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The #1 Selling<br />
Real Estate Office<br />
in Lynnfield*<br />
*MLS PIN 1/1/18 - 12/31/2018<br />
WELCOME<br />
GALE<br />
RAWDING<br />
See page 2<br />
Gale Rawding<br />
617-784-9995<br />
Gale.rawding@<br />
nemoves.com<br />
ANDOVER<br />
$989,800<br />
Rossetti/Poti Team<br />
781-718-4662<br />
Debbie Caniff<br />
617-771-2827<br />
Spring<br />
Market<br />
is here!<br />
Call me today<br />
for a complimentary<br />
market update!<br />
LYNNFIELD WEEKLY<br />
PEABODY<br />
$549,900<br />
Joyce Cucchiara<br />
978-808-1597<br />
JUST LISTED!<br />
LYNNFIELD<br />
$619,000<br />
Louise<br />
Bova-Touchette<br />
617-605-0555<br />
MARCH 28, 2019 • VOL. 63, NO. 13<br />
IN THE NEWS<br />
Page 4:<br />
Salzillo named<br />
one of 10 Best<br />
Real Estate Agents<br />
Page 5:<br />
Absentee ballots<br />
available<br />
SERVING THE COMMUNITY SINCE 1957<br />
NEWS<br />
16 PAGES • ONE DOLLAR<br />
Page 9:<br />
Boys lacrosse has<br />
tournament in mind<br />
PRSRT STD<br />
ECRWSSEDDM<br />
U.S. POSTAGE<br />
PAID<br />
PERMIT #168<br />
POSTAL CUSTOMER<br />
LYNNFIELD, MA 01940<br />
WOBURN, MA<br />
By Thomas Grillo<br />
A town divided on a trail<br />
College<br />
scam fallout<br />
continues for<br />
local family<br />
By Thomas Grillo<br />
One thing was clear at the start of last week’s hearing<br />
on the proposed Wakefield-Lynnfield Rail Trail:<br />
Lynnfield is divided.<br />
“We are a town in crisis,” said Debbie LaConte as<br />
she choked back tears. “I love Lynnfield, but between<br />
the rail trail and the proposed cinema at MarketStreet,<br />
our town is so divided.”<br />
At issue is the 4.4-mile path that begins at the Galvin<br />
Middle School on Main Street in Wakefield and extends<br />
to the Lynnfield and Peabody line.<br />
More than 100 residents and others filled the Lynnfield<br />
Middle School auditorium to let Massachusetts Department<br />
of Transportation (MassDOT) know where they stand.<br />
Shahpar Negah, MassDOT’s project manager, was<br />
ready for what could have been an unpleasant night.<br />
Before opening the hearing to comments, she told the<br />
crowd that the state is aware there is opposition to<br />
the trail. “We respect that,” she said. “I just ask that<br />
The son of a Lynnfield dad who was implicated<br />
in the admission scandal is facing troubles<br />
of his own at the University of Southern<br />
California.<br />
Johnny Wilson, 23, whose father, John B.<br />
Wilson, has been charged in a nationwide<br />
bribery conspiracy of rich parents to secure their<br />
children’s admission into the nation’s most elite<br />
RAIL TRAIL, PAGE 8<br />
Signs in support<br />
and opposition<br />
of the proposed<br />
rail trail in<br />
Lynnfield.<br />
PHOTOS |<br />
ANNE MARIE TOBIN<br />
schools, is under review by the school.<br />
USC has frozen the accounts of students,<br />
including that of Johnny Wilson, who may<br />
be associated with the alleged scheme. It will<br />
prevent them from registering for classes or<br />
acquiring transcripts while their cases are<br />
under review, according to a statement from<br />
USC’s press office.<br />
COLLEGE, PAGE 3<br />
The #1 Selling<br />
Real Estate Office<br />
in Lynnfield*<br />
CHELSEA<br />
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MIDDLETON<br />
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MIDDLETON<br />
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SALE PENDING!<br />
MIDDLETON<br />
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SOLD!<br />
WINTHROP<br />
$610,000<br />
*MLS PIN 1/1/18 - 12/31/2018<br />
Evelyn Rockas<br />
617-256-8500<br />
Karen Johnson<br />
781-367-8482<br />
Reggie Lemelin<br />
978-979-6262<br />
Louise<br />
Bova-Touchette<br />
617-605-0555<br />
Carole Rocha<br />
781-462-7067
2<br />
INDEX<br />
Classifieds................................................................................13-16<br />
Police Log....................................................................................... 4<br />
Real Estate...............................................................................14-16<br />
Religious Notes............................................................................... 7<br />
Seniors............................................................................................ 6<br />
Sports........................................................................................9-11<br />
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Let us help get your<br />
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please contact Ernie Carpenter at<br />
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WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 MARCH 28, 2019<br />
Coldwell Banker Lynnfield<br />
recognizes top sales associates<br />
The Coldwell Banker<br />
Residential Brokerage office<br />
in Lynnfield is pleased to announce<br />
the following affiliated<br />
sales associates have been recognized<br />
for their sales achievements:<br />
Joyce Cucchiara, Louise<br />
Touchette, Evelyn Rockas,<br />
Debbie Caniff, Carol Diciaccio<br />
and Frank Rossetti.<br />
Cucchiara has been recognized<br />
with the Coldwell’s<br />
International President’s Premier<br />
award. This honor is awarded to<br />
the top 3 percent of all sales associates<br />
internationally.<br />
Touchette has been recognized<br />
with the Coldwell Banker<br />
International President’s Elite<br />
award. This distinguished honor<br />
is awarded to the top 5 percent<br />
of all Coldwell Banker affiliated<br />
sales associates internationally.<br />
Rockas has been recognized<br />
with the Coldwell Banker<br />
International President’s Circle<br />
award. This distinguished honor<br />
is awarded to the top 10 percent<br />
of all Coldwell Banker affiliated<br />
sales associates internationally.<br />
Caniff has been recognized<br />
with the Coldwell Banker<br />
International Diamond Society<br />
award. This distinguished honor<br />
Coldwell welcomes<br />
Gale Rawding<br />
John C. Olimpio CPA<br />
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Coldwell Banker<br />
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in New England announced<br />
that Lynnfield<br />
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has affiliated with<br />
the Lynnfield office.<br />
Drawing on 30 years of<br />
experience in real estate,<br />
Rawding will provide<br />
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well as the surrounding<br />
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is awarded to the top 15 percent<br />
of all Coldwell Banker affiliated<br />
sales associates internationally.<br />
DiCiaccio and Rossetti<br />
have been recognized with the<br />
Coldwell Banker International<br />
Sterling Society award. This<br />
distinguished honor is awarded<br />
to the top 25 percent of all<br />
Coldwell Banker affiliated sales<br />
associates internationally.<br />
“These sales associates are<br />
dedicated professionals who<br />
focus on providing premier service<br />
to homebuyers and sellers.<br />
These awards are a reflection<br />
of their skills, knowledge and<br />
professionalism,” said Merit<br />
McIntyre, president of Coldwell<br />
Banker Residential Brokerage<br />
in New England, in a statement.<br />
“I anticipate that they will continue<br />
to achieve great success in<br />
the future.”<br />
The five sales associates are<br />
affiliated Coldwell Banker’s<br />
Coldwell Banker Residential<br />
Brokerage which calls itself<br />
the largest residential real estate<br />
brokerage company in New<br />
England. With more than 4,000<br />
affiliated real estate agents and<br />
staff in approximately 90 office<br />
locations, the organization serves<br />
Massachusetts, Rhode Island,<br />
New Hampshire and Maine.<br />
Coldwell Banker Residential<br />
Brokerage is part of NRT LLC,<br />
the nation’s largest residential<br />
real estate brokerage company.<br />
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MARCH 28, 2019<br />
COLLEGE<br />
FROM PAGE 1<br />
The students have been notified<br />
that their status is under review,<br />
the school said. Following<br />
the examination, USC pledged<br />
to take the proper action related<br />
to their status, up to revoking<br />
admission or expulsion.<br />
USC confirmed the 6-foot<br />
Johnny Wilson is enrolled in<br />
the school’s Bachelor of Arts/<br />
Economics degree program.<br />
The U.S. Attorney’s Office in<br />
Boston alleged John B. Wilson,<br />
a 59-year-old investor, allegedly<br />
paid water polo coach Jovan<br />
Vavic $220,000 to get his son into<br />
USC in 2014 under the guise of<br />
being recruited as an athlete.<br />
The coach has since been<br />
fired and indicted.<br />
Prosecutors say John B.<br />
Wilson paid $1 million in<br />
December to secure spots for<br />
his twin daughters at Stanford<br />
and Harvard universities after a<br />
witness began cooperating with<br />
federal authorities.<br />
John B. Wilson was arrested<br />
in Texas and will be arraigned<br />
in U.S. District Court in Boston<br />
on Friday, March 29.<br />
TOM WALLACE<br />
Planning Board<br />
Integrity you<br />
can count on!<br />
A veteran ready to serve Lynnfield.<br />
I respectfully request<br />
your vote on April 9.<br />
He has been charged with<br />
conspiracy to commit mail fraud<br />
and honest services mail fraud.<br />
The charge of racketeering conspiracy<br />
provides a sentence of<br />
up to 20 years in prison, a fine<br />
of not more than $500,000 and<br />
three years probation.<br />
John B. Wilson owns a $2.4<br />
million Colonial on Ashley<br />
Court with his wife, Leslie, and<br />
a seven-bedroom vacation home<br />
they bought in Hyannis Port on<br />
Cape Cod in 2000 for $6 million,<br />
according to county records.<br />
The national scandal threatens<br />
to take down celebrities including<br />
Felicity Huffman, star<br />
of “Desperate Housewives,” and<br />
Lori Loughlin of “Full House,”<br />
who were also indicted. In addition,<br />
athletic coaches from Yale,<br />
Stanford, USC, Wake Forest<br />
and Georgetown, face prosecution,<br />
as well as parents and<br />
exam administrators.<br />
A cooperating prosecution<br />
witness told law enforcement<br />
agents he began working with<br />
John B. Wilson in 2012, who<br />
agreed to pay the bribes.<br />
In 2013, John B. Wilson<br />
emailed the witness to “confirm<br />
for which schools is side door<br />
option really viable,” according<br />
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WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 3<br />
College scam fallout continues for local family<br />
- 20 years of USAF service (Chief of Plans in 2 assignments)<br />
- B.S. Resource Planning, focus on city and park planning<br />
- Master of Public Administration<br />
- Served in 2 city governments and state park service<br />
prior to USAF<br />
- Executive Director – Charles River Aquatics<br />
