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Vol. 25, No. 21
Have a Safe & Happy Memorial Day!
-FREE- www.advocatenews.net
Published Every Friday
781-233-4446
Friday, May 27, 2022
REMEMBERING THE FALLEN Reversing the Vote
Town Meeting supports
the sale of recreational marijuana
in Saugus, overturning a 2018 vote
that rejected pot money
By Mark E. Vogler
T
he Annual Town Meeting
voted unanimously
in 2018 for an article
that banned the operation
of any marijuana retail establishments
in town. But much
has changed over the last four
years â€” particularly a decline
in town revenue in the midst
of two-plus years of coping
with the COVID-19 pandemic
â€” which contributed to this
weekâ€™s overwhelming approval
of an article that allows for the
recreational sale of marijuana.
â€œWe should reap the benefi ts
just like any other community,â€
Selectman Jeff rey Cicolini said,
imploring Town Meeting members
to enable Saugus to join
the growing list of communities
in Massachusetts that are
tapping into recreational marijuana
sales as a lucrative revenue
stream.
Cicolini noted that the Saugus
Public Schools is in need
of more funds as it attempts to
achieve a fi ve-year goal of rising
from the bottom 10 percent
A GOLD STAR WIFE: Donna Whittemore-Farris, of Saugus, is a frequent visitor to Riverside Cemetery
for Memorial Day observances. Here, she turns out for a Memorial Day ceremony in 2019 to remember
her late husband, U.S. Army veteran Everett Farris, who served in the Vietnam War. Whittemore-Farris
blames his death (2010) on exposure to chemicals which left him paralyzed years after his Vietnam
service. He was a decorated veteran who served in the Anti-Tank Company of the 169th Infantry Regiment.
Please see inside for more photos and Memorial Day coverage, including â€œThe Sounds of Saugus.â€
(Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
~ Home of the Week ~
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in the state in academic performance
to the top 10 percent.
The town will also need to fi gure
out a way to fund its share
â€” estimated to be as high as
$41 million over the next 30
years â€” of the proposed new
$317 million Northeast Metro
Tech School.
â€œWe have a lot of needs in
this community. We have a lot
of big-ticket items coming up,â€
Cicolini said.
â€œWe have a revenue problem.
We have to get creative and
fi nd new alternatives,â€ he said.
During Mondayâ€™s fourth and
fi nal session of this yearâ€™s Annual
Town Meeting, members
voted 31-13 (with five members
absent) for Article 36 â€” an
amendment to the townâ€™s Zoning
Bylaws to allow for marijuana
establishments in town.
Cogliano cites â€œdeplorableâ€
parks and playgrounds
Board of Selectmen Chair Anthony
Cogliano, who authored
the article, lobbied for support
VOTE | SEE PAGE 2
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LEGAL NOTICE
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 27, 2022
VOTE | FROM PAGE 1
SAUGUS BOARD OF SELECTMEN
PUBLIC HEARING
Notice is hereby given that the Saugus Board
of Selectmen will conduct a public hearing on
the request of The Lab Spa, Raymond Bradley
Lima Da Silva, proprietor, for a Special Permit
(S2) to operate Massage and Cupping Therapy,
Skin Care, and Beauty Services, at 999 Broadway,
Saugus, MA 01906.
This Public Hearing will be held in the Saugus
î€·î’îšî‘ î€«î„îî î€¤î˜î‡îŒî—î’î•îŒî˜îî€ î–îˆî†î’î‘î‡ îƒ€î’î’î•î€ î€•î€œî€› î€¦îˆî‘î—î•î„î
Street, Saugus, MA, 01906 on June 14, 2022 at
7:15 PM.
Anthony Cogliano, Chairman
Janice K. Jarosz, Temp. Clerk
May 20, 27, 2022
with a video he made which
documented â€œdeplorable conditionsâ€
at Saugus parks, including
Golden Hills Park, Saugus
Elks Park, Oaklandvale
Park, Lynnhurst Park, Stocker
Park, Anna Parker Playground,
Waybright Elementary School
and Stackpole Field.
â€œWe should not have our
parks and playgrounds that our
children play on be looking like
this,â€ Cogliano said.
Conditions at several of these
parks violated local safety
codes in addition to being unkempt
and in need of repairs.
Itâ€™s a recipe for disaster. Thereâ€™s
no need of this,â€ Cogliano said.
Cogliano acknowledged
that the town doesnâ€™t have the
money or manpower to address
the abundance of defi -
ciencies at the parks. And any
money generated by recreational
marijuana sales would
go into the general fund. Furthermore,
itâ€™s the prerogative
of the town manager and his
staff to determine how to address
the widespread park defi
ciencies. Cogliano cited the
substandard parks as an example
of unmet town needs that
could be addressed with the
revenue generated from recreational
marijuana sales.
Provisions to protect
the public
The following conditions
apply for marijuana establishments
within the Business
Highway Sustainable Development
Zoning District (BHSD).
The amended version of the
approved regulations state
that marijuana establishments:
May not be located within
1,000 feet of a pre-existing
public or private school providing
education in kindergarten
or any grades 1 through 12.
The buff er zone distance shall
be measured along the shortest
publicly accessible pedestrian
travel path from the Marijuana
Establishment entrance
to the school entrance.
May not be located within
1,000 feet of a park or playground.
The buff er zone distance
shall be measured along
the shortest publicly accessible
pedestrian travel path from
the Marijuana Establishment
entrance to the park or playground.
May
not be located within
1,000 feet of each other.
May not be located in buildings
that contain any residential
units, including transitional
housing, such as hotels, motels
and dormitories.
For Advertising with Results, call The Advocate Newspapers
at 781-233-4446 or info@advocatenews.net
Opponents make their case
About a third of the members
expressed opposition
to allowing recreational pot
shops to locate in Saugus.
Those voting against Article
36 include Mark J. Bell, Susan
C. Dunn and Susan Paloma of
Precinct 1; Christine M. Moreschi
of Precinct 2; Rick A. Smith
of Precinct 3; William Leuci and
Robert C. Northrup of Precinct
4; Pamela J. Goodwin, Jaclyn A.
Hickman and Brenton H. Spencer
of Precinct 5; Jeanie Bartolo
of Precinct 6; Robert A. Palleschi
of Precinct 7; and Peter Manoogian,
Sr. of Precinct 10.
â€œIâ€™m not really buying it,â€ Precinct
7 Town Meeting Member
Robert A. Palleschi said, disputing
the argument that the recreational
pot sales would be in
the communityâ€™s best interests.
â€œWhat does it really add
to the community â€¦ We
shouldnâ€™t have it because we
donâ€™t need it and we donâ€™t
want it,â€ he said.
Precinct 10 Town Meeting
Member Peter Manoogian offered
an amendment to refer
the article to the Board of Selectmen
so they could put the
measure on the ballot for residents
to vote on. Manoogian
cited statistics showing that
seven of the townâ€™s 10 precincts
voted against the legalization
of marijuana back in
November of 2016 and that
the town voted 7,652 to 6,710
â€” 53 percent â€” against the
measure.
Meanwhile, voters statewide
approved Question 4 by
a 54 percent margin, allowing
the possession, use, distribution
and cultivation of limited
amounts of marijuana by persons
age 21 and older.
Manoogian noted that two
precincts â€” 9 (318 more opposed)
and 7 (220 more opposed)
â€” have the greatest
margin of opposition to Question
4 and happened to be located
near Route 1. That would
be the location set aside for future
marijuana establishments.
â€œI think the numbers are compelling,
particularly in those
precincts surrounding Route
1,â€ Manoogian said.
â€œI see this as an issue of democracy,â€
Manoogian said.
â€œRefer this back to the entire
Board of Selectmen to place on
the ballot,â€ he said.
But School Committee Member
John Hatch took umbrage
to Manoogianâ€™s â€œdemocracyâ€
argument. â€œI disagree with the
speaker,â€ Hatch said.
â€œWe have an elected Town
Meeting. This is a democracy,â€
he said.
He noted â€œthe structural defi -
citâ€ in the townâ€™s fi scal situation,
which he said has made it
diffi cult for the School Department
to put its budget together
this year.
Board of Selectmen ViceChair
Debra Panetta said she
is sensitive to the public vote
that was taken in 2016, showing
that 53 percent of Saugus
residents opposed the legalization
of marijuana. â€œAll in all,
it comes down to what the residents
want,â€ Panetta said.
â€œI donâ€™t see an issue with putting
this on the ballot,â€ she said.
Manoogianâ€™s motion failed
16 to 28.
Panetta pointed out that the
neighboring communities of
Lynn, Malden and Melrose already
have marijuana facilities
in their communities. Yet, several
other communities located
near Saugus â€” Lynnfi eld,
Revere and Wakefi eld â€” have
not adopted regulations allowing
for the sale of recreational
marijuana.
Sacrificing Celtics playoff
tickets
Precinct 8 Town Meeting
Member William E. Cross III,
THE FINAL TALLY: A scoresheet projected on a screen over
the stage area in the second fl oor auditorium at Saugus
Town Hall shows how members voted on Article 36 â€” 3113
supporting it â€” an amendment to the townâ€™s Zoning Bylaws
to allow for marijuana establishments in town. (Saugus
Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://FNfbYSnWhj0DcTKSld4-Cf3p6v-Cd5z9jYn0Hb_Mt8oÍ%ïÍ`Ì°Í ×b‰#i»^y—T×‰EÚ5THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 27, 2022
Page 3
Rain or shine,
history will be made
First woman commander of the U.S. Constitution
will lead this yearâ€™s Memorial Day parade as grand marshal
By Mark E. Vogler
T
PROTECTING THE STUDENTS: Saugus Public Schools Superintendent
Erin McMahon addressed Town Meeting members
at their Monday (May 23) meeting on her concerns about
the potential impact that Route 1 marijuana establishments would
have on the Saugus Middle-High School, which is located nearby.
(Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
who is a Saugus Fire Department
captain in the Fire Prevention/Investigation
Unit,
said he received calls from
residents in his precincts requesting
that he attend Monday
nightâ€™s session because of
the vote on Article 36. â€œI gave
up my Celtics tickets to be here
tonight,â€ Cross told his colleagues.
He spoke in opposition
to the Manoogian amendment
and in support of Article
36.
Cross said he voted against
legalizing marijuana in 2016,
but has since changed his
mind. â€œPeople didnâ€™t know
what they were voting on,â€
Cross said.
Precinct 2 Town Meeting
Member Christopher P. Riley
said he didnâ€™t regard the 2016
vote as the wrong vote back
then. â€œIt was a diff erent time.
Recreational marijuana was
not proven,â€ Riley said.
â€œThis is here, whether we
like it or not,â€ Riley said, adding
that he thinks it is an opportunity
to develop more revenue
for the town.
Cogliano said he is convinced
that the marijuana facilities
heâ€™s reviewed â€œare extremely
professionally run.â€
Cogliano introduced Attorney
Jonathan Capano, who has
been working with the cannabis
industry since 2017. He cited
statistics which show lucrative
benefi ts reaped by communities
that have accepted
the sale of recreational marijuana.
For instance, between
December 2018 and May 2019,
adult use marijuana brought in
$2.9 million in local tax revenue.
In the following fi scal year
which ended June 2020, marijuana
sales generated $14.4
million for cities and towns. In
fi scal year 2021, the local option
brought in $31.3 million.
Between May 9 and May 15,
recreational marijuana sales
generated $27.2 million. Since
the legalization of marijuana
in 2018, the industry has surpassed
$3 billion in sales.
With Saugus having 12 liquor
licenses, the community
would qualify for about three
dispensaries, according to Capano.
Saugus
Public Schools Superintendent
Erin McMahon
shared her concerns about the
potential impact of marijuana
establishments on Route
1. During her time as a superintendent
of Denver Public
Schools in Colorado, she observed
a 5 to 10 percent increase
in students skipping
or being absent from classes
in 2012. McMahon asked the
Town Meeting to consider increasing
the allowable distance
between the establishments
and the schools. Article
36 was amended to accommodate
the superintendentâ€™s
request, as the minimum distance
was increased from 500
feet to 1,000 feet.
he threat of scattered
thunder showers tomorrow
morning (Saturday,
May 28) shouldnâ€™t be
an excuse for a poor turnout
for the Annual Memorial Day
weekend parade, according to
parade organizers and town
offi cials.
â€œThe people weâ€™re honoring
that day gave up a heck of a lot
more than a dry day,â€ Saugus
Veterans Council Commander
Stephen L. Castinetti said in
an interview this week.
Selectman Corinne Riley,
who has been active in
local veterans events, said
she agrees with Castinettiâ€™s
expectations for the parade
â€” the first one to be
held in three years since the
March 2020 outbreak of the
COVID-19 pandemic. â€œIt is
wonderful to be able to remember
and pay our respects
to those men and women
who made the ultimate sacrifi
ce,â€ Riley said this week.
â€œI hope everyone lines the
streets regardless of weather.
Those who served were
under much more unfavorable
conditions protecting
our freedoms,â€ she said.
Castinetti hopes for a great
turnout this year, in spite of
the weather, as he sees this
yearâ€™s parade as something
special. â€œThis is a once-in-alifetime
event that you cannot
miss!â€ Castinetti declared
of the parade â€” which is
scheduled to get underway
at 10 a.m. tomorrow morning.
Castinetti, a retired U.S.
Navy captain, considers this
yearâ€™s parade â€œhistoricalâ€ because
USS Constitution Commander
Billie June â€œBJâ€ Farrell
has agreed to be the paradeâ€™s
Grand Marshal and keynote
speaker for the townâ€™s Memorial
Day Ceremony. â€œItâ€™s historical
because Commander Farrell
became the fi rst female
Commanding Offi cer of this
great ship in 224 years,â€ Castinetti
said.
MEMORIAL DAY | SEE PAGE 6
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 27, 2022
Captain Charles Thomas passes away at age 89
Retired Fire Department
By Mark E. Vogler
A
t the beginning of Tuesday
nightâ€™s meeting
(May 24), selectmen
observed a moment of silence
in honor of retired Saugus Fire
Department Captain Charles
â€œCharlieâ€ C. Thomas, who died
earlier in the day. Then each
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selectman took turns sharing
their fondest and funniest
stories about the friendly
guy with the big heart who
used to enjoy hanging out â€œin
the corner boothâ€ at the Hammersmith
Family Restaurant in
Saugus Center, involved in the
talk of the town.
â€œThe Hammersmith will never
be the same without the
corner booth,â€ Board of Selectmen
Chair Anthony Cogliano
told colleagues.
â€œKnowing everything thatâ€™s
going on in the town â€¦ And
whatever they didnâ€™t know,
they fabricated,â€ Cogliano
quipped.
