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<SAUGUS
AD
D
D
Vol. 25, No. 19
Have a Safe & Happy Mother’s Day!
DCAT
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-FREE- www.advocatenews.net
Published Every Friday
SAUGUS’ LEGAL EAGLE
B
TE
781-233-4446
Friday, May 12, 2023
What’s up with
Saugus’ pot business?
Board of Selectmen Chair Cogliano said the town
manager is taking too long to make recommendations,
but a majority of the board members disagree
By Mark E. Vogler
oard of Selectmen
Chair Anthony Cogliano
said he’s ready to
proceed with public hearings
for the seven applicants
seeking the three Special PerPOT
BUSINESS | SEE PAGE 2
C E
A E
SCHOLASTIC SIBLINGS: Pictured from left to right: Collette
and Diana Whitcomb – half of Saugus quadruplets – show off
matching grasshopper tattoos. They will receive their diplomas
in commencement exercises at UMass Lowell tomorrow (Saturday,
May 13). Their two brothers are on course to graduate in the
future from UMass Lowell. Please see inside for story. (Courtesy
photo to The Saugus Advocate by Brooke Coupal)
Attorney John J. Vasapolli has represented the Town of Saugus as town counsel on legal
matters for 42 years, serving under nine town managers. Please see inside for more photos
and this week’s “The Advocate Asks.” (Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 12, 2023
POT BUSINESS | FROM PAGE 1
mits (S-2) to open marijuana
dispensaries on Route 1 in
Saugus. “It was my assumption
that we would have had
those people in here by now
to start issuing licenses,” Cogliano
told his colleagues near
the end of Tuesday (May 9)
night’s meeting.
“I am asking that all of the
manager’s recommendations
be submitted to this
board no later than next Friday
(May 19) so that the board
can bring those people in for
hearings,” he said.
“I just think it’s high time
that the board conduct our
business now as we are the
S-2 permit-granting authority.
Unless one of those applicants
doesn’t meet the criteria
for rezoning, I would
expect to see all the applicants
before us so we can
start scheduling those hearings
and get the ball rolling,”
he said.
But a majority of the selectmen
on the fi ve member
board – Vice Chair Debra Panetta,
Jeff rey Cicolini and MiMulti-Family
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chael Serino – said in interviews
with The Saugus Advocate
that they objected to setting
a deadline for the town
manager to make his recommendations
to the board –
Crabtree should take as much
time as he needs and that the
Marijuana Establishment Review
Committee should be allowed
to complete its work.
“I for one will off er as much
time as needed by the committee
to thoroughly vet
the applicants so we can
make fully informed decisions
when deciding on who to issue
the licenses to,” Selectman
Jeff rey Cicolini said in an
interview.
However, Cogliano said he
thinks the process has already
taken too much time since
the Annual Town Meeting approved
the rezoning article
on cannabis dispensaries last
May 6 – a year ago tomorrow
(Saturday, May 6). “Here we
are at the beginning of May
and we’re still at Square One.
So, we want to get moving
with that,” Cogliano told his
colleagues.
Selectman Corinne Riley
was the lone member siding
with Cogliano. She said the
town loses revenue with each
passing day that no S-2 permits
are issued.
Crabtree, who did not attend
Tuesday night’s meeting,
has said little on the situation
publicly since he issued a
Request For Information (RFI)
document in January.
“I think the purpose of the
RFI was to make sure everyone
met the criteria for the
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correct place and their fi nancials
were in order,” Cogliano
said.
“And It’s been quite some
time. Town Meeting approved
that [rezoning article for cannabis
dispensaries] last May
6 and the Attorney General
Nov. 4,” he said.
Here’s what each selectman
had to say about the need to
proceed expeditiously on the
issuance of S-2 permits to applicants
seeking approval to
open up marijuana dispensaries
in town:
Selectman Jeff rey Cicolini
The cannabis establishments
coming to town is a
very signifi cant event for Saugus
and one that cannot be
taken lightly. We have a committee
that is charged with
vetting each applicant and
performing site visits for each
of their proposed locations to
make sure they comply with
the thousands of pages of
regulations and governance
requirements. The committee
is comprised of several of our
top ranking offi cials including
but not limited to our Town
Manager, the Police Chief
and Fire Chief, the Health Director
and our head of procurement.
From what I understand,
to date this process has
been extremely involved and
time consuming. In addition
to department heads being
in the middle of our budget
season there are many other
town responsibilities each
member is dealing with in addition
to one key member being
out for a medical procedure.
I understand the desire
to make decisions quickly and
move forward however this
process cannot and should
not be rushed. Many of my
partners at my fi rm have fi rsthand
knowledge of this entire
process and I am told there
are communities that have
taken almost a year from the
opening of the Proposals to
issuance of the license(s). It
is critical that we get this process
right as it is a matter of
public safety and long-term
sustainability. I for one will offer
as much time as needed by
the committee to thoroughly
vet the applicants so we can
make fully informed decisions
when deciding on who to issue
the licenses.
Board of Selectmen Chair
Anthony Cogliano
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reach meetings for the following
sites: Oye Restaurant, Out
of Asia, The 99, Avalon Motel,
All Tune and Lube, the property
just north of the Army
Surplus store and Auto Excellence.
The
rezoning was voted by
Town Meeting to allow these
dispensaries on May 6th 2022,
it was approved by the Attorney
General on November
4th 2022. The town manager
has told me he will be
ready in two weeks so I think
Friday May 19th should be
more than suffi cient to deliver
his recommendations to the
Board. S2 permits are granted
by the Board of Selectmen
and unless one of the applicants
fails to meet the necessary
requirements, I intend to
bring them all in for hearings
to determine the best fi t for
our town. I respect the work
of the committee the Manager
assembled and value their
opinions. But this is a Board of
Selectmen issue and I intend
to handle them like any other
licensing issue. I will do my
homework and set up site visits
at existing locations to see
how well the dispensaries are
being run.
The Attorney General took
six months, the Manager took
six months. I’d like to see one
open in 2023 so the Board
and I will do our due diligence
which should take less than a
month.
Board of Selectmen Vice
Chair Debra Panetta
The proposed marijuana
facilities are being vetted
by the Marijuana Establishment
Review Committee
made up of Public Safety Department
heads, the Building
Commissioner, Health
Director, Procurement Director,
Town Manager, and other
important representatives.
This Committee is reviewing
thousands of pages of submitted
material and conducting
in-person presentations.
There are 7 applications before
this Committee, where
these applicants are looking
for locations up-and-down
Route 1. This is a new process
for Saugus, and like any new
process, it takes time to do it
right. This is a time-consuming
undertaking, and we are
in the midst of budget season
for department heads,
who are busy with multiple
responsibilities. The Committee
needs to take the required
time to complete the process
thoroughly.
Each proposed facil ity
needs to be properly vetted
for the health and safety of
Saugus residents. As with all
applications that come before
the Board of Selectmen,
we should rely heavily on the
recommendations from our
Public Safety experts (Police
Chief, Fire Chief), Building Inspector,
Health Director, Town
POT BUSINESS | SEE PAGE 6
׉	 7cassandra://JKKP9c7zG-uShS5pmhGxg3HRLDSOcQtH8U9Mvy8hc00&`̰ d]h#x ׉ETHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 12, 2023
~ The Advocate Asks ~
Page 3
Town Counsel John J. Vasapolli discusses his 42 years of
giving legal advice to Town of Saugus officials
Editor’s Note: For this week’s
column, we sat down with Saugus
Town Counsel John Vasapoli,
who has been giving legal
advice to Saugus town government
officials and boards
for more than four decades.
Vasapolli, 71, was born in Lynn
and moved with his family to
Saugus when he was three. He
wanted to attend Saugus High
School, but his parents wanted
him to go to a parochial school,
so he attended St. Mary’s in
Lynn, where he graduated in
1970. He was voted “Most Likely
To Succeed” in his class. Both
of his grandparents immigrated
from Sicily. His father’s family
grew up in the Brickyard of
Lynn. His grandfather on his
dad’s side of the family was a
foreman at Lynn Gas and Electric.
Vasapolli’s father worked
for more than 30 years at GE
and died at age 55.
In 1974, Vasapolli graduated
with cum laude honors from
Providence College with a bachelor’s
degree in the Humanities.
He put himself through Suffolk
Law School without a car, walking
from School Street to Cliftondale
Square to catch a bus to
Boston. Vasapolli recalled that
he didn’t get his first car until he
was 26. He paid $900 for a Mercury
Montego and had to borrow
$300 from his best friend
to insure the car. He graduated
from Suffolk Law School in
1977 and passed the bar exam
soon after. He got involved in
Saugus local government, serving
as an associate member of
the Board of Appeals and later
was appointed to the Board of
Assessors. Vasapolli applied for
daily basis, you are rendering
legal advice to town officials.
You’re involved in most of the
decisions that are made as an
advisor. My nickname is “The
Consigliere.” “The Consigliere,”
like in “The Godfather” (the
movie).” So, you’re basically
corporate counsel.
ASKS | SEE PAGE 4
9
David Vasapoli (right) is following in his father John’s footsteps
as a lawyer in the Saugus Law Office of Vasapolli & Ricciardelli.
(Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
an opening as assistant town
counsel and took the position in
1980. Opportunity knocked after
six months on the job. Bradbury
Gilbert retired as town
counsel after 19 years. Vasapolli
was appointed to fill the position
he’s held ever since.
Vasapolli got married and
raised a family. His wife Linda,
from Lynn, is a nurse. They have
two sons: Joseph, 38, of Chelmsford,
is a property manager;
David, 32, of Georgetown, has
worked six and a half years as
an attorney for his father in the
Saugus Law Office of Vasapolli
& Ricciardelli. The firm specializes
in probate and family law,
estate planning, business law
and personal injury. Vasapolli
is a former president of the Essex
Bar Association, served as
a hearing officer for the Board
of Bar Overseers and recently
served on the Joint Bar Committee,
which makes gubernatorial
recommendations on whether
candidates are qualified for
judgeships. He is also a member
of the Greater Lynn Bar Association.
Highlights of this week’s
interview follow.
Q: For the benefit of Saugus
Advocate readers, what is the
role of the Town Counsel, or
Town Attorney?
A: In that position, you are
the legal advisor to all town
officials. You have to advise
them on all legal matters. You
have to attend all of the Town
Meetings, advise the Town
Meeting and Moderator. You
review contracts for the town
manager. You’re appointed by
the town manager. And on a
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 12, 2023
News that citizens will love to hear
Saugus TV’s new interim director unveils a plan to fix auditorium acoustics after years of talk, but no action
By Mark E. Vogler
T
own officials and citizens
alike have been
complaining for years
about the inability to hear
citizens comment from the
lectern or selectmen discussion
of important issues in
the second floor auditorium
Gerry
D’Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
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at Town Hall. It’s rare for the
Board of Selectmen to complete
meetings without complaints
about the acoustics in
the historic room where town
business is conducted.
But newly appointed Saugus
TV Interim Director Rachel
Brugman at Tuesday (May
9) night’s meeting briefed selectmen
on plans she has for
upgrading the sound system
so that poor acoustics doesn’t
make it difficult for citizens
– including town officials –
to hear testimony at public
meetings. Brugman told selectmen
she got a bid from
a second company – Pro AV
Systems Audio Visual Technologies
– to do the project
for $107,084. But she said she
decided to go with the low
bidder – Key Media – which
gave her a quote of $85,000
while offering to do more than
Pro AV.
“I think that’s terrific,” Board
of Selectmen Vice Chair Debra
Panetta told Brugman. “That’s
something that we’ve needed
for a long time,” Panetta said.
Selectman Michael Serino
lauded Brugman for addressing
the longstanding problem
in a short time after being
appointed interim director.
“We’ve been promised this
for years,” Serino said.
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TV Interim Director Rachel Brugman drew praise from
selectmen at Tuesday night’s meeting for developing a plan
to improve the acoustics of the second floor auditorium of
Saugus Town Hall. Board of Selectmen Chair Anthony Cogliano
listens in the inset photo. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate
by SaugusTV)
A quick fix after years of
talking
Brugman said the improvements
could be made within
a month after the project
is begun. But as a formality,
Saugus TV must go before
the Finance Committee for a
recommendation before getting
approval of the requested
budget increase at a Special
Town Meeting.
“The Town Hall has been
persistently grappling with
audio issues for years, primarily
attributed to the deteriorated
state of the current audio
rack, which requires immediate
replacement,” Brugman
said in a statement this
week to The Saugus Advocate.
“Additionally,
the audio system’s
original design catered
to having the selectmen situated
on stage, posing a challenge
in adjusting the microphones
and speakers. Consequently,
the current layout
curtails the speaker volume,
leading to feedback and unsatisfactory
audio quality,”
Brugman said. “To overcome
these issues, we plan to acquire
state-of-the-art audio
equipment and relocate the
speakers in front of the seASKS
| FROM PAGE 3
Q: How many town managers
have you served under?
A: I’ve served under nine
town managers.
Q: Do you have one you
served under who sticks out
more than the others?
A: Well, I think they have all
had their strong points and
week points. I think that if you
look at the records of each of
them, that would show what
lectmen. This measure will enhance
our capacity to amplify
the sound in the auditorium,
without any feedback interference,
providing the audience
with superior audio experiences.”
In
an interview later, Panetta
– who has often complained
about the auditorium’s
poor acoustics – said she
is “very pleased” that the town
could soon be getting the
needed acoustical improvements
in the Town Hall auditorium.
“We sometimes have
difficulty hearing applicants,
and we even have difficulties
hearing each other on the
Board,” Panetta told The Saugus
Advocate.
“I know the audience has
a very hard time hearing
what’s being said, which is
why I always try to speak directly
into the microphone.
It’s hard enough for many
people to speak publicly,
and to ask someone to repeat
themselves makes it that
much more difficult,” she said.
“These acoustic upgrades
will significantly improve our
meetings and events at Town
Hall, and I’m sure Town Meeting
will welcome these improvements
as well.”
type of job they did, whether
they did a good job or a bad
job. Some were here for shorter
terms than others. I served
as temporary town manager
on two occasions – after
Steve Angelo and after Andrew
Bisignani – and I was
just kind of keeping the ship
sailing until the selectmen
had gone through the selection
process and appointed
ASKS | SEE PAGE 8
׉	 7cassandra://dqKBbY4UTBSZwAEAGXZDJTsKtuBkp4fDInoJs7rlLoo/`̰ d]h#x ׉E	THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 12, 2023
Page 5
Joseph T. Scurio Promoted to Senior Vice President - Commercial Banking
(Wakefi eld, MA) – Joseph T.
Scurio of Peabody has been
promoted to the position of
Senior Vice President - Senior
Commercial Banking Offi cer
at The Savings Bank. He previously
served as Vice President
- Commercial Banking Offi cer.
.. Since joining The Savings
Bank in 2019, Joe has been
responsible for spearheading
and overseeing the Bank’s
Paycheck Protection Program
(PPP) loan originations and
loan forgiveness during the
pandemic which resulted in
309 loans totaling just over
$23 million. In addition, Joe
has closed a combined total of
over $82 million in new commercial
real estate and commercial
and industrial loans,
not including PPP loans, in the
past three years.
.. Joe’s banking experience
spans 35 years of service
which included a previous position
with The Savings Bank
from 1994-1998 in the Loan
Servicing Department.However,
over the last 20 years,
Joe’s eff orts have been centered
in commercial lending.
Prior to rejoining The Savings
Bank in 2019, he was associated
with the Reading Co-opthe
Massachusetts Housing Finance
Agency.
Joe received his Bachelor of
Science degree Cum Laude in
Business Administration from
Salem State University, and his
Associate of Science in Business
Administration from the
New England College of Finance,
in Boston.He is also a
retired member of the Massachusetts
Air National Guard
having served 20 years of honorable
service and retiring at
the Rank of Master Sergeant.
Joe is an active member and
Director of the Peabody Rotary
Club, and a member of the
Board of Directors of the Saugus
Public Library Foundation.
“I join my colleagues in congratulating
Joe Scurio as he
joins the senior management
team as a Senior Vice
President,” Bob DiBella, President
and Chief Executive
Offi cer of The Savings Bank
said. “He has been an asset
to the Bank and to the
Commercial Banking team
since rejoining us in 2019.
We wish him every success
in this new position.”
Joseph T. Scurio
erative Bank as a Vice President/Commercial
Loan Officer
responsible for generating
new commercial loan business
and the daily management
of a $75 million loan portfolio.
He has also worked with
East Boston Savings Bank as
a Vice President, Group Head
for Commercial Real Estate
Lending in the Peabody Offi
ce; and Everett Co-operative
Bank as an Assistant Vice President/
Commercial Lending Offi
cer.His prior work experience
also includes positions at DanversBank,
MedfordBank, and
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 12, 2023
Meet Julia Child!
The Delvena Theatre Company presents this live performance next at the Saugus Public Library
(Editor’s Note: The following
The Delvena Theatre Cominfo
is from a press release issued
by the Saugus Public Library
this week to promote
next week’s theatrical presentation
about the late Julia Child,
the famed American cooking
teacher, television personality
and cookbook author who popularized
French cuisine.)
pany will be presenting Meet
Julia Child! at the Saugus Public
Library (295 Central St.,
Saugus) on Tuesday, May 16,
at 6:30 p.m. Meet Julia Child!
is a live performance featuring
Lynne Moulton as “Julia
Child” doing what she did
best. The audience will learn
more about her life and have
the opportunity to view “Julia”
on the set of “The French Chef,”
an amusing experience. After
the performance, the cast will
open up for discussion regarding
Julia Child.
This original edutainment
production will feature both
Lynne Moulton and Fran Baron.
This program is sponsored
by the New Friends of the Saugus
Public Library.
The Delvena Theatre Company
has been doing to-go
shows for the last several years
at various venues throughout
the New England area.
The Company was founded
in 1992, and prior to “going on
the road” performed at different
locations throughout Massachusetts,
most often at the
Boston Center for the Arts.
Delvena was nominated for
five Independent Reviewers of
New England Awards. Its production
of “Who’s Afraid of Virginia
Woolf?” was on Theatre
Mirror’s Best List for acting, diPOT
BUSINESS | FROM PAGE 2
Manager, and others serving
on this Committee. We need
to avoid legal issues, like the
scandal involving the former
Mayor of Fall River, concerning
the local approval/selection
process for marijuana
companies.
I would not feel comfortable
moving forward with
these applications until the
Committee completes its due
diligence, spending the proper
time to complete their important
work. Then the Board
of Selectmen need to review
the applications, hold public
hearings, and have site visLaw
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Julia Child/Delvena Theatre Company: The Saugus Public Library
will host this special program spotlighting the late,
great American cooking personality on Tuesday, May 16, at
6:30 p.m. After the performance, the cast will talk about Julia
Child. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate)
recting and production. Delvena’s
“Anna Weiss” and “Beyond
Therapy” were included
on Theatre Mirror’s best playlist,
and Delvena’s “Blue Heart”
its. Our Town residents deserve
no les
Selectman Corinne Riley
The issue of granting marijuana
licenses is certainly under
the purview of the Board
of Selectmen, as are granting
Liquor Licenses. The more
time that passes, the more
revenue the town misses out
on that will go to the cities
just outside the town’s borders.
Seeing as they can only
be on Route one with specific
guidelines of location, if
the businesses meet the criteria
that were vetted by the
committee the town manager
assembled, then we should
have them so we can review
and make the decision on
who we feel is best fitted to
run their establishment here
in town.
Selectman Michael Serino
After speaking with the
Town Manager, I do not believe
that the Cannabis (marijuana)
licensing process has
been lagging. The Town Manager
has put in a considerable
amount of time in putting
together an application
process. A Cannabis committee
has been formed to include
one individual from
our Police and Fire departments,
Planning Board, Board
of Health, Procurement Director
and our Building Commissioner.
The Cannabis commitwas
placed on Aisle Say’s best
list.
For more information, call
the Library at 781-231-4168,
ext. 3106.
tee will have to visit each site
before making their recommendation
to the Board of
Selectmen. The Town Manager
has had to consult with
an attorney who has expertise
in licensing Cannabis establishments.
Unfortunately,
the Town Manager has been
in the middle of putting together
the 2024 Town budget
over the past several
months. Many meetings have
been held with all department
heads, Finance Committee
members, Board of
Selectmen and Town Meeting
members and preparing
for our Town Meetings.
Overall, seven (7) applicants
have filed the necessary
paperwork requesting
a Cannabis license. Once the
Cannabis committee makes
their recommendations to the
Board of Selectmen, I would
like to have the opportunity
and time needed to review
all the applications. Moreover,
as one member of the board,
I would like to schedule a site
visit with my fellow board
members and then schedule
a host community outreach
forum as required under Mass
General Laws. We need to be
fair to all applicants. Imposing
a deadline is not in the best
interest of public safety for
our community. This is a new
learning experience for all of
us and we need to get this licensing
process right.
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~ The Old Sachem ~
Page 7
A Super Jumper
I
f you were around in
1968 and watched the
Summer Olympics from
Mexico City that year, you
saw a treat. A young Dick
Fosbury dashed to the bar,
then completed a very unusual
jump of going over
backwards rather than the
accepted way of going head
fi rst frontways. He changed
the method of the high jump
forever.
Richard Douglas Fosbury
was born on March 6, 1947,
in Portland, Oregon. He died
on March 12, 2023. He had
a remarkable impact on the
sport in an action that became
to be known as the Fosbury
Flop.
At the age of 16 at Medford
High School in Portland,
he started doing a “back fi rst”
jump for the high jump. He
began with the traditional
method of front fi rst but
had trouble getting over the
bar. As a sophomore he had
trouble completing jumps
of five feet, which was the
traditional requirement for
high school high jumpers.
The technique was called the
straddle method – where the
jumper went over the bar facing
down and lifted his legs
individually over the bar. The
high jump event only has a
rule that you start the jump
from only one foot and go
over the bar. It doesn’t stipulate
how you perform after
you leap. He decided to try
another method, which took
him over a year to perfect.
During his junior year he
was able to go over the bar
backwards, head fi rst, curving
his body over the bar and
kicking his legs up in the air,
ending the jump, and landing
on his back. During his
time, the landing platform
was changed from sawdust
to a softer foam rubber. The
sawdust hadn’t been a problem
for facing jumpers; they
landed on their feet. The
change to foam rubber fit
into Fosbury’s routine very
well. He did, however, have
early problems, compressing
a couple of vertebrae, and the
softer landing reduced the
problem. Although his coaches
kept advocating the straddle
method, they eventually
could see that Dick could
improve from his early method
of the fl op. During his junior
year, he broke the Medford
High School record with
a jump of 6 feet, 3 inches.
As a senior, he took second
place in the state fi nals with a
leap of 6 feet, 5.5 inches. The
local newspaper, The Medford
Mail-Tribune, posted a
photo that was captioned
“Fosbury Flops over Bar.” The
reporter stated that Fosbury
looked like a fish flopping
into a boat. Another newspaper
reported Fosbury’s eff ort
as “the World’s Laziest High
Jumper.”
Fosbury enrolled in Oregon
State University after graduating
from Medford High.
The college coach kept telling
Dick that he should use
the traditional method and
kept Fosbury in that method
as a freshman. But as a
sophomore he convinced
the coach of his fl op method,
and seeing the results in
practice, the coach agreed.
As a sophomore he cleared
6 feet, 10 inches in the fi rst
college meeting, which shattered
the school’s record, and
the rest is history.
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His method was pictured
on the cover of Track & Field
in the February 1968 issue.
He won the 1968 National
Collegiate Athletic Association
(NCAA) title using his
flop method, and he won
again in 1969. He worked on
his technique and developed
a curved J approach that increased
his speed before the
jump. He kept having a longer
run to increase his speed,
which gave him more lift over
the bar. He completed a jump
of 7 feet, 1 inch at a competition
in Berkley, California,
and duplicated that feat the
following year in the NCAA
championship.
Fosbury won the Olympic
trials in Los Angeles with a
leap of 7 feet, 1 inch, but offi -
cials worried that the Mexico
City altitude might hinder the
athletes. Now the team went
into training, and Fosbury
was one of four who cleared
7 feet, 1 and 1/8 inches, but
was listed as fourth based on
misses. In the fi nal team competition,
three jumpers were
able to clear 7 feet, 2 and 5/8
inches.
In the 1968 Olympics, Fosbury
won the Gold Medal
with a leap of 7 feet, 4 and
1/4 inches. In the 1972 Olympics
in Munich, Germany, 28
of the competitors used the
fl op and 12 kept to the former
method.
He graduated from Oregon
U with a degree in civil engineering
in 1971. Fosbury was
inducted into the National
Track & Field Hall of Fame in
1981. He ran as a Democrat
for a seat in the Idaho House
of Representatives and lost
to the incumbent. In January
2019, Fosbury was elected as
a Blane County Commissioner.
He became a co-owner of
Galena Engineering Corporation
Inc. In Ketchum, Idaho,
where he resided from 1977.
In March 2008 he was diagnosed
with stage-one lymphoma,
and he had surgery a
month later to remove a cancerous
tumor that engulfed
his lower vertebra, and declared
himself to be doing
well and cured of cancer.
Fosbury along with fellow
Olympians Gary Hall and
Anne Cribbs became founders
of World Fit, a nonprofi t
organization that promotes
youth fi tness programs and
Olympic ideals.
R ichard Fosbur y suc -
cumbed with a recurrence
of lymphoma at the age of
76. He will be remembered
“The Old Sachem,” Bill Stewart
(Courtesy photo to The Saugus
Advocate by Joanie Allbee)
as a champion high jumper
who developed a newer, better
method of competition.
(Editor’s Note: Bill Stewart,
better known to Saugus Advocate
readers as “The Old
Sachem,” writes a weekly
column about sports – and
sometimes he opines on current
or historical events or famous
people)
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 12, 2023
Making their scholastic mark
The Whitcomb quadruplets are achieving their goals at UMass Lowell; the two sisters are set
to graduate tomorrow, and the two brothers will earn their degrees in the future
By Katharine Webster
D
iana and Collette Whitcomb
are the female
half of a set of quadruplets
who all ended up at
UMass Lowell. But the sisters
from Saugus, who recently got
matching grasshopper tattoos
because they used to catch
grasshoppers together in their
family’s backyard, will “walk”
before their brothers Andrew
and Bryce.
They’re excited to graduate
together from the Zuckerberg
College of Health Sciences. The
Whitcomb sisters are set to receive
their degrees tomorrow
during the UMass Lowell 2023
commencement exercises at
the Tsongas Center. They are
among the graduates in the
Class of 2023 from eight families
who have multiple siblings
earning diplomas.
“I think it’s kind of cool. I’m
happy I can do it with Diana,”
said Collette, turning to her
sister and adding, “You’re my
favorite.”
“Aww, you’re my favorite!” Diana
replied.
Diana, a nursing student
who just finished her precepASKS
| FROM PAGE 4
the town manager. I’ve seen
all types of town managers.
But I think if you look at the retorship
with the school nurse
at the Bartlett School in Lowell,
also works at Lahey Clinic
and has applied to the nurse
residency program there. Collette,
a nutritional science major,
is looking into lab and research
jobs as well as graduate
school. Both took electives
in art history in their early semesters
at UML. They loved it
so much Diana ended up earning
a minor in art history, while
Collette completed a minor in
architectural studies.
“Those are my fun classes,”
Collette said.
“It makes you a well-rounded
person,” Diana agreed.
Andrew, a business major
with concentrations in marketing
and management, completed
a professional co-op
with Keurig Dr. Pepper Inc. for
six months last year. He will
graduate in December and go
straight into UMass Lowell’s
MBA program. Bryce, a junior
who transferred to the university
from North Shore Community
College, recently switched
his major from computer science
to management information
systems, joining his brothcord,
you can make your own
judgement as to who were the
most effective and who were
the least effective.
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NEW COLLEGE GRADS: Pictured from left to right: Collette and Diana Whitcomb recently displayed
matching grasshopper tattoos. The sisters, who are half of a set of quadruplets from
Saugus, used to catch the insects in their backyard. Tomorrow they will be receiving their diplomas
in commencement exercises at UMass Lowell. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate
by Brooke Coupal)
er in the Manning School of
Business.
How will the four of them
and their mom celebrate after
Commencement? That’s easy,
Q: And as far as longevity…
A: Yes, I think the present
town manager has been the
longest.
Q: Yes, he’s the only one who
has served for over a decade.
A: Yes, and if you look at his
record, and financially – the
type of situation we’re in – he
has a combination of accounting
background, legal background;
he was also a police
officer. He has a lot of vision,
which is great. It’s a very difficult
job. It takes a tremendous
amount of time; every
day’s a problem, and it’s a difficult
position.
I think some town managers
were much more qualified
than others. Unfortunately, we
had one [Bisignani] that went
to jail for criminal wrongdoing
– a sad situation. The present
town manager was fired and
there was a recall as a result
of it. So, it’s been an interesting
nine town managers.
Q: What would you say is the
average number of hours that
it takes to be a town counsel?
A: I would say it varies. Now,
during Town Meeting when
it meets, it’s more because
you need to be at the Town
Meeting, and members have
a lot of questions during the
the sisters agreed: They’ll go
out to dinner somewhere and
then head to Richardson’s for
ice cream.
“They’re the best!” the sisters
chorused.
Editor’s Note: Katharine Webster
is a UMass Lowell senior
staff writer and editor.
Saugus Town Counsel John Vasapolli advocates two major
changes in his hometown government: staggered terms for
members of the Board of Selectmen and expansion of the
Town Meeting from 50 up to 100 members. (Saugus Advocate
photo by Mark E. Vogler)
week. But on a daily basis,
I’m in touch with department
heads with legal questions.
The building inspector will call
me about the zoning bylaws.
The town clerk might call me.
The manager, I speak to every
day probably – or almost every
day – on various matters.
So, it varies. I’m available fulltime
even though I have a private
practice, but I am availASKS
| SEE PAGE 12
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Page 9
A tribute to a Saugus mom
This weekend will be a special Mother’s Day for Maureen Whitcomb, who will celebrate two of her
quadruplet children receiving college diplomas while the two others are on course to follow in the future
Lowell area, put the university
at the top of her list, she says.
“UMass Lowell was my No.
1 choice,” she says. “It was the
happy middle – not too close
to home and not too far from
home.”
Next was Collette, who was
accepted in the nutritional
science program. Again, location
was a deciding factor,
because she was able to
keep a job with good pay at a
WHITCOMB | SEE PAGE 10
St. Anthony’s Church
Flea Market & Bazaar
Saturday, May 13,, 2023
from 8:00 AM - 2:00 PM
Maureen Whitcomb (center), a Saugus single mom, shared a moment with her children at UMass
Lowell’s O’Leary Library in this 2020 photo. Pictured from left to right are quadruplets Andrew,
Diana, their mother Maureen, Collette and Bryce. (Courtesy Photo to The Saugus Advocate
by Tory Wesnofske of UMass Lowell.)
Featuring Crafts, Nick-Nacks
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~ Admission Only .50 Cents ~
For info, call Linda: (781) 910-8615
All proceeds benefit St. Anthony’s Church
The Saugus Whitcomb quadruplets are pictured from left to right shortly after birth in September
2000: Andrew, Bryce, Diana and Collette. (Courtesy Photo to The Saugus Advocate by
Maureen Whitcomb)
(Editor’s Note: UMass Lowell
staff writer Katharine Webster
wrote the following story,
which was published by the
University on Feb. 13, 2020. As a
Mother’s Day tribute to a single
mom who raised four children
who each pursued a college education,
we have reprinted this
article with the permission of
UMass Lowell.)
By Katharine Webster
T
he Whitcomb quadruplets’
names begin with
A, B, C and D – but their
parents didn’t plan it. They
just picked four names that
they liked, and it turned out
that way.
Likewise, three of the four
quadruplets – Andrew, Collette
and Diana – didn’t set
out to go to the same college.
Each decided to come
to UMass Lowell for different
reasons. Still, they’re happy to
be together.
“It’s certainly a bonus that
my sisters are here, but I
would have come here anyway,”
says Andrew, a business
major.
“We all thought it would be
funny to go to the same college,”
says Collette, a nutritional
science major, “but we
didn’t plan it that way.”
Diana applied first, to meet
the early action deadline for
the nursing program. She
wanted to visit campus, so all
four came to an open house
with their mom. The Whitcombs,
who are from Saugus,
were impressed by the
campus.
When Diana was accepted
to the Solomont School
of Nursing, she was offered
admission to the Honors College,
too. That, plus a comprehensive
financial aid package,
the location and a wealth of
clinical opportunities in the
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Landscaping
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 12, 2023
A musical play at Legion Hall
Theatre Company of Saugus begins two-weekend performance of ‘Peter and
the Starcatcher’ tonight
(Editor’s Note: The following
info is from a press release issued
by the Theatre Company
of Saugus.)
T
he Theatre Company
of Saugus (TCS) will
present “Peter and the
Starcatcher,” a play with music,
during the second and third
weekends of May 2023. This
Tony-winning show upends
the century-old story of how a
miserable orphan comes to be
The Boy Who Would Not Grow
Up (aka Peter Pan). A wildly
theatrical adaptation featuring
marauding pirates, jungle
tyrants, unwilling comrades
and unlikely heroes, “Peter
and the Starcatcher” playfully
explores the depths of greed
and despair… and the bonds
of friendship, duty and love.
Plot: A young orphan and
his mates are shipped off from
Victorian England to a distant
island ruled by the evil King
Zarboff . They know nothing
of the mysterious trunk in the
captain’s cabin, which contains
a precious, otherworldWHITCOMB
| FROM PAGE 9
Starbucks near home. She returns
to Saugus every weekend
to work.
Andrew was the last to accept.
Like his sisters, he wanted
to be close enough to
home that he could visit on
the weekends. And it was the
right fi t for his desired major.
“When I walked through
North Campus and saw that
the business school was
brand-new, I thought, ‘Bingo!
I’m going here,’” Andrew says.
Bryce, the fourth quadruplet,
is studying for an associate
degree in computer information
systems at North
Shore Community College.
He hopes to transfer to UMaly
cargo. At sea, the boys are
discovered by a precocious
young girl named Molly, a
Starcatcher-in-training who
realizes that the trunk’s precious
cargo is “starstuff ,” a celestial
substance so powerful
that it must never fall into the
wrong hands. When the ship
is taken over by pirates – led
by the fearsome Black Stache,
a villain determined to claim
the trunk and its treasure for
his own – the journey quickly
becomes a thrilling adventure.
Featuring 18 actors portraying
more than 100 unforgettable
characters, “Peter and the
Starcatcher” uses ingenious
stagecraft and the limitless
possibilities of imagination to
bring the story to life.
Performances are May 1213-14
and 19-20-21, 2023,
on Friday and Saturday evenings
at 8 p.m. and Sunday
matinees at 2 p.m. The venue
is the American Legion Post
210 at 44 Taylor St. in Saugus.
The performance space
is not wheelchair accessible,
but it does feature a bar servss
Lowell in a couple of years.
For now, though, he’s living at
home with their mom, Maureen,
and saving money.
Collette says that the best
thing about being quadruplets
is that they were never
bored, because they always
had each other for playmates.
“We were never lonely. We
were always entertained,” she
says. “We were always out in
the backyard, doing stuff .”
The four branched out and
made diff erent friends as they
grew older and went to different
high schools. Bryce attended
Saugus High School,
while his siblings went to
Northeast Metropolitan Regional
Technical High School
in Wakefield – Diana in the
ing alcoholic and soft drinks.
Snacks and raffl e tickets are
available for purchase before
the show and during intermission.
Masks are required indoors
for the safety of the audience
and cast.
Tickets paid at the door
are $25 for adults or $23 for
youngsters, seniors or veterans.
Tickets purchased in advance
online are only $22 or
$20. Tickets are now on sale;
for complete information visit
the Tickets page on the TCS
website: TCSaugus.org/tickets/
The
TCS production is directed
by Matthew Garlin, stage
managed by Ally Lewis and
musically directed by Samantha
Prindivill – with choreograhealth
assistant program, Andrew
in business technology
and Collette in culinary arts.
The quadruplets are
fi rst-generation college students,
although their mom
went back to school a couple
of years ago and earned her
associate degree in marketing
at North Shore.
At UMass Lowell, Collette
and Andrew were invited to
join the River Hawk Scholars
Academy (RHSA), a support
program for first-year,
fi rst-generation students. Collette
says she greatly appreciated
being able to take a special
River Hawk Scholars section
of College Writing I, because
at her technical high
phy by Julie Liuzza, costumes
by Venessa Phelon and props
by Addie Pates. TCS is pleased
to announce the cast, including
actors from throughout
the North Shore area. The Orphans
include Michael Mazzone
as the Boy, Jackie Daley
as Prentiss and Jennifer Antocci
as Ted. The British Subjects
are Jon Workman as Lord
Leonard Aster, Hailey Cooke
as his daughter Molly Aster,
D’Shyla Hodge as her governess
Mrs. Bumbrake, Ted Merritt
as the ship captain Robert
Falcon Scott and Kris Reynolds
as Grempkin. The Seafarers
aboard one ship, the Wasp,
include Kaleigh Ryan as The
Black Stache, Maria Mulcahy
as Smee and D’Shyla Hodge as
school, she had never learned
to write a research paper.
“We all went at the same
speed,” she says. “It was a really
nice group.”
Andrew likes knowing that
if he needs help, he can reach
out to RHSA director and Assoc.
Teaching Prof. of English
Matthew Hurwitz. He’s also
been matched with a mentor
through the RHSA: James
Kohl, dean of student aff airs
and enrichment. He sometimes
goes up to Kohl’s offi ce
to have tea and talk about
politics, superhero movies
and “Seinfeld.”
Diana chose to join River
Hawk Rising, a four-year support
program run by the Office
of Multicultural Affairs
Sanchez. The Seafarers aboard
the other ship, the Neverland,
are Bridget R. Saunders as
Bill Slank, Meg Brown as Alf
and Chinedu Ibiam as Mack.
When the ships get to the island,
they meet the Mollusks:
Andrew Quinney as Fighting
Prawn, Chinedu Ibiam as
Hawking Clam and Kris Reynolds
as Teacher. The Mermaids
include Natalie Lewis, Jodie
Putnam, Meg Brown and JacLene
London. Melz Phelon is
the Young Child.
“Peter and the Starcatcher”
is written by Rick Elice, based
on the novel by Dave Barry
and Ridley Pearson, with
music by Wayne Barker. The
show was originally produced
on Broadway by Nancy Nagel
Gibbs, Greg Schaff ert, Eva
Price, Tom Smedes and Disney
Theatrical Productions.
“Peter and the Starcatcher” is
presented through special arrangement
by Music Theatre
International (MTI). For more
information, see the TCS website
at TCSaugus.org.
for diverse students who can
benefi t from individual help.
“I thought, ‘I need help all
four years,’” she says.
Most of the students in River
Hawk Rising are fi rst-generation
students from low-income
families, like the Whitcombs.
Diana says a threeday
summer orientation and
weekly seminars in the fall
that introduced her to key
campus resources and support
staff were especially
helpful. She also checks in every
two weeks with Elsie Otero,
associate director of Multicultural
Aff airs.
“They had presentations
on getting organized, adjustWHITCOMB
| SEE PAGE 11
Honoring mothers today
and every day.
Happy Mother’s Day.
100 Salem Turnpike, Saugus, MA 01906
WINWASTESAUGUS.COM
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Page 11
Malden Catholic students from Saugus
achieve Third Quarter Honor Roll
M
alden Catholic students
have completed
the coursework
required for the third
quarter of the 2022-2023
school year. The school has
three categories for outstanding
academic performance
honors: President’s List (90 to
100 in all classes), First Honors
(85 to 89 in all classes), and
Second Honors (80 to 84 in
all classes).
Malden Catholic Honors –
Quarter Three 2023
President’s List (90 to 100 in
all classes)
Ethan Addazio, Rachael
Burke, Isabelle Da Silva, Hailey
Fern, Autumn Ingemi, Joseph
Laudanno, Sabrina Magliozzi,
Leyna Nguyen, Ryan Young
First Honors (85 to 89 in
all classes)
Elias Abourjaili, Olivia Arsenault,
Ryan Buonopane, Robert
Crivello, Caio Cruz, Lucas
La Verde, John Paul Lowrey,
Ally Marino, Vincent Nguyen,
Gianluca Sapienza, Yasmin
Saroufim, Steven Streeter, Alina
Truong, Emily Uribe Lopez,
Molly Warner, Marina Youssef
Second Honors (80 to 84
in all classes)
Nikolas Agganis, Isla Anderson,
Ava Duarte, Mia Fronduto,
Benjamin Hurley, Maximus
Iturrondo, Richard Pesaturo,
Joy Pham, Joseph Viglione
About Malden Catholic:
Since 1932, Malden Catholic
High School (MC) has shaped
emerging leaders in our community,
claiming a Nobel Laureate,
a Senator, two ambassadors
and countless community
and business heads
among its alumni. Annually,
graduates attend some of
the nation’s most renown universities,
including Harvard,
Dartmouth, Georgetown,
Brown, Cornell, Tufts, Duke,
Georgia Tech, Boston College,
Northeastern, Boston University
and Amherst College.
Foundational to student
success is MC’s codivisional
model which offers the best
of both worlds: single-gender
academics during the
day and integrated social
and extracurricular opportunities
after school. MC
is known in the community
for its rigorous academics,
SFX Scholars Program
and award-winning STEM
program with electives like
Robotics and Engineering
Design. MC curricula is designed
to improve individual
growth mindset, leadership
principles and success outcomes
along with integrating
the Xaverian values of
trust, humility, compassion,
simplicity and zeal. https://
www.maldencatholic.org/
Fire causes
extensive
damage to
Pleasant
Avenue home
Saugus firefighters battle a two-alarm blaze at 27 Pleasant
Ave. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate by Michael Layhe)
By The Advocate
A
house.
SCHOLASTIC SIBLINGS: As Collette and Diana Whitcomb prepared to graduate from UMass
Lowell tomorrow (Saturday, May 13) they reflected on their time on campus. This university
file photo from 2020 shows, from left to right, Diana, Andrew and Collette – all UMass
Lowell students – and Bryce, who was then studying at North Shore Community College.
(Courtesy Photo to The Saugus Advocate by Tory Wesnofske of UMass Lowell.)
WHITCOMB | FROM PAGE 10 weren’t enough,” she says.
ing to college and managing
your work and studying and
free time,” she says.
Diana has done well at
achieving that balance. She
has a work-study job in the
Navigators Food Pantry in
University Crossing, volunteers
once a week at a Lowell
food pantry through
an Honors College initiative
and sews costumes for
the Off-Broadway Players, a
student theater group. She
loves helping others, because
she knows what it’s
like to struggle.
“We were on food stamps
growing up, and we went
to food pantries sometimes
when the food stamps
“Anybody who knew my
mom and had older kids
would give us hand-medown
clothes and toys –
even our teachers.”
Collette and Diana live
one floor apart in Riverview
Suites, and they often
eat meals or study together,
since they’re both taking
core health sciences classes
including Human Anatomy
and Physiology. Andrew
also lives on South Campus
and runs into his sisters at
least once a week. The four
siblings have a private chat
group and stay up to date on
each other’s plans.
Andrew’s work-study job
also overlaps with Diana’s.
He spends half his time in
the food pantry and the rest
asking students to donate
meal swipes to help out others
struggling with food insecurity.
Maureen
says that raising
quadruplets is financially
challenging. But now, three
of the four are at UMass
Lowell, and things are looking
up. Once her four children
are “settled,” Maureen
hopes to return to school
again, this time for her bachelor’s
degree. Her dream is
to earn it here through online
and evening classes in
time to graduate with her
children.
“I’m so lucky to have them
here,” she says, tearing up.
“All my investment is in
them.”
Nobody was home when the fire started at about 5 pm, according
to official reports.
Firefighting crews from Lynn, Malden and Everett responded
to the fire scene.
Cause of the fire is under investigation, fire officials said. They
said there were no injuries reported.
The building is valued at $216,000, according to assessing records
at Saugus Town Hall.
THIS WEEK ON SAUGUS TV
Sunday, May 14 from 9–11 pm. on Channel 8 – “Sunday
Night Stooges” (The Three Stooges).
Monday, May 15 all day on Channel 8 – “Movie Monday”
(classic movies).
Tuesday, May 16 at 8:30 pm. on Channel 9 – Annual Town
Meeting from May 15.
Wednesday, May 17 at 7 pm. on Channel 9 – Finance
Committee Meeting ***live***
Thursday, May 18 at 6 pm. on Channel 9 – School
Committee Meeting ***live***
Friday, May 19 at 5:30 pm. on Channel 9 – Library Board of
Trustees Meeting from May 18.
Saturday, May 20 at 8:30 pm. on Channel 9 – Planning
Board Meeting from May 18.
Saugus TV can be seen on Comcast Channels 8 (Public),
9 (Government) & 22 (Educational). ***programming may be
subject to change without notice*** For complete schedules, please
visit www.saugustv.org
two-alarm fire during the dinner hour at 27 Pleasant
Ave. Thursday night caused several hundred thousand
dollars’ worth of property damage to the 133-year-old
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 12, 2023
Town Meeting 2023
A freedom of speech discussion proves precious and priceless as members vote to
enhance that right
By Mark E. Vogler
T
own Meeting members
breezed through 11 articles
– many of them financial
– in unanimously approving
them in rapid fashion
on Monday (May 8) night.
But members showed they
value the concept of democracy
as the cornerstone of the
New England Town Meeting
as precious and priceless as
they took more than an hour
debating the final two articles,
which still passed by large
margins:
Article 18, which, while controversial,
passed by a 36-1
margin, guarantees that Town
Meeting members get to introduce
nonbinding resolutions
with 48 hours’ notice.
Article 19, which prevailed
on a 32-6 vote, virtually guarantees
that everyone who
wants to address Town Meeting
gets an opportunity to
speak no matter how long it
takes.
Precinct 10 Town Meeting
Member Peter Manoogian,
who authored both articles,
led the charge by passing
out photocopies of a Norman
Rockwell painting from
his “Four Freedoms” series depicting
a man standing up at
a Town Meeting exercising his
right to free speech.
“You might not like what
they have to say, but they
should have a right to say it,”
Manoogian said of Article 19,
which would require a nine/
tenths vote of Town Meeting
to “call the question” and end
debate on articles if the moderator
determines there are
Saugus residents in the audience
who want to express
themselves on matters being
discussed.
“It sets the threshold high
for our citizens to speak,” Precinct
3 Town Meeting Member
Rick Smith said.
“Every voice matters no matter
what side of the aisle…By
passing this, it provides an
open door policy. Let’s prevent
people’s democracy being
stolen,” he said.
“Democracy is a participatory
sport,” Precinct 10 Town
Meeting Member Martin
Costello said.
“If it wasn’t, it doesn’t exist
anymore,” he said.
Precinct 6 Town Meeting
Member William S. Brown argued
“that it doesn’t make
sense to go to a nine/tenths
requirement” to call the question.
“Two-thirds
margin is hard
enough to get,” he said.
Brown, who was one of six
members voting against Article
19 and the lone dissenter
on Article 18, predicted that
passage of the article would
lead to longer discussions at
Town Meetings. Matters that
take two to three meetings
would now take four meetings,
he predicted. “At some
point, we have to say enough
is enough,” Brown said.
“I think you ought to plan on
spending a lot of time on other
articles. We have to move
along at some point,” he said.
But former Town Meeting
Member Andrew Whitcomb,
from Precinct 4, declared “I
think Town Meeting has a responsibility
to hear from its
residents.”
“It shorts out 48 hour notice
by 11 hours,” Brown said, suggesting
that resolutions submitted
on Thursday evening
after the Town Clerk’s Office
closes wouldn’t get adequate
notice.
But Manoogian noted that
the 48-hour notice is the same
procedure used under the
state Open Meeting Law. “By
not supporting this, you’re
saying we don’t have the need
to express ourselves,” he said.
A musical play at Legion Hall
Theatre Company of Saugus begins two-weekend performance of Peter and the
Starcatcher tonight
(Editor’s Note: The Theatre
Company of Saugus issued the
following press release)
The Theatre Company of
Saugus will present Peter and
the Starcatcher, a play with
music, during the second and
third weekends of May. This
Tony-winning show upends
the century-old story of how a
miserable orphan comes to be
The Boy Who Would Not Grow
Up (a.k.a. Peter Pan). A wildly
theatrical adaptation featuring
marauding pirates, jungle
tyrants, unwilling comrades,
and unlikely heroes, Peter
and the Starcatcher playfully
explores the depths of greed
and despair… and the bonds
of friendship, duty and love.
A young orphan and his
mates are shipped off from
Victorian England to a distant
island ruled by the evil King
Zarboff. They know nothing
of the mysterious trunk in the
captain’s cabin, which conASKS
| FROM PAGE 8
able on a full-time basis for
my services.
Q: From the time that you
began as town counsel to
now, have you seen an increase
in the amount of time
that the town decides to go
tains a precious, otherworldly
cargo. At sea, the boys are
discovered by a precocious
young girl named Molly, a
Starcatcher-in-training who
realizes that the trunk’s precious
cargo is starstuff, a celestial
substance so powerful
that it must never fall into the
wrong hands. When the ship
is taken over by pirates – led
by the fearsome Black Stache,
a villain determined to claim
the trunk and its treasure for
his own – the journey quickly
becomes a thrilling adventure.
Featuring 18 actors portraying
more than 100 unforgettable
characters, Peter and
the Starcatcher uses ingenious
stagecraft and the limitless
possibilities of imagination to
bring the story to life.
The Theatre Company of
Saugus (TCS) production is
directed by Matthew Garlin,
stage managed by Ally Lewis,
and musically directed by Sawith
a special counsel, because
of the complicated issues
that confront the town,
which would make it impossible
to focus on a complex
case while at the same time
doing the day-to-day tasks as
town counsel? I just want to
get your read on that.
mantha Prindiville; with choreography
by Julie Liuzza; costumes
by Venessa Phelon; and
props by Addie Pates.
Performances are May 1213-14
and 19-20-21, 2023, on
Friday and Saturday evenings
at 8 p.m. and Sunday matinees
at 2 p.m.
The venue is the American
Legion Post 210 at 44 Taylor St.
in Saugus. The performance
space is not wheelchair accessible,
but it does feature a
bar serving alcoholic and soft
drinks. Snacks and raffle tickets
are available for purchase
before the show and during
intermission. Masks are required
indoors for the safety
of the audience and cast.
Tickets paid at the door are
$25 for adults or $23 for youth,
seniors, or veterans. Tickets
purchased in advance online
are only $22 or $20. Tickets
are now on sale; for complete
information visit the Tickets
A: Sure. I think the legal profession,
just like the medical
profession, has become very
specialized. So, if we have an
environmental case, we bring
in an environmental lawyer;
we’ll hire a special lawyer for
labor negotiations. I am the
day-to-day corporate counsel.
My advice is requested. But,
page on the TCS website: TCSaugus.org/tickets/
Peter
and the Starcatcher is
written by Rick Elice, based on
the novel by Dave Barry and
Ridley Pearson, with music By
Wayne Barker. The show was
originally produced on Broadway
by Nancy Nagel Gibbs,
Greg Schaffert, Eva Price, Tom
Smedes, and Disney Theatrical
Productions. Peter and
the Starcatcher is presented
through special arrangement
by Music Theatre International
(MTI).
We are pleased to announce
the cast, including actors
from throughout the North
Shore area of Boston. The Orphans
include Michael Mazzone
as the Boy, Jackie Daley
as Prentiss, and Jennifer Antocci
as Ted. The British Subjects
are Jon Workman as Lord
Leonard Aster, Hailey Cooke
as his daughter Molly Aster,
D’Shyla Hodge as her governthere’s
a lot of specialization:
There are lawyers that just litigate;
there are lawyers who
only handled labor negotiations;
there are lawyers that
only do environmental cases.
There’s a need for that, and
that need is in every city and
town. Most cities and towns
have a city solicitor or a town
ess Mrs. Bumbrake, Ted Merritt
as the ship captain Robert
Falcon Scott, and Kris Reynolds
as Grempkin.
The Seafarers aboard one
ship, the Wasp, include Kaleigh
Ryan as The Black Stache,
Maria Mulcahy as Smee, and
D’Shyla Hodge as Sanchez.
The Seafarers aboard the
other ship ,the Neverland,
are Bridget R Saunders as Bill
Slank, Meg Brown as Alf, and
Chinedu Ibiam as Mack.
When the ships get to the
island they meet the Mollusks:
Andrew Quinney as
Fighting Prawn, Chinedu Ibiam
as Hawking Clam, and
Kris Reynolds as Teacher. The
Mermaids include Natalie
Lewis, Jodie Putnam, Meg
Brown, and JacLene London.
Melz Phelon is the Young
Child.
For more information, see
the Theatre Company of Saugus
website at TCSaugus.org.
counsel, and they bring in outside
lawyers, too, on a caseby-case
basis. As you can see,
zoning has become very specialized.
Development has
become very specialized. Although
the manager might
bring in a special counsel, he’ll
ASKS | SEE PAGE 15
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Page 13
Saugus Gardens in The Spring
Here’s what’s blooming in town this week to make your walks more enjoyable
By Laura Eisener
M
igratory Bird Day is
this Saturday, May
13, in the United
States and Canada. While
many birds stick around for
the winter, others are arriving
from warmer climates,
or are passing through on
their way north. On Tuesday
a colorful new avian visitor,
which I had never seen
at my feeder before, arrived
– the state bird of Maryland,
the Baltimore oriole (Icterus
galbula), with its bright orange
and black plumage. I
am hoping it will nest in the
neighborhood. A few years
ago, one nested at Saugus
Ironworks and was an additional
popular attraction
for those visiting the historic
site.
Mother’s Day is this Sunday,
May 14, and the garden
centers are full of flowers.
Many gardens are at their
peak of bloom at this time
of year, with some daffodil
and tulip varieties still in full
swing, and many trees and
shrubs coming into flower
now, too. Right on schedule,
old favorites like lilacs (Syringa
vulgaris), flowering dogwoods
(Benthamidia florida,
formerly Cornus florida) and
crabapples (Malus spp.) are
coloring the landscape in
pinks, whites and purple
tones. In part because of the
bloom time, many of these
plants are popular Mother’s
Day gifts, and they can be a
reminder of the occasion for
many decades to come.
Since 1908,
This phlox lawn at Shirley Diotte’s home is a spectacular
sight in spring. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate by Laura
Eisener)
Pale yellow tulips bloom beneath a Japanese Maple in
the garden at St. Margaret’s Parish in Cliftondale. (Courtesy
photo to The Saugus Advocate by Laura Eisener)
ing season beyond May,
and low growing varieties
can help a lilac fit in a tighter
space than the familiar
forms.
Tulips are still in bloom
the peak
bloom of lilacs is celebrated
on Lilac Sunday at the
Arnold Arboretum’s famous
lilac collection. As it often
coincides with Mother’s
Day, it has been a traditional
outing for several generations
of families in the
Boston area. There are over
400 lilac shrubs there, but a
stroll through any town in
New England at this time of
year is likely to be scented
by these popular shrubs for
a few weeks in mid-May. In
the 18th and 19th centuries
it was traditional to plant
lilacs at the corners of a
new house, but they are
also often planted in other
areas of the garden. Lilacs
need full sun to bloom well,
but do not demand a lot of
care. Old-fashioned varieties
are still the most popular,
although new introductions
can extend the lilac bloomall
around town although
some varieties have faded
now or have been devoured
by hungry rabbits. Hopeful
gardeners still plant tulip
bulbs in the fall, hoping for
a dramatic and colorful display,
and sometimes they
are rewarded with some
fantastic flowers.
A long cool spring like
we have had up until this
point has given some spring
perennials like rock phlox
(Phlox subulata) a chance to
bloom for over a month. Because
of its ability to bloom
in shallow soils and rock
gardens, it is a good fit for
New England’s rocky soil.
It can adapt to areas from
bright sun to partial shade,
so there is a place in almost
every garden that would be
appropriate for it. Luckily
rabbits do not seem especially
fond of it and tend to
leave it alone.
One of the most beautiful
displays of phlox this spring
can be found in front of
the Winter Street home of
Shirley Diotte, where a lawn
of rock phlox and violets
rather than grass carpet the
steep slope. Shirley’s late
husband, Saugus Policeman
Bill Diotte, planted the
phlox to solve a landscape
challenge since mowing or
weeding on this steep area
would be a difficult weekly
task. When not in bloom, it
resembles very short grass.
Once establ i shed,
rock
phlox helps keep out many
weeds. Shirley says that the
white violets came in on
their own and are a beautiful
complement to the pale
violet phlox.
Editor’s Note: Laura Eisener
is a landscape design consultant
who helps homeowners
with landscape design, plant
selection and placement of
trees and shrubs, as well as
perennials. She is a member
of the Saugus Garden Club
and offered to write a series of
articles about “what’s blooming
in town” shortly after the
outbreak of the COVID-19
pandemic. She was inspired
after seeing so many people
taking up walking.
Orange tulips and yellow daffodils bloom at Dunkin’ on
Route 1 near Essex Street. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate
by Laura Eisener)
Dark and pale purple lilacs perfume the air in a Lynnhurst
garden. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate by Laura Eisener)
A Baltimore oriole checks out the neighborhood. (Courtesy
photo to The Saugus Advocate by Laura Eisener)
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 12, 2023
Saugus softball team reaches seven-win mark
H
By Greg Phipps
ead Coach Steve Almquist
acknowledged
that his Saugus High
School softball team was entering
a tough stretch of five
games in eight days (mostly due
to rain makeups) and that it was
nice to start the week off with a
win. That victory came on Monday
afternoon at Salem’s Mack
Park when the undermanned
Sachems grinded their way to a
6-1 defeat of the Witches.
It was a big win for Saugus,
which was coming off consecutive
losses last week to Marblehead
and Beverly – where it was
outscored by a combined 21-3
margin. “We’ve been struggling
a bit the past couple of games
as we’ve been a bit shorthanded,”
Almquist explained after
Monday’s tilt. “Due to injury and
illness we’ve lost two key players
for the rest of the season
and a third, who is one of our
top hitters, has been away for
a few games due to family obligations.
But she’s expected to
return, which will certainly help.”
According to Almquist, because
of losing these players,
younger members from
the junior varsity squad have
been called up. Freshmen Maria
Silva and Anna Enwright and
eighth-grader Sydney Deleidi
have “settled in quite nicely and
have certainly proved that they
can play at [the varsity] level,”
Almquist said. “We don’t have
any seniors on the squad so we
are a very young team that has
experienced our share of ups
and downs this season. But the
kids continue to work hard and
try to get better every day.”
Junior Abby Enwright was the
starting pitcher in Monday’s
win, and she performed very
well by going the distance and
striking out four. She gave up
just four hits and walked two
for her first varsity win. Saugus
broke open a close game
with three runs in the top of
the fourth. The Sachems added
single runs in the fifth and
sixth to put it away.
Offensively, Ava Rogers
socked three hits, including
two doubles, and drove in a
run. Devany Millerick added
two hits and an RBI, Silva finished
with two knocks, and
Sydney Deleidi contributed
two hits. Also getting into the
act were Taylor Deleidi with
a double and Danica Schena
with a single. Lily Ventre, Alexa
Morello and Anna Enwright
Saugus’s Alexa Morello is shown laying down a bunt Monday
against Salem.
Saugus pitcher Abby Enwright is shown winding up to deliver
a pitch in early-inning action against Salem.
Saugus’s Ava Rogers made it safely to second base during
Monday’s game at Salem.
Saugus’s Danica Schena beats out an infield hit on Monday
at Salem.
each drove in a run.
Saugus was right back at it
on Tuesday at Malden Catholic.
In a high-scoring affair, the
Sachems pulled out a 9-7 win.
Kaitlyn Pugh produced five
hits and scored twice, while
Ventre belted three hits, including
a triple. Taylor Deleidi
was the winning pitcher.
Tuesday’s win left Saugus at
7-5 overall (4-1 in the NorthFreshman
player Maria Silva is shown connecting for a
base hit in Monday’s win at Salem.
eastern Conference) on the
season. The Sachems hosted
Winthrop on Wednesday
and were scheduled to host
Peabody on Friday. They then
have a rematch against Malden
Catholic on Monday, May
15, in another home game.
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Page 15
Saugus comes up short in close games
D
By Greg Phipps
espite having just one
victory three quarters
of the way through
the 2023 campaign, the Saugus
High School baseball
team could have had four or
five more wins had things
gone a bit differently in some
of their games. Two recent
defeats were a perfect example
of how a good deal of the
season has played out for the
young Sachems.
Late leads didn’t hold up in
a 10-8 home loss to Triton on
Monday at World Series Park
and a tough-to-swallow 3-2
setback at Salem last Friday. In
the Triton game, the Sachems
let a 5-0 lead after three innings
fade away. The visitors
tallied 10 times over the final
four frames to come out
on top. Saugus owned an 8-7
advantage after scoring three
times in the bottom of the
sixth to retake the lead. But Triton
rallied for three in the top
of the seventh for the eventual
two-run triumph.
Offensively, it was one of
the most productive performances
of the season for the
Sachems. Nathan Soroko and
Cam Soroko each had two hits
and a combined three RBIs,
while Connor Bloom collected
two hits and Tyler Riley
stroked a double. Also contributing
hits were Jordan Rodriguez,
Shane Bourque and
Danny Zeitz.
In last Friday’s loss at Salem,
Saugus held a 2-1 lead entering
the bottom of the seventh
before the host Witches
walked it off with two runs. Riley
had two hits and Cam SoASKS
| FROM PAGE 12
always have me involved, consulting
as a team with the outside
counsel.
But again, it’s like the medical
profession, where you have
a heart doctor; specialized
medicine is the same way. You
have a general practitioner
who does your physicals. But
if you have a heart problem,
you go to a specialist.
Q: What’s the biggest challenge
for you as Town Counsel?
A:
I would say that you have
to call them as you see them.
You have to advise the town
manager and the department
Saugus batter Cam Bernard
gets plunked by a pitch
against Stoneham.
roko and Nathan Soroko drove
in the Sachems’ runs. Pitchers
Cam Soroko, Cam Bernard
and Zeitz combined to allow
the three runs on just five hits.
Another close defeat took
place on Tuesday at home, as
the Sachems were shut out,
2-0, against Peabody. Saugus
was held to four hits by Peabody
pitching. Meanwhile,
Bernard put forth a strong
effort on the mound for the
hosts, going the distance and
giving up six hits and one
earned run. He struck out six
batters.
A 15-5 loss at Marblehead
last Wednesday and an 11-1
setback at home to Stoneham
last Saturday added to
Saugus’s 1-14 overall record
as of early this week. Bernard
got the start in the makeup
against Stoneham and struggled
a bit before Riley replaced
him in the middle innings.
The Sachems took on Danvers
at home on Thursday and
travel to play Northeast Metro
Tech on Monday, May 15. After
heads as to what the law is.
You can’t tell them what they
want to hear. Just like a doctor
– a doctor shouldn’t tell you
that you’re not ill when you are
sick. And I think it’s the same
way with a town counsel. If
you have to tell town officials,
“This is the law,” they may not
want to hear it. Sometimes
they don’t follow it.
I would say that I’ve been
lucky enough that most of the
time the department heads
that I’ve advised and town employees
that I’ve advised have
followed my advice. And the
biggest challenge is you want
to make sure that you give
them the right advice. That’s
Sachems’ third baseman Jordan Rodriguez gets the tag down too late to nab a Stoneham
base runner.
tha
W
Saugus’s Cam Soroko took
off out of the box after connecting
for a double early
in last Saturday afternoon’s
contest against Stoneham.
probably the most challenging
thing. You may have department
heads that want
to do something or a town
manager that may want to do
something, and you have to
say, “Legally, you can’t do that.”
You might have to tell the selectmen,
“Look, you have no
authority to do this.”
Sometimes selectmen get
elected and they think they
are more than a licensing
authority. But they’re not
the town manager and get
to spend the money. They
appoint the town manager.
They’re the licensing authority,
but the town manager has
the appointing powers and
Saugus second baseman Tyler Riley tried to apply the tag
to a Stoneham base runner attempting to steal last Saturday
afternoon at World Series Park.
the spending powers, and he
does the hiring and firing.
Q: Now, you’ve had a couple
of high-profile cases over the
years, like the woman librarian
embezzling money and a
couple of building inspectors
who may have been corrupt.
What’s that like?
A: Whenever there’s a criminal
investigation, we’d cooperate
100 percent with federal
authorities or local authorities
in honoring any subpoenas
they may issue to us. We
open up the books, and if anybody
ever complains about a
department head, we’ll say,
Look, go to the U.S. Attorney.
Go to the district attorney. We
don’t tolerate that kind of misconduct
and there is a process
to go through. We’ve had the
FBI in here on a number of
occasions. Over my 42 years,
we’ve had the DA in here. We
just open up the books and cooperate
100 percent.
Q: That sounds pretty tough.
You’re working with somebody,
and all of a sudden,
they are under state or federal
probe.
A: I had that with a town
manager who I worked under.
It was very difficult. He
left here and went to another
town. That’s when I became a
ASKS | SEE PAGE 19
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 12, 2023
The Sounds of Saugus
By Mark E. Vogler
Good morning, Saugus!
Town Meeting is beginning to
crank up and it should prove interesting
at 7:30 p.m. next Monday,
with the Cliftondale Rezoning
article expected to draw
some hot debate. There are several
other articles that could
pique the interest of Town Meeting
members and residents.
One of them is a proposal initiated
by Precinct 10 Town Meeting
Member Peter Manoogian to
rename the property known as
the Ballard School to Ballard Gardens.
Manoogian has organized
a neighborhood meeting for 4
p.m. tomorrow (Saturday, May
13) on the Ballard School Property
primarily for the immediate
neighbors to discuss the Ballard
Garden Proposal that will be
coming up on Monday (May 15)
at Town Meeting, at 7:30 p.m.in
the second floor auditorium at
Saugus Town Hall.
“If you are a neighbor or nearby
abutter, I encourage you to
attend, preferably both on Saturday
and Monday,” Manoogian
wrote in a flier he’s been
circulating.
“It is clear there WILL BE OPPOSITION
to the creation of this
park/greenspace. The main argument
AGAINST is ‘we should
have a plan for all the vacant
buildings before we commit to
one,’” he wrote. “Yet those who
make this argument have no
suggestion (at least that they
will publicly willing state) for this
30,000 sq. ft. single family residentially
zoned parcel.”
“As neighbors and abutters
your voice is important. Your Precinct
10 Town Meeting Members
will need your help to get this
passed. Please call or text me
if you have questions,” Manoogian
said.
Anyone interested in further
details can contact Manoogian
at 781-820-5690 or email –
pm1963@comcast.net
“Town Meeting, by its vote,
supports the concept of demolishing
the existing building, site
preparation, repurposing where
appropriate, elements and materials
that can be incorporated
into a passive green space with
topographical features and designs
that may include perennial
planting, trees, brick walkways, a
gazebo, a separately fenced area
for dogs and a separate tot lot,”
according to Article 17. “It is further
understood that all planning,
site decisions, and procurement
are within the purview of
the Saugus Town Manager who
will seek input from neighbors,
the Saugus Tree Committee,
the Saugus Garden Club as well
as the general public and furthermore
that any appropriation
necessary for construction
must be adopted by a vote of
Town Meeting.”
“Saugus Over Coffee”
With a strong likelihood that
Town Meeting sessions will continue
on Mondays now through
June, we decided it was best to
reschedule our next “Saugus
over Coffee” forum. The new
date is Tuesday, June 20, at 6:30
p.m., when we will be featuring
Precinct 6. We will be sending
out an invitation soon – via
email and letters to the homes
of each of the five Town Meeting
members.
For those unfamiliar with the
“Saugus Over Coffee” forums,
they are cosponsored by The
Saugus Advocate and the Saugus
Public Library. The primary
purpose is to give citizens
in each of the town’s 10 precincts
an opportunity to voice
their concerns about top issues
in their respective precincts. It
also gives them an opportunity
to meet their Town Meeting
representatives and chat over
a cup of coffee or tea. Town
Meeting members will benefit
by getting to know more about
concerns in their precincts.
Viewers of the forums videotaped
by Saugus TV will also
get to learn a little about the
history or interesting things
about the precinct being featured
each month.
One of my major hopes for
the forums is that they spur an
interest for citizens to become
potential candidates for Town
Meeting in this fall’s town election.
The public should keep in
mind that there was a paucity
of candidates for Town Meeting
seats in the town elections
back in 2021. In five of the 10
precincts, only five candidates
ran for the five seats. That
means half of the 50-member
body was elected without
competition.
Stay tuned for more information
as “Saugus Over Coffee”
continues. Here is the remaining
schedule:
Precinct 6 – June 20
Precinct 7 – July 10
Precinct 8 – August 14
Precinct 9 – September 11
Precinct 10 – October 23
Please check with The Saugus
Advocate or library for any
changes in dates. Residents
can check the programming
guide on the station’s website
(www.saugustv.org) for dates
and times. A video of the forum
will also be available for
viewing on the station’s vimeo
page within a day or two after
the event (www.vimeo.com/
saugustelevision).
Saugus Garden Club
Fundraiser May 17
Lisa Greene, a Master Designer
and teacher, will be the guest
speaker at the Saugus Garden
Club’s Annual Fundraiser, which
is set for Wednesday, May 17, at
6:30 p.m. in the second floor auditorium
at Saugus Town Hall.
Doors open at 6 p.m. The program
will feature an auction of
floral centerpieces, raffle baskets,
door prizes and refreshments.
Tickets
for the evening will
cost $5 and will be available at
the door or you can purchase
tickets from Garden Club members.
For more details, please
contact Garden Club Co-Presidents
Lorraine DiMilla (home:
781-233-7541) and Donna Manoogian
(home: 781-233-5640;
or cell phone: 617-240-9003).
This is the year’s top event for
the Saugus Garden Club and the
program always draws a large
gathering.
Kane’s Donuts will host
breast cancer event
Both Kane’s Donuts locations
in Saugus will participate during
the period May 12-18 in Bakes
for Breast Cancer Massachusetts
– a campaign to raise funds and
awareness for breast cancer research.
Kane’s Donuts will dedicate
100% of the sales from one
of their featured donuts back to
Bakes for Breast Cancer.
“We are on a mission to end
breast cancer for good, one
sweet treat at a time,” said Bakes
for Breast Cancer Founder Carol
Sneider. “The Massachusetts
culinary scene is thriving, and in
addition to our trusted partners
that have participated year after
year, we had more new venues
reach out to us more than in
years past. Here’s to what is shaping
up to be our most successful
year to date.”
There are two ways to participate
in Bakes for Breast Cancer
Massachusetts: Establishments
can offer one designated dessert
where 100 percent of the
proceeds go towards Bakes for
Breast Cancer, or offer up their
entire dessert roster where 50
percent of the proceeds go back
to the organization.
Since its inception in 1999,
Bakes for Breast Cancer has
raised more than two million
dollars. To date, more than 4,500
different bakeries, cafés, pastry
shops, supermarkets and restaurants
have participated in annual
events in Massachusetts, Rhode
Island, Maine and the Cape & Islands.
How
Scottish POWs shaped
New England
The Saugus Iron Works National
Historic Site has an interesting
forum set for 1 p.m.at the park
on May 21. The press release issued
recently by the Iron Works
invited historic-minded residents
and others to attend and
“share your ideas to help shape
the future of an exciting research
project.”
“New research conducted
by an international team of archaeologists
and historians is
unearthing the fascinating story
of some of the workers at the
Saugus Ironworks,” it continued.
“Landscapes of Indenture is
an international investigation
of the lives of the Scots, and the
environmental impact they and
other laborers had on the New
England frontier. National Park
Service is a partner in the project
along with Salem State University,
the University of New
Hampshire, Old Berwick Historical
Society, Durham University
in England, and the University
of St. Andrews in Scotland. The
team of archaeologists, historians
and paleoecologists are currently
conducting fieldwork on
sites associated with the Scots,”
the press release noted. “The
story of 400 Scottish soldiers
taken prisoner at the Battles of
Dunbar (1650) and Worcester
(1651) and shipped to New England
as forced labor is one of
the most compelling immigrant
stories in early American history.
Many Scots served their fiveto-seven-year
indentures at the
Saugus Ironworks, and the rest
worked in other hard and dangerous
jobs in Massachusetts,
New Hampshire and Maine.”
A June run for Mission
Ready
Marine veteran Brandon Montella,
the U.S. Marine veteran
who completed a 100-mile run
last Veterans Day to honor local
veterans and to raise money
for his nonprofit cause, announced
he has scheduled a 5K
fund-raising run/walk through
Breakheart Reservation this
summer. The event – set for 10
a.m. Saturday, June 10 – is to
benefit his 501C3 Mission Ready,
which provides fitness programs
and events to under-resourced
youth and veterans. Here’s a link
to the event with all the information
and sponsors on the site:
https://runsignup.com/Race/
MA/Saugus/MissionReady5K
Multiple “Shout Outs” this
week
We can never get enough
“shout outs.” So, it’s always a
great week when you have more
than one “Shout Out” to heap
praise on town residents who
show acts of kindness or a good
deed that contributes to the betterment
of the community. Here
are the nominations:
Editor’s Choice: “For all of the
Saugus mothers out there, for
all you do throughout the year,
to make a happy home for your
children while also performing
acts of kindness as volunteers
with various groups to help
make Saugus a better place.
Saugus TV Interim Executive
Director Rachel Brugman: “I am
very pleased to announce that
our one and only, John Prudent
has been nominated for
a New England EMMY AWARD
for his Saugus TV production of
The Cops and Cars Show 2022.
We are very, very proud of his
hard work and are going to celebrate
this victory with an Emmy
Pre-Party BBQ Bash that will take
place Saturday, June 10th from
12 p.m. to 3 p.m. on the Saugus
TV front lawn. The event is sponsored
by Polcaris and there will
be free pizza. This isn’t just for
Saugus TV members, everyone
and everyone they know is invited
for food, friends, and fun.
The Emmy winner will be announced
later that evening so
everyone better wish him luck!
We will see you and everyone
you know then!
Editor’s Choice: “Let’s have 200
shout outs for Joanie Allbee,
AKA ‘The Sketch Artist.’ Over the
past three years, the local artist/
writer and frequent contributor
to The Saugus Advocate has
spent untold hours spreading
positivity and joy through town
with her sketches of people from
all walks of life who contribute to
the betterment of Saugus. Joanie
would network with a handful
of businesses in the community
to provide a $10 gift certificate
for contest winners each week.
She would follow up the sketch
with a story about the person or
people being sketched. That is
a few thousand hours of volunteer
work shining a public light
on Saugus people who make a
huge difference in their efforts
to make Saugus a better place.
Now that she has revealed herself
as the artist and writer behind
the sketches, she deserves
as many shout outs as readers
feel like making. She is also
the designer of the ‘Hope rings’
that have been left in places all
around.”
Precinct 6 Town Meeting
Member Jeanie Bartolo: “A
‘Shout Out’ to Saugus Residents
regarding the Rezoning of Cliftondale
Square: The next Annual
Town Meeting will be held on
Monday, May 15, 2023, at 7:30
p.m., second floor of Town Hall.
Town Meeting Members will
discuss and VOTE on ARTICLE
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 17
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Page 17
THE SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 16
21; the REZONING OF CLIFTONDALE
SQUARE. All residents are
welcome to attend and speak if
they wish on this very important
issue.
“Of all the things I have worked
on during my time as a Town
Meeting Member this Rezoning
of Cliftondale Square is the biggest.
An overwhelming majority
of the residents who live here,
including myself, are against it. I
got 100 telephone calls against
it and only 1 telephone call for it.”
Want to “Shout Out” a
fellow Saugonian?
This is an opportunity for our
paper’s readers to single out –
in a brief mention – remarkable
acts or achievements by Saugus
residents or an act of kindness
or a nice gesture. Just send
an email (mvoge@comcast.net)
with a mention in the subject
line of “An Extra Shout Out.” No
more than a paragraph; anything
longer might lend itself to
a story and/or a photo.
An Earth Day fundraiser
Earth Day is actually over. But
the Saugus River Watershed
Council will be holding an “Earth
Day” fundraiser at Prince Pizzeria
on May 25, from 4 to 8 p.m.– either
in person or takeout. People
who want to contribute to
causes organized by the environmental
group can purchase
Prince vouchers, including one
for a slice of the Saugus River
Watershed at $25. This includes
the popular Take ‘n Bake pizza in
three-pack boxes.
Kindergarten registration
information
Saugus Public Schools has announced
that Kindergarten registration
packets for the 2023-24
school year in the Saugus Public
Schools are already available.
The packets can be picked up
at the Veterans Early Learning
Center’s main office through today
(Friday, May 5) between 9:30
a.m. and 1:30 p.m. The VELC is located
at 39 Hurd Ave. in Saugus.
The packet will also be available
on the Saugus Public Schools’
website.
Completed registration packets
should be dropped off at the
VELC on Wednesday, May 17,
or Thursday, May 18, between
9:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Mandatory
Kindergarten screenings
will be scheduled at this time.
The screenings will be held on
Wednesday, June 7, and Thursday,
June 8, and will last about
20 minutes. There is no deadline
for registration; however, we ask
that students register by May 19
to allow for staff and program
planning.
Saugus moved to a free, allday
kindergarten model for the
2021-21 school year to better
prepare students academically,
socially and emotionally. A halfday
option is not available.
Students must be five years
old by Aug. 31, 2023, in order to
enter kindergarten in the fall of
2023; there are no exceptions.
For more information, please
contact the VELC at 781-2318166.
Seeking
Sachem Sports
Historical Data
If you are knowledgeable
about the Saugus High Sachem
Boys and Girls sports team prior
to 1969, Saugus Public Schools
could use your help. The School
District is looking for data on
Saugus High Sachem Boys and
Girls sports teams prior to 1969
that won a conference, regional
and/or State Championship.
“For example, we need data on
the 1966, ‘67 or ‘68 Saugus varsity
cross country team that won
the State Championship,” Saugus
School Committee Member
Dennis Gould wrote in a press release
this week.
“We need the team, the year
and what championship they
won. Pictures of the teams, trophies
or old banners would be
great also,” Gould said. “The data
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 18
- LEGAL NOTICE -
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT
Essex Probate and Family Court
36 Federal Street
Salem, MA 01970
(978) 744-1020
Docket No. ES23C0087CA
In the matter of: Arturo Rosado Martir
CITATION ON
PETITION TO CHANGE NAME
A Petition to Change Name of Adult has been filed by Arturo
Rosado Martir of Saugus, MA requesting that the court enter a
Decree changing their name to: Pablo Arturo Coyle.
IMPORTANT NOTICE
Any person may appear for the purposes of objecting to the
petition by filing an appearance at: Essex Probate and
Family Court before 10:00 a.m. on the return day of
06/02/2023. This is NOT a hearing date, but a deadline by
which you must file a written appearance if you object to
WITNESS, Hon. Frances M. Giordano, First Justice of
this Court.
Date: April 28, 2023
PAMELA CASEY O’BRIEN
REGISTER OF PROBATE
May 12, 2023
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 12, 2023
THE SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 17
will be used by the School District
to generate historical banners
to hang in the new complex
and to give to the Saugus
Sports Hall of Fame for permanent
record.”
If you happen to have access or
knowledge of such data, please
email it to Dennis Gould, School
Committee, jdgould1969@aol.
com. Dennis can also be reached
at 1-617-257-4847.
Kowloon launches outdoor
dining next week
The Kowloon Restaurant,
which is located at 948 Broadway
(Route 1 North) in Saugus,
is set to open its outdoor dining
venue on May 17 – serving
a full food and bar menu. Their
outdoor concert series kicks off
on May 19 with Beatlejuice. The
Kowloon Restaurant is open every
day from noon till closing,
and the outdoor venue is open
Wednesday to Sunday from 5
p.m.to closing.
This month’s Outdoor Concert
Lineup:
May 19: Beatlejuice, presented
by the Saugus Lions Club. Tickets
are $35 per person. Doors open
at 6 p.m. and the show is at 7 p.m.
For tickets, call 781-727-5629.
May 26: WildFire Band – free
admission, reserved seating is
$10 per person. Doors open at
5 p.m.
May 27: Cover Story Entertainment
– free admission, reserved
seating is $10 per person. Doors
open at 5 p.m.
Beatlejuice at Kowloon
The Saugus Lions Club will
present Beatle Juice in Concert
at 6 p.m. on May 19 at the Kowloon
Restaurant (948 Broadway,
Saugus). Beatlejuice is an American
Beatles cover band based in
New England and features some
- LEGAL NOTICE -
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT
Essex Probate and Family Court
36 Federal Street
Salem, MA 01970
(978) 744-1020
Docket No. ES23P1415EA
Estate of: BARBARA E. DEVINE
Date of Death: 12/14/2022
CITATION ON PETITION FOR
FORMAL ADJUDICATION
To all interested persons:
A Petition for Formal Probate of Will with Appointment of
Personal Representative has been filed by Donald B. Devine
of East Wakefield, NH requesting that the Court enter a formal
Decree and Order and for such other relief as requested in the
Petition.
The Petitioner requests that: Donald B. Devine of East Wakefield,
NH 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 06/12/2023.
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. Frances M. Giordano, First Justice of this
Court.
Date: May 05, 2023
PAMELA A. CASEY O’BRIEN
REGISTER OF PROBATE
May 12, 2023
of the region’s finest rock musicians.
It initially featured Brad
Delp, former frontman for the
band Boston, and has continued
since his death in 2007. Beatlejuice
plays regularly at venues
throughout New England.
Tickets are $35 and can be
purchase from Frank Rossetti
(frank@mycbagents.com), Nelson
C. Chang (nelsonchang@
nelsonchanglaw.com), Tom Traverse
(781-727-5629) or your local
Saugus Lion. In the event of
rain, the club has set a makeup
date for May 20. Stay tuned for
more details.
Bingo is back!
The Kowloon Restaurant announced
Bingo every Wednesday
from 7 to 9 p.m.in the Hong
Kong Lounge. Prizes will be given
away each week with a grand
prize set at the finale in March. A
full Chinese gourmet spread is
available during Bingo – featuring
pupu platters, egg rolls, crab
Rangoons, Saugus Wings, General
Gau’s chicken, lobster sauce,
fried scallops, lo mein, moo shu
pork, salt and pepper calamari
and sushi – along with a full bar
menu, including the signature
mai tais and scorpion bowls.
VFW Benefit May 20
The Saugus VFW Post 2346
Run To Home Base Benefit is set
for 7 p.m. to 1 a.m., Saturday,
May 20, at the VFW post (190C
Main St., Saugus). Only 100 tickets
will be sold, and they will be
available at the VFW Bar. If interested,
leave a message at 339600-7325
or contact a member.
The cost is $50 per person,
which covers a live band with
dancing, a local comedian and
a buffet dinner. There will also
be a silent auction, a 50/50 raffle,
a cash bar and a lottery raffle.
Spring and Summer Track
camps gearing up
Chris Tarantino – a 1990 Saugus
High School graduate who
has a reputation for mentoring
young athletes in the sports of
track and field – is gearing up
for the start of another Saugus
Sachems track camp. Tarantino
said the summer program targets
kids in grades one to eight
in the age bracket of five to 14
years old. The program is sponsored
by the town’s Youth & Recreation
Department.
He started out with Spring
Track and Field behind the Belmonte
STEAM Academy starting
on April 25 with the last day
Thursday, May 25. “This is developmental
and instructional,
serving as a precursor to the
summer camp,” Tarantino said.
“Returning athletes will be
given the opportunity to get
a leg up on training while first
year students will get a run
through in the fundamentals of
the sport,” he said.
Now for some details on the
Summer Track Camp, which will
be scheduled on running days
behind the Belmonte from 6-8
p.m. Some important dates for
six to 18 year olds: June 19-22,
trial and final registration week;
June 26-30, first formal week;
July 3-7, second formal week;
July 7, Pasta Dinner Prince Pizzeria,
6 p.m.; July 8, In-house meet
at Belmonte starting at 10 a.m.;
July 10-13, Retrain week; July
15, Summer Showdown, Cranston,
R.I.
First-year runners will be
charged $250. The price will
be $200 for runners returning
from spring; $150 for returning
runners from spring who
have a uniform; $100 for runners
with three-plus years in
the program; and $50 for those
with three-plus years in the
program who have a uniform.
The cost includes the following:
Camp t-shirt, pasta dinner, entry
in Summer Showdown and
uniform.
Please register for Summer
Track Camp by June 1 to assure
a uniform for Cranston.
For more details, you can reach
Coach Tarantino by calling him
at 781-854-6778 or emailing
him at christophertarantino24@
gmail.com.
C.H.a.R.M. Center is open
The Town of Saugus announced
that the community’s
compost C.H.a.R.M Center will
be open to residents on Wednesdays
and Saturdays from 8 a.m.
to 2 p.m. The site is located behind
the Department of Public
Works at 515 Main St.
Stickers are required to gain
seasonal access to the site. Stickers
may be purchased for $25.00
at the Department of Public
Works (DPW) located at the
Compost Site when making
your visit to the Compost Site.
The Town accepts checks only
for payment of the $25. No cash
will be accepted. Kindly bring a
check when visiting. Thank you!
Compost site stickers must be
permanently placed on the lower
left corner of residents’ automobile
windshields. Vehicles
registered out of state are not
permitted.
Yard waste must be disposed
of in brown compost bags or
open containers. The Town will
accept grass clippings, leaves
and brush. As in years past, no
branches or limbs larger than
three inches in diameter are permitted.
Residents
may call Scott Brazis
at the Solid Waste and Recycling
Department at 781-2314036
with questions.
Pam Harris Scholarship
The Saugus River Watershed
Council (SRWC) is offering the
following $500 Pam Harris Memorial
Scholarship for the spring
of 2023. This scholarship will recognize
and support graduating
high school seniors who have
demonstrated environmental
leadership and plan to continue
in the environmental field
through a course of study in college
or as volunteers. Send in
applications by May 26 to Mary
Lester (marylester@saugusriver.org).
Applicants
must be able to
demonstrate their personal
commitment to protecting the
environment. Examples include
volunteer work associated with
environmental conservation,
part-time jobs working to protect
the environment, academic
achievement and/or selecting
a college course of study in the
environmental field. They must
also demonstrate a commitment
to public health aspects of
environmental protection.
Pam Harris was a nurse, volunteer
member of the Saugus
Board of Health and an SRWC
Board Member. Pam was committed
to improving public
health for families in the Saugus
River watershed by addressing
the most troubling sources of
pollution.
Applicants must be graduating
from high school during the
spring of 2023 and live in one of
the 11 communities that are part
of the watershed council, including
Saugus. SRWC staff, contractors,
board members or members
of their immediate families
are not eligible to apply.
Saugus Youth Baseball/
Softball Scholarship
The family of Stephen Wing is
pleased to announce the availability
of a $500 scholarship to
a graduating senior from any
area high school who participated
in a Saugus youth baseball
or softball program. Applicants
must be planning to attend
a post-secondary school.
The $500 Stephen Wing Memorial
Scholarship was created
by Stephen’s family in memory
of a boy who loved life and
thoroughly enjoyed playing
and participating in youth baseball
programs. Stephen’s desire
to improve and willingness to
work hard to achieve a goal enabled
him to be considered a
skilled baseball player. Stephen
lost his battle with illness at the
age of 10.
Interested seniors are asked
to provide the screening committee
with the following: (1) a
copy of your student data sheet
(resume) and (2) a persuasive
cover letter indicating why the
applicant is an appropriate candidate
for the scholarship (cover
letter should indicate the teams/
leagues participated in and the
candidate’s efforts to work hard
to achieve goals). AdditionalTHE
SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 19
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Page 19
ASKS | FROM PAGE 15
temporary town manager. It
was very nerve-racking.
Q: And, at that point, you
have to suspend any kind of
communication with a town
official who is facing criminal
charges.
A: What happened with
that previous town manager
– when Andrew Bisignani left,
I was given information that
there were a number of contracts
that weren’t bid that
should have been bid. And I
was in a position where I had
to do something about it. And
I had a colleague who reminded
me of Sen. Sam Ervin in the
Watergate hearings, whose
line was “What did you know
and when did you know it?”
So, I contacted the [state]
Department of Revenue and
the Inspector General’s Office.
The Inspector General came in
immediately and investigated,
and the Department of Revenue
said, “You have to conduct
a forensic audit. And that’s
what we did. It was a very difficult
situation: a difficult situation
for me to be in. But it
wasn’t anything we were going
to cover up. Crimes were
committed. This individual
went to another town and
committed other crimes and
eventually got indicted.
But when you are violating
municipal finance laws, you
have a problem. When you are
violating bidding laws, that’s
a problem. You have to follow
the laws. It’s the public’s money.
It’s the taxpayer’s money.
It’s not your money. That time
was difficult for me.
Q: That’s a real challenge:
when you’ve been working
with somebody you trusted.
A: Exactly, that’s not something
you can cover up, especially
when you have employees
coming to you, pointing
out the irregularities. That’s
very difficult.
Q: What’s the most rewarding
part of the job?
A: Representing the town I
grew up in. It’s an honor for
me to represent the town I
grew up in and to advise the
town officials – to take pride
THE SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 18
ly, the Wing Family seeks a candidate
who demonstrates persistence
and teamwork.
The student data sheet (resume)
and cover letter should be
submitted to the Wing Memorial
scholarship c/o Ed Nazzaro
(enazzaro47@comcast.net) on
or before Friday, May 19, 2023.
Food Pantry notes
The Saugus United Parish
Food Pantry is open today (Friin
the fact that I live here and I
care about the town I grew up
in. That’s the most rewarding.
I’ve had offers in other towns
to represent other towns. But
I had no desire to work in any
place but Saugus. My practice
is here. My family is here.
I brought my family up here.
It’s extremely rewarding. It’s
an honor.
Q: So, you must get a big
thrill on Town Meeting night.
A: Well, you never know
what they are going to ask
you. I don’t have the questions
ahead of time. I wish I did. But
I enjoy the challenge and just
strive to give them the right
answer. And it’s difficult. It’s
not always easy.
Q: What’s the craziest thing
you were ever asked to get a
legal opinion on?
A: I have to think about that.
I’d have to think about that
one. That’s an interesting one.
I think it’s hard sometimes
for people to understand; for
example, when selectmen get
elected, what their role is; or if
somebody gets appointed to
a Board of Appeals, what their
role is. You have to read the
town bylaws. You have to read
the zoning. You have to read
the Town Charter. It’s all there
– all in the statute. And sometimes
people think they have
more authority than they really
have. It’s kind of like putting
them in their lane and telling
them to stay in their lane and
this is what you can do and
can’t do. That’s always a conflict
between the town manager
and selectmen.
In our town, it’s a very strong
town manager form of government.
It’s difficult because
he’s hired and fired by the
same five people. Now, we
changed the charter, so if he’s
an incumbent, he only needs
a majority vote to extend
his contract, not four out of
five – which I think is a good
thing. And I think the process
by which selectmen are
elected in this town – all five
at the same time – I think is a
poor system. Most cities and
towns have staggered elections,
where two run at a time.
When you have five [candiday,
May 12) from 9:30-11 a.m.
Veterans bricks available
The Saugus War Monument
Committee, once again, is sponsoring
the Buy A Brick Program
to honor all those who have
served their country. If you
would like to purchase one in
the name of someone who is
presently serving or has served,
in the memory of a loved one,
or just for someone from your
family, school, etc., the general
pricing is $100 for a 4″ X 8″
dates] running for selectmen,
you just need to come in the
top five. You don’t have to be
the best out of two.
Q: So, you think the town
elections should be staggered?
A:
I absolutely think they
should be staggered. I think
that’s been a problem over the
years. I think the Town Meeting
is too small – 50 members.
I believe it’s one of the
smallest in the state. It’s a representative
Town Meeting.
There should be more than
50 members. When you need
a two-thirds vote, 15 could
block something, especially
with a town of our size. I think
there should be a larger Town
Meeting, and I think selectmen
should run in staggered
elections.
Q: How many people would
you go with in a Town Meeting?
A:
Maybe close to 100 –
somewhere between 50 and
100. I like representative Town
Meeting, so you don’t need
a quorum. For example, Lynnfield
has trouble getting a
quorum. What happens is the
people who come out are the
people who have a particular
interest that night. I like the
representative Town Meeting
form of government, and
I think Town Meeting does a
good job and never made a
wrong decision in my entire
career because Town Meeting
is representative. It’s a democratic
republic.
Q: So, you don’t think an
open Town Meeting would
work in Saugus?
A: I don’t like the idea of
an open Town Meeting. The
whole basis upon which our
country was founded on was
a representative form of government.
I think you are more
careful with your vote if you
are representing people other
than yourself. You’re not just
voting for your own self-interests;
so if you have an open
Town Meeting, those people
are only voting for their own
self-interests. Those are the
two changes that I’d like to
see: staggered elections and
a larger Town Meeting. When
brick (three lines), or $200 for 8″
X 8″ brick (five lines). Each line
is a maximum of 15 characters.
The improvement and upkeep
of the monument on the corner
of Winter and Central Streets
rely on the generosity of donors
through fundraising.
The brick application must
be in by Sept. 15 to ensure the
bricks will be ready for Veterans
Day. Please contact Corinne Riley
at 781-231-7995, for more information
and applications.
you have a town manager like
we have now, you wouldn’t
be able to keep him. You saw
with the recall what happened
when voters decided that selectmen
weren’t acting properly.
They got removed. That’s
probably one of the biggest
surprises I had in my career –
that that recall was successful.
Q: It actually worked.
A: I never thought it would.
To get that many signatures
in 25 days, I just thought, was
an insurmountable task. And
they did, but it only shows
you how strongly the people
felt about that Board of Selectmen
and how they were
treating the town manager.
And look, he’s still there, 10
years later. What does that
tell you? But in my opinion –
look at his record; look at the
town’s bond rating. The bond
rating saves the town a ton
of money, when you can borrow
money at such a low rate.
And for years, we had very little
in the stabilization funds.
We couldn’t fund operating
expenses. He [Crabtree] has
found ways to do it, which is
great. But being town manager
is a seven-day-a-week job.
It isn’t anything I ever had any
aspirations about – not even
for a split second.
Q: Looking back at the 42
years you served as town
counsel, what’s the biggest
thing you’ve seen?
A: I just think being part
of municipal government
and being part of the decision-making
process – and
giving advice. You’re advising
for an entire town, acting
in the best interests of the
town. That’s a big client. I’ve
really had the respect of employees
and citizens. They haven’t
all agreed with me all of
the time. But to be respected,
and, I said, my legacy would
be that I hope to have a positive
impact on whatever I deal
with over the years.
It’s not easy. A lot of times,
it’s a lot of pressure and you’re
getting hit from all angles. You
could see that at the Town
Meeting. I had no idea what
they were going to ask me last
night. You try to field the quesMedia
truck will honor late
veterans
The Saugus Veterans Council
will be doing something new
this year in the Memorial Day Parade.
There will be a media truck
displaying sites that honor our
veterans and photos of our deceased
military men and women
to remember them during
the parade. If you want a deceased
family member or friend
that served in the military to be
included, please send a photograph
and name to stevecastitions
and give them the right
answer.
I think the hardest thing to
deal with was the recall because
I had a board that was
not taking my advice. It was
getting advice from some attorney
who doesn’t really get
paid by the town. He had cases
against the town – Attorney
Neil Rossman – and I told
the selectmen that they didn’t
have the basis to fire this town
manager, but they didn’t want
to hear that. Here’s a case
where I gave them the right
advice, but it was ignored.
They didn’t have any basis to
fire him. They just didn’t like
him and they ran to get rid of
him. That’s not grounds, because
he had a contract. They
had to honor his contract.
They chose not to do that and
the people spoke and the recall
succeeded.
Had it failed, the manager
wouldn’t have been able to
stay there, and they’d have all
sorts of lawsuits. There would
have been a lot of damage
to the town. We would have
gone backwards instead of
moving ahead. And it would
have affected all of the taxpayers,
between the lawsuits
and the financial status of the
town.
Q: Anything else that you
would like to share?
A: It’s truly been an honor. If
you think about it, this is the
town I grew up in, and if I had
a choice, I wouldn’t have done
anything different. I like practicing
law here and I want to
continue being Town Counsel
as long as my health prevails.
Q: Would you serve another
10 years?
A: I don’t want to make predictions
and I don’t want to
jinx myself. I don’t know. But
if you love what you’re doing
and you care about the town
– and the town has changed
– you want to keep going. I
take my granddaughter down
to Bucchiere Park on Bristow
Street. It’s a beautiful playground.
Beautiful. She’s from
Chelmsford and she loves it.
We didn’t have that before.
Look at the parks. Look at the
new high school.
netti@comcast.net
Legion breakfasts on Friday
mornings
Saugus American Legion Post
210 hosts its popular breakfasts
from 8 - 9 a.m. on Fridays. The
Legion requests a donation of
$8 from those who are looking
for a delicious meal at Legion
Hall. The Legion also welcomes
veterans who can’t afford the
meal to enjoy a free breakfast.
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 20
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 12, 2023
THE SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 19
Bon appétit!
TOWN OF SAUGUS
ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS
SAUGUS, MASSACHUSETTS 01906
781-231-4030
MAY 25, 2023 AGENDA
The SAUGUS ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS will hold
a public hearing on THURSDAY, MAY 25, 2023 at 7:00
pm, at the TOWN HALL ANNEX, 25 Main Street.
The following petitions will be heard. Petitioner, or their
representative, must be present at the meeting.
1. On the petition of Igor Fraga and Hanh Truong, owners
of the property at 72 Lincoln Ave., (Lot #5, Plan #3013),
seeking a special permit to add a dormer to left side of
house and a variance for a pre-existing 3’ sideyard
setback where 15’ is required and a pre-existing 13.3’
front yard setback where 20’ is required.
2. On the petition of Patrick & Jean Verderico, owners
of the property at 486 Main St., (Lot #334, Plan #1034),
seeking a special permit to build a 22’ x 28’ garage with
breezeway & stairs and a variance for a 2’ sideyard set
back where 20’ is required.
3. On the petition of Trunk Space LLC c/o Colonial
Traveler Motor Court, Inc., owners of the property
at 1737 & 1753 Broadway (Lot #47, Plan #2030 and
Lots 29, 601, Plan #2030), seeking a special permit to
construct a four story mini-storage facility and variances
to: increase the number of allowable building stories,
decrease the number of required parking spaces, decrease
the number of required loading spaces, non-daylight
hours operations, unattended operation and keycode
locking operations.
Tom Traverse, Chairperson
Stephanie Puracchio, Clerk
May 05, 12, 2023
What’s happening at the
Saugus Public Library
For schoolchildren looking
for interesting projects and programs
to participate in this fall,
there’s plenty to do at the Saugus
Public Library. There are also
some very good programs offered
for grownups, too.
Join our Teen Advisory Board:
First Tuesday of each month at
6 p.m. in the Teen Room; fi fth
grade and up. Meet with the
Teen Librarian once a month
to talk about what you’d like for
programs and materials at the library.
Your opinion matters! No
registration required. Snacks
provided! (sauguspubliclibrary.
org – 781-231-4168)
Just Sew! Saugonians are welcome
to join a monthly sewing
class for adults that is held the
third Monday of each month
from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. in the
Community Room of the Saugus
Public Library. The class covers
basic topics like sewing buttons,
hemming clothing and mending
torn fabric and will move on
to more advanced topics in the
coming weeks. This class is free.
(See sauguspubliclibrary.org)
Pastel Class at the Library: “Color
Your World in Pastels” with
Sharon Morley is a fun, handson
workshop that novice and
experienced artists alike will enjoy!
No drawing experience required!
Just a wish to explore
pastel freely!
Participants will have the
chance to create a painting using
pastels which Sharon will
provide. After a short demonstration
on the varying ways to
use pastels, Sharon will supply
each person with pastel paper
and soft pastels and they can either
work from a still life set up
that she will provide or their favorite
photograph. Sharon will
also touch on how to frame
paintings with a focus on archival
materials so the work will be
well protected. Samples of her
works will be on display and
questions about any aspect of
painting, exhibiting, etc. will be
encouraged.
Date: Monday May 8, 2023;
time: 6–8 p.m.; location: Community
Room, Saugus Public Library,
295 Central St.; 781-2314168.
There is no charge for this
adult program, but registration
is required. To register, please see
our website Events Calendar at
sauguspubliclibrary.org.
A neat teen group called Manga
& Anime Club: The Manga &
Anime Club, from all accounts,
is a lot of fun for kids in Grades
6 and up. So, if you are curious,
check out the Teen Room. Chat
with friends! Make crafts! Try Japanese
snacks!
Club meetings will continue
on Saturdays through May from
10-11 a.m. It will be held on May
13. Please sign up in advance;
call 781-231-4168 or stop by the
Reference Desk (https://www.
sauguspubliclibrary.org/newmanga-anime-club.../);
Saugus
Public Library, 295 Central St.,
Saugus Mass.
First Baptist Church
presents “Can We Talk…”
First Baptist Church Pastor Leroy
Mahoney invites troubled
people to join others in a special
program called “Can We Talk
… Community conversations on
Trauma and Healing” the first
Thursday of every month from
6 to 7 p.m. at Rev. Isaac Mitchell
Jr. Fellowship Hall (105 Main St.
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 22
American Exterior and
Window Corporation
Contact us for all of your home
improvement projects and necessities
Telephone: 617-699-1782
Toll Free: 1-888-744-1756
Email: info@americanexteriorandwindow.com
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All estimates, consultations or inspections
completed by MA licensed supervisors.
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1. On May 12, 1820, what
English nurse (“Lady with the
Lamp”) was born in Florence,
Italy?
2. How many bridges does the
Amazon River have: 0, 22 or
236?
3. The fi rst credit card was for
what company?
4. On May 13, 1941, Chicano
rock music pioneer “Ritchie”
Valens was born; what is the
name of his Mexican folk song
cover hit?
5. Until 1951, U.S. coin-operated
telephone calls cost how many
cents: three, fi ve or 10?
6. May 14 is Mother’s Day; what
is the offi cial Mother’s Day
fl ower?
7. What game that was originally
called Criss-Cross Words only
sold 532 in its fi rst year?
8. In what year was the 1st
“Oldies But Goodies” collection
of rock and roll hits released:
1959, 1964 or 1971?
9. In 1861, what “Fireside Poet,”
who died in Cambridge, Mass.,
wrote in a journal, “The word
May is a perfumed word... It
means youth, love, song; and
all that is beautiful in life”?
10. May 15 is National Chocolate
Chip Day; in 1937 in what state
did Ruth Graves Wakefi eld cut
up a chocolate bar to invent
chocolate chip cookies?
11. What is considered the
“Greatest Show on Earth”
(having 2 million attendees per
day): Carnival in Rio de Janeiro,
Carnival in Venice or Mardi
Gras in New Orleans?
12. In the 1932 short “The Music
Box” who delivered a piano?
13. In Amsterdam, what method
of transport is most commonly
stolen?
14. On May 16, 1957, what road
in Massachusetts opened?
15. What is cos lettuce also
called?
16. What global writing system
has 63 characters?
17. On May 17, 1875, what
oldest consecutively held
thoroughbred horse race in the
United States was fi rst run?
