) He moved
to 24 Bowers Ave. (pictured, right), in a home (purportedly built
by his grandfather), when he was 3 years old and lived there until
he was 10. (Photos courtesy of Neighborhood View)
community.” The group commissioned
a series of murals
throughout the city which feature
famous artists and other
notable figures who hail from
Malden. Past murals have celebrated
the work of Ed Emberley,
Norman Greenbaum, Frank Stella,
Keith Knight and the five Malden
Wonder Women.
To commission the new mural,
Santillo contacted former Malden
firefighter Fred Seager, a local
artist and co-founder of the
Malden Sketch Group in 1995,
which is still operating today.
Over the years, Seager has painted
a series of murals inside Malden’s
district firehouses. Seager
liked the idea of doing a mural of
Gardner and said, “I started looking
at some Perry Mason book
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Erle Stanley Gardner as judge
and William Talman as District
Attorney, in one of the last Perry
Mason’s television shows. (From
Pinterest, posted by Jim Davidson)
covers” to add “colorful fun along
the bike path.”The City of Malden
provided funding.
In case you wonder who Erle
Stanley Gardner was, he is best
known as the creator of Perry
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 30, 2025
Clean Water Action to honor Malden students
at 2025 celebration
Special to The Advocate
F
our Malden High School
students will be honored
with Clean Water Action’s
2025 Youth Leadership Award
at the organization’s annual
celebration on June 12. Noha
Ahmed, Delina Yohannes, Melinna
Enamorado and Olivia
Yang, all alumni of Clean Water’s
Youth Action Collaborative,
are being recognized
for efforts in mobilizing their
peers and their community
for environmental justice.
The event — “The Fun is in
the Fight!” — will be held at
the Charles River Museum of
Industry and Innovation in
Lawrence A. Simeone Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
~ Since 1989 ~
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300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
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Waltham.
“These young organizers
didn’t just read about community
organizing — they walked
the walk. From meeting with
elected leaders to rallying at
the State House, they show up
and inspire the people around
them to shake off their apathy
and get to work for a healthier
environment,” said Clean Water
Action Massachusetts Co-Director
Elizabeth Saunders. “I
am so excited to honor them
alongside other Massachusetts
movement leaders and grassroots
advocates.”
The organization’s other
2025 awardees are as follows:
• Environmental Justice
Leadership Award — María
Belén Power: the Commonwealth’s
first Undersecretary
of Environmental Justice.
• John O’Connor Grassroots
Leadership Award — Barbara
Espinosa Barrera: the Environmental
Justice and Health EqMalden
students are shown participating at Boston’s climate rally
last winter. From left to right are Clean Water Action’s State CoDirector,
Cynthia Mendes (tan coat) and students (holding the
banner) Noha Ahmed, Delina Yohannes, Melinna Enamorado and
Olivia Yang. (Photo courtesy of Clean Water Action staff member Omesa Mokaya)
uity Organizer at GreenRoots
in Chelsea.
• John O’Connor Award for
Canvassing — Sarah Etling: Etting
is not only the most successful
canvasser calling Clean
Water Action’s Massachusetts
members – she also trains
new staff in effective grassroots
organizing and communication.
•
Clean Water Champion —
Mujeres Victoriosas & Community
Economic DevelopBLAZE
| FROM PAGE 1
The fire appeared to have destroyed
most of the edifice at
206 Ferry St., which is one of the
biggest residential buildings
on the Malden side of the long
street, this one located on the
south corner of the intersection
with Holyoke Street.
Initially, there have been no
reports of anyone injured at
the fire scene — residents or
firefighters— though a couple
of firefighters were seen being
attended to by EMT personnel
there around 7:30 p.m., four
hours after the blaze was reported.
One cat was rescued by
Malden firefighters at the scene
while one resident claimed his
cat was lost in the fire.
Mutual aid firefighting apment
Center: They are both
leading community organizations
in New Bedford and are
recognized for their collaborative,
multilingual outreach
efforts to help people in underserved
neighborhoods
access Mass Save® programs
providing energy efficiency
improvements.
For more information about
the event, including tickets
and sponsorships, please visit
cleanwater.org/ma-spring.
paratus and crews from many
surrounding communities
were on hand to assist in both
firefighting operations and
other valuable on-site duties.
Everett, Revere and Saugus
firefighters were on hand to
assist as were other crews from
Medford, Somerville, Stoneham,
Melrose and Chelsea,
among others.
The cause of the fire was unknown
as of early Wednesday
evening, though an unconfirmed
report was that it may
have been electrical in nature.
Malden Police blocked off
both ends of Ferry Street from
through travel as firefighters
battled the blaze, at Eastern Avenue
extension and also at Cross
Street, beside the Ferryway K-8
School.
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Page 5
Deb Haney’s artwork at the Malden Public Library
T
he Malden Public Library will
be displaying the artwork
of Deb Haney throughout the
month of June. The library will
be hosting a reception for the
artist on Monday, June 2, from
7-8 p.m., and everyone is welcome
to attend.
A world traveler and collector
of the old, odd or unusual,
Deb has embraced the world
of handcrafting and design for
decades. Her ethnic inspired
adornments for home, person
and garden have been sold in
shops, shows and galleries in
Southern California and New
England. Deb was honored to
have been juried into several
national mixed-media exhibitions
at the Bristol (R.I.) Art
Museum, a historic mixed-media
art exhibit at the Broad
Institute of Harvard and MIT
honoring the thousands who
lost their lives to COVID, and
numerous local art events in
Melrose and Malden and the
Winthrop and Revere Art Festivals.
Deb
lives on Revere Beach (the
oldest public beach in USA!),
where she looks out on the
ocean for daily inspiration. This
“Oldest Public Beach in USA” series
comes from her musings
about the ways people enjoyed
Revere Beach in early times. Vintage
images, acrylic paints and
several mediums were used in
these acrylic mixed-media collages.
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Page 6
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 30, 2025
~ Malden Musings ~
Chelsea’s Jay Ash Speaks
By Peter Levine
I
t is said in “Malden Musings”...
Former Ward 5 Councillor,
between the line’s never say
quit warrior (outside the lines
also), and current man of leisure
who also married very well,
John Furlong, jolted my memory
after he read the “Summer of
’79 Revisited” article. He reminded
me of a number of non-Mal425r
Broadway, Saugus
Located adjacent to Kohls Plaza Route 1 South
in Saugus at the intersection of Walnut Street
We are on MBTA Bus Route 429
781-231-1111
We are a Skating Rink with
Bowling Alleys, Arcade and
two TV’s where the ball
games are always on!
PUBLIC SKATING SCHEDULE
12-7 p.m.
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
$10.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Rollerblades/inline skates $3.00 additional cost
Private Parties
7:30-11 p.m.
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
$11.00
Price includes Roller Skates
18+ Adults Only After 7 PM - ID Required
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4-8 p.m. $10.00 8:30-11 p.m. $11.
18+ Adults Only After 7 PM - ID Required
12-9 p.m.
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Sorry No Checks - ATM on site
Roller skate rentals included in all prices
Inline Skate Rentals $3.00 additional
BIRTHDAY & PRIVATE PARTIES AVAILABLE
www.roller-world.com
donian cagers who made an impact
in the Malden Men’s Rec
Basketball League back in the
Rec glory days. Guys like Meffa’s
Mike McCormick at Bowdoin,
Jerry Scott, who played
at Providence, John Miller, Assumption,
Keith Whit, UMass
Amherst; Kevin Headley played
with NY Knick all-time great Patrick
Ewing at Cambridge Rindge
& Latin and (we think) Bridgewater
State; Kenny “Monster” Kocher
dominated at Salem State,
and Jay Ash (yes, THAT Jay Ash,
Mass. Secretary of Housing and
Economic Development under
Governor Charlie Baker, previously
serving as City Manager
in Chelsea) made it look easy at
Clark. Thanks, John, for reminding
me that those guys made it
quite painful at times to play in
that league.
I heard from Jay Ash after I
Malden High School’s Roy Finn Gym in the 1980s — Malden
Recreation Department Basketball League — Levine Club’s Richie
“Magic” Lynch attempts a reverse layup with Broadway East’s Jay
Ash in hot pursuit.
posted pictures to his FB page.
It was a game played many years
ago at Malden High School in
the Rec League — his Broadway
East team (remember BE?
North Shore Acappella owned
that joint on Sunday nights
during our glorious past) versus
my Levine Club. Now, Jay was
a force of nature on the hoop
court. He played college hoops
at Clark, where he was captain,
graduating in 1983 and at a
skilled 6' 8" (or so) needed constant
attention on the court, to
say the least. The only issue he
׉	 7cassandra://wOjcfAZzUO9CuSxSkdOyTp-sa7Fwda3PB_IBdtw090Y,;` h8h;36׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 30, 2025
Page 7
had when he played for BE was
ball distribution. Sharing the
round ball with 6' 7" Rudy Williams
and all-world point guard
Bobby Chew (his family-owned
BE) was a daunting task, to say
the least. You see, Rudy starred
at Providence College and had
a “cup of coffee” I believe with
the New Jersey Nets while Bobby
could score 25 in his sleep, as
the saying goes.
After I posted the pictures, Jay
had this marvelous retort: “Peter,
you should have joined us after
the games at Broadway East - if
you thought Rudy took lots of
shots at MHS, you should have
seen all the shots he had at BE!
Almost put Bobby out of business!
Power forward (Dom) Lamarra
was there to be the enforcer
- although Rudy and he
had good softball discussions,
both could flat out play ball (and
drink). Thanks for sharing those
pictures - I didn’t know we had
color photos from back then!!!!”
Attention! Malden High
School Class of 1975! It’s time
for the Big 5-0! Can you believe
it? Our 50th Class Reunion is just
around the corner! (Yes, really…
FIFTY.) Time may have flown, but
our memories — and some of
our dance moves (well, maybe
not mine) are still going strong.
Save the date: Saturday, September
20, Crowne Plaza, Woburn.
Get ready to party like it’s
1975 all over again! We’ll laugh,
reconnect, reminisce and squint
at each other, asking, “Wait…
do I know you?” (Except for you,
Jack Freker and Mark Burns,
who’ve somehow discovered
the fountain of youth and still
look like you just walked off the
field at Macdonald Stadium.)
Tickets: $100. Cocktail Hour: 5–6
p.m. (Cash Bar) — Buffet Dinner
+ Merrymaking immediately
following! Dancing, storytelling
and a whole lot of horseplay
strongly encouraged! RSVP
by August 20 — make checks
payable to Pam Picillo and mail
to 7 Peterson Rd., Peabody, MA
01960. Need a room? Call 781935-8760
to book a special $169
rate for the night at the Crowne
Plaza. Let’s make this night unforgettable
— because let’s face
it, we’ll need the photos to remember
it by! Am I right?
“Malden Musings” is not just a
list of old places (although it often
resembles such); it’s about
the memories and connections
people have with them. This
column attempts to highlight
the importance of these shared
experiences in shaping our understanding
of a place and its
community. With that said... Our
paths rarely crossed over the
years, but just last week I found
myself deep in conversation
with Ron Falite — and it turns
out, we’re cut from the same
Maldonian cloth (even though
he’s a Wakefield guy).
