2026 Inaugural PA Chamber Policy Council Summit

May 28, 2025 | 8:00 AM TO 3:30 PM

Register To Attend

PA Chamber Policy Summit 2026: Shaping Pennsylvania’s Future

Join us for the PA Chamber’s inaugural Policy Summit – a dynamic gathering where Pennsylvania’s business leaders, lawmakers, and stakeholders unite to advance a more competitive Commonwealth.

The Policy Summit is your gateway to the heart of the PA Chamber’s member-driven legislative agenda. Our 11 impactful policy councils—covering critical areas such as energy development, tax reform, infrastructure and transportation development, higher education, labor, healthcare, financial services, technology, legal affairs, and more—are the engines that drive our advocacy. These councils bring together diverse voices to shape policies that matter most to Pennsylvania’s business community.

Why Attend?

– Engage in Productive Dialogue: Connect directly with the leaders and experts with knowledge and influence over the laws and regulations shaping your world.

– Learn from Council Members: Discover how the PA Chamber’s policy councils work collaboratively to identify challenges, propose solutions, and champion pro-business reforms.

– “Shop” the Policy Councils: All 11 PA Chamber Policy Councils will convene at the Policy Summit, so you can attend your council/s meeting(s) and then “shop” the others to see where your expertise and interests fit. Meet council leads, sit in on sessions, and discover where you can inform our 2026 priorities!

– Expand Your Network: Enjoy dedicated networking sessions and a breakfast to meet fellow attendees, council members, and special guests.

– Hear from Keynote Speakers: Gain insights from thought leaders throughout the information-packed agenda.

– Explore Timely Topics: Participate in breakout sessions tailored to the interests of your industry. There’s something for everyone at the Policy Summit, and the event will help you maximize the value of your PA Chamber membership.


Whether you’re a PA Chamber member, a business leader, a policymaker, or simply curious about how you can make a difference, this summit is for you. If you’re new to the PA Chamber or unfamiliar with our policy councils, this is the perfect opportunity to learn how your voice can help shape Pennsylvania’s future.

For more information about the 2026 Inaugural PA Chamber Policy Council Summit, contact PA Chamber Director of Events and Engagement, Oona Burke Johnson at objohnson@pachamber.org or 717.720.5557.

Time & Place

Thursday, February 19, 2026
8:00 a.m. – 3:30 p.m.

Sheraton Harrisburg-Hershey
4650 Lindle Road
Harrisburg, PA 17111

Price:

Free to Investor Members

REGISTRATION:

AGENDA

Click here to view agenda.

FEATURED SPEAKERS

State Senator Lisa M. Boscola has spent the majority of her professional career working to improve the lives of Lehigh Valley residents. Born in Bethlehem on April 6, 1962 to Richard and Anna Stofko – Senator Boscola has remained a proud steel worker’s daughter and life-long resident of the Lehigh Valley, a fact which has made her intimately familiar with the issues that face her district and the people she represents.

First elected to the Pennsylvania General Assembly in 1994, Senator Boscola served two terms in the state House and is serving her sixth term representing the 18th Senatorial District. Prior to her election to the General Assembly, Senator Boscola served as Deputy Court Administrator with the Northampton County Court. She received her Bachelors and Masters degrees from Villanova University cum laude.

Throughout her legislative career, Senator Boscola has worked tirelessly to bring property tax reform to the forefront of the debate in the General Assembly.  Senator Boscola has been a leading proponent of the total elimination of the local school property tax and has been a co-sponsor of Senate Bill 76. Every Session, she has also introduced legislation to freeze property taxes on seniors so that they can remain in their homes.

Redistricting reform has been an issue that Senator Boscola has continued to fight for through the years by introducing legislation to amend the Pennsylvania Constitution, and change the way the Commonwealth conducts the redistricting process by removing politics and creating a truly Independent Citizen’s Commission.

