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Vol. 36, No.3
-FREEwww.advocatenews.net
oca
Free
Every Friday
Jack Satter House Tenants Assoc.
Host Installation of Officer
781-286-8500
Friday, January 23, 2026
Traffic Commission
approves trial speed
bumps on Rice
and Lantern Avenues
By Barbara Taormina
he Traffic Commission
unanimously approved
the installation of trial speed
bumps on Rice and Lantern
Avenues.
Julie DeMauro from the
The Hebrew Senior Life installed its Jack Satter House Tenants Assoc. offi cers on Tuesday. Shown
seated, from left to right, are: Marie Loconzolo and Arlene DiGregorio. Middle row, shown from
left: Tenantsâ€™ Association Vice President Joanne Monteforte, Mayor Patrick Keefe, Council Vice
President Angela Guarino Sawaya, and Tenantsâ€™ Association President Roxanne Aiello. Back row:
State Representative Jeff rey Turco and Executive Director Caren Silverlieb. See photo highlights
inside. (Advocate photo by Tara Vocino)
Planning & Community Development
Offi ce explained
that the plan for the speed
bumps was developed with
the traffic working group.
DeMauro said inflatable,
temporary speed bumps
would be installed at 2 Rice
Avenue and Lancaster Street
and at 136 Lantern Avenue. A
third speed bump is planned
for Rice Avenue, but the exact
location was not clear.
T
Ward 5 Councillor Angela
Guarino-Sawaya said the
second speed bump on Rice
Avenue should be placed
right after the Whitten Avenue
beach entrance.
â€œWeâ€™re going to test it out
and see how it goes,â€ said
DeMauro. â€œThen, weâ€™ll figure
out a permanent location
for it.â€
DeMauro said the Lantern
Avenue speed bump is for
a three-month pilot period.
â€œWeâ€™ll decide after if the
placement is right,â€ she said.
â€œIf it is, weâ€™ll be able to put it
down permanently.â€
TRAFFIC | SEE Page 2
City Council approves 2026 subcommittee assignments,
debates limits on council debate
By Barbara Tormina
A
t their meeting last week,
the City Council voted on
organizational matters that
will dictate how the council
moves forward over the next
year. Councillors approved the
2026 list of appointments to
subcommittees. Much of the
detailed discussion and review
of issues takes place in subcommittees,
which then make
recommendations on actions
to the full council.
This year, Councillor-atLarge
Joanne McKenna will
continue on as chairwoman of
the Appointments & Personnel
Administration Committee.
Councillors Anthony Cogliandro,
Robert Haas, James
Mercurio and Marc Silvestri
will serve on the committee.
The Ways and Means Subcommittee
will be chaired by
Ward 3 Councillor Anthony
Cogliandro. Councillors Paul
Argenzio, James Mercurio,
Joanne McKenna and Ira Novoselsky
were appointed to
Way and Means.
Ward 5 Councillor Angela
Guarino-Sawaya will chair
the Economic Development
& Planning Subcommittee.
Councillors Robert Haas, Michelle
Kelley, Ira Novoselsky
and Marc Silvestri will serve on
the Economic Development &
Planning Committee.
The Youth, Parks and Recreation
Subcommittee will be
chaired by Councillor-at-Large
APPROVES | SEE Page 2
City Council members, shown from left to right: Ward 6 Councillor Chris Giannino, Ward 4 Councillor
Paul Argenzio, Ward 3 Councillor Anthony Cogliandro, Councillor-at-Large Robert Haas, Vice President/Ward
5 Councillor Angela Guarino-Sawaya, President/Councillor-at-Large Tony Zambuto, Councillor-at-Large
Marc Silvestri, Ward 2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky, Councillor-at-Large Joanne McKenna
and Ward 1 Councillor James Mercurio. Missing from photo: Councillor-at-Large Michelle Kelley.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JANUARY 23, 2026
TRAFFIC | FROM Page 1
Other business
DeMauro also made a request
for a public hearing to restrict
parking on Everard Street
from Cottage Street to Belle Isle
Avenue. As part of the stateâ€™s
Safe Routes to School program,
which is investing $1.4
million for improvements, the
sidewalks around the Beachmont
school will be extended
from four feet to 10 feet, which
will not leave enough room for
parking. DeMauro said the area
is not a residential parking area
but rather a drop-off space and
there is room for student transportation
at the back of the
school. The Commission voted
to hold a public hearing.
The Commission also voted
to approve parking restrictions
on the odd side of Bradstreet
Avenue from Atlantic to Endicott
Avenues and on the odd
side of Winthrop Avenue from
Broadway to Beach Street, to
allow for snow plowing.
Commission chairman Chris
Ciaramella said the proposal to
restrict parking was developed
by the parking department,
the police and the public works
department. â€œWe thought this
would be a benefi cial change
to the schedule to help with
plowing. It is defi nitely needed,â€
said Ciaramella.
Ward 1 Councillor James
Mercurio told the Commission
he plowed that area for
many years, the plows are getting
bigger and he supports
the new restrictions. Commissioners
voted unanimously to
approve the new parking restrictions.
The
Commission reviewed
several requests to change
the schedule for handicapped
person parking. Commissioners
voted to move the following
requests to a public
hearing: requests for handAPPROVES
| FROM Page 1
Valentine's Special
SAVE OVER $100!!!
Buy three colors or highlights
and get the 4th FREE!
Includes cut and blow dry
Located inside of Clickers Hair Salon
960 Broadway, Revere
ACCEPTING NEW CLIENTS!
CALL 857-310-7872
Payments accepted: card, cash, venmo
Offer expires to Jan. 14, 2026
Over 30 years experience
Michelle Kelley with Councillors
Paul Argenzio, Anthony
Cogliandro, Robert Haas and
Ira Novoselsky as members.
The City Councilâ€™s subcommittee
on Public Works will
be chaired by Ward 2 Councillor
Ira Novoselsky with Councillors
Paul Argenzio, Anthony
Cogliandro, James Mercurio
and Marc Silvestri serving
as members.
Councillor-at-Large Marc Silvestri
will serve as chair of the
Zoning subcommittee with
Councillors Paul Argenzio, Anthony
Cogliandro, Angela Guarino-Sawaya
and Michelle Kelly
as members.
The Human Services subicapped
parking at 27 Avon
Street, 11 Waves Avenue and
59 Cooledge Street.
The Commission also voted
to hold a public hearing
on the plan from Worcesterbased
Commonwealth Electrical
Technologies to install three
on-street EV charger stations
on McCoba Street, Hutchinson
Street and Proctor Avenue. Steven
Conte of Commonwealth
Electrical said the planning
was done with the cityâ€™s planning
department and sustainability
groups and the stations
were being funded by grants
from the Massachusetts Clean
Energy Center. The only catch is
committee will be chaired by
Councillor-at-Large Robert
Haas. Councillors Angela Guarino-Sawaya,
Michelle Kelley,
Joanne McKenna and James
Mercurio will serve as members.
Ward
4 Councillor Paul Argenzio
will continue for another
year as chairman of the Legislative
Aff airs subcommittee,
with councillors Angela Guarino-Sawaya,
Robert Haas, Michelle
Kelley and Joanne McKenna
as members.
