×‰?×B!›×‘C‘×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://awLL6kSJMgwqNAI364Jch6x7DFDRY-c2ycEN6xWeXkkÎ Ø«Í`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://P_7IWueGs-L9C_4byBVZgJh-xZNraS3CJGYJ6bfqZGkÍ‘0Í`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://RNTRzi2-5zN5HJB_d6fF6HRkf_Sy5TvJLFMMHr9ko4AÍ,•Í`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://10qp-wGOgzvjqH2YyLL7wjamiH2MQ5lRl23zY3CyyRIÎ ¯0ÍZ Í ÍÅÍñ×`çtqùŸè>&î^«’× ×`çtqùŸè>&î^¯ Í¦Ípm9×H³http://Politico.com××Ðˆ× ×`çtqùŸè>&î^® Í€Í'Ì¾9×H»http://www.advocatenews.net××Ðˆ×ˆE×`çtpùŸè>&î^•×‰EÚÐThe Advocate - A Household word for 30 years!
Vol.30, No.27
-FREEwww.advocatenews.net
Boncore
planning to resign
senate seat; Dâ€™Ambrosio
considered strong
contender
Advocate Staff Report
A
ccording to a recent post
on Politico.com, State
Senator Joseph Boncore is exFree
Every Friday
781-286-8500
Friday, July 9, 2021
Revere Beach celebrates 125 years
as Americaâ€™s First Public Beach
Fireworks Celebration on July 12 from 7-10 p.m.
T
his week the City of Revere,
in collaboration with the Revere
Beach Partnership and the
Department of Conservation &
Recreation (DCR), announced
plans for a fi reworks celebration
on Revere Beach to commemorate
125 years of the fi rst public
beach in America. On Monday,
July 12, the city will celebrate
with fi reworks, a live band and
games on the sand from 7:00ANTHONY
Dâ€™AMBROSIO
School Committeeman
pected to announce his departure
from his senate seat to
JOSEPH BONCORE
State Senator
SENATOR | SEE Page 18
10:00 p.m.
â€œAs Americaâ€™s first public
beach, Revere Beach continues
to be the heart of our city,â€ said
Mayor Brian Arrigo. â€œOver the
past year, the Beach has served
as an economic, civic, and public
health hub for our community
and will continue to serve our
residents and families across the
Commonwealth.â€
Charles Eliot was the original
architect of the beach area
back in 1896; he focused on giving
the public access to natural
spaces. Eliot was determined to
create public spaces of beauty
Thereâ€™s nothing like the colors of a sunset over Revere Beach,
which will celebrate 125 years as Americaâ€™s First Public Beach with
a celebration on July 12.
near metropolitan areas. Revere
Beach became the first public
beach in the United States
in 1896 and is over three miles
long. To this day it remains easily
accessible by the MBTAâ€™s Blue
Line from Boston. The beach
is known to accommodate as
many as one million visitors a
weekend during its annual sand
sculpture competition.
Also at the celebration will
be the Revere Board of Health,
in collaboration with MGH
Brighamâ€™s Kraft Centerâ€™s Community
Care Van, distributing
BEACH | SEE Page 12
New report shows average increase of four percent in
water quality safety at metropolitan beaches
Special to Th e Advocate
S
ave the Harbor/Save the
Bay recently released its annual
Water Quality Report Card
for the Metropolitan Beaches
from Nahant to Nantasket, using
monitoring data from the
2020 beach season.
Weekly water quality testing
at Bostonâ€™s regional beaches
began in late May 2020. Additional
daily testing of Constitution
Beach, Kingâ€™s Beach, Malibu
Beach, Tenean Beach and Wollaston
Beach began in early June
and concluded on September 6,
2020. These beach safety scores
are calculated as the percent of
water samples that comply with
the state Department of Public
Health (DPH) single sample limit
for bacteria, a straightforward
way to evaluate seasonal beach
water quality and potential impacts
on public health.
Rainfall can have a signifi cant
impact on beach water quality
and can vary greatly from year
to year. Changes in the summer
storm intensity and frequency
can often explain the variations
we see; 2020 was a relatively dry
year, with only a few large summer
storms and relatively fewer
wet weather impacts. It is also
important to note that some
beaches are tested daily, while
others are tested weekly, so in
some instances a single failed
test can change the rating for
that beach. These seasonal variations
are why Save the Harbor/
Save the Bay is reluctant to draw
WATER | SEE Page 15
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 9, 2021
A New Beginning: Blessed Mother of the Morning Star Parish
By Stephen W. Fielding
A
special liturgy to initiate
and commence a new
beginning of a new parish â€“
Blessed Mother of the Morning
Star parish, consisting of St.
Mary of the Assumption Church
of Revere and Our Lady of Grace
of Chelsea/Everett â€“ was held
on Thursday, July 1, 2021, at Our
Lady of Grace Church. Fr. John
Sheridan, pastor, was the presider
of the mass that included
English and Kreyol readings
and hymns. A special collation
took place afterward in
the lower hall with parishioners
from each church enjoying
comradery while sampling
an assortment of desserts and
beverages.
A joyous weekend of celebration
is being planned for
the weekend of September 25
and 26.
A group picture at the collation
Three Haitian vocalists sang â€œImmaculate Maryâ€ in Kreyol.
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The procession to begin the
mass was breathtaking.
The Haitian Choir was absolutely harmonic.
Fr. John Sheridan talks about
following the star on our parish
journey.
Centerpieces at the collation
on display
Prices subject to
change
Have a Happy &
î€´î‚î‡î† î€´î–îŽîŽî†î“î€‚
FLEET
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Page 3
State Senate authorizes $300M for transportation infrastructure
I
n late June the Massachusetts
Senate passed legislation
to invest $300 million in
municipal transportation projects
and selected statewide
transportation infrastructure
projects. The bill, An Act fi nancing
improvements to municipal
roads and bridges, authorizes
$200 million for municipal
roads and bridges through
the Chapter 90 program and
$100 million to support statewide
projects to address congestion,
support electric vehicle
infrastructure and improve
public transit.
â€œSafe roads, reliable bridges,
and modernized transit infrastructure
made possible
through this bill exemplifies
the Senateâ€™s approach to public
transportation,â€ said Senate
Transportation Committee
Chair Joseph Boncore. â€œThe economic
impacts of the COVID-19
pandemic has made the need
for this funding more urgent.
These investments will provide
critical funding for shovel-ready
transportation projects in our
more than $771,000 for Revere
and over $276 thousand for
Winthrop.
JOSEPH BONCORE
State Senator
cities and towns, create jobs,
and support local and regional
economies.â€
The bill includes the following
components:
â€¢ $200 million in Chapter 90
funding for cities and towns for
projects to maintain, improve
and repair roadways, bridges,
sidewalks and bikeways; this includes
$14.9 million for Boston,
$2.78 million for Cambridge,
â€¢ $25 million for the Municipal
Small Bridge Program to support
replacement or preservation
of structurally defi cient local
bridges critical to local communities
and not eligible for existing
federal aid programs.
â€¢ $25 million for the Local Bottleneck
Program to address localized
traffi c bottlenecks and
invest in infrastructure to reduce
congestion, improve traffi c fl ow
and reduce idling and greenhouse
gas emissions.
â€¢ $25 million for Electric Vehicle
(EV) infrastructure to support
municipalities and regional transit
authorities in their eff orts to
install EV infrastructure and purchase
EVs and zero-emission vehicles.
â€¢
$25 million for Transit-Supportive
Infrastructure to create
dedicated bus lanes, enhance
bus stops and train stations, support
passenger safety, upgrade
technology and modernize infrastructure
to meet demand
Revere man facing life in prison for
involvement in fentanyl operation
By Christopher Roberson
C
esar Rivera, 22, of Revere,
was recently arrested and
charged with being involved in
a â€œprolifi c drug traffi cking organizationâ€
that reportedly manufactured
counterfeit Percocet
pills laced with fentanyl.
According to law enforcement
offi cials, it is alleged that a pill
press was used to produce up
to 15,000 pills per hour. At a value
of up to $20 per pill, approximately
$300,000 worth of drugs
were being generated every 60
minutes.
The other suspects in the
case include Vincent Caruso,
26, of Salem, Laurie Caruso, 51,
of Lynn, Ernest Johnson, 33, of
Salem and Nicole Benton, 45,
of Saugus.
Rivera is now facing one count
of possessing controlled substances
with intent to distribute
and one count of conspiracy
to possess and use a fi rearm
in furtherance of a drug traffi
cking crime. If convicted, Rivera
could be sentenced to life in
prison and be fi ned $250,000.
In his seven-page affi davit, FBI
Special Agent Craig Harvey said
Rivera has no prior convictions,
however; there are five cases
pending against him.
Harvey said that in April
2019, Rivera was arrested by
Everett Police who responded
to ShotSpotter activation. He
said police recovered fi ve fi rearms
during their investigation
and charged Rivera with the unlawful
possession and discharge
of a fi rearm as well as with other
violations of state gun laws.
â€œI am also aware through the
course of this investigation that
these fi ve fi rearms recovered
were depicted in a music video
entitled â€œTen Toes Downâ€
that is believed to have been
fi lmed on the same day of Riveraâ€™s
arrest,â€ said Harvey. â€œDuring
the course of the music video
numerous individuals affi liated
with racketeering enterprises
known as Epic Nation the
Label, the Little Crip Gangsters
and Tiny Rascals Gang can be
seen holding fi rearms and the
lyrics to the song discuss drug
distribution and willingness to
commit violence.â€
Harvey said that in September
2019, an arrest warrant was
issued for Rivera after he failed
to appear in Malden District
Court. However, Rivera was apprehended
15 months later in
Malden. At the time, four warLike
us on Facebook
advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
rants had been issued for his arrest.
Harvey also said Rivera was
found in possession of a Glock
26 9mm pistol with nine rounds
of ammunition, 28 grams of cocaine
base, eight grams of fentanyl,
seven grams of marijuana
and $2,709 in cash.
and increase frequency of public
transit services and improve
access to public transit.
The bill was also passed by the
House in late June, and it was
enacted by the Legislature on
July 2. Governor Charlie Baker
signed the bill on July 2.
Lawrence A. Simeone Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
~ Since 1989 ~
* Corporate Litigation
* Criminal/Civil
* MCAD
* Zoning/Land Court
* Wetlands Litigation
* Workmenâ€™s Compensation
* Landlord/Tenant Litigation
* Real Estate Law
* Construction Litigation
* Tax Lein
* Personal Injury
* Bankruptcy
* Wrongful Death
* Zoning/Permitting Litigation
300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 9, 2021
î€°îµºîµ¼î¶„îµ¾î¶’ î¹Ÿ î€¥î¶‹î¶ˆî¶î¶‡
Attorneys at Law
î€ î€³î€¨î€µî€¶î€²î€±î€¤î€¯ î€¬î€±î€­î€¸î€µî€¼ î€ î€µî€¨î€¤î€¯ î€¨î€¶î€·î€¤î€·î€¨
î€ î€©î€¤î€°î€¬î€¯î€¼ î€¯î€¤î€º î€ î€ªî€¨î€±î€¨î€µî€¤î€¯ î€³î€µî€¤î€¦î€·î€¬î€¦î€¨
î€ î€³î€¨î€µî€¶î€²î€±î€¤î€¯ î€¥î€¤î€±î€®î€µî€¸î€³î€·î€¦î€¼ î€ î€¦î€¬î€¹î€¬î€¯ î€¯î€¬î€·î€¬î€ªî€¤î€·î€¬î€²î€±
14 Norwood St., Everett, MA 02149
Phone: (617) 387-4900 Fax: (617) 381-1755
î€ºî€ºî€ºî€‘î€°î€¤î€¦î€®î€¨î€¼î€¥î€µî€²î€ºî€±î€¯î€¤î€ºî€‘î€¦î€²î€°
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Mayor Arrigo presents the Jodi and Deanne Mantia and Toni-Ann Merlina with a Commendation
from the City.
Mantia Sisters Dance Academyâ€™s
Mark 30th Year
PROUD PARENTS: Jodi and Deanne Mantia with their parents, Teddi and Jimmy Mantia are shown
at their recent event marking 30 years in business.
Like us on Facebook
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Mayor Brian Arrigo and wife, Daveen with sons, Jack and Joseph congratulate the Mantia Sisters
on their 30th anniversary.
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Page 5
Mayor launches Public Service Honor program
Recognizing Revereâ€™s outstanding public service workers
M
ayor Brian Arrigo this
week launched the
Public Service Honor of the
Month Campaign to highlight
Revereâ€™s outstanding
public service workers for
their dedication to making
the city a better place.
Throughout this past year,
our public and community
service workers have
gone above and beyond
to keep the city moving
forward through difficult
times. Each month, Mayor
Arrigo will present one of
the cityâ€™s employees with
the Public Service Honor
of the Month to recognize
these amazing people and
to give our residents a little
more insight into those
that work for the city.
â€œGovernment is about
helping people and that is what
our city employees do on a daily
basis,â€ said Mayor Brian Arrigo.
â€œThe program is designed to
highlight those who go above
and beyond their daily duty to
serve the people and City of Revere.
I am proud to work alongside
so many dedicated individuals
and be able to highlight
their work across all departments
in our city.â€
As we present the 2022
budget it is a reminder of how
important the role of our finance
team is in Revere. Revereâ€™s
fi rst Public Service Honor
of the Month is Richard Viscay,
Chief Financial Offi cer (CFO).
We know that when the cityâ€™s fi -
nances work our city works better
for our people. We are proud
to honor Chief Viscay with our
fi rst public service recognition.
An interview with Chief Viscay
is below.
Q: What do you do in the
City?
A: I am the Chief Financial Offi
cer of the City, acting as the
City Auditor and Budget Director
and reporting directly to the
Mayor and oversee auditing,
budget, assessing, purchasing,
treasurer, collector and parking
departments. As the lead
fi scal agent for the city, I serve
as a member of the Mayorâ€™s executive
management team, involved
in many daily policy and
program decisions that help
inform the Mayorâ€™s decisions
around how to use your tax dollars
and other city revenues. Additionally,
I am chairman of the
Revere Retirement Board and a
Board Commissioner of the Revere
Housing Authority supporting
their ongoing mission
and goals.
Q: What are the goals for
your department?
Maria and now our city CFO
under Mayor Brian Arrigo.
Q: What is your favorite
part about working in
the city?
