May 7, 2021 FridayMusings is your source for what we love about Livonia
As Livonia Returns to Normal: A Hometown Leadership Special Edition

FridayMusings appreciates when community volunteerism, both within the private and public sectors, are recognized. One of the reasons the typewriter founded the 1835 Livonia City Hall of Fame in 2005. That evening of recognition is always the first Thursday of October. But at the beginning of the year, our Livonia Chamber of Commerce acknowledges and salutes another group of hometown hero's at the Leadership and Awards Celebration.

This edition of FridayMusings presents the 2021 award recipients. Residents, leaders, businesses, and educators, those who make our community the hometown of which we are all proud and thanks Dan West and the Chamber of Commerce for this important event.

The Leadership and Awards Celebration, set for 5-7 p.m. Tuesday, May 11, is sponsored by Embassy Title Agency, AlphaUSA, St. Mary Mercy Hospital, MASCO, Bill Brown Ford, and Madonna University. There are a limited number of seats available for $10 in this socially distanced program. No meal will be served. For those who are unable to attend, there will be a live stream of the event available. 

For details, call the Livonia Chamber office at 734.427.2122, visit www.livonia.org, or e-mail tahmouch@livonia.org.
Matt Collins, First Citizen, built a coalition to help hospital workers


Matt Collins has rarely gone without something to do. 

Last year when Covid restrictions ended social gatherings, he learned stressed medical workers didn’t have easy access to meals at St. Mary Mercy Hospital with limited cafeteria operations. This made it challenging for them to grab something to eat during a chaotic day of treating Covid patients. 

The longtime Livonia Lions Club President engaged his contacts at other service clubs and local restaurants to send two meals a day to the hospital to feed the workers. Cash donations from the clubs and in-kind donations from restaurants kept this operation going for about six weeks until the initial Covid surge eased. 

Then on Mother’s Day morning, Collins coordinated a group of volunteers from local services clubs to hand out flowers and candies to hospital workers heading home after their overnight shift so they had something to give to their moms that day. 

“It gave us a chance to thank them for what they are doing because they might not have been able to get to a store to get something for their mothers,” Collins said. 

Collins has long been known for this type of volunteer leadership, and his career of community service led to his selection of the 2021 Livonia First Citizen Award, an annual honor given to a Livonia resident for extraordinary community service.

He co-owns Kahsar Sales & Marketing, an Ohio-based company that deals with electronic and electromechanical components for manufacturers. He had been a volunteer in Livonia since shortly after moving here in 1986. A neighbor invited him to a Lions Club meeting and it has been an instrumental part of his life since. 

“I went to a Christmas Party the Lions put together for multiple-issue handicap children and I was amazed at what they did, how the children reacted, and I wanted to get more involved,” Collins said. 

Lions International regularly supports special needs children, especially those visually and hearing impaired. The Livonia Lions Club keeps its resources it collects locally in southeastern Michigan. Collins is in line to be the Lions’ district governor for the 35 clubs and 850 members in Wayne and Monroe counties next year. 

Holli Kerkhof, a member of the Livonia Lions Club, said she admires his leadership.

“He gets to know people and explores their passion in volunteering,” Kerkhof said. “He provides opportunities for them to step up and give in a way that makes sense for them.”

In 2012, he led collaboration with several Livonia service clubs to network and coordinate their efforts. Since the Livonia Community Service Forum partners with the Kids Coalition Against Hunger each year for a food packing event that contributed toward distributing 100,000 meals to needy local families. 

This collaboration initiated by Collins enabled the groups to quickly maneuver when the pandemic urgency took hold last spring. 

“The Lions Club opened the door to this community for me to be of service and connect with the community,” he said. “I am honored to be recognized like this, but I just enjoy helping people.”

Along with his wife of 46 years, Kathleen, Collins has also volunteered as a coach and scout leader while the couple’s three children were growing up.  
Marygrove Awnings, Rock City earn the business of year honors with Anastasia and Katie’s landing community enhancement award
Marygrove Awning and Rock City Music Company found ways to thrive during the pandemic challenges of 2020.

Both companies will be honored this month with Livonia Chamber of Commerce businesses awards that recognize their business excellence and community contributions.

Marygrove Awning will receive the 2021 Outstanding Large Business of the Year Award as the company has grown in recent years and was able to leverage its advertising investments to promote many metro Detroit restaurants to help them endure prolonged periods of limited operations last year.  

