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Patrick
MAYOR
Believe in Rever
Paid for and authorized by the Keefe Committee
Have a Safe & Happy Columbus Day Weekend!
Vol. 33, No.40
-FREEww
w.advocatenews.net
Vote
Patrick Keefe on November 7th
ee Every Friday
ree
Candidate Dan Rizzo cites numerous
accomplishments as former Mayor
Special to Th e Advocate
A
former Mayor and current
candidate for Mayor, Dan
DAN RIZZO
Candidate for Mayor
Rizzo, has submitted his formal
announcement, having made
it through the preliminary election
back on Tuesday, September
19. In his announcement he
stated that he believes that he
brings a strong record of public
service accomplishments to
his campaign from his previous
term of offi ce as Mayor. â€œDuring
my prior tenure as Mayor,â€ Rizzo
stated, â€œwe revitalized Broadway,
investing nearly $9 million
that we secured in state and
federal funds. We built the new
Hill School and the Harry Della
Russo Stadium, along with
three new ball fi elds behind St.
Maryâ€™s Church.â€
Having previously served as
Mayor from 2012-2015, Rizzo
feels that he has a deep understanding
of Revereâ€™s unique
challenges and opportunities.
Rizzoâ€™s prior tenure as Mayor
was marked by his commitCANDIDATE
| SEE Page 23
Pats Boys Soccer
shutout Malden, 2-0
781-286-8500
Friday, October 6, 2023
Gerry Visconti Picks
Pat for Mayor
Keefe Campaign wins important
endorsement in the race to November 7th
Special to Th e Advocate
O
n Tuesday morning Gerry
Visconti and Patrick Keefe
stood together to announce Viscontiâ€™s
support for Patrick Keefe
in the race to choose Revereâ€™s
next mayor.
MAYOR | SEE Page 2
Gerry Visconti is shown
endorsing Patrick Keefe
for mayor.
City Council overrides
acting mayorâ€™s veto to make
permanent appointments
City solicitor sides with Keefe, sayâ€™s city law
allows for veto power
By Barbara Taormina
T
ON THE GO: Revereâ€™s Jeremy Romero makes his move against Malden defenders during last
Thursdayâ€™s match in Revere. See pages 12-17 for sports highlights. (Advocate photo by Emmily Harney)
he City Council last week took
the unusual step of unanimously
overriding Acting Mayor
Patrick Keefeâ€™s veto of their
motion that he cease and desist
making any permanent appointments
or hires. The original
motion was fi led by Councillorat-Large
Anthony Zambuto on
August 28 and passed unanimously
by the council, which
relied on a legal opinion from
the law fi rm Anderson & Kreiger.
Keefe, who had his own opposing
legal opinions, notifi ed the
council of his decision last week.
COUNCIL | SEE Page 19
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2023
MAYOR | FROM Page 1
â€œPatâ€™s motivation is genuine.
He understands the needs of
our diverse community, and he
will work tirelessly, taking on the
issues with commitment and
dedication to serving all. That is
why I choose Patrick as Mayor
for my family, my business and
the city that I love. Please join
me in supporting Patrick Keefe
for Mayor of Revere,â€ Visconti
said of his one-time opponent.
Acting Mayor Keefe said, â€œGerry
has been a strong voice for
Revere on the City Council. He
has always brought a common-sense
approach to city
government. While we have not
always agreed on the issues, our
mutual commitment to moving
Revere forward has been
the common thread tying us
together to fi nd the best path
forward. As our campaign continues
to gain momentum, I am
grateful to Gerry for his support
and for the trust he has placed
in my candidacy.â€
With this endorsement, Patrick
Keefeâ€™s campaign shows the
consolidation of primary voters,
coming together to support
Acting Mayor Keefe and his vision
for moving Revere forward.
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The Foundation of Prosperity:
Why Fiscal Responsibility Matters
By Alexander Rhalimi,
Councillor at Large Candidate
A
s a candidate for Revere
Councillor at Large, I believe
that one of the cornerstones
of good governance is
fi scal responsibility. Itâ€™s not just
an abstract concept; it directly
impacts the lives of every resident
in our city. Letâ€™s explore
why fi scal responsibility matters
and how it can lead us toward a
brighter future.
Fiscal responsibility means
managing our cityâ€™s finances
wisely and transparently. Itâ€™s
about making informed decisions
that prioritize the needs
of our community while ensuring
we live within our means.
When we achieve fi scal responsibility,
several signifi cant benefi
ts follow:
1. Economic Stability: A fi scally
responsible government is
less likely to face budget defi cits
and fi nancial crises. This stability
is crucial for attracting businessOur
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es and investors, which, in turn,
generates jobs and boosts our
local economy.
2. Lower Taxes and Fees: Responsible
fiscal management
can help keep taxes and fees in
check. This means more money
stays in the pockets of our
residents, making Revere an affordable
place to live and work.
3. Investment in Priorities:
A balanced budget allows us to
invest in essential services like
education, public safety, and infrastructure.
It ensures our city
remains a great place to raise
a family, providing opportunities
for all.
4. Debt Reduction: Responsible
fi scal policies help reduce
the burden of long-term debt.
This frees up resources for critical
projects and emergencies
and prevents future generations
from shouldering unnecessary
fi nancial burdens.
5. Transparency and Accountability:
Fiscal responsibility
goes hand in hand with
transparency and accountability
in government. It ensures that
our leaders are held accountable
for their fi nancial decisions,
promoting trust and confi dence
in our elected offi cials.
I am committed to bringing a
fi scally responsible approach to
Revereâ€™s government. If elected,
I will work tirelessly to balance
our budget, prioritize essential
services, and ensure that our
tax dollars are spent wisely and
effi ciently.
In the end, fi scal responsibility
isnâ€™t just a buzzword; itâ€™s a commitment
to building a prosperous,
sustainable future for Revere.
By making informed fi nancial
decisions today, we can secure
a better tomorrow for our
city and its residents. Your vote
for fi scal responsibility is a vote
for our collective well-being and
prosperity.
Editor: Alexander Rhalimi,
candidate for Revere Councillor
at Large. Campaign contact
email: Vote@RhalimiforRevere.
org Website: www.RhalimiforRevere.org
Local
student inducted
into National Scholastic
Honor Society
S
aint Anselm College student
Gina M. Buccieri, of Revere,
a Nursing major in the class of
2023, has been inducted into
the Tau Chapter of the Delta Epsilon
Sigma National Scholastic
Honor Society for the 20222023
academic year. Students
are considered for membership
if they have completed at
least 50% of the credit requirements
for their degree and are
ranked in the top 20% of their
class. Candidates also must have
demonstrated dedication to intellectual
activity and service to
their community.
Founded in 1939, Delta Epsilon
Sigma (DES) is the national
scholastic honor society for
students, faculty and alumni of
colleges and universities with
a Catholic tradition. Their purpose
is to recognize academic
accomplishments, foster scholarly
activities and encourage a
sense of intellectual community
among its members. The Tau
chapter at Saint Anselm College
is one of 119 DES chapters nationwide
and has inducted 763
members to date.
RHS Outdoors Club
awarded Partnership Grant
from the Foundation Trust
T
he Revere High School
(RHS) Outdoors Club is very
pleased to announce a new
partnership with the Foundation
Trust, a private philanthropic
organization serving the
Greater Boston area. A grant of
$4,235 will support current and
expanding RHS Outdoors Club
programming during the 20232024
school year.
â€œThis partnership between
the Foundation Trust and the
RHS Outdoors Club will yield a
myriad of benefi ts for our students.
We look forward to engaging
in this work. A gracious
GRANT | SEE Page 21
FLEET
î€¥î€ªî€¦î€´î€¦î€­ î€µî€³î€¶î€¤î€¬
î€´î€µî€°î€±
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Page 3
Running unopposed: Cogliandro
still campaigns for his vote
By Barbara Taormina
W
ard 3 incumbent City Councillor
Anthony Cogliandro is
running unopposed in the upcoming
election.
Although he's heading back to
his seat on the council, heâ€™s still out
holding signs and talking with the
people in the neighborhoods he
represents about their needs and
concerns.
Cogliandro is a people politician.
"I am the type who shows up at
your doorstep if you have an issue,"
he said in an interview with
The Revere Advocate. "I like being
the point person, I know who to
call to get things done," he said.
While he fi nds the role of ward
councillor rewarding, he admits
that the job of city councillor
comes with high stakes.
"I'm one of eleven people who
has a say in how the city runs.
When it comes to biolabs and
$500 million high schools, those
are things that bring a lot of pressure
to the job," he said.
Because of that pressure, Cogliandro
is at every meeting possible
when city business is on the agenda.
Fellow councillors know him
as someone who always does the
homework and always meets with
constituents when there's a plan or
project in the works that could affect
their quality of life.
ANTHONY COGLIANDRO
Ward 3 Councillor
He said the city found more wetlands
than anyone anticipated at
Wonderland.
"I was the only one to ask about
the conservation commission's
fi ndings," he said.
As for the new high school,
which is now being planned in
Ward 3, Cogliandro said he opposed
the Wonderland site. It
wasn't because he favored one
location over the other, it was because
of the cost.
"I couldn't see spending money
that puts our city in the negative
by millions of dollars. It was
fi scally irresponsible," he said adding
that fi nancial risk doesn't account
for the $100 million eminent
domain lawsuit the former
owners of Wonderland are pursuing
against the city.
Cogliandro said the city needs
to pause development and take
the time needed to catch up with
the recent expansion and population
growth. He mentioned the
police department which has 95
offi cers, and the chief says the city
needs 135.
However, he does welcome
commercial development.
"We defi nitely want more but
where are they going to build?" he
asked adding he frequently passes
by the Sozio lot and wonders
what's taking so long.
"We need more commercial development
but we have to be cautious
about where it goes," he said.
Many Revere residents know Cogliandro
from his many years as an
instructor at Revere Karate Academy.
He said he uses a lot of his skills
as a sixth-degree black belt on the
council. He observes, listens and
pays close attention to detail.
He brings all of that to serving
Ward 3, but also the city at large.
"I ran for the council because I
didn't want anyone else to move
out of the city because they
couldn't aff ord it," he said.
The job as a city councillor has
gotten more complicated but Cogliandro's
motives have not.
"My goal is always to do the right
thing," he said.
PATRICK KEEFE WINS KEY PUBLIC
SAFETY ENDORSEMENT
Revere Firefi ghters Local 926 Picks Pat for Mayor
I
n a statement released
Wednesday afternoon, Revere
Firefi ghters Local 926 announced
their endorsement of
Patrick Keefe in the race for Mayor
of Revere.
â€œThe members of IAFF Local
926 have endorsed Acting
Mayor Patrick Keefe in the November
Election and are asking
you to join us in keeping Revere
safe and moving forward.
Since becoming Acting Mayor,
Patrick Keefe has ensured that
Revere Firefi ghters have the resources
to protect the citizens
of Revere. Acting Mayor Keefe
has approved the purchase of
3 new fi re trucks, continues to
hire additional fi refi ghters and
ensures adequate resources are
always available. Acting Mayor
Keefe has an open-door policy
with the department and its
members.
Patrick Keefeâ€™s commitment
to ensuring the highest level
of public safety makes him the
Happy
Columbus
Day
Anthony T. Zambuto
Councillor-at-Large
Pid P li i
Paid Political Advertisement
l A
i
î€ªî€² î€·î€²
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î€·î€² î€µî€¨î€¶î€¨î€µî€¹î€¨ î€²î€±î€¯î€¬î€±î€¨
î€²î€µ î€¶î€¦î€¤î€± î€´î€µ î€¦î€²î€§î€¨
î‚‡ î€”î€“î€“î€ˆ î€¦îîŒîî„î—îˆ î€¦î’î‘î—î•î’îîîˆî‡ î€©î„î†îŒîîŒî—îœ
î‚‡ î€±îˆîšîîœ î€¦î’î‘î–î—î•î˜î†î—îˆî‡ î€©î„î†îŒîîŒî—îœ
î‚‡ î€˜î€“î€“î€“ î€¯î…î€‘ î€²î™îˆî•î–îŒîîˆî‡ î€¨îîˆî™î„î—î’î•
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best choice for Mayor this November.â€
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
SAVE THE DATE
JUAN
JARAMILLO
Candidate for
Revere City Council at-large
PRE-ELECTION
CAMPAIGN DINNER
DATE: Thursday, October 19, 2023
TIME: 6:00pm-8:00pm
LOCATION: Beachmont VFW, 150
Bennington Street, Revere
DINNER WILL BE SERVED
This is a FREE family-friendly event
î€ªî€µî€¤î€±î€§ î€²î€³î€¨î€±î€¬î€±î€ª î€¶î€³î€¨î€¦î€¬î€¤î€¯î€„
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2023
MC hires Valdez as Varsity Baseball Coach
M
alden Catholic has hired
former Major League Baseball
coach David Valdez to head
its Varsity Baseball program, announced
Malden Catholic Director
of Athletics William Raycraft.
Prior to joining Malden Catholic,
David Valdez spent several
years coaching in Major League
Baseball as a hitting coach, international
playerâ€™s assistant
and most recently as a player
development coach in the Milwaukee
Brewers system. In prior
years, he was named Manager
of the Year after his club fi nished
as Division Champions in
the Piedmont Collegiate Summer
League in Richmond, Va.,
and had a six-year stint as Manager
for the Menâ€™s Baseball team
at Bunker Hill Community College.
He was also a coach for
the Dominican Summer League
and US Heroes of the Diamond
US Team and for 14 years owned
Valdez Baseball Academy, a successful
instructional camp designed
to train Little League,
high school, college and professional
baseball players
and provide athletes with
position-specifi c instruction.
In addition, Valdez coached
several AAU programs, including
National Champions
in 2013 and 2014 and
runner-up in 2015, and he
was selected as Most Infl uential
Latin Person in Massachusetts.
Plus,
David Valdezâ€™s career
as a professional athlete included
playing for the Seattle
Mariners and Los Angeles
Dodger systems as well
as the Dominican Winter,
Columbian Winter, Frontier
and Northern Leagues.
â€œI have wanted to be a part of
the MC baseball program for a
long time and Iâ€™m extremely excited
about having the opportunity
to work with the Lancers,â€
Valdez stated.
â€œI am confi dent that we will
make extraordinary things happen
on the diamond and bring
back the baseball performance
that MC enjoyed in its rich history
to the Catholic Conference.
I look forward to making
the alumni base and greater
school community proud," added
Valdez.
incredibly passionate person
who not only loves the
game but knows how to inspire,
listen, teach and win
â€“ all of these qualities will
translate well to our students.â€
About
Malden Catholic:
DAVID VALDEZ
Malden Catholicâ€™s new Varsity
Baseball Coach
Valdez emerged out of a
strong pool of applicants with
outstanding qualifi cations. According
to William Raycraft,
â€œCoach Valdez is considered to
be one of the most respected
minds in baseball and will be
a great asset to our program
on and off the fi eld. His major
league experience along with
the ability to teach at all levels of
baseball experience will signifi -
cantly benefi t our student-athletes
and build an outstanding
MC program.â€
Raycraft added, "Valdez is an
Since 1932, MC has shaped
emerging leaders in our
community, claiming a Nobel
Laureate, a Senator, two
ambassadors and countless
community and business
heads among its alumni.
Annually, graduates attend
some of the nationâ€™s most
renown universities. Foundational
to student success
is MCâ€™s codivisional model
which off ers the best of both
worlds: single-gender academics
during the day and integrated
social and extracurricular opportunities
after school. MC is
known in the community for its
rigorous academics, SFX Scholars
Program and award-winning
STEM program. MC curricula
is designed to improve individual
growth mindset, leadership
principles and success
outcomes along with integrating
the Xaverian values of trust,
humility, compassion, simplicity
and zeal â€“ https://www.maldencatholic.org.
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×‰	Ú 7cassandra://MSp0HZ_zmqfL7gWqyB3mM078SkdfrgKUpciiHVWBP-UÍ,\Í`Ì°Í ×e1µ«fK¸6g×‰EÚTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2023
Page 5
~ POLITICAL ENDORSEMENT ~
State Rep. Jeff Turco stands for
Councillor McKenna
To the Voters of Ward 1:
I write to enthusiastically endorse
Joanne McKenna for another
term as your Ward 1 City
Councilor.
During the nearly three years
we have worked together,
Joanne McKenna has focused
her efforts on getting things
done for the residents of Ward 1.
I have come to admire her genuineness
of deliberation and
her unending eff ort to get to
the right decision. Joanne had
proven she cares more about
voting the right way than the
popular way.
Earlier this Spring Joanne took
a stand for the taxpayers of Revere.
In doing so, she was unfairly
singled out and maligned. A
project in Ward 1 was cancelled
in retaliation. Yet, Joanne McKenna
didnâ€™t miss a beat and
went back to work fi ghting for
Ward 1. When others would
have wilted, Joanne McKenna
stood tall for Ward 1 and for
what she believed to be right.