The Veterans subcommittee
will be chaired by Ward 1 Councillor
James Mercurio. Councillors
Michelle Kelley, Joanne
McKenna, Anthony Cogliandro
and Ira Novoselsky will serve as
members.
the charging stations must be
open and available to electric
vehicles only for 12 hours a day,
seven days a week. The Commission
voted to make those
hours 7 p.m. to 7 a.m.
Commission Chairman Chris
Ciaramella said he is concerned
about possible damage and
maintenance of the charging
stations. Conte explained that
if a charging station were hit
by a vehicle, a panel would be
exposed to allow fi rst responders
to turn off the power. Ciaramella
proposed that some of
the revenue from the charging
stations be set aside for maintenance.
Ward
6 Councillor Chris Giannino
will chair the councilâ€™s
Public Safety subcommittee.
Councillors Paul Argenzio, Anthony
Cogliandro, Joanne McKenna
and Marc Silvestri will
serve as members.
The council also approved its
Rules of Order although Ward
3 Councillor Anthony Cogliandro
proposed amending or repealing
rule 8, which sets limits
for the amount and number
of times councillors are allowed
to speak and debate issues. Cogliandro
said the rule should be
eliminated since councillors violate
it every meeting.
But City Council President Anthony
Zambuto disagreed and
said he wants to enforce the debate
limits. â€œAnd I will, as president,
enforce that rule,â€ said
Zambuto. â€œI think we should
live with it, itâ€™s a good rule.â€
Advertise
i in the Adv
dvertise
n the Advoccaatete
Classifieds! Classifieds!
Call us at:
781-286-8500
Advertising that
gets results!
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Page 3
Lynn Man Pleads Guilty to Drug Conspiracy and Armed Robbery
Defendant charged with years-long drug conspiracy and gunpoint robbery of a drug customer
B
OSTON â€” A Lynn man
pleaded guilty Tuesday to
a years-long drug conspiracy
and a January 2023 armed
robbery of a drug distributor,
during which the defendant
and another individual
stole approximately $24,000
in drug traffi cking proceeds
intended for the purchase of
cocaine.
Harvey Rodriguez, a/k/a
â€œBig Opp,â€ 29, pleaded guilty
to one count of conspiracy
to distribute controlled substances
and one count of conspiracy
interfere with commerce
by robbery (Hobbs Act
Robbery). U.S. Senior District
Court Judge F. Dennis Saylor
IV scheduled sentencing
for April 27, 2026. In August
2025, Rodriguez was arrested
and charged.
Rodriguez was a participant
in a multi-year drug conspiracy
that took place in the
Lynn area and on the North
Shore of Massachusetts. As
described in the court papers,
Rodriguez conspired with numerous
other distributors including
those he supplied,
and others who have been
previously charged with federal
drug off enses, including
Vincent Caruso, a/k/a â€œFatzâ€,
Lawrence Michael Nagle, Jr.
and Schuyler Oppenheimer,
a/k/a â€œSKâ€. The drug conspiracy
involved the manufacturing
of counterfeit prescription
pills and the sale of kilograms
of cocaine and fentanyl
in Lynn and throughout Massachusetts.
Over the course
of the investigation, Rodriguez
distributed cocaine and
methamphetamine to a cooperating
witness and confi -
dential informant on four occasions.
Rodriguez
also participated
in an armed robbery of a
drug customer. On Jan. 30,
2023, a drug transaction was
scheduled to take place at an
apartment in Woburn, during
which an associate of Rodriguez
was to deliver a kilogram
of cocaine in exchange
for approximately $24,000.
During the transaction, Rodriguez
and Claudio Melo
entered the apartment and
pointed semiautomatic pistols
at the drug customer before
taking the $24,000 in
cash, which was proceeds of
drug traffi cking activities the
drug customer was engaged
in. Rodriguez and Melo then
forced the drug customer to
open a safe in his bedroom,
which was empty. Shortly
thereafter, both robbers departed
with the $24,000 cash.
The charges of conspiracy
to distribute controlled substances
and possession of
controlled substances with intent
to distribute provide for a
sentence of up to 20 years in
prison, at least three years of
supervised release and a fi ne
of up to $1 million. The charge
of conspiracy to interfere with
commerce by robbery provides
for a maximum penalty
of up to 20 years, up to three
years of supervised release
and a fi ne of up to $250,000.
Sentences are imposed by a
federal district court judge
based upon the U.S. Sentencing
Guidelines and statutes
which govern the determination
of a sentence in a criminal
case.
United States Attorney Leah
B. Foley and Ted E. Docks, Special
Agent in Charge of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation
in Boston made the announcement.
Valuable assistance
was provided by the
Drug Enforcement Administration;
the Massachusetts
State Police; and the Lynn
Police Department. Assistant
U.S. Attorney Philip A. Mallard
of the Organized Crime
& Gang Unit is prosecuting
the case.
Lawrence A. Simeone Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
~ Since 1989 ~
* Corporate Litigation
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300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JANUARY 23, 2026
Revere Arabic Community awarded Community Power
Grant to advance food justice and systems change
Project Bread supports grassroots advocacy to make hunger history statewide
T
he nonprofi t organization
Revere Arabic Community
(RAC) has been named a recipient
of Project Breadâ€™s inaugural
Community Power
Grants program. The funding
will help to drive grassroots
advocacy and systems change
to address the root causes of
food insecurity, building capacity
for smaller organizations
where it would not be
otherwise possible. RAC was
selected from over 40 proposals
for its proven impact, advocacy
wins and strong po8
Norwood St.
Everett
(617) 387-9810
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at 4:00 PM
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tential to build power across
communities.
â€œFood insecurity is not just
about food â€” it is about deep
structural disparities,â€ said Project
Bread Director of Community
Partnerships Adriana
Mendes-Sheldon. â€œTrue transformation
happens when power
is redistributed and communities
most impacted by food insecurity
are part of shaping the
solutions. By investing in grassroots
leadership and advocacy,
we build long-term capacity
for organizing and a sustainable
impact that goes beyond charity
and toward systemic change.â€
RAC is a grassroots, immiwww.810bargrille.com
grant-led
organization dedicated
to supporting low-income
and non-English-speaking families
in Revere and surrounding
communities as they navigate
food insecurity, language barriers
and social isolation. Founded
in 2022 by Egyptian immigrant
and community leader
Asmaa Abou-Fouda, RAC centers
culturally responsive support
and leadership development
to ensure immigrant families
feel seen, supported and included
in their new home. With
support from Project Breadâ€™s
Community Power Fund, RAC
is expanding its Immigrant
Family Support and Food Distribution
Program to move beyond
short-term food assistance
and toward long-term systems
change. The project aims to recruit
and train 10 to 15 immigrant
residents in advocacy,
public speaking and community
organizing. In addition, there
will be hosting of SNAP enrollment
events, community listening
sessions and public forums
with local and state leaders to elevate
immigrant voices and priorities.
RAC has already hosted
their fi rst workshop, training 21
participants, and will continue
to train immigrant residents in
future workshops and events.
Together, these eff orts aim to
build a permanent, immigrantled
advisory network that advances
culturally and religiously
appropriate food access and
shapes more equitable food
policies across Massachusetts.
â€œThis project is about ensuring
immigrant families are not
just receiving food, but gaining
the confi dence, skills, and
power to advocate for themselves,â€
said RAC Founder and
President Asmaa Abou-Fouda.
