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The Advocate - A Household word for 30 years! Vol.30, No.34 -FREEwww.advocatenews.net Free Every Friday Students return to the classroom 781-286-8500 Friday, August 27, 2021 City Council hammers out parking issues at Jack Satter House Elderly beach residents protest city’s parking ordinance By Adam Swift T he installation of parking meters by the state’s DepartMayor Brian Arrigo and Superintendent of Schools Dr. Dianne Kelly welcomed fi rst grade student Lucas Angel, 6, back to school at Hill Elementary School last Wednesday morning. See page 6 for photo highlights. (Advocate photo by Tara Vocino) New high school site could be selected by October By Adam Swift W ithin the next few months, the School Building Committee could be making a fi nal recommendation on the site and design option for a new high school. During a community forum last week, the design team from project architect Perkins Eastman laid out the options that are still on the table. Three sites are still in consideration: the current high school, the former Wonderland Park site and the Revere Housing Authority property bounded by Constitution and Cushman Avenues. In addition, there are three to fi ve potential building confi gurations still under consideration for each site. “What is critical right now is looking at a handful – about 11 – options, and when we get to the end of this process in the middle of October and submit [the preferred school schematic report to the state] in late October, we need one solution,” said Robert Bell, an educational planner and programmer from Perkins Eastman. “The School Building Committee will be making the fi nal decision with input from the community and educators to take it down to one [choice].” Once that choice is made, there will be a better idea of the total overall cost of the project and total construction time. The new high school is being funded partly through the Massachusetts SITE | SEE Page 16 ment of Conservation & Recreation (DCR) along the beachside of Revere Beach Boulevard has only increased the anxiety of residents at the Jack Satter House. While parking in Revere in general, and especially along the Boulevard, is a constant problem, it is the residents of Jack Satter House, the Boulevard’s only senior housing development, who have borne the brunt of it. One of the major issues is a lack of visitor parking passes for a building where many of the residents depend on home healthcare aides and family members for assistance. Jack Satter House has been listed in the city’s parking ordinance as one of the buildings in the city not eligible for city parking permits and visitor passes for individual residents, and the more than 250 residents have had to make do with 19 visitor passes for the entire building. Monday night, on the heels of a motion made by Councillor-at-Large George Rotondo GEORGE ROTONDO Councillor-at-Large and a compromise promised by Police Chief David Callahan, Jack Satter House residents may soon see some relief for their parking issues. Callahan, who sits on the city’s Traffi c Commission, suggested the City Council forward a request to the Commission asking that Jack Satter House be removed from the list of Revere buildings not eligible for PARKING | SEE Page 17 City requests loan order for purchase of Riverside Boatyard property By Adam Swift D uring the past year, many of the questions surrounding the Riverfront Master Plan in the Gibson Park area have revolved around the future of the property at 29 Thayer Ave. Now, many of those questions about the former Riverside Boatyard are close to being answered. Last Monday night, the City Council scheduled a public hearLOAN | SEE Page 19 JOHN POWERS Ward 5 Councillor

Page 2 THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021 ANGELO’S FULL SERVICE Regular Unleaded $2.919 Mid Unleaded $2.959 Super $3.119 Diesel Fuel $3.079 "42 Years of Excellence!" 1978-2020 KERO $4.65 DEF $3.49 9 Diesel $2.859 9 HEATING OIL 24-Hour Burner Service Call for Current Price! (125—gallon minimum) DEF Available   Open an account and order online at: www.angelosoil.com (781) 231-3500 (781) 231-3003 367 LINCOLN A  A    DA ~ POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT ~ Patrick Keefe announces re-election for City Councillor Ward 4 Ward 4 Councillor Patrick Keefe with his family: son Patrick, wife Jennifer, daughter Adrianna. I www.eight10barandgrille.com We Have Reopened for Dine-In and Outside Seating every day beginning at 4 PM am thrilled to announce that I will be seeking anothWE'RE OPEN! 8 Norwood Street, Everett (617) 387-9810 STAY SAFE! er term as Revere’s Ward 4 City Councilor. I am so grateful for the trust and confi dence the voters of Revere have placed in me over my fi rst few terms in offi ce. I have worked hard to be your voice of reason on the City Council, and I look forward to ensuring your needs continue to be met by City Hall. My fellow councilors elected me as council President and served during a tumultuous 2020 year, with the pandemic and global unrest, we maintained civility and did the job we were elected to do, while serving the community at an unmatched capacity. As I always refl ect on my work it’s important for me to set realistic goals in serving the needs of our community. My greatest goal is to continue to be available and transparent to the residents not just in Ward 4 but across the entire city. I believe elected offi cials should not only be approachable and responsive but also involved. It’s hard to fully understand the work needed if you are not present on the ground level. That’s why even during a pandemic I made sure we were on the streets, dealing with issues firsthand. I like many of Revere’s residents was severely impacted during the pandemic. I watched my entire industry get shut down with no real knowledge of when it would get back to normal, so much uncertainty and fear. Rather then disappear and worry solely about ourselves, the Keefe committee got active, working with the city’s Recreation Dept, Senior Center and School department creating a food response network serving many of the residents of Revere. These were some of the most vulnerable residents, Elderly, sick, or quarantined. Many of these residents had no outside resources to help early in the pandemic. During this time, I also setup a restaurant relief fund, and healthy food distribution center for some of my 800 employees in the northeast. This was all done while furloughed. Not for personal or fi nancial gain but because it was the right thing to do. Leaders step up when it’s most diffi - cult and when the need is the greatest. During the worst times for Revere, I was proud to be part of a team that stepped up. We came together as a community, so many residents, employees and elected offi cials showed me true hope in their love for community shined. Revere deserves leaders that will step up, leaders that will be active as part of the solution, not just fi nger point and tear each other down. My campaign has always been about the positives. 18 years ago, buying my home on Kilburn Street might have been the best decision of my life. I am so proud to represent you, I Believe in Revere and I hope Revere believes in me. If you want more positive, engaged and involved leaders I humbly ask for your support this November. Thank you in advance for your support, Patrick M Keefe Jr Ward 4 Councilor “Believe in Revere” Prices subject to change Have a Happy &   FLEET

THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021 Page 3 City Council supports police grant request L By Adam Swift ast Monday night, the City Council voted to support the Police Department’s $22,040 grant application for a variety of community outreach materials, including a tip line that is compatible with cell phones. The department applied for the Fiscal Year 2021 Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant (JAG) program. According to Police Chief David Callahan, the money from this year’s request will be used for a tip411 Pro subscription, a Flock license plate reader lease, and community outreach educational materials and shirts for the community services division. “These are grants we get all the time for the department; they help us with equipment and different things that we need,” said Callahan. “Basically, we are going to purchase a few more cameras for the community; we’re going to do a 411 tip line, especially for cell phones and things like that that we don’t have. We did some research in some other communities, and they said it is extremely useful because people can remain anonymous when they text information to us.” While it was not included in the grant, several city councillors took the opportunity to ask about the possibility of the department setting up more solar-powered speed awareness signs throughout the city. “One of the things that everyone is asking for is those solar speed machines on the poles,” said Ward 2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky. “I’ve been asking for several years for several locations and I’m still waiting for those.” Some of those locations include Centennial Avenue and Standish Road, Novoselsky said. Ward 5 Councillor John Powers noted that he has also requested several of the signs for either side of Route 1A. Callahan said that some of those signs have been ordered, but they are not being funded through the JAG grant. Ward 1 Councillor Joanne McKenna said she heard one of the issues with getting the speed signs in place has been City Council approves funding for public mural projects By Adam Swift W ith the establishment of a Public Art Commission earlier this year, the city has stepped up eff orts to make Revere a hub for the arts. provements to it are welcome, because it is a gateway to our city from other communities. A lot of people do commute to the city of Revere by bicycle.” Ward 6 Councillor Richard Serino also praised the work of the city to bring public art to the underpass area. “Through the work of [Planner] Elle Baker and [Transportation Coordinator] Julie DeMauro, they are going to procure artists to do a day of art where they go and paint the underpass,” said Serino. “I thank the administration for this, and I look forward to seeing the fi nished project.” The funding for the Northern Strand Community Trail is slated for a public event in September to complement new lighting at the underpass, according to Mayor Brian Arrigo. JESSICA ANN GIANNINO Councillor-at-Large Mayor Brian Arrigo is now requesting two appropriations from the city’s Community Improvement Trust Fund totaling $50,000 for two public murals proposed by the art commission. Last Monday night, the City Council approved the appropriations. One of those murals would be at the underpass at the Northern Strand Community Trail, and the other is proposed for a spot near the Wonderland parking lot at Butler Circle. Councillor-at-Large Jessica Ann Giannino spoke in favor of the appropriations. “For anyone who hasn’t taken advantage of the trail yet, they have done a lot as far as artwork along the sides of the trail; there are beautiful lights if you go through at night,” she said. “I think any imthe sand sculptures, and looking at the building that is there now, which is a power station for the MBTA Blue Line, what a diff erence that people will see coming into our city other than that ugly building,” said Ward 2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky. that there is no one to install the base of the signs. “They have 10, they are sitting in the police department, and they don’t have anyone to install them; that’s what I’m hearing,” said McKenna. Callahan said he believes the ROTONDO George Revere (Pol. Adv.) 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Page 4 THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021 Mask mandate issued statewide for public schools Ages fi ve and older and staff required to wear masks indoors in school buildings; plan to revisit policy on Oct. 1 and adjust, if 80% are vaccinated, school-by-school As back-to-school schedules unfolded, the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education issued a statewide mask mandate for all staff and all students ages fi ve and older when they are inside school buildings. (Courtesy Photo) By Steve Freker T he speculation became a reality on Wednesday afternoon when a statewide mask mandate for most public school students was issued by state Education Commissioner Jeff rey Riley through the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (DESE). The mask mandate is presumably in response to the latest public health data which shows rising positive COVID-19 cases in both Massachusetts and statewide, largely due to the Delta variant. All students in all schools ages fi ve and older, as well as all school personnel, will be required to wear a mask that covers their nose and mouth whenever they are inside a school building. The mandate exempts students who cannot wear a mask due to medical conditions or behavioral needs, and Riley said he will revisit the mandate in the near future if and when it is warranted by public health data. Students will be allowed to remove the mask when outdoors for recess or other activities and that will remain optional for those who do want to use the mask. At this time plans are in place for traditional lunchtime held in school cafeterias. After October 1, the commissioner’s policy allows middle and high schools to lift the mask mandate for vaccinated students and staff only if at least 80% of students and staff in a school building are vaccinated. Unvaccinated students and staff would still be required to wear masks. In Malden, the School Committee voted unanimously at a special meeting held last Thursday to require Malden Public Schools staff and students ages fi ve and older to wear face coverings/masks in schools. At this time, the statewide mask mandate for schools would now supersede the local mandate. A similar move had been considered in all of The Advocate communities, but no other official votes were taken in anticipation of a statewide decision on schools and masks. As stated above, the statewide school mask mandate would be revisited October 1 for an 80 percent vaccination rate on a schoolby-school basis. At this time, about 4.5 million, or 65.4 percent, of Massachusetts’s total population has been fully vaccinated. In the age groups most affected by the school mask mandate, approximately 40 percent of all Massachusetts teens aged 12-15 and just under half of all Mass. residents aged 16-19 have been vaccinated. All three categories, according to state and national fi gures, are higher than the national percentages.

THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021 Page 5 ~ THE REVERE BEAUTIFICATION COMMITTEE ~ RBC announces its latest “Beautiful Home” T his week’s “Beautiful Home” is located on Garfi eld Avenue. As one drives by this pretty blue house, it is evident why it was selected for this honor. A lovely stone wall encloses the front of the property and is matched by a smaller version of the wall enclosing the fl ower beds located on both sides of the front entry stairs. Both of these fl ower beds are fi lled with multicolored fl owers, such as yellow and pink oxeye daisies, vibrant pink impatiens and white impatiens. Above the fl ower beds are window boxes fi lled to the brim with orange, pink and white impatiens. An open porch is on the right side of the house. Two rocking chairs sit on the porch – creating an invitation to sit down and relax. To make the porch more inviting, there is a large planter fi lled with red geraniums, yellow fl owers perched on an antique milk container, and two hanging baskets fi lled to overfl owing with multicolored fl owers of different varieties. To the right of the house there is a child’s wooden chair. A container fi lled with pink, white and rose fl owers sits on the chair; other fl owers are behind the chair 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. From left to right are RBC Chairperson Eleanor Vieira, “Beautiful Home” owner Sheryle Morgan and RBC Treasurer Karen Knapp. RevereTV Spotlight R evereTV has kept up with all kinds of community events over this past week. The Shirley Ave. Night Market took place a few weeks ago now, but RevereTV was there to capture all the sights and sounds. This was a community event on the beach end of Shirley Avenue that featured vendors, food and music. Check out the RevereTV Community Channel and RTV YouTube for a video package with the highlights from that night. The Revere Farmers’ Market is still happening every Friday afternoon on the American Legion Lawn on Broadway. Not only does the market have vendors with products to purchase, but there are many activities to participate in for free. A few activities are Salsa Dancing and Zumba! RevereTV ventured to the market to check out the dance classes and speak with the instructors. To see what this is all about, watch RevereTV’s coverage of last week’s Salsa Dancing class playing on the Community Channel and YouTube. Another highlight reel to watch is from the annual Bocce on the Beach. This was a fundraising event in the form of a bocce tournament to benefi t the upkeep and renovations of the Rumney Marsh Burial Ground. The video package for this event includes interviews with participants, the event hosts and even Mayor Brian Arrigo. You may see some other familiar faces, too! Watch what happened at Bocce on the Beach on the Community Channel and YouTube. The Moroccan Cultural Festival is an annual large-scale, community-run event that has been taking place in Revere over the past few years. There was plenty of entertainment, such as dancing and a fashion show, vendors and food that celebrates Moroccan culture. To see all that happened at the festival, watch RevereTV’s coverage of the event playing on the channel over the next week or so, and on all of RTV’s social media. Be on the lookout for the premiere of “Cooking Made Simple” episode 4 on Facebook, YouTube and television. Community member and chef Kelly Armetta took to the kitchen to whip up another summer dinner dish. To see what Armetta makes this week, watch “Cooking Made Simple” on all RevereTV outlets. The RevereTV Community Channel is 8 and 1072 for Comcast subscribers, and 3 and 614 on RCN. All community event coverage and community member programming airs on that channel and on RevereTV’s YouTube and Facebook pages. 14 Proctor Avenue, Revere (781) 284-5657 and a metal heart outline completes the picture. The owners of the house are Sheryle and Richard Morgan. They have owned the house for 34 years and do the landscaping themselves. It takes them approximately three to four hours a week to care for their property. The Revere Beautifi cation Committee (RBC) congratulates the Morgan family and urges all residents to do as the Morgan’s have done – take pride in your property by cleaning and beautifying it.

Page 6 THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021 Students return to the classroom S By Tara Vocino tudents headed back to school early Holding up her new backpack was incoming second grader Yoursa Sore, 7, who said it feels weird – in a good way – to be back. Mayor Brian Arrigo said back-to-school is an exciting day in the city. Wednesday morning at Hill Elementary School. For the fi rst time since early March 2020, all 11 Revere Public Schools will be open at full capacity for the 2021 school year, resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic. Mayor Brian Arrigo and Superintendent of Schools Dr. Dianne Kelly welcomed students and distributed crayons to Hill students. Students and parents waited their turn. Danielle Mason with her fi rst grade class at at Hill Elementary School last Wednesday morning. Buses arrived for drop-off . Teachers checked in students for class. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino) Superintendent of Schools Dr. Dianne Kelly said the schools have worked with the Dept. of Public Health to ensure a safe return due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Superintendent of Schools Dr. Dianne Kelly greeted students Jose and Yeimy Lazo. (Paid Pol. Adv) Hill Elementary School Principal Melissa Lomas (at right) greeted students as they entered the building.

THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021 Page 7 City Council honors Moroccan Athletic Club members AUTOTECH 1989 SINCE Is your vehicle ready for the Summer Season?!! Recharge your vehicle's AC for the warm weather! Includes up to 1 LB. of Refrigerant* (*Most Vehicles/Some Restrictions May Apply) AC SPECIAL Only $69.95 DRIVE IT - PUSH IT - TOW IT! CASH FOR YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR SUV! 2012 HONDA PILOT EXL 2010 CADILLAC ESCALADE Loaded, One Owner, Sunroof, Back-up Camera, Warranty, Only 101K Miles! TRADES WELCOME! $14,900 Financing Available! Premium Package, Loaded, Warranty, Looks, 170K Highway Miles, Runs & Drives Great! TRADES WELCOME! $12,900 (781) 321-8841 • (617) 571-9869 Easy 1236 EasternAve • Malden EddiesAutotech.com The City Council presented Certifi cates of Appreciation to the Moroccan Athletic Club for their outstanding performances at the track & fi eld events in Rome, Georgia. The team earned seven medals won by fi ve runners and a shot-putter. Shown with the coaches and athletes are City Council President Anthony Zambuto and Ward 2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky. (Courtesy photo) Promises Made, Promises Kept. • A new Point of Pines Fire Station that will provide a quicker response time to the Pines, Oak Island, lower Revere Street and the Boulevard. • A major cleaning of the Eastern County Ditch, replacing and relining several thousands feet of sewer drainage lines and rebuilding of the drainage pumps on Rice Avenue and Dunn Road. • Thousands of feet of decaying waterlines have been replaced, this will provide residents with cleaner household water and stronger water pressure to fire hydrants in the event of a fire. • Worked to ensure the demolition of the dangerous buildings on the Wonderland property. After a meeting with the Department of Environmental Protection, the asbestos abatement began, and the buildings were demolished within six months. • A new sewerage pump station on the Lynnway, that has replaced the old station which malfunctioned for years. Re-Elect John F. Powers Ward 5 City Councilor On Tuesday, Sept. 14th Keep Your Full Time City Councilor working for you. Paid Political Advertisement Vehicle! We Pay Cash For Your Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma

Page 8 THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021 ~ LETTER-TO-THE-EDITOR ~ Councillor applauds DPW for storm efforts Dear Editor, First and Foremost, thank you to the Revere Dept. of Public Works (DPW) for acting so quickly on Seawall Street last Monday night into the morning. The wa~ FLASHBACK ~ 55th in a series of photos     In 2010, the Revere High School Girls Soccer Team ran their annual car wash outside the Central Fire Station on Broadway raising money for their program. Recognize anyone?       Attorneys at Law                   14 Norwood St., Everett, MA 02149 Phone: (617) 387-4900 Fax: (617) 381-1755  John Mackey, Esq. * Katherine M. Brown, Esq. Patricia Ridge, Esq. Everett Aluminum 10 Everett Ave., Everett 617-389-3839 Owned & operated by the Conti family since 1958 • 57 Years! “Same name, phone number & address for family since 1958 • 63 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! Summer is Here! ter was fl ooding the street from the 17-18 block to the 80 block of Seawall, thereabout. I am wondering if we can have something done to help these low lying areas when we have high tides and heavy rain. Clearly we need better fl ood resiliency strategies that the Mayor and DPW are working towards. That said, I hope The Revere Advocate could recognize the Revere DPW for weathering the storm and helping keep Revere going in the right direction. Thank you to Chris, Nick and Joe who came to help mitigate the fl ooding on Seawall Street. The DPW is never fully recognized for the work they do. It’s important work and it is what keeps our City moving forward! Thank you. Signed, George Rotondo

THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021 Page 9 ~ POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT ~ Councilor Powers announces bid for re-election in Ward 5 “My name is John Powers; and it has been my honor to represent the citizens of Ward 5 on the Revere City Council. Today I am proud to announce my candidacy for re-election to the Ward 5 Council seat. I am grateful beyond words for the trust that the citizens of Ward 5 have placed in me; and I humbly ask for your support again, so that I may continue to serve you and your families and we may together continue the progress we have begun in the great city of Revere. For those of you who may not know me, please allow me to tell you a bit about myself, about some of the achievements of which I am most proud, and about some of what I still hope to accomplish in the future. I am a lifelong Revere resident, a homeowner and a taxpayer. Among my many City Council roles, I have been elected by my colleagues to three terms as City Council President. I have also been appointed to four terms as Chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, which is responsible for reviewing and approving the annual city budget, and as Chairman of the Public Safety Committee, which provides oversight of the Police and Fire Departments. I especially pride myself for serving as a full-time City Councilor – that is my only job. I truly enjoy spending every day working on important city issues and providing constituent services. If you see fi t to re-elect me, I pledge to remain accessible to all Revere citizens, easily reachable, and unfailingly responsive to anyone who needs my assistance, who has a question or concern, or who just wants his or her voice heard. When last I stood for re-election in 2019, I noted our successes on a number of fronts especially relevant to Ward 5; and I am pleased to say that much progress has been made since then with even more to come: A New Point of Pines Fire Station: This is an issue on which I had long been a vocal and persistent advocate. By 2019, we had secured a commitment from the Mayor and City Council to build a new fi re station on the Lynnway to better serve the Point of Pines, Riverside, Oak Island and Lower Revere Street neighborhoods as well as the city as a whole. Since then, we have approved bond funding for a new stateof-the-art facility, which is now in fi nal design. Demolition of the long-vacant Alden Mills Fire Station is already underway; new construction will begin later this year. The new fi re station should Upgraded Neighborhood JOHN POWERS Ward 5 Councilor be fully operational by late 2022. A New Vision for the Revere RiverFront District: By 2019, we had successfully fought two proposed residential projects for the vacant Riverside Boat Works property on Thayer Avenue that were opposed by the Riverside community; and we then passed new zoning that precluded of any dense multi-family redevelopment of that property. Since then, we have completed a community-based Masterplan for the RiverFront District as a whole that envisions the conversion of the Riverside Boat Works property to a community rowing/educational center, that would be an integral new element of an expanded and more resilient Gibson Park; the residential redevelopment of the former G&J salvage yard with an attractive and accessible waterfront; and a reconfi gured transportation network that will directly link the district to Revere as a whole – eliminating the current need to use Mills Avenue to get to and from Gibson Park. The RiverFront Masterplan was approved by both the Revere Planning Board and City Council; and it is already being implemented in many critical respects, including the prospective city purchase of Riverside Boat Works, which is in the fi nal stages of negotiation with its current owner. Improved Neighborhood Infrastructure: With the full support of the Mayor and his DPW staff , we have continued to repave streets and replace sidewalks throughout Ward 5; and less visibly but at least equally important, we have continued to upgrade our water, sewer, drainage and pumping facilities throughout the district. At long last, with my proactive support, we have fully excavated and restored the Eastern County Ditch, which is vital to fl ood control in Ward 5 and has already resulted in virtually eliminating area fl ooding in major storm events. Playgrounds: With the full support of the Mayor and his Community Development staff , we have continued to improve our recreational facilities in Ward 5 for both our younger and our older residents, with new playgrounds at Gibson and DeStoop Parks and the Paul Revere School, with the renovation of Ambrose Park about to get underway. We are also working with DCR on a senior-oriented renovation of Sullivan Park on Revere Beach Boulevard, which will be linked to the Bay Road neighborhood via the new pedestrian bridge at Sachem Street. New Public Schools: Following-up on our support for construction of the fi ve new public schools including the Paul Revere Elementary School and the Rumney Marsh Middle School, both of which serve children in Ward 5, we are working with the Mayor and the School Superintendent on planning for a new Revere High School. This much needed facility recently received essential initial approval from the Massachusetts School Building Authority, which will underwrite a major portion of its cost; and we are currently in the feasibility planning stage. Municipal bonding will be supported by the property tax proceeds from new development at Suffolk Downs and elsewhere in Revere. RE-ELECTION | SEE Page 16 J& $45 yd. S LANDSCAPE & MASONRY CO. MULCH SALE! Discount Spring Special PICK-UP or DELIVERY AVAILABLE 617-389-1490 Premium Hemlock or Pitch Black BELOW WHOLESALE COSTS LANDSCAPERS WELCOME $4 yd. $40 yd. $3 yd.                                                                                      

Page 10 THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021 Memorial pole dedicated to World War II Seaman and late Malden St. resident By Tara Vocino A memorial pole was dedicated to the late World War II United States Navy Seaman Joseph Molinaro in front of his Malden Street home on Saturday. Revere Veterans Service Officer Marc Silvestri said he puts on these veterans’ dedications for special families in the city. Dedication attendees, in front of the memorial pole, seated from left to right: wife Josephine Freni, daughter Jodi Freni, son-inlaw Victor Mancini and granddaughter Julia Freni (far right). Standing from left to right: Veterans Service Offi cer/Councillor-at-Large candidate Marc Silvestri, Ward 6 Councillor Richard Serino, City Council President Anthony Zambuto, City Council Vice President Gerry Visconti, granddaughter Olivia Freni, Craig Rose, daughter Carol Ann Mancini, Ward 2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky, Ward 4 Councillor Patrick Keefe, friend Ralph DiCicco (in back), son Richard Freni and Father John Sheridan. St. Mary of Assumption Parish Father John Sheridan prays. A memorial pole was dedicated to World War II United States Navy Seaman Joseph Molinaro on Malden Street on Saturday. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino) Joseph Molinaro’s son, Richard Freni, said his father was a St. Mary of Assumption Holy Name Society member. Molinaro’s granddaughter Olivia Freni sings the National Anthem. Shown from left to right: daughter Carol Ann Mancini, granddaughters Olivia and Julia Freni, grandson Richard Freni Jr., daughter Jodi Freni and son Richard Freni Sr. Seated: wife Josephine Molinaro. Joseph Molinaro’s family members unveiled his sign in front of their Malden Street home; shown from left to right are son-in-law Victor Mancini, grandson Richard Freni Jr. and daughter Jodi Freni; at far right is son Richard Freni Sr.

THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021 Page 11 Annual National Night Out a Great Success L ocal, county and state police offi cers, along with the Suff olk County District Attorney’s Offi ce connected with the community during National Night Out at the Garfi eld School recently. Police Chief David Callahan, Fire Chief Christopher Bright with First Asst. Dan Mulhern of the Suffolk County District Attorney’s offi ce, along with members of the DA’s offi ce. Reaching out to the citizens were, from left; Sgt. Kevin Colannino, Offi cer Jerry Salvati, and Denise Papasodora of the Revere PD Records Dept. Members of the Suff olk County District Attorney’s Offi ce are shown with Mayor Brian Arrigo during the recent National Night Out at the Garfi eld School. (Photos courtesy of the Revere Police Dept.) SAVINGS NOW & DOWN THE ROAD! Ward 2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky with Mayor Brian Arrigo. Auto Loans as low as 1.99% PURCHASE or REFINANCE Apply FAST at massbaycu.org or call (617) 269-2700 APR* SOUTH BOSTON – EVERETT – QUINCY – SEAPORT *APR=Annual Percentage Rate. APR includes a .25% discount for automatic payments. 1.99% APR is for terms up to 48 months. Monthly payment is $21.69 per $1,000 borrowed. 2.24% APR without automatic payments. Monthly payment without automatic payments is $21.80 per $1,000 borrowed. Other rates and terms are available. Up to 105% financing based on NADA retail value. Qualification restrictions apply. Rate, term, and approval based on credit worthiness. Rates are subject to change without notice. Sgt. Joe Internicola hand a youngster a sticker during the event. Federally insured by NCUA

Page 12 THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021 Visconti and family host pizza luncheon for seniors C By Tara Vocino ity Council Vice President/Councillor-at-Large Gerry Visconti sponsored a pizza luncheon at the Rossetti-Cowan Senior Center on Tuesday. Mystic Valley Elder Services Meals Coordinator Karen Knapp cuts cake. Joseph Canzano provided musical and comic entertainment. Shown during Tuesday’s luncheon at the Rossetti-Cowan Senior Center: Standing from left to right: Wanda Antonucci, candidate for reelection Councillor-at-Large Gerry Visconti (holding a Team Visconti for Revere bag), Vincent Cammarata and Doris Kaufman; seated from left to right: “RoRo” Cattoggio, Joseph Cattoggio, Rose Belmonte and Joseph Belmonte. Senior Pattie Manzo slow dances with Gerry Visconti. Seated from left to right: seniors Marie Cardella, Barbara Stoddard, Kathleen Brennan and Adelina Rotondo. Standing from left to right: seniors Joseph Picardi and Mary Pecoraro. Senior Center Volunteer Coordinator Ed Deveau dances with senior Francine Cataldo. Shown from left to right: School Committee member/Senate candidate Anthony D’Ambrosio, City Council Vice President/Councillor-at-Large Gerry Visconti and Councillor-at-Large/State Rep. Jessica Giannino. Standing from left to right: City Council Vice President/Councillor-at-Large Gerry Visconti, Councillor-at-Large/State Rep. Jessica Giannino, School Committee member/Senate candidate Anthony D’Ambrosio and Anton Todisco. Seated from left to right: Pattie Manzo, Mary MacDonald, Rose Napolitano and Elaine Repucci.

THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021 Page 13 Seated from left to right: William Reedy, Agnes Ferrilli and Thomas Berube. Standing from left to right: School Committee member/State Senate candidate Anthony D’Ambrosio, Councillor-at-Large/State Rep. Jessica Giannino, Ty Smith, Bart Campanella, Gerry Visconti and Christine Berube. Shown from left to right: Joseph, Danielle, Sofi a, Gerry, Camryn Carrillo and Gerry Visconti behind the pizza display. Shown from left to right: Danielle Visconti, Sofi a Visconti and Camryn Carrillo served food. From left to right: State Senate candidate Anthony D’Ambrosio, Councillor-at-Large candidate for reelection Gerry Visconti, wife Danielle Visconti and State Representatives Jessica Giannino and Jeff Turco. We can help you buy a house. So you can create a home. WHETHER YOU’RE READY TO BUY OR REFINANCE, WE’LL GUIDE YOU THROUGH THE WHOLE PROCESS. TALK TO ONE OF OUR RESIDENTIAL LENDERS TODAY.               WWW.EVERETTBANK .COM Brothers Gerry and Joseph Visconti served pizza to guests.         NMLS #443050 Member FDIC Member DIF

Page 14 THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021 GREATER BOSTON LEAGUE NOTEBOOK: Revere HS Patriots name football captains for 2021 season MHS football and Coach Exilhomme bust out for scrimmage action Saturday; EHS’s Jason Maitre poised for big season for BC Eagles The fast pace of high school preseason football continues this week for Malden High School football and fi rst-year Head Coach Witche Exilhomme. Malden football opened camp By Steve Freker L ou Cicatelli is pleased as punch that space is at a premium at venerable Della Russo Stadium in the heart of Revere on Park Avenue. That’s because it could mean only one thing if the home of the Patriots football program is bursting at the seams in August: Numbers are great in preseason camp! Coach Cicatelli and his enthusiastic staff welcomed nearly 70 prospects to the stadium on Friday, the fi rst day of preseason workouts for Massachusetts high school football teams. After several days of “just helmets,” Revere put on the pads for several days of limited and then full contact for the fi rst time since the past spring “Fall 2” season. Revere High football will put some of its early lessons to use tomorrow afternoon when the Patriots kick off their scrimmage schedule by hosting Hamilton-Wenham at 2:30 p.m. at Della Russo Stadium. Revere will also scrimmage against Northeast Metro Tech on Friday, Sept. 3 at 10 a.m. at home, all in preparation for its regular season and home opener vs. former Northeastern Conference (NEC) foe Peabody High on Friday, Sept. 10 at 6 p.m. in Revere. “It’s one of our largest turnouts on Friday along with the rest of the over 300 high school programs in the state, and Coach Exilhomme said he and his staff are pleased with the early results. “We have good numbers and a lot of hard-working players who have started the preseason,” said Coach Exilhomme, himself a 2012 Malden High School graduate and former three-year Golden Tornado varsity starter. Malden will get to work against an opponent tomorrow, Saturday, is eligible for the National Football League (NFL) draft following this season. Coming out of Everett High as a Class of 2018 senior after playing his fi nal high school season for the Tide in 2017, Maitre was ranked as the #1 football prospect in Massachusetts and was heavily recruited, though he committed to the Eagles during his junior year of high school. A native of Orlando, Fla., Maitre Jason Maitre, a former Everett High standout, is in his fourth season as a Boston College Eagle defensive back. (Courtesy Photos) MHS season opener is set Medford at 10 a.m. at Macdonald for Sept. 16 vs. Whittier Tech The Golden Tornado footMalden High sophomore receiver Felix DaCosta burst free from the drill during the fi rst day of preseason camp at Macdonald Stadium in Malden last Friday. Malden will scrimmage Chelsea High at 10 a.m. at home on Saturday. (Advocate Photo by Steve Freker) for preseason camp in a while,” said coach Cicatelli. Coach Cicatelli said a lot of fi rst-year and fi rst-time players are learning the ropes, and he is pleased with how the experienced players are interacting. This week Revere Football announced four captains who will lead the team this season; they are Augusto Goncalves, Elmahdi Elkeaouakibi and Wilmer Rodriguez, who are all seniors, and Max Doucette, a junior. **** MHS and first-year head coach Exilhomme eye fi rst test of season on Saturday August 28 when the Golden Tornados welcome Greater Boston Leaguers Chelsea and Somerville to Macdonald Stadium at 10:00 a.m. for a three-team, jamboreestyle scrimmage. While Somerville does appear on Malden’s regular season schedule, Chelsea does not in 2021. It is expected that the Red Devils will reappear as a GBL league opponent for Malden on the 2022 slate. Chelsea is easing its way into the GBL fold this fall, playing three GBL opponents – Revere, Medford and Somerville – in football. The Red Devils are playing a full GBL league slate in other sports. **** ball regular season schedule opens on Thursday, September 16 when Malden hosts non-leaguer Whittier Tech at Macdonald Stadium at 6 p.m. On Friday, Sept. 24, Malden hits the road for a 7 p.m. game at two-time defending Division 4 Super Bowl Champ Melrose. The Tornados then stay on the road against Greater Boston League opponents. On Friday, October 1, Malden is at Dilboy Stadium for a 6:00 p.m. kickoff versus Somerville. On October 8, Malden takes on the Revere High Patriots at Harry Della Russo Stadium at 6 p.m. Malden plays its only Saturday game of the schedule on October 16, traveling to historic Manning Field in Lynn, the home fi eld of the legendary Harry Agganis, for a 1:00 p.m. game vs. GBL league member Lynn Classical Rams. Friday, October 22 is Homecoming for Malden; the Tornadoes host the Lynn English Bulldogs – another GBL league game – at 6 p.m. Malden stays on the GBL streak when it hosts the Everett Crimson Tide on Friday, October 29 at 6 p.m. That night features an extra special addition as the 2021 Golden Tornado Hall of Fame inductees will be introduced at halftime. The weekends of November 5 and November 12 will feature postseason games versus Division 3 opponents, and the regular season will conclude with the 138th Thanksgiving Day matchup, with Malden hosting traditional rival Stadium in Malden. **** Former EHS star Jason Maitre set to soar for the BC Eagles It’s “T minus eight days” for defensive back Jason Maitre and the Boston College Eagles. On Saturday, September 4, the BC football squad will spice up the Labor Day Weekend when it opens its regular season and home schedule with a noon game versus visiting Colgate. It will be the fi rst of two non-league games to start the season for BC. The following Saturday on September 11 at 3:30, BC will take a short hop down the Mass. Turnpike to play UMass Amherst at McGuirk Stadium in Amherst. Maitre, a 5-10, 185 lb. cornerback, is poised for a breakout season for the Eagles, in this, his redshirt junior year of competition. A 2018 Everett High graduate, Maitre is in his fourth year with the BC program. He has two more years of eligibility with the Eagles and moved with his family to Boston when he was 12. He is a Communications major at BC. He played in two games in the 2018 season as a true freshman, before redshirting, and recorded two tackles. In the 2019 season, Maitre was a redshirt freshman, appearing in 11 games and breaking into the starting lineup for six games – recording 34 tackles and two interceptions. One of the picks he returned for a touchdown against NC State. In 2020, Maitre again started six games, appeared in 11 games and had 32 tackles and one interception. He recorded a season-high eight tackles in a win over Georgia Tech. Maitre is already penciled in as an Opening Day starter and is poised for a big season as he enters his fi rst professional draft-eligible year of collegiate play. **** Around the League Dracut has hired former Ayer Shirley coach Jermaine McKenzie to head up its football program. Before coaching A-S for one season, McKenzie spent two years as head coach at Bishop Brady High School in Concord, N.H. He has served as an assistant at Boston FOOTBALL | SEE Page 20 Jason Maitre covered a Syracuse receiver in a game played last season.

THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021 Page 15 ~ LETTER TO THE EDITOR ~ Back to school can’t be business as usual this year Dear Editor: Back to school season is here! As students prepare to return to the classroom in-person we must ensure our children have the college and career support they need. I’m Jacqueline Chavez, a public school teacher and education policy specialist running for the Revere School Committee because I have the continue my commitment to ensure every student in Revere has access to the same support and resources that I had. I will do this by: • expanding access to internships and college, scholarship, and FAFSA workshops for all juniors and seniors Jacqueline Chavez, candidate for Revere School Committee, is pictured with her fi eld director and former teacher Corinne Thomas during Chavez’s canvassing kickoff . (Courtesy Photos) classroom and policy experience to ensure our children are prepared to succeed in K-12 and beyond. The 2020 Census data indiJacqueline Chavez, candidate for Revere School Committee, is pictured with a supporter during last week’s canvassing. cates Revere had the largest population increase in all of Massachusetts over the last ten years. We must continue our commitment to equitably serving all students in our community as it grows so that every student has the tools to fulfi ll their potential. Many of our Revere families say the School Committee must do more to prepare students for success after graduation. I have the personal and professional experience to support our students in pursuing further education to meet their career goals. As a Gates Millennium and Hispanic Scholarship Fund Scholar, I received my undergraduate (Bachelor’s in Political Science and International Relations) and graduate (Master’s in Education and Social Change) degrees debt free. I wouldn’t have had this opportunity without my high school counselor and the resources in my school district. This experience led me to start a scholarship fund to provide fi rst-generation college students scholarships for college and certifi - cation training programs. In the past seven years we have given over $15,000 to students! As committeewoman, I will • ensuring equitable distribution of COVID-19 relief funds Our students deserve the best, and that comes with experienced, dedicated leadership. As a teacher, scholarship fund director, and education policy specialist, I’m committed to ensuring all students, families and educators have access to high-quality support and opportunities for college and career success. Sincerely, Jacqueline Chavez Candidate for Revere School Committee Vote: November 2, 2021 Website: chavez4revere.com Email: info@chavez4revere.com Facebook & Instagram: @chavez4revere

