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Vol. 34, No.22
-FREEwww.advocatenews.net
Free
Every Friday
USS Constitution Commander
delivers keynote address
at Cityâ€™s Memorial Day Ceremony
781-286-8500
Happy 101ST
Friday, May 31, 2024
Birthday,
Mary Masella
Shown during the Cityâ€™s Annual Memorial Day Ceremonies at Charles McMackin Veterans Memorial
Park Monday, from left to right: First Lady Jennifer Keefe, Mayor Patrick Keefe, Keynote
Speaker USS Constitution Commander BJ Farrell and State Senator Lydia Edwards during
Mondayâ€™s Memorial Day ceremony at Charles McMackin Veterans Memorial Park.
See pages 8â€“9 for photo highlights. (Advocate photo by Tara Vocino)
Board of Health meets with state
officials to discuss mosquito control
Offi cials consider dragonfl ies and goats over spraying salt marsh
By Barbara Taormina
he Board of Health was joined
at their last meeting by members
of the staff of the Northeast
Massachusetts Mosquito
Control and Wetlands Management
District, who presented
an overview of the work being
T
done to control mosquito populations
and any risk of West Nile
virus and Eastern equine encephalitis.
District Director Barry
Noone and Entomologist Kimberly
Foss described their program
of integrated pest management
that begins with surveillance,
the tracking and trapping
of mosquitos throughout
the district. Once captured, the
bugs are frozen and sent to the
state for testing for any trace of
the viruses mosquitoes transmit
to humans.
BOARD | SEE Page 7
Mayor Patrick Keefe wished Mary â€œTudyâ€ Masella,
who turned 101 on Wednesday, May 29, Happy Birthday.
Mary ranks #9 in Revereâ€™s â€œtop tenâ€ of oldest residents.
(Courtesy of the City of Revere)
A Day of Shopping,
Citywide
Community Yard Sale Day
to be Held on June 8, 2024
R
EVERE, MA â€” The City of
Revere is proud to present
â€œRevere Pickers,â€ a community
yard sale day on Saturday, June
8. Residents are encouraged to
apply for a free yard sale permit
through the Inspectional
Services Department (www.
revere.org/permitting) and set
up shop at their homes from
REVERE FIREFIGHTERS MEMORIAL
Sunday, June 9, 2024
8:15 A.M.
Relatives and friends of the Revere Fire Department, especially our retirees, are cordially
îŒî‘î™îŒî—îˆî‡ î—î’ î„î—î—îˆî‘î‡ î’î˜î• î€¤î‘î‘î˜î„î î€©îŒî•îˆî‚¿îŠî‹î—îˆî•î– î€°îˆîî’î•îŒî„î î€§î„îœ î€¨î›îˆî•î†îŒî–îˆî–î€‘ î€³îîˆî„î–îˆ î‘î’î—îˆ î—î‹îŒî– îœîˆî„î•î‚¶î–
î†îˆî•îˆîî’î‘îœ î–î‹î„îî î…îˆ î‹îˆîî‡ î„î— î—î‹îˆ î€¤î€°î€¨î€µî€¬î€¦î€¤î€± î€¯î€¨î€ªî€¬î€²î€±î€ îî’î†î„î—îˆî‡ î„î— î€•î€—î€œ î€¥î•î’î„î‡îšî„îœî€ î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆî€‘
î€³îîˆî„î–îˆ îî’îŒî‘ î˜î– î„î– îšîˆ î‹î’î‘î’î• î’î˜î• î‡îˆî“î„î•î—îˆî‡ îîˆîî…îˆî•î– î„î— î—î‹îŒî–î€ î’î˜î• îî’î–î— î–î’îîˆîî‘ î—î•î„î‡îŒî—îŒî’î‘î„î î–îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆî€‘
Christopher P. Bright
Chief of Department
9:00am-2:00pm, rain or shine.
The deadline to apply for a permit
is Thursday, June 6.
Prior to the event, the City of
Revere will share the list of yard
sales across the city. Residents
are encouraged to monitor the
offi cial City of Revere Facebook
SHOPPING | SEE Page 5
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 31, 2024
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Chelsea woman used fake
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B
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R
OSTON â€” A Chelsea woman
pleaded guilty yesterday
in federal court in Boston
to conspiring to possess and
use false identifi cations as part
of an identity theft scheme to
target a wireless company.
Perla Soto, 24, pleaded guilty
to an Information charging
conspiracy to possess and use
more than fi ve false identifi cations.
U.S. District Court Judge
Julie E. Kobick scheduled sentencing
for Aug. 9, 2024. Soto
was originally charged by criminal
complaint in March 2024.
From January 2022 through
November 2023, Soto was
captured on surveillance video
conducting 20 transactions
where she posed as customers
of a wireless company.
These transactions took place
in retail stores throughout the
United States.
Celebrating Our 52ndCelebrating Our 52nd Yearear
Chris 2024
Soto used counterfeit driverâ€™s
licenses and identifi cation bearing
her photograph and the
personal identifying information
of customers of the wireless
company in order to conduct
transactions at these retail
stores. While posing as the
customer, Soto would purchase
new phones and accessories on
the customerâ€™s account. Working
as part of a larger group,
Soto provided these fraudulently
obtained phones and
accessories to other coconspirators
who would sell them on
the black market.
In total, over 120 customers of
the wireless company had their
personal information utilized
in transactions totaling over
$290,000 in fraudulently obtained
phones and accessories.
The charge of conspiring to
possess of fi ve or more identifi
cation documents with intent
to use them unlawfully
provides for a sentence
of up to fi ve years in prison,
three years of supervised release
a fi ne of up to $250,000
and restitution. Sentences are
imposed by a federal district
court judge based upon the
U.S. Sentencing Guidelines
and statutes which govern
the determination of a sentence
in a criminal case.
Acting United States Attorney
Joshua S. Levy; Jodi Cohen,
Special Agent in Charge
of the Federal Bureau of Investigation,
Boston Division;
and John E. Mawn Jr., Interim
Colonel of the Massachusetts
State Police made the
announcement. Assistant U.S.
Attorney Philip A. Mallard of
the Organized Crime & Gang
Unit is prosecuting the case.
Expanding
Opportunities
City of Revere hosts
a Union Trade Fair
at Revere High School
EVERE, MA â€” On May 23,
Mayor Patrick M. Keefe Jr.
and the City of Revere Department
of Workforce Development
and Youth Engagement
teamed up with
Revere Public Schools, colleges,
and career and external
learning opportunities
to bring a Union Trade Fair to
Revere High School.
The trade fair allowed students
the opportunity to
meet and learn about diff erent
union trade organizations
throughout the Commonwealth,
as well as the United
States Armed Services. Representatives
from all the major
Union Trades were present
to answer questions and
provide information about
their own apprenticeship
programs.
Some of the groups attending
included:
1. Laborersâ€™, Local 22
2. North Atlantic State Regional
Council of Carpenters
3.
Painters and Allied Trades
DC 35
4. Sheet Metal Workers International
Association,
Local 17
5. Building Pathways
6. Plumbers and Gasfitters
US, Local 12
7. Operating Engineers, Local
4
8. Teamsters, Local 25
9. United States Marines
10. Franklin Cummings Tech
11. NorthShore Community
College
This fair marks an important
expansion of trade-centric
programming in Revere
Public Schools. Mayor Keefe
expressed his support, stating,
â€œWe have heard families
and students asking for more
opportunities to learn about
the trades and unions, and
we answered. This is a great
opportunity for our students.
We want to celebrate our students
that are taking interest
in skilled labor, trade work,
and the Armed Forces.â€
â€œWe encourage any student
interested in pursuing
a career in a Union Trade after
high school to come and
learn about their apprenticeship
program,â€ added
Gerry Visconti, Director of
Workforce Development and
Youth Engagement.
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Page 3
Mass. House passes landmark veterans legislation
Bill increases state benefi ts and tax credits and modernizes services for veterans
O
n May 22, 2024, the Massachusetts
House of Representatives
unanimously
passed legislation that honors
veterans in Massachusetts
by broadening the defi nition
of a veteran, increasing tax
credits and state benefi ts that
they are eligible for and modernizing
the services that they
rely on. â€œAn Act honoring, empowering,
and recognizing our
servicemembers and veterans
(HERO Act)â€ mandates impacting
hundreds of thousands of
veterans living in Massachusetts.
On May 28, the Massachusetts
Senate referred the
bill to its Committee on Ways
and Means.
â€œEnsuring that state government
is doing everything that
it can to support the Commonwealthâ€™s
veterans is one of the
most important responsibilities
that we have as elected offi
cials. Veterans represent the
very best of us, having risked
their lives in service of this
country, which is why we owe
them nothing less than our unwavering
support,â€ said House
Speaker Ronald J. Mariano (DQuincy).
â€œThis legislation not
only provides increased support
for veterans in Massachusetts,
through tax credits
and enhanced benefi ts, it also
takes steps to ensure that the
Commonwealth goes to even
greater lengths to honor our
veterans and gold star families.
I want to thank Governor
Healey for fi ling the HERO Act,
as well as Chairman Michlewitz
and Chairman Cassidy for
working diligently to guide this
bill through the legislative process,
and fi nally all of my colleagues
in the House for recognizing
the importance of supporting
our veterans however
we can.â€
â€œThe HERO Act is a transformative
package of reforms
and dental help beyond other
benefi ts available to veterans.
â€¢
Updates the definition of
â€œdependentâ€ to make it gender
neutral and include children
over the age of 18 who
meet the criteria for emanciMASS
HOUSE | SEE Page 5
Lawrence A. Simeone Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
~ Since 1989 ~
* Corporate Litigation
* Criminal/Civil
* MCAD
Jessica Giannino
State Representative
that will make sure our veterans
and their families have access
to the benefi ts, resources
and support they deserve,â€
said Governor Maura T. Healey.
â€œAs we approach Memorial
Day, we are grateful to the
House for advancing this essential
bill today and look forward
to our continued partnership
with the Legislature to
strengthen veteran services in
Massachusetts.â€
â€œThe HERO Act is a historic
piece of legislation that addresses
critical quality of life issues
that our veterans face every
day such as benefi ts, medical
assistance, and tax exemptions,â€
said Representative Jessica
Giannino (D-Revere). â€œI am
thankful to Speaker Mariano
for his dedication to improving
the lives of our veterans in
the Commonwealth and to all
our Commonwealthâ€™s service
members, both active duty
and retired.â€
â€œThe HERO Act represents
the partial redemption of a
debt owed by the people of
the Commonwealth to our veterans.
I am extremely proud
to have joined a unanimous
House of Representatives in
voting for this legislation. The
breadth of earned benefits
contained in this bill will go
Jeff rey Rosario Turco
State Representative
a long way in expressing our
collective â€˜thank youâ€™ to our
HEROâ€™S,â€ said Representative
Jeff rey Rosario Turco (D-Winthrop).
The
bill broadens the defi -
nition of â€œveteranâ€ for the purposes
of expanding veteran
benefi ts eligibility, and to better
align it with federal law.
This new definition includes
any person that served on active
duty for at least 90 days,
and whose last discharge was
under conditions other than
dishonorable; any person that
served on active duty, in the
National Guard or as a reservist,
including solely for training
purposes and was awarded
a service-connected disability,
or died in such service;
and any person determined to
be a veteran according to the
U.S. Department of Veterans
Aff airs. Veterans who are current
Massachusetts residents
will be eligible for benefi ts, regardless
of how long they have
resided here.
The HERO Act includes
changes to veteransâ€™ benefi ts
in the following areas:
â€¢ Requires the Secretary of
the Executive Offi ce of Veterans
Services (EOVS) to provide
benefi ts for medical assistance,
behavioral health
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* Landlord/Tenant Litigation
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* Tax Lien
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* Bankruptcy
* Wrongful Death
* Zoning/Permitting Litigation
300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
ANNOUNCEMENT
REVERE AMERICAN LEGION POST #61
Is reopening soon!
We are happy to announce that we
have begun taking reservations for
our function hall at 249 Broadway,
Revere for events after May 20, 2024
For information, please call
781-284-9511
Leave your name and telephone
number.
Window Glass & Screen Repair
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 31, 2024
OBITUARIES
Richard A. Testa
py and fulfi lling life. Following
the death of his parents, his sister
â€œConnieâ€ would take on the
role of caring for him and they
became inseparable. Richard enjoyed
being surrounded by his
family and was a true testament
that a positive attitude will help
to overcome even lifeâ€™s most diffi
cult challenges.
He is the beloved son of the
P
assed away suddenly on May
25th following a brief illness.
He was 83 years of age. Richard
was born on March 12, 1941 and
was the son of Guy and Emma
(Deangiles) Testa. Richard was
born with several disabilities,
however, with the compassionate
care and dedication of his
family, he was able to live a haplate
Guy and Emma (Deangiles)
Testa. Adored brother of Constance
â€œConnieâ€ Chessor of Revere,
Constantino Testa of Melrose,
and the late Anna Fassi, Virginia
Regan, Eugene Testa and
Frances Testa. Cherished uncle of
his caretaker, Theresa A. Alejandro
and her husband Michael of
Lynn and also lovingly survived
by many nieces and nephews.
Funeral arrangements will
be announced in the upcoming
days.
Theresa (Arsenault)
Levasseur
in Boston, Mrs. Levasseur was
the daughter of the late Henry
and Margaret (McGilvary)
Arsenault. A former resident
of Saugus, before moving to
Revere 17 years ago, Theresa
was a member of St. Margaretâ€™s
Church in Saugus for 55
years. She was a member of
NAMI (National Assoc. for the
Mentally Ill) and was a former
Volunteer of the Year for serving
those in need from the
Greater Lynn Area Board for
the Mentally Challenged.
Mrs. Levasseur is survived
O
f Revere, formerly of Saugus.
Died on Friday, May
24th at the Kaplan Family Hospice
House in Danvers at the
age of 96. She was the wife of
the late Gerard Levasseur. Born
by her four children, Nancy
Delena of FL, Jacqueline Busse
and her husband Stephan
of FL, Susan Morgan of Saugus,
and Steven Spanoghe
of Groveland; her beloved
granddaughter, Christina Mahimda
and her husband Abdel;
her great grandson, Cameron;
as well as many nieces
and nephews. She was predeceased
by her brothers and
sisters, Joseph Arsenault, Elizabeth
White, Agnes Bishop,
Leonard Arsenault, Melvin Arsenault,
Charlotte Sallie and
Mary Monzione.