You see, in Malden — or “Maldonia,”
as Chris (Moro) likes to
say — if you’re not related by
blood, you’re probably connected
by neighborhood. If you
didn’t share a classroom, then
you likely shared a ballfield. And
if your family didn’t know their
family, then someone in the corner
booth at the Irish American
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or the IACC sure did. That’s the
beauty of this city — tight-knit,
a little insular, proudly provincial
and (quite) rich with overlapping
stories.
Ron and I had our moment of
Maldonian revelation where all
good conversations begin —
and all good men meet — at the
Italian American Citizens Club.
We took a stroll down memory
lane, swapping names and stories
like trading cards (he was
holding some serious Mickey
Mantles), and by the end, it felt
like we’d known each other forever.
Turns out, we’re practically
blood brothers by way of six
degrees of Malden separation.
You probably already know
Ron — he’s a familiar face
around town and the President
of Falite Brothers, the HVAC
company that’s been keeping
homes comfortable since 1980.
But beyond business, Ron’s the
kind of guy you’re lucky to sit
across from with a drink in hand
swapping stories of who knows
who.
So, here’s to new chums that
were always there, just waiting
to be recognized. Ron’s a standup
guy, and I’m proud to finally,
officially, call him paisan.
By the way, congratulations
to Chris Moro for joining the esteemed
ranks of the Massachusetts
Italian American Sports
Hall of Fame committee. They
do great work, and you will be
a fine addition.
“All my best memories come
back clearly to me. Some can
even make me cry just like before.
It’s yesterday once more.”
—Karen Carpenter.
This week, I take a stroll down
memory lane with another Malden
slice of life: a quiet reflection
on the soul of a city that
once thrived in corner stores,
familiar faces, Bandstands and
front stoop conversations. Just
a small glimpse into what made
— and still makes — our little
five-square-mile hometown
something truly special. Names
and places from yesteryear echo
in our hearts like the chime of
a distant ice cream truck on a
summer evening (Eddie the Ice
Cream Man, anyone?), reminders
of a time when neighbors
were family (well, most of them
anyway) and every street had
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Mayor Gary Christenson and Malden Disability Commission
Members were in attendance as Malden Lions Club members
presented a braille typewriter to the Malden Public Library.
A
s part of their mission, the
Malden Disability Commission
works to ensure that all persons
have equal access to facilities,
services and programs. The
Vice Chair of the Commission,
Chukwuka “Chuks” Ezewuzie, has
been focused on this and working
with Malden Public Library
Director Dora St. Martin to improve
accessibility for the visually
impaired. Most recently, Chuks
and the Disability Commission
collaborated with the Malden
Lions Club, who graciously donated
a braille writer to be used
at the library. The writer resembles
a typewriter with a combination
of keys that is used to create
braille characters on paper.
The braille writer was presented
to Mayor Gary Christenson
and Director St. Martin by both
the Commission and the Lions
Club and will become part of
the “Library of Things” so that
anyone wanting to use or borrow
the writer will be able to do
so. “We were thrilled to partner
with the Disability Commission
as well as the Malden Public Library,”
said Malden Lions Club
President Jimmy Luong. “This
aligns perfectly with the mission
of the Lions Club which is to provide
much needed services to
the visually impaired.”
“On behalf of the Disability
Commission, I want to thank the
Malden Lions Club for this donation
to our Library,” said ViceChair
Ezewuzie. “This is a significant
contribution to the ongoing
project of the Malden Disability
Commission to provide
and equip the library for readers
and users who are blind or visually
impaired. This means that
patrons who are braille readers
can now come to the library and
request to use the braille machine
to take notes while reading
or doing their research in
the library.”
Malden Lions Club
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Disability Commission
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3THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 30, 2025
Page 9
Pride Month Movie at Malden Public Library: “Gen Silent”
T
he Malden Public
Library in conjunction
with the City of
Malden, Ward 5 Councillor
Ari Taylor, the City
of Malden’s of Diversity,
Equity and Inclusion
program and the Malden
Pride Coalition will
have a special screening
of “Gen Silent” in
honor of Pride Month
(June). On Wednesday,
June 4, at 6 p.m., the library
will show this important
documentary
about LGBTQIA+ elders and the
hurdles they face as they navigate
later life care and medical
concerns. “Gen Silent” follows the
lives of six seniors in and around
Boston who are trying to navigate
aging and care in a system
that is, reportedly, sometimes
hostile or not equipped to embrace
and support their needs.
See this film and share your perspectives
with the community.
Elder care is an issue that each
of us will have to face in some
form. But, reportedly, for our
queer elders that can be even
more daunting. SAGE Advocacy
& Services for LGBTQ+ Elders
provides some startling figures
facing the community: “53% of
LGBTQ+ older people report
feeling isolated from others. 65%
of older transgender respondents
felt there would be limitable
for themselves and elders
in their community, there will
be an information table with
materials from local organizations
and a book list for further
reading.
ed access to care as they aged...
55% from the same 2015 national
survey feared they would be
denied medical treatment. 70%
of LGBTQ+ elders fear having
to ‘re-closet’ themselves when
seeking elder housing. 41% of
LGBTQ+ older people report
having a disability, compared to
35 percent of heterosexual older
adults.” With these figures it is
essential to have conversations
around what we can do to better
support people in our neighborhood,
family and systemically
through government support.
Following the screening there
will be a discussion and light refreshments.
Representatives
from Mystic Valley Elder Services
and the Wicked Queer
film festival will join the discussion.
And for those who wish to
learn more about services availAll
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 30, 2025
Over 400 attendees light up the night
at Malden High Senior Prom
Promgoers have a fabulous night at Danversport
Huong Ly and Dan DaSilva
ready for a wonderful night
Malden High School Senior Prom 2025 was a Great Night!
Sean Retotal and Kim Smith were all smiles at the Malden High
School Senior Prom, which was held on Wednesday, May 21 at
Danversport.(Senior Prom Photos Courtesy of MHS Maldonian)
By Steve Freker
A
few raindrops did not take
away from the thrill and excitement
for the over 400 who
had a fabulous night at the Malden
High School Senior Prom at
Danversport in Danvers. A sumptuous
full course meal was followed
by a night of dancing, socializing
and lots of smiles and
fun for those in attendance on
Wednesday, May 21. Oh, and
photos, lots of photos!
The signature night went off
without a hitch, according to
eighth-year Malden High School
Principal Chris Mastrangelo, who
was in attendance along with his
full administrative team and lots
of MHS staff chaperones.
“It was a great night for all who
attended,” Mastrangelo said.
“The planning was done so well
and that’s a credit to the Class
of 2025 Advisors Courtney Braz
and Bobby Grinnell. They and
the Class Officers have worked
so hard to have made the Senior
Prom such a special event.”
The evening started with a
well-attended “Red Carpet” entrance
event where many of the
attendees came to the school
and “walked the walk” in their
prom finery. The unexpected
wet weather presented a bit of
challenge but there were the
MHS House Principals to walk
the promgoers down the stairs
from Salem Street with umbrellas
to make sure they were kept
fairly dry.
“For our Schools Superintendent,
it was his first time seeing
the Red Carpet Walk,” Mastrangelo
said of Malden Public
Schools Superintendent Timothy
Sippel, Ed.L.D. “Dr. Sippel said
he had never seen anything like
it and was very happy for all the
promgoers … to be able to participate
in such a special event.”
Afterwards, the nearly 200 Red
Carpet walk attendees made
their way to The Gallery inside
the school for some snacks and
some more photos. The snack
tables and mini-reception were
hosted by the members of the
MHS Junior Class of 2026. The
Class of 2026 juniors, led by Class
Advisor Nancy Wentworth, also
took the time to “install” the Red
Carpet from Salem Street, down
the steps and into the school
grounds, before the walk.
“We thank our juniors and their
advisor for the extra time and
care they took to help make the
evening special for our promgoers,”
MHS Principal Mastrangelo
said.
From the school, the attendees
Nate Sullivan and Isaac Pineda were greeted by Class Co-Advisor
Bobby Grinnell at Danversport. (Senior Prom Photos Courtesy of MHS Maldonian)
were whisked to Danversport on
11 coach buses. After the prom,
the attendees were returned to
the high school, where school
administrators waited until all attendees
were picked up by family
members and caregivers.
“Everyone had a great time
and once again, the staff at the
venue and the police officers
from the detail made it a point
to tell us how well-behaved and
cordial our students were at the
Senior Prom,” Mastrangelo said.
“They said it would a pleasure to
have us back next year.”
***
Senior Prom kicked off
Senior Week; Graduation
Day is Sunday, June 1
The Senior Prom kicked off a
whirlwind of events for Senior
Week, which culminates in “The
Big One,” the Class of 2025 Graduation
Day, which is set for this
Sunday, June 1 at Macdonald
Stadium at 2:00 p.m.
Malden High School Senior
Prom 2025 was a Great Night!
Senior Ivana Marinkovic and
junior Gino Spadafora enjoyed
the evening. (Senior Prom Photos Courtesy
of MHS Maldonian)
Gordon Zeng and Jennifer
Slawson dressed for the
occasion. (Senior Prom Photos Courtesy of
MHS Maldonian)
Ryan Xiao and Jayden Ramos
captured the view as they
entered the hall. (Senior Prom Photos
Courtesy of MHS Maldonian)
Kyle Neilssien and Sabriel
Jonathas enjoyed the night.
׉	 7cassandra://rsHx9OzAcwSL49Dxr_uj1bhYUXcNuAyJZLBdSRJJolY7/` h8h;3:׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 30, 2025
Page 11
Malden High Promgoers Shine
on the 2025 ‘Red Carpet Walk’
M
any promgoers participated
in the Annual Red
Carpet Walk at Malden High
School, preceding the 2025 Senior
Prom, which was held on
Wednesday, May 21 at Danversport.
Despite some wet weather,
the late afternoon tradition
was a big thrill for all involved
that day, with fashion very much
the name of the game. Following
the Red Carpet Walk and lots
of photos and smiles, coach buses
took them all to the event.
Special thanks were given to the
Class of 2026 Juniors who assisted
with snacks and a mini-reception
for the promgoers in
The Gallery. (Advocate Photo by
Henry Huang)
Bo Bogan-Stead and Jessica Li
(Advocate Photo by Henry Huang)
The “Green Team” was beautiful to behold (Advocate Photo by Henry Huang)
Mateus Brito and Juliana Rosa
(Advocate Photo by Henry Huang)
Tony Gedeus and his date (Advocate Photo by Henry Huang)
Wow
Nate Sullivan is having
a good night. (Advocate
Photo by Henry Huang)
50
Aidan Brett and Lucia Antonucci
(Advocate Photo by Henry Huang)
Daniel DaSilva and Huong Ly
(Advocate Photo by Henry Huang)
James Hyppolite and his prom
date (Advocate Photo by Henry Huang)
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 30, 2025
Malden High Baseball recognizes,
honors five athletes on Senior Night
By Haset Tesfaw
Malden High School
Blue and Gold
T
he Malden High School Baseball
Team honored its five seniors
with a celebration of Senior
Night on Monday, May 19, following
the final home game at
newly furbished Pine Banks Park.
After the game, Malden Coach
Steve Freker gave a special
“thank you” to each individual
senior on the team. Before he did
this, he also singled out the help
from his assistant coaches, Phil
Cook, Kenny Runge and Michael
Nicholson, as well as the team’s
parent boosters, who decorated
the field. He also had thanks
Senior Captain Chris MacDonald is joined by his family as they smile for a photo after the game.
