7

THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, MAy 31, 2024 Page 7 Patriotism over Pain Dog bite doesn’t keep Board of Selectmen Chair Panetta from participating in town’s annual Memorial Day parade By Mark E. Vogler A fter a dog bit her on the right hand at Veterans Park last Saturday morning, Board of Selectmen Chair Debra Panetta didn’t get to walk in this year’s Memorial Day Parade with her fellow selectmen. “Yes, I always walk. I lost so much blood, and I was lightheaded, so I was afraid to walk,” Panetta said in an interview last weekend. “They wanted to rush me to the emergency room by ambulance, but I wanted to participate in the parade. I never missed a Memorial Day parade. It is important to show your respect to the men and women who made the ultimate sacrifi ce for us to have the freedoms that we enjoy today,” she said. Determined to participate in the parade, Panetta got a ride to the staging area at Anna Parker Field on Essex Street instead of going right to the hospital, she received a “ridiculously painful” tetanus shot. Medical staff bandaged up the wound and prescribed some medicines for the pain. Panetta said she doesn’t know how many Memorial Day parades she has marched in over the years, but doesn’t recall ever missing any. “Even when my son was a Boy Scout, I used to march in the parades with him,” she said. “I marched in the parades Clark Moulaison, a studio associate at SaugusTV, and Joe Matterazzo, from the staff of AM radio station WMEX of Quincy, assisted Board of Selectmen Chair Debra Panetta after she was bitten by a dog at last Saturday’s Memorial Day parade. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate by Charlie Zapolski) hospital for medical attention. Once at the staging area, she walked around until she found a ride. Members of the Parson Roby Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) had room for her in their fl oat. “I appreciated that the DAR let me sit in the fl oat this year,” Panetta said. Panetta went to Riverside Cemetery for the annual Memorial Day observance after the parade had ended. When Panetta finally did go to the when I was on the School Committee. I marched in all the parades as a selectman. So I really can’t count,” Panetta said. Panetta was greeting people at Veterans Park on Saturday morning at the time of the dog attack. She happened to notice a handsome black lab in the crowd. “The owner was sitting in a foldable chair,” Panetta recalled. “The black lab was by his side. When I walked by, I said ‘what a nice dog.’ He stood up for me to pet him, and when I did go to pet him, he bit me,” she said. PATRIOTISM | SEE PAGE 8 RON’S OIL Call For PRICE MELROSE, MA 02176 NEW CUSTOMER’S WELCOME ACCEPTING VISA, MASTERCARD & DISCOVER (781) 397-1930 OR (781) 662-8884 100 GALLON MINIMUM

8 Publizr Home


You need flash player to view this online publication