- Member Lynnfield Historical Society<br />
- Member Lynnfield Tree Committee<br />
As a member of the Planning Board, I’ll work hard to<br />
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to the complaint.<br />
The witness explained “Jovan<br />
Vavic is giving me one boys slot<br />
and as of yet no one has stepped<br />
up to commit…”<br />
Also that year, John B. Wilson<br />
emailed the witness and asked,<br />
“Would the other kids know<br />
my son was a bench warmer …<br />
Obviously his skill level may be<br />
below the other freshmen. In your<br />
view will he be so weak as to be a<br />
clear misfit at practice, etc.?”<br />
The father was told his son<br />
would not be expected to play<br />
water polo for USC beyond the<br />
first semester of his freshman<br />
year, the transcript said.<br />
One day after Johnny Wilson<br />
was admitted to USC as water<br />
polo recruit in 2014, under the<br />
subject line “USC fees,” his father<br />
wrote: “Thanks again for making<br />
this happen! Pls give me the invoice.<br />
What are the options for the<br />
payment? Can we make it for consulting<br />
or whatever … so I can pay<br />
it from the corporate account?”<br />
Prosecutors say the bribes were<br />
orchestrated by William “Rick”<br />
Singer, a 58-year-old California admissions<br />
consultant. He is scheduled<br />
to plead guilty to racketeering<br />
conspiracy. Court documents reveal<br />
his company was paid $25<br />
million from 2011 through last<br />
month to facilitate the bribes.<br />
John B. Wilson has an extensive<br />
résumé, according to Bloomberg,<br />
the business news outlet. He is the<br />
founder of Hyannis Port Capital<br />
Inc. and serves as its president.<br />
He served as the chief operating<br />
officer of Gap Inc., and was chief<br />
financial officer for Staples Inc.<br />
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4<br />
LYNNFIELD WEEKLY<br />
NEWS<br />
(USPS Permit #168)<br />
Telephone: 781-593-7700 • Fax: 781-581-3178<br />
Mailing Address: P.O. Box 5, Lynn, MA 01903<br />
News and Advertising Offices: 110 Munroe St., Lynn, MA 01901<br />
Office Hours: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday<br />
www.weeklynews.net<br />
Editor: Thor Jourgensen tjourgensen@essexmediagroup.com<br />
Reporter: Thomas Grillo tgrillo@itemlive.com<br />
Sports Editor: Anne Marie Tobin atobin@essexmediagroup.com<br />
Advertising Reps: Ralph Mitchell rmitchell@essexmediagroup.com<br />
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No cancellations accepted after deadline.<br />
The Lynnfield Weekly News is published 52 times per year on Thursday by Essex<br />
Media Group, Inc. No issue is printed during the week of Christmas. The Lynnfield<br />
Weekly News is delivered via US Mail to all homes in Lynnfield. It is also<br />
available in several locations throughout Lynnfield. The Lynnfield Weekly News<br />
will not be responsible for typographical or other errors in advertisements, but will<br />
reprint that part of an advertisement in which a typographical error occurs if notified<br />
immediately. Advertisers must notify the Lynnfield Weekly News of any errors in<br />
advertisements on the FIRST day of insertion. The publisher reserves the right to<br />
reject, omit or edit any copy offered for publication. POSTMASTER: Send address<br />
changes to Lynnfield Weekly News, P.O. Box 5, Lynn, MA 01903. © 2016 Essex<br />
Media Group, Inc.<br />
Les Goodwin celebrates his birthday<br />
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 MARCH 28, 2019<br />
Arrest<br />
Chase Gibson, 22, of 527<br />
Salem St., Apt. 40, was arrested<br />
on Monday at 4:59 p.m.<br />
at J. Crew at 640 Market St. and<br />
charged with larceny over $250.<br />
Summons<br />
Brie A. Baker, 42, of 500<br />
Ross Drive, was summoned on<br />
Friday at 1:23 p.m. for domestic<br />
assault and battery.<br />
Frank R. Baker, 43, of 16<br />
Griggs St., Dracut, was summoned<br />
on Friday at 1:23 p.m. for<br />
leaving the scene of an accident<br />
with personal injury.<br />
Shannon Brogna, 22, of 116<br />
Lincoln St., Winthrop, was summoned<br />
on Saturday at 11:23<br />
p.m. at King’s Entertainment at<br />
510 Market St. for domestic assault<br />
and battery.<br />
Accidents<br />
Motor vehicle crash with<br />
property damage reported at 47<br />
Brook Drive on Friday at 5:49<br />
p.m. Officer reports Gaeta’s Tow<br />
on scene.<br />
Minor motor vehicle crash<br />
with property damage reported<br />
on Saturday at 2:30 p.m. on<br />
Grove Street. Officer stood by<br />
for paper exchange.<br />
Hit and run crash reported<br />
on Market Street on Saturday at<br />
11:53 p.m.<br />
Motor vehicle crash reported<br />
at midnight on Sunday on Market<br />
Street. Officer took report.<br />
Alarms<br />
Accidental 911 call on<br />
Thursday at 10:25 a.m. from<br />
972 Main St. Officer confirmed<br />
Police Log<br />
it was done by mistake.<br />
False burglar alarm sounded<br />
at 3 Post Office Square on<br />
Thursday at 12:55 p.m. Officer<br />
reports everything appears OK.<br />
Abandoned 911 call from 2<br />
Hawkes Lane on Thursday at<br />
2:33 p.m. Officer spoke with<br />
resident and all is OK.<br />
False burglar alarm reported<br />
from Lynnfield Middle School at<br />
505 Main St. on Friday at 2:24 a.m.<br />
Fire reported at 4 Reedy Road<br />
on Wednesday at 8:20 a.m. Call<br />
referred to the Lynnfield Fire<br />
Department.<br />
Accidental remote control<br />
panic alarm sounded at 1<br />
Williams Road on Wednesday at<br />
9:14 a.m.<br />
False burglar alarm reported<br />
from Lynnfield High School<br />
at 275 Essex St., Apt. 253 on<br />
Thursday at 3:28 a.m. Officer reports<br />
all appears to be in order.<br />
Abandoned 911 call from 680<br />
Main St. on Tuesday at 3:50<br />
p.m. Officer confirmed it was<br />
accidental.<br />
Fire alarm sounded at 26<br />
South Broadway on Wednesday<br />
at 1:22 a.m. Call referred to the<br />
Lynnfield Fire Department.<br />
A hang up 911 call was received<br />
from T-Mobile USA at<br />
325 North Broadway on Monday<br />
at 9:54 a.m. Officer checked area<br />
and found nothing.<br />
Fire alarm sounded at Gaslight<br />
at 1100 Market St. on Monday at<br />
4:19 p.m. Call handled by the<br />
Lynnfield Fire Department.<br />
Accidental burglar alarm reported<br />
at Baubles Jewelry at 1<br />
Post Office Square on Monday<br />
at 9:05 p.m. Officer reports<br />
building is secure.<br />
False door burglar alarm reported<br />
at 400 Broadway on<br />
Tuesday at 7:19 a.m.<br />
Accidental garage door alarm<br />
sounded at 27 Pyburn Road on<br />
Monday at 7:41 a.m.<br />
Video alarm at 15 Ramsdell<br />
Way shows a man walking up the<br />
driveway on Friday at 7:04 a.m.<br />
Officer reports the man seen on<br />
camera is a maintenance worker.<br />
Complaints<br />
Officer wanted on Market<br />
Street on Thursday at 10:11 a.m.<br />
Request for police at 94<br />
Beaver Ave. on Thursday at 2:47<br />
p.m. Officer took report.<br />
Request from a tow truck operator<br />
for assistance with lights<br />
at 100 Walnut and 425 Market<br />
streets on Thursday at 8:32 p.m.<br />
Caller reported trash fell from<br />
truck at 555 Lowell St. at 1 North<br />
Hill Drive on Wednesday at 9:11<br />
a.m. The Department of Public<br />
Works was contacted and are en<br />
route.<br />
Officer requested at 2 Pine St.<br />
because caller said she came<br />
home and found her door open<br />
on Wednesday at 2:22 p.m.<br />
Officer reports no break in, wind<br />
blew door open.<br />
Shoplifting reported at<br />
Gymboree at 405 Market St.<br />
on Wednesday at 4 p.m. Officer<br />
took report.<br />
Resident of 2 Priscilla Road<br />
came to the police station to<br />
report a suspicious telephone<br />
call on Wednesday at 6:34<br />
p.m. Officer will report the incident<br />
to the Social Security<br />
Administration.<br />
Maria Salzillo of J Barrett & Company<br />
named one of 10 Best Real Estate Agents<br />
PHOTO COURTESY OF LOUISE PELLEGRINO<br />
Les Goodwin and his wife, MaryLou, celebrated his 90th<br />
birthday on Saturday, March 23, with friends and family<br />
at the Our Lady of the Assumption’s church hall.<br />
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Visit us at three locations:<br />
LYNNFIELD 550 Summer Street<br />
WAKEFIELD 374 Main Street<br />
MALDEN 1012 Eastern Avenue<br />
Call 781.322.2800 or email<br />
info@supinoinsurance.com<br />
www.supinoinsurance.com<br />
BEVERLY — J Barrett &<br />
Company is pleased to announce<br />
that Realtor® Maria Salzillo has<br />
been named as a “Two Years 10<br />
Best in Massachusetts for Client<br />
Satisfaction” by the American<br />
Institute of Real Estate Agents<br />
(AIOREP).<br />
The award recognizes<br />
Salzillo’s exceptional performance<br />
in providing her clients<br />
with service and support<br />
throughout each real estate<br />
transaction.<br />
“Maria’s long-standing and<br />
well-deserved reputation for<br />
outstanding client service has<br />
always been a source of pride<br />
within J Barrett & Company<br />
and it’s satisfying to know<br />
that the rest of the real estate<br />
industry now recognizes her<br />
ability as well,” says Jon Gray,<br />
president.<br />
“For me, peer recognition is<br />
one of the highest compliments<br />
I could receive,” said Salzillo.<br />
“Real estate involves buying<br />
and selling property but, in<br />
every transaction ‘people’ are<br />
most important.”<br />
AIOREP’s selection process<br />
focuses on agents who have<br />
achieved significant success in<br />
the industry without sacrificing<br />
service and support to their clients.<br />
Only those agents who<br />
demonstrate the highest standards<br />
of client satisfaction are chosen.<br />
Agents selected to the “10<br />
Best” list must pass a rigorous<br />
vetting process based on client<br />
and/or peer nominations plus additional<br />
criteria that includes sales<br />
volume as well as no complaints<br />
or negative feedback of any kind.<br />
Salzillo specializes in the<br />
marketing and sales of residential<br />
and commercial properties,<br />
has earned several real estate<br />
designations including Certified<br />
Relocation Professional (CRP),<br />
Senior Real Estate Expert<br />
(SRES), Accredited Staging<br />
Professional (ASP), Certified<br />
Negotiations Specialist (CNS)<br />
and an Accredited Buyer<br />
Representative (ABR). She<br />
also has the American Warrior<br />
Real Estate Professional<br />
Certification.<br />
She is based out of the<br />
Peabody/Lynnfield Office.<br />
J Barrett &Company was<br />
Maria Salzillo<br />
established in January 2007<br />
and is a service-oriented company<br />
that has quickly become<br />
the premier privately-owned<br />
real estate firm on the North<br />
Shore. The company serves<br />
the North Shore and Cape<br />
Ann areas from offices in<br />
Beverly, Gloucester, Ipswich,<br />
Manchester, Marblehead,<br />
Peabody and in Prides<br />
Crossing.