18. How many days of rain were
there when Noah was on the
Ark: 30, 40 or 80?
19. What kind of entertainment
involves the cascade, shower
and fountain?
20. On May 18, 1980, what
mountain in Washington state
erupted?
Complete Financing
Available.
No Money Down.
ANSWERS
1. Florence Nightingale
2. 0 (The riverbanks are thought too
unstable for bridges.)
3. Diner’s Club (in 1950)
4. “La Bamba”
5.
6.
Five
Carnations
7. Scrabble
8. 1959
9. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
10. Massachusetts (at the Toll House Inn
in Whitman)
11. Carnival in Rio de Janeiro
12. Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy
13. Bicycle
14. The Massachusetts Turnpike
15. Romaine
16. Braille
17. The Kentucky Derby
18. 40
19. Juggling (basic patterns)
20. Mount St. Helens
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Page 21
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 12, 2023
OBITUARIES
Charles R. Reed
He was the owner and principal
electrician of Reed Electric
Company. He was also the
Electrical Inspector for the
Town of Saugus.
Charlie was known for his
big personality,
laughter,
O
f North Port, FL formerly
of Saugus. Age 83, died
on Thursday, May 4th at Melrose-Wakefield
Hospital. He
was the beloved husband of
Priscilla (Schon) Reed with
whom he shared 56 years of
marriage. He was the son of
the late Wilfred and Eleanor
(Noonan) Reed.
Born in Winthrop, Charlie
grew up in New York before
moving to Saugus in 1965,
eventually retiring in Florida.
THE SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 20
in Saugus). “Join us as we gather
in community to share our
stories, thoughts and feelings
about whatever you are going
through,” Rev. Mahoney states
in a written announcement.
“As always, it is a safe space
and smile. He enjoyed nothing
more than his family but
spending time with friends at
the beach in Maine, the park
in Florida, or locally in Saugus
was a close second. Charlie
loved an adventure. He raced
motorcycles and snowmobiles,
had many camping trips
throughout the United States
and Canada, and enjoyed visits
to Aruba.
In addition to his wife, Charlie
is survived by his six children,
Karlene Fleuriel of Peabody,
Lisa Tomas of Peabody,
Michelle McKay of Gloucester,
Pierre Fleuriel of NH, Kathleen
McGown of Saugus, and Audrey
Reed of Peabody; son-inlaw
Ron McGown of Saugus;
numerous grandchildren and
great-grandchildren; and his
to come together in community,”
he says.
іHealthy Students-Healthy
Saugus Program Resumes
for the 22-23 School Year
(Editor’s Note: The following
info is from an announcement
submitted by Julie Ci~
LEGAL NOTICE ~
Board of Selectmen
Public Hearing
Notice is hereby given that the Saugus Board of
Selectmen will conduct a Public Hearing on the request
Vilela Corp, d/b/a VTeck Auto Services, for a Class II
Auto Dealer’s license to buy and sell second hand
motor vehicles at 24 Winter Street, Saugus, MA 01906.
Owner Wellsey Vilela, 28 Garfield Avenue, Woburn, MA
01801.
This Public Hearing will be held on May 23, 2023, at
the Saugus Town Hall, 298 Central Street, second floor,
Saugus, MA 01906. The meeting starts at 7:00 PM.
Chairman Anthony Cogliano
Janice K. Jarosz, Temp Clerk
May 05, 12, 2023
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
Special Permit Request
Board of Selectmen
Public Hearing
Notice is hereby given that the Saugus Board of
Selectmen will conduct a Public Hearing on the request
of Joseph A. Pingaro, 216 Augusta Way, Middleton,
MA 01949 for a Special (S2) Permit to allow for the
operation of an auto body repair business by allowing
general automotive repair and maintenance at
24 Winter Street, Saugus, MA 01906.
This Hearing will be held on May 23, 2023, in the Saugus
Town Hall, 298 Central Street, second floor, Saugus,
MA 01906. The meeting starts at 7:00 PM.
Chairman Anthony Cogliano
Janice K. Jarosz, Temp Clerk
May 05, 12, 2023
brother Mark of CA. He was
predeceased by his brother
Robert and one grandchild.
Charlie had countless family
and friends. His loss is felt by
all. He was honored in a private
ceremony with his family
on May 10th.
In lieu of flowers, the family
kindly requests that donations
be made to Melrose-Wakefield
Hospital.
Tax-deductible contributions
can be made online at melrosewakefield.org/giving.
Please
check the “Make this
gift in tribute to” box and type
“In Memory of Charles Reed”.
Contributions can also be
mailed to Melrose-Wakefield
Hospital- Attn Fund Development
with a note “honoring
Charles Reed”, 585 Lebanon
Street, Melrose, MA 02176
Pauline F. (Draper)
Dudley
O
f Saugus. Age 93, died on
Wednesday, May 3rd at
her home surrounded by her
colini, a member of the Board
of Directors for Healthy Students-Healthy
Saugus.)
Who we are: Healthy Students-Healthy
Saugus (HS2)
is a nonprofi t group of volunteers
who are helping to off -
family. She was the wife of the
late William R. Dudley, Sr. Born
in Malden, she was the daughter
of the late Clarence and
Ethel (Draper) Cottrell. A resident
of Saugus since 1962,
Mrs. Dudley was all about her
family, “the glue to keep everyone
together.” Her hobbies
and interests included; bingo,
walking, and dining out. She
loved going to casinos especial
with S & S Casino Tours
whom she referred to as her
other family.
Mrs. Dudley is survived by
her six children; William Dudley
and his wife Patricia of
Lunenburg, Dee Dudley of
FL, Christine Burke of Saugus,
Susan Spalding and her
husband Randy of Seabrook,
NH, Kathleen Dudley and
her husband Thomas Waugh
of Lynn and Patricia McGovern
and her husband Daniel
of Saugus, 16 grandchildren,
25 great grandchildren, and 2
great great grandchildren. She
was the sister of the late Ethset
food insecurity in households.
HS2 provides students/
families who enroll in the program
a supply of nutritious
food for when school lunches
and breakfasts are unavailable
to them on weekends.
el Alec, Mable DeNunzio, Gilbert
Cottrell, Milton Cottrell,
Joseph Cottrell and Donald
Cottrell. Mrs. Dudley was predeceased
by her granddaughter
Jenna Dudley.
Relatives and friends were
invited to attend visiting hours
in the Bisbee-Porcella Funeral
Home, Saugus, on Wednesday
May 10, followed by a funeral
service in the funeral home.
In lieu of fl owers, donations
in her memory may be made
the Make- a-Wish Foundation
at www.wish.org or the Elephants
sanctuary in Tennessee
at www.elephants.com.
How HS2 can help you: HS2
bags are distributed at Saugus
Public schools on Fridays
to take home. Bags include
such items as peanut butter,
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 23
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY SALES & RENTALS
Happy
Mother’s
Day!
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617-957-9222
Joe DiNuzzo
617-680-7610
Denise Matarazzo
617-953-3023
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׉	 7cassandra://RgyWj8mT4pAtoW27eGXCwUPZ5nVhtVLlNFIXrTwDf6U*
`̰ d]h#x ׉E8THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 12, 2023
Page 23
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial Record, a weekly trade newspaper.
It is reprinted with permission from the publisher, The Warren Group.
BUYER1
Olson, Kirstin L
THE SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 22
canned meals/soups/tuna/
vegetables, pasta, fruit cups,
cereal, oatmeal, goldfi sh, pretzels
and granola bars. All food
is provided to children free of
charge. It is our hope these
resources will support the
health, behavior and achievement
of every student who
participates. To sign up go
here to complete online form:
https://forms.gle/gmMGguycSHBdziuE9
Want
to partner with us: We
would love to partner with
organizations, sports teams,
For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com.
SELLER1
BUYER2
Pizzi, Frederick M
Scalisi, Mario G
youth groups, PTOs, businesses
and individuals to assist in
feeding students of Saugus.
To learn more about how you
can partner with us, visit the
Healthy Students-Healthy Saugus
Facebook page or email us
at HS2Saugus@gmail.com
HS2 relies on donations to
create take-home bags for a
weekend full of meals. Checks
can also be sent directly to:
Salem Five c/o Healthy Students-Healthy
Saugus, 855-5
Broadway, Saugus, MA 01906.
Online donations can also be
made at https://givebutter.
com/HealthySaugus
* Crack Repairing * Pot Hole Filling
* Striping Handicapped Spaces
* Free Estimates
Tom’s Seal Coating
Call Gary: 978-210-4012
FOR SALE - SAUGUS
Location! Location! Welcome to Saugus where 19 Gilway awaits your creative
touch. This cozy home is nestled in one of the most desirable areas in
Saugus. Leave it as is or upgrade the kitchen and baths. Don’t delay and miss
out. Did I mention close to major routes and accessibility to Boston, Airport,
and Transportation? Come to one of our open houses on Thursday May 11th
from 5:00-7:00 pm Saturday & Sunday May 13th & 14th from 12:00-2:00 pm.
SELLER2
Scalisi, Susan
ADDRESS
1214 Sheffi eld Way #1214
CITY
Saugus
DATE
04.19.23
PRICE
525000
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 12, 2023
.............
#
1
Listing & Selling
Office in Saugus
“Experience and knowledge
Provide the Best Service”
Free Market Evaluations CRE
CarpenitoRealEstate.com
SEE WHY MORE PEOPLE CHOOSE
CARPENITO REAL ESTATE
SAUGUS - 8 room, Colonial features granite kitchen, living room,
dining room and family room, all with hardwood flooring, 3-4
bedrooms, one 1st floor which could also be used as a den, 2 full
baths, detached garage, located on dead-end street…$649,900.
From the day
Lori Johnson
walked into my
mother’s home
until the day the
final paperwork
was signed,
I knew I had
made the right
choice in
choosing her
as our realtor!
Lori is
SAUGUS - 6 rm, 3 bedrm Colonial, 1 ½ baths, hardwood
flooring, central air, two car gar w/loft storage
& attached screen house, nicely located off Saugus
Center in IronWorks neighborhood!...$515,000
781-718-7409
professional, reliable, efficient, and
non-judgmental, guiding us through
a bittersweet time. Within a couple of
weeks from the day Lori first walked
through the property with us, the
house was sold. Lori and Carpenito
Real Estate provided us the complete
package from the listing proposal
package, expert recommendations for
clean out and clean up, through all of
the legal paperwork.
NORTH OF BOSTON - Well-established, immaculate Pilates Studio
offers top-of-the-line equipment, 950+sq ft of perfectly laid out
space, can be easily suited to your schedule to make this a perfect
investment! $20,000. MOTIVATED SELLER-MAKE AN OFFER!!
I recommend you to Lori Johnson and
Carpenito Real Estate Inc. with all your
real estate needs.
View our website from
your mobile phone!
335 Central St., Saugus, MA
781-233-7300
BOXFORD - 1st AD 9 rm Colonial offers 3 bedrooms, 3 full,
2 half baths, granite kitchen, fireplace, wood flooring, 1st
floor main bdrm w/private bath, finished lower level, bonus
room over 3 car garage, lg lot…$950,000.
EAST BOSTON -
1st AD, 3 Family
offers 5/6/6 rooms,
2/3/3 bedrooms,
wood flooring, eat-in
kitchens, laundry in
units, rear porches,
finished lower level,
replacement
windows,
gas/electric heat.
$1,075,000.
THINKING OF SELLING?
Carpenito Real Estate can
provide you with the
BEST price, T
BEST service and
BEST results! T
Call us today!
UNDER
CONTRACT
FOR SALE- DUPLEX STYLE SINGLE
FAMILY ATTACHED HOME. SPACIOUS
LIVING AREA. 1ST FLOOR LAUNDRY,
3 BED, 3 BATH, WALK UP ATTIC,
LOWER LEVEL FAMILY ROOM WITH
WET BAR, LARGE, FENCED IN YARD
WITH ABOVE GROUND POOL. GAS
HEAT. SAUGUS $659,900
LOOKING TO
BUY OR SELL ?
CALL
RHONDA
COMBE
CALL BRANDI 617-462-5886
FOR SALE - RARE FIND! BRAND NEW
HOME FEATURING 3 BEDS, 3
BATHS,QUALITY CONSTRUCTION
THROUGHOUT. FLEXIBLE FLOORPLAN.
OPEN CONCEPT, CATHEDRAL CEILINGS, SS
APPLIANCES, LARGE ISLAND, SLIDER TO
DECK. MAIN BED HAS 2 CUSTOM CLOSETS
AND EN SUITE. FINISHED WALK OUT LL
OPEN FOR FUTURE EXPANSION.
SAUGUS $875,000
CALL DEBBIE: 617-678-9710
FOR SALE- 3 BED, 1.5 BATH
RANCH. VINYL SIDING, GAS HEAT,
CENTRAL AC,GARAGE, HARDWOOD,
LARGE BASEMENT,
ALARM SYSTEM, NEWER ROOF.
SAUGUS $599,000
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
UNDER
UNDER
CONTRACT
FOR SALE -SAUGUS SPLIT-ENTRY,
2000 SQUARE FEET, 3 BEDROOM,
1.5 BATH, HARDWOOD
FLOORING, GARAGE UNDER,
FENCED IN PRIVATE YARD.
SAUGUS $599,900
CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
CONTRACT
FOR SALE- 3 BED, 2 BATH
RANCH. UPDATED SYSTEMS,
2 FIREPLACES, GARAGE,
FENCED YARD, IN-GROUND
POOL, GREAT
NEIGHBORHOOD.
SAUGUS $565,000
CALL DEBBIE 617-678-9710
CALL RHONDA
FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE
NEEDS.
781-706-0842
UNDER
CONTRACT
FOR SALE - 3 BED, 1 BATH,
VINYL SIDING, HARDWOOD,
GAS HEAT, CENTRAL AC, GREAT
LOCATION,
SAUGUS $425,000
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
MOBILE HOMES
WE ARE HIRING!
WE ARE LOOKING FOR
AGENTS IN OUR SAUGUS
OFFICE. OFFERING A SIGN
ON BONUS TO QUALIFIED
AGENTS!
FOR SALE- 3 ROOM, 1 BED, 1 BATH NICELY UPDATED HOME WITH NEW
PITCHED ROOF, ELECTRIC, HOT WATER AND MORE.
SAUGUS $119,900
FOR SALE-4 ROOMS, 2 BED, 1 BATH, NEW ROOF AND FURNACE.
DESIRABLE PARK. NEEDS SOME UPDATES. PEABODY $119,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
MOBILE HOME
FOR SALE-BRAND NEW 14 X
52 UNITS. ONLY 2 LEFT!
STAINLESS APPLIANCES AND
FULL SIZE LAUNDRY. 2BED 1
BATH. FINANCING AVAILABLE
WITH 10% DOWN
DANVERS $199,900
Thinking of BUYING OR SELLING soon? CONFUSED about the current market?
WE ARE HERE TO HELP! GIVE US A CALL TODAY!
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