Senator Boscola has also focused on the need for state government to promote economic development initiatives to provide family sustaining jobs to the Lehigh Valley and across the Commonwealth. She has worked diligently to bring the Lehigh Valley region our fair share of state funds for worthwhile local projects. She has been a strong advocate for funding economic development programs with proven track records of job creation and retention such as the Ben Franklin Technology Centers, Small Business Development Center and the Manufacturer’s Resource Center. Working with the private sector to drive growth, job expansion and retention has been a focus for Senator Boscola. Cutting out the red tape, ensuring the State’s incentives are competitive with surrounding states is one way government can help promote growth.

Most recently, Senator Boscola was the proud prime sponsor of the omnibus bill, Senate Bill 421 of 2019-20, which is known, today, as Act 77 of 2019. Act 77 was the largest voting modernization bill in decades that included the elimination of straight party voting, extending the deadline for absentee ballot submissions, and created a no excuse mail-in voting option for all Pennsylvania voters, in which, “kitchen tables and living rooms will be converted in polling places. Researching a candidate can be done while you vote from the comfort of your own home.”

Senator Boscola was instrumental in bringing a City Revitalization and Improvement Zone (CRIZ) designation to Bethlehem. Senator Boscola fought hard to ensure that Bethlehem had an opportunity to submit a CRIZ application and has worked to ensure that the incentive will be a tool that would drive new growth to the region.

It was in Senator Boscola’s recognition that staying competitive required creative incentives to help generate new growth in the region, which is what the CRIZ accomplished. As our region continued to recover from the loss of Bethlehem Steel, the CRIZ looked to leverage new state tax increments to complete difficult development projects in Bethlehem and beyond. The redevelopment of the vacant steel land has proven successful and has created diverse job opportunities that have enabled Bethlehem and the Lehigh Valley to flourish and remain one of the most competitive regions, of size, in the Northeast.

Currently, Senator Boscola serves as the Chair of the Consumer Protection and Professional Licensure Committee where she has tirelessly protected consumers from utility rate increases, as well as the Chair for the Game and Fisheries Committee. From 2011 through 2020, Senator Boscola served as Chair of the Senate Democratic Policy Committee, where she lead the fight to bring policies into state government that would create family sustaining jobs, protect the rights of victims of crime, reform and reduce the size of state government and promote school to work opportunities.

Along with Consumer Protection and Game and Fisheries, Senator Boscola is also a member of the Banking & Insurance, Communications and Technology, and Law and Justice committees.   Senator Boscola is also involved in a number of legislative caucus’ including serving as co-chair of the Economy, Business & Jobs Caucus, the Community College Caucus, and the Competitive Caucus. She is also a member of the Local & School Property Tax Relief Caucus, Legislative Sportsmen Caucus, Fire & Emergency Services Caucus, Early Childhood Education Caucus, LGBTQ Caucus among others. Senator Boscola is also a member of the Ben Franklin Technology Development Authority Board.  One of her most recent accomplishment was being named the 2021 ‘Legislator of the Year’ by the Lehigh Valley Labor Council.  Senator Boscola has also recently been named to the ‘City & State 2024 Power of Diversity: Women 100’, and awarded the ‘2022 State Award for Excellence’ by the American Association of Nurse Practitioners, the ‘Victory Through Service Award’ from ASPIRE, and was named ‘Champion of the Industry’ by the Pennsylvania Restaurant and Lodging Association.

Senator Boscola resides in Bethlehem Township with her husband, Ed Boscola and their furry felines.

Mike Carroll, Secretary of Transportation, was first elected to the Pennsylvania House of Representatives in 2006 and subsequently re-elected for seven additional terms, and  he worked on transportation throughout his time in public office. Mike was Democratic chairman of the House Transportation Committee from 2018 through 2022.