A: Knowing I can have a
RICHARD VISCAY
Chief Financial Offi cer
A: As CFO, my goals are to ensure
that all of the fi nancial operations
of the City are operating
as effi ciently and eff ectively
as possible by embracing technology
and innovation whenever
possible. Our most important
role is to ensure that your tax
dollars and other city revenues
are used wisely and fulfi ll the vision
of your elected leaders. Just
like your own budgets at home,
we must balance our budgets to
ensure a great credit rating as a
city that will allow us to continue
to borrow and refi nance in a
smart and eff ective way to keep
our city competitive. In my role
as City Auditor, I oversee a team
of people who consistently review
departmental spending
and budgets to provide the trust
in our government that there
are no fraudulent, illegal or excessive
expenses.
Q: How did you get involved
in public service?
A: Municipal fi nance is an art
that can only be truly learned
through experience, and Iâ€™ve
been able to gain a lot of perspective
from many leaders
throughout our Commonwealth
â€“ government, when
done well, can help a lot of people
â€“ and if your budget works
your city works better for its residents.
I began my public service
career as an accountant
in the Massachusetts State Department
of Revenue acting as
a representative to 25 cities and
towns on the North Shore, reviewing
audits, setting tax rates
and certifying free cash for all of
those towns as part of my duties.
My fi rst role in a municipality
came in 2013 as the Director
of Finance for the Town of Wenham.
Since that time, Iâ€™ve served
as the Finance Director under
Salem Mayor Kim Driscoll, CFO
under Everett Mayor Carlo DeQ:
What are you excited
about for the future of Revere?
A:
As a parent of two Revere
High graduates and an active
member of the School Building
small part to play in positioning
the city to achieve
its maximum potential. As a
resident of the City, it brings
me great joy to see how our
work can support the improvements
both internally
as we conduct City business
and externally as we develop
key areas of the city, including
the Beach, Suff olk
Downs and Wonderland.
This balance allows us to
grow in a smart, intentional
way that gives opportunities
for all in our community.
Committee,
I am excited about
the new Revere High School
project and what it means for
the next generation of leaders
in Revere. I am excited about the
development of Suff olk Downs
and the Life Science building
that was recently announced
by HYM; these developments
Gerry
Dâ€™Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
Is Your Estate in Order?
Do you have an update Will, Health
Care Proxy or Power of Attorney?
If Not, Please Call for a Free Consultation.
14 Proctor Avenue, Revere
(781) 284-5657
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100% Fruit Juice
Box
Ice Cold Milk
7/5
HOLIDAY
NO MEAL SERVICE
7/6
Chicken & Waffle
Sandwich
Fresh Veggie of
the Day
Apple Sauce Fruit
Cup
Ice Cold Milk
7/12
Warm Empanadas
Fresh Veggie of
the Day
Apple Sauce Fruit
Cup
Ice Cold Milk
7/19
Warm Empanadas
Fresh Veggie of
the Day
100% Fruit Juice
Box
Ice Cold Milk
7/26
Warm Empanadas
Fresh Veggie of
the Day
Apple Sauce Fruit
Cup
Ice Cold Milk
7/13
Chicken & Waffle
Sandwich
Fresh Veggie of the
Day
100% Fruit Juice Box
Ice Cold Milk
7/20
Chicken & Waffle
Sandwich
Fresh Veggie of
the Day
Apple Sauce Fruit
Cup
Ice Cold Milk
7/27
Chicken & Waffle
Sandwich
Fresh Veggie of the
Day
100% Fruit Juice
Box
Ice Cold Milk
7/28
Calzone
Fresh Veggie of
the Day
Apple Sauce Fruit
Cup
Ice Cold Milk
7/14
Calzone
Fresh Veggie of
the Day
Apple Sauce Fruit
Cup
Ice Cold Milk
7/21
Calzone
Fresh Veggie of the
Day
100% Fruit Juice Box
Ice Cold Milk
7/15
Ball Park Frank
Fresh Veggie of the
Day
100% Fruit Juice
Box
Ice Cold Milk
7/22
Ball Park Frank
Fresh Veggie of
the Day
Apple Sauce Fruit
Cup
Ice Cold Milk
7/29
Ball Park Frank
Fresh Veggie of
the Day
100% Fruit Juice
Box
Ice Cold Milk
7/16
Twist Nâ€™ Go
Smoothie
Fresh Veggie of
the Day
Apple Sauce
Fruit Cup
Ice Cold Milk
7/23
Pizza Tart
Fresh Veggie of
the Day
100% Fruit Juice
Box
Ice Cold Milk
7/30
Croissant Sandwich
Fresh Veggie of
the Day
Apple Sauce Fruit
Cup
Ice Cold Milk
Updated Information can be found at www.revereps.schooldish.com
Please visit us on Facebook-RPS Diningservices
Daily Lunch Choices include Sunbutter Jammie and Cheese Sandwich on wholegrain bread
BREAKFAST MENU:
Monday: Chewy Oatmeal Breakfast Round, Yummy Craisins, Milk
Tuesday: Whole Grain Chocolate Muffin, Box of Raisins, Milk
Wednesday: Chocolate Chip Power Bar,Yummy Craisins, Milk
Thursday: Whole Grain Cereal Bar, Raisins, Milk
Friday: The Ultimate Breakfast Bar,Yummy Craisins, Milk
This Institution is an equal opportunity provider
6/29
Chicken &
Waffle Sandwich
Fresh Veggie of
the Day
Apple Sauce
Fruit Cup
Ice Cold Milk
7/7
Calzone
Fresh Veggie of
the Day
100% Fruit Juice
Box
Ice Cold Milk
7/8
Ball Park Frank
Fresh Veggie of
the Day
Apple Sauce Fruit
Cup
Ice Cold Milk
7/9
Croissant Sandwich
Fresh Veggie of the
Day
100% Fruit Juice
Ice Cold Milk
6/30
Calzone
Fresh veggie of the
Day
100% Fruit Juice
Box
Ice Cold Milk
7/1
Ball Park Frank
Fresh Fruit of the
Day
Apple Sauce Fruit
Cup
Ice Cold Milk
7/2
Pizza Tart
Fresh Veggie of the
Day
100% Fruit Juice
Box
Ice Cold Milk
FREE MEALS
TO ALL
STUDENTS
Revere Summer
Lunch Program will
begin June 28 at
the following sites
in Revere:
* Beachmont School
*Hill School
*Paul Revere School
*Costa Park
*Revere Beach
Bandstand
*Sonny Meyers Park
And July 6 at the
following sites
*RHA Rose St
*RHA Adams Ct
*Ciarlone Park
*Louis Pasteur Park
We will also be at
the Farmerâ€™s Market
On Fridays!
All meals come
complete with fruit,
veggies and milk.
Locally sourced fruits
and veggies when
they are available.
include cucumbers,
carrot sticks, celery
sticks, and grape
tomatoes!
Nutrient dense
ingredients and whole
grains are always
provided.
2021
will put Revere on the map â€“
both showcasing our amazing
educational achievements
and helping provide a pipeline
of new jobs, opportunities and
revenues for the City â€“ we are
putting Revere on the map as a
major player in our state and regionâ€™s
economic growth.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 9, 2021
~ POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT ~
Manuel Carrero Launches Revere City
Council Race for Ward 2
M
anuel Carrero, engineer
and 13-year Revere resident,
announced that his campaign
would seek to represent
Ward 2 on the City Council.
Calling the Shirley Ave neighborhood
home since moving
to the city at a young age, Carrero
looks forward to meeting
neighbors, sharing his vision of a
brighter future for all Revere residents,
and hearing directly from
them on the challenges and future
of the Ward.
â€œJust as Ward 2â€™s streets have
Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
î€­î€‰
î‚‡ î€µîˆîîŒî„î…îîˆ î€°î’îšîŒî‘îŠ î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆ
î‚‡ î€¶î“î•îŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î€©î„îî î€¦îîˆî„î‘î˜î“î–
î‚‡ î€°î˜îî†î‹ î€‰ î€¨î‡îŠîŒî‘îŠ
î‚‡ î€¶î’î‡ î’î• î€¶îˆîˆî‡ î€¯î„îšî‘î–
î‚‡ î€¶î‹î•î˜î… î€³îî„î‘î—îŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î€·î•îŒîîîŒî‘îŠ
î‚‡ î€ºî„î—îˆî• î€‰ î€¶îˆîšîˆî• î€µîˆî“î„îŒî•î–
î€­î’îˆ î€³îŒîˆî•î’î—î—îŒî€ î€­î•î€‘
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seen me grow into a young professional
in the community, I
have bore witness and felt the
impacts of tremendous change
over the past few years. Our
î€¶
î€¯î€¤î€±î€§î€¶î€¦î€¤î€³î€¨ î€‰ î€°î€¤î€¶î€²î€±î€µî€¼ î€¦î€²î€‘
î€°î„î–î’î‘î•îœ î€ î€¤î–î“î‹î„îî—
î‚‡ î€¥î•îŒî†îŽ î’î• î€¥îî’î†îŽ î€¶î—îˆî“î–
î‚‡ î€¥î•îŒî†îŽ î’î• î€¥îî’î†îŽ î€ºî„îîî–
î‚‡ î€¦î’î‘î†î•îˆî—îˆ î’î• î€¥î•îŒî†îŽ î€³î„î™îˆî•
î€³î„î—îŒî’î– î€‰ î€ºî„îîŽîšî„îœî–
î‚‡ î€¥î•îŒî†îŽ î€µîˆî€î€³î’îŒî‘î—îŒî‘îŠ
î‚‡ î€¤î–î“î‹î„îî— î€³î„î™îŒî‘îŠ
îšîšîšî€‘î€­î„î‘î‡î€¶îî„î‘î‡î–î†î„î“îˆî€îî„î–î’î‘î•îœî€‘î†î’î
î‚‡ î€¶îˆî‘îŒî’î• î€§îŒî–î†î’î˜î‘î— î‚‡ î€©î•îˆîˆ î€¨î–î—îŒîî„î—îˆî– î‚‡ î€¯îŒî†îˆî‘î–îˆî‡ î€‰ î€¬î‘î–î˜î•îˆî‡
î€™î€”î€šî€î€–î€›î€œî€î€”î€—î€œî€“
MANUEL CARRERO
î€§îˆî–îŒîŠî‘îŒî‘îŠ î„î‘î‡ î€¦î’î‘î–î—î•î˜î†î—îŒî‘îŠ î€¬î‡îˆî„î– î—î‹î„î— î„î•îˆ î‚´î€ªî•î’î˜î‘î‡î– î‰î’î• î€¶î˜î†î†îˆî–î–î‚µ
î€¯î„î‘î‡î–î†î„î“îŒî‘îŠ
neighborhood has made signifi
cant strides, and I aim to ensure
that all residents share in
the prosperity brought on by
this growth. The Shirley Ave
neighborhood has a strong tradition
of neighborly action and
community leadership, and the
time is now for that tradition to
hold a seat on the Revere City
Council.â€
Carrero is an operations engineer
at Raytheon and a graduate
of Revere High School and
Merrimack College. A fi rst-generation
Latino-American whose
mother is a union hospitality
worker and father a mechanic,
Carreroâ€™s upbringing refl ects
the hard-working, high-achieving
character of Ward 2.
Carrero feels indebted to the
community that off ered him the
opportunity to excel, and is fueled
to return that compassionate
leadership to all Revere residents.
His platform will focus
on expanding housing aff ordability,
supporting municipal,
community, and youth-based
anti-poverty eff orts, and stewarding
the responsible growth
of Ward 2.
For more information and opportunities
to get involved, visit
votecarrero.com and follow the
campaign on Facebook, Instagram,
and Twitter. For all inquiries,
contact votecarrero@gmail.
com or (781) 951-4442.
Summer
is Here!
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://bnkMGLCtL0xFcJ3J7s6H2IFlxrPJ_7gU14yEZ4yAN3MÍ0IÍ`Ì°Í ×`çtpùŸè>&î^›×‰EÚ•THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 9, 2021
Page 7
HRC gives input
on equity director position
A
By Adam Swift
s part of the Fiscal Year
2022 budget, the City
Council approved funding for
a new citywide Director of Equity
and Inclusion. Last week,
Revereâ€™s Human Rights Commission
gave its input on the
job description for the position,
which will be listed with an annual
salary of $85,000 plus benefi
ts. The position is in place of
an Executive Director for the
commission, which the members
had previously discussed.
â€œThis is a new job that just got
approved in the budget eff ective
July 1,â€ said Human Rights
Commission Chair Janine Grillo
Marra. â€œThe job description is
broader than the executive director
job description we were
asked to review back in March.
Most of that executive director
job description and most of
those responsibilities are included,
but this is a much broader
job description.â€
The new position will lead the
development and implementation
of proactive diversity to
support the cityâ€™s Racial Equity
Municipal Action Plan, according
to Mayor Brian Arrigo. In
the lead up to the FY22 budget
discussions, Arrigo stated that
the new director will work with
the Human Rights Commission,
mayorâ€™s Cabinet, City Council
and city department heads to
champion the values of a diverse
and inclusive city. Qualifi
cations listed in the draft job
listing discussed by the Human
Rights Commission last week
include a bachelorâ€™s degree in
humanities, political science or
other related fi eld, with a JD or
masterâ€™s in public administration,
civil rights law or human
rights law preferred. The city is
also looking for someone either
from Revere or who has great
knowledge of the community.
â€œThe most important thing in
this position is getting someone
who is coming from the community,
someone who understands
the community, someone
who understands the issues
in this Revere community,â€
said Human Rights Commission
Member Rachid Moukhabir.
â€œSomeone coming from New
York or California doesnâ€™t necessarily
know what is going on in
our city. We need someone with
a track record of community organization,
and more imporBaker
files legislation to
improve water safety
and awareness
I
n an eff ort to bolster public
safety and awareness at state
parks and beaches, Governor
Charlie Baker recently fi led legislation
to increase fi nes for swimming
outside designated waterfronts
across the Commonwealth.
The legislation, â€œAn Act
Relative to Enhanced Enforcement
of Swimming Limitations,â€
would increase the maximum
fi ne to $500 for entering or
swimming in any waters on Department
of Conservation and
Recreation (DCR) property that
are not designated for swimming.
The legislation would provide
an appropriate penalty for
swimming in unsafe areas and
deter park visitors from considering
these dangerous activities.
â€œSwimming at undesignated
waterfronts is dangerous and
too often leads to tragic consequences,
and this legislation is
part of a comprehensive plan
to discourage risky behavior
and ensure the safety of visitors
to our state parks and beaches,â€
said Baker. â€œWhile we encourage
all to visit our beautiful
coastal and inland beaches, we
urge the public to exercise caution
and not swim at any body
of water that has not been designated
for swimming by state
or local authorities.â€
â€œFrom the Berkshires to Cape
Cod, Massachusetts is home to
many waterbodies and coastlines
offering great opportunities
for outdoor recreation;
however, we have already seen
far too many tragic accidental
drownings occur already this
year,â€ said Lieutenant Governor
Karyn Polito. â€œWe look forward
to working with our colleagues
in the Legislature to move quickly
on these important changes.â€
Under current law, penalties
for violating the DCRâ€™s rules and
regulations vary depending on
whether a property was once
part of the Metropolitan District
Commission, with fi nes ranging
from $20 to $200. The fi led legislation
establishes a uniform
maximum fi ne of $500 for entering
or swimming in waters other
than those designated for swimming
by the DCR.
