P’alante! The Father and Son Construction Duo Who Never Stop Moving Forward

Dan Labrador had just picked up his son Niko from school when he spotted it – “a white, very used, newly painted van…a beauty,” he knew immediately it was the one. As soon as he arrived home, Dan spoke with his wife Maggie and discussed his plans to start his own contracting business. With Maggie’s support, Dan gave his two-week notice to the painting company where he was working full time, “we put everything we had at that time – all the credit cards totaling about $4,500 and our company was off.”

Dan founded Lyon Contracting Services, LLC in 2011 on the principles inherited from his fearless father who left Cuba in 1967 for a better life in America, “with nothing but a bag in hand,” says Dan. “The fact that you came from a place where you were not free makes everything much more bearable.” In 1970 Dan’s mother, brother, and sisters joined his father, “I was the youngest and born here, and consider myself the celebration baby,” Dan laughs.

Dan recalls the moment as a young boy when he listened intently to his father’s conversation about starting a business, “I saw that look in his eyes and I knew as a young boy that one day I would have my own business too.”

Lyon Contracting Services is a full service general contracting company, headquartered in Philadelphia, with commercial and residential clients within 60 miles of Northeast Philadelphia. Lyon offers construction specialties and sub-packages from rough and finished carpentry to drywall, acoustical ceiling and millwork installation and full-service painting.

Running a family business wasn’t always easy. To get through the day, Dan’s family says this Cuban word …P’alante!

Dan explains, “When things aren’t going well…you exhale. P’alante! When things are going great…you celebrate, P’alante! When things are going wrong…you make it right, P’alante!”

Dan credits his wife, a first-generation American from Puerto Rico, for helping him navigate the challenges of running a family business. While their business was growing, so was their family with the addition of Dan’s two daughters who were born a year apart. “When my son was in his first year of college he told me he wanted to work with me. That was the game-changer and how our business got stronger.”

“Growing up my father and I were best of buds, I was his mini-me everywhere he went,” says Niko. As I grew older I wanted to be just like him and be with him as much as I could.” After completing two years of community college, Niko decided to join his father fulltime. “That was in the summer of 2012. I started out just following Dan everywhere. Through the eight years, I slowly developed and gained more responsibility and moved up to project manager,” Niko explains.

“The car rides are literally the best times with my father, some of the most hilarious moments and most important life lessons I’ve learned have been during a workday car ride together.”

As a minority-owned and operated business and a first-generation Cuban American, Dan understands the challenges that immigrant communities face in the workforce. “You’re limited when you are from another country; you have the language barrier and don’t have a huge network.” Dan has made it his mission to pay it forward by sourcing workers with highly specialized skills, developed in their native countries.

“It feels great that we might have a little part in creating a bit of that American Dream for their families.”

Every fall, the Greater Northeast Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce (GNPCC) participates in Minority Enterprise Development Week, a citywide initiative giving special recognition to a minority-owned business. GNPCC nominated Lyon Contracting and Mayor Kenney honored the Labrador family in a special ceremony on Monday, October 7th.

According to the US Senate Committee on Small business and Entrepreneurship, over the last 10 years, minority business enterprises accounted for more than 50 percent of the two million new businesses started in the United States and created 4.7 million jobs. There are now more than four million minority-owned companies in the United States.

“I’m very thankful and humbled,” Dan says. My wife, my daughters, my son are the reason and why we hope to build a business where we can serve our clients and our entire team for generations to come.

By the time Dan was 20 years old he was married, working full-time had a young son and was taking college courses at Temple University. In 2017-18, Dan was among the 14th cohort of 20 graduates who recently completed the Goldman Sachs 10,000 Small Business-Greater Philadelphia program.

Niko understands his father’s drive – “it’s in his blood.” In his new role as Vice President, Niko plans to continue to reach a greater audience through new marketing communication platform including social media and website development. But Niko admits, “There is still so much more. I plan to work beside my father for many years to come, learning from him one car ride at a time.“

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Visual Software’s Technology Will Revolutionize Healthcare and Education in Remote Regions around the World

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By Graziella DiNuzzo

In Swaziland (now officially eSwatini) Africa, a man with Aids walks many miles through precarious terrain to arrive at the nearest clinic. If he is lucky to be seen that day, the clinic attendant will need to conduct testing to determine a diagnosis – testing alone may kill him, the attendant, or any number of people who might mishandle his infectious blood.  The clinic does not know this man’s history – no computer, no database, no medical record.

The narrative is the same in a mountainous village in Lesotho, Africa where a young child’s already limited education, anchored in a primitive one-room schoolhouse, makes him virtually invisible –  no computer, no school record, no access to the world.

When Robert Hutchison, President and CEO of Visual Software, attended a networking event hosted by the World Trade Center of Greater Philadelphia, US Commercial Service and Bucks County Community College, he met Victoria Senome, President of the African and Caribbean Business Council.

“Victoria said our software would be revolutionary in Africa,” said Hutchison, “and I am learning firsthand that she’s right.”

Two weeks later, in October 2018, Hutchison found himself on his first trip to Lesotho, Africa, with a mission group from the National Baptist Convention and meeting with the minister of education who welcomed him with open arms.

