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Page 10 RevereTV Spotlight T he Revere High School football season continues as the Patriots take on longtime stronghold Everett tonight, away at 6 p.m. If you can’t make it over to Everett, watch the game live on RevereTV via YouTube or the Community Channel. On television, this would be channel 8/1072 on Comcast and 3/614 on RCN. Replays of all RHS football games play on those channels throughout the month and can be found at any time on the RTV YouTube page. RevereTV will make it to all Revere High School Football games this season. The Community Channel has been fi lled with all kinds of fall community events that have been happening around the city. Last Saturday, the RTV crew caught the sights and sounds of the Shirley Avenue Cultural Festival. There were so many vendors, activities and music for all to enjoy. Watch this footage in between programming on the Community Channel. It will also be posted to all RTV social media accounts. Municipal meetings still and always will air live on RTV GOV, which is 9 on Comcast and 13/613 on RCN. The meetings also stream to RevereTV’s YouTHE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2022 EPA | FROM Page 2 Tube and Facebook pages. Tune in for replays of the latest meetings, which include last week’s popular Traffic Commission meeting, Wednesday’s Conservation Commission meeting and Thursday’s Human Rights Commission meeting. All meetings from this month replay on a loop of various schedules after being streamed live. In upcoming events, be sure to tune in to RevereTV’s coverage of the Italian Flag Raising Ceremony today at noon. This is another community-basedand-organized ceremony happening outside City Hall to celebrate Italian heritage. If you do not attend or miss RTV’s live coverage, you will be able to watch the footage replaying on the RTV Community Channel by next week. Don’t forget that the Revere Farmers’ Market still happens every Friday throughout the month of October. This was mentioned on this week’s “In the Loop” PSA now playing on RTV. Coverage of this weekend’s Barktober Fest will soon be added to the mix on the Community Channel, as will the Great Pumpkin Dash after it happens later this month. dened communities and, moreover, are being worsened by extreme weather precipitated by climate change. EPA’s ongoing oversight will ensure that facilities comply with their permits to protect human health and the environment of nearby communities with environmental justice concerns. EPA intends to continue to engage with community members to address concerns raised on these permits. To better understand these complex cumulative impacts, building on EPA’s recent announcement of a new national offi ce dedicated to advancing environmental justice and civil rights, EPA is working with partners to explore an initiative to investigate these cumulative impacts in the aff ected communities. This work requires creating a process that is built with and led by community stakeholders. Concurrently, EPA has issued a broader policy framework around these permits, outlining its approach to analyzing and considering cumulative impacts, as appropriate, in future permitting and planning actions. If this analysis yields “new information” identifying environmental impacts EPA can address, EPA will consider reopening these permits to propose appropriate modifi cations – or use the information to inform the next round of permitting. EPA also commits to scrutinize a cumulative impact analysis for evidence of disparate treatment or disparate impact in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act – and commits to a longer term planning initiative to help mitigate the full range of adverse impacts on communities with environmental justice concerns. Chelsea River is an urban tidal river fl owing from the mouth of Mill Creek, between Chelsea and Revere, to Boston’s Inner Harbor, between East Boston and Chelsea. The river is classifi ed by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts as a Class SB water body, meaning the water quality of the river should be able to support wading, swimming, fi shing, boating and a healthy fi sh and aquatic life community. Chelsea River is considered “impaired” because it is not supporting those uses due to pollutants – such as ammonia, dissolved oxygen and petroleum hydrocarbons – and conditions such as turbidity, odor and trash/debris. EPA is also making eff orts on transparency and keeping the public informed of these permits. In their SWPPP, each permittee is required to present the factual basis and analysis of actions taken in suffi cient detail to allow EPA, the public or an independent, qualifi ed person to evaluate the reasonableness of the decision. The updated permits are available at this website: https://www.epa. gov/npdes-permits/chelsea-river-bulk-petroleum-storage-facilities-npdes-permits. The SWPPPs for each facility will be posted on this site each year, along with a summary of discharge monitoring data. Additional information is also available to help the public sign up for notifi cations on any violations, and ways to contact EPA with questions and concerns. For Advertising with Results, call he Adv cate Ne spapers call The Advocate Newspapers at 781-286-8500 or Info@advocatenews.net Revere, let us wrap your home in energy savings all year round. As a part of National Grid’s Community First partnership, Revere residents are eligible to save 75% or more on approved insulation and no-cost air sealing. Just think of insulation as a comfortable sweater for your home keeping the air you want in and air sealing as a jacket keeping dust and allergens out. 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