(MHS Blue and Gold/Jacob Fuentes Photo)
Senior Brayan Jose is surrounded by his family as they all pose for
a photo after the game. (MHS Blue and Gold/Jacob Fuentes Photo)
for the Golden Tornado Club and
Katie Bowdridge for providing
the senior player posters, which
the players keep as a memento.
“First of all,” he said, “I’d like to
thank Karen Bogan and all the
parents who have helped.”
When Karen Bogan spoke,
Senior Captain Bo Stead is surrounded by family, posing for a
photo after the game. (MHS Blue and Gold/Jacob Fuentes Photo)
she gave her appreciation to
everyone and added, “It’s everyone.
I feel like I’m at the Academy
Awards. I don’t want to leave
anyone out,” Bogan said.
“I’ve been coaching for many
years and I’ve never had a group
of parents, families, caregivers,
and friends who have been so
helpful and so gracious with
their time. This is the truth, and
everyone who is associated with
us knows this is the truth,” Coach
Freker said. “Each one of the parents
cares about all the kids, not
just their own, and it shows in all
the work they do.”
“This is the first of a number of
celebrations, but tonight is important
because it’s senior night,
and on this night we honor these
seniors who have put in a lot of
time and couldn’t get here if it
weren’t for all the caregivers and
families,” Coach Freker said, before
introducing the seniors.
“First up is a guy who just
said he wanted to try playing
baseball just last year, and
we don’t say no to anybody,
BASEBALL | SEE PAGE 13
׉	 7cassandra://wVvDd1DDVf4WDzE_-QQX97a9Y8F_OzDTvhwzgnfxkVg70` h8h;3<׉EuTHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 30, 2025
Page 13
~ Mystic Valley Regional Charter School Sports ~
Eagles Soar Past Red Hawks with 5-0 Sweep
By Emily Brennan
T
he Mystic Valley boy’s tennis
team closed out their regular
season in dominant fashion Monday
afternoon, blanking Amesbury
High School with a 5-0 victory.
The Eagles set the tone early by
securing the singles points, then
continued their momentum with
a clean sweep in doubles play.
With the win, Mystic Valley improves
to 9-6 in the season.
SINGLES PLAY
• #1 Singles: Jay Raj (MV) def.
Noah Blouin (AHS) 6-0, 6-0
• #2 Singles: Wes Cunningham
(MV) def. Jared Black (AHS)
6-0, 6-0
• #3 Singles: Ethan Co (MV) def.
Luke Sheehan (AHS) 6-3, 6-4
BASEBALL | FROM PAGE 12
so we got him a glove and
cleats,” Coach Freker said. “He’s
learned how to play the game,
and he loves it. We have a lot
of respect and admiration for
him for wanting to learn something
new. Tonight we honor
Muhammad Ibrahim.”
Freker welcomed Brayan Jose,
who “started here at a new high
Wes Cunningham
DOUBLES PLAY
• #1 Doubles: Eli DeTore / Ryan
Co (MV) def. Saideep Vachuka /
Andrew Roberts (AHS) 6-3, 6-1
school, began after joining some
wonderful family members who
were already here. He was welcomed
into our school, and it’s
been a blessing to have him. He’s
learned a lot about baseball and
has gotten better as he’s gone
along. He comes up with outstanding
plays every game.”
Freker then talked about Aiden
Brett and the impact he’s made
on the team. “This kid played all
three seasons of sports, all four
Eli DeTore
• #2 Doubles: Nathan Tessema
/ Miguel McCurdy (MV) def. Max
Kerslein / Julian Sleerwood (AHS)
7-6 (8-6), 2-6, 9-7
Ethan Co
Next, the Eagles turn their
attention to the postseason
as they await their seeding for
the MIAA Division 4 State Tournament.
Mystic Valley currently
holds the No. 7 spot in the
most recent statewide rankings.
sport,
its golf, but he gives baseball
everything he has,” Coach
Freker said. “He’s a competitor,
and he’s been with us for four
years. I think the best thing you
can say about Chris MacDonald
is that he speaks his mind
and backs it up, and he’s loyal.
He’s loyal to his coaches, teammates,
and most importantly to
his family.”
Freker welcomed Stead, who is
such “an important part of MalSenior
Muhammed Ibrahim was recognized by coach Michael
Nicholson at Senior Night. (MHS Blue and Gold/Jacob Fuentes Photo)
years. That’s ‘old school.’ A couple
of baseball seasons he missed
because of some sports injuries.
We’re so fortunate to have him
back here for his senior year of
baseball.”
“He’s [Brett] made an imSenior
Captain Chris MacDonald is joined by his family as they
smile for a photo after the game. (MHS Blue and Gold/Jacob Fuentes Photo)
pact in every game he’s played
and played multiple positions.
He makes demands on everybody,
including his coaches. This
kid will run up a tree and run
through a building to get that
win, and we never want him to
stop. He became a captain, and
he’s a leader with us,” the coach
added.
Freker then proceeded to introduce
senior Christopher MacDonald.
“This next guy here decided
that he was also going to
be ‘old school’ and played three
seasons of sports. Believe it or
not, this is not even his best
den High School.” He continued,
“I’ve never seen someone with as
much magnetism and charisma.
He’s one of those people who say
everybody in the world is just
another friend whom he hasn’t
met, and things are really going
to happen to him after he leaves
high school because of that personality,”
the coach said. “He’s a
man of many talents. We’re so
pleased at how he’s developed,
not just as a baseball player but
as a young man.”
After all the speeches were
concluded, the seniors took pictures
and received gifts from
their family and friends and celebrated
their last time playing
baseball as seniors here at Malden
High.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 30, 2025
MURAL | FROM PAGE 3
sporadic. As he said, he “severed
academic connections with high
school and college” -i.e., he was
suspended several times from
high school, stopped going, and
went to work in a law office until
his father sent him to Palo Alto
High School, from which he graduated
in 1909. He was then sent
to Valparaiso University in Indiana
for law school but escaped
after four weeks before being arrested
for pranks and for suing
his professor.
Back in California, based on his
quite unorthodox informal legal
training, he took the bar examination
at age 21 and passed. He became
a law clerk and hung out his
own shingle by agreeing to take
over petty work from the constitutional
lawyer who was happy
for him to do so. However, he said,
“The more successful I became as
an attorney, the more I was called
on to be in one place. I found out
that wasn’t what I wanted.”
In the burly and wicked town
of Oxnard, California, police wanted
to reimburse themselves the
$2,000 they had paid private detectives
to clean up the city. They
did this by arresting and charging
21 Chinese folks $10 each for
gambling. Gardner outmaneuvered
the police and deviously
defended these victims of police
discrimination. As such, he
became well-loved by the Chinese
people who lived there. He
later broke up a courtroom into
laughter with a double jeopardy
plea between the judge and the
city attorney.
Soon cases poured in for him.
Gardner said,” I realize now that I
have annoyed many, many people
as I went through life.” Nevertheless,
his work in Ventura County
lasted some 20 years.
Gardner started writing seriously
in 1921. He said frequently,
“I want it understood that I have
no natural aptitude as a writer…I
couldn’t construct what I wanted
to write…It was like trying to sign
my name with my left hand.”
He decided to try writing for
the new pulp fiction field in 1923,
under the pen name Charles M
Green. Rejection after rejection
came in, but he kept writing. After
he had been up most of three
nights, he sent a rejected story
back with revisions, thanking
the editor for including the reader’s
criticism, which had been inadvertently
included and unkind.
That story launched his literary
career.
Hughes says that Gardner
nightly pounded out a novelette
every third day while working in a
very busy law office daily. He used
about a dozen pen names, and
wrote about 15 series, becoming
one of the pulp fiction magazine
Black Mask’s most popular
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By 1932, after Gardner acquired
a dictating machine and a
series of secretaries, all of whom
called him “Uncle Erle,” he worked
less and less at law. Because he
wanted solitude when he wrote,
after lawyering until 11 P.M., he
retreated to his self-made ‘camp
wagon,’ a fully provisioned halfton
truck with compound transmission
and oversized tires, to
furiously write stories. In 1933,
when his first Perry Mason novel
was published, he was still writing
pulp fiction. He called himself
a fiction factory of one.
After he stopped lawyering in
1933, Gardner energetically kept
writing. A Perry Mason radio drama
aired for 12 years, from 1943
to 1955, and Gardner was able
to get many of the Mason novels
serialized in the Saturday Evening
Post.
When the new broadcast medium
of television captured Gardner’s
interest, he discontinued the
radio shows. Gardner himself personally
insisted on casting the
less experienced Raymond Burr
as Perry Mason. Between 1957
and 1966, the Perry Mason series
was the most popular program
on television. In all, Gardner
wrote more than 600 pulp fiction
novelettes and stories under
11 different names so as not to
interfere with his simultaneously
written Perry Mason stories.
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He wrote 82 Perry Mason stories,
the last being published posthumously,
in 1973.
As early as 1936, he sold his
Hollywood house and traveled
with friends and secretaries for
more than a year with up to four
trailers. In his travels, he (“my dog
Rip, actually”) discovered a site in
Temecula, California, later to become
his home for the rest of his
life. He purchased 3,000 acres and
built a knotty pine cabin. Over
the years, his extensive network
of friends not only came to visit,
travel, hunt and fish in his beloved
Baja California, but came
to live at Rancho Del Paisano in
cabins he built for them, even
for their families and relatives. He
wrote seven books about his travels
in Baja California.
In 1946, because of an article
written about Gardner in the Saturday
Evening Post, Gardner became
known as a champion of
the underdog. When he was given
a script from a young Los Angeles
lawyer about a man facing
a pending death penalty, Gardner
got involved, agreeing that
California was going to execute
an innocent man. Through quick
but careful work, Gardner got the
man a reprieve and, later, life imprisonment,
pending another investigation.
In due time, Hughes
says, the man was found innocent.
For
his work for the wrongly
accused, Gardner sought the
help of the owner of Argosy, a
pulp fiction magazine, “to get
readers interested in the case
of [criminal] justice.” He used his
fame and wealth to form what he
called, “The Court of Last Resort,”
a board consisting of experts in
criminal investigation. His team
prevented dozens of innocent
people from suffering executions
and long prison terms. Cases
were featured in Argosy and
gained a lot of attention. Gardner
had speaking dates before law
organizations and law enforcement
officials and received honors
in the legal field. According to
Hughes, “Perhaps nothing in his
entire career meant as much to
Gardner as the Court [of Last Resort].”
His 1952 book, The Court of
Last Resort, took the reader along
with him by participating in the
investigation as they read.
Gardner and others concluded
that the state of criminal justice in
the United States was ‘shocking’.
The publicity he gave to cases
made important changes in the
law. At the Supreme Court of the
United States, a ruling was made
that a man on trial without funds
for legal help would be entitled
to a lawyer paid for by the state.
Gardner helped in the fields of forensic
science and criminology.
He helped establish law enforcement
foundations and annual
conferences. In the late 1950s, the
American Bar Association went to
the Ford Foundation for funds to
inaugurate the first full-scale investigation
of American justice.
Out of this investigation came
President Lyndon Johnson’s establishment
of a crime commission,
the first in the United States.
When Erle Stanley Gardner
died in 1970, at the age of 80, he
had fictionally and figuratively
lived more lives than most people.
Joy
Pearson is a citizen reporter
for Neighborhood View,
where this article first appeared.