Relatives and friends are invited
to attend visiting hours
in the Bisbee-Porcella Funeral
Home, 549 Lincoln Ave., Saugus
on Sunday, June 2, from
2-4 p.m. A funeral will be held
from the funeral home on
Monday at 9:30 a.m. followed
by a funeral mass in St. Margaretâ€™s
Church, 431 Lincoln Ave.,
Saugus at 10:30 a.m. Interment
in Woodlawn Cemetery
in Everett. In lieu of fl owers,
donations in Theresaâ€™s memory
may be made to St. Jude
Childrenâ€™s Research Hospital
at stjude.org.
RevereTV Spotlight
W
î€˜î€“
ith graduation on the horizon
for the Class of 2024,
8 Norwood St.
Everett
(617) 387-9810
Open Tues. - Sat.
at 4:00 PM
Closed Sun. & Mon.
Announcing our Classic SpecialsAnnouncing our Classic Specials
Dine In Only:Dine In Only:
* FREE Salad wi * FREE Salad with purth purchase ofchase of
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* Cheese Pizza - Only $10* Cheese Pizza - Only $10
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Come celebrate the music of female rock stars
with Polymnia Choral Society!
N
ow in its 71st year, Polymnia
Choral Society has been
delivering great performances
to acknowledge and honor the
important times in our lives. On
June 1, Polymnia will be performing
Mothers of Rock, a celebration
of female rock, pop,
folk and country musicians. The
concert will feature songs that
have been made famous by female
rock stars like Dolly Parton,
Carole King, Joni Mitchell,
Aretha Franklin and Taylor Swift!
This concert celebrates the immense
contribution women
have made to the world of rock
music. Come join us, sing along
to fun and familiar songs and
celebrate these awesome female
musicians! This concert
promises to be a fun-fi lled event
appropriate for all ages!
Join us on Saturday, June 1,
at 7:30 p.m. at Melroseâ€™s Memorial
Hall (590 Main St.). Tickets
are $30 for table seating, $25
for adults, $20 for seniors, $15
for students, $5 for children under
12, and $8 for patrons with
an EBT, WIC, or ConnectorCare
card. We look forward to seeing
you there!
To purchase tickets for this
concert, visit https://polymnia.
org/about-our-upcoming-season/;
Miter Biter (479 Main St.,
Melrose) or call 617-633-5006.
Memorial Hall has a wheelchair-accessible
entrance on the
left side of the building (viewed
from the street). It also has accessible
bathrooms. Please contact
access@polymnia.org if you
have any specifi c seating needs.
Entree, Tuesdays & Wednesdays
there have been a few more senior
events this past week that
RevereTV had the chance to cover.
Last Tuesday night, Revere
High School hosted the Class
of 2024 Senior Prom. RevereTV
was at Danversport to cover the
red carpet as students arrived to
be interviewed by teachers Mr.
Kingston and Ms. Terenzi. RTV
aired this live on the Community
Channel and YouTube, where
it can still be viewed.
In sports, RHS seniors are always
honored by their teams at
their last home games of the season.
The Varsity Baseball Team
had their Senior Night last Monday
when they played Lynn English.
RevereTV aired this ceremony
and game live on the Community
Channel and YouTube.
The recording will be replayed
on RTV for the next few weeks,
mostly in the evenings. Donâ€™t forget
to watch the Class of 2024 on
RevereTV on June 5 at 6 p.m. as
they walk the stage on the fi eld
at Harry Della Russo Stadium.
RevereTV will be covering graduation
in its entirety live for all to
watch on the Community Channel
and YouTube.
The City of Revere and the Veterans
Service Office observed
Memorial Day with their annual
public event at McMackin Veterans
Memorial Park at 249 Broadway.
RevereTV covered the event
and played it live on all channels
and YouTube. The ceremony
serves to honor those in the
community who sacrifi ced their
lives while in the armed forces.
Watch this yearâ€™s ceremony
and hear from local representatives
and veterans who spoke
on Monday. This will be replayed
on the Community Channel and
can be viewed on YouTube at
any time.
The Revere Chamber of Commerce
recorded another episode
of â€œThe Wave.â€ Episode 13 features
an inspiring conversation
with Chocolaff ee and Las Parceritas
cofounders, twin sisters, and
entrepreneurs, Angelica and Diana
Cardona, who are deeply involved
in the Revere community.
The two have also been active
community members at RevereTV
for years. Join hosts Erica
Porzio and Anasha Girma as they
delve into the Cardona sistersâ€™
journey, offering insights into
how they initiated their business
venture. Additionally, stay tuned
for updates on an exciting lineup
of summer events organized by
the Chamber of Commerce! â€œThe
Waveâ€ plays on the Community
Channel on RevereTV.
Watch RTV GOV for all of the local
government meetings from
the month of May as they replay
through the rest of the week.
All meetings are played live on
RTV and YouTube and then are
replayed on the channel. This
weekâ€™s rotation includes the latest
from the License Commission,
Appointments Sub-Committee,
Legislative Aff airs SubCommittee,
Revere City Council,
Planning Board, Zoning Board of
Appeals, Traffi c Commission and
Revere Board of Health.
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Page 5
MASS HOUSE | FROM Page 3
pation; expands the pool of
coverage by extending benefi
ts to dependents who are
mentally or physically unable
to support themselves
after reaching the age of 23;
grants benefi ts to the dependent
of a veteran who has resided
in Massachusetts for
one day prior to applying for
benefi ts.
â€¢ Clarifi es that an increase to
an otherwise eligible veteranâ€™s
income due to a costof-living
adjustment (COLA)
made to Social Security, supplemental
security income
or social security disability
insurance would not render
the recipient ineligible for
benefi ts in the year the adjustment
was issued.
â€¢ Increases annuity for blind,
paraplegic or veterans with
disabilities
â€¢ Codifi es the authority of the
recently created EOVS to operate,
maintain and expand
the Massachusetts Veterans
Memorial Cemeteries in Agawam
and Winchendon, and
to add new locations
â€¢ Requires the Veterans Equality
Review Board to ensure
that veterans discharged due
to sex, race, color, religious
creed, national origin, age,
genetic information, ancestry,
marital status, disability
â€” or any U.S. Department of
Veterans Aff airs category eligible
for upgrade â€” receive
state-based benefi ts.
â€¢ Requires the Secretary of
EOVS, with the Secretary of Labor
and Workforce Development,
to create and distribute
a notice including information
regarding the services and resources
available to veterans
to be posted in the workplace
and provided on an employeeâ€™s
fi rst day by employers in
SHOPPING | FROM Page 1
page (www.facebook.com/CityofRevere)
for the timeliest updates
of yard sale locations and other
important information. Mayor
Keefe commented, â€œIt will be a
fun day to get out, visit yard sales
around Revere, meet neighbors,
and get some shopping in.â€
Mayor Keefe and the City of
Revere are also hosting a yard
sale at City Hall (281 Broadway).
100% of the proceeds of the
City Hall yard sale will benefi t
the Revere High School Scholarship
Fund. Mayor Keefe added,
â€œCome shop at City Hall to
contribute to the higher education
of hard-working graduates
of Revere High School.â€
Residents can also donate to
the Revere High School Scholarship
Fund by Venmo (@CityofRevere),
with â€˜Scholarship Fundâ€™
in the subject line, or by visiting
City Hall.
Massachusetts with more than
50 full-time employees.
The HERO Act includes the following
tax initiatives changes:
â€¢ Veteransâ€™ property tax abatement
and exemptions: creates
two local options
â€¢ Employer tax credit for hiring
veterans increases
â€¢ Motor Vehicle Sales Tax exemption:
adds veterans with
disabilities with a Purple
Heart recipient plate to those
allowed a sales tax exemption
for the purchase of a motor
vehicle for personal use.
â€¢ The HERO Act also includes
the following reforms:
â€¢ Requires the Governor to
annually issue a proclamation
on Memorial Day in recognition
of the sacrifi ces of
Gold Star families, and requires
that certain landmarks
and bridges be illuminated
in gold on Memorial Day, including
the Fore River Bridge,
Zakim Bridge and Longfellow
Bridge.
â€¢ Requires flags to be flown
at half-staff at public buildings
and military installations
when a military member is
killed in active duty, or when
the remains of a prisoner of
war or a military member
who went missing in action
return home to Massachusetts,
and annually on national
POW/MIA Day.
â€¢ Requires notice to veterans
entitled to purchase creditable
service for active time
in the Armed Services.
â€¢ Maintains authorization for
the Registrar of Motor Vehicles
to furnish veterans, including
prisoners of war and
recipients of certain medals,
with distinctive license
plates and emblems indicating
the branch of service,
award received or disability
status. The distinctive plates
and emblems must be issued
without a fee other than the
established registration fee
for private passenger motor
vehicles and motorcycles.
â€¢ Requires the Department of
Children and Families (DCF)
to collect information regarding
the military status
of parents, guardians and
caregivers during an investigation
for the abuse and neglect
of a child and provide
notice to the appropriate
military authorities of allegations
of abuse and neglect of
a child involving military personnel.
Requires the Commissioner
of DCF to enter
into a Memorandum of Understanding
with the federal
Family Advocacy Program at
military installations in Massachusetts
related to sharing
information regarding investigations.
â€¢
Requires EOVS, in coordination
with the Executive Office
of Health and Human
Services, to convene a working
group to study and make
recommendations on the
use of psychedelics as an alternative
therapy for mental
health treatments for veterans.
â€¢
Authorizes the Department
of Public Health (DPH) to issue
a waiver for veterans
applying for an emergency
medical technician (EMT)
certification in Massachusetts
if it is determined by
DPH that the education and
training requirements for
veterans and military medics
of the US Armed Forces
are suffi ciently comparable
to the requirements for EMTs
in Massachusetts.
â€¢ Allows certain veteranâ€™s organizations
to be approved by
the Gaming Commission and
their local licensing authority
for up to fi ve slot machines
on their premises.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 31, 2024
In the Big Leagues
Director of Parks & Recreation to
Umpire NCAA Division II Baseball
Championship
R
EVERE, MA â€” Mike Hinojosa,
Director of Revere
Parks & Recreation, is
taking his umpire skills to
the big leagues: the NCAA
Division II Baseball Championship,
which will take
place from June 1-8 in Cary,
North Carolina.
The Division II World Series
boasts some of the fi nest
teams and umpires in
college baseball. Hinojosa,
who grew up playing baseball,
has been an umpire for
15 years. He initially tested
to become a college umpire
eight years ago. After
passing an intense exam,
Hinojosa umped for two trial
years before becoming a
full-fl edged member.
To become a college
playoff umpire, one must
receive positive feedback
from college coaches and
fellow umpires. These reviews
lead to a selection
from the National Umpire
Assigner. In previous
years, Hinojosa has umped
in multiple college playoff
rounds, including the regionals
and superregionals.
This year, he was selected
as one of the best in the
nation, and will now participate
in all playoff rounds of
the Division II competition.
Hinojosa most recently
won the Robert â€˜Curleyâ€™
Clement Umpire of the
Year Award in 2023. â€œWe
are very proud of Mike, and
we are excited to see how
these College World Series
games go,â€ commented
Mayor Keefe. â€œMike is a
team player and has dedicated
many years of service
to Revere athletics and recreation.
Weâ€™re all happy to
see him fi nd success as an
umpire, too.â€
Mike Hinojosa, Director of Revere Parks & Recreation, will be umpiring an NCAA Division II championship
game in North Carolina this week.
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î€­î€‰
î‚‡ î€µîˆîîŒî„î…îîˆ î€°î’îšîŒî‘îŠ î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆ
î‚‡ î€¶î“î•îŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î€©î„îî î€¦îîˆî„î‘î˜î“î–
î‚‡ î€°î˜îî†î‹ î€‰ î€¨î‡îŠîŒî‘îŠ
î‚‡ î€¶î’î‡ î’î• î€¶îˆîˆî‡ î€¯î„îšî‘î–
î‚‡ î€¶î‹î•î˜î… î€³îî„î‘î—îŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î€·î•îŒîîîŒî‘îŠ
î‚‡ î€ºî„î—îˆî• î€‰ î€¶îˆîšîˆî• î€µîˆî“î„îŒî•î–
î€­î’îˆ î€³îŒîˆî•î’î—î—îŒî€ î€­î•î€‘
By Dom Nicastro
Patriots lacrosse
team shows marked
improvement
The Revere boys lacrosse
team went 0-18 this season but
improved greatly throughout
the season. â€œAll the boys played
their hearts out and grew as a
team and young adults,â€ Revere
coach Jordan DeBarros said.
â€œThe captains were tremendous
leaders and role models
for the other boys on the team,
including being an extension of
myself and other coaches with
teaching the fi rst-year players
the rules and ways of lacrosse.â€
Freshman attack Matthew Leî€¶
î€¯î€¤î€±î€§î€¶î€¦î€¤î€³î€¨
î€‰ î€°î€¤î€¶î€²î€±î€µî€¼ î€¦î€²î€‘
î€°î„î–î’î‘î•îœ î€ î€¤î–î“î‹î„îî—
î‚‡ î€¥î•îŒî†îŽ î’î• î€¥îî’î†îŽ î€¶î—îˆî“î–
î‚‡ î€¥î•îŒî†îŽ î’î• î€¥îî’î†îŽ î€ºî„îîî–
î‚‡ î€¦î’î‘î†î•îˆî—îˆ î’î• î€¥î•îŒî†îŽ î€³î„î™îˆî•
î€³î„î—îŒî’î– î€‰ î€ºî„îîŽîšî„îœî–
î‚‡ î€¥î•îŒî†îŽ î€µîˆî€î€³î’îŒî‘î—îŒî‘îŠ
î‚‡ î€¤î–î“î‹î„îî— î€³î„î™îŒî‘îŠ
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î€™î€”î€šî€î€–î€›î€œî€î€”î€—î€œî€“
î€§îˆî–îŒîŠî‘îŒî‘îŠ î„î‘î‡ î€¦î’î‘î–î—î•î˜î†î—îŒî‘îŠ î€¬î‡îˆî„î– î—î‹î„î— î„î•îˆ î‚´î€ªî•î’î˜î‘î‡î– î‰î’î• î€¶î˜î†î†îˆî–î–î‚µ
î€¯î„î‘î‡î–î†î„î“îŒî‘îŠ
one became the leading scorer
this season with 19 goals. Senior
attack captain Walid Harda was
second in line with 18 goals on
the season before transitioning
to goalie and recording 44 saves
in the last four games.
Revere had a total of three
goalies this season. Its main goalie
was senior Santiago Gil, who
made 101 saves on the year. A
freshman goalie, Guilherme Andrade,
made 42 saves.