JOHN MACKEY & ASSOCIATES
~ Attorneys at Law ~
* PERSONAL INJURY
* REAL ESTATE
* FAMILY LAW
* PERSONAL BANKRUPTCY
* LANDLORD/TENANT DISPUTES
14 Norwood Street
Everett, MA 02149
Phone: (617) 387-4900 Fax: (617) 381-1755
WWW.JMACKEYLAW.COM
On Election Day,
Tuesday, November 7
Joanne McKenna is a woman
of great courage, toughness and
kindness. Her love of Revere and
her neighbors is what makes me
proud to call her my friend and
my colleague. I respectfully urge
the people of Ward 1 to vote to
re-elect Joanne McKenna on
November 7!
All my best,
Jeff Turco
State Representative
Former airline gate agent
sentenced for cheating airline
ticketing system
R
ecently a Chelsea woman was
sentenced in federal court in
Boston for using her position as
an airline gate agent to convert
low-cost fl ights to more expensive
fl ights and destinations for friends,
family and acquaintances. Tiff any
Jenkins, 35, was sentenced by U.S.
Senior District Court Judge Mark L.
Wolf to time served (one day) and
18 months of supervised release
with the fi rst three months to be
served on curfew. Jenkins pleaded
guilty to three counts of wire
fraud in October 2019.
As a gate agent, Jenkins had access
to the airlineâ€™s computer reservation
database and had the ability
to use a special code, referred
to as an involuntary exchange or
â€œINVOL,â€ to change fl ights for customers
at no additional cost. This
code enables agents to change
flights for customers who miss
their fl ights or experience a death
in the family. During a 15-month
period, from approximately July
1, 2016, through Sept. 27, 2017,
Jenkins executed approximately
505 involuntary ticket exchanges
for more than 100 diff erent passengers.
Many of those exchanges
occurred after the passenger
was first booked on domestic
fl ights at one of the airline companyâ€™s
lowest available fares â€“ often
roundtrip fl ights between Las
Vegas, Nev., and Long Beach, Calif.
A short time later, Jenkins exchanged
those tickets for a completely
diff erent city pair, generally
involving much more expensive
international locations, for friends,
family and acquaintances.
Acting U.S. Attorney Joshua S.
Levy; the Special Agent in Charge
of the FBIâ€™s Boston Field Division,
Jodi Cohen; and the Special Agent
in Charge of the IRSâ€™s Criminal Investigations
in Boston, Harry Chavis,
Jr., made the announcement.
Assistant U.S. Attorney David M.
Holcomb of the Securities, Financial
& Cyber Fraud Unit prosecuted
the case.
â€œPlease
consider
me for
one of
your
six
votesâ€
Re-Elect
John Kingston
Revere School Committee
(Paid Pol. Adv.)
Like us on
Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2023
Local firefighters graduate from Mass. Firefighting Academy
Graduates of Class #314 represent 14 fi re departments
S
tate Fire Marshal Jon M. Davine
and Massachusetts Firefi
ghting Academy (MFA) Director
Jeff rey P. Winn announced
the graduation of 24 fi refi ghters
from the 50-day Career Recruit
Firefi ghting Training Program,
including three residents
of Revere.
â€œMassachusetts firefighters
are on the frontlines protecting
their communities every day,
and todayâ€™s graduates are needed
now more than ever,â€ said
Davine. â€œThe hundreds of hours
of foundational training theyâ€™ve
received will provide them with
the physical, mental, and technical
skills to perform their jobs effectively
and safely.â€
â€œMassachusetts Firefighting
Academy instructors draw on
decades of experience in the fi re
service to train new recruits,â€ said
Director Winn. â€œThrough consistent
classroom instruction
and practical exercises, todayâ€™s
graduates have developed the
tools theyâ€™ll need to work seamlessly
with veteran fi refi ghters in
their home departments and in
neighboring communities as
mutual aid.â€
The graduating fi refi ghters of
Class #314 represent the fi re departments
of Acton, Bellingham,
Charlton, Gloucester, Lawrence,
Littleton, Milton, North Andover,
Orleans, Plymouth, Revere,
Rockland, Tewksbury and Weston.
The Revere residents who
graduated are FF Nico DiSalvo,
FF Seth Tata-Amato and FF Patrick
Reardon.
Basic fi refi ghter skills
Students receive classroom
training in all basic firefighter
skills. They practice fi rst under
non-fire conditions and
then during controlled fi re conditions.
To graduate, students
must demonstrate proficiency
in life safety, search and rescue,
ladder operations, water
supply, pump operation and
fire attack. Fire attack operations
range from mailbox fi res to
multiple-fl oor or multiple-room
structural fi res. Upon successful
completion of the Career Recruit
Program, all students have met
the national standards of NFPA
1001, Standard for Fire Fighter
Professional Qualifi cations, and
are certifi ed to the levels of Firefi
ghter I/II and Hazardous Materials
First Responder Operations
by the Massachusetts Fire Training
Council, which is accredited
by the National Board on
Fire Service Professional Qualifi
cations.
Todayâ€™s fi refi ghters do much
more than fi ght fi res
Modern fi refi ghters train for
and respond to all types of hazards
and emergencies. They are
the fi rst ones called to respond
to chemical and environmental
emergencies, ranging from the
suspected presence of carbon
monoxide to gas leaks to industrial
chemical spills. They might
be called to rescue a child who
has fallen through the ice, an
offi ce worker stuck in an elevator
or a motorist trapped in
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a crashed vehicle. They test and
maintain their equipment, including
self-contained breathing
apparatus (SCBA), hydrants,
hoses, power tools and apparatus.
At
the MFA, recruits learn all
these skills and more, including
the latest science of fi re behavior
and suppression tactics,
from certifi ed fi re instructors.
They also receive training in
public fi re education, hazardous
material incident mitigation,
fl ammable liquids, stress
management and self-rescue
techniques. The intensive, 10week
program involves classroom
instruction, physical fi tNewly
appointed Revere Firefi ghters Nico DiSalvo, Seth Tata-Amato
and Patrick Reardon
ness training, fi refi ghter skills
training and live firefighting
practice.
The MFA provides recruit and
in-service training for career,
call and volunteer fi refi ghters at
every level of experience, from
recruit to chief offi cer, at campuses
in Stow, Springfi eld and
Bridgewater.
The graduates of the Class #314 represent 14 fi re departments.
~ POLITICAL ENDORSEMENT ~
Senator Lydia Edwards Endorses
Councillor Silvestri for Re-Election
S
tate Senator Lydia
Edwards endorses
Marc Silvestri for City
of Revere Councilor AtLarge.
Senator Edwards
represents the Third
Suff olk District (Revere,
Winthrop, Boston).
â€œMarc Silvestri is a
champion for the people
of Revere. He works
tirelessly, is there when
the community needs
him, and is guided by
doing what is right.
I could not be more
proud to endorse my friend, Revereâ€™s
Councillor Marc Silvestri,
on his re-election bid for Councillor
At-Large,â€ said Senator Lydia
Edwards.
Councillor Silvestri noted: â€œIt
has been a pleasure to collaborate
with elected offi cials like
Senator Edwards, who shares
a vision for moving Revere forward.â€
Councillor Silvestri is humbled
and would like to extend his
gratitude to Senator Edwards for
State Senator Lydia Edwards with candidate for reelection
Councillor-at-Large Marc Silvestri
her endorsement. Lydia worked
extensively in the legal fi eld before
being elected to the State
Senate and Boston City Council.
She worked as a public interest
attorney with Greater Boston Legal
Services, focusing on labor issues
such as fi ghting for access to
unemployment insurance, back
wages, fair treatment for domestic
workers, and combating human
traffi cking.
As senator, Edwards continues
to be a fi erce advocate,
activist, and voice
for the most vulnerable
in the community,
fighting for workers,
renters, unions, immigrants,
and teachers
and making the commonwealth
more affordable
and inclusive.
She is also the Senate
Chair of the Joint Committee
on Housing.
Senator Lydia Edwardsâ€™
endorsement is
another addition to the
list of Marcâ€™s enthusiastic supporters
in his bid for re-election ahead
of the November 7 general election,
including the Revere Firefi
ghters Local 926, Laborers Union
Local 22, Greater Boston Labor
Council, Teamsters Local 25, IBEW
Local 103, IBEW Local 2222, Floorcoverers
Local 2168, Boston Carmenâ€™s
Union Local 589, Plumbers
& Gasfi tters Local 12, Elevator
Constructors Local 4 and Plasters
& Cement Masons Local #534.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://E9CCof0fciCE0Q044SGDZwy5eOw7JsGNUqZrEjzcymAÍ/bÍ`Ì°Í ×e1µ«fK¸6g×‰EÚmTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2023
Page 7
15th Annual ALS & MS Walk for Living to be Held
on October 15th
Former Governor Charlie Baker and Lauren Baker Join Walk as Special Ambassadors
CHELSEA, MA (August 2023) â€“
Steve Saling and Patrick Oâ€™Brien
were given 2-5 years to live after
each was diagnosed with
ALS. Defying all odds, they have
been living at the Leonard Florence
Center for Living for the
past 13 years since the Center
opened its doors. Both are living
full, productive lives; Steve has
traveled throughout the country
speaking about ALS and Patrick
produced Transfatty Lives, a
documentary about ALS which
won the Tribecca Film Festival
Audience Award. The Leonard
Florence Center for Living takes
care of more individuals living
with ALS than any place else in
the world.
In support of these inspiring
residents at the Center, Former
Governor Charlie Baker and his
wife Lauren Baker will act as
walk ambassadors at the 15th
Annual ALS & MS Walk for Living
on Sunday, October 15. The
short two-mile walk enables the
ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis)
and MS (multiple sclerosis)
Platinum level sponsors include
M&T Banks and Wilmington
Trust; Gold Level A.H.O.H.; Independent
Newspaper Group is
the media sponsor. For more information
or to make a muchappreciated
donation, please
visit www.walkforliving.org or
contact Walk Director Maura
Graham at mgraham@chelseajewish.org
or 617-4098973.
All donations are tax deductible.
About
Chelsea Jewish Lifecare
Chelsea Jewish Lifecare is reFormer
Gov. Charlie Baker and Lauren Baker. Special Walk Ambassadors
the
ambassadors for the ALS &
MS Walk for Living. The residents
are truly an inspiration to us all.â€
As the countryâ€™s first urban
model Green HouseÂ® skilled
nursing facility, the Leonard
Florence Center provides a level
of independence not typically
found in other skilled nursing
facilities. Residents, many who
make a donation to their team.
Following the dog friendly
walk, there will be a BBQ hosted
by Chiliâ€™s, face painting, live
dance
performances, a petting zoo
and more. The $20 donation
fee includes a Walk for Living
tee shirt as well as all food and
activities.
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
Need a hall for your special event?
The Schiavo Club, located at
71 Tileston Street, Everett is
available for your Birthdays,
Anniversaries, Sweet 16 parties
and more?
Call Dennis at
(857) 249-7882 for details.
Last year, thousands turned out the 14th annual ALS & MS Walk
for Living.
residents as well as other attendees
to participate in wheelchairs,
ventilators or by foot.
â€œW e are thrilled to have Governor
Baker and Mrs. Baker on
board as our ambassadors for
this yearâ€™s Walk for Living,â€ said
Barry Berman, CEO of Chelsea
Jewish Lifecare, the nonprofit
that operates the award-winning
Center. â€œMrs. Baker visited
the Center and met the
residents. It was obvious how
moved she was by the experience.
We are grateful for the Bakerâ€™s
support and participation in
our major fundraising initiative
of the year.â€
â€œI am in awe of the spirit, determination,
and passion of these
residents,â€ said Lauren Baker.
â€œCharlie and I are proud to act as
are completely immobilized,
control lights, turn on the TV, call
for the elevator, and open doors
with help of a computer and
sensor that tracks head and eye
movements. The Stein Family
Center for Well-Being, the only
Green HouseÂ® ventilator program
in the country, opened
within the Center in 2020.
The 2023 Walk for Living will
take place at 10am on Sunday,
October 15 at 165 Captains Row
on Admiralâ€™s Hill in Chelsea. Every
single dollar raised goes directly
back to patient care and
programs for ALS and MS residents.
To register, go to the Walk
for Living website and click on
register. To join Governor Baker
and Lauren Bakerâ€™s team,
please go Team Baker and
defi ning senior care and re-envisioning
what life should be like
for those living with disabling
conditions. The eldercare community
includes a wide array
of skilled and short-term rehab
residences, ALS, MS and ventilator
dependent specialized
care residences, traditional and
specialized assisted living options,
memory care, independent
living, adult day health, and
homecare and hospice agencies
that deliver customized and
compassionate care.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2023
Mass. Legislature passes comprehensive tax relief package
Bill includes $561.3 million in tax relief in FY24, $1.02 billion in FY27 and beyond
W
ith the goal of providing
fi nancial relief to families
across the Commonwealth
while making Massachusetts
more competitive with other
states, the Massachusetts Legislature
overwhelmingly enacted
a bipartisan tax relief package
supporting residents across
all income levels on September
28. The Senate and House both
passed their versions of the bill
earlier this year and reconciled
diff erences in their versions before
enacting the bill. The bill is
now on Governor Maura Healeyâ€™s
desk for her signature and/
or other actions.
â€œThis tax relief package strikes
the critically important balance
of providing permanent
fi nancial relief to residents and
businesses across Massachusetts,
without compromising
the long-term fi nancial security
of the Commonwealth,â€ stated
Speaker of the House Ronald
J. Mariano (D-Quincy). â€œIâ€™m confi
dent that this tax reform legislation
will help to make Massachusetts
more aff ordable for all
residents, while also helping to
make the Commonwealth more
competitive with other states.
I want to thank Chairman Michlewitz,
the members of the
conference committee and all
the members of the House, as
well as Senate President Spilka
and our partners in the Senate
for working diligently to get
this done.â€
â€œThis is the most signifi cant
tax relief package in a generation,â€
said Senate President Karen
E. Spilka (D-Ashland). â€œThis
legislation is going to put real
dollars into the pockets of the
people who need it most, including
parents, seniors, young
people, and middle-class families
who are struggling to keep
up with rising costs. This bill includes
a historic expansion of
housing programs that will ignite
aff ordable housing development
and ease the housing
crunch, as well as signifi cant relief
for families with young children.
It will also make Massachusetts
a more competitive place
to live and work and encourages
businesses to continue investing
in our region. I am deeply
grateful for the work of Chair
Rodrigues and Senator Moran
on this package, as well as all of
the Senate members, and off er
my sincere thanks to Speaker
Mariano and our colleagues in
the House for their partnership
and collaboration.â€
â€œThis tax relief package will
help thousands of residents
keep more money in their pockets
by providing much needed
financial assistance,â€ said
Representative Aaron Michlewitz
(D-Boston), who is Chair of
the House Committee on Ways
and Means. â€œThis package will
also help keep the Commonwealth
an economically competitive
work environment for
both businesses and workers. I
want to thank Speaker Mariano
for his leadership, my counterparts
on the conference committee
for their tireless work to
make this legislation possible, as
well as the entire Legislature for
their collaboration on this issue.â€
â€œThis tax cut bill will touch almost
every resident of Revere
and Winthrop. Whether you are
a senior, a parent, a child or a
small investor, this bill focuses
on providing you tax relief. I am
proud to have spoken and voted
in favor of this important bill. A
billion-dollar tax cut is real money
in the hands of the folksâ€¦â€
said State Representative Jeffrey
Rosario Turco (D-Winthrop).
â€œWith the cost of living continuing
to increase, many residents
in Revere and beyond
are struggling,â€ said RepresenJESSICA
GIANNINO
State Representative
tative Jessica A. Giannino (DRevere).
â€œThese tax reforms will
empower our families, strengthen
our economy, and help build
a more prosperous Commonwealth
for all.â€
â€œToday the Senate took action,
long in the making, to provide
desperately needed tax relief
to respond to household budgets
under stress and employers
struggling to compete in a
state whose costs are a major
challenge,â€ said Senate Minority
Leader Bruce Tarr (R-Gloucester).
â€œI have been honored to not
only serve on the conference
committee for this legislation,
but also to work across the aisle
consistently to build consensus
and partnership on a matter
that has been a top priority
for the Senate Republican caucus
for years, and a necessity for
the people who pay the bills for
our state government. Over the
past two years we have worked
to illustrate the heavy burdens
being carried by people in our
state for things ranging from
childcare to housing, and the
uphill climb employers are facing
on the road to greater prosperity
for our economy. This legislation
is a major fi rst step that
will make a real diff erence for all
of them.â€
The compromise bill includes
the following tax changes:
Child and Dependent Tax
Credit: The bill increases the refundable
tax credit for a dependent
child, disabled adult, or senior
from $180 to $310 per dependent
in taxable year 2023,
and then to $440 in taxable year
2024 and beyond, while eliminating
the child/dependent cap.
This expanded credit, which will
benefi t more than 565,000 families,
will be the most generous
universal child and dependent
tax credit in the country.
Estate Tax: Massachusettsâ€™
current estate tax, which has not
been updated in many years,
has become an outlier in several
ways. The changes made in
this bill update the tax to bring
JEFFREY ROSARIO TURCO
State Representative
it more in line with other states
and eliminate punitive elements
of the tax for those with incomes
just high enough to trigger it.