Sen. Lewis announces June
Office Hours in Malden
tate Senator Jason Lewis
will be holding Office Hours
in Malden on Monday, June 2,
2025, from 10:30-11:30 a.m. at
the Malden Senior Center (7
Washington St). Any Malden resident
is welcome to attend Office
Hours, with no appointment
necessary, to meet with the Senator
and discuss any constituent
issues or legislative feedback.
Senator Lewis will also be
holding Office Hours on the
same day in Melrose from 12-1
p.m. at the Milano Senior Center
(201 W. Foster St.) and in
Wakefield from 1:30-2:30 p.m.
at the Wakefield Senior Center
(30 Converse S.t). Another
option for residents who
would like to meet with Senator
Lewis is to attend virtual Office
Hours, which will be held
on Monday, June 16, from 2-3
p.m. on Zoom.
For further information or
any questions, visit SenatorJasonLewis.com
or contact
his office at 617-722-1206 or
Jason.Lewis@masenate.gov.
׉	 7cassandra://jdp9FrApCT0LBrKHwjnpCPh786Xf1RF4ywC4keOs9ng3` h8h;3>׉E#THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 30, 2025
Page 15
Beacon Hill
Roll Call
By Bob Katzen
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www.massterlist.com
THE HOUSE AND SENATE: Beacon
Hill Roll Call records local senators' and
representatives’ votes on roll calls from
the week of May 19-23. All Senate roll
calls were related to the Senate version
of a $61.4 billion fiscal 2026 state budget.
“BEHIND THE SCENES OF THE SENATE
BUDGET DEBATE”
Of the 1,058 amendments filed by
senators, only 21 came to a roll call vote.
Many others were simply approved or rejected
one at a time on voice votes, some
with debate and some without debate.
To move things along even faster,
the Senate also did its usual “bundling”
of many amendments. Instead of acting
on each amendment one at a time, hundreds
of the proposed amendments are
bundled and put into two piles—one
pile that will be approved and the other
that will be rejected, without a roll call,
on voice votes where it is impossible to
tell which way a senator votes.
Senate President Karen Spilka, or the
senator who is filling in for her at the podium,
orchestrates the approval and rejection
of the bundled amendments
with a simple: “All those in favor say ‘Aye,’
those opposed say ‘No.’ The Ayes have
it and the amendments are approved.”
Or: “All those in favor say ‘Aye,’ those opposed
say ‘No.’ The No’s have it and the
amendments are rejected.”
Senators don’t actually vote "Yes" or
"No," and, in fact, they don’t say a word.
The outcome was predetermined earlier
behind closed doors. Supporters of the
system say that any senator who sponsored
an amendment that is in the "No"
pile can bring it to the floor and ask for
an up or down vote on the amendment
itself. They say this system has worked
well for many years.
Critics say that most of the time members
do not bring their amendment,
which was destined for the "No" pile,
to the floor for an up-or-down vote because
that is not the way the game is
played. It is an “expected tradition” that
in most cases you accept the fate of your
amendment as determined by Democratic
leaders.
APPROVE $530 MILLION FISCAL
2025 SUPPLEMENTAL BUDGET (H
4150)
House 149-1, approved a $530 million
fiscal 2025 supplemental budget that
will carry a net cost to the state of $318.2
million after federal reimbursements.
Provisions include $189 million for
childcare financial assistance; $134 million
for the Medical Assistance Trust
Fund; $60 million for Home Care Services;
$42.9 million for the Residential Assistance
for Families in Transition (RAFT)
program; and $15 million in grants to
support municipal celebrations of the
250th anniversary of the American independence.
“Amid
President Trump’s dismantling
of the Department of Education, and
amid sweeping cuts at the federal level
to programs that millions of Americans
rely on, this supplemental budget makes
key investments that will ensure continued
funding for state programs that support
many of the commonwealth’s most
vulnerable residents,” said House Speaker
Ron Mariano (D-Quincy).
“This supplemental budget will fund
critical programs such as childcare financial
assistance, home care services and
food insecurity that require immediate
attention,” said Rep. Aaron Michlewitz
(D-Boston), Chair of the House Committee
on Ways and Means.
“The policies of kill, maim, medicate
and indoctrinate our children continue,
as does the policy of putting illegal immigrants
ahead of our citizens,” said Rep.
John Gaskey (R-Carver), the only members
to vote againt the budget. “[Speaker]
Mariano's hint at a lower budget to
help struggling taxpayers turned into
a free-for-all as the House budget ballooned
all week long.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the budget. A “No” vote
is against it.)
Rep. Paul Donato
Yes
Rep. Steven Ultrino Yes
ENGLISH LEARNERS (H 4150)
House 150-1, approved an amendment
that would enshrine protections
for English language learners and students
with disabilities currently provided
under federal law into state law, ensuring
that these students receive both
English language development and Special
Education services in a coordinated,
culturally and linguistically appropriate
manner, regardless of school district or
demographic. The amendment also prohibits
discrimination in public schools
based on immigration, citizenship status
or disability.
“This is a strong step toward ensuring
English learners are fairly evaluated and
appropriately supported in special education,”
said amendment sponsor Rep.
Alice Peisch (D-Wellesley). “This will help
ensure our English Language Learners
students receive the same opportunities
to succeed as every other student.”
“This is a requirement that further burdens
an already struggling education
system but, show me where this isn’t already
happening,” said amendment opponent
Rep. John Gaskey (R-Carver).
“The schools have every resource they
need available to them. If there is a significant
problem and parents need to
be involved, translators are always available.
The state wants to provide translators
for non-English speakers but refuses
to allow teachers to speak to parents
when their children are suffering mental
health breaks, declaring they are the
opposite sex.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the amendment. A “No”
BHRC| SEE PAGE 16
General Bids will be received until 25 June 2025 at 2:00PM EDT and publicly opened
online, forthwith.
General bids and sub-bids shall be accompanied by a bid deposit that is not less than
five (5%) of the greatest possible bid amount (including all alternates) and made payable
to the MALDEN HOUSING AUTHORITY. Note: A bid deposit is not required for Projects
advertised under $50,000.
Bid Forms and Contract Documents will be available for review at biddocs.com (may be
viewed and downloaded electronically at no cost).
General bidders must agree to contract with minority and women business enterprises as
certified by the Supplier Diversity Office (SDO). The combined participation benchmark
reserved for such enterprises shall not be less than 13% of the final contract price
including accepted alternates. Request for waivers must be sent to EOHLC (Chad.
Howard@mass.gov) 5 calendar days prior to the General Bid date. NO WAIVERS WILL
BE GRANTED AFTER THE GENERAL BIDS ARE OPENED.
The Contractor and all subcontractors (collectively referred to as “the Contractor”)
agree to strive to achieve minority and women workforce participation. The Workforce
Participation benchmark is set at 6.9% for women and 15.3% for minorities.
The Workforce benchmark percentages are a statutory requirement under MGL c.
149 § 44A(2)(G).
PRE-BID CONFERENCE / SITE VISIT: Scheduled
Date and Time: 06/11/2025 at 10:00AM EDT
Address: 61 Sylvan Street, Malden, MA 02148
Instructions: None
The hard copy Contract Documents may be seen at:
Nashoba Blue Inc.
433 Main Street
Hudson, MA 01749
978-568-1167
May 30, 2025
LEGAL NOTICE
ADVERTISEMENT TO BID
MGL c.149 Over $150K
Project #165063
The Malden Housing Authority, the Awarding Authority, invites sealed bids from
Contractors for the Load Center Replacement at State Aided Development (EOHLC
#165063): Forestdale Old (667-1) in Malden, Massachusetts, in accordance with the
documents prepared by SHEKAR & ASSOCIATES, INC.
The Project consists of but not limited to:
Replacement of existing apartment load centers, building distribution panels, with new
including conduits, wiring, kitchen & bathroom receptacles, primary & secondary work at
new pad mounted transformer, temporary diesel generator with temporary feeders and
related work; site work.
Bid documents will be available starting June 4, 2025 at Biddocs.
The work is estimated to cost $412,000.00.
All bidding Requests for Information (RFIs) shall be submitted online by 06/18/2025 at
2:00PM EDT for general bids.
Bids are subject to M.G.L. c.149 §44A-J & to minimum wage rates as required by
M.G.L. c.149 §§26 to 27H inclusive.
THIS PROJECT IS BEING ELECTRONICALLY BID AND HARD COPY BIDS WILL NOT
BE ACCEPTED. Please review the instructions in the bid documents on how to
register as an electronic bidder. All Bids shall be submitted online at biddocs.com
and received no later than the date and time specified.
General bidders must be certified by the Division of Capital Asset Management and
Maintenance (DCAMM) in the following category of work, Electrical, and must submit a
current DCAMM Certificate of Eligibility and signed DCAMM Prime/General
Contractor Update Statement.
LEGAL NOTICE
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` 'p׉	 7cassandra://qJb-4eE7DOAa0fotVy-5_gStwBx3EYR24w2IxBR-KXwͳ`׉	 7cassandra://V9jKhg2-eFMBCWuM-rLP9JV-_5Pjoyx0OOJCms4O7ZI-` h8m;3xנh8m;3} 	ԁ̨9ׁH !mailto:bob@beaconhillrollcall.comׁׁЈנh8m;3| Á;9ׁHhttp://Tues.MaׁׁЈ׉E'PPage 16
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 30, 2025
BHRC | FROM PAGE 15
Yes
Rep. Steven Ultrino Yes
SENATE APPROVES $61.4 BILLION
FISCAL 2026 STATE BUDGET (S 3)
Senate 38-2, approved a $61.4 billion
fiscal 2026 state budget after three
days of debate. The House has already
approved a different version, and a
House-Senate conference committee
will eventually craft a compromise plan
that will be presented to the House and
Senate for consideration and then sent
to Gov. Maura Healey.
“This budget reflects the Senate’s
commitment to a commonwealth that
carefully balances investing in our people
with responsible money management
so we can protect our residents,
communities and economy for years
to come,” said Senate President Karen
Spilka (D-Ashland). “The Senate’s statewide
approach to investment delivers
resources to every part of the state and
protects our most vulnerable residents,
while our continued focus on education
and mental health ensures that residents
have the keys to unlock the doors of opportunity.”
“This
budget is a testament to the
Senate's collective values and our shared
responsibility to invest in every community
and every person in the commonwealth—from
the Connecticut River Valley
to Cape Cod,”said Sen. Jo Comerford
vote is against it.)
Rep. Paul Donato
(D-Northampton), Vice Chair of the Senate
Committee on Ways and Means. “By
prioritizing education, transportation,
health care and support for municipalities,
we are not only addressing immediate
needs but also laying the foundation
for a more equitable and resilient commonwealth
amid a time of great national
turbulence and strife.”
“Constituents and businesses from
across my district are exhausted by
Gov. Healey’s budget priorities that underfund
core local services, overfund
benefits for non-residents with billions
of tax dollar and burden them with ever-increasing
taxes and energy costs,”
said Sen. Ryan Fattman (R-Sutton), one
of only two senators to vote against the
budget. “Massachusetts residents are
going to keep voting with their feet as
they move out-of-state if we continue
with the status quo – it’s unsustainable
and must end.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the budget. A “No” vote
is against it.)