At its many designated waterfronts
throughout the state, the
DCR off ers services like clearly
marked swimming areas with
SAFETY | SEE Page 10
tantly, someone who listens.â€
Moukhabir said he would also
like to see the job description
pared down from its current
multipage form. â€œThe HR director
has already mentioned, like
you said, that this is too big and
detailed, so after the HRC gives
input, itâ€™s going to be looked
at again to try to condense it,â€
said Marra.
Commission Member Kourou
Pich asked if the $85,000 is
the most that could be off ered
for the position. â€œI feel like this
is a huge responsibility,â€ she
said, adding she would like to
see a salary range of $85,000 to
$100,000.
Marra said she would pass the
request along to the Mayorâ€™s
Offi ce, but said she isnâ€™t sure if
the salary could be increased,
since the $85,000 figure was
in the budget approved by the
council.
The input from the Human
Rights Commission will be summarized
and given to the cityâ€™s
HR director, who will then craft a
fi nal job description for the position.
Marra said that once a fi -
nal job description is completed
she will distribute it to the commission
members.
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You asked...
for more Memory Care units.
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617.887.0826
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 9, 2021
~ ADVOCATE MOVIE REVIEW ~
Black Widowâ€™s first solo mission fails
to meet objective; rating: D+
By Mitch Ringenberg
A
~ FLASHBACK ~
49th in a series of
î“î‹î’î—î’î– î‰î•î’î î€·î‹îˆ î€¤î‡î™î’î†î„î—îˆ îƒ€îîˆî–
common criticism lobbed
towards the Marvel Cinematic
Universe (MCU) is that
each of their movies all look,
feel and move pretty much the
same. When a promising indie
director like Taika Waititi (the
New Zealand filmmaker who
helmed 2017â€™s â€œThor: Ragnarokâ€)
or recent Oscar-winner ChloÃ©
Zhao (this yearâ€™s upcoming â€œEternalsâ€)
is scooped up by Disney to
direct their latest Avengers-adjacent
blockbuster, itâ€™s often diffi -
cult to see their thumbprints in
the fi nal product. Itâ€™s like when
Quentin Tarantino directed a
couple episodes of â€œCSIâ€ back in
2005; these directors are there to
fi lm one chapter of a larger story
and collect a handsome paycheck
while theyâ€™re at it.
Thus, credit should be given to
In 2010, at the Revere Little League Telethon,
î€³î•îˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î— î’î‰ î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆ î€©îŒî•îˆî‚¿îŠî‹î—îˆî•î– î€¯î’î†î„î î€œî€•î€™î€ î€¯î—î€‘
James Carmello (3rd from right) and members
î’î‰ î‹îŒî– î†î•îˆîš î“î•îˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î— î„ î†î‹îˆî†îŽ î—î’ î—î‹îˆ î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆ î€¯îŒî—î—îîˆ
î€¯îˆî„îŠî˜îˆ î€³î•î’îŠî•î„îî€‘ î€¤î†î†îˆî“î—îŒî‘îŠ î—î‹îˆ î†î‹îˆî†îŽ îŒî– î€³î•îˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î—
î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ î“î•î’îŠî•î„î î€µî’î‘ î€¯î„î”î˜î„îŠîîŒî„ î„î‘î‡ î€°îŒî†îŽîˆîœ î€¦î„î–î’îîŒî€‘
î€‹î€¤î‡î™î’î†î„î—îˆ î‚¿îîˆ î“î‹î’î—î’î€Œ
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director Cate Shortland for imbuing
â€œBlack Widowâ€ with a noticeably
darker tone than previous
MCU outings. Set shortly after
the events of â€œCaptain America:
Civil War,â€ this prequel focuses
on the tortured backstory
of Scarlett Johanssonâ€™s Russian-superspy-turned-Avenger
Natasha Romanoff (codename
Black Widow). The film
is a spy thriller about survivorâ€™s
guilt and the trauma women
carry after spending time with
abusive, domineering men. At
least thatâ€™s what â€œBlack Widowâ€
wants to be about. Unfortunately,
all that thematic ambition is
undermined by graceless, CGIheavy
action and lackluster storytelling.
This movie desperately
wants to capture the grim espionage
thrills of â€œThe Bourne Identity,â€
but it ultimately feels like an
inferior imitation.
The fi lm begins with an opening
credits montage of female
child soldiers being brainwashed
and trained in lethal
combat as a breathy, femalesung
cover of Nirvanaâ€™s â€œSmells
Like Teen Spiritâ€ plays to let you
know that this movie is gritty, by
golly. Like the rest of â€œBlack Widow,â€
the sequence is fi lled with
desaturated colors and quick
cuts that render the onscreen
action almost incomprehensible.
Young girls being trained
to kill for their country is a pretty
heavy concept for a superhero
movie made for children, but
sadly there arenâ€™t enough ideas
at play here to justify such loaded
imagery.
The story fi nds Natasha forced
to reconcile with her estranged
family after an attempt is made
on her life by a mute assassin
named Taskmaster. In an intriguing
twist, her family was formed
in America during an undercover
mission by her parents Alexei
(an amusing David Harbour)
and Melina (a Rachel Weisz without
much to do), yet once Alexeiâ€™s
cover is blown, the unit is
quickly disbanded, and Natasha
and her sister Yelena (Florence
Pugh, also wasted here)
are turned over to a shady government
program in Russia. The
fi lm is at its strongest when exploring
the strained dynamics
between this highly dysfunctional
family. A stretch in the
middle shows both sisters confronting
their parents about the
falsehoods of their upbringing.
To mom and dad, it was an assignment
that got a little too
personal; to Natasha and Yelena,
it was their entire lives.
Yet whenever â€œBlack Widowâ€
appears to be fi nding a groove
with its characters, it abruptly
shifts gears into a noisy action
set piece. Character growth is
substituted for bloated spectacle
at every turn, and a third
act that should be an emotional
payoff for a family fi nally coming
together to defeat the big
baddie is instead a noisy mess
with a bunch of people running
in front of unconvincing greenscreen
explosions while atop a
crumbling spaceship. Even the
smaller action beats fail to satisfy:
A hand-to-hand fi ght between
Johansson and Pugh in a
kitchen is clearly an homage to
similar, far superior fi ght scenes
from â€œThe Bourne Supremacyâ€
and â€œAtomic Blonde.â€ However,
any potential impact is sapped
out by annoying editing techniques.
A single kick or punch
will contain so many quick cuts
that itâ€™s hard to discern whoâ€™s doing
what. Thatâ€™s a massive disappointment
considering that
when you have a superhero as
iconic as Black Widow you best
be sure to let her shine.
â€œBlack Widowâ€ comes to theaters
and Disney+ on July 9.
Revere residents named to Deanâ€™s
List at UMass Amherst
AMHERST - The following Revere residents were
named to the Deanâ€™s List at the University of Massachusetts
Amherst for the spring 2021 semester:
Melisa Avdic, Kevin Alfred Bardhi, Miranda Nell
Cardona, Leila Cesic, David Oleg Conlon, Alondra
Esparza, Zachary J. Gentile, Ava Jane Hawkes,
Brendan Patrick Hayes, Sonia Yanira Hercules Mancia.
Ergi Ismahili, Isabella Mendes Izidoro, Greis Kasofo,
Eve Lyn Lescovitz, William Ly, Aladdin Hatim
Mohammed, Oluwafemi Olatunbosun, David To
Phan, Milton Xavier Rios, Jhonnatan Ismael Rivera,
Luana Rodrigues Dos Santos, Michael Joseph
Roncevich, Sari Saint-Hilaire, Anas Sbai, Andrew M.
Simonton, Wellan Sok, Andrew Tran, Baron Tran,
Jimmy Tran, Kevin Trinh, Amelia Rose Viscay and
Giana Marie Wilson.
Students must have a 3.5 grade point average
to qualify for the Deanâ€™s List.
Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
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Page 9
Cities and towns applaud increase in state
climate resilience funding
Early heat waves signal need is far greater than available resources
C
ities and towns involved
in the Resilient Mystic Collaborative
(RMC) applauded
the doubling of annual funds
for the Municipal Vulnerability
Preparedness (MVP) Grant Program
to $21 million in the Baker
Administrationâ€™s FY2022 Capital
Plan. In the latest MVP grant
round, the Commonwealth received
92 applications requesting
a total of $28 million for action
grants out of $10 million
available.
â€œChelsea has already suff ered
through two debilitating heat
waves and a dozen days over
90 F even before July 1st,â€ said
Chelseaâ€™s Housing and Community
Development Director,
Alex Train. â€œOur same residents
who suff ered disproportionately
through COVID are now at risk
from heat-related illnesses. We
need to upgrade our infrastructure
and services for the summer
of 2050, not 1950.â€
â€œExtreme heat, storms,
drought, and fl ooding are no
longer a thing of the future. Climate
resilience needs to become
a core government function,
just like schools and roads,â€
said Mystic River Watershed Association
Deputy Director Julie
Wormser. â€œThis funding increase
is a critical down payment.â€
Below are details of some of
the projects in Greater Bostonâ€™s
Mystic River Watershed seeking
MVP funding this year.
â€œTwelve municipalities depend
on the Charles River and
Amelia Earhart Dams to prevent
catastrophic coastal fl ooding
of residential neighborhoods
and businesses,â€ said
Cambridgeâ€™s Department of
Public Works Commissioner,
Owen Oâ€™Riordan. â€œIt is of critical
importance that these dams
and portions of our shoreline be
elevated to ensure we protect
tens of thousands of people and
billions in property from harm.
We could use every penny in the
MVP program over the next decade
just to solve this one issue.â€
â€œBelle Isle Marsh is by far the
largest remaining salt marsh in
Boston Harbor providing a crucial
buff er for fl ooding to neighboring
communities and critical
habitat for over 250 bird species,
mammals and marine animals,
said Friends of Belle Isle Marsh
President Mary Mitchell. â€œFunding
for restoration projects and
nature-based resiliency projects
within the marsh is needed now
to best protect against climate
change and sea level rise.â€
â€œOne of Winthropâ€™s most valuable
resources is Ingleside Park,
a vast green space enjoyed by
the entire Town,â€ said Winthropâ€™s
Director of Planning and Development,
Rachel Kelly. â€œThe
Park floods after heavy rains
and snowmelt. Winthrop would
greatly benefi t from additional
MVP funding to mitigate fl ooding
with improved drainage and
green infrastructure.â€
The RMC includes 20 of 21
communities (Arlington, Belmont,
Boston, Burlington, Cambridge,
Chelsea, Everett, Lexington,
Malden, Medford, Melrose,
Reading, Revere, Somerville,
Stoneham, Wakefield, Watertown,
Winchester, Winthrop and
Woburn) and over 98 percent of
the population and land base in
the Mystic River Watershed. Together,
RMC municipalities represent
one percent of the stateâ€™s
land base and 10 percent of its
population. The partnership focuses
on fresh water and coastal
fl ooding and protecting vulnerable
residents and workers
from extreme weather, including
heat.
â€œThe Resilient Mystic Collaborative
and MVP Program has
brought together cities and
towns in ways that we could
not foresee,â€ said Reading Senior
Civil Engineer Alex Rozycki.
â€œAs these communities continue
to work together and evaluate
shared MVP grant possibilities
the scope and breadth of
these complex projects quickly
expands as well. Regional MVP
funding is supporting a revitalized
trail system and green
stormwater treatment systems
to increase storage and water
quality in Reading, which provides
similar benefi ts to downstream
communities. The estimated
cost to complete this
project alone is over two million
dollars.â€
â€œClimate change is bringing
intense rainfall that overwhelms
our aging stormwater
systems with increased frequency,â€
said Melrose Director
of Public Works Elena Proakis
Ellis. â€œWe are working with 16
other communities to manage
local and regional fl ooding
through expanded wetlands
and other nature-based solutions.
With enough small projects
combined, we can make
a real diff erence in our region.
These projects are too costly for
communities like Melrose to afford
with local funding alone,
however. This work is essential
to the region and brings other
habitat and social benefi ts along
the way.â€
â€œThe industrial district that
spans Chelsea and Everett provides
thousands of good-paying
jobs and billions in annual
economic activity,â€ said Chelseaâ€™s
Alex Train. â€œIt was unfortunately
also built by fi lling in the Island
End River, which is now chronically
flooding during heavy
storms. The price tag for protecting
this area from fl ooding
over the next fi fty years is north
of $50 million.â€
For more information: resilient.
mysticriver.org â€“ https://www.
mass.gov/municipal-vulnerability-preparedness-mvp-program
Mystic
River Watershed at
a glance
The 76-square-mile Mystic
River Watershed stretches from
Reading through the northern
shoreline of Boston Harbor to
Revere. Its name is an anglicized
version of the Pequot word missi-tuk
(â€œlarge river with windand
tide-driven wavesâ€), and it
is now one of New Englandâ€™s
most densely populated urbanized
watersheds.
The seven-mile Mystic River
and its tributaries represented
an early economic engine for
colonial Boston. Ten shipyards
built more than 500 clipper
ships in the 1800s before roads
and railways replaced schooners
and steamships. Tide-driven
mills, brickyards and tanneries
along both banks of the river
brought both wealth and pollution.
In
the 1960s, the Amelia Earhart
Dam transformed much of
the river into a freshwater impoundment,
while construction
of Interstate 93 fi lled in wetlands
and dramatically changed the
riverâ€™s course. Since then, many
former industrial sites have been
cleaned up and redeveloped
into new commercial areas and
residential communities.
The Mystic is facing growing
climate-related challenges:
coastal and stormwater
fl ooding, extreme storms, heat,
drought and unpredictable seasonal
weather. The watershed
is relatively low-lying and extensively
developed, making it
prone to both freshwater and
coastal fl ooding. Its 21 municipalities
are home to a half-million
residents, including many
who are disproportionately vulnerable
to extreme weather: environmental
justice communities,
new Americans, residents
of color, elders, low-income residents
and employees, people
living with disabilities and English-language
learners.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 9, 2021
ZBA overturns Franklin St. decision in favor of business
By Adam Swift
T
he owners of the Clean Joe/
Board Up Kings building at
7 Franklin St. can rest a little bit
easier, as the Zoning Board of
Appeals last week overturned
a controversial decision by the
cityâ€™s building inspector.