The bill reduces the estate tax for
all taxpayers and eliminates the
tax for all estates under $2 million
by allowing a uniform credit
of $99,600.
Earned Income Tax Credit
(EITC): This bill increases the refundable
EITC from 30 per cent
to 40 per cent of the federal credit.
This increase will provide crucial
support to working individuals
and families, benefi ting
nearly 400,000 taxpayers with incomes
under $60,000.
Single Sales Factor Apportionment:
Currently, most businesses
in Massachusetts are subject
to a three-factor apportionment
based on location, payroll
and receipts. To support companies
headquartered in Massachusetts,
this bill establishes
a single sales factor apportionment
in the Commonwealth
based solely on receipts, matching
what 39 other states currently
do.
Senior Circuit Breaker Tax
Credit: This bill doubles the refundable
senior circuit breaker
tax credit, which supports limited-income
seniors facing high
rents or real estate taxes, from
$1,200 to $2,400. This change is
expected to impact over 100,000
seniors across Massachusetts.
Rental Deduction Cap: This
bill increases the rental deduction
cap from $3,000 to $4,000.
This is expected to impact about
800,000 Massachusetts taxpayers.
Short-Term
Capital Gains
Tax: At 12 per cent, Massachusetts
is among the states with
the highest short-term capital
gains tax rate, and it taxes shortterm
capital gains at a higher
rate than long-term capital
gains. The bill lowers the shortterm
capital gains tax rate to 8.5
per cent.
RELIEF | SEE Page 9
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×‰EÚìTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2023
Page 9
Northeast Metro Tech Vocational
Dean Named to Board of
Directors of The Light Foundation
S
uperintendent David DiBarri
was pleased to announce
that Northeast Metro Tech Vocational
Dean Russ Mezikofsky has
been named to the Board of Directors
of the Light Foundation
â€“ a nonprofi t organization that
seeks to motivate and support
young people. The Light Foundation
was founded by retired
New England Patriots off ensive
lineman Matt Light while he was
still amid a football career that
landed him in the New England
Patriots Hall of Fame. The foundation
seeks to motivate young
people by taking them out of
their usual environments, and
helps them develop the skills,
values and mindset they need
to create meaningful and productive
futures.
Dean Mezikofsky and Light
have known each other personally
for about a decade. Dean
Mezikofsky, who is also a photographer,
has photographed
numerous events for The Light
Foundation, which led Light to
invite him to join the Board of
Directors as it sought to add educators
to its membership. The
Light Foundation, due to its focus
on young people, recently
added both Dean Mezikofsky
and another board member
with educational backgrounds.
â€œSince weâ€™ve known each
RELIEF | FROM Page 8
Housing Development Incentive
Program (HDIP): The
bill increases the statewide cap
from $10 million to $57 million
for 2023, and subsequently to
$30 million annually, which will
provide Gateway Cities with an
expanded tool to develop market
rate housing. This increase is
estimated to create 12,500 new
homes in Gateway Cities and
spur over $4 billion of private investment
in these communities.
Low-Income Housing Tax
Credit: This bill raises the annual
authorization from $40 million
to $60 million. This increased authorization
cap provides enough
funding to spur the creation of
thousands of new units of affordable
housing annually while
also bolstering economic development.
Local
Option Property Tax
Exemption for Affordable
Housing: This new policy will
permit municipalities to adopt
a local property tax exemption
for affordable real estate that
is rented by a person whose income
is less than a certain level
set by the community.
Title V Cesspool or Septic
System Tax Credit: This bill will
Revere resident
named to Deanâ€™s List
for spring 2023
semester
S
Pictured from left to right: retired Patriots Hall of Famer Matt
Light and Northeast Metro Tech Vocational Dean Russ Mezikofsky.
(Courtesy Northeast Metro Tech)
other for so long he realized it
would be great to have people
from the education community
involved in the board,â€ said Dean
Mezikofsky.
Dean Mezikofsky hopes the
new relationship will enable The
Light Foundation and Northeast
Metro Tech to form a working relationship,
with the foundation
helping Northeast students and
Northeast students contributing
to the work of the foundation.
â€œThe kids The Light Foundation
helps are kids who might
be in rough situations, and they
triple the maximum credit from
$6,000 to $18,000 and increases
the amount claimable to $4,000
per year, easing the burden on
homeowners facing the high
cost of septic tank replacement
or repair.
Additional tax changes
â€¢ Lead Paint Abatement: Doubles
the credit to $3,000 for full
abatement and $1,000 for partial
abatement, to support families
with older homes.
â€¢ Dairy Tax Credit: Increases the
statewide cap from $6 million to
$8 million, to provide more assistance
for local farmers during
downturns in milk prices.
â€¢ Student Loan Repayment
Exemption: Ensures that employer
student loan payments
are not treated as taxable compensation.
â€¢
Commuter Transit Benefi ts:
Makes public transit fares, as well
as ferry and regional transit passes
and bike commuter expenses,
eligible for the commuter expense
tax deduction.
â€¢ Apprenticeship Tax Credit Reforms:
Expands the occupations
for which this workforce development
credit is available.
â€¢ Cider Tax: Raises the maximum
amount of alcohol for
remind me a lot of some of the
kids who go to Northeast,â€ said
Dean Mezikofsky. â€œI want to get
Matt to come to the school and
we want to get more Northeast
kids involved in The Light Foundation
programs.â€
Mezikofsky spent seven years
as a teacher at Northeast Metro
Tech, and he has served for the
past four years as a Vocational
Dean, overseeing six shops and
half of the freshman class.
To learn more about The Light
Foundation, visit https://www.
mattlight72.com/.
these classes of drinks to 8.5 per
cent, allowing more locally produced
hard cider and still wines
to be taxed at a lower rate.
â€¢ Senior Property Tax Volunteer
Program: Increases from $1,500
to $2,000 the maximum amount
that municipalities may allow for
certain seniors to reduce their
property tax by participating
in the senior work-off program.
Additional reforms
In addition to tax relief, the bill
updates Chapter 62F of the Massachusetts
General Laws, which
triggered nearly $3 billion in taxpayer
refunds in 2022. This law
requires that excess revenue
be returned to taxpayers when
tax revenue collections in a given
fi scal year exceed an annual
tax revenue cap. The bill ensures
that each credit is applied
equally to every taxpayer. The
bill also adjusts the Stabilization
Fund cap, allowing the Commonwealthâ€™s
savings account to
retain more funding. In addition,
the bill requires married taxpayers
who fi le a joint return with
the federal government to fi le a
joint state return, subject to exemptions
or adjustments promulgated
by the Department of
Revenue.
425r Broadway, Saugus
Located adjacent to Kohls Plaza Route 1 South
in Saugus at the intersection of Walnut Street
We are on MBTA Bus Route 429
781-231-1111
We are a Skating Rink with
Bowling Alleys, Arcade and
two TVâ€™s where the ball
games are always on!
PUBLIC SKATING SCHEDULE
12-7 p.m.
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
$9.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Rollerblades/inline skates $3.00 additional cost
Private Parties
7:30-11 p.m.
$10.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Adult Night 18+ Only
Private Parties
Private Parties
4-7 p.m. $9.00
12-9 p.m.
7:30-11 p.m. $10.
18+ Adults Only After 7 PM
$9.00
Everyone must pay admission after 6 p.m.
Sorry No Checks - ATM on site
Roller skate rentals included in all prices
Inline Skate Rentals $3.00 additional
BIRTHDAY & PRIVATE PARTIES AVAILABLE
www.roller-world.com
aint Anselm College has released
the Deanâ€™s List of high
academic achievers for the second
semester of the 2022-2023
school year. To be eligible for
this honor, a student must have
achieved a grade point average
of 3.4 or better in the semester
with at least 12 credits
of study which award a letter
grade. A total of 557 students â€“
representing 24 states and fi ve
countries â€“ received this honor.
Mark W. Cronin, Dean of the
College, announced that Revere
resident Gina Buccieri (Nursing
[BS], 2023) was named to the
Deanâ€™s List for the spring 2023
semester.
About Saint Anselm College:
Founded in 1889, Saint Anselm
College is a four-year liberal arts
college providing a 21st century
education in the Catholic,
Benedictine tradition. Located
in southern New Hampshire
near Boston and the seacoast,
Saint Anselm is well known for
its strong liberal arts curriculum,
the New Hampshire Institute of
Politics, a highly successful nursing
program, a legacy of community
service and a commitment
to the arts.
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Í
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2023
Cityâ€™s Annual Fall Festival a great Success
T
By Tara Vocino
he Cityâ€™s Parks and Recreation Department sponsored Sundayâ€™s annual Fall Festival along Broadway. Children
enjoyed activities, such as a magic show, while their parents shopped locally as vendors sold their created
items.
Sisters Alayna Festa, 7, and Calee Festa, 5,
caught bubbles.
Councillor-at-Large candidate Juan Jaramillo, his son,
Lucas, and his wife, Crystal, bought earrings from Maribet
accessories.
Revere Chamber of Commerce President Patrick Lospennato
and Chamber Executive Director Erica Porzio (far right), who
painted this mural.
Denise Boucher sold Revere Beach, Malden and Wonderland
mixed-media art.
Children were surprised at the magic tricks performed.
Avery Smith, 2, played Connect 4.
Untapped Coff ee Company Kori Oâ€™Hara with her daughter, Kalista
LaSala, and School Committee member John Kingston. The coff ee
company advocates for mental health resources.
Mayor: Shown from left to right: Jennifer Keefe
and her husband, Acting Mayor Patrick Keefe,
Jr., and intern Kathy Nguyen gave out Halloween
popcorn during Sundayâ€™s Fall Festival along
Broadway.
Murrayâ€™s Tavern waitress Valentina Rueda Cardona
served beer inside the beer tent.
The streets were blocked off for the annual Fall Festival. (Advocate
photos by Tara Vocino)
Liziana, 2, Lavinia, 8, and Alicia Viera took a photo inside
the fall Photo Booth by Mannâ€™s Garden Center.
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Page 11
MBTA Announces East Boston,
Winthrop, and Lynn Ferry Service
Will Be Extended This Fall
East Boston and Winthrop ferries are extended until November 30,
and Lynn ferries are extended to October 31.
Magician/Street Performer Darren Yong did a magic trick by hiding
a ring given to Vivian Medina (in center).
BOSTON â€“ Due to popular
demand, the MBTA today announced
that East Boston, Winthrop,
and Lynn ferry services
will be extended through the
fall. East Boston and Winthrop
ferries are extended until November
30 and Lynn ferries are
extended to October 31. Ferry
service schedules are available
at mbta.com/ferry.
â€œThis summer we were able
Vibe Energy Healing owner Karen Cantone (in center) and her mother,
Carol, with State Representative Jeff rey Turco
to expand our water transportation
network and the public
response has been so positive
that we have decided to now
extend these ferry services into
October and November,â€ said
MBTA General Manager and
CEO Phillip Eng. â€œSafe and reliable
multi modal transportation
including water transportation
is a priority. Iâ€™m proud that the
MBTA team can continue to offer
this to the public.â€
The East Boston ferry operates
on weekdays and weekends between
East Boston at Lewis Mall
Wharf and the downtown Boston
area at Long Wharf (North).
A one-way fare on the East Boston
ferry is $2.40 (or $1.10 for
Reduced Fare riders), which is
the same as taking the subway.
Tickets can be purchased on the
mTicket app. Printed LinkPasses,
Commuter Rail Zone passes,
and M7s are also accepted.
M7 cards, or M7s, are MBTA Student
CharlieCards that are preloaded
with monthly passes for
the school year for middle and
high schoolers. East Boston ferry
service is funded through the
Commonwealth.
The Winthrop ferry operates
on weekdays between Winthrop
Landing, Quincy, and the
downtown Boston area at Central
Wharf (South). A one-way
fare on the Winthrop ferry is
$6.50. Tickets can be purchased
on the mTicket app or with cash.
Printed LinkPasses, Commuter
Rail Zone passes, and M7s are
also accepted.
The Lynn Ferry operates on
weekdays between the Blossom
Street Pier and the downtown
Boston area at Long Wharf
(North). A one-way fare on the
Lynn Ferry is currently $7. Tickets
can be purchased on the
mTicket app or with cash. Printed
LinkPasses, Commuter Rail
Zone passes, and M7s are also
accepted.
Passengers should note that
some schedule adjustments
may be made due to weather
this season. Service information
will be available at mbta.
com/alerts.
For more information, visit
mbta.com/ferry, or connect
with the T on X (the site formerly
known as Twitter) @MBTA
and @MBTA_CR, Facebook /
TheMBTA, Instagram @theMBTA,
Threads @thembta, or TikTok
@thembta.
~ POLITICAL ENDORSEMENT ~
Boston Carmenâ€™s Union Local 589
endorses Rhalimi for Council At-Large
A
lexander Rhalimi is proud to
announce that his campaign
Dakota Ware and Alayna Morello created sand art with Sonal Verma,
owner of Super Kool Sand Art.
for Council at-Large has been
endorsed by Boston Carmenâ€™s
Union Local 589 of the Amalgamated
Transit Union, AFL/CIO
CLC. â€œI want to extend my heartfelt
thanks to the Boston Carmenâ€™s
Union Local 589 for their
endorsement of my candidacy for
Revere Council at Large. This endorsement
means a great deal to
me, as it refl ects our shared commitment
to the values of public
transportation, workerâ€™ rights,
and community wellbeing,â€ Rhalimi
said.
â€œLocal 589 represents the dediShown
from left to right: Janine Ellis, Terri Theberge and Joyce DiNuccio
held signs for Mayoral Candidate/former Mayor Dan Rizzo.
cated men and women who keep
our public transit system running
day in and day out, Rhalimi continued.
â€œTheir hard work and dedication
are essential to the functioning
of our community, and I
am proud to have their support.
I pledge to continue advocating
for the improvement of public
transportation services and ensuring
that the rights and well-being
of transit workers are protected.
Together, we can make Revere
an even better place to live, work,
and commute.â€
Rhalimi holds a Master degree
of Criminal Justice from Boston
University. His educational background
would be indispensable
when interpreting and crafting
local ordinances, policies,
and regulations as a member of
the city council. His knowledge
can inform discussions and decisions
related to public safety initiatives,
law enforcement practices,
and community policing. Currently
the principal of Alliance Financial
Group, Rhalimiâ€™s experience
in fi nancial services provides
him with a solid foundation in fi scal
management and economic
matters, valuable assets when
it comes to the role of Councilor
at-Large.
Throughout his life, Rhalimi has
actively engaged with the Revere
community. He has volunteered
with several local non-profi t organizations
and has cultivated
a deep understanding of the issues
that matter most to residents.
Local 589 is proof of that
engagement and commitment;
â€œIt is with great pleasure the Executive
Board and Membership
of the Boston Carmenâ€™s Union Local
589 of the Amalgamated Transit
Union, AFL/CIO-CLC, who represent
over 5,900 workers at the
MBTA, has endorsed your candidacy
for election to the Revere
City Council. The Carmenâ€™s Union
feels every fortunate to have a
friend of your stature and integrity
running for election. Therefore,
Local 589 urges all their members
and their families who live in the
city of Revere to support your
candidacy for Revere City Council
at-Large,â€ said Wayne Peacock
union Recording Secretary.
Rhalimi is dedicated to fostering
a vibrant and inclusive community.
His campaign platform is
centered around key policy priorities
that address the diverse
needs of Revereâ€™s residents. Rhalimi
is committed to enhancing
community engagement and
transparency, ensuring public
safety through community policing,
and promoting sustainable
economic development to create
job opportunities. He is a strong
advocate for aff ordable housing
solutions and equitable housing
policies, aiming to provide stable
and aff ordable living options for
all. Rhalimi also prioritizes education
and youth empowerment,
aiming to collaborate with local
schools and organizations to improve
education outcomes and
provide meaningful opportunities
for young residents.
Vote Rhalimi to Revere Council
at-Large on November 7th.
For more information about the
campaign, please visit RhalimiforRevere.org.
You may email the
committee at vote@rhalimiforrevere.org.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2023
Patriot Boysâ€™ Soccer Shutout Malden, 2-0
Juan Garcia with the ball for Revere during their win over Malden 2-0.
JP Chavarria signals to his teammate during Thursdayâ€™s match with Malden.
Francisco Navarette with the ball.
Jeremy Romero of Revere with the ball.
Kaue Alves with the ball. (Advocate photos by Emily Harney)
Nicolas Morgira works to keep control of the ball for Revere as a player from Malden
moves in.
Noah Gaviria of Revere works to gain control of the ball.
Latrell Ashby for Revere with the ball.
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Page 13
Kaue Alves with the ball during Revereâ€™s game and win over Malden 2-0.
Revere varsity boys head soccer coach, Dr. Manuel Lopes looks on during their
match with Malden.
Jared Romero with the ball.
Patsâ€™ Jeremy Romero of Revere lands on the ground
after colliding with a Malden player.