Sen. Jason Lewis
Yes
PRESCRIPTION DRUGS (S 3)
Senate 34-5, approved an amendment
that would allow Health Policy
Commission regulators to place a maximum
price limit on some medications,
capping what patients, providers, pharmacies
and others in Massachusetts
would pay.
“I was supportive of this amendment
because of the impact high prescription
drug prices have had on the most vulnerable
in my community" said Sen. Pavel
Payano (D-Lawrence). "Nobody should
have to make a choice between paying
their bills and paying for their prescriptions.”
"While
I agree with the intention behind
this amendment, I believe that the
subject matter needs to be addressed. I
voted no … because I believe, given its
magnitude, that it should go through the
regular committee-review process,” said
Sen. John Keenan (D-Quincy). “While versions
of the legislation that this amendment
reflect have been filed in previous
sessions, this amendment includes
new language that deserves a committee
hearing and additional committee
review.”
"If this doesn't belong in a budget,
I'm not sure where else it belongs,” said
amendment sponsor Sen. Cindy Friedman
(D-Arlington). “This is having a
profound effect on how we use our resources
in the commonwealth, and if
we don't address this issue sooner rather
than later, we will be in major trouble.
Our hospitals are in major trouble because
of this, our insurers are in major
trouble, our state is in major trouble, so
this, in my mind, is absolutely the right
place for this."
(A “Yes” vote is for the amendment. A “No”
vote is against it.)
Sen. Jason Lewis
Yes
HUMAN TRAFFICKING (S 3)
Senate 12-28, rejected an amendment
that would mandate human trafficking
training for all hotel, motel, lodging
house or bed and breakfast establishment
employees in the Bay State, from
the front desk to housekeeping and food
service, in order to equip them to recognize
and respond to trafficking situations.
The measure also requires these
establishments to post in plain view, in
the lobby and in any public restroom in
their establishment, a written notice developed
by the attorney general, which
must include the national human trafficking
hotline telephone number.
Amendment sponsor Sen. Mark Montigny
(D-New Bedford) said the passage of
the amendment will send a message to
survivors that we support them. He noted
that almost no one trafficking people
is in jail in Massachusetts and said that
when people call him and ask him why, he
doesn’t have an answer. Training front-line
people in hotels to recognize trafficking
and posting a hotline number might give
a victim a chance. He said he has worked
with hundreds of survivors and advocates
on this and they always stress why is there
so much inaction on Beacon Hill.
Sen. Mike Rodrigues (D-Westport),
who voted against the amendment, said
the goals are laudable, but this is a situation
where you really don't create a mandate
that every hotel employee, no matter
their job, is required to be trained to
recognize human trafficking without extensive
discussions with the labor unions
that represent the employees. He noted
this mandate could arguably involve
tens of thousands of individuals.
(A “Yes” vote is for the amendment. A “No”
vote is against it.)
Sen. Jason Lewis
No
CAPITAL GAINS TAX DISTRIBUTION
(S 3)
Senate 5-34, rejected an amendment
that would require any excess revenue in
capital gains revenue over $1 billion to
annually automatically be transferred
as follows: 80 percent to the Rainy Day
Fund; 10 percent to the state’s Pension Liability
Fund; and 10 percent to the State
Retiree Benefits Trust Fund. The amendment
would replace a section that distributes
5 percent to the Rainy Day Fund;
90 percent to the state’s Pension Liability
Fund; and 5 percent to the State Retiree
Benefits Trust Fund.
Sen. Bruce Tarr (R-Gloucester), the
amendment sponsor, said that putting
only 5 percent into the stabilization fund
at a time when we recognize there's a
possibility of a downturn in federal support
for our budget is not a good idea.
He noted we have a stabilization fund to
ensure we have those resources when
we need them.
Sen. Mike Rodrigues (D-Westport),
who voted against the amendment, said
the Rainy Day Fund is currently already
funded at an impressive gold standard of
$8.1 billion. He argued that putting the
majority of the funds into the Pension Liability
Fund would be wiser and would
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
BUYER1
BALEKJIAN, GEORGE
BUJISIC, BOJAN
MACINNIS, DREW
PARAJULI, BHESRAJ
TSAI, CHIEHJEN
BUYER2
BUJISIC, BRANKA
PARAJULI, SREEJANA N
COLA, ANNMARIE
SELLER1
150 OAKLAND STREET LLC
RYAN, ANNMARIE
CORRIGAN, ZACHARY
MOREIRA, WEGHY O
PEMA, ADA
ZABEL, MOIRA
OLIVEIRA, ADRIELLY M
SELLER2
boost the state’s bond rating.
(A “Yes” vote is for the amendment. A “No”
vote is against it.)
Sen. Jason Lewis
No
INCREASE ESTATE/DEATH TAX EXEMPTION
(S 3)
Senate 5-34, rejected an amendment
that would increase from $2 million to $5
million the amount of money that is tax
exempt from the value of a person’s estate
when calculating the state’s estate/
death tax that a person is required to
pay following their death before distribution
to any beneficiary. The increase
to $5 million would be implemented
over three years.
Most Republicans are against any
such tax and coined the name “death
tax” to imply that the government taxes
you even after you die. Most Democrats
support the tax and call it an “estate
tax” to imply that this tax is mostly paid
by the wealthy.
Amendment supporters said that
Massachusetts is one of only 12 states
that have an estate/death tax and that
the Bay State’s is the most aggressive of
the 12. They said that in light of the high
value of houses, with the average home
price more than $500,000, the $1 million
threshold of this “unfair and regressive”
tax is too low and noted the federal tax
exempts the first $12 million. They noted
that Massachusetts is losing many residents
who move to Florida and other
states where this tax does not even exist.
Sen. Jamie Eldridge (D-Marlborough)
Senate Chair of the Committee on Revenue,
said he voted against the increased
exemption because the Legislature in
a bipartisan manner already raised the
threshold last session from $1 million to
$2 million, providing tax relief to many
middle class and working families. “Further
raising the threshold would not
only further reduce state revenue at a
time when federal budget cuts are looming,
but such a change would only make
our tax system more regressive, disproportionately
benefiting Massachusetts'
wealthiest families," said Eldridge.
(A “Yes” vote is for increasing the exemption
to $5 million. A “No” vote is against increasing it.)
Sen. Jason Lewis
No
ALLOW GOLD STAR MOTHERS TO
RECEIVE ANNUITY EVEN OIF THEY REMARRY
(S 3)
Senate 39-0, approved an amendment
that would repeal a current law
that restricts a surviving spouse from
receiving the Gold Star annuity if they
remarry.
"As we near Memorial Day, a day
where we remember and honor those
who made the ultimate sacrifice in service
to our nation, we can never forget
those they left behind,” said amendment
sponsor Sen. John Velis (D-Westfield).
“It is truly so cruel to me that these husbands
and wives, who lost their loved
BHRC| SEE PAGE 17
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial
Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission from the publisher,
The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property
information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com.
ADDRESS
150 OAKLAND ST
3 GOODWIN AVE
72 LAS CASAS ST
51-1/2 WILLARD ST
31 LODGEN CT #1D
CITY
MALDEN
MALDEN
MALDEN
MALDEN
MALDEN
DATE
05.05.25
05.08.25
05.06.25
05.08.25
05.07.25
PRICE
1065000
751500
1075000
955000
420000
׉	 7cassandra://CWI1zsQAeB2a5YkEogV2qdb9oHE6uCjstpUyQP3YBnA,` h8h;3@׉E,THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 30, 2025
Page 17
BHRC | FROM PAGE 16
ones, who have sacrificed so much
themselves, are told that their sacrifice
will no longer matters to the commonwealth
if they decide to remarry.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the amendment.)
Sen. Jason Lewis
Yes
$400,000 FOR PEDIATRIC PALLIATIVE
CARE (S 3)
Senate 39-0, approved an amendment
increasing funding for a pediatric
palliative care program by $400,000
(from $10.4 to $10.8 million). This program
provides invaluable comprehensive
care for children living with life-limiting
or end-of-life illnesses, as well as support
for their families.
“I am proud to secure additional funding
for this critical program which will
help clear the waiting list for these services
and support the staff who work
with these children,” said amendment
sponsor Sen. Sal DiDomenico(D-Everett).
“Families who are seeking pediatric palliative
care do not have time to wait on
a waitlist. These children deserve quality
care and support throughout the duration
of their illness and at the end of their
lives, and their families deserve the support
they need as they face one of the
most traumatic times of their lives. This
program has been one of my top priorities
during my 15 years in the Senate and
I will continue to ensure that all families
have access to these vital services.”
(A Yes” vote is for the $400,000.)
Sen. Jason Lewis
Yes
ALSO UP ON BEACON HILL
HEALTHY PUBLIC COLLEGES (S 949)
– The Higher Education Committee will
hold a hearing on June 3rd to hear testimony
and consider legislation that
would establish a Green and Healthy
Public College and University Building
Planning Commission to evaluate and
make recommendations on campus infrastructure
-- focusing on energy efficiency,
indoor air quality, accessibility, life
safety and overall public health.
The proposal creates a trust fund to alleviate
campus debt and lower student
fees currently used to finance aging infrastructure.
It also ensures long-term investments
so that all public higher education
campuses meet Green and Healthy standards
by 2037. The bill prioritizes renovations
for buildings in greatest need and
addresses longstanding environmental
and health inequities across campuses.
“I filed this bill because every student
deserves to learn in an environment
that is safe, healthy and sustainable,” said
sponsor Sen. Jake Oliveira (D-Ludlow).
“By investing in our public college and
university infrastructure now, we can reduce
student debt, eliminate health disparities
and build a more equitable, climate-resilient
future for higher education
in Massachusetts.”
SENIOR SHELTERS (H 787) – The
Committee on Elder Affairs will hold a
hearing on June 24th to consider a bill
that would establish a special commission
to study the feasibility of dedicated
senior shelters in Massachusetts. The
commission would examine the unique
needs of homeless seniors, evaluate existing
resources and propose recommendations
to address gaps in services
and housing for this population.
Supporters say that homeless seniors
are a growing part of the homeless population
in the Bay State. They note they
face unique challenges and need specialized
support because of limited retirement
savings, rising housing costs
and a lack of affordable housing options.
Rep. Sean Reid (D-Lynn), the sponsor
of the measure, did not respond to repeated
requests by Beacon Hill Roll Call
asking him to comment on his bill.
$500,000 FOR ENVIRONMENT - The
Healey Administration announced nearly
$500,000 in grants from the inaugural
Environmental Justice Capacity Building
Grant Program to help empower local
organizations to build organizational
capacity, strengthen local advocacy, advance
community-driven solutions and
improve the health and wellbeing of underserved
communities. The Healey Administration
said the grants represent an
ongoing commitment to addressing environmental
inequities and ensuring that
all Massachusetts residents, particularly
those in low-income and marginalized
communities, have the tools and resources
they need to tackle climate change
and other environmental challenges.
“We are committed to ensuring every
community in Massachusetts has a seat
at the table in shaping the decisions that
impact our families and environment,”
said Office of Energy and Environmental
Affairs Secretary Rebecca Tepper. “From
growing culturally relevant produce in
community gardens to creating youth
environmental employment opportunities
– these organizations serve as vital
resources in neighborhoods across
Massachusetts.”
$22.2 MILLION TO MODERNIZE AFFORDABLE
HOUSING INTERNET – The
Healey Administration announced $22.2
million in grants to upgrade internet access
for 15,793 affordable housing units
across 54 communities in Massachusetts.