MARCH 28, 2019<br />
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 5<br />
Absentee ballots available<br />
LYNNFIELD — Absentee ballots<br />
for Lynnfield’s annual election<br />
on Tuesday April, 9 are available<br />
in the Town Clerk’s office.<br />
There is no early voting this<br />
year.<br />
Election laws make absentee<br />
ballots available to registered<br />
voters who meet one of the following<br />
three criteria:<br />
1. Absent during the hours the<br />
polls are open.<br />
2. Physical disability which<br />
would prevent voting at the<br />
polling place.<br />
3. Religious beliefs that prevent<br />
participation on election<br />
day.<br />
An application must be completed<br />
and received by the Town<br />
Clerk by noon on Monday,<br />
April 8. Call the Town Clerk’s<br />
office to request an application,<br />
or send a note to the office at<br />
55 Summer Street, Lynnfield,<br />
MA 01940. Applications can<br />
also be downloaded from the<br />
town’s web site at www.town.<br />
lynnfield.ma.us, on the Town<br />
Clerk’s page under Elections.<br />
The clerk’s office is open<br />
Monday through Thursday,<br />
from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., and<br />
Friday from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.<br />
For questions call the office at<br />
781-334-9400.<br />
We want to hear<br />
from you!<br />
Send us a letter at<br />
editor@weeklynews.net.<br />
Letters should be no more<br />
than 300 words.<br />
The Woods of Lynnfield<br />
Please join us:<br />
April 3rd 7 - 9 PM<br />
at<br />
The Meeting House<br />
617 Main Street<br />
Presentation on the 55 and older<br />
adult community<br />
for one zoning change
6<br />
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 MARCH 28, 2019<br />
Seniors<br />
LYNNFIELD<br />
SENIOR CENTER<br />
Trips<br />
April 3 Boston Tea<br />
Party Museum tour, lunch<br />
at Abigail’s Tea House<br />
and souvenir tea mug<br />
$36.<br />
April 9 Country legends<br />
tribute show at the<br />
Log Cabin $99<br />
April 10 Boston on<br />
your own: Visit the North<br />
End, Quincy Market, the<br />
Greenway $5<br />
Activities<br />
Thursday, March 28<br />
8 a.m. Hairdresser, exercise<br />
room. 8:30 a.m.<br />
Zumba gold. 8:45 a.m.<br />
Drumming with Jill. 9<br />
a.m. Manicurist, stitch<br />
and chat. 9:15 a.m. Sit<br />
and tone with Jill. 9:20<br />
a.m. Gentle Pilates. 10<br />
a.m. Yoga, Let’s build<br />
Catering<br />
available<br />
SU CHANG’S<br />
Authentic Chinese Cuisine<br />
Legos, Mah Jongg. 10:30<br />
a.m. Lunch brunch. 11<br />
a.m. Aerobic dance with<br />
Alice. 11:30 a.m. Lunch:<br />
Reuben. 12:30 p.m.<br />
Bridge, diabetes academy.<br />
*****<br />
Friday, March 29<br />
8 a.m. Exercise room,<br />
Friends breakfast. 9 a.m.<br />
Blood pressure, hairdresser,<br />
Broadway jazz<br />
dance class, acrylic<br />
painting. 9:15 a.m. Bingo.<br />
9:30 a.m. Tai Chi. 10 a.m.<br />
Chair yoga video. 10:30<br />
a.m. Zumba. 11:15 a.m.<br />
Lunch: Navy bean soup.<br />
*****<br />
Monday, April 1<br />
8 a.m. Zumba gold with<br />
Alice, exercise room.<br />
8:45 a.m. Aerobics video.<br />
9 a.m. Gentle Pilates,<br />
hairdresser/tax assistance,<br />
Functions<br />
from 2-200<br />
All Your Special Events<br />
Can Be Celebrated at Su Chang’s<br />
Live Music From 6:30-8:30 on Wednesdays<br />
Rehearsal Dinners • Anniversaries • Birthdays • Holiday Parties<br />
Walmart shopping. 10<br />
a.m. Creative writing, line<br />
dance/tap dance, driver’s<br />
license requirements,<br />
topic of the day, chair<br />
yoga video, sit and tone<br />
with Darci. 11 a.m. yoga<br />
for strength. 11:30 a.m.<br />
Lunch: Lemon chicken.<br />
Noon Oil painting, photo<br />
club. 12:30 p.m. Mah<br />
Jongg, Mexican train,<br />
computer (sign up).<br />
*****<br />
Tuesday, April 2<br />
8 a.m. Hairdresser, exercise<br />
room. 8:30 a.m.<br />
Food shopping. 8:45 a.m.<br />
Exercise under the belt.<br />
9 a.m. Blood pressure.<br />
9:15 a.m. Bingo. 9:30<br />
a.m. Intermediate Italian.<br />
10 a.m. Tai Chi. 10:30<br />
a.m. Scrabble. 11:30 a.m.<br />
Lunch: baked fish.12:15<br />
p.m. Rotary Elder Act<br />
meeting. 12:30 p.m.<br />
Computer class -sign up,<br />
Bridge, watercolor class,<br />
successful singles, Easter<br />
craft with Elaine.<br />
*****<br />
Wednesday, April 3<br />
8 a.m. Exercise room/<br />
hairdresser. 8:30 a.m.<br />
Zumba. 9 a.m. Walking<br />
club, artist drop in, alterations<br />
with Anita,<br />
Tripoley, manicurist.<br />
9:30 a.m. Aerobics<br />
video. 10 a.m. Chair<br />
yoga, welcome coffee,<br />
psychology and the<br />
world around us, embroidery.<br />
10:15 a.m.<br />
Beginner Italian. 11:30<br />
a.m. Lunch: Pot roast.<br />
12:15 p.m. Pokeno,<br />
Canasta. 12:30 p.m.<br />
Bridge.<br />
PETER A.<br />
TORIGIAN CENTER<br />
Thursday, March 28<br />
8-9 a.m. Breakfast.<br />
8:30 a.m. Quilting. 9:15<br />
a.m. Whist. 9:30 a.m.<br />
Advanced painting, Big<br />
Band dancing. 10 a.m.<br />
Hearing screenings. 12:30<br />
p.m. Bridge, corn hole. 1<br />
p.m. ALS support group,<br />
sing-along. 2 p.m. Show<br />
rehearsal.<br />
*****<br />
Friday, March 29<br />
8 a.m. Beginner<br />
painting, TOPS weigh in.<br />
9 a.m. Aerobics, TOPS<br />
meeting. 11:15 a.m. Chair<br />
yoga. Noon Open art<br />
studio. 12:30 p.m. Bingo.<br />
1 p.m. Pingpong.<br />
*****<br />
Monday, April 1<br />
9 a.m. Aerobics, duplicate<br />
Bridge 9:30 a.m.<br />
Podiatry, tambourine<br />
team. 10 a.m. Drill team.<br />
11:15 a.m. Zumba. 12:30<br />
p.m. Bridge, model ship<br />
building, Bingo, food<br />
commodity.<br />
*****<br />
Tuesday, April 2<br />
8-9:30 a.m. Cafe breakfast.<br />
9 a.m. Taxes. 9:15<br />
a.m. Whist. 9:30 a.m.<br />
Book club, exercise with<br />
Edye, Bunka workshop.<br />
10:30 a.m. Line dancing.<br />
11:30 a.m. Birthday celebration.<br />
Noon Mah Jongg.<br />
12:30 p.m. Crocheting/<br />
knitting.<br />
*****<br />
Wednesday, April 3<br />
9 a.m. Sewing/repair,<br />
aerobics, rug hooking,<br />
wood carving. 10:15<br />
a.m. Zumba. 12:30 p.m.<br />
Model ship building,<br />
golden agers meeting. 1<br />
p.m. National Association<br />
of Retired Federal<br />
Employees meeting.<br />
373 Lowell St., Peabody • Tel. 531-3366 • Fax 531-3060<br />
LUNCH M-F 11:30-3PM • Take Out Always Available Daily by Phone, Fax or our Website<br />
SUN-THURS 11:30-10 PM • FRI-SAT 11:30-11PM<br />
www.SuChangsPeabody.com<br />
ACE INHIBITORS POSE LOW LUNG CANCER RISK<br />
The “angiotensin converting enzyme” (ACE) inhibitors used to treat<br />
hypertension have recently been linked to an increased risk of<br />
developing lung cancer. According to the study, which compared<br />
outcomes among approximately one million people taking blood<br />
pressure drugs, those taking ACE inhibitors were 14% more likely to<br />
develop lung cancer than those taking other medications. But as<br />
much as a 14% increase in lung cancer risk seems like an appreciable<br />
increase, it is actually quite small in absolute terms (a risk difference of<br />
only four cases per 10,000 people). The study neglected to say whether<br />
other possible lung cancer risk factors (such as smoking) played a<br />
role. Remember, however, untreated blood pressure can cause heart<br />
attack and stroke.<br />
ACE inhibitors are commonly prescribed to treat hypertension<br />
because they tend to be well-tolerated by those who take them.<br />
They’re usually taken just once a day, often in the morning. They may<br />
be prescribed along with diuretics or calcium channel blockers, which<br />
are also used to treat high blood pressure. For more information,<br />
please call VILLAGE PHARMACY at 781-334-3133. Our pharmacy is<br />
located in the Colonial Shopping Center and open Mon.-Fri., 9-7; Sat.<br />
9-3; and Sun. and holidays, 9-1:30.<br />
HINT: It is always necessary to weigh the risks against the benefits<br />
when deciding to take any drug.<br />
Colonial Shopping Center • 590 Main St. Lynnfield, MA 01940 • 781-334-3133<br />
WINTER 2018-19<br />
Target your message<br />
to an affluent audience<br />
Cornering cancer Our house<br />
GAS<br />
explosion<br />
Contact us at:<br />
781-593-7700<br />
info@essexmediagroup.com
MARCH 28, 2019<br />
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 7<br />
Religious Notes<br />
Calvary Christian Church<br />
47 Grove St., Lynnfield<br />
781-592-4722<br />
www.lynnfield-ccc.org<br />
Senior Pastor Timothy<br />
Schmidt would like to invite<br />
you to join us for one of our<br />
Sunday worship services at<br />
8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 12:30<br />
p.m. and 6:30 p.m. Children’s<br />
Ministry (ages 0-11) offered in<br />
all Sunday morning services.<br />
Hispanic Service: Sunday<br />
at 12:30 p.m. in the Prayer<br />
Chapel. Celebrate Recovery:<br />
Monday at 6:30 p.m. Young<br />
Adult Ministry: Wednesday<br />
at 7 p.m. ages 18-30’s. Youth<br />
Ministry: Friday at 6:30 p.m.<br />
ages 12-18. Weekly Prayer<br />
Meetings: Monday - Friday<br />
at 7 p.m. and Saturday at 6<br />
p.m. Church office hours are<br />
Monday- Friday 8:30 a.m. to<br />
4:30 p.m. For more information<br />
contact our church office<br />
at 781-592-4722, office@lynnfield-ccc.org<br />
or visit our website<br />
www.lynnfield-ccc.org.<br />
Centre Congregational<br />
Church<br />
5 Summer St., Lynnfield,<br />
781-334-3050 or<br />
www.centre-church.org<br />
Pastor: Nancy Rottman<br />
Director of Faith Formation:<br />
Larainne Wilson<br />
An Open and Affirming<br />
Congregation of the United<br />
Church of Christ. Whoever<br />
you are and wherever you<br />
are on life’s journey, you are<br />
welcome. Our worship services<br />
are held at 10 a.m. each<br />
Sunday morning. We strive to<br />
provide inspiring, down-toearth<br />
messages that are applicable<br />
to everyday life. We<br />
are committed to providing<br />
children a warm, safe, and inclusive<br />
environment with vibrant<br />
and engaging Children’s<br />
Programming (Godly Play,<br />
Whole People of God, and<br />
Brick-by-Brick) and trained<br />
and consistent staff, incorporating<br />
opportunities for stories,<br />
music, and service. Free<br />
nursery care is available for<br />
children up to age 4, with a<br />
new transition class beginning<br />
in January for 3 and 4-year<br />
olds. We also have a Young<br />
Families Group that offers<br />
fellowship opportunities for<br />
parents and children together.<br />
We have ample parking in a<br />
large lot behind the church<br />
and the facility is handicap<br />
accessible. Please find us on<br />
Facebook at facebook.com/<br />
CentreChurchUCC or visit<br />
www.Centre-Church.org for<br />
updated information about our<br />
ministries and activities.<br />
Please feel free to contact the<br />
church office if you would like<br />
more information about any of<br />
these activities. (781-334-3050<br />
or office@centre-church.org)<br />
Office Hours at the church<br />
are 9 a.m. – 3 p.m. Monday<br />
– Friday.<br />
Tower Day School is located<br />
at Centre Congregational<br />
Church and Director, Leah<br />
O’Brien may be reached at<br />
towerdayschool@gmail.com or<br />
781-334-5576.<br />
Lynnfield Community<br />
Church<br />
735 Salem St., Lynnfield<br />
(781) 599-4421<br />
LynnfieldCommunityChurch.<br />
org.<br />
Lynnfield Community<br />
Church welcomes you to<br />
Sunday worship at 10-11 a.m.<br />
Following our service, join us<br />
for coffee and fellowship in<br />
Marshall Hall. Parking is behind<br />
the church and there are<br />
entrances in front and on the<br />
side of the building. Please visit<br />
soon.<br />
Messiah Lutheran Church<br />
708 Lowell St, Lynnfield<br />
781-334-4111<br />
Email: pastor@mlcspirit.org<br />
The Sunday morning<br />
schedule begins at 9 am with<br />
an inter-generational Growing<br />
Together hour of Bible Study,<br />
prayer, fun and service. Sunday<br />
morning worship is held at<br />
10:30 in a traditional yet family-friendly<br />
style.<br />
At 7:01 Wednesday is the<br />
min-week prayer service. All<br />
are welcome to join in prayer<br />
for families and friends, schools<br />
and communities, the nation<br />
and the world. Those who<br />
cannot make it in person may<br />
send their prayer requests to<br />
pastordaveb@mlcspirit.org<br />
Rev. Dr. Jeremy Pekari and<br />
Rev. David Brezina serve<br />
Messiah Lutheran Church.<br />
Lynnfield Catholic<br />
Collaborative<br />
112 Chestnut St., Lynnfield<br />
Our Lady of the Assumption<br />
and St. Maria Goretti<br />
The Lynnfield Catholic<br />
Collaborative, comprised of<br />
Our Lady of the Assumption<br />
Church, Salem and Grove<br />
Streets, and Saint Maria Goretti<br />
Church, 112 Chestnut St.,<br />
Lynnfield, may be reached by<br />
calling 781-598-4313 or by<br />
email: jsano@ola-smg.org or<br />
by visiting the website: lynnfieldcatholic.org.<br />
The Pastoral Leadership<br />
Team: The Pastor is Rev. Paul<br />
E. Ritt, the Parochial Vicar<br />
is Rev. Anthony Luongo and<br />
the Deacons are Thomas<br />
O’Shea and Ed Elibero. Donna<br />
Delahanty is Director of Parish<br />
Ministries.<br />
Office hours: Monday<br />
through Thursday 8 a.m. - 4<br />
p.m., Friday 8 a.m. - 12 p.m.,<br />
closed for holidays.<br />
Go to: www.lynnfieldcatholic.org<br />
St. Maria Goretti (112<br />
Chestnut Street, Lynnfield)<br />
Saturday Vigil: 4 p.m.<br />
Sunday: 10 a.m.<br />
Tuesdays and Thursdays: 9 a.m.<br />
St. Paul’s Episcopal Church<br />
127 Summer St., Lynnfield<br />
781-334-4594<br />
Rev. Rob Bacon serves as<br />
rector of St. Paul’s Episcopal<br />
Church. Founded in 1918, its<br />
mission is to connect with<br />
God and each other through<br />
worship, prayer, service, and<br />
study.<br />
We offer Sunday services<br />
at 8:30 a.m. and 10 a.m. Child<br />
care is available, as well as<br />
classes for K-6 students.<br />
Students in grades 7-12<br />
meet at 10 a.m. the 2nd & 4th<br />
Sundays of the month for discussion,<br />
learning, sharing, socializing,<br />
volunteering. This<br />
Youth Group participates in<br />
the local, ecumenical Giv2,<br />
which gives teens opportunities<br />
to live their faith through<br />
service.<br />
On Mondays, at 6 p.m., St.<br />
Paul’s parishioners and friends<br />
gather for Centering Prayer.<br />
Introduction to Centering<br />
Prayer is offered the first<br />
Monday of the month at 5:30<br />
p.m. Holy Eucharist and Bible<br />
Study are offered Wednesday<br />
mornings, from 9 - 11 a.m. For<br />
more information go to: www.<br />
stpaulslynnfield.org. or email<br />
to office@stpaulslynnfield.<br />
org.<br />
Temple Emmanuel<br />
120 Chestnut St., Wakefield<br />
Temple Emmanuel of<br />
Wakefield is affiliated with<br />
the Jewish Reconstructionist<br />
Communities. We offer a<br />
contemporary approach to<br />
Judaism while maintaining a<br />
respect for traditional Jewish<br />
values. We are a caring and<br />
inclusive community through<br />
learning and community activities.<br />
Besides Shabbat and<br />
Festival services, there is a<br />
Sisterhood and Temple Reads<br />
Book Club, Shabbat dinners,<br />
concerts and other programs.<br />
Consult the temple website<br />
and Facebook page for updated<br />
information.<br />
Temple Emmanuel’s<br />
mission is to be an inclusive<br />
and welcoming<br />
Jewish Reconstructionist<br />
Community devoted to<br />
learning, spirituality, and<br />
caring for each individual.<br />
At Temple Emmanuel we<br />
are building a vibrant future<br />
in honor of our past, utilizing<br />
ancient traditions to<br />
provide meaning and sustenance<br />
in our contemporary<br />
lives. There is a chairlift to<br />
the second floor social hall.<br />
Visitors are encouraged to<br />
come to services and events<br />
that interest them.<br />
Shabbat services, led by<br />
Rabbi Greg Hersh are held<br />
most Friday evenings at 7:30<br />
p.m. and Saturday mornings at<br />
9:30 a.m.<br />
Second Saturday morning is a<br />
Tot Shabbat at 9:30 a.m. and a<br />
Jewish Meditation Circle is on<br />
the third Friday evening at 7:30<br />
p.m.<br />
Visit www.WakefieldTemple.<br />
org for complete schedule<br />
of services, family events,<br />
and Continuing Education<br />
programs.<br />
The Temple website<br />
(www.WakefieldTemple.<br />
org) has the complete list<br />
of Rosh Hashanah and Yom<br />
Kippur services. Seats may<br />
be reserved by calling Phil<br />
617-688-0870.<br />
The Church of Jesus Christ<br />
of Latter-day Saints<br />
400 Essex St., Lynnfield.<br />
lds.org<br />
Sunday services and classes<br />
are from 9 a.m. to noon;<br />
9-10:10 a.m. Sacrament<br />
Meeting; 10:20-11 a.m.<br />
Sunday School; 11:10-noon,<br />
Primary and Youth Classes;<br />
Youth Night and Boy/Cub<br />
Scouts: Tuesdays at 7 p.m.;<br />
Bishop: Matthew Romano,<br />
781-334-5586. Family History<br />
Center, Wednesdays 10 a.m.<br />
to 9 p.m.; Thursday, 10 a.m.<br />
to 4 p.m. Please check before<br />
coming due to weather or for<br />
summer hours.<br />
Wakefield-Lynnfield<br />
United Methodist Church<br />
273 Vernon St., Wakefield<br />
Pastor: Glenn M. Mortimer<br />
Sunday<br />
Worship<br />
Services:<br />
Summer: Sunday, July 1<br />
through Labor Weekend Sun.<br />
Sept. 2, 2018 10 a.m. Worship<br />
Service.<br />
School Year: Sept. 8 through<br />
June 30, 2019 - 10:30 a.m.<br />
Knit, Pray & Crochet<br />
Ministry meets at 10 a.m. on<br />
the 1st and 3rd Mondays of<br />
each month at the church to<br />
chat, learn to knit & crochet<br />
and to make items like blankets,<br />
hats, mittens, scarves,<br />
prayer shawls and prayer<br />
squares for people in need.<br />
Following the service, we<br />
enjoy Fellowship at our Coffee<br />
& Conversation time.<br />
There are also many ways<br />
to serve the community<br />
through volunteer opportunities,<br />
social groups and<br />
committees like Ecumenical<br />
Youth Group, Choir, Book<br />
Club, Sunday School, Bible<br />
Study, United Methodist<br />
Women, Ministry Leadership<br />
Team, Card Care Club, Craft<br />
Fair Committee, just to name<br />
a few. We offer our building<br />
to groups like Happy Hearts<br />
Preschool, Cub Scouts,<br />
Girl Scouts, Wakefield Arts<br />
& Crafts Society, Music<br />
Together-Preschool<br />
Music,<br />
Kids Curtain Call Drama<br />
for Middle Schoolers, and<br />
Wakefield Toy Swap. We are<br />
also a Project Linus Blanket<br />
Drop-off spot.<br />
We have musicians “In the<br />
House” as our Pastor, Rev.<br />
Glenn Mortimer, and his wife,<br />
Elizabeth, are musicians, and<br />
incorporate music into special<br />
church services for all<br />
to enjoy. For more information<br />
about our church, please<br />
call the church office at (781)<br />
245-1359 or email us at our<br />
new email WLUMC273@<br />
gmail.com. Visit us on<br />
Facebook www.facebook.com/<br />
methodistchurchwakefield.<br />
LYNNFIELD<br />
WEEKLY<br />
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We reach EVERY<br />
household in Lynnfield<br />
every week.<br />
Let us help get your<br />
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8<br />
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 MARCH 28, 2019<br />
RAIL TRAIL<br />
FROM PAGE 1<br />
you relax, and sit back. We are<br />
not here to push it. If Lynnfield<br />
decides they don’t want a rail<br />
trail, we won’t pursue it.”<br />
Police Chief David Breen<br />
told the attentive audience that<br />
he received a call on Tuesday<br />
about pro and con rail trail signs<br />
being stolen from properties.<br />
“Please respect each other,”<br />
he said. “You don’t have to<br />
agree with your neighbors,<br />
but please respect each other’s<br />
rights.”<br />
MassDOT has pledged $10.2<br />
million that would be used to construct<br />
the trail, erect fences along<br />
the route, and build a boardwalk<br />
across Reedy Meadow. If approved,<br />
construction on the asphalt<br />
12-foot linear path is expected<br />
to begin in 2022.<br />
Board of Selectmen Chairman<br />
Richard Dalton gave strong support<br />
to the project. He praised<br />
volunteers who have devoted<br />
hundreds of hours to researching<br />
how a path would benefit<br />
Lynnfield.<br />
Gerard Noumi, a member of<br />
the Recreational Path Committee,<br />
offered the eight-person panel up<br />
as a resource to answer any questions<br />
about the trail.<br />
Patricia Campbell, an outspoken<br />
critic of town government,<br />
said while she is not an<br />
abutter, she opposes the path<br />
because of the environmental<br />
damage it will cause.<br />
“Reedy Meadow is a treasure<br />
and the wetlands must be<br />
protected,” she said. “This is a<br />
needless expenditure.”<br />
Resident Patrick Curley said<br />
he fears bike riding with his<br />
children because of distracted<br />
drivers.<br />
“The idea of having a safe<br />
place to recreate is a great comfort<br />
for my family,” he said. “My<br />
Cub Scout den will love it and<br />
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Letters to the Editor<br />
A town divided on a trail<br />
they’ll get to see nature up close.”<br />
Peter Perlmutter, who described<br />
himself as a recreational cyclist,<br />
said a rail trail will separate the<br />
bike riders from motor vehicles.<br />
“About 98 percent of drivers<br />
are prepared to share the road<br />
with cyclists,” he said. “But the<br />
other 2 percent are distracted<br />
and unwilling to share the road.”<br />
Stephanie Rauseo said while<br />
she likes the idea of the trail,<br />
she fears what will happen to<br />
the wildlife at Reedy Meadow.<br />
“Where will the animals go?”<br />
she asked. “The rail trail is a<br />
great idea but I’m worried.”<br />
Kristen Cooper, a mother of<br />
a 1- and 3-year-old, said when<br />
she seeks pictures of what the<br />
trail will look like, she sees the<br />
future of Lynnfield.<br />
“The trail is the right thing at<br />
the right time for Lynnfield,”<br />
she said.<br />
Voters will have their say<br />
about the trail at the annual<br />
town election ballot on Tuesday,<br />
April 9. A non-binding referendum<br />
will ask voters where<br />
they stand.<br />
Looking for past issues?<br />
Find them on<br />
weeklynews.net<br />
A vote for Wallace<br />
I am writing to endorse<br />
Thomas Wallace for the<br />
Lynnfield Planning Board.<br />
I first met Tom when he adopted<br />
a mixed-breed rescue<br />
dog that I was fostering on<br />
behalf of Cape Ann Animal<br />
Aid. Outside of any other<br />
endorsements, I can confirm<br />
that Tom is a wonderful dog<br />
owner and has given Delta<br />
— a sweet girl who suffered<br />
many unpleasant experiences<br />
prior to her rescue —<br />
a life worthy of any other<br />
dog’s envy.<br />
But enough about dogs.<br />
The Planning Board is one<br />
of the most critical public<br />
bodies in our town. It helps<br />