Kenan Batic, Daniel Espinosa and JP Chavarria walk off
the fi eld after their win over Malden 2-0.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2023
GREATER BOSTON LEAGUE
ROUNDUP: Everett is now the
lone Division 1 GBL Football
Team after realignment
New this year, Malden drops
from D-1 fi rst time ever, now
in Division 3 with Revere, Lynn
Classical, Lynn English
By Steve Freker
E
verett has stood alone quite
a bit in the Greater Boston
League for most of the past three
decades â€” and the modern era
in general â€“ when it comes to success
on the gridiron. The Crimson
Tide won a whopping 13 Division
1 Super Bowl State Championships
under former Head Coach
John DiBiaso Jr. from 1993-2017.
The only other GBL teams to win
a Super Bowl title in the past 50
years were Head Coach Silvio Cella
and the Revere High Patriots in
1973 and Head Coach Armand
Caraviello and the Medford High
Mustangs in 1978.
Everett has also had a monopoly
on the GBL Football Championship
for the past three decades,
winning every one except two
from 1993-2023. Cambridge upThe
Revere High School
Boys Soccer Team tied
GBL leader Somerville
on Tuesday, 1-1, and are
just one game out of fi rst
place in the GBL. From left: Revere Highâ€™s Luis Silva (6), Kenan Batic
(4), captain JP Chavarria (18), Eric DeCarvalho (8), Kaue Alves (7)
and, in front, junior captain Bryan Medina (8).
Malden dropped down two divisions
to Division 3 for the fi rst
time in its history for some basic
reasons, according to Director
of Athletics Charlie Conefrey.
â€œOne of the main reasons is that
we are now aligned with schools
in our own league of similar size
and similar participation numbers
in the sport,â€ said Conefrey,
who also sits on the Board of Directors
for the MIAA.
With the shift to Division 3,
Mike Sanristil is serving as captain
for the Michigan Wolverines
in his fi fth year of football
in Ann Arbor. He is considered
the best player to ever wear
a Malden Pop Warner Football
uniform who played high
school football at Everett High.
(Courtesy/Michigan Football)
set Everett on Thanksgiving Day
in 2002, clinching that yearâ€™s GBL
title. Malden, under then Head
Coach Joe Pappagallo, upset Everett
on October 24, 2015, and won
the GBL crown after clinching it
with a win over Medford.
All in all, alone at the top has
been a frequent perch for the Everett
High football team. Well,
now they are defi nitely alone at
the top in the Greater Boston
League for another reason. The
Tide is now the only Division 1
team left in the league after the
newest Massachusetts Interscholastic
Athletic Association (MIAA)
realignments for postseason football
tournament play were announced.
Last
year, two of the eight GBL
teams competed in the Eastern
Mass. highest division, Everett
and Malden. Not coincidentally,
Everett and Malden are two of
the winningest teams in the history
of MIAA football, going back to
the early 1900s. In fact, Everett is
number 10 in THE NATION at 844378
overall (since 1893).
Malden is now in the same spot
as Lynn Classical, Lynn English,
Somerville and Revere. Medford
dropped down to Division 4 this
year and Chelsea moved up one
division to Division 7.
Size-wise, Everett has the largest
enrollment in the GBL, followed
by Revere, Lynn English,
Malden, Somerville, Medford,
Chelsea and Lynn Classical.
Conefrey stressed the alignments
were for playoff games and
postseason considerations only,
and would aff ect nothing as to
GBL league play.
The only GBL team that does
not play a full league slate is Chelsea,
which is allowed to pick the
teams it wishes to play from the
GBL â€“ this year selecting Medford
and Somerville only.
â€œWe are hoping to qualify for
the postseason for the fi rst time
since 2015 this year and then
compete for the title in our new
division,â€ Conefrey said.
Revere High Boys Soccer
Team just one game
out of first-place in GBL
standings; Everett boys
close to top as well
R
evere High Boys Soccer is just
one game and three goals out
of fi rst place in the Greater Boston
League race. Somerville sits atop
the list at 5-1-1 in league play,
while Revere is right behind at
5-2-1 in the league. Everett is the
only team to have beaten Somerville
this season â€“ 2-1 in the season
opener. Revere, which tied Somerville,
1-1, in their only meeting on
Tuesday this week, put the Patriots
right in the mix for the GBL
crown.
Everett, at 4-3-1 GBL, is right
there for the league top spot
as well. Everett has a split with
Somerville, and a big one on its
list is a home game with Revere
on Thursday, October 12 at 4:15
p.m. Revere has a game to make
up with Somerville before the season
ends, a game which very well
could decide this yearâ€™s GBL Boys
Soccer Championship.
All four top GBLers â€“ Somerville,
Revere, Medford (4-3-1 GBL also)
and Everett â€“ appear to be headed
to postseason play at this point.
Stay tuned.
Former Malden Pop Warner
star Mike Sanristil returns for
5th year of collegiate career
at University of Michigan
H
eâ€™s probably the best player
to ever don a uniform in the
Malden Pop Warner Football program.
Mike Sanristil, who played
for fi ve years in the Malden Pop
Warner program and attended
Malden Public Schools for eight
years, before changing course
and heading to Everett High for
his high school career, is a fi fthyear
Wolverine and team captain
for the University of Michigan. Already
named a Big 10 â€œDefensive
Player of the Weekâ€ for returning a
Pick-6 interception in a Michigan
win over Rutgers, Sanristil is projected
to be at least a 6th round
pick in the 2024 NFL draft.
If so, he would be the second
Malden Pop Warner star and Malden
resident to become an NFL
pick in the past three years, joining
present Baltimore Ravens
tight end Isaiah Likely in that elite
group. Likely played for six years
in Malden Pop Warner and three
years at Malden High School before
transferring to Everett High
immediately after his junior year
football season at Malden High.
Following is an excerpt from
a writeup in Sports Illustrated on
Sanristilâ€™s decision to return to
Ann Arbor before the season.
â€œThe opportunity to spend another
year in Ann Arbor, to continue
his education at a world-class
university, to continue building
on the bonds heâ€™s created with
his teammates and his coaches,
and ultimately the opportunity
to win a national championship
- all compelling reasons for a return
to Michigan.
â€œFrom wide receiver to defensive
back, Michiganâ€™s Mike Sainristil
has certainly made his mark
on the football program in Ann
Arbor. After putting his name on
the map as a solid defender in
2022, Sainristil had a decision to
make - enter his name in the NFL
draft, or return to Michigan for a
fi fth season.
â€œAfter much thought and careful
consideration, Sainristil chose
Michigan once again.â€
â€œYear after year, Ann Arbor is always
ranked top-three as a college
town,â€ Sainrstil said in a recent
interview. â€œThe people here
are great, you walk around and
everyone is nice to you. Ann Arbor
is home to me.
â€œI love my teammates, coach
Harbaugh - my football Dad -
was giving me the opportunity
to leave, I said, â€˜no dad, I want to
stay home.â€™â€
OUT OF STATE PROPERTY
AND THE MASS ESTATE TAX
M
assachusetts General
Laws Chapter 65C, Section
1(f) specifi cally exempts
from the Massachusetts estate
tax tangible personal property
and real estate located outside
of Massachusetts. The Commonwealth
of Mass directs
taxpayers to calculate the federal
gross estate for estate tax
purposes and then provides
for a reduction of out of state
tangible personal property
and out of state real estate.
Under the current proposed
tax relief package that is now
on Governor Healeyâ€™s desk
(that she has until October 8,
2023 to sign), the estate tax
exemption will be increased
to $2,000,000. If a taxpayer
dies with a $2,000,000 taxable
estate, the $2,000,000
is reduced by $60,000 in order
to arrive at the adjusted
taxable estate, or $1,940,000.
The Table B Computation of
Maximum Credit for State
Death Taxes results in a credit
of $99,600. This table is utilized
by the Commonwealth
of Massachusetts to determine
the estate tax due when
someone dies in Massachusetts.
Under the old federal estate
tax law, the IRS allowed a
credit for state death taxes on
the federal estate tax return.
The federal government no
longer allows for this tax credit.
Massachusetts, however,
actually uses that table to determine
the Massachusetts
estate tax due. The Massachusetts
estate tax return actually
piggy backs the prior Federal
estate tax return based upon
the 1999 Revision date. We, as
preparers, have to prepare the
current Massachusetts estate
tax return and the federal estate
tax return, Form 706, as it
existed back in 1999.
The good news is that an
estate of $2.5million would
only result in $44,000 in Massachusetts
estate taxes. Compare
this with the current estate
tax provision in Massachusetts
which would result
in an estate tax of $143,600.
Quite a big difference. This
is due to the $99,600 credit
against the Massachusetts estate
tax based upon the fi rst
$2million of the gross estate
being exempt from the estate
tax. Only the estate value
over $2million is actually
subject to tax.
The Dassori v. Commissioner
of Revenue 2016 decision
involved a case of fi rst impression.
The probate court judge
decided the case against the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
holding that a real estate
investment in Paris, France
was not subject to the Massachusetts
estate tax. The real
estate in question was held in
a vehicle similar to a nominee
realty trust utilized by real estate
attorneys in Massachusetts.
The Commonwealth
tried to argue that the real estate
investment was intangible
personal property due to
the nature of the taxpayerâ€™s interest
in the entity that actually
held title to the real estate.
The probate judge considered
the investment to be real
estate based upon Massachusetts
law and, as such, the real
estate could not be subject to
estate tax by Massachusetts.
Otherwise, that would represent
a due process violation
under the 14th amendment
to the Constitution.
Joseph D. Cataldo is an Estate Planning/Elder Law Attorney, Certifi ed
Public Accountant, Certifi ed Financial Planner, AICPA Personal
Financial Specialist and holds a Masterâ€™s Degree in Taxation.
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Page 15
Ailing Patriots: Limping Revere falls to English,
turns page to Everett
By Dom Nicastro
T
he question these days for
the Revere High School football
team isnâ€™t whoâ€™s playing. Itâ€™s
who isnâ€™t.
The Patriots, just like last year,
have been snake bitten by the
injury bug so badly that theyâ€™re
down about 30% from their initial
roster of more than 50. That
depletion showed in the teamâ€™s
28-6 loss to Lynn English last
week in Greater Boston League
action at Lynnâ€™s Fraser Field. The
loss dropped the Patriots to 0-4,
and theyâ€™ll limp into a game no
one wants to limp into â€“ at home
against Everett Friday, Oct. 6 at
6 p.m.
â€œItâ€™s worse than last year,â€ Revere
coach Lou Cicatelli said. â€œIt
blows my mind. Weâ€™ve got a lot
of younger kids as it is. Weâ€™re playing
this week with a lot of freshmen
and sophomores.â€
Among the injured are starting
center Joel Vasquez, defensive
end Ethan Romagos, tailback
and linebacker Abbas Atoui,
backup quarterback and slot receiver
Danny Hou and receiver
Gabriel Paretsis. Even running
back Giovanni Woodard, who
has received a lionâ€™s share of the
carries and has performed admirably
this season, has been sick in
practices this week and hopes to
be on the fi eld against Everett.
â€œAll we can do is show up and
give the kids a chance to practice,
do their best and give some guys
a chance to shine and play varsity
football,â€ Cicatelli said. â€œWeâ€™ll
see where it goes, and weâ€™ll do
our best.â€
Revere did all it could with a
depleted staff last week in Lynn.
But the Bulldogs were ahead
the entire game, taking a 21-0
lead at halftime and a 28-0 edge
into the last quarter. Lynn Englishâ€™s
Limbert Thomas and Isaiah
Goorahlal had rushing touchdowns,
and Cody Richardson
had two interceptions. Thomas
found Mitchell Purter for a 15yard
score and tossed to Zamari
Omosefe for a 56-yard English
touchdown. Revere quarterback
Carlos Rizo plunged into the end
zone on a 2-yard quarterback
sneak to break up the shutout,
but it was far too late to make it
a competitive game.
â€œI think off ensively we did OK,â€
Cicatelli said, â€œbut we still canâ€™t
get any continuity going. Our offensive
line is very young. Theyâ€™re
2023 Pats Seniors, shown from
left to right: front row: Victor
Andrade, Hakim Malki, Ashley
Chandler, Guillermo Menjivar,
Brayan Lemus, Ahmed Bellemsiel,
Zakaria Benkirane, Felipe
Maia, Diego Madrigal and Jose
Ozuna; back row: Ethan Romagos,
Anthony Pham, Alejandro
Ventura, Rafael Teixeira, Carlos
Rizo Jr., Abbas Atoui, Walter
Rodriguez, Patrick Keefe, Javan
Close and Carlos Jimenez.
all sophomores.â€
Once again, Revere looked
good at times and moved the
ball but usually had a setback in
the form of a penalty or long loss
of yardage. Rizzo made a beautiful
connection with Hou for a 30yard
gain, for example, but that
drive stalled in the fi rst half.
Felipe Maia, the teamâ€™s punter
and kicker, continues to be a
bright spot with some booming
kicks. Cicatelli had nothing but
praise for the Patriot with the
strong boot. â€œHeâ€™s been a bright
light,â€ Cicatelli said of his kicker.
â€œHeâ€™s just been really good for
us. Another bright light was Gio
[Woodard], but he canâ€™t do it on
his own.â€
Everett has been playing Everett-like
football. The team is 3-1
and on a three-game winning
streak, beating Somerville (590),
Lynn English (35-0) and Boston
College High (35-34).
â€œWeâ€™re going to play the game
and try to get out of Dodge,
hopefully, somewhat healthy,â€
Cicatelli said. â€œThatâ€™s all you can
do. If we lose any more guys itâ€™s
going to be tough. Everett has
very strong ball control, and
theyâ€™re very, very physical.â€
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Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2023
Lady Pats Volleyball blanked by Everett, 3-0
#7 Hadassa Dias and her teammates listen to their coach Emilie Hostetter
during Wednesdays match with Everett.
Danna Canas on serving for Revere.
Susan
Lemus Chavez with the hit for Revere. (Advocate photos
by Emily Harney)
Fans from Revere cheer on the girlsâ€™ volleyball team Wednesday during
their match at Everett High School.
Hadassa Dias with the serve for
Revere.
Lea Doucette of Revere (R) and her teammate work to return
the ball to Everett.
Hadassa Dias and Danna Canas get ready for the serve from Everett during
Wednesdays match.
Farrah Habbour with the ball
for Revere.
Susan Lemus Chavez works to keep the ball in play for
Revere.
Susan Lemus Chavez, Farrah Habbour and Samantha Hoyos Tobon all
diving to keep the ball in play for Revere.
Susan Lemus Chavez serving
for Revere.
Samantha Hoyos Tobon and Lea Doucette at the front of
the net, work to return the ball to Everett.
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Page 17
~ RHS PATRIOTS SPORTS ROUND-UP ~
Revere girlsâ€™ soccer
team tops Malden,
ties Somerville
Revere beat Malden, 1-0, last
week to climb to 8-0.
â€œCoach Rick [Caceda] and his
Malden team played us very
tough and tested our defense
and gave our midfi eld a hard
time,â€ Revere coach Megan
Oâ€™Donnell said. â€œThey were the
fi rst team to get multiple shots
on net and tested our integrity.
Our team didnâ€™t play their best
due to injuries and a team bug
thatâ€™s going around. We had a
few opportunities in the fi rst half
to score but we couldnâ€™t fi nish.â€
The Patriots scored the lone
goal of the game with about
eight minutes left when Erika
Mejia and Samarah Paiva got
the ball out of the middle and
down the sideline to Catalina
Chizavo, who then put the ball
through to Nataly Oliva. Oliva
took the ball to the corner of
the box and scored to the bottom
right of the goalie.
Kesley Morales, Fatima Oliva,
Giselle Salvador and Emily Torres
held Malden to four shots
on net, and Nisrin Sekkat made
some great saves and is fi nding
her way in goal. The midfi eld,
which was controlled by Sandra
Torres, Paiva, Erika Mejia and
Chizavo, played hard and took
many hard hits from Malden,
but they were able to move the
ball upfi eld to give teammates
chances to score multiple times
during the game.
The junior varsity team finished
with a 3-3 tie against
Malden with Ikram Bichia scoring
two goals and freshman Sarah
Grandos scoring her fi rst career
goal. Ajsi Balla and Andrea
Mendieta had their best games.
Somerville was a dog fight
that ended in a 1-1 tie. Ari Pina
scored the lone goal on a free
kick, and Fatima Oliva and Sekkat
had the defensive on lock.
Revere field hockey
team falls in
competitive matches
Revere fell to Saugus, 3-1, with
the goal scored by Danni Randall
and assisted by Matthew
Terrell. That came after a 3-2
loss to Ursuline Academy. The
Patriots had a strong fi rst quarter,
with goals being scored by
Bella Stamatopoulos and Isabella
Mendieta (assist by Randall).
Revere fell to Peabody, 3-2.
â€œDespite losing by one, it was
the best game Revere field
hockey has played all season,â€
Revere coach Alex Butler said.
â€œThe team played hard all four
quarters, and had multiple offensive
corners, one of which
led to a goal.â€
The fi rst goal was scored by
Isabella Mendieta with an assist
from Terrell. The second goal
was scored by Terrell.