The projects will install modern fiber-optic
cables in public and affordable
housing properties that will increase residents’
access to high-quality, reliable and
affordable broadband service.
“Massachusetts is leading the nation
in its efforts to improve internet access
and adoption statewide,” said Massachusetts
Interim Economic Development
Secretary Ashley Stolba. “The Residential
Retrofit Program is a key component
of our strategy to upgrade broadband
infrastructure statewide and will
expand economic opportunity to residents
by enabling them to access essential
online tools.”
“The Residential Retrofit Program is an
ambitious effort to revamp decades-old
wiring affecting low-income families and
we’re already seeing how much of an impact
this work has had,” said Massachusetts
Broadband Institute Director Michael
Baldino. “This round of Residential
Retrofit Program grantees demonstrated
a dedication to serving affordable
housing residents and providing
them with access needed to thrive in
the digital age.”
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 latenight
sessions and a mad rush to act on
dozens of bills in the days immediately
preceding the end of an annual session.
During the week of May 19-23, the
House met for a total of seven hours and
15 minutes while the Senate met for a total
of 33 hours and two minutes.
Mon. May 19
House11:04 a.m. to11:08 a.m.
Senate 11:08 a.m. to 3:53 p.m.
Tues.May 20
No House session.
Senate 11:05 a.m. to7:54 p.m.
Wed. May 21
House11:01 a.m. to6:09 p.m.
Senate 10:38 a.m. to7:48 p.m.
Thurs. May 22
House11:01 a.m. to 11:04 a.m.
Senate 10:06 a.m. to8:24 p.m.
Fri. May 23
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.
5 OR 5 POWER
A
5 or 5 power provides a beneficiary
of a Trust the power
in any calendar year to withdraw
the greater of $5,000 or
5% of the Trust principal. Therefore,
for any Trust that has assets
less than $100,000, the
beneficiary can withdraw up
to $5,000. For any Trust that has
more than $100,000 in assets,
the beneficiary can withdraw
up to 5% of the Trust assets. The
situation usually occurs when
the Settlor of a revocable Trust
dies, which in turn results in the
Trust becoming irrevocable and
the Trust then provides for the
benefit of a surviving spouse.
Per the Internal Revenue
Code, there has to be a limit
on what the beneficiary can
withdraw each year in order to
avoid any negative tax consequences.
If a Trust provision allowed
the beneficiary to withdraw
more than $5,000 or 5%
of the Trust principal each year,
then the IRS would consider
this to be a “general” power of
appointment and some or all of
the Trust assets could be included
in the beneficiary’s estate for
estate tax purposes.
What is one advantage of including
such a provision in a
trust document? Such a provision
might be suitable in a situation
of a second marriage
wherein one spouse does not
want the surviving spouse to
have unfettered control over
the Trust assets. Such a power
would provide a minimum of a
$5,000 withdrawal on the part of
the surviving spouse each year.
This could be important if the
Trust itself generated very little
income for the year that was required
to be distributed to the
surviving spouse pursuant to
the terms of the Trust. Alternatively,
if the Trust principal ended
up being $1,000,000 at the
time of the first spouse’s death,
the surviving spouse could take
up to $50,000 each year (5% of
$1,000,000). Furthermore, such
a right might put some of the
Trust’s assets at risk if the surviving
spouse was involved in
litigation. Generally speaking,
creditors can reach what you can
reach as a beneficiary of a Trust.
The 5 or 5 power also allows
the beneficiary to withdraw
up to 5% of the Trust’s assets,
even if the withdrawal is not
for an ascertainable standard
such as for the health, education
and support of the surviving
spouse. This allows the surviving
spouse to simply take a
withdrawal without meeting
any such standard. The surviving
spouse would not have to
answer to a Trustee that might
not be so cooperative when it
comes to Trust distributions.
The other benefit of the 5 or 5
power is that so long as the surviving
spouse does not exceed
its parameters, upon the surviving
spouse’s death, the assets in
the Trust not subject to the 5 or
5 power will not be included in
her taxable estate for estate tax
purposes. In this situation, the
first spouse to die has the ability
to exempt $13.9 million in assets
from his or her taxable estate
by funding the so-called
“family trust” portion of a marital
deduction trust wherein the
surviving spouse still would enjoy
rights to income, discretionary
Trustee distributions of principal
to the surviving spouse
based upon a health, education
and support standard and the 5
or 5 power. Upon the surviving
spouse’s death, the remaining
Trust assets not subject to the
5 or 5 power will be distributed
free of estate tax to the children
of the first spouse to die. However,
the Trust assets subject to
the 5 or 5 power in the hands of
the surviving spouse would be
taxable in her estate upon her
death. If her federal taxable estate
ends up being $13.9 million
or less, there would be no
federal estate tax anyway. If
there were $5,000,000 of Trust
assets, at most, only $250,000
would be taxable in the surviving
spouse’s estate. It also
looks as though Congress may
extend most of the key provisions
of the 2017 Tax Cuts and
Jobs Act meaning the federal
estate tax exemption may not
be dropping down to approximately
$6million as of January
1, 2026. A huge difference from
an estate planning standpoint.
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.
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HOLOCAUST | FROM PAGE 1
tant relative to save her life. At
just seven years old, she became
“Krysia,” a recently deceased
Catholic girl, as her family
marched off to concentration
camps. She was reunited with
her father following the war
and came to America, where
she chose a new name: Janet.
Janet’s strength and resilience
enabled her to overcome her
brokenness to share her journey
of survival and hope with
younger generations to ensure
that no one ever forgets
the atrocities of the Holocaust.
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 30, 2025
Impressively, Janet’s testimony
before the Massachusetts
Legislature mandated genocide
education in our schools.
Speaking with students all over
the world, including Malden
High School, Janet’s contributions
and insight have been an
invaluable tool.
Savvy Senior
by Jim Miller
Does Medicare Cover Vision Care and Eye Exams?
Although original Medicare’s vision coverage is
limited to medical issues, there are ways you can
save on routine care. Here are several to check into.
Medicare Advantage plans: Many of these plans,
Dear Almost,
Many soon-to-be retirees are a bit blurry with
what Medicare does and doesn’t cover when
it comes to vision care. The good news is that
Medicare covers most medical issues like cataract
surgery, treatment of eye diseases and medical
emergencies. But unfortunately, routine care
like eye exams and eyeglasses are usually the
beneficiary’s responsibility. Here’s a breakdown
of what is and isn’t covered.
Eye exams and treatments: Medicare does not
cover routine eye exams that test for eyeglasses or
contact lenses, but they do cover yearly medical
eye exams if you have diabetes or are at high
risk for glaucoma. They will also pay for exams
to test and treat medical eye diseases if you’re
having vision problems that indicate a serious
eye problem like macular degeneration, dry eye
syndrome, glaucoma, eye infections or if you get
something in your eye.
Eye surgeries: Medicare will cover most eye
surgeries that help repair the eye function,
including cataract surgery to remove cataracts
and insert standard intraocular lenses to replace
your own. Medicare will not, however, pick up the
extra cost if you choose a premium multifocal lens
that restores full range of vision, thereby reducing
your need for glasses after cataract surgery. The
extra cost for a premium lens can run $1,500 to
$4,000 per eye.
Eye surgeries that are usually not covered by
Medicare include refractive (LASIK) surgery and
cosmetic eye surgery that are not considered
medically necessary.
Eyeglasses and contact lenses: Medicare will
not pay for eyeglasses or contact lenses, with
one exception: If you have had a conventional
intraocular lens inserted during cataract surgery,
Medicare will pay for eyeglasses or contact lenses
following the operation.
Ways to Save
which are alternatives to original Medicare and
sold through private insurance companies, cover
routine eye exams and eyeglasses, but coverage
is limited so be sure you understand the specifics.
While I don’t recommend enrolling in an
Advantage plan just to get vision coverage it
is an option you should know about. To locate
Advantage plans in your area that provide vision
coverage, go to Medicare.gov/plan-compare or
call 800-633-4227.
Purchase vision insurance: If you get routine eye
exams and purchase new eyeglasses annually,
a vision insurance plan may be worth the costs.
These policies typically range between $5 and
$30 per month. Most plans will also have copays
or deductibles you’ll be responsible for.
Check veterans’ benefits: If you’re a veteran and
qualify for VA health care benefits, you may be
able to get some or all of your routine vision care
through VA. Go to VA.gov/health-care/about-vahealth-benefits/vision-care
to learn more.
Find cheaper shopping options: Many retailers
provide discounts – between 10 and 50 percent
– on eye exams and eyeglasses if you belong to a
membership group like AARP or AAA.
You can also save by shopping at discount
retailers like Costco Optical, Sam’s Club Optical
or Target Optical, which are all recommended
by Consumer Reports. Or consider buying your
glasses online at retailers like ZenniOptical.com,
EyeBuyDirect.com or GlassesUSA.com which offer
big savings.
To purchase glasses online, you’ll need a valid
prescription from an eye doctor (no more than
a year old), plus your pupillary distance number,
which is the distance, measured in millimeters,
between the centers of your pupils in each eye.
Look for assistance: There are also health centers
and local clinics that provide free or discounted
vision exams and eyeglasses to those in need. To
find them put a call into your local Lions Club (see
Directory.LionsClubs.org) for referrals.
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.
Dear Savvy Senior,
What all does Medicare cover when it comes to
vision care? I currently have good vision insurance
through my employer but will lose it when I retire.
Almost 65
- LEGAL NOTICE -
City of Malden, Massachusetts
INSPECTIONAL SERVICES
215 Pleasant Street, 3rd Floor
Malden, Massachusetts 02148
(781) 397-7000 ext. 2030
MALDEN PLANNING BOARD
PUBLIC HEARING
The Malden Planning Board will hold a public hearing in
the Herbert L. Jackson Council Chamber, Malden City
Hall, 215 Pleasant Street, Malden, MA at 7:00 P.M. on
Wednesday, June 11, 2025 on the petition of Janick Company
LLC (Permit Application # RES 070208-2025) seeking a special
permit uunder Title 12.28.010.D of the Code of the City of
Malden to allow residential conversion of preexisting
nonconforming property in the Residence A zoning
district, namely, to demolish the existing three-family
dwelling and to construct a two-family dwelling, at the property
known as and numbered, 27 Sheridan Street, Malden,
MA and also known by City Assessor’s Parcel ID 040 177
721. Petition and plans are available for public review in the
Inspectional Services Department, Malden City Hall, 215
Pleasant Street, Room 330, Malden, MA and under
Permit Application # RES-070208-2025 at https://maldenmaenergovweb.tylerhost.net/apps/SelfService#/home
By:
Diane M. Chuha
Clerk
May 23, 30, 2025
- LEGAL NOTICE -
City of Malden, Massachusetts
INSPECTIONAL SERVICES
215 Pleasant Street, 3rd Floor
Malden, Massachusetts 02148
(781) 397-7000 ext. 2030
MALDEN PLANNING BOARD
PUBLIC HEARING
The Malden Planning Board will hold a public hearing
in the Herbert L. Jackson Council Chamber, Malden
City Hall, 215 Pleasant Street, Malden, MA at 7:00 P.M.
on Wednesday, June 11, 2025 on the petition of Gabriela
Mello Muniz/Embrace Pathways, on behalf of Aphli LLC
(Permit Application # COO-071581-2025) seeking a special
permit under Title 12.12.030 of the Code of the City
of Malden, to allow medical center use of property in the
Central Business zoning district, namely, a mental health
clinic, at the property known as and numbered, 389 Main
Street, Malden, MA, Suites 301, 302, 303 and 304 and
also known by City Assessor’s Parcel ID numbers 075 270
202 301, 075 270 202 302, 075 270 202 303 and 075 270
202 304. Petition and plans are available for public review
in the Inspectional Services Department, Malden City Hall,
215 Pleasant Street, Room 330, Malden, MA and under Permit
Application # COO-071581-2025 at https://maldenma-energovweb.tylerhost.net/apps/SelfService#/home
By:
Diane M. Chuha
Clerk
May 23, 30, 2025
׉	 7cassandra://pFlPhH032nl7Htr-1BHaO0QSRKTsQjARv0VnQOUgp3A-` h8h;3B׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 30, 2025
Page 19
MUSINGS | FROM PAGE 7
a story.