â€œWhen families are supported
in their own language and culture
and given the tools to lead,
they can help create food systems
and policies that refl ect
their values and meet their real
needsâ€”today and for generations
to come.â€
Project Bread awarded a total
of $97,000 to fi ve Massachusetts
organizations through the Community
Power Grants program.
Grantees received individualized
technical assistance from
Project Breadâ€™s Research and
Evaluation team to develop customized
logic models that track
each projectâ€™s progress and impact.
They will also participate in
Project Breadâ€™s statewide Community
of Practice.
Mendes-Sheldon explained
that â€œthe program was intentionally
designed to provide value
beyond funding, off ering key
supports that build long-term
organizational capacity, sustainability,
and impact.â€
The grants strategically support
the Make Hunger History
Coalition, Project Breadâ€™s bold
statewide initiative mobilizing
more than 500 partners around
a shared roadmap to permanently
end hunger in Massachusetts.
This work seeks to intentionally
shift the power dynamics
in anti-hunger work by
providing tools and support for
grassroots organizations and individuals
to voice their perspectives
and become leaders in this
statewide movement. The coalition
operates through fi ve strategic
pillars: ensuring all residents
can access and buy food,
integrating food security with
health care, supporting residents
to eat nutritious and local
food, enhancing food support
programs for priority populations,
and addressing root
causes that contribute to hunger.
RAC
| SEE Page 10
î€¨î€¹î€¨î€µî€¨î€·î€· î€¤î€¯î€¸î€°î€¬î€±î€¸î€° î€¶î€¸î€³î€³î€¯î€¬î€¨î€¶
î€™î€š î€¼îˆî„î•î–î€„
î¹ î€¹îŒî‘îœî î€¶îŒî‡îŒî‘îŠ î¹ î€¦î„î•î“îˆî‘î—î•îœ î€ºî’î•îŽ î¹ î€§îˆî†îŽî–
î¹ î€µî’î’î‰îŒî‘îŠ î¹ î€©î•îˆîˆ î€¨î–î—îŒîî„î—îˆî– î¹ î€µîˆî“îî„î†îˆîîˆî‘î— î€ºîŒî‘î‡î’îšî–
î¹ î€©î˜îîîœ î€¯îŒî†îˆî‘î–îˆî‡ î¹ î€©î˜îîîœ î€¬î‘î–î˜î•îˆî‡
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Page 5
TRUST INCOME TAX RETURNS FOR 2025 TAX YEAR
F
or this upcoming tax season,
whether you have previously
executed a revocable trust or irrevocable
trust, it is important to
know the Trust income tax return
fi ling requirements. If you have
executed a revocable Trust, it
will be treated as a grantor-type
Trust and therefore no separate
tax return will be required to be
fi led for the Trust. If you were to
open a stock brokerage account
or money market account in the
name of such a trust, for example,
you can have the bank or fi -
nancial institution simply use
your social security number for
IRS 1099 reporting purposes.
Upon your death as the Settlor
of such a revocable Trust, the
Trust would then become irrevocable
and would no longer be
classifi ed as a grantor-type trust.
In such an event, if the Trust generates
income, whether interest,
dividend, capital gain income,
or net rental income from rental
real estate, then a separate Trust
tax return would need to be fi led.
Furthermore, the Trustee would
have to fi le for a federal ID number
for the Trust with the IRS.
If the Trust does not distribute
its income, it will have to pay taxes
at the Trust level. The highest
tax bracket for Trusts of 37 percent
starts at only $15,650 in taxable
income. Therefore, it is often
more desirable to distribute
the income to the income benefi
ciaries in order to claim an inGerry
Dâ€™Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
Is
Your Estate in Order?
Do you have an update Will, Health
Care Proxy or Power of Attorney?
If Not, Please Call for a Free Consultation.
14 Proctor Avenue, Revere
(781) 284-5657
come distribution deduction at
the Trust level to zero out the
Trustâ€™s taxable income. The income
will then be taxed to the
income beneficiaries who actually
receive the distribution
on their individual income tax
returns. For the 2025 calendar
year, the 22 percent tax bracket
for a married couple does
not begin until taxable income
reaches $96,950. The 37 percent
tax bracket for the same couple
does not begin until taxable income
reaches $751,600.
With a Medicaid irrevocable
Trust executed for asset protection
purposes, a tax return would
have to be fi led by the Trust under
its federal ID number in the
event it generates taxable income.
The Trust should be drafted
in such a way as to be treated
as a grantor-type Trust. If this
Trust is generating taxable income,
there would then be a
grantor letter issued to the Settlor/Grantor/Trustor
of the Trust
in order for that person to report
the items of income on his or her
individual income tax return.
There are several Trust provisions
that would need to be included
in the irrevocable Trust in order
for it to be treated as a grantortype
Trust for tax purposes.
Since the irrevocable Trust is
drafted to be treated as a grantor-type
Trust, it does not matter
if interest income, dividend income,
capital gain income or net
rental income is actually distributed
to the Grantor. Those items
of income will pass through to
the Grantor of the Trust via the
grantor letter and will be reported
on his or her Form 1040.
The Trust will not be paying the
income taxes on the income it
generates.
Upon the death of the Settlor
of the irrevocable Trust, the Trust
will no longer be treated as a
grantor-type Trust. Consequently,
any net income generated by
the Trust will be taxed at higher
Trust income tax rates unless the
net income is actually distributed
to the income benefi ciaries or
remainder benefi ciaries.
For this upcoming tax season,
be aware of the income tax rules
pertaining to revocable and irrevocable
Trusts when determining
whether or not a tax return
needs to be fi led, and if so, which
type of Trust income tax return.
Joseph D. Cataldo is an Estate Planning/Elder Law Attorney, Certifi ed Public Accountant, Certifi ed
Financial Planner, AICPA Personal Financial Specialist and holds a Masterâ€™s Degree in Taxation.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JANUARY 23, 2026
~ GUEST COMMENTARY ~
Trooper Hanna Still
Remembered / Killer
Stays Behind Bars
By Sal Giarratani
A
s someone who served
over 28 years in law enforcement
as a member of
the DMH Metro Boston Area
Police Department, I still
remember when Trooper
George L. Hanna was brutally
murdered after he made a
traffi c stop.
Hanna was removing the
occupants of the vehicle
when one of them, Jose Colon,
20 years old at the time,
shot Hanna six times at close
range on February 26, 1983.
The killer was sentenced to
life without parole. However,
this is Massachusetts and
thanks to a Supreme Judicial
Court decision, Commonwealth
v. Mattis, which ruled
â€œemerging adultsâ€ who were
18 to 20 at the time they murdered
could not be sentenced
to life without parole. Parole
board hearings are now being
held for these youthful killers
because their brains werenâ€™t
fully developed at the time
of their killings but seemingly
their trigger fi ngers appeared
to have been fully developed,
huh? So, Colon and others
could eventually get released
and back on the streets while
the victims get no paroles
from death. Thanks to the Supreme
Judicial Courtâ€™s ruling,
to date, 39 â€œemerging adultsâ€
received their â€œGet out of Jail
Freeâ€ card.