â€œSonia Haily did an amazing
job in goal and had great support
on defense from Ava Morris
and Briana Mendieta,â€ said
Butler, a Peabody field hockey
alumna (Class of 2013). â€œThe
team did an amazing job of hitting
hard, playing the ball wide
and hustling the entire game.
Peabody is a really tough team,
and our team defi nitely held our
own all four quarters.â€
Revere/Malden
golf team goes two
matches without loss
On Thursday, Sept. 28, the Revere/Malden
golf team competed
to a 36-36 tie against
Somerville at Stoneham Oaks.
This tie gave the team a 4-11
record on the season. Some
highlights are a 5.5-3.5 win
by Malden freshman Tommy
SPORT | SEE Page 23
Three Vaccines Seniors Should
Consider Getting This Fall
Dear Savvy Senior,
Which vaccines are recommended for Medicare seniors
this fl u season?
Just Turned 65
Dear Just Turned,
There are actually three different
types of vaccines seniors
should consider getting this fall
to protect against a repeat of last
winterâ€™s â€œtripledemicâ€ of respiratory
illnesses, which included
fl u, RSV and coronavirus. Hereâ€™s a
rundown of the diff erent vaccines
the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) is recommending
and how they are covered
by Medicare.
Senior-Specifi c Flu Shots
For people age 65 and older,
there are three fl u vaccines (you
only need one) that the CDC recommends
over traditional flu
shots.
These FDA-approved vaccines
provide extra protection beyond
what a standard flu shot
does, which is important for older
adults who have weaker immune
defenses and have a greater
risk of developing dangerous
fl u complications compared
with younger, healthy adults. The
three senior-specifi c options include
the:
â€¢ Fluzone High-Dose Quadrivalent
vaccine, which contains four
times the amount of antigen as
a regular fl u shot does, creating
a stronger immune response for
better protection.
â€¢ Fluad Quadrivalent vaccine,
which contains an added ingredient
called adjuvant MF59 that
also helps create a stronger immune
response.
â€¢ FluBlok Quadrivalent vaccine,
is a recombinant protein
(egg-free) fl u vaccine that contains
three times the amount of
antigen as compared with a regular
fl u shot.
There isnâ€™t enough evidence
Lea Doucette and Samantha Hoyos Tobon celebrate after taking
the lead during the second set.
Liv Yuong with the serve for
Revere.
yet to indicate whether one of
these three vaccines provides superior
protection over the other
two for seniors.
As for side eff ects, you should
know that the Fluzone High-Dose
and Fluad vaccines can cause
more of the mild side eff ects that
can occur with a standard-dose
fl u shot, like pain or tenderness
where you got the shot, muscle
aches, headache or fatigue. While
the side eff ects of Flublok tend to
be a little less frequent.
All fl u vaccines are covered 100
percent by Medicare Part B as
long as your doctor, health clinic
or pharmacy agrees not to charge
you more than Medicare pays.
New RSV Vaccines
Anyone age 60 and older, especially
if you have any heart or
lung conditions, diabetes, kidney
or liver disorders that make you
vulnerable to the respiratory syncytial
virus (RSV) should consider
getting one of the new FDA approved
RSV vaccines (either Arexvy
or Abrysvo).
These vaccines, recommended
by the CDC, will help protect
older and immunocompromised
adults from respiratory illness,
which is responsible for 6,000 to
10,000 deaths and at least 60,000
hospitalizations each year in seniors
65 and older.
The new RSV vaccines are covered
by Medicare (Part D) prescription
drug plans.
Updated Covid Booster
If you havenâ€™t had a Covid-19
booster shot lately, you should
consider getting one this fall.
Even though the Covid public
health emergency has ended and
the number of cases has gone
way down, it has been surging
in recent months causing an increase
in hospitalizations, especially
among the elderly.
The updated Covid vaccine targets
the XBB omicron subvariants
that are some of the most dominate
coronavirus variants circulating
in the U.S. It will also provide
protection against the EG.5 variant
(Eris), which is closely related
to the XBB.
Covid booster shots are covered
100 percent by Medicare
Part B.
When and Where
Most health offi cials agree that
itâ€™s safe to receive the fl u and Covid
booster at the same time. But
because the RSV vaccines are
new this year, many doctors are
recommending a two-week window
between an RSV shot and
the fl u and/or the COVID shots.
You can fi nd all three vaccines
at most pharmacies, medical
clinics and health departments,
or you can do a search at Vaccines.gov.
Samantha
Hoyos Tobon, and Lea Doucette and Hadassa Dias prepare
for Everettâ€™s serve.
Danna Cana works to return
the ball.
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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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2023
By Bob Katzen
If you have any questions about this weekâ€™s report, e-mail us
at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com or call us at (617) 720-1562
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THE HOUSE AND SENATE: Beacon
Hill Roll Call records local
representativesâ€™ and senatorsâ€™
votes from the week of September
25-29.
LEGISLATURE APPROVES TAX
RELIEF PACKAGE (H 4104)
House 155-1, Senate 38-1, approved
and sent to Gov. Maura
Healey the conference committee
version of a tax relief package.
It was drafted as a compromise
to the diff erent versions approved
by the House and Senate.
Supporters say this will provide
$561.3 million in tax relief in
fi scal year 2024 and $1.02 billion
per year in subsequent years.
Provisions include increasing
the rental deduction cap from
$3,000 to $4,000; reducing the estate
tax for all taxpayers and eliminating
the tax for all estates under
$2 million by allowing a uniform
credit of $99,600; increasing
the refundable tax credit for
a dependent child, disabled adult
or senior from $180 to $310 per
dependent in taxable year 2023,
and then to $440 in subsequent
years while eliminating the child/
dependent cap; doubling the refundable
senior circuit breaker
tax credit from $1,200 to $2,400;
increasing the refundable Earned
Income Tax Credit from 30 percent
to 40 percent of the federal
credit; and reducing the shortterm
capital gains tax rate from
12 percent to 8.5 percent.
Other provisions double the
lead paint tax credit to $3,000
for full abatement and $1,000 for
partial abatement; ensure that
employer student loan payments
are not treated as taxable compensation;
make public transit
fares, as well as ferry and regional
transit passes and bike commuter
expenses, eligible for the commuter
expense tax deduction;
increase from $1,500 to $2,000
the maximum that municipalities
may pay seniors to do volunteer
work to reduce their property
taxes; raise the annual authorization
for the low income housing
tax credit from $40 million to
$60 million; and allow cities and
towns to adopt a local property
tax exemption for aff ordable real
estate that is rente
â€œThis is the most significant
tax relief package in a generation,â€
said Senate President Karen
Spilka (D-Ashland). â€œThis legislation
is going to put real dollars
into the pockets of the people
who need it most, including
parents, seniors, young people
and middle class families who
are struggling to keep up with rising
costs. This bill includes a historic
expansion of housing programs
that will ignite aff ordable
housing development and ease
the housing crunch, as well as
signifi cant relief for families with
young children. It will also make
Massachusetts a more competitive
place to live and work and
encourages businesses to continue
investing in our region.â€
â€œThis tax relief package strikes
the critically important balance
of providing permanent fi nancial
relief to residents and businesses
across Massachusetts, without
compromising the long-term fi -
nancial security of the commonwealth,â€
said House Speaker Ron
Mariano (D-Quincy). â€œIâ€™m confi -
dent that this tax reform legislation
will help to make Massachusetts
more aff ordable for all residents,
while also helping to make
the commonwealth more competitive
with other states.â€
â€œBack in April, I stood at the rostrum
for about 13 minutes and
expressed a mix of support for
the many elements of this bill
that will help working families
and people experiencing poverty
â€” while at the same time criticizing
the elements of this bill that
will benefit large corporations
and the super-rich,â€ said Rep.
Mike Connolly (D-Cambridge),
the only House member to vote
against the package.
â€œFrom my vantage point, this
bill was signifi cantly improved
through the conference committee
process, and there are several
elements of the bill I enthusiastically
support,â€ continued Connolly.
â€œAnd yet, as I stand here today,
I still cannot bring myself
to support the total price tag of
$1.1 billion once fully implemented.
Not after we just spent a decade
working to pass the Fair
Share Amendment to gain desperately
needed new revenue
â€¦ A lot more needs to be done,
including bigger public investments
in programs, services and
infrastructure â€” investments
that could be signifi cantly constrained
by the overall cost of todayâ€™s
tax cut bill.â€
The measure also includes two
provisions which the Mass Fiscal
Alliance says will result in tax
hikes. One would require Massachusetts
married couples who
fi le income tax returns jointly at
the federal level to do the same at
the state level. The other changes
the system under Chapter 62F
that requires that annual tax revenue
above a certain amount collected
by the state go back to the
taxpayers. Under current law, the
money is returned to taxpayers
based on what he or she earned
and paid in taxes. The new tax
package changed that and provides
that each taxpayer will receive
a fl at rate refund, unrelated
to what they earned or paid
in taxes.
â€œNever before have so many
waited so long for so little,â€ said
Paul Craney, a spokesman for
the Mass Fiscal Alliance. â€œLeave
it up to two career politicians to
not only deliver a two-year late
tax relief package while almost
every other state saw immediate
relief but include tax hikes in
their relief package. The speaker
and Senate presidentâ€™s proposal
includes a marriage penalty, applying
the new income surtax
to married couples who have a
combined income of over a million
dollars.â€
Craney further explained that
changing how Chapter 62F surplus
money is distributed to taxpayers
actually hijacks the system
and turns it into a socialist wealth
redistribution scheme.
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the tax relief
package. A â€œNoâ€ vote is against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
Rep. Jeff Turco
Sen. Lydia Edwards
Yes
Yes
$1 MILLION FOR HEADSTART
PROGRAMS (H 4040)
House 156-0, overrode Gov.
Healeyâ€™s veto of $1 million (reducing
funding from $17.5 million
to $16.5 million) in funding for
grants to Head Start programs.
â€œI am reducing this item to the
amount projected to be necessary,â€
said Healey in her veto message.
â€œThe adjusted funding level
proposed here is consistent
with the fi scal year 2023 General
Appropriations Act and sustains
signifi cant expansion to this lineitem
in recent fi scal years.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the $1 million.
A â€œNoâ€ vote is against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
Rep. Jeff Turco
Yes
$1.4 MILLION FOR SUICIDE
PREVENTION SERVICES (H 4040)
House 154-0, overrode Gov.
Healeyâ€™s veto of $1.4 million (reducing
funding from $1.8 million
to $400,000) in funding for suicide
prevention programs.
â€œI am reducing this item to
an amount consistent with my
House [budget]... recommendation,â€
said Healey in her veto message.
â€œThe program goals are suffi
ciently funded through an expansion
in the Suicide Prevention
and Intervention â€¦ line item.
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the $1.4 million.
A â€œNoâ€ vote is against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
Rep. Jeff Turco
Yes
$250,000 FOR PROSTATE CANCER
RESEARCH (H 4040)
House 154-0, overrode Gov.
Healyâ€™s veto of $250,000 (reducing
funding from $1.25 million to
$1 million) in funding for prostate
cancer research.
â€œI am reducing this item to the
amount projected to be necessary,â€
said Healey in her veto
message. â€œThis will allow the program
to continue its current level
of services.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for $250,000. A
â€œNoâ€ vote is against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
Rep. Jeff Turco
Yes
$250,000 FOR PARENT-CHILD
PLUS PROGRAM (H 4040)
House 131-24, overrode Gov.
Healeyâ€™s veto of $250,000 (reducing
funding from $4,250,000
to $4,000,000) in funding for the
Parent-Child Plus Program. According
to its website, â€œThe goals
of this intensive, evidence-based
home visiting model are to promote
school readiness and academic
success by strengthening
parent-child verbal interaction
and reading and play activities
in the home.â€
â€œI am reducing this item to the
amount projected to be necessary,â€
said Healey in her veto message.
â€œThe adjusted funding level
proposed here is consistent
with the fi scal year 2023 General
Appropriations Act and sustains
signifi cant expansion to this lineitem
in recent fi scal years.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the $250,000.
A â€œNoâ€ vote is against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
Rep. Jeff Turco
Yes
$880,000 FOR MASSACHUSETTS
SERVICE ALLIANCE (H
4040)
House 130-24, overrode Gov.
Healeyâ€™s veto of $880,000 (reducing
funding from $2,280,000
to $1,400,000) in funding for the
Massachusetts Service Alliance.
According to its website, the
Massachusetts Service Alliance
is a â€œprivate, nonprofi t â€¦ organization,
established in 1991, that
expands volunteerism and service
in Massachusetts. It provides
funding, training and support to
individuals and organizations,
enabling them to tackle pressing
issues, strengthen communities,
and make our commonwealth a
better place to live.â€
â€œI am vetoing this item because
it is not consistent with my House
[budget] â€¦ recommendation,â€
said Healey in her veto message.
â€œThis is a passthrough and will
not impact core Executive Offi ce
of Labor and Workforce Development
programming.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the $880,000
million. A â€œNoâ€ vote is against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
Rep. Jeff Turco
Yes
SUSPEND RULES TO ALLOW
AMENDMENTS TO TAX PACKAGE
(H 4104)
Senate 3-33, voting along party
lines, rejected a motion to suspend
the Senate rule that prohibits
amendments from being proposed
to the conference committee
version of the tax package.
Republicans supported rule
suspension while Democrats opposed
it.
Supporters of rule suspension
said Senate rules allow only a
Yes or No vote on the tax package.
They argued there are some
fl aws in the bill and that rule suspension
is the only way to allow
amendments to be proposed.
Opponents of rule suspension
said that suspending the
rule would result in hundreds of
amendments being proposed to
the package and lead to starting
tax relief debate all over again.
They noted that both Republican
members of the conference
committee signed off on the bill.
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for rule suspension
to allow amendments. A â€œNoâ€
vote is against rule suspension.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards
No
ALSO UP ON BEACON HILL
EQUITY IN EDUCATION - What
can our business, political and
education leaders do diff erently
to connect Black and Latino students
to pathways to careers that
our thriving life sciences, health,
clean tech and other sectors so
urgently need to fi ll?
Join MASSterList, the State
House News Service, and the
Massachusetts Business Alliance
for Education on Tuesday, October
24th, for a policy event from
8:15 â€“ 10:30 am at the MCLE New
England â€“ 10 Winter Place, Boston
(Downtown Crossing), (inperson
only).
Register for this FREE event:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/
equity-in-education-tickets723011084617?aff
=BHRC
INCREASE MINIMUM WAGE (H
1925, S 1200) â€“ The Labor and
Workforce Development Committee
held a hearing on legislation
that would raise the current
$15 minimum hourly wage
for workers, including municipal
workers, by $1.25 per year until
it reaches $20 per hour in 2027.
Other provisions index the minimum
wage to infl ation beginning
in January 2028; increase the
BEACON | SEE Page 22
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Page 19
COUNCIL | FROM Page 1
â€œThis is concerning; itâ€™s a rare
occasion and I donâ€™t understand
why itâ€™s being sent back
as a veto,â€ said Ward 3 Councillor
Anthony Cogliandro, who added
that this is the only council
motion that has come back as
a veto and there was no one at
the meeting to explain it. â€œIt just
doesnâ€™t sit right with me.â€
Councillor-at-Large Marc Silvestri
also said he didnâ€™t understand
the reasoning behind
the veto. â€œIf we vote to overturn
it, heâ€™ll veto it again and weâ€™ll
play political volleyball back
and forth,â€ said Silvestri. â€œThatâ€™s
politics.â€
According to Councillor-at-Large
Dan Rizzo, an acting
mayor can only hire and appoint
on a temporary or emergency
basis. â€œThat wasnâ€™t the
case here and thatâ€™s what was
troubling the council. You canâ€™t
abuse your position,â€ said Rizzo.
Massachusetts General Laws
says acting mayors possess the
powers of mayor only in matters
not admitting of delay but shall
have no power to make permanent
appointments and no
power of veto.
But Revere operates under
a special act approved by the
Massachusetts Legislature in
2004 concerning vacancies in
the mayorâ€™s offi ce, on the city
council and the school committee.
The act, like the law,
gives the acting mayor power
to deal with matters not admitting
delay but says he or she has
no power to make permanent
appointments. It says nothing
about vetoes.
City Solicitor Paul Capizzi, who
said he wholeheartedly agrees
with Keefeâ€™s right to veto the
council motion, sent councillors
a detailed memo on the
powers and duties of an acting
mayor prior to their vote to override
Keefeâ€™s veto. â€œIn my opinion,
hiring employees to carry out
the day-to-day responsibilities
for running a city is legally and
functionally distinct from makto
department heads and other
specifi c senior level positions or
to serve on a multi-member policy
making body.â€
Councillors conceded the
disagreement with Keefe was
a moot point with the General
Election just a few weeks away.
Still, Rizzo said it was important
to show their disagreement
with Keefe.