The building has housed the
Clean Joe business, which is
managed by Josef Koch of JEK
Enterprises, since 2018. The
business cleans out homes and
businesses affected by fires,
fl oods and other property damage.
JEK Enterprises has been
before the ZBA several times this
year trying to clear up a ruling
by the building inspector stating
that the business is illegally
operating as a 24/7 business
and that it is not a grandfathered
use in the Neighborhood Business
(NB) zone. Prior to 2018, the
building was home for decades
to Madison Associates, a small
manufacturer and distributor of
composite steel.
At last weekâ€™s ZBA hearing,
Attorney Larry Simeone, representing
JEK Associates, once
again noted that there is nothing
in the Revere zoning ordinances
that establish just what
a 24/7 business is. Several neighbors
and city councillors spoke
in favor of overturning the building
inspectorâ€™s ruling, while several
other abutters countered
that the business creates undue
noise and disturbance during
nights and weekends.
â€œThe evidence that is before
[the ZBA] does not support the
decision made by the building
inspector,â€ said Simeone. â€œIn fact,
there is no evidence for which
the building inspector has come
forth with to substantiate his decision.
The decision he stated
was that neither the NB zone nor
any assorted grandfathered use
of the property supports â€¦ the
structures or premises being utilized
for a 24/7 business operation.
[In] a review of the Revere
zoning ordinance, as well as all
the ordinances in the city of Revere,
you will fi nd that no defi -
nition of the term 24/7 business
or operation is found in the zoning
ordinance.â€
Simeone further stated that
there is nothing in the zoning ordinance
that deals with the typical
hours of operation for a business
in the NB district.
During the public hearing,
several people spoke in favor of
JEK Enterprises and Clean Joeâ€™s,
including employees, people
who used the business and city
councillors.
â€œWhat I see now is a very
well-run business,â€ said Councillor-at-Large
George Rotondo.
â€œHe provides a service to the
community, and he does it respectfully.
Iâ€™m not sure why this
has been litigated endlessly; itâ€™s
not a detriment to the community,
and he has gone out of his
way to help the community.â€
City Council President Anthony
Zambuto noted that he spent
a number of years chairing the
councilâ€™s zoning subcommittee
and helped create many of the
zoning ordinances on the city
books. He said he is bothered
that the building inspector was
citing conditions that donâ€™t exist
anywhere in the zoning ordinances.
However,
several residents
who live near 7 Franklin St.
argued that the business is
a hardship on the neighborhood.
Franklin Street resident
John Riccio said there are differences
on what kind of business
is allowed in a general
business zone and what is allowed
in the NB zone. â€œThe
major diff erence is that the NB
zone was made to be harmonious
with, and not detrimental,
to the neighborhood,â€ said
Riccio. â€œClean Joe bought the
property under these condiSAVINGS
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tions, and now he wants to
change it, and there will be no
difference between that NB
zone and the general business
zone in that area.â€
Riccio said he has lived in the
neighborhood for 36 years and
never complained about Madison.
He added that he would
not complain about Clean Joe
except for their doing business
after typical business hours. â€œItâ€™s
loud, itâ€™s noisy, there are backup
SAFETY | FROM Page 7
ropes and buoys, lifeguards onduty,
and water quality testing.
Undesignated waterfronts do
not receive such services, and
may also have hazardous features
like murky water, steep
slopes, and aquatic plant species,
creating a potentially dangerous
situation for swimmers.
â€œThe legislation fi led today
reflects the Baker-Polito Administrationâ€™s
commitment to
the health and safety of Massachusetts
residents and visitors,â€
said Secretary of Energy and
Environmental Aff airs Kathleen
Theoharides. â€œIncreasing fi nes
is a critical part of our comprehensive
strategy to prevent potential
tragedies and ensure all
visitors to the Commonwealthâ€™s
state parks have a safe and enjoyable
experience.â€
â€œDCR welcomes visitors of all
ages and swimming abilities
to our waterfronts each summer
season, and we ask that
each person heed park signs,
staff direction, and water safety
recommendations,â€ said DCR
Commissioner James Montgomery.
â€œThe increase in fi nes
for swimming in unsafe waters
on DCR property is another example
of the Administrationâ€™s
continued commitment to increasing
safety throughout our
state park system.â€
DCR has been coordinating
with the Executive Offi ce of Energy
and Environmental Aff airs
(EEA), the Massachusetts State
Police (MSP) and the Massachusetts
Environmental Police
alarms; there are gates opening;
and these are large metal gates,â€
said Riccio. â€œAll this happens, and
it could be in the middle of the
night. Madison had nothing like
that.â€ Riccio said he has no problem
with the noise during regular
daytime hours.
ZBA Member Arthur Pelton
made a motion to overturn
the building inspectorâ€™s decision,
which was approved by a
4-0 vote.
(MEP) to implement new measures
to enhance public safety
and discourage swimming at
undesignated waterfronts. DCR
has produced and posted dozens
of new swimming safety
signs at DCR parks and beaches.
These signs will be in multiple
languages at select areas
such as Houghtonâ€™s Pond within
the Blue Hills State Reservation
in Canton. DCR has also increased
outreach for the agencyâ€™s
Learn to Swim program,
which offers free swimming
lessons at 12 locations statewide
for people of all ages.
The DCR recently announced
that it has increased lifeguard
pay from $17 per hour or $18
per hour for head guards to
$20 per hour and $21 per
hour. Lifeguards who remain
committed for the entire season
with the DCR will also receive
a $500 bonus at the end
of the season. DCR continues
to actively recruit individuals
to become a lifeguard at
its inland and coastal waterfronts,
and deep water swimming
pools in the Boston Region
(including Cambridge
and the surrounding towns),
the North Region (specifi cally
Saugus, Nahant and East Boston),
the South Region (specifically
Sandwich and Westport)
and the Central Region (Metro
West to Worcester County). Interested
individuals can apply
online and are strongly encouraged
to call James Esposito at
857- 214-0400 or visit the DCRâ€™s
lifeguarding webpage, application
information, and lifeguard
requirements can be found.
Revere residents named
to Deanâ€™s List at
Quinnipiac University
SOUTH BOSTON â€“ EVERETT â€“ QUINCY â€“ SEAPORT
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HAMDEN, Conn. â€“ Revere residents
Cameron Barker and Rania
Bensadok were named to
the Dean's List at Quinnipiac
University for the spring 2021
semester.
To qualify for the Dean's List,
students must earn a grade
point average of at least 3.5
with no grade lower than C.
Full-time students must complete
at least 14 credits in a semester,
with at least 12 credits
that have been graded on a
letter grade basis to be eligible.
Part-time students must complete
at least six credits during
a semester.
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Page 11
NEMCC provides BOH mosquito activity update
By Adam Swift
I
tâ€™s that time of year where
we have to pay attention to
the risks of mosquito-borne illnesses,
such as West Nile virus
and Eastern equine encephalitis
(EEE), again.
Tuesday night, representatives
from the Northeast Massachusetts
Mosquito Control
and Wetlands Management
District (NEMMC) gave the
Board of Health an update on
mosquito activity in the region
and the services NEMMC provides
for the health board and
residents.
â€œWe work under the state
umbrella, and everything we
do is integrated pest management,â€
said NEMMC Entomologist
Kimberly Foss. â€œWe donâ€™t
just go treat and spray: We do
mosquito surveillance; we do
biological controls â€¦ we also
do physical controls, such as
property maintenance, and we
handle resident requests.â€
In addition, Foss said the
NEMMC does a lot of education
and outreach and has resources
available for the Board of Health
and for residents. She said
the organization is busy yearround,
beginning with freshwater
larviciding in the spring.
â€œThere are 52 diff erent kinds of
mosquitoes in Massachusetts,
and each of the mosquitoes
has diff erent habitats and different
times of the year when it
spreads viruses,â€ said Foss.
Some of the major areas that
get treated in Revere are salt
marshes and catch basins. In
urban areas, such as Revere,
Foss said, the mosquitoes that
breed in catch basins are a risk
for carrying and spreading West
Nile virus.
In addition to its regular regimen
of spraying in the city
and the other 31 communities
it services, the NEMCC will respond
to resident and Board
of Health requests for spraying
and testing.
â€œTires that breed mosquitoes,
puddles, ponds, anything that
may breed mosquitoes or any
problem that a resident may
RevereTV Spotlight
H
appy 4th of July! The RevereTV
staff hopes everyone
had a safe and healthy weekend
as your celebrations took
place. The studio was closed
on Monday in observance of
the holiday, but has been busy
getting some new community
programming together. This
week, the RTV summer interns
have started. Each intern will
be taken through the official
community member production
classes. These classes include
learning all the skills pertaining
to fi eld shoots, studio
shows, and post-production
editing. By the end of the summer
season, all RTV interns will
be well equipped to be able to
create their own community
program or contribute independently
on a broad production
set. Stay tuned for more about
RevereTVâ€™s four interns!
Chef Kelly Armetta finally
made his way back to the kitchen
studio for the second offi cial
episode of â€œCooking Made Simple.â€
On par with his past programs,
Armetta demonstrated
how to create a multi-course
meal. This weekâ€™s episode is on
theme with the summer season.
All recipes were for a backyard
barbecue. The dishes include
Jerk Chicken, Smoked
Potato Salad, Steak with Green
Chimichurri, Barramundi Skewers
with Bloody Mary Gazpacho,
Broccoli Feta Salad, Baked
Bean Salad, and Mexican Corn.
Armetta shows you how to
make all these dishes in an hour
and a half episode! You can fi nd
â€œCooking Made Simpleâ€ episode
two airing on the RTV Community
Channel throughout the
week. It can also be viewed at
your convenience on YouTube
where the recipes are included
in the video description.
A few community members
submitted new episodes of
their programs. Sal Khan of
â€œSALâ€™S SHOW,â€ is airing his July
episode at its usual timeslot
which is Thursday at 7pm and
Saturday at 5pm. Judie VanKooimanâ€™s
program, â€œLife Issues,â€
has its July episode airing on
Thursday at 6pm and Sunday
at 1pm. There is a new episode
of â€œEn Positivoâ€ produced by Diana
Cardona on RTV airing at
10am on Saturday and 6pm on
Tuesday. Pastor Dan from the
First Congregational Church
in Revere sends a recording
of the services from the previous
week. This airs every Sunday
at 8am, noon, and 6pm. As
a reminder, the RevereTV Community
Channel is 8 or 1072
for Comcast subscribers, and 3
or 614 for RCN subscribers. All
community programming plays
on these television channels.
Local government meetings
have taken a short hiatus
through the holiday but are
starting again soon. Until then,
most meetings replaying on the
RevereTV schedule include all
of the Ways and Means Budget
Hearings, the latest City Council
Meetings, and the Zoning Board
of Appeals Meeting. RTV Gov is
channel 9 on Comcast and 13
or 613 on RCN.
have or a Board of Health may
have, they can contact us and
weâ€™ll go do a service request,â€
said Foss.
The quickest way to get information
on spraying and mosquitoes
or to make a request is
through the NEMCC website at
www.nemassmosquito.org.
One of the biggest things the
NEMCC does is surveillance and
testing of potential problem areas.
Foss said that surveillance
started about four weeks and
typically lasts through October.
In Revere, adult mosquito
surveillance began the week
of May 14, and mosquito pools
began being sent to the stateâ€™s
Department of Public Health
on June 14.
The NEMCC has completed
18 site inspections for spring
and early summer larviciding
and completed catch basin larviciding
on June 26.
There were 142 residential
and 66 Board of Health requests
for adulticide spraying in June.
One mosquito pool was sent to
the lab and tested negative for
West Nile virus and EEE.
â€œWe had one resident request
for inspection, but we
would like to see a little more,â€
said Foss. â€œIf people are having
problems or concerns, they can
easily call us or they can go to
our website. They can have us
check that puddle of water in
front of their house, or if their
backyard is wet. We check the
salt marshes all the time. Anything
they think is questionable,
weâ€™ll come look at it.â€
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 9, 2021
AG Healey secures nearly $300K for
students of online for-profit school
Special to Th e Advocate
A
ttorney General Maura
Healey recently announced
that a former online
for-profi t school will pay nearly
$300,000 to settle allegations
that it unfairly imposed excessive
technology fees on students
and failed to make proper
disclosures.
The assurance of discontinuance,
fi led on Wednesday in
Suff olk Superior Court against
Zovio Inc. (formerly Bridgepoint
Education, Inc.), which
owned Ashford University LLC,
settles claims that the school violated
state consumer protection
laws and regulations prohibiting
unfair or deceptive
practices.
â€œThis settlement provides
much-needed relief to students
who were overcharged by this
online for-profit school,â€ said
Healey. â€œProtecting students
from unfair and deceptive tactics
continues to be a top priority
of this offi ce and we will
go after for-profi t schools that
exploit and deceive students.â€
Ashford University, which is
now closed, off ered associate,
bachelors, masters, and doctoral
degrees online in a variety
of subjects. The AGâ€™s Offi ce
alleges that the school unfairly
imposed a one-time excessive
â€œTechnology Services Feeâ€ on all
students after six weeks of enrollment
and retained the entire
fee regardless of how long
a student remained enrolled at
the school. The AGâ€™s Offi ce also
alleges the school failed to disclose
material information to
prospective students about its
programs.
Under the terms of this settlement,
Zovio will pay a total
of $295,120, which will be used
to provide payments to certain
Ashford University students.
The company will also waive
remaining institutional debts
owed to the school by Massachusetts
students who attended
between 2011 and 2014.
Zovio is required to inform the
AGâ€™s Offi ce if it resumes marketing
and/or recruitment activities
in Massachusetts prior
to the enrollment of any Massachusetts
student.
Addressing fraud and abuse
in the for-profi t school and student
lending industry has been
a top priority for Healey since
taking office. The AGâ€™s Office
has taken predatory schools to
court, changed the practices of
student loan servicers, gone after
unlawful student loan â€œdebt
reliefâ€ companies, and helped
student borrowers fi nd more
aff ordable repayment solutions
through Healeyâ€™s first-in-thenation
Student Loan Assistance
Unit. The AGâ€™s Offi ce also houses
the Stateâ€™s Student Loan Ombudsman,
who advocates for
student borrower rights.
Massachusetts students who
are looking for help or information
should fi le a Student Loan
Help Request at www.mass.
gov/ago/studentloans or call
the AGâ€™s Student Loan Helpline
at 1-888-830-6277.
~ GUEST COMMENTARY ~
Horror in Winthrop
By Sal Giarratani
A
s a former police offi cer with
28 years on the job, I have
seen America improving over my
lifetime, but we seem to be less
and less shocked by acts of unexplainable
violence which many
times have racial components attached.