Senior captain midfi elder Guillermo
Menjivar played offense
and defense and was a big contributing
factor for ball possession
and moving the ball around
on off ense. Menjivar was a key
player in forcing turnovers on
defense with the help of fellow
defenders.
Revere track team
shines on state level,
GBL all-stars
The Revere boys track team
came away with seven 2024 outdoor
Greater Boston League allstars:
Isaiah DeCrosta, JV Cunha,
Amir Yamani, Medy Bellemsieh,
Youness Chahid, Oliver Escobar
and Kevin Purcifi ll. At the Division
1 state meet, Revere got strong
performances from the following:
Purcifi ll: shotput, ninth, 130-11;
Cunha: 800, 14th
, 2:00.52; 400, 15th
51:58; DeCrosta: 400 hurdles, 13th
, 3:31.31.
,
,
59:18; Bellemsieh, Edwin Alarcon,
Yamani, Cunha: 14th
The Revere girls had 11 all-stars:
Ashley Cabrera Rodriguez, Liv Yuong,
Gemma Stamatopoulos, Olivia
Rupp, Daniela Santana Baez,
Rocio Gonzalez, Hiba El Bzyouy,
Giselle Salvador, Angelina Montoya
Araque, Yara Belguendouz
and Gigi Zierten.
Revere girls coach Racquel
MacDonald-Ciambelli shared
the GBL Girls Track Coach of the
Year title with Chelsea coaches
Cesar Hernandez and Matthew
McCormick.
On the girls side, Revere had the
following results at the Division 1
state meet: Ashley Cabrera Rodriguez,
Triple jump: 18th
feet; 400 hurdles: 38th
, 31-02.75
, 1:16.70;
Liv Yuong, High Jump: no height.
Revere girls tennis team
makes postseason
Revere qualifi ed for the state
tournament with two wins last
week. The Patriots fi nished 6-6
and earned the 40th
seed out of
41 teams in Division 1. They took
on No. 25 and Greater Boston
League rival Malden on Wednesday,
May 29.
Revere beat Medford, 3-2, on
May 22: First singles: Dayna Phan
lost, 8-5. Second singles: Jaimy
Gomez won, 8-4. Third singles:
Lesly Calderon Lopez won, 8-2.
First doubles: Cesia Loza and Rachel
Sanchez lost, 8-5. Second
doubles: Keila Loza and Erta Ismahili
won, 8-7.
Revere beat Everett, 3-2, on
May 23: First singles: Phan lost,
8-3. Second singles: Gomez won,
8-5. Third singles: Calderon Lopez
won, 8-4. First doubles: Cesia
Loza and Sanchez won, 9-7. Second
doubles: Keila Loza and Ivana
Nguyen lost, 8-2.
Revere volleyball
team set for tourney
The Revere boys volleyball
team earned a fi nal record of 12-8
and earned the No. 31 seed out
of 39 teams. The Patriots will face
No. 34 Nipmuc Regional (14-6) at
home Friday, May 31 at 3:30 p.m.
Should Revere win, it will face
Newton North, the No. 2 seed, in
the single-elimination tourney.
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Page 7
BOARD | FROM Page 1
According to Foss, the 54 species
of mosquitos in Massachusetts
pick up viruses from birds
and pass the diseases to humans
when they bite. Noone
explained that traps collect
mosquito lava and adult mosquitos.
From March to September,
teams go out to diff erent
sites in salt marshes and fl ood
areas to conduct surveillance
of mosquito breeding. They are
able to determine if the mosquitos
are a risk to humans and
what, if any, intervention should
occur.
Close attention is paid to
catch basins, which are cleaned
and monitored. Mosquitos often
breed in artifi cial containers,
and district workers remove 600
to 800 tires every year.
Some salt marsh mosquitos
lay their eggs in wet, muddy
areas, such as stagnant ditches
along salt marshes. High
tides fl ood these areas and trigger
the hatching of mosquito
eggs. Salt marsh mosquitos
are known for being aggressive
day biters. Without treatment,
they can have massive
breeding numbers from June to
September and are an extreme
coastal nuisance. If larval counts
are high, areas are treated with
a bacterial larvicide, which, like
all of the chemical treatments
used by the district, pose a low
risk to humans, wildlife and pollinators.
The
district recommends barrier
spray treatments for public
areas, such as parks, athletic
fi elds and schools. A barrier
spray is applied to surrounding
trees, bushes and vegetation,
which reduces mosquitos
for several weeks. The spray
is applied at night when mosquitos
hunker down for the
day. According to Noone, residents
need to stay off fi elds after
theyâ€™ve been sprayed but areas
are safe for people to visit by
the next morning.
Property owners who are
concerned about mosquitos
can call the district. Staff will
come and inspect a property to
fi nd any areas or objects likely
to attract breeding mosquitos.
Birdbaths, kiddie pools and pet
dishes â€” anywhere water can
collect â€” are common culprits.
Homeowners who have an
abundance of mosquitos in
their yard can contact the district
and request that their property
be sprayed. A pickup truck
mounted with an Ultra-Low Volume
(ULV) aerosol generator
(sprayer) will come to a home after
dark and pull into the driveway.
The spray trucks deliver a
300-ft. column of mist spray to
the property, which kills adult
flying mosquitos. This technique,
called adulticide, provides
temporary control over
flying mosquitos and will diminish
mosquito populations
that could potentially be carrying
virus.
Health Board member ViviA
birdâ€™s-eye view of Rumney Marsh looking towards Northgate.
(Advocate fi le photo)
ana CataÃ±o asked about natural
remedies. She had questions
about using goats to graze
on the phragmites, an invasive
marsh plant favored by mosquitos
for nesting and breeding,
which was used before. Noone
didnâ€™t think goats would have
the desired impact and said the
district mows down the phragmites
in October and grinds it to
pulp. CataÃ±o also asked about
bringing in some dragonfl ies,
which eat mosquitos. Foss said
dragonfl ies do feed on mosquiGerry
Dâ€™Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
Is
Your Estate in Order?
Do you have an update Will, Health
Care Proxy or Power of Attorney?
If Not, Please Call for a Free Consultation.
14 Proctor Avenue, Revere
(781) 284-5657
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d t welcome
tos but there is other food they
prefer. And Foss said dragonfl
ies would have to be imported
from other states and they
would pose a threat to local
dragonfl y populations.
The district maintains a userfriendly
website at https://www.
nemassmosquito.org/ where
residents can request home inspections,
truck spraying and
removal of abandoned tires.
The site also has a link for any
resident who wants their home
to be excluded from any widespread
spraying or treatment.
Thereâ€™s a list of all chemicals and
pesticides used and information
about insecticides and things to
avoid to escape mosquito bites.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 31, 2024
USS Constitution Commander delivers
keynote address at Memorial Day ceremony
Councillors paid respect to veterans with a plaque. Shown from left to right: Councillors-at-Large
Robert Haas III; Michelle Kelley; Juan Pablo Jaramillo and Marc Silvestri; Ward 4 Councillor Paul Argenzio;
Ward 5 Councillor Angela Guarino-Sawaya; Brian Spagnolo (the son of Rosario Spagnolo,
a Vietnam veteran who served); Mayor Patrick Keefe; Veterans Services Director Isaac McDaniel;
Robert Mansfi eld (of the Revere Fire Department, the son of Henry Meoli, a Korean veteran who
served); State Representative Jessica Ann Giannino; State Senator Lydia Edwards; State Representative
Jeff rey Rosario Turco; City Council Vice President Ira Novoselsky; City Council President Anthony
Cogliandro; Councillor-At-Large Anthony Zambuto and School Committee Members John
Kingston and Anthony Caggiano.
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Revere Historian Jeff Pearlman
read the names of the fallen
from the Rumney Marsh Burial
Ground.
Veterans Service Director Isaac
McDaniel announced the lowering
of the fl ags to half-mast to
represent American courage.
In refl ecting upon 9/11, the U.S.
Navyâ€™s USS Constitution 77th
Commander, BJ Farrell, said
September 11 brought a sense
of togetherness along with destruction.
Ward
2 City Councillor/City
Council Vice President Ira Novoselsky
read the names of
World War II veterans killed.
Prince-Strauss/Benjamin Groman
Jewish War Veterans Post
161 Commander Joseph Cole
read the names of those killed
in World War II.
William Reedy read the names
of World War I veterans killed
in action.
R
By Tara Vocino
evere celebrated Memorial
Day with a keynote address
from the 77th Commanding Offi
cer of the USS Constitution, BJ
Farrell, at Charles McMackin Veterans
Memorial Park.
State Representative Jessica
Giannino asked guests to keep
World War II veterans in their
mind, as numbers are dwindling.
Mayor
Patrick Keefe, Jr. said
Memorial Day remembers
those who made the ultimate
sacrifi ce by dying in their respective
wars.
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Page 9
The 77th Commander of the
USS Constitution, BJ Farrell, saluted
during the playing of taps.
Maurice and Sonji Neverson, of Eagle Heights
Church, sang â€œGod Bless America.â€
Korean veteran Angelo Migliero, 94, and his wife,
Jennie Migliero, who have been married for approximately
70 years
Rumney Marsh Academy
eighth-grader Noor
Ashour read a Memorial
Day proclamation from
Governor Maura Healey.
State Representative Jeffrey
Turco said approximately 1.3
million Americans have died
in uniform.
World War II veteran Vincenzo
James Cannarozzo, 98, was
present.
Valerie Moscone sang the National
Anthem.
Reverend Tim Bogertman, the
pastor of First Congregational
Church of Revere, gave the invocation.
State
Representatives Jeff rey Turco (at left) and Jessica Giannino
off ered greetings from the Commonwealth.
Mayor Patrick Keefe (at right) and Veterans Services Director Isaac McDaniel
laid the wreaths in front of the World War I and World War II memorial.
(Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 31, 2024
67th
Annual Revere High Sc
(Advocate photos by Emily Harney)
Frank Eydenberg Gold Award, presented
by Coach Brandon Pezzuto was
awarded to Jonathan Wells.
Natalie Rodriguez Lopera received the
Joe â€œPipâ€™ Giulia Memorial award.
Raihan Ahmed received the Robert and
Phyllis Flynn Boysâ€™ Tennis award.
Alem Cesic received the Ken Hill Swimming
award.
Jaimy Omez received the Outstanding
Girlsâ€™ Tennis award.
Luke Ellis received the Bernard Sochat
Memorial award.
Olivia Morris received the Michael Della
Russo Female Athletic award.
JP Chavarria received the Donald P.
Foulds, Sr. Memorial award.
Zaraius Bilimoria received the Ugo
Evangelista Athletic award.
Matt Terrel received the Augustine C.
Whelan Athletic award.
Lesley Calderon Lopez received the Irma
Wertheim Athletic award.
Guillermo Menjivar Hernandez received
the Outstanding Boys Lacrosse award.
Carlos Moran received the outstanding
team spirit award.
Ashley Cabrera Rodriguez was recognized
for breaking the outdoor track
1000m dash with a new school record
of 13.1 seconds.
Rocio Gonzalez Castillo was
recognized as the fi rst RHS
athlete to receive 12 varsity
letters.
Ruben Rodriguez received
the RHS Male Volleyball
Player of The Year
Award and holds the
school record having
amassed over 700 kills
and counting.
Riley Straccia received
the Revere High School
Softball award.
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Page 11
chool Sports Awards Night
Joao Victor Cunha and Giselle Salvador
received the Silvio Cella Outstanding
Athlete award.
The RHS Athletic Department
Awards for Academic Excellence was
awarded to Andrew Leone for Basketball
and Lacrosse.
Giselle Salvador received the Leonard
J. Randall Memorial award, outstanding
girlsâ€™ soccer player award, Jake Collins
Memorial award, recognition for indoor
track and outdoor track and the
Silvio Cella Outstanding Athlete award.
Bella Stamatopoulos received the RHS
Athletic Department Awards for Academic
Excellence.
Isaiah DeCrosta was recognized
for his contribution to the record-breaking
team for the
Swedish Medley Relay in track.
Kevin Purcifull was recognized
for breaking school records in
indoor track; 25 lbs. and 30 lbs.
weight throw and outdoor track
for the 12 lb. hammer throw.
Abbas Atoui received the
George Kenneally Memorial
award.
Ollie Svendsen received the
Capt. George Hurley Memorial
award, the James â€œJimmyâ€ Webber
Character award and the Dr.
Albert Fulchino Baseball award.
Joao Victor Cunha received the
Silvio Cella Outstanding Athlete
award and recognition in
outdoor and indoor track.
Marwa Riad and Hila El Bzyouy were recognized
for their excellence in outdoor track.
Kyle Cummings received the
Michael Della Russo Athletic
award and Al Blasi Baseball
Coaches award.
Ahmed Mahdi Bellemsieh received the Richard
â€œDickieâ€ Fox Memorial Award, the Enrico
Caruso Athletic award and recognitions in indoor
and outdoor track.
Jannet Sehli received the Walter
E. Tye Jr. Memorial award.
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#Page 12
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 31, 2024
RHS Patriots Girlsâ€™ Varsity Lacrosse Seniors
Share Future Plans after graduation
By Tara Vocino
T
he Revere High School Lady
Patriots Girlsâ€™ Varsity Lacrosse
Team shared their collegiate
plans during last Fridayâ€™s Senior
Night at Harry Della Russo Stadium
in Revere.
Sophie Grullon was escorted by her sister, Janibelle, her father Stanley,
her friend Amir, and her mother, Carolina. Grullon plans to attend
Bunker Hill Community College in the fall where she will be
studying photography.
Victoria Vilaca was escorted by her mom, Lana, her aunt, Luiza
and brother, Noah. Villa plans to attend Suff olk University in the
fall, where she will be double majoring in theatre and business.
PATRIOTIC DUET: Bianca Rincon
and Isabella DePaul sang the
National Anthem during last Fridayâ€™s
Revere High School Girlsâ€™
Varsity Lacrosse Senior Night
at Harry Della Russo Stadium.
(Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Meesha Francois was escorted by her brother,
Ethan and her cousin, Sami. Francois plans to attend
Brandeis University in the fall, where she will
be studying biology.
Ariana Aguilar was escorted by her mother, Mirna, dad, Armando, her cousin,
Zakaria Moubtassim, her sister, Annabelle and her sister/teammate, Gabby.
Aguilar plans to study psychology in the fall.
Revere softball ready for Division 1 state tournament
By Dom Nicastro
T
he Revere High School softball
team capped off a remarkable
regular season with a
15-5 record, securing its spot in
the Division 1 state tournament
as the No. 36 seed out of 38
teams. They will face the No. 29
seed, Shrewsbury, which holds
a 5-13 record, on Friday, May 31,
at 3:30 p.m. on the road.