Selectman Michael Serino
told Cogliano that he knew
Charlie â€œwhen he was back on
the Planning Board with your
grandfather.â€
â€œHe used to have to wake
your grandfather up. A great
guy. Always friendly. Never
said anything bad about anybody,â€
Serino said.
Board of Selectmen ViceChair
Debra Panetta called
Thomas â€œMr. Saugus.â€ â€œHe was
everywhere. He did so much
for the town,â€ Panetta said.
Thomas went to work for
the Saugus Fire Department
on April 20, 1964, and retired
on Sept. 8, 1996, completing
32 years and four months of
service to the Town of Saugus,
according to town records.
had kind words to say,â€ Riley
said. â€œHe will be sorely missed.
My thoughts and prayers go
out to his family.â€
Thomas was the husband
Charles â€œCharlieâ€ C. Thomas
(Courtesy Photo to The Saugus
Advocate)
Thomas was a longtime member
of the Saugus Knights of
Columbus and the Saugus
Lions Club. He also enjoyed
spending time in his garden
and being surrounded by family,
according to a local obituary
published this week.
Selectman Jeffrey Cicolini
called Thomasâ€™ death â€œa huge
loss.â€ He recalled Thomas being
a frequent visitor to the
Harbormasterâ€™s Office when
Cicoliniâ€™s dad ran it.
Selectman Corinne Riley
called Thomas â€œa wonderFATHERâ€™STHERâ€™S
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ful man and a fellow Lion.â€
â€œWhen we spoke, he always
of Lois (Hobbs) Thomas. They
were married for 66 years. Born
in Revere, he was the son of the
late Caesar and Josephine (DeVellis)
Thomas of Italy. Charles
was the father of Charles C. Jr.
and his wife Lori of Saugus; Darren
Thomas of Peabody; Lisa
Lawrence and her husband
Bob of Fla.; Pamela Ferreira
and her husband Mike of Saugus;
and the late Brian Thomas.
Charles is also survived by
his 10 grandchildren and seven
great-grandchildren.
In lieu of fl owers Charlie requested
donations to be made
to the Saugus Firefi ghters Relief
Association @saugusfi rereliefassociation.com
or the Saugus Lions
Club for eye research.
The Bisbee-Porcella Funeral
Home (549 Lincoln Ave. in
Saugus) is in charge of arrangements.
Calling hours are scheduled
for Tuesday 7:30 to 9:30
a.m., followed by a funeral mass
at Blessed Sacrament Church
(14 Summer St. in Saugus) at 10
a.m. Burial will follow at Riverside
Cemetery in Saugus.
A ZBA dilemma
A former board chair with 25 yearsâ€™
experience lacks the votes to get reappointed
to a position he resigned from
By Mark E. Vogler
F
ormer Zoning Board of
Appeals Chair Ben Sturniolo,
a 25-year veteran
of the board, seeks reappointment
to the ZBA after resigning
earlier this year. But at
Tuesdayâ€™s (May 24) meeting,
selectmen were deadlocked
at 2-2 with one abstention on
a substitute motion to appoint
Sturniolo to fi ll a current vacancy
on the board.
â€œMr. Sturniolo is probably
the most experienced Board
of Appeals person weâ€™ve had
in the last eight decades,â€ Selectman
Jeff rey Cicolini said.
But Cicolini cast one of the
two votes against reappointing
Sturniolo. â€œI think it sends a
bad message,â€ Cicolini said, referring
to recent eff orts to encourage
new and less experienced
candidates participating
in local government.
Cicolini instead backed the
appointment of ZBA alternate
member Robert Northrop,
who is interested in becoming
a full-time member of the
board. That motion failed on a
2-2 vote with one abstention.
â€œIâ€™d hate to see Mr. Northrop
get discouraged.â€
Selectman Michael Serino
and Board of Selectmen ViceChair
Debra Panetta each supported
the substitute motion
to reappoint Sturniolo and
also voted against the appointment
of Northrop. Board
of Selectmen Chair Anthony
Cogliano sided with Cicolini
on both votes. Selectman
Corinne Riley abstained from
both votes because her husband,
Precinct 2 Town Meeting
Member Christopher P. Riley,
is a candidate for the ZBA
vacancy.
Selectmen advertised for applicants
to fi ll the ZBA vacancy
following Sturnioloâ€™s resignation
earlier in the year.
â€œHello â€¦ as you know a few
months back I needed to resign
my position as Chair of the
ZBA, needing to care for two
ZBA DILEMMA | SEE PAGE 8
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://ej94SCbaxFA1n3Yt-kyxNTYFqpVyWwOoE3m0z6X0hK0Í/ÙÍ`Ì°Í ×b‰#i»^y—T×‰EÚºTHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 27, 2022
Page 5
Two Pioneer Charter School students receive
â€œPumpkin Patchâ€ scholarships
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SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS: Left to right: Pioneer Charter School of Science II graduating
seniors Omar Ally and Neva Matthews receive their Danny Panico Memorial Scholarship
Awards from Rev. Bill Ladd and Carl Spencer â€” both of First Congregational Church-UCC
of Saugus. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate)
By Mark E. Vogler
T
he First Congregational
Church-UCC of Saugus
this week handed
out its annual Danny Panico
Memorial Scholarship Award
to two graduating students
from Pioneer Charter School
of Science II in Saugus. This
yearâ€™s winners are Omar Ally
and Neva Matthews.
â€œOmar will be attending
UMass Lowell and Neva will
be attending Brown University,â€
said Rev. Bill Ladd, Pastor of
First Congregational ChurchUCC
of Saugus.
â€œI, along with Carl Spencer,
handed them out [Tuesday,
May 24] and they were
very happy to receive them,â€
he said.
Hereâ€™s what Rev. Ladd said
about this yearâ€™s recipients:
Omar Ally is a real go-getter.
In class, heâ€™s prepared
and motivated and outside of
class, his volunteer activities
have stretched from one end
of Saugus to the other. Heâ€™s
easy and engaging and is a
great communicator whether
it be with his peers or with faculty
and staff at school.
Neva Matthews volunteered
at the Alzheimerâ€™s Disease
Center where her responsibilities
were setting up appointments
for the clinical trials,
data entry from the Montreal
cognitive assessment.
She also developed a fi ngerprint
scanner with text notifi -
cations that allow caregivers
to monitor their patients safely,
then submitted this project
to the school science fair.
She wants to study bioengineering.
The
award â€” also known as
â€œThe Pumpkin Patch Scholarshipâ€
â€” is funded by proceeds
generated by the churchâ€™s
â€œPumpkin Patchâ€ held in October
during the past 20 years.
Wildlife Control and Tree Service
24-Hour Service
Panico, a longtime church
member and Pumpkin Patch
worker, died in 2017, and the
scholarship is meant to honor
his contributions.
Saugus is one of many communities
receiving pumpkins
from the Navajo Reservation
near Farmington, N.M., working
with a program called Pumpkin
Patch USA, which coordinates
the destination of the
pumpkins. The church and the
Navajo Reservation both benefit
from the pumpkin sales.
The local â€œPumpkin Patchâ€ began
in Saugus Center about
two decades ago as a fundraiser
for the churchâ€™s Youth Group
and has continued to fl ourish
as somewhat of a communitywide
autumn attraction.
The scholarships are a way
of the church â€œgiving back to
the communityâ€ for supporting
its annual Pumpkin Patch.
Aaron Posnik
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 27, 2022
MEMORIAL DAY | FROM PAGE 3
â€œCome out and welcome
Commander Farrell to Massachusetts
and, more importantly
to Saugus!! Meet the new Commanding
Officer of the USS
Constitution, Old Ironsides, on
May 28,â€ he said.
Constitution float
will be in parade
Meanwhile, the offi cial Memorial
Day will be observed
throughout the country on
Monday, May 30, the designated
holiday.
On Jan. 21, a Change-ofCommand
ceremony was held
at the USS Constitution at the
Charlestown Navy Yard. It was
there that Commander John
Benda transferred command
of the USS Constitution to
Commander BJ Farrell, 39, who
became the 77th Commanding
Offi cer of Massachusettsâ€™
Ship of State. The USS Constitution
is the worldâ€™s oldest
commissioned warship that
remains afl oat.
A USS Constitution fl oat and
some of Commander Farrellâ€™s
crew will accompany her to
Saugus tomorrow, according
to Castinetti.
â€œWeâ€™re expecting at least six
fl oats, four bands, four High
School JROTC Units and numerous
military and civilian
marching groups and multiple
vehicles â€” both military
and civilian. Weâ€™ve got a
lot of things that people havenâ€™t
seen in the past,â€ Castinetti
said.
â€œAnd, itâ€™s going to be rain or
shine at 10:00 a.m.,â€ he said.
The core of past parades â€”
representing various social,
fraternal and nonprofi t groups
and organizations â€” will be
familiar to those watching the
parade, Castinetti said. â€œIt looks
like everything is about the
same, except that we are adding
active duty Marines and Marine
enlistees,â€ Castinetti said.
â€œWe will also have many antique
vehicles and trucks and
also a third band. We seem to
be growing by the day,â€ he said.
There will be participating
bands from Beverly, Peabody,
Revere and Salem, according
to Castinetti.
A new parade route
this year
Castinetti noted there will
be several changes to this
yearâ€™s parade. â€œWe will form up
at Anna Parker at 9 a.m. and
step off at 10 a.m. The parade
will proceed up Essex Street
through Cliftondale and then
Central Street to Winter Street
and stopping at the Veterans
Lot in Riverside Cemetery,â€ Castinetti
said. â€œWe will conduct
our entire Memorial Day ceremony
at the cemetery. We will
not proceed to the Town Hall.
At the conclusion of the ceremony,
all will be dismissed from
Riverside Cemetery.â€
WIN Waste Innovations is
sponsoring the parade. Catherine
Parrotta, a general assignment
reporter for Boston
25 News, will sing the National
Anthem to kick off the Memorial
Day ceremony at Riverside
Cemetery. Parrotta joined
the television station in March
2012 as a general assignment
reporter.
The start of the Memorial Day
Weekend tradition offi cially begins
at 3 p.m. today (Friday, May
27) with the so-called â€œgrave
fl agging.â€ A group of volunteers
â€” schoolchildren, members
from local Girl and Boy Scout
units, retirees, town officials,
veterans and anyone else who
shows up â€” will converge on
the grounds of Riverside Cemetery
for the annual decoration
of the graves. Graves Registration
Offi cer Randy Briand will
oversee the volunteers.
â€œPrince Pizza will be donating
20 large pizzas for the fl agging
crew,â€ Castinetti said.
Gordie at work
in the cemetery
Gordie Shepard, a U.S. Army
veteran of the Vietnam War,
COMING TO SAUGUS: Billie
June â€œBJâ€ Farrell, the 77th
Commanding Offi cer of the
USS Constitution â€” but the
fi rst woman offi cer in charge
during the shipâ€™s 224-year
history â€” has accepted an
invitation to be the grand
marshal of this yearâ€™s Annual
Memorial Day Parade, which
is set for tomorrow (Saturday,
May 28) at 10 a.m. (Courtesy
photo by the U.S. Constitution
Museum to The Saugus
Advocate)
has been working hard this
week to get Riverside Cemetery
gravesites into shape. â€œAs
usual, Gordie has been working
his butt off to make Riverside
Cemetery look great,â€ Castinetti
said.
Shepard was initially drawn
to Riverside Cemetery to visit
the gravesite of his old childhood
friend â€” Richard â€œDickyâ€
Devine, Jr. â€” a fellow Vietnam
War veteran who was killed
in combat in January of 1969.
Shepard continued to make
frequent visits to his buddyâ€™s
grave. As the years passed, he
noticed that his friendâ€™s headstone
was beginning to sink
into the ground. He looked at
the one beside it, and it bore
the name of another hero killed
during the war. Someone elseâ€™s
family or friend member. It had
been partially covered with
grass and dirt. As Shepard surveyed
the cemetery, he noticed
that many of the headstones
and plaques bearing the names
of his fellow soldiers were in
disrepair.
At that point, Shepard went
on a mission to clean and
straighten out Devineâ€™s gravestone
and then the one beside
it. Then he kept going, doing
as many as he could over the
course of numerous volunteer
hours. As the years went on,
Shepard restored more than
400 gravesites belonging to
veterans.
Eventually, he began his Civil
War Burial Plot restoration
Based a count of the stars on local monuments,
here are the numbers of Saugus
service men who were killed while serving
their country:
â€¢ World War I â€” 14
â€¢ World War II â€” 57
â€¢ Korean War â€” 2
â€¢ Vietnam War â€” 3
â€¢ Iraq War â€” 1
project in 2015. The plaques
in the Grand Army of the Republic
Plot were in very bad
shape. Some were sunk into the
ground and almost all of them
were unreadable.
The National Organization of
the Sons of Union Veterans of
the Civil War honored Shepard
with the organizationâ€™s 2019
Founderâ€™s Award for his outstanding
service in the memory
of Union Civil War Soldiers.
It was the groupâ€™s only award
for that year.
What you need to know
about Commander Farrell
Hereâ€™s a short biography of
her education and military service
leading up to her current
assignment as told by the USS
Constitution Museum on its
website:
Billie June (BJ) Farrell was born
in Paducah, Kentucky. She attended
the United States Naval
Academy and was commissioned
in 2004 with a Bachelor
of Science in political science. In
2009, she earned a Master of Science
degree in operations management
from the University of
Arkansas.
Her first division officer tour
was aboard USS Vella Gulf (CG
72) as electrical offi cer. She then
briefl y took over as OI Division
Offi cer before being promoted
to navigator for her second tour.
After completing her two division
offi cer tours, Farrell reported to
Commander, Naval Personnel
Command (COMNAVPERSCOM)
in Millington, Tennessee and became
an action offi cer in PERS833
(Post Selection Board Matters).
While there, she assumed
duties as delay section head and
assistant board screener.
After departing PERS-833, Farrell
started the Department Head
pipeline. She reported to USS San
Jacinto (CG 56) in March 2012 as
the weapons offi cer and then became
the combat systems offi cer
onboard. Her next tour was as
deputy director for professional
development at the United
States Naval Academy. After departing
the Naval Academy, Farrell
reported to Commander, Naval
Surface Force Atlantic as deputy
N3. She then served as executive
offi cer onboard USS Vicksburg
(CG 69).
Farrellâ€™s awards include two
Meritorious Service Medals, four
Navy and Marine Corps Commendation
Medals, and three
Meritorious Unit Commendation
Medals.
