© 2024 LEHIGHVALLEYNEWS.COM
Your Local News | Allentown, Bethlehem & Easton
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Business News

Hottest spot north of Havana? Economically, it's the Lehigh Valley

dancers.jpg
Phil Gianficaro
/
LehighValleyNews.com
A sensational musical stage performance was among the highlights of the Greater Lehigh Valley Chamber of Commerce's annual meeting and awards luncheon on Thursday at Wind Creek Event Center.

BETHLEHEM, Pa. — As far as Tony Iannelli is concerned, the title to the song “Copacabana” may need a rewrite.

Yes, Iannelli, the 73-year-old ringmaster and executive director of the Greater Chamber of Commerce, chose Thursday to belt out Barry Manilow’s 1978 Grammy Award-winning hit during a glittering Broadway-level extravaganza at the chamber’s annual meeting and awards luncheon at Wind Creek Event Center.

But to Iannelli, the hottest economic spot north of Havana is the Lehigh Valley.

The annual celebration drew an estimated 1,000 members of the Greater Lehigh Valley business community who gathered among colleagues, customers and competitors to celebrate their collective mission of making the region a better place to work and live.

The Lehigh Valley logged more economic development projects in America in 2023 than any similarly sized market, according to Site Selection magazine.

The region’s Gross Domestic Product recently topped $50 billion.

That's hot.

"To really feel the highs, you have to have felt the low. And we felt the low. But now, we’re on a high.”
Tony Iannelli, executive director, Greater Lehigh Valley Chamber of Commerce

“Sometimes, you’re at the right place at the right time — and we’re at the right place,” said Iannelli, who is in his 27th year as head of the chamber.

“Geographically, we sort of had a resurgence after the end of the whole Mack Truck [production plant relocation in the early 1980s] and the [1995] closing of Bethlehem Steel.

"To really feel the highs, you have to have felt the low. And we felt the low. But now, we’re on a high.”

Tony Iannelli, executive director of the Greater Lehigh Valley Chamber of Commerce, sings at annual meeting

Awards

The annual meeting included the presentation of several awards to Lehigh Valley civic, cultural, health, military and entertainment organizations.

Milestone Awards went to:

  • LifePath Inc., a disabilities and support organization based in Bethlehem, celebrating its 50th year.

“I thank you for showing our community that people with disabilities are valuable members of our community,” LifePath Chief Executive Officer Sue Leyburn said.

IMG_3723.jpeg
Phil Gianficaro
/
LehighValleyNews.com
LifePath CEO Sue Leyburn accepted the Milestone Award for the company's 50 years serving the intellectually disabled in the Lehigh Valley.

  • Miller Symphony Hall in Allentown, celebrating 125 years.

“I urge everyone to take advantage of this gem we have in the Lehigh Valley,” Executive Director Al Jacobsen said upon receiving the award.

“You don’t have to go to Philadelphia or New York to hear great music.”

  • Lehigh Valley Health Network (now part of Jefferson Health), celebrating 125 years of Lehigh Valley Hospital at 17th Street, and 50 years at Cedar Crest.

"It's our people that make LVHN special," Jefferson Chief Executive Officer Dr. Joe Cacchione, who accepted the award, said.

"I've seen how committed they are to improving people's lives."

Volunteer of the Year Award was presented to the Veterans & Military Brush-Up Committee. The volunteer-driven initiative honors veterans and their families by providing exterior home painting services.

“This is just about doing things to help people in the Lehigh Valley that need our help,” said Tom Applebaum, Lehigh County Director, Office of Veterans Affairs, and Brush-Up founder.

'In a celebratory move'

Business of the Year Award went to PPL Center/Lehigh Valley Phantoms, who are celebrating their 10th season.

Iannelli moderated a Business Matters Live! panel discussion on the center and the hockey franchise, with Lee Butz, chairman of the board of Alvin H. Butz construction company in Allentown, and brothers Jim and Rob Brooks, owners of the Lehigh Valley Phantoms.

The Butz Company built the PPL Center.

IMG_3725.jpeg
Phil Gianficaro
/
LehighValleyNews.com
Greater Lehigh Valley Chamber of Commerce director Tony Iannelli moderated a panel discussion on the 10th anniversary of the PPL Center and Lehigh Valley Phantoms.

“That first night, when the Eagles opened up the center, it felt like more than just a building,” Butz said. “It became a living thing.”

The Greater Lehigh Valley Chamber of Commerce is the largest and most active business networking organization in and around the Lehigh Valley, engaging nearly 5,000 businesses and members who employ more than 280,000 people.

“When Billy Joel wrote the song, ‘Allentown,’ it hurt, it stings. It’s really clear that we were at the bottom back then. Now we see the horizon, if you will, and we see the top."
Tony Iannelli, executive director, Greater Lehigh Valley Chamber of Commerce

It's greatly responsible for the resurgence in the Lehigh Valley.

“When Billy Joel wrote the song, ‘Allentown,’ it hurt, it stings,” Iannelli said about the song about unemployed steelworkers.

“It’s really clear that we were at the bottom back then. Now we see the horizon, if you will, and we see the top.

“Now, today, we’re in a celebratory move. That’s what this event today is all about.”