National Main Street Program Founder Mary Means Keynotes Main Street Oakland County’s Annual Main Event Awards Program

  • First in-person Main Event program since 2019.
  • Main Street Oakland County will welcome Lyon Township and the Huron Corridor – Pontiac as new districts.
  • Keynote address will include envisioning Main Street’s future.Pontiac, Michigan –  Main Street Oakland County (MSOC) is hosting Mary Means, founder of the national main street movement, as keynote speaker during its annual Main Event awards program Thursday, May 5 at the Flagstar Strand Theatre in Pontiac. The theme is “Together Again” since it will be the first in-person Main Event ceremony since 2019.In addition to recognizing businesses and communities with nine award categories, MSOC will welcome Lyon Township and the Huron Corridor – Pontiac as new districts and Auburn Hills and South Lyon will advance to the Partner Program level during this year’s celebration.

    “Our Main Street communities engaged quickly and creatively with their local small businesses to help them adjust, survive, and reopen safely during the pandemic,” Oakland County Executive Dave Coulter said. “As vital economic development partners with the county, they coordinated grant programs from their own resources, as well as the county and state grants, and distributed PPE to small businesses.”

    The Main Event runs from 6-9 p.m. and is open to anyone interested in historic preservation and the economic development of downtowns and historic commercial districts.  Tickets are $35 and available online until May 1 at AdvantageOakland.EventBrite.com.

    The keynote address, “How Story Saved the Nation’s Main Streets,” will recount the beginnings of the main street movement in the 1980s. Means and three novice main street managers began to write a different story about historic downtowns, never imagining that 40 years later the movement would develop into a vibrant network of more than 1,600 communities in 40 states. She will share her insights, how the power of story underpins it all, and what she envisions for Main Street’s future.

    Twenty-five MSOC communities were eligible to submit nominations. They are Auburn Hills, Berkley, Birmingham, Clarkston, Clawson, Farmington, Ferndale, Franklin, Groveland Township, Hazel Park, Highland, Holly, Holly Township, Lake Orion, Lathrup Village, Leonard, Madison Heights, Oak Park, Ortonville, Oxford, Pontiac, Rochester, Royal Oak, South Lyon, and Wixom.

    During the ceremony, MSOC will make an announcement regarding presenting sponsor DTE Foundation. MSOC will also recount program milestones and recognize the other sponsors who are Genisys Credit Union, SMART, McLaren Oakland, Dobrusin Law, and Oakland County Business Finance Corporation.

    About Mary Means
    As the CEO of Mary Means & Associates in Maryland, Means is a leader in place-based community development, helping communities optimize their historic character. She has committed her life to helping clients build bridges between plans and people and has been recognized by the American Planning Association, who gave her its “Planning Pioneer Award.” The National Trust for Historic Preservation named her the recipient of the “Crowninshield Award,” the highest honor in historic preservation. She is the author of “Main Street’s Comeback and How It Can Come Back Again.”

    About Main Street Oakland County
    Main Street Oakland County (MSOC) is our unique economic development program for downtowns, with a historic preservation philosophy and an emphasis on “sense of place.” We assist local governments, downtown management organizations and nonprofit organizations develop their downtowns and historic commercial corridors as vibrant, successful districts that serve as the heart of their communities. Established in 2000, MSOC is the nation’s first and only county-wide coordinating Main Street program. Our mission is to maximize the economic potential and to preserve the heritage and sense of place of Oakland County’s historic downtowns and commercial districts by encouraging and facilitating the use of the Main Street Four-Point Approach® that emphasizes comprehensive economic development within the context of historic preservation. Since 2001, the cumulative total for new public and private investment in MSOC downtowns is $1,044,243,193.