Saugus By the Numbers
Saugus in the Civil War: Killed in action
arenâ€™t noted. But the large Civil War
Monument inside a large rotary â€” a keystone-shaped
roundabout, two plaques
on the right and left sides of the memorial
individually list the 163 enlisted men from
Saugus, eight who served in the Navy.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Yx7b5YfF8AHVFda8snrJ_4k1xTrclnmS36tJQZtahJIÍ(¥Í`Ì°Í ×b‰#i»^y—T	×‰EÚìTHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 27, 2022
Page 7
Filling leadership voids
School Committee elects Serino to serve as chair and Hatch as vice-chair for fi nal 18 months of two-year term
By Mark E. Vogler
Whittredge, who was the
eplacing former School
Committee Chair
Thomas R. Whittredge
was a smooth and orderly
transition when the new committee
convened for its fi rst
meeting Wednesday (May 25)
night. Committee members
voted 4-0 to elect Vice-Chair
Vincent A. Serino to serve the
fi nal 18 months as chair and
then elected John Hatch on a
4-0 vote to fi ll the leadership
void left by Serino vacating his
vice-chair seat.
It was no surprise, as the
R
top two vote-getters in local
elections usually assume
the chair and vice-chair positions,
which still requires confi
rmation by a committee vote.
Serino fi nished second in last
fallâ€™s School Committee race
with 2,021 â€” 69 votes behind
Whittredge. Hatch finished
with the third highest vote total
(1,846).
â€œYes, it respects the will of
the voters and puts two very
talented, experienced gentlemen
in leadership,â€ School
THE NEW CHAIR: Vincent Serino
received the support of
his School Committee colleagues
on Wednesday night
(May 25) to serve the fi nal 18
months of his two-year term
as chair. He succeeds Thomas
Whittredge, who recently resigned
to spend more time with
his children. (Courtesy photo to
The Saugus Advocate)
Committee Member Ryan
Fisher told The Saugus Advocate.
â€œWeâ€™ve
been very fortunate
on the leadership front, with
Tom Whittredge for two and
a half years, and now Vin and
John. Leigh brings a whole
new perspective to the board,
both as an advocate and a
NEW SCHOOL COMMITTEE
VICE-CHAIR: School Committee
Member John Hatch received
the unanimous support
of his fellow committee
members to fill the vacancy
in the vice-chair seat previously
occupied by Vincent
Serino, who was elected as
the new chair. (Saugus Advocate
fi le photo by Mark E. Vogler)
mom. Iâ€™m optimistic,â€ Fisher
said.
Leigh Gerow â€” who received
1,593 votes, the sixth
highest total in last Novemberâ€™s
town elections â€” fi lls the
vacancy left earlier this month
by Whittredgeâ€™s departure.
She participated in her first
meeting Wednesday.
â€œA Virtual Open Houseâ€
Town plans Zoom Meeting on Climate Adaptation
and Resilience Plan on June 9
T
he Town of Saugus has
scheduled a special
â€œVirtual Open Houseâ€
for June 9 via Zoom videoconferencing
for town residents
and offi cials who would like
to learn about the top four
climate hazards facing Saugus
today and in the future. In
addition, the special forum â€”
which town offi cials are calling
â€œA Virtual Open Houseâ€
â€” will also give participants
a chance to off er their own
views on the townâ€™s climate
adaptation and resilience
plan. They can identify places
and spaces they consider
important to the community.
Residents can share their
vision for a resilient future in
Saugus by joining in the Virtual
Open House on Thursday,
June 9, from 6 to 7:30 p.m., according
to the townâ€™s Director
of Planning and Economic
Development, Christopher
Reilly. He has been circulating
a fl yer on the upcoming
meeting.
The Town of Saugus received
grant funding to complete
the Climate Adaptation
and Resilience Plan through
the Municipal Vulnerability
Preparedness (MVP) Action
Grant program. The MVP Action
Grant supports municipalities
in advancing priority
climate adaptation actions
to address climate change impacts
resulting from extreme
weather, sea level rise, inland
and coastal fl ooding, severe
heat and other climate impacts.
Town offi cials say the
Saugus Climate Adaptation
and Resilience Plan will
Assess risk and vulnerability
due to Saugusâ€™s top hazards
(flood, heat, severe storms
and drought)
Examine and communicate
how the impacts of these hazards
can be reduced through
investment in adaptation
Recommend next steps to
reduce risk and build resilience
in Saugus
For more information about
the Climate Adaptation and
Resilience Plan, visit
https://www.saugus-ma.
gov/planning-and-economic-development/pages/municipal-vulnerability-preparedness-climate-adaption-and
To
learn more about the
MVP program and local climate
change data, visit
https://resilientma.org/mvp
Anyone interested in
joining the Town of Saugus
for the Virtual Open
House needs to register. You
can RSVP at https://www.
eventbrite.com/e/saugus-climate-adaptation-andresilience-plan-open-housetickets-298152952507
â€œThis
free virtual public open
house off ers an opportunity to
learn about the plan, explore
priority risks for Saugus, and
help inform steps the community
can take to improve quality
of life and reduce the impacts
of climate change on the
community,â€ Reilly said.
The Zoom link and passcode
below can be used to
join the meeting on June 9 at
6:00 p.m.
Join Zoom Meeting
https://us06web.zoom.us/
j/89796755411pwd=bkJtVmRqdEl0MnA1Q3UxMFhVWHRPQT09
Meeting
ID: 897 9675 5411
Passcode: 409926
top vote-getter in the last
two School Committee races,
stepped down from the twoyear
position to spend more
time with his two children after
his wife died last Thanksgiving.
School Committee Members
Fisher (1,807) and Joseph
â€œDennisâ€ Gould (1,661)
fi nished fourth and fi fth in last
fallâ€™s voting.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 27, 2022
Sachems seniors salute World Series Park Supt.
for bringing nighttime baseball to Saugus
O
n May 23 graduating
seniors on the Saugus
High School baseball
team presented World Series
Park Superintendent Bob Davis
a gift of appreciation for
his tireless eff ort of fundraising
and installation of lights at
the fi eld. The Saugus Sachems
held the fi rst-ever home baseball
game under the lights on
April 29.
The Saugus Sachems baseball
team seniors are Nathen
Ing, Ryan Anderson, Anthony
Macone, Sean Oâ€™Rourke, MiJ&
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WE LOVE YOU, BOB! The Saugus Sachems Baseball Team shows appreciation to World Series
Park Superintendent Bob Davis for tenacious and tireless eff orts to bring nighttime
baseball to Saugus. Surrounding Bob Davis are the Saugus Sachems baseball team members
of the Class of 2022: Nathen Ing, Ryan Anderson, Anthony Macone, Sean Oâ€™Rourke,
Michael Howard, Matt MacEachern, Ryan Mabee, Anthony Cicolini, David Turilli and Drew
Gardner. The senior players will be honored today in a ceremony before their fi nal home
game, set for 4 p.m. at World Series Park. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate)
chael Howard, Matt MacEachern,
Ryan Mabee, Anthony Cicolini,
David Turilli and Drew
Gardner. The players will be
honored today (May 27) when
they play the fi nal home game
of their careers at 4 p.m. at
World Series Park. Saugus
High will have its senior game
vs. Everett. WIN Waste Innovations
Plant Manager Jim BianZBA
DILEMMA | FROM PAGE 5
members of my family who
were not well,â€ Sturniolo wrote
in a May 14 text to selectmen.
â€œThe situation has improved
and I have secured the needed
assistance. I served 25 years on
the board, and would like to
be considered for reappointment,â€
he said.
Selectmen Serino and Pachi
will be throwing
out the ceremonial
fi rst pitch prior to the
game. There will be
a special ceremony
before the game. Little
League players who wear
their game shirts will get to
come on the fi eld during the
ceremony and will also receive
a ticket for a free slush at the
netta supported Sturnioloâ€™s reappointment
passionately, citing
his 25 years of service and
invaluable expertise as a longtime
board member. Serino
said he personally didnâ€™t see
how the board couldnâ€™t grant
Sturnioloâ€™s request.
â€œI made the motion to put
Ben on [the board] in 1995,
and he did a phenomenal
job,â€ Cogliano said. But the
concession stand.
To participate in
the ceremony, the
Little Leaguers
should arrive at the
field no later than
3:15 â€” 15 minutes before the
ceremony starts. Feel free to
contact Renee Howard (617592-5876)
with any questions
or concerns.
chair agreed with Cicolini that
Northrop should be given a
chance to move up from his
alternate seat.
â€œI also like the fact that Mr.
Riley applied for this position,â€
Cogliano said.
Cicolini stressed that he
doesnâ€™t want his vote to be
construed as opposition to
somebody with 25 years of
experience. â€œHe didnâ€™t take a
temporary leave. He resigned,â€
Cicolini said.
â€œWeâ€™re trying to build interest
in other residents,â€ he said.
Selectmen voted to invite
Sturniolo, Northrop, Riley and
Leo Fonseca â€” another candidate
who responded to the
ZBA vacancy posting â€” for interviews
with the board in the
fi rst fl oor conference room at
Town Hall on June 14 at 6 p.m.
Cogliano told The Saugus Advocate
following this weekâ€™s
meeting that it is possible for
selectmen to vote on filling
the ZBA vacancy after interviewing
the four candidates.
The Board of Appeals holds
public hearings and acts on
applications for Special Permits,
Variances and Comprehensive
Permits. Most Board of
Appeals hearings are for Special
Permit applications for residential
or business uses not
allowed by right.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://F1KYOLUt0W3N0jZAvGKcoSQYsL39XLIXArtbdhL-H_oÍ0uÍ`Ì°Í ×b‰#i»^y—T×‰EÚ²THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 27, 2022
Page 9
Town Meeting 2022
Town manager gets fi nal authorization
to buy Cliftondale property for possible parking
By Mark E. Vogler
S
electmen gave Town
Manager Scott C. Crabtree
and his staff the
green light to buy the vacant
building at 481-483 Lincoln
Ave. that was last used as a
loan center. â€œWhatever plans we
have, weâ€™ll have some property
that will allow parking to attract
businesses,â€ Crabtree told
selectmen following a unanimous
vote at Tuesdayâ€™s meeting
(May 24) of the Board of Selectmen.
â€œWe have a lot of options,â€
he said.
The boardâ€™s vote was the
latest procedural step, confi
rming a May 2 Special Town
Meeting vote to authorize selectmen
to acquire title to the
land and building.
Selectman Jeffrey Cicolini
hailed the boardâ€™s vote as â€œa
huge stepâ€ to Cliftondale Revitalization
efforts. â€œItâ€™s nice
to see the townâ€™s commitment,â€
he said. â€œThis is crucial
to achieving a true revitalization,â€
Cicolini said.
Selectman Debra Panetta
said, â€œItâ€™s clearâ€ from reading
the townâ€™s updated Master Plan
that â€œresidents want to see the
revitalization of Cliftondale.â€
Selectman Corinne Riley
said she was grateful to Precinct
2 Town Meeting Member
Joe Vecchioneâ€™s work as
chair and architect of the Special
Town Meeting Committee
for revitalizing Cliftondale
Square. â€œBeing a lifelong resident
in Cliftondale, knowing
how busy it was and hoping
that it could be again, Iâ€™m
grateful that we worked together
within the Cliftondale
Revitalization Committee and
shared ideas and visions,â€ Riley
said after the meeting.
â€œI personally would like to
thank Town Meeting, Board of
Selectmen and the Town Manager
for supporting this purchase,
which I know will help
with one strong issue that has
hindered Cliftondale in convenient
parking,â€ Riley said.
â€œThis is a great fi rst step, but
there is a lot more work to be
done and I look forward to
keeping the momentum going
with enticing new businesses
back to Cliftondale,â€ she said.
During the May 2 Special
Town Meeting, members
unanimously approved two
articles to pave the way for
the land purchase. Article 11
authorizes the Board of Selectmen
to acquire title to the
land and building located at
481-483 Lincoln Ave. Article
12 seeks the appropriation of
$775,000 to buy the property.
â€œEven if we donâ€™t use it right
away, it will set the stage [for
future revitalization of Cliftondale],â€
Town Manager Scott C.
Crabtree said.
Precinct 6 Town Meeting
Member William Brown recalled
how eff orts to revitalize
Cliftondale over the years have
failed. He recalled how his family
owned a hardware store in
the area back in the 70s and early
80s. â€œThis is the fi rst time Iâ€™ve
seen a positive step,â€ he said.
Town Meeting members
wholeheartedly supported
the article for the purchase
of the property, even though
they didnâ€™t think that parking
is the best use.
â€œIn general, parking is not a
problem,â€ said Precinct 2 Town
Meeting Member Peter Rossetti,
Jr., who has lived in Cliftondale
for 70 years and whose
family has owned an insurance
business there for decades.
â€œThe reason parking is not a
problem is there is not a lot to
attract people to the square,â€
he said.
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Spring
is Here!
T
The COVID-19 Update
Town reports 92 newly confi rmed cases over the past week; two new deaths
By Mark E. Vogler
Meanwhile, the number
here were 92 newly
confirmed COVID-19
cases over the past
seven days through Wednesday
(May 25), according to
Town Manager Scott C. Crabtree.
Thatâ€™s seven fewer confi
rmed COVID-19 cases than
last week.
This weekâ€™s positive
COVID cases reported to
the town by the state Department
of Public Health
(DPH) increased the overall
total to 9,178 confi rmed
cases, according to Crabtree.
There have been more
than 400 confi rmed cases
over the past fi ve weeks, as
the virus continues to hang
around, causing some people
to continue wearing
masks at Town Hall even
though they are optional
of confirmed COVID-related
deaths reported since the
outbreak of the Coronavirus
in March of 2020 increased
to 92. Eleven weeks ago, total
Saugus deaths related to
COVID-19 were listed at 106.
But that number was reduced
to 88 because of a change in
the guidelines used by health
offi cials.
â€œOur hearts and prayers go
out to those families aff ected
by this health pandemic,â€
Crabtree said.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 27, 2022
The Sounds of Saugus
By Mark E. Vogler
Memorial Day Parade
returns Saturday
Saturday, May 25, 2019.
What a great day it was for a
parade! And what a great day
it was to observe Memorial
Day weekend by honoring the
townâ€™s fallen heroes.
I remember it very well three
years ago, while snapping
photos of the Lynn English Junior
Reserve Offi cers Training
Corps (JROTC) doing maneuvers
in front of Saugus Town
Hall. I was standing right near
the entrance to the Saugus
Public Library, where staging
had been set up for the offi -
cial Memorial Day Ceremony.
It was a beautiful day. And
the town was blessed to have
a special guest â€” Francisco A.
UreÃ±a, the stateâ€™s Secretary of
the Department of Veteransâ€™
Services â€” delivering the keynote
speech after the annual
Memorial Day Parade.