shape Lynnfield through its<br />
decisions concerning both<br />
residential and commercial<br />
development and has the<br />
power to influence public and<br />
private spaces within a town.<br />
Tom’s background makes him<br />
uniquely suited for a position<br />
on this board, including his<br />
bachelor’s degree in resource<br />
planning and his twenty years<br />
of service in the United States<br />
Air Force.<br />
Tom has repeatedly demonstrated<br />
a strong interest in<br />
guiding our community towards<br />
smart development<br />
and prudent allocation of<br />
Town resources by attending<br />
Over a decade ago, our town<br />
leaders, with support from residents,<br />
decided to build a rail<br />
trail in Lynnfield.<br />
These leaders were successful<br />
in obtaining a feasibility<br />
study, an initial design,<br />
and state funds.<br />
What other costs are necessary<br />
to complete and maintain<br />
the trail?<br />
These future costs include<br />
land to build it, final design,<br />
environmental insurance, and<br />
maintenance.<br />
To lease the MBTA’s land,<br />
the final design cost, and environmental<br />
insurance are estimated<br />
as much as $350,000.<br />
This is the worst case because<br />
grants have been obtained<br />
to offset these costs<br />
and there are other non-town<br />
funds available to further<br />
offset them.<br />
Annual maintenance is estimated<br />
at $8,000. Maintenance<br />
cost to taxpayers can be reduced<br />
by outside funding and<br />
volunteers. Long-term maintenance<br />
costs are typically<br />
funded by the Massachusetts<br />
Department of Transportation<br />
(MassDOT).<br />
Based on the number of<br />
households in Lynnfield, this<br />
nearly every open meeting<br />
in Lynnfield since he filed<br />
his papers to run for this office.<br />
He asks educated and<br />
thoughtful questions and<br />
is clearly committed to familiarizing<br />
himself with all<br />
town issues before joining the<br />
Planning Board. If elected, I<br />
believe Tom will work tirelessly<br />
to support economic<br />
development while remaining<br />
sensitive to our historic roots<br />
and the natural beauty that<br />
graces Lynnfield.<br />
I thank all current and<br />
former members of the<br />
Planning Board for their service,<br />
but Lynnfield also needs<br />
new people with innovative<br />
ideas to participate in town<br />
government. As those of you<br />
who know him may attest,<br />
Tom is a unique, energetic<br />
and talented individual, and I<br />
believe he will provide a fresh<br />
perspective to the Planning<br />
Board. We need people like<br />
Tom to bring transparency,<br />
accountability, and professionalism<br />
to a critical body<br />
whose jurisdiction extends<br />
to every private home and<br />
commercial property in town.<br />
Please join me in voting for<br />
him on April 9.<br />
Yes on trail<br />
makes sense<br />
Melanie Lovell<br />
68 Bourque Road<br />
equates to less than $90 per<br />
household to complete the<br />
rail and less than $2 annually<br />
per household to maintain it.<br />
The complete package of<br />
committed funding is unheard<br />
of. Think of all the million<br />
dollar plus projects completed<br />
in Lynnfield over the<br />
last 20 years and how much<br />
of these costs were borne by<br />
taxpayers. This project requires<br />
very little financial<br />
commitment from us. What<br />
a value. We will be obtaining<br />
a great community asset at<br />
minimal cost.<br />
Most of the funding for this<br />
project is paid for by MassDOT,<br />
restricted to construct rail trails.<br />
If Lynnfeld does not use these<br />
funds to construct the trail, the<br />
town loses it. No money is saved<br />
by not constructing the trail. If it<br />
is not built, your tax dollars will<br />
not benefit us, but benefit one<br />
of the many other communities<br />
waiting for this money.<br />
The April 9 vote does not<br />
commit town funds to the trail<br />
project. It makes sense to vote<br />
“Yes” to continue the rail trail<br />
project, a great value to our<br />
community at minimal cost.<br />
John Ciampa
MARCH 28, 2019<br />
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 9<br />
Sports<br />
Boys lacrosse has tournament in mind<br />
By Anne Marie Tobin<br />
PHOTOS | KERRIANNE ALLAIN<br />
Harrison Drislane, left, and co-captain Hunter Allain spring into action during<br />
a preseason boys lacrosse scrimmage.<br />
LYNNFIELD — The Lynnfield boys<br />
lacrosse team is looking to get back in<br />
the tournament after a two-year absence,<br />
but it’s not going to be easy.<br />
The Pioneers lost seven seniors to<br />
graduation from the 2018 team (6-10),<br />
including their two leading scorers<br />
and Cape All League all-stars in Peter<br />
Look (32 goals, 17 assists), the team’s<br />
Offensive Player of the Year, and Jack<br />
Razzaboni (23 goals, 15 assists), so their<br />
top need will be finding a way to replace<br />
the pair, who accounted for almost half<br />
of all goals last season.<br />
The Pioneers also took some huge<br />
hits in the back line with the loss of the<br />
team’s Defensive Player of the Year,<br />
goaltender Zack Huynh.<br />
But with 12 returning varsity players,<br />
several of whom were starters last year,<br />
the Pioneers may have most of the pieces<br />
in place to get back to their winning<br />
ways.<br />
This year’s team will be led by senior<br />
captains Hunter Allain, a crease defenseman,<br />
and midfielder Gianluca Alfe.<br />
“Hunter brings brains and brawn to<br />
the team and as a four-year starter he<br />
knows the defense our calls and he will<br />
be a leader out on the defensive side<br />
of the ball,” said Lynnfield coach Joe<br />
Papagni, the only coach the Pioneers<br />
have ever known, now in his 17th<br />
season. “Gianluca brings a tremendous<br />
amount of offensive skill to that side of<br />
the ball and he will lead our offense by<br />
example.”<br />
Scoring-wise, the Pioneers have two<br />
of their top-four scorers coming back in<br />
Alfe, who scored 35 points last year, and<br />
junior midfielder Jackson Hammersley,<br />
who contributed 32 points last year.<br />
“We lost 86 percent of our goals<br />
through graduation, but we are still planning<br />
on scoring goals,” said Papagni.<br />
“Captain Gianluca Alfe and Jackson<br />
Hammersley should be able to score<br />
goals. They are both talented kids who<br />
want to score. Sophomores Dario Leach<br />
(midfield/attack) and John Briggs (midfield/attack)<br />
also return and I believe<br />
will also be able to pick up scoring for<br />
our offense as will newcomer Mitch<br />
McKay. Mitch is a big strong attack who<br />
brings skill and size to our offense.”<br />
Also returning are senior defensive<br />
wing Nicholas Buonfiglio, senior attack<br />
John Michalski, senior defensive<br />
wing Harrison Drislane and sophomores<br />
Michael Dreher (long stick middie), Jack<br />
Galvin (defenseman) and Miles McKay<br />
(midfielder).<br />
In addition to Hammersley, two juniors<br />
are returning with faceoff specialist<br />
Peter Razzaboni expecting to step up in<br />
the midfield and John Simonetti seeing<br />
minutes as a defensive midfielder and<br />
midfielder.<br />
“Peter is a key this year as a face off<br />
man and he worked hard all year to<br />
improve his face off skills and expect<br />
it will pay off for us this spring,” said<br />
Papagni. “John Briggs may also see time<br />
on faceoffs.”<br />
Defensively, Allain, Drislane, Buonfiglio<br />
and Dreher have nailed down<br />
starting positions, while Myles McKay<br />
and Simonetti will start as defensive<br />
middies. Alfe, Mitch McKay, Leach and<br />
Razzaboni will start at attack.<br />
The starting goalie position is up for<br />
grabs and is down to newcomers Nik<br />
Marotta, a junior, and freshman Connor<br />
Preston.<br />
“Both have looked good in practice<br />
and have good qualities,” said Papagni.<br />
“They both need work in areas but we<br />
are looking forward to working with<br />
both of them.”<br />
Several other freshmen are in potentially<br />
in the mix for varsity minutes,<br />
including Janssen Sperling, Will<br />
Steadman, Ian McDonald, Jack Phelps,<br />
Rupert Thomas and Declan Bolger.<br />
“I expect they will keep working and<br />
eventually get some varsity time this<br />
spring,” Papagni said. “We know a lot<br />
about our freshmen as they played on our<br />
jv team last spring and did a nice job for<br />
us last year. Rupert had an outstanding<br />
Saugus scrimmage Saturday morning, so<br />
right now it looks like he will get some<br />
varsity time.”<br />
Papagni said he expects that<br />
North Reading, Hamilton-Wenham,<br />
Masconomet and Ipswich will be strong<br />
again this year.<br />
As far as team goals go, Papagni said<br />
there is only one.<br />
“We have 16 games and we expect<br />
to compete to the very best of all of<br />
our abilities and surprise some people,”<br />
Papagni said.<br />
Two new coaches are on board, Long<br />
Island native and Endicott College graduate,<br />
Tom Harvery, and Lynnfield High<br />
graduate Michael Doherty, a former<br />
player and captain under Papagni.<br />
“Tom is from a lacrosse hotbed and he<br />
is doing a great job with our offense,”<br />
Papagni said. “Michael has also been<br />
helping us out and he brings some of<br />
that past successful tradition we strive to<br />
meet.”<br />
The Pioneers open the season on<br />
the road Wednesday, April 4 against<br />
Northeastern Conference rival Revere.<br />
The Pioneers also have non-league<br />
games scheduled at Peabody under the<br />
lights Friday, April 5 (7) and against<br />
Tyngsboro at home Wednesday, April 17<br />
at 10 a.m.<br />
The Pioneers’ first Cape Ann League<br />
contest is at home Tuesday, April 9<br />
against Manchester-Essex (3:45 p.m.).<br />
Stone is a wrestling giant<br />
Lynnfield/North Reading<br />
wrestling coach Craig<br />
Stone was inducted into the<br />
New England Wrestling<br />
Hall of Fame last month in<br />
Providence. With him are,<br />
left, Bob Gay, president of<br />
Council of New England<br />
Secondary School Principals<br />
Association (CNESSPA); and<br />
Donal Friedman, executive<br />
director of CNESSPA.<br />
CNESSPA (Council of New<br />
England Secondary School<br />
Principals’ Association).<br />
COURTESY PHOTO<br />
Over-40 softball<br />
still has openings<br />
The Lynnfield Men’s Over-40 Softball<br />
League has announced there are a limited<br />
number of open positions available. Anyone<br />
interested in playing this coming season must<br />
register online on or before April 5.<br />
To register, go to LynnfieldMensSoftball.<br />
com/registration.<br />
The league is open to current or former male<br />
Lynnfield residents who will be 40 years of<br />
age or older as of the start of the season on<br />
May 7.<br />
The registration fee is $140 (non-refundable),<br />
which includes the mandatory town $30<br />
field assessment fee.<br />
The league provides its participants with a<br />
recreational and social outlet to play softball<br />
during the spring and summer months. Games<br />
are generally held Tuesday-Thursday nights.<br />
For more information, visit LynnfieldMensSoftball.com,<br />
or contact commissioner<br />
Kevin Geary by phone at 978-505-2318<br />
or by e-mail at goblue626@gmail.com.