In 2010, Mike was awarded the Boy Scouts of America Minsi Trails Council Distinguished Citizen Award for his work to rehabilitate the Stillwater Dam in Tobyhanna Township. In 2014, he was awarded the Jean Yates Award from the Pittston Memorial Library Board of Trustees based on his dedication and service to the library and the Joseph Battisto Award for his legislative service to the citizens of Monroe County. In 2015, he received the Pennsylvania Citizens for Better Libraries (PCBL) State Elected Official Award. In May 2016, he received the BAYADA Home Health Care Champion award, and in June 2016 he was presented with the Silver Bayonet Award by AMVETS in grateful appreciation of services rendered to the community, state, and nation. 

Mike formerly worked as the chief of staff for then-state Rep. John Yudichak, served as legislative liaison for PennDOT under Gov. Robert Casey and served as district office director for Congressman Paul Kanjorski. A graduate of Pittston Area High School, Mike earned a bachelor of arts in liberal studies from the University of Scranton. A lifelong resident of Avoca, he is a member of the Friendly Sons of Saint Patrick in Pittston, and the Ancient Order of Hibernians, Avoca Division. Mike is father of three adult children, Matt, Mackenzie, and Ali. ,

State Senator Lynda Schlegel Culver was elected to serve the residents of the 27th District in a special election in January 2023 and reelected to a full term in November 2024. Lynda was previously elected to serve seven terms representing the people in the 108th District in the state House of Representatives.

She is the chair of the Senate Education Committee and the vice chair of the Health and Human Services Committee. She also serves on the Appropriations, Aging & Youth, Consumer Protection & Professional Licensure, Intergovernmental Operations, and Local Government committees.

Lynda is a lifelong resident of Northumberland County and has dedicated her life to serving others, including family, friends, and the broader community.  She served for more than 20 years as the staff leader in the office of former state Rep. Merle Phillips. Lynda learned during that time about the inner workings of state and local government, while she simultaneously provided timely and reliable constituent services to residents who turned to the office for help.

She has extended her dedication to service beyond her work as a state representative and senator. She also offers her time and talents to many local community organizations, including the Early Learning Investment Committee, Greater Susquehanna Valley Chamber of Commerce and Central PA Chamber of Commerce, the Community Giving Foundation, Everyone’s Playground Advisory Council, and the United Way of Pennsylvania. Lynda also serves as a member Central Susquehanna Opportunities, Inc. (CSO) Board of Directors and the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency (PHEAA) Board of Directors.

Lynda is honored to have been the recipient of several awards including: the 2024 Community Service Citation from the Pennsylvania Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery; 2024 YMCA Legislative Champion Award; the 2023 Elected Official Award from the Pennsylvania Library Association; Guardian of Small Business by the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB); the 2021 “Advocate for Excellence” award from the Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) in PA Initiative to change the Future for all children in Pennsylvania with Autism Spectrum Disorder; the 2020 Start Strong PA Legislative Champion Award; the 2017 Pre-K for PA Champion Award; the 2017 Distinguished Citizen Award from the Susquehanna Council of the Boy Scouts of America; the 2015 Adam Smith Distinguished Leadership Award from Economics PA; the 2014 Dan Foss Heritage Award from the Greater Susquehanna Valley Chamber of Commerce, the 2012 Charles H. Coder Leadership in Entrepreneurial Innovation Award from the Bucknell University Small Business Development Center; the 2012 Guy Temple Award from Leadership Susquehanna Valley; and the 2011 Soroptimist International Ruby Award.

She is a Shikellamy High School graduate and earned a Bachelor of Arts in political science with a concentration in public administration from Bloomsburg University. She is also a graduate of the Leadership Susquehanna Valley Program.

Lynda lives in Rockefeller Township with her husband, Tom, and their dog, Rooney. They have an adult son, Joshua. The family is active in their church in Sunbury.

Representative Dan Frankel has been, and always will be, an outspoken advocate for civil rights and public health. He champions legislation to bring equality to Pennsylvania for LGBTQ+ residents, stands in staunch opposition against efforts to limit women’s healthcare options, and works tirelessly to end gun violence with common sense measures.