Zambuto agreed and said
ANTHONY ZAMBUTO
Councillor-at-Large
ing permanent appointments as
referenced in the charter,â€ wrote
Capizzi. â€œIn my opinion, therefore,
the acting mayor may, during
the time he serves, hire staff
as needed, subject to appropriation
of course, but may not
make permanent appointments
the councilâ€™s legal opinion on
the matter was from one of the
best fi rms in the state. â€œWe believe
our opinion was the right
one,â€ he said. â€œThe bottom line is
we made a statement. So, weâ€™re
back at square one. This was a
separation of powers action. The
people will decide.â€
Zambuto went on to say this
that type of situation shouldnâ€™t
continue. â€œWe canâ€™t have an acting
Mayor for this length of time.
Itâ€™s unheard of and it wonâ€™t happen
again. Thatâ€™s why Iâ€™m here.â€
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The Maintenance Technician will be based at our residential
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1. On Oct. 6, 1993, who
retired from pro basketball,
saying, â€œI donâ€™t have
anything else to proveâ€?
2. Chester, Vermontâ€™s Ariana
Wunderle set a Guinness
World Record for the
farthest walk (639 feet,
7 inches) on a tightrope
wearing what?
3. In the Old West, what
term â€“ derived from the
Spanish vaquero â€“ was
most used to mean cowboy?
4.
On Oct. 7, 1955, what
musician was born in Paris
whose name includes the
name of a toy?
5. What U.S. state does
not have coyotes or bald
eagles?
6. Who was the ancient
Greek goddess of harvest?
7. On Oct. 8, 1871, the
Great Chicago Fire began
in what type of building:
barn, factory or mansion?
8. The first American
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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€“
View the interior
of this home
right on your
smartphone.
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
cream cheese (1872) was
a combination of cream
and what French cheese
recipe?
9. Where was Abraham
â€œBramâ€ Stoker, who authored
â€œDracula,â€ from?
10. October 9 is Columbus
Day and Indigenous
Peoplesâ€™ Day; what explorAnswers
er
is also celebrated on
this day?
11. What U.S. president
was a licensed bartender?
12. In what U.S. state that
has Wrigley Field would
you find the Pumpkin
Capital of the World?
13. On Oct. 10, 1845,
what school for midshipmen
was founded in Annapolis,
Maryland?
14. Which squash is dark
green: kabocha, pattypan
or sweet dumpling?
15. Which has a greater
number: solar system
planets or colors in a rainbow?
16.
Who originated
â€œblinded by the Light,â€
â€œPink Cadillacâ€ and â€œFireâ€?
17. On Oct. 11, 1828, the
fi rst American cotton mill
burned down; it was located
in what North Shore
city that has an English,
gender-neutral name?
18. What English mystery
writer is Guinness
World Recordsâ€™ most translated
author?
19. What was the first
MTV video?
20. On Oct. 12, 1901,
what buildingâ€™s name was
changed from Executive
Mansion?
1. Michael Jordan
(He returned to play
in March 1995.)
2. High heels
3. Buckaroo
4. Cellist Yo-Yo Ma
5. Hawaii
6. Demeter
7. Barn
8. NeufchÃ¢tel
9. Ireland
10. Leif Erikson
11. Abraham Lincoln
12. Illinois (the village
of Morton)
13. U.S. Naval Academy
14.
Kabocha
15. Planets (eight); a
rainbow has seven
16. Bruce Springsteen
17.
Beverly (the Beverly
Cotton Manufactory)
18.
Agatha Christie
19. The Bugglesâ€™ â€œVideo
Killed the Radio
Starâ€
20. The White House
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2023
Humane Removal Service
COMMONWEALTH
WILDLIFE CONTROL
ANIMAL & BIRD REMOVAL
INCLUDING RODENTS
Rui Pereira
CALL 617-285-0023
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Page 21
Joseph W. â€œJoeâ€ Cook
Upon retirement, Joe and Arlene
moved to Joeâ€™s family farm
in Alabama where they enjoyed
10 years of country life. They then
returned to the Boston area where
they resided at the Jack Satter
House in Revere, with Joe making
many friends, particularly with the
poker club there.
Joe was predeceased by his
J
oseph â€œJoeâ€
W. Cook
of Revere, MA,
passed away on
September 26, 2023 at the age
of 86.
Joe was born June 15, 1937 in
Horton, Alabama to Daniel Sr. and
VeElla (Smith) Cook on their family
farm along with ten other brothers
and sisters.
In 1955, Joe joined the U.S. Navy,
serving honorably for 3 years. During
a port call in Boston, Joe met
his future wife Arlene and relocated
to the Boston area after his discharge
to marry and start a family.
Joe had a general aviation career
at Logan Airport for over 40
years, primarily for Butler Aviation,
where he was respected and loved
by all his co-workers while never
missing a day of work. During this
time, Joe was also an avid bowler
participating in many leagues and
loved to play pool as well.
aforementioned parents and
three of his siblings, Tilton; Daniel
Webster; and Ida Lee (Hopper).
As well he is survived by seven
other siblings, Michael; George,
Vicki (Potash), Rosie (Dean), Joyce
(Blackwood), Juanita (Johnson),
and Bonnie (Mahan).
He is survived by his loving wife
Arlene Cook and his three children:
Kenneth and his wife Donna
of Newtown, CT; Michael (predeceased
by his wife Shawn) of Revere,
MA; and Michele Gibson and
her husband David, of Stoughton,
MA.
As well as his grandsons Michael
Cook (and wife Colleen) of
Lynn, MA; Brian Cook of Leominster,
MA; Mathew Cook of Revere,
MA; Christopher Nessco (and wife
Leah) of Leominster, MA; Jonathon
Gibson of Stoughton, MA; and
granddaughter Ashley Nicole Gibson
of Stoughton MA.
Joe is also survived by his three
great-grandchildren Jacob, Travis,
and Vanessa, as well as another
great-grandson on the way.
In lieu of fl owers, please send
any donations to New England
Center and Home for Veterans. The
family will hold a private ceremony.
To send online condolences,
please visit www.vertucciosmithvazza.com.
Funeral arrangements
entrusted to the care and direction
of the Vertuccio Smith & Vazza,
Beechwood Home for Funerals.
OBITUARIES
Marie A. Hennessey
who aff ectionately referred to her
as â€œAuntie Ree.â€ Marie was a member
of the Red Hats, The Telephone
Pioneers of America, and she was
most proud of her volunteer work
for the â€œGenerationsâ€ reading program
at the Whalen School. Marieâ€™s
health had been declining
over the past several years, but
very much like her personality,
she had a strong will to fi ght and
push, which she did courageously.
Her battle ended on Monday, and
she is now reunited with her parents
in heaven.
She is the beloved daughter of
O
f Revere. Died on Monday,
October 2nd, at Massachusetts
General Hospital in Boston,
following a long illness.
She was 68 years old. Marie was
born on April 28, 1955, in Everett.
She was a lifelong Revere
resident where she was proudly
raised by her parents David
& Virginia Hennessey. She was
the eldest of three, with brothers,
David, Jr. & Mark. She attended
Immaculate Conception
School and was an alumna
of Revere High School, Class
of 1973. Marie furthered her education
by earning a degree in
Business Administration from
Fisher College. Marie also continued
to take various classes
that interested her throughout
her life. Marie worked for
New England Tel & Tel, which
became Verizon as a â€œLine Assigner,â€
her career spanned over
30 years.
Family was the center of Marieâ€™s
heart. She loved her parents, her
brothers, and their spouses, and
adored her nieces and nephews,
RevereTV Spotlight GRANT | FROM Page 2
W
atch Revere High School
Football on RevereTV!
Three games from this season
are now replaying on the Community
Channel and posted to
YouTube. The games now airing
are versus Peabody, Medford
and Lynn English. RTV will
be at as many games as possible,
including all home games
at Harry Della Russo Stadium.
Watch tonightâ€™s game against
Everett live at 6 p.m. on the Community
Channel and RTVâ€™s YouTube
page.
The rain didnâ€™t stop the Shirley
Ave. Cultural Festival a few weeks
ago. Manique Khessouane, RevereTVâ€™s
star youth correspondent,
takes you through the festival,
which was moved inside
the Garfield School. Watch as
she talks to vendors and community
members about their
experience and what they contributed
to the event. Some people
brought food from their local
restaurants; some gave away
books and baked goods; and
others just enjoyed their time
exploring, dancing and learning
about the diff erent cultures
of local residents who volunteered
to share. Walk through
the Shirley Ave. Cultural Festival
with Manique, now playing
on the RTV Community Channel,
and posted to Instagram
and YouTube.
Candidates on the General
Election ballot will soon be recording
video statements to play
on RTV GOV until the big day on
November 7. Those who made
it through the preliminary election
have the option of reusing
the video they previously used,
and all candidates have the option
of recording or not recording
a statement in general. All
candidate statements set up for
the General Election will be posted
all at once starting in a few
REVERETV | SEE Page 22
the late David J. Hennessey, Sr. &
Virginia T. (Manning) Hennessey.
The loving sister of David J. Hennessey,
Jr & wife Francine M. Hennessey
of Bedford and Mark F.
Hennessey & wife Maureen B.
Hennessey of Melrose. The cherished
aunt of Daniel P. Hennessey,
Timothy J. Hennessey, Theresa V.S.
Hennessey, Kevin J. Hennessey,
Ryan D. Hennessey, Brendan D.
Hennessey, and Erin B. Hennessey.
She is also lovingly survived by
many cousins, extended family
& friends.
Family & friends are respectfully
invited to attend visiting hours
on Friday, October 6th from 4 to 8
pm in the Vertuccio Smith & Vazza
Beechwood Home for Funerals,
262 Beach St. Revere. A funeral
will be conducted from the funeral
home on Saturday, October
7th, beginning at 8:45 am, followed
by a funeral mass at 10 am
in St. Anthony of Padua Church,
250 Revere St. Revere. Interment
immediately followed in Woodlawn
Cemetery. In lieu of fl owers,
remembrances may be made to
MGH Cancer Center, MGH Development
Offi ce, 125 Nashua Street,
Suite 540, Boston, MA 02114.
thank you to the Foundation
Trust for supporting us as we
bring our vision into reality,â€ said
RHS Outdoor Club Co-Advisor
Jesus Lopez.
The grant will enable the RHS
Outdoors Club to implement a
rock climbing program by helping
them purchase climbing
equipment and covering fees for
three climbing trips to the Metro
Rock climbing gym in Everett
(https://metrorock.com). These
trips will introduce as many as
50 students to the art of indoor
rock climbing and offer the
chance for others to further develop
their climbing skills. The
climbing gear will also enable
the program to include outdoor
rock climbing in places like the
Lynn Woods, Hammond Pond
and Red Rocks.
The partnership will also include
a presentation by a Foundation
Trust Training Associate,
Beth Waterman, a Licensed
Mental Health Counselor who
focuses on trauma and healing.
â€œWe are very interested in
further exploring the intersection
of nature, mindfulness, and
mental health. Rock climbing
provides many benefi ts including
physical fi tness, cardiovascular
health, as well as a host of
mental health benefi ts including
reduction in anxiety and increased
self-esteem,â€ added RHS
Outdoor Club Co-Advisor Isabel
Solano.
Comments Foundation Trust
Executive Director Joseph
Spinazzola, Ph.D., â€œOur bodies
carry the stress from daily
living along with the accumulated
toll of life adversity.
Our bodies are also the greatest
source of recovery and resilience
in the aftermath of
these experiences. The Foundation
Trust is excited to support
youth programming that
engages the body in strengthsbased
activities that cultivate
new skills, foster wellness, and
build community.
A fi nal portion of the grant will
fund a spring camping trip in
New Hampshire for junior and
Maurizio Veraldi
O
f Revere. Passed away on September
28th, just a day before
his 59th birthday, following
a devastating illness. Born in Crotone,
Italy, he is the son of Oreste
Veraldi and Rosa Maria Talentino.
He was raised and educated in Italy
and journeyed to the United
States in 1996. He married Linda
Larsen, and the couple began
their family residing in Chelsea.
They would eventually move to
Revere in 2010. Maurizio was a
devoted husband and father. He
was a talented Chef and worked
at the Beacon Hill Hotel in Boston.
He is the beloved husband of Linda
(Larsen) Veraldi of Revere. Devoted
father of Isabella R. Veraldi and
Nicholas O. Veraldi, both of Revere.
Loving son of Rosa Maria Talentino
in Italy and the late Oreste Veraldi.
Dear brother of Guido Veraldi and
Giuseppina Veraldi, both of Italy. He
is also survived by several cousins in
the US and Italy.
Family and friends were invited
to attend Visiting Hours on Thursday,
October 5th. A Funeral Service
followed in the funeral home. In lieu
of fl owers, remembrances may be
made to the American Cancer Society,
P.O. Box 6704, Hagerstown,
MD 21741.
senior class members. Fifteen
students will have the opportunity
to experience the great outdoors
in the mountains of New
Hampshire. Students will learn
how to set up tents, build fi res
and cook on camping stoves
and get the chance to hike bigger
mountains like Mount Cardigan.
The
RHS Outdoors Club was
established in 2014 to address
opportunity gaps by providing
students with access to nature,
greenspace and recreational
opportunities in Massachusetts
and beyond. The RHS Outdoors
Club comprises a diverse group
of students and teachers who
enjoy being outdoors together.
Their programming includes
day hiking, climbing and camping,
as well as hosting community
building activities, sports and
adventure fi lm viewing.
The Foundation Trust is a private
operating foundation committed
to uplifting vulnerable individuals
and communities. To
learn more, visit www.FoundationTrust.org.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2023
BEACON | FROM Page 18
minimum wage for tipped workers
from $6.75 to $12 by 2027 and
then set it at 60 percent of the full
minimum wage in future years.
â€œIncreasing the minimum wage
to $15 per hour has had a tremendously
positive impact on hundreds
of thousands of working individuals
and families in the commonwealth
who have seen their
take-home pay increase and improve
their standard of living,â€
said Senate sponsor Sen. Jason
Lewis (D-Winchester). â€œHowever,
due to high infl ation, the buying
power of $15 has been significantly
eroded, and it is estimated
by the MIT Living Wage Calculator
that a single person living in
the Greater Boston area would
need to earn more than $22 per
hour just to cover the basic necessities
of life --and far more to
support a family. This is why we
need to start phasing in another
increase to the minimum wage in
Massachusetts.â€
â€œWe know that working families
and individuals are under
enormous fi nancial stress with rising
infl ation and increased costs
of housing and living,â€ said House
sponsor Rep. Tram Nguyen (DAndover).
â€As workers are struggling
to meet their basic needs
and provide for their families, I am
glad to [fi le] this bill to provide fair
wages in our commonwealth.â€
UNBIASED SUMMARIES IN
CHILD REMOVAL CASES (H 182)
- The Committee on Children,
Families and Persons with Disabilities
held a hearing on a proposal
that would require the Department
of Children and Families
(DCF), when considering a
childâ€™s removal from his or her
family, to establish a case review
team that produces summaries
that do not include demographic
and identifying information such
as gender, race, ethnicity, disability,
geographic location and socioeconomic
status.
Sponsor Rep. Joan Meschino
(D-Hull) said the bill is designed
- LEGAL NOTICE -
î€¦î€²î€°î€°î€²î€±î€ºî€¨î€¤î€¯î€·î€« î€²î€© î€°î€¤î€¶î€¶î€¤î€¦î€«î€¸î€¶î€¨î€·î€·î€¶
î€·î€«î€¨ î€·î€µî€¬î€¤î€¯ î€¦î€²î€¸î€µî€·
î€³î€µî€²î€¥î€¤î€·î€¨ î€¤î€±î€§ î€©î€¤î€°î€¬î€¯î€¼ î€¦î€²î€¸î€µî€·
î€¶î˜îµµî’îîŽ î€³î•î’î…î„î—îˆ î„î‘î‡ î€©î„îîŒîîœ î€¦î’î˜î•î—
î€•î€— î€±îˆîš î€¦î‹î„î•î‡î’î‘ î€¶î—î•îˆîˆî—
î€¥î’î–î—î’î‘î€ î€°î€¤ î€“î€•î€”î€”î€—
î€‹î€™î€”î€šî€Œ î€šî€›î€›î€î€›î€–î€“î€“
î€§î’î†îŽîˆî— î€±î’î€‘ î€¶î€¸î€•î€–î€³î€•î€”î€˜î€–î€¨î€¤
î€¨î–î—î„î—îˆ î’î‰î€ î€°î€¤î€µî€·î€¬î€± î€§îŒî€¯î€¬î€¨î€ªî€µî€²
Dî„î—îˆ î’î‰ î€§îˆî„î—î‹î€ î€“î€—î€’î€”î€œî€’î€•î€“î€•î€–
î€¦î€¬î€·î€¤î€·î€¬î€²î€± î€²î€± î€³î€¨î€·î€¬î€·î€¬î€²î€± î€©î€²î€µ
î€©î€²î€µî€°î€¤î€¯ î€¤î€§î€­î€¸î€§î€¬î€¦î€¤î€·î€¬î€²î€±
To all interested persons:
A petition for î€©î’î•îî„î î€³î•î’î…î„î—îˆ î’î‰ î€ºîŒîî îšîŒî—î‹ î€¤î“î“î’îŒî‘î—îîˆî‘î— î’î‰
î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î„î î€µîˆî“î•îˆî–îˆî‘î—î„î—îŒî™îˆ î‹î„î– î…îˆîˆî‘ î‚¿îîˆî‡ î…îœî€ î€°î„î•î—îŒî‘ î€¤î€‘ î€§îŒî€¯îŒîˆîŠî•î’
of î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆî€ î€°î€¤ requesting that the Court enter a formal Decree
and Order and for such other relief as requested in the Petition.
