׉?4ׁB!בCט U Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://Eak1FLeWJaLuiBJgYTZLXh2xIREiynkW4Y0Yux2sF4Q CB`'p׉	 7cassandra://qFpaqT17-DSRCCuJnjkwATpqIpfRvxoROPP4RYOLljQ͸%`׉	 7cassandra://XDxQmJDIOIu192KdNddkCDAtEKFKEegOKIAMFCdaN1U7L` i;=$Zנi;=$] 9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈ׈Ei;=$H׉E1Your Local News, Sports and Information Online. Scan & Subscribe!
Vol. 35, No. 17
-FREEwww.advocatenews.net
Published
Every Friday
Mayor submits FY27 municipal budget
proposal of $240.3M to City Council
Budget cuts include approximately 32
jobs citywide, including all Malden Police
cadets, five firefighters and 14 full-time
positions across city government
By Steve Freker
M
Malden Mayor Gary Christenson
submitted a $240.3 million
municipal budget proposal
to the Malden City Council for
its review at Tuesday night’s
City Council Committee of the
Whole meeting. (Advocate File Photo)
alden Mayor Gary Christenson
formally submitted the
Fiscal Year 2027 municipal budget
proposal to the City Council
Tuesday evening at a Committee
of the Whole meeting held
in the Council Chamber at City
Hall. Accompanied by a transmittal
letter, the budget appropriation
was the ominous, proverbial
“other shoe to drop,” as
the numbers include cuts necessary
to cover a near $10 million
structural deficit. (The complete
text of Mayor Christenson’s
FY27 budget transmittal letter
to the City Council is included
on page 2.)
Included among the cuts are
the elimination of approximately
32 full- or part-time jobs across
city government, including cuts
in the ranks of the Malden Police
Department and Fire DepartBUDGET
| SEE PAGE 5
Wayne Martineau Sr.
Ten Mystic Valley Juniors Earn
National Merit Recognition
By Steve Freker
T
hey grew up together in one
of Malden’s most well-known
Mystic Valley Regional Charter School juniors who earned National Merit recognition: Maya Abuzaid,
Victor Caetano, Adam Cheng, Wassim Daoud, Sadra Hashempour, Prisha Kumar, Ihsan Nigdelioglu,
Kyle Phung, Angelina Ricciardone and Emma Wang. (Courtesy MVRCS)
By Emily Brennan
M
ystic Valley Regional Charter
School is proud to announce
that ten members of the
junior class have been recognized
by the National Merit Scholarship
Corporation for their exceptional
academic achievement. Maya
Abuzaid, Victor Caetano, Adam
Cheng, Wassim Daoud, Sadra
Hashempour, Prisha Kumar, Ihsan
Nigdelioglu, Kyle Phung, AngeliMERIT
| SEE PAGE 5
neighborhoods, right on the
same corner, among the same
people. Their friendship was
formed over 50 years ago and it
never wavered. That is why it was
so hard for Chris Simonelli to say
goodbye to Wayne Martineau Sr.
at services held Monday in Malden
for one of the city’s most
popular and respected residents.
It is no secret that Simonelli,
who is now on his second “tour”
representing Ward 7 on the Malden
City Council, is someone
who wears the proverbial “heart
on his sleeve.” So did his late, lifelong
friend Wayne, who passed
away suddenly on April 20 after
a brief battle with cancer.
Councillor Simonelli recalled
Wayne Martineau before requesting
a moment of silence in
his friend’s name at the last full
Council meeting. It was not an
easy task for the born-and-bred
Malden guy who still lives in the
same neighborhood. “We both
lived in the Newland Street projects
and we grew up with the
same friends and same neighborhood,”
Simonelli recalled at
the Council meeting. “In an important
time of our lives, we all
looked out for each other, Wayne
a lot more than others, probably.
He always went the extra mile.”
“Wayne was a frequent
babysitter for the younger kids
in my family and me at times,”
Simonelli said, and with a smirk,
“if he was here he’d probably say
he was still doing it for me!”
Simonelli told his Council colleagues
and those watching the
Council meeting that Wayne
Martineau, who worked many
years for Malden Housing in his
adult life, must have had “a calling.”
“I believe we are all here for a
reason,” said Simonelli, who had
a difficult time with his emotions
during his tribute, at times fighting
a losing battle holding back
tears. “Wayne was here with us
to help people. He helped evREMEMBERS
| SEE PAGE 8
Ward 7 Councillor
Chris Simonelli
617-387-2200
Friday, May 1, 2026
Councillor Simonelli remembers
well-known Malden ‘good guy’ &
mentor after unexpected passing
Wayne F. Martineau Sr., lifelong
Malden resident and local city
employee, suddenly, at 66
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 1, 2026
Mayor Christenson outlines proposed FY27 municipal
budget in transmittal letter to Malden City Council
Following is the text of Malden Mayor Gary Christenson’s formal letter to the members
of the City Council accompanying the proposed FY27 municipal appropriation.
Dear Members of the City Council,
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I present the Fiscal Year 2027
budget for your review and consideration.
With this budget, we
begin a multi-year effort to reduce
expenses to bring them in line with
available revenues. I have covered
in prior year budget messages the
challenges that we face that are
unique to Malden so I won’t repeat
them here. Those, combined
with challenges that are common
in many other cities, find us in a situation
that is forcing a change in
how we deliver services. As a largely
developed urban city with limited
highway access and a heavy focus
on residential use, the opportunities
for large-scale transformational
development are virtually
non-existent and, as such, we are
overly reliant upon property tax
revenue growth to fund ongoing
cost increases.
That fact, when combined with
the unparalleled pressure applied
to Malden from the inequities in
the school funding formula (Chapter
70), leave us with few options.
We know our residents are feeling
the same pressure in their daily
lives.
A level service budget, defined
as continuing current service levels
and meeting contractual and
expected obligations, yielded an
almost $10 million structural deficit.
It is entirely consistent with the
scope of the problem we shared
with the City Council and the public
during discussions on an override.
As a result, this budget proposes
cuts totaling approximately
$4.5 million. To fund the gap, I am
proposing that $5.2 million be used
from our reserves. It is not enough
to put us on a sustainable path but
it is a start.
We will need to continue to work
together to solve this ongoing challenge
in whatever way possible,
which will include additional cuts
in future years if nothing changes.
The proposed cuts are impactful
and have an underlying theme
of doing more with less. While I
leaned heavily toward cuts of open
positions that we have purposefully
not filled the past few months in
anticipation of this exercise, the reality
is that with this budget, there
are people losing jobs and as Mayor,
the impact on personnel and
service levels is not to be understated.
That
will leave us having to get
creative to deliver services, and
there’s little doubt our residents will
feel some of that impact. However,
I’ve attempted to balance many
competing needs while prioritizing
things that remain important to me
even in tough times. It’s important
to keep in mind that exercises
that involve reductions in personnel
have expenses associated with
the first year before you reach the
full-time run rate savings.
Things like unemployment costs,
payouts for earned time and the
need for transition periods are difficult
to predict. While we have made
some allowances for those in this
budget, it’s likely that future appropriations
may be necessary to
find costs associated with the proposed
reductions. It is also important
to note that with most employees
being subject to collective bargaining
agreements, there is a process
that we must follow to comply
with labor laws. Those conversations
have begun and will continue
in parallel with the City Council
budget deliberations.
Additionally, there will be required
ordinance updates consistent
with the changes proposed
as part of this budget. Those will
likely need to follow immediately
after passage.