Thank you to Governor
Maura Healey and all for so
strongly urging the Parole
Board to deny parole for
Trooper Hannaâ€™s killer. His
parole was denied. As Healey
acknowledged, â€œIn civil society
law enforcement offi cers
uphold the laws that allow
our communities to live in
peace and safety. The intentional
killing of an offi cer in
the line of duty is not only a
brutal crime against one person,
but also a violent assault
on the rule of law.â€
Finally, let us never forget
the real victim here, Trooper
George Hanna.
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a winter market and a Chili
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other activities. Plus, youâ€™ll
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THE HOUSE AND SENATE:
Beacon Hill Roll Call records local
senatorsâ€™ votes on roll calls
from the week of January 1216.
There were no roll calls in
the House last week.
OFFER TAX CREDIT TO COVER
LARGE PROPERTY TAX INCREASES
(S 2899)
Senate 37-1, approved and
sent to the House a bill that
supporters said would give
cities and towns the ability to
shield their most vulnerable
taxpayers from the â€œshockâ€ of
an extraordinarily high third
and fourth quarter tax bill in
a year when the communityâ€™s
residential property tax levy
rises by more than 10 per cent.
Qualifying groups of taxpayers
include people aged 65
and older who own and occupy
the home; people enrolled
in MassHealth; and people living
with children under age 6
or under 18.
Under current law, the fi rst
and second quarter property
tax bills for a given year are
estimated based on the prior
yearâ€™s tax levy and do not refl
ect any tax increase. As a result,
the third and fourth quarter
bills must cover the entire
increase, so those two bills increase
by twice the full-year
percentage increase. The legislation
would allow a municipality
to use its own funds to give
qualified persons a tax credit
to cover the third and fourth
quarter spike.
â€œEvery year across the state,
there are a few communities
in which homeowners face unusually
large tax increases,â€ said
sponsor Sen. Will Brownsberger
(D-Belmont). â€œThis legislation
will give those communities
tools to help their most vulnerable
taxpayers.â€
â€œIt is critical that we begin
this new year by prioritizing
municipal property tax relief,â€
said sponsor Sen. Nick Collins
(D-South Boston). â€œBy advancing
these responsible tax relief
proposals, we can help ease
the burden of rising property
tax bills on homeowners without
harming small businesses
or putting our economy at risk.â€
By Bob Katzen
If you have any questions about this weekâ€™s report, e-mail us
at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com or call us at (617) 720-1562
â€œI voted â€˜Noâ€™ â€¦ because tax
classifi cation, exceptions and
credits, particularly when novel,
should be addressed comprehensively
and analyzed in
the context of other new proposals
and existing law,â€ said
Sen. John Keenan (D-Quincy),
the only senator to vote against
the bill.
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill. A
â€œNoâ€ vote is against it.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards Yes
INCREASE COMMERCIAL
PROPERTY TAX (S 2899)
Senate 5-33, rejected an
amendment that would allow
the city of Boston to shift more
of its property tax burden onto
commercial real estate in fi scal
years 2027 through 2029. The
amendment is similar to the
one that has been proposed
and supported by Boston Mayor
Michelle Wu.
The amendment would have
allowed Boston to adjust its
property tax classification if
residential properties were set
to bear a higher share of the
total levy than in fiscal year
2025, with maximum shift levels
capped at 181.5 percent in
fi scal 2027, 180 percent in fi scal
2028 and 178 percent in fi scal
2029.
Sen. Mike Rush (D-West Roxbury)
framed the amendment
as a direct response to what
he described as a mounting
aff ordability crisis for Boston
homeowners, particularly seniors
and working families. He
said the amendment was fi led
at the request of Wu and the
Boston City Council and closely
mirrored a home rule petition
approved by the council
and fi rst fi led with the Legislature
in 2024. He pointed to rising
residential values, lagging
commercial property values
and statutory limits on municipal
tax increases as drivers of
recent spikes in Boston tax bills.
He said the amendment would
give Boston temporary flexibility
to blunt those increases
while state and city offi cials
work on longer-term solutions.
Rush added that the average
tax bill for a family home rose
by more than $500 in 2025 and
is expected to increase by more
than $700 in 2026, while commercial
tax rates have continued
to decline. He said those
increases have disproportionately
aff ected seniors on fi xed
incomes.
Sen. Will Brownsberger (DBelmont)
argued that the tax
shift proposal risked producing
unintended and inequitable
outcomes.
â€œOne narrative, one example,
would be, well, Iâ€™ve got a struggling
homeowner thatâ€™s benefiting
from it,â€ said Brownsberger.
â€œThatâ€™s good, and Iâ€™ve
got an offi ce tower whose private
equity owners are paying
more taxes. Maybe that narrative
makes sense in some cases.
But on the other hand, the
truth is, weâ€™re lowering â€¦ taxes
for your very wealthy singlefamily
homeowner, perhaps living
in something of a mansion
in the most tony neighborhood
of the city. And youâ€™re raising
taxes on your little garage owner
trying to make things work.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill. A
â€œNoâ€ vote is against it.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards Yes
INCREASE TAX RELIEF TO VETERANS
(S 1948)
Senate 38-0, approved a bill
that would allow cities and
towns to hike from the current
$1,500 to $2,000, the property
tax break for veterans and
spouses of deceased or disabled
veterans in exchange for
their providing volunteer services
to their municipality.
â€œOur veterans have already
given so much in service to
our nation, and they deserve to
be able to remain in the communities
they call home,â€ said
sponsor Sen. Julian Cyr (DProvincetown).
â€œFor many veterans
on Cape Cod, the Islands
and across Massachusetts, rising
property taxes are putting
undue pressure on household
budgets that are already razor
thin. This bill gives communities
a meaningful property tax
relief tool while recognizing the
service veterans have already
given so they may live with the
dignity they have earned.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards Yes
CREATE TAX REBATE PROGRAMS
(S 2900)
Senate 37-1, approved and
sent to the House a bill that
would give cities and towns
the option to create tax rebate
programs for residents who already
benefi t from a local residential
exemption. This new
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Page 7
rebate program would allow
cities and towns to set income
and asset thresholds, tailoring
relief to local residentsâ€™ needs.
â€œIt is critical that we begin
this new year by prioritizing
municipal property tax relief,â€
said sponsor Sen. Nick Collins
(D-South Boston). â€œBy advancing
these responsible tax relief
proposals, we can help ease
the burden of rising property
tax bills on homeowners without
harming small businesses
or putting our economy at risk.â€
â€œI voted â€˜Noâ€™ â€¦ because tax
classifi cation, exceptions and
credits, particularly when novel,
should be addressed comprehensively
and analyzed in
the context of other new proposals
and existing law,â€ said
Sen. John Keenan (D-Quincy),
the only senator to vote against
the bill.
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill. A
â€œNoâ€ vote is against it.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards Yes
MEANS TESTING (S 2902)
Senate 37-0, approved and
sent to the House a bill that
would make it easier for communities
to off er local property
tax exemptions to seniors by allowing
cities and towns to institute
a means-tested senior citizen
property tax exemption for
income-eligible seniors who
have lived in their community
for at least 10 years.
â€œRising property taxes have
created serious fi nancial burdens
for many elderly residents
in my communities and across
Massachusetts,â€ said sponsor
Sen. Jason Lewis (D-Winchester).
â€œThe legislation that
I fi led to provide an option for
municipalities to opt in to a senior
citizen property tax exemption
would allow municipalities
to support struggling
income-eligible seniors and
allow many aging residents
the ability to continue to live
in their communities and not
be driven out due to increasing
tax burdens.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards Yes
REQUIRE MORE PUBLIC DISCLOSURES
OF FUNDRAISING
AND SPENDING BY BALLOT
QUESTION GROUPS (S 2898)
Senate 38-0, approved and
sent to the House a bill requiring
more frequent public reporting
of fundraising and
spending by groups supporting
or opposing ballot questions.
Under the bill, ballot
question committees would
be required to provide monthly
reports on their fi nances. After
September of that year,,
campaigns would have to fi le
biweekly reports until Election
Day. The bill would hold ballot
question campaigns to the
same standard of disclosure already
followed by candidates
for offi ce. Currently, ballot committees
donâ€™t have to report on
their fi nances between Jan. 20
and September.
â€œThis is a bipartisan bill, a
commonsense bill that we
must pass now to ensure our
campaign finance laws are
strengthened, theyâ€™re consistent
and theyâ€™re fair for everyone,â€
said sponsor Sen. Sal DiALL
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Domenico (D-Everett). â€œThe
ballot questions are happening
this fall. We have to get this
done right now.â€
â€œStatewide ballot questions
are a great tool for empowering
the public to vote directly on
statewide policies, but it is vitally
important that our voters
know which people and organizations
are funding these policy
proposals,â€ continued DiDomenico.
â€œI am proud to pass my
legislation through the Senate
that will close a loophole in our
campaign fi nance law and ensure
our residents have all the
information they need to make
an educated decision when
voting on ballot measures.â€
â€œWith the increasing number
of ballot questions in each election,
the need for transparency
has never been greater,â€ said
Sen. John Keenan (D-Quincy),
Senate Chair of the Joint Committee
on Election Laws. â€œMany
of the questions are backed
with significant funding and
other resources. This important
bill will allow voters to see who
is supporting or opposing the
ballot questions, sponsoring
the ads and paying for mailings.
It will help voters make informed
decisions at the polls.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards Yes
SIGNATURE GATHERING FOR
BALLOT QUESTIONS (S 2898)
Senate 34-3, approved an
amendment that would require
that when a ballot question
group pays people or a
company to gather signatures
to qualify the question to be on
the ballot, the petition must include
a disclosure, in a manner
to be determined by the secretary
of state, which clearly informs
potential signers that the
petition is being distributed by
a paid signature gatherer.
Another provision prohibits
pay-per-signature arrangements
in this signature gathering
process and specifically
prohibits any bonus pay or
incentives, paid to the signature
gatherer, which is contingent
upon the number of signatures
collected. A violation of
this ban would be punishable
by a fi ne of between $100 and
$10,000 and each signature collected
would be considered to
be a separate off ense.in violation
of this section.
â€œBy prohibiting pay-per-signature
arrangements, we will
drastically reduce the unique fi -
nancial incentive for signature
gatherers to mislead voters into
signing petitions and ensure
that initiative campaigns can
still collect signatures based
on the merits of the policy,â€ said
sponsor Sen. Barry Finegold (DAndover).
â€œIndividuals
should not be restricted
from engaging in political
activity that is legal,â€ said
Sen. Ryan Fattman (R-Sutton),
one of three senators to vote
against the amendment. â€œThe
proponent of the amendment
says that this will stop fraudulent
activity, but fraudulent activity
is already illegal and published
on the signature petition.
My position revolves around
freedom of speech, where people
have the ability to petition
their government through a
ballot process. The ballot process
includes payment to collect
signatures in various forms,
and I donâ€™t believe itâ€™s constitutional
to ban that.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the amendment.
A â€œNoâ€ vote is against it.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards Yes
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JANUARY 23, 2026
Jack Satter House Tenants Association
Hosts Installation of Office
Executive Director Caren Silverlieb
said itâ€™s amazing that 280
tenants can get along so well.
State Rep. Jeffrey Turco said
heâ€™s honored to call the tenants
his friends.
Ward 2 City Councillor Ira Novoselsky
said heâ€™s made friends
here.
Domenic Logiudice led the
Pledge of Allegiance.
Rabbi Lior Nevo blessed the
meal.
Ward 5 City Councillor/Council
Vice President Angela Guarino
Sawaya led the Star-Spangled
banner.
Shown from left to right, are: incoming Assistant Clerk Patricia
Whitty, Vice President Joanne Monteforte, Recording Secretary
Melinda Brawn, President Roxanne Aiello, Treasurer Anna Holland,
Second Vice President Louis Cohen, and Financial Secretary
Janice Gilman.
Incoming Mayoral Executive
Assistant/Scheduler Leanne
Statamopoulos asked tenants
to call her if they need anything
at City Hall.
Shown from left to right, are: Ward 2 City Councillor Ira Novoselsky,
Ward 5 City Councillor/Council Vice President Angela Guarino
Sawaya, incoming mayoral executive assistant/scheduler
Leanne Stamatopoulos, Mayor Patrick Keefe and State Rep. Jeffrey
Turco.
Roxanne Aiello thanked tenants
for entrusting her to another
year.
Shown from left to right, are: Resident Services
Director Rose Shapiro, birthday girl Maryjane
Ferrari, 88, and receptionist/resident Amy Walch
during Tuesdayâ€™s Jack Satter House offi cer installation
on Tuesday.
Assistant Clerk Pat Whitty and Second Vice President
Lou Cohen read the oath.
Treasurer Anna Holland read
the oath.
Just The Three of Us performed
after dinner. (Advocate photos by
Tara Vocino)
Incoming fl oor representatives are: Peggy Granitas, Amy Walch, Mary Correia, Julie Firicano, Donna Stahl, Gladys Galvez, Barbara Slayton,
Judy Yantosca, Pat Doucette, Phyllis Snyder, Dolores Diliberti, Jean Aronson, Lois Levine, Toni Serena, and Diane Uliss.
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Page 9
Lady Pats Basketball Rout Everett on the Road, 63-37
Lady Pats Rebecca Mercado
and Sarah Lechheb work to
gain control of the ball from an
Everett guard.
Freshman Addison Ulwick with
the ball for Revere.
Addison Ulwick shoots to score
for Revere.
Addison Ulwick shoots for two.
Allyson Ollivierra takes her shot.
Haley Peralta drives the ball up the court.
Sonia Haily reacts to her teammates
scoring.
Allyson Ollivierra looks for an open teammate.
Revereâ€™s Rebecca Mercado moves in to guard a player from Everett.
Sarah Lechheb with the ball.
Sarah Lechheb works to keep possession of the ball for Revere.
Sarah Lechheb shoots for Revere
as the Patriots take the win
over Everett, 63-37 on Monday
at Everett.
Allyson Ollivierra of Revere
comes from behind to guard
the ball handler from Everett.
Senior Shayna Smith with the
ball and the shot attempt to
score for the Patriots.