It was a few minutes before
the ceremony was set to commence.
I remember Saugus
Veterans Council Commander
Steve Castinetti expressing
his displeasure with what he
thought was a disappointing
turnout for the dayâ€™s events.
â€œThere should be a lot more
people out here today,â€ Castinetti
said, openly chiding the
community of Saugus for not
having a better response to
the dayâ€™s events.
I happened to agree with
him that the seemingly good
crowd turnout along the parade
route and the cemetery
seemed to dwindle drastically
by the time the parade ended
offi cially in front of Town Hall.
Few people actually showed
up for the most important
â€”Contestâ€”
SKETCH OF THE WEEK
GUESS WHO GOT SKETCHED! If you know the right answer,
you might win the contest. In this weekâ€™s edition, we
continue our weekly feature where a local artist sketches
people, places and things in Saugus. Got an idea who
was sketched this week? If you do, please email me at
mvoge@comcast.net or leave a phone message at 978683-7773.
Anyone who between now and Tuesday at
noon identifi es the Saugonian sketched in this weekâ€™s
paper qualifi es to have their name put in a green Boston
Red Sox hat with a chance to be selected as the winner of
a $10 gift certifi cate, compliments of Dunkinâ€™ in the Food
Court at the Saugus Square One Mall. But you have to enter
to win! Look for the winner and identifi cation in next
weekâ€™s â€œThe Sounds of Saugus.â€ Please leave your mailing
address in case you are a winner. (Courtesy illustration
to The Saugus Advocate by a Saugonian who goes by the name
of â€œThe Sketch Artistâ€)
part of the festivities: to pause
and refl ect on the great human
sacrifi ce of Saugonians
during the various wars. Seventy-seven
of Saugus young
men died in combat serving
their country since World War
I and through the Iraq wars.
All of them were true heroes.
All of them deserve a day of remembrance.
But
it was a refl ection of a
disappointing national trend.
Memorial Day just doesnâ€™t
command the respect and
demonstration of patriotic
pride that it once did.
Hopefully, after the parade
being canceled during the
past two years because of
COVID-19, Saugonians â€”
young and old â€” will appreciate
this yearâ€™s event even
more.
The Town of Saugus, along
with the Saugus Veterans
Council and the American Legion
Post, extends an invitation
to all local servicemen
and women to join them at
the Memorial Day Parade tomorrow
(Saturday, May 28).
Come march with town offi -
cials, residents, students and
fellow soldiers to pay tribute
to those who gave their lives
for our freedom.
The parade â€” which is
scheduled to get underway
at 10 a.m. â€” will be â€œhistoricalâ€
this year, according to Saugus
Veterans Council Commander
Castinetti, a retired U.S. Navy
captain. Billie June â€œBJâ€ Farrell,
the 77th Commanding Officer
of the USS Constitution â€”
but the fi rst woman offi cer in
charge during the shipâ€™s 224year
history â€” has accepted
an invitation to be the grand
marshal of this yearâ€™s Annual
Memorial Day Parade and
keynote speaker for the townâ€™s
Memorial Day Ceremony. â€œThis
is a once-in-a-lifetime event
that you cannot miss!â€ Castinetti
told us a few weeks ago.
â€œItâ€™s historical because Commander
Farrell became the
fi rst female Commanding Offi
cer of this great ship in 224
years. Come out and welcome
Commander Farrell to Massachusetts
and, more importantly
to Saugus!! Meet the
new Commanding Offi cer of
the USS Constitution, Old Ironsides,
on May 28,â€ he said.
The parade will step off at
10 a.m. from Anna Parker Playground
at 124 Essex St. in Saugus,
proceed to Cliftondale
Square, to Central Street and
to Winter Street and end at
Riverside Cemetery where a
Memorial Day Ceremony will
take place.
I plan on attending this
yearâ€™s Memorial Day weekend
event, just as I have most of
the others during my time as
Saugus Advocate Editor. But,
personally, Iâ€™m looking forward
to the event.
A Saugus Medal of Honor
recipient
It will be 78 years ago next
month that Arthur Frederick
DeFranzo, a 25-year-old staff
sergeant from Saugus, sacrifi
ced his own life on a battlefi
eld in France while displaying
what his Medal of Honor Citation
hailed as â€œextraordinary
heroism and magnifi cent devotion
to duty.â€
On June 10, 1944, near Vaubadon,
France, German combat
forces opened fire with
several machine guns, wounding
DeFranzo while he was rescuing
an injured man. Unconcerned
about his own injuries,
he led an attack on the enemy
positions and encouraged his
men to advance. He destroyed
an enemy machine gun position
after being hit several
more times. He died of those
wounds.
There are few living Saugus
residents who would remember
DeFranzo, a member
of the Saugus High School
Class of 1939. He would be 103
years old today. But for patriotic
Saugus residents who take
pride in their town, the memory
of DeFranzo lives on as the
most celebrated example of
the ultimate sacrifi ce paid by
a Saugonian fi ghting for his
country.
DeFranzo is one of more
than 3,500 Americans to have
received the Medal of Honor
â€” highest military decoration
presented by the United
States government to a member
of its armed forces since
1863 â€” and one of more than
600 who received the medal
posthumously.
Be safe out there, Saugus
Each year at this time, I devote
some space in this column
to share with readers my
personal connection to Memorial
Day â€” in hopes that it
might get people taking special
steps in their own lives to
avoid becoming part of the
tragic Memorial Day weekend
death toll on the nationâ€™s
highways.
It happened 44 years ago
this weekend. But I remember
it like it was yesterday â€” one
of the saddest days of my life
â€” relived over and over each
year when millions of people
across the country pause to
remember those who sacrifi
ced their lives for this country.
I was working as a reporter
on the police beat for The San
Angelo (Texas) Standard-Times.
And one of my assignments
was to write a story about the
death toll on West Texas roads
and highways.
That grim task included coverage
of a crash in the Texas
Hill Country that killed seven
people in one family. There
werenâ€™t that many deaths the
next day, so the editor on duty
asked me to rehash the fatal
facts so he could â€œjuice upâ€ a
recycled story that had very
little new information, but
would still run on the front
page for the second day in a
row. It really bothered me as
I left the newsroom that day,
knowing how some of us in
the media can be so callous in
the way we treat these tragedies.
I carried out the assignment
while expressing some
dismay to the insensitive desk
editor.
I awoke the next morning
to a knock on the door of my
motel room. The stranger told
me it was a family emergency
and I needed to call home, so I
walked out into the parking lot
to make a dreaded collect call
to my folksâ€™ home in Swansea,
Mass. My brother, Wayne answered
the phone and told me
that my twin brother, Lance,
had gone to a better place and
was no longer with us.
Here was a U.S. Air Force veteran
who survived the Vietnam
War â€” serving his time in
Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and
â€™Nam â€” coming home without
a scratch. But on Memorial
Day 1978, Lance was one of
the 15 people who died over
that weekend on Massachusetts
roads. On a dark, foggy
night, less than an eighth of
a mile down the street from
my parentsâ€™ home, Lance hit a
curb with his motorcycle and
was fatally injured. As I recall,
he snapped a vertebrae in his
neck.
Alcohol wasnâ€™t a factor.
There werenâ€™t any witnesses to
report what happened. Weâ€™ll
never know whether a passing
car or an animal could have
caused him to lose control of
his motorcycle, or whether
there was some other kind of
fatal distraction.
It was a two-hour car ride
from my motel room to the
nearest airport in Midland,
Tex., where I barely caught the
last connecting fl ight to Boston
that day. I was stuck in Dallas
for several hours.
More than 12 hours later, I
sat in the kitchen of my folks
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 16
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Page 11
SAUGUS GARDENS IN THE SPRING
Hereâ€™s whatâ€™s blooming in
town this week to make
your walks more enjoyable
T
By Laura Eisener
he abrupt change in
weather last weekend,
from unseasonably
cool to suddenly summer, has
sent many people scrambling
to catch up with their gardening
projects. It is fi nally safe to
plant tender annuals without
concern about damage from
frost at night. Memorial Day is
the date to remember for the
danger of frost to have passed
in most of New England. Up
until now it was risky to plant
species from tender climates
unless they could be quickly
moved indoors or covered
up if cold weather developed.
In general, the popular annuals
can be depended upon to
continue blooming until some
point in the fall, while perennials
which return every year
have an average bloom time
of only a few weeks.
The killdeer which were
described last week scurrying
around open lawns and
marshy areas are still busy protecting
their young. Some of
the other nesting birds have
offspring now. I have been
seeing some starling fledglings
at our feeder, larger already
than their parents, but
still being fed seeds by the
adults. The young onesâ€™ feathers
are still showing brownish
camoufl age color rather than
the adultsâ€™ plumage of glossy
black with bright specks.
This weekend veteransâ€™
monuments are decorated
with flags and memorial
wreaths. If space is limited,
you might consider a long
blooming annual which has a
wreath-shaped fl ower cluster
as an appropriate tribute. Verbena
hybrids â€˜Superbena Redâ€™
and â€˜Superbena Whiteoutâ€™ are
perfect matches for the stripes
in the American fl ag. There are
also some dark purple varieties
that make reasonable substitutes
for navy blue, since
true blues are diffi cult to fi nd
in plants. Verbenas are almost
as widely available as petunias
and million bells and make a
good showing in early summer
right through to fall. They
are popular for hanging baskets
and containers and as a
low growing summer ground
cover in sunny areas. Flower
clusters form a circle of individual
fi ve-petalled blossoms
just under an inch across. In
addition to red, white and â€œalmost
blue,â€ annual verbenas
can be found in several shades
of pink and light violet.
One tall species of verbena
that can be a short-lived perennial
is purple top verbena
or vervain (Verbena bonariensis),
which has a long stem
and a flower cluster that is
more three-dimensional than
the popular summer annual
hybrids.
In May there are always
an abundance of flowers in
bloom. Most of them finish
up quickly when temperatures
soar. Roses and peonies
all over town have prominent
buds, ready to bloom any day
now. Many azaleas are still in
fl ower, and some rhododendrons
are blooming while others
are just beginning. When I
went out to my fi rst appointment
of the day, the irises
were just beginning to open,
and by the time I got home the
top two buds were in full fl ower.
A few bulbs like ornamental
onions (Allium giganteum
and a few other species) are
just coming into bloom, while
most of the tulips and daff odils
are gone.
Very few of our popular
fl owering bulbs originated in
North America. Camassia is a
genus of late spring fl owering
bulbs which got their scientifi
c name from the Nez Perce
name for one species which
they called â€œQuamash.â€ Small
camas, also known as common
camash (Camassia quamash),
shows some of the varied
spellings of the original
word in its species name and
its common names. The word
was defined as â€œsweetâ€ because
the bulbs were cultivated
as a food, sweet and tasty
when roasted over a fi re. It is
also sometimes sold as wild
hyacinth, since the flowers
do resemble small hyacinths
in appearance. They are pretty
close to true blue and may
be a sky color or a deeper blue
tone. Like Dutch hyacinths
and grape hyacinths which
they resemble, they have narrow
somewhat grass-like foliage
which lasts a month or so
into the summer before dying
back and becoming dormant
until the following spring. This
species is found wild through
much of the northwestern
OUR NATIONAL EMBLEM: A bald eagle fl ies over Saugus â€” not just on Memorial Day â€”
but every day. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate by Joanie Allbee)
SMALL CAMAS: This is an interesting
native bulb blooming
in gardens now with a
deep blue color that is highlighted
by the bright yellow
pollen on the stamens.
(Courtesy photo to The Saugus
Advocate by Laura Eisener)
United States and Canada, but
several larger Camassia species
are found in the southern
United States. If you are considering
it as food rather than
fl owers, it is important to distinguish
between this and the
meadow death camas (Toxicoscordion
venenosum, formerly
Zigadenus venenosus), which
has white fl owers and grows
in the same western habitats.
Editorâ€™s Note: Laura Eisener is
a landscape design consultant
who helps homeowners with
landscape design, plant selection
and placement of trees
and shrubs, as well as perennials.
She is a member of the Saugus
Garden Club and off ered to
write a series of articles about
â€œwhatâ€™s blooming in townâ€
shortly after the outbreak of the
COVID-19 pandemic. She was
inspired after seeing so many
people taking up walking.
AMERICAâ€™S PLANTS: Red and white annual hybrid verbena
are good choices for a patriotic planting or a â€œSaugus prideâ€
garden. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate by Laura Eisener)
RED VERBENA FLOWER CLUSTERS: these form a small
â€œwreathâ€ â€” opened fl owers circle those still in bud. (courtesy
photo to the saugus advocate by laura eisener)
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 27, 2022
Baseball Sachems crush Everett, 13-2
(Advocate photos by Emily Harney)
Saugus fi rst baseman Ryan Anderson works to tag out a player from Everett during
Wednesdays game and win over Everett, 13-2.
Ryan Mabee on the mound Wednesday for Saugus as they
took on the Crimson Tide of Everett.
Braden Faiella at bat for Saugus leans back to avoid the pitch.
Ryan Mabee on the mound Wednesday for Saugus as a player from Everett
avoids his pitch.
Braden Faiella gets ready to take off from second base once the ball is live.
Saugus beat Everett Wednesday, 13-2.
Cam Soroko and Michael Howard of Saugus celebrate at the plate after a
scoring run by Soroko. Saugus beat Everett 13-2 Wednesday.
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Page 13
Sachem second baseman Anthony Macone heads towards the base as a
player from Everett tries to work their way back there.
Ryan Mabee of Saugus crosses home plate as players from Everett close in
behind him to question the umpireâ€™s call.
Anthony Macone of Saugus gets ready to take from fi rst base once the ball
is in play during Wednesdayâ€™s game with Everett.
Braden Faiella works his way home to score one of the 13 runs for Saugus
during their win over Everett Wednesday.
Ryan Mabee of Saugus gets ready to make his way home in hopes to score
another run against Everett.
Cam Soroko rounds third base as he heads home to score for Saugus during
their game Wednesday with Everett.
Ryan Mabee of Saugus fi nds himself caught between third base and home
plate as he tries to make his way home to score during Wednesdayâ€™s game
with Everett.
Nathan Ing of Saugus gets ready to take off from fi rst base during Wednesdayâ€™s
game with Everett.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 27, 2022
Baseball Sachems still on brink of playoff bid
D
By Greg Phipps
espite running into an
untimely three-game
losing streak in the
late stages of the regular season,
the Saugus High School
baseball team still had a shot
at reaching 10 wins and putting
itself in position to qualify
for the postseason. After
consecutive losses to Beverly,
Gloucester and Marblehead,
the Sachems came alive
with a 13-2 road defeat of Everett
Wednesday to put them
one win away from the 10-win
plateau.