[In his letter, the Mayor outlined
specific proposed cuts of approximately
32 full-time positions —
including 10 existing public safety
positions and three open, unfilled
police officer positions — and 17
full-time positions across city government.
See Budget Story, Page
MAYOR | SEE PAGE 9
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׉	 7cassandra://RrItE5xflt3enhN-eTM5omuQT3tlJf_QUhmpjyq-66U9` i;=$J׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 1, 2026
Page 3
MALDEN HIGH SPORTS: Tornado Boys Volleyball takes key
match win of Somerville, 3-1; Tao, Li and Chen are standouts
Malden Baseball tops Lynn English, Revere and wins Serino Classic title, D'Anna is
Tournament MVP; First in for Tornados AT Revere in more than a decade
By Steve Freker
I
t may have been a vacation on
the calendar, but there were
no breaks for the Malden High
Tuesday, also at home.
Malden Volleyball got some
fine performances from Tornadoes
Hikaru Tao, James Li and
Gray Chen. "They all played very
J&
SERINO CLASSIC CHAMPIONS!— Senior captain with the Serino
Classic Championship plaque. From left, Billy Gavin, Ryan
McMahon. Gino Spadafora (front), T.J. Lynch, rear, Jackson
Tourkantonis and Eudy Francisco. (Courtesy/Malden Public Schools Athletics)
School Golden Tornado Spring
Teams.
Malden High Boys Volleyball
topped Everett in a set sweep,
3-0, at the Finn Gym in Malden
and then followed up with another
big win, 3-1, this week on
consistently and very well," said
Malden head coach Dan Jurkowski.
"It was a team effort,
and those guys were the leaders
against Somerville."
SPORTS | SEE PAGE 4
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 1, 2026
SPORTS | FROM PAGE 3
The win lifted Malden to 7-3
overall, 4-2 in the Greater Boston
League at the midpoint of the
season. The Tornados were set to
host GBLer Chelsea on Wednesday,
April 29 at 5:15 p.m. at the
Finn Gym, Malden High School.
Next week, two more home
games, Monday, May 4 hosting
Lynn Classical and Wednesday,
May 6, home versus leaguer
leader and undefeated (8-0) Revere.
Both games are at 5:15
p.m. starts.
Malden Baseball tops Revere,
Lynn English & wins Serino Classic
Malden
High Baseball finished
off a successful stretch of games
with a comeback win on the
road over Revere, 6-3 on Monday
this week. It was the first time
Malden had beaten Revere—
on the Patriots home field— in
8 Norwood St.
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Senior Captain Billy Gavin (31,
1.27 ERA) was solid on the
mound, pitching into the seventh
inning, scattering 4 hits
and striking out 5. None of Revere's
3 runs were earned as Malden
made a whopping six errors
defensively behind him, but he
stayed cool and worked out of
several jams.
Malden fell behind, 3-1, and it
looked gloomy before the Tornados
erupted for 5 big runs to take
a 6-3 lead in the top of the 6th.
The remarkable part is that the
two biggest hits were the very
first hits of the respective players’
varsity careers.
Freshman Arthur Sewell led
off the inning by hammering
a long double— his first-ever
varsity base hit— to deep left
field over the head of the fielder.
Sophomore Devin Otero Milonopolous
(3-for-4) followed
with an infield single. The runners
moved up on a groundout
by sophomore Nick D'Anna and
senior captain Ryan McMahon
walked to load the bases.
Sophomore Davante Layne
then drew a second consecutive
walk to force in Sewell with a run
to make it 3-2, Revere, and then
came one of the biggest hits of
the season.
Sophomore Kendrick Noelwww.810bargrille.com
saint
had come into the game
as a replacement the inning before
and stepped to the plate
in only his second at bat of the
varsity season. A lefty batter, he
swung and missed at the first
pitch, but on the second pitch,
he delivered bigtime, stinging
a hard grounder down the first
base line just inches inside the
bag. It went for a double and
cleared the bases— the eventual
game winning hit— as Malden
went up, 5-3.
Noelsaint then scored on an
RBI single by sophomore pinch
hitter Jaylen Fuentes Rivera to
make it 6-3 Malden.
When Gavin used up all of his
allowed pitch count pitches in
the bottom of the 7th, senior McMahon
came on to shut the door
with a strikeout and groundout
which he fielded himself.
*****
Gavin pitched another gem
and got some more relief help
from McMahon in a key, 7-4 win
at home over Lynn English on
April 20.
Sophomore Davante Layne
(2-for-3, 2 RBIs, 3 stolen bases),
senior captain T.J. Lymch (2-for2,
2 RBIs, 4 stolen bases), sophomore
Nick D'Anna (2-for-3, 2 runs
scored, 2 stolen bases) and McMahon
(1-for-3, 2 runs scored, 1
stolen base) led the Tornado offense.
Seniors
Jackson Tourkantonis
(2-0) and T.J. Lynch split
the pitching duties and sophomore
Nick D'Anna (2-for-3, 3
RBIS) led the way at the plate
for Malden in a 12-2 win over
Greater Lawrence as Malden
won the 12th Annual Christie
Serino Baseball Classic for the
3rd straight year.
D'Anna, who also went 3-for-4
with a home run and 5 RBIs in a
semifinal win over East Boston,
was named 2026 Serino Classic
Most Valuable Player.
Lynncolln Silva returns a volley
in front of teammate Joan Diaz
Vargas. (Advocate Photo/ Henry Huang)
Israel DeSouza smashed the ball
at the net against Somerville.
(Advocate Photo/ Henry Huang)
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617-389-3839
Celebrating 67 Years in Business!
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׉	 7cassandra://Z4gL9VjnEfyU7lKafumFW3iaRJsXKL-xn9H2p7qH6HU9w` i;=$L׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 1, 2026
Page 5
BUDGET | FROM PAGE 1
ment, as well as across most municipal
departments. The FY27
proposal is for $240.3 million,
which represents a meager 1.8%
increase over last year’s FY26 figure
of $236.1 million.
In his transmittal letter, Mayor
Christenson stressed that while
this year’s budget proposal is a
level-funded budget from the
previous fiscal year, it still imposes
a near $10 million structural
budget deficit. “A level service
budget, defined as continuing
current service levels and meeting
contractual and expected
obligations, yielded an almost
$10 million structural deficit,”
Mayor Christenson stated in his
transmittal letter to the Council.
“It is entirely consistent with the
scope of the problem we shared
with the City Council and the
public during discussions on an
override.”
After a five-month campaign
by city officials seeking a Proposition
2 1/2 property tax override,
Malden voters rejected the proposal
in a special election held
on March 31. The override bid
was defeated by just 124 votes,
a razor-thin 51-49 percent margin
on a day when the turnout
mirrored recent city elections,
just 15 percent of registered voters.
The so-called “other shoe”
dropped on Tuesday, in the form
of the unveiling of the city budget
for the first time.
In his letter, the Mayor detailed
how the FY27 proposal addresses
the nearly $10 million deficit,
as state law mandates cities
and towns submit a balanced
budget by a June 30 deadline.
“As a result, this budget proposes
cuts totaling approximately
$4.5 million. To fund the gap, I
am proposing that $5.2 million
be used from our reserves. It is
not enough to put us on a sustainable
path but it is a start,” the
Mayor added.
Malden’s cash reserves — often
called by the misnomer “free
cash”— are also sometimes referred
to as the “rainy day” fund.
