The Revere Traffic Commission (RTC) held its regular monthly meeting this past Thursday, March 21, in the City Councillor Joseph A. Del Grosso City Council Chambers. On hand for the session were City Planner Frank Stringi, Fire Chief Chris Bright, Police Chief Dave Callahan, and City Engineer Nick Rystrom. The principal portion of the meeting
By Adam Swift The City Council approved a resolution Monday night that will allow the city to accept a grant for the inventory of the city’s 12,000 water service lines to make sure they comply with the state’s lead and copper rule regulations. “This grant application (for $365,000) needs a resolution from the city council,”
The Revere Traffic Commission held its regular monthly meeting on December 21 in the City Councillor Joseph A. Del Grosso Council Chambers of Revere City Hall. On hand for the session were chair Paul Argenzio (for whom this was his last meeting because of Argenzio’s recent election to the City Council), City Planner Frank Stringi,
The Revere Traffic Commission held a brief but productive meeting last Thursday evening in the City Council Chamber. Chairman Paul Argenzio and fellow commissioners Police Chief David Callahan, City Planner Frank Stringi, City Engineer Nick Rystrom, and Fire Chief Chris Bright were in attendance. Argenzio began the meeting by noting that the equipment for the much-anticipated traffic study
The Revere Zoning Board of Appeals (ZBA) gave its approval to developer Mario Zepaj for four variances for the construction of a 25-unit apartment building at 344 Salem St. at its regular monthly meeting last Wednesday evening. The often-contentious, 45-minute hearing saw neighborhood residents often interrupt the proceedings, drawing repeated admonitions from ZBA chairperson Michael Tucker and pointed responses from