In the wake of the 2018 tragedy at the Tree of Life building, Representative Frankel assembled a coalition of community and faith organizations and others to fight for an update to Pennsylvania’s laws to address hate crimes in a modern era.

Currently serving as the Democratic chairman of the House Health Committee, he promotes science-based policies to protect and improve the public health of the Commonwealth. He serves on the Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council to contain healthcare costs and support high-value care. In addition, Rep. Frankel is co-chair of the PA SAFE Caucus and the founder and past chair of both the PA Women’s Health Caucus and LGBTQ+ Equality Caucus.  

Representative Frankel serves the heart of Pittsburgh, representing the neighborhoods of Squirrel Hill, Shadyside, Greenfield, Oakland, Point Breeze, and Regent Square. As the Representative, he leads these communities with the same compassion and activism he sees from his neighbors. An active member of his community, he works to build a thriving region for everyone. 

Representative Frankel sits on Allegheny County’s Area Agency on Aging’s Advisory Council, the State Employee Retirement System board, and the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy’s Board of Directors. He also serves as the governor’s representative to the Board of Trustees for the University of Pittsburgh. Representative Frankel previously served as President of the Jewish Family and Children’s Service board. 

In addition, he’s honored to have participated in Pittsburgh’s urban renaissance through his past work on the Urban Redevelopment Authority Board of the City of Pittsburgh and the Pittsburgh Convention and Visitors Bureau Board.

Representative Frankel is a graduate of the Pennington School (1974) and Kenyon College (1978). He completed a certificate program for senior executives in state and local government at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government (2000). Formerly an insurance executive, he served as a Vice President at Hilb, Rogal, & Hamilton Co. and a regional insurance brokerage firm, Frankel Co.

Representative Frankel resides in Squirrel Hill, down the street from the house he grew up in. He is married to Debra Frankel, a psychotherapist. Together, they have three grown children.

Paul Friel was elected to the state PA House of Representatives in November 2022, serving the state’s 26th Legislative District in Chester County.

Friel has spent his career innovating and leading in the manufacturing, retail and environmental sectors. Most recently, he was owner of PACE Environmental, an environmental testing and engineering firm.

He has also been highly invested in his community — serving on the executive boards of nonprofits such as Camp Rainbow and the Philadelphia Boys’ Choir, coaching wrestling, and serving as president of the Owen J. Roberts School Board.

Friel brings this perspective and experience to Harrisburg and is committed to working on some of the most pressing issues our families face: making sure that high quality public education is available to every child, regardless of where they live and preparing each student in our Commonwealth for college if they choose, a career and civic life, supporting innovative environmental policy that ensures clean air and water for future generations; promoting the development of strong and sustainable local economies and their energy and manufacturing sectors; and safeguarding open space, including the Commonwealth’s integral farmland, protecting democracy by upholding voter rights and advocating for reforms that will increase the transparency and efficacy of government.

Friel grew up in Gilbertsville, PA and graduated from St. Pius X High School and Temple University. He married his high school sweetheart, Mary, and together they raised four children in the OJR School District.

State Representative Seth Grove (R-York), Republican Chair, House Labor and Industry Committee

Hard-working, dedicated and effective are three words to describe Rep. Seth Grove’s approach to legislating. Seth has tirelessly served the 196th District since 2009, and during his time in office, he has consistently advocated for streamlined, more efficient government and commonsense- conservative principles. He stands in support of our gun rights, life, educational choice, election integrity, government accountability, and government transparency.

For the 2023-2024 Session, he was elected by his caucus to be the Republican Chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, which is also part of the Republican Caucus leadership team. He oversees negotiating the state budget and all fiscal matters on behalf of the House Republican Caucus. His focus has been financial transparency, ending deficit spending, and eliminating government waste and fraud.

