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alld
a
Vol. 30, No. 49
den
AADD
-FREEBy
Christopher Roberson
C
ongresswoman Katherine
Clark, U.S. Senator Ed Markey,
Congresswoman Lori TraA
household word in Malden for 30 years!
CTE
OCAT
AT
www.advocatenews.net
Published Every Friday
Congresswoman Clark tours
Malden home weatherized with
funds from new Infrastructure Act
han and U.S. Energy Secretary
Jennifer Granholm recently
toured the home of Malden
resident Cindy Yu, which was recently
weatherized using funds
from the new Infrastructure Investment
and Jobs Act.
“Cindy’s story highlights the
CLARK | SEE PAGE 8
617-387-2200
By Steve Freker
O
Shown from left to right are State Representative Paul Donato, Congresswoman Lori Trahan, U.S.
Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm, Malden resident Cindy Yu and her daughter and U.S. Senator Ed
Markey; Mayor Gary Christenson and Congresswoman Katherine Clark are shown in back. (Courtesy Photo)
Malden School Committee
extends school bus contract
through 2022-23 school year
Mayor notes ‘seller’s market’ factor in
supporting fi nal option year for NRT Bus Inc.
By Steve Freker
W
hen it came time for Malden
School Committee
Chairperson and Mayor Gary
Christenson’s turn to say his
piece, he made it quite simple:
Dollars...and sense. The topic
was whether the School Committee
was going to fl ip a voting
coin and either move on
from its present student transportation
vendor, Lynn-based
NRT (North Reading Transportation)
Bus Inc., or exercise its fi -
nal one-year extension option
through the 2022-23 (Fiscal Year
23) school year.
Already the School Committee
had heard at Monday night’s
meeting from the influential
Special Education Parent Advisory
Council (SEPAC), and its
President, Patrick Fitzgerald, and
also from a parent of a bused
student, who related what she
described as a harrowing experience
by her son on an NRT vehicle
from the fall of 2019. Fitzgerald
asked the School Committee
members to table a vote
on the potential contract extension
so as to provide time for
more input from SEPAC members
on their personal experiences
with NRT Bus. The parent
of the student who spoke, Amy
Friedman, told the School Committee
there should be no consideration
of a contract renewal
unless NRT Bus guaranteed
full compliance with all tenets
of the contract in place, which
she claimed was not being folBUS
| SEE PAGE 10
ne of the longest-running local
holiday traditions in New
England will continue this season
when Santa Claus makes his
annual visit to Pine Banks Park
E
Friday, December 10, 2021
Santa Claus will make his 72nd
Annual Visit to Pine Banks Park
Traditional visits and photos in
'Santa’s Offi ce; return this year
Santa Claus is coming to town at Pine Banks Park for his 72nd
Annual Visit on Saturday, December 18 from 2-6 p.m. The Ward
5 Elves will assist him that day and this elf with Santa, above,
bears a slight resemblance to Councillor Barbara Murphy, don't
you think?(Courtesy Photo)
next week.
Santa Claus will take time out
of his busy schedule at the North
Pole to come to his Pine Banks
headquarters, at 1087 Main St.
SANTA CLAUS | SEE PAGE 11
Longtime School Committee members
Iovino, Froio and Luong departing
It has been over 50 years of service to the Malden
school district for Ward 4’s Iovino
Departing School Committee Members Leonard Iovino and Michelle Luong were honored at Monday’s
School Committee Meeting – their fi nal one. Shown above, after Mayor/School Committee Chairperson
Gary Christenson presented offi cial municipal citations, are, from left, Malden High School Student
Representative to the School Committee Christelle Jean, School Committee Members Jennifer
Spadafora (Ward 3), Adam Weldai (Ward 5), Luong, Christenson, Iovino, Michael Drummey (Ward 1),
Robert McCarthy Jr. (Ward 2) and Joseph Gray (Ward 6). (Advocate Photo)
By Steve Freker
T
hree departing members
of the Malden School Committee
who have each made
a signifi cant impact were recognized
at their final meeting
Monday night. Ward 4
School Committee Member
Leonard Iovino has contributCOMMITTEE
| SEE PAGE 9
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 10, 2021
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T
Malden City Council seeking to establish
new Racial Equity Commission
Councillor Sica's proposed resolution to form
new group is adopted by unanimous vote
By Steve Freker
he Malden City Council on
Tuesday unanimously approved
a pair of resolutions with
the intent to address a state of
affairs in this city which, they
said, has caused a distinct atmosphere
of discord and divisiveness.
The
two resolutions, both
firsts for this community, are
calls to establish formal training
sessions for City Council members
in Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
in 2022 and also to establish
a Racial Equity Commission
which would propose recommendations
for a Racial Equity
Plan for the city of Malden.
Both of these undertakings
would be coordinated by the
first-year coordinator of Diversity,
Equity and Inclusion Bybiose
Larochelle.
The resolution to establish the
training sessions for City Councilors
was sponsored by Councillor
at Large Debbie DeMaria.
The resolution to establish the
Racial Equity Commission was
initiated and sponsored by Ward
8 City Councillor Jadeane Sica,
who credited her former election
opponent Nate Bae Kupel
for assisting her in coming up
with the full proposal.
Over a dozen Malden citizens
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participated in the public comment
section of the meeting,
some by written emails or letters
and nine residents who spoke in
person at the Council podium,
all of them addressing one or another
of the resolutions.
All of the speakers or others
who commented were in favor
of the resolutions, though two
of the speakers said they believed
there was not a clear mandate
on "whose story would be
the basis" for the research planning
that was designed to acThe
Malden City Council voted unanimously to adopt a resolution
by Ward 8 Councillor Sica and co-sponsored by eight other
Councillors to establish an ad hoc Racial Equity Commission with
the intention of ultimately forming a Racial Equity Plan. The City
Council includes, front, l-r, Barbara Murphy (Ward 5), Amanda
Linehan (Ward 3), Jadeane Sica (Ward 8), Debbie DeMaria (at
large), Second row, l-r, Craig Spadafora (at large), Neal Anderson
(Council President, Ward 7), David Camell (Ward 6).Third row, l-r,
Paul Condon (Ward 2), Peg Crowe (Ward 1), Stephen Winslow (at
large) and Ryan O'Malley (Ward 4). (Courtesy Photo)
company the establishment of
the commission.
Councillor Sica's resolution
was co-sponsored by Councillors
Stephen Winslow (at
large), Craig Spadafora (at large),
Amanda Linehan (Ward 3), Peg
Crowe (Ward 1), Deborah DeMaria
(at large), Neal Anderson
(Council President, Ward 7), Paul
Condon (Ward 2) and Barbara
Murphy (Ward 5).
On a statement she made as
an introduction to her resolution,
Councillor Sica said she was
at first "reluctant to pursue it,"
when she considered the premise
of establishing a Racial Equity
Commission in Malden and then
discussed it further with Kupel.
"The past year has been a difficult
one with respect to the
topics of race and racial equity,"
Councillor Sica said ."It seemed
that, at every turn, someone
was leveling charges of racism,
scouring social media for evidence
of past racial insensitivity,
or questioning qualifications
based on race or perceived racial
attitudes.
"A great deal of time and effort
has been spent on the topic,
and the only thing we have to
show for it is an increase in discord
and divisiveness," Councillor
Sica added.
The Councillor said it has been
disheartening to see, hear and
read what has transpired in Malden
in the past several years,
particularly through the use of
social media. She said it has gotten
into many aspects of daily
lives, from elections to other
realms.
"Over the last year, we have
allowed race to become weaponized,
to be treated as a political
club, used to belittle opponents
in an effort to gain personal
electoral advantage," Councillor
Sica said."We’ve allowed ourselves
to be sidetracked by issues
that are, at best, trivial, and,
at worst, contrived. We’ve spent
too much time sniping at each
other over perceived slights and
interpreting each other’s words
and actions in the worst possible
light.
"Worse still, our scattershot
approach has emboldened the
most vicious, racist elements in
society to take potshots at our
residents, while hiding behind
their computer screens," Councillor
Sica added."At times, we
have been tempted to mistakenly
equate their sentiments
with those of individuals - myself
included- who find their views
despicable."
Councillor President and
Ward 7 Councillor Neal Anderson
said it was the right time to
adopt this resolve and that it has
been a long time coming.
"This is something very important
for our community as
a whole that all of our community
can be proud of, taking a
big step to address racial equity
with the help of our own citiCOMMISSION
| SEE PAGE 10
׉	 7cassandra://hk_fGvZD-VQgrTiC2mwVZI3TUmUOA8XbWD6yWUuoApI,`̰ aW@1׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 10, 2021
Page 3
Celebrating 93 years young
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Shown from left to right are Derine Caruso’s daughter Andrea Fountain, Derine Caruso and Mayor
Gary Christenson. (Photo Courtesy of the City of Malden)
M
ayor Gary Christenson recently
presented longtime
Malden resident Derine Caruso
with a citation in celebration of
her 93rd birthday. Well-known
as someone who has been devoted
to her family, Derine was
a loving wife for 52 years to
her husband Ignazio and with
him raised fi ve children. She is
very proud of them as well as
her 14 grandchildren and three
great-grandchildren. Derine also
spent many years employed by
local business Gans Tire, which
she very much enjoyed.
When Mayor Christenson
asked Derine what her secret
to longevity is, she responded
that “good genes” is her secret
to reaching this milestone.
Melrose Arts & Crafts Society
donates to Shaw’s Giving Tree
O
n November 22, the Melrose
Arts & Crafts Society
decided to donate to the Melrose
Shaw’s Giving Tree. The
tree is for seniors in need and
has tree-shaped cards with a
senior’s number, the item requested
and the cost. Home Instead,
which is partnering with
Shaw’s, will purchase, wrap and
distribute the requested item
to the designated senior. Melrose
Arts & Crafts Society Vice
President Janice Carr and several
other members, in the spirit
of giving, were pleased to
present Shaw’s Customer Service
Manager Sharon Piccirilli
with funds to purchase fi ve
cards.
The Society’s next monthly
meeting will be held on December
13 at the First Baptist Church
at 561 Main St. in Melrose from
9 a.m. to approximately 1 p.m.
Elaine Lerman will be teaching
a class on making Christmas
gift tags.
The Society has members
from 11 surrounding communities
and welcomes anyone interested
in learning a new craft
or improving an old one to contact
Dorothy Iudice at 781-6622099.
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PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://8ps2AIbcIhyQezP3LGZ2ov4G3Bo7dT8tehHq7CYvtO8 M`)׉	 7cassandra://kFurE9t3QcJi9_Uq47-J72e2UFdnMWSJ2QXFc9a9AnQͥ`J׉	 7cassandra://xI3TWLpX_aPtFK7iSr0B9xHv68djxm3bSwjOkoZyrFo/`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://DSkmd-ywywnToC9dgNInoMXyj4XIlH9UV1JiVSF2slY Msk͠aW@Vט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://BS9Acqv_MYlfEX_OrEqF-6UwmCFEY_FOg8ILC7hYzZ4 ):`)׉	 7cassandra://gPcH-5uHYhhSq1qi9dhXqXxNyLd3zun6O6n4DAaKVnA͏`J׉	 7cassandra://am2qCGaD1BiCluEV6H3M4vAOaHqx_TDFPH1KIK61-eE)}`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://sc8Pd327amJED4v_OP1un6dlGBh8wrYBZKtbc-c3i2E 8͠aW@WנaW@[ V΁̫9ׁHhttp://enredevelopment.comׁׁЈ׉EbPage 4
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 10, 2021
~ Op-Ed ~
Will Massachusetts join 45 states to protect
student data privacy and security?
By State Representative Kate
Lipper-Garabedian
N
early two decades ago,
when I was a teacher in the
Atlanta Public Schools, I kept
my students’ records in standard
manila folders, stored away
in a metal fi le cabinet. Opening
one, you might fi nd several examples
of student work, parent-signed
graded tests, the results
of the diagnostic reading
test I proctored at the start of the
school year, and family contact
information. I submitted attendance
and report card grades
via a monochrome interface
on a clunky desktop computer.
Otherwise, evidence of teaching
and learning was captured
exclusively on paper. In the following
years, our way of living
and working has become increasingly
dependent on digital
connectivity. I have experienced
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the seismic shifts in public education
driven by digital learning
technology as an education attorney,
fi rst supporting school
districts across the country and
then as Chief Legal Counsel at
the Massachusetts Executive Offi
ce of Education.
During the COVID-19 pandemic,
the use of digital solutions
in our K-12 schools has
been on full display, and families
have had front-row seats. I’ve
witnessed my oldest son Harrison
navigate fi rst and second
grades during remote and hybrid
weeks, logging into school
each morning and creating a
data footprint that dwarfed the
information my students generated.
Anyone visiting a school
today can observe the degree
to which our education system
has embraced the promise of
technology in their delivery of
instruction.
A review of our education
laws, on the other hand, leaves
the impression that student records
continue to be confi ned
to the four corners of manilla
folders. Massachusetts is one
of only fi ve states that has not
updated its state laws over the
last decade to acknowledge the
proliferation of digital education
data and ensure protections for
its students. Other state legislatures
have established privacy
and security requirements
regarding student data, codifying
accountability levers and
providing families with greater
insight into the data collected
from their children. Updated
laws elsewhere place guardrails
around the use of data, prohibiting
commercialization and
over-collection/over-surveillance.
It’s time for Massachusetts
Kate Lipper-Garabedian
State Representative
to catch up.
That’s why I fi led the Student
and Educator Data Privacy Act,
House Bill 127, with Representative
Jeff Roy at the start of 2021.
The Act establishes comprehensive
requirements for education
technology service providers
and empowers the Commonwealth,
school districts, and
schools to assert privacy and security
expectations for their students
and educators. In crafting
H.127, I analyzed and incorporated
the best of other states’
legislation, like extending protections
to certain data collected
from and about teachers and
to preschool programs run by
public school districts. Informed
by national and local education
data and legal experts, the bill
protects and gives agency to
students, educators, and families.
The Student and Educator
Data Privacy Act requires that
education technology service
providers adhere to critical security
practices and prohibits them
from commercializing student
and educator data – e.g., targeted
advertising, amassing student
profi les, and selling private
data. To accomplish this, the Act
identifi es provisions necessary
for the agreements between educational
entities and third-party
technology operators. It includes
terms of data ownership,
data access, security breach notifi
cations, and data destruction.
And it enables individuals and
schools to bring civil actions
for noncompliance and allows
the Commissioner of Elementary
and Secondary Education
to bar an operator that fails to
comply with protocols. On implementation,
the Act supports
districts and schools by authorizing
a Chief Privacy Offi cer at
the Department of Elementary
and Secondary Education to develop
and provide model agreements,
guidance, and technical
assistance. School districts likewise
will prioritize student and
educator data privacy by designating
an individual as a data
manager. And families will be
empowered to review publicly
available lists of the student data
collected and the operators that
have access to that information,
fostering greater trust among
the community.
There is great promise in harnessing
technology to maximize
student learning and engagement
in both physical and
remote classrooms. I imagine
how digital applications that
exist for today’s students might
have complemented my lessons
years ago – off ering multimodal
delivery of curriculum, assisting
with necessary remediation,
and inspiring self-directed learning.
Yet I also have watched Harrison
access a math application
through school only to learn
that it now is the subject of a
Federal Trade Commission complaint
related to aggressive marSTUDENT
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׉	 7cassandra://xI3TWLpX_aPtFK7iSr0B9xHv68djxm3bSwjOkoZyrFo/`̰ aW@3׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 10, 2021
Page 5
Fire officials offer sage advice during holiday season
By Christopher Roberson
ire officials are once again
reminding residents to be
mindful of fire safety during
the holidays, particularly with
Christmas trees.
“Place your tree carefully so
F
it doesn’t block any exits you
might need in an emergency,”
said State Fire Marshal Peter Ostroskey.
“Although there are not
a lot of Christmas tree fires, they
are very serious when they do
happen. The best way to prevent
a Christmas tree fire is to
water it well every day.”
It is almost impossible to stop
a tree fire as it only takes eight
seconds for the flames to reach
the ceiling. Less than 20 seconds
later, a flashover would
occur, igniting everything else
in the room.
According to John Machnicki,
a fire safety professional at Travelers
Insurance, the heat from a
burning Christmas tree can be
the equivalent of “40,000 100watt
light bulbs.” “Christmas
trees are powerful fuel sources,
especially when dry,” he said.
“The tree becomes a fuel that
burns very rapidly and gives off
a lot of heat energy.”
In addition, Ostroskey said
that when buying a tree, needles
should not fall off when
pulling your hand along the
branches. If that happens, the
tree is too dry.
Placement is also a key factor.
Ostroskey said the tree should
not block doors or windows
that would be used to escape
a fire. “Santa may be able to escape
up the chimney, but you’ll
need two clear pathways out of
each room,” said Ostroskey.
The tree should also be three
feet away from heating vents,
fireplaces or other heat sources.
According to the U.S. Fire
Administration, 25 percent of
Christmas tree fires are caused
by putting a tree too close to
a heat source. A Christmas tree
will “act like a blowtorch in your
living room” once it catches fire.
According to Cavallo & Signoriello
Insurance, real Christmas
trees are three times more
likely to catch fire than an artificial
tree. Therefore, real trees
should be kept no longer than
four weeks.
When decorating the tree, it
is recommended to use newer
LED lights. The lights should
be off when no one is home
and before going to bed at
night. When decorating outside,
consumers should use
lights that are specifically for
outdoor use. Fire officials also
suggest using a ground-fault
circuit interrupter, which can
be installed by an electrician
or purchased for portable use.
In addition, consumers should
be aware that a 15-ampere circuit
can support 1,800 watts
and a 24-ampere circuit can
support 2,400 watts.
“No one thinks they will experience
a fire, but sadly so
many do over the holidays,”
said Ostroskey. “Be sure that
your smoke and carbon monoxide
alarms are in good working
order and review your home
escape plan with family and
guests.”
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In less than 20 seconds, a dry Christmas tree can become a blazing
inferno. (Photo Courtesy of the National Fire Protection Association)
City seeks volunteers
to create Transit
Action Plan
he City of Malden is seeking
four residents to volunteer
and guide public input on the
creation of its first Transit Action
Plan. Development of this plan
will be based on Malden residents’
experiences using MBTA
bus, subway and commuter rail
services. The final plan will outline
opportunities to improve
the city’s transit services and
connect them to other modes
of travel, like walking and bicycling.
Volunteers
will serve on the
Mayor’s Sustainable and Equitable
Transportation Task Force.
This Task Force includes city
staff, residents and a City CounT
cil
representative. The Mayor’s
Office specifically seeks residents
from transit-dependent
households willing to help expand
outreach to fellow transit
users. Meetings will take place
about once a month over the
course of 2022, along with three
planned community meetings.
If you would like to join this
Task Force, please send a brief
email expressing your interest
to John Alessi (jalessi@maldenredevelopment.com)
before
12 p.m. on Monday, December
20. Interviews for this position
will take place between December
27-29. The Task Force will begin
meeting in January 2022.
You may qualify for ABCD’s Fuel Assistance
Program and be eligible for as much as $1,030
towards your heating costs (oil, gas, or electric).
Maximum benefit is $1,030
Household of 1 = $40,951
Household of 2 = $53,551
Household of 3 = $66,151
Household of 4 = $78,751
Cold days are coming.
ABCD’s got you covered.
APPLY TODAY!
Last day to apply is April 30, 2022
Residents of Boston, Brookline, and Newton:
178 Tremont Street, Boston, MA — 617.357.6012
Residents of Malden, Medford, Everett,
Melrose, Stoneham, Winchester and Woburn:
18 Dartmouth Street, Malden, MA — 781.322.6284
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 10, 2021
Malden Today Tomorrow and Yesterday –
34th Annual Hall of Fame Banquet
By Peter F. Levine
W
hat fun we had at the Malden
High School Golden
Tornado Club 34th Annual
Hall of Fame Banquet and Induction
Ceremony! The Moose
Hall was rockin’ on Saturday,
November 20 with, according
to reliable sources, the biggest
crowd in over 10 years crowding
into the venerable banquet
room. Thanks to the 1973 Malden
High School hockey team
(and the whole DeVincentis
clan), not an extra seat in the
house – the hockey team out
in full force due to the extraordinary
eff ort of Bobby McCarthy
rounding up his old teammates.
Coach (Bill) McCormack
was on hand for the big event.
He had his loving nephews Paul
and Sean Gilligan by his side all
night making sure “Uncle Bill”
was well taken care of.
The night was a great success,
in every measurable way.
It helps sitting with some of
the best and brightest minds in
Malden: Malden Recreation Director,
brother Joe; former girls’
hoops coach and MHS Principal
Dana Brown, who kept us enterLaw
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Members of the 1973 Malden High School Hall of Fame Hockey Team (Courtesy Photo)
tained all night with his running
commentary; MHS Class of 1973
baseball standout Matt “Anthony’s
Older Brother” Chiccuarelli;
MHS Class of 1973 basketball
standout Tommy Stein; Harvey
“Nat the Cat” Nadler, who has
more Malden sports knowledge
in his little fi ngers than most of
us have in our whole body. Saw
Harvey and coach Exilhomme
comparing notes earlier in the
night (expect a Thanksgiving
Day victory after that little talk).
Joe’s daughter Dorothy gave us
the inside scoop on a lot of the
stats behind the stats with her
vast knowledge of Malden High
sports. Football Head Coach
Witche Exilhomme and assistant
coach Wiston Jeune as well as
Wiston’s charming wife rounded
out this fabulous table.
A few takeaways from the
event before I publish a quote
from the keyboard of the inimitable
Dana Brown:
• We had two of the finest
quarterbacks in the history of
Malden in attendance, Johnny
Salmon from the class of ’66 and
John Stanasek from the class of
’76. Both should have their own
wing in the Hall.
• Sad news relayed by Panama
[Peter Carroll]; a Golden Tornado
“titan” died this past August.
Dickie Vaughan bled blue
and gold and loved Malden and
Malden athletics. He joins Hall of
Famers Guy LoConte (1954), Billy
Blais (1964) and Steve Carpenter
(1975) passing away in 2021.
• Panama also announced that
longtime Golden Tornado supporters
Bobby Sager and Dave
Slaine made sizable contributions
to the Golden Tornado
Club. Bobby, $10,000 and David,
$2,500. Thank you, gentlemen.
Mensches, both of you!
Great to see the whole DeVincentis
family in attendance. Bobby’s
daughter Kaitlyn was taking
her rightful place in the Hall of
Fame this night. My old friend
Joe (DeVincentis) looked to be
enjoying himself the most.
Took a moment for me recognize
old friend Donny Roach
(Hall of Fame 1976). I was very
happy to hear both his parents
are alive and well. Two very
nice people raising four beautiful
children. Donny, by the way,
may be the best all-around athlete
during my years at the high
school. He could do it all and we
were very proud that he lived
on Malden Street in Edgeworth
during his high school years
(right next door to Mr. Adorn).
Steve Surette was accompanied
by his little sister Paula;
both looked great. He was the
leader of that talented ’73 hockey
team on the way to a GBL
Most Valuable Player Award. His
brother Dave was also on this
team. Dave was no slouch either.
By the way, Steve, thank you for
the kind words about my column.
Again, it means a lot coming
from you.
Dave (Slaine) flew up from
Florida for the event (and boy
were his arms tired – that’s a
joke, son). His good pal Mike
Byrne was being inducted; he
had to be there. His donation
of $2,500 to the Golden Tornado
Club in Mike’s name was just
one of the many mitzvahs Dave
has done for his beloved Malden
over the years – most of his
good deeds, under the radar.
They don’t make them like Dave
Slaine any longer. Oh yeah, and
for those that don’t know him,
Dave was a terror on the hoop
court. With those long legs and
deadly jumper, he always took
it easy on me back in the old Y
days. He always respected his elders.
Thank you, Dave, for your
generosity and love of Malden.
Yes, Bob Rotondi, you were
missed.
Where would Malden High
and Malden athletics be without
Malden’s Loyal Order of Moose,
Henry’s Catering and specifi cally
the Dorazio family – without
their generous support over the
many years?! Yeah, we’d be hurting.
Thank you from the bottom
of Malden’s heart for the benevolence
the Dorazios have shown
over the decades.
Jeanne (Grasso) Marquardo
is listed as the secretary of the
Golden Tornado Club, but darn
it, that isn’t even close to what
she actually means to this organization.
Thank you, Jeanne!
Say hi to Joey and Marty for me.
Mike Byrne started his classy
speech by thanking his “best
friend” (his wife) and his (best
friend) growing up, Russell
Smith. Russell passed away a
few years back, but Mike and
Russell’s sister Maryanne make
sure that we never forget the
wonderful person Russ was.
Maryanne (Smitty) is a Hall of
Famer herself from the class of
1978.
Fun fact: Mike’s 1972 football
squad were so close nine of his
teammates were ushers in his
wedding!
All roads lead back to Dave
Slaine. Mike mentioned Dave
also in his acceptance speech.
Dave hasn’t called Malden home
for many years, but the impact
and the friendships he made
growing up here are for life.
That’s how Malden rolls! That’s
how Dave Slaine rolled!
The ’73 hockey team looked
genuinely happy to be there. A
few are already in the Hall as individuals
(Steve Surette, Steve Sideri,
Joe Bogan, Bill McCormack),
but for many others on the team
this was their fi rst time attending
a Hall of Fame banquet. It
was great to catch up with old
MALDEN: TODAY| SEE PAGE 15
׉	 7cassandra://zy89vn8lsFt1Ov96-5LBJTTzHcYT3-kN44Um8HljRng.v`̰ aW@5׉E~THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 10, 2021
Page 7
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 10, 2021
Residents urged to shop locally for the holidays
By Sandy Felder
B
etween supply chain issues
and product shortages at
the big chain stores, the time
has never been better to shop
locally for the holidays with
small businesses. In addition to
helping the local economy and
your community, shopping with
small businesses in your area is
good for the soul.
There are several wonderful
new places in Malden where
you can buy unique and beautiful
gifts for every member of
CLARK | FROM PAGE 1
core purpose of the Infrastructure
Investment and Jobs Act –
investing directly in American
families to lower costs and build
a stronger, more sustainable future.
The Infrastructure Investment
and Jobs Act is the game
changer we’ve been waiting for,”
said Clark during the December 3
visit to Yu’s home. “With this new
law, families, especially low-income
families, will increase their
energy efficiency and save money
through reduced energy bills
while collectively strengthening
our climate resiliency as a nation.
I’m grateful to Secretary Granholm
and my Massachusetts colleagues
for coming to Malden to
highlight the importance of this
critical program to our economic
recovery and our future.”
STUDENT | FROM PAGE 4
keting of fee-based perks.
As I advocate for passage of the
Student and Educator Data Privacy
Act, I invite you to add your
voice to the chorus for modernizing
our state law framework.
Check in with the students in
your life about the education
programs and apps they are utilizing.
Follow up with school adthe
family. Here are a few suggestions
in Malden Center.
The Gallery@57, which is located
at 57 Pleasant St., has
handmade gifts and fine art created
by more than 50 local artists,
as well as fair trade items
imported for you by community
members. Whether it be a
hand beaded necklace or bracelet,
a beautiful silk or hand felted
scarf, a handcrafted belt, a
handmade doll, a build a fairy
kit, or beaded animals, there is
so much to choose from at The
Gallery@57. They have cards for
Signed into law by President
Joe Biden on November 15, the
Act calls for an infusion of $3.5
billion into the Department of
Energy’s Weatherization Assistance
Program. The investment
is intended to cut energy costs
by $283 per year for single-family
homes and reduce the carbon
footprint by 2.2 million tons per
year as well as create and maintain
approximately 8,500 jobs.
“Cindy is one of millions of
people across the country who
has taken advantage of the
Weatherization Assistance Program,”
said Granholm. “That
funding just got a lot bigger.
What does it mean? It means
that our house is warm.”
The efficiency upgrades were
completed by Community Action
Programs Inter-City, Inc. (CAPIC)
and Action for Boston Commuministrators
on privacy policies
for student learning. Ask about
the kinds of data being collected,
access to that data, the software
pre-installed on school-monitored
devices, and the protocols
in the event of a security breach.
The Student and Educator
Data Privacy Act is about cultivating
trust – trust among
schools, districts, students, teachall
occasions, including Hanukkah,
Christmas, Kwanzaa and
Season’s Greetings.
Malden Center Fine Wines,
which is located at 220 Pleasant
St., sells a wide range of spectacular
wine, craft beer, spirits, gourmet
cheeses and other delightful
treats. In addition to their wonderful
selection and free tastings
on Fridays and Saturdays,
their gourmet guru can make
custom platters for a romantic
dinner for two or for a large party.
Their beautiful gift baskets are
perfect for any occasion.
nity Development (ABCD).
Yu said her first experience
with the Weatherization Assistance
Program came last winter
when her boiler broke. “I called
ABCD and CAPIC for help,” she
said. “They came in and helped
us, which was awesome. With
my two little babies, it means a
lot for our family.”
Markey lauded Yu for reaching
out to ABCD and CAPIC. “My
neighbor Cindy Yu partnered
with CAPIC, Inc. and ABCD to
weatherize her home and help
her family save on energy costs,”
he said. “She’s a sustainability
leader for Malden and for the
whole country. This $3.5 billion
that we have is going to be used
across the country, especially in
the poorest communities, and
$7 billion dollars for low-income
heating assistance.”
ers, third-party operators, and
families. To ensure technology is
employed and leveraged appropriately,
Massachusetts law must
acknowledge that data are now
digital. We must establish high
standards of privacy, security,
transparency, and accountability
regarding collection and use.
It’s high time for the Student and
Educator Data Privacy Act.
I
Soul City Yoga, which is located
at 210 Pleasant St., offers
classes in a safe practice space
for all levels of yoga enthusiasts.
Their community building practice
celebrates diversity and representation.
You can purchase
gift certificates for the person
who loves yoga or for someone
who needs a place to find peace.
The Closet Connection hopes
to reopen at 173 Pleasant St.
in the near future. Until then,
you can browse couture handbags
and gently worn designer
clothing on their website at
https://closetconnectionresale.
com/ or see their collection of
secondhand bargains on Instagram
at https://www.instagram.
com/maldenconsignment. For
even more fun, join in one of
their Facebook Live sales, which
take place on Tuesdays at 6:30
p.m. for high-end luxury items
at https://www.facebook.com/
groups/closetconnectionvips/.
For all other secondhand goodies,
check out https://www.facebook.com/groups/maldenconsignment
on Tuesdays at 7 p.m.
and Wednesdays at 6 p.m.
Two Malden men
indicted for drug
trafficking
By Christopher Roberson
gor Desouza, 25, and Matthew
Ramos, 24, both of Malden,
were indicted on December 1
for their alleged involvement in
a drug trafficking operation. According
to federal law enforcement
officials, Desouza and Ramos
had been moving fentanyl
and methamphetamine “in and
around the Malden area.” In addition,
the drugs were altered
to look like Adderall, Xanax and
oxycodone.
While searching the defendants’
residence, investigators
allegedly recovered nearly
10,000 pills believed to be
“thousands of methamphetamine
pills pressed to resemble
Adderall or Xanax.” Allegedly,
thousands of compressed
fentanyl pills were also found
and looked very similar to oxycodone;
in addition, investigators
seized a gun, more than 200
rounds of ammunition, black tar
heroin, MDMA crystals, cocaine
and LSD.
Desouza and Ramos are
each charged with one count
of possession with intent to
distribute 500 grams or more
of methamphetamine, 40
grams or more of fentanyl and
other illegal substances. Desouza
was arraigned in federal
court on December 3. The
date of Ramos’ arraignment
was not disclosed.
Under federal law, Desouza
and Ramos could face 15 years
to life in prison, supervised release
for nine years to life and
fines of up to $15 million.
׉	 7cassandra://THcSztEtnk4HndEIKBKDbT_5PdA_hWRNoN_rdRwrjdg-b`̰ aW@7׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 10, 2021
Page 9
COMMITTEE | FROM PAGE 1
ed over 50 years to the Malden
Public Schools, over 40
years as a teacher and administrator
and over 20 years on
the School Committee. Ward
7 School Committee Member
Michelle Luong was elected to
the board in 2019 for the fi rst
time. Ward 8 School Committee
Member John Froio also
did not seek reelection this
past fall.
Iovino declared earlier this
year he would be seeking reelection
to another two-year
term in this past fall’s election,
and Luong ran for an open
Ward 7 City Council seat this
past fall and left the School
Committee seat open in the
ward.
Dawn Macklin, who fi nished
second to Iovino in the 2019
race, ran unopposed this time
around and won the open seat
in the 2021 race. Coincidentally,
Keith Bernard also fi nished
second in 2019, to Luong, and
topped Nicole Mossalam to
claim the Ward 7 School Committee
seat in this year’s election.
Sharyn Rose Zeiberg, a
political newcomer, defeated
Bruce Friedman for the
open School Committee seat
in Ward 8.
The praises were many for
the departing members at
An official municipal citation
was presented to Ward 7 School
Committee Member Michelle
Luong, who is departing after
serving a term representing her
constituents.
Monday’s meeting.
“We may never again see a
record or longevity of service in
our school district as Mr. Iovino
has contributed to the Malden
community,” said Mayor Gary
Christenson, who has served
alongside Iovino for decades,
as a fellow School Committee
member in the early 2000s and
as chairperson of the body for
the past 10 years as Mayor.
Mayor Christenson also
praised Luong for her contributions.
“Ms. Luong has been a
strong advocate for all our students,
particularly those served
An official municipal citation
was presented to Ward 4
School Committee Member
Leonard Iovino, who did not
seek reelection in this past
fall’s vote.
through our Special Education
staff ,” he said.
Ward 5 School Committee
Member Adam Weldai also
served with Iovino a decade
ago in Weldai’s fi rst go-around
on the school board and most
recently again when he returned
as an elected member.
“Lenny [Iovino] has been a valued
colleague, a mentor and,
most importantly, a friend for
much of my life,” Weldai said.
“His service to the Malden
district on so many levels is
simply remarkable and is not
something we can replace.
100 years of
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You have touched so many
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Weldai also thanked Luong
for her service. “You [Luong]
have worked very hard to give
a voice to the voiceless, and all
of the students and their families
truly appreciate that.”
Mayor Christenson and the
other members of the School
Committee presented Iovino
and Luong with official municipal
citations commending
them for their service as School
Committee members to the
Malden community. Froio, who
was attending the meeting virtually,
will receive his citation at
a later time.
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Tuesday
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 10, 2021
BUS | FROM PAGE 1
lowed at this time.
Both School Committee members
and Mayor Christenson acknowledged
the comments of
those two speakers, as well as
many others who had contacted
them on the issue.
Mayor Christenson, who
spoke right before a 6-3 vote in
favor of Malden picking up the
last one-year contract option
with NRT, provided some striking
clarity. “For me it’s the great
unknown. This has been the
most volatile line item on the
school budget year in and year
out, and if you thought it was a
challenge before, you ain’t seen
nothing yet,’” Mayor Christenson
said at Monday night’s regular
School Committee meeting
about the bus transportation
contract.
Mayor Christenson and other
School Committee members
noted bus transportation, like
some other contracted service
enterprises, had been severely
impacted by personnel shortages
and other serious issues
since even before the COVID-19
pandemic. But the introduction
too much to speculate,” Mayor
Christenson. “I support the extension
of one more year, with
the full intention of putting the
contract back out to bid early in
the next school year so we will
have time to get plenty of input
from all parties who are impacted.”
Spadafora
talked about a chalof
the once-in-a-100-years virus
to the world has magnified the
provision of services.
Ward 3 School Committee
Member Jennifer Spadafora,
who is the designated member
for transportation issues oversight,
had reviewed the timeline
for the contract, noting it was a
three-year agreement with NRT,
signed to begin in 2018, with
two one-year School Department
options for 2021-2022 and
2022-23. Malden Public Schools
(MPS) pays about $2.5 million
annually for the NRT services,
to provide bus transportation
for 346 special needs students
both in and out of district.
Both Spadafora and Mayor
Christenson said they backed
picking up the final one-year option
with NRT since time and financial
uncertainty are big obstacles
to the alternative: seeking
new bids from another vendor
in time for a new service
vendor to be hired and acclimated
to the Malden district. “For
me, it makes sense financially to
take this budget concern off the
board,” the Mayor said. “At least
we know it is at our option, and
we know what our cost will be.”
“Without knowing what our
Chapter 70 funding will be due
to our enrollment numbers or
what the new Northeast [Vocational]
school project is going to
mean to us, cost-wise, it is just
lenging timeline if NRT’s oneyear
extension was not voted
in. “Time is of the essence; if we
tabled a vote, we would have
to put it off to January at the
earliest, then vote on an RFP
[Request for Proposals], which
would take us to February or
March,” Spadafora explained.
“Then we’d have to interview
and be cutting it too close to
be able to train drivers to get to
know routes. We have 50 routes
every morning and afternoon
for our students, including in
and out of district.”
In building a school budget
proposal that has traditionally
been razor-thin in the ability to
reduce it to fit financial parameters,
not knowing what bus
transportations costs would be
that late in the game, such as in
the spring, would be anathema
to budget preparation protocol,
Spadafora said. “Our Assistant
Supt., Toni Mertz, is working
on the [FY23] school budget
right now, It’s important to
know what [bus costs] we’re
building into our budget right
now,” Spadafora said. “With the
climate we are in now as for hiring
and training drivers, it is important
that we have this [contract]
issue settled as soon possible.”
Ward
5 School Committee
Member Adam Weldai said he
is pleased with the degree of input
he had received on the bus
contract issue, including from
someone directly involved with
the matter, Committee Member
Spadafora, whose son is an
out-of-district student who is
bused daily. “Give SEPAC credit
that they have increased engagement
and participation
from caregivers. The most important
question I had when
talking to those who contacted
me was ‘do they take part’
in the daily transportation service,”
said Weldai, who seconded
Spadafora’s motion to extend
COMMISSION | FROM PAGE 2
zens," Councillor Anderson said.
"It's time we walked the walk after
talking about these issues
and how to address them for
so long."
Councillor Sica said she was
hopeful that the establishment
of the Racial Equity Commission,
which is expected to come
about in early 2022, would be
a positive step in the right direction.
"With
the help of our Diverthe
contract. “Most of them did,
and most of them spoke favorably
of the company [NRT]; plus,
we have a committee member
[Spadafora] intimately involved
with the service.”
Spadafora related that she
had also had some issues at
times with NRT, but added
that the company did respond
quickly to questions and complaints
and “did their best to rectify
them in a reasonable time
frame.”
Spadafora said that first-year
Assistant Superintendent for
Student Services Pamela MacDonald
had made monitoring
the bus transportation process
an important priority since
MacDonald came aboard in
August. “She [MacDonald] has
been working closely and extremely
diligently with NRT on
complaints and other issues,
and NRT has been very responsive,”
Spadafora said. “Whether
it is that the route takes longer
than it should to get to school
in the morning – they have put
students on different routes and
the problem is solved immediately,
or they have even added
routes.”
Outgoing Ward 7 School Committee
Member Michelle Luong,
a steady champion for MPS Special
Education students, agreed
that the time factor is critical and
said she could support the extension
of the contract, if communication
could be improved
so as to address any remaining
issues with students’ transportation
experience could be addressed
and rectified immediately.
Ultimately,
Luong voted
against the motion to extend
the NRT contract, joined by
members Joseph Gray (Ward
6) and Robert McCarthy Jr.
(Ward 2). All other members
voted in favor: Mayor Christenson,
Michael Drummey (Ward
1), Spadafora, Leonard Iovino
(Ward 4), Weldai and John Froio
(Ward 7).
Echoing Mayor Christenson,
Spadafora pledged to get the
new contract process going as
early as possible in 2022, “so we
can hit the ground running.” She
also said all stakeholders “would
have a seat at the table, starting
with SEPAC.”
sity, Equity and Inclusion coordinator
and a small group of
committed residents, I believe
that we can break the negative
cycle we have fallen into,"
Councillor Sica said."It is my
hope that we will be able engage
the community in meaningful
dialogue outside the
political arena, work toward
building mutual respect and
understanding, and make significant
strides toward a more
holistic and inclusive community."
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Page 11
Mystic Valley YMCA announces appointment
of four board members, names new board leadership
T
he Mystic Valley YMCA recently
announced four new
members of its Board of Directors
and named new board offi
cers to the volunteer leadership
of the organization, which
serves Everett, Malden and
Medford. These individuals will
support the nonprofit’s mission
to promote youth development,
healthy living and social
responsibility.
“We are excited to name
the new leadership and board
members who will bring diverse
expertise, insights, and lived experiences
to our work,” said President
and CEO Debbie Amaral.
“We are working diligently to
ensure the board truly refl ects
our communities to help lead
our Y today and into the future.”
The Board of Directors elected
new offi cers to serve twoyear
terms:
• Chief Volunteer Offi cer (CVO)
– Ronnie Puzon, RE/MAX Trinity
• Vice CVO – Christopher Melendez,
Morgan, Lewis & Bockius,
LLP
• Treasurer – Seth Felix, East
Cambridge Savings Bank
(through December 2021)
• Treasurer – Anthony Dotson,
BellMark Partners (eff ective January
2022)
• Secretary – Mea Mustone,
Malden Catholic High School
Four new board members
began their terms eff ective November
1:
• Elizabeth “Liz” Hart is the
founder and executive director
of the nonprofit organization
Tailored for Success, Inc., which
is dedicated to assisting low-income
women as they attempt
to enter the workforce. Hart is
SANTA CLAUS | FROM PAGE 1
on the Malden-Melrose line, on
Saturday, December 18, from
2:00 to 6:00p.m.,
For the 72nd year, Santa and
his helpers, the Ward 5elves and
others from Ward 1 and elsewhere
around the community,
will be making a stop at the park
to greet all the good little boys
and girls and their families and
collect their letters and Christmas
Wish Lists in person.
Santa Claus first visited Pine
Banks in 1949 and enjoyed himself
so much he kept coming back
every year since, according to Malden
Ward 5 City Councillor Barbara
Murphy. "It's a fantastic holiday
tradition and we are so excited it's
something we can keep going,"
Councilor Murphy said.
This year marks a return to the
traditional Santa visits, as "Santa's
Offi ce" will be up and operating
and photos with the man
himself will be available as they
a Commissioner Emeritus with
the Massachusetts Commission
on the Status of Women,
an active member and past District
Governor of Zonta International
and a past President and
board member of the Mystic Valley
YMCA. Hart earned her B.S. in
Business Administration from
Northeastern University and her
Master’s in Nonprofi t Management
from Cambridge College.
Hart is a resident of Melrose.
• Judy Kim is a principal data
solutions analyst with Liberty
Mutual. She has previously
held positions with Mass General
Brigham (Partners HealthCare)
and McLean Hospital-Harvard
Medical School, where she
was a clinical research assistant
studying youth mental health.
Kim earned a B.A. in Psychology
from the University of Texas at
Austin, an M.A. in Quantitative
Methods in the Social Sciences
from Columbia University and
an M.S. in Epidemiology from
the Harvard T. H. Chan School
of Public Health and is working
towards her M.B.A. from Babson
College. Kim is a member of the
Steering Committee to guide
a new Master Plan for the City
of Medford, where she resides.
• Nicole Paparian is the chief
administrative offi cer of Hoff ’s
Bakery in Malden, a premiere
manufacturer of gourmet desserts
for the food service and
retail trades in New England.
Paparian has extensive experience
in marketing and public
relations, including positions
with MullenLowe Mediahub,
the American Advertising
Federation and Liberty Hotel in
Boston. She is an active member
have been in the past.
In accordance with health
and safety protocols due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, all those who
participate are requested to wear
masks. The masks can be off the
children during photos, however.
Also on hand this year are expected
to be other holiday characters,
including Rudolph the
Red-Nosed Reindeer, Olaf from
"Frozen", the Christmas Bear,
Elmo and others.
Pine Banks Superintendent
Kevin Benner and his staff are
busy preparing for Santa's visit.
Councillor Murphy and the Ward
5 elves will be handing out candy
canes and collecting the letters
and lists for Santa. Mrs. Claus
has been busy in the kitchen and
will be distributing cookies and
hot chocolate packages in cups
"to go" as well.
Malden children and families:
Don't miss your chance to
tell Santa whether you've been
"naughty or nice!”
Member FDIC
Member DIF
RIGHT BY YOU
of the International Dairy Deli
Bakery Association, the American
Bakers’ Association and the
Malden Chamber of Commerce.
Paparian earned her B.S. in Business
Administration from The
George Washington University
School of Business. She is a resident
of Medford.
• Kevin Thai is the owner and
lead photographer of Three Circles
Studio in Malden, specializing
in corporate and headshot
photography. Prior to founding
his company, he was a teacher
at Staff ord House International
and a longtime teacher of English
as a Second Language at
Bunker Hill Community College
as well as in South Korea. He is
an active Board Member of the
Malden Chamber of Commerce
and has a commitment to his
community and start-ups. Kevin
holds his B.A. in History and
Masters in Education from Gordon
College. He and his family
live in Malden.
“I am personally delighted to
welcome such a strong group of
new board members and leadership.
I look forward to serving
with each of them to advance
the Y’s mission,” said Immediate
Past CVO Peter Nigro.
“I wish Ronnie Puzon the best
as he leads the organization in
the years ahead.”
A full list of the Mystic Valley
YMCA’s Board of Directors can
be found at https://mv-ymca.
org/our-y/our-leadership.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 10, 2021
Malden Catholic’s Make-A-Wish
Club grants a wish
J
asper is a playful two-anda-half-year-old
who loves
puzzles, dinosaurs and trucks.
Diagnosed with myopathy, a
life-threatening neuromuscular
disease, the amount of time
he spends on his favorite activities
is limited, but his positive attitude
always keeps a smile on
his face. Seeking a welcome escape
from the challenges of his
illness, Jasper wished to have a
play structure with a clubhouse.
Recently, the Make-A-Wish
Club at Malden Catholic (MC)
presented a check for $7,340 to
Make-A-Wish® Massachusetts
and Rhode Island to create and
build Jasper’s playset. Malden
Mayor Gary Christenson, Melrose
Mayor Paul Brodeur and
Make-A-Wish Massachusetts
and Rhode Island Special Events
Coordinator Hilary Muntz were
onsite for the ceremony along
with the MC Make-A-Wish Club
members.
After seeing his customized
playset for the first time, Jasper
was amazed by its exciting features
and the possibility for adventure.
From the swings to relax
on to the monkey bars to
help him exercise to a slippery
slide, Jasper was thrilled by this
new world of exploration. As his
mother reflects, “I am (and pretty
sure I always will be) moved
to tears when I look at the play
structure. It’s so much more than
a play structure – it’s proof that
Jasper is a warrior and he can’t
be held back.”
During the 2020-2021 academic
year, MC students and
parents came together and
raised money through a variety
of events, candy grams and
product sales to make his wish
come true. “This served as a reminder
that with a community
working together, we can provide
renewed hope and uplifting
joy when it is needed
most,” said MC Headmaster John
Thornburg. “Our MC Make-AWish
Club is also actively pursuing
the fundraising plans to fulfill
a fourth wish in 2022.”
Malden Catholic announces
Galvin-Shea Memorial Scholarship
A
Memorial Scholarship Fund
has been named for Sheila
Shea and Timothy J. Galvin,
late residents of Malden and
Melrose, respectively. The Galvin-Shea
Memorial Scholarship
will be awarded to two graduating
seniors from Malden Catholic
High School who plan to attend
college. The $3,000 award
will be presented to both a male
and female graduate. The Class
of 2022 will mark the first graduating
class of female students
from Malden Catholic (MC).
Shea, a native of County Cork,
Ireland, died in July 2020. She
was a Malden resident for more
than 50 years and worked many
years for the Volpe Construction
Company. She volunteered
much of her time to worthy
causes in Malden and was selected
for the annual Cheverus
Award in 2010 for her many
hours volunteering as a Eucharistic
Minister at Immaculate
Conception Parish. In addition,
Shea brought Communion to
those in the Parish who were
unable to attend Mass due to illness.
She was also selected the
“Volunteer of the Year” by Bread
of Life in Malden.
Galvin, son of Bartolomew
and Eleanor (Shea) Galvin, formerly
of Melrose, and nephew
of Sheila Shea, died suddenly
in February 2002 at the age of
35. He was the husband of Michelle
(Garton) Galvin and the
father of two young sons, Brendon
and Timothy. Galvin was a
1984 MC graduate and lettered
in both football and track. He
was gifted with an outstanding
personality and was well-known
as well as well-liked in the Melrose
area. He was the brother of
Kathleen M. (Galvin) Sherman of
Saugus, Sheila M. (Galvin) Gamst
of Melrose and Dennis B. Galvin
of Bradford, who also graduated
from Malden Catholic.
The scholarship was donated
by Charles Harrington, a native
of South Boston who now
resides in Florida. He was Shea’s
best friend for many years. Harrington’s
only request was that
the recipients of the scholarships
be outgoing students who
have volunteered to help others.
Harrington plans to make the
scholarship an annual award to
MC graduates.
“The scholarships are a wonderful,
generous way to honor
their legacies and make a tremendous
impact for our students
here at MC,” said an MC
spokesperson.
Middlesex DA partners with MIT
to conduct criminal system clinic
C
AMBRIDGE – Middlesex District
Attorney Marian Ryan
and The Educational Justice Institute
(TEJI) of the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology
(MIT) have announced a new
partnership to expand education
around racial equity issues
in the criminal system. The Middlesex
County District Attorney’s
Office will facilitate two clinics
to educate students about
prosecutorial work and the daily
functions of the court system
with the goal of tasking the participants
to develop innovative
solutions to improve data management,
increase transparency
and view outcomes through
a racial equity lens.
“In Middlesex County, we have
deepened and expanded our
commitment to racial justice
in our prosecutorial work,” said
Ryan. “One of the most critical
components of that work is education.
I am excited about this
partnership which will allow us
to interact with students to provide
them with a comprehensive
overview of what we do dayto-day
and also provide them
a view into our broader policy
work. MIT educates some of the
best and brightest minds in the
world and this partnership will
allow us to access that talent to
develop new ideas to increase
transparency, accountability and
to enhance the restorative components
of the system.”
As part of the curriculum, students
will hear personal perspectives
from prosecutors, defense
attorneys, judges and others
with firsthand experience.
They will learn about both data
management systems in law
enforcement and some of the
practical challenges which arise
in collecting and reporting that
data to the public. Participants
will complete relevant reading
and journal assignments and, as
a final project, will present proposals
to improve specific areas
of the current system. The Middlesex
County District Attorney’s
Office will then work with the
students to review their proposals
and use them to inform the
work of the Office.
“The goal is to broaden our
community collaborations
around our work. Through conversations
in the classroom and
by reviewing the reflective work
of the student’s final assignments,
we will increase the diversity
of ideas and perspectives
coming together to improve our
criminal system,” said Ryan.
TEJI Founder/Co-Director Lee
Perlman gave the MIT side of the
equation: “I’ve been bringing MIT
students into prisons and jails
for years to take class alongside
incarcerated students. I’ve seen
how life changing it is for MIT students
to not simply read about,
but see with their own eyes a sector
of the criminal justice lifecycle,
and meet some of the people
most affected. Our partnership
with DA Ryan’s office is the next
step in this proximate education
– they’ll get to see the real workings
of a DA’s office that is striving
to improve justice outcomes,
meet the people doing the work,
and participate in creating processes
to assure equal justice.”
TEJI Co-Director Carole Cafferty,
an advocate for justice-involved
people for over 30 years,
added: “Socially engaged academic
opportunities such as
these allow MIT students to
hone their empathy skills and
use their intellectual gifts to directly
improve people’s lives.
Our partnership with DA Ryan
and her team will provide students
with firsthand experience
while contributing to solutions
for complex social justice challenges
within our communities.”
The winter class starts on Tuesday,
January 4, 2022, and the
spring semester course starts on
February 2, 2022. This course will
be taught by Ryan, Assistant District
Attorney Aliya Khalidi and
MIT alumnus Assistant District Attorney
Michael Berry, in conjunction
with Cafferty and Perlman.
This partnership builds on the
Office’s past work to explore
and implement best practices
in prosecutorial work. In June
the Middlesex District Attorney’s
Office hosted an Inaugural Data
Summit that brought together
thought leaders and experts
in data management to explore
best practices nationally.
City presents ChronoSquad Malden
D
eveloped in conjunction
with Paidia Studios and
Northeastern University, the
ChronoSquad Malden game is
an augmented reality gaming
app for your phone that takes
you through some of Malden’s
amazing history. Free to play, the
family-friendly game is fun for all
ages and encourages players to
get out and see Malden through
a new lens. Please visit https://
www.cityofmalden.org/833/
Chronosquad---The-MobileMalden-History-.
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Page 13
Malden man arrested on firearm charges
connected with Cambridge shooting
By Christopher Roberson
M
iguel Lorenzo, 31, of Malden,
was taken into custody
by Cambridge Police on December
2 in connection with his
alleged involvement in a shooting
last month on Sciarappa
Street in Cambridge.
On November 19 at 2:12 a.m.,
police responded to a report
of gunfire on Sciarappa Street.
Upon arrival, officers reportedly
saw Lorenzo going into an
apartment building where he
barricaded himself for the next
four hours. As police attempted
to coax Lorenzo out from behind
his barricade, other officers
were able to get the building’s
residents evacuated. In addition,
messages were sent to residents
in the surrounding neighborhood
advising them to shelter
in place. As a result, no injuries
were reported.
Lorenzo finally exited the
building at 6:30 a.m. and was
detained by police. No charges
were filed at that time.
However, further investigation
allegedly connected Lorenzo
with a loaded gun and ballistic
evidence that was found at
the scene. Therefore, Lorenzo
was arrested on December 2 at
Post 69 Remembers Pearl Harbor
D
ecember 7th marks the 80th
anniversary of the Japanese
attack on Pearl Harbor. The attack
killed 2,403 U.S. personnel,
including 68 civilians, and destroyed
or damaged 19 U.S. Navy
ships, including 8 battleships.
The three aircraft carriers of the
U.S. Pacific Fleet were out to sea
on maneuvers. This catastrophe
led to the American entry into
World War II. This attack changed
American forever. In his speech
to Congress requesting a declaration
of war, President Roosevelt
called it a day that will live
in infamy. The war dragged on
until two events turned the tide
for the Americans; the first was
the Marines’ successful invasion
of Guadacanal that ended in the
defeat of the Japanese. The second
was the naval battle of Midway
Islands that took a heavy
toll of American and Japanese
battleships and airplanes, but
in the end the Americans won.
By the end of the Pacific war,
the U.S. had lost 364,748 killed
and wounded and had 21,580
missing.
We also note the 76th anniversary
of the Battle of the Bulge
that took place in Bastogne, Belgium,
from December 16, 1944,
to January 1945. It was the most
significant battle of the war after
Normandy. The American
and British Armies were outnumbered
and low on supplies.
The Armies also had to content
with snow and frigid temperatures.
At one point the Germans
sent a letter to General Anthony
McCauliffe demanding that the
Allies surrender; he replied to
the order with the word “Nuts.”
The battle continued until General
Patton’s 3rd Army came
to the rescue. With the end of
this battle World War II came
to an end in April. The casualties
included 90,000 Allies and
100,000 Germans.
What happened at Pearl Harbor
and Bastogne should give
us pause and reflect on the
courage of those Navy, Marines,
Army and Airmen that defeated
our enemies, and kept our freedoms
alive. Post 69 had many
members from World War II. Our
Post will always salute their heroism
and will always remember
their sacrifice to save our great
country.
—George Sahady for the
members of the Post.
Dept. of Public Health awards
$12.6M for school health workforce
and local COVID-19 response
T
he Baker-Polito Administration
recently announced
an investment of $12.6 million
for the community-based
COVID-19 response. This includes
$8.6 million in grants
for school districts across the
Commonwealth to expand the
school health workforce and
enhance schools’ ability to respond
to COVID-19 and an
additional $4 million for local
Boards of Health for COVID-19
contact tracing and case investigations.
School
health
workforce funding
Over two years, 43 school
districts across the Commonwealth
will receive $8.6 million
in funding through the Crisis
Response COVID-19 Supplemental
Funding for Workforce
Development from the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC). These
funds will be used to hire additional
school nurses, expand
the roles of school nurse leaders
responsible for health and
safety activities across entire
school districts and add additional
staff to assist with case
management, contact tracing,
COVID-19 testing and student
mental health needs within
school communities.
Local public health
funding
Building on a previous $16.6
million investment, the Administration
has awarded an additional
$4 million to local Boards
of Health for COVID-19 contact
tracing and case investigations,
bringing the total amount of direct
federal and state aid provided
to local public health for
contact tracing since April 2021
to $20.6 million. These funds
are part of the state’s efforts
to build and strengthen local
public health by providing additional
funding, training and
technical support to respond
to COVID-19.
“All of these funds will assist
and support two groups that
have been on the frontlines of
the COVID-19 response – our
school health workforce and our
local health departments,” said
Acting Public Health Commissioner
Margret Cooke. “We are
grateful for all of their efforts to
address the critical health and
safety needs of Massachusetts
residents throughout these
challenging months, and the
Administration is committed to
being an active partner as we
transition into the next phase
of the pandemic.”
T
his home and was arraigned the
following day. Assistant Clerk
Magistrate Daniel Flaherty ordered
Lorenzo to be held without
bail pending a dangerousness
hearing that was scheduled
for December 7.
Lorenzo faces two counts of
Assault with a Dangerous Weapon,
one count of Possession of
a Firearm without a License as
an Armed Career Criminal, one
count of Possession of Ammunition
without a License as an
Armed Career Criminal, one
count of Carrying a Loaded Firearm
and one count of Discharging
a Firearm within 500 feet of a
Dwelling. Under state law, Lorenzo
could be sentenced to up to
14 years in prison and be ordered
to pay up to $6,600 in fines.
The incident remains under
investigation.
Omicron variant
detected
in Massachusetts
he Massachusetts Department
of Public Health (DPH)
recently announced that genetic
sequencing has identified
the COVID-19 Omicron variant
for the first time in a case
in Massachusetts. The individual
is a female in her 20s and a
resident of Middlesex County
who traveled out of state. She
is fully vaccinated, has experienced
mild disease and did
not require hospitalization. The
variant was identified through
sequencing performed at New
England Biolabs.
While Omicron is classified
by the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC)
and the World Health Organization
as a Variant of Concern,
scientists are still working
to determine how it compares
with the predominant
Delta variant in terms of transmissibility
and disease severity.
There is some limited evidence
that Omicron could be
more transmissible than other
COVID-19 virus variants, including
Delta. Omicron is being
monitored closely by public
health authorities around
the world, and more information
about what we know
about Omicron is available on
the CDC website.
All three COVID-19 vaccines
in use in the United States have
been shown to be highly protective
against severe disease
resulting in hospitalization or
death due to known COVID-19
variants and remain the single
best way for people to protect
themselves, their loved
ones and their community
from COVID-19. There are more
than 1,000 locations across the
Commonwealth to get vaccinated
or receive a booster. The
vaccine is free and no ID or insurance
is required for vaccination.
Visit vaxfinder.mass.
gov for a list of vaccination locations.
Other
public health prevention
measures that help stop
the spread of COVID-19 variants
include the following: getting
tested and staying home
if you are sick, frequent handwashing
or use of hand sanitizer,
following masking requirements
and telling your close
contacts if you test positive for
COVID-19 so they can take appropriate
steps. To learn more
about protecting yourself from
COVID-19, visit www.mass.
gov/covidvaccine.
Residents are urged to enable
MassNotify on their smartphone.
The service can be
accessed through both Android
and iPhone settings; it
is not an application that can
be obtained through an app
store. This private and anonymous
service notifies users
of a potential exposure
to COVID-19 so they can take
appropriate precautions. For
more information and instructions
on enabling MassNotify
on your smartphone, visit
https://www.mass.gov/info-details/enable-massnotify-on-your-smartphone.
The
State Public Health Laboratory,
the Broad Institute of
MIT and Harvard and several
hospital and academic laboratories
have all contributed to
sequencing efforts in Massachusetts
during the pandemic.
This sequencing data contributes
to the tracking of clusters
and patterns of disease
spread. This in-state laboratory
capacity to sequence variants
allows Massachusetts to
not have to rely on out-of-state
laboratories.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 10, 2021
City of Malden hosts Patchell Park
Redesign Meeting – Dec. 15
T
he City of Malden invites
members of the public to a
virtual community meeting on
the future of Patchell Park, which
is located off Glen Rock Avenue
near Oak Grove, on Wednesday,
Dec. 15 at 6 p.m. on Zoom.
Thanks to a Community Preservation
Act grant and funding
from City Councillors Amanda
Linehan, Debbie DeMaria
and Craig Spadafora, Patchell
Park is undergoing a Master
Plan process designed to
envision future improvements
to the park. The fi rst community
meeting in October drew
many public comments, and
that input has been compiled
by landscape architecture consultants
at Shadley Associates.
Initial design renderings incorporating
that community feedback
will be shown at the meeting,
and residents will have an
opportunity to react and give
further input.
This project is being led by the
Friends of Oak Grove, Inc. (FOOGI)
with staff support from Malden’s
Offi ce of Strategic Planning
and Community Development.
To
join the meeting, visit CityofMalden.org,
where the Zoom
link will be posted, and contact
Councillor Linehan with
any questions at alinehan@cityofmalden.org.
A
New
trash trap
installed
in the Malden River
new trash trap was put into
place on the Malden River on
November 18. Situated across
the northern end of the river,
this trash trap will catch and
hold trash before it has a chance
to fl oat farther down the Malden
River and into the Mystic River.
“Most trash in the ocean
comes from rivers, and this
trash in the rivers comes from
land,” said Mystic Ambassador
Sushant Bajracharya of the Mystic
River Watershed Association
(MyRWA). “Through this trash
trap we are having an impact locally,
and globally.”
With an ability to store a high
Register for the
ZOOMmeeting
HERE!
Please join us for a discussion of the
project and
provide YOUR INPUT!
the
Sponsored by
City ofMalden
Councillor At Large, Craig Spadafora
Councillor At Large, Debbie DeMaria
Friends ofOak Grove, Inc. (FOOGI)
Malden Community Preservation Act Fund
Ward 3 City Councillor, Amanda Linehan
City Seeks Resident Member
for Cannabis Licensing
and Enforcement Commission
T
he Malden City Council is
reaching out to Malden residents
to fi ll its resident member
seat on the Cannabis Licensing
and Enforcement Commission
(CLEC). The fi ve-member
Commission operates under
the City of Malden Revised Ordinances
of 1991, Section 6.49
and serves as the local licensing
authority for Marijuana Establishments
within the City
of Malden. The CLEC shall enforce
the provisions of Marijuana
Establishment Licenses, including
but not limited those
items contained in 935 CMR
500, contained within the Special
Permit and the host community
agreement and any
rules and regulations promulgated
by the CLEC. Members
of the CLEC shall not be employed
by, be hired by, own or
otherwise benefi t directly or indirectly
from the growing, distribution
or sale of Marijuana.
Additional information may be
found at www.cityofmalden.
org/cannabis.
Prospective members must
be a resident of the City of
Malden and have been so for
the preceding two years. CLEC
members serve a term of three
years. The CLEC meets on the
fourth Wednesday of the month
at 5 PM in the auditorium of the
Malden Senior Center, 7 Washington
Street. No individual who
has been convicted of a felony
and/or who has been convicted
of distribution of controlled
substances to a minor in any jurisdiction
shall be eligible for appointment.
Interested
parties should send
a letter of interest and a resume
to Lisa Cagno, Clerk of Committees
at lcagno@cityofmalden.org.
The
deadline for accepting applications
is Sunday, December
26, 2021.
Inaugural Ceremonies slated for Jan. 3
M
alden’s 2022 Inaugural
Ceremonies will take
place on Monday, January
3, at 6 p.m. at Malden High
School (77 Salem St.). Members
of the public are invited
to witness members of
the City Council and School
Committee as they are sworn
into office. There will also
be an opportunity to recognize
outgoing members who
have served the community.
The event is open to the public;
however, it will be recorded
for later viewing for those
who are not comfortable attending.
All attendees are required
to wear facemasks in
accordance with COVID-19
protocols.
Saturday, Jan. 1, Solemnity of Mary
Holy Day of Obligation
4 pm
10 am
Sunday, Jan. 2, Epiphany
4 pm
8 am
9:30 am
11 am
Friday, Dec. 31 St. Mary’s
Saturday, Jan. 1 Our Lady of Grace
Saturday, Jan. 1 St. Mary’s
Sunday,Jan. 2 Our Lady of Grace
Sunday,Jan. 2 St. Mary’s
Sunday,Jan. 2 Our Lady of Grace
Saturday, Dec. 25, Christmas Day
8 am
9:30 am
Our Lady of Grace
St. Mary’s
11 am Our Lady of Grace
Please note that there will be no 4 pm Mass on that Saturday
Wednesday, December 15th
2nd
opportunity to
at 6pm
volume of trash, this trash trap
is an upgrade from the trash
boom that was previously in
the Malden River. This improvement
is part of MyRWA’s ongoing
work to reduce stormwater
pollution and improve water
quality in the watershed.
This project was funded in
part by the North American
Wetlands Conservation Act. Installing
the trash trap in the river
was no small feat. MyRWA
wants to give heartfelt thanks
to these generous partners and
community members who donated
their time and equipment
to make this project possible:
• Friends of the Malden River
• John Preotle Jr., John Spinella,
Gilmar Segura & Mike McCarthy
of River’s Edge
• Basil and Angelo Rigano, Victor,
Jose & Jesus of Rigano’s Towing
Service
• Joe Sallese Jr., Carmen Mastropietro
& Jamie Duplease of
Joe’s Welding and Armor Door
& Lock
Mayor Gary Christenson was
present for the installation, and
he has shared his support for
the Trash Free Malden and Trash
Free Mystic initiatives.
“Protecting water quality and
improving our rivers is a team
sport,” said MyRWA Executive Director
Patrick Herron. “This was
an incredible team committed
to stopping trash in its tracks
on the Malden River. I invite the
community to be part of these
eff orts, and also to get out and
enjoy this great resource in their
backyard.”
To learn more about MyRWA’s
eff orts to reduce trash in
the Mystic River Watershed, see
https://mysticriver.org/trashfree-mystic.
How
to help
How can community members
help? Please pick up trash
whenever you see it on the
street or in our parks. Most trash
in our rivers and lakes comes
from the street and is washed
into the river through storm
drains when it rains. Keeping
trash off the streets is the best
way to keep our rivers clean.
Blessed Mother of the
Morning Star Parish
Christmas and New Year’s Schedule
Friday, Dec. 24, Christmas Eve
4 pm
5:30 pm
7 pm
Kreyol
Family Mass St. Mary’s (bring a fl ashlight!)
St. Mary’s
Our Lady of Grace
From our kids to yours,
let’s keep Patchell Park vibrant for years to come!
׉	 7cassandra://JI84OeEvUq_Aq6ioexPJ39C9070tPqlPtN1v1NrCfoU*[`̰ aW@=׉EqTHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 10, 2021
Page 15
MALDEN: TODAY | FROM PAGE 6
GREATER BOSTON LEAGUE
NOTEBOOK:
Local football teams like Everett,
Malden and Revere will have lots
of new faces next season
Winter seasons open next week; Everett
and Lynn English still looking like
Boys Basketball teams to beat
By Steve Freker
T
urnover due to graduation
is a predictable rite of passage
for all high school teams,
year-in and year-out,
Due to several senior-laden
football squads in the Greater
Boston League this past season,
expect to see a lot of new
faces when the 2022 fall season
rolls around.Everett High, Malden
High and Revere High all
featured the senior year players
that each of these schools have
rostered in a number of years.
Suffice it to say that "Senior
Nights" this fall were a major
excursion for Athletic Directors
to plan and execute.
Second-year Head coach Rob
DiLoreto must have gotten a
sore arm waving goodbye to all
of his senior players on Thanksgiving
Day after the Crimson
Tide smacked visiting St. John's
of Shrewsbury.
Do you think any other high
school team in Massachusetts
had THIRTY!! (30) seniors on its
team this past fall? Everett did!
That's right, between the
players and cheerleaders; nearly
50 Tide student-athletes
were honored on Senior Day
this year.
Malden and Revere also
had increased numbers of
12th-graders on their squads
this year.Malden first-year head
coach Witche Exilhomme had
17 seniors on his roster at one
point this season. Revere football
boss Lou Ciccatelli had just
about the same, nearly 20 seniors,
For
all three of these Greater
Boston League (GBL) rivals,
many, if not most of these seniors
played key roles on both
sides of the ball. Seven Malden
starters on defense were
seniors on Thanksgiving in the
Tornados' win over Medford.
For Revere, a dozen seniors
were starters in the win over
Winthrop on Turkey Day and
Everett had a reported 20 of
its 22 starting offensive and
defensive starting spots filled
by seniors.
What all this means is that
a lot of coaches have a lot of
work to do getting players
ready to fill those spots next
fall, starting with preseason
camp in August.
Looks like there will be a lot
more "good" numbers up for
grabs next fall when its Picture
Day and everyone throws
on the game "uni's" for the first
time!
Everett High and Lynn English
still teams to beat in Boys
Basketball
Some things change like the wind, others never seem to
change at all.
Season Two of the COVID-19 pandemic will feature some
more "normalcy" than usual, if that even exists anymore.
Players, coaches and officials will still need to wear masks,
but fans will be allowed into the game for the first time in a
year and a half when the Winter Season kicks off next week.
Full winter slates begin with Malden hosting Medford on
Tuesday, December 14 and Everett hosting Chelsea the same
night, both games are 6:00 p.m. starts.
This will be the first full season with the two Lynn teams (Classical
and English) in the GBL and as usual the "teams to beat"
are Everett High and Lynn English.
More on all this coming next week after a week of games
under the belt!
friends like Richie Howard, the
Surette brothers, Bobby McCarthy,
Ray Porter, Jimmy McGonagle,
Danny Boland, Joey Mayne
and Bobby DiMeco. I even got
to chat up Jimmy’s little brother
Johnny “Mags” McGonagle for a
while. Did I mention that most of
the team was from Edgeworth?
Emcee and Golden Tornado
Club Vice President Peter Carroll
kept the night flowing as only
Panama can. Brian’s big brother
has been called a Malden treasure
and an invaluable member
of the community, mostly by
his pal Terry Mathews, but that’s
what friends are for! Of course, I
kid, we love ya, Pete! Great job.
The inductees’ speeches were
impressive – seriously – short
and sweet deftly mixing in nostalgic
memories with humility
and reverence for those who
mentored them through their
formative years. Yeah, I’m talking
about you, Mario (Fosco), Kaitlyn
(DeVincentis), Rachel (Timmons
Henderson), Anthony (Pappagallo)
and Annie (Abber). Wonderful
job, kids!
Speaking of mentoring...every
inductee under the age
of 35 I have ever heard speak
name-checks Joe (Levine) and
Dana (Brown) as their role models
and mentors through their
high school years. How great is
that? To have had a positive impact
on so many young lives. It
don’t get much more gratifying.
Thank you, gentlemen.
The Borsetti brothers, John
and Mike, were sitting with 1976
Hall of Famer Johnny Stanasek.
Where was Mario?!
Mike Byrne, he of that sweet
right arm, you’re another story.
To know you is to love you.
One of the nicest people I have
ever met. Fact. We played many
games of hoop up the old Y, and
you always wanted Mike on your
team if you wanted to keep the
court. Malden has always been
very fortunate to have Mike Byrne
as a member of the community.
Congratulations, big guy.
Mayor Christenson was sitting
front and center as he usually
does at these events. Like
a kid in a candy store, his passion
and enthusiasm for Malden
High School athletics is legendary.
And no early exit for this guy.
With G Man’s assistance I was
able to get the money shot at the
end of the night of that incredibly
talented 1973 hockey team.
Heard something crazy that
night: Tryouts for that 1973
hockey team attracted 150 Malden
High students. Think that
over for a second. One hundred
fifty students tried out for this
hockey team with only a handful
making the squad. Amazing.
Did I mention that the dinner
was excellent! The Moose gets
better with age. And speaking
of age, my two main men, Ralphie
Kelly and Ronny Luke, were
behind the stick this night. Like
your favorite old pair of Chuck
Taylor’s, these two have been in
our lives serving us (responsibly
of course) since time immemorial.
Thank you, guys.
Oh yeah, almost forgot Freck!
Golden Tornado Club President
Steve Freker once again threw
a great party. Smiles and happy
faces throughout the Moose
Hall prove Freck done good! See
you at the next banquet, Steve!
“This is the end, beautiful
friend, this is the end, my only
friend, the end” – I sat with Dana
(Brown) all night. Love listening
to his insights whether it be
sports, politics or just life in general.
He isn’t shy, as the saying
goes. The man got it going on!
Dana, of course, took to Facebook
after the ceremony and
with heart in hand hit a buzzer-beater
in Game 7:
“What a wave of emotions
last night as worlds collided at
the Malden High School Golden
Tornado Hall of Fame Induction
ceremony. With the affable
Pete Carroll emceeing the night
the 1973 Championship hockey
team and the Class of 1972’s
Mike Byrne, representing ‘our’
era were notably recognized
and inducted.
“Inductee Mario Fusco represented
throwback days when
he reminisced about being
named GBL MVP in soccer and
then kicking a winning field goal
against Everett football, all in the
same week. He was introduced
by H.O.F. Coach Steve Rubin.
“Inductees Rachel Timmons
Henderson, Kaitlyn DeVincentis,
Annie Abber, and Anthony Pappagallo
were all highly regarded
and awarded student-athletes at
M.H.S. when I was Principal. The
number of teammates, friends,
and coaches in attendance to
support these honorees speaks
volumes about who they are.
“Distinguished Service winner
Don Nally was honored for his
heroic efforts in the community
as the boys’ basketball coach. I
had the pleasure of hiring Coach
Nally, many, many years ago.
“Hall of Famers John ‘Cuddles’
Willcox, Don Roach, John Stanasek,
John Salmon, John ‘Fergie’
Furlong among many others
too numerous to mention,
in the House.
“Renaissance men David
Slaine, Bobby Sager....in the
house!
“I had the pleasure of being a
guest at the Joe Levine table and
sitting between Joe and Peter
and alongside MHS Head Football
Coach Witche Exilhomme
and Asst. Coach Wiston Jeune.
“What a night!
“Postscript: Everyone who
was inducted mentioned one
or more adults in their lives who
served as guides/mentors. No
one does it alone. We have to
get back to this!”
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 10, 2021
Beacon Hill
Roll Call
By Bob Katzen
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~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT
Middlesex Probate and Family Court
10-U Commerce Way
Woburn, MA 01801
(781) 865-4000
Docket No. MI21P6206EA
Estate of: Richard L. Sullivan
Date of Death: 05/22/2021
CITATION ON PETITION FOR
FORMAL ADJUDICATION
To all interested persons:
A Petition for Formal Adjudication of Intestacy and
Appointment of Personal Representative has been filed by
Daniel Sullivan of Medford, MA requesting that the Court enter
a formal Decree and Order and for such other relief as requested
in the Petition. The Petitioner requests that: Daniel Sullivan of
Medford, MA be appointed as Personal Representative(s) of said
estate to serve Without Surety on the bond in unsupervised
administration.
IMPORTANT NOTICE
You have the right to obtain a copy of the Petition from
the Petitioner or at the Court. You have a right to object to
this proceeding. To do so, you or your attorney must file a
written appearance and objection at this Court before:
10:00 a.m. on the return day of 01/03/2022.
This is NOT a hearing date, but a deadline by which you
must file a written appearance and objection if you object to
this proceeding. If you fail to file a timely written appearance
and objection followed by an affidavit of objections within
thirty (30) days of the return day, action may be taken without
further notice to you.
UNSUPERVISED ADMINISTRATION UNDER THE
MASSACHUSETTS UNIFORM PROBATE CODE (MUPC)
A Personal Representative appointed under the MUPC in an
unsupervised administration is not required to file an
inventory or annual accounts with the Court. Persons interested
in the estate are entitled to notice regarding the administration
directly from the Personal Representative and may petition
the Court in any matter relating to the estate, including the
distribution of assets and expenses of administration.
WITNESS, Hon. Maureen H. Monks, First Justice of this
Court.
Date: December 06, 2021
TARA E. DeCRISTOFARO
REGISTER OF PROBATE
December 10, 2021
will give you a leg up on what’s
happening in the blood sport of
Bay State politics. For more information
and to get your free subscription,
go to: www.massterlist.com/subscribe
GOV.
CHARLIE BAKER ANNOUNCES
HE WILL NOT RUN
FOR RE-ELECTION – Gov. Baker
announced that he will not
seek a third term as governor of
Massachusetts in 2022 while Lt.
Gov. Karyn Polito also said she
will not seek the governorship.
This leaves the race wide open.
“This was an extremely difficult
decision for us,” said the pair
in a joint statement. “We love
the work and we especially respect
and admire the people of
this wonderful commonwealth.
Serving as governor and lieutenant
governor of Massachusetts
has been the most challenging
and fulfilling jobs we’ve
ever had.”
“We have a great deal of work
to do to put the pandemic behind
us, keep our kids in school
and keep our communities and
economy moving forward. That
work cannot and should not be
about politics and the next election.
If we were to run, it would
be a distraction that would potentially
get in the way of many
of the things we should be
working on for everyone in Massachusetts.
We want to focus
on recovery, not on the grudge
matches political campaigns
can devolve into.”
“Today is about the future.
This next year needs to be about
recovery, not about politics. We
are grateful for the chance we
have been given to serve the
people of this great state and
will give it our all between now
and the end of 2022,” concluded
the statement.
Four candidates had already
entered the race before Baker’s
announcement. Democratic
candidates include Incumbent
State Sen. Sonia Chang-Diaz
(D-Boston), former State Sen.
Ben Downing and Harvard professor
Danielle Allen. The only
GOP candidate currently in the
race is former State Rep. Geoff
Diehl.
The two biggest names being
tossed around as possibilities in
political circles on the Democratic
side include Attorney General
Maura Healey and U.S. Secretary
of Labor and former Boston
Mayor Marty Walsh.
THE HOUSE AND SENATE:
There were no roll call votes in
the House or Senate last week.
This week, Beacon Hill Roll Call
reports local senators’ roll call attendance
records for the 2021
session. No more roll calls are
planned in the Senate until January
2022.
The Senate held 115 roll calls
in the 2021 session. Beacon Hill
Roll Call tabulates the number
of roll calls on which each sen~
Legal Notice ~
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT DEPARTMENT
Middlesex Probate and Family Court
10-U Commerce Way
Woburn, MA 01801
Docket No. MI21D2117DR
ORDER FOR SERVICE BY
PUBLICATION AND MAILING
Stange Previlon aka Stanage Previlon, Plaintiff
vs.
Chedlie J. Previlon
aka Chedlie Jean Baptiste Previlon, Defendant
The Plaintiff has filed a Complaint for Divorce requesting that
the Court grant a divorce for Irretrievable Breakdown of the
Marriage 1B. The Complaint is on file at the Court.
An Automatic Restraining Order has been entered in this matter
preventing you from taking action which would negatively impact
the current financial status of either party. SEE Supplemental
Probate Court Rule 411.
You are hereby summoned and required to serve upon:
Roseline Jeanne Bazelais, Esq., Attorney at Law, 10 Holden
St., Suite 7, Malden, MA 02148 your answer, if any, on or
before 12/28/21. If you fail to do so, the court will proceed
to the hearing and adjudication of this action. You are also
required to file a copy of your answer, if any, in the office of
the Register of this Court.
WITNESS, Hon. Maureen H. Monks, First Justice of this
Court.
Date: November 16, 2021
TARA E. DeCRISTOFARO
REGISTER OF PROBATE
December 10, 2021
ator votes and then calculates
that number as a percentage
of the total roll call votes held.
That percentage is the number
referred to as the roll call attendance
record.
More senators have 100 percent
roll call attendance records
this year than at any time in recent
memory. Thirty-seven of
the 39 members did not miss
any roll calls and have 100 percent
roll call attendance records.
This can be attributed to the fact
that under emergency rules adopted
because of the COVID-19
pandemic, the vast majority of
the 39 senators are not in the
Senate chamber during a session.
Most are watching and listening
to the session from their
home or business and voting remotely.
Senators’ votes are communicated
to Senate officials
during the session or prior to the
session if senators are informed
in advance that there will be a
roll call vote. If a member wants
to speak on an issue under consideration,
they do so on a separate
“debate phone line” and
their voice is then heard in the
Senate chamber and by anyone
watching the broadcast online.
The number of senators who
had 100 percent roll call attendance
records in the prior four
years was 33 in 2020; 28 in 2019;
20 in 2018; 24 in 2017; and 17
in 2016.
Sen. Mike Barrett (D-Lexington)
and Senate President Karen
Spilka (D-Ashland) were the
only two senators who missed
any roll calls this year.
Barrett missed 13 roll calls
(11.4 percent) out of 115 for a
roll call attendance record of
88.6 percent. “In my capacity as
State Senate chair of the Utilities
and Energy Committee of
the Legislature, I attended the
U.N. Climate Change Conference
in Glasgow for its climactic
second week,” Barrett told Beacon
Hill Roll Call. “In doing so, I
missed several roll calls back in
the Senate, all taken on a single
day. I regret this, but feel my responsibilities
to my constituents
were best satisfied during that
particular time by my working at
the U.N. event. Achieving emissions
reductions relies heavily
on ‘subnational’ governments
like state legislatures, where so
many of the actual programs are
designed and funded.”
“Over 400 private jets
crammed Scotland’s airports
and Massachusetts sent several
of our state’s leading green
elites to virtue signal and share
their moral authority with other
self-absorbed bureaucrats
and politicians,” said Paul Craney,
spokesman for the Mass Fiscal
Alliance. “While his legislative
colleagues were trying to determine
how to best help their
constituents with COVID relief
BHRC | SEE PAGE 20
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Page 17
OBITUARIES
Carole Susan
Lucey (Sullivan)
After a prolonged
illness,
Carole Susan Lucey
(Sullivan), a
resident of Forestdale
Senior
Living Center in
Malden, passed
away peacefully on December
1, 2021. Prior to moving to
Forestdale in July 2021, Carole
was a proud Crimson Tider…
.a lifelong resident of Everett,
an accomplished Everett public
school teacher, and a formidable
classroom presence
in the 6th grade at the Lafayette
School where she taught
for many years. Carole was an
outspoken advocate for public
school education and today
many an Everett resident still
remember Mrs. Lucey as one
of their fi nest teachers.
Born March 27, 1939, Carole
(Sully 1) was the eldest of
the three daughters of Thomas
F. and Gertrude L. Sullivan
(Wood). She attended Everett
public schools and was the
fi rst in her large extended family
to attend college, graduating
Cum Laude from Boston
College in 1961. Soon after, she
assumed her fi rst teaching job
in the Everett public schools…
the rest is history. She went on
to achieve much recognition
in her fi eld culminating with
receiving the Massachusetts
Christa McAuliff e Excellence in
Teaching Award in 1996.
The beloved wife of the late
John J. Lucey, Carole and John
lived a full life with their two
much loved feline companions,
Cheese and Crackers. Carole
loved to travel, take long leisurely
drives with John to scenic
spots throughout New England,
wine and dine with their
many lifelong friends, and enjoy
their raucous Irish family
birthday and holiday celebrations.
But of greatest pleasure
was relaxing and savoring the
sun, surf and ocean breezes
of their Falmouth Ma second
homestead.
Carole is survived by her two
sisters Elaine Smith (Sully 2)
and her life partner Jane Coviello,
Arlene Bakeman (Sully 3)
and her husband James Bakeman,
and fi ve very much loved
nieces and nephews: Keri and
Matt Holian, Kristen Smith, Jaime
and Aaron Henry, Lindsay
Bakeman and James Lyons,
and Jim and Meghan Bakeman.
Carole Sue will be sorely
missed and long remembered
by her family and friends. She
will always hold a special place
in the hearts of all.
Wei Ji Wu
86, of Malden, passed on November
30, 2021. Arrangements
are entrusted to Hall Funeral
Home and Crematory, 949 Main
Street, Waldoboro, ME.
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT
Middlesex Divison
10-U Commerce Way
Woburn, MA 01801
(781) 865-4000
Docket No. MI21P6192EA
Estate of: Annette M. Scott
Date of Death: October 11, 2021
INFORMAL PROBATE
PUBLICATION NOTICE
Advocate
Call now!
617-387-2200
advertise on the web at
www.advocatenews.net
To all persons interested in the above captioned estate, by Petition of
Petitioner James A. Scott of Malden, MA James A. Scott of
Malden, MA has been informally appointed as the Personal
Representative of the estate to serve Without Surety on the bond.
The estate is being administered under informal procedure
by the Personal Representative under the Massachusetts
Uniform Probate Code without supervision by the Court.
Inventory and accounts are not required to be filed with the
Court, but interested parties are entitled to notice regarding
the administration from the Personal Representative and
can petition the Court in any matter relating to the estate,
including distribution of assets and expenses of
administration. Interested parties are entitled to petition the
Court to institute formal proceedings and to obtain orders
terminating or restricting the powers of Personal
Representatives appointed under informal procedure. A
copy of the Petition and Will, if any, can be obtained from
the Petitioner.
December 10, 2021
Like us on Facebook
advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/
Advocate.news.ma
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT
Middlesex Divison
Docket No. MI21P5958EA
Estate of: Stanley George Sherman
Also Known As: Stanley G. Sherman
Date of Death: October 9, 2021
INFORMAL PROBATE
PUBLICATION NOTICE
To all persons interested in the above captioned estate, by Petition
of Petitioner Andrew F. Ward of Arlington, MA a Will has been
admitted to informal probate. Andrew F. Ward of Arlington, MA
has been informally appointed as the Personal Representative of the
estate to serve Without Surety on the bond.
The estate is being administered under informal procedure
by the Personal Representative under the Massachusetts
Uniform Probate Code without supervision by the Court.
Inventory and accounts are not required to be filed with the
Court, but interested parties are entitled to notice regarding
the administration from the Personal Representative and
can petition the Court in any matter relating to the estate,
including distribution of assets and expenses of
administration. Interested parties are entitled to petition the
Court to institute formal proceedings and to obtain orders
terminating or restricting the powers of Personal
Representatives appointed under informal procedure. A
copy of the Petition and Will, if any, can be obtained from
the Petitioner.
December 10, 2021
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT
Middlesex Divison
Docket No. MI21P4781EA
Estate of: Chaosheng Zou
Date of Death: July 19, 2021
INFORMAL PROBATE
PUBLICATION NOTICE
To all persons interested in the above captioned estate, by Petition of
Petitioner Suqian Lu of Malden, MA a Will has been admitted to
informal probate. Suqian Lu of Malden, MA has been informally
appointed as the Personal Representative of the estate to serve Without
Surety on the bond.
The estate is being administered under informal procedure
by the Personal Representative under the Massachusetts
Uniform Probate Code without supervision by the Court.
Inventory and accounts are not required to be filed with the
Court, but interested parties are entitled to notice regarding
the administration from the Personal Representative and
can petition the Court in any matter relating to the estate,
including distribution of assets and expenses of
administration. Interested parties are entitled to petition the
Court to institute formal proceedings and to obtain orders
terminating or restricting the powers of Personal
Representatives appointed under informal procedure. A
copy of the Petition and Will, if any, can be obtained from
the Petitioner.
December 10, 2021
Classifieds
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 10, 2021
1. On Dec. 10, 1830, poet Emily Dickinson was born in Amherst,
Mass.; where did she attend college?
2. The first-known written mention of “pigs in blankets” was
in a Betty Crocker children’s cookbook in what year: 1921,
1945 or 1957?
3. How many ghosts are in “A Christmas Carol”?
4. In “computerese” what does SMTP stand for?
5. On Dec. 11, 1769, Venetian blinds were patented in what
country: England, Italy or the United States?
6. In what United Kingdom language with many words
describing snow would you find “skelf” (a large snowflake)
and “spitters” (small drops of driving snow)?
7. On Dec. 12, 1917, in Nebraska, Father Edward Flanagan
founded Boys Town for wayward boys; in what year did it
start accepting girls: 1918, 1960 or 1978?
8. Do both male and female mosquitoes bite?
9. Omicron is the 15th letter of what alphabet?
10. How are ostriches, emus and kiwis similar?
11. December 13 is National Cocoa Day; in 1765 chocolate
manufacturing – using West Indian cocoa beans – in the
American Colonies began in what Massachusetts city?
12. How are “Death Valley Days,” “General Electric Theater” and
the 1959 Tournament of Roses parade similar?
13. What Christmas movie/song character “stink, stank, stunk”?
14. On Dec. 14, 1542, after her father died, Princess Mary Stuart
became Queen of Scots at what age: one week, four years
or 16 years?
15. How are “Becoming,” “Where the Light Enters” and “Spoken
from the Heart” similar?
16. December 15 is Bill of Rights Day; how many constitutional
amendments are in the Bill of Rights: five, 10 or 27?
17. What two animals are used to hunt truffles?
18. What color is in an Elvis Christmas song title?
19. What is the name of the mountain range that goes through
Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia?
20. On Dec. 17, 1917, Sir Arthur Charles Clarke was born, who
cowrote the screenplay for what 1968 sci-fi film?
ANSWERS
BBB scam alert:
Shipping tricks cost
online shoppers
T
his holiday shopping season,
the Better Business Bureau’s
BBB Scam Tracker has received
numerous reports about shipping
tricks that scammers use
to steal from online shoppers.
The con artists are exploiting
PayPal’s policies by delivering
incorrect items and using stolen
tracking numbers.
How the scam works
People are shopping online
and are finding amazing deals –
often brand-name goods at a significant
discount. Often the items
are large, such as pieces of furniture
or a vacuum cleaner. The
website and the products look legitimate,
so consumers are deciding
to take a chance and make a
purchase. The site directs them to
pay through PayPal, which leads
many to believe it’s safe.
After checkout, a confirmation
email arrives that contains
a tracking number from UPS, FedEx
or another shipping service.
After a few weeks, the package
arrives, but it’s not what was expected.
For example, one shopper
ordered a six-foot artificial
Christmas tree, but “received a
bottle brush Christmas tree no
bigger than my hand.” Another
shopper told BBB that they
ordered “a pressured machine
washer for $78...” and received “a
yellow shirt that’s not worth $2.”
In another common version of
this scam, the package is delivered...
but to the wrong address.
When consumers try to correct
the mistake, they are finding
that the ecommerce site
is either unresponsive or unhelpful.
In some cases, the site
doesn’t provide contact information;
in others, no one responds
to emails or calls.
Some scam victims report filing
claims with PayPal to get
a refund. PayPal’s protection
promise says customers can
open a dispute if the package
never arrives or if the item received
is counterfeit or differs
significantly from what was ordered.
However, not every claim
was resolved to the buyer’s satisfaction.
For example, one
shopper reported the following
experience after ordering a
desk online and filing a dispute
though PayPal: “I was contacted
by PayPal and told they had
found in favor of the seller. They
had apparently received confirmation
of delivery of said desk
to my house according to the
tracking number… PayPal did
not give me any option to discuss
their decision, to argue why
they found in favor of the seller.
They just closed the case.”
BBB contacted PayPal about
Your Hometown News Delivered!
EVERETT ADVOCATE
MALDEN ADVOCATE
REVERE ADVOCATE
SAUGUS ADVOCATE
One year subscription to
The Advocate of your choice:
$100 per paper in-town per year or
$120 per paper out-of-town per year.
Name_________________________________________
Address_______________________________________
City_______________ State_______ Zip ____________
CC# _______________________________ Exp. _____
Sec. code____ Advocate (City):___________________
Clip & Mail Coupon with Credit Card, Check or Money Order to:
Advocate Newspapers Inc.
PO Box 490407, Everett, MA 02149
the BBB Scam Tracker reports.
After looking into the stolen
tracking code issue, they replied:
“We notified various shipping
carriers of this issue allowing
tracking data to be stolen and
we believe it has been closed.
In addition, we made enhancements
to our algorithms to identify
and disable these fraudulent
bad actors. In fact, we are stopping
a significant majority of
these fraudulent sellers at first
transaction through our detection
program and have refunded
customers impacted by this
fraud scheme even if they did
not appeal our decision.”
Protect yourself from a
package delivery scam
Before paying, know your
rights and responsibilities. In
everything from check cashing
scams to cons involving new
peer-to-peer payment systems,
scammers often take advantage
of what consumers don’t know
when it comes to processing
payments. Don’t make a purchase
from a shady seller assuming
the purchase will be protected
no matter what.
Before buying online, confirm
the site has real contact information.
Make sure the seller
has a working phone number
and address on the website, so
you can contact them in case of
problems.
Don’t wait too long to file a
dispute. Scammers know that
PayPal and credit cards have
time limits for disputes. They often
try to delay the process long
enough so that shoppers miss
the window.
If the price seems too good to
be true, there’s probably something
wrong. Be wary if the item
is selling for significantly lower
than what’s been advertised
elsewhere.
Review BBB online shopping
tips. Many online purchase
scams use similar tactics. See
BBB.org/ShoppingOnline for
more advice.
For more info
Learn more about spotting
and reporting PayPal fraud. For
more resources on shipping
fraud, see FedEx’s website and
UPS’s online resource center. To
learn more about scams, go to
BBB.org/ScamTips.
If you’ve been targeted by
this scam, help others avoid
the same problem by reporting
your experience at BBB.org/
ScamTracker.
1. Mount Holyoke Female Seminary, which became Mount
Holyoke College
2. 1957
3. Four: Jacob Marley and the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present
and Yet to Come.
4. Simple Mail Transport Protocol
5. England
6. Scottish
7. 1978
8. Only the females do.
9. Greek
10. They are flightless birds.
11. Dorchester
12. Ronald Reagan acted as host for all of them.
13. Mr. Grinch
14. One week
15. They are books by First Ladies: Michelle Obama, Jill Biden
and Laura Bush.
16. 10
17. Dogs and pigs
18. Blue – “Blue Christmas”
19. The Atlas mountains
20. “2001: A Space Odyssey”
׉	 7cassandra://KuwdFyVZsCCxb8qCHpiU1lYbPb6Q6MCNY-UWwYfcNQw&`̰ aW@A׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 10, 2021
Page 19
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
PUBLIC NOTICE
REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS
RADON MEASUREMENT PROFESSIONALS AND
LEAD-BASED PAINT INSPECTORS/RISK ASSESSORS
2021 MALDEN LEAD HAZARD CONTROL/HEALTHY HOMES PROGRAM
The City of Malden, Office of Strategic Planning and Community Development (OSPCD)
is seeking proposals from certified radon measurement professionals and licensed
lead-based paint inspectors/risk assessors. Malden received a grant from the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development that will fund deleading work, radon
mitigation, and other healthy homes repairs in approximately 142 low and moderate
income dwelling units over a 42 month period.
The Request for Proposals (RFP) includes radon testing, lead-based paint inspections, risk
assessments, soil sampling, dust wipe sampling and clearance inspections. Bidders must
be licensed, insured, and have experience performing radon and lead paint inspections/
risk assessments. All work must comply with Federal and state radon/lead regulations.
Please email Kevin Nestor at knestor@maldenredevelopment.com for a copy of the
Request for Proposals. Please call 781-324-5720 ext. 5732 if you have any questions.
THE SUBMISSION DEADLINE IS 4:00 PM ON MONDAY, JANUARY 3, 2022.
December 10, 2021
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
PUBLIC NOTICE
REQUEST FOR QUALIFICATIONS
CONSTRUCTION CONTRACTOR SERVICES FOR THE
2021 MALDEN LEAD HAZARD CONTROL/HEALTHY HOMES PROGRAM
The City of Malden, Office of Strategic Planning and Community Development (OSPCD)
is seeking qualified contractors for its Lead Hazard Control/Healthy Homes Program.
Malden received a grant from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
that will fund deleading work, radon mitigation, and other healthy homes repairs in
approximately 142 low and moderate income dwelling units over a 42 month period.
Contractors must have a thorough knowledge of the Massachusetts Building Code
and must be licensed, insured, and registered on the System for Award Management
(SAM.gov). Licensed deleading contractors and certified radon mitigation contractors are
encouraged to apply.
Interested contractors may obtain a copy of the Request for Qualifications by emailing
knestor@maldenredevelopment.com. Please call Kevin Nestor at 781-324-5720 ext. 5732
if you have any questions.
THE SUBMISSION DEADLINE IS 4:00 PM ON MONDAY, JANUARY 3, 2022.
December 10, 2021
~ Home of the Week ~
REVERE...PRIME BROADWAY Location
and Visibility offers this great Retail
Condo with multiple possibilities. Located
on bus line, within walking distance of
neighborhoods. Great opportunity to
invest and build your business. Condo
fee is $174.00.
Offered at $600,000
335 Central Street,
Saugus, MA 01906
(781) 233-7300
View all our listings at: CarpenitoRealEstate.com
View the interior
of this home
right on your
smartphone.
a y avvy S iorenniiooro
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by Jim Miller
Social Security Calculators
That Can Help You Decide
When to Claim
Dear 62,
Deciding when to start collecting your Social Security benefi ts
is one of the most complicated and consequential decisions in retirement.
The diff erence between a good decision and a poor one
could cost you and your wife tens of thousands of dollars over your
retirement, so doing your due diligence now is a very smart move.
Just Turned 62
Factors to Consider
As you may already know, you can claim Social Security any time
between the ages of 62 and 70, but each year you wait increases
your benefi ts between 5 and 8 percent. However, there are other
factors you need to take into account to help you make a good
decision, like your health and family longevity, whether you plan
to work in retirement, along with spousal and survivor benefi ts.
To help you weigh your claiming strategies, you need to know
that Social Security Administration claims specialists are not
trained or authorized to give you personal advice on when you
should start drawing your benefi ts. They can only provide you information
on how the system works under diff erent circumstances.
To get advice you’ll need to turn to other sources.
Online Tools
Your fi rst step in getting Social Security claiming strategy advice
is to go to SSA.gov/myaccount to get your personalized statement
that estimates what your retirement benefi ts will be at ages
62 through 70. These estimates are based on your yearly earnings
that are also listed on your report.
Once you get your estimates for both you and your wife, there
are a number online Social Security strategy calculators you can
turn to that can compare your options so you can make an informed
decision.
The best one that’s completely free to use is Open Social Security
(OpenSocialSecurity.com), which runs the math for each possible
claiming age (or, if you’re married, each possible combination
of claiming ages) and reports back, telling you which strategy
is expected to provide the most total spendable dollars over
your lifetime.
But if you want a more thorough analysis consider fee-based calculators
like Maximize My Social Security (MaximizeMySocialSecurity.com)
or Social Security Solutions (SocialSecuritySolutions.
com). Both of these tools, which are particularly helpful to married
couples as well as divorced or widowed persons, will run what-if
scenarios based on your circumstances and show how diff erent
fi ling strategies aff ect the total payout over the same time frame.
Maximize My Social Security’s web-based service costs $40 per
year for a household, while Social Security Solutions off ers several
levels of web-based and personalized phone advice ranging
from $20 to $250.
In-Person Advice
You may also be able to get help through a fi nancial planner.
Look for someone who is a fee-only certifi ed fi nancial planner
(CFP) that charges on an hourly basis and has experience in Social
Security analysis.
To fi nd someone, use the National Association of Personal Financial
Advisors online directory at NAPFA.org, or try the Garrett
Planning Network (GarrettPlanningNetwork.com), which is
a network of fee-only advisers that charge between $150 and
$300 per hour.
Send your senior questions to: Savvy Senior, P.O. Box 5443, Norman,
OK 73070, or visit SavvySenior.org. Jim Miller is a contributor to
the NBC Today show and author of “The Savvy Senior” book.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 10, 2021
BHRC | FROM PAGE 16
money, the Lexington state senator
was boasting about serving
on a climate panel in which he
spoke to ‘legislators’ from other
countries including from China
and Russia. Can Massachusetts’
most narcissistic green elite be
this tone deaf or is he there for
the self-celebration and pageantry?”
It’s
a Senate tradition that the
Senate president only votes occasionally.
Current Senate President
Karen Spilka follows that
tradition and only voted on 45
(39.1 percent) of the 115 roll calls
while not voting on 70 (60.9 percent)
of them.
Sen. Spilka's offi ce did not respond
to repeated requests by
Beacon Hill Roll Call to comment
on her voting record.
We specifi cally asked if Spilka
was in the Statehouse building
WANTED
FULL TIME
LAUNDRY ATTENDANTS
DAYS & NIGHTS AVAILABLE
for all the formal and informal
sessions; how the tradition developed
that the president rarely
votes; has she ever thought of
breaking that tradition and being
recorded on all roll calls; and
how does she choose on which
roll calls she will vote?
“Sen. Spilka follows the tradition
that many before her followed,”
said Paul Craney. “In this
particular case, it’s not necessarily
a bad tradition but unfortunately
a much worse trend in the
state senate is quickly emerging,
and that is its opaqueness.
The Statehouse has been closed
for over 600 days, and now major
budget decisions are being
done behind closed doors
and when lawmakers are on recess.
The Massachusetts Legislature,
including the State Senate,
is the most opaque legislative
body in the United States.
There is no other state legislature
this secretive.”
SENATORS' 2021 ROLL CALL
CALL 617-387-4838
ATTENDANCE RECORDS
The percentage listed next to
the senator’s name is the perREAL
ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
BUYER1
THAKURI, BIRAJ S
BUYER2
SINGH, PRIYANKA
SELLER1
SELLER2
centage of roll call votes on
which the senator voted. The
number in parentheses represents
the number of roll calls
that he or she missed.
Sen. Jason Lewis 100 percent (0)
HOW LONG WAS LAST WEEK'S
SESSION? Beacon Hill Roll Call
tracks the length of time that
the House and Senate were in
session each week. Many legislators
say that legislative sessions
are only one aspect of the
Legislature's job and that a lot of
important work is done outside
of the House and Senate chambers.
They note that their jobs
also involve committee work,
research, constituent work and
other matters that are important
to their districts. Critics say that
the Legislature does not meet
regularly or long enough to debate
and vote in public view on
the thousands of pieces of legislation
that have been 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 November
29-December 3, the House
met for a total of one hour and
30 minutes while the Senate
met for a total of one hour and
22 minutes.
Mon. Nov. 29
House 11:00 a.m. to 11:12 a.m.
Senate 11:14 a.m. to 11:18 a.m.
Tues. Nov. 30
No House session
No Senate session
Wed. Dec. 1
No House session
No Senate session
Thurs. Dec. 2
House 11:11 a.m. to 11:21 a.m.
Senate 11:07 a.m. to 11:14 a.m.
Fri. Dec 3
House 11:03 a.m. to 12:11 p.m.
Senate 11:03 a.m. to 12:14 p.m.
Bob Katzen welcomes feedback
at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial
Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission from the publisher,
The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property
information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com.
ADDRESS
PAPOULIDIS LOUKIA EST ORFANOS, SARANTOULA 80 MAIN ST #25
CITY
MALDEN
DATE
15.11.2021
PRICE
$320 000,00
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Page 21
Classifieds
Advocate
adCall now! 617-387-2200
vertise on the web atwww.advocatenews.net
FRANK’S Housepainting
(781) 289-0698
• Exterior
• Ceiling Dr.
• Power Wash
• Paper Removal • Carpentry
FREE ESTIMATES — Fully Insured
Mold & Waterproofing
EXPERTS
• Sump Pumps • Walls & Floor Cracks •
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
- Licensed Contractor -
JPG CONSTRUCTION
Cell phone 781-632-7503
508-292-9134
~ HELP WANTED ~
Construction Help Wanted
Seeking Full-Time Laborers
Basic construction knowledge,
MA Drivers License with clean
driving record a must.
EVERETT ALUMINUM
Call Steve at: (617) 389-3839
“Proper prep makes all the difference” – F. Ferrera
• Interior
Discount Tree Service
781-269-0914
Discount Services
Professional
TREE
REMOVAL
& Cleanups
24-HOUR SERVICE
-Raccoons
-Squirrels
781-269-0914
Removal
FIRE • SOOT • WATER
Homeowner’s Insurance Loss Specialists
FREE CONSULTATION
1-877-SAL-SOOT
Sal Barresi, Jr. - Your fi rst call
617-212-9050
SPADAFORA
AUTO PARTS
JUNK CARS
WANTED
SAME DAY PICK UP
781-324-1929
Quality Used Tires
Mounted & Installed
Used Auto Parts & Batteries
Family owned & operated since 1946
Advocate
Call now!
617-387-2200
advertise on the web at
www.advocatenews.net
$
$
$
$
Classifieds
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 10, 2021
J.F & Son Contracting
Snow Plowing
No Job too small! Free Estimates!
Commercial & Residential
781-656-2078
- Property management & maintenance
Shoveling & removal
Landscaping, Electrical, Plumbing, Painting, Roofing, Carpentry, Framing,
Decks, Fencing, Masonry, Demolition, Gut-outs, Junk Removal & Dispersal,
Clean Ups: Yards, Garages, Attics & Basements. Truck for Hire, Bobcat Services.
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
For Rent
Everett
3 Bdr. - 1st Floor
Nice Hardwood Flooring
No Smoking, No Pets
Close to Public Trans.
Section 8 Accepted
857-888-1537
Frank Berardino
MA License 31811
AAA Service • Lockouts
Trespass Towing • Roadside Service
Junk Car Removal
617-387-6877
26 Garvey St., Everett
MDPU 28003 ICCMC 251976
43 Holland St., Saugus $499,000
● 24-Hour Service
● Emergency Repairs
BERARDINO
Plumbing & Heating
Gas Fitting ● Drain Service
Residential & Commercial Service
617.699.9383
Senior Citizen Discount
WASTE REMOVAL &
BUILDING MAINTENANCE
• Landscaping, Lawn Care, Mulching
• Yard Waste & Rubbish Removal
• Interior & Exterior Demolition (Old
Decks, Fences, Pools, Sheds, etc.)
• Appliance and Metal Pick-up
• Construction and Estate Cleanouts
• Pick-up Truck Load of Trash
starting at $169
• Carpentry
LICENSED & INSURED
Call for FREE ESTIMATES!
Office: (781) 233-2244
6 Hodgkins Rd., Unit A $379,000
Rockport, MA - CONTINGENT
This 2-bedroom ranch offers a 5-6 room with open concept floor
plan all on one level living. The living room overlooks a deck with
an open backyard area, with a heated in-ground built-in pool.
Extra wide driveway & healthy size garage finished in epoxy
coated floor. It includes a lower level with extra rooms & an additional
full bath. The level yard is nestled with a fenced in yard,
shed, and more. You will love this home just as the previous
owner did!!
CONDOMINIUM - LYNN
Patrick
Rescigno
Rosa
Rescigno
Carl
Greenler
38 Main St., Saugus
(781) 558-1091
mangorealtyteam.com
~ Meet Our Agents ~
Barry Tam
Sue Palomba
Founder, CEO
Lea
Doherty
Location! Welcome to 6 Hodgkins Road in Rockport with 2 deeded
parking. Turnkey home awaits for the new Owner!!! It boasts
its own entrance with a beautiful mudroom. This condo can be
transferred into the home of your dreams with a kitchen that offers
granite counter tops, stainless steel appliances and an eat in with
plenty of sunlight. The open concept of living room that awaits a
fireplace to curl up with a book or a favorite beverage. Second floor
has 3 bedrooms along with a full bath and a pull down attic with
storage. Charm, a special urban feel, level yard, shed, 2 deeded
parking, commuter rail seaside town, and much more. What more
can be asked. This opportunity is awaiting for you!
20 Railroad Ave.
Rockport MA
$474,800
Light and airy rooms,
in the uniquely
designed, attractively
laid out home, that
adapts to a variety of
Ron
Visconti
196 Locust St., Lynn - Welcome to the Stadium Condominiums,
one the best managed and maintained properties
on the North Shore. This is a terrific Studio Condo unit featuring
cozy living, an office area, bedroom, 1 full bathroom,
workout area with a bonus area of a private indoor balcony
overlooking the lobby. This is a tremendous value and will
not last. Currently rented. Tenant pays $1,450/mo. and would
like to stay. Lease expires end of April, Section 8 - $205,000
Carolina
Coral
Franco
Pizzarella
Call (781) 558-1091 for a
Free Market Analysis!
We are Fluent in Chinese,
Cantonese, Italian and Spanish!
needs and uses. So much here to utilize. Delightful and Inviting
year round getaway, Condo Alternative! Easy access to Front
Beach. A commuters dream. Perfect location. All the work has
been done for you to move right in to this 2 BR 1.5 bath colonial.
Located near the train, shopping, restaurants, beaches, and
Shalin Liu Music Center. The open concept living and dining
room is bright roomy. French doors to wonderful balcony off the
master bedroom. Low maintenance exterior with parking for 2
cars. But so close to the train you don’t even need a car. Bonus
area in basement with plumbing connections for a possible
bathroom. This Rockport gem is worth seeing. Has great rental/
vrbo potential and has a history of commercial use.
UNDER
AGREEMENT
׉	 7cassandra://u5RTtVCQkiU2CEPFscyL_ptKsZJWgkER08Nkg-eFarA3`̰ aW@E׉EhTHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 10, 2021
Page 23
.............
#
1
Listing & Selling
Office in Saugus
“Experience and knowledge
Provide the Best Service”
Free Market Evaluations CRE
CarpenitoRealEstate.com
View our website from
your mobile phone!
335 Central St., Saugus, MA
781-233-7300
EVERETT - 3 FAMILY offers 5/5/5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath each unit,
rear porches, separate utilities, new front stairs, conveniently located
just outside of Glendale Square – Great opportunity!!............$920,000.
MALDEN - Well maintained 4 rm., 2 bdrm. Cape Cod style home,
fireplace lvrm., hrdwd. flooring, 3 season porch, vintage details,
replacement windows, walk-up attic, finished lower level, attached
gar., fenced, corner lot.............................................................$530,000.
EVERETT - Well established Auto Body/Auto Repair shop, 6 bays,
3 offices, 2 half bath, ample parking, many possibilities, close to all
major routes, & Encore Casino................................................$2,000,000.
SAUGUS - 7 rm., 3 bdrm. Garrison Colonial offers 2 full baths,
sunrm., kitchen w/ center island, finished lower level offers famrm.
and second kitchen updated roof, easy access to all major routes
and shopping.....................................................................$489,900.
WONDERING WHAT YOUR
HOME IS WORTH?
CALL US FOR A FREE
OPINION OF VALUE.
781-233-1401
38 MAIN STREET, SAUGUS
FOR SALE
SAUGUS - 11 Unit Building. Cliftondale Square. Property
consists of three store fronts & one free-standing building, seven
residential units. All separate utilities. All units deleaded, ample off
street parking, INCREDIBLE opportunity......................$2,600,000.
SAUGUS - 40,000 +/- Sq. Ft. lot w/ Ranch style home offering 6 rms., two
bdrms. & 1 1/2 baths in need of updating and TLC, oversized detached gar./
barn structure. Large lot with frontage on 2 streets. Great opportunity to
explore possibilities................................................................................$499,900.
LET US SHOW YOU OUR
MARKETING PLAN TO
GET YOU TOP DOLLAR
FOR YOUR HOME!
LITTLEFIELDRE.COM
UNDER CONTRACT
INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITY
FOR SALE - CUSTOM BUILT, 8 ROOM, 3 BED 3 BATH
SPLIT ENTRY IN DESIRABLE INDIAN VALLEY $734,900
SAUGUS CALL KEITH 7781-389-0791
FOR SALE
FOR SALE - THIS RENOVATED 3 BEDROOM, 1 BATH RANCH OFFERS A BRAND NEW KITCHEN WITH STAINLESS
STEEL APPLIANCES, QUARTZ COUNTERS, GAS COOKING AND A LARGE ISLAND FOR DINING OR PREPPING.
COZY FORMAL LIVING OR DINING WITH WOOD BURING FIREPLACE OPEN TO THE NEW KITCHEN, SPACIOUS
FAMILY ROOM OFF THE KITCHEN OVERLOOKING BACK YARD OFFERS A BEAUTIFUL CUSTOM BUILT ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER WITH ELECTRIC FIREPLACE. PLENTY OF ROOM IN THE BASEMENT TO EXPAND AND
FINISH FOR MORE LIVING SPACE. LEVEL YARD WITH NEW PAVER PATIO FOR OUTDOOR ENJOYMENT. ONE
CAR GARAGE UNDER WITH ACCESS TO BASEMENT. THIS HOME ALSO FEATURES NEW GAS HEAT, NEW
CENTRAL A/C, NEW 200 AMP ELECTRIC, ALL NEW PLUMBING, SIDING, GUTTERS, ASPHALT DRIVEWAY AND
WINDOWS. HARDWOOD FLOORS THROUGHOUT. $499,900 PEABODY CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
LOOKING TO
BUY OR SELL?
CALL
RHONDA
COMBE
FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE
NEEDS!
781-706-0842
FOR SALE- BEAUTIFULLY RENOVATED 4 BED 2
BATH OPEN CONCEPT CAPE $589,900 SAUGUS
CALL JOHN 617 -285-7117
FOR RENT 1 BED WITH EAT-IN KITCHEN & LAUNDRY
IN UNIT ON STREET PERMIT PARKING. EVERETT
$1700 CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
FOR RENT SUNNY & BRIGHT 2-3 BED FULL
KITCHEN W/ LAUNDRY IN UNIT. OFF ST PARKING
FOR 2.SAUGUS $2200 CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
UNDER
AGREEMENT
FOR SALE - 3 FAMILY & 1 FAMILY ALL ON ONE LOT,
PLENTY OR PARKING, CLOSE TO CASINO $1,400,000
EVERETT RHONDA 781-706-0842
FOR SALE
FOR SALE-UPDATED 1 BED CONDO WITH SS
KITCH AND HW FLRS. FEE INCL HEAT & HW.
2 OFF ST PKING. $274,900 WAKEFIELD CALL
RHONDA 781-706-0842 781-706-0842
FOR RENT
FOR SALE-3 BED 2 BATH CAPE WITH UPDATES
ON SAUGUS LINE WITH 1 CAR GARAGE
$539,900 LYNN CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
FOR RENT
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, December 10, 2021
Follow Us On:
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY SALES & RENTALS
Looking to purchase a new home?
Sandy Juliano
Broker/President
Remember, the seller pays agents commission. There
is no cost to you to use a real estate agent to protect
you during the biggest transaction of your life! Call
today and ask about Buyers Representation.
WE KNOW EVERETT!! Call TODAY to sell or buy with the best!
LISTED BY NORMA & ROSEMARIE
NEW LISTING BY SANDY
SOLD!
CONDO - NEW PRICE - $449,900
30 CHELSEA ST. #812
EVERETT
CALL NORMA FOR DETAILS!
617-590-9143
NEW LISTING BY SANDY
SOLD
SINGLE FAMILY
39 ARLINGTON ST., EVERETT
$529,900
NEW LISTING
129 CLARENCE ST., EVERETT
NEW PRICE! $799,900
TWO FAMILY
SOLD BY NORMA
OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY
HUGE 3 FAMILY
21-23 CLEVELAND AVE., EVERETT
$980,000
DEC. 12, 2021
11:30-1:30
32 RIDGE RD., READING
$675,000
NEW LISTING BY NORMA
CONDO
120 WYLLIS AVE., UNIT #310
SOLD BY JOE!
6 FAMILY
CHARLES STREET, MALDEN
$1,250,000
CALL JOE FOR DETAILS 617-680-7610
UNDER AGREEMENT
SINGLE FAMILY
20 BAKER RD., EVERETT
$509,900
SOLD BY MICHAEL
AS BUYER’S AGENT
58 BRADFORD ST.
EVERETT
Open Daily From 10:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
433 Broadway, Suite B, Everett, MA 02149
Open Daily From 10:0
Joe DiNuzzo
- Broker Associate
:0
00 AM
5:00 PM
www.jrs-properties.com
Follow Us On:
617.544.6274
Norma Capuano Parziale
- Agent
Denise Matarazz
- Agent
Maria Scrima
- Agent
Rosemarie Ciampi
- Agent
Michael Matarazzo
-Agent
Mark Sachetta
- Agent
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