Page 16 THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021 RE-ELECTION | FROM Page 9 Transportation Projects: We have continued to work in concert with the Mayor and his Community Development staff and with DOT, DCR and the MBTA to improve transportation facilities and services on North Shore Road, Revere Beach Boulevard and American Legion Highway in Ward 5 to address the persistent problem of regional commuting through Revere to/from Boston. This multi-jurisdictional process is always slower than we all want it to be; but recently there has been encouraging progress on three important regional rail initiatives for which I have been a primary advocate: Congresswoman Katherine Clark has recently approved $4M for planning of a new regional rail station at Wonderland, linked to the Blue Line; the current Transportation Bond Bill includes $25M for the construction of such a regional rail station, for which I testifi ed along with Governor Baker and Mayor Arrigo; and DOT has recently designated the regional rail line through Revere as the Environmental Justice Corridor, with a priority for its electrifi cation to allow for “transit frequency and transit fares” on our regional rail. In addition, of particular interest to Ward 5, I was instrumental in supporting the commencement of design work on the proposed new roundabout for the RiverFront District, in successfully opposing DCR traffi c meters on the residential side of Revere Beach Boulevard, and in renovating the newly landscaped traffi c island at Butler Circle. Job Development Initiatives: Since 2019, we have worked to create new Revere job opportunities with the rezoning and reactivation of the former NECCO property in Ward 5 by Amazon, the proposed new Amazon facility to replace the vacant Showcase Cinema in Ward 6, the ongoing redevelopment of the Revere portion of the former Suffolk Downs racetrack in Wards 1 and 2, and – now that it has fi nally been cleared for redevelopment at my insistence – the prospective commercial revitalization of the former Wonderland racetrack in Ward 5. These development initiatives will eventually increase the number of job opportunities in and for Revere by threeto-four-fold. These are just a few of the Public Hearing Notice City of Revere, MA Proposed Loan Order $175,000 – DPW Backhoe Bonds Notice is hereby given that the Revere City Council will conduct a public hearing on Monday evening, September 27, 2021 at 6:00 p.m. in the City Councillor Joseph A. DelGrosso City Council Chamber, Revere City Hall, 281 Broadway, Revere, MA 02151 relative to the following proposed loan order: That $175,000 is appropriated to pay costs of purchasing a backhoe for the Department of Public Works, including the payment of all costs incidental and related thereto; that to meet this appropriation, the Treasurer, with the approval of the Mayor, is authorized to borrow said amount under and pursuant to Chapter 44, Section 7(I) of the General Laws, or pursuant to any other enabling authority, and to issue bonds or notes of the City therefor. That any premium received by the City upon the sale of any bonds or notes approved by this order, less any such premium applied to the payment of the costs of issuance of such bonds or notes, may be applied to the payment of costs approved by this order in accordance with Chapter 44, Section 20 of the General Laws, thereby reducing the amount authorized to be borrowed to pay such costs by a like amount.                    “Commonwealth” ) to qualify under Chapter 44A of the General Laws any and all bonds of the City authorized to be borrowed pursuant to this loan order, and to provide such information and execute such           connection therewith.                         City Hall, Revere, Massachusetts 02151, Monday through Thursday from 8:15 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. and Friday 8:15 A.M. to 12:15 P.M. Attest: Ashley E. Melnik City Clerk August 27, 2021 many issues and opportunities for which I have fought on behalf of the residents of Ward 5; and they will continue to require informed attention and leadership in the next two years and beyond. I believe that my performance to date as your City Councillor refl ects the experience and expertise, the vision and understanding, and the dedication and leadership that I will continue to bring to this exceptionally broad range of civic and community responsibilities and that make me ideally positioned to continue to serve you and the city. Revere is at an exciting time in its history. The direction we take and the choices that we make in the coming years will determine whether we reach our economic, commercial, and civic potential as a community. It is on that basis that I again humbly ask you, the Revere residents of Ward 5, for your vote in the primary on Tuesday, September 14. SITE | FROM Page 1 School Building Authority grant program. Bell said there are several overarching concepts that the designers are trying to carry through at any potential site, including creating a heart of the school that can also be used by the whole community, creating classroom clusters and connecting indoor and outdoor spaces for learning and activities. “There were six sites that were under consideration in the preliminary design program, and at the end of that, three sites were moved forward into the preferred schematic design,” said Dawn Guarriello, a designer at Perkins Eastman. The site with the largest number of alternative options is the current high school site, which could include building two new three-story classroom wings and then taking down the balance of the existing building to the west of the Field House to build a new auditorium, administrative offi ce and Freshman Academy. This plan would include the renovation of the existing high school Field House. Other variations at the high school site include building the ~ OP-ED ~ Fiore Opposes 291-Unit Riverside Building R ecently, I joined several of my friends and neighbors in opposing yet another massive residential building project here in Revere. This time, we attended a Conservation Commission meeting to voice our opposition to a 291-unit building being proposed. Our community is being inundated by construction projects just like this one. With each passing special permit approval, we are seeing our streets further clogged with traffi c and our quality of life diminished. Lifelong Revere residents are fi nding it harder and harder to stay here because of the skyrocketing rental rates due to these buildings. I have to ask, “What are we doing here and why are we allowing this?” We have always been a closeclassroom wings at four stories each and using a smaller footprint, or building an all-new three-story high school on the Erricola Park portion of the high school property and then recreating the fi elds once the old high school is torn down. “This would allow the existing building to function on site during the duration of construction,” said Guarriello. The options at Wonderland include building a new three- or four-story high school on the southern end of the site, which is the highest ground on the property. The downsides of the Wonderland site include more diffi - cult access for students and the fact that the City of Revere doesn’t currently own the property and would incur additional costs to purchase it. The third site is the Revere Housing Authority property, which would eliminate about 150 housing authority units. Those units would have to be replaced, either elsewhere in the city or incorporated into the high school property, depending on the plan. Superintendent of Schools Dr. Dianne Kelly said there have been discussions with the Revere Housing Authority about the feasibility of using that site, and she noted that at this time no fi nal site knit community and our elected offi cials and their appointees are allowing out-of-town developers to dictate the terms of their entry into this city. We are getting little to no community benefi ts from these projects and are suff ering more and more with each passing day. Even worse is the impact they are having on pushing people out of our city. I am running for the Ward 5 City Council seat because I have had enough. I know many of the residents of our great city have as well. We need to put an end to these special permits and developers who don’t care about our community. We must develop a comprehensive plan for our community that puts Revere residents fi rst. I humbly ask for your support on Sept. 14th! has been selected. “The thing that makes this an attractive idea is that it’s in the middle of the city, so it would largely be accessible by most of Revere’s residents,” said Kelly. “It would enable a lot of kids to walk to school. The issue with the Wonderland site is that it’s blocked by the commuter rail and by highways, so when you think about kids walking to school, that would really be a worry.” She said that if a Wonderland option is chosen the schools would work with the state on potential overpasses and pedestrian walkways to make it safe for students. The hope is to build a new high school off -site, Kelly said, to set in motion a larger plan that could ease overcrowding throughout the district by converting the old high school into a central middle school. “That would allow us to convert at least some of the middle schools into elementary schools, and that would alleviate the overcrowding we currently have across the district,” said the superintendent. However, Kelly said she believes all the building options still on the table are viable. “When one is ultimately selected, we’ll make it work and it will be great for the kids and great for the community,” said Kelly.

THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021 Page 17 PARKING | FROM Page 1 individual visitor passes for residents. While Jack Satter House residents in attendance at Monday night’s meeting were happy to hear that, there was a bit of confusion and disappointment during the debate to get to that point. The original motion proposed by Rotondo asked that the mayor request the Traffi c Commission to provide resident parking passes for the residents of Jack Satter House and that 10 home care provider parking passes be provided to the administration of Jack Satter House for their use. Rotondo also asked the mayor to request that the city’s state legislators investigate the feasibility of providing visitor passes for residents at Jack Satter House and other properties along Revere Beach Boulevard. “The people who are aff ected the most are the residents at the Satter House and the seniors along the boulevard,” said Rotondo. “Since the meters down at Revere Beach have taken up much of the parking down there, people throughout Revere Beach Boulevard are older, and need care. Sometimes that care provider can be a family member.” Rotondo, who has worked as a nurse for a home healthcare provider, said it can be extremely hard to get a pass as a healthcare provider to get parking. “With what we have currently in place from the DCR, if a nurse were to have to change Northeast Metro Tech receives $61K Skills Capital Grant By Christopher Roberson WAKEFIELD – Northeast Metropolitan Regional Vocational High School (Northeast Metro Tech) recently received a $61,000 Skills Capital Grant to “upgrade and modernize equipment in the health assisting and dental assisting programs.” The grant is part of this year’s $9.7 million eff ort from the Baker-Polito Administration to provide 47 institutions with funding to prepare students for careers in industries such as health care, manufacturing and information technology. In addition to this year’s grant, Northeast Metro Tech received $250,000 from the Skills Capital Grant Program last year and $106,320 in 2019. “The Skills Capital Grants have helped give thousands of young people opportunities in high-demand jobs and the grants have had a tremendous impact on students, schools and local businesses,” said Governor Charlie Baker. “These signifi cant investments made over the past six years in this program with our partners in the Legislature will help train students to adapt to the changing needs of our economy.” Since the program was launched in 2015, approximately 40,000 students have benefi tted from 387 grants totaling $102 million. During that time, 68 percent of the grants have gone to public high schools and vocational schools, 24 percent have gone to colleges and eight percent have gone to community organizations. To be eligible for a Skills Capital Grant, an institution must show “partnerships with local businesses as well as align curriculum and credentials with industry demand to maximize hiring opportunities.” “Massachusetts, like the rest of the country, will face workforce challenges in the next few years, but we are poised to handle them better because of programs like the Skills Capital Grants,” said Lt. Governor Karyn Polito. “The grants enable schools, colleges and other educational institutions to revamp how students learn and gain crucial experience that serves them and employers well.” “Training a skilled workforce is critical to the Commonwealth’s economic recovery, and the Skills Capital Grants have been a vital component of our eff orts to strengthen the talent pipelines for key industries,” said Housing and Economic Development Secretary Michael Kennealy. “As we continue emerging from the economic damage infl icted by the pandemic, funding this program at this milestone level will signifi cantly increase access to employment opportunities in every region of Massachusetts and accelerate progress toward recovery.” Public Hearing Notice City of Revere, MA Proposed Loan Order $5,000,000 - Road Bonds Notice is hereby given that the Revere City Council will conduct a public hearing on Monday evening, September 27, 2021 at 6:00 p.m. in the City Councillor Joseph A. DelGrosso City Council Chamber, Revere City Hall, 281 Broadway, Revere, MA 02151 relative to the following proposed loan order: That $5,000,000 is appropriated to pay costs of constructing, reconstructing, paving, repaving and/or repairing roads, including the payment of all costs incidental and related thereto; that to meet this appropriation , the Treasurer, with the approval of the Mayor, is authorized to borrow said amount under and pursuant to Chapter 44, Section 7(I) of the General Laws, or pursuant to any other enabling authority, and to issue bonds or notes of the City therefor. That any premium received by the City upon the sale of any bonds or notes approved by this order, less any such premium applied to the payment of the costs of issuance of such bonds or notes, may be applied to the payment of costs approved by this order in accordance with Chapter 44, Section 20 of the General Laws, thereby reducing the amount authorized to be borrowed to pay such costs by a like amount.                    “Commonwealth”) to qualify under Chapter 44A of the General Laws any and all bonds of the City authorized to be borrowed pursuant to this loan order, and to provide such information and execute such           connection therewith.                         City Hall, Revere, Massachusetts 02151, Monday through Thursday from 8:15 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. and Friday 8:15 A.M. to 12:15 P.M. Attest: Ashley E. Melnik City Clerk August 27, 2021 their schedule and go care for someone on Revere Beach, they would have to come to City Hall, fi le for an application, wait for that application, and that’s not how healthcare is run,” said Rotondo. “When someone is in need of care, when someone is in need of assistance … I should be able to just park and go into the building without hindrance.” During the public discussion on the motion, several residents of Jack Satter House spoke about the hardship of having care providers or family members fi nd parking spaces and worrying about being able to get one of the limited visitor parking passes available for residents. “I cannot tell you how emotional people are getting at the Jack Satter House,” said Satter House resident Jean Aronson. “They are getting angry, they are getting sick, they are getting discouraged, they are getting argumentative … My family came, the whole time they didn’t enjoy their visit; the whole time they were looking out the window to see if their car was going to be taken.” City Council President Anthony Zambuto caused a mini uproar in the Chambers when he ordered the motion to the Traffi c Commission, noting it was legally their jurisdiction to amend the parking ordinances. Several residents of Jack Satter House said that members of the Traffi c Commission had told them to bring the issue to the City Council and that they were frustrated that any resolution to the parking problems seemed to be going around in circles. That’s when Callahan and Ward 6 Councillor Richard Serino stated that taking Jack Satter House off the list of buildings in the city that are not allowed parking passes could help ease the situation. Serino made the motion to remove 420 Revere Beach Boulevard, the address of Jack Satter House, from that list in the parking ordinance, a move that will have to be voted on by the Traffi c Commission. Public Hearing Notice City of Revere, MA Proposed Loan Order $1,725,000 – Land Acquisition Bonds Notice is hereby given that the Revere City Council will conduct a public hearing on Monday evening, September 27, 2021 at 6:00 p.m. in the City Councillor Joseph A. DelGrosso City Council Chamber, Revere City Hall, 281 Broadway, Revere, MA 02151 relative to the following proposed loan order: That the City is hereby authorized to acquire by eminent domain the property located at 29 Thayer Avenue in Revere, Massachusetts, as more completely described in the deed from Thayer Avenue, LLC, dated July 31, 2012, recorded at the Suffolk County Registry of Deeds in Book 49938, Page 53, and to take any other action incidental and related thereto, for recreational and open space purposes; that $1,725,000 is appropriated to pay the costs of said land acquisition project, including the payment of all costs incidental and related thereto; that to meet this appropriation, the Treasurer, with the approval of the Mayor, is authorized to borrow said amount under and pursuant to Chapter 44, Section 7(1) of the General Laws, or pursuant to any other enabling authority, and to issue bonds or notes of the City therefor. That any premium received by the City upon the sale of any bonds or notes approved by this order, less any such premium applied to the payment or the costs of issuance of such bonds or notes, may be app lie d to the payment of costs approved by this order in accordance with Chapter 44, Section 20 of the General Laws, thereby reducing the amount authorized to be borrowed to pay such costs by a like amount.                    “Commonwealth”) to qualify under Chapter 44A of the General Laws any and all bonds of the City authorized to be borrowed pursuant to this loan order, and to provide such information and execute such           connection therewith.                         City Hall, Revere, Massachusetts 02151, Monday through Thursday from 8:15 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. and Friday 8:15 A.M. to 12:15 P.M. Attest: Ashley E. Melnik City Clerk August 27, 2021

Page 18 THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021 If you have any questions about this week’s report, e-mail us at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com or call us at (617) 720-1562. (D-Foxborough), Barry Finegold (D-Andover), Edward Kennedy (D-Lowell) and Jason Lewis (DWinchester). All in all, 32 Democrats (91.4 THE HOUSE AND SENATE: There were no roll calls in the House or Senate last week. This week, Beacon Hill Roll Call reports on the percentage of times local senators voted with their party’s leadership in the 2021 session. Beacon Hill Roll Call uses 72 votes from the 2021 Senate session as the basis for this report. This includes all roll calls that were not quorum calls or on local issues. The votes of the 35 Democrats were compared to Senate Majority Leader Cynthia Creem (DNewton), second-in-command in the Senate. We could not compare the Democrats’ votes to those of Senate President Karen Spilka (D-Ashland) because, by tradition, the Senate president rarely votes. The senator who voted with Creem the least percentage of times is Sen. Diana DiZoglio (DMethuen) who voted with her only 50 times (69.4 percent). Rounding out the top 3 who voted with Creem the least number of times are Sens. Walter Timilty (D-Milton) who voted with her 56 times (77.7 percent) and Marc Pacheco (D-Taunton) who voted with her 62 times (86.1 percent) Nineteen (54.2 percent) of the 35 Democratic senators voted with Creem 100 percent of the time in 2021. Seven senators voted with Creem all but one time: Sens. Jo Comerford (D-Northampton), Julian Cyr (D-Truro), James Eldridge (D-Acton), Paul Feeney percent) voted with Creem 90 percent or more of the time. The votes of the two Republican senators were compared with those of GOP Senate Minority Leader Bruce Tarr (R-Gloucester). In 2021, as in 2020, none of the two voted with Tarr 100 percent of the time. In 2021, the Republican senator who voted the lowest percentage of times with Tarr was Sen. Patrick O’Connor (R-Weymouth) who voted with Tarr 84.7 percent of the time. Sen. Ryan Fattman (R-Sutton) voted with Tarr 93 percent of the time. SENATORS’ SUPPORT OF PARTY’S LEADERSHIP IN 2021 – THROUGH AUGUST 20, 2021 The percentage next to the senator’s name represents the percentage of times the senator supported his or her party’s leadership. The number in parentheses represents the number of times the senator opposed his or her party’s leadership. Some senators voted on all 72 roll call votes. Others missed one or more roll calls. The percentage for each senator is calculated based on the number of roll calls on which he or she voted and does not count the roll calls for which he or she was absent. Sen. Joseph Boncore 100 percent (0) 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 Legislature’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 August 16-20, the House met for a total of 35 minutes while the Senate met for a total of 46 minutes. Mon. Aug. 16 House 11:02 a.m. to 11:22 a.m. Senate 11:16 a.m. to 12:03 p.m. Tues. Aug. 17 No House session No Senate session Wed. Aug. 18 No House session No Senate session Thurs. Aug 19 House 11:01 a.m. to 11:05 a.m. Senate 11:14 a.m. to 11:17 a.m. Fri. Aug. 20 No House session No Senate session Bob Katzen welcomes feedback at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com SKATING CENTER www.Roller-World.com 781-231-1111 HELP WANTED Skate Guards • Snack Bar    Adults Prefered - Hours Can Be Arranged Open 7 Days Per Week Call Jerry at 617-620-9201 or Michelle at 781-233-9507 Located at 425R Broadway (Route 1 South), Saugus MBTA Bus Route 429 ~ LEGAL NOTICE ~                            In the matter of:    CITATION ON PETITION TO CHANGE NAME A              of   requesting that the court enter a Decree changing their name to:                                                                                  Public Hearing Notice City of Revere, MA Proposed Loan Order $3,000,000 – Water Main Bonds Notice is hereby given that the Revere City Council will conduct a public hearing on Monday evening, September 27, 2021 at 6:00 p.m. in the City Councillor Joseph A. DelGrosso City Council Chamber, Revere City Hall, 281 Broadway, Revere, MA 02151 relative to the following proposed loan order: That $3,000,000 is appropriated to pay costs of constructing, reconstructing, laying, relaying, extending , lining and/or relining water mains, including the payment of all costs incidental and related thereto; that to meet this appropriation, the Treasurer, with the approval of the Mayor, is authorized to borrow said amount under and pursuant to Chapter 44, Section 8(5) of the General Laws, or pursuant to any other enabling authority, and to issue bonds or notes of the City therefor. That any premium received by the City upon the sale of any bonds or notes approved by this order, less any such premium applied to the payment of the costs of issuance of such bonds or notes, may be applied to the payment of costs approved by this order in accordance with Chapter 44, Section 20 of the General Laws, thereby reducing the amount authorized to be borrowed to pay such costs by a like amount.                    “Commonwealth “) to qualify under Chapter 44A of the General Laws any and all bonds of the City authorized to be borrowed pursuant to this loan order, and to provide such information and execute such           connection therewith.                         City Hall, Revere, Massachusetts 02151, Monday through Thursday from 8:15 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. and Friday 8:15 A.M. to 12:15 P.M. Attest: Ashley E. Melnik City Clerk August 27, 2021

THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021 Page 19 LOAN | FROM Page 1 1. On Aug. 27, 1940, Nestle registered what twoword trademark for chocolate chip cookies? 2. What English mystery writer said, “The best time for planning a book is while you’re doing the dishes”? 3. What fi ctional island is best for people who do not want to grow up? 4. On Aug. 28, 1845, the fi rst issue of what scientifi c magazine was published by founder and West Boxford, Mass., native Rufus Porter? 5. How are African Queen, Black Pearl and Yellow Submarine similar? 6. What did the earliest photographers transfer images onto? 7. On Aug. 29, 1917, Isabel Sanford was born, who won an Emmy for playing what character on “The Jeff ersons”? 8. How are Leonardo, Raphael, Donatello and Michelangelo similar? 9. The word lava comes from what language? 10. On Aug. 30, 1963, a government “Hot Line” was established between what two important buildings in the USA and Moscow? 11. What 1800s Haverhill native wrote the poem “The Pumpkin,” in which “On the fields of Answers his harvest the Yankee looks forth, Where crooknecks are coiling and yellow fruit shines, And the sun of September melts down on his vines”? 12. What sport has a winner category called King of the Mountains? 13. What does a horse that wins the Belmont Stakes, Preakness Stakes and Kentucky Derby in the same year win? 14. August 31 is International Overdose Awareness Day; according to the UN, what continent has the most drug-related deaths? 15. What word derived from a proper noun has been used to indicate an intense craving or addiction? 16. A Nebula Award is given for what type of book? 17. On September 1 traditional oyster season begins; what city that includes Pearl Street (where Herman Melville was born) has been known as the oyster capital of the USA? 18. The earliest paintings depicted what, animals or people? 19. How are La Divina, La Stupenda and La Superba similar? 20. On Sept. 2, 1992, what pair began a $5,000,000 chess rematch? How to Choose an Adult Day Care Services Provider Dear Savvy Senior, Can you off er any tips on choosing a good adult day care provider for an elderly parent? My 81-year-old father, who just moved in with me, has dementia and needs attention during the day while I’m at work. Need Assistance Dear Need, Adult day care services can be a great option for caregivers who work, or for those who just need a break during the day. Here’s what you should know, along with some tips to help you fi nd and choose one. Adult Day Care The business of adult day care services has grown rapidly in recent years. According to the National Adult Day Services Association, there are upwards of 4,600 adult day centers across the U.S., the result of a 35 percent increase since 2002. Those centers provide services to more than 260,000 participants and family caregivers, which is a whopping 63 percent increase over the last two decades. As the name implies, adult day care provides care for elderly seniors who cannot care for themselves at home. While services will vary from center to center, they typically provide personal care, meals and snacks, various activities and social interaction in a safe supportive environment. Additionally, many centers also provide health services such as medication management, various therapies, exercise and transportation to and from the facility. Adult day care centers generally operate programs during normal business hours fi ve days a week. However, some centers may off er services in the evenings and on weekends, too. Costs for care will vary as well, usually between $25 to more than $100 per day (the national average is $75/day), depending on where you live. Unfortunately, in most cases original Medicare does not pay for adult day care, but some Medicare Advantage plans, and many long-term care insurance policies do. But most seniors or their families pay for care out-of-pocket. If your dad is lower income and can’t aff ord this, state Medicaid programs provide fi nancial assistance if he meets eligibility requirements, and some states have PACE programs that provide fi nancial aid. Contact your state Medicaid office (see Medicaid. gov) for more information. The VA even provides adult day care to eligible veterans enrolled in their Medical Benefits Package. See VA.gov/geriatrics to learn more. How to Choose Your fi rst step in shopping for an adult day center is to determine the kinds of services your dad needs, and you need as a caregiver. After you do that, here are some tips to help you locate and choose a good provider. Start by contacting your Area Agency on Aging (call 800-6771116 to get your local number) to get referrals to adult day service programs in your area. You can also search theNational Adult Day Services Association (NADSA) database at NADSA.org/locator. Once you have a list of a few centers, call them to find out their eligibility criteria, if they offer the types of services your dad needs, if they are accepting new clients, their hours of operation, if they’re licensed and/or registered with a state agency (this is not required in all states) and what they charge. After you identify a few good centers, go in for a visit. Find out about the staffi ng ratio (at least one staff member for every six participants is recommended) and what kind of training they have. While you’re there, notice the cleanness and smell of the facility. Is it homey and inviting? Does the staff seem friendly and knowledgeable? Also be sure to taste the food and consider making an unannounced visit. To help you rate your visit, the NADSA off ers a helpful checklist of questions to ask at NADSA.org – click on “Site Visit Checklist” under the “For Caregivers” tab. Then, after your visit, be sure to check their references. Get names and phone numbers of at least two or three families who have used the center you are considering and call them. 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. ing on Sept. 27 on a $1.725 million bond order being requested from the administration for the acquisition of the property by eminent domain. City offi cials have proposed a community boating center for the parcel, a development that would be in conjunction with upgrades to Gibson Park and the private development of the G/J Towing site as part of the RiverFront Master Plan. “This property is being purchased by the city for the purposes of expanding the open space and recreational area at Gibson Park,” said Richard Viscay, the city’s fi nance chief. “This land acquisition will help the city achieve goals and objectives of the RiverFront Master Plan, which was developed through a community-based process and adopted by the Revere Planning Board.” Ward 5 Councillor John Powers said that over the years the uncertainty about the development of that parcel has been a constant concern for residents in the Riverside neighborhood. “Once and for all – that will put the people who live in Riverside – it will put their minds to rest without having to worry about developers coming in there and building,” said Powers. “I’ve talked to the mayor, and we are looking at putting community boating down there and/or a crew program. A lot of the schools around here have crew programs, as does St. Mary’s in Lynn, and there is a lot of scholarship money given out by colleges and universities to these schools that have the programs.” Councillor-at-Large Jessica Ann Giannino said she is also excited to see the acquisition coming to fruition. “This property has given the residents in Riverside anxiety for so many years, and it’s given me anxiety for so many years on the council because we never know what we are going to get,” she said. “We’ve been threatened on that property: We’ve had developers come in and propose projects that are way too big for that one, single-family home residential unit. I want to applaud the city for stepping up and for purchasing this land for open space, for green space, for recreational space, because, quite frankly, that is what we are in need of right now.” Ward 4 Councillor Patrick Keefe said that Revere is a large, oceanside community that currently doesn’t have public boating access or a public boat ramp. “To be able to open this up and create this key parcel for the boating community, for the rowing community, for recreational space – I promised the mayor I would bring this up every month in the council – what’s the update on the purchase of the boatyard, and you’ve shut me up quickly,” said Keefe. “Well done, I’m okay with that and I’m glad to hear that this will be happening.” 1. Toll House 2. Agatha Christie 3. Never Never Land (in J.M. Barrie’s “Peter Pan”) 4. Scientifi c American 5. They are names of watercraft appearing in fi lms. 6. Glass 7. Louise “Weezy” Jeff erson 8. They are the names of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and also of Italian Renaissance artists. 9. Italian 10. The White House and the Kremlin 11. John Greenleaf Whittier 12. Several cycling road races, such as the Tour de France 13. The Triple Crown Trophy 14. North America 15. Jones (or jonesing) 16. Science fi ction 17. New York 18. Animals 19. The are nicknames of opera singers (Maria Callas, Joan Sutherland and Montserrat Caballé). 20. Boris Spassky and Bobby Fischer

Page 20 THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021 OBITUARIES Samuel Anthony “Tony” Chiarella School Bus Driver Wanted for Afternoon & Evening Sporting Events. Buses garaged in Malden. Call Mr. Ladner at: 617-542-2325, ext. 212 ~ Legal Notice ~ COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS THE TRIAL COURT PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT DEPARTMENT                  DIVORCE SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION AND MAILING    vs.    , Defendant                                   .                                                  It is                        .                                  FELIX ARROYO REGISTER OF PROBATE    For Advertising with Results, call The Advocate Newspapers at 781-286-8500 or Info@advocatenews.net A ge 78, died on Friday, August 20 at his home in Beachmont. He was the husband of June (Duncan) Chiarella with whom he shared 37 years of marriage. Born in Boston and raised in Revere, he was the son of the late Vincent and Mildred (Pagliuca) Chiarella. A retired MDC Police Offi cer Tony was a United States Army veteran serving during the Vietnam Confl ict. Besides his wife he is survived by his two companions; Scoobie and Charlie, three children; Lauretta Chiarella of Revere, Gina Gallarelli- Chiarella of Revere and Anthony Chiarella of Pittsfield and four grandchilFOOTBALL | FROM Page 14 Latin, Cathedral, Matignon, Blackstone-Millville and Cambridge Rindge & Latin, his alma mater. McKenzie was one of four fi nalists for the Malden High head football coach position before 2012 MHS alumnus Witche Exilhomme was hired... The Greater Boston O f Revere on August 20, 2021. Beloved mother of Christopher Bethel and his wife Shelley of Lowell and daughter Roseann Bethel of Revere. Sister of the late Suzanne Centrella (Sozio) and late Anthony Sozio of Revere. Loving grandmama of Ryan, Jessica, Sophea and Justin Bethel. Also survived by loving nephews and nieces. League thus nearly had two “MacKenzies” in its head coach ranks. Lynn English earlier this summer announced the hiring of MacKenzie Charles as its new head football coach. Charles is also an assistant coach for the Bulldogs’ back-to-back State Champion boys’ basketball team in 2018-19 and 2019-20... With Boston English and Boston Latin not playing Discount Tree Service 781-269-0914 BUYER2 SELLER2 ADDRESS Tremblay, Paul F Hoyle Construc on Inc Elaine V Diserio RET Dierks, Wolfgang Benne , Walter C Ciambelli, Steven Leggiero, Gerardo Noel IRT 21 Sweeney Ave #2 21 Sweeney Ave #1 Obrien, Richard 8 Lynnway 924 Winthrop Ave Leo, Mevis O Buenrostro, Rafael Leggiero, Teresa 108 Walnut Ave Noel, Donna M 48 Newbury St dren. He was the brother of Jeanette Leonard of Brockton, Louise Baldyda of Webster, Rose Marie Paulsen of Revere, Carol Kellog of CA, and the late Lauretta Chiarella. In lieu of fl owers, donations in his memory may be made MSPCA- Boston www.mspca.org. The family offers profound thanks to the medical staff of Mass General Hospital for their excellent care over the years and ask that in lieu of fl owers please consider a donation to Mass General Cancer Center. Sydney Shuman Josephine Bethel O f Revere, formerly of Canton, entered into rest on August 25, 2021 at the age of 94. Beloved husband of Ina Edythe (Wolfson) Shuman. Devoted father of Andrea Zidel and Stuart Freedman, and Jay and Lynda Shuman. Loving brother of the late Frank and Gerald Shuman. Cherished grandfather (“Baba”) of Erica Zidel and Ted Tieken, Evan Zidel, Jaclyn Firestone and her husband Evan, and Matthew Shuman; and great-grandfather of Gavin Tieken-Zidel, Isabella Tieken-Zidel, and Ethan Firestone. Sydney was a proud WWII US Navy Veteran. He was a storyteller and jokester, still a quiet man, who was immensely loyal to his family. To know Baba was to love Baba. Expressions of sympathy in his memory may be made to Jewish National Fund at jnf.org. a game this past spring in “Fall 2,” the de facto title on “Longest Continuous High School Football Rivalry in the Nation” now passes to GBL rivals Malden High and Medford High, which did play in 2020 (actually, in “Fall 2” this past spring) and who will meet for Game #134 in a row on November 25 at Macdonald Stadium in Malden at 10 a.m. Discount Services Professional TREE REMOVAL & Cleanups 24-HOUR SERVICE Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission from the publisher, The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com. BUYER1 REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS SELLER1 Mogavero, Domenica M Tremblay, Katherine E Carolan-Bolognese, M A Swiniarki-Dierks, C Zepaj, Marenglen Leo, Victor M Hoyle Construc on Inc DATE -Raccoons -Squirrels 781-269-0914 Removal PRICE Revere 05.08.2021 $ 620 000,00 05.08.2021 $ 660 000,00 04.08.2021 $ 779 000,00 350 Revere Beach Blvd #10O 03.08.2021 $ 498 000,00 02.08.2021 $ 329 900,00 02.08.2021 $ 827 000,00 13.07.2021 $ 695 000,00

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Page 22 THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021                     KITCHEN CABINETS To Look Like New 508-840-0501 FURNITURE STRIP & FINISH Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma WASTE 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!    ~ Home of the Week ~ SAUGUS...Nicely maintained 6 room Ranch/ Bungalow style home offers 3 bedrooms, spacious        kitchen with corian counter tops, peninsula          for entertaining, updated bathroom, gleaming      up attic, desirable, heated sunroom, rear mudroom leading to level yard with patio area and vinyl                        ~ TOWNHOUSE FOR RENT ~ WAKEFIELD - Built in 2007. Luxury 4 bedroom Townhouse with 2 full baths and 2 additional 1/2 baths. You will love the open      sunlight and beauti   The master bedroom is complete with an ensuite bathroom and large walk in closet and 2 additional closets. This townhouse will be sure to please you with its spacious rooms and generous closet spaces, The washer and dryer hookups are on the same level as the         deck, packing and more. Bus line in front of house. A credit score of 680 required with a complete application, references required, most recent pay stubs, and a copy of driver’s license. What are you waiting for? $3,100. EAST BOSTON     commercial space. at the present time there is a     offers 3 bdrm, 2 full baths.     great sunlight...$989,000 38 Main St., Saugus (617) 877-4553 mangorealtyteam.com ~ Meet Our Agents ~ Coming Soon: 7 Hooper St., Chelsea - 3 family......$949,000 Sue Palomba Founder, CEO Barry Tam Lea Doherty Ron Visconti COMING SOON: STONEHAM Beautiful 4 level, 7 Room, 2 1/2 bath corner lot Carolina Coral Patrick Rescigno Rosa Rescigno Carl Greenler Why List with Mango Realty? Our last listing SOLD $64,000 OVER ASKING with 28 OFFERS! Townhouse offers Central Air, with great amenities including pool, 2 assigned parking spaces, pet friendly, barbecues welcome, minutes to major routes and Boston.......$589,950 Call Mango Realty at (617) 877-4553 for a Free Market Analysis! Fluent in Chinese, Cantonese, Italian & Spanish!       View the interior of this home right on your smartphone.                          COMING SOON: CHELSEA  * Crack Repairing * Pot Hole Filling * Striping Handicapped Spaces * Free Estimates Tom’s Seal Coating Call Gary: 978-210-4012 UNDER AGREEMENT

THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021 Page 23 Follow Us On: COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY SALES & RENTALS Looking to purchase a new home? Sandy Juliano Broker/President Remember, the seller pays agents commission. There is no cost to you to use a real estate agent to protect you during the biggest transaction of your life! Call today and ask about Buyers Representation. WE KNOW EVERETT!! Call TODAY to sell or buy with the best! LISTED BY NORMA & ROSEMARIE OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY AUG. 28, 2021 12:00-1:30 CONDO 30 CHELSEA ST. #812 EVERETT CALL NORMA FOR DETAILS! 617-590-9143 NEW PRICE! CALL NORMA FOR DETAILS! 617-590-9143 LISTED BY NORMA UNDER AGREEMENT 6 FAMILY CHARLES STREET, MALDEN $1,250,000 CALL JOE FOR DETAILS 617-680-7610 SOLD BY MICHAEL AS BUYER’S AGENT UNDER AGREEMENT 4 FAMILY 54 EVERETT ST. EVERETT 756 BROADWAY, EVERETT $859,900 CALL NORMA FOR DETAILS! 617-590-9143 NEW LISTING BY NORMA SOLD! TWO FAMILY - 123 BUCKNAM ST., EVERETT $849,900 CALL QUAZI FOR DETAILS! 617-447-1989 OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY SOLD BY JOE & NORMA AS BUYER’S AGENT 15 SOUTH MARBLE ST. STONEHAM AUG. 29, 2021 12:00-1:30 SINGLE FAMILY 20 BAKER RD., EVERETT $569,900 SOLD BY MICHAEL AS BUYER’S AGENT 58 BRADFORD ST. EVERETT Joe DiNuzzo Norma Capuano Parziale - Broker Associate www.jrs-properties.com O D il F 10 00 A M 5 00 PM - Agent Open Daily From 10:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M. 433 Broadway, Suite B, Everett, MA 02149 Denise Matarazz - Agent Maria Scrima - Agent Follow Us On: 617.544.6274 Rosemarie Ciampi - Agent Michael Matarazzo -Agent Mark Sachetta - Agent

Page 24 THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 2021 # 1       “Experience and knowledge Provide the Best Service”        View our website from your mobile phone! 335 Central St., Saugus, MA 781-233-7300                                                                                                                                    REVERE - PRIME BROADWAY location and visibility                                                                                                                         WONDERING WHAT YOUR HOME IS WORTH? CALL US FOR A FREE OPINION OF VALUE. 781-233-1401 38 MAIN STREET, SAUGUS COMING SOON FOR RENT LET US SHOW YOU OUR MARKETING PLAN TO GET YOU TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR HOME! LITTLEFIELDRE.COM FOR RENT OFFICE CONDO 890 SQFT SAUGUS $1400CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842 UNDER AGREEMENT COMING SOON- NEW CONSTRUCTION TOWNHOMES 3 BED, 2.5 BATH, OPEN CONCEPT SHAKER CABINETS WITH QUARTZ COUNTERS. WALK TO DOWNTOWN, RESTAURANTS, SHOPS, COMMUTER RAIL AND LAKE. CLOSE TO MAJOR RTS. CALL FOR PRICING. WAKEFIELD - CALL KEITH 781-389-0791 LOOKING TO BUY OR SELL? CALL RHONDA COMBE FOR ALL YOUR REAL ESTATE NEEDS! 781-706-0842 FOR SALE - 3 FAMILY & SINGLE FAMILY ALL ON ONE LOT EVERETT $1,499,000 CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842 FOR SALE -BRAND NEW MANUFACTURED MOBILE HOMES. FOUR CUSTOM UNITS LEFT. ALL UNITS ARE 2 BED, 1 BATH TITAN HOMES WIH QUALITY THROUGHOUT 12 X 52. HEATED BY PROPANE GAS, FULL, SIZE LAUNDRY HOOKUPS, AND STAINLESS STEEL APPLIANCES. DANVERS - $199,900 - CALL ERIC 781-223-0289 INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY FOR ALL YOUR REAL ESTATE NEEDS CALL KEITH - 781-389-0791 DEBBIE - 617-678-9710 BRANDI - 617-462-5886 JULIEANNE - 781-953-7870 DANIELLE - 978-987-9535 RHONDA - 781-706-0842 JOHN - 617-285-7117 ERIC - 781-223-0289 MATT - 781-484-8541 DAWN - 978-880-8425 INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY FOR SALE- 3-4 BED 2 BATH FULLY RENOVATED STONEHAM - $699,900 CALL KEITH 781-389-0791 FOR SALE FOR SALE- FOUR FAMILY - INVESTMENT PROPERTY PEABODY $1,250,000 CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842 FOR SALE

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