During the 2021-2022 Session, Chairman Grove served as the Majority Chairman of the House State Government Committee where he led the Republican efforts in election integrity and Congressional redistricting. He championed the largest overhaul of the Commonwealth’s 1937 election law to ensure it provided access to all legal voters, ensured every election process was secure, and modernized an old law. This was the largest election reform package in the country. In his leadership of Congressional redistricting, Chairman Grove created the most open and transparent process in the history of the Commonwealth leading to the General Assembly selecting a citizen drawn map for the first time in the history of the Commonwealth. In his capacity as Chairman, he has tackled tough policy issues and held the most oversight hearings out of any Senate or House Standing Committee.

During the 2019-2020 Session, Chairman Grove was the first Chairman of the House Government Oversight Committee which is charged with completing bipartisan, fact-based investigations of executive agencies and their actions. The committee was created from HB 2026 of 2018, which he was the prime sponsor. Chairman Grove is also the first Chairman and only Chairman ever to be elected Chairman of a committee by the members of the Committee. This position allowed him to continue his work on accountability and transparency of government.

Chairman Grove is married to Dr. Kacey Grove. They have three children and a labrador retriever. They currently reside in Dover Township, York County. Seth graduated from Spring Grove Area School District, York College of Pennsylvania with a B.A. in Public Administration, and the University of Kentucky with a master’s degree in public financial management.

Nikki Jones joined the firm in 2023 and has over 22 years of legislative and government relations experience with a focus on energy and utility policy.

Prior to joining the firm Nikki served as Senior Director of Public and Regulatory Affairs at PPL Electric Utilities. Throughout her 12 years with the company Nikki represented PPL Electric Utilities, its parent company PPL Corporation and other subsidiaries before the PA General Assembly and PA Public Utility Commission. In addition to overseeing the government relations and regulatory affairs functions at PPL, Nikki also managed the community relations, rates and regulatory strategy teams. During her time with PPL Nikki helped lead industry efforts to successful passage of several bills such as the Distribution System Improvement Charge (DSIC), reauthorization of the Responsible Utility Consumer Protection Act (Chapter 14) and Act 58 of 2018, which authorizes utilities to petition the PUC for alternative ratemaking mechanisms.

Preceding her time with PPL, Nikki worked in the Pennsylvania House Democratic Caucus where she held several positions including staff to former Representative Phyllis Mundy and Legal Counsel to former House Majority Whip and Speaker Keith McCall. During her time with Representative McCall, Nikki represented the caucus in key negotiations on legislation establishing energy efficiency standards for utilities (Act 129 of 2008) and amendments to the Alternative Energy Portfolio Standards Act.

A native of Steelton, Dauphin County, Nikki is a 2001 graduate of Penn State University and 2005 graduate of Widener University School of Law. She resides in the Hershey area with her husband and two children.

A lifelong resident of Western Pennsylvania, Joshua D. Kail is a legislator who will work to restore law and order, protect taxpayers, defend life and the Second Amendment, reform Harrisburg and bring family-sustaining jobs to the 15th Legislative District.

As a fierce law and order advocate, Josh serves as Republican chairman of the House Appropriations Committee’s Subcommittee on Criminal Justice. He is also the House Republican appointee to the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency.

On top of his work in the House Appropriations Committee, Josh is also a sitting member on the House Consumer Protection, Technology and Utilities Committee; Energy and Judiciary committees for the 2025-26 legislative session.

He has long understood the importance of controlling taxes while modernizing education, as well as the need to put an end to job-killing overregulation and to apply conservative solutions to our state’s challenges.

Prior to running for office, Josh worked as an attorney representing small and mid-sized businesses and worked as a solicitor for various local governments. He also did work for Beaver County’s Children and Youth Services.

Josh is a graduate of Geneva College and Regent University School of Law. He and his wife, Abby, and their eight children live in Beaver, Pennsylvania.

Since 2002, Adam Long has practiced in the Labor and Employment Law Practice Group, assisting employers with labor and employment law compliance and representing employers in defense of claims made against them.