Captain Shayna Smith congratulated teammate Allyson Ollivierra
after scoring for the Patriots. (Advocate photos by Emily Harney)
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JANUARY 23, 2026
~ REVERE HIGH PATRIOTS SPORTS ROUNDUP ~
Revere girls track qualifies for nationals in relay;
Annunziata sparks boysâ€™ hockey again
By Dom Nicastro
R
evere High School winter
teams continue to show
growth and staying power as
the season hits its midpoint,
with one program celebrating
a national qualification and
another leaning on its Revere
core to stay competitive despite
roster challenges.
Girlsâ€™ indoor track
showing depth and
national-level speed
Revere girlsâ€™ indoor track delivered
one of its strongest collective
performances of the
season on Sunday at the MSTCA
Division 2 State Relays,
sending seven relay teams into
competition and coming away
with both personal bests and
a national qualifi er. The highlight
came in the sprint medley
relay, where Danni Hope Randall,
Zizi Kalliavas, Rania Hamdani
and Gemma Stamatopoulos
ran a 4:37.18, qualifying for
Adidas Nationals in March. The
quartet finished with three
seconds to spare and came
within two seconds of the
school record set last season.
The group will head to Virginia
Beach next month looking
RHS Patriots Girlsâ€™ Varsity Track Team, shown from left to right: Standing: Head Coach Racquel MacDonald-Ciambelli,
Nour Maihouane, Fatima El Hariri, Annalise Rodriguez, Aidah Louaddi, Rania Hamdani,
Jaliyah Manigo, Genevieve â€œGigiâ€ Zierten, Olivia Rupp, Gemma Stamatopoulos, Danni Hope
Randall, Emma DeCrosta, Gianna Chiodi, Ngena Mlongecha and Assistant Coach Noelle MacDonald;
kneeling: Kawtar Lharz, Deborha Santos Artica, Angelynn Ramirez Tobon, Ina Tamizi, Doris Guadron
Chinchilla, Larissa Saraiva, Zacharania â€œZiziâ€ Kalliavas, Julieta Agudelo, Sabrina Pereira and Basma
Sahibi; sitting: Isabella Afonso, Adis Cordero, Fabiana Pellegrino, Jaleeyah Figueroa, Jade Dang, Lesly
Mendoza, Sara Brown Abdelfattah, Dina Elfathy, Bsmela Ahmed and Dayana Ortega. (Advocate photo)
to lower the time even further.
Revere also saw strong results
in the fi eld events. In the
long jump relay, senior captain
Dayana Ortega posted a lifetime
best of 14 feet, 2.5 inches,
while junior Ina Tamizi jumped
13 feet, 2 inches in her first
competitive attempt. Stamatopoulos
rounded out the trio
with a 13-11.5 eff ort.
The shotput relay produced
two more personal records,
with Basma Sahibi throwing
24-7.25 and Gigi Zierten adding
a 22-5.75 toss. Nour Maihouane
completed the group
with a 20-3 throw.
Other Revere relay results included:
â€¢
4x50-yard relay: Lesly Mendoza,
Jade Dang, Jaleeyah
Figueroa, Rania Hamdani â€”
27.44, 20th overall
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boasting 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, eat-in kitchen
îšîŒî—î‹ î†îˆî•î„îîŒî† î—îŒîîˆ îƒî’î’î• îšî€’î–îîŒî‡îˆî• î—î’ î‹îˆî„î—îˆî‡ î…î•îˆîˆîîˆîšî„îœî€
dining room open to large living room with gas
îƒ€î•îˆî“îî„î†îˆ î‚² îŠî•îˆî„î— î‰î’î• îˆî‘î—îˆî•î—î„îŒî‘îŒî‘îŠî€„ î€©îŒî‘îŒî–î‹îˆî‡ îî’îšîˆî•
îîˆî™îˆî îšîŒî—î‹ î‘îˆîšîˆî• î†î— îƒî’î’î•îŒî‘îŠ î„î‘î‡ îƒ€î•îˆî“îî„î†îˆî€‘ î€¦îˆî‘î—î•î„î î„îŒî•
îšî€’î‘îˆîšîˆî• î†î’î‘î‡îˆî‘î–îˆî•î€ î‘îˆîš î‹î’î— îšî„î—îˆî•î€ î‘îˆîš îšî„îîŽîšî„îœî–
and patio, 1 car garage with newer door, large, level
îî’î—î€ îî’î†î„î—îˆî‡ îŒî‘ î‡îˆî–îŒî•î„î…îîˆ î€¯îœî‘î‘ î€©îˆîîî– î‘îˆîŒîŠî‹î…î’î•î‹î’î’î‡î€
î†îî’î–îˆ î—î’ îˆî™îˆî•îœî—î‹îŒî‘îŠî€„ î€°î€¬î€±î€·î€îî’î™îˆ î•îŒîŠî‹î— îŒî‘î€„
î€²î‰£îˆî•îˆî‡ î„î— î€‡î€šî€œî€œî€î€œî€“î€“
î€–î€–î€˜ î€¦îˆî‘î—î•î„î î€¶î—î•îˆîˆî—î€
î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î–î€ î€°î€¤ î€“î€”î€œî€“î€™
î€‹î€šî€›î€”î€Œ î€•î€–î€–î€î€šî€–î€“î€“
î€¹îŒîˆîš î„îî î’î˜î• îîŒî–î—îŒî‘îŠî– î„î—î€ î€¦î„î•î“îˆî‘îŒî—î’î€µîˆî„îî€¨î–î—î„î—îˆî€‘î†î’î
â€¢ 4x50-yard shuttle hurdles:
Dayana Ortega, Basma Sahaibi,
Zizi Kalliavas, Gemma
Stamatopoulos â€” 35.11,
12th overall
â€¢ 4x200-meter relay: Danni
Hope Randall, Jaliyah Manigo,
Rania Hamdani, Zizi Kalliavas
â€” 2:00.07, 20th overall
â€¢ 4,000-meter DMR: Olivia
Rupp, Emma DeCrosta, Jaliyah
Manigo, Gigi Zierten â€”
14:36.22, 16th overall
Everettâ€”Revere
hockey leaning
on Revere scoring
and resilience
The Everettâ€”Revere boys
hockey team split a pair of
games last week, earning a 2-1
win over Northbridge before
dropping a 9-1 decision to Saugusâ€”Peabodyâ€”Swampscott.
RAC
| FROM Page 4
To get involved with the Make
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People
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both games, Revere senior
Frankie Annunziata remained
the off ensive driver. Annunziata
scored both goals against
Northbridge, each unassisted,
and added the lone goal in the
loss later in the week, pushing
his season total to 18 goals.
Coach Craig Richards credited
Annunziataâ€™s ability to score in a
variety of ways, noting that the
senior has been eff ective from
the outside, off the rush, and
by attacking defenders oneon-one
and creating his own
shooting lanes in traffi c.
Goaltending played a key role
in the Northbridge win, with Everett
goalie Ray Blauvelt delivering
a strong performance in
a low-scoring game that helped
stabilize the team after a string
of losses. Despite the lopsided
fi nal score in the loss, Richards
pointed to eff ort and competitiveness,
particularly given the
teamâ€™s limited numbers. Everettâ€”Revere
dressed 17 skaters
and one goalie last week, continuing
to battle through illness
and injuries while relying heavily
on underclassmen.
Among those younger contributors,
Revere eighth-grader
Bradley Roach continued to
draw praise from the coaching
staff . Richards described Roach
as a complete player who competes
with the poise and confi
dence of a veteran, earning
regular minutes and playing a
meaningful role despite his age.