What
happened on Saturday,
June 26 should have never happened
in Winthrop or any other
community. I agree with the commentary
very much. America in
general and Boston, in particular,
have had a complicated history
when it comes to race.
However, while many residential
neighborhoods around us still
exhibit high levels of segregation,
there are other parts of the city of
Boston which have grown leaps
and bounds and hardly resemble
the Boston of 1974 when racial
tensions spilled over into the
streets over a federal court order
that divided up kids in neighborhoods
like multicolored jelly
beans in a jar. The federal judge in
BEACH | FROM Page 1
vaccines in an eff ort to boost
Revereâ€™s vaccination numbers.
â€œWeâ€™ve found attending events
throughout the city is a great
this case even stated his job wasnâ€™t
to improve the equality and quality
of what was being taught in
the school system nearly 50 years
ago â€“ his job was demographics
of who sat next to who in the
classroom.
As a result, instead of folks holding
our elected offi cials accountable,
folks turned on each other.
Boston residents of all colors and
shades saw each group as the otherâ€™s
enemy when the real architects
of racial unrest were never
held accountable.
As someone who grew up in
lower Roxbury/South End in the
â€™50s and â€™60s, we seemed not divided
from each other. Most of us
were working-class families struggling
along, trying to raise families
and trying to make the futures of
their children better than theirs. As
a child of that era, I had all kinds
of friends and their color was secondary.
The bind that held us together
wasn't race but geography.
I believe the problem with violence
today is that too many in society,
in government and especialway
to make getting the vaccine
convenient for our residents,â€
said Revereâ€™s Director of Public
Health, Lauren Buck. â€œWe hope
to inform residents of the safety
of the vaccine and commemly
in the news media have been
very successful with the politics
of division. I certainly believe that
what just happened in Winthrop
when victims were most likely selected
by skin color does not defi
ne us from each other.
We may never truly know what
happened that day or why someone
would do the things that were
done by the culprit. Suff olk D.A.
Rachel Rollins stated that the killer
had hate in his heart. I believe
the shooter had no heart but that
hate seemingly must have been
housed in his mind.
We need to stop dividing and
start uniting. Society is all of us
together. Race, however, remembers
a festering sore for all of us.
We need to address the current
climate in this country and start
working one by one in improving
life for all. We canâ€™t wait for the government
to act and we must trust
ourselves. We canâ€™t live in fear and
call ourselves a free people. We are
not as bad as many say but we are
not as good as we need to be. That
work continues.
orate Revere Beach.â€
As of July 2, the Massachusetts
Department of Public Health reported
59% of Revere residents
fully vaccinated and 67% with
their fi rst dose.
Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
Top Smartphones for
Tech-Shy Seniors
Dear Savvy Senior,
Can you recommend some good smartphones for older
seniors? I would like to get my 78-year-old mother to upgrade
to a smartphone but want something thatâ€™s easy for her to see
and use.
Shopping Around
Dear Shopping,
There are actually several smartphones
I can recommend that will
provide your mother a simpler, less
intimidating smartphone experience.
Here are my top three options.
Apple iPhones: Because of the
quality and functionality of Apple
products, an iPhone is a great choice
for seniors who are inexperienced
with technology. But, to make it easier
for you mom to use, youâ€™ll need
to set it up and customize it to meet
her needs and preferences.
To set-up your momâ€™s iPhone
and make it senior-friendly, start by
cleaning-up/decluttering the home
screen, which you can do by deleting
the apps your mom wonâ€™t use
and hiding the apps sheâ€™ll rarely use
in labeled folders or the App Library.
The fewer options the better!
Youâ€™ll also want to set up a small
number of contacts (with photos)
to family and friends that your mom
frequently communicates with and
install some apps she would enjoy
using.
Finally, iPhones have a wide variety
of built-in accessibility features
you can turn on depending on your
momâ€™s needs. These features, which
you access through the phoneâ€™s settings,
can help users that have diminished
vision, hearing impairment,
hand dexterity problems or
cognitive loss.
Some popular accessibility features
among older iPhone users include
larger text and icon display,
zoom (screen magnifi cation), magnifi
er (turns iPhone into a magnifying
glass), increased volume and
alerts, voice control, fi nd my iPhone,
and emergency SOS and medical
ID set up. But there are dozens of
other tweaks you can make to enhance
your momâ€™s experience with
her iPhone.
For a rundown of the diff erent accessibility
features and instructions
on how to set them up, see Apple.
com/accessibility.
If youâ€™re interested in this option,
the iPhone 12 (5G, 6.1-inch display
screen, $800) or iPhone 12 mini (5G,
5.4-inch screen, $700) are excellent
choices. Or, for a more budgetfriendly
phone consider the iPhone
SE (4.7-inch screen, $400) that came
out in 2020.
Samsung Galaxy: If youâ€™re an android
phone user and would like to
get your mom a phone that youâ€™re
familiar with, you should consider
a Samsung.
All Samsung phones off er an â€œEasy
Modeâ€ feature in their settings that
boosts the text and icon size, and
simplifi es the home-screen layout
and contacts, which makes these
phones a nice option for seniors or
tech-newbies.
These phones also have a variety
of accessibility features -see Samsung.com/us/accessibility/galaxy-mobile
for instructions â€“ that can accommodate
your momâ€™s needs.
The Samsung Galaxy S21 5G (6.2inch
screen, $800) or more moderately
priced Galaxy A71 5G (6.7inch
screen, $600) are good choices
to consider here.
Lively Smart: Another less expensive
option to consider is to purchase
your mom a smartphone thatâ€™s specifically
designed for seniors. The
best one available is the new Lively
Smart off ered by Best Buy.
This phone has a 6.2-inch screen,
large text and a simple list-based
menu that provides one-touch access
to frequently used features like
video chat, camera, email and more.
It also off ers a nice variety of optional
health and safety features you can
add on like:\
â€¢ Urgent Response, which is a
mobile medical alert service that
would connect your mom to a Lively
agent in emergency situations, 24/7,
who would confi rm her location and
get her the help she needs.
â€¢ Urgent Care, which would let
your mom to speak to a registered
nurse or board-certifi ed doctor anytime.
â€¢
Lively Link, which is an app that
sends alerts to family and friends
if your mom calls urgent response.
â€¢ Personal Operator Service,
who can assist your mom with tasks
like helping fi nd addresses, setting
up appointments booking Lively
Rides through a partnership with
Lyft and much more.
The Lively Smart is available online
at Lively.com or at Best Buy stores
for $150.
Send your senior questions to: Savvy Senior,
P.O. Box 5443, Norman, OK 73070, or visit SavvySenior.
org. Jim Miller is a contributor to the NBC Today show
and author of â€œThe Savvy Seniorâ€ book.
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Page 13
Public health officials confirm seasonâ€™s first
West Nile mosquito sample
T
he state Department of
Public Health (DPH) recently
announced that West
Nile virus (WNV) has been
detected in mosquitoes in
Massachusetts for the fi rst
time this year. The presence
of WNV was confi rmed today
by the state Public Health
Laboratory in a mosquito
sample collected on June
29 in Medford. No human or
animal cases of WNV or Eastern
Equine Encephalitis (EEE)
have been detected so far
this year. There is no elevated
risk level or risk-level change
associated with this fi nding.
â€œThe first WNV infected
mosquito of the season is
always a signal that it is time
to start taking steps to avoid
mosquito bites,â€ said DPH
Acting Commissioner Margret
Cooke. â€œWNV is part of
summer in Massachusetts
and as we head into this long
holiday weekend, it is important
to remember that
while WNV can cause serious
illness, there are simple
things that you can do
to protect yourself and your
loved ones.â€
WNV is usually transmitted
to humans through the
bite of an infected mosquito.
There were 8 human cases
of WNV in 2020. In 2018,
there were 49 human cases
of WNV infection acquired in
Massachusetts - the greatest
number of cases the Commonwealth
has ever had
in a single year. While WNV
can infect people of all ages,
people over the age of 50
are at higher risk for severe
disease. Most people infected
with WNV will have no
symptoms. When present,
WNV symptoms tend to include
fever and flu-like illness.
In rare cases, more severe
illness can occur.
â€œThese simple actions can
help protect you from mosquito
bites and the diseases
they can cause,â€ said state
Epidemiologist Dr. Catherine
Brown. â€œThe tools for prevention
include using a mosquito
repellent with an EPA-registered
ingredient according
to the directions on the label,
wearing clothing to reduce
exposed skin when weather
permits, draining standing
water to prevent mosquito
breeding, and repairing window
screens to keep mosquitoes
out of your home.â€
Additional information, including
all WNV and EEE positive
results, can be found on
the Arbovirus Surveillance
Information web page at
Mosquito-borne Diseases |
Mass.gov, which is updated
daily, or by calling the DPH
Division of Epidemiology at
617-983-6800.
To Avoid Mosquito Bites
â€¢ Apply Insect Repellent
When Outdoors. Use a repellent
with an EPA-registered
ingredient (DEET (N,
N-diethyl-m-toluamide),
permethrin, picaridin (KBR
3023), oil of lemon eucalyptus
[p-methane 3, 8-diol
(PMD)] or IR3535) according
to the product label instructions.
DEET products should
not be used on infants under
two months of age and
should be used in concentrations
of 30 percent or less
on older children. Oil of lemon
eucalyptus should not be
used on children under three
years of age.
â€¢ Be Aware of Peak Mosquito
Hours. The hours from
dusk to dawn are peak biting
times for many mosquitoes.
Consider rescheduling
outdoor activities that occur
during evening or early
morning in areas of high risk.
â€¢ Wear Appropriate
Clothing to Help Reduce
Mosquito Bites. Wearing
long sleeves, long pants and
socks when outdoors will
help keep mosquitoes away
from your skin.
Mosquito-Proof Your
Home
â€¢ Drain Standing Water.
Mosquitoes lay eggs in
standing water. Limit the
number of places around
your home for mosquitoes
to breed by either draining
or discarding items that
hold water. Check rain gutters
and drains. Empty unused
fl owerpots and wading
pools and change the water
in birdbaths frequently.
â€¢ Install or Repair Screens.
Keep mosquitoes outside by
having tightly-fi tting screens
on all windows and doors.
Protect Your Animals
Animal owners should
reduce potential mosquito
breeding sites on their
property by eliminating
standing water from containers
such as buckets,
tires, and wading pools â€“
especially after heavy rains.
Water troughs provide excellent
mosquito breeding
habitats and should be
fl ushed out at least once a
week during the summer
months to reduce mosquitoes
near paddock areas.
Horse owners should
keep horses in indoor stalls
at night to reduce their risk
of exposure to mosquitoes.
Owners should also
speak with their veterinarian
about mosquito repellents
approved for use in
animals and vaccinations to
prevent WNV and EEE. If an
animal is suspected of having
WNV or EEE, owners are
required to report this to the
Department of Agricultural
Resources, Division of Animal
Health by calling 617626-1795
and to the DPH by
calling 617-983-6800.
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Í`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://oGDHNzDR2T6upJ81fRGibI-bj3-vN_zi3o_IFlh44A4Í'Í`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://TmdK-BLxHa_iPbPZdKn_ho_SXhYsp5RDzOWnZIVi_ZgÎ û•4Í ÍÅÍñ×`çtvùŸè>&î^Ý“× ×`çtwùŸè>&î^á Í1Í7Ì»9×HÚ !mailto:bob@beaconhillrollcall.com××Ðˆ× ×`çtwùŸè>&î^à ÍÓÍúÌ·9×H»mailto:dharris@revereha.com××Ðˆ× ×`çtvùŸè>&î^ß Í0oÌ×9×HÚ !mailto:bob@beaconhillrollcall.com××Ðˆ×‰EÚ+uPage 14
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 9, 2021
If you have any questions about this weekâ€™s report, e-mail us at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com or call us at (617) 720-1562.
THE HOUSE AND SENATE: Beacon
Hill Roll Call records the votes
of local representatives and senators
from the week of June 28-July 2.
OVERRIDE BAKERâ€™S VETO OF
PROJECT LABOR AGREEMENT
FOR SOLDIERSâ€™ HOME (S 2439)
House 130-30, Senate 37-3, overrode
Gov. Charlie Bakerâ€™s veto of a
section of the bill authorizing $400
million to fund the construction of
a new Soldiersâ€™ Home in Holyoke.
The section requires the home be
built under a Project Labor Agreement
(PLA) that ensures that union
labor will be used to build the facility
by mandating a pre-bid, pre-hire
collective bargaining agreement for
the construction.
â€œThis [PLA] requirement threatens
the viability of this project by limiting
fair competition and disproportionately
reducing opportunities
for minority, women and veteran-owned
businesses,â€ wrote Gov.
Charlie Baker in his veto message. â€œIt
will also raise the overall costs of this
project precipitously and may result
in a labor shortage, putting the project
and project timeline in jeopardy.â€
â€œPLAs create barriers to entry that
eliminate the equality of opportunity
that is central to the commonwealthâ€™s
public construction process,â€
continued Baker. â€œWhile PLAs
do not technically prohibit nonunion
contractors from bidding on
a project, PLA terms make it cost
prohibitive and impractical for any
non-union member to participate.â€
â€œI voted to uphold the project
labor agreement provisionâ€¦because
it establishes practical standards
for fair pay and workplace
safety,â€ said Senate Marc Pacheco
(D-Taunton). â€œIn addition, the language
â€¦ includes key safeguards
designed to ensure inclusion and
equity amongst project contractors.
Construction initiatives throughout
the commonwealth have successfully
implemented project labor
agreements in recent years and
I am pleased the hardworking employees
tasked with building this
new facility will be able to rely on
reasonable workplace conditions.â€
â€œGov. Baker recognizes the risk
that the project-labor agreement
could bring to the Holyoke Soldiersâ€™
Home project,â€ said Sen. Ryan Fattman
(R-Sutton) who opposed the
PLA provision. â€œNot only will it exclude
the opportunity for women
and minority owned businesses to
bid on components of the project,
but the PLA could also signal unforeseen
budget expenditures that
drive the cost over budget. These
risks will threaten the commonwealthâ€™s
ability to secure VA funding
that is needed to match the
commonwealthâ€™s fi nancial commitment
in this bill.â€
â€œThis [PLA] language and resulting
agreement will ensure that
hard-earned, taxpayer dollars are
spent effi ciently to build a new soldiersâ€™
home that is on time, on budget
and worthy of the veterans it
will serve,â€ said Sen. Paul Feeney (DFoxborough)
the Senate sponsor
of the language. â€œThe language â€¦
commits to recruiting and hiring a
workforce that is diverse, local, safe,
well-trained and highly skilled. Despite
the governorâ€™s vocal opposition,
the Senate took steps by overriding
his veto, to assist women,
minority and veteran owned businesses
in creating jobs and opportunities
now and in the future, as
well as expanded opportunities for
many local working-class people in
the construction trades.â€
In an unusual occurrence, SenGroundskeeper/Custodian/Laborer
Job
Summary
Hiring (1) Full -Time employee to join the Revere Housing Authority team as
Groundskeeper / Custodian/Laborer. Work involves the performance of routine duties
î•îˆîî„î—îˆî‡ î—î’ î—î‹îˆ îˆî›î—îˆî•îŒî’î• îî„îŒî‘î—îˆî‘î„î‘î†îˆ î’î‰ îî„îšî‘î–î€ î—î•îˆîˆî–î€ î–î‹î•î˜î…î–î€ îƒ€î’îšîˆî• î…îˆî‡î–î€ îšî„îîŽî–î€
î•î’î„î‡îšî„îœî–î€ î“î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠ îî’î—î–î€ îˆî—î†î€‘î€ž î—î‹îˆ îŒî‘î—îˆî•îŒî’î• î†î˜î–î—î’î‡îŒî„î îî„îŒî‘î—îˆî‘î„î‘î†îˆ î’î‰ îƒ€î’î’î•î–î€ îšî„îîî–î€ î†îˆîŒîîŒî‘îŠî–î€
îšîŒî‘î‡î’îšî–î€ îˆî—î†î€‘ îŒî‘ î’ï‚ˆî†îˆî–î€ î“î˜î…îîŒî† î„î•îˆî„î– î„î‘î‡ î„î“î„î•î—îîˆî‘î—î–î€ž î„î‘î‡ î“îˆî•î‰î’î•îî– îîŒî‘î’î• îî„îŒî‘î—îˆî‘î„î‘î†îˆ
repairs and painting repairs. He/she will be required to lift and carry heavy objects, to
work outdoors in all types of adverse weather conditions.
Knowledge, Skills and Abilities employment
1.
2.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
ate Ways and Means chairman Sen.
Mike Rodrigues (D-Westport) broke
with Senate President Karen Spilka
and her leadership team was one
of only three senators and the only
Democrat to vote with the governor
against the PLA. Beacon Hill Roll
Call asked Rodrigues why he voted
against the PLA. His spokesman
Bently Holt responded, â€œThe senator
is tied up in conference and so
will not be issuing a statement on
this.â€ Rodrigue also voted against
the PLA agreement when it was
up for a vote in April. At that time,
he told the State House News Service,
â€œI have problems with anytime
we limit competition on any sort of
public construction projects. I think
more competition is healthier for everyone.
Itâ€™s better for the taxpayers.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for overriding BakKnowledge
of grounds keeping and custodial cleaning preferred.
Knowledge of the proper use of chemicals, fertilizers, and pesticides.
3. Knowledge of occupational hazards and safety measures.
4.
Ability to understand and carry out oral and written instructions.
Ability to maintain acceptable working relationship with co-workers.
Ability to work in adverse conditions, such as: sleet, snow, heat, cold, dust and
dirt, as well as cramped quarters and high places.
Ability to lift heavy objects.
Knowledgeable and skilled in performing various painting tasks
Knowledgeable and skilled in performing various carpentry tasks
Responsibilities
1. Work in a professional and courteous manner within a service environment.
2.
Perform preventive ground keeping and custodial procedures.
3.
Document information required maintaining records on preventive maintenance
programs, repairs, installations, and stock utilization and working orders.
î€—î€‘ î€¥îˆ î“î•î’î‚¿î†îŒîˆî‘î— îšîŒî—î‹ î‹î„î‘î‡ î„î‘î‡ î“î’îšîˆî• î—î’î’îî–î€‘
5. Report to work in emergency conditions.
6. When necessary works under adverse conditions, shovels snow
and lifts heavy objects.
Performs all other related duties that may be assigned.
î€´î˜î„îîŒî‚¿î†î„î—îŒî’î‘î–î€’î€¨î›î“îˆî•îŒîˆî‘î†îˆ
7.
High school graduate with at least one-year of full time, or equivalent part-time
experience in building custodial and grounds keeping. Possess a valid Massachusetts
class D driverâ€™s license.
Starting hourly rate is $29.90/ hr. based on experience; 40 hours per week, excellent
î…îˆî‘îˆî‚¿î—î–î€‘
Please submit resume to Dean Harris, Director of Maintenance & Modernization,
70 Cooledge Street Revere, MA 02151 or email to dharris@revereha.com. Accepting
î•îˆî–î˜îîˆî– î˜î‘î—îŒî î“î’î–îŒî—îŒî’î‘ î‚¿îîîˆî‡î€‘ î€µî€«î€¤ îŒî– î„î‘ îˆî”î˜î„î î’î“î“î’î•î—î˜î‘îŒî—îœî€’ î€¤ï‚ˆî•îî„î—îŒî™îˆ î€¤î†î—îŒî’î‘ î€¨îî“îî’îœîˆî•î€‘
July 2, 9, 2021
erâ€™s veto and favors the PLA provision.
A â€œNoâ€ vote is for sustaining the
governorâ€™s veto and against the PLA
provision.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Ye s
Sen. Joseph Boncore
with the resources they need to invest
in critical infrastructure projects,â€
said Senator Patrick Oâ€™Connor
(R-Weymouth). â€œInvesting in our
roads, sidewalks and bridges is an
investment in the longevity and
safety of our communities.â€
â€œIt is good news that theâ€¦bill
jumped another hurdle on Beacon
Hill and is moving ahead,â€ said
Massachusetts Municipal Association
(MMA) Executive Director Geoff
Beckwith. â€œThe construction season
is getting shorter with each passing
day, and there is a huge need
to enact the bill now. Communities
depend on these funds for critical
road repair projects. We are also asking
that the state add to this $200
million â€¦ bill by using some of this
yearâ€™s large budget surplus to put
even more funding on the street, as
it has done in past years. MMA estimates
that the annual cost of getting
and maintaining 30,000 miles
of municipal roads into a state of
good repair is approximately $600
million, and communities donâ€™t
have the resources to get there
themselves. While passing theâ€¦bill
is an important step, going beyond
$200 million is essential.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill.)
Sen. Joseph Boncore
Ye s
HOW LONG WAS LAST WEEKâ€™S
Ye s
$200 MILLION FOR LOCAL
ROADS AND BRIDGES (S 2486)
Senate 39-0, approved a bill that
includes authorizing $200 million
in one-time funding for the maintenance
and repair of local roads and
bridges in cities and towns across
the state. The package is a bond
bill under which the funding would
be borrowed by the state through
the sale of bonds. The House has already
approved a diff erent version
of the proposal and a House-Senate
conference committee will likely
work out a compromise.
â€œSafe roads, reliable bridges and
modernized transit infrastructure
made possible through this bill exemplifi
es the Senateâ€™s approach to
public transportation,â€ said Senate
Transportation Committee Chair
Joe Boncore (D-Winthrop). â€œThe
economic impacts of the COVID-19
pandemic have made the need for
this funding more urgent. These investments
will provide critical funding
for shovel-ready transportation
projects in our cities and towns, create
jobs and support local and regional
economies.â€
â€œThe measure we passed today
will provide our cities and towns
SESSION? Beacon Hill Roll Call
tracks the length of time that the
House and Senate were in session
each week. Many legislators say that
legislative sessions are only one aspect
of the Legislatureâ€™s job and that
a lot of important work is done outside
of the House and Senate chambers.
They note that their jobs also
involve committee work, research,
constituent work and other matters
that are important to their districts.
Critics say that the Legislature does
not meet regularly or long enough
to debate and vote in public view
on the thousands of pieces of legislation
that have been fi led. They
note that the infrequency and brief
length of sessions are misguided
and lead to irresponsible late-night
sessions and a mad rush to act on
dozens of bills in the days immediately
preceding the end of an annual
session.
During the week of June 28-July
2, the House met for a total of four
hours and 24 minutes while the
Senate met for a total of two hours
and 45 minutes
Mon. June 28 House 11:02 a.m.
to 12:14 p.m.
Senate 11:14 a.m. to 12:20 p.m.
Tues. June 29 No House session
No Senate session
Wed. June 30 House 11:04 a.m.
to 2:13 p.m.
No Senate session
Thurs. July 1 House 11:03 a.m.
to 11:06 a.m.
Senate 11:17 a.m. to 12:56 p.m.
Fri. July 2 No House session
No Senate session
Bob Katzen
welcomes feedback at
bob@beaconhillrollcall.com
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://E3ao-4Kjytv4uTT1dY8za99MU7eqpGrmDWYdIy2RMosÍ"ÆÍ`Ì°Í ×`çtpùŸè>&î^£×‰EÚ¾THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 9, 2021
Page 15
1. On July 9, 1932, King C.
Gillette died, who invented
the safety razor with disposable
blades and founded
a company in what city?
2. Is wasabi grown outside
Japan?
3. What were kayaks originally
made of?
4. According to the â€œGuinness
Book of World Records,â€
the hottest weather
ever recorded on earth
(134Â°) was on July 10, 1913,
where?
5. Who was the only U.S.
president to pay all the national
debt (in 1835)?
6. What is a mud pot?
7. On July 11, 1977, who
was posthumously awarded
the Presidential Medal
of Freedom?
8. What do bull, hammerhead
and nurse have in
common?
9. What does JPEG stand
for?
10. In what year were
women first allowed to
participate in Olympic
swimming: 1895, 1912 or
1921?
11. July 12 is International
Town Crier Day; what New
England beach town has
had a town crier since the
Answers
mid-1800â€™s?
12. Charles Babbage has
been called the â€œFatherâ€
of what?
13. What food has the
highest water content â€“
96% (a member of the
gourd family)?
14. On July 13, 1923, the
â€œHollywoodlandâ€ sign (later
revised to â€œHollywoodâ€)
was dedicated; what did it
advertise?
15. The fi rst-known recipe
for what campfire snack
was in a 1927 Girl Scout
handbook?
16. By weight, what is the
most-consumed melon in
the country?
17. On July 14, 2013, the
last telegram was sent â€“
in what country that is the
second-most populous
country?
18. Revere Beach, Americaâ€™s
first public beach,
was founded in what year:
1896, 1922 or 1931?
19. The countryâ€™s oldest
church bells are in what
church in Boston?
20. On July 15, 1879, a patent
was issued to two men
from Worcester, Mass., for
the fi rst American â€œdobby,â€
which is what?
Northeast Metro Tech thanks
community leaders for supporting
school building project
WAKEFIELD â€“ Superintendent
David DiBarri of Northeast
Metropolitan Regional Vocational
High School (Northeast
Metro Tech) wishes to thank
community leaders who are
requesting the state use federal
American Rescue Plan Act
funding to help pay for a new
school building. Revere Mayor
Brian Arrigo, Malden Mayor
Gary Christenson and Chelsea
City Manager Thomas Ambrosino
are requesting support for
the funding for a new state-ofthe-art
building. Gateway City
Mayors Shaunna Oâ€™Connell
of Taunton and Paul Coogan
of Fall River are seeking similar
spending for the new Bristol
Plymouth Regional Technical
School in Taunton and
WATER | FROM Page 1
conclusions from results for individual
years, preferring to rely on
multiyear averages.
In 2020, the overall water quality
safety rating for Boston Harborâ€™s
regional beaches managed
by the state Department of
Conservation & Recreation was
93 percent, which was an improvement
over the prior year,
which had a score of 89 percent.
Five beaches had perfect scores
of 100 percent in 2020: Carson
Beach, City Point and Pleasure
Bay in South Boston and Revere
Beach and Winthrop Beach.
Eight other area beaches earned
ratings ranging from 85 percent
to 98 percent. Water quality continued
to lag at Tenean Beach
in Dorchester, which scored 79
percent, and at Kingâ€™s Beach in
Lynn and Swampscott, which
scored just 70 percent in 2020.
â€œWhile we are delighted with
the progress that we have made
on most of the regionâ€™s public
beaches, we are disappointed
to report that Tenean Beach
in Dorchester and Kingâ€™s Beach
in Lynn and Swampscott were
still unsafe for swimming more
than one out of every fi ve days
in 2020,â€ said Save the Harbor/
for Greater Fall River Vocational
Technical High School in Fall
River. These fi ve Gateway City
leaders are asking state leaders
to commit $300 million of
the Commonwealthâ€™s expected
$5.3 billion from the American
Rescue Act funds.
Northeast Metro Tech is planning
a new state-of-the-art facility
that will allow the District
to expand from 1,270 students
to about 1,600, drastically reducing
the Districtâ€™s student
wait list. The building project
is estimated to cost $317.5 million.
The grant award from the
Massachusetts School Building
Authority (MSBA) is estimated
to be only $140 million, resulting
in a cost to Northeast Metro
Techâ€™s member communiSave
the Bayâ€™s Executive Director,
Chris Mancini. â€œWe are particularly
concerned about the
situation at Kingâ€™s Beach, where
fi lthy, bacteria laden discharges
from both Lynn and Swampscott
at Stacey Brook continue
to threaten public health.â€
He added, â€œOur kids and families
deserve better. We are calling
on the Lynn Water and Sewer
Commission and the Swampscott
Water and Sewer Department
to work together with
Save the Harbor/Save the Bay,
state and federal regulators,
and the community to Save
Kingâ€™s Beach, which is a critical
recreational asset to Lynnâ€™s
kids and families. This is an environmental
justice issue in a diverse,
dense city where healthy
green and blue spaces are at a
premium.â€
Save the Harbor/Save the Bay
is also concerned about the accuracy
of the beach flagging
and posting protocols, where
bacteria testing triggers swimming
advisories. According to
Save the Harborâ€™s Spokesperson,
Bruce Berman, one problem
is that postings are always
a day late because beach managers
must wait up to 36 hours
to obtain test results. Beach water
quality might have already
ties of $177 million. The MSBA
is reviewing the proposal and
will vote on the fi nal disbursement
in August. Northeast
Metro Techâ€™s 12 sending communities
will be responsible for
the balance of the costs. Tax impact
information for all 12 communities
will be available this
summer.
DiBarri and fellow superintendents
are asking the MSBA
to increase its anticipated grant
awards to refl ect actual costs
of these worthy construction
projects. â€œUrban students
should have the same access
to receive relevant and rigorous
instruction in Career Technical
Education, in safe and state-ofthe-art
facilities, as students in
suburban districts,â€ DiBarri said.
changed significantly during
this period, so the prior dayâ€™s
tests often do not refl ect current
conditions. Moreover, in 2019,
DPH made additional changes
to the beach posting and fl agging
protocols, which has resulted
in additional days where
beaches are unnecessarily posted
with swimming advisories
when they are in fact safe for
swimming.