The Petitioner requests that:
î€°î„î•î—îŒî‘ î€¤î€‘ î€§îŒî€¯îŒîˆîŠî•î’ of î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆî€ î€°î€¤ be appointed as Personal
Representative(s) of said estate to serve î€ºîŒî—î‹î’î˜î— î€¶î˜î•îˆî—îœ on the
bond in î˜î‘î–î˜î“îˆî•î™îŒî–îˆî‡ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî’î‘î€‘
î€¬î€°î€³î€²î€µî€·î€¤î€±î€· î€±î€²î€·î€¬î€¦î€¨
î€¼î’î˜ î‹î„î™îˆ î—î‹îˆ î•îŒîŠî‹î— î—î’ î’î…î—î„îŒî‘ î„ î†î’î“îœ î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ î€³îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘ î‰î•î’î
î—î‹îˆ î€³îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘îˆî• î’î• î„î— î—î‹îˆ î€¦î’î˜î•î—î€‘ î€¼î’î˜ î‹î„î™îˆ î„ î•îŒîŠî‹î— î—î’ î’î…îîˆî†î—
î—î’ î—î‹îŒî– î“î•î’î†îˆîˆî‡îŒî‘îŠî€‘ î€·î’ î‡î’ î–î’î€ îœî’î˜ î’î• îœî’î˜î• î„î—î—î’î•î‘îˆîœ îî˜î–î— î‚¿îîˆ
î„ îšî•îŒî—î—îˆî‘ î„î“î“îˆî„î•î„î‘î†îˆ î„î‘î‡ î’î…îîˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ î„î— î—î‹îŒî– î€¦î’î˜î•î— î…îˆî‰î’î•îˆî€
î€”î€“î€î€“î€“ î„î€‘îî€‘ î’î‘ î—î‹îˆ î•îˆî—î˜î•î‘ î‡î„îœ î’î‰ î€”î€”î€’î€”î€–î€’î€•î€“î€•î€–î€‘
î€·î‹îŒî– îŒî– î€±î€²î€· î„ î‹îˆî„î•îŒî‘îŠ î‡î„î—îˆî€ î…î˜î— î„ î‡îˆî„î‡îîŒî‘îˆ î…îœ îšî‹îŒî†î‹ îœî’î˜ îî˜î–î—
î‚¿îîˆ î„ îšî•îŒî—î—îˆî‘ î„î“î“îˆî„î•î„î‘î†îˆ î„î‘î‡ î’î…îîˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ îŒî‰ îœî’î˜ î’î…îîˆî†î— î—î’ î—î‹îŒî–
î“î•î’î†îˆîˆî‡îŒî‘îŠî€‘ î€¬î‰ îœî’î˜ î‰î„îŒî î—î’ î‚¿îîˆ î„ î—îŒîîˆîîœ îšî•îŒî—î—îˆî‘ î„î“î“îˆî„î•î„î‘î†îˆ î„î‘î‡
î’î…îîˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ î‰î’îîî’îšîˆî‡ î…îœ î„î‘ î„îµ¶î‡î„î™îŒî— î’î‰ î’î…îîˆî†î—îŒî’î‘î– îšîŒî—î‹îŒî‘ î—î‹îŒî•î—îœ
î€‹î€–î€“î€Œ î‡î„îœî– î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ î•îˆî—î˜î•î‘ î‡î„îœî€ î„î†î—îŒî’î‘ îî„îœ î…îˆ î—î„îŽîˆî‘ îšîŒî—î‹î’î˜î— î‰î˜î•î—î‹îˆî•
î‘î’î—îŒî†îˆ î—î’ îœî’î˜î€‘
î€¸î€±î€¶î€¸î€³î€¨î€µî€¹î€¬î€¶î€¨î€§ î€¤î€§î€°î€¬î€±î€¬î€¶î€·î€µî€¤î€·î€¬î€²î€± î€¸î€±î€§î€¨î€µ î€·î€«î€¨
î€°î€¤î€¶î€¶î€¤î€¦î€«î€¸î€¶î€¨î€·î€·î€¶ î€¸î€±î€¬î€©î€²î€µî€° î€³î€µî€²î€¥î€¤î€·î€¨ î€¦î€²î€§î€¨ î€‹î€°î€¸î€³î€¦î€Œ
î€¤ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î„î î€µîˆî“î•îˆî–îˆî‘î—î„î—îŒî™îˆ î„î“î“î’îŒî‘î—îˆî‡ î˜î‘î‡îˆî• î—î‹îˆ î€°î€¸î€³î€¦ îŒî‘
î„î‘ î˜î‘î–î˜î“îˆî•î™îŒî–îˆî‡ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî’î‘ îŒî– î‘î’î— î•îˆî”î˜îŒî•îˆî‡ î—î’ î‚¿îîˆ î„î‘
îŒî‘î™îˆî‘î—î’î•îœ î’î• î„î‘î‘î˜î„î î„î†î†î’î˜î‘î—î– îšîŒî—î‹ î—î‹îˆ î€¦î’î˜î•î—î€‘ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î– îŒî‘î—îˆî•îˆî–î—îˆî‡
îŒî‘ î—î‹îˆ îˆî–î—î„î—îˆ î„î•îˆ îˆî‘î—îŒî—îîˆî‡ î—î’ î‘î’î—îŒî†îˆ î•îˆîŠî„î•î‡îŒî‘îŠ î—î‹îˆ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî’î‘
î‡îŒî•îˆî†î—îîœ î‰î•î’î î—î‹îˆ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î„î î€µîˆî“î•îˆî–îˆî‘î—î„î—îŒî™îˆ î„î‘î‡ îî„îœ î“îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘
î—î‹îˆ î€¦î’î˜î•î— îŒî‘ î„î‘îœ îî„î—î—îˆî• î•îˆîî„î—îŒî‘îŠ î—î’ î—î‹îˆ îˆî–î—î„î—îˆî€ îŒî‘î†îî˜î‡îŒî‘îŠ î—î‹îˆ
î‡îŒî–î—î•îŒî…î˜î—îŒî’î‘ î’î‰ î„î–î–îˆî—î– î„î‘î‡ îˆî›î“îˆî‘î–îˆî– î’î‰ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî’î‘î€‘
î€ºî€¬î€·î€±î€¨î€¶î€¶î€ î€«î’î‘î€‘ î€¥î•îŒî„î‘ î€­î€‘ î€§î˜î‘î‘î€ î€©îŒî•î–î— î€­î˜î–î—îŒî†îˆ î’î‰ î—î‹îŒî– î€¦î’î˜î•î—î€‘
î€§î„î—îˆî€ î€²î†î—î’î…îˆî• î€“î€•î€ î€•î€“î€•î€–
î€¹î€¬î€±î€¦î€¨î€±î€· î€³î€µî€²î€¦î€²î€³î€¬î€²
î€µî€¨î€ªî€¬î€¶î€·î€¨î€µ î€²î€© î€³î€µî€²î€¥î€¤î€·î€¨
î€²î†î—î’î…îˆî• î€“î€™î€ î€•î€“î€•î€–
to prevent discrimination in the
child removal processes. â€œThe
goal is for DCF to provide a biasfree
summary of a childâ€™s situation
that takes into account safety and
risk factors, the familyâ€™s strengths
and opportunities for supportive
interventions before removing
a child from their home,â€ said
Meschino.
ALLOW CITIES AND TOWNS TO
IMPOSE A NEW 2 PERCENT ALCOHOL
TAX (S 1773) â€“ The Revenue
Committee held a hearing on
a bill that would allow cities and
towns to impose a local sales tax
of up to two percent on alcoholic
beverages sold at retail, bars
or at restaurants. Municipalities
that choose to impose the local
tax would be required to use the
revenue generated for substance
abuse prevention and for protecting
the public health.
â€œThere is tremendous unmet
need for substance use disorder
treatment in every community
in Massachusetts,â€ said Sen. Cindy
Creem (D-Newton). â€œThis bill
would enable interested cities
and towns to expand their addiction
and public health programming
to meet that need.â€
$4 MILLION FOR SECURITY AT
FAITH-BASED ORGANIZATIONS
- The Healey administration announced
that more than $4 million
in federal funds have been
awarded to address priority security
needs at faith-based and
community service organizations
at heightened risk of a hate crime
or terror attack in the Bay State.
â€œCommunities rely on nonprofit
and faith-based organizations
for essential social services, spiritual
support and guidance,â€ said
Gov. Healey. â€œOur administration
is deeply committed to ensuring
these vital organizations have the
tools and resources needed to
create safe, inclusive and protected
environments. These federal
funds provide critical support to
our nonprofi t and faith communities
while strengthening Massachusettsâ€™
ability to uphold our values
and celebrate our diversity.â€
$5.2 MILLION FOR RECYCLING,
COMPOSTING AND WASTE REDUCTION
- The Healey Administration
announced nearly $5.2
million in grant funding to 283
municipalities to bolster their recycling,
composting and waste
reduction programs.
â€œResidents partner with their
communities to help protect the
environment by recycling and reusing
as much as possible,â€ said
REVERETV | FROM Page 21
weeks. Videos will play on RevereTV
in the order of the names
of candidates on the ballot.
These candidate statements will
soon be playing on RTV GOV and
in specifi c new playlists on YouTube
to be viewed and shared.
A new month brings a new cycle
of local government meetLt.
Gov. Kim Driscoll. â€œThis important
funding will help municipalities
implement innovative programs
and policies that are proven
to maximize reuse, recycling
and waste reduction.â€
QUOTABLE QUOTES
â€œThe Green Communities program
helps our cities and towns
make important investments at
the local level to achieve their
own climate goals and lower carbon
emissions. This moves us forward
on our clean energy path
and lessens our reliance on volatile
fossil fuels, lowering costs
and risks for our communities and
their residents and businesses.â€
--- Energy and Environmental
Aff airs Secretary Rebecca Tepper
announcing the awarding of $3.3
million in Green Communities
competitive grants to 27 municipalities
across Massachusetts to
fund clean energy projects.
â€œWe have taken meaningful
strides in recent years to increase
the sustainability and resilience
of our stateâ€™s public transit
system. From securing grants
to fund environmental initiatives
to reducing emissions through
fl eet electrifi cation, the MBTA is
fi rmly committed to building a
greener, more climate-ready transit
network.â€
--- MBTA General Manager and
CEO Phillip Eng announcing the
establishment of a new Climate
and Resiliency Policy and Planning
team as part of the Policy
and Strategic Planning Division
that will be tasked with decreasing
the Tâ€™s and the commonwealthâ€™s
environmental footprint
and increasing the resilience of
the MBTA system.
â€œThe data is clear â€“ based on
state testing results we know
there is lead in most of the taps
tested at schools and childcare
centers across the state and we
know children are the most impacted
from exposure to lead. We
need policies that get the lead out
of faucets and fountains in our
schools and pre-schools.â€
--- Deirdre Cummings,
MASSPIRG legislative director
state urging lawmakers to pass a
bill to get the lead out of drinking
water at Massachusetts schools
and childcare centers.
â€œI was proud to fi le and testify
in support of â€¦ [a bill] preventing
false confessions, a necessary
piece of legislation to prevent law
enforcement from knowingly or
recklessly engaging in deception
in order to coerce a confesings.
The latest from the City
Council Chambers â€“ now replaying
on RTV GOV â€“ are the
License Commission, Traffic
Commission, Revere City Council,
Zoning Board of Appeals,
Parking Advisory Committee,
Conservation Commission and
Human Rights Commission.
There was a special community
presentation about the Route
1A Riverfront Roadway InfraMon.
Sept. 25 House 11:02
a.m. to 11:49 a.m.
Senate 11:09 a.m. to 11:53 a.m.
Tues. Sept. 26 No House session
No
Senate session
Wed. Sept. 27 House 11:01
a.m. to 5:16 p.m.
No Senate session
Thurs. Sept. 28 House 11:03
a.m. to 12:24 p.m.
Senate 11:22 a.m. to 1:31 p.m.
Fri. Sept. 29 No House session
No Senate session
Bob Katzen
welcomes feedback at
bob@beaconhillrollcall.com
Bob founded Beacon Hill Roll
Call in 1975 and was inducted
into the New England Newspaper
and Press Association
(NENPA) Hall of Fame in 2019.
structure Improvement Project,
which is also replaying on RTV.
This presentation included explanations
from the developers
and visuals to show the changes
to be made to the roadways
and traffi c fl ow in that neighborhood.
You can watch all
government meetings live on
RevereTVâ€™s YouTube page and
RTV GOV, which is channel 9 on
Comcast and 13/613 on RCN.
sion. Signifi cant research demonstrates
that deception can cause
suspects to waive their rights and
make false confessions. This leads
to wrongful convictions and the
incarceration of innocent persons,
the denial of justice to victims
and ongoing risks to public
safety. It is time to end a practice
that undermines the eff ectiveness
of our criminal justice
system.â€
---Sponsor Rep. Kate LipperGarabedian
(D-Melrose) testifying
before the Judiciary Committee
on legislation that would
prevent false confessions in Massachusetts
by ending the use of
deceptive interrogation tactics.
HOW LONG WAS LAST WEEKâ€™S
SESSION? Beacon Hill Roll Call
tracks the length of time that the
House and Senate were in session
each week. Many legislators
say that legislative sessions
are only one aspect of the Legislatureâ€™s
job and that a lot of important
work is done outside of
the House and Senate chambers.
They note that their jobs also involve
committee work, research,
constituent work and other matters
that are important to their
districts. Critics say that the Legislature
does not meet regularly or
long enough to debate and vote
in public view on the thousands
of pieces of legislation that have
been fi led. They note that the infrequency
and brief length of sessions
are misguided and lead to
irresponsible late-night sessions.
During the week of September
25-29, the House met for a total of
eight hours and 23 minutes while
the Senate met for a total of two
hours and 53 minutes.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://_CUssYxm3_bNE0blKiZ8sg-_gTGqv_-8f8QuBfD3GZkÍ$•Í`Ì°Í ×e1µ«fK¸6g×‰EÚ,—THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2023
Page 23
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
Corpuz, Joshua
BUYER1
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
SELLER1
BUYER2
Sanchez, Paige B Sanchez, Juan
CANDIDATE | FROM Page 1
ment to enhancing public safety
in Revere. â€œWhen I served as
Mayor,â€ Rizzo said, â€œwe were successful
in hiring 20 new police
offi cers in three years, we provided
our police department
with valuable new crime fi ghting
technology, and we increased
our neighborhood police
foot patrols, fostering a safer
environment for our city.â€
Rizzo mentioned with pride
his accomplishments in the
area of controlled economic
development resulting in increased
investments and job
opportunities within the city.
He stated,â€ We encouraged
the Market Basket Supermarket
to locate at the Northgate
Shopping Center, reenergizing
Northgate, and in the process
creating 600 new private
sector jobs which has benefi ted
both our residents and local
businesses.â€
Rizzo also noted â€œthat one of
the most disappointing occurrences
of his administration, a
number of years ago, was when
Guinasso Rt 2014
Minkovitz, Sharon
City Councilâ€™s failure to approve
his recommendation to implement
an Apartment Building
Moratorium, which would
have placed rigid controls on
apartment development in
the City of Revere, specifi cally
regulating the number of new
apartments that could be constructed,
the required number
of parking spaces needed for
each apartment and the impact
of apartment development on
the cityâ€™s school system, public
safety forces, traffi c congestion,
and other related infrastructure
impacts.â€ â€œThe failure
to adopt an Apartment Building
Moratorium,â€ Rizzo stated,
â€œhas resulted in excessive uncontrolled
overdevelopment
and gridlocked traffi c congestion
on our city streets.â€
With his strong leadership
skills and proven dedication
to Revere, Rizzo believes that
he can make a major contribution
to improving the City of
Revere. â€œMy vision for the City,â€
Rizzo said,â€ includes a continued
investment in improving
the cityâ€™s infrastructure, findSELLER2
ADDRESS
Guinasso,
Arthur F 500 Revere Beach Blvd #104
20 Chamberlain Ave
ing ways to fi nance and build
senior citizen aff ordable housing,
working with State agencies
to develop workable solutions
to address our cityâ€™s and
our regionâ€™s catastrophic traffi
c problems, and accelerating
a workable program to put in
place a professionally managed
emergency preparedness program
to deal with our continuous
fl ooding, which occurs in
many areas of our community.â€
Further, Rizzo stressed, â€œWe
need to work to approve the
construction of a fiscally responsible
new high school that
both our taxpayers and rent
payers can aff ord, and we must
assign a high priority to returning
the Wonderland Dog Track
site as a responsible, productive
economic revenue generator
for our city, which will help
to ensure a more prosperous future
for Revere.â€ Rizzo concluded
by saying, â€œI believe that my
experience, my passion, and my
deep connection to our community
will result in a renewed
hope for a vibrant future for
Revere.â€
38 Main St. Saugus
(781) 558-1091
20 Railroad Ave. Rockport
(978)-999-5408
mangorealtyteam.com
Commercial Listings
Saugus - for sale
14 Norwood St. Everett
(781)-558-1091
NEW LISTING - Stoneham - rental
Saugus
SPORT | FROM Page 17
Cronin in the 6-spot, a 5-4 win
by Revere junior Jonathan Wells
in the 5-spot and a 4.5-4.5 tie by
Malden junior Chris MacDonald
in the 2-spot. Additionally,
Malden junior Bo Bogan participated
in his fi rst match of the
season in the 8-spot, winning
his match 5.5-3.5, securing a tie.