Saugus sported a 9-10 overall
record entering Fridayâ€™s
regular-season finale and
rematch against Everett at
World Series Park. Wednesdayâ€™s
victory did not come as
easily as the fi nal score indicated.
The
contest was tied at 2-2
through three frames before
Saugus rallied for six tallies in
the top of the fourth. The Sachems
added fi ve more runs
in the sixth to put the game
on ice. It ended after six innings
due to the 10-run rule.
A triple and three RBI from
Anthony Macone and two hits
Saugus catcher Michael Howard, head coach Joe Luis and pitcher Sean Oâ€™Rourke meet on the mound in a game against
Winthrop earlier this season. The Sachems were one victory away from possibly qualifying a postseason berth after
Wednesdayâ€™s win over Everett.
and three runs driven in by
Cam Soroko helped lead the
Sachems, who fi nished with
15 total hits for the game.
Ryan Mebee had three hits
and Michael Howard brought
home two runs with a double.
Also contributing off ensively
were Nathan Ing and Ryan
Anderson with two hits and
an RBI each, and Drew Gardiner
with a double and run
batted in. Mabee was the winning
pitcher, as he hurled four
and one-third innings (two
hits and six strikeouts). Macone
and Danny Zietz also
saw pitching duty in the win.
The news was not as good
for the Sachems earlier in the
week when they dropped
their third consecutive game
on Monday at Marblehead.
Saugus did battle back late
but came up short in a 12-7
fi nal. The Sachems still have
hopes of making the tournament
but they will need to
emerge victorious in their Senior
Day game Friday against
Everett to possibly receive a
playoff nod.
with wins over Swampscott, Melrose
Sachems gear up for tourney
By Greg Phipps
H
aving clinched a playoff
spot with its 10th
win last week, the
Saugus High School softball
team added to its victory total
by topping Swampscott
last Friday and Melrose on
Tuesday. It was the second
time the Sachems have come
out on top against both those
squads this season.
In Tuesdayâ€™s close 2-0 triumph
over the Red Raiders,
pitcher Fallon Millerick was
near perfect. She allowed
just four hits and fanned four
while also aiding her own
cause on off ense with a key
triple. It was Millerickâ€™s 11th
win of the season.
Lily Ventre, who missed a
good portion of the season
with an injury, drove in a run
with a hit, and Gianna Costa
added an RBI single. Those
runs would stand up in the
shutout win. Felicia Reppucci,
Kaitlyn Pugh and Ava Rogers
had hits, and Head Coach
Steve Almquist credited Devaney
Millerick and Ryann Moloney
with solid games in the
fi eld.
Last Friday, the team celeStarting
catcher Lily Ventre has returned to the Saugus lineup
with a vengeance after missing some of the season with
an injury.
brated its Senior Day at home
with a fi ve-inning win over
Swampscott. Reppucci tripled,
one of her two hits on
the day, and drove in three
runs, while Costa had two hits
and an RBI in an eventual 13-1
triumph. Moloney drove in a
run with a hit, and Fallon Millerick,
who had two hits, was
the winning pitcher with fi ve
strikeouts to her credit. The
off ense didnâ€™t stop there, as
Pugh and Devaney Millerick
each smashed two hits and
finished with two RBI, and
Rogers, Ventre, Taylor Deleidi
and Bella Natalucci all contributed
hits.
The one drop-off was a
16-4 loss at Danvers on Monday.
Moloney had a big day
in the defeat with a 4-for4
performance and an RBI.
Also contributing hits were
Rogers, Fallon Millerick, Devaney
Millerick and Costa. The
game ended in six innings
due to the 10-run rule.
The Sachems sat at 12-7
overall heading into Fridayâ€™s
regular-season fi nale at Marblehead.
After that, they will
await to fi nd out their playoff
Pitcher Fallon Millerick
hurled a 2-0 shutout victory
over Melrose on Tuesday.
seeding and opening-round
opponent.
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Page 15
SHS Lady Sachems Lacrosse team
honored on Senior Night
By Tara Vocino
T
he Saugus High School Girlsâ€™ Varsity Lacrosse
Senior Night highlighted seniors and their
future plans during their game against the
Northeast Metro Regional Vocational Knights.
Sachems Co-Captain Kali Penachio is joined by
her parents, Kris and Paul, and sister/teammate
Nina during last Wednesdayâ€™s Senior Night at
Saugus High School. Penachio plans to attend
UMass Lowell in the fall to study pharmaceutical
sciences.
LADY SACHEM SENIORS, PICTURED FROM LEFT TO RIGHT: Co-Captain Elise Rego, Co-Captain Kali
Penachio, Samantha Valley, Amanda DeFronzo, Sophia Scalisi, Co-Captain Georgia Fiore, Emily
Orent and Tayla Walsh during last Wednesdayâ€™s Girlsâ€™ Varsity Lacrosse Senior Night. (Advocate photos
by Tara Vocino)
PICTURED FROM LEFT TO RIGHT: proud mom,
Cheryl, senior Tayla, sister, Ashley and their father,
David. Walsh plans to attend the University
of New Hampshire this fall to study psychology
and justice studies.
Sachems Co-Captain Elise Rego presented fl owers
to her mother Cindy, accompanied by her father,
Daniel. Rego plans to attend University of New
Hampshire this fall to study communications.
Sachems Co-Captain Elise Rego runs through the
stick tunnel.
PICTURED FROM LEFT TO RIGHT: proud dad, Derek,
sister/teammate, Jessica, senior Samantha
and mother, Susan Valley. This fall, Valley plans
to attend Rivier University to study nursing.
Emily Orent, second from left, is joined by her parents,
Mark and Debra and sister, Nicole. Orent plans
to attend the University of Connecticut this fall.
Sophia Scalisi, third from right, is joined by her
father, Brian, sister/teammate Juliana and their
mother, Tina. Scalisi plans to attend Stonehill College
this fall to study psychology.
Amanda DeFronzo presented roses to her mother,
Karin, accompanied by her brother, Ryan. DeFronzo
plans to attend the University of Miami
this fall to study health science.
Sachems Co-Captain Georgia Fiore, second from right, presented fl owers to her mother, Jessica, father
Ed, sisters Grace and Shelby and boyfriend Jason Ciampa. Fiore plans to attend Endicott College
this fall to study exercise science.
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Page 16
home, reading the local newspaper
story about just another
Memorial Day traffi c tragedy.
But this one really hit home
and still resonates painfully every
year at this time.
Lance was just 25 and was
an excellent student, looking
forward to his junior year
at Southeastern Massachusetts
University. So much of
life ahead of him. But all his
dreams and hopes ended on
that Memorial Day.
Itâ€™s a holiday tragedy that visits
hundreds of American families
every year. If you head out to
the roads this weekend â€” especially
to do some long distance
driving â€” be safe out there.
Enjoy the holiday with family
and friends. And take time to
say a few prayers for the service
people who sacrifi ced their lives
in combat duty to defend our
American way of life.
Honoring Saugus High
baseball seniors
The Saugus High School Varsity
Baseball Team invites all
Saugus Little League players
to attend the Varsity Senior
Game to be held at World Series
Park, today (Friday, May
27) to celebrate the last home
game of the season for graduating
seniors. Little League
players who wear their game
shirts will get to come on the
fi eld during the ceremony and
will also receive a ticket for a
free slush at the concession
stand. To participate in the
ceremony, the Little Leaguers
should arrive at the fi eld no
later than 3:15 â€” 15 minutes
before the ceremony starts.
Feel free to contact Renee
Howard (617-592-5876) with
any questions or concerns.
One-day trash delay for
holiday week
The Town of Saugus announces
that trash and recycling
collection will run on a
one-day delay from Tuesday
(May 31) through Saturday
(June 4), due to the observance
of Memorial Day (Monday, May
30). There will be no collection
on Monday (May 30) due to the
holiday. Services will resume
on a one-day delay from Tuesday
(May 31) through Saturday
(June 4). Residents whose collection
day falls on Monday will
be collected from on Tuesday.
Collection will continue to run
on a one-day delay for the remainder
of the week.
Please contact the Department
of Public Works at 781231-4145
with any questions.
Want to help make
a better Library?
The Saugus Board of Selectmen
is accepting applications
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 27, 2022
for appointments to the Saugus
Library Board of Trustees.
This is a volunteer/nonpaid
position for Saugus residents.
Those interested may submit
a letter of interest/resume no
later than June 1 to the Saugus
Board of Selectmen, Saugus
Town Hall, 298 Central St.,
Suite 4, Saugus, MA 01906.
Compost site now open
The communityâ€™s compost
site will be open to residents
on Wednesdays and Saturdays
from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. The site
is located behind the Department
of Public Works at 515
Main St.
Stickers are required to gain
seasonal access to the site.
Stickers may be purchased for
$25.00 at the Department of
Public Works (DPW) located at
the Compost Site when making
your visit to the Compost
Site. The Town of Saugus accepts
checks only for payment
of the $25.00. No cash will be
accepted. Kindly bring a check
when visiting. Thank you!
Compost site stickers must
be permanently placed on the
lower left corner of residentsâ€™
automobile windshields. Vehicles
registered out of state are
not permitted.
Yard waste must be disposed
of in brown compost
bags or open containers. The
Town will accept grass clippings,
leaves and brush. As
in years past, no branches or
limbs larger than three inches
in diameter are permitted.
We ask all residents to please
wear a mask and maintain and
respect social distancing from
others while visiting the site.
Residents may call Lorna Cerbone
at the Solid Waste and
Recycling Department at 781231-4036
with questions or for
more information.
We have a winner!
Congratulations to Carole
Drake for making the right
identification in last weekâ€™s
â€œGuess Who Got Sketchedâ€
contest. She was one of several
readers answering correctly.
But she was the only one
to have her name picked in a
drawing from the green Boston
Red Sox cap.
Hereâ€™s the correct answer, offered
by the person who goes
by the name of The Sketch
Artist:
â€œThe answer to last weekâ€™s
sketch is the multi-talented
Gabriella Snyder Stelmack!
Gabriella has such an angelic,
highly skilled and trained
voice!
â€œCheck out Gabriellaâ€™s CD
â€˜Ancient Christmasâ€™
â€œSongs and Carols with Gabriella
Snyder with Mountain
Dulcimer Guitar, Viola & Violin
â€œThe song #3 â€˜Come With
Meâ€™ (a favorite of mine) Gabriella
wrote the music & words.
She states on her CD why she
wrote â€˜Come With Meâ€™ â€˜I wanted
to write a â€œLittle Drummer
Boyâ€ type song, with the wise
men hearing about the newborn
King and setting out to
fi nd Him. I hope this takes you
on your journeyâ€™ Gabriella.â€™
â€œSuch a myriad of beautiful
Christmas songs on Ancient
Christmas! She produced
the CD through her own Colla
Voce Recording & Publishing
Co.
â€œGabriella quotes in her own
words the following: â€˜I am the
Executive Director of Bread
of Life in Malden, a nonprofit
faith based, volunteer driven
organization that provides
a million meals per year for
struggling families and senior
citizens in the north metro
Boston area. I have worked
with the organization for 33
years. What some people donâ€™t
know is I am also a composer
of two operas, many songs
and choral pieces, and have
sung professionally, and was
a private vocal instructor for
many years. I want to continue
sharing my music and sharing
what I have with those
who have less. Knowing that
only God can save the world
through Christ, I try in my
small way to be part of His
work. My favorite passage
from the Bible is Matthew,
chapter 25, â€œFor I was hungry
and you gave me something
to eat, I was thirsty and you
gave me something to drinkâ€¦
.I tell you the truth, whatever
you did for one of the least
of these brothers or sisters of
mine, you did for me.â€ I consider
myself to be on a pilgrimage
through life, stumbling many
times, but continually trying to
go Godâ€™s way rather than my
own: Godâ€™s goals, Godâ€™s methods,
Godâ€™s timing, with Godâ€™s
power. On the wall of my office
hangs something that
was read as a young girl and
I always want to remember: â€œI
shall pass this way but once.
Any good therefore that I can
do, or any kindness that I can
show to any human being, let
me do it now. Let me not defer
or neglect it, for I shall not
pass this way again.â€â€™
â€œGabriella, you are a great
example of â€˜donâ€™t hide your
light under a bushel, let it
shine for all to seeâ€™ â€” you are
a great beacon of light to this
world!
â€œThank you, Yours Truly,
â€œThe Sketch Artistâ€
Disco Dance party
at the Kowloon
The Kowloon Restaurant is
set to host an outdoor Disco
Dance Party featuring The
Cover Girls performing live
in concert. The event is set at
the Kowloonâ€™s outdoor venue
on June 18 (rain date June
19) on Route 1 North in Saugus.
Showtime is 7 p.m., and
doors open at 6 p.m. General
admission is $39 per person
and V.I.P. reserved seating
is $59 per person. Guests are
invited to dress in disco wear.
Tickets are available at online
ordering, front desk or chargeby-phone:
781-233-0077.
The Cover Girls are an all-female,
New York City-based
freestyle group that achieved
most of their chart success
in the late 1980s and early
1990s. Among the groupâ€™s
best-known songs are â€œShow
Me,â€ â€œBecause of You,â€ â€œWe
Canâ€™t Go Wrongâ€ and â€œWishing
on a Star.â€
Opening for The Cover Girls
is Vinyl Groove. Vinyl Groove
is a multitalented vocal group
who sing the best R&B dance
music from the 70s, including
Motown-Philly and classic disco
dance music â€” including
songs from Tavares, The Trammps,
The Stylistics, The Oâ€™Jays,
The Temptations, Blue Magic,
Smokey Robinson, Earth Wind
& Fire, Donna Summer, The
Spinners and the Four Tops.
A â€œShout Outâ€ for â€œShout
Outsâ€
Jeanie Bartolo, a prolifi c contributor
to our weekly â€œShout
Outâ€ segment of this column
(and she was actually the
catalyst behind this weekly
feature) off ers the following
â€œShout Out:â€
â€œMemorial Day marks the
third anniversary of The Advocateâ€™s
Sounds of Saugus
â€œShout Outâ€ column with a
total of 230 Shout Outs, so
I thought a â€œShout Outâ€ for
â€œShout Outsâ€ to EVERYONE
who nominated someone
special and to Mark Vogler for
printing them. Letâ€™s keep it going!!!
Many thanks.â€
A â€œShout Outâ€ for those
who get sketched
We also received a â€œShout
Outâ€ this week from â€œthe
Sketch Artistâ€:
â€œA SHOUT OUT & THANKYOU
To ALL the wonderful people
sketched so far!
