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Page 16 THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, JunE 19, 2020 ~ LEGAL NOTICE ~ CITY OF EVERETT BOARD OF APPEALS 484 BROADWAY EVERETT, MASSACHUSETTS 02149 (617) 381-7445 To Whom It May Concern: This notice is to inform you that a public hearing will be held on Monday, July 6, 2020 at 7:00 PM in regards to an application for zoning relief. In response to Governor Baker’s declaration of a public health emergency and the related Emergency Executive Order dated March 12, 2020, the Zoning Board of Appeals shall be meeting remotely until further notice. The audioconferencing application Zoom will be used for this purpose. An online link and telephone access number will be provided on all meeting agendas and also on the Board’s website. This application will permit the public to access and participate in future Board meetings and hearings. Instructions for joining meetings in this manner will be provided on the City and City Clerk’s website. In addition, Everett Community TV (ECTV) may provide coverage of these meetings. We extend our thanks for your understanding and participation in this manner, which is intended to keep members of the Board and the public safe. Whereas a petition has been presented by: Property Address: Map/Parcel: 881 Broadway N0-06-000154 Property Owner: Regency Condo of Everett Assoc. 881 Broadway Everett, MA 02149 Person Requesting: Centerline 750 W. Main Street Suite 301 West Bridgewater, MA 02767 To the said Board of Appeals, the owner/applicant seeks to construct a roof top telecommunications facility Reason for Denial: Permit was denied in accordance to the City of Everett Zoning Ordinance: Zoning Ordinance: Section 4 Dwelling Districts (a) Uses Uses. Within any dwelling district as indicated on the zoning map, no building, structure or premises shall be used and no building or structure shall be erected which is intended or designed to be used in whole or in part for any industry, trade, manufacturing, or commercial purposes, of for other than the following specified purposes: 1. A single or double semi-detached dwelling existing at the time of the first enactment of the Zoning Ordinance may be converted to provide not more than a total of three (3) dwelling units provided that the following standards are met: Any addition shall comply with the front, side and rear yard requirements and height limitations of the Zoning Ordinance. Where the existing building is already non-conforming, any alteration shall not increase the existing non-conformity. Parking in accordance with this Zoning Ordinance shall be provided for any additional dwelling units. (Ord. of 4-29-91) 2. The offices of a doctor, dentist or other member of a recognized profession, teacher or musician residing on the premises; provided there is o display or advertising except for a small professional name plate. 3. Customary home occupations, such as dressmaking or millinery or the leasing of rooms or the taking of boarders, conducted by owner occupants only; provided there is no display or advertising visible from outside, except for an announcement card or sign of not more than two (2) feet square area, and that such uses be confined to not over one-third of the total floor area occupied by each family. 4. Schools, except private vocational schools, public libraries, fire stations, art museums, churches, parish houses and Sunday School buildings, membership clubs and social and recreational buildings and premises, park, water supply reservations, soldiers and sailors memorial buildings, except those chief activity of which is one customarily carried on as a gainful business. 5. Real estate signs, referring only to the premises or tract on which they are located, and having an area not exceeding eight (8) square feet. 6. Truck gardens and greenhouses, provided that any greenhouse heating plant shall be distant not less than twenty (20) feet from any street or lot line. 7. Hospitals, not for the insane or feeble-minded; provided that no building be within thirty (30) feet of any street or lot line. 8. Public or charitable institutional buildings not of a correctional nature, providing that no building thereon be within thirty (30) feet of any street or lot line. 9. Railroad or street railroad passenger stations or rights-of-way including customary accessory services therein; not including switching, storage, or freight yards or sidings. 10. Cemeteries, including any crematory therein, which is not within a distance of thirty feet of any street or lot line. 11. Telephone central buildings without garages or yards for service or storage. MARY GERACE – Chairman ROBERTA SUPPA - Clerk BOARD OF APPEALS June 12 & June 19, 2020 Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma HORSES | FROM PAGE 2 formed a heroic deed. Last year Racow was named after Winthrop Detective Judith Racow, who during an undercover buy on Everett Avenue in Chelsea on Nov. 8, 1995, was working in an undercover capacity when she was allegedly kidnapped during what she refers to as “a drug investigation gone bad.” All three horses are formerly from race tracks. “I think it is amazing that we can memorialize the officers through the horses that help protect and serve the public,” Horses and Heroes founder Skyllar Mulvaney wrote. “[They] are from Finger Lakes Race Track.” Lynn Strong was named after Lynn police officers John Bernard, Matthew Coppinger, Joshua Hilton, Joshua Seaman and Michael McEachern last year, according to Mulvaney. Everett Strong was named in honor of Everett police officers Det. Robert Hall, Sgt. Paul Durant, Lt. Rick Ditrapano, Det. Dan Tucker, Officer Joe Pepicelli and Sgt. Larry Jedrey in 2018. The 1,500-pound white horse is with the Washington, D.C., Metropolitan Police Department’s Mounted Unit. Officer Laura Teeple, instructor/trainer of the Horse Mounted Unit for the United States Park Police, explained that the training process, for Lynn Strong and Detective Racow, begins with introduction to the parks (Rock Creek) and slowly moving into the streets and neighborhoods surrounding the parks. “We then move on to more stimulating situations, such as the Georgetown waterfront and rides on city streets,” Teeple wrote in an e-mail. “Once they have become accustomed to those areas, our horses are taken to downtown locations, where they would be patrolling with other ‘steady’ horses [that] can help them become comfortable with all of the activity they will be exposed to on a regular basis.” As far as their training goes, Det. Racow is on a 120-day trial period to determine if he will be suitable for the job. However, Teeple added it’s unlikely that he will be involved with any protests or crowd situations until after that time. On the other hand, Lynn Strong is doing extremely well, and she may use him for the 4th of July celebrations, if they aren’t cancelled due to COVID-19, as a part of his training. Teeple described the animal welfare regulations for all horses, including these three. “When we are assigned to HORSES | SEE PAGE 22

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