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WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 MARCH 28, 2019<br />
Girls lacrosse has its sights set high<br />
By Anne Marie Tobin<br />
LYNNFIELD — When the Lynnfield girls lacrosse team<br />
takes the field April 1 for its season opener against Cape<br />
Ann League rival Masconomet, the Pioneers have their<br />
sights set on another record-breaking year.<br />
Last year, the team records for most goals in a single<br />
season (222) and largest goal differential (+52). The<br />
Pioneers also notched their first-ever road tournament win,<br />
defeating Winthrop 13-4 in the first round of the Division 2<br />
North tournament.<br />
While the season ended with a 15-3 loss in the quarterfinals<br />
to top-seeded Newburyport, the team nonetheless finished<br />
12-8 (its second best record in program history) and<br />
had four players selected to the CAL All-Star team.<br />
That loss brought with it the end of the road for three senior<br />
captains, who played key roles and will be tough to<br />
replace.<br />
Attack/midfielder Liv Smyrnios led the front line with<br />
59 goals and eight assists. Now playing at St. Anselm’s,<br />
Smyrnios scored her first collegiate goal March 9 in the<br />
Hawks’ 23-4 win over visiting Post University.<br />
Gracie Sperling wreaked havoc all year long at midfield<br />
with 28 goals, 17 assists, 47 draw controls, 61 ground balls<br />
and 26 caused turnovers, while defenseman Hannah Filipe<br />
anchored the backfield.<br />
“The three seniors were all big contributors for the<br />
last three years,” said Lynnfield coach Ethan Blanchette.<br />
“Losing their leadership may be more significant than anything<br />
else because they were strong personalities that did an<br />
excellent job as leaders of the team. But we’re also losing<br />
over 80 goals and a ton of caused turnovers, among other<br />
things.”<br />
The good news is that several key returners are back, including<br />
eight starters, beginning with senior captains, midfielder<br />
Sophia Ellis, attack Ashley Barrett, defender Brianna<br />
Buckley Moynihan student-athlete for February<br />
Both Abby Buckley of Lynnfield High<br />
and Ryan Garlitz of St. John’s Prep will<br />
leave lasting imprints on their schools’<br />
athletic programs — even if, in the case of<br />
Buckley, it’s indirect.<br />
The two athletes have been named the<br />
Moynihan Lumber Student Athletes of the<br />
Month for February.<br />
Buckley, a Lynnfield High senior, was the<br />
starting goalie for the Peabody/Lynnfield/<br />
North Reading girls hockey team. She backboned<br />
the co-op team to a historic season in<br />
which the team set program records for single-season<br />
wins (17) and goals scored (89).<br />
Buckley “has been the backbone of<br />
our team for four years,” said Peabody/<br />
Lynnfield coach Michelle Roach. “And<br />
she’s been a key to rebuilding the program.<br />
As a senior captain, she holds the program<br />
record for wins (28, which not only eclipses<br />
the record for goalies, but is more victories<br />
than the entire program had prior to her<br />
joining the team).<br />
PHOTO | ANNE MARIE TOBIN<br />
Ashley Barrett tries to get through a double team<br />
during a play day over the weekend.<br />
Barrett and attack Olivia Sarni.<br />
Ellis and Ashley Barrett earned CAL All-Star honors last<br />
year with Barrett contributing 52 goals, 10 assists and 31<br />
ground balls and Ellis adding 40 ground balls, 17 caused<br />
turnovers and 17 draw controls. Sarni contributed 47 goals,<br />
two assists, 15 ground balls and seven caused turnovers.<br />
Other returning starters are junior defender Mac Schena,<br />
junior middie Tori Morelli, sophomore middie/attack<br />
Jen Flynn, sophomore goalie Grace Magno, senior Jenna<br />
Lannon, junior Shannon Pierce, junior Maddie Burke,<br />
junior Molly Ozanian and sophomore Ava O’Brien also<br />
return.<br />
With Sperling gone, Morelli looks to be a key factor in all<br />
Holder of a 3.78 grade point average,<br />
Buckley carried a 2.34 goals-against average<br />
for her four-year career, and had a<br />
save percentage of .901, “well above average<br />
for high school girls,” Roach said.<br />
Buckley allowed only 14 goals this<br />
season, and 32 for her career.<br />
She was named the Northeastern<br />
Conference all-league goalie this winter,<br />
and led the Tanners to their third-straight<br />
Carlin Cup victory over Bishop Fenwick.<br />
“Most recently,” said Roach, “she helped<br />
us make program history with our first tournament<br />
win.” And thanks to her, the Tanners<br />
shocked St. Mary’s of Lynn in the second<br />
game by not only beating the Spartans, but<br />
shutting them out, 4-0.<br />
“It honestly felt amazing,” Buckley said<br />
of her performance. “Seeing where we’ve<br />
come since my freshman year, getting an<br />
accomplishment like that means so much.<br />
It felt awesome, especially getting it against<br />
St. Mary’s who shut us out in last year’s<br />
Thursday, March 28<br />
Girls lacrosse<br />
Danvers at Lfd (scrim.), 3:45<br />
Friday, March 29<br />
No events scheduled<br />
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COURTESY PHOTO<br />
Abby Buckley backboned the Peabody/<br />
Lynnfield/North Reading girls hockey<br />
team to a historic season.<br />
tournament.”<br />
The Tanners eventually lost in the third<br />
round, but to eventual Division 1 state<br />
champion Methuen/Tewksbury.<br />
phases of the game, especially on the draw. She finished the<br />
2018 season with eight goals and assists, 58 draw controls,<br />
40 ground balls, 16 caused turnovers and 10 blocks.<br />
“We have eight starters returning, and I would consider<br />
all of them high-quality players,” said Blanchette. “While<br />
they won’t all be all-stars, I could see any of the eight returners<br />
having an all-star caliber season.”<br />
The Pioneers are loaded with promising new talent.<br />
Juniors Lexi Allain and Sydney Jean-Simon along with<br />
sophomores Molly Murphy, Maddie Murphy, Olivia<br />
Murphy (no relation) and Bella Scala moved up from the<br />
JV squad.<br />
Blanchette said the team’s biggest need is filling in the<br />
holes on defense.<br />
“The goals allowed total (170 last year), while higher<br />
than in past years was still excellent, as I believe we were in<br />
the top 45 in goals-against average out of over 200 teams,”<br />
Blanchette said. “We have a lot of goals to replace, but we<br />
have several players who will compete for playing time on<br />
attack. It’s the defense that has a few areas of need without<br />
obvious players to fill those spots.”<br />
Blanchette had a chance to evaluate his team Sunday at<br />
the annual North Andover play day.<br />
“We were short-handed and had only three subs, but<br />
that gave our younger players a great chance to get lots of<br />
playing time,” said Blanchette. “Plus, it was a chance to get<br />
in game shape and play at true game speed at the varsity<br />
level,”<br />
Lynnfield’s 2019 schedule is competitive with nine nonleague<br />
contests on the docket, including the last six of the<br />
season capped by an away match under the lights against<br />
Bishop Fenwick May 27 at 6.<br />
The Pioneers’ final tune-up before kicking off the regular<br />
season is a scrimmage this afternoon (March 28) at home<br />
against Danvers at 3:45.<br />
HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS SCHEDULE<br />
Saturday, March 30<br />
Boys lacrosse<br />
Essex Tech at Lfd (scr.), 10<br />
Sunday, March 31<br />
Baseball<br />
Pentucket at Fenwick, 1<br />
Monday, April 1<br />
Girls lacrosse<br />
Masco at Lynnfield, 3:45<br />
Looking for past issues?<br />
Find them on<br />
weeklynews.net<br />
“Her leadership inspires her teammates<br />
and her play instills confidence,” Roach<br />
said. “She makes big saves at crucial time<br />
and it lifts our team.”<br />
In the seven games she played in<br />
February, Buckley had three shutouts and a<br />
5-1-1 record. She allowed nine goals for a<br />
1.29 average.<br />
Buckley has been on the high honor<br />
roll at Lynnfield all four years, and was<br />
student-athlete of the month once before,<br />
in February 2017. She also received the<br />
Spanish Award for Academic Achievement<br />
in 2016.<br />
Off the ice, Buckley writes for the<br />
Lynnfield High School Catalyst, the<br />
school newspaper, is in the Kindness Club,<br />
Sisterhood Society Club, and Best Buddies<br />
club.<br />
She also plays girls lacrosse for the<br />
Pioneers. A nursing major, Buckley will be<br />
attending Boston College in the fall.<br />
Boys lacrosse<br />
Peabody at Lowell, 7<br />
Fenwick at Man-Essex, 4<br />
Tuesday, April 2<br />
Track<br />
Peabody at Beverly, 4<br />
Spellman at Fenwick, 3:30<br />
Wednesday, April 3<br />
Boys lacrosse<br />
Lynnfield at Revere, 7<br />
Girls lacrosse<br />
Gloucester at Peabody, 4<br />
Girls tennis<br />
Williams at Fenwick, 3:30<br />
Boys tennis<br />
Fenwick at Matignon, 4<br />
Boys lacrosse<br />
Nwburyport at Fenwick, 4
MARCH 28, 2019<br />
PHOTO | LYNNFIELD HIGH HOCKEY<br />
Mike Caruso, left, is this year’s boys hockey team Sparkes<br />
Award winner, joining his father Frank, right, as the only father-son<br />
duo to win the award.<br />
Boys hockey<br />
celebrates season<br />
By Anne Marie Tobin<br />
LYNNFIELD — The<br />
Lynnfield boys hockey team<br />
wrapped up its season with its<br />
annual awards banquet Friday<br />
March 22 at the middle school.<br />
Senior Mike Caruso received<br />
the Bob Sparkes Award for outstanding<br />
leadership. He joined<br />
his father, Frank Caruso, the<br />
1983 winner, as what are believed<br />
to be the only father-son<br />
winners in the history of<br />
Lynnfield ice hockey.<br />
“The fact that Mike’s father<br />
also won it makes it that much<br />
special,” said Lynnfield coach<br />
Jon Gardner. “Leadership is the<br />
main criteria, being a good citizen<br />
both on off the ice. It’s the<br />
most prestigious award we give.”<br />
Gardner’s twin brother, assistant<br />
coach Jay, who received<br />
the Sparkes Award in 1995, said<br />
Caruso defines “team player.”<br />
“He’s a lead-by-example guy<br />
who’s impossible not to respect<br />
and follow,” said Jay Gardner.<br />
“He’s done everything we asked<br />
of him without hesitation and he<br />
does everything the right way,<br />
whether it’s the way he plays the<br />
game or the way he handles himself<br />
off the ice.<br />
“He’s developed into one of<br />
the most dependable and consistent<br />
players we’ve ever had<br />
the pleasure of coaching and<br />
he will be sorely missed. No.19<br />
(Caruso) is the very definition<br />
of a team player.”<br />
Other awards:<br />
Senior Jeff Floramo received<br />
the Passion Award, while senior<br />
Richie Caseletto won the Pride<br />
Award.<br />
Senior Chris Flannery won<br />
a second straight Work Ethic<br />
Award, while senior Will<br />
Garofoli received the Selfless<br />
Award. The Biggest Strides<br />
award went to senior Leo Quinn.<br />
The Most Impactful Player<br />
Award was shared by senior<br />