â€œThank you for allowing me
to use my little spark to showcase
ALL you brilliant lights of
Hope and wonderful people
of Saugus! Shining so brightly
In deeds and actions!
â€œEndless giving and doing
for others lending uplifting
hands reaching out.
â€œSaugonians who go the extra
mile!
â€œBeacons of luminesce!
â€œIf you know someone who
hasnâ€™t been featured, letâ€™s not
leave them out! Letâ€™s get them
sketched and showcased. We
look to these people for inspiration,
motivation and hope
for a better Saugus each day!
Thank you
â€œYours Truly
â€œThe Sketch Artistâ€
Want to â€œShout Outâ€
a fellow Saugonian?
This is an opportunity for
our paperâ€™s readers to single
out â€” in a brief mention â€”
remarkable acts or achievements
by Saugus residents or
an act of kindness or a nice
gesture. Just send an email
(mvoge@comcast.net) with a
mention in the subject line of
â€œAn Extra Shout Out.â€ No more
than a paragraph; anything
longer might lend itself to a
story and/or a photo.
Bishop plans to bless
the Community Garden
The Right Rev. Alan Gates,
Episcopal Bishop of Massachusetts,
will be blessing the
Community Garden ground at
St. Johnâ€™s Episcopal Church today
(Friday, May 27) at 9 a.m.
Meanwhile, The Rev. John
Beach of St. Johnâ€™s Episcopal
Church, continues to search
for a few good men, women
and children who would like to
join a noble cause â€” the second
year of the church-sponsored
community garden. â€œWe
are inviting all interested persons
to join us in producing
vegetables for those who are
suff ering from food insecurity
in Saugus,â€ Rev. Beach wrote in
a letter to the community.
Rev. Beach is looking for a
variety of help as the garden
approaches planting time for
its second year:
If you are able to grow a few
seedlings in your home, we
would like to bring the seeds,
soil, pots, and instructions in
the next few weeks.
Assist in the planting of
crops on Friday May 27th and/
or Saturday May 28th sometime
between 9 and noon. We
will be having a brief service of
the blessing of the ground on
the Friday.
Assist for an hour a week
in the tending of the crops
(weeding and watering) over
the course of the summer.
Assist in the harvesting of
the crops in September and
delivering them to the Saugus
Food Pantry
â€œIf you are able to assist, or if
you are interested in contributing
to the garden, please
let me know. I am looking forward
to working with you,â€
Rev. Beach said. He can be
reached by phone (774-9619881)
or email (revjbeach@
gmail.com).
â€œBefore we plant the seedlings,
it would be wonderful
if you were able to join us for
that service,â€ Rev. Beach said.
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Page 17
Saugus Kindergarten
Registration underway
Kindergarten registration
for students entering the Saugus
Public Schools in the fall
of 2022 opened this month.
Registration packets may be
picked up at the Main Offi ce
of the Veterans Early Learning
Center (VELC) at 39 Hurd Ave.
in Saugus Monday through
Friday during school hours.
The packet will also be available
on the Saugus Public
Schoolsâ€™ website, https://www.
saugus.k12.ma.us/.
Completed forms and required
documentation may
be returned to the VELC Main
Offi ce. Packet drop-off hours
will be Monday through Friday
from 9:30 to 11 a.m.; kindergarten
screening appointments
will be scheduled at
this time. Screenings will take
place on Wednesday, June 8
and Thursday, June 9 and will
last about 20 minutes. There
is no deadline for registration.
Saugus moved to a free, allday
kindergarten model for
the 2021-22 school year to
better prepare students academically,
socially and emotionally.
A half-day option is
not available.
â€œFree, all-day kindergarten
levels the playing field and
gives Saugus children all of
the building blocks they need
from day one,â€ said School
Committee Member Ryan
Fisher.
Students must be fi ve years
old by Aug. 31, 2022, in order
to enter kindergarten in the
fall of 2022; there are no exceptions.
For more information,
please contact the Veterans
Early Learning Center at
781-231-8166.
Buy a brick to honor
a Saugus veteran
The Saugus War Monument
Committee once again is sponsoring
the Buy A Brick Program
to honor all those who have
served their country. If you
would like to purchase one in
the name of someone who is
presently serving or has served,
in the memory of a loved one,
or just for someone from your
family, school, etc., the general
pricing is $100 for a 4â€ X 8â€
brick (three lines) and $200 for
8â€ X 8â€ brick (fi ve lines). Each
line is a maximum of 15 characters.
The improvement and upkeep
of the monument on the
corner of Winter and Central
Streets rely on the generosity
of donors through fundraising.
The brick application must
be in by Sept. 15 to ensure
the bricks will be ready for
Veterans Day. Please contact
Corinne Riley at 781-231-7995
for more information and applications.
SHS
Class of â€™62 plans
60th reunion
Leaders of the Saugus High
School Class of 1962 would like
you to â€œSAVE THE DATE.â€ Their
60th Class Reunion will be held
on Saturday, Sept. 10, 2022,
from 1 to 5 p.m. at Prince Pizzeria
in Saugus. They are reaching
out to contact fellow classmates
as well as other alumni
who would like to join them.
The well-known 50s and 60s
music group of Howie Conley
will be there for musical enjoyment.
Those of you who have
heard them know what a performance
they put on. There
will be pizza and salad combinations
plus soft drinks. The
price includes all you can eat,
tax and gratuities â€” plus Howie
Conleyâ€™s group â€” and is $29
per person. There is a bar available
for wine, beer and mixed
drinks.
There is no need to purchase
tickets at this time. Please let
one of the following people
know of your interest either
by a phone call or a text message
so that you can be easily
reached when the time draws
near. No commitment is necessary.
They are just exploring
the number of interested
classmates.
Donna â€œCannâ€ Olivera â€”
781-987-4308
Jonni â€œGiantonioâ€ Matrona
â€” 781-439-4200
Janice â€œCristianoâ€ Pomeroy
â€” 617-512-2097
Larry Seavers â€” 704-9062606
Food
pantry seeking
driver volunteers
The Saugus United Parish
Food Pantry seeks volunteers
to make food and bread pickups
on Thursdays and Fridays
from 7:30 to 9 a.m. Anyone
who has the time and interest
to help out should contact Jeff
Hirtle at 781-922-0661. The
food pantry operates out of
the basement at Cliftondale
Congregational Church at 50
Essex St. in Saugus.
Friday morning Legion
Hall breakfasts continue
Hereâ€™s some great news for
people who enjoy their Friday
morning breakfasts at the
Saugus American Legion Cpl
Scott J. Procopio Post 210. Legion
Hall, which is located at
44 Taylor St., resumed its Friday
breakfasts and will continue
through today. The buffet
breakfast is served at 8 a.m.
for a donation of $7.
Bon appÃ©tit! And good luck
to the Kitchen Crew.
Looking for book
donations
The New Friends of the Saugus
Public Library are asking
for donations of gently used
adult hardcover and softcover
fi ction for the ongoing book
sale in the Community Room.
They would also appreciate
donations of gently used childrenâ€™s
books. Please limit donations
at this time to only
fi ction and childrenâ€™s books;
they do not have storage
space for other genres or media.
Please...clean and newer
books only. No tattered pages,
bad odors, stains, or dirty
covers!
Books may be dropped off
at the Main Circulation Desk
during business hours. Please
do not place donations in the
outdoor book drops.
Want to be a Knight?
The Knights of Columbus is
looking for new members to
join. If you are interested in becoming
a member of this local
organization, please call 781233-9858.
Food
Pantry still open
The Saugus United Parish
Food Pantry continues to remain
open on Fridays between
9:30 a.m. and 11:00
a.m. despite concerns over
the Coronavirus. They have
made adjustments to protect
their core of volunteers
and the needy people who
receive the food. For the protection
of volunteers & clients,
and to limit personal contact
and crowding/gathering, the
food pantry has been distributing
pre-bagged groceries.
Even though clients may receive
items they donâ€™t want
or need, food pantry organizers
feel this is the best course
of action to mitigate the potential
spread of COVID-19.
Those in need, even for shortterm
or one-time assistance,
are encouraged to come. The
food pantry is located in the
basement of Cliftondale Congregational
Church at 50 Essex
St. in Saugus.
Letâ€™s hear it!
Got an idea, passing thought
or gripe you would like to
share with The Saugus Advocate?
Iâ€™m always interested in
your feedback. Itâ€™s been six
years since I began work at The
Saugus Advocate. Iâ€™m always
interested in hearing readersâ€™
suggestions for possible stories
or good candidates for
â€œThe Advocate Asksâ€ interview
of the week. Feel free to email
me at mvoge@comcast.net.
Do you have some interesting
views on an issue that you
want to express to the community?
Submit your idea. If
I like it, we can meet for a 15to
20-minute interview over
a hot drink at a local coff ee
shop. And Iâ€™ll buy the coff ee
or tea. Or, if you prefer to continue
practicing social distancing
and be interviewed from
the safety of your home on the
phone or via email, I will provide
that option to you as the
nation recovers from the Coronavirus
crisis.
If itâ€™s a nice day, my preferred
site for a coff ee and interview
would be the picnic area of the
Saugus Iron Works.
Saugus Youth Baseball/Softball Scholarship available
T
he Family of Stephen
Wing will be providing
a $500 scholarship to
a graduating senior from any
area high school who participated
in a Saugus youth baseball
or softball program. Applicants
must be planning
to attend a post-secondary
school. The scholarship award
will be given directly to the
successful applicant.
The $500 Stephen Wing Memorial
Scholarship was created
by Stephenâ€™s Family in
memory of a boy who loved life
and thoroughly enjoyed playing
and participating in youth
baseball programs. Stephenâ€™s
desire to improve and willingness
to work hard to achieve
a goal enabled him to be considered
a skilled baseball player.
Stephen lost his battle with
illness at the age of 10.
Interested seniors are asked
to provide the screening committee
with the following:
(1) a copy of your student data
sheet (resume) and
(2) a persuasive cover letter indicating
why the applicant
is an appropriate candidate
for the scholarship (cover
letters should indicate
the teams/leagues participated
in and the candidateâ€™s
eff orts to work hard
to achieve goals. Additionally,
the family seeks a canREAL
ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission from the publisher, The Warren Group.
For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com.
BUYER1
â€œGiron, Carlosâ€
â€œTagieva, Mavjudaâ€
â€œDandrow, Jenniferâ€
â€œKavjian, Amanda Aâ€
â€œTagiev, Makhirâ€
BUYER2
SELLER1
42 Mount Vernon LLC
â€œLabkovich, Alenaâ€
â€œThi-Nguyen, Thuy Lâ€ 14 Dustin Street LLC
MSY Realty LLC
â€œLabkovich, Denisâ€
SELLER2
ADDRESS
42 Mount Vernon St
44 School St
14 Dustin St
16 Oaklandvale Ave
CITY DATE
05/09/22
05/10/22
05/13/22
05/11/22
Saugus
Saugus
Saugus
Saugus
PRICE
$750,000
$780,000
$632,000
$670,000
didate who demonstrates
persistence and teamwork.
The student data sheet (resume)
and cover letter should
be submitted to the Wing Memorial
Scholarship c/o Ed Nazzaro
(enazzaro47@comcast.
net) on or before Tuesday, May
31, 2022.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 27, 2022
Beacon Hill
Roll Call
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.
Beacon Hill Roll Call
Volume 47 â€” Report No. 20
May 16-20, 2022
Copyright Â© 2022 Beacon
Hill Roll Call. All Rights Reserved.
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THE
HOUSE AND SENATE:
Beacon Hill Roll Call records
local representativesâ€™ votes on
roll calls from the week of May
16-20. There were no roll calls
in the Senate last week.
MARIJUANA LAWS
(H 4791)
House 155-0, approved a
bill that makes changes in
the cannabis industry including
a section that would require
the state to put its tax
and licensing revenue from
the sales of marijuana revenue
into a newly created Social
Equity Trust Fund to provide
grants and loans, including
forgivable and no-interest
loans, designed to assist
entrepreneurs and businesses
from communities disproportionately
harmed by the
decades of marijuana prohibition.
The measure would
also allow municipalities to
vote by a local referendum
or through a vote of the municipal
government for social
consumption of marijuana to
take place in their community.
The Senate has already approved
its own version of the
bill and a House-Senate conference
committee will likely
hammer out a compromise
version.
Supporters explained that
opening an average cannabis
retail shop can require up
to $1.5 million. They noted
that since federal cannabis
laws prevent these businesses
from accessing traditional
bank loans, lack of capital can
pose an insurmountable barrier.
They noted that less than
20 (6 percent) of the 346 marijuana
businesses are connected
to participants in the Cannabis
Control Commissionâ€™s
current social equity program
or economic empowerment
entrepreneurs.
â€œThis legislation builds upon
the Houseâ€™s multi-session efforts
to create a fair and successful
cannabis industry, fostering
equitable opportunities
to those disproportionately
impacted by the systemic
racism of historic drug
policy,â€ said Speaker of the
House Ron Mariano (D-Quincy).
â€œWith this legislation, the
House addresses ongoing
concerns that have only become
more pronounced with
the growth of the cannabis industry,
such as the host community
agreement process
and systemic barriers for minority-owned
businesses to
enter the cannabis market.â€
â€œThis legislation continues
to build on the strives we
have made in the cannabis industry
to ensure equitable access
for all Massachusetts residents,
particularly those who
have been disadvantaged by
marijuana prohibition and enforcement,â€
said Rep. Dan Donahue
(D-Worcester), House
Chairman of the Committee
on Cannabis Policy. â€œThis bill
lays out a clear and fair approach
to expungement for
prior marijuana convictions
that ensures the best interest
of justice is served by providing
a real and eff ective avenue
for many to put their past behind
them.â€
â€œI voted against the cannabis
bill fi rst based on the principle
that I believe legalization
was a mistake,â€ said Rep.
Jeff Turco (D-Winthrop), one
of only two members who
voted against the measure. â€œI
believe this bill compounds
the mistake by using taxpayer
funding to fi nance new entrants
into the cannabis market.
In addition, this bill will allow
people convicted of distributing
cannabis in a school
zone and to children to be
permanently expunged from
their criminal record. In light
of all of these concerns, I voted
against the bill.â€
Rep. Marc Lombardo (D-Billerica),
the only other representative
who voted against
the measure, did not respond
to repeated requests by Beacon
Hill Roll Call for a comment.
(A
â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill.
A â€œNoâ€ vote is against it).