In the FY26 budget last year, Malden
also used $5.2 in free cash to
cover some of the budget. “Free
cash” is essentially the city’s savings
account and is looked at
closely when determining credit
ratings and is crucial in establishing
interest rates for municipal
borrowing.
Approximately $4.5 million
& 32 jobs projected to be
cut for Malden for FY27
The approximately $4.5 million
in municipal budget cuts for
FY27 are primarily in the form of
the elimination of some 32 fulland
part-time jobs. Included are
the following:
• Public Safety/Police — elimination
of three open positions
(Police Officers); elimination of all
five Cadet positions ($575,000)
• Public Safety/Fire — elimination
of five positions (Firefighters,
$550,000)
• Library — elimination of one
position (Custodian, $75,000)
• Department of Public Works
— elimination of the open Assistant
Director position ($130,000)
• Restructuring of Boards/
Commissions — reducing pay
for most boards/commissions;
additionally, proposing to reduce
the size of three boards/
commissions ($80,000)
• Operational Budget Cuts/Enhancements
— includes one recommendation
for revenue enhancement
on commercial permit
fees ($600,000)
• Elimination of FY27 Cost of
Living Adjustment (COLA) increases
— across all open contracts;
will propose 0% increase
for open union contracts for
FY27 ($1.1 million)
• Operational Budget Cuts —
various operational line item reductions
as outlined in the departmental-level
budgets
• General Government — elimination
of 17 positions across all
area of government, specifically:
ASSESSORS: Eliminate funding
for 1.0 Full-Time clerk position.
CEMETERY: Eliminate funding
for 1.0 Full-Time clerk position.
CITY CLERK: Reduce by 80%
funding for a contracted employee.
ENGINEERING:
Shift funding
for part-time employees to a
grant.
HEALTH: Eliminate funding for
1.0 Full-Time Clerk, 1.0 Full-Time
Language Access Coordinator
and a PT (10 hr.) Nurse.
INFORMATION TECH: Eliminate
funding for 1.0 Assistant Director
position.
INSPECTIONAL SERVICES:
Eliminate funding for .50 FTE
Clerk and 1.0 Full-Time Rehab.
Specialist.
LEGAL: Reduction in hours for
two PT Asst. City Solicitors and
Special Counsel.
OSPCD: Eliminate funding for
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1.0 Planning and Development
Specialists.
PARKING: Eliminate funding
for 1.0 Director/CSO (Eff. 1/1/27).
PUBLIC FACILITIES: Eliminate
funding for 1.0 Full-Time clerk
position.
RECREATION: Eliminate funding
for two Part-Time positions.
SENIOR CENTER: Eliminate
funding for 1.0 Full-Time clerk
position.
TEEN CENTER: Eliminate funding
for 1.0 Full-Time clerk position.
TREASURER:
Eliminate funding
for 1.0 Full-Time clerk position.
VETERANS: Eliminate funding
for 1.0 Full-Time clerk position;
convert coordinator to 20
hrs. a week
Funding for Education
is proposed for $106.5
million in FY27
The budget appropriation proposal
for Education, and its largest
appropriation — $102.1 million
for the Malden Public Schools
— for FY27 is $106.5 million,
which represents an increase of
$4.96 million from the previous
FY26 year, or approximately 4.3%.
BUDGET | SEE PAGE 10
MERIT | FROM PAGE 1
na Ricciardone and Emma Wang
earned this distinction based on
their outstanding performance
on the PSAT/NMSQT.
“We are proud to see ten members
of this class earn National
Merit recognition, the highest
number in Mystic Valley’s history
and the largest share of a graduating
class as well,” said Director/
Superintendent Alex Dan.
Selected from more than 1.3
million students nationwide,
these high-achieving juniors
rank among the top 4% scorers
in the country.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 1, 2026
~ Malden Musings ~
Saint Rocco Feast 2026 On My Mind
By Peter Levine
S
unshine and blue skies usually
bring happy, smiling pilgrims
by the thousands out of
hibernation during the annual
San Rock Festa (this year on August
7 through 9). Fine weather
and a decades old tradition will
do that. Planned — just for you,
Malden — is a spectacular weekend
of music and food, which is
guaranteed to make Maldonians
and Friends of Maldonia forget
the daily grind and mishegas
of life for a brief few moments
anyway. The homemade Italian
food served by real homemade
Italians will bring back memories
of family dinners of yesterTHE
PAESANI CLUB
ANNUAL POLENTA PARTY
ANTHONY’S OF MALDEN
105 CANAL STREET
MALDEN, MA. 02148
THURSDAY, MAY 14, 2026
6:00PM COCKTAIL HOUR
SAVE THE DATE!
LA MORA CONTEST
FEATURING
SAL
“THE GOLDFISH SWALLOWER”
BARRESI
year: a simpler time in life when
you’d stagger down Pearl on a
Sunday morning (queue “Sunday
Morning Coming Down”
by Johnny Cash) and smell the
fresh bread baking at Pearl Bakery;
when you’d walk by any
house on Malden, Thacher or
Oakland Streets and inhale the
Sunday sauce simmering on the
stove – the meatballs, eggplant
and chicken cutlets frying – and
know instinctively whose mom
was cooking which Sunday afternoon
banquet. The friends
and family lining the streets all
San Rock weekend long will
bring back these memories “lost
to the sands of time.” Recaptured
for this moment, on this special
weekend — truly a spectacular
weekend. As Carly Simon once
sang, “Stay right here...cuz these
are the good old days.” See you
on Pearl in August, Maldonia!
It is said in Malden Musings...
• Separated at birth: former
Malden Superintendent of Cemeteries
and 25 ppg scorer in the
1981 Malden Men’s Recreation
Department Men’s Hoop League
Jimmy “Husband of the Fabulous
Judy” Cahill and the arrogant casino
mogul Moe “I buy you out,
you don’t buy me out!” Greene
(Alex Rocco) from the classic,
“The Godfather.”
• For all you haters out there, I
got the scorebook to prove the
25 ppg. Insert smiley face.
• Last week I listened to Jethro
Tull’s 1971 masterpiece “AquaHome
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Johnny Puleo Sr. & Peter Chiacchi with the Roma Band in the
background Malden Street — Saint Rocco Feast mid-1960s
lung” (40th Anniversary Edition),
and believe it or not, forgot how
much I loved Ian Anderson and
the rest of the boys in Tull! So
much pleasure in each and every
track. “Wond’ring Aloud” is
worth the price of admission all
by itself!
• On the 6th anniversary of his
passing…. Great googly moogly!
People simply adored the
late great Preacher Jack! The
mad genius of boogie-woogie
piano had many admirers!
Stealers, dealers, sidewalk spielers
loved him. Buskers, huskers
and dawn to duskers were
in awe! And at the Shipwreck in
the ’70s a mobster or two may
have tipped him a double saw
(a well-known underworld figure
who ran the Ebb Tide would
request “Blueberry Hill” multiple
times a night, according to Jasper
Jack). Mike Girard from the
legendary Boston-based band
The Fools also dug what Preacher
offered; he once opined: “I
saw him for the first time years
ago when I was busing tables
at a coffee house in the late ‘60’s
or early ‘70’s. He was as cool as
a moose. I saw him years later
and my opinion was the same.
He was one of a kind.”