goaltender Aidan Kelly, senior<br />
defenseman Jaret Simpson<br />
and senior forward George<br />
DeRoche, who also played his<br />
way into the Century Club this<br />
year.<br />
“We don’t really believe in<br />
the term most valuable to refer<br />
to one player in a team sport,”<br />
said Gardner. “The three of<br />
them together was just a different<br />
dynamic even though<br />
they played different positions.<br />
This is the first time we gave<br />
this award, but it just fit.<br />
“Throughout the season, they<br />
were all impactful and each of<br />
them needed the other two in<br />
order to do that. Jaret played<br />
D but also was an offensive<br />
contributor,” Gardner added.<br />
“George was our leading scorer<br />
by also was key on the penalty<br />
kill and Aidan was always there<br />
as our rock and safety net.”<br />
Sophomore Brenden Henehen<br />
received the junior varsity Vlad<br />
Award.<br />
The captains and assistant<br />
captain of the 2019-202 team<br />
were announced. The captains<br />
are seniors John Simonetti,<br />
Ronnie Fucillo and Danny<br />
Mack, while junior Sam Pifko<br />
was named assistant captain.<br />
The Pioneers’ Cape Ann<br />
League all-stars were recognized<br />
and received certificates.<br />
DeRoche received CAL All-<br />
League honors for a second<br />
straight season, while Simpson,<br />
who was an all-star last year,<br />
was also an All-League honoree.<br />
DeRoche scored 20 goals and<br />
dished 20 assists to finish his career<br />
with 115 points. Simpson,<br />
a defenseman, finished with 23<br />
points on eight goals and 15<br />
assists.<br />
Kelly, Garofoli and Simonetti<br />
were named to the CAL ALL-<br />
Star team. Kelly finished with<br />
an 11-6-4 record with a 2.28<br />
goals-against average.<br />
Garofoli had 10 goals and<br />
10 assists while Simonetti had<br />
eight goals and 17 assists.<br />
This season the Pioneers finished<br />
with an overall record of<br />
11-6-4, thanks to a late-season<br />
push when the Pioneers picked<br />
up some key wins and delivered<br />
solid performances against<br />
some top-quality programs.<br />
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 11<br />
Yannone off to a stellar<br />
start for Endicott lacrosse<br />
By Harold Rivera<br />
BEVERLY — Based on individual merit,<br />
Lynnfield’s Derek Yannone is off to a stellar start<br />
to his senior season on the Endicott men’s lacrosse<br />
team.<br />
The St. John’s Prep graduate (2015) has earned<br />
Commonwealth Coast Conference Specialist-of-the-<br />
Week honors three times in a season that’s only five<br />
weeks old.<br />
“It’s cool but I try not to take it too much into consideration,”<br />
Yannone, a midfielder/faceoff specialist.<br />
“I try to take things game by game. If it happens it<br />
happens. I just want to do my<br />
job for my teammates.”<br />
At 1-5 through their first six<br />
games, the Gulls are off to a<br />
tough start. Their lone win was<br />
an 11-4 victory over Skidmore,<br />
but Endicott has played a tough<br />
slate of non-conference opponents.<br />
Three of Endicott’s five<br />
losses came against ranked opponents<br />
in No. 2 Amherst, No.<br />
3 Tufts and No. 12 Stevens.<br />
“I think our systems work,”<br />
Yannone, a two-sport athlete<br />
in lacrosse and football at St.<br />
John’s Prep, said. “Against<br />
Amherst we did very well offensively.<br />
It’s just about us<br />
trusting each other and playing<br />
as a team. When we do play as<br />
COURTESY PHOTO<br />
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in stride. He just wants to win.<br />
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a team, I feel that we’re very<br />
strong overall.<br />
“We’re really good defensively,”<br />
Yannone said. “We have<br />
a very solid defense. Our offense still needs to work<br />
out a few kinks. Faceoffs are also another strength of<br />
our team.”<br />
Yannone scored an unassisted goal in the 12-10 loss<br />
to Amerst earlier this week. This season, Yannone has<br />
scored three goals, scooped 53 ground balls and has<br />
won 80 of 125 faceoffs.<br />
As one of 12 seniors on Endicott’s roster, Yannone<br />
recognizes that he’ll have to step into a leadership<br />
role this spring. His goals are to voice his opinion<br />
when needed while setting a positive example for the<br />
underclassmen.<br />
“We have a pretty big senior class,” Yannone said.<br />
“We’re all expected to lead and provide those leadership<br />
roles for the team and underclassmen. Whenever<br />
I feel something needs to be said, I say it. For instance<br />
at halftime of the Springfield game (8-4 loss), I felt<br />
we weren’t playing to our standards so I talked to the<br />
guys a little bit about that. It’s just about being honest<br />
and constructive.”<br />
Academically, things are going well for Yannone.<br />
With his responsibilities on and off the field, Yannone<br />
keeps a busy schedule.<br />
He’s set to graduate in May.<br />
“Things are pretty good. Senior classes are a little<br />
strenuous,” Yannone said. “I have thesis this semester.<br />
As a computer science major, I’m<br />
developing an app. I have that balance<br />
between lacrosse, school and<br />
social life to work on what I need to<br />
get done for the semester.”<br />
If Endicott’s looking to turn<br />
things around in its young season,<br />
now’s the time. Yannone and the<br />
Gulls open their CCC schedule<br />
Saturday (3) when they host Curry<br />
at Hempstead Stadium. Despite<br />
finishing 7-11 overall last spring,<br />
the Gulls were dominant in conference<br />
play. Endicott went 6-2<br />
against CCC opponents in 2018 and<br />
reached the championship game of<br />
the conference tournament, where it<br />
fell to Western New England.<br />
“Last season was tough,”<br />
Yannone said. “We had a lot more<br />
downs than ups. We were a young<br />
team. I feel we didn’t get into the<br />
rhythm of things early enough into<br />
the season to kind of figure things<br />
out.<br />
“Western New England’s our biggest rival in the<br />
conference,” Yannone said. “We lost to Curry last<br />
year. This year I think it’ll be a lot different. We’re<br />
looking forward to taking that game back Saturday.<br />
Western New England’s the big one we look forward<br />
to every year.”<br />
Yannone’s confident the Gulls can move in the<br />
right direction as the season takes its course.<br />
“One term a lot of teams use to describe us is<br />
‘gritty,’” Yannone said. “We’re hard-nosed players.<br />
Getting into a dogfight, a lot of teams expect that<br />
going into a game.”<br />
WINTER 2018
12<br />
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 MARCH 28, 2019<br />
VOTE YES<br />
THE TRUTH ABOUT THE<br />
MARKETSTREET THEATER PROPOSAL<br />
You’ve probably heard about our plan to bring a new community theater to MarketStreet. Along<br />
with the theater, we will be providing a smart traffic signal system on Walnut Street, more<br />
parking and a $300,000 contribution to Lynnfield’s parks.<br />
In an effort to clear up some misinformation out there, we wanted to share some more<br />
facts with you:<br />
• NO BROKEN PROMISES - We made a promise to Town Meeting in 2007 that any<br />
changes at MarketStreet would be brought back to Town Meeting for consideration.<br />
That’s what we are doing on April 29th.<br />
• NOT A MEGAPLEX - The proposed theater is certainly not a “megaplex.” In fact,<br />
it is scaled to fit with our current buildings and about half the size of a typical<br />
megaplex cinema.<br />
• MOVIES ARE THRIVING - The movie industry is thriving with overall sales up<br />
8% in 2018 -- its best year in a decade.<br />
• SMART SIGNALS WORK - The smart signal system will help move traffic during<br />
all traffic conditions from light to heavy. The theater project is the source of capital<br />
for these improvements.<br />
• THIS PROPOSAL IS NOT BEING RUSHED - We waited a year at the request of the<br />
Selectmen and worked with the Town’s advisory committee to refine the proposal.<br />
• 1350 BUILDING HAS NO IMPACT - Lahey Health has been open for 6 months. Its<br />
visitors are mainly daytime and do not impact the theater.<br />
IT’S TIME FOR A COMMUNITY THEATER TO BE BUILT AT MARKETSTREET. VOTE YES<br />
AT TOWN MEETING ON APRIL 29TH AT 6:30 P.M. AT LYNNFIELD MIDDLE SCHOOL.<br />
LYNNFIELD TOWN MEETING<br />
on APRIL 29<br />
LEARN MORE AT COURB.CO/MSTHEATER
MARCH 28, 2019<br />
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 13<br />
PEABODY PLANNING BOARD<br />
24 Lowell Street<br />
Peabody, Massachusetts 01960-5440<br />
Phone: (978) 538-5793<br />
Fax (978) 538-5988<br />
Notice is hereby given that the PLANNING BOARD OF THE CITY OF PEABODY<br />
will conduct a PUBLIC HEARING on THURSDAY EVENING, APRIL 18, 2019, at<br />
7:00 P.M.., in Lower Level Conference Room, City Hall, 24 Lowell Street, Peabody,<br />
MA in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 40A, Section 5 of the<br />
Massachusetts General Laws TO CONSIDER AMENDING THE ZONING<br />
ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF PEABODY<br />
as follows:<br />
SECTION ONE: By amending Section 6 Entitled Special Regulations as follows:<br />
By adding a new Section 6.16 entitled Residential Overlay District as follows:<br />
6.16.0 Residential Overlay District<br />
6.16.1 Establishment<br />
6.16.2 Purpose of the Residential Overlay<br />
6.16.3 District Regulations<br />
6.16.4 Site and Design Criteria<br />
6.16.4.1 Purpose<br />
6.16.4.2 Applicability<br />
6.16.4.3 Framework for Review Process<br />
6.16.4.4 Access<br />
6.16.4.5 Parking<br />
6.16.4.6 Pedestrian and Bicycle Access<br />
6.16.4.7 Landscaping and Lighting<br />
6.16.4.8 Utilities<br />
6.16.4.9 Capital Facility Requirements<br />
6.16.4.10 Noise<br />
SECTION TWO: That the Zoning Map of the City of Peabody entitled, City of<br />
Peabody Zoning Map Adopted April 28, 2011, as amended, is hereby further<br />
amended as follows:<br />
To include within the Residential Overlay District the following parcels:<br />
Assessors Map 039, Parcel 005 and numbered 68 Prospect Street (MRI Building)<br />
Assessors Map 039, Parcel 047 and numbered 39 Cross Street (Office Building)<br />
Assessors Map 039, Parcel 048C and numbered 43 Cross Street (Tailor Shop)<br />
Assessors Map 039, Parcel 048E and numbered 73 Prospect Street (Residential<br />
dwelling)<br />
Assessors Map 039, Parcel 048H and numbered 37 Cross Street (Vacant Land)<br />
Assessors Map 039, Parcel 600 and numbered 41 Cross Street (Restaurant)<br />
Assessors Map 039, Parcel 601 and numbered 41 Cross Street (Hotel)<br />
Assessors Map 035, Parcel 038A and numbered 190 Newbury Street [R] (Vacant<br />
Land)<br />
Assessors Map 047, Parcel 018 and numbered 176 Newbury Street (Macs Trailer<br />
Park)<br />
Assessors Map 051, Parcel 001 and numbered 210 Andover Street (JC Penney)<br />
Assessors Map 051, Parcel 002 and numbered 210 Andover Street (Barnes &<br />
Noble)<br />
Assessors Map 051, Parcel 006 and numbered 61 Prospect Street (East Boston<br />
Savings Bank)<br />
Assessors Map 051, Parcel 007 and numbered 210 Andover Street (Macys)<br />
Assessors Map 051, Parcel 008 and numbered 210 Andover Street (Portion of<br />
Mall main parcel to only include land bordering north of Orthopedics Drive,<br />
Prospect Street, Andover Street and Route 128)<br />
Assessors Map 051, Parcel 010 and numbered 210 Andover Street (Macys Men)<br />
Assessors Map 052, Parcel 001 and numbered 210 Andover Street (Tesla)<br />
Assessors Map 062, Parcel 017B and number 1 Orthopedics Drive (Medical<br />
Office)<br />
SECTION THREE: All ordinances or parts of ordinances inconsistent herewith<br />
are<br />
hereby repealed.<br />
SECTION FOUR: This ordinance shall take effect as provided by law.<br />
COPIES OF THE PROPOSED RESIDENTIAL OVERLAY DISTRICT ZONING AMENDMENT<br />
ARE AVAILABLE FOR PUBLIC VIEWING AT THE CITY CLERK'S OFFICE OR OFFICE OF<br />
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT & PLANNING, CITY HALL, 24 LOWELL STREET,<br />
PEABODY, MA OR POSTED ON THE CITY OF PEABODY WEBSITE AT<br />
WWW.PEABODY-MA.GOV<br />
PEABODY PLANNING BOARD<br />
THOMAS BETTENCOURT<br />
CHAIRPERSON<br />
Weekly News: March 28, April 4, 2019<br />
PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />
CITY OF PEABODY<br />
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING THE ZONING ORDINANCE<br />
OF THE CITY OF PEABODY<br />
BE IT ORDAINED by the City Council of the City of Peabody as follows:<br />
That the Zoning Ordinance of the City of Peabody entitled Zoning Ordinance -<br />
2011, as amended through June 28, 2018, is hereby further amended as follows:<br />
SECTION ONE: By amending Section 6 Entitled Special Regulations as follows:<br />
By adding a new Section 6.15 entitled Mill Overlay District as follows:<br />
6.15 Purpose<br />
6.15.1 Establishment<br />
6.15.2 Boundaries<br />
6.15.3 Applicability and Relationship to Underlying Zoning<br />
6.15.4 Permitted Uses<br />
6.15.4.1 The following uses shall be permitted by right in the Mill Overlay<br />
District (MOD)<br />
6.15.4.2 The following uses shall be permitted by Special Permit in the Mill<br />
Overlay District (MOD)<br />
6.15.5 Parking, Landscaping, Façade, Signs and Pedestrian<br />
Accommodation<br />
6.15.6 Noise<br />
6.15.7 Relationship to Underlying Zoning<br />
6.15.8 Waivers<br />
SECTION TWO: That the Zoning Map of the City of Peabody entitled, City of<br />
Peabody Zoning Map Adopted April 28, 2011, as amended, is hereby further<br />
amended as follows:<br />
To include within the Mill Overlay District the following locations:<br />
Assessors Map 053, Parcel 047 and numbered 58 Pulaski Street<br />
SECTION THREE: All ordinances or parts of ordinances inconsistent herewith are<br />
hereby repealed.<br />
SECTION FOUR: This ordinance shall take effect as provided by law.<br />
INTRODUCED ON FEBRUARY 14, 2019<br />
PUBLIC HEARING HELD BY THE PEABODY PLANNING<br />
ON MARCH 7, 2019<br />
PUBLIC HEARING HELD BY THE PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />
ON MARCH 14, 2019<br />
ADOPTED AS ADVERTISED AND READ BY THE PEABODY CITY COUNCIL ON<br />
MARCH 14, 2019<br />
PUBLICATION OF ADOPTION ON MARCH 28, 2019<br />
NOTE: That claims of invalidity by reason of any defect in the procedure of<br />
adoption may be made within ninety (90) days from the date of adoption.<br />
Weekly News: March 28, 2019<br />
PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />
CITY OF PEABODY<br />
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING THE ZONING ORDINANCE<br />
OF THE CITY OF PEABODY<br />
BE IT ORDAINED by the City Council of the City of Peabody as follows:<br />
That the Zoning Ordinance of the City of Peabody entitled Zoning Ordinance -<br />
2011, as amended through June 28, 2018, is hereby further amended as follows:<br />
SECTION ONE: By amending Section 4.2.5 "Uses" by adding the use<br />
"charitable retail facilities of less than 12,000 square feet in size where such<br />
charitable entity is a nonprofit organization with an IRS 501(c)(3) designation and<br />
is engaged in the sale of general merchandise, furniture, household goods, dry<br />
goods, clothing, hardware, paint, household appliances, and/or books " and by<br />
adding the designation of "SP" in the I-L Zone in the column for charitable retail<br />
facilities of less than 12,000 square feet in size where such charitable entity is a<br />
nonprofit organization with an IRS 501(c)(3) designation and is engaged in the<br />
sale of general merchandise, furniture, household goods, dry goods, clothing,<br />
hardware, paint, household appliances, and/or books .<br />
PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />
CITY OF PEABODY<br />
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING THE ZONING ORDINANCE<br />
OF THE CITY OF PEABODY<br />
BE IT ORDAINED by the City Council of the City of Peabody as follows:<br />
That the Zoning Ordinance of the City of Peabody entitled Zoning Ordinance -<br />
2011, as amended through June 28, 2018, is hereby further amended as follows:<br />
SECTION ONE:<br />
By adding to Section 2: Definitions to the Zoning Ordinance:<br />
Studio, motion picture and television filming. A building used for creating,<br />
editing, and producing film or video without spectators.<br />
SECTION TWO: To amend Section 4: Table 4.2 Schedule of Use Regulations<br />
to allow Studio, motion picture and television filming, by special permit in the<br />
following districts: IL, IP, and DDD<br />
SECTION THREE: All ordinances or parts of ordinances inconsistent herewith are<br />
hereby repealed.<br />
SECTION FOUR: This Ordinance shall take effect as provided by law.<br />
INTRODUCED ON FEBRUARY 14, 2019<br />
PUBLIC HEARING HELD BY THE PEABODY PLANNING<br />
ON MARCH 7, 2019<br />
PUBLIC HEARING HELD BY THE PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />
ON MARCH 14, 2019<br />
ADOPTED AS ADVERTISED AND READ BY THE PEABODY CITY COUNCIL ON<br />
MARCH 14, 2019<br />
PUBLICATION OF ADOPTION ON MARCH 28, 2019<br />
NOTE: That claims of invalidity by reason of any defect in the procedure of<br />
adoption may be made within ninety (90) days from the date of adoption.<br />
Weekly News: March 28, 2019<br />
PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />
CITY OF PEABODY<br />
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING SECTION 19-81<br />
"PARKING PROHIBITED - HANDICAP ZONE"<br />
OF THE CODE OF THE CITY OF PEABODY<br />
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PEABODY AS FOLLOWS:<br />
SECTION ONE: The Code of the City of Peabody adopted on January 9, 1986,<br />
and amended, is hereby further amended as follows:<br />
Section 19-81 entitled "Parking Prohibited, Handicapped<br />
Zone" of the Code of the City of Peabody, Massachusetts, is<br />
hereby amended by inserting therein the following:<br />
One handicap parking space in front of and along the<br />
property line of the following address:<br />
12 Carlton Street<br />
SECTION TWO: All ordinances or parts of ordinances inconsistent herewith are<br />
hereby repealed.<br />
SECTION THREE: This ordinance shall take effect as provided by law.<br />
INTRODUCED MARCH 14, 2019<br />
ORDERED PUBLISHED MARCH 14, 2019<br />
PUBLISHED MARCH 28, 2019<br />
Weekly News: March 28, 2019<br />
PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />
LEGAL AD<br />
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING<br />
Notice is hereby given that the City<br />
Council of the City of Peabody will<br />
conduct a public hearing on THURS-<br />
DAY EVENING, APRIL 18, 2019, at<br />
7:30 P.M., in the Frank L. Wiggin<br />
Auditorium, City Hall, 24 Lowell Street,<br />
Peabody, MA on the application from<br />
GRECIAN DINER AND TAVERN INC.,<br />
136 Newbury Street, Peabody, MA<br />
REQUESTING AN ENTERTAINMENT<br />
LICENSE for the use of non-live<br />
entertainment, specifically, television,<br />
CD Player, DVD player, radio, and<br />
digital internet jukebox and live<br />
entertainment, specifically, D.J. and<br />
Live Entertainment in form of live<br />
music at said 136 NEWBURY STREET,<br />
Peabody, MA.<br />
PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />
LEGAL AD<br />
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING<br />
Notice is hereby given that the City<br />
Council of the City of Peabody will<br />
conduct a public hearing on THURS-<br />
DAY EVENING, APRIL 18, 2019, at<br />
7:30 P.M., in the Frank L. Wiggin<br />
Auditorium, City Hall, 24 Lowell Street,<br />
Peabody, MA on the application from<br />
IMPROTEX AUTO INC C/O ELCHIN<br />
NADIROV D/B/A PRESTIGE AUTO<br />
SALES, 288 Newbury Street, Peabody,<br />
MA REQUESTING THE TRANSFER OF A<br />
CLASS 2 MOTOR VEHICLE LICENSE at<br />
said 288 NEWBURY STREET, Peabody,<br />
MA.<br />
PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />
COUNCILLOR JON G. TURCO<br />
CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT<br />
SECTION TWO: All ordinances or parts of ordinances inconsistent herewith are<br />
hereby repealed.<br />
SECTION THREE: This Ordinance shall take effect as provided by law.<br />
INTRODUCED ON FEBRUARY 14, 2019<br />
PUBLIC HEARING HELD BY THE PEABODY PLANNING<br />
ON MARCH 7, 2019<br />
PUBLIC HEARING HELD BY THE PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />
ON MARCH 14, 2019<br />
ADOPTED AS ADVERTISED AND READ BY THE PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />
ON MARCH 14, 2019<br />
PUBLICATION OF ADOPTION ON MARCH 28, 2019<br />
NOTE: That claims of invalidity by reason of any defect in the procedure of<br />
adoption may be made within ninety (90) days from the date of adoption.<br />
Weekly News: March 28, 2019<br />
LYNNFIELD WATER DISTRICT<br />
PUBLIC NOTICE<br />
A Special Meeting of the Lynnfield<br />
Water District will be held on<br />
Monday, May 13, 2019 at 7:00<br />
pm at the District office; 842<br />
Salem Street, Lynnfield, Massachusetts.<br />
The Warrant for the<br />
Special Meeting will close at 8:00<br />
p.m. Monday, April 8, 2019.<br />
Weekly News: March 28, 2019<br />
Find great<br />
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PEABODY CITY COUNCIL<br />
COUNCILLOR JON G. TURCO<br />
CITY COUNCIL PRESIDENT<br />
Timothy E. Spanos<br />
City Clerk<br />
Weekly News: March 28, 2019<br />
Timothy E. Spanos<br />
City Clerk<br />
Weekly News: March 28, 2019
14<br />
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 MARCH 28, 2019<br />
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26 Main Street | Lynnfield, MA 01940 | 781.266 .2100<br />
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MARCH 28, 2019<br />
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 15<br />
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Opportunity Act. Owned by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker and the Coldwell Banker Logo are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. 627297NE_3/19<br />
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16<br />
WEEKLYNEWS.NET - 978-532-5880 MARCH 28, 2019<br />
Together We're Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices<br />
Commonwealth Real Estate Northrup Associates<br />
Where you deserve to be<br />
New<br />
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Northrup Associates<br />
26 Main Street<br />
Lynnfield, MA 01940<br />
781.246-2100<br />
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Where you deserve to be