Adam regularly counsels employers on a wide range of labor and employment law issues, including wage and hour compliance, employment discrimination, employee leaves of absence, labor relations, and non-competition agreements.

Adam also represents employers in single plaintiff and class-based employment litigation matters and before various governmental agencies, including the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission, and the National Labor Relations Board.  He also represents employers with union-represented workforces in collective bargaining negotiations and grievance arbitrations.

The clients that Adam serves range from publicly traded companies to family-owned businesses.  Adam also serves as counsel for a number of colleges and universities.

Adam is admitted to practice in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, and in the U.S. District Courts for the Western, Eastern, and Middle Districts of Pennsylvania.

Adam is active in the community and currently serves as a Board member for The LINK Foundation and as the Chair of the Human Resources Committee of the United Way of the Capital Region. He also is a former Board member and Board Secretary for the American Red Cross’s Central Pennsylvania Chapter, a former President of the Paxtonia Athletic Association, and a former member of the Board of Directors of the Center of Independent Living of Central PA.

A native of central Pennsylvania, Adam resides in Lower Paxton Township with his wife Alison and their three children.

David Lowdermilk, PE, is an associate vice president with HNTB in Pennsylvania, where he serves as the Pennsylvania Sales Manager. Over the course of his four-decade career, Dave has guided and delivered major transportation projects and strategic initiatives for a wide range of public-sector clients.

In 2013, while serving as President of the American Council of Engineering Companies of Pennsylvania (ACEC/PA), Dave played a prominent leadership role during the passage of Pennsylvania Act 89. As a leading voice for the state’s transportation infrastructure community, he helped advance this landmark legislation, Pennsylvania’s first long-term, sustainable funding program dedicated to addressing the Commonwealth’s infrastructure needs. Today, Dave continues his commitment to strengthening Pennsylvania’s transportation network via long term sustainable funding through his active involvement on the PA Chamber’s Transportation Policy Council.

Dave’s contributions to the engineering profession have been recognized throughout his career. He was named the 2009 Delaware Valley Engineer of the Year, the 2009 American Society of Civil Engineers Philadelphia Civil Engineer of the Year and the 2008 Engineer of the Year by the Delaware County Chapter of Professional Engineers. He holds a Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering from Pennsylvania State University and is a licensed Professional Engineer in Pennsylvania.

Kristin Phillips-Hill was elected to serve York County citizens in the Pennsylvania Senate in 2018 and subsequently re-elected in 2022.

In the 2023-24 session and again in the 2025-26 session, Kristin’s colleagues elected her to serve as the Senate Majority Caucus Chair, where she leads legislative discussions to advance the Senate’s agenda.

As a former small business owner and school board director, Kristin has made government efficiency a cornerstone of her public service career.

She successfully championed legislative initiatives ranging from overhauling the state’s permitting process to streamlining the delivery of health care through reforms to the prior authorization process. She also led the efforts on landmark human trafficking reform, overturned a century-old law that prohibited the right to freedom of religious expression, and successfully fought to ban outside, third-party funding from influencing the administration of elections in Pennsylvania.

Throughout her tenure in the Senate, Kristin has been a leader on expanding access to high-speed internet across Pennsylvania, including chairing the Communications & Technology Committee during her first term. She continues this work as vice chair of the Senate Communications & Technology Committee and as a member of the Pennsylvania Broadband Development Authority, which she helped to establish in 2021, overseeing significant investments to expand broadband access statewide.

Her work has resulted in meaningful bipartisan reforms that address the needs of constituents while ensuring fiscal responsibility.

Kristin’s dedication to fiscal transparency extends to her personal conduct. She does not participate in the state’s pension or health insurance programs and commutes to Harrisburg in her own vehicle without accepting mileage reimbursement. She has been recognized by government watchdog entities for exceeding expectations in expense reporting for her transparency and accuracy. She also returns the automