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State Representative Donato Democrat Leadership with Results! Maldden alld a Vol. 31, No. 28 den AADD -FREEOCAT AT 617-387-2200 Published Every Friday Special to Th e Advocate O ne of the most exciting aspects of the recent anMalden City Clerk Greg Lucey administers the oath of offi ce to Police Chief Glenn Cronin as Mayor Gary Christenson looks on during last Thursday morning’s ceremony outside City Hall. See pages 12 - 13 for photo highlights. (Advocate photo by Tara Vocino) The Smack Dabs Kick-Off Malden’s Summer Concert Series By Tara Vocino S ponsored by the Office of Mayor Gary Christenson and in memory of Sal Khan, The Smack Dabs, a swing blues ensemble, opened Malden’s Summer Concert Series on City Hall Plaza Tuesday night. Forthcoming performances are on July 26, August 9 and August 23 at City Hall Plaza at 215 Pleasant Street. Concer t-goers, pictured from left to right: Ephrem Menghisteab, Bonnie Blanchard and Councillorat-Large Karen Colón-Hayes. (Advocate photo by Tara Vocino) nouncement on the proposed redevelopment of the former Malden Hospital site was the inclusion of public open space. Our community has made clear its desire for a development that included open space, and Tufts Medicine listened. We’ve heard from many residents desiring more information about this aspect of the announcement. While more will develop on this as the project progresses, let us share some additional details that you may fi nd helpful. The open space component of the proposal is comprised of multiple pieces. First, about 2.9 acres on the Medford side of the site that is currently undeveloped and fi lled with mature trees will remain as such. Tufts Medicine and the proposed new hospital will retain ownership but will commit this land to conservation. This helps achieve the overall goal of limiting the development on the site and protects some of the natural beauty that www.advocatenews.net New Police Chief Glenn Cronin takes the helm (Pol. Adv.) Your Only Local Newspaper Source for 30 Years! CTE E Friday, July 15, 2022 Mayor Christenson and Councillor Linehan Provide Update on Open Space exists on the site today. On the land contained within Malden, about 6.7 acres will be not only set aside, but will become the property of the City of Malden. We will own it, use it, and maintain the area just like other open space in the City. We are working with Tufts Medicine and a nonprofi t organization that helps secure open public land to help facilitate the transaction, both fi nancially and logistically. The 6.7 acres is made up of about 2/3rd wooded, hilly land that might be most appropriate to provide walking trails and connectivity to Fellsmere Pond. The other approximately 1/3 is sufficiently flat to allow for the creation of additional passive recreation space that fi ts the community’s needs. Figuring out the use of the fl at area, walking trails, and connectivity to Fellsmere pond will be a community led eff ort. Like all of you, we look forward to watching this plan progress, and are excited to see that the wishes of our community were taken to heart with this proposal.

Page 2 THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 North Shore Haitian Adult Day Health Center celebrates 5-year anniversary T he North Shore Haitian Adult Day Health Center (La Source) celebrated its 5-year anniversary on Tuesday, June 28th. La Source off ers a continuum of services and support for elders. The center provides help in managing long term illnesses such as diabetes and helps provide additional care to fi t individual needs. During the celebration, we heard from speakOUR OFFICE HAS MOVED TO 519 BROADWAY, EVERETT SABATINO INSURANCE AGENCY 519 BROADWAY EVERETT, MA 02149 PHONE: (617) 387-7466 FAX: (617) 381-9186 Visit us online at: Rocco Longo, Owner WWW.SABATINO-INS.COM ers, enjoyed traditional Haitian food and participated in group song and dance. The atmosphere created was one of community and engagement. The Seniors spoke about what the center means to them. It is clear that they come for socialization - especially after being isolated for so long during COVID-19. When I asked how I could be of help, the quick response was to spread the word so others are aware of this fantastic resource! I enjoyed chatting and dancing with the seniors and I look forward to returning soon. La Source is located at 263 Commercial Street, Malden, MA 02148. To find out additional information call: 781-605-1943 Councillor Colón Hayes speaking with an interpreter from La Source. Valid as of 7/7/2022* Councillor Colón Hayes, Carole Valdez, Interim Program Director, Anna Sandstrom The Immigrant Learning Center Open a 2-year CD with one of the region’s highest rates. Make your money work harder, longer, with our 2-year certificate of deposit account. Stop into one of our branches to open an account. 419 BROADWAY. EVERETT, MA 02149 771 SALEM ST. LYNNFIELD, MA 01940 WWW.EVERETTBANK.COM 617-387-1110 781-776-4444 Member FDIC | Member DIF *Annual Percentage Yield (APY) is subject to change without notice. Fixed rate term Certificate of Deposits accounts, rates are guaranteed for the length of the term. Minimum deposit to open account and to obtain the APY is $500 unless otherwise specified. APY is based on principal and interest remaining in the account for a period of one year. Penalty may be imposed for early withdrawal. For consumer accounts only. No out of state deposits. ECB NOW Checking Account is requested. Senior group

THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 Page 3 Sheriff Koutoujian attends White House event marking the passage of The Bipartisan Safer Communities Act W ASHINGTON – Middlesex Sheriff Peter J. Koutoujian joined leaders from across the nation at the White House Monday, July 11 as President Joseph improve safety in our communities, our homes and our schools.” In addition to the items listed above, the legislation: • Adds convicted domestic violence abusers in dating relationships to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS). • Creates federal straw purchasing and trafficking criminal off enses. • Establishes funding for the creation and establishment of extreme risk protection order systems, as well as mental health, drug and veteran courts. • Provides funding to expand mental health services in schools. • Invests resources to help institute safety measures for schools, including training for school personnel. Middlesex Sheriff Peter J. Koutoujian, Norwood Police Chief William Brooks and IACP Deputy Executive Director Terrence Cunningham (former Wellesley, Mass. Police Chief) attended a White House event marking the passage of The Bipartisan Safer Communities Act on Monday, July 11, 2022. R. Biden, Jr. marked the passage of The Bipartisan Safer Communities Act. The legislation was passed in June following mass shootings in Buff alo, New York and Uvalde, Texas. “The Bipartisan Safer Communities Act is a crucially important piece of legislation. The bill provides for an enhanced review process for those under the age of 21 seeking to purchase fi rearms, while also providing new resources for critical community- and school-based public safety initiatives. In addition, it clarifi es who must register as federally licensed fi rearm dealers,” said Sheriff Koutoujian. “I want to thank President Biden, Senators Chris Murphy and John Cornyn, and all those who worked tirelessly to craft and pass this bill. And though work remains to be done, I believe this legislation represents meaningful action in eff orts to

Page 4 THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 Lawrence A. Simeone Jr. Attorney-at-Law ~ Since 1989 ~ * Corporate Litigation * Criminal/Civil * MCAD * Zoning/Land Court * Wetlands Litigation * Workmen’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 ANGELO’S FULL SERVICE Regular Unleaded $4.189 Mid Unleaded $4.459 Super $4.989 Diesel Fuel $4.999 44 Years of Excellence!! 1978-2022 KERO $8.99 DEF $4.75 9 DYED ULS $4.249 9 HEATING OIL 24-Hour Burner Service Call for Current Price! DEF Available by Pump! Open an account and order online at: www.angelosoil.com (781) 231-3500 (781) 231-3003 367 LINCOLN AVE • SAUGUS Hours: Mon. - Wed. 6AM - 6PM / Thurs. & Fri. 6AM - 7PM / Sat. 7AM - 5PM / Sun. 9AM-1PM Need a hall for your special event? 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This bipartisan legislation seeks to transform early education and child care in the Commonwealth by making it more accessible and affordable for families, providing high-quality care for young children, strengthening early education providers, improving compensation and professional development for early educators and better meeting the workforce needs of Massachusetts employers. The bill is based on the recommendations made by the Special Legislative Early Education and Care Economic Review Commission, which was created by the legislature in 2020 and issued its fi nal report in March 2022. This commission was led by Senator Lewis and Representative Alice Peisch. Having passed the Senate, the bill now moves to the House of Representatives for further consideration. “There are numerous benefits from expanding access to high-quality, aff ordable early education and child care: it enhances the cognitive and social emotional development of young children; it enables parents to work and improves families’ economic well-being; and it helps employers that are struggling with a workforce shortage,” said S LANDSCAPE & MASONRY CO. 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I’m very grateful to Senate President Spilka, who has long championed early education, my Senate colleagues, and the advocates who have worked so hard to make this happen.” “The Common Start Coalition, made up of more than 150 organizations and thousands of parents, providers, and early educators working together to make high-quality early education and child care aff ordable and accessible to all Massachusetts families, is thrilled by the Senate’s passage of An Act to Expand Access to High-Quality, Aff ordable Early Education and Care. This legislation represents a substantial step toward implementing our full vision and tackling the ongoing multifaceted child care crisis,” said Coalition for Social Justice Executive Director Deb Fastino, who is also the Statewide Director of the Common Start Coalition. “This legislation will aid educators who are working for inadequate pay, families who are struggling to aff ord child care, and providers who are working hard to keep their doors open and their programs fully staff ed. We are grateful for the leadership of Education Committee Chairman Jason Lewis, Senate Ways and Means Committee Chairman Michael Rodrigues and Senate President Karen Spilka, and look forward to working with Chairwoman Peisch and House leadership to get comprehensive child care legislation across the fi nish line and deliver the help that parents, educators, providers, and children desperately need.” High-quality early education helps young children to develop stronger communication, social and cognitive skills. Investments in early education have been shown to yield long-term benefi ts, such as higher academic achievement and greater lifetime earnings. However, for too many families in Massachusetts today high-quality, affordable early education and child care remains out of reach or is a major fi nancial challenge. This impacts the ability of parents, especially mothers, to enter or remain in the workforce and hurts families’ economic well-being. It is also contributing to workforce shortages and hampering the state’s economic recovery. This legislation improves access to high-quality care and aff ordability for families in the following ways: • Increases subsidy eligibility over time from the current level of 50% of state median income ($65,626 annual household income for a family of four) to 125% of state median income ($164,065 annual household income for a family of four) • Makes it easier for subsidized providers to off er scholarships or discounted tuition for their private pay families • Requires the Department of Early Education and Care (EEC) to annually evaluate and eliminate barriers to subsidy access for families • Requires parent fees for subsidized families to be aff ordable and updated at least every fi ve years • Requires EEC to assess the extent of the current supply of licensed care across the state and the unmet needs of families Even as child care is expensive for families to aff ord, early education providers are in crisis. Given the low wages and poor benefi ts that they can afford to pay their staff , providers face chronic challenges with attracting and retaining early educators, almost all of whom are women and many of whom are women of color. Federal pandemic relief funding has been a lifeline for the early education and care sector, but these funds are one-time and not a sustainable solution. This legislation will help stabilize providers, improve program quality, and expand capacity in the following ways: • Makes operational grants to providers that were fi rst distributed during the pandemic permanent and requires that a provider must be willing to enroll subsidized children in order to qualiEDUCATION | SEE PAGE 14 Prices subject to change Ask about our Heating Oil Conditioner! FLEET

THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 Page 5 Mayor Christenson and Councillor Linehan Provide Update on Open Space Special to The Advocate O ne of the most exciting aspects of the recent announcement on the proposed redevelopment of the former Malden Hospital site was the inclusion of public open space. Our community has made clear its desire for a development that included open space, and Tufts Medicine listened. We’ve heard from many residents desiring more information about this aspect of the announcement. While more will develop on this as the project progresses, let us share some additional details that you may find helpful. The open space component of the proposal is comprised of multiple pieces. First, about 2.9 acres on the Medford side of the site that is currently undeveloped and filled with mature trees will remain as such. Tufts Medicine and the proposed new hospital will retain ownership but will commit this land to conservation. This helps achieve the overall goal of limiting the development on the site and protects some of the natural beauty that exists on the site today. On the land contained within Malden, about 6.7 acres will be not only set aside, but will become the property of the City of Malden. We will own it, use it, and maintain the area just like other open space in the City. We are working with Tufts Medicine and a nonprofit organization that helps secure open public land to help facilitate the transaction, both financially and logistically. The 6.7 acres is made up of about 2/3rd wooded, hilly land that might be most appropriate to provide walking trails and connectivity to Fellsmere Pond. The other approximately 1/3 is sufficiently flat to allow for the creation of additional passive recreation space that fits the community’s needs. Figuring out the use of the flat area, walking trails, and connectivity to Fellsmere pond will be a community led effort. Like all of you, we look forward to watching this plan progress, and are excited to see that Gerry D’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 the wishes of our community were taken to heart with this proposal. 425r Broadway, Saugus Located adjacent to Kohls Plaza Route 1 South in Saugus at the intersection of Walnut St. We are on MBTA Bus Route 429 781-231-1111 At this time, the state requires everyone to wear masks We are a Skating Rink with Bowling Alleys, Arcade and two TV’s where the ball games are always on! PUBLIC SKATING SCHEDULE 12-8 p.m. Sunday Monday Tuesday $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 Wednesday Thursday Friday Everyone must pay admission after 6 p.m. Private Parties Private Parties 4-11 p.m. Saturday 12-11 p.m. $9.00 $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

Page 6 THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 Malden Today, Tomorrow and Yesterday – The Steve Ultrino Interview By Peter Levine A nd now a word or two from the “Pride of Edgeworth,” State Rep (D) straight out of Ward 2, Steve Ultrino: 1. What one thing would people be surprised to learn about you? — “Despite my stockier build, I am a very picky eater (exLaw Offices of Terrence W. Kennedy 512 Broadway, Everett • Criminal Defense • Personal Injury • Medical Malpractice Tel: (617) 387-9809 Cell: (617) 308-8178 twkennedylaw@gmail.com cept for milk chocolate).” 2. Where would you most like to buy a one-way ticket to? — “Aruba.” 3. What person, alive or dead, would you like to eat dinner with?— “Well, I would always like to see my father and grandparents again; however, I always wanted to meet with Saint (Mother) Teresa of Calcutta.” 4. What’s one song to play to put yourself in a good mood? — “Perfect” by Ed Sheeran; a bonus if Andrea Bocelli sang along.” 5. What is the one piece of advice that most changed your life? — “A former teacher/Xaverian Brother once told me, “The greatest deed is the one in which you have accomplished and not in which you need to talk about.” 6. What one piece of advice would you give your younger self? — “Learn how to relax; one thing I am not very good at unfortunately.” 7. What’s the one thing that keeps you motivated? — “Helping people/working in the community.” 8. What’s the one thing you want to be remembered for? — “Helping people and community service.” 9. Malden is a small, vibrant community with, by any standard of measurement, a bright future. You (and your family) have long known Malden. Through good times and bad. With the infl ux of new restaurants, new residents, a forward-looking administration in City Hall led by Mayor Christenson and his staff , the removal of the city hall building/police station and the ongoing “transit-oriented development” centered around the Orange Line – what is your vision of Malden and the downtown area, in say, fi ve years? And how would you continue to spur growth in Malden? — “I would like to see more of a selection of ethnic restaurants, a hub for innovation in science, education, and the arts.” 10. Malden has long been ~ Home of the Week ~ SAUGUS...Wonderful Family Tri Level home offers 10+ rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, spacious fireplace living room with built-ins leading to formal dining room, large, eat-in kitchen with granite counter tops, double wall oven, cooktop and ceramic tile flooring, hardwood flooring, family room with fireplace, cedar closet, additional finished rooms in lower level, deck, great corner lot with storage shed, updated roof (2016), great opportunity for the large, extended or growing family. Large home - lots of space!! Offered at $750,000. 335 Central Street, Saugus, MA 01906 (781) 233-7300 View the interior of this home right on your smartphone. View all our listings at: CarpenitoRealEstate.com known for its outstanding restaurants, delis, and bakeries. You grew up in a neighborhood renowned for its food. Growing up what were your favorite places to grab a slice of pizza, a sub or a French bread? — “The original DiPietro’s Pizzeria and the bakery. However, a full pizza would be at the former Highland Café and my grandmothers of course.” Picked up pieces while waiting patiently for, arguably, the best weekend of the year, Saint Rocco Weekend (August 12-14) ... • Outstanding (red) rose bush display at the entrance of the Jackson Street Parking Garage at 7 Jackson St. Great job, Standard Parking! • Little known Malden fact department: superstar Democratic political consultant Michael Goldman’s dad taught Norman Greenbaum how to box at the old Beth Israel Synagogue Community Center some 65 years ago when Normie was a teenager. • So, after 42 years the skinny little kid from Russell Street retires from his dream gig: City of Malden Chief of Police. Congratulations Kevin (Molis)! You have done really well and Malden is very proud of you! We thought we would lose you at one point, though. Hollywood came calling. You put loyalty to your hometown before fame and fortune in Tinseltown! For that we are grateful. Most of all, Kevin, Edgeworth is very proud of you! More on Chief Molis when I collect my thoughts. • Did you know that... Councilor-at-Large Craig Spadafora is an accomplished photographer and somewhat of a musicologist? True facts. • The 1971 smash hit “Clean up Woman” by Betty Wright is stuck in my head and will not leave. Not that this is a bad thing. • Ward 7 Councillor Chris Simonelli threw a party for the ages on the 4th of July. Master Chef Albert from Anthony’s on Canal Street catered the aff air with some sweet soul music provided by T&T (Tyrone & Tyrone aka “Living on Beats”), who obviously love and know their music. A one-two punch right there unmatched since “Dangerous Dana” Rosenblatt threw leather. Thank you, Chris! • Steven E. DiGiacomo passed away suddenly on June 11. He was 73 years old. According to his obituary, “Steve wrote his own rules. He lived 1,000 years in his 74 calendar years because he attacked life, grabbed it by its lapels, kissed it and swung it on the dance fl oor.” I can personally attest to that. Steve certainly loved life and was a whole heck of a lot of fun to shoot darts and drink beer with deep into the night (responsibly of course)! Stevie, say hello to Neal (Spadafora), Stevie (McCarthy), Richie (CreMALDEN: TODAY| SEE PAGE 7

THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 Page 7 MALDEN: TODAY | FROM PAGE 6 mone) and Joey (Moreno) when you guys finally hook up again! • Happy 7-0, John “Trixie” Trischitta! Trixie is a true legend in these here parts. We’re not exactly sure why he is, but he is. Insert smiley face. • So long and much happiness to one of my best friends, Bobby Goodwin, of the Oakland Street Goodwins. Bobby and his wife Kelly (both retired) are fleeing cold New England nights for warmer days in Florida. Bobby and I go back to 1978 or so. We saw the Ramones every single time they came anywhere in New England for a good seven-year period. We had many late-night China Garden feed fests (or better yet, frenzies) on the steps of Johnny Angelo’s Barber Shop, Gabby’s, on Highland Ave. And we spent (too many) hours sitting on a barstool in the old lounge at Anthony’s on Canal Street. Goodie, I cherished every single moment, my friend. We’re gonna miss you. Stay well and I’ll see you as soon as the first chill hits Malden! Yet more musings from the inimitable pen of the late John O’Brien, whose wit and wisdom endeared him to generations of Malden High School students, Malden residents and faculty at MHS. These “Musings” from September 1973 are some of his best works. Danger, Will Robinson! There is a word or two used by John that may be offensive to some in 2022. If you are faint of heart, read on at your own risk (said semi-facetiously): (“Danger, Will Robinson!!”) “Rumor has it that Women’s Liberation will seek to outlaw the running broad jump.” • “Legalize potluck suppers.” • “American League hitters stopped taking (Bill) Lee for granted.” • “Had a disc attack at the discotheque, but I’ll be back.” • “When she said, “no way” in Norway, I knew we were Finished.” • (“Danger, Will Robinson!!”) “If baseball outlawed midgets, why shouldn’t basketball outlaw giants?” • “In Saint Louis, they’re asking: “Is a pennant in the Cards?” • “Since the day we shared a cone, I have pined for you.” • “If my search for happiness is a wild goose chase, I’m a dead duck.” As Peter Falk’s iconic TV character “Columbo” would say “Just one more thing, sir” – Torbert Macdonald would have been 105 this past June 6. “Torby” wore many hats in his long and illustrious career. Most notably, a Congressman straight out of Malden (via Everett) who happened to be married to a famous movie starlet, the forever beautiful Phyllis Brooks. I received a wonderful email in 2014 from Laurie Macdonald, daughter of our late beloved congressman. At the time Laurie wanted to put her dad’s legacy into historical perspective: “As for the ‘history,’ for the record, my father was President Kennedy’s roommate at Harvard, and life-long close friend. They both joined the Navy, and both were PT Boat captains in World War 2. My father was awarded the Silver Star and the Purple Heart for his wartime actions. He was an usher at Jack’s wedding and an honorary pallbearer at the funeral. In fact, my father had been with Jack in Palm Beach the weekend before the assassination. President Kennedy was also my older brother’s godfather. Jack and my dad both died far too young; the President in 1963 and my father in 1976 at age 58, after serving 21 years in Congress. It was his death that created the vacancy that now-Senator Ed Markey filled.” Happy birthday, Torby! Malden will not forget you. Postscript 1: Speaking of Trixie, we were both at the Emerson School (I was in the first grade, he in the sixth) that fateful day in 1963 and both remember the JFK tragedy vividly. Postscript 2: I feel very fortunate to have been friends with the late (Malden District Court Clerk Magistrate) Joe Croken. We both had lockers in the same aisle in the Health Club at the old Y. Joe was Torby’s “right hand man” and would share stories with me of his time spent with the legendary Congressman. www.eight10barandgrille.com We Have Reopened for Dine-In and Outside Seating every day beginning at 4 PM WE'RE OPEN! 8 Norwood Street, Everett (617) 387-9810 STAY SAFE!

Page 8 THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 Forestdale Park awarded Gold at 24th Annual Digital Health Awards F orestdale Park, an Assisted Living and Compass Memory Support Community in Malden, won a Gold Award for their testimonial video at the Health Information Resource Center’sSM Digital Health Awards®, which highlighted the world’s best in digital health media at its 24th annual competition. The video, which is titled “Come Home to Forestdale Park,” brought home a win in the Digital Health Media/ Publications: Video Category. The award competition recognizes a wide variety of digital health resources in a variety of entry classifications. A panel of 57 experts in the field judged and awarded gold, silver, bronze and merit distinctions to select entries from a pool of nearly 700 hopefuls. Diana Jeong Celebrated by Mass. Commission on the Status of Women in 19th Annual Commonwealth Heroine Class of 2022 M Resident Care Associate Diane Blake Holness and Judy Topalian Forestdale Park’s winning video features commentary from several residents, family members and employees; all of them rave about how the senior community is a place residents can confidently call home. The video centers around the close ties between residents and staff, the families’ appreciation of the high-quality care of their aging parents, and the community’s unique programming that keeps residents social, active and independent. Each testimonial featured in the video reel shares a common thread: a sense of compassion that allows each community member to feel like a member of the Forestdale Park family. You can watch the video at Forestdale Park’s website, www.ForestdalePark.com. Forestdale Park is a Volunteers of America Massachusetts senior community in Malden that offers service-enriched assisted living options, as well as a secure Compass Memory Support Neighborhood® designed for those experiencing memory loss. For more information about Forestdale Park, call 781333-8903 or visit the community’s website, www.ForestdalePark.com. ALDEN – Representative Steven Ultrino (D-Malden) and his office celebrates Diana Jeong as she is named one of Massachusetts Commission on the Status of Women’s (MCSW) Commonwealth Heroine for 2022. The team is proud to have nominated Ms. Jeong for this honor as she continues to dedicate her time and efforts to help improve the community of Malden. The Commonwealth Heroines are women who strive to make a difference and improve the lives of others within their community. They are leaders, mentors, volunteers, and innovators who dedicate their time and efforts to protect and represent the interests of those in need. Jeong has been in a pillar in the Malden community and has co-founded key Asian-based non-profit organizations including Malden Asian Pacific American Coalition, Asian Spectrum, and Greater Malden Asian American Community Coalition (GMAACC). As a lifelong Malden resident, Jeong has worked tirelessly drive civic engagement and volunteered in organizations supporting local arts and culture, education, language access, and healthcare – particularly for Malden’s Asian American community for many years. After retiring from her position as Finance Director for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Executive Office of Housing Everett Aluminum 10 Everett Ave., Everett 617-389-3839 Owned & operated by the Conti family since 1958 • 57 Years! family since 1958 • 64 “Same name, phone number & address for over half a century. We must be doing something right!” •Vinyl Siding •Free Estimates •Carpentry Work •Fully Licensed •Decks •Roofing • Fully Insured • Replacement Windows www.everettaluminum.com Now’s the time to schedule those home improvement projects you’ve been dreaming about all winter! and Economic Development. She has given her time, expertise, and passion to the boards of many other organizations, including the Asian American Civic Association and Malden YWCA. She currently serves as the Vice President of GMAACC. “Diana’s work over the years can only be described as selfless and truly impactful,” says Representative Ultrino, “She has brought the Malden community closer and strived to uplift the voices of underrepresented individuals – particularly within our Asian American community. I would like to congratulate Ms. Jeong on this wonderful accomplishment and we are very fortunate to have heroines like her who are committed to making Malden a better and more inclusive community for everyone.” In celebration of the new Commonwealth Heroines Class of 2022, the MCSW hosted a Zoom event featuring opening remarks by MCSW Chairwoman Denella Clark and a special recognition presentation of the newest class. This year, an in-person event was held on Wednesday, June 22nd at The Venezia Hotel in Boston. The program book with short biographies of each Commonwealth Heroine is available for public viewing here. A recording of the event can be found on MCSW’s Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/MassCSW/videos. Summer is Here!

THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 Page 9 The Smack Dabs Kick-Off Malden’s Summer Concert Series Pictured from left to right: Assistant to the Mayor Maria Luise, Victoria Sheets and Ward 5 School Committee Member Adam Weldai. Councillor-at-Large Karen Colón-Hayes (at left) and former Ward 7 School Committee Member Gladys Rivera Rogers, the fi rst Malden Hispanic politician, are shown enjoying the event. Tasty Treats owner Angel Rojas and Mayor Gary Christenson (Courtesy photo, Assistant to the Mayor Maria Luise) Mackey & Brown Attorneys at Law * PERSONAL INJURY * REAL ESTATE * FAMILY LAW * GENERAL PRACTICE * PERSONAL BANKRUPTCY * CIVIL LITIGATION 14 Norwood St., Everett, MA 02149 Phone: (617) 387-4900 Fax: (617) 381-1755 WWW.MACKEYBROWNLAW.COM The Smack Dabs, a swing blues ensemble, performed on Tuesday outside of City Hall. Pictured from left to right: keyboardist Richard Saunders, bassist James Gray, guitarist Mark Earley, clarinetist Kit Buckley and trombonist Clayton DeWalt. John Mackey, Esq. * Katherine M. Brown, Esq. Patricia Ridge, Esq. 2.55 CD The k se you like to see. Open a 3- egions highest rates. se you li Stop into one o anches to open an account. en a 3egion into one o Member FDIC | Member DIF *Annual Percentage Yield (APY) is subject to change without notice. Fixed rate term Certificate of Deposits accounts, rates are guaranteed for the length of the term. Minimum deposit to open account and to obtain the APY is $500 unless otherwise specified. APY is based on principal and interest remaining in the account for a period of one year. Penalty may be imposed for early withdrawal. For consumer accounts only. No out of state deposits. ECB NOW Checking Account is requested.

Page 10 THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 TOE JAM PUPPET BAND W ednesday, July 20, 6:30 pm The Toe Jam Puppet Band off ers a special brand of hands-on children's entertainment that grown-ups can actually enjoy. The performances are very active, encouraging kids and parents to sing and dance along with the band as they entertain with a unique combination of original songs, masterful shadow puppetry, storytelling and just plain old good fun! This program is supported by a grant from the Malden Cultural Council, a local agency supported by the Mass Cultural Council, a state agency. For a complete schedule of the summer programs for all ages, visit the Malden Public Library or its website. Global Warming Workshop July 28 G lobal warming has begun to visibly strain local ecosystems; Overzealous urbanization has led to fragmented habitats; and pollinator numbers continue to decrease annually. Thoughtful gardening has never been more important. Join us at the Malden Public Library Thursday, July 28th at 4pm for an engaging workshop led by Laurie We Sell Cigars & Accessories R.Y.O. TOBACCO ---------TUBES CIGAR SMOKERS DELIGHT! 15 Handmade Churchill Size Cigars including a Cohiba - Long Leaf filler - wrapped $43.95 SUMMER SPECIALS! HUMIDOR SPECIAL! $99.95 Complete! Reg. Priced $149.95 * Travel Humidors * Desk Top Humidors * Many Types of Lighters * Ash Trays * Juuls * Vapes * Glass Pipes * Rewards Program * CBD Infused Products * GIFTS UNDER $30 - GIFT CERTIFICATES A.B.C. CIGAR 170 REVERE ST., REVERE (781) 289-4959 STORE HOURS: Monday - Saturday: 8:00 AM - 7:00 PM Sunday & Holidays: 8:00 AM - 6:00 PM Bebick on Inviting Wildlife into your Garden. In this free program for adults, you will learn how to better adapt your gardening techniques to work with nature and create habitat for a variety of wildlife. Limited spaces available, registration required, learn more and sign up at https://maldenpubliclibrary.org/blog/wildlife or call 781.324.0218. Malden Students Who Made the UMass Amherst Spring 2022 Dean’s List A MHERST, Mass. – Below is a list of local students who were named to the dean’s list at the University of Massachusetts Amherst for the spring 2022 semester. In order to qualify, an undergraduate student must receive a 3.5 grade-point average or better on a four-point scale. MALDEN Munib Abdulghani Vedatman Soham Basu Saige Denise Brutus Peizhen Cai Connor Michael Cargill Tsz Wing Chan Lily Ling Chen Vivian Chen Matthew Paul DiStefano Delilah Paris Doeleman William James Duggan Helen Negussie Eshetu Olivia Danielle Forestier Lily Gao Harriet Shane Hechanova GerTake Advantage of all our HOLIDAY SPECIALS! Buy Cigars by the Box & SAVE! Competitive prices on all Brands, Great Selection Malden and Saugus Residents Named to Dean's List At Univ. Of New England B IDDEFORD AND PORTLAND, MAINE | TANGIER, MOROCCO (July 8, 2022) - The following students have been named to the Dean's List for the 2022 spring semester at the University of New England. Dean's List students have attained a grade point average of 3.3 or better out of a possible 4.0 at the end of the semester. Salma Bezzat of Malden; and Amanda Castle, Sarah McGonigle, and Olivia Rando of Saugus. The University of New England is Maine's largest private university, with two beautiful coastal campuses in Maine, a one-of-a-kind study-abroad ochi Ashley Victoria Giang Qianxi Guo Dylan Ha Isaias Hernandez Rivera Kara Elizabeth Hollis My Hua Ayman Ihiri Leila Imani Edward Tse Yong Jiang Susmita Koirala Yousef A Lahkiky Jacqueline Fontanilla Law Taylor Hak Lee Zetang Lei Jianxiong Lin Sarah Yen Lin Yangyang Lin Caitlin Lu Rongqiang Luo Sami Luu Isabelle Conceicao Maraschi Savanna Z Moy Alexey Mozyaev Anna Nguyen Dang Khoa Q Nguyen Hoang Nguyen Julia Diniz Oliveira Derick Phan Matthew James Romprey Ajithaan Ramar Sathiyendra Xiaoya Shen Michael Shi Jared Gunnar Swanson Waymond Szeto Bethan Emily Taddeo Wendy Mei Wah Tan Xinyi Tan Michael Thompson Jasmine My Tran Ivana Truong Temesgen T Tsige Thuy-Tam Hoang Vo Jack Bestick Williams Jiaqi Ye Yu Wei Zeng Guilin Zhang Wu Zheng Xue Yi Zhou Zhiyang Zuo campus in Tangier, Morocco, and an array of flexible online offerings. In an uncommonly welcoming and supportive community, we off er hands-on learning, empowering students to make a positive impact in a world full of challenges. We are the state's top provider of health professionals and home to Maine's only medical and dental colleges, a variety of other interprofessionally aligned health care programs, and nationally recognized degree paths in the marine sciences, the natural and social sciences, business, the humanities, and the arts. Visit une.edu

THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 Page 11 State Representative LipperGarabedian to Host Virtual Office Hours Friday, July 22, 2022 S tate Representative Kate Lipper-Garabedian announced that she and her offi ce will hold virtual offi ce hours for constituents on Friday, July 22, 2022, from 12:00-1:00pm. Representative Lipper-Garabedian’s office hours are always open to the public to enable residents to speak directly with the Representative and her staff about any issue. Private virtual rooms are available for sensitive topics. If a constituent is unable to attend offi ce hours, Representative Lipper-Garabedian and her staff are available to correspond, speak, or schedule a meeting. Please contact Legislative Aide Julia Germani by e-mail at julia. germani@MAHouse.Gov or by phone (617) 722-2810. To learn more about Representative Kate Lipper-Garabedian and to sign-up for her newsletter, visit her website, www. KateforRep.com. "Vanity awards" ask for a fee to claim a prize - New England Business Leaders Targeted I t’s always an ego boost to receive a notice that you or your company has won an award. The Better Business Bureau reminds you that if that award requires you to pay a fee to “claim” it, make sure you check out all the details before sending money. While there are many legitimate and competitive awards out there (even ones that are unfamiliar to you), there are also a lot of “vanity awards.” These are available in virtually every industry and for every profession. For some, you fi ll out a form and pay a fee to enter the ‘competition.’ With others, you are notifi ed that you’ve won and directed to a place where you can order plaques or trophies. These awards may sound good, but many are not particularly prestigious. The more winners there are, the less respected the award becomes. Trusted, hardworking businesses and business owners deserve recognition, but not the kind you have to pay for. However, this is the premise of vanity award scams. What is a vanity award scheme? This scheme typically targets business owners through email campaigns. The email will congratulate the owner on his or her selection for the Best of [insert city name] Award and invite the contact to follow a link to a website listing further details on how to claim the prize. Among the instructions on how to claim the honor and receive a plaque or trophy, a onetime fee will be listed, ranging from $100 to $200, sometimes with higher amounts if the owner would like a larger trophy or plaque. BBB recommends the following tips before paying to receive an award: • Research the award. Check Metro Mayors urge MBTA to restore service levels, financial commitment T he Metropolitan Mayors Coalition has advocated for a fully funded, safe, reliable, frequent, and accessible transportation system since the Coalition was founded in 2001. The MBTA is a lifeline for our residents, providing access to jobs, school, shopping, recreation, and services. Bolstering use of transit is also a key element of the Commonwealth’s plans to reduce Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emissions. When service is reduced, so is our entire region’s quality of life, as residents are forced to make compromises that only serve to hurt our economy, the environment, or both. Given these priorities, we urge swift action to restore the MBTA’s service levels, along with a longer-term fi nancial commitment so that we can usher in a strong and equitable recovery for our residents and our region. Many of the residents who rely out the company's BBB Business Profi le at BBB.org to ensure that the off er is legitimate. • Ask specifi c questions. Learn everything you can about who is giving the award, where they are located, how long the award has been in existence and how your business was selected as a winner. Organizations that off er legitimate awards will be willing to provide specifi c details on why your company was chosen. • Know the nomination process. Find out who nominated your business for the award. If you didn't apply for it or the organization cannot tell you how you were nominated, chances are the award is not legitimate. • Check for payment requirements. Most legitimate awards do not come with costs to the recipient. If there is a fee, scrutinize it closely. If there is a fee for winning or for receiving a certifi cate or plaque, it could be a scheme simply after your money. For more information The sole intent of a vanity award scheme is to capitalize on a company's excitement for an award that essentially holds no value with the purpose of making money on the off er. To report a vanity award scheme, visit BBB Scam Tracker at BBB.org/ scamtracker. For more tips to help you as a business owner, visit BBB’s Business Resources page and BBB's Business HQ. Also, read about the top 10 scams targeting small businesses. Stay one step ahead of scammers by subscribing to BBB's weekly Scam Alert emails. on the T are the same people that we lauded as “essential workers” during the height of the pandemic. A well-functioning and safe MBTA is what allowed them to get to work and is a critical component of a strong recovery. Now, the MBTA is cutting service to address critical safety issues, many of which were originally cited in the 2019 report of the Safety Review Panel established by the Fiscal Management and Control Board (FMCB). This Coalition, in the summer of 2020, encouraged the T to implement some of these changes during the pandemic when ridership was lower. Financial resources are necessary to implement a myriad of safety recommendations, including those recommendations that will be forthcoming from the Federal Transit Administration (FTA). We urge the Legislature and Governor Baker to invest substantial dollars from the state’s current budgetary surplus to allow the MBTA to address all signifi cant safety concerns and to restore service at the earliest possible date. We hope the Legislature passes additional funds for MBTA safety upgrades in the Transportation Bond Bill currently before it. In addition to these funds, we urgently need a longterm sustainable funding source to continue uninterrupted service in the years ahead. This Coalition has always called for additional investments in MBTA operations, maintenance, and repair, to ensure that transit-dependent and low-income residents can access the T without serious fi nancial burden. We are committed to working with the T to take steps to protect low-income riders by creating a means-tested fare program. Cutting service hurts all of us, but especially the communities that were most impacted by the pandemic. Furthermore, increasingly crowded trains constitute an additional safety issue that puts our residents at risk. We cannot afford to fail our communities again. The Metropolitan Mayors Coalition is a group of cities and towns in the urban core of Metro Boston whose leaders gather to exchange information and create solutions for common problems. The municipal officials in this group represent more than 1.4 million residents in the cities and towns of Arlington, Boston, Braintree, Brookline, Cambridge, Chelsea, Everett, Malden, Medford, Melrose, Newton, Quincy, Revere, Somerville, and Winthrop.

Page 12 THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 Police Chief, Captain, Lieutenant and Sergeant take oaths of office By Tara Vocino F our Malden police officers were promoted, including one to police chief, during last Thursday morning’s ceremony outside of Malden City Hall. School Resource Officer Trent Headley was promoted to Sergeant, Sgt. Peter Mitchell was promoted to Lieutenant, Lt. Daniel Catana was promoted to Captain and Captain Glenn Cronin was promoted to Police Chief. Mayor Gary Christenson congratulated the newly promoted officers. He thanked them for doing a dangerous job daily. Malden Police Commissioner Salvatore “Butch” Gennetti (at left) and Mayor Gary Christenson (far right) congratulated the newly promoted officers. Proud wife, Jeanne pinned her husband, Glenn Cronin. Incoming Police Chief Glenn Cronin and his family, pictured from left to right: his son-in-law, John O’Bryan; his daughter Cassandra O’Bryan; Police Chief Cronin; his wife, Jeanne Cronin; their daughters Jessica and Kaitlynn Cronin; his mother-in-law, Paulette Willett; and his father-in-law, Richard Willett. Cronin has served on the police force for 29 years. Proud mother Alice with her son, Lt. Peter Mitchell. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino) City Clerk Gregory Lucey swore in Trent Headley, Peter Mitchell and Daniel Catana, respectively. Sgt. Trent Headley, who was most recently Malden High School’s School Resource Officer, is shown with Ward 8 Councillor Jadeane Sica.

THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 Page 13 State Rep. Paul Donato congratulated incoming Police Chief Glenn Cronin. The Headley family, pictured from left to right: Sgt. Trent Headley’s son Tryston; Sgt. Trent; his wife, Samantha; their son Hayden; and his mother, Karylen Headley. Lieutenant Peter Mitchell was pinned by his son Collin, 4. Malden City Clerk Greg Lucey administers the oath of office to Police Chief Glenn Cronin as Mayor Gary Christenson looks on during last Thursday morning’s ceremony outside City Hall. Malden resident Natalja Sticco, a soprano, performed the National Anthem. School Resource Officer Trent Headley was pinned by his son, Hayden, as police sergeant. Police Chief Glenn Cronin gave remarks. Pictured from left to right: School Resource Officer Trent Headley was promoted to Sergeant, Sgt. Peter Mitchell was promoted to Lieutenant, Lt. Daniel Catana was promoted to Captain and Captain Glenn Cronin was promoted to Police Chief. Lieutenant Peter Mitchell Jr. posed with his wife, Lisa, and their son, Collin.

Page 14 THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 How to Plan a Backyard Vacation Need to stay near home this summer? Enjoy a staycation in your yard! Y our backyard, always a great for your health and well-being, can do even more for families this summer by being a place to hold a staycation. With the pandemic keeping more people closer to home, a backyard vacation can be a fun way to spend time together and build new memories as a family while spending time in green space. How do you excite your family about a backyard vacay and plan a fun time? Here are a few tips to help from the TurfMutt environmental education and stewardship program. Make a backyard staycation plan. Put together a gentle schedule with a mixture of activities that your family will enjoy like dining, camping and games. Add a theme for the week, day or evening. A luau theme can be carried through with costumes, food and activities. A sports theme can have everyone in team jerseys and doing sports activities. Use creative EDUCATION | FROM PAGE 4 fy for a grant • Requires EEC to use an actual-cost-of-quality-care methodology for setting subsidy reimburseTidy overgrown areas. Add fl owering plants and rearrange planters for visual appeal. Put delicate fl owers in pots and out of the way of foot traffi c. Now may be the time to add a picnic table, a badminton net or croquet course, planters, patio, grill, fi re pit, or pergola to your backyard. Organize for fun. Identify names for meals and activities to spice things up. Even you don’t have a pool, children’s water play misters or sprinklers can help everyone cool off in the backyard (provided your area is not under drought conditions). Map where activities will occur in the yard. A lawn area may be the site of a soccer game, bocce ball or croquet, but it can also double as an overnight camping zone for the kids in a family tent. The fi re pit can be used for roasting hot dogs for lunch or s’mores at night. Time for crafts, potting ment rates and calculating operational grants. • Requires EEC to calculate subsidy rates based on quarterly enrollment rather than daily attenplants, and eating can happen at a picnic or dining table. Assess what you have and consider their creative uses. Lounge chairs, sports and play equipment can be used for their original purposes, but they can also become part of an amazing obstacle course. The wheelbarrow used for gardening and yard work can become part of a family fi eld day. The playset your children adore can become a breakfast spot or reading area. Spruce up your yard. Mow the lawn and trim the bushes. dance of children • Takes steps to strengthen the recruitment and pipeline of early educators • Early educators with bachelor’s zones for diff erent activities. Dining, lounging and reading may be best in shady spots. Sports, family yard games and tossing a ball to your dog may be better on a lawn that can handle rough and tumble play. Hammocks, lawn chairs, swings, picnic blankets and air mattresses can all provide a place for people to sit down and cool off . Include teachings about backyard wildlife and nature. Ask kids to take an inventory of the many birds, butterfl ies and other wildlife they see, looking up their species and background. Put up a bird feeder or plant a butterfl y garden, as well degrees earn far less than their counterparts who teach in public elementary schools, and one in six early educators lives in poverty. To improve compensation, benefi ts and professional development for the early educator workforce, this legislation includes the following provisions: • Requires EEC to develop a career ladder that links educational attainment and work experience to compensation and benefi ts and recommends compensation levels commensurate with public school teachers with similar credentials • Establishes educator scholarship and loan forgiveness programs to provide greater access to higher education and professional development opportunities • Enables subsidized providers to off er free or discounted seats for the children of their own staff Other provisions in this bill to improve and strengthen early education and child care in Massachusetts include: • Creates a commission to study and recommend to the legislature ways that employers could provide more support to their workers to help meet their early education and child care needs • Requires EEC to report to the legislature on ways to expand successful local partnerships, such as the Commonwealth Preschool Partnership Initiative (CPPI) • Requires EEC and the Children’s Investment Fund to report to the legislature on ways to improve and expand the impact of the Early Education and Out of School Time (EEOST) Capital Fund for making improvements to earas potted flowering plants to support birds and pollinators. Add wind chimes, rain collectors, or backyard thermometers and wind gauges to help kids observe science in action. (Visit TurfMutt.com for a variety of backyard lesson plans that are free and STEM-aligned.) Design new games incorporating your green space. Hold a nature scavenger hunt that’s fun, educational and tests your family’s observational skills. Create a “drive-thru” movie theater by bringing laptops outside or a projector to show them on a sheet hung outside. Build anticipation. Talk about your backyard vacation in advance with your family and review your plans. Count down the days to build excitement about spending time together in your family yard. For more information and tips about living landscapes and backyard learning visit www. TurfMutt.com. ly education facilities • Requires EEC to create “a plan to pilot, scale and regularly evaluate shared services and quality licensed hubs for early education and care programs” • Creates a data advisory commission to work with EEC on expanded data collection and reporting, and the improved use of data to inform the cost and quality of care Massachusetts Business Coalition for Early Childhood Education Executive Director Tom Weber said, “Due to the Legislature’s extraordinary leadership, this session, already immensely productive, is poised to be truly historic for early care and education, an issue of vital importance to the success of Massachusetts children, families, communities, workers, and the economy. Acting with great urgency and vision, the Legislature is advancing key provisions of the EEC Economic Review Commission’s blueprint for early care and education, generated by the tremendous leadership of its chairpersons, Senator Jason Lewis and Representative Alice Peisch, through the state budget and legislation that would improve the lives of Massachusetts families now and for generations to come. The Massachusetts Business Coalition for Early Childhood Education is deeply grateful for the Legislature’s unprecedented action, which is driving progress toward a stronger and more equitable economy through the provision of affordable, accessible, high-quality early care and education.”

THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 Page 15 Jason Lewis endorsed for 5th Middlesex District State Senate by ELM Action Fund he Environmental League of Massachusetts Action Fund has endorsed Jason Lewis in the election for 5th Middlesex District in the Massachusetts Senate, a credit to his commitment to the environment and climate action. With issues of public health, environmental justice, transportation and energy policy inextricably linked, we need leaders at every level of government who understand the pressing issues of their community and will call for ambitious action. “Senator Lewis has been a strong leader on too many environmental issues to name, but especially on waste-reduction as the Senate Chair of the Zero Waste Caucus,” said ELM Action Fund Executive Director Casey Bowers. “We are thrilled to continue our support for him.” “I’m thrilled to receive the endorsement of the Environmental League of Massachusetts Action Fund for my re-election campaign to the State Senate,” said Senator Lewis. “If re-elected I will conT tinue to fight for bold policies to combat climate change, protect our environment, grow our state’s clean energy economy like offshore wind power, and reduce waste especially single-use plastics.” Since 2014, Lewis has represented the 5th Middlesex District in the Massachusetts Senate. In the current session, he is the primary sponsor of waste reduction and animal welfare legislation, as well as a bill to restrict the use of the toxic herbicide glyphosate. As the Senate Chair of the Zero Waste Caucus, he has been an ally to the ELM Action Fund on several priority waste-reduction bills. Lewis is a proponent of offshore wind and holds that environmental justice should be central to decision-making in state government. To learn more about Jason Lewis, visit his website at https:// senatorjasonlewis.com/. To learn more about the ELM Action Fund, its work and its recent electoral victories, visit www.elmaction.org/elections. FUN-damental Basketball Camp Open to Boys and Girls in Local Area T he FUN-damental Basketball Camp, open to boys and girls in local area cities and towns, will be held July 25 to July 29, 2022 at the Immaculate Conception Parish Center, located at 51 Summer Street in Everett. The camp will be held between the hours of 9:00 am and 1:00 pm for boys and girls entering grades 3 thru 8 as of September, 2022.The cost of the camp is $100. Tony Ferullo, boys’ varsity basketball coach at Mystic Valley Regional Charter School in Malden, will be the Director of the camp. The purpose of the camp is: • To provide all campers with the fundamental tools to help them become better basketball players; • To create a positive atmosphere where the camper will learn and have fun at the same time; and • To instill the spirit of the game into all campers, and inspire them to continue playing the game either competitively or just for fun. Each camper, who will receive a T-shirt and certificate, will participate in various drills, scrimmages and individual contests. Special guests will speak and share their personal basketball tips.An awards ceremony will take place on the last day of the camp, and parents and friends are welcome to attend. For more information about the FUN-damental Basketball Camp, please contact Camp Director Tony Ferullo: 857-312-7002 or tferullo@ suffolk.edu. Writer / director Ti West returned after a substantial hiatus to make what might just be the best horror movie of this young decade. Like the most efficient slashers, X bears a simple premise: a group of twenty-somethings rent out a cabin to film an adult movie in the 1970s and naturally much bloodshed ensues. While X has plenty of the expected thrills and kills packed into its runtime, it’s also the rare slasher with some genuine ideas on its mind about the end of the free-wheeling ‘70s and the rise of Reagan-era moralism. Think Boogie Nights meets Friday the 13th, and you’ll understand why X is sure to go down as one of the year’s finest horror experiences. 3. Top Gun: Maverick After spending the majority of the last 15 Say what you will about Tom Cruise the man, but Tom Cruise the actor still knows years in Transformers purgatory, director Michael Bay has made his best (and most insane) movie in almost 20 years. The trailers for Ambulance promised a rather generic heist thriller filtered through Bay’s orange-and-teal color palette, but make no mistake: this is peak Bayhem, up there with the director’s best. This is an adrenaline junkie’s dream with an unhinged lead performance from Jake Gyllenhaal, comically bloody shootouts, and stunning drone camera work that captures all the hyper-violent hijinks with exhilarating glee. Those with high blood pressure need not apply, but fans of The Rock and Bad Boys will feel right at home. You know a film is special when it qualifies as the year’s best comedy, action movie, and heartfelt drama. Directing duo, The Daniels have made the multiverse movie to end all multiverse movies with Everything Everywhere All At Once, which stars Michelle Yeoh as a downtrodden laundromat owner suddenly thrust into a battle for the fate of the universe. It’s a family story about embracing one’s heritage while appreciating the uniqueness of future generations. It also has wicked kung-fu sequences, talking rocks, and people with hot-dogs for fingers. Wild, weird, irreverent, and touching; if you see one movie from 2022, make it this one. 2. X Cooper Raiff is the triple-threat talent who’s the writer, director, and star of this year’s Sundance smash Cha Cha Real Smooth. In some ways, Raiff’s film is the typical Sundance dramedy: a directionless young man, fresh out of college, strikes up a hopeless romance with an older woman. It’s a premise movie that have been hitting on since The Graduate, but luckily Raiff has a voice all his own. Funny and tender, Cha Cha Real Smooth coasts on charm just like its lead character, but it’s surprisingly critical of his naivete as well. Those in their 30s and up will likely find themselves laughing and cringing in recognition at this endearing comingof-age story. 5. Ambulance ~ Mitch @ The Movies ~ The Best Movies of 2022 (So Far) 1. Everything Everywhere All At Once how to make a satisfying blockbuster better than just about anyone else in Hollywood. Top Gun: Maverick makes the high-octane aerial sequences of the original seem like flying on a discount airline. This is big-screen spectacle of the highest order, an awe-inspiring mix of practical fighter-jet action and satisfying storytelling. The fact that it works as well as it does — 36 years after the first one —feels like a miracle. 4. Cha Cha Real Smooth

Page 16 THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 Beacon Hill Roll Call By Bob Katzen GET A FREE SUBSCRIPTION TO MASSTERLIST – Join more than 22,000 people, from movers and shakers to political junkies and interested citizens, who start their weekday morning with CREDITOR CLAIMS AGAINST THE PROBATE ESTATE G enerally, a creditor of a Massachusetts decedent has one year from the date of death to file a claim against the decedent’s estate. In years past, the time period within which to file a claim commenced when the Personal Representative was actually appointed by the Probate Court. Under the Massachusetts Uniform Probate Code (MUPC), which was effective on March 31, 2012, creditors now have one year from the date of death to file a claim against the estate. The purpose of the one year from the date of death provision is to promote the quick settlement of estates by allowing the Personal Representative of the estate to pay claims and to make distributions after one year from the date of death without the risk of being held accountable to a creditor. It is not enough for the creditor to simply provide notice of the claim to the Personal Representative, or even to just file a Notice of Claim in the probate court. MUPC Section 3-803(a) provides that, before the one- year period expires, the creditor must bring an action against the Personal Representative in the appropriate court, serve the Personal Representative with process by in hand delivery, and file a Notice of Claim with the Probate Court setting forth the creditor’s information and the amount of the claim. It often occurs that there is no estate to be probated or, even if there is a probate estate, the proceedings do not commence until after one year from the date of death. In this case, the creditor is out of luck and any subsequent claim would be barred. If a creditor is aware of the decedent’s death and the probate process has not commenced, the creditor has the right to petition the Probate Court in order to seek the appointment of a suitable Personal Representative. In this situation, the creditor would be aware that probate assets do indeed exist and that the dollar amount of the claim justifies the expenses to be incurred. The MUPC puts the onus on the creditor to learn of the decedent’s death and to take action accordingly before the statute expires. It should not be too difficult for the creditor to follow-up when no payments on the debt have been made. Furthermore, with today’s easy access to the internet, a quick google search of the debtor’s name and address would provide the date of death of the decedent. It is important for Personal Representatives to be aware of this one-year statute before final estate distributions are made. Joseph D. Cataldo is an Estate Planning/Elder Law Attorney, Certified Public Accountant, Certified Financial Planner, AICPA Personal Financial Specialist and holds a Master’s Degree in Taxation. MASSterList—the popular newsletter that chronicles news and informed analysis about what’s going on up on Beacon Hill, in Massachusetts politics, policy, media and influence. The stories are drawn from major news organizations as well as specialized publications selected by widely acclaimed and highly experienced writers Keith Regan and Matt Murphy who introduce each article in their own clever and inimitable way. MASSterlist will be e-mailed to you FREE every Monday through Friday morning and will give you a leg up on what’s happening in the blood sport of Bay State politics. For more information and to get your free subscription, go to: https://lp.constantcontactpages. com/su/aPTLucK THE HOUSE AND SENATE: Beacon Hill Roll Call records representatives’ and senators’ votes on roll calls from the week of July 4-8, 2022. BENEFITS FOR MILITARY FAMILIES (H 4978) House 154-0, approved legislation that would support military families who relocate to the Bay State by providing career stability for the spouses of service members and education for their children. The Senate has already approved a different version of the bill and the House version now goes back to the Senate for consideration. Provisions include making it easier for military personnel and their spouses who move to the Bay State to get a Massachusetts professional license, if their job requires one, so that they can continue their civilian careers and provide for their families without interruption; requiring the Commissioner of Education to issue a military spouse a valid certificate for teaching if he or she holds a valid teaching license from another state; allowing children of military members to register and enroll in a school district at the same time it is open to the general population by waiving the proof of residency requirement until the student actually begins school; creating a purple-star campus designation for certain schools that are military-kid friendly and show a major commitment to students and families connected to the nation’s military; and requiring that a child or spouse of an active-duty service member in Massachusetts continue to pay the in-state less expensive tuition rate at state universities even if the service member is assigned to move out of the state. “Anyone who has worn the uniform or has a family member who has worn the uniform knows that the sacrifice of military service goes far beyond the individual service member,” said Sen. John Velis (D-Holyoke) Senate chair of the Committee on Veterans and Federal Affairs. “[This bill] is a recognition of that sacrifice and the challenges these families face. The bill will benefit so many military families coming to our state ~ LEGAL NOTICE ~ INVITATION TO BID The Malden Housing Authority (MHA), the Awarding Authority, invites sealed bids from Supply Contractors to furnish and deliver: Hardware and Various Items Supplies, MHA #062722 for the MHA, in Malden Massachusetts, in accordance with the documents prepared by MHA. This is a federal and state funded contract and Federal laws and regulations shall apply in addition to the laws and requirements of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. MHA is seeking an indefinite quantity contract to furnish and deliver hardware and various items supply, for a minimum term of one (1) year, extending up to a maximum term of five (5) consecutive years, all awards to be made subject to funding and in the MHA’s sole discretion. Typical items would include but not limited to: hardware products, plumbing products, electrical products, paint, paint tools and products, waterproofing products, hand tools, power tools, sandpaper, drywall compound, cornerbead, cleaning tools and fluids, snow removal products, lubricants, automotive products, extension cords, lighting, etc. Bidding procedures shall be in accordance with CFR 85.36; M.G.L. c. 30b, as most recently amended, and all other applicable laws. The estimated project value is up to: $15,000.00 per contract year; total potential maximum contract value is $75,000.00. Bid documents will be available by email request at efahey@ maldenhousing.org from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Monday through Thursday, and may be examined at the MHA’s Main Administrative Offices, 630 Salem Street, Malden, MA from July 18, 2022, the bid documents are available by mail for $35.00 each (or $45.00 per set for overnight), in the form of a certified check made payable to Malden Housing Authority, to cover shipping. Bidder’s written questions will be received until 3:00 pm, 8/24/22 at efahey@maldenhousing.org with all questions. Sealed general bids will be received at the MHA’s Main Administrative Offices, 630 Salem Street, Malden, MA until 2:00 PM on 9/7/22, at which time all general bids will be publicly opened and read aloud. Section 3 of the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968 (12 U.S.C. 1701u) (Section 3) Part 135 - Economic Opportunities for Low- and Very Low-Income Persons shall apply to this project. Copies of the above are bound in the bid documents and are fully integral portions of the conditions of the contract with which each bidder must comply. The MHA reserves the right to reject any or all general bids if it is in the public interest to do so. July 15, 2022 and will help bring massive federal investments to our commonwealth.” “This comprehensive legislation is the result of countless hours of listening and learning from our veterans and advocates across the commonwealth,” said Rep. Paul McMurtry (D-Dedham), House chair of the Committee on Veterans and Federal Affairs. “It not only meets our veteran community’s most immediate needs, it also addresses the many challenges our veterans and their families face.” (A “Yes” vote is for the bill.) Rep. Paul Donato Yes Rep. Steven Ultrino Yes $56 MILLION FOR FAMILIES OF VICTIMS OF HOLYOKE SOLDIERS’ HOME (H 4932) Senate 39-0, approved $56 million in funding for the families of the victims of the COVID-19 outbreak at the Holyoke Soldiers’ Home. The Senate has already approved the measure and onlyfinal approval is needed in each branch before the measure goes to the governor for his signature. “No amount of money will ever make up for the devastating loss and heartbreak that these families have been through,” said Sen. John Velis (D-Holyoke). “What happened at the Home was unacceptable and will forever leave a scar on the commonwealth especially our Western Mass comBHRC | SEE PAGE 17

THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 Page 17 BHRC | FROM PAGE 16 munities. No dollar figure will ever bring these families their loved ones back. That anguish and grief will always be there, but this settlement does ensure that the families no longer need to suffer the painful and long process of continued litigation.” (A “Yes” vote is for the bill.) Sen. Jason Lewis Yes EARLY EDUCATION AND CHILD CARE (S 2973) Senate 40-0, approved and sent to the House a bill designed to expand access to high-quality, affordable early education and care. Provisions include increasing over time from the current $65,626 to $164,065 the maximum income allowed to qualify for subsidy eligibility for a family of four; requiring the Department of Early Education and Care to evaluate and eliminate barriers to subsidy access for families on an annual basis; strengthening the recruitment of early educators; establishing early educator scholarship and loan forgiveness programs to provide greater access to higher education and professional development opportunities; allowing subsidized providers to offer free or discounted seats for the children of their own staff; and creating a commission to study and recommend to the Legislature ways that employers could provide more support to their workers to help meet their early education and child care needs. “There are numerous benefits from expanding access to high-quality, affordable early education and childcare,” said Sen. Jason Lewis (D-Winchester), Senate Chair of the Committee on Education. “It enhances the cognitive and social emotional development of young children; it enables parents to work and improves families’ economic well-being; and it helps employers that are struggling with a workforce shortage. This legislation makes major strides in improving affordability and accessibility of care for families, stabilizing early education providers which will improve program quality and expand capacity and supporting the early educator workforce, many of whom are women of color.” “This issue has been a top priority of mine for many years, and I am thrilled to pass this transformative piece of legislation alongside my Senate colleagues,” said Sen. Sal DiDomenico (D-Everett), a member of the Special Legislative Early Education and Care Economic Review Commission. “As a father of two children, I know that affordable and quality early education and care is indispensable for families and their economic security. This bill will increase childcare access and help thousands of families obtain care at lower costs. Just as importantly, these investments will provide support to childcare providers and ensure people working in this field can earn a living wage, acquire higher education and support their own families.” (A “Yes” vote is for the bill.) Sen. Jason Lewis Yes ALSO UP ON BEACON HILL $250 OR $500 TAX REBATE TO SOME TAXPAYERS – The House and Senate leadership unveiled legislation that would use some of the state’s estimated $3.6 billion surplus to give one-time tax rebates to an estimated 2 million eligible people. The package is estimated to cost $500 million. A $250 rebate would go, by September 30, to individual taxpayers and a $500 rebate to married taxpayers. Eligibility will be determined by annual income reported in 2021, with the minimum income required to be $38,000, and the maximum $100,000 for individual filers and $150,000 for joint filers. “Whether it is the rising price of gas, groceries, or summer clothes for kids, the Massachusetts Legislature has heard loud and clear that increased costs due to inflation have cut into family budgets,” said speaker of the House Ron Mariano, Senate President KarenSpilka, House Ways and Means Chair Aaron Michlewitz and Senate Ways and Means Chair Mike Rodrigues, in a joint statement. The statement continued, “These rebates represent the Legislature’s commitment to delivering immediate financial relief directly to residents of the commonwealth, rather than to large oil companies that continue to profit off economic uncertainty and international conflict and follow our efforts to provide $500 in premium pay for lower income front-line workers during the pandemic. As we recognize the need for structural change as well, we continue to work on potential changes to the tax code with the goal of providing additional relief to residents.” “The Legislature’s ‘Taxpayer Energy and Economic Relief Fund’ proposal is a good start in reimbursing taxpayers for the muti-billion-dollar over-taxation revenue surpluses bonanza of the past two years,” said Chip Ford, executive director of Citizens for Limited Taxation. “Anything that reduces taxpayers’ burden especially in this economy is welcomed, but this will only reduce the pain for a few weeks in the fall. Gov. Baker’s tax relief bill offers broader and long-overdue structural tax reforms. It also needs consideration and adoption. Clearly there is sufficient surplus revenue for both.” “This is a poorly thought-out gimmick being done right before the election simply to score points with voters, plain and simple,” said Mass Fiscal Alliance spokesman Paul Craney. “Meaningful relief should be broad based and focused on lowering taxes on the people they most effect. Picking winners and losers through arbitrary brackets, as well as penalizing married couples more likely to have families depending on them, is a poor way for our out of touch Legislature to show solidarity with the privations their ill-conceived economic policies are currently forcing Massachusetts families to contend with.” Critics also took a swipe at the measure because it doesn’t provide a rebate for lower-income taxpayers earning less than $38,000. Marie-Frances Rivera, president of the Massachusetts Budget and Policy Center, said that rebates that exclude people earning less than $38,000 is not targeted tax relief to people who need it the most and are struggling to pay rent every month. Mariano responded at a press conference and pointed out that the Legislature several months ago had already spent $490 million on low-income folks who were adversely affected by the COVID loss of jobs. “So we felt we had addressed a lot of the needs there,” said Mariano. “The next step was to move up and take care of the folks who are in that middle income area that so often is neglected.” Some opponents said it is also unfair to exclude people earning over $100,000 from the rebate. They noted that if you have three children and earn $100,000 you are not exactly rich. $400,000 FOR FARMS – The Baker Administration announced the granting of $400,000 in grants to several Bay State farms to improve their operations. “[The] administration remains committed to the Massachusetts agricultural industry to ensure our local farmers continue to succeed and have the support they need to provide invaluable products for the public to enjoy,” said Energy and Environmental Affairs Secretary Beth Card. “These Agricultural Preservation Restriction Program Improvement grants will further strengthen the commonwealth’s food supply system making it more resilient now and well into the future.” “The Massachusetts Department of Agricultural Resources (MDAR) is steadfast with its commitment to our commonwealth’s farming families,” said MDAR Commissioner John Lebeaux. “Through the … program we have been able to conserve critical farmland, preserve Massachusetts agricultural history and provide support to help keep these farm businesses sustainable now and for future generations.” SOME COVID-19 POLICIES EXTENDED (H 4978 AND S 2559) – The House approved a bill that extends the authority for remote participation for all public bodies and the authority for representative town meetings to meet by remote means through March 31, 2023. Other provisions authorize the use of electronic communication technology in real estate property closings by attorneys; require landlords, when sending tenants a notice to quit for nonpayment of rent, to include information regarding the tenant's legal rights; require all public notices be posted to a website; require that the meeting of a state public body must have at least one of its members physically present at all meetings; and permit notary publics to select a tamper-evident technology for notarial acts with electronic record. “This legislation makes permanent the flexibility permitted under the Open Meeting Law during the COVID-19 State of Emergency while keeping with the Open Meeting Law’s objectives of transparency, convenience and access by the public,” said Rep. Tony Cabral (D-New Bedford), the chair of the Committee on State Administration and Regulatory Oversight. “The ability to participate remotely has significantly increased and promoted access and participation in our democratic process throughout the commonwealth. There is no reason to move backwards from this new era of public access. Now that we have experienced the benefits of remote access to public meetings, we cannot go back.” Advocates for the bill include the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts, Boston Center for Independent Living, Common Cause Massachusetts, Disability Law Center, League of Women Voters of Massachusetts, Massachusetts Newspaper Publishers Association, MASSPIRG, New England First Amendment Coalition, and New England Newspaper & Press Association. Those groups released a joint statement. “We applaud the Legislature for consistently appreciating the importance of remote access to public meetings,” read the statement. “Across the commonwealth, remote access to public meetings has significantly increased public participation in state and local government, and has lowered longstanding barriers for people with disabilities, people with limited access to transportation and people with work and family obligations.” The Senate has already approved its own version of the measure and a House-Senate conference committee will likely craft a compromise version. LOTTERY FOR LOW LICENSE PLATES - The Registry of Motor Vehicle announced that applications for the 2022 Low Number License Plate Lottery are now being accepted and must be submitted online by 5 p.m., Friday, September 2. This year's goodies are 199 low license plates including F7, 36, 78K, X44, 1S, and 6666. Applications are available online at http://www.mass.gov/RMV There is no fee to apply. However, If the applicant is selected as a winner, there is a special plate fee that will be required, in addition to a standard registration fee. Prior to the establishment of this lottery several years ago, these low-number plates were given away under the old-school system which gave the plates to “well-connected” drivers who "knew someone" in state government. QUOTABLE QUOTES “These toxic chemicals don’t belong anywhere, let alone in food packaging. Kudos to Rhode Island for taking this important step to protect the public from PFAS. I hope Massachusetts will soon become the next state to act.” --- Ben Hellerstein, state director for Environment Massachusetts, on Rhode Island’s passage of a new law banning PFAS (per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances) in food packaging. Supporters say that PFAs are dangerous chemicals which have been linked to a wide variety of health problems including immunosuppression, low birthweight, liver disease and testicular and kidney cancer. “The Legislature’s move, driven by Speaker Ron Mariano and Senate President Karen Spilka, to give driver's licenses to people in this country illegally resonated like no other issue before with the people of Massachusetts. MassFiscal set a record with the number of people who used our website to contact their legislators opposing this vote. ---Paul Craney, spokesman for the Mass Fiscal Alliance. “I look forward to working with you and your team and our team as we hopefully quickly and successfully settle the differences between both of our bills. It’s the first time we’ve attempted to update and modernize the cannabis laws since they were enacted by the voters in 2016 and modified by us in the Legislature in 2017.” BHRC | SEE PAGE 22

Page 18 THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 avy eniiooravvy S iorn or avvyavy vvy io iori by Jim Miller How to Find and Claim Your Family’s Forgotten Assets Dear Savvy Senior, A while back I read an article about some online tools that can help people search for lost or forgotten money left behind by their deceased relatives, but I’ve misplaced it. Can you help me with this? My mom, who passed away in January, was always bad about keeping up with her money, so I’m wondering if there was anything she left behind. Searching Son Dear Searching, Forgotten or lost money is actually very common in the United States. According to the National Association of Unclaimed Property Administrators, there are literally billions of dollars in unclaimed funds sitting in state treasuries and other agencies just waiting to be found. These unclaimed funds are from accounts that are inactive or whose owners, or their heirs, cannot be located. Unclaimed funds can include things like lost or forgotten saving or checking accounts, stocks, utility security deposits, tax refunds, life insurance policy proceeds, un-cashed dividend checks, matured savings bonds and much more. This typically happens because of a change of address (the owner moved), a name change (the owner got married or divorced), or the owner dies, and the estate was unaware of the money or the heirs could not be located. By law, companies and fi nancial institutions that can’t fi nd the owner or their next of kin within two to fi ve years must turn the property over to the state where it’s held indefi nitely. Where to Search About 10 percent of all Americans have some unclaimed money out there waiting to be found, so it’s very possible your mother had some too. To start your search, go to Unclaimed.org, which has links to all state programs that will let you do a state benefi ts search online for free. Or you can do a multi-state search in 39 states at MissingMoney.com. Be sure to check every state in which your mother lived, worked or did business. Also, make sure to check under your mom’s maiden name, and if she had a frequently misspelled name, search those misspellings too. Using her fi rst initial and her last name is also encouraged to make sure everything comes up. Every state can tell you immediately if your mom has some unclaimed money, as well as how to go about collecting it. Look Here Too In addition to state treasuries, here are some other resources that can help you look for unclaimed money that may have been overlooked. Forgotten retirement benefi ts: To search for lost or forgotten 401(k) funds your mom may have left behind with an old employer, use the National Registry of Unclaimed Retirement Benefi ts at UnclaimedRetirementBenefi ts.com. Or to search for lost pension benefi ts, use the Pension Benefi t Guaranty Corporation trusteed plan search tool at PBGC.gov/search-trusteed-plans. Lost life insurance: To track down a lost or forgotten life insurance policy, the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, an insurance regulatory support organization, off ers a free policy locator service at https://eapps.naic.org/life-policy-locator. Unredeemed savings bonds: It’s very common for people to lose track of U.S. saving bonds because they are often given to children as gifts, then forgotten before the bonds reach maturity. To fi nd out if your mom had any, the U.S. Department of the Treasury provides an online search tool at TreasuryHunt.gov for fi nding matured, uncashed savings bonds over 30 years old and no longer earning interest. Federal tax refunds: Each year thousands of refund checks totaling millions of dollars are returned to the IRS by the post offi ce. To look for lost Federal tax refund checks go to IRS.gov/refunds or call 800-829-1954. 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 “The Savvy Senior” book. OBITUARY Paul Michael DeVincentis Of Malden passed away Monday, July 11th 2022. Paul was born May 10th 1978, the son of Paul and Marie DeVincentis. After high school he went on to get his master’s degree at Salem State College and taught in schools in Malden as well as Cambridge. Paul was also the high school swim coach leading them to many GBL Championships and even earning the award Coach of the Year. Paul is survived by his parents Paul and Marie DeVincentis, his siblings Gregg DeVincentis and his wife Katie of Peabody, Jenna Clough and her husband David of Malden, his nieces and nephews Dylan, Chase, LEGAL NOTICE CONTRACT 2022-S-1 2022 SEWER LINING PROGRAM MALDEN, MASSACHUSETTS INVITATION TO BID THE CITY OF MALDEN invites sealed bids for Contract 2022-S-1 of its 2022 Sewer Lining Program. Bids will be received at the office of the Malden Engineering Department, 215 Pleasant Street, 3rd Floor – Room 340, Malden, MA 02148, until 1:30 PM local time on Thursday, August 11, 2022 and at that place and time will be publicly opened and read aloud. In general, the work of this contract shall consist of pipeline cleaning, and video inspection, followed by cure-in-place pipe (CIPP) lining of sanitary sewers on various throughout Malden, Ma. The pipelines to be CIPP lined will be determined based on a review of the initial cleaning and CCTV video of the various sewer lines. The City has compiled a list of approximately 28,000 linear feet of sewer lines that will be initially cleaned and videoed. As the videos are completed the City will review the videos and select the pipes to be lined. For bidding purposes, the City anticipates approximately 19,000 linear feet of pipe will be lined. This work will also consist of sewer manhole rehabilitation along with other appurtenant items. Contract Documents will become available Thursday, July 21, 2022 and may be examined and/ or obtained at the office of the Malden Engineering Department, 215 Pleasant Street, 3rd Floor – Room 340, Malden, MA 02148, Monday through Thursday, 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM. City offices are closed on Fridays. A deposit in the form of a check payable to the “City of Malden, Massachusetts” in the amount of $50.00 will be required for each set of the Contract Documents. A refund of the deposit will be made for Contract Documents returned in good condition within 4 weeks after bids are received. Bidder’s requesting Contract Documents by mail shall include an additional non-refundable check payable to “Hayner/Swanson, Inc.” in the amount of $40.00 per set to cover handling and mailing costs. The bids shall be prepared and submitted in accordance with the Instructions to Bidders. Bids must be accompanied by a bid security, satisfactory to the City, in the amount of five percent (5%) of the total bid. The bid security shall be in the form of a bid bond issued by a company licensed to do business in the Commonwealth; or a certified, treasurer’s or cashier’s check, issued by a responsible bank or trust company, payable to the “City of Malden, Massachusetts”. Cash deposits will not be accepted. A Performance Bond and a Labor and Materials Payment Bond in the amount of one hundred percent (100%) of the bid will be required of the successful bidder. Contracts for work under this Proposal will obligate the Contractor and Subcontractors to comply with applicable Federal, State and local provisions regarding prevailing wage rates, insurances, labor, equal employment opportunity, anti-discrimination and affirmative action. The City of Malden may use federal funds to pay for portions of the work to be completed under this project. Because of this, Contractors and Subcontractors working on this project must be registered in “The System of Award Management” (sam.gov). Bidders must include evidence of their active registration in sam.gov with their bid. Bids may be held by the City of Malden for a period not to exceed sixty (60) calendar days from the date of the opening of bids for the purpose of reviewing the bids and investigating the qualifications of bidders, prior to awarding the Contract. The City of Malden reserves the right to waive any informalities or to reject any or all bids received if deemed to be in their best interest. CITY OF MALDEN BY Yem Lip, P.E. City Engineer Malden Engineering Department July 15, 2022 Gabriella, Gregg Jr., Elle and Eva as well as many uncles, aunts, cousins and friends who will miss him dearly. A memorial service for Paul will be held at the Weir MacCuish Funeral Home located at144 Salem Street Malden MA on Saturday, July 16th 2022 from 10-12 with services at 12. In lieu of fl owers consider making a donation in Paul’s name to the American Diabetes Association https://diabetes.org/ LEGAL NOTICE

THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 Page 19 Your Hometown News Delivered! EVERETT ADVOCATE MALDEN ADVOCATE REVERE ADVOCATE SAUGUS ADVOCATE One year subscription to The Advocate of your choice: $100 per paper in-town per year or $120 per paper out-of-town per year. Name_________________________________________ Address_______________________________________ City_______________ State_______ Zip ____________ CC# _______________________________ Exp. _____ Sec. code____ Advocate (City):___________________ Clip & Mail Coupon with Credit Card, Check or Money Order to: Advocate Newspapers Inc. PO Box 490407, Everett, MA 02149 Legal Notice INVITATION FOR QUOTE CITY OF MALDEN - OFFICE OF THE CONTROLLER The City of Malden invites quotes in accordance with M.G.L. c.149, from Vendors for: Parking Automation Equipment Installation The City of Malden seeks a qualified and experienced installer of parking garage access control systems to install parking garage automation equipment in four parking garages in downtown Malden. Scope of work may be obtained by contacting Purchasing@cityofmalden.org starting JULY 20, 2022 at 10 A.M. Quotes will be received until 10:00 A.M., THURSDAY AUGUST 4, 2022 via email, to Purchasing@cityofmalden.org. Quotes will not be accepted nor may submitted quotes be corrected, modified or withdrawn after the deadline for quotes. Solicitation for quotes is under the purview of M.G.L C.149. As such, vendors must pay prevailing wages, a payment bond is required >$25K, as well as OSHA Training. The City will reject any and all quotes in accordance with the above referenced General Laws. In addition, the City reserves the right to waive minor informalities in any or all quotes or to reject any or all quotes (in whole or in part) if it be in the public interest to do so. CITY OF MALDEN OFFICE OF THE CONTROLLER July 15, 2022 Legal Notice

Page 20 THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma LEGAL NOTICE 1. On July 15, 1948, General of the Armies of the United States John J. Pershing died; who previously had that title? 2. What vehicle is also the name of a pie? 3. In what decade was Brasilia built: 1780s, 1890s, or 1950s? 4. On July 16, 1941, what player created a record by hitting safely for the 56th consecutive baseball game? 5. What does IBM stand for? 6. What author crated Neverland? 7. July 17 is National Ice Cream Day; reportedly, in 1906 the Hot Fudge Sundae was invented at C.C. Brown’s on what famous street? 8. What author created the detective Lord Peter Wimsey? 9. What lasagna ingredient is a byproduct of making another lasagna ingredient? 10. On July 18, 1976, who scored the fi rst-ever perfect 10 at the Olympics? 11. What is the importance of ENIAC? 12. What animal is also called a glutton and is a nickname for the State of Michigan? 13. What instrument does a concertmaster play? 14. On July 19, 1848, as advertised in the Seneca County Courier, the Seneca Falls Convention began “to discuss the social, civil and religious condition and rights of” what? 15. Due to a heatwave, Castenaso, Italy, imposed a fi ne for barbers and hairdressers doing what? 16. What is the fi rst fruit to ripen in spring? 17. On July 20, 1976, the Viking I landed on what planet that is also the name of a candy bar? 18. What word meaning pep is also the name of the offi cial soft drink of Maine? 19. The fi rst world peace park is in what two countries? 20. On July 21, 1979, Jay Silverheels became the fi rst Native American with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame; what well-known TV character did he play? ANSWERS CONTRACT 2022-S-1 2022 STORMWATER CLEANING PROGRAM MALDEN, MASSACHUSETTS INVITATION TO BID THE CITY OF MALDEN invites sealed bids for Contract 2022-SW-1 of its 2022 Stormwater Cleaning Program. Bids will be received at the office of the Malden Engineering Department, 215 Pleasant Street, 3rd Floor – Room 340, Malden, MA 02148, until 1:30 PM local time on Thursday, August 18, 2022 and at that place and time will be publicly opened and read aloud. In general, the work of this contract shall consist of pipeline cleaning, debris disposal and video inspection of stormwater sewers at various locations throughout Malden, Ma. The City has compiled a list of approximately 6,800 linear feet of sewer lines that will be cleaned and videoed. Contract Documents will become available Thursday, July 21, 2022 and may be examined and/ or obtained at the office of the Malden Engineering Department, 215 Pleasant Street, 3rd Floor – Room 340, Malden, MA 02148, Monday through Thursday, 9:00 AM to 30:30 PM. City offices are closed on Fridays. A deposit in the form of a check payable to the “City of Malden, Massachusetts” in the amount of $50.00 will be required for each set of the Contract Documents. A refund of the deposit will be made for Contract Documents returned in good condition within 4 weeks after bids are received. Bidder’s requesting Contract Documents by mail shall include an additional non-refundable check payable to “Hayner/Swanson, Inc.” in the amount of $40.00 per set to cover handling and mailing costs. The bids shall be prepared and submitted in accordance with the Instructions to Bidders. Bids must be accompanied by a bid security, satisfactory to the City, in the amount of five percent (5%) of the total bid. The bid security shall be in the form of a bid bond issued by a company licensed to do business in the Commonwealth; or a certified, treasurer’s or cashier’s check, issued by a responsible bank or trust company, payable to the “City of Malden, Massachusetts”. Cash deposits will not be accepted. A Performance Bond and a Labor and Materials Payment Bond in the amount of one hundred percent (100%) of the bid will be required of the successful bidder. Contracts for work under this Proposal will obligate the Contractor and Subcontractors to comply with applicable Federal, State and local provisions regarding prevailing wage rates, insurances, labor, equal employment opportunity, anti-discrimination and affirmative action. The City of Malden may use federal funds to pay for portions of the work to be completed under this project. Because of this, Contractors and Subcontractors working on this project must be registered in “The System of Award Management” (sam.gov). Bidders must include evidence of their active registration in sam.gov with their bid. Bids may be held by the City of Malden for a period not to exceed sixty (60) calendar days from the date of the opening of bids for the purpose of reviewing the bids and investigating the qualifications of bidders, prior to awarding the Contract. The City of Malden reserves the right to waive any informalities or to reject any or all bids received if deemed to be in their best interest. CITY OF MALDEN BY Yem Lip, P.E. City Engineer Malden Engineering Department July 15, 2022 LEGAL NOTICE 1. George Washington 2. Scooter 3. 1950s 4. Joe DiMaggio 5. International Business Machines 6. J. M. Barrie 7. Hollywood Boulevard 8. Dorothy Sayers 9. Ricotta (a byproduct of making mozzarella) 10. Nadia Comăneci 11. It stands for the name of the fi rst computer (Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer) 12. Wolverine 13. Violin 14. “Woman” 15. Shampooing customers’ hair twice 16. Strawberries 17. Mars 18. Moxie 19. Canada and USA (Waterton-Glacier International Peace Park) 20. Tonto on The Lone Ranger series

THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 Page 21 Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper Facebook.com/ Advocate.news.ma We follow Social Distancing Guidelines! 855-GO-4-GLAS ● 24-Hour Service Frank Berardino MA License 31811 ● Emergency Repairs BERARDINO Plumbing & Heating Gas Fitting ● Drain Service Residential & Commercial Service J.F & Son Contracting Snow Plowing No Job too small! Free Estimates! Commercial & Residential 781-656-2078 - Property management & maintenance Shoveling & removal Landscaping, Electrical, Plumbing, Painting, Roofing, Carpentry, Framing, Decks, Fencing, Masonry, Demolition, Gut-outs, Junk Removal & Dispersal, Clean Ups: Yards, Garages, Attics & Basements. Truck for Hire, Bobcat Services. 617.699.9383 Senior Citizen Discount FIRE • SOOT • WATER Homeowner’s Insurance Loss Specialists FREE CONSULTATION 1-877-SAL-SOOT Sal Barresi, Jr. - Your fi rst call 617-212-9050 SPADAFORA AUTO PARTS JUNK CARS WANTED SAME DAY PICK UP 781-324-1929 Quality Used Tires Mounted & Installed Used Auto Parts & Batteries Family owned & operated since 1946 Advocate Call now! 617-387-2200 advertise on the web at www.advocatenews.net $ $ $ $ Classifieds