This is a sign of great improvement
under Coach Megan
Oâ€™Donnell in the past
few seasons. In her third
year, Oâ€™Donnell has guided
teams to four-win, sevenwin
and now 15-win seasons.
The Patriots showcased their
prowess with a mix of off ensive
and defensive strengths
throughout the season.
â€œThis is a hard-hitting team
that is just really good,â€ Oâ€™Donnell
said. â€œI knew we were going to
be close to winning 10 games
to make the tournament.â€
SOFTBALL | SEE Page 17
2024 RHS PATRIOTS SOFTBALL TEAM: Shown from left to right: back row: Zuhey Pastrana, Lea Doucette, Caleigh Joyce, Gianna Chiodi, Jordan Martelli, Danni Hope
Randall, Shayna Smith, Francesca Reed, Jaelynn Smith, Anna Doucette, Brianna Miranda, Lindsay Pineda and Assistant Coach Hailey Powers; kneeling: Dakota Lanes,
Julianna Bolton, Riley Straccia, Luiza Santos, Isabella Qualtieri, Ally Straccia and Olivia Morris.
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Page 13
Revere High School Boysâ€™
Volleyball Seniors
Announce Career Paths
By Tara Vocino
T
he Revere High School Patriots Boysâ€™ Volleyball Seniors announced their career
paths during last Wednesdayâ€™s Senior Night.
Ruben Rodriguez, a 2 year captain, and GBL league all-star, is joined by his father,
Ruben Rodriguez, his stepmother Maria Licon, his mother, Tara Reyes, his brother
Justin Barahona, his sister, Mercedes Rodriguez, his brother, Said Licon, his brother,
Joel Licon, and his girlfriend, Kyara Rodriguez.
Seniors took one last group photo on the court during last Wednesdayâ€™s Revere
High School Boysâ€™ Volleyball Senior Night at home. Shown from left to right, are:
Jacob Lopez, Rayan Echelh, Ruben Rodriguez, Medhi Echelh, and Melih Yilmaz.
(Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Mehdi Echelh has committed to UMass/Lowell to study psychology. Echelhis joined
by his father, Khalil Echelh, his mother, Amal Barakat, and his brothers, Rayan Echelh,
DeaaEchelh and his sister, Bayan Echelh.
Rayan Echelh is working for Cataldo ambulance as an EMT while continuing his
volleyball career at Dean College and plans to study Health Sciences and Society.
Echelh is joined by his brother, Mehdi Echelh and his teammates, Ruben Rodriguez,
Kawan Diaz, and his friends, Kyara Rodriguez, Tiff any Hoang, and Stacey Li.
Jacob Lopez #5, in center, plans to attend Wentworth Institute Of Technology and
major in computerscience. Lopez is joined by his brother, Matthew Lopez and his
girlfriend, Valentina Espinsosa, Jacobâ€™s girlfriend, Isabella Cintron and his teammates,
Chris Choc Chavez, Melih Yilmaz, and Lucas Jiminez.
Melih Yilmaz, in center, class of 2024 valedictorian, plans to attend BU in the fall. Yilmaz is joined by his father, Mehmet Yilmaz, his mother, Selma Yilmaz, his brother,
Tarik Yilmaz, his teammates, Alessandro Trichilo, Jacob Lopez, Chris Choc Chavez, and his friends, Ricky Tran, Chris Merveille, Giancarlo Ciciulla, Diego Martinez,
and Dillian Boodoosingh.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 31, 2024
By Bob Katzen
If you have any questions about this weekâ€™s report, e-mail us
at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com or call us at (617) 720-1562
GET A FREE SUBSCRIPTION
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lp.constantcontactpages.com/
su/aPTLucKs
THE HOUSE AND SENATE: Beacon
Hill Roll Call records local
senatorsâ€™ and representativesâ€™
votes on roll calls from the week
of May 20-24. All Senate roll calls
were related to the Senate version
of a $55.9 billion fi scal 2025
state budget.
â€œBEHIND THE SCENES OF THE
SENATE BUDGET DEBATEâ€
Of the 1,100 amendments
fi led by senators, only 41 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
â€œbundlingâ€ of many amendments.
Instead of acting on each
amendment one at a time, hundreds
of the proposed amendments
are bundled and put into
two pilesâ€”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 fi lling in
for her at the podium, orchestrates
the approval and rejection
of the bundled amendments
with a simple: â€œAll those
in favor say â€˜Aye,â€™ those opposed
say â€˜No.â€™ The Ayes have it and the
amendments are approved.â€ Or:
â€œAll those in favor say â€˜Aye,â€™ those
opposed say â€˜No.â€™ The Noâ€™s have
it and the amendments are rejected.â€
Senators
donâ€™t actually vote
Yes or No, and, in fact, they donâ€™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 â€œNoâ€
pile can bring it to the fl oor and
ask for an up or down vote on
the amendment itself. They say
this system has worked well for
many years.
Opponents say that rarely, if
ever, does a member bring his
or her amendment to the fl oor
for an up-or-down vote because
that is not the way the game is
played. It is an â€œexpected traditionâ€
that you accept the fate of
your amendment as determined
by Democratic leaders.
VETERANS BENEFITS (H 4661)
House 156-0, approved and
sent to the Senate a package
designed to benefi t veterans in
the Bay State by broadening the
defi nition of a veteran, increasing
tax credits and state benefi
ts for which they are eligible
and modernizing the services
on which they rely.
Provisions include providing a
medical assistance benefi t, behavioral
health assistance benefi
t and dental benefi t beyond
other benefi ts available to veterans;
increasing from $2,000 to
$2,250 and then to $2,500 the
annuity for blind, paraplegic or
veterans with disabilities; allowing
municipalities to annually increase
local property tax abatements
for veterans in an amount
equal to the increase in cost of
living determined by the Consumer
Price Index for the year;
increasing from $2,000 to $2,500
the amount of a tax credit for
each qualifi ed veteran hired by
an employer and for subsequent
years of continued employment
of each veteran; creating a working
group to study and make
recommendations on the use
of psychedelics as an alternative
therapy for mental health treatments
for veterans; and allowing
certain veteranâ€™s organizations
to be approved by the Gaming
Commission and their local licensing
authority for up to fi ve
slot machines on their premises.
â€œ[The bill] is a transformative
package of reforms that will
make sure our veterans and their
families have access to the benefi
ts, resources and support they
deserve,â€ said Gov. Maura Healey.
Rep. Gerard Cassidy (D-Brockton),
House Chair of the Committee
on Veterans and Federal
Aff airs, called the measure a
historic piece of legislation that
addresses critical quality of life
issues faced every day by veterans.
â€œIt is important that we continue
to honor those who served
our country, and this bill highlights
our commitment to their
wellbeing,â€ said Cassidy.
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes Rep.
Jeff Turco Yes
SENATE APPROVES $57.999
BILLION FISCAL 2025 BUDGET
(S 3)
Senate 40-0, approved a $55.9
billion fi scal 2025 state budget
after adding an estimated $89.6
million in spending during three
days of debate. The House has already
approved a diff erent version
and a House-Senate conference
committee will eventually
craft a plan that will be presented
to the House and Senate
for consideration and sent to the
governor.
â€œ[The budget includes] universally
free community college
and record public higher education
investments,â€ said Sen. Jo
Comerford (D-Northampton),
Senate chair of the Committee
on Higher Education. â€œSignifi
cant funding for rural roads
and bridges, local public health,
K-12 schools, Unrestricted Government
Aid, Regional Transit
Authorities, food security and
more.â€
â€œToday our chamber took
a vote of confidence in every
Massachusetts resident going
to school, raising a family and
working to make ends meet,â€
said Senate President Karen
Spilka (D-Ashland). â€œToday we
took a vote for an affordable,
competitive and equitable commonwealth,
This budget is an investment
in our people, and it
is an investment in our collective
future.â€
â€œThe fi scal year 2025 budget
overwhelmingly passed by the
Senate makes transformative
investments in education, regional
equity and builds upon
the commonwealthâ€™s workforce
economy,â€ said Sen. Mike Rodrigues
(D-Westport), chair of
the Senate Committee on Ways
and Means. â€œThese historic measures
enable residents to remain
in the state, solidifying our economic
future for generations to
come. The budget is also a balanced
and responsible plan,
centered on sustainability and
regional equity by maximizing
revenues and building upon the
progress weâ€™ve already made in
key sectors of the state economy.
With a transparent and inclusive
amendment process, we
were able to improve our original
budget and make even further
strides in our education,
economic development, environmental
and health and human
services priorities.â€
Although no one voted
against the budget, it wasnâ€™t
without its critics.
â€œThe State Senate seems to
have only one thing on their
mind: spend more, reform less,â€
said Paul Craney, spokesman
for the Massachusetts Fiscal Alliance.
The Senate President
kicked off that theme when she
proposed new â€˜freeâ€™ community
college, which would add an unstoppable
ballooning mandate
for future generations of taxpayers.
The Senateâ€™s questionable
priorities were also refl ected
in the late hours of last night,
as they adopted an amendment
to spend $250,000 on a new
state seal and motto, when previous
attempts proved unfruitful.
What a colossal waste of taxpayer
money. Thereâ€™s no other
way to view this.â€
Craney continued, â€œSenate
leadership had a great opportunity
to do something benefi cial
for the stateâ€™s economic competitiveness,
but they failed to act.
The income surtax was advertised
to the public as a tax just
for high income earners making
over $1 million dollars. Then
last year, the Legislature added
a â€˜marriage penaltyâ€™ to impose
the $1 million dollar income surtax
for all â€˜combinedâ€™ incomes for
married couples. This change
in the tax policy penalizes married
couples just for being married
and signifi cantly lowers the
threshold from what tax proponents
campaigned on. At a time
when Massachusetts is desperate
to keep high income earners
and productive taxpayers from
moving out of state, the State
Senate missed probably their
most important opportunity to
be helpful. They had a great opportunity
to strike out the marriage
penalty, but instead, they
chose to keep taxes high by penalizing
families.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the budget.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards Yes
SALES TAX HOLIDAY (S 4)
Senate 5-34, rejected an
amendment that would establish
a 2-week sales tax holiday,
from August 6, 2024 to August
19, 2024, allowing consumers
to buy most products that
cost under $2,500 without paying
the stateâ€™s 6.25 percent sales
tax. State law currently calls for
a 2-day sales tax holiday every
year.
â€œThere is no doubt that Massachusetts
residents and small
businesses are feeling the weight
of infl ation,â€ said Sen. Ryan Fattman
(R-Sutton). â€œBy giving a
2-week tax reprieve through an
extended sales tax holiday, we
provided families and individuals
an opportunity to make purchases
without the added burden
of taxes which also helps
small businesses.â€
Amendment opponents said
the Legislature has provided extensive
tax relief in recent years
and argued the 2-week holiday
would cost $210 million which
the state cannot afford. They
noted that current state law already
provides a 2-day sales
tax holiday annually. They noted
that extending the holiday is
more of a feel-good policy that
does little to help families. They
noted the extension would actually
generate little additional
revenue for stores because consumers
typically buy the products
even without the tax-free
days.
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the 2-week
sales tax holiday. A â€œNoâ€ vote is
against it.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards No
ABOLISH REQUIREMENT THAT
COUPLES MUST FILE TAXES
JOINTLY (S 4)
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Page 15
Senate 10-29, rejected an
amendment that would abolish
the current requirement that
Massachusetts married couples
who fi le income tax returns
jointly at the federal level do the
same at the state level.
Amendment supporters said
that since these mararied couples
are currently required to
fi le jointly at the state level, their
combined income can total
more than $1 million and the 4
percent surtax applies to them
and many more fi lers which is
not what the voters approved
on the November 2022 ballot
question imposing the 4 percent
surtax.
â€œThis amendment would have
restored the original language
of the surtax which would have
allowed married couples in Massachusetts
to fi le state taxes separately
despite fi ling jointly for
federal taxes,â€ said Sen. Ryan
Fattman (R-Sutton). â€œIn doing
so, couples in Massachusetts
would have had the opportunity
to keep more of their hardearned
income versus sending
it over to the state.â€
Amendment opponents said
requiring married couples who
fi le jointly at the federal level to
fi le jointly with the state is reasonable
and is working well.
They noted the surtax is raising
more money than predicted
and is allowing funding of some
of the most important programs
in the budgets including universal
free school meals, breakfast
and lunch, for every student;
free community college; and increased
scholarships â€” none of
that would be possible without
the surtax revenues.
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the amendment
abolishing the joint filing
requirement. A â€œNoâ€ vote is
against the amendment and favors
requiring joint fi ling.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards No
CAPITAL GAINS TAX (S 4)
Senate 4-35, rejected an
amendment that would retain
a current law that requires any
excess revenue in capital gains
revenue over $1 billion to annually
automatically be transferred
as follows: 90 percent
to the Rainy Day Fund; 5 percent
to the State Retiree Benefi
ts Trust Fund; and 5 percent to
the State Pension Liability Fund.
The $1 billion would remain in
the General Fund and be spent
by the Legislature with no restrictions.
The
proposed Senate budget
changes that for only fi scal 2025
by raising the threshold by $375
million so that any excess over
$1.375 billion would automatically
go to those three funds if
the secretary of administration
and fi nance makes a determination
that the funds are needed
to achieve balance for fi scal year
2025. The $1.375 billion would
remain in the General Fund to
be spent on by the Legislature
with no restrictions.
â€œThis amendment would have
restored the original language of
the capital gains law that allows
transfers of excess gains collections
over $1 billion in one fi scal
year,â€ said Sen. Ryan Fattman
(R-Sutton). â€œChanging this language
for one year â€¦ would
create a precedent that would
mean less transparency year after
year by allowing a greater
amount of taxpayer money to
be used outside of the intended
purpose of the capital gains tax.â€
Opponents said the additional
$375 million is needed in the
General Fund this fi scal year to
fund many useful new programs
in the budget including the new
free community college program.
They noted that the state
estimates that there will be $513
million in excess capital gains
this fi scal year which means that
a total of $138 million will still
be deposited in the Rainy Day
Fund and the two other retirement
funds. They noted that a little
less money for the Rainy Day
Fund this year is acceptable because
there is a healthy balance
of $8.4 billion currently in the
Rainy Day Fund.
