B4 Metro The Boston Globe WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2019
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Today is Wednesday, Sept.
11, the 254th day of 2019.
There are 111 days left in the
year.
Birthdays: Rock musician
Mickey Hart (The Dead) is 76.
Actor Scott Patterson is 61.
Actor John Hawkes is 60. Syri-
an President Bashar al-Assad
is 54. Singer Harry Connick Jr.
is 52.. Actress Taraji P. Henson
is 49. Rock musician Jon Buck-
land (Coldplay) is 42. Rapper
Ludacris is 42. Country singer
Charles Kelley (Lady Antebel-
lum) is 38.
ºIn 1789, Alexander Ham-
ilton was appointed the first
US Secretary of the Treasury.
ºIn 1814, an American
fleet scored a decisive victory
over the British in the Battle of
Lake Champlain in the War of
1812.
ºIn 1936, Boulder Dam
(now Hoover Dam) began op-
eration as President Franklin
D. Roosevelt pressed a key in
Washington to signal the start-
up of the dam’s first hydroelec-
tric generator.
ºIn 1941, groundbreaking
took place for the Pentagon. In
a speech that drew accusations
of anti-Semitism, Charles A.
Lindbergh told an America
First rally in Des Moines, Iowa,
that ‘‘the British, the Jewish,
and the Roosevelt administra-
tion’’ were pushing the United
States toward war.
ºIn 1973, Chilean Presi-
dent Salvador Allende died
during a violent military coup.
ºIn 2001, America faced an
unprecedented day of terror as
19 al Qaeda members hijacked
four passenger jetliners, send-
ing two of the planes smashing
into New York’s World Trade
Center, one into the Pentagon,
and the fourth into a field in
western Pennsylvania, result-
ing in nearly 3,000 deaths.
ºIn 2006, in a prime-time
address, President George W.
Bush invoked the memory of
the victims of the 9/11 attacks
as he staunchly defended the
war in Iraq, though he ac-
knowledged that Saddam Hus-
sein was not responsible for
the attacks.
ºIn 2008, presidential can-
didates John McCain and Ba-
rack Obama put aside politics
as they visited ground zero to-
gether on the anniversary of
9/11 to honor its victims.
ºIn 2009, on his first 9/
anniversary as president, Ba-
rack Obama urged Americans
to come together in service
just as they united after the
terrorist attacks.
ºIn 2012, a mob armed
with guns and grenades
launched a fiery nightlong at-
tack on a US diplomatic out-
post and a CIA annex in Beng-
hazi, Libya, killing US Ambas-
sador Chris Stevens and three
other Americans.
ºIn 2014, in a joint state-
ment, 10 Arab states promised
to ‘‘do their share’’ to fight Is-
lamic State militants, but
NATO member Turkey refused
to join in.
ºLast year, about 1.7 mil-
lion people in three states were
warned to get out of the way of
Hurricane Florence, which
was taking dead aim on the
Carolinas. With Florence bear-
ing down on the Southeast
coast, President Donald
Trump turned attention back
to the federal government re-
sponse to Hurricane Maria in
Puerto Rico a year earlier,
deeming it ‘‘incredibly success-
ful’’ despite a recent federal re-
port finding that nearly 3,
people died.
This day in history
Dorchester real estate agent
Craig Galvin — who had busi-
ness ties to Lynch, and the for-
mer head of the city’s inspec-
tions department took a leave
of absence because of connec-
tions he has to the South Bos-
ton project.
And Walsh has made clear
that the engine room of the
city’s real estate boom wasn’t
going to stop churning away.
“There are timely projects
before the board right now that
will unfairly and negatively im-
pact residents who have been
waiting to improve their homes
if they are not addressed,”
Walsh said in a statement Mon-
day.