“Malden Musings” once again
celebrates the Maldonians who
left their fingerprints on the fabric
of our city — not with headlines
or grand gestures (unlike
some elected officials in the
not-so-distant past aka last June
4th) — but through their everyday
grace, hard work and neighborly
spirit. They made Malden a
place worth calling home. They
worked, played, laughed and
leaned on each other — something
that feels all the rarer in
today’s fast-moving, fractured
world exacerbated by those (at
times) who should know better.
In Malden, we remember.
We hold dear those who came
before us, the friendships that
shaped our youth, and those still
waiting to be made. Because,
in my humble opinion, memories
aren’t just things we carry
— they’re threads that stitch us
together. Who can deny that?
Yeah, nobody.
With that said, lest we forget...
paraphrasing Elie Wiesel, “If we
forget those who came before
us, they will die a second time.”
Maldonians who walked these
streets, let’s say their name
again...
• Bill Mini: Father, husband,
teacher/rabbi, historian, author,
artist, lover of Malden and World
War II vet.
• Angelo “Sonny” Mercurio:
Pearl Street Bakery manager/
West End of Boston expat.
• Josephine M. Cherone: Kind,
generous, giving mother of five
fine boys. This world is a lot less
rich with Mrs. C gone.
• Joe Croken: Malden District
Court Clerk Magistrate, YMCA
Chowhound, friend to many, beloved
raconteur.
• Anthony “Papa Tony” Spadafora:
Patriarch of the Spadafora
clan, brother of World War II
hero Albert and young Craigie’s
grand-pappy.
• Harry Mehos: Malden sports
icon and Johnny and Mike’s older
brother. An individual who
2025 Malden misses a great
deal.
• Laura Damiano: Saint Peter’s
Church insider, treasured Edgeworthian
and fierce protector of
her four boys.
• Walter Kelliher: Eight term
Mayor of Malden, consummate
insider, World War II Navy veteran.
•
Bobby Crowley: Singer of
songs, father, husband, friend
to many.
• Joe D’Orsi: Founder of Harvard
Pastry on Highland Ave.;
born in Italy and World War II
Army vet.
• Stoneham’s Mario Cantone:
Big Cheese at Cantone’s Italian
Restaurant on Broad Street in
Boston — later to be reinvented
as one of the first “punk rock”
clubs in Beantown. Bronze Star
recipient in World War II and father
to nationally known comedian
Mario Cantone. Mario was
also a proud YMCA Chowhound
and one of the Y regulars back in
the glory days of the old barn.
And a really hot (expletive deleted).
Many were the hours we
spent entertained in the steam
room as Mario dispensed words
and tales of wisdom, much to
our delight.
• Bill Dempsey: World War II vet
and witness to history. Teacher
beloved by generations. Imagine
being loved and venerated
by generations?! I cannot.
• Barney Kahn aka The Malden
Square Dean of Merchants: The
King of Kings in Malden Square
for decades and The Square’s
first Douglas Tran.
• Papa Tony’s brother SS Albert
N. Spadafora: World War II Army
Air Force Gold Star hero.
• Edmund Trabucco: Former
Malden Chief of Police and
much more.
• Eleanor Molinari: Housewife,
mother, boss of bosses in the
Edgeworth neighborhood, married
to World War II hero Frankie.
Eleanor passed right through
the Pearly Gates no questions
asked for having made sons
Frankie, Johnny and Jimmy (Ernie
was always a nice boy) into
upstanding citizens, after rocky
starts. Insert great big smiley
face. Daughters Mary, Angela
and Paula? Saints!
• Sean Lucey: Ed and Mary’s
son and one of the most unique
individuals ever to call Malden
home; born with an innate
sense of what was important
in life, the importance of human
reasoning, ethics and critical
thinking. Yeah, he was way
ahead of his time. He loved The
Clash and turned me on to Stiff
Little Fingers!
• “Malden Musings” remembers
so we don’t forget.
As Peter Falk’s iconic TV character
Columbo would say, “Just
one more thing, sir” …Happy
May 31st birthday to lifelong
pally, Greg Lucey — Edgeworth
kid through and through, by
way of Forestdale, former City
Clerk, Councillor-at-Large and
forever one of Malden’s best
friends. Greg and I go way
back — all the way to Beebe Jr.
High, where we shared a locker
stuffed with dog-eared issues
of Mad Magazine, Sports Illustrated,
and The Boston Globe.
That locker held more than just
magazines — it held the early
threads of a friendship that’s
lasted a lifetime. In high school,
we spent countless mornings at
Schopell’s in Malden Square, fueling
up on pancakes and “what
are we gonna do Friday night”
questions. And when we weren’t
there, we were at Devir Park —
playing baseball, football, basketball,
whist and whiffle ball
deep into the summer nights,
under the glow of Emerald and
Malden streetlights while the
soundtrack of our (at times misguided)
youth played on. Mr. Big
Stuff, anyone?!
The Devir Park Bandstand stories?
Those late-night tales are
just between Greg and me (and
that’s how they’ll stay — smiley
face here).
So many moments, each one
stitched into the fabric of growing
up Malden. Every memory
as vivid and cherished as the
next. No lie.
Another (kinda) milestone
birthday, Luce — and the gray?
You wear it well. Here’s to old
friends, the best stories and
many more chapters still to
come.
Postscript 1: Did anyone else
catch the thinly veiled jab/slur
at the Saint Rocco Feast — and
the proud Malden/Edgeworth
community that’s kept this tradition
alive for over 90 years —
on the “Faceplant” page, Malden
Network News, a couple weeks
back? I sure did. And trust me,
I’ll be sharing my thoughts on it
very soon. Shame on you, MNN,
for disrespecting a celebration
that means so much to so many.
Postscript 2: John Baglio —
get well soon my friend. You are
in our thoughts.
—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.
FOR
RENT - EVERETT
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. All New -
Off-Street Parking - Central AC -
Gas Heat - Hardwood Floors.
Going Fast! Call:
(617) 839-8954 & leave message
Water and Sewer Rates FY26
Legal Notice
City of Malden
Public Hearing
Public Works Commission
There will be a Public Hearing conducted by the Public
Works Commission on Tuesday, June 10th, 2025 at 3:30
pm at Malden City Hall, 215 Pleasant Street, Conference
Room #108, Malden, MA., regarding FY26 Water and
Sewer Rates.
Karen M. Bourque, Clerk
Public Works Commission
May 23, 30, 2025
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 30, 2025
Licensed
& Insured
Free
Estimates
1. On May 30, 1942, over 1,000 British bombers flew to what city with
a name similar to perfume?
2. How are alewife, clown and dog similar?
3. What Secretary of the Treasury was born in the British Leeward Islands
and was orphaned?
4. On May 31, 1977, the Trans-Alaska Pipeline was completed between
Prudhoe Bay and what?
5. In what country is “The Jungle Book” set: the Congo, India or Malaysia?
6.
What Massachusetts city was originally called Mystic Side?
7. On June 1, 1494, Scottish Friar John Cor made the first-known written
record of what beverage?
8. How are Blue, Cabinet and The Situation similar?
9. How are bell, Carolina reaper and Scotch bonnet similar?
10. On June 2, 1886, Frances Folsom married what U.S. president (with
a last name that is a city’s name) and became the youngest First
Lady at 21?
11. Which song won the 2025 Eurovision contest: “Wasted Days and
Wasted Nights,” “Wasted Love” or “Wasted”?
12. What is pommes frites?
13. On June 3, 1906, what French entertainer (with the same first name
as “Little Women” sister) was born in Saint Louis, Missouri?
14. Which singer was called the Empress of the Blues: Bessie Smith, Billie
Holiday or Bonnie Raitt?
15. The 2025 Beach Soccer World Cup final was won by what country
that originated the sport?
16. On June 4, 1937, what “first” in grocery shopping debuted at Oklahoma
City’s Humpty Dumpty stores?
17. In 1980 what disease was declared eradicated: AIDS, polio or smallpox?
18.
What is Rancho Obi-Wan in Petaluma, California?
19. Reportedly, semicolons are less popular; what wartime U.S. president
said, “…I must say that I have a great respect for the semicolon;
it’s a very useful little chap”?
20. On June 5, 2012, what author of “Fahrenheit 451” died?
ANSWERS
Carpentry * Kitchen & Bath * Roofs * Painting
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Call 781-710-8918 * Saugus, MA
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Malden Trans is looking for reliable drivers for
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Part-time positions available and based on AM &
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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
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Good driver history from Registry a MUST!
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Part-time hours, BUT GUARANTEED 20-35
HOURS PER WEEK depending on experience.
Contact David @ 781-322-9401.
OBITUARIES
Dale Helen Hendry
11/19/1947 - 12/18/2024
Previously of Jasper St, Saugus.
Born and raised in Malden.
Passed away peacefully with her
caregiver by her side. Survived
by her daughter Rhonda, who
resides in New Hampshire Dale
worked and retired from a career
with Kappy’s Liquor’s corporate
office in Everett.
An Urn Garden service is
scheduled on June 7 at 11am
in Woodlawn Cemetery, Everett,
MA.
Du Trinh
Of Malden. Passed away surrounded
by his family May 23rd.
Born in Vietnam, Du was the son
of Quang Trinh and Hue Thai To.
He was the loving husband of
Mai Trinh, spending almost 31
years of marriage together. The
beloved father of Sarah Trinh and
Amy Trinh. During his free time
Du enjoyed swimming, cooking
and when he was younger,
he enjoyed playing basketball.
Du is survived by his wife Mai
Trinh of Malden, his daughters
Sarah Trinh of Japan and Amy
Trinh of Cambridge, his siblings
Kenny Trinh of MA, Benny Trinh
of TN, Donny Trinh of Vietnam,
Jimmy Trinh of MA, Larry Trinh of
CA and Ton Trinh of MA, as well
as many other family and friends
who will miss him dearly.
Services for Du were held on
Monday May 26th at the Weir
MacCuish Golden Rule Funeral
Home, 144 Salem St, Malden.
Like us on Facebook
advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/
Advocate.news.ma
1. Cologne, Germany (Eau de
Cologne originated there in
1709.)
2. They are names of types of
fish.
3. Alexander Hamilton
4. Valdez Harbor
5. India
6. Malden
7. Scotch whiskey
8. They are names of rooms at
the White House.