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
Rep. Donald Wong Yes
PUBLIC MEETING BEFORE
LICENSING (H 4791)
House 29-126, rejected an
amendment that would require
that a public hearing
be held prior to the signing
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2. Cherries
3. Wimpy
4. Fear of spiders
5. â€œThe Pirates of Penzanceâ€
6. A corporation
7. Sri Lanka
8. The Indianapolis 500
9. George Orwell
10. The Flintstones
11. They are camel species.
12. NYC
13. A horse
14. Maine
15. USA
16. A gilded gramophone
17. â€œDonâ€™t give up the ship!â€
18. Mississippi
19. Sonoran
20. Velveeta
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 27, 2022
Page 19
of an agreement between a
host city or town and a marijuana
business.
â€œUnder current law a public
meeting must take place in
a community prior to a cannabis
business applying for
a license from the Cannabis
Control Commission,â€ said
amendment sponsor Rep.
Paul Frost (R-Auburn). â€œHowever,
that public meeting
can and has taken place after
a host community agreement
is already signed and
agreed to between the business
and community offi cials.
My amendment sought to require
that the public meeting
must take place prior to the
signing of the host community
agreement. This way residents,
especially those impacted
by the location of such
a business, can have input prior
to any agreement on addressing
impacts being fi nalized.
It makes the process far
more transparent and consistent
from community to community.â€
Rep
. Dan Donahue
(D-Worcester), co-chair of
the Committee on Cannabis
Policy. opposed the amendment.
â€œCurrently municipalities
are allowed to host, have
their host community agreement
meetings before a host
community agreement is required,â€
said Donahue during
the debate in the House. â€œThe
Cannabis Control Commission
under this legislation
will have the ability to promulgate
new regulations â€¦
which â€¦could include possibly
the preference to have a
host community agreement
meeting before they sign â€¦
This bill is about setting the
boundaries for what could be
included in a host community
agreement. It doesnâ€™t deal
with the processes for which
a municipality will engage
their community members in
signing the host community
agreement.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the
amendment. A â€œNoâ€ vote is
against it).
Rep. Jessica Giannino No
Rep. Donald Wong Yes
BHRC | SEE PAGE 20
Savvy Seniory Senior
BY JIM MILLER
How to Start a Walking Program and Stay Motivated
Dear Savvy Senior,
My doctor recently suggested
I start a walking program to
help get my weight and blood
pressure under control, but
Iâ€™ve never exercised much and
am 66. Can you recommend
some tips?
Hate to Exercise
Dear Hate,
You should follow your doctorâ€™s
orders. Years of research
have shown that walking may
be the single best exercise
you can do to improve your
health as you age. It burns calories,
which will help you lose
weight, builds endurance, enhances
muscle tone and it
doesnâ€™t pound your joints.
It also helps improve or
prevent many age-related
health problems including
high blood pressure, diabetes,
heart disease, arthritis, osteoporosis,
dementia and even
depression.
But walking is not only
good for what ails you. Itâ€™s
also one of the easiest and
most convenient exercises
you can do and is completely
free. All you need is a good
pair of walking shoes that fi t
well and a little desire. Here
are some things you should
know to help get you started
and stay motivated.
Getting Started
Start out slow if you need to.
For many people this means
head out the door, walk for 10
minutes, and walk back. Do it
every day for a week. If that
9. Who wrote about being
an assistant in
a used bookshop in
â€œKeep the Aspidistra
Flyingâ€?
1. On May 27, 1937, the
Golden Gate Bridge
opened for â€œPedestrian
Dayâ€ in what city?
2. What fruit is in Black
Forest cake?
3. May 28 is National
Hamburger Day; what
is the name of the Popeye
comic strip/cartoon
character whose
favorite food was hamburgers?
4.
What is arachnophobia?
5.
On May 29, 1911, W. S.
Gilbert died, who did
the libretto for what
comic opera subtitled
â€œThe Slave of Dutyâ€?
6. What type of group is
the FDIC?
7. Most cinnamon comes
from what island?
8. On May 30, 1911, what
car race was fi rst held?
10. What fictional family
lived in Bedrock?
11. How are Arabian and
Bactrian similar?
12. Rap began in what U.S.
city?
13. In the movie â€œToy Story
2â€ what animal has the
name Bullseye?
14. On May 31, 1634, the
Massachusetts Bay Colony
annexed what?
15. In what country did the
Spanish fl u originate?
seems easy, add fi ve minutes
to your walks the next week
and keep adding fi ve minutes
until you are walking as long
as you desire. Itâ€™s also a smart
idea to start and fi nish your
walk with a few simple warm
up and cool down stretches.
Stretching will make you
feel better and help prevent
injury.
Most fi tness professionals
recommend walking about
30 minutes, fi ve or more days
a week. For optimal health
benefi ts aim for 10,000 steps
per day, which is the equivalent
of about fi ve miles.
Your walking pace is also
important. While strolling
around the park or neighborhood
at an easy pace is
good for you, a brisker pace
that has you breathing heavily,
but you are still able to
carry on a conversation, provides
better health, fitness
and weight loss benefi ts.
Staying Motivated
While starting a walking
program takes initiative, sticking
with it takes commitment.
Here are some tips to help
you stay motivated:
Find a walking buddy:
Having a friend to walk with
can provide motivation and
support along with companionship.
Wear
a fi tness tracker or
pedometer: These devices
measure how far youâ€™ve
walked in steps and miles,
providing motivation by
spurring you to meet a par16.
What does the Grammy
trophy represent?
17. On June 1, 1813, USS
Chesapeake Commander
James Lawrence
said what famous
line after being
fatally wounded 30
miles from Boston Harbor?
18.
In what state was Tennessee
Williams born?
19. The Saguaro cactus
is found only in what
desert?
20. On June 2, 1928, what
processed cheese went
public?
ticular goal and showing you
if youâ€™ve met it. Or, if you use a
smartphone there are free pedometer
apps you can download
like MyPacer.com, Google.
com/fi t or Accupedo.com.
Join a walking club: To
fi nd one in your community,
call your nearby medical center,
mall, health club, senior
center, running shoe stores
or Area Agency on Aging to
see if they sponsor or know
of any clubs or groups. Or try
MeetUp.com or the American
Volkssport Association (AVA.
org), to search for non-competitive
walking clubs in your
area, or start one.
Keep a journal: Use it to
keep track of your walking
minutes, steps, or mileage
and total it up at the end of
each week to see how youâ€™re
progressing. There are also
free apps like MapMyWalk.
com and Walkmeter.com that
use GPS to map your walk
and measure your distance
and time, which is fun and
motivating.
Have a backup plan: If
bad weather, allergies or other
factors limit your outdoor
walking, have a backup plan
like walking at your local mall,
buying a home treadmill or
joining a health club.
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.
ANSWERS
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Page 20
BORROW $5 BILLION FOR
STATE PROJECTS(H 4790)
House 155-0, approved and
sent to the Senate a $5 billion
bill that borrows money
for hundreds of projectsâ€”
the majority involving maintenance
and modernization
projects of buildingsâ€”many
of which are decades old. The
House added $125 million
during consideration of the
package. A key provision imposes
a fi ve-year moratorium
on any prison or jail construction
in Massachusetts.
There was no debate on the
House fl oor during consideration
of the package. There
were 256 amendments fi led
by members, many of which
were filed by legislators for
projects in their own disTHE
SAUGUS ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 27, 2022
trict. Members pitched their
amendments behind closed
doors. In the end, there was
no debate or vote on individual
amendments but rather approval
of a single mega-consolidated
which included
some, but not all, of the 256
amendments.
â€œIâ€™m pleased that the House
of Representatives advanced
this critical legislation to ensure
funding for several governmental
facility projects,â€
said House Speaker Ron Mariano
(D-Quincy). â€œThe House
bill also includes a moratorium
on the construction of all
new prisons in the commonwealth.
This moratorium is
consistent with the goals of
the Legislatureâ€™s 2018 criminal
justice reform legislation,
which looked to reduce
our prison population, limit
â€œYOUR FINANCIAL FOCUSâ€
Joseph D. Cataldo
BACKDOOR ROTH IRAâ€™S
W
hen the House
Ways and Means
Committee in
May of 2021 passed Secure
2.0, the Securing a Strong
Retirement Act, it appeared
that this bill would easily
pass the United States
Senate and the House of
Representatives. It the bill
were to have passed, that
would have been the end
of the Backdoor Roth IRA.
A backdoor Roth IRA is
when high income earners,
who otherwise are not
able to contribute to a Roth
IRA, instead contribute to a
non-deductible Traditional
IRA. Subsequently, he or
she will then convert the
non-deductible Traditional
IRA into a Roth IRA. At
the time of conversion, the
only income taxes to be paid
would be if there were earnings
in the Traditional IRA
account prior to the conversion.
Only the earnings
would be taxed. The Roth
IRA owner does not have to
take out any required minimum
distributions upon
reaching the age of 72. No
income taxes will have to
be paid on future earnings
so long as the Roth IRA
account has been established
for at least fi ve years.
If you are single, for calendar
year 2022, your ability
to contribute to a Roth
IRA is phased out completely
once your modifi
ed adjusted gross income
reaches $144,000. For a
married person fi ling jointly,
the income figure for
the phase out is $214,000.
Secure 1.0 did away with
the stretch IRA, which allowed
non-spouse beneficiaries
of IRAâ€™s to â€œstretchâ€ the
required minimum distributions
over his or her life expectancy.
Under current law,
the IRA account must be
withdrawn within a ten- year
period. For certain Trust beneficiaries,
the IRA account
must be taken over a fiveyear
period. Many beneficiaries
must also begin withdrawing
monies in the benefi
ciary IRA account starting
in year one and then in each
of the next nine years. With
Roth IRAâ€™s, benefi ciaries are
not required to withdraw
monies in years one through
nine. They must, however,
withdraw the entire account
out by the end of the tenth
year. However, that means
that the Roth IRA benefi ciary
has the luxury of having that
account grow tax free for
the entire ten- year period.
Even if Congress does away
with the backdoor Roth IRA,
the legislation would only
affect future conversions.
So, for now, it seems to still
be a great planning idea.
solitary confi nement and increase
access mental health
support.â€
Rep. Danielle Gregoire
(D-Marlborough), the House
chair of the Committee on
Bonding, Capital Expenditures
and State Assets, did not respond
to repeated
requests by Beacon Hill Roll
Call to comment on passage
of the bill. Her committee held
a hearing on the original version
of the measure sponsored
by Gov. Charlie Baker
back in January.
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill).
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
Rep. Donald Wong Yes
ALSO UP ON BEACON HILL
ALLOW CITIES AND TOWN
TO IMPOSE WATER FEES (S
2869) â€” The Committee on
Municipalities and Regional
Government held a virtual
hearing on legislation that
would allow cities, towns and
water or wastewater districts
to impose â€œreasonableâ€ fees
that would be used only to
remedy/offset impacts that
water withdrawals and discharges
have on the natural
environment.
Supporters said that â€œwater
bankingâ€ at the local level has
proven to be an eff ective tool
for mitigating the impacts of
water withdrawals on both
the natural environment and
local and regional water infrastructure
systems.
â€œIn response to administrative
consent orders and increasingly
stringent regulatory
mandates, communities
are being encouraged to establish
water banks or mitigation
funds,â€ said sponsor
Sen. Jamie Eldridge (D-Acton).
â€œThese funds are needed
to design and construct
water, sewer and stormwater
improvements that are required
to mitigate environmental
impacts directly attributed
to new or increased
demands placed on these essential
services.â€
RAISE FINES FOR ANIMAL
CRUELTY (H 2132) â€” Stuck
in the Bills in Third Reading
Committee since approved by
the House on Dec. 30, 2021, is
a bill that would amend current
law that imposes up to a
7-year prison sentence and/or
$5,000 fi ne for a fi rst off ense
of animal cruelty and a 10year
prison sentence and/or
$10,000 fi ne for a second offense.
The bill leaves the prison
sentences as they are but
raises the fi nes to $5,500 for
a first offense and $11,000
for subsequent offenses. It
also creates a special account
where up to $500 for a fi rst offense
and up to $1,000 for subsequent
off enses would go to
fund improvements to animal
shelters in the city or town in
which the violations occurred.
â€œAnimal cruelty laws in Massachusetts
are strong, but not
strong enough,â€ said sponsor
Rep. Bruce Ayers (D-Quincy).
â€œ We need to set a stronger
precedent that animal cruelty
will not be tolerated. The
additional funds generated
through this bill will help
subsidize much-needed improvements
to animal shelters
across Massachusetts,
putting the fi nancial burden
on the backs of those who violate
the law. Addressing the
inaction on the bill for the
past fi ve months, Ayers said
heâ€™s confi dent on the merits
of this bill and feels that it will
continue through the legislative
process.â€
$500 PAYMENTS TO
330,000 ELIGIBLE LOW-INCOME
WORKERS â€” The Baker
Administration announced
that 300,000 low-income
workers will each receive
$500 under the second round
of the COVID-19 Essential Employee
Premium Pay Program
that was part of the American
Rescue Plan Act approved by
the Legislature in December
2021. The administration was
given the power and fl exibility
to implement the program
and announced last week that
these round two checks will
be mailed out soon.
Massachusetts residents will
be eligible for the $500 if their
2021 income from employment
was at least $13,500â€”
and their total income put
them below 300 percent of
the federal poverty level. Individuals
who received a round
one payment through this
program or received unemployment
compensation in
2021 will not be eligible for
this second round of payments,
nor will commonwealth
executive branch employees
who received or will
receive a one-time COVID-related
payment from the state
as their employer.
For more information about
eligibility and other details,
go to https://www.mass.
gov/info-details/covid-19-essential-employee-premium-pay-program#eligibility-parameters
â€” or call (866)
750-9803 Monday through
Friday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
QUOTABLE QUOTES
â€œAs Massachusetts motorists
are on the verge of paying
six dollars a gallon for gasoline,
Speaker Ron Mariano
and Senate President Karen
Spilka should reconsider their
thoughts that suspending the
state gas tax is a gimmick. Instead,
they should address
suspending the gas tax and
cutting other taxes to help
middle class Massachusetts
taxpayers keep more of their
hard-earned money.â€
--- Paul Craney, spokesman
for the Mass Fiscal Alliance
â€œWhile this shooting happened
in New York, we need
to talk about it here in Massachusettsâ€”because
that could
have been Nubian Square,
Grove Hall, downtown Brockton
or Forest Park in Springfi
eld. It could have been, and
historically has been, a synagogue,
a mosque or a center
serving immigrant communities.â€
---
Massachusetts Coalition
to Prevent Gun Violence statement
on mass shootings in
Buff alo and across the nation.
â€œAchieving an accurate
count for all 50 states and DC
is always a diffi cult endeavor,
and these results suggest
it was diffi cult again in 2020,
particularly given the unprecedented
challenges we faced.â€
î€²ï‚ˆî†îˆ î€«îˆîî“ î€±îˆîˆî‡îˆî‡ î€ î€³î„î•î— î€·îŒîîˆ
Established in 1961, our company is seeking a responsible person to join our team.