Page 22 BHRC | FROM PAGE 17 ---Senate Ways and Means chair Sen. Mike Rodrigues (D-Westport) on the conference committee working on drafting a compromise version of a bill that would make changes in the cannabis laws. “We're seeing more daylight shootings on busy streets and more guns in the hands of teenagers. The common thread, beyond shooters willing to send bullets fl ying regardless of where they are, is that the guns were likely trafficked in from another state.” ---Suff olk County District Attorney Kevin Hayden urging governors and legislators in states with THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 “easy-access gun purchase laws” to consider the impacts their laws are having on cities like Boston. HOW LONG WAS LAST WEEK'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 LegisWASTE REMOVAL & BUILDING MAINTENANCE • Landscaping, Lawn Care, Mulching • Yard Waste & Rubbish Removal • Interior & Exterior Demolition (Old Decks, Fences, Pools, Sheds, etc.) • Appliance and Metal Pick-up • Construction and Estate Cleanouts • Pick-up Truck Load of Trash starting at $169 • Carpentry LICENSED & INSURED Call for FREE ESTIMATES! Office: (781) 233-2244 AAA Service • Lockouts Trespass Towing • Roadside Service Junk Car Removal 617-387-6877 26 Garvey St., Everett MDPU 28003 ICCMC 251976 REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS BUYER1 LEBLANC, BRANDON SADIKOVA, EKATERINA HUANG, FIONA L ZHANG, GUANGQUAN BUYER2 EPSTEIN, SAMUEL CHEN, YANYI SELLER1 WU, TAO KWJM CAPITAL LLC RAKIM, HIND SELLER2 CHEN, DAIKUN lature's job and that a lot of important work is done outside of the House and Senate chambers. They note that their jobs also involve committee work, research, constituent work and other matters that are important to their districts. Critics say that the Legislature does not meet regularly or long enough to debate and vote in public view on the thousands of pieces of legislation that have been fi led. They note that the infrequency and brief length of sessions are misguided and lead to irresponsible late-night sessions and a mad rush to act on dozens of bills in the days immediately preceding the end of an annual session. During the week of July 4-8, the House met for a total of seven hours and 44 minutes and the Senate met for a total of seven hours and 55 minutes. Mon. July 4 No House session No Senate session. Tues.July 5 House11:03 a.m. to11:14 a.m. Senate 11:18 a.m. to12:09 p.m. Wed. July 6 House11:02 a.m. to11:51 a.m No Senate session. Thurs. July 7 House11:04 a.m. to 5:48 p.m. Senate 11:19 a.m. to 6:23 p.m. Fri. July8 No House session No Senate session Bob Katzen welcomes feedback at bob@beaconhillrollcall.comBob founded Beacon Hill Roll Call in 1975 and was inducted into the New England Newspaper and Press Association (NENPA) Hall of Fame in 2019. 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. ADDRESS 20-30 DANIELS ST #301 49 CLYDE ST 22 BARRETT ST HELEN CONTREAS FT CONTREAS, MARILYN 49 WARREN AVE CITY MALDEN MALDEN MALDEN MALDEN DATE 06.17.22 06.22.22 06.17.22 06.17.22 PRICE 335000 773000 638000 505000 69 Foundry St. #321 Wakefield, MA 01880 38 Main St. Saugus We are fluent in Mandarin, Cantonese, Italian and Spanish! 42 Richard St. Saugus, MA 01906 20 Railroad Ave. Rockport (781) 558-1091 mangorealtyteam.com YOUR AREA IS POPULAR! 2 bed 1.5 bath ranch: large eat-in kitchen, living room, heated two-car garage, walk up attic, basement, front porch and outdoor patio, close to major routes, Boston, Logan Airport and more..........................................$539,000 Find us on Google and see what our clients have to say about us! 73 Plummer Ave, Winthrop MA 02152 The market is packed with buyers looking for homes in your neighborhood! If you're thinking about selling, you're in an excellent position. We know your area WELL and have many years of experience of sales with the highest return. WE want to help YOU sell for the best price and least amount of time. Please call now (781) 5581091 or email infowithmango@gmail.com for a FREE MARKET ANALYSIS, so we can discuss what is best for you! This Week's Reviews Sue and her team were amazing to work with. Their professionalism and experience was spectacular. They willingly went above and beyond to help make my family's home buying dream come true. I would strongly recommend them to anyone looking to buy or sell a house. - Joyce D. 4 Bed 1.5 Bath, sunroom, patio, deck, open concept living and dining, heated attic space, short distance to beach and park............$679,000 Sue and her team were very professional and knowledgeable during both our buying and selling process and made both transactions as easy as possible. - Eddie P. 2 Bed 2 Bath, modern condo: open concept floor plan, new appliances spacious bedroom closets, balcony with courtyard views, garage parking, two parking spots, elevators, in-home laundry, and landscaped courtyard........................for lease $2,900 Call Sue: (617) 877-4553 or Email infowithmango@gmail.com for a Free Market Analysis! 6 Overlook Dr. #409 Andover, MA 01810 2 bed 2 bath 1720 sq ft corner penthouse BRAND NEW condo in 62+ community: quartz countertops, natural light, primary suite with walk in closet and en-suite bath, guest bedroom with walk in closet and full bath, and more..........................$849,000 This listing is growing in popularity online, act quickly and call Jeanine Moulden (617) 312-2491 for more info!

THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 Page 23 # 1 Listing & Selling Office in Saugus “Experience and knowledge Provide the Best Service” Free Market Evaluations CRE CarpenitoRealEstate.com View our website from your mobile phone! 335 Central St., Saugus, MA 781-233-7300 SAUGUS - 1st AD - 7 room Multi Level home offers 2 full baths, fireplace living room, hardwood flooring, updated kitchen, spacious familyrm, 1 car gar, roomy yard, located in desirable Iron Works neighborhood........................$649,900 SAUGUS - 1st AD - Spacious 10 rm Tri-level home offers 4+ bedrms, 2 ½ baths, lvrm w/fp, hardwood flooring, eat kit w/granite, familyroom with fp, deck, large corner lot, updated roof, great for large or growing family.................... $750,000. SALEM- 1st AD - Two Family 6/5 rooms, 3/2 bedrooms, updated kitchens, replacement windows, three season porch, separate utilities, walk-up 3rd level, two car garage, located near Downtown Salem..........$899,900. SAUGUS - 1st AD - 8 rm Col offers 3 bedrms, 2 ½ baths, master bdrm with private bath & sitting room, finished lower level, fenced yard with above ground pool & patio, great location, close to everything! .....................$849,900. LYNN - 1st AD - 6 room colonial offers 1 ½ baths, living room/ dining room combination, bonus room, fresh paint and carpeting, side street location - great opportunity!....$399,900. WALTHAM - 1st AD - Westgate Condominium offers this 5 rm, 2 bdrm townhouse featuring 1 ½ baths, sunny living room, dining room, hardwood, central air, laundry, garage, convenient location..................................................... $449,900. PEABODY - 1st AD - 7 rm Col offers 4 bedrooms, 4 baths, 1st flr bedroom, lg kit w/island seating, master suite w/full bath, finished LL w/playrm, entertainment size deck, beautiful yard w/ AG pool. Great family home!...........................................$699,900 WONDERING WHAT YOUR HOME IS WORTH? CALL US FOR A FREE OPINION OF VALUE. 781-233-1401 38 MAIN STREET, SAUGUS FOR SALE FOR SALE SAUGUS - 1st AD - 4 room condo at desirable Hillview West offers 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, spacious living room leading to private patio area, updated central air/heat, one parking space, pool....................................................................$359,900. LYNN - Well-Maintained Two Family. Each unit has 5 rooms, nicely updated kitchens, spacious living & dining rooms, separate utilities. Desirable residential neighborhood off Walnut Street...........$659,900. LET US SHOW YOU OUR MARKETING PLAN TO GET YOU TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR HOME! LITTLEFIELDRE.COM COMING SOON FOR SALE - 3 BED, 2 BATH COLONIAL/ MULTI LEVEL COMPLETELY RENOVATED W/ 2 BED CARRIAGE HOUSE SAUGUS $849,000 CALL KEITH FOR MORE DETAILS FOR SALE FOR SALE - TRANQUIL SETTING WITH THIS BEAUTIFUL CENTER ENTRANCE COLONIAL. YOU WILL ENTER THIS HOME FROM THE FARMER’S PORCH. ONCE INSIDE THE FIRST FLOOR WILL OFFER A SPACIOUS EAT-IN KITCHEN, FORMAL DINING ROOM, AND A FIREPLACE FAMILY ROOM. AS WELL AS A HALF BATH WITH LAUNDRY. SECOND FLOOR OFFERS FOUR BEDROOMS. MAIN BEDROOM WILL HAVE A FULL TILE BATH WITH SEPARATE TUB AND SHOWER, AS WELL AS A WALK-IN CLOSET. THERE ARE THREE ADDITIONAL GOOD SIZE BEDROOMS AND ANOTHER FULL BATH. HARDWOOD FLOORS AND TILE THROUGHOUT. CENTRAL AIR, WALK UP ATTIC, FULL WALK OUT BASEMENT, TWO CAR GARAGE WITH PARKING FOR 6 CARS, DECK AND PATIO. STILL TIME TO CUSTOMIZE AND MAKE THIS YOUR OWN! SAUGUS $974,900 CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842 LOOKING TO BUY OR SELL? CALL JOHN DOBBYN FOR ALL YOUR REAL ESTATE NEEDS! 617-285-7117 FOR RENT - 1 BED WITH EAT-IN KITCHEN & LAUNDRY IN UNIT ON STREET PERMIT PARKING. EVERETT $1700 CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842 FOR RENT - 1 BED 1 BATH WITH LAUNDRY IN UNIT. HEAT & HOT WATER INCLUDED. 1 CAR OFF ST. PKNG SAUGUS $1800 CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842 FOR RENT COMING SOON - LOCATION LOCATION! SPLIT ENTRY RANCH WITH WALK-OUT LOWER LEVEL. PRIVACY GALORE & TOTALLY RENOVATED. LYNNFIELD CALL PENNY 781-929-7237 FOR SALE - 12 BED, 4 FAMILY 2H BATH, 4 UNIT APT. BLDG, 8 OFF-ST. PKNG IN DESIRABLE AREA IN SOMERVILLE $1,900,000 CALL DANIELLE 978-987-9535 FOR RENT FOR SALE - 2 PLUS ACRES OF RESIDENTIAL LAND. WATER AND SEWER AT SITE SAUGUS $850,000 CALL RHONDA FOR DETAILS 781-706-0842 MOBILE HOMES 3 BED, 1 BATH PEABODY $169,900 NEW 2 BED, 1 BATH 12 X 52 … TWO UNITS LEFT DANVERS $199,900

Page 24 THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, July 15, 2022 Follow Us On: COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY SALES & RENTALS Happy Summer! Sandy Juliano Broker/President A great time to think of selling or buying! Call today for a free market analysis. WE KNOW EVERETT!! Call TODAY to sell or buy with the best! FOR SALE TWO FAMILY, $849,900. UNDER AGREEMENT THREE FAMILY 46-48 OLIVER STREET EVERETT CALL SANDY FOR DETAILS! OPEN HOUSE THIS SUNDAY! 81 Elsie Street FOR SALE - TWO FAMILY, $859,900 - 81 ELSIE ST. OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, JULY 17 FROM 12:00-1:30 - CALL SANDY FOR DETAILS, 617-448-0854. CALL YOUR LOCAL REAL ESTATE PROS AT JRS! Joe DiNuzzo - Broker Associate M Norma Capuano Parziale - Agent 433 Broadway, Suite B, Everett, MA 02149 www.jrs-properties.com Open Daily From 10:00 A 5:00 PM A.M. - 5:00 P.M. Denise Matarazz - Agent Maria Scrima - Agent Follow Us On: CONDO SOLD BY SANDY AS BUYERS AGENT! OPEN HOUSE 31-33 WARREN ST. SUNDAY, JULY 17 FROM 12:00 - 1:30 CALL NORMA FOR DETAILS 617-590-9143 FOR RENT EVERETT, 2 BEDROOM WITH PARKING, 1ST FLOOR $2300/MONTH CALL NORMA 617-590-9143 CALL US FOR ALL YOUR PROPERTY RENTAL NEEDS AT 617-448-0854 Rosemarie Ciampi - Agent Mark Sachetta - Agent 617-294-1041

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