Still, Wu is not alone in urg-
ing changes to the zoning board
and how it functions. Councilor
MattO’Malleyhasraisedthe
prospect of creating an om-
budsman’s office help to ensure
transparency at the board,
which holds great sway over the
look and feel of Boston’s neigh-
borhoods. And on Tuesday,
Council president Andrea
Campbell called for the creation
of an inspector general for the
city, appointed by an indepen-
dent board and tasked with
“rooting out” corruption.
“Bostonians deserve a city
government that is free of cor-
uZONINGBOARD
Continued from Page B
ruption and waste, grounded in
transparency, and accountable
to the people,” she said.
Neither those ideas nor the
bribery scandal, which has
roiled City Hall for nearly two
weeks now came up Tuesday.
The meeting turned out to be a
mostly routine affair, with the
zoning board approving dozens
of projects. Galvin, who re-
signed his board position Sun-
day night after The Boston
Globe reported his business ties
to Lynch, was only briefly men-
tioned. “We offer him thanks
for his years of service,” Araujo
said in a brief statement. Then
shemovedontothefirstitem
on the agenda: routine zoning
extensions, like the vote that is
at the center of the bribery case.
The board approved four of
them, with little discussion.
There was one hiccup:
Board member Kerry Walsh
Logue was absent, leaving the
panel with just five members
Tuesday, the minimum needed
to pass most items. That meant
a single “no” vote could scuttle
a project, prompting several de-
velopers to request deferrals
from the board.
“We’re going to wait for a
full board,” said Tim Sheehan,
who was representing a three-
unit project in Charlestown.
Then there was James Chris-
topher.
The son of William “Buddy”
Christopher — Walsh’s long-
time head of inspectional ser-
vices and overseer of the board,
who took an unpaid leave Fri-
day — who now runs his fa-
ther’s architecture firm, James
Christopher, had three projects
on the zoning board’s agenda
Tuesday. He, too, requested de-
ferrals until October, without
specifying why. The younger
Christopher, who appeared as
thearchitectontheSouthie
condo project at the center of
the scandal, declined to com-
ment when approached by the
Globe Tuesday.
Still, many projects did go
forward, and nearly all were ap-
proved — a key step in a process
that can stretch for months, or
years, depending on the size of
a development.
Boston builder Cabot, Cabot
& Forbes has been working
since 2017 on a condo-and-
apartment project with 400-
plus units on Kilmarnock Street
in the Fenway. With the project
on Tuesday’s agenda and a goal
to break ground early next year,
chief executive Jay Doherty saw
no reason to pause — for either
a scandal or a reduced board.
“We’ve done a lot of work on
this with neighbors and the
community. We’ve covered our
bases,” Doherty said, after the
project won unanimous ap-
proval. “We felt we had our best
foot forward and we were ready
to go.”
Tim Logan can be reached at
[email protected].
Follow him on Twitter at
@bytimlogan. Milton J.
Valencia can be reached at
[email protected].
Follow him on Twitter
@miltonvalencia.
Despitescandal,it’sbusinessasusualforzoningboard
JONATHAN WIGGS/GLOBE STAFF
James Christopher, who runs an architecture firm, had three projects on the zoning board’s agenda Tuesday. He, like
other developers who appeared before the board, requested deferrals until October.
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LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICES
LEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICES
LEGAL NOTICES
M.G.L. C. 149 CONSTRUCTIONNOTICE TO CONTRACTORS –
ADVERTISEMENT OF INVITATION FOR BIDSCOMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
DEPARTMENT OF CONSERVATION and RECREATION251 Causeway Street, Suite 600,
Boston, MA 02114-
PHONE: 617-626-1250 FACSIMILE: 617-626-1351www.mass.gov/dcr
Contract No.: P20-3355-M5ATitle: PAINTING OF DCR POOL FACILITIES
Address/Location: Statewide
Sealed GENERAL BID proposals shall be submitted on aform furnished by the Department and will be received un-
tilthat time and place be publicly opened and read.11:00AM on Wednesday October 9, 2019and will at
Individual sets of contract documents, in the form of Com-pact Discs (CDs), which include specifications, are available
at the Boston address above, free of charge. All partieswho wish to have the CDs shipped to them must Email:
[email protected] your approved account
number for mailing service (i.e. – Federal Express), or youmay request to have CD sent by the United State Post Ser-
vice. In the email, please include your company’s name,
address, telephone #, and contact person. Will email whenpossible.
If any addenda are issued throughout the open period forthis project, DCR will distribute these addenda via email
to the email identified by the prospective bidders to DCR
at the time the CD of plans and specifications is issued.PLEASE NOTE: All bidders must confirm receipt of any DCR
email communication by sending a return email stating:“(name of bidder) confirms that we have received Ad-
dendum #__ for Project No.P20-3355-M5A and Title “
Painting of DCR Pool Facilities .”The email must show thename and phone number of the bidder’s responsible con-
tact person.
A pre-bidding conference for prospective bidders will beheld on:Wednesday September 25, 2019 At 10:00 AM , 7th ,
Floor Conference Room, 251 Causeway Street, Boston. MA
The project consists of: Painting of Swimming Pool Sur-
faces and Pool Shells at Various DCR Facilities.
The estimated project cost is$800,000.
The work is to be accomplished within 730 calendar days
of a notice to proceed. Liquidated damages in the amountof$ 500.00 per day will be assessed if the work has not
been completed in accordance with the provisions of the
contract within the time specified (as extended by any au-thorizedextensionoftimegrantedinaccordancewiththe
contract provisions).
The proposed contract includes a combined participationgoal of0.0 %of the bid price for minority-owned busi-
ness enterprises and women-owned business enterprises.Proposed MBE/WBE participation plans that include solely
MBE or solely WBE participation, or do not include a rea-
sonable amount of participation by both MBE and WBEfirms to meet the combined goal, will not be considered
responsive.
The applicable local minority workforce utilization per-
centage is a minimum goal of 15.3%. The applicable localwomen workforce utilization percentage is a minimum
goal of 6.9%.
The Commonwealth encourages the participation of Veter-an-Owned Business Enterprises (“VOBE”) on its construc-
tion projects. The Veteran-Owned Business Enterprise par-ticipation benchmark for this contract is0.0%.
Each bid must be accompanied by a bid deposit, in theform of a bid bond, cash, certified check, or a treasurer’s
or cashier’s check issued by a responsible bank or trustcompany, payable to the Department of Conservation and
Recreation in the amount of 5% of the bid.
Each bid must be enclosed in a sealed envelope on whichthe bidder’s return address, Including the bidder’s name, is
listed, and be addressed as follows:
Robert Boncore, Director of Contract
Administration and ProcurementDepartment of Conservation & Recreation
251 Causeway Street, 6th Floor
Boston, MA 02114SEALED BID/PROPOSAL ENCLOSED
Contract No.:P20-3355-M5A
Contract Title: PAINTING OF DCR POOL FACILITIES
Bids are subject to the provisions of M.G.L. Ch. 149, sections 44A to H, inclusive. In addition, bids are also subject-
to Ch. 30, Sect. 39F, G, H and M inclusive. Wages are sub-
jsections 26 to 27D inclusive. The Department reserves theect to minimum wage rates as per Mass. Gen. L. Ch. 149,
right to waive any informalities in or to reject any and all
bids if it be in the public interest to do so.
All Bidders for this project are required to be certified with
the Massachusetts Division of Capital Asset Managementand Maintenance (DCAM) for the Painting and must submit
with the bid an update of their respective qualifications.
General Bidders must be Certified for General Construction. -
Leo Roy, CommissionerMassachusetts Department of
Conservation and Recreation
LEGAL NOTICE MORTGAGEE’S SALE OF REAL ESTATE By vir-tue of and in execution of the Power of Sale contained in
a certain mortgage given by Carlos A. Castellon and PedroLuna to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. act-
ing solely as nominee for First Horizon Home Loans, dated
August 25, 2008 and recorded in Suffolk County Registry ofDeeds in Book 43983, Page 237 (the “Mortgage”) of which
mortgage Nationstar Mortgage LLC d/b/a Mr. Cooper is the
present holder by assignment from Mortgage ElectronicRegistration Systems, Inc., to First Horizon Home Loans, a
Division of First Tennessee Bank National Association dated
April 9, 2009 recorded in Suffolk County Registry of Deedsin Book 45594, Page 105; assignment from First Horizon
Home Loans, a Division of First Tennessee Bank NationalAssociation to Nationstar Mortgage LLC dated May 10,
2017 recorded in Suffolk County Registry of Deeds in Book
58067, Page 99 and confirmatory assignment from FirstTennessee Bank National Association dba First Horizon
Home Loans to Nationstar Mortgage LLC d/b/a Mr. Cooper
dated April 25, 2018 recorded in Suffolk County Registry ofDeeds in Book 59552, Page 39, for breach of conditions of
said mortgage and for the purpose of foreclosing the same,
the mortgaged premises located at 29 Eutaw Street, EastBoston, MA 02128 will be sold at a Public Auction at 11:
AM on October 16, 2019, at the mortgaged premises, more
particularly described below, all and singular the premisesdescribed in said mortgage, to wit: The land in the part of
Boston called East Boston with the buildings thereon, nownumbered 29 Eutaw Street, being part of Lot 25 on a plan
of land of the Boyden Malleable Cast Iron & Steel Co., by
R.H. Eddy dated May 1, 1839, recorded with Suffolk Deedsat the end of Book 448, bounded: NORTHWESTERLY by said
Street, twenty-five (25) feet; NORTHEASTERLY by Lot 26,
fifty (50) feet; SOUTHEASTERLY by a line parallel with saidStreet and distant fifty feet southeasterly there from five
(5) feet; NORTHEASTERLY again by a line parallel with the
line dividing said Lots and distant five feet southwesterlythere from fifty (50) feet; SOUTHEASTERLY again by Lot
31, twenty (20) feet; SOUTHWESTERLY by the southwest-
erly half of said Lot 25, one hundred (100) feet. Containing2,250 square feet, be said measurements and contents
more or less and according to said plan. For mortgagor’s
title see deed recorded with the Suffolk County Registry ofDeeds in Book 39501, Page 297. The premises will be sold
subject to any and all unpaid taxes and other municipal assessments and liens, and subject to prior liens or other en--
forceable encumbrances of record entitled to precedence
over this mortgage, and subject to and with the benefit ofalleasements, restrictions,reservationsandconditionsof
record and subject to all tenancies and/or rights of parties
in possession. Terms of the Sale: Cash, cashier’s or certi-fied check in the sum of $5,000.00 as a deposit must be
shown at the time and place of the sale in order to qualify
as a bidder (the mortgage holder and its designee(s) areexempt from this requirement); high bidder to sign written
Memorandum of Sale upon acceptance of bid; balance of
purchase price payable in cash or by certified check in thir-ty (30) days from the date of the sale at the offices of mort-
gagee’s attorney, Korde & Associates, P.C., 900 ChelmsfordStreet, Suite 3102, Lowell, MA 01851 or such other time
as may be designated by mortgagee. The description for
the premises contained in said mortgage shall control inthe event of a typographical error in this publication. Other
terms to be announced at the sale. Nationstar Mortgage
LLC d/b/a Mr. Cooper Korde & Associates, P.C. 900 Chelms-ford Street Suite 3102 Lowell, MA 01851 (978) 256-
Luna, Pedro, 17-
NOTICE OF ACTIVITY AND USE LIMITATION
25 AND 65 LEWIS STREETCLIPPERSHIP WHARF
EAST BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS
RTN 3-
A release of oil and/or hazardous materials has occurred atthis location, which is a disposal site as defined by M.G.L.
c. 21E, § 2 and the Massachusetts Contingency Plan, 310
CMR 40.0000. On 5 September 2019, Lendlease Clip-pership Wharf LLC recorded with the Suffolk County Reg-
istry of Deeds aTIONonthedisposNOTICE OF ACTIVITY AND USE LIMITA-alsite,pursuantto 310 CMR40.1074.
Thethe following activities and uses on the properties:NOTICE OF ACTIVITY AND USE LIMITATIONwill limit
♦Free standing single, or two-family residential homes;
♦Uses and activities in tidal area other than public use as
open space and passive recreational;
♦Any activities and/or uses that involve disturbance or di-
rect contact with the contaminated soil or sediment belowprotective covers and marker barrier, protective barriers,
or outside clean utility zones without preparation of a SoilManagement Plan (SMP), a Non-Traditional Asbestos Work
Plan (NTAWP), and a Health and Safety Plan; and
♦neath protective covers and marker barrier, protective bar-Use of contaminated soils or sediments that exist be-
riers, or outside clean utility zones for on-site reuse abovesuch barriers; and
♦related personnel.Access to active construction area by non-construction
Any person interested in obtaining additional informationabout theNOTICE OF ACTIVITY AND USE LIMITATION
may contact Nicholas Iselin of Lendlease Clippership Wharf
LLC, 20 City Square, 2nd Floor, Boston, Massachusetts,02129.
Thethe disposal site files can be viewed at MassDEP web-NOTICE OF ACTIVITY AND USE LIMITATIONand
site at https://eeaonline.eea.state.ma.us/portal#!/search/wastesite and reviewed at MassDEP Northeast Region,
205B Lowell Street, Wilmington, Massachusetts 01887,
978-694-3200.
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS(SEAL)
DEPARTMENT OF THE TRIAL COURTLAND COURT
19 SM 004036
ORDER OF NOTICE
To:
Tammi Markand to all persons entitled to the benefit of the Service-
members Civil Relief Act, 50 U.S.C. c. 50 §3901 (et seq):
Nationstar Mortgage LLC d/b/a Mr. Cooper
claiming to have an interest in a Mortgage covering realproperty in Dorchester Center (Boston), numbered 64 Nor-
folk Street, given by Tammi Mark to Mortgage ElectronicRegistration Systems, Inc., as mortgagee, acting solely as
a nominee for Pride Mortgage Incorporated, dated August
3, 2004, and registered at Suffolk County Registry Districtof the Land Court as Document No. 686071 and noted on
Certificate of Title No. 118235, as affected by a Loan Modi-
fication Agreement dated July 11, 2017, and registered asDocument No. 875968 and noted on Certificate of Title No.
118235, and now held by the Plaintiff by assignment, has/
have filed with this court a complaint for determination ofDefendant’s/Defendants’ Servicemembers status.
If you now are, or recently have been, in the active militaryservice of the United States of America, then you may be
entitled to the benefits of the Servicemembers Civil ReliefAct. If you object to a foreclosure of the above mentioned
property on that basis, then you or your attorney must file a
written appearance and answer in this court at Three Pem-berton Square, Boston, MA 02108 on or before October
21, 2019 or you may lose the opportunity to challenge the
foreclosure on the ground of noncompliance with the Act.