â€œWhile Save the Harbor recognizes
the importance of protecting
public health, the current
system is often inaccurate
and sometimes overly restrictive,â€
said Berman. â€œOver the
coming months we plan to work
with consultant Kelly Coughlin
of Stony Brook Partners, and
with the Department of Conservation
and Recreation, the
Massachusetts Water Resources
Authority, MADEP, USEPA and
MADPH to develop new rainfall
thresholds and protocols to improve
fl agging and posting accuracy.â€
In
the meantime, Save the
Harbor/Save the Bay urges
beachgoers to rely on common
sense when swimming after
summer storms and to use the
multiyear average safety ratings
to help decide when and where
it is safe to swim.
1. Boston, Mass.
2. Rarely, due to
its ideal growing
conditions restricting
wide cultivation
3.
A framework
of whalebone or
driftwood covered
with skins
caulked with
whale fat
4. Death Valley,
California
5. Andrew Jackson
6.
A hot spring
with mud and
venting gases
7. Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr.
8. They are types
of sharks.
9. Joint Photographic
Expert
Group
10. 1912 (The
Olympics fi rst included
swimming
in 1908.)
11. Provincetown
12. The computer
13. Cucumbers
14. A housing development
in the
hills near Hollywood
15.
Sâ€™mores
16. Watermelon
17. India
18. 1896
19. Old North
Church
20. A loom attachment
used
for creating small
geometric patterns
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 9, 2021
OBITUARIES
Joan U. (Ferullo)
Buccini
F
amily & friends are invited
to attend Visiting Hours
on Thursday, July 1st from 4:00
p.m. to 8:00 p.m., in the Vertuccio
& Smith, Home for Funeral,
773 Broadway (Rt. 107) REVERE
for Joan U. (Ferullo) Buccini,
who died unexpectedly
on Sunday, June 27th, she just
celebrated her 86th birthday
on June 22nd. A Funeral will
be conducted from the Funeral
Home on Friday, July 2nd at
9:00 a.m., followed by a Funeral
Mass in St. Anthony of Padua
Church, 250 Revere St. REVERE
at 10:00 a.m. Interment will follow
in Puritan Lawn Memorial
î€°î’îî‡ î€‰ î€ºî„î—îˆî•î“î•î’î’î‚¿î‘îŠ
î€¨î€»î€³î€¨î€µî€·î€¶
î‚‡ î€¶î˜îî“ î€³î˜îî“î– î‚‡ î€ºî„îîî– î€‰ î€©îî’î’î• î€¦î•î„î†îŽî– î‚‡
î€¤î€¯î€¯ î€ºî€²î€µî€® î€ªî€¸î€¤î€µî€¤î€±î€·î€¨î€¨î€§
î€ î€¯îŒî†îˆî‘î–îˆî‡ î€¦î’î‘î—î•î„î†î—î’î• î€
î€­î€³î€ª î€¦î€²î€±î€¶î€·î€µî€¸î€¦î€·î€¬î€²î€±
î€¦îˆîî î“î‹î’î‘îˆ î€šî€›î€”î€î€™î€–î€•î€î€šî€˜î€“î€–
î€˜î€“î€›î€î€•î€œî€•î€î€œî€”î€–î€—
Park, Peabody.
Joan was born & raised in
Boston. She attended Boston
Public Schools and was
an alumna of Roslindale High
School. She met & married her
husband Hugo M. â€œMikeâ€ Buccini
and the couple settled in
Revere. They raised their children
in Revere where Joan
was a proud mother & homemaker.
She and her husband
shared 55 years of marriage
until his death on February 25,
2009. Joan continued to live a
life surrounded by her loving
family & her group of friends.
She enjoyed going places and
always loved getting dressed
up for any occasion. She later
became a great grandmother
& loved being with her 2 great
grandsons. Her family was paramount;
she enjoyed being
with her siblings & sharing &
making new memories.
She is the beloved wife of
55 years to the late Hugo M.
â€œMikeâ€ Buccini. Loving mother
of Christina M. Alma & husband
Edwin of Saugus & Wayne
R. Buccini of Revere. Cherished
grandmother of Michelle A.
SKATING CENTER
www.Roller-World.com
781-231-1111
HELP WANTED
Skate Guards â€¢ Snack Bar
î€‰ î€²î‰îƒ€î†îˆ î€«îˆîî“
Adults Prefered - Hours Can Be Arranged
Open 7 Days Per Week
Call Jerry at 617-620-9201
or Michelle at 781-233-9507
Located at 425R Broadway (Route 1 South), Saugus
MBTA Bus Route 429
F
amily & friends are invited
to attend a Visitation on
Wednesday, June 30th from
10:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. (Noon)
in the Vertuccio & Smith, Home
for Funerals, 773 Broadway
(Rte. 107) REVERE, Vita A. Radway
AKA Vita A. Marotta, formerly
of Revere, who passed
away in Lynnfield, on June
25th, following a lengthy illness.
She was 93 years of age.
Her Funeral Service will be conducted
in the funeral home at
12:15 p.m. & immediately followed
with interment in Holy
Cross Cemetery, Malden.
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission
from the publisher, The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com.
BUYER1
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
SELLER1
BUYER2
Desimone, Christopher
Ospina, Elizabeth
Courtemanche, Tracy L
Gonzalez, Juan D
Casî†Ÿ llo, Kevin P
Corliss, Laura A
Paî†Ÿ no, Ever B
Desimone, Trevor J
JAM 5 Properî†Ÿ es LLC
Vasquez, Rivera C Bensellam, Rachid
Springer, Paul H 2010-3 Sfr Vent REO LLC
Medjahed, Mohamed Medjahed, Raî†Ÿ ba Houdna, Hasna
SELLER2
Desimone, Michael J 97 Crystal Ave
115 Walnut Ave
Parmenter&Brown LT Brown, Priscilla D 102 Main St #2
Hotchkiss, Malcolm
Hotchkiss, Anne
Tarek, Hakima
Echchetouani, Hassan 86 Jones St
36 Reservoir Ave
133 Savage St #A
ADDRESS DATE
PRICE
Revere
18.06.2021 $ 260 000,00
18.06.2021 $ 660 000,00
18.06.2021 $ 599 000,00
17.06.2021 $ 890 000,00
92-R Arcadia St #A 16.06.2021 $ 490 000,00
11.06.2021 $ 525 000,00
07.06.2021 $ 520 000,00
Swanson & her husband Christopher
of Saugus & Jenny M.
Lawless & her fi ancÃ© Lian Lemmo
of Manchester, NH. Adored
great-grandmother of Brandon
T. & Grayson M. Swanson. Dear
sister of Geraldine Remondi &
husband Emelio of Hyde Park,
Michael J. Ferullo & wife Shelley
of Plymouth& the late Sabino
Ferullo, Jr. She was the devoted
daughter of the late Former
Lt. Heavyweight boxer Sabino
Ferullo â€œSammy Fullerâ€ &
Jenny (Raff aele) Ferullo. She is
also lovingly survived by many
nieces, nephews, grandnieces
& grandnephews.
In lieu of flowers, remembrances
may be made to The
Boston Bulldogs Running Club,
P.O. Box 470558 Brookline, MA
02447-0558.
Vita A. Radway
AKA
Vita A. Marotta
Vita was born in Revere and is
the daughter of the late Leonard
and Catherine (Darone)
Radway. She was second oldest
of 5 children. Vita was a
long-time resident of Lynnfi eld;
she shared her home with her
brother Arnold and her nieces
and nephew. Vita and Arnold
raised their 6 great-nieces and
nephew after a tragic accident
claimed the life of their mother
and their niece, Cynthia Flint.
Vita very much enjoyed having
all of her family around her and
treated everyone she knew as
family. Following the family
tradition, she always cooked
Sunday dinners, and everyone
looked forward to her famous
meatballs. To everyone
that knew and loved her, she
was known as â€˜Auntyâ€™, a loving
and caring woman who truly
enjoyed helping others. During
the early parts of her life,
she enjoyed traveling to Hawaii,
a place where she would
visit often and form life-long
friendships. Vita worked most
her life at the Department of
Employment & Training in Boston,
a career that spanned 20
years. She lived in Revere during
the early years of her life
when her parents came from
Italy. The family later moved to
Lynnfi eld in 1945.
She is the wife of the late William
A. Marotta. Devoted sister
to Arnold P. Radway of Lynnfi
eld & the late Anthony G.
â€œTonyâ€ Radway, Vivian â€œMillieâ€
Radway-Flint & Phyllis LeTourneau.
Dear daughter of the late
Leonard & Catherine (Darone)
Radway. Cherished grandaunt
& surrogate mother to Jennifer
Connell, Rian Connell, Sharane
Connell-Anderson & Brian Anderson,
all of Lynnfi eld. Loving
grandaunt to Christina Passanisi
of Saugus, Danielle Passanisi
& Bianca Passanisi, both of
Lynnfield. Also lovingly survived
by her great grandnieces
& nephews, Hunter & Poppy,
both of Lynnfi eld, Angelo,
Briella & Janessa-May, all of
Saugus.
In lieu of flowers, remembrances
may be made to Care
Dimensions Hospice, 75 Sylvan
St., Danvers, MA 01923.
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Removal
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 9, 2021
Discount
Page 17
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î€­î€‘î€© î€‰ î€¶î’î‘ î€¦î’î‘î—î•î„î†î—îŒî‘îŠ
î€¶î‘î’îš î€³îî’îšîŒî‘îŠ
î€±î’ î€­î’î… î—î’î’ î–îî„îîî€„ î€©î•îˆîˆ î€¨î–î—îŒîî„î—îˆî–î€„
î€¦î’îîîˆî•î†îŒî„î î€‰ î€µîˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î—îŒî„î
î€šî€›î€”î€î€™î€˜î€™î€î€•î€“î€šî€›
î€ î€³î•î’î“îˆî•î—îœ îî„î‘î„îŠîˆîîˆî‘î— î€‰ îî„îŒî‘î—îˆî‘î„î‘î†îˆ
î€¶î‹î’î™îˆîîŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î•îˆîî’î™î„î
î€¯î„î‘î‡î–î†î„î“îŒî‘îŠî€ î€¨îîˆî†î—î•îŒî†î„îî€ î€³îî˜îî…îŒî‘îŠî€ î€³î„îŒî‘î—îŒî‘îŠî€ î€µî’î’îƒ€î‘îŠî€ î€¦î„î•î“îˆî‘î—î•îœî€ î€©î•î„îîŒî‘îŠî€
î€§îˆî†îŽî–î€ î€©îˆî‘î†îŒî‘îŠî€ î€°î„î–î’î‘î•îœî€ î€§îˆîî’îîŒî—îŒî’î‘î€ î€ªî˜î—î€î’î˜î—î–î€ î€­î˜î‘îŽ î€µîˆîî’î™î„î î€‰ î€§îŒî–î“îˆî•î–î„îî€
î€¦îîˆî„î‘ î€¸î“î–î€ î€¼î„î•î‡î–î€ î€ªî„î•î„îŠîˆî–î€ î€¤î—î—îŒî†î– î€‰ î€¥î„î–îˆîîˆî‘î—î–î€‘ î€·î•î˜î†îŽ î‰î’î• î€«îŒî•îˆî€ î€¥î’î…î†î„î— î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆî–î€‘
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î€¶î€³î€¤î€§î€¤î€©î€²î€µî€¤
î€¤î€¸î€·î€² î€³î€¤î€µî€·î€¶
î€­î€¸î€±î€® î€¦î€¤î€µî€¶
î€ºî€¤î€±î€·î€¨î€§
î€¶î€¤î€°î€¨ î€§î€¤î€¼ î€³î€¬î€¦î€® î€¸î€³
î€©î•î„î‘îŽ î€¥îˆî•î„î•î‡îŒî‘î’
î€°î€¤ î€¯îŒî†îˆî‘î–îˆ î€–î€”î€›î€”î€”
ADVOCATE
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advertise on the web at
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î‚‡ î€•î€— î€ î€«î’î˜î• î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆ
î‚‡ î€¨îîˆî•îŠîˆî‘î†îœ î€µîˆî“î„îŒî•î–
î€¥î€¨î€µî€¤î€µî€§î€¬î€±î€²
î€³îî˜îî…îŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î€«îˆî„î—îŒî‘îŠ
î€µîˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î—îŒî„î î€‰ î€¦î’îîîˆî•î†îŒî„î î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆ
î€ªî„î– î€©îŒî—î—îŒî‘îŠ î‚‡ î€§î•î„îŒî‘ î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆ
î€™î€”î€šî€‘î€™î€œî€œî€‘î€œî€–î€›î€–
î€¶îˆî‘îŒî’î• î€¦îŒî—îŒîîˆî‘ î€§îŒî–î†î’î˜î‘î—
î€šî€›î€”î€î€–î€•î€—î€î€”î€œî€•î€œ
î€´î˜î„îîŒî—îœ î€¸î–îˆî‡ î€·îŒî•îˆî–
î€°î’î˜î‘î—îˆî‡ î€‰ î€¬î‘î–î—î„îîîˆî‡
î€¸î–îˆî‡ î€¤î˜î—î’ î€³î„î•î—î– î€‰ î€¥î„î—î—îˆî•îŒîˆî–
î€©î„îîŒîîœ î’îšî‘îˆî‡ î€‰ î’î“îˆî•î„î—îˆî‡ î–îŒî‘î†îˆ î€”î€œî€—î€™
î€‡
î€‡
î€‡
î€‡
Classifi eds
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 9, 2021
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î€²î‰¤î†îˆî€ î€‹î€šî€›î€”î€Œ î€•î€–î€–î€î€•î€•î€—î€—
take a job at MassBio, the notfor-profi
t organization founded
in 1985 that â€œrepresents and
provides services and support
for the #1 life sciences cluster
in the world,â€ according to its
website.
Boncoreâ€™s vacancy would
open the possibility for locals,
such as School Committeeman
Anthony Dâ€™Ambrosio,
to take a stab at the seat,
which covers Revere, Winthrop
and sections of Boston
and Cambridge. Dâ€™Ambrosio,
in his fi rst term, has proven a
strong leader with the Revere
school board, given his Yale
pedigree, and would certainly
provide strong leadership
representing Revere. Boncore
has held the state senate seat
since 2016 and was last elected
in 2020.
The race for this senate seat
could hold quite an exciting
race in the Sept. primary if
Boncore should resign for the
high-paying position at MassBio.
Boncore had not made an
offi cial announcement as of
press time.