• Happy 82nd day of birth to
that ageless wonder, Buddy
“Boss Dawg of the Boneyard”
Arthur! Possibly Malden’s second-best
hoopster ever, Buddy
married well in life (hello Louise!)
which — all agree — has
helped him maintain those still
boyish good looks! Happy birthday,
Big Guy!
You are a longtime Maldonian
if you remember…
• Heart-stopping, pants-dropping,
earth shocking, hard rocking,
booty-shaking, earth-quaking,
Viagra-taking, history making,
legendary fireworks at Devir
Park on the Monday night
of the Saint Rocco Feast. Thank
you once again to “The Boss” for
allowing me to swipe from him
yet again!
• When basketball enthusiasts
would line up 30 deep for next
at the old YMCA on a Wednesday
or Friday night (Saturday afternoons,
also).
• When the Centre Methodist
Church stood where the John
and Christina Markey Malden
Senior Community Center now
stands.
• Stephen Joseph Harris excelled
at football, hockey, baseball
and track at MC (1968). His
freshman year hockey season,
the team made the state tournament.
In his sophomore year,
the football team went undefeated
(State Champs). In his senior
year, he was ranked number
one in Offense in the Catholic
Conference. Odds bodkins!
Outstanding!
• In the winter, under the direction
of the D.P.W., Devir Park,
Linden Park and Ferryway Green
were flooded, attracting the best
hockey players in the city/state
who would play deep into the
night — floodlights be damned.
• When Mooney Pond on
Princeton Road was a “special
hangout” where you could walk
along the edge of the pond, inhale
clean fresh air, sit on the
huge boulders at the far edge of
the area and hide amongst the
dense trees. In winter you could
MUSINGS| SEE PAGE 7
׉	 7cassandra://ZiobmtxSwScIurSvoGoDvDUdfqxOa3UvdP434GKFpWY2w` i;=$N׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 1, 2026
Page 7
MUSINGS | FROM PAGE 6
ice skate, play hockey or just
slide around for fun. It was a vernal
pool of sorts, a natural spring
that ran off onto Eric Place,
which, on paper, is a “street” off
Cherry Street (thank you to Malden
Police Officer Noelle Bowie-Pierce’s
mom Kim Bowie Sterrett
for this contribution).
• When Malden had a thriving
Jewish population with names
such as Ruderman, Goldman,
Rubin, Ross, Slavin, Berman, Robbins,
Slaine and Sager to name
but a few populating the Malden
phone book. Suffolk Square
(the West End, also) was the center
of Malden’s Jewish community/heart
and soul for many years
until Urban Renewal came rearing
its ugly head.
• Grind them out, stay on the
court or go home basketball
games at Little Pearl, Ferryway
Green, Linden Park, Amerige,
Green Street Park and Devir, in
the sweltering July heat or on a
frigid March afternoon.
As Peter Falk’s iconic TV character
Columbo would say, “Just
one more thing, sir” — a big Malden
Musings holla to Edgeworth
icon, Capo di tutti capi, one
bad mamma jamma and without
a doubt a really swell fella,
100-year-young Nicky Angelo!
This OG is a faithful Son of Edgeworth
and proud American who,
as part of the “greatest generation,”
answered the call of duty,
serving proudly when the Army
came calling. Aware of his patriotic
duty, Nicky, to this very day,
has never missed an opportunity
to cast a ballot, national or otherwise.
Highlights of Nick’s life include
casting his very first vote
for Abraham Lincoln, booking
passage on the Titanic but cancelling
last minute, and advising
a young upstart women pilot
named Amelia Earhart that travelling
alone across the Atlantic
was a really crazy idea or “ubatz,”
as my mother used to call me. All
kidding aside, we in Malden are
blessed to have Nicky Angelo in
our lives. Viva San Rock, Nicky,
mad respect and we’ll see you
in August.
Postscript: Speaking of Kim
Bowie, my heart goes out to you
and your family during this time
of loss. My sincerest condolences
on the passing of your mother,
Jeannette (Bowie), at the remarkable
age of 89. From what I have
read and heard, one filled with decades
of much love, wisdom and (I
am sure) those quiet in-between
moments that gently shaped the
beautiful family she built.
A proud 1955 graduate of Cheverus
High School, Jeannette’s
story reads of a life well lived (whoever
wrote her obituary did a fine
job, indeed). Even in something
as simple and endearing as her
love for devil dogs, I can feel the
joy she carried and shared freely.
That small detail alone brought a
genuine smile and said so much
about her spirit. It’s clear she was
someone very special. Reflected
so beautifully in her children
and grandchildren. Wish I knew
her. In my opinion, the legacy she
leaves behind isn’t just in years
lived, but in the lives she touched
and the love she seemingly gave
so effortlessly. May her memory
continue to be a blessing, comfort
and a quiet presence in your
hearts always.
—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.
Hearts, Hugs & Hope: An Alzheimer’s Support
Group at Forestdale Park Senior Living
May 26, 2026, 5:30 pm, at Forestdale
Park Assisted Living and
Memory Care Community, 341
Forest Street, Malden. Our support
group for caregivers meets
in person at Forestdale Park. Dealing
with Alzheimer's disease and
related dementia isn't easy, so it is
helpful to share your concerns and
personal experiences with others
who completely understand what
Gerry
D’Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 1, 2026
REMEMBERS | FROM PAGE 1
eryone, all the time. That’s what
he did and we were so blessed
to have him with us.”
Simonelli recounted that
Wayne Martineau was a mentor
and assisted others in so many
ways, despite dealing with challenges
and tragedies in his own
family, with the loss of cherished
children and others. Wayne was
a dear friend of the late Malden
Babe Ruth Baseball icon Bob Rotondi,
who passed away in 2024,
and was a daily visitor and aide
to Bob when he most needed
help at home.
“I’m going to miss him so
much, I already do,” Simonelli
said, just a day after his passing.
“He did so much in this city
for so many people. We will all
miss him.”
***
A funeral for Wayne Martineau
was held from the A. J. Spadafora
Funeral Home, Malden on Monday
followed by a Mass of Christian
Burial celebrating Wayne’s
life in Sacred Hearts Church,
Malden. Interment was in Forest
Dale Cemetery in Malden.
Savvy Senior
by Jim Miller
Low-Cost Smartphone Plans for Budget-Minded Seniors
Dear Savvy Senior,
What are the absolute lowest-cost smartphone
plans for seniors who mainly talk and
text but need a little cellular data for email
and occasional use? I’m currently paying $40
a month and hoping to cut that down.
--Looking to Save
Dear Looking,
You’re asking a smart question. Many seniors
pay far more for smartphone service
than they actually use. If most of your phone
activity is calls, texts, email, and light web
browsing, there’s usually no need to spend
$40 or more a month. The good news: plenty
of low-cost carriers now cater to light users
who want reliable service without the
extra cost.
The cheapest plans today mostly come
from mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs)
– smaller carriers that lease coverage
from major networks like T-Mobile, Verizon,
and AT&T. Because they don’t run their own
towers, MVNOs can offer basic service for a
fraction of the cost of major carriers, while
still providing nationwide coverage. Here
are some of the best options available now.
Cheapest Wireless Plans
According to Consumer Reports, Mint Mobile
is a top value among low-cost smartphone
plans. For $15 per month, you get
unlimited talk and text plus 5 gigabytes
(GB) of data. The catch: you pay for a full
year upfront – $180 plus taxes – but for seniors
comfortable paying annually, it’s a
smart way to lock in savings. Mint runs on
T-Mobile’s network and works with most unlocked
phones.
If you want a similar plan without the upfront
commitment, T-Mobile Connect is
worth a look. For about $15 per month, you
get the same 5 GB of data and unlimited talk
and text, with no contract and the flexibility
to switch plans month to month. It’s an
easy, low-commitment option on the same
reliable T-Mobile network.
For seniors who barely use their phone,
Ultra Mobile’s PayGo plan is the absolute
cheapest option right now. At just $3 per
month plus fees, it includes 100 minutes, 100
texts, and 100 MB of data, with extra usage
costing only a few cents per minute, text, or
MB. It’s ideal for anyone who mainly needs a
phone for emergencies, and it also runs on
T-Mobile’s reliable network.
Tello is another flexible option, with plans
starting at $8 per month for 300 minutes, unlimited
texts, and 2 GB of data. You can easily
add more minutes or data in small, inexpensive
increments, making it ideal for seniors
who want control over their costs.
Finally, US Mobile offers a plan starting at
$10 per month (paid annually) for unlimited
talk and text plus 4 GB of data. Simple,
affordable, and straightforward, it’s a solid
choice for seniors who want coverage without
extra bells and whistles.
Lifeline Program
If your budget is especially tight, be sure
to check into the federal Lifeline Assistance
Program. Lifeline provides a $9.25 monthly
discount on phone or internet service.
You may qualify if you receive benefits
such as Medicaid, SNAP (food stamps),
Supplemental Security Income (SSI), public
housing assistance, or Veterans Pension. You
may also qualify based on income alone if
your household income is below 135 percent
of the federal poverty level – currently
$21,546 for one person or $29,214 for two.
To learn more or apply, visit lifelinesupport.org.
If approved, you can choose from
participating providers in your area, and in
some cases even apply the discount to service
you already have, if your provider participates.
Before
switching plans, make sure your
phone is unlocked and compatible with the
new carrier’s network. A quick compatibility
check on the provider’s website can help
ensure a smooth transition and keep your
savings on track.
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.
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
BUYER1
Huynh, Thao
Joshi, Anwesh
BUYER2
Tran, Nang
Moura, Jefferson De Souza Moura, Rebeca Silva
Schleifman, Erica Beth
Xu, Xiaoli
SELLER1
Advent Rt
Newman, Adrian
Langelier, Brian A
Mason, Matthew Wright Hynes, Leo
Forbes, Marjorie A
Hynes, Mindy S
~ OP-ED ~
Resident Offers City Officials
Suggestions Regarding City Budget
To The Malden City Council and
Mayor Christenson,
I have sat through many council
meetings and listened to several of
you justify your decisions by referencing
your personal lives and the
realities you face at home. Today, I
am asking you to hold yourselves
to that same standard—because
this is mine.
On February 20, 2025, I unexpectedly
lost my husband. There was no
life insurance. His 401(k) had been
spent helping his son get sober—a
decision I stand by. I applied for Social
Security survivor benefits and
was denied because of my income.
At that point, I had no choice but
to face reality and make hard decisions.
I
cut out anything that wasn’t
essential. I moved money around
just to maintain basic stability. Projects
I wanted were put on hold indefinitely,
while necessary repairs
were financed through an equity
line. And through all of it, I made
sure the fundamentals covered my
mortgage, insurance, healthcare,
and providing a home for my mother
who lives with me.
None of these decisions were
easy. Some of them I didn’t want to
make. But they were necessary—
and I made them anyway. And I
know I am not alone. Many residents
in this city are doing the exact
same thing every day.
So as you approach these budget
discussions, I am asking—no,
expecting—you to do the same.
Prioritize what truly matters. Fund
public safety at the levels required
to keep our community protected.
Stop allocating money to projects
that are not essential to the
city’s core infrastructure. If capital
improvements are necessary, then
plan responsibly set funds aside or
finance them over time. But stop
spending money we do not have
and stop spending on things we
do not need.
OFFERS | SEE PAGE 12
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial
Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission from the publisher,
The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property
information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com.
SELLER2
Carozza, John G
Parik, Katrina
ADDRESS
22 Porter St
65 Central Ave
173 Howe St
118 Avon St
46-A Wentworth Ter
CITY
Malden
Malden
Malden
Malden
Malden
DATE
04.10.26
04.10.26
04.10.26
04.10.26
04.08.26
PRICE
910000
969500
875000
835000
825000
׉	 7cassandra://HQENuHPHZqoTKRqVl_3qOsE4YEd_fz1Cvj5gyUucpBU-` i;=$P׉E^THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 1, 2026
MAYOR | FROM PAGE 2
One for details.]
On the education front, while
A FEW WORDS ON THE
TAXATION OF SOCIAL
SECURITY BENEFITS
f your only source of income
is social security benefits,
none of your social security
benefits will be taxable. However,
if you have other sources
of income, the amount of
your social security benefits
that will be taxable will depend
upon your provisional
income (PI). PI equals the
total of (1) tax-exempt interest,
(2) 50% of your social security
benefits and (3) other
income items that comprise
your adjusted gross income,
less certain deductions and
exclusions.
For a single taxpayer, if PI
I
is less than $25,000, then the
social security benefits are
fully tax-free; if PI is between
$25,000 and $34,000, then up
to 50% of the benefits are taxable.
If PI is over $34,000, then
up to 85% of the benefits are
subject to tax.
For a married couple filing
a joint tax return, if PI is less
than $32,000, then the social
security benefits are fully tax
free; if PI is between $32,000
and $44,000, then up to 50%
of the benefits are taxable; if
PI is over $44,000, then up to
85% of the benefits are subject
to tax.
Your PI will include taxable
interest, dividends, capital
gain income, W-2 income,
net rental real estate income,
unemployment income, IRA
distributions, pension income,
gambling income, etc.
Therefore, for many taxpayers,
much of their social security
income then becomes
taxable. The question then becomes
how much is taxable?
As part of the tax return preparation
process, a tax software
program will automatically
perform the calculation to arrive
at the answer.
The Big Beautiful Bill provides
for a $6,000 deduction
for a single person 65 years of
age or older. A married couple
filing a joint return where each
taxpayer is at least age 65 will
be entitled to a $12,000 deduction.
This is the so-called
“no tax on social security” deduction.
The
deduction begins to be
phased out for a single taxpayer
and a taxpayer filing as
head of household once modified
adjusted gross income
(MAGI) reaches $75,000 and
is completely phased out once
MAGI reaches $175,000. For a
joint tax return, the deduction
begins to be phased out once
MAGI reaches $150,000 and is
completely phased out once
MAGI reaches $250,000. This
deduction is available whether
you take the standard deduction
or you itemize your
deductions.
Eliminating income taxes on
social security would simply
have been too costly for our
federal government. Such a
bill was never going to pass.
The $6,000 deduction has
helped reduce income taxes
for many Americans for the
2025 tax year. The deduction
is good until 2028.
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.
Subscribe to The Advocate: www.advocatenews.net
FY27 represented the last year of
the Student Opportunity Act (SOA)
and we anticipated aid more consistent
with prior-year increases
under SOA ($5.8 million for FY26),
reductions in enrollment offset
any increase in aid to the point
that state aid as proposed in the
House budget is for the minimum
per pupil amount under Chapter
70 FY27, a reduction of about $4.8
million in aid.
Additionally, this year’s budget
shows significantly increased
costs for anticipated enrollment
at NE Regional Voke as they move
into a new and larger facility, while
at the same time we reach our full
run rate on our annual cost from
the debt from the building project.
As I’ve communicated previously
and extensively, our conversion
Page 9
to the GIC (health insurance plan)
is expected to yield savings as compared
to had we continued to be
self-insured. Those savings are reflected
in this budget based upon
estimates. It’s important to note
that only after enrollment is complete
and tallied will we know the
actual impact of this initiative.
We have difficult days ahead
as we adjust to reductions in staff
while recognizing that the worst
is not past us. It will take us working
together in every way possible
to stay focused on the important
work that has to be done while
finding solutions to put Malden on
a sustainable long-term path.
Respectfully submitted,
Mayor Gary Christenson
Lawrence A. Simeone Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
~ Since 1989 ~
* Corporate Litigation
* Criminal/Civil
* MCAD
* Zoning/Land Court
* Wetlands Litigation
* Workmen’s Compensation
* Landlord/Tenant Litigation
* Real Estate Law
* Construction Litigation
* Tax Lien
* Personal Injury
* Bankruptcy
* Wrongful Death
* Zoning/Permitting Litigation
300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 1, 2026
BUDGET | FROM PAGE 5
Education funding in the proposed
budget is comprised of
three components. Funding for
City of Malden
215 Pleasant Street
Malden, Massachusetts 02148
conservationcommission@cityof
malden.org
the Malden Public Schools makes
up the largest portion of education
spending ($102.1 million, increase
of 3.5% from FY26).
The proposed funding is targeted
to fund the required increase
in net school spending, although
health insurance makes
this even more of a variable than
in prior years. This change takes
City of Malden
Massachusetts
CONSERVATION COMMISSION
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
Notice is hereby given in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 131,
Section 40, Wetlands Protection Act (as amended) of the Massachusetts
General Laws and the Malden Wetlands Protection Ordinance that a
Hearing of the City Of Malden Conservation Commission will be held
on Monday, May 11, 2025 at 7:00 p.m. via remote participation, Hearing
of a Request for Determination of Applicability (RDA) for a proposed
new approximately 0.26-mile-long underground gas main installation
within the paved public roadway of Lynn Street in Malden.
On March 28, 2025, Governor Healey signed An Act Extending Certain COVID-19
Measures Adopted During the State of Emergency that permits state and local
public bodies to conduct public meetings in a hybrid or remote format through
June 2027. This meeting will be conducted via remote participation only.
In person attendance by members of the public is prohibited, and all effort will
be made to permit public attendance of this meeting, in the manner specified
below, via remote access by internet, telephone, and if available via public
broadcast of the meeting by Urban Media Arts on public access television
channels. Public access will also be provided by posting minutes, and/or a
transcript, recording, or record of the meeting on the City of Malden website at
cityofmalden.org as soon as practicable after the meeting.
Additional information/guidelines for the public can be found here:
https://www.mass.gov/service-details/updated-guidance-on-holding-meetingspursuant-to-the-act-extendi
ng-certain-covid-19-measures
Information regarding how to join the meeting will be provided on the Conservation
Commission Agenda posted on the City’s website at cityofmalden.org at least 48
hours prior to the meeting.
Isaac Slavitt
Chairman
May 01, 2026
PUBLIC NOTICE
CITY OF MALDEN
LICENSING BOARD
A Public Hearing will be held before the Licensing Board
for the City of Malden at City Hall, 215 Pleasant Street,
Room 108, Malden, MA 02148 on Tuesday, May 19, 2026
at 6:00 p.m. regarding the application of DAKK Corp,
DBA Pearl Street Station, located at 53 Summer Street,
Malden, MA For a transfer of license as a Restaurant to
be consumed on premises.
All interested parties will be given an opportunity to be
heard.
Andrew Zeiberg, Member
Kevin Melis, Member
Denise Balboni-Cowie, Member
May 01, 2026
into account increases in spending
in other areas that are part of
the equation. Other increases include
Malden’s mandated payments
to other districts, such as
Northeast Vocational, a combination
of increases in both the anticipated
hike in population of Malden
students at the school for the
2026-2027 school year and this
city’s share of the debt service
for the construction of the Northeast
high school building, a $340
million, state-of-the-art building.
Set to open in September, the
number of students the new
school can serve catapults to
1,600 from the 1,350 enrollment
at present. Right now, about 150
Malden residents are students.
An additional 60-70 Malden high
school-age students are expected
to be granted admission for
this fall’s freshman class, as Malden
payments to Northeast increase
commensurately.
Council Finance Committee
meetings, Public
Hearing on Final Budget
Proposal planned
Malden Councillor At Large
Carey McDonald serves as chairperson
of the Finance Committee,
and he announced that a
number of those subcommittee
meetings will be planned and
held, to discuss details of the FY27
budget proposal. “We only have
painful and bad choices with this
budget process,” Councillor McDonald
said.
“We are forced to make significant
use of reserves and will see
significant cuts,” he said at Tuesday’s
meeting. “I hope we bring
our best and most constructive
approach to this process.”
“This [process] is not going to
lead to full budget stability,” McDonald
added. “It will be ongoing
for years. We are facing structural
financial issues we will continue
to face.”
Mayor Christenson encouraged
the entire City Council to
participate in the budget review
process. “I strongly encourage
full Council participation in the
Finance [Committee] meetings
over the next few weeks,” Mayor
Christenson stated. “Although
some may be focused on the next
mayoral election, this is not a time
for politics. We must give all of our
attention to this budget process
to best support our residents.”
“We have difficult days ahead
as we adjust to reductions in staff
while recognizing that the worst
is not past us,” the Mayor stated
in his letter to the Council. “It will
take us working together in every
way possible to stay focused
on the important work that has to
be done while finding solutions
to put Malden on a sustainable
long-term path.”
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
City of Malden
215 Pleasant Street, Room 330
Malden, MA 02148
Malden Licensing Board
׉	 7cassandra://ETx1mVD_OBkuBGgb-3yOYd056O_TEUlP44LgsUwZKI4/J` i;=$R׉EbTHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 1, 2026
Page 11
OBITUARY
Marjorie A. “Margie”
(Giguere) Freker
Age 89, of Northborough,
MA, and
formerly of Peabody,
Malden, and
Charlestown, MA,
passed away peacefully
on December
31, 2025.
Born in Charlestown
on May 23,
1936, Margie was the daughter of the late
Albert N. and Helen M. (Swett) Giguere.
Raised in Charlestown, she graduated
from the Girls High School of Boston,
Class of 1954, where she made lifelong
friends. At nineteen, she married John C.
”Jack” Freker Sr. and began her family in
Charlestown before moving to Malden
in 1965. She lived there for more than 30
years and proudly raised her six children.
As a young mother, Margie began
her career with the John Hancock Insurance
Company as a keypunch operator
at night. One of the highlights of her
professional life came in the mid- 1980s,
when she was promoted to a Network
Engineer in the TP Control Room. Dedicated
and hardworking, she enjoyed her
career and the friendships she built there,
often traveling for training and work-related
events. She loved taking her family
along on vacations to places such as
Southern Maine, Disney World, Washington,
D.C., and many trips to Canobie Lake
Amusement Park.
Margie was independent, loyal, a
touch stubborn, and quick to laugh. She
was a deeply caring parent, grandparent,
and friend to all who knew her. A New Englander
through and through, she loved
the ocean, local seafood, and cheering
for the Boston Celtics. She also loved traveling—both
across the U.S. to visit family
and friends, and abroad to destinations
including the UK, Spain, Germany,
France, and South Africa. An avid reader,
she especially enjoyed biographies and
nonfiction, drawn to the richness of real-life
stories. She had a lifelong love of
1960s music and rarely missed her favorite
talk radio programs. Margie also
found joy in simple pleasures—playing
bingo, visiting casinos, crocheting, and
spending time with a good cup of coffee
and Russell Stover’s chocolates.
Curious by nature, Margie has carried
an insatiable interest in the world around
her throughout her life. It was a defining
trait that enriched her days and the lives
of those who loved her. Together with
her sister-in-law, she researched her family
history and proudly traced her ancestry
back to the Mayflower, later becoming
a member of the Mayflower Society.
Family was at the heart of Margie’s life.
Holidays and special occasions brought
her the greatest joy—especially when all
six of her children were together with her
in the same room. She had a special, individual
bond with each of her children,
and those loving connections extended
to her grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
Margie
is survived by her six devoted
children: John C. “Jack” Freker Jr. and his
wife Leidy Suarez Freker of Miami Beach,
FL; Steve Freker of Malden; Gary Freker
and his wife Lisa (Scarlett) of Lowell; Karen
Freker and her partner Wendy Ziesemann
of Shrewsbury; Linda Freker and
her partner Eric Buzek of Conroe, TX; and
Michael Freker and his wife Jennifer Stafford
of Denville, NJ.
She also cherished her close relationships
with her sisters-in-law Marjorie
Giguere, Marie “Pat” Mendes, and
Cheryl Freker.
Margie was lovingly known as “Nana”
to John C. Freker III and his fiancée Charlotte
Moore, Beau Freker and his wife Jennifer
Engel-Freker, Angela Blaney and
her husband Miles, Abigail Freker, Ryan
Freker and his partner Caitlin Ace, Ashley
Freker and her fiancé Adam Stevens,
Brodie Freker and Hunter Freker. She was
the proud great-grandmother of Eliza,
Olympia, and Felix Freker, and leaves behind
many in laws, nieces, nephews, and
dear friends.
She was predeceased by her former
husband and the father of her children,
John C. “Jack” Freker of Stuart, FL,
with whom she shared 33 years of marriage,
as well as by her siblings—Albert
D. Giguere, Barbara H. Rock, and Edward
C. Giguere.
A Celebration of Life will be held on
Friday, May 1st at 11:00 a.m. at the First
Congregational Church of Shrewsbury,
followed by a luncheon gathering of
family and friends. A private burial has
been arranged.
Margie’s humor, warmth, and generosity
will be deeply missed—but her
love and spirit will live on in the many
lives she touched.
in lieu of flowers, please consider donating
to your local public library. To view
Margie's online tribute, share a memory,
or offer a condolence, please visit www.
chiampafuneralhome.com
John M. Freni
Of Malden. Aff
ec tiona t ely
known as "Little
John" to those who
loved him, was
born on March 11,
1985, in Everett. After
spending some
time in Texas, he
found his way back to his roots, making
Malden the place he was proud to
call home. He passed away on April 25,
far too soon, leaving behind a legacy of
warmth, generosity, and a spirit so alive
that those who knew him will feel his
absence every day.
John had a gift for making life feel
lighter. His humor was quick, his heart
was open, and his energy was the kind
that filled a room without effort. Whether
he was sitting down to a good dinner,
spending an evening out with friends
and family, or simply showing up for
someone who needed him, John approached
everything with the same
genuine care that defined who he was.
He was the kind of person who didn't
need a reason to help — helping was
just in his nature. He worked hard in the
construction industry, and he wore that
OBIT | SEE PAGE 12
INSPECTIONAL SERVICES
215 Pleasant Street, 3rd Floor
Malden, Massachusetts 02148
(781) 397-7000 ext. 2030
INSPECTIONAL SERVICES
215 Pleasant Street, 3rd Floor
Malden, Massachusetts 02148
(781) 397-7000 ext. 2030
City of Malden
Massachusetts
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, MAY 13, 2026 on the petition of Malden
Minuteman Wings, LLC doing business as Wing Stop, on behalf of Malway
Realty Associates LP by its property manager, WS Development/WS Asset
Management, in Permit Application # CMID-076533-2026, seeking a special
permit under Title 12, Code of the City of Malden, Section 12.12.030, to allow
restaurant use of preexisting nonconforming property in the Highway Business
zoning district, namely, to occupy for restaurant approximately 2,700 square feet
at the premises known as and numbered 44 Broadway, Malden, MA, part of the
property known and numbered 36-54 Broadway, Malden, MA and also known
as Broadway Plaza and by City Assessor’s Parcel Identification # 125 481 103.
Petition and plans are available for public review in the Inspectional Services
Department, Malden City Hall, 215 Pleasant Street, Room 330, Malden, MA
and through the City website under Permit Application # CMID-076533-2026
at https://maldenma-energovweb.tylerhost.net/apps/SelfService#/search
By:
Diane Chuha
Clerk
April 24, May 1, 2026
City of Malden
Massachusetts
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, MAY 13, 2026 on the petition of Mackenzie Richards NP of Thrive
Beauty Spa LLC, on behalf of 471 Eastern Avenue LLC (Permit Application #COO076527-2026)
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 Industrial 1 zoning district,
namely, a medical aesthetics spa, in the storefront space of the building known as 473
Eastern Avenue, at the property known as and numbered, 471-473 Eastern Avenue,
Malden, MA, and also known by City Assessor’s Parcel ID 097 427 708. Petition and
plans are available for public review in the Inspectional Services Department, Malden
City Hall, 215 Pleasant Street, 3rd Floor, Malden, MA and under Permit Application
# COO- 076527-2026 at:
https://maldenma-energovweb.tylerhost.net/apps/SelfService#/search
By:
Diane Chuha
Clerk
April 24, May 1, 2026
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 1, 2026
BUDGET
SERVICES
RUBBISH REMOVAL
* Interior-Exterior Demolition
Bathroom/Kitchen/Decks, Etc.
* All Types of Debris Removed
* Pick-up Truck Load of Trash
starting at $239.
~ Licensed & Insured ~
Call (978) 494-3443
Clean-Outs!
We take and dispose
from cellars, attics,
garages, yards, etc.
Call Robert at:
781-844-0472
OBIT | FROM PAGE 11
pride honestly. Every project he took
on reflected his diligence and his commitment
to doing things right. But for
all the demands of the work, John never
lost sight of what mattered most —
the people around him and the simple
pleasures that made life worth living.
Family was his foundation, and that
love guided everything he did. John is
survived by his devoted father, John A.
Freni, and was preceded in death by his
beloved mother, Laura Farrell. Among
his most cherished relationships was
the special bond he shared with his
grandmother, Emma Freni — a connection
that was special to him. He is
also survived by his grandmother Celia
Lane, and is reunited with his late
grandfather, Joseph Freni. He leaves behind
a wide and loving circle of countless
aunts, uncles, and cousins who will
carry him with them always.
A Visitation will be held on Friday,
May 1, 2026, from 4:00 PM to 7:00 PM
at Buonfiglio Funeral Home, 128 Revere
Street, Revere, MA, with a Prayer Service
to follow at 7:15 PM. Family and friends
are kindly invited.
OFFERS | FROM PAGE 8
This is not complicated. It is about
discipline, priorities, and accountability.
Hard
decisions are part of leadership.
I have had to make them.
The residents of this city are making
them. Now it is your turn.
Put aside personal agendas. Do
the job you were elected to do. Run
this city responsibly, protect the services
people depend on, and respect
the financial realities your constituents
are living with every single day.
Respectfully,
Denise Balboni-Cowie
81 Newland Street
Malden, MA
J.F & Son Contracting
Frank Berardino
MA License 31811
● 24-Hour Service
● Emergency Repairs
BERARDINO
Plumbing & Heating
Gas Fitting ● Drain Service
Residential & Commercial Service
617.699.9383
Senior Citizen Discount
~ School Bus Drivers Wanted ~
7D Licensed School Bus Drivers
Malden Trans is looking for reliable drivers for
the new school year. We provide ongoing training
and support for licensing requirements. Applicant
preferably lives local (Malden, Everett, Revere).
Part-time positions available and based on AM &
PM school hours....15-30 hours per week. Good
driver history from Registry a MUST! If interested,
please call David @ 781-322-9401.
CDL SCHOOL BUS DRIVER WANTED
Compensation: $28/hour
School bus transportation company seeking
active CDL drivers who live LOCALLY (Malden,
Everett, Chelsea and immediate surrounding
communities).
- Applicant MUST have BOTH S and P endorsements
as well as Massachusetts school bus certificate.
Good driver history from Registry a MUST!
-
Part-time hours, BUT GUARANTEED 20-35
HOURS PER WEEK depending on experience.
Contact David @ 781-322-9401.
AAA Service • Lockouts
Trespass Towing • Roadside Service
Junk Car Removal
617-387-6877
26 Garvey St., Everett
MDPU 28003 ICCMC 251976
Snow Plowing
No Job too small! Free Estimates!
Commercial & Residential
781-656-2078
- Property management & maintenance
Shoveling & removal
Landscaping, Electrical, Plumbing, Painting, Roofing, Carpentry, Framing,
Decks, Fencing, Masonry, Demolition, Gut-outs, Junk Removal & Dispersal,
Clean Ups: Yards, Garages, Attics & Basements. Truck for Hire, Bobcat Services.
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
Carrijo Home Improvement, Inc.
General Contractor
* Interior & Exterior Carpentry * Kitchen & Bath
* Roofs * Painting * Decks * Siding
* Licensed & Insured * Free Estimates
Carrijohomeimprovement.com
Call 781-710-8918 * Saugus, MA
FIRE • SOOT • WATER
Homeowner’s Insurance Loss Specialists
FREE CONSULTATION
1-877-SAL-SOOT
Sal Barresi, Jr. - Your fi rst call
617-212-9050
׉	 7cassandra://XfDWzEIR0ekyxpBgiPxqfqXxmQDLjc15gxNegO19nuw=:` i;=$T׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 1, 2026
Page 13
Discount Tree Service
781-269-0914
Humane Removal Service
COMMONWEALTH
WILDLIFE CONTROL
ANIMAL & BIRD REMOVAL
INCLUDING RODENTS
CALL 617-285-0023
FURNISHED ROOM FOR RENT
EVERETT
• HELP WANTED • HELP WANTED • HELP WANTED
Professional
TREE
REMOVAL
& Cleanups
24-HOUR SERVICE
Route Driver/Technician
Action Jackson Amusements is growing and seeking a Route
Driver/Technician for the greater Boston area. This role involves
servicing and maintaining amusement equipment, with daily travel
between locations. Must have a valid Massachusetts driver’s license
and meet company driving requirements.
Schedule: Monday through Friday 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. with overtime
based on business needs.
Hourly Pay: $18.00 - $28.00 per hour, based on experience and
qualifications.
Be eager to train and advance into further company roles, such as
performing on-site equipment service calls.
Send resume to jmagee@actionjacksonusa.com or call 781-324-1000
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
www.mastrocola.com
American Exterior and
Window Corporation
Contact us for all of your
home improvement projects
and necessities.
Call Jeff or Bob
Toll Free: 1-888-744-1756
617-699-1782 / www.americanexteriorma.com
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All estimates, consultations or inspections completed
by MA licensed supervisors. *Over 50 years experience.
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plus 1 week rent required.
Call: 617-435-9047 - NO TEXT
The Kid Does
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Call Eric: (857) 322-2854
Steps Stoops Rebuilt or Repaired
Chimney Rebuilt or Repaired
House Foundation Leaks Repaired
All Basement Repairs
Walkways, Driveways & Patios Installed
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Roofing & Siding Installed
Masonry Repairs
Window Installation & Repairs
Carpentry & Waterproofing
617-955-5164
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toughbuildjohn@gmail.com
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@advocatenews.net
Insured and
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Complete Financing Available.
No Money Down.
1. In Hawaii, May 1 is Lei Day; each island
has an official lei material, including
pupu, which is what beach item?
2. What Founding Father wrote letters
to The New-England Courant as Mrs. Silence
Dogood?
3. The first rocket launch countdown
was in 1929 in the silent film “Frau im
Mond,” which means what?
4. On May 2, 1903, what pediatrician/
author was born whose last name is the
same as a character in “Star Trek”?
5. How are Edward Estlin, Marjorie Taylor
and Riley B. similar?
6. What California city — home of the
Rose Bowl — has a fork in the road (an
18-foot wooden one)?
7. On May 3, 2000, geocaching began;
what is it?
8. What game that uses a container is
called “flea hop game” in German?
9. The Boston Celtics have been in the
playoffs for how many seasons in a
row?
10. On May 4, 1959, the Grammy Awards
were first presented; why they were
named that?
11. What president’s name (not Bush)
appears in the Bible (1900 King James
Version)?
12. In what song is “When it’s cold outside,
I’ve got the month of May”?
13. On May 5, 1821, in exile, what leader
died whose name is the same as a pastry?
14.
How are “The Hobbit,” “The Maltese
Falcon” and “Treasure Island” similar?
15. On what radio show were “Bebopareebop
Rhubarb Pie” and the Rhubarb
Sisters?
16. On May 6, 1915, Babe Ruth hit his
first MLB homer while playing for what
team?
17. What condiment’s name is also part
of a holiday’s name?
18. Can different animal species interbreed?
19.
How are baseball, coonskin and
newsboy similar?
20. On May 7, 1966, The Mamas & The
Papas had a No. 1 hit with what song
about a day?
ANSWERS
1. A tiny shell (of Ni’hau Island)
2. Benjamin Franklin
3. Woman in the Moon (reportedly, the first
serious science fiction film)
4. Benjamin Spock
5. Names of people known by initials (E.E.
Cummings, MTG [Greene] and B.B. King)
6. Pasadena
7. Treasure hunting where geocaches (containers)
are placed and found using GPS
and other techniques
8. Tiddlywinks
9. 12
10. The trophy is a small replica gramophone;
people mailed in suggestions for its name.
11. Trump (Thessalonians 4:16 and Corinthians
15:52 — trump has meant trumpet)
12. The Temptations’ “My Girl”
13. Napoleon
14. Books about a treasure quest (by J.R.R. Tolkien,
Dashiell Hammett and Robert Louis
Stevenson, respectively)
15. “A Prairie Home Companion”
16. Boston Red Sox
17. Mayo (Cinco De Mayo)
18. Yes (e.g., a mule is a horse and donkey hybrid)
19.
Types of caps
20. “Monday, Monday”
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 1, 2026
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Page 15
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354 Broadway, Unit 3, Lynn, MA 01904
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List Price: $450,000
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 1, 2026
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