As businesses reopened last June, restaurant owners called Marygrove Awnings looking for help to expand and enhance their outside dining. Mike and Sue Falahee appreciated the business but knew their restaurant customers were not able to fully operate. They offered financing and discounts, and free publicity on WJR-AM radio. 

“We wanted to use our ad budget to promote our customers,” Mike Falahee said. “We set up a chance for these restaurants to talk on the powerful Paul W. Smith show each Thursday.” 
 
With each restaurant promoted, Marygrove Awnings covered the hors d'oeuvres for the first 25 customers that entered the place that day.  
The Falahees have owned Marygrove Awnings on Merriman Road for 25 years. They merged Marygrove with their original business, American Roll Shutter and Awning, which they opened on Eight Mile Road in 1984. Marygrove Awning opened in Detroit in 1936, moved to Livonia in 1985, and was owned by two generations of the Bellanger family before they sold to the Falahees.  

The company designs manufactures and installs awnings and louvered roofs of sizes that range from small home projects to large commercial sites such as Comerica Park. Over the past three years, Marygrove expanded operations to new markets in Toledo, Columbus, Chicago, and New Jersey. With a total of 70 employees, the company neared $20 million in sales last year.  

They attribute the company’s growth to the emerging leadership of their two sons, Jason and Vincent, quality products, a family-like feel for the staff, memorable Christmas parties, and incentive-based pay for employees. The business has long supported youth sports teams, Tom Celani charities that support youth and the hungry, raised money for diabetes research and held blood drives. Also, Marygrove manufactured thousands of masks and face shields to donate last year.  

Sue Falahee said she is proud of the business honor.  “It makes us feel proud,” she said. “We have worked hard, and it is nice to be recognized, but this is not just for us, it is for all of us in the company.”
Rock City Music Company, located next to O’Malley’s on the corner of Five Mile and Farmington, found ways to connect more people to music over the past year despite Covid-forced operational limitations.

They provided virtual shopping experiences, helped people learn to play an instrument, expanded their customer base, and supported charities in earning the 2021 Outstanding Small Business of the Year Award. 

“A lot of people picked up an instrument for the first time over the past year, and helping those people get into it made the last year a lot more fun,” said Rock City owner Nick Marocco.

Marocco, at age 24, bought the Garden City music store he managed for four years and relocated to Livonia in 2015. The new spot tripled his floor space for guitars, amplifiers, drums, vinyl records, rock posters, and other collectibles. His shop has also been used for intimate performances and meet and greets with rock musicians such as Geddy Lee from Rush and Bruce Kulick, who played guitar for Kiss and Grand Funk Railroad. 

Since the time he was forced to close last spring, Marocco and his team grew their business with virtual engagements to show products and online sales with customers from around the country, Europe, Canada, and Japan.
His team has worked with young people who learned to play music to express themselves. He developed a friendship with a talented young guitar player who struggled to communicate since he has high-functioning autism. He encouraged the young man to play in a band with him for benefit shows that raised money for autism. 

“He was afraid to get on the stage, and then he was playing in front of 2,000 people with us at the Royal Oak Music Theater,” Marocco said. “It was incredible to watch.”

With donations of money, lessons, instruments, and use of his recording studio, Rock City has also been a regular supporter of the Detroit Dog Rescue, Forgotten Harvest, and cancer fundraisers. 

He said he is grateful for the support from the Livonia community and to receive this business honor. “It tells us we are doing something right,” Marocco said.
Anastasia and Katie’s Coffee Shop and Café, a unique mission-based business, will receive the 2021 Community Enhancement Award, which honors businesses that made a recent investment to develop a new enterprise, improve the appearance of a property, or upgrade services that notably enrich the Livonia community.

Anastasia and Katie’s opened in January 2020 by MI Work Matters, a nonprofit group that supports adults with developmental disabilities in search of employment. The coffee shop was designed to provide jobs for these adults while showing other employers how to employ these adults. 

Kelly Rockwell (Anastasia’s mom), Dan Duffy (Katie’s dad), and Gil Wilcox built the quaint shop on Merriman near Seven Mile that sells coffee and sandwiches. Rockwell said the shop had a great response until the Covid-19 orders forced them to close. 

“It was such an overwhelming response,” Rockwell said. “We were so grateful for the response. It was motivating to know that many people wanted us to succeed.”

With loans and community donations, the shop reopened as a carry-out-only business and developed a boxed-lunch program where at least 10 homemade meals are prepared and delivered to local businesses. 
Rockwell said they are still in business because of the perseverance of her team and customers, and she is grateful for the recognition. 

“Things like this keep us moving forward when you consider all the challenges,” she said.