Since then, Hutchison has made four trips to six countries in Africa, Jordan and the Kurdistan Region of Iraq…and he’s getting ready to leave for Africa again next month.

“Globally, we had already worked in Australia and England, but what led me to Africa was a desire to use the software we developed to maximize impact, not profit.”

Hutchison is now on a mission.

“I had been praying about how to use our products to make a significant contribution to the world, and then opportunities in Africa opened up.”

IT has always been Hutchison’s calling. His 40 years in the computer / software industry includes working at Bell Laboratories on the UNIX Operating System project, and developing advanced mathematical modeling software for internationally known clients. He also created an advanced warning system for one of the largest telephone systems in the world and written three textbooks.

Hutchison and his team at Visual Software created Sustainable Applications and Solutions optimized for use in rural settings and large communities. Using a private cloud-based system, the software can maintain basic and advanced information for healthcare and education sectors.

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Robert Hutchison, President, Visual Software, stands inside Visual Software’s test lab

“From building databases and providing individual IDs to e-based learning and more, lives will be improved and saved. In some places, 14 out of 100 women now die in childbirth. Technology will make a huge difference and improve that statistic.”

Since 2001, Visual Software has served millions of students and companies in the US, Canada, Europe, Africa and Australia. With close working relationships with Microsoft, Oracle and many regional systems integrators throughout the US, UK and Australia, they are able to provide custom, integrated platforms. Visual Software has been a Microsoft Certified Partner since 2003 and an Oracle Gold Certified Partner since 2014. They are also members of the international security group OWASP.

So with no electricity, how does a poor village power up computers?

“We are working with solar equipment providers to create a low-voltage solar energy package that supplies the needs of schools and clinics without generating the heat normally associated with such systems,” Hutchison explains.

“By eliminating the solar inverter, the heat generated is far less and the system runs more efficiently. By reducing the heat, the need for cooling fans is eliminated, thereby reducing the amount of dust making its way into the equipment. By reducing dust, the equipment lasts longer.”

Robert Hutchison wheels out a black metal rolling cart with several shelves. He places a laptop on top of the cart and lifts it to point out the encased heavy rubber covering.

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Robert Hutchison demonstrates customized cart and military-grade laptop

“Students will use hardened laptops, tested to the Military standard 810G for durability and resistance to moisture and dust. The carts will hold the equipment inside and the outside will be fitted with solar panels. Wireless networking will connect to the Internet. The cart can be wheeled between rooms. Having all components pre-packaged eliminates much of the work of deploying the solutions in these remote locations.”

And what about wireless connectivity?

The Visual Software team had to re-write the software for low bandwidth, in consideration of markets like Africa with high internet access costs. “In Africa, Internet customers pay for their wireless internet data by the gigabyte; there are no unlimited data plans as is common in the US. As of May 2019, data rates for 10GB of data range from USD $8.37 (Egypt) to $279 (Equatorial Guinea). “

In Sierra Leone, there is a hospital called Emergency, established by an Italian NGO in 2001. To date, Emergency has treated 798,496 patients and was a critical resource during the Ebola crisis – all without technology.

“Outside the hospital in Sierra Leone there are extreme environmental challenges, like dirt, mud and flooding from monsoon rains but inside the hospital is spotless. They even have white PVC encased doors so they can be wiped down. But they still log all of their patient blood tests in big ledger books.”

Since 1994, Emergency has opened its doors free of charge to victims of war, refugees and the sick at its hospitals located in Afghanistan, Central African Republic, Iraq, Sicily, Sierra Leone and Sudan.

As the son of a refugee, Hutchison has a deep understanding of the long-lasting affect of humanitarian aid. His mother and aunt were part of the massive child refugee evacuation called “Los Niños”, during the Spanish Civil War”, cramming nearly 4,000 children into a steamship to England, who were also come to be known as the “Basque Children.” His mother was eventually adopted by a family in Northern England. His grandparents were captured by Franco’s forces, put into slavery and then moved to concentration camps.  After the war, his grandparents lived out the remainder of their lives in Mexico.

Hutchison is paying it forward.

“I have been donating my time and resources to this project in Africa. The best part of Africa is the people.”

Once the technology is implemented, the goal is to create jobs and set up the project to be self-sustaining. Visual Software will provide support when needed.

“Within the first year of our education deployment, we intend to deploy classroom technology to 1,000 schools with an eventual target of over 30,000 schools in the first five years.” Hutchison smiles.

What’s next?

“Visual Software recently connected with several of the PA Overseas Authorized Trade Representatives ATRs during our recent September 19 and 20, 2019, Bringing the World To PA (BTW2PA) events in Philadelphia during their one-on-one ATR meetings to discuss market expansion in the UK and Australia, as well as market entry strategies for Scandinavia, the Czech Republic, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates (Arab Gulf region).  Visual Software has already done some great work in Australia with many more opportunities to expand upon their initial success,” said Dale Foote, International Trade Specialist for the World Trade Center of Greater Philadelphia.

Robert Hutchison and his team are transforming lives, one byte at a time.

Click here for more information on Visual Software’s Sustainable Solutions.