~ Home of the Week ~
KITCHEN
CABINETS
To Look Like New
508-840-0501
FURNITURE
STRIP & FINISH
î€¦îîˆî„î‘î€î€²î˜î—î–î€„
î€ºîˆ î—î„îŽîˆ î„î‘î‡ î‡îŒî–î“î’î–îˆ
î‰î•î’î î†îˆîîî„î•î–î€ î„î—î—îŒî†î–î€
îŠî„î•î„îŠîˆî–î€ îœî„î•î‡î–î€ îˆî—î†î€‘
î€ºîˆ î„îî–î’ î‡î’ î‡îˆîî’îîŒî—îŒî’î‘î€‘
î€¥îˆî–î— î€³î•îŒî†îˆî– î€¦î„îîî€
î€šî€›î€”î€î€˜î€œî€–î€î€˜î€–î€“î€›
î€šî€›î€”î€î€–î€•î€”î€î€•î€—î€œî€œ
Danvers
Superb awaits in this well maintained home that
offers excellent proximity to Major highways of 128,
î€œî€˜î€ î„î‘î‡ î€µî’î˜î—îˆ î€”î€‘ î€·î‹îˆ îƒ€î•î–î— îƒî’î’î• î‹î„î– î„ îî’î™îˆîîœ î˜î“î‡î„î—îˆî‡
kitchen with granite counter tops, Stainless Steel
Appliances, 1 bedroom, 1 bath and beautiful living
î•î’î’î îšîŒî—î‹ îŠîîˆî„îîŒî‘îŠ î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡ îƒî’î’î•î–î€‘ î—î‹îˆ î‹î’îîˆ î‹î„î–
a lovely three seasoned porch with lots of sun and
î’î™îˆî•îî’î’îŽîŒî‘îŠ î…îˆî„î˜î—îŒî‰î˜î îœî„î•î‡î€‘ î€·î‹îˆ î–îˆî†î’î‘î‡ îƒî’î’î• î„îšî„îŒî—î– î€•
bedrooms. driveway for 4 cars. Great scale to parks
and recreations....$499,000
Danvers
Carolina
Coral
Patrick
Rescigno
Rosa
Rescigno
Carl
Greenler
Seize the opportunity to get in thriving Danvers
neighborhood. Six room, 3 bedroom, 2 full baths.
6 car parking. Lot size of 24,699. This home is in a
lovely and established location.
Close to schools, parks and recreation....$649,000
Why List with
Mango Realty?
Our last listing SOLD
$64,000 OVER ASKING
with 28 OFFERS!
38 Main St., Saugus
(617) 877-4553
mangorealtyteam.com
~ Meet Our Agents ~
SAUGUS - 1st AD - Perfectly located, one-owner Center
Entrance Colonial features 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 full
î…î„î—î‹î–î€ î–î“î„î†îŒî’î˜î–î€ îƒ€î•îˆî“îî„î†îˆ îîŒî™îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’îî€ îˆî„î—î€îŒî‘ îŽîŒî—î†î‹îˆî‘ î’î“îˆî‘
î—î’ î‡îŒî‘îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’î î„î‘î‡ î‰î•î’î‘î—î€î—î’î€î…î„î†îŽî€ î€”î–î— îƒî’î’î• î‰î„îîŒîîœ î•î’î’î
îšîŒî—î‹ î–îîŒî‡îˆî• î—î’ î‡îˆî†îŽ îšîŒî—î‹ î—î•îˆî› îƒî’î’î•îŒî‘îŠî€ î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡ îƒî’î’î•îŒî‘îŠ
î—î‹î•î’î˜îŠî‹î’î˜î—î€ î—îšî’ î†î„î• îŠî„î•î„îŠîˆ î˜î‘î‡îˆî• îšîŒî—î‹ î‘îˆîšîˆî• îŠî„î•î„îŠîˆ
î‡î’î’î•î–î€ îî„î•îŠîˆî€ îîˆî™îˆî îî’î—î€ îî’î†î„î—îˆî‡ îŒî‘ î‡îˆî–îŒî•î„î…îîˆ î€«î’îšî„î•î‡ î€©î„î•îî–
î’î‘ îŠî•îˆî„î— î†î˜îî€î‡îˆî€î–î„î†î€‘ î€¦î’îîˆ îî„îŽîˆ î—î‹îŒî– î’î‘îˆ îœî’î˜î• î’îšî‘î€„
î€²î‰£îˆî•îˆî‡ î„î— î€‡î€™î€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
Saugus
View the interior
of this home
right on your
smartphone.
SAUGUS - Location! Nice and Sunny 4 Rooms,
î€• î…îˆî‡î•î’î’îî–î€ îŠîîˆî„îîŒî‘îŠ î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡ îƒî’î’î•î–î€
balcony, storage, 1 deeded parking, Pet Friendly
and more.........................................................$269,000
COMING SOON: STONEHAM
Sue Palomba
Founder, CEO
Barry Tam
Lea
Doherty
Ron
Visconti
Beautiful 4
level, 7 Room,
2 1/2 bath
corner lot
Townhouse
offers Central
Air, with great
amenities
including pool,
2 assigned
parking spaces,
pet friendly, barbecues welcome, minutes to
major routes and Boston.......$589,950
Call Mango Realty at
(617) 877-4553 for a
Free Market Analysis!
Fluent in Chinese, Cantonese, Italian & Spanish!
UNDER
AGREEMENT
UNDER
AGREEMENT
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Page 19
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 9, 2021
.............
#
1
î€¯îŠ‹îŠ•îŠ–îŠ‹îŠîŠ‰ î€‰ î€¶îŠ‡îŠŽîŠŽîŠ‹îŠîŠ‰
î€²îŠˆîŠˆîŠ‹îŠ…îŠ‡ îŠ‹îŠ î€¶îŠƒîŠ—îŠ‰îŠ—îŠ•
â€œExperience and knowledge
Provide the Best Serviceâ€
î€©î¨’î¨…î¨… î€°î¨î¨’î¨‹î¨…î¨” î€¨î¨–î¨î¨Œî¨•î¨î¨”î¨‰î¨î¨Žî¨“
î€¦îŠƒîŠ”îŠ’îŠ‡îŠîŠ‹îŠ–îŠ‘î€µîŠ‡îŠƒîŠŽî€¨îŠ•îŠ–îŠƒîŠ–îŠ‡î€‘îŠ…îŠ‘îŠ
î€¦
î€µ î€¨
View our website from
your mobile phone!
335 Central St., Saugus, MA
781-233-7300
î€¶î€¤î€¸î€ªî€¸î€¶ î€ î€©î€¬î€µî€¶î€· î€¤î€§ î€ î€³îˆî•î‰îˆî†î—îîœ îî’î†î„î—îˆî‡ î€› î•î’î’î î€¶î“îîŒî— î€¨î‘î—î•îœ î€µî„î‘î†î‹î€
î€– î…îˆî‡î•î’î’îî–î€ î€”îƒ² î…î„î—î‹î–î€ îî„î•îŠîˆ îˆî„î—î€îŒî‘ îŽîŒî—î†î‹îˆî‘î€ î‡îŒî‘îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’îî€ î‚¿î•îˆî“îî„î†îˆ
îîŒî™îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’îî€ î‰î„îîŒîîœ î•î’î’î îšîŒî—î‹ î‚¿î•îˆî“îî„î†îˆî€ î†îˆî‘î—î•î„î î„îŒî•î€ î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡
îƒ€î’î’î•îŒî‘îŠî€ î–î˜î‘î•î’î’îî€ îŠî„î•î„îŠîˆî€ îî„î•îŠîˆ îî’î—î€ î†î˜îî€î‡îˆ î–î„î†î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€˜î€›î€œî€î€œî€“î€“î€‘
î€µî€¨î€¹î€¨î€µî€¨ î€ î€³î€µî€¬î€°î€¨ î€¥î€µî€²î€¤î€§î€ºî€¤î€¼ îî’î†î„î—îŒî’î‘ î„î‘î‡ î™îŒî–îŒî…îŒîîŒî—îœ î’ï‚‡îˆî•î– î—î‹îŒî–
îŠî•îˆî„î— î€µîˆî—î„îŒî î†î’î‘î‡î’ î–î—î’î•îˆ î‰î•î’î‘î— îšîŒî—î‹ îî„î‘îœ î“î’î–î–îŒî…îŒîîŒî—îŒîˆî–î€‘ î€¯î’î†î„î—îˆî‡
î’î‘ î…î˜î– îîŒî‘îˆî€ îšîŒî—î‹îŒî‘ îšî„îîŽîŒî‘îŠ î‡îŒî–î—î„î‘î†îˆ î’î‰ î‘îˆîŒîŠî‹î…î’î•î‹î’î’î‡î–î€‘ î€ªî•îˆî„î—
î’î“î“î’î•î—î˜î‘îŒî—îœ î—î’ îŒî‘î™îˆî–î— î„î‘î‡ î…î˜îŒîî‡ îœî’î˜î• î…î˜î–îŒî‘îˆî–î–î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€™î€“î€“î€î€“î€“î€“î€‘
î€¶î€¤î€¸î€ªî€¸î€¶ î€ î€š î•î’î’îî€ î€– î…îˆî‡î•î’î’î î€ªî„î•î•îŒî–î’î‘ î€¦î’îî’î‘îŒî„î î’ï‚‡îˆî•î– î€• î‰î˜îî î…î„î—î‹î–î€
î–î˜î‘î•î’î’îî€ îŽîŒî—î†î‹îˆî‘ îšîŒî—î‹ î†îˆî‘î—îˆî• îŒî–îî„î‘î‡î€ î‚¿î‘îŒî–î‹îˆî‡ îî’îšîˆî• îîˆî™îˆî î’ï‚‡îˆî•î–
î‰î„îîŒîîœ î•î’î’î î„î‘î‡ î–îˆî†î’î‘î‡ îŽîŒî—î†î‹îˆî‘ î˜î“î‡î„î—îˆî‡ î•î’î’î‰î€ îˆî„î–îœ î„î†î†îˆî–î– î—î’ î„îî
îî„îî’î• î•î’î˜î—îˆî– î„î‘î‡ î–î‹î’î“î“îŒî‘îŠî€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€—î€›î€œî€î€œî€“î€“î€‘
î€°î€¨î€·î€«î€¸î€¨î€± î€ î€™ î•î’î’î î€¹îŒîîî„ î„î— î—î‹îˆ î€µîˆîŠîˆî‘î†îœî€„ î€™ î•îî–î€ î€• î…î‡î•îî–î€ î’ï‚ˆî†îˆî€
2 baths, gourmet kit w/granite, ss appliances, open to great room
îšîŒî—î‹ îŠî„î– î‚¿î•îˆî“îî„î†îˆî€ îšî„îî î’î‰ îšîŒî‘î‡î’îšî– îšîŒî—î‹ î„î—î•îŒî˜î î‡î’î’î• î—î’ î’î™îˆî•î–îŒîîˆî‡
î‡îˆî†îŽ îšî€’î‘î„î—î˜î•î„î îŠî„î– îŠî•îŒîî î„î‘î‡ î‚¿î•îˆ î“îŒî—î€ î‰î’î•îî„î î‡îŒî‘îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’îî€ îî„î–î—îˆî•
î…îˆî‡î•î’î’î î’ï‚‡îˆî•î– î“î•îŒî™î„î—îˆ î…î„î—î‹î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€™î€—î€œî€î€œî€“î€“î€‘
EVERETT - Well established Auto Body/Auto Repair shop,
î€™ î…î„îœî–î€ î€– î’ï‚ˆî†îˆî–î€ î€• î‹î„îî‰ î…î„î—î‹î€ î„îî“îîˆ î“î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠî€ îî„î‘îœ î“î’î–î–îŒî…îŒîîŒî—îŒîˆî–î€
î†îî’î–îˆ î—î’ î„îî îî„îî’î• î•î’î˜î—îˆî–î€ î€‰ î€¨î‘î†î’î•îˆ î€¦î„î–îŒî‘î’î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€•î€î€“î€“î€“î€î€“î€“î€“î€‘
î€¶î€¤î€¸î€ªî€¸î€¶ î€ î€²î‘îˆî€î’îšî‘îˆî• î€¦îˆî‘î—îˆî• î€¨î‘î—î•î„î‘î†îˆ î€¦î’îî’î‘îŒî„îî€ î€› î•î’î’îî–î€ î€—
î…î‡î•îî–î€ î€• î‰î˜îî î…î„î—î‹î–î€ î–î“î„î†îŒî’î˜î–î€ î‚¿î•îˆî“îî„î†îˆ îîŒî™îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’îî€ îˆî„î—î€îŒî‘
îŽîŒî—î†î‹îˆî‘î€ î‡îŒî‘îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’îî€ î€”î–î— îƒ€î’î’î• î‰î„îîŒîîœ î•î’î’î î€ î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡ îƒ€î’î’î•îŒî‘îŠ
î—î‹î•î’î˜îŠî‹î’î˜î—î€ î—îšî’ î†î„î• îŠî„î•î„îŠîˆî€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€™î€œî€œî€î€œî€“î€“î€‘
WONDERING WHAT YOUR
HOME IS WORTH?
CALL US FOR A FREE
OPINION OF VALUE.
781-233-1401
38 MAIN STREET, SAUGUS
COMING SOON
COMING SOON
FOR RENT
COMING SOON - 3 BED 3 BATH
OVERSIZED CAPE WITH OVERSIZE LOT
MELROSE CALL DEBBIE 617-678-9710
COMING SOON
UAG
COMING SOON- 3+ BED 2 BATH CAPE
GREAT LOCATION RENOVATED
LYNNFIELD CALL DEBBIE 617-678-9710
COMING SOON
FOR SALE- OVERSIZE SPLIT
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FOR RENT
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INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITY
FOR SALE- FOUR FAMILY - INVESTMENT
PROPERTY PEABODY $1,250,000
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FOR SALE- 2 BED SINGLE WIDE MOBILE HOME
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PEABODY $94,900
FOR SALE -BRAND NEW MANUFACTURED MOBILE
HOMES. FOUR CUSTOM UNITS LEFT. ALL UNITS
ARE 2 BED, 1 BATH TITAN HOMES WIH QUALITY
THROUGHOUT 12 X 52. HEATED BY PROPANE
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STAINLESS STEEL APPLIANCES.
PEABODY $199,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
COMING SOON- NEW CONSTRUCTION
TOWNHOMES 3 BED, 2.5 BATH
WAKEFIELD CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
FOR RENT 4 ROOM - ONE BED, EVERETT
$1,600 CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
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LITTLEFIELDRE.COM
FOR ALL YOUR REAL ESTATE NEEDS CALL
KEITH - 781-389-0791
DEBBIE - 617-678-9710
BRANDI - 617-462-5886
JULIEANNE - 781-953-7870
DANIELLE - 978-987-9535
RHONDA - 781-706-0842
JOHN - 617-285-7117
ERIC - 781-223-0289
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