At 4-4-6, Everettâ€”Revere remains
in the mix as the season
progresses, with upcoming
games against East Boston and
Northeast Metro Tech expected
to provide another measuring
stick as the team pushes toward
postseason contention.
tline (1-800-645-8333), which
provides confi dential assistance
to connect with food resources,
including SNAP benefi ts, in 180
languages and for the hearing
impaired.
For more information, visit
www.projectbread.org/gethelp.
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Page 11
Basketball Pats battle through busiest week of the season
By Dom Nicastro
T
he Revere High School
boysâ€™ basketball team didnâ€™t
have time to catch its breath
last week. Four games in seven
days â€” including league
heavyweights, a road test
against a conference favorite
and a Sunday matinee just
ahead of a snowstorm â€” gave
the Patriots one of their most
demanding stretches of the
2025â€”2026 season. The results
were mixed, but the effort
and flashes of growth
were hard to miss.
Revere opened the week
the right way Monday night
at home, earning a 43â€”34
win over Northeast Vocational,
leaning on balanced scoring
and strong work on the
glass. Senior tri-captain Devin
Berry set the tone inside with
six points and fi ve rebounds,
while junior guard Lucca Albano
knocked down three triples
for nine points. Junior forward
Bryan David delivered a double-double
effort with nine
points and 10 rebounds, and
Nathan Brown added six points
and six boards. Junior guard
Wesley Nunez chipped in fi ve
points and fi ve assists as the
Patriots controlled the tempo.
The challenge ramped up
quickly Tuesday night as Revere
hosted Everett in a GBL
matchup. Everettâ€™s pressure
defense disrupted Revereâ€™s
rhythm from the opening tip,
forcing turnovers and limiting
clean looks. Berry led the
Patriots with 13 points and
seven rebounds, while sophomore
Charles Dobre added
six points and four steals. Despite
solid contributions from
Nico Cespedes, Zaney Kayembe
and Chris Recinos, the
Crimson Tide pulled away for
a 75â€”38 victory.
Friday night brought another
test on the road at
Somerville, the Greater Boston
Leagueâ€™s top team. For one
half, Revere showed exactly
what itâ€™s capable of. After trailing
32â€”20 late in the second
quarter, the Patriots closed
the half on a 7â€”0 run, cutting
the defi cit to fi ve at the break
and going toe-to-toe with the
Highlanders.
â€œThe Patriots would play
their best half of basketball
so far this season in the fi rst
half against the top seed in
the conference,â€ Head Coach
Dave Leary said.
The second half proved
more diffi cult. Off ensive struggles
resurfaced, and Somerville
capitalized, pulling away
for a 73â€”39 win. Dobre led
Revere with nine points and
six rebounds, while Berry
added seven points and four
boards. Contributions also
came from Recinos, Nunez,
Kayembe, David and Brown
as the Patriots continued to
search for consistency against
elite competition.
Revere wrapped up the
busy stretch Sunday afternoon
on the road at Chelmsford,
playing a tightly contested
game throughout. The Patriots
trailed by just two after
the fi rst quarter and six at
halftime, matching Chelmsford
basket for basket through
much of the third. But timely
free throws down the stretch
helped the hosts secure a 50â€”
38 win. Dobre led Revere with
11 points and four steals, while
senior tri-captain Isaiah Llanos
scored 10 points and buried
two 3-pointers. Berry added
six points and fi ve rebounds,
and the Patriots once again
stayed competitive deep into
the game without being able
to string together a decisive
run.
Revere now sits at 3â€”9 on
the season but returns home
this week with opportunities
ahead. The Patriots host Lynn
Classical on Tuesday night
and Lynn English on Thursday,
with both games tipping
off at 7 p.m.
Bryan David battles for position under the net.
The RHS Patriot Cheerleaders were on hand Tuesday night supporting the boysâ€™ basketball team
as they took on Everett.
Charles Dobre grabs the rebound.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JANUARY 23, 2026
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Page 13
RevereTV | FROM Page 6
carve one-of-a-kind ice sculptures
throughout the day.
Mark your calendars for a day
of fun, food and family-friendly
entertainment you wonâ€™t
want to miss. For more details
or to sign up to become a vendor,
visit the websites listed on
the fl yer in these PSA videos,
which are also posted to YouTube
and Facebook. Thanks
to the â€œIn the Loopâ€ team, all
of these announcements are
recorded in four to fi ve languages
each week. Watch and
follow RevereTV to stay in the
loop.
Culinary students from
Northeast Metro Tech were
back in the kitchen studio
to cook up another fl avorful
recipe from scratch. In Season
3, Episode 4 of â€œNortheast
Cooks,â€ watch as the students
lead you through making
a rich and creamy Cajun
chicken pasta. Each student
takes charge in diff erent steps
of the recipe along the way.
This episode is now playing
on the Community Channel
but is also posted to YouTube,
where you can pause and follow
along at your own pace.
â€œNortheast Cooksâ€ is a student-led
show produced by
RevereTV in coordination with
Northeast Metro Tech.
Revere High School Basketball
will continue to be featured
on RevereTV every week.
The Revere Boys team had a
close game versus Chelsea
that is currently replaying on
the Community Channel. Last
weekâ€™s game of the week was
the Girls team against Somerville,
and this weekâ€™s was the
Boys team versus Lynn Classical.
All games covered by RTV
will play live on YouTube and
the Community Channel. Replays
will be scheduled to the
Community Channel in the
weeks following, but recordings
on YouTube will be taken
down immediately after each
game until the end of the basketball
season. The Community
Channel is 8 and 1072 on Comcast
and 3 and 614 on RCN.
RTV GOV is building up a replay
rotation from all January
government meetings so far.
These meetings include the
usual subcommittees and the
newly sworn in Revere City
Council. On January 13, the city
held a neighborhood meeting
about planned improvements
to Route 1A South and Gibson
Park. This meeting was held in
the John Powers Community
Room inside the Alden A. Mills
Point of Pines Fire Station and
was open to all. The recording
of this special meeting is included
in the current replay rotation
on RTV GOV and can also
be found on RevereTVâ€™s YouTube
page. All recurring meetings
play live on television and
YouTube. RTV GOV is channel
9 on Comcast and channels 13
and 613 on RCN.
Law Offices of
JOSEPH D. CATALDO, P.C.
â€œATTORNEYS AND COUNSELORS AT LAWâ€
î‚‡ ESTATE/MEDICAID PLANNING
î‚‡ WILLS/TRUSTS/ESTATES
î‚‡ INCOME TAX PREPARATION
î‚‡ WEALTH MANAGEMENT
î‚‡ RETIREMENT PLANNING
î‚‡ ELDER LAW
369 Broadway Everett, MA 02149 (617)381-9600
JOSEPH D. CATALDO, CPA, CFP, MST, ESQUIRE.