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is in favor of any
excess capital gains revenue
above $1 billion going to the
Rainy Day Fund and the two retirement
funds. A â€œNoâ€ vote is for
raising the threshold to $1.375
billion.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards No
CONTINUE SESSION BEYOND
8 P.M.
Senate 36-3, approved a motion
to suspend Senate rules to
allow the Senate budget debate
session on May 22 to continue
beyond 8 p.m. Under Senate
rules, the Senate cannot meet after
8 p.m. unless the rule is suspended.
The session lasted two
hours and 15 minutes beyond 8
p.m. and adjourned at 10:15 p.m.
Supporters of rule suspension
said that the Senate has important
work to continue on the fi scal
2025 budget and should stay
in session to work on it.
Opponents of rule suspension
said it is irresponsible for the
Senate to debate and vote late at
night when taxpayers are asleep.
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for meeting
beyond 8 p.m. A â€œNoâ€ vote is
against it.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards Yes
$350,000 MORE FOR YWCAs
(S 4)
Senate 39-0, approved an
amendment that would increase
funding for YWCAs by $350,000
(from $650,000 to $1 million).
â€œFor close to 150 years, YWCAs
around the world and the nine
YWCAs in Massachusetts have
stood beside our young women
as a pillar of support and empowerment
and across the state
they are working hard to expand
outreach, staffi ng, programming
and support services to hundreds
of at-risk girls,â€ said Sen.
Robyn Kennedy (D-Worcester),
the sponsor of the amendment.
â€œThis $350,000 amendment is
critical to the continuance of
our investment in gender specifi
c youth violence prevention.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the
$350,000.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards Yes
$1 MILLION MORE FOR CIVICS
EDUCATION (S 4)
Senate 39-0, approved an
amendment that would increase
funding for civics education
in schools across the state
by $1 million (from $1.5 to $2.5
million).
â€œI am so proud to support our
continued investments in civics
education, which empowers
young people and gives them
the tools to make their voices
heard as they advocate for social,
racial, economic and environmental
justice,â€ said amendment
sponsor Sen. Becca Rausch
(D-Needham). â€œMy amendment
fully funds the Civics Project
Trust Fund, boosting our school
systemsâ€™ ability to implement
civics education curricula and
support student civics projects.
Iâ€™ve met and corresponded
with hundreds of students
about their civics projects, and I
can say with confi dence that our
investments in civics education
are paying off .â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the $1 million.)
Sen.
Lydia Edwards Yes
BAN HOME EQUITY THEFT (S 4)
Senate 39-0, approved an
amendment that would prohibit
cities and towns that foreclose
on properties on which the
owner owes back property taxes,
from keeping all of the profits
when the city or town sells
the property at auction. Current
Massachusetts law allows
this practice. The bill would allow
the city or town to keep only
the amount owed in back taxes
and send the remainder to
the owner.
Last year, the United States
Supreme Court ruled that cities
and towns that foreclose on
properties on which the owner
owes back property taxes, cannot
keep all of the profi ts when
the city or town sells the property
at auction. Supreme Court
Chief Justice John Roberts, writing
a unanimous decision about
a similar Minnesota law, said
that â€œa taxpayer who loses her
$40,000 house to the state to fulfi
ll a $15,000 tax debt has made
a far greater contribution to the
public fi sc than she owed.â€
BEACON | SEE Page 16
How to Find Reliable Health Information Online
Dear Savvy Senior,
How can I tell if the health info on a website is trustworthy? I usually do a
Google search on a symptom, drug or health condition when I want to research
something, but with so much information out there Iâ€™m not sure what I can trust.
Skeptical Sal
Dear Sal,
Youâ€™re wise to be skeptical!
Thereâ€™s an overwhelming
amount of health advice on
the internet today and it can
be hard to tell whatâ€™s credible.
To help you sort through the
online clutter and locate reliable,
trustworthy health information,
here are a few tips to
follow, along with some toprated
sites you can turn to with
confi dence.
Savvy Searching
First, know that Google or
Bing is not always the best place
to start a search. Youâ€™ll increase
your odds of finding reliable
health information if you begin
with websites run by government
agencies (identified by
URLs ending in.gov), medical
associations (often.org) or academic
institutions (.edu).
Commercial websites (usually
ending in.com), such as
drug or insurance companies
who may be trying to sell you
their products, are usually not
the most trustworthy options.
To fi nd out whoâ€™s sponsoring a
site and where the information
came from, click on the â€œAbout
Usâ€ tab on the siteâ€™s home page.
Also note that good health
and medical information changes
all the time so check the date
that information was published
to make sure itâ€™s current.
Some other areas you need
be wary of include online
symptom checkers and artifi -
cial intelligence (AI) tools. While
symptom checkers do off er potential
diagnoses that could fi t
your set of symptoms, they are
often inaccurate, and tend to
err on the side of caution says
Ateev Mehrotra, MD, professor
of health care policy at Harvard
Medical School. AI tools, like
ChatGPT, can also be wrong
or generate false but scientifi c
sounding information.
You also need to be cautious
about using medical information
from social media, online
forums or YouTube. Comments
in these places may sound authoritative
even if the authors
have no medical training or
expertise.
Top Health Sites
While there are many excellent
websites that provide reliable
health and medical information,
one of the best all-purpose
sites thatâ€™s recommended
by Consumer Reports for researching
symptoms and conditions
is MedlinePlus (medlineplus.gov).
A
service of the National Library
of Medicine, the worldâ€™s
largest medical library, and
part of the National Institutes
of Health, MedlinePlus provides
high-quality, trustworthy
health and wellness information
thatâ€™s easy to understand
and free of advertising.
Here are a few additional
websites, recommended by the
Medical Library Association and
others, to help you fi nd reliable
information on specifi c diseases,
conditions and treatments.
Cancer: National Cancer Institute
(cancer.gov), American
Cancer Society (cancer.org) and
National Comprehensive Cancer
Network (nccn.org).
Heart disease: American
Heart Association (americanheart.org),
National Heart, Lung
and Blood Institute (nhlbi.nih.
gov).
Diabetes: American Diabetes
Association (diabetes.org).
Alzheimerâ€™s disease: Alzheimerâ€™s
Association (alz.org)
and Alzheimers.gov.
Public health and vaccines:
Center for Disease Control and
Prevention (cdc.gov).
Alternative medicine: National
Center for Complementary
and Integrative Health (nccih.nih.gov)
and the National
Institutes of Healthâ€™s Offi ce
of Dietary Supplements (ods.
od.nih.gov).
Any research you do online
before seeing a doctor, be sure
to save or print your fi ndings
out on paper, including the site
you got your information from,
so you can review it together.
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 â€œThe Savvy Seniorâ€ book.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 31, 2024
BEACON | FROM Page 15
â€œFor far too long my constituents,
and homeowners across
Massachusetts, have been
robbed of their rightful equity
by greedy profi teers and apathetic
bureaucrats,â€ said Sen.
Mark Montigny (D-New Bedford),
the sponsor of the amendment.
â€œThe Supreme Courtâ€™s
ruling last year, along with the
Hampden Superior Courtâ€™s decision
last month, brought new
hope that this thievery would fi -
nally come to an end. The Senate
has taken the lead on ending
this injustice in Massachusetts
and I am proud to ensure
that weâ€™ve taken this opportunity
to provide strong protections
for struggling homeowners who
are often facing incredible challenges
in their lives. Homeowners
deserve relief and any municipality
who has engaged in this
predatory process should proactively
refund the money to those
aggrieved.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the amendment.)
Sen.
Lydia Edwards Yes
ALSO UP ON BEACON HILL
ELECTRONIC WAGE CARDS (H
1841) â€” The House gave initial
approval to legislation designed
to protect the rights and money
of workers who receive their
wages through electronic wage
~ Legal Notice ~
A-24-08
Public Hearing
Notice is hereby given in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 40A of the
Massachusetts General Laws and Title 17 of the Revised Ordinances of the City of
Revere (RRO) that the City of Revere Zoning Board of Appeals (ZBA) will conduct a
public hearing on Tuesday evening, June 18, 2024 at 5:00 P.M. in the City Councillor
Joseph A. DelGrosso City Council Chamber, Revere City Hall, 281 Broadway, Revere,
MA 02151 on the application of Eight Avon, LLC, 1040-1048 North Shore Road, Unit
B2, Revere, MA 02151 requesting the following variances to enable the appellant to
î†î’î‘î–î—î•î˜î†î— î„ î†î’î‘î—îˆîî“î’î•î„î•îœî€ î‚¿î™îˆî€î–î—î’î•îœî€ î•îˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î—îŒî„î î„î“î„î•î—îîˆî‘î— î…î˜îŒîî‡îŒî‘îŠ îšîŒî—î‹ î—îšîˆîî™îˆ î˜î‘îŒî—î– î„î—
8 Avon Street, Revere, MA 02151:
1. RRO Section 17.24.010 with respect to minimum area requirement of 10,000 s.f.
within the GB District;
2. RRO Section 17.24.010 with respect to minimum frontage requirement of 100 feet
within the GB District;
3. RRO Section 17.24.010 (q) with respect to minimum rear yard setback requirement
of 20 feet for residential use within the GB District;
4. RRO Section 17.24.010 (q) with respect to minimum front yard setback requirement
of 20 feet for residential use within the GB District;
5. RRO Section 17.24.01 (q) with respect to minimum side yard setback requirement of
15 feet for residential use within the GB District;
6. RRO Section 17.24.010 with respect to maximum FAR of 1.5 within the GB District;
7. RRO Section 17.28.020 with respect to minimum parking requirement for apartment use.
A copy of the aforementioned proposed plan and application (A-24-08) îŒî– î’î‘ î‚¿îîˆ î„î‘î‡
î„î™î„îŒîî„î…îîˆ î‰î’î• î“î˜î…îîŒî† îŒî‘î–î“îˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ îŒî‘ î—î‹îˆ î’ï‚ˆî†îˆ î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ î€¦îŒî—îœ î€¦îîˆî•îŽî€ î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆ î€¦îŒî—îœ î€«î„îîî€ î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆî€
Massachusetts, Monday through Thursday from 8:00AM-5:00PM. Proponent/opponent
testimony will be accepted in writing on or before June 11, 2024. Testimony can be
submitted via email to amelnik@revere.org.
Ashley E. Melnik, Clerk
City of Revere
Zoning Board of Appeals
May 31, June 7, 2024
REVERE PUBLIC SCHOOLS
Public Hearing
Notice is hereby given in accordance with the
provisions of Section 38N of Chapter 71 of the
Massachusetts General Laws, that the Revere School
Committee will conduct a public hearing on Monday,
June 3, 2024 at 3:00 p.m. in the Emmanuel M.
Ferrante School Committee Room and via Zoom,
îî’î†î„î—îˆî‡ î’î‘ î—î‹îˆ î‚¿î•î–î— îƒ€î’î’î• î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆ î€«îŒîŠî‹ î€¶î†î‹î’î’îî€
101 School Street, relative to the Revere Public
Schools proposed Fiscal Year 2024-2025 School
Operating Budget. All interested persons will be
given the opportunity to be heard for or against the
whole or any part of the proposed budget.
May 24, 31, 2024
cards from their employers.
â€œI sponsored this bill in order
to protect workers who receive
their wages through electronic
wage cards from their employers,â€
said sponsor Rep. Tackey
Chan (D-Quincy). â€œWithout
this bill, employees are subject
to unfair fees when trying to access
their wages. This bill would
help ensure that workers are protected,
made aware of any fees
associated with usage of their
card and provided with a means
of checking their balances without
cost.â€
PROTECT FIREFIGHTERS (H
2339) â€” The House gave initial
approval to a measure that
would require a manufacturer
or person that sells Firefi ghting
Personal Protective Equipment
to any person or government
agency, to provide, beginning
January 1, 2025, written notice
to the buyer, at the time of sale,
if the equipment contains toxic
PSAs, as well as the reason such
chemicals were added to the
equipment. Beginning on January
1, 2027, the bill prohibits
any person from manufacturing,
knowingly selling or distributing
any equipment containing intentionally
added PFAS chemicals.
â€œFirefi ghters put their life on
the line every day to protect the
residents of Massachusetts,â€ said
sponsor Rep. Jim Hawkins (D-Attleboro).
â€œThe gear used to protect
them in the performance of
their duties in fact contains PFAS
which is contributing to the rates
of occupational cancer among
Firefi ghters. [The proposal] will
not only help identify turnout
gear containing PFAS but phase
out such forever chemicals from
this gear going forward.â€
REQUIRE SPRINKLER SYSTEMS
(H 2289) â€” The House gave initial
approval to legislation that
would allow cities and towns to
require the installation of an automatic
sprinkler system in every
newly-constructed 1- or 2-family
home.
Sponsor Rep. Ruth Balser (DNewton)
said that todayâ€™s new
homes burn hotter and faster
than those of the past because
of modern construction techniques
and synthetic furnishings.
She noted that as a result,
residents have only one to three
minutes to flee the average
home without sprinklers.
â€œAutomatic sprinklers work fast
and give people more time to escape,â€
said Balser. â€œAccording to
the Massachusetts Fire Sprinkler
Coalition, having both sprinklers
and smoke alarms reduces the
risk of dying in a home fi re by 80
percent. Additionally, automatic
sprinklers put out 90 percent
of home fi res before the fi re department
arrives, which reduces
~ Legal Notice ~
fi refi ghtersâ€™ exposure to the toxic
products of combustion that
cause cancer.â€
$13 MILLION FOR STUDENT
MENTAL HEALTH PROGRAM â€”
Gov. Healey announced that the
state is investing $13 million in
the Bridge for Resilient Youth in
Transition (BRYT) program, an inschool
program supporting students
who have fallen behind
academically due to challenges
with their mental health. This is
the fi rst time the state has provided
funding to establish BRYT
in schools. Up until now, the program
had only been available to
districts with the economic resources
to get it off the ground.
â€œFar too many young people in
Massachusetts have been aff ected
by a growing mental health
crisis that was only amplifi ed by
the pandemic,â€ said Gov. Healey.
â€œEvery student should have
the support needed to balance
their mental health and education.
Expanding BRYT is a critical
step that is bringing us closer to
that goal.â€
â€œAcross Massachusetts and the
nation, young people are struggling,â€
said?Health and Human
Services Secretary Kate Walsh.
â€œTheyâ€™re expected to juggle academics,
extracurriculars, social
lives and family needs â€” often
in the harsh and unrelenting
light of social media â€” while
also maintaining their mental
health.?Teens frequently have to
navigate multiple systems to address
their health needs.
â€œOur kids shouldnâ€™t have to
â€˜case manageâ€™ themselves â€”
thatâ€™s why BRYT is so valuable,â€
continued Walsh. BRYT helps students
navigate and balance academic
requirements and mental
health treatment, while also providing
the space to take a step
back when needed. Expanding
this program means that more
students than ever before will be
able to access the mental health
support they need, in their home
and at school.?Weâ€™re thrilled to
help make that a reality.â€?
HOW LONG WAS LAST WEEKâ€™S
SESSION?
Beacon Hill Roll Call tracks the
length of time that the House
and Senate were in session each
week. Many legislators say that
legislative sessions are only one
aspect of the Legislatureâ€™s job
and that a lot of important work
is done outside of the House and
Senate chambers. They note that
their jobs also involve committee
work, research, constituent work
and other matters that are important
to their districts. Critics
say that the Legislature does not
meet regularly or long enough to
debate and vote in public view
on the thousands of pieces of
legislation that have been fi led.
They note that the infrequency
and brief length of sessions are
misguided and lead to irresponsible
late-night sessions and a
mad rush to act on dozens of bills
in the days immediately preceding
the end of an annual session.
During the week May 20-24
the House met for a total of six
hours and 49 minutes and the
Senate met for a total of 39 hours
and 47 minutes.
Mon. May 20 House 11:03 a.m.
to 11:16 a.m.
Senate 11:01 a.m. to 3:08 p.m.
Tues. May 21 No House session
Senate 10:05 a.m. to 8:01 p.m
Wed. May 22 House 11:00 a.m.
to 5:26 p.m.
Senate 10:18 a.m. to 10:13 p.m.
Thurs. May 23 House 11:02
a.m. to 11:12 a.m.
Senate 10:15 a.m. to 12:04 a.m.
(Fri day moirning)
Fri. May 24 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.
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Page 17
SOFTBALL | FROM Page 12
So, 15? Yes, that is above and
beyond for the Patriots. A strong
postseason performance would
simply be icing on an already
tremendous 2024.
Essentially, the Patriots have
shown 100% improvement over
the last two seasons. To what
does the coach attribute the
success to? Leadership. Seniors
Juliana Bolton, Isabella Qualtieri,
Luiza Santos, Ally and Riley
Straccia, Dakota Lanes and
Olivia Morris were outstanding
all season.
Their journey to the state
tournament included key victories
in their fi nal two games
of the regular season.
In a thrilling matchup against
Lynn Classical on May 22, the Patriots
triumphed 9-6. The game
saw standout performances
from Lea Doucette, who hit an
inside-the-park home run, and
Caleigh Joyce, who doubled
and scored a crucial run. Danni
Hope Randall pitched a solid
game, striking out 12 over seven
innings, allowing only three
hits and six runs.
The following day, Revere secured
another victory, defeating
Saugus 6-4. Doucette once
again led the charge with another
inside-the-park home run
and a triple, while Shayna Smith
added a sacrifi ce fl y.
Randall continued to shine,
earning the win by pitching seven
innings and striking out fi ve,
while allowing just fi ve hits and
four runs.
Throughout the season, the
Patriots demonstrated their
depth and talent. Doucette
led the team with an impressive.556
batting average, hitting
fi ve home runs and driving in
33 runs. Ally Straccia was also a
key contributor with a.568 average
and two home runs. Shayna
Smith (.483), Riley Straccia (.481)
and Frankie Reed (.452) provided
consistent off ensive support,
each hitting over.450 and combining
for 81 RBIs. Smith had
four homers, and Reed added
two.
Defensively, the Patriots were
anchored by Hope Randall, who
î€©î•î„î‘îŽ î€¥îˆî•î„î•î‡îŒî‘î’
î€°î€¤ î€¯îŒî†îˆî‘î–îˆ î€–î€”î€›î€”î€”
pitched 111 innings, striking out
170 batters with a 3.34 ERA. Gianna
Chiodi also contributed
with 16 innings pitched and 25
strikeouts.
As they head into the state
tournament, the Patriots are
poised to make a strong run,
leveraging their balanced offensive
and defensive strategies.
The teamâ€™s blend of exî‚‡
î€•î€— î€ î€«î’î˜î• î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆ
î‚‡ î€¨îîˆî•îŠîˆî‘î†îœ î€µîˆî“î„îŒî•î–
î€¥î€¨î€µî€¤î€µî€§î€¬î€±î€²
î€³îî˜îî…îŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î€«îˆî„î—îŒî‘îŠ
î€µîˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î—îŒî„î î€‰ î€¦î’îîîˆî•î†îŒî„î î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆ
î€ªî„î– î€©îŒî—î—îŒî‘îŠ î‚‡ î€§î•î„îŒî‘ î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆ
î€™î€”î€šî€‘î€™î€œî€œî€‘î€œî€–î€›î€–
î€¶îˆî‘îŒî’î• î€¦îŒî—îŒîîˆî‘ î€§îŒî–î†î’î˜î‘î—
Tomâ€™s Seal Coating
* Crack Repairing * Pot Hole Filling
* Striping Handicapped Spaces
* Free Estimates
Call Gary: 978-210-4012
î€§î€³î€¶î€°î€©î€³î€²î€©
î€§î€³î€²î€¸î€¶î€¥î€§î€¸î€­î€²î€« î€Š î€±î€¥î€·î€³î€²î€¶î€½
î€§î€³î€±î€±î€©î€¶î€§î€­î€¥î€° î€Š î€¶î€©î€·î€­î€¨î€©î€²î€¸î€­î€¥î€°
î€§î“î’î‡î–î‰î˜î‰ î€ªîî…î˜ î€»î“î–î
î€²î‰î› î€¨î‰î‡îî—
î€²î‰î› î€ªî‰î’î‡îî’î‹
î€¦îî“î‡î î€±î…î—î“î’î–î
î€²î‰î› î€ªî“î™î’îˆî…î˜îî“î’î— î€¶î‰î”î“îî’î˜îî’î‹
î€œî€™î€›î€‘î€—î€˜î€”î€‘î€œî€œî€™î€–
î€µî™î…îîî˜î î€´î–î“îŠî‰î—î—îî“î’î…î î€»î“î–î î€«î€¹î€¥î€¶î€¥î€²î€¸î€©î€©î€¨
î€³î€¶ î€½î€³î€¹î€¶ î€±î€³î€²î€©î€½ î€¦î€¥î€§î€¯î€’ î€­î’î—î™î–î‰îˆ î€Š î€¦î“î’îˆî‰îˆî€’
1. May 31 is National Speak in
Complete Sentences Day;
what is the shortest sentence
in English?
2. Which animal sleeps more:
bat, cat or koala?
3. On June 1, 1494, what national
drink of Scotland was
fi rst written aboutâ€” in a log
â€” â€œEight bolls of malt to Friar
John Cor wherewith to make
aqua vitaeâ€?
4. The Sons of the Desert is a
club devoted to publicizing
what comic pair?
5. Which is the worldâ€™s largest
desert: Antarctic, Gobi or
Sahara?
6. On June 2, 1886, what U.S.
president (last name is the
name of a city) wed at the
White House?
7. June is National Accordion
Awareness Month; what
does squeeze-box mean?
8. Literally, what does the
Greek â€œtyrannosaurus rexâ€
mean in English?
9. What is Brazilâ€™s offi cial language?
10.
On June 3, 1851, what NYC
sports team became the fi rst
to wear uniforms?
Answers
11. At the Salem, Mass., witch trials,
how many people were
accused: 11, 74 or 200-plus?
12. June 4 is National Cheese
Day; what is the most popular
cheese recipe in the USA?
13. What cheese (named after
a person) was fi rst made by
1700s Franciscan friars in
California?
14. What saltwater inhabitant
has â€œduckâ€ in its name?
15. The word piano originated in
what language?
16. On June 5, 1916, what son
of Jewish immigrants was
sworn in as a U.S. Supreme
Court Justice?
17. The Dull Menâ€™s Club honored
Tim Web as 2023 Anorak of
the Year for his â€œPothole Artâ€;
what does anorak mean?
18. What kind of animal was
Tommy, who was the subject
of animal rights trials in
New York?
19. In what video game would
you fi nd a ghost named Pinky?
20.
On June 6, 1933, in Camden
in what state did the first
drive-in movie theatre open?
perienced players and emerging
talent has positioned them
as a formidable opponent in
the upcoming match against
Shrewsbury.
Oâ€™Donnell credited her coaching
staff â€” Victoria Correia and
Hailey Powers â€” for bringing
wisdom, guidance and support
all season.
â€œEveryone played hard this
season and played diff erent positions,â€
Oâ€™Donnell said. â€œThey
were willing to pinch-hit, pinchrun.
Everybody just did their job.
And I had a great coaching staff .â€
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission
from the publisher, The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com
BUYER1
Bautista, Analilia
Herrera, Silvia E
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
SELLER1
BUYER2
230 PROCTOR REALTY LLC
Capps, Harold R Hinostroza, Karen M De Leon, Marlon
Coppola, Adelina
Hlortsi, Romeo Q
Kanj, Remi
Kelley, Phillip
De Leon, Marlon
B&r Tripoli Ft
Ramos, Wilber A
Sheehan, Tyler D
138 Pearl Ave Unit 1 LLC
Zelenina, Uliana 495 Revere Bch Blvd 302 L
Coppola, Adelina
Tripoli, Bartholomew
SELLER2
ADDRESS
230 PROCTOR AVE #1
57 Howard St #1
483 Malden St
57 Howard St #2
505-507 Broadway
138 Pearl Ave #1
DATE PRICE
05.07.24 600000
05.09.24 732000
05.07.24 25000
05.10.24 557000
05.10.24 1200000
05.07.24 440000
495 Revere Beach Blvd #302 05.08.24 412500
Revere
1. I am.
2. Koala
3. Scotch whiskey
4. Laurel & Hardy (Each
local chapter is a
â€œtentâ€ and named after
one of their fi lms.)
5. Antarctic
6. Grover Cleveland
7. Accordion
8. King of tyrant lizards
9. New York Knickerbockers
10.
Portuguese
11. 200-plus
12. Macaroni & cheese
13. Mon t e r ey J a c k
(named after 1800s
cheese producer David
Jacks)
14. The geoduck clam
15. Italian
16. Louis Brandeis
17. 1) a jacket; 2) a studious
person with solitary
interests (British).
(Tim takes pictures
of dioramas he
makes in potholes.)
18. Chimpanzee
19. Pac-Man
20. New Jersey
î€°î€³î€§î€¥î€°î€°î€½ î€³î€»î€²î€©î€¨
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PÍ€×‘C’×˜š   Í(Í€u×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://TpE-smpOJH1v4aosr8v13G3FpyBJPX-YY1qo_ZIR424Î ¯Í`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://9qdeZiiNgjigVbIDsk2VXh_9vMJAMlsfIsDizCK6xmkÍ©ÉÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://9FcYxo3grKoft4XvxRxBZOAjtLNYXvHXVTBDy5wHm5cÍ4PÍ`Ì°Í ×fXÝ™me‡À•×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://RYqMzHt1XEbRr4cT9zyyCSj_9N1vHYaKSbZ5IULaGFIÎ %Í`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://O8S1htCgRvLOIi0Ai9nBvlcW9LWc99-C0Iy7szyx55oÍ}2Í`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://2t-O7m0k9HkSXsrig2hVoLyNgJMPqDw6r3kw-aIvH_oÍ(pÍ`Ì°Í ×fXÝ™me‡À–‘× ×fXÝ™me‡À Í%Í!Ì×9×H¹http://TrinityHomesRE.com××Ðˆ×‰EÚePage 18
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 31, 2024
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î€ºîŒî‘î‡î’îšî–î€ î€¶îŒî‡îŒî‘îŠî€ î€µî’î’îƒ€î‘îŠî€ î€¦î„î•î“îˆî‘î—î•îœ î€‰ î€°î’î•îˆî€„
All estimates, consultations or inspections completed
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Electronics Technician
Full time / part time electronics technician position
working for a family owned and operated company.