â€œThis year has taught us time
and time again that each half
point is valuable as a total of
one point separates us from
having an undefeated season
thus far,â€ Revere/Malden coach
Brandon Pezzuto said. â€œHowever,
the coaching staff believes
that falling short is a great way
to reinforce one of our core values,
which is to be resilient and
to complete for each and every
point regardless of the overall
score of your match.â€
On Monday Oct. 2, Revere/
Malden earned a victory by the
slightest of margins in match
play: 36.5-35.5 over Lynn English
at Kelley Greens in Nahant.
This improved the teamâ€™s record
to 5-1-1 on the season, movDATE
PRICE
09.12.23 315000
09.12.23 835000
ing it one step closer to a tournament
bid. â€œKelley Greensâ€™ extremely
challenging pin positions
and lightning-fast greens
posed a challenge for both
teams in this match,â€ Pezzuto
said. â€œThe greens, being not
well protected by bunkers and/
or water, rely on pin placement
to challenge players to land approach
shots in strategic locations
or be penalized by diffi
cult recovery shots or rejection
from the green itself. The
coaching staff observed on numerous
occasions 8-10' downhill
putts settling off the putting
surface. Our teamâ€™s ball striking
was excellent and much improved
over the last 3-4 weeks
but this match came down to in
and around the greens.â€
Some highlights from the
match are No. 1 MacDonald
winning 5.5-3.5; No. 3 Matt LaCroix
of Revere winning 5-4; No.
4 freshman Jacob Simonelli of
Revere tying 4.5-4.5; No. 6 freshman
Cronin winning 6-3; and
senior captain Ryan Coggswell,
of Malden, battling to the very
end to tie his match, 4.5-4.5.
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Incredible opportunity for investors and developers.
This long standing confirmed pre-existing licensed
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the Saugus Waterfront Mixed Use Overlay District
(WMOD). Current owner is now petitioning the Town
of Saugus to have this prime waterfront location
entered into the WMOD. Please read Article 18 in the
Saugus Zoning Bylaws, found on the web, to learn
about the array of potential land use and mixed use
possibilities under this overlay. The owners
recognize that any sale will include this zoning
contingency. All rights and title to licensed pier will
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the property includes boat storage and residential
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CALL/TEXT Sue 617-877-4553
ROCKLAND - Rental
Are you dreaming of starting your own business? This
professional office or retail space is located on busy
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two front entrances and one rear exit. There are two rest
rooms. Additional storage space in the basement!
Multiple parking spaces in the rear of the building. Tenant
pays their own electricity and heating costs. Exterior
maintenance (snow plowing and landscaping) is shared
with adjoining tenant. High traffic and strong visibility
location close to the areas major highways. Flexible
terms for start-up business. Parking for these two units
will be out back or on side of building, not in front, and
there is plenty! Large basement for storage included in
lease. Other uses are permitted with special permit.
Lessee to conduct due diligence with Rockland building
department $1,600. CALL/TEXT Peter 781-820-5690
Bright and sunny one bedroom apartment in
desirable Stoneham location. The open floor
plan includes spacious living room and eat in
kitchen with high quality cabinets and ample
storage. Spacious bedroom is complete with a
large closet and "jack and jill" access to
bathroom. This meticulously maintained
apartment includes new flooring, recessed
lighting, and fresh paint. Some highlights are
GARAGED PARKING, off-street parking,
central air, common area laundry, along with
both attic and garage storage. Owner
occupied, well-kept property. Electric is
included in rent. Location proves to be a
commuter's dream being just minutes to 95,
28, and 93. Not far from MBTA commuter rail
and orange line. Close proximity to
restaurants, shopping, and trails. Vacant and
ready to rent! $1,950.
CALL/TEXT Lea 617-594-9164
Find us on Google
and see what our clients
have to say about us!
MOVE RIGHT IN..This Spectacular sun-filled
home with exceptional flow. Details matter &
this lovely home is brimming with great
potential and character. Walk into a screened
in porch & read your favorite book or just have
your favorite drink w/ a friend or family
member. The kitchen leads and flows into the
living & dining room that offers gleaming
hardwood floors & a full bath on the first floor.
The second floor has 3 generous bedrooms
that have hardwood floors with an additional
new full bath. The roof is approximately 2
years old. The Driveway can park 3-4 cars
tandem, Easy access to public transportation,
20 minutes from Boston, close to shopping
malls & restaurants. Saugus is an energetic
town featuring new schools, low property tax
rate. Something this sweet will not last.
$579,000.
CALL/TEXT Sue 617-877-4553
Saugus Ctr
Are you ready to move into this newly remodeled 5
bedroom Colonial. Beautiful hardwood floors
throughout. Stainless steel appliances, a farmers sink
and granite counter tops glisten under recessed first
floor lighting. State of the art programable heat pump
provides energy efficient year-round temperature
control. All new bathrooms with first floor laundry
hookup. New plumbing, wiring, and newly recent vinyl
clad windows. Spacious basement, with storage. Fully
electrified 10' x 20' custom built shed. $749,000
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You will be stunned the very
moment you enter into this
townhouse. This spacious
townhouse has a kitchen that has
been tastefully renovated with the
past 5 years and impeccably
maintained since. The large eat in
kitchen offers stainless steel
appliances, granite countertops.
The open concept floor plan is
perfect for entertaining. 2
assigned parking with ample
visitor parking are just a few more
perks to mention. Easy and low
maintenance living. 2 cats ok. No
Smoking, This will not last. Great
credit score and references
required $2,900.
CALL/TEXT Sue 617-877-4553
Business Opportunity
LYNN
MANGO Realty is offering a great opportunity to acquire a long
established active restaurant/bar with common victualer/all
alcohol license in a prime down town Lynn location. The owner
of this business is retiring after 29 years of success at this
location. Loyal customer base. Kitchen facilities updated. Two
rest rooms. Seats 92/ Plenty of off-street parking. Documented
revenue for both food, liquor and lottery allows you to have a
quick return on your investment. Favorable lease terms for this
corner location. $200,000.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2023
.............
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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€¦
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Best Agents provide
the Best Results!
SAUGUS - Wonderful 10 rm Cape offers 5+ bedrooms, 3 baths,
îƒ€î•îˆî“îî„î†îˆ îî™î•îî€ î’î“îˆî‘ î†î’î‘î†îˆî“î—î€ î’î‰îƒ€î†îˆî€ îƒ€î‘îŒî–î‹îˆî‡ îî’îšîˆî• îîˆî™îˆîî€ îŠî•îˆî„î—
î–î˜î‘î•î’î’îî€ îŒî‘îŠî•î’î˜î‘î‡ î“î’î’î îšîŒî—î‹ î†îˆîîˆî‘î— î“î„î—îŒî’î€ î€” î†î„î• îŠî„î•î„îŠîˆî€ îî„î•îŠîˆî€
î†î’î•î‘îˆî• îî’î—î€ îî’î†î„î—îˆî‡ îî˜î–î— î’î˜î—î–îŒî‡îˆ î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î– î€¦îˆî‘î—îˆî•î‚«î€‡î€šî€›î€œî€î€œî€“î€“î€‘
î€µî€¨î€¹î€¨î€µî€¨ î€ î€˜ î•î’î’î î€¦î„î“îˆ î€¦î’î‡ î–î—îœîîˆ î‹î’îîˆ î’î‰î‰îˆî•î– î€•
î…îˆî‡î•î’î’îî–î€ î€” îƒ³ î…î„î—î‹î–î€ î‰î•î’î‘î—î€î—î’î€î…î„î†îŽ îîŒî™îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’îî€ î‡îŒî‘îŒî‘îŠ
î•î’î’î îšîŒî—î‹ î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡ îƒî’î’î•îŒî‘îŠî€ î†îˆî‘î—î•î„î î„îŒî•î€ îˆî‘î†îî’î–îˆî‡
î“î’î•î†î‹î€ îŒî‘îŠî•î’î˜î‘î‡ î“î’î’îî€ î†î’î•î‘îˆî• îî’î—î€„î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€—î€œî€œî€î€œî€“î€“î€‘
View our website from
your mobile phone!
335 Central St., Saugus, MA
781-233-7300
SAUGUS RENOVATED 4 room, 2 bedroom condo, 2021 updates
include kitchen w/quartz, 2 bathrooms & laminate flooring, great
open floor plan, cen air, laundry in unit, Hillview Westâ€¦$399,000.
î€¦î€«î€¨î€¯î€¶î€¨î€¤ î€ î€— î•î’î’îî€ î€• î…îˆî‡î•î’î’î î€¦î’î‘î‡î’ î’î‰î‰îˆî•î– î€• î‰î˜îî î…î„î—î‹î–î€ î‘îˆîšîˆî•
îƒî’î’î•îŒî‘îŠ î„î‘î‡ îîŒîŠî‹î—îŒî‘îŠî€ îŠî•î„î‘îŒî—îˆ îŽîŒî—î†î‹îˆî‘î€ î€” îŠî„î•î„îŠîˆ î“î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠî€ îŒî‘îŠî•î’î˜î‘î‡
î“î’î’îî€ îî’î†î„î—îˆî‡ îŒî‘ î€°îŒîîî†î•îˆîˆîŽ î€¦î’î‘î‡î’îîŒî‘îŒî˜îî–î‚«î€‡î€—î€—î€“î€î€“î€“î€“î€‘
Linda Surette
î€¶î€¤î€¸î€ªî€¸î€¶ î€ î€¶î“î„î•îŽîîŒî‘îŠ î€•î€î…îˆî‡î•î’î’î î†î’î‘î‡î’ îî’î†î„î—îˆî‡ îŒî‘ î€¦îîŒî‰î—î’î‘ î€¤î•îî– î€¦î’îî“îîˆî›î€
î‘îŒî†îˆîîœ î•îˆî‘î’î™î„î—îˆî‡ î˜î‘îŒî— î’î‰î‰îˆî• î”î˜î„î•î—î îŽîŒî—î†î‹îˆî‘ î†î’î˜î‘î—îˆî•î–î€ î‘îˆîš î†î„î•î“îˆî—îŒî‘îŠî€ îŠî•îˆî„î—
î’î“îˆî‘ î†î’î‘î†îˆî“î—î€ î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡ îƒî’î’î•îŒî‘îŠî€ î–î“î„î†îŒî’î˜î– îî™î•î îšî€’î–îîŒî‡îˆî• î—î’ î…î„îî†î’î‘îœî€
îˆî›î—î•î„ î–î—î’î•î„îŠîˆî€ îŠî•îˆî„î— îî’î†î„î—îŒî’î‘ î€ îŠî•îˆî„î— î˜î‘îŒî—î€„î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€–î€˜î€˜î€î€“î€“î€“î€‘
Linda is a Proven Success!
Call her at 781-910-1014
& allow her to put her
knowledge to work for you!
î€ºî€¤î€®î€¨î€©î€¬î€¨î€¯î€§ î€ î€°îŒîîî…î•î’î’îŽ î†î’î‘î‡î’ î’î‰î‰îˆî•î– î€— î•î’î’îî–î€ î€• î…îˆî‡î•î’î’îî€
î€• î…î„î—î‹î–î€ î€• î“î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠ î–î“î„î†îˆî–î€ îî„î“îîˆ îŽîŒî—î†î‹îˆî‘ îšîŒî—î‹ îŠî•î„î‘îŒî—îˆ
î†î’î˜î‘î—îˆî•î–î€ î“î•îŒîî„î•îœ î…îˆî‡î•î’î’î îšî€’î“î•îŒî™î„î—îˆ î…î„î—î‹î€ îšî„î–î‹îˆî• î‡î•îœîˆî•
îŒî‘ î˜î‘îŒî—î€ î†îˆî‘ î„îŒî•î€ îˆî›î—î•î„ î–î—î’î•î„îŠîˆî‚«î€‡î€—î€–î€œî€î€“î€“î€“î€‘
COMING SOON
COMING SOONBRAND
NEW CONSTRUCTION
COLONIAL LOCATED ON A NICE SIDE
STREET NOT FAR FROM ELEMENTARY
SCHOOLS AND THE CENTER OF
TOWN. 4 BEDROOM, 3.5 BATH WITH
HARDWOOD THROUGH-OUT.
BEAUTIFUL KITCHEN AND BATHS.
EXQUISITE DETAIL AND QUALITY
BUILD. GARAGE UNDER.
SAUGUS
CALL KEITH FOR MORE DETAILS
781-389-0791
RENTAL
COMING SOON
COMING SOON- 4 BEDROOM, 2
BATHROOM RENOVATED CAPE
LOCATED ON A NICE SIDE STREET.
THIS HOME FEATURES A NEW KITCHEN
WITH STAINLESS APPLIANCES &
QUARTZ COUNTERS, NEW
BATHROOMS, HARDWOOD FLOORS
AND FRESH PAINT THROUGH. GARAGE
UNDER. MAINTENANCE FREE VINYL
SIDING. SAUGUS CALL KEITH FOR
MORE DETAILS 781-389-0791
LOOKING FOR EXPERIENCED
AGENTS WHO WANT A
NO HASSLE, NO NONSENSE
OFFICE.
WE ARE LOOKING FOR AGENTS WHO
WANT TO MAKE A DECENT PAY WITHOUT
PAYING HIGH FEES. ARE YOU A
GO GETTER? PERHAPS
UNDER CONTRACT
FOR SALE- 3+ BED, 2 BATH SPLIT
ENTRY HOME ON NICE CUL-DE-SAC
LOCATION. THIS HOME FEATURES A
LARGE LIVING ROOM OPEN TO
FORMAL DINING ROOM AND EAT-IN
KITCHEN. 3 BEDS AND FULL BATH UP.
LOWER LEVEL OFFERS A FIREPLACE
FAMILY, ADDITIONAL BEDROOM,
OFFICE AND ANOTHER FULL BATH.
GREAT LOCATION. SAUGUS $565,000
CALL DEBBIE 617-678-9710
PRICE IMPROVEMENT
FOR SALE-NEW CONSTRUCTION
ONE OF A KIND CONTEMPORARY
MODERN HOME WITH AMAZING
VIEWS OF PILLINGS POND, 4590
SQFT. OPEN CONCEPT, 3 LEVELS,
4 BEDS, 6 BATHS, TOP OF THE LINE
MATERIALS AND FINISHES, HOME
THEATER, WORK-OUT ROOM AND SO
MUCH MORE! LYNNFIELD $1,899,900
CALL DANIELLE 978-987-9535
BI-LINGUAL? WILLING TO GO ABOVE AND
BEYOND? CALL US TODAY!
KEITH 781-389-0791
MOBILE HOMES
YOUNG ONE BEDROOM IN GOOD CONDITION IN A DESIRABLE PARK WITH 2 PARKING
SPOTS. SOLD AS IS. SUBJECT TO PROBATE DANVERS $119,900
UPDATED 2 BEDROOM WITH NEWER KITCHEN, BATH, RUBBER ROOF, WINDOWS,
SIDING AND APPLIANCES. FULL SIZE LAUNDRY. DANVERS $119,900
REMODELED 2 BEDROOM WITH GLEAMING HARDWOOD FLOORS, C/A, AND FULL
SIZE LAUNDRY. LOW PARK FEE. PLENTY OF PARKING. LOTS OF UPDATES. PEABODY
$209,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
SOLD
UNDER CONTRACT
FOR SALE- 2 BED, 1 BATH WITH SPACIOUS
LIVING ROOM, DINING ROOM AND
BEDROOMS. ALSO HAS HOME OFFICE.
LARGE YARD WITH WORKSHOP WITH
ELECTRICITY WHICH IS ALSO GREAT FOR
STORAGE. CLOSE TO AREA SCHOOLS,
SHOPS, RESTAURANTS AND MAJOR
ROUTES. QUICK TO POINTS NORTH OR
SOUTH.
METHUEN $374,900
3 BEDROOM WITH EAT-IN KITCHEN ON SECOND FLOOR OF
OWNER OCCUPIED 2 FAMILY. STACKABLE WASHER & DRYER,
CLOSE TO PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION. ON STREET PARKING.
SAUGUS $3,300
CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
LOOKING TO
BUY OR SELL?
CHRISTOPHER RIZZA
781-589-9081
CALL HIM
FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS
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