î€¦î„î–î˜î„î î’ï‚ˆî†îˆ îˆî‘î™îŒî•î’î‘îîˆî‘î—î€‘ î€ºî’î•îŽ îî’î†î„îîîœ îŒî‘ î€°î„îî‡îˆî‘ î’î‘ î€µî— î€œî€œ îšî‹îŒî†î‹ îŒî– î’î‘ î€°î€¥î€·î€¤ î•î’î˜î—îˆî€‘
î€›î€î€–î€“ î„îî€î€”î€•î€î€–î€“ î“îî€‘ î€°î’î‘î‡î„îœ î—î‹î•î˜ î€©î•îŒî‡î„îœî€‘ î€·îˆîî“î’î•î„î•îœ î…î˜î— îî„îœ î—î˜î•î‘ îŒî‘î—î’ î“îˆî•îî„î‘îˆî‘î—
position.
î€¶î’îîˆ î’ï‚ˆî†îˆ îˆî›î“îˆî•îŒîˆî‘î†îˆ î•îˆî”î˜îŒî•îˆî‡î€‘ î€¸î–îˆ î’î‰ î€°îŒî†î•î’î–î’î‰î— î€¨î›î†îˆîî€ î€²î˜î—îî’î’îŽ î„î‘î‡ î€ºî’î•î‡ î„î•îˆ
î“î•îˆî‰îˆî•î•îˆî‡ î…î˜î— î‘î’î— î•îˆî”î˜îŒî•îˆî‡î€‘ î€¦î’îî“îˆî‘î–î„î—îŒî’î‘ î†î’îîîˆî‘î–î˜î•î„î—îˆ îšîŒî—î‹ îˆî›î“îˆî•îŒîˆî‘î†îˆ
î€°î˜î–î— î‹î„î™îˆ îˆî›î†îˆîîîˆî‘î— îšî•îŒî—î—îˆî‘ î„î‘î‡ î’î•î„î î†î’îîî˜î‘îŒî†î„î—îŒî’î‘ î–îŽîŒîîî–î€ îˆî›î†îˆîîîˆî‘î— î„î—î—îˆî‘î—îŒî’î‘ î—î’
î‡îˆî—î„îŒîî€ îˆî›î†îˆî“î—îŒî’î‘î„î î’î•îŠî„î‘îŒîî„î—îŒî’î‘î„î î„î‘î‡ îŒî‘î—îˆî•î“îˆî•î–î’î‘î„î î–îŽîŒîîî– î„î‘î‡ î—î‹îˆ îƒ€îˆî›îŒî…îŒîîŒî—îœ î—î’ îîˆî„î•î‘
î‘îˆîš î—î„î–îŽî–î€‘
î€¶îˆî‘î‡ î•îˆî–î˜îîˆ î—î’ î‡î„î™îŒî‡î€£î„î†î—îŒî’î‘îî„î†îŽî–î’î‘î˜î–î„î€‘î†î’î î’î• î„î“î“îîœ îŒî‘ î“îˆî•î–î’î‘ î„î— î€›î€– î€¥î•î’î„î‡îšî„îœî€
î€°î„îî‡îˆî‘î€ î€°î’î‘î‡î„îœ î—î‹î•î˜ î€©î•îŒî‡î„îœ î€œî„îî€î€–î“îî€‘
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://lkS_RiDiBvxYJp6xFr_yjqyD1SN2PQweBI5zy4yQ0y4Í%/Í`Ì°Í ×b‰#i»^y—T×‰EÚéTHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 27, 2022
Page 21
--- Census Bureau Director
Robert Santos on its nationwide
corrected census
data which includes adjusting
the total number of people
living in the Bay State from
7,029,917 to 6,784,000 â€” a reduction
of 245,917.
â€œWhen you include additional
time for construction
and the start of construction
and the rate of infl ation that
we have to project, as we are
seeing infl ation on a lot of our
work and a lot of our bids and
in the overall economy, there
is going to be a signifi cant increase
in what we collectively
thought the cost estimates
would be for this project.â€
--- Transportation Secretary
Jamey Tesler predicting that
the estimated cost to demolish
and replace the Bourne
and Sagamore bridges has risen
from the 2019 estimate of
up to $1.65 billion to a new estimate
of up to $4 billion.
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 of May 1629,
the House met for a total of
eleven hours and 17 minutes
and the Senate met for a total
of one hour and 25 minutes
Mon. May 16 House 11:03
a.m. to 11:42 a.m.
Senate 11:07 a.m. to 11:24
a.m.
Tues. May 17 House 11:00
a.m. to 12:25 p.m.
No Senate session
Wed. May 18 House 11:04
a.m. to 4:42 p.m.
No Senate session
Thurs. May 19 House 1:45
p.m. to 5:20 p.m.
Senate 11:06 a.m. to 12:14
p.m.
Fri. May 20 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.
APARTMENT FOR RENT
EVERETT
î€— î€µî’î’îî–î€ î—î‹îŒî•î‡ îƒ€î’î’î•î€ î‘îˆî„î• î–î†î‹î’î’îî–
î„î‘î‡ î…î˜î– îîŒî‘îˆî€‘ î€±î’ îšî„î–î‹îˆî• î’î• î‡î•îœîˆî•î€‘
î€¤î™î„îŒîî„î…îîˆ î€±î’îšî€„
î€¦î„îî î€¦î„î•îîˆî‘î€ î€™î€”î€šî€î€–î€–î€”î€î€™î€“î€›î€—
FOR RENT
OFFICE or
RETAIL SPACE
750 sq. ft.
617-389-6600
PARKWAY
LOCATION
Sunday, May 29 from 9â€”
THIS WEEK ON SAUGUS TV
Wednesday, June 1 at 8:30
1 p.m. on Channel 8 â€” â€œSunday
Night Stoogesâ€ (The Three
Stooges).
Monday, May 30 all day on
Channel 8 â€” â€œMovie Mondayâ€
(classic movies).
Tuesday, May 31 at 8:30 p.m.
on Channel 9 â€” School Committee
Meeting from May 25.
p.m. on Channel 9 â€” Special
Town Meeting from May 23.
Thursday, June 2 at 8:30
p.m. on Channel 9 â€” Board
of Selectmen Meeting from
May 24.
Friday, June 3 at 8:30 p.m. on
Channel 22 â€” SHS Varsity Baseball
vs. Everett from May 27.
Saturday, June 4 at 8:30
p.m. on Channel 22 â€” SHS Varsity
Softball vs. Melrose from
May 24.
Saugus TV can be seen on
Comcast Channels 8, 9 & 22. For
complete schedules, please visit
www.saugustv.org.
***programming may be subject
to change without notice***
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 27, 2022
î€©î•î„î‘îŽ î€¥îˆî•î„î•î‡îŒî‘î’
î€°î€¤ î€¯îŒî†îˆî‘î–îˆ î€–î€”î€›î€”î€”
î‚‡ 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—
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate
Newspapers
at
781-233-4446 or
info@advocatenews.net
Hall Rentals
Available
Excellent rates
Call 781-324-9570
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781 233 4446
VENDING MACHINE MOVER
$500.00 Signing Bonus for All New Hires
Driver with clean driving record for the greater Boston area to move
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fluently. Apply in person Monday thru Friday, 9am to 4pm @
83 Broadway, Malden, MA â€“ Or send your resume to jmagee@
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No phone calls please. Must have a valid driverâ€™s license.
855-GO-4-GLAS
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
CLASSIFIEDS
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Page 23
Follow Us On:
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Have a Safe & HappyHave a Safe & Happy
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 27, 2022
.............
#
1
î€¯îŠ‹îŠ•îŠ–îŠ‹îŠîŠ‰ î€‰ î€¶îŠ‡îŠŽîŠŽîŠ‹îŠîŠ‰
î€²îŠˆîŠˆîŠ‹îŠ…îŠ‡ îŠ‹îŠ î€¶îŠƒîŠ—îŠ‰îŠ—îŠ•
â€œExperience and knowledge
Provide the Best Serviceâ€
î€©î¨’î¨…î¨… î€°î¨î¨’î¨‹î¨…î¨” î€¨î¨–î¨î¨Œî¨•î¨î¨”î¨‰î¨î¨Žî¨“
î€¦îŠƒîŠ”îŠ’îŠ‡îŠîŠ‹îŠ–îŠ‘î€µîŠ‡îŠƒîŠŽî€¨îŠ•îŠ–îŠƒîŠ–îŠ‡î€‘îŠ…îŠ‘îŠ
î€¦
î€µ î€¨
Think Real Estate
î€¶î€¤î€¸î€ªî€¸î€¶ î€ î€·îšî’ î‰î„îîŒîîœ î’ï‚‡îˆî•î– î€™î€’î€— î•î’î’îî–î€ î€–î€’î€• î…îˆî‡î•î’î’îî–î€ î“îî˜î– î„î‡î‡îŒî—îŒî’î‘î„î îîŒî™îŒî‘îŠ î–î“î„î†îˆî€
î–îˆî“î„î•î„î—îˆ î˜î—îŒîîŒî—îŒîˆî–î€ î—îšî’ î‚¿î•îˆî“îî„î†îˆî–î€ î†îˆî‘î—î•î„î î„îŒî•î€ îŒî‘îŠî•î’î˜î‘î‡ î“î’î’îî€ î–î“î•îŒî‘îŽîîˆî• î–îœî–î—îˆîî€ îŠî•îˆî„î—
î‰î’î• îˆî›î—îˆî‘î‡îˆî‡ î’î• îî„î•îŠîˆ î‰î„îîŒîîœî€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€›î€™î€œî€î€“î€“î€“î€‘
Think Lauren Barton
î€¯î€¼î€±î€± î€ î€”î–î— î€¤î€§ î€¯î’î™îˆîîœ î€š î•î î€¦î„î“îˆ î€¦î’î‡ î–î—îœîîˆ î‹î’îîˆ î’ï‚‡îˆî•î– î€– î…îˆî‡î•îî–î€
î€• î‰î˜îî î…î„î—î‹î–î€ î…î•îŒîŠî‹î— î€‰ î–î˜î‘î‘îœ îîŒî™îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’î îšî€’îŠî„î– îšî’î’î‡î–î—î’î™îˆî€ î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡
î€‰ î–îîŒî‡îˆî•î– î—î’ îîŠ î‡îˆî†îŽî€ îŽîŒî— îšî€’îŠî•î„î‘îŒî—îˆ î†î’î˜î‘î—îˆî•î– î€‰ î†î— îƒ€î•î€ î‡îŒî‘îŒî‘îŠî•îî€
î†î’î‘î™îˆî‘îŒîˆî‘î— î€”î–î— îƒ€î’î’î• î…îˆî‡î•îî€ î‚¿î‘ î€¯î€¯ îšî€’î‰î“ î‰î„îîŒîîœî•î îîˆî™îˆî îœî‡ îšî€’î“î„î—îŒî’î€‘
î€ªî•îˆî„î— î‰î„îîŒîîœ î‹î’îîˆî€„ î€¼î’î˜ îšî’î‘î‚¶î— î…îˆ î‡îŒî–î„î“î“î’îŒî‘î—îˆî‡î€„î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€˜î€•î€œî€î€“î€“î€“î€‘
View our website from
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335 Central St., Saugus, MA
781-233-7300
SAUGUS - 1st AD Nicely located 7 room Colonial offers 3 bedrooms,
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street location, wonderful opportunity! ..................................... $499,900.
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781-233-1401
38 MAIN STREET38 MAIN STREET, SAUGUS, SAUGUS
FOR SALEFOR SALE
FOR SALEFOR SALE
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kitchen, 1st flr master suite, hardwood flooring, central air, fin LL offers playrm
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î€¶î€¤î€¸î€ªî€¸î€¶ î€ î€”î–î— î€¤î€§ î€¦î˜î–î—î’î î€¦î’îî’î‘îŒî„î î‰îˆî„î—î˜î•îŒî‘îŠ î€› î•îî–î€ î€– î…î‡î•îî–î€ î€• î€”î€’î€• î…î„î—î‹î–î€ î€• î†î„î• îŠî„î•î„îŠîˆî€
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LITTLEFIELDRE.COM
624 SALEM STREET, L NNFIELD
624 SALEM STREET, LYNNFIELD
FOR SALEFOR SALE
FOR SALE - 3 BED, 1.5 BATH COLONIAL ON SUNTAUG
LAKE WITH LOTS OF UPGRADES. LOCATED ON
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CALL JUSTIN 978-815-2610
FOR SALEFOR SALE
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FIRST FLOOR AND THREE ADDITIONAL BEDROOMS ON THE SECOND FLOOR. MAINTENANCE FREE VINYL
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AND NEWER ROOF. BASEMENT OFFERS EXPANSION POSSIBILITIES WITH WALK-OUT TO SMALL YARD. WINDOW
A/CS STAY AS GIFTS. WALKING DISTANCE TO OAK GROVE T (ORANGE LINE), PINE BANKS PARK, SHOPS &
MORE. CLOSE TO BOSTON. GREAT COMMUTER LOCATION! $599,900 MALDEN CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
LOOKING TO
BUY OR SELL?
CALL
DAWN
BRYSON
FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE
NEEDS!
978-880-8425
FOR SALE - 2 BED, 1 BATH WITH UPDATED WITH
NEWER KITCHEN AND FLOORING PEABODY
$129,900 CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
FOR SALE - 2 BED, 1 BATH WITH SOME UPDATES
IN DESIRABLE PARK NEW OIL TANK, FENCED
YARD. SAUGUS $119,900 CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
FOR SALE -BRAND NEW MANUFACTURED MOBILE HOMES.
FOUR CUSTOM UNITS LEFT. ALL UNITS ARE 2 BED , 1 BATH
12 X 52. DANVERS $199,900 CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
FOR SALEFOR SALE
FOR SALE - 4 FAMILY INVESTMENT PROPERTY
NEAR DOWNTOWN ALL SEPARATE ENTRANCES
WITH GREAT RENTAL HISTORY $1,100,000
PEABODY CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
FOR SALE - 3 BED, 2 BATH COLONIAL/ MULTI LEVEL
COMPLETELY RENOVATED WITH 2 BED CARRIAGE
HOUSE SAUGUS $849,900 CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
FOR SALEFOR SALE
FOR SALE - 2 PLUS ACRES OF RESIDENTIAL
LAND. WATER AND SEWER AT SITE SAUGUS
CALL RHONDA FOR DETAILS 781-706-0842
FOR SALEFOR SALE
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