AICPA Personal Financial Specialist Designee
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
BUYER1
Babo, Zachary
Binder, Keith W
Chen, Winnie
Garcia, Fabio E
Lemus, Dora Y
Mesa, Laura M
Nijolla, Ana M
Pareene, Daniel
Parkes, Michael
Passos, Warley F
Vaqari, Xheni
Zapata, Richard S
BUYER2
SELLER1
Babo, Vincent
Ciambelli, Steven
133 Salem Development LLC
50 Ann Road Rt
Ephesus LLC
Mesa, Juan F
Parkes, Lorraine
Passos-Oliveira, Karinne A
Costa, Dean R
Doria, Amaury F
Ramunno Francesco Est
133 Salem Development LLC
Jones, Derrick P
Martocchio Ft
R&j Investments LLC
Don Q Re Development LLC
Avilez, Natalia
Saturn Realty Group LLC
Garcia, Liliana
Iantosca, Maria
Martocchio, Joseph J
Chiles, Kevin J
SELLER2
Babo, Badhyl R
ADDRESS
8 Lowell St
31 Crest Ave
133 Salem St #307
50 Ann Rd
238 Malden St
10 Festa Rd
133 Salem St #418
286 Fenno St #5
10 Ocean Ave #203
141 Lincoln St
109 Salem St #405
224 Harris St
12.30.25
12.30.25
01.02.26
12.29.25
12.31.25
12.29.25
12.30.25
12.31.25
12.30.25
12.30.25
12.31.25
Revere
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission
from the publisher, The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com
DATE PRICE
12.29.25
250000
1085000
310000
850000
900888
695000
339000
287000
499900
855000
525000
750000
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
www.mastrocola.com
FURNISHED ROOM FOR RENT
EVERETT
1 bedroom, 1 bath furnished room for rent.
$275. per week rent. Two week deposit
plus 1 week rent required.
Call: 617-435-9047 - NO TEXT
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ÌµÍL9×H¾http://www.beyondfinancing.com××Ðˆ×‰EÚIPage 14
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JANUARY 23, 2026
Get your Mortgage Resolutions with Beyond Financing, Inc.
New Year rates @ www.beyondfinancing.com Powered by Finley Concierge
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Beyond Financing, Inc. Licensed in CA-CT-FL-MA-NH-NC-RI-SC-TX
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999 Broadway, Suite 500-N, Saugus-MA 01906 www.BEYONDFINANCING.COM857.410.1391 NMLS ID: 2394496
IN CA, CT & MA: Mortgage Broker Only, not a Mortgage Lender or Mortgage Correspondent Lender. In FL, NH, NC, RI, SC & TX: Mortgage Broker and Correspondent Lender.
Loans are available fairly and equally regardless of race, color, religion, sex, familial status, national origin, military status, disability, or ancestry.
TRINITY REAL ESTATE
321 MAIN STREET | SAUGUS, MA | VILLAGE PARK
TrinityHomesRE.com
28 Osprey Rd., Saugus 01906 - Commercial
Rental List Price: $3,500
Listed by: Patricia Torcivia Cell: 781.820.0974
A 2 story building in Prime Location with the 2nd level unit
available for rental office space to sublet consisting of
approximately 4000 sq ft of 7 furnished offices and a designated
kitchen along with 2 restrooms. Upon entering the unit you are
greeted into a Large foyer entrance that opens into a spacious
reception room which leads to a huge spacious office that leads out
to a long hallway consisting of another 4 offices (2 smaller offices
and 2 ex lg) and a designated kitchen that includes a refrigerator
along the hallway is a men and women restrooms....rental price
includes all utilities (Heat/electric/AC/water) .Move-in
condition...office furniture included...Wi-Fi negotiable Easy access
to Rt 99 near Lowe's and Rt C-1 exit in front of building...
Available Jan 1,2026
722 Lowell Street, Peabody 01960 - Rental
Rental List Price: $3,500
Listed by: Lucia Ponte Cell: 781.8838130
Spacious and Beautifully Renovated Duplex! This stunning home has
been completed with well planned details and layout, throughout.
Much elegance is expressed in the large foyer that introduces you to
the open-concept living and dining space, both with decorative FP.
The beautiful, huge kitchen features custom cabinetry, large center
island, pendant lighting, granite countertops, stainless steel
appliances, w/breakfast area. The second level offers a spacious
primary bedroom with cathedral ceiling, two generous closets, and a
beautiful ensuite bath with sky light. Two additional bedrooms, with
beamed vaulted ceilings Unit is sun filled and has been meticulously
maintained. Additional highlights include in-unit laundry in the
basement & two-car parking
781.231.9800
230 Broadway, #2, Lynn 01904 - Rental
Rental List Price: $2,400
Listed by: Patricia Torcivia Cell: 781.820.0974
A freshly painted 2nd floor apartment consisting of a 5 Room/2
Bedroom owner occupied house that is located in a desirable area
near Wyoma Square... Features include lots of cabinet space in the
kitchen with electric stove, new refrigerator, tiled floor and a walk
through that leads to an open dining room/living room with hardwood
floors and natural woodwork with built-in china cabinet.. two
bedrooms and a newer bathroom with tiled floor finish off this great
layout with closet space and hardwood floors in the bedroom as
well...covered parking for one car under the carport and front and
rear porches for sitting outdoors...Available for Feb 1..Must have
good references..1st month rent, last month rent, and one month
security deposit is required at signing a one year lease.
3 Hunnewell St., Melrose, MA 02176
List Price: $1,375,000
Listed by: Dale Brousseau Cell: 617.957.2728
Three family in Melrose represents a strong investment opportunity with
immediate income & long-term upside. Set on a nice13k sq ft lot, the
property offers exceptional parking capacity & outdoor space. Unit 1
delivers a desirable three bedrooms, including a Primary Suite, plus a
lower-level family room with private entrance & in-unit laundry. This unit
currently rents for $3,400 per month & includes exclusive use of the
oversized two-car garage, enhancing both appeal & revenue potential.
Units are occupied by long-term tenants, providing stable, predictable
income. All units have separate utilities, hardwood floors and replacement
windows throughout.
Providing Real Estate Services for Nearly Two Decades
Servicing Saugus, Melrose, Wakefield, Malden, all North Shore communities, Boston and Beyond.
Commercial
Rental
FOR
RENT
FOR
RENT
FOR
SALE
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Page 15
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JANUARY 23, 2026
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î†î’î•î‘îˆî• îî’î— îšîŒî—î‹ î„îî“îîˆ î’ï‚‡ î–î—î•îˆîˆî— î“î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠî€ îî„î‘îœ î“î’î–î–îŒî…îŒîîŒî—îŒîˆî–î€„ î€¦î„îî î‰î’î• î‡îˆî—î„îŒîî– î€‡î€•î€î€—î€œî€œî€î€œî€“î€“î€‘
COMMONMOVES.COM
335 CENTRAL STREET, SAUGUS, MA / (781) 233-7300
î€µî€¨î€¹î€¨î€µî€¨ î€ î€§îˆî–îŒî•î„î…îîˆ î’î‘îˆî€î’îšî‘îˆî• î€µî„î‘î†î‹ î’î‰î‰îˆî•î– î€•î€î€– î…îˆî‡î•î’î’îî–î€ î‹î˜îŠîˆ
îîŒî™îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’î î’î“îˆî‘ î—î’ î‡îŒî‘îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’î î€ îŠî•îˆî„î— î‰î’î• îˆî‘î—îˆî•î—î„îŒî‘îŒî‘îŠî€ î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡
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î€¯îŒî‘î‡î„ î€¶î˜î•îˆî—î—îˆ
781-910-1014
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