9. They are types of pepper.
10. Grover Cleveland
11. “Wasted Love” by JJ
12. French fries (in French)
13. Josephine Baker
14. Bessie Smith
15. Brazil
16. Shopping carts
17. Smallpox
18. The world’s largest collection
of Star Wars memorabilia
19. “Honest Abe” Lincoln
20. Ray Bradbury
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Page 21
C B&
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781-233-0348
* Landscaping Maintenance * Mulch
* Lawn Mowing & Dethatching
* Spring & Fall Clean-ups * Owner-Operated
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American Exterior and
Window Corporation
Contact us for all of your
home improvement projects
and necessities.
Call Jeff or Bob
Toll Free: 1-888-744-1756
617-699-1782 / www.americanexteriorma.com
Windows, Siding, Roofing, Carpentry & More!
All estimates, consultations or inspections completed
by MA licensed supervisors. *Over 50 years experience.
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Complete Financing Available.
No Money Down.
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
FIRE • SOOT • WATER
Homeowner’s Insurance Loss Specialists
FREE CONSULTATION
1-877-SAL-SOOT
Sal Barresi, Jr. - Your fi rst call
617-212-9050
J.F & Son Contracting
Snow Plowing
No Job too small! Free Estimates!
Commercial & Residential
781-656-2078
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Shoveling & removal
Landscaping, Electrical, Plumbing, Painting, Roofing, Carpentry, Framing,
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Clean Ups: Yards, Garages, Attics & Basements. Truck for Hire, Bobcat Services.
617-387-2200
advertise on the web at
www.advocatenews.net
For Advertising with Results, call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@advocatenews.net
Advocate
Call now!
AAA Service • Lockouts
Trespass Towing • Roadside Service
Junk Car Removal
617-387-6877
26 Garvey St., Everett
MDPU 28003 ICCMC 251976
Frank Berardino
MA License 31811
● 24-Hour Service
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BERARDINO
Plumbing & Heating
Gas Fitting ● Drain Service
Residential & Commercial Service
617.699.9383
Senior Citizen Discount
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• Landscaping, Lawn Care, Mulching
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Office: (781) 233-2244
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 30, 2025
OPEN HOUSES!
YOU'RE INVITED! EXPLORE OUR NEWEST LISTING
AT THE MANGO REALTY OPEN HOUSE.
$1,299,000
9 INDIAN ROCK DR, SAUGUS
CALL LEA AT 617-594-9164
Open House: Thursday, May 29, 2025 | 5:00 PM – 7:00 PM
Welcome to this stunning split-entry, turn-key home located in the
highly sought-after Indian Rock neighborhood! Boasting over 3,200 sq.
ft. of beautifully finished living space, this home features spacious
bedrooms, updated bathrooms, and generous closet space throughout.
Enjoy a modern kitchen, a brand new lower-level kitchenette with highend
finishes, and a cozy 3-season porch, perfect for entertaining yearround.
The luxurious primary suite offers vaulted ceilings, dual closets,
and a spa-like ensuite bath. Sitting on a prime corner lot, the backyard
is a showstopper with a heated saltwater in-ground pool, a new
gazebo, and ample space for outdoor enjoyment. A two-car garage,
multiple heating zones, and a finished lower level provide ideal
flexibility for extended family, a home office, or gym. All this, in one of
Saugus’ most desirable communities, a true commuter’s dream! Don’t
miss your chance to tour this exceptional property. For more
information, contact Lea at 617-594-9164
$1,500/month
New Commercial Rentals from Mango
Realty – Saugus & Rockport
Boost Your Business in Prime Locations!
Discover high-visibility commercial spaces now available in Saugus
and Rockport, brought to you by Mango Realty. These versatile
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perfect for taking your business to the next level. Saugus: Located in
a high-traffic area with easy access to major highways, shopping
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Don’t miss the opportunity to grow your business in these sought-after
locations! Contact Mango Realty today to schedule a private tour or
learn more about current availability.
345 Central, Saugus MA
Just $1,500/Month! Versatile 900 sq. ft. office/retail space
in a high-visibility Saugus Center location! Includes 550 sq.
ft. street-level storefront and 350 sq. ft. finished basement,
ideal for professionals or small businesses such as law
firms, accountants, salons, or fitness studios. Affordable
lease terms: First month, security deposit, and one-month
broker fee. Tenant pays electric. Owner covers water,
sewer, taxes, and exterior maintenance. Call Peter at 781820-5690
to schedule your showing today!
$1,200/month
420 Lincoln Avenue, Saugus MA
Cliftondale Square – Office Space for Rent. Attractive 2ndfloor
office with 4 spacious rooms, private bathroom, and
on/off-street parking. Perfect for professionals—lawyers,
accountants, doctors, architects, and more. Only
$1,200/month. Flexible lease (month-to-month or yearly) with
no security deposit. Just $2,000 to move in (includes first
month & background check). Call Peter at 781-820-5690 –
Don’t miss out!
$1,300/month
30 Main Street, Rockport MA
Prime Rockport Commercial Space – Rare Opportunity!
Offered for the first time in 20 years! Located in the heart of
Rockport’s Cultural District, this beautifully updated space is
ideal for a boutique, gallery, or office. Steps from Front Beach &
Shalin Liu, with high foot traffic and exceptional visibility.
Features: fresh paint, new flooring, pellet stove, updated
bathroom, furnished with desk, chair, display cabinets, HD TV,
track lighting, art hanging system & A/C. Don’t miss out – call
Jeanine at 617-312-2491 today!
Behind every success story at Mango Realty is a team of
passionate, knowledgeable, and hardworking real estate
professionals. Our agents are known not only for their market
expertise but for their unwavering dedication to our clients’ goals.
Together, we form a collaborative powerhouse, always ready to go
the extra mile. Connect with us today and experience the Mango
difference!
$839,900
SUE PALOMBA
617-877-4553
CEO OF MANGO REALTY
45 PRINCETON RD MALDEN, MA
Open House: Saturday, May 31 | 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM
Sunday, June 1 | 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM
Prime Two-Family Home in Malden – A Rare Opportunity!
Here’s your chance to own a beautifully maintained two-family home in
one of Malden’s most sought-after neighborhoods! Proudly cared for
by the same family for decades, this versatile property is move-in
ready and ideal for investors, multi-generational living, or rental
income. Each unit features updated kitchens and baths, modern
flooring, stainless steel appliances, and in-unit laundry. Enjoy relaxing
on the welcoming farmer’s porch or entertaining on the spacious rear
decks. Perfectly situated near downtown Malden and Melrose with
easy access to schools, shopping, and public transportation, this home
combines comfort, value, and prime location. Call Peter at 781-8205690
today for more details. Don’t let this incredible opportunity pass
you by!
CONTACT US FOR A FREE COMPARATIVE MARKET
ANALYSIS OF YOUR PORPERTY TODAY
Call: (781) 558-1091
Text: (617) 877-4553
infowithmango@gmail.com
We welcome you to visit our offices
38 Main St Saugus MA 01906
563 Broadway Everett, MA 02149
32 Main Street Rockport, MA 01966
Peter Manoogian
(617) 387-6432
LEA DOHERTY
617-594-9164
MARIE RICHEMOND
609-553-7427
JEANINE MOULDEN
617-312-2491
ROSA RESCIGNO
781-820-0096
CARL GREENLER
781-690-1307
Real Estate Broker
NORMA PARZIALE
617-590-9143
ROSE CIAMPI
617-957-9222
Real Estate Broker
Ron Visconti
(617) 387-6432
CHRISTINE DESOUSA
603-670-3353
Joe Dinuzzo
617-680-7610
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Page 23
Call for
Classified
Advertising at:
617-387-2200
Clean-Outs!
We take and dispose
from cellars, attics,
garages, yards, etc.
Call Robert at:
781-844-0472
For Advertising with
Results,
call The Advocate
Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@
advocatenews.net
For Advertising with Results, call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@advocatenews.net
Discount Tree Service
781-269-0914
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
TRINITY REAL ESTATE
321 MAIN STREET | SAUGUS, MA | VILLAGE PARK
TrinityHomesRE.com
36 Essex Street, 3, Saugus -List Price: $339,000
Move-in ready 2-bedroom condo in the heart of Cliftondale
Square! Enjoy an updated kitchen boasting cherry cabinets,
granite counters, ceramic tile back splash, stainless
appliances, breakfast bar and hardwood flooring, open to a
sunny living room with slider to your private balcony. Freshly
painted, new carpeting, wall a/c, deeded parking, laundry
room in building, low condo fee includes heat & hot water.
Listing Agent: Lori Johnson
781.718.7409
14 Aaron Street, Melrose
List Price: $649,000
Nestled on a quiet residential street in Melrose, this oldstyle
9 room, 5 bedroom, 2 full bathroom Colonial has been
in the same family for many years and is ready for its next
chapter. A great opportunity for buyers looking to restore
and personalize this property located in a desirable
community.
Listing Agent: Lucia Ponte
781.883.8130
101 Waite Street, A7, Malden
List Price: $259,999
Fantastic opportunity for investors or homeowners
looking to build instant sweat equity!
This spacious 1-bedroom condo features large living
room, dining area and lots of closets! Incredible
potential! Enjoy common laundry room on same floor, a
deeded parking space, and plenty of on-street parking.
Listing Agent: Diane Horrigan
781.526.6357
781.231.9800
332 Lynnfield Street, Lynn
List Price: $499,900
This Ranch style home features 2 spacious bedrooms, 1 full bath, and
hardwood floors throughout. Convenient to schools, commuter
routes, shopping, and Lynn/Swampscott beaches. Great home for first
time home buyers, or if you are looking to down size. Also, superb
condo alternative. Come bring your ideas to personalize this home or
do nothing but unpack and enjoy!
Listing Agent: Lucia Ponte
781.883.8130
New Listing: 2 Inwood Drive, 3003, Woburn -List Price: $839,900
Must see lovely 3-bedroom condominium at Deerpoint
Condominiums featuring high ceilings and open floor plan that creates
a spacious airy feel throughout.. Enjoy a cozy fireplace, in-unit
laundry. and gourmet kitchen boasting stainless steel appliances and
an oversized island, perfect for entertaining. 3rd bedroom currently
being used as gym Additional highlights include a 2-car garage, 2
storage units.
Listing Agent: Annemarie Torciva
781.983.5266
21 Wormwood Street, U220, Boston-List Price: $839,000
Grand brick and beam loft in the iconic Fort Point Place. #220
affords a wide-open concept space complete with oversized windows
and high 11-foot ceilings. With maple wood floors throughout, the
spacious living room and bedroom area flow seamlessly into the
dining room and kitchen. Washer and dryer hookup in the
bathroom. Parking space is a double wide space big enough to fit 2
cars. Enjoy quick access to major highways, public transportation,
shopping, restaurants and the vibrant seaport district.
Listing Agent, Broker/Owner: Ronnie Puzon
917.992.3689
Providing Real Estate Services for Nearly Two Decades
Servicing Saugus, Melrose, Wakefield, Malden, all North Shore communities, Boston and Beyond.
Professional
TREE
REMOVAL
& Cleanups
24-HOUR SERVICE
Steps Stoops Rebuilt or Repaired
Chimney Rebuilt or Repaired
House Foundation Leaks Repaired
All Basement Repairs
Chimney Inspection
Roofing & Siding
Masonry Repairs
Window Installation & Repairs
Drywall & Carpentry
Waterproofing
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 30, 2025
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