Witness, GORDON H. PIPER, Chief Justice of this Court on
September 5, 2019.Attest: Deborah J. Patterson
Recorder
19-
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
The Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination(“MCAD”) hereby gives notice pursuant to M.G.L. c. 30A,
§ 2 of a series of public hearings to be held on proposedchanges to its Rules of Procedure found at 804 CMR 1.
et seqc. 151B, § 3 and M.G.L. c. 151C, § 5. The MCAD has revised., promulgated pursuant to its authority under M.G.L.
all 25 sections of 804 CMR 1.00 to improve readability andreflect current MCAD practice and procedure. The revisions
includecomplaint moves through the MCAD process, as well asareorderingofthesectionstosequencehowa
substantive changes to the rules with respect to motionpractice, rebuttals, the timeline for housing complaints,
mediations, and more. An electronic copy of the proposedregulations and further explanation of revisions can be
found at: https://www.mass.gov/orgs/massachusetts-com-mission-against-discrimination.The public hearing schedule
is as follows:
October 9, 2019, 12 p.m.:Conference Room, 436 Dwight Street, Springfield, MASpringfield MCAD, Third Floor
(^01103) October 10, 2019, 12 p.m.:MCAD Boston Headquarters, 1
Ashburton Place, 21st Floor, Boston, MA 02108October 15, 2019, 12 p.m.:Middlesex Community College,
Bedford Campus Center, Café East, 591 Springs Road, Bed-ford, MA 01730
October 18, 2019, 12 p.m.:lege, Lecture Hall, 2240 Iyannough Rd., West Barnstable, MACape Cod Community Col-
02668
October 25, 2019, 12 p.m.:ter, Blue Lounge, 486 Chandler Street, Worcester, MA 01602Worcester State, Campus Cen-
The deadline for submitting written comments is5 p.m. on
November 8, 2019copies of the proposed regulations should be submitted to.Written comments or requests for hard
the MCAD Records Access Officer at [email protected] or to 1 Ashburton Place, Room 601, Boston, MA 02108
NOTICE OF PUBLIC INVOLVEMENT PLAN MEETINGLEGAL NOTICE
6 AND 50 BRIDGE STREETWEYMOUTH, MA
A release of oil and/or hazardous materials was identifiedRelease Tracking Numbers (RTNs) 4-0026230 & 4-
in connection with prior uses at this location, which con-
tains a disposal site as defined by M.G.L. c. 21E, § 2 and theMassachusetts Contingency Plan, 310 CMR 40.0000.Algon-
quin Gas Transmission, LLC previously received a petition
from residents in Weymouth requesting that the disposalsite associated with RTNs 4-0026230 and 4-0026243 be
designated a Public Involvement Plan Site. As a result, a
public meeting will be held at the Abigail Adams MiddleSchool, 89 Middle Street, Weymouth, MA on September
25, 2019 from 7:00 to 9:00 pm to present and to solicit
public comment on a draft Release Abatement MeasurePlan, which has been submitted to the Massachusetts
Department of Environmental Protection (MassDEP) on
September 11, 2019. Copies of the draft Release Abate-ment Measure Plan are available at the Weymouth Health
Department, the Tufts Public Library, and on the MassDEP’sonline database. The deadline for public comments on this
document is October 15, 2019. Questions or comments re-
garding this meeting or the draft Release Abatement Mea-sure Plan should be directed to James Doherty, PE, LSP at
TRC Environmental Corporation, 650 Suffolk Street, Lowell,
MA 01854; [email protected]
LEGAL NOTICE Common-
wealth of Massachusetts TheTrial Court Probate and Fam-
ily Court Suffolk Division 24
New Chardon St. Boston, MA02114 CITATION ON PETITION
TO CHANGE NAME Docket
No. SU19C0425CA A Petitionto Change Name of Adult
has been filed by CatherineMarie Armuelles of Chelsea
MA requesting that the courtenter a Decree changing their
name to: Nepantla Canizzo
IMPORTANT NOTICE Any per-son may appear for purposes
of objecting to the petition by
filing an appearance at: Suf-folk Probate and Family Court
before 10:00 a.m. on the re-
turn day of 09/12/2019. Thisis NOT a hearing date, but a
deadline by which you must
file a written appearance iyou object to this proceeding.f
WITNESS, Hon. Brian J.Dunn,
First Justice of this Court.Date: August 27, 2019 Felix D
Arroyo, Register of Probate.