Repairing and maintaining amusement machines,
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îŒî‘ î—î‹îˆ î‚¿îˆîî‡î€‘ î€³î’î–î–îŒî…îîˆ î’î™îˆî•î—îŒîîˆ î„î™î„îŒîî„î…îîˆ î’î‘ îšîˆîˆîŽîˆî‘î‡î–î€‘
Experience in the amusement / gaming industry a
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Send resume to jmagee@actionjacksonusa.com
î’î• î†î„îî î€”î€î€›î€“î€“î€î€–î€˜î€™î€î€™î€”î€”î€• îŒî‰ îœî’î˜ î‹î„î™îˆ î„î‘îœ î”î˜îˆî–î—îŒî’î‘î–î€‘
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î€±î’ î€­î’î… î—î’î’ î–îî„îîî€„ î€©î•îˆîˆ î€¨î–î—îŒîî„î—îˆî–î€„
î€¦î’îîîˆî•î†îŒî„î î€‰ î€µîˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î—îŒî„î
î€šî€›î€”î€î€™î€˜î€™î€î€•î€“î€šî€›
î€ î€³î•î’î“îˆî•î—îœ îî„î‘î„îŠîˆîîˆî‘î— î€‰ îî„îŒî‘î—îˆî‘î„î‘î†îˆ
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î€¶î‹î’î™îˆîîŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î•îˆîî’î™î„î
î€¯î„î‘î‡î–î†î„î“îŒî‘îŠî€ î€¨îîˆî†î—î•îŒî†î„îî€ î€³îî˜îî…îŒî‘îŠî€ î€³î„îŒî‘î—îŒî‘îŠî€ î€µî’î’îƒ€î‘îŠî€ î€¦î„î•î“îˆî‘î—î•îœî€ î€©î•î„îîŒî‘îŠî€
î€§îˆî†îŽî–î€ î€©îˆî‘î†îŒî‘îŠî€ î€°î„î–î’î‘î•îœî€ î€§îˆîî’îîŒî—îŒî’î‘î€ î€ªî˜î—î€î’î˜î—î–î€ î€­î˜î‘îŽ î€µîˆîî’î™î„î î€‰ î€§îŒî–î“îˆî•î–î„îî€
î€¦îîˆî„î‘ î€¸î“î–î€ î€¼î„î•î‡î–î€ î€ªî„î•î„îŠîˆî–î€ î€¤î—î—îŒî†î– î€‰ î€¥î„î–îˆîîˆî‘î—î–î€‘ î€·î•î˜î†îŽ î‰î’î• î€«îŒî•îˆî€ î€¥î’î…î†î„î— î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆî–î€‘
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Page 19
î€©î’î• î€¬î‘î”î˜îŒî•îŒîˆî–î€ î€¦î’î‘î—î„î†î— î˜î– î„î— î€šî€›î€”î€î€˜î€˜î€›î€î€”î€“î€œî€” î’î• îˆî€îî„îŒî î˜î–
î„î— îŒî‘î‰î’îšîŒî—î‹îî„î‘îŠî’î€£îŠîî„îŒîî€‘î†î’î
î€³îˆî—îˆî• î€°î„î‘î’î’îŠîŒî„î‘ î€‰ î€°î€¤î€±î€ªî€² î€µîˆî„îî—îœ î€¬î‘î†î€‘ î€¤î†î‹îŒîˆî™îˆî– î€²î™îˆî• î€‡î€– î€°îŒîîîŒî’î‘ îŒî‘
î€¶î„îîˆî– îŒî‘ î€­î˜î–î— î€š î€ºîˆîˆîŽî–î€„ î€¯îˆî— î€¸î– î€¥î•îŒî‘îŠ î€µîˆî–î˜îî—î– î—î’ î€¼î’î˜î‰‘î€°î’î•îˆ î‰î’î• î€¯îˆî–î–î€„î€…
î€µîˆî„î‡îŒî‘îŠî€ î€°î€¤ î€“î€”î€›î€™î€š
î€§îŒî–î†î’î™îˆî• î—î‹îŒî– îˆî›î†îˆî“î—îŒî’î‘î„î î–îŒî‘îŠîîˆî€î‰î„îîŒîîœ î‹î’îîˆ îšîŒî—î‹ î„ îîˆîŠî„î î„î†î†îˆî–î–î’î•îœ î‡îšîˆîîîŒî‘îŠ î˜î‘îŒî—î€ îŒî‡îˆî„îîîœ
î–îŒî—î˜î„î—îˆî‡ î‘îˆî„î• î€°î„î•îŽîˆî— î€¥î„î–îŽîˆî—î€ î—î‹îˆ î†î’îîî˜î—îˆî• î•î„îŒîî€ î–î‹î’î“î“îŒî‘îŠ î†îˆî‘î—îˆî•î–î€ î„î‘î‡ îî„îî’î• î‹îŒîŠî‹îšî„îœî–î€‘
î€¨î‘îî’îœ îˆî„î–îœ î„î†î†îˆî–î– î—î’ î—î‹îˆ î„îŒî•î“î’î•î— î„î‘î‡ î‡î’îšî‘î—î’îšî‘ î€¥î’î–î—î’î‘î€‘ î€§î’î‘î€Šî— îîŒî–î– î’î˜î— î’î‘ î—î‹îŒî–
î†î’î‘î™îˆî‘îŒîˆî‘î—îîœ îî’î†î„î—îˆî‡ îŠîˆîî€„ î€¦î„îî î€¶î˜îˆ î„î— î€™î€”î€šî€î€›î€šî€šî€î€—î€˜î€˜î€– î’î• îˆîî„îŒî î„î— î–î’îî‡îšîŒî—î‹î–î˜îˆî€£îŠîî„îŒîî€‘î†î’îî€‘
î€¦î’îî…îŒî‘îˆî‡ î–î„îîˆî– î—î’î—î„î î‰î’î• î€– î‹î’îîˆî– î’î‰î‰îˆî•îˆî‡ î…îœ î€³îˆî—îˆî• î€°î„î‘î’î’îŠîŒî„î‘ î„î‘î‡ î€°î€¤î€±î€ªî€² î€µîˆî„îî—îœ îŒî‘ îî˜î–î— î€š îšîˆîˆîŽî– îŒî– î’î™îˆî•
î€– îîŒîîîŒî’î‘ î‡î’îîî„î•î–î€‘ î€¬î‰ îœî’î˜ î„î•îˆ î—î‹îŒî‘îŽîŒî‘îŠ î’î‰ î–îˆîîîŒî‘îŠ îîˆî— î˜î– î…î•îŒî‘îŠ î•îˆî–î˜îî—î– î—î’ îœî’î˜î€‘ î€ºîˆ îšîŒîî î…î•îŒî‘îŠ îœî’î˜ îî’î•îˆ î‰î’î• îîˆî–î–î€‘
î€¨î›î“îˆî•îŒîˆî‘î†îˆ î—î‹îˆ î€³î’îšîˆî• î’î‰ î€µîˆî–î˜îî—î– îšîŒî—î‹ î€³îˆî—îˆî• î€°î„î‘î’î’îŠîŒî„î‘ î„î‘î‡î„
î€°î€¤î€±î€ªî€² î€µîˆî„îî—îœ î€¬î‘î†î€‘ î€²î˜î• î—î•î„î†îŽ î•îˆî†î’î•î‡ î–î“îˆî„îŽî– î‰î’î• îŒî—î–îˆîî‰î‰‘îˆî
î—î‹î•îˆîˆ î‹î’îîˆî– î–î’îî‡î€ î—î’î—î„îîŒî‘îŠ î’î™îˆî• î€‡î€– îîŒîîîŒî’î‘ îŒî‘ îî˜î–î— î–îˆî™îˆî‘ îšîˆîˆîŽî–î€‘
î€¬î‰ îœî’î˜î€Šî•îˆ î†î’î‘î–îŒî‡îˆî•îŒî‘îŠ î–îˆîîîŒî‘îŠî€ î—î•î˜î–î— î˜î– î—î’ î‡îˆîîŒî™îˆî• îˆî›î†îˆî“î—îŒî’î‘î„î
î•îˆî–î˜îî—î–î€‘ î€ºîˆ î“î•îŒî’î•îŒî—îŒîîˆ îî„î›îŒîîŒîîŒî‘îŠ î™î„îî˜îˆ î‰î’î• î’î˜î• î†îîŒîˆî‘î—î–î€‘
îŒ
î€ºîŒî—î‹ î„ îîŒî‰îˆî—îŒîîˆ î’î‰ î•îˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î†îœ îŒî‘ î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î–î€ î€³îˆî—îˆî• î€°î„î‘î’î’îŠîŒî„î‘î’
î…î•îŒî‘îŠî– î˜î‘î“î„î•î„îîîˆîîˆî‡ îî’î†î„î îŽî‘î’îšîîˆî‡îŠîˆ î„î‘î‡ îˆî›î“îˆî•î—îŒî–îˆ î—î’
î€°î€¤î€±î€ªî€² î€µîˆî„îî—îœ î„î‘î‡ îŒî—î– î†îîŒîˆî‘î—îˆîîˆî€‘ î€ºî‹îˆî‘ îœî’î˜ îˆî‘î—î•î˜î–î— î€³îˆî—îˆî• î—î’îˆ
îî„î•îŽîˆî— îœî’î˜î• î“î•î’î“îˆî•î—îœî€ îœî’î˜î€Šî•îˆ î‘î’î— îî˜î–î— îŠîˆî—î—îŒî‘îŠ î„ î•îˆî„î îˆî–î—î„î—îˆ î„îŠîˆî‘î—î€ž
îœî’î˜î€Šî•îˆ îŠî„îŒî‘îŒî‘îŠ î„ î“î„î–î–îŒî’î‘î„î—îˆ î„î‡î™î’î†î„î—îˆ î‰î’î• î—î‹îˆ î†î’îîî˜î‘îŒî—îœî€‘ î‘
î„
î€¥îˆî‘îˆî‰îŒî— î‰î•î’î î’î˜î• îˆî›î†îˆî“î—îŒî’î‘î„î î†î’îîî˜î‘îŒî†î„î—îŒî’î‘ î–îŽîŒîîî– î„î‘î‡ î‡îˆîˆî“î€
î•î’î’î—îˆî‡ î…îˆîîŒîˆî‰ îŒî‘ î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î– î„î– î‹îˆ î‡îˆî–î†î•îŒî…îˆî– î„î‘î‡ îî„î•îŽîˆî—î– îœî’î˜î•î–
î“î•î’î“îˆî•î—îœ îšîŒî—î‹ î“î•îˆî†îŒî–îŒî’î‘ î„î‘î‡ î†î„î•îˆî€‘ î€¦î‹î’î’î–îˆ î€³îˆî—îˆî• î„î‘î‡ î€°î„î‘îŠî’
î€µîˆî„îî—îœ î€¬î‘î†î€‘ î—î’ î–î‹î’îšî†î„î–îˆ î‘î’î— î’î‘îîœ îœî’î˜î• î‹î’îîˆ î…î˜î— î„îî–î’î—î‹îˆ î™îŒî…î•î„î‘î—
îˆî–î–îˆî‘î†îˆ î’î‰ î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î– îŒî—î–îˆîî‰ î„î‘î‡ îŒî—î– î–î˜î•î•î’î˜î‘î‡îŒî‘îŠ î—î’îšî‘î– î„î‘î‡ î†îŒî—îŒîˆî–î€‘
î’
î€¸î€±î€§î€¨î€µ î€¤î€ªî€µî€¨î€¨î€°î€¨î€±î€·
î€·î’î“î–î‰îŒîˆîî‡î€ î€°î€¤ î€“î€”î€œî€›î€–
î€¨î›î†îŒî—îŒî‘îŠ î€¤î‘î‘î’î˜î‘î†îˆîîˆî‘î—î€„ î€ºîˆî€Šî•îˆ î—î‹î•îŒîîîˆî‡ î—î’
î„î‘î‘î’î˜î‘î†îˆ î—î‹î„î— î—î‹îŒî– î†î„î“î—îŒî™î„î—îŒî‘îŠ î•î„î‘î†î‹î€î–î—îœîîˆ
î•îˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î†îˆ î‘îˆî–î—îîˆî‡ îŒî‘ î€·î’î“î–î‰îŒîˆîî‡ î€°î€¤ îšîŒî—î‹ î„î‘
îˆî‘î—îŒî†îŒî‘îŠ î“î•îŒî†îˆ î—î„îŠ î’î‰ î€‡î€›î€”î€“î€î€“î€“î€“î€ î–îšîŒî‰î—îîœ
î‰î’î˜î‘î‡ îŒî—î– îî„î—î†î‹ î„î‘î‡ îšîˆî‘î— î˜î‘î‡îˆî•
î„îŠî•îˆîˆîîˆî‘î— îšîŒî—î‹îŒî‘ î€²î€±î€¨ î€ºî€¨î€¨î€®î€„ î€·î‹î„î‘îŽ
îœî’î˜ î‰î’î• î—î‹îˆ î’î™îˆî•îšî‹îˆîîîŒî‘îŠ îŒî‘î—îˆî•îˆî–î— î„î‘î‡
î–î˜î“î“î’î•î—î€‘ î€®îˆîˆî“ î„î‘ îˆîœîˆ î’î˜î— î‰î’î• îî’î•îˆ îˆî›î†îŒî—îŒî‘îŠ
î„î‘î‘î’î˜î‘î†îˆîîˆî‘î—î– î—î‹î„î— îšîŒîî î–î‹î’îšî†î„î–îˆ îî’î•îˆ
îˆî›î”î˜îŒî–îŒî—îˆ î‹î’îîˆî–î€‘ î€©î’î• î„î‘îœ îŒî‘î”î˜îŒî•îŒîˆî– î’î• î—î’
îˆîî…î„î•îŽ î’î‘ îœî’î˜î• î’îšî‘ îî’î˜î•î‘îˆîœ îŒî‘ î—î‹îˆ îšî’î•îî‡
î’î‰ î•îˆî„î îˆî–î—î„î—îˆî€ î‡î’î‘î€Šî— î‹îˆî–îŒî—î„î—îˆ î—î’ î•îˆî„î†î‹ î’î˜î— î—î’
î€³îˆî—îˆî• î„î— î€šî€›î€”î€î€›î€•î€“î€î€˜î€™î€œî€“î€‘ î€¼î’î˜î• î‡î•îˆî„î î‹î’îîˆ
î†î’î˜îî‡ î…îˆ îî˜î–î— î„ î†î„îî î„îšî„îœî€„
î€»î‰ î›î…î’î˜ î˜î“ î€¬î‰î…î– î€ªî–î“î‘ î€½î“î™
î€ºî‹î„î—î€Šî– îœî’î˜î• î‡î•îˆî„î î‹î’îîˆ î‰îˆî„î—î˜î•îˆî€¢ î€¬î– îŒî— î„ î†î’îîœ î‰îŒî•îˆî“îî„î†îˆ î‰î’î• î—î‹î’î–îˆ î†î‹îŒîîîœ î‘îŒîŠî‹î—î–î€¢ î€¤ î–î“î„î†îŒî’î˜î– îŽîŒî—î†î‹îˆî‘
î“îˆî•î‰îˆî†î— î‰î’î• îœî’î˜î• îŒî‘î‘îˆî• î†î‹îˆî‰î€¢ î€²î• îî„îœî…îˆ î„ î–î—î˜î‘î‘îŒî‘îŠ î…î„î†îŽîœî„î•î‡ î’î„î–îŒî– î‰î’î• î–î˜îîîˆî• î…î„î•î…îˆî†î˜îˆî–î€¢ î€¹îŒî–îŒî— î˜î–
î’î‘ î€©î„î†îˆî…î’î’îŽ î„î— î€°î„î‘îŠî’ î€µîˆî„îî—îœ î€ î€¶î˜îˆ î€³î„îî’îî…î„ î„î‘î‡ îîˆî—î‰”î– îŠîˆî— î—î‹îˆ î†î’î‘î™îˆî•î–î—î„îŒî’î‘ î–î—î„î•î—îˆî‡ î’î‘ î’î˜î•
î†î’îîîˆî‘î— î–îˆî†î—îŒî’î‘î€‘ î€¼î’î˜ î†î„î‘ î„îî–î’ î–îˆî‘î‡ î˜î– î„ î—îˆî›î— î’î• î†î„îî î˜î– î„î— î€šî€›î€”î€î€˜î€˜î€›î€î€”î€“î€œî€” î’î• î–îˆî‘î‡ î˜î– î„î‘ îˆî€îî„îŒî î„
îŒî‘î‰î’îšîŒî—î‹îî„î‘îŠî’î€£îŠîî„îŒîî€‘î†î’îî€‘ î€¯îˆî—î€Šî– î–î—î„î•î— î„ î†î’î‘î™îˆî•î–î„î—îŒî’î‘ î„î‘î‡ îŠîˆî— îŒî‘î–î“îŒî•îˆî‡ î…îœ îˆî„î†î‹ î’î—î‹îˆî•î€Šî– î‡î•îˆî„î
î‹î’îîˆ î™îŒî–îŒî’î‘î–î€‘ î€³îî˜î–î€ îšî‹î’ îŽî‘î’îšî–î€¢ î€ºîˆ îîŒîŠî‹î— îî˜î–î— î‹î„î™îˆ î—î‹îˆ î“îˆî•î‰îˆî†î— î“î•î’î“îˆî•î—îœ î—î‹î„î— îî„î—î†î‹îˆî– îœî’î˜î•
îšîŒî–î‹îîŒî–î—î€„
î€ºî‹î„î— îšî’î˜îî‡ îœî’î˜î• î“î•î’î“îˆî•î—îœ î–îˆîî î‰î’î• îŒî‘ î—î’î‡î„îœî‰”î– îî„î•îŽîˆî—î€¢
î€¸î‘îî’î†îŽ î—î‹îˆ î—î•î˜îˆ î™î„îî˜îˆ î’î‰ îœî’î˜î• î“î•î’î“îˆî•î—îœ îšîŒî—î‹ î„ î†î’îî“î„î•î„î—îŒî™îˆ îî„î•îŽîˆî— î„î‘î„îîœî–îŒî– î‰î•î’î î€°î€¤î€±î€ªî€² î€µî€¨î€¤î€¯î€·î€¼ î€¬î€±î€¦î€‘î€„ î€ºî’î‘î‡îˆî•îŒî‘îŠ î„î…î’î˜î— îœî’î˜î•
î‹î’îîˆî‰”î– îšî’î•î—î‹î€¢ î€¯î’î’îŽ î‘î’ î‰î˜î•î—î‹îˆî•î€„ î€¦î’î‘î—î„î†î— î˜î– î„î— î€šî€›î€”î€î€˜î€˜î€›î€î€”î€“î€œî€” î’î• îˆîî„îŒî î„î— îŒî‘î‰î’îšîŒî—î‹îî„î‘îŠî’î€£îŠîî„îŒîî€‘î†î’îî€‘ î€§î’î‘î‰”î— îîŒî–î– î’î˜î— î’î‘ î—î‹îŒî–
î™î„îî˜î„î…îîˆ î’î“î“î’î•î—î˜î‘îŒî—îœ î€ î†î’î‘î—î„î†î— î˜î– î—î’î‡î„îœî€„
î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î–î€ î€°î€¤ î€“î€”î€œî€“î€™
î€«îˆî•îˆî‰”î– îœî’î˜î• î†î‹î„î‘î†îˆ î—î’ î’îšî‘ î‘î’î— î’î‘îˆî€ î…î˜î— î—îšî’ î…îˆî„î˜î—îŒî‰î˜î î“îŒîˆî†îˆî– î’î‰ îî„î‘î‡ îŒî‘ î—î‹îˆ î–î’î˜îŠî‹î—î€î„î‰î—îˆî•
î„î•îˆî„ î’î‰ î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î–î€‘ î€·î‹îŒî– î˜î‘îŒî”î˜îˆ î“î„î†îŽî„îŠîˆ î’î‰î‰îˆî•î– îˆî‘î‡îîˆî–î– î“î’î–î–îŒî…îŒîîŒî—îŒîˆî– î‰î’î• î†î•îˆî„î—îŒî‘îŠ îœî’î˜î•
î‡î•îˆî„î îˆî–î—î„î—îˆ î’î• îŒî‘î™îˆî–î—îîˆî‘î— î“î•î’îîˆî†î—î€‘ î€±îˆî–î—îîˆî‡ îŒî‘ î—î‹îˆ î—î•î„î‘î”î˜îŒî î…îˆî„î˜î—îœ î’î‰ î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î–î€ îˆî„î†î‹
î“î„î•î†îˆî î†î’îîˆî– îšîŒî—î‹ îŒî—î– î’îšî‘ î„î‡î‡î•îˆî–î– î„î‘î‡ î„ î†î’îî…îŒî‘îˆî‡ î“î•îŒî†îˆ î’î‰ î€‡î€œî€œî€˜î€î€“î€“î€“î€‘ î€§î’î‘î‰”î— îîŒî–î– î’î˜î— î’î‘
î—î‹îŒî– îŒî‘î†î•îˆî‡îŒî…îîˆ î™î„îî˜îˆî€„ î€¦î„îî î€¶î˜îˆ î„î— î€™î€”î€šî€î€›î€šî€šî€î€—î€˜î€˜î€– î’î• îˆîî„îŒî î„î— î–î’îî‡îšîŒî—î‹î–î˜îˆî€£îŠîî„îŒîî€‘î†î’îî€‘
î€³îˆî„î…î’î‡îœî€ î€°î€¤ î€“î€”î€œî€™î€“
î€§îŒî–î†î’î™îˆî• î—î‹îˆ î†î‹î„î•î î’î‰ î—î‹îŒî–
î‡îˆîîŒîŠî‹î—î‰î˜î î€•î€î…îˆî‡î•î’î’î î‹î„î™îˆî‘î€
î‰îˆî„î—î˜î•îŒî‘îŠ îŠîîˆî„îîŒî‘îŠ î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡ î‰îî’î’î•î–
î„î‘î‡ î„î…î˜î‘î‡î„î‘î— î‘î„î—î˜î•î„î îîŒîŠî‹î—
î—î‹î•î’î˜îŠî‹î’î˜î—î€‘ î€·î‹îŒî– î“îˆî—î€î‰î•îˆîˆî€ î–îî’îŽîˆî€
î‰î•îˆîˆ î•îˆî—î•îˆî„î— î’î‰î‰îˆî•î– î†î’î‘î™îˆî‘îŒîˆî‘î—
îšî„î–î‹îˆî•î€’î‡î•îœîˆî• î‹î’î’îŽî˜î“î– î„î‘î‡ î•îˆî”î˜îŒî•îˆî–
î„ î€™î€›î€“î€Ž î†î•îˆî‡îŒî— î–î†î’î•îˆ îšîŒî—î‹ î•îˆî‰îˆî•îˆî‘î†îˆî–î€‘
î€¦î’î‘î—î„î†î— î€µî’î–î„ î€µîˆî–î†îŒîŠî‘î’ î„î— î€šî€›î€”î€î€›î€•î€“î€
î€“î€“î€œî€™ î’î• î–î’îî‡îšîŒî—î‹î•î’î–î„î€£îŠîî„îŒîî€‘î†î’îî€‘
î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆî€ î€°î€¤ î€“î€•î€”î€˜î€”
î€¬îîî„î†î˜îî„î—îˆ î€”î€î…îˆî‡î•î’î’î î„î“î„î•î—îîˆî‘î—
îšîŒî—î‹ î’î†îˆî„î‘ î™îŒîˆîš îŒî‘ î„ îšîˆîî
îî„îŒî‘î—î„îŒî‘îˆî‡ î…î˜îŒîî‡îŒî‘îŠî€ î€‡î€•î€î€•î€˜î€“î€‘î€“î€“
îî’î‘î—î‹îîœ î•îˆî‘î— îŒî‘î†îî˜î‡îˆî– î‹îˆî„î—î€ î‹î€‘îšî€‘î€
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Providing Real Estate Services for 17 Years
Servicing Saugus, Melrose, Wakefield, Malden,
all North Shore communities, Boston and beyond.
43 Dearborn Street, Medford
List Price:$949,900
974-976 Main Street, 4, Melrose
List Price:$414,000
Open Houses: Friday 5-7, Saturday and Sunday 12-1:30
7 Room, 4 Bedroom, 3 Full
bath, 2500 Square Foot,
Fantastic Single Family Colonial
style home in one of the hottest
neighborhoods in Medford.
For a free home
market analysis,
contact us today.
Dale Brousseau 617.957.2728
781.231.9800
4 Room, 2 Bedroom, 1
Full Bath,
789 Square Foot
Condo located at desirable
Woodbriar Heights.
Lucia Ponte 781.883.8130
TRINITY REAL ESTATE | 321 MAIN STREET| SAUGUS, MA| VILLAGE PARK
TrinityHomesRE.com
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 31, 2024
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- 3 BEDROOM, 1 BATHROOM, 7
ROOM COLONIAL SITUATED ON A NICE
CORNER LOT. THIS HOME HAS MANY
IMPROVEMENTS DONE WITHIN THE LAST 10
YEARS. UPDATES INCLUDE GAS HEAT 2015,
ROOF 2019, NEW HOT WATER HEATER 2024,
HARDWOOD FLOORS REFINISHED ON FIRST
FLOOR 2024, NEW CARPET 2024, NEW STOVE &
MICROWAVE 2024, DISHWASHER 2021, NEW
TUB SURROUND 2022, VANITY 2022, LIGHT
FIXTURES AND FRESH PAINT THROUGHOUT.
EAT-IN KITCHEN, FORMAL DINING, SPACIOUS
LIVING ROOM. SAUGUS $525,000
CALL DEBBIE 617-678-9710
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- FULLY RENOVATED 4 BEDROOM,
2.5 BATHROOM COLONIAL.THIS HOME HAS
NEW ROOF, SIDING, WINDOWS, GAS HEAT
HVAC SYSTEMS, AND C/A. YOU WILL BE
WOWED BY THE OPEN CONCEPT WITH NEW
KITCHEN WITH HIDDEN PANTRY, CUSTOM
BUILT ENTERTAINMENT CENTER, AND NEW
CUSTOM TILED BATHROOMS. BONUS
FINISHED 3RD FLOOR FOR ADDED SPACE!
THERE IS ALSO NEW RED OAK FLOORING AND
FRESH PAINT THROUGHOUT. THIS IS NOT ONE
TO MISS!! BEVERLY $999,999
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- THIS 3+ BEDROOM, 3 BATH
RANCH IS NEWLY RENOVATED AND OFFERS
PLENTY OF ROOM FOR EVERYONE! THE
KITCHEN FEATURES WHITE & GRAY CABINETS
WITH AN ISLAND OPEN TO THE DINING AREA
AND WINDOWS OVERLOOKING THE PRIVATE
BACKYARD, DECK AND IN-GROUND POOL.
THE EXTENDED FAMILY BECAUSE THERE IS AN
IN-LAW UNIT WITH AN ADDITIONAL KITCHEN,
LIVING/ DINING ROOM, BEDROOM, AND BATH.
LYNNFIELD $ 949,900
CALL DEBBIE 617-678-9710
FOR SALE
FOR SALE-NEW CONSTRUCTION WITH 3800
SQFT OF LIVING! THIS HOME FEATURES 9â€™
CEILINGS ON BOTH FLOORS, CUSTOM
KITCHEN THERMADOR APPLIANCES, 10'
ISLAND, FP IN FAMILY ROOM WITH COFFERED
CEILING, WIDE PLANK OAK 6" HW FLOORS.
2ND FLOOR LAUNDRY, 4 BEDROOMS, LARGE
PRIMARY SUITE W/ CUSTOM WALK-IN CLOSET
& WALK-IN SHOWER. ENTERTAINMENT AREA
WITH A FULL BATHROOM AND A CUSTOM WET
BAR IN BASEMENT.
LYNNFIELD $1,540,000
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
COMING SOON COMING SOON- TO A HIGHLY SOUGHT AFTER
NEIGHBORHOOD. OVERSIZED SPLIT ENTRY ON A
LEVEL, SIZABLE LOT. 3+ BEDROOMS, 3.5
BATHROOMS, 2800+ SQFT. ROOM FOR EXTENDED
FAMILY IN FINISHED BASEMENT. CUSTOM BUILT
BY ONE OWNER AND WELL CARED FOR.
SAUGUS
CALL DANIELLE FOR DETAILS 978-987-9535
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- NOTHING TO DO BUT MOVE RIGHT
INTO THIS COMPLETELY REMODELED CAPE WITH
PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP THROUGHOUT. LARGE EAT
IN KITCHEN, MASTER SUITE WITH FULL BATH.
CORNER LOT GARAGE GREAT YARD. LYNN
$649,500
CALL RHONDA 781-705-0842
BUILDABLE LOT
â€¢ SAUGUS $175,000 CALL KEITH 781-389-0791 FOR FURTHER DETAILS
RENTALS
â€¢ RED OAK HARDWOOD FLOORING THROUGHOUT UNIT, NEWER KITCHEN CABINETS, GRANITE
COUNTERS. UNIT HAS GOOD SIZE EAT IN KITCHEN, DINING ROOM, LIVING ROOM, OFFICE AND
BEDROOM. BATHROOM HAS SHOWER, TILE FLOOR AND GRANITE COUNTERS. IN-UNIT STACKABLE
WASHER AND DRYER. REFRIGERATOR, MICROWAVE, WASHER AND DRYER INCLUDED. 2 OFF
STREET PARKING SPACES. IF YOU'RE LOOKING FOR A NICE QUIET APARTMENT, THIS MAY BE FOR
YOU. RIGHT ON BUS LINE. NO PETS AND NO SMOKING. SAUGUS $2,000
â€¢ SPACIOUS SECOND FLOOR ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT. SUNNY AND BRIGHT. OFFERING A LARGE
EAT-IN KITCHEN WHICH IS OPEN TO THE LIVING ROOM. LARGE BEDROOM WITH GOOD SIZE CLOSET.
THERE IS ALSO A GREAT STORAGE CLOSET IN THIS UNIT. FULL BATH. COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY
IN THE BASEMENT. OUTDOOR SPACE. TWO CARS OFF STREET PARKING. GOOD CREDIT AND
REFERENCES PLEASE. THREE MONTHS' RENT REQUIRED TO MOVE IN. NO SMOKING, NO PETS.
SAUGUS $2,250
CALL RHONDA 781-705-0842
LOOKING TO
BUY OR SELL?
MOBILE HOMES
ANTHONY
COGLIANO
(857) 246-1305
CALL HIM
FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE
â€¢ GREAT YOUNG ONE BEDROOM UNIT IN A VERY DESIRABLE PARK IN MOVE IN CONDITION. 2 CAR
PARKING. LOW PARK RENT OF 410 A MONTH INCLUDES RE TAXES, WATER AND SEWER, RUBBISH
REMOVAL AND , SNOW PLOWING. NO DOGS ALLOWED. SOLD AS IS WILL NOT LAST.
DANVERS 89,900
â€¢ PRE-CONSTRUCTION. WELCOME TO SHADY OAKS BRAND NEW MANUFACTURED HOME
COMMUNITY. AFFORDABLE YET UPSCALE LIVING , EACH HOME HAS AMPLE SQUARE FOOTAGE
WITH 2 BEDROOMS AND 2 BATHS. OPEN CONCEPT PERFECT FOR ENTERTAINING. HIGH QUALITY
FINISHES FROM TOP TIER APPLIANCES TO ELEGANT FINISHES. OCCUPANCY DATE APRIL 2024
DANVERS PRICES START AT $229,000 FOR 2 BEDROOM, $159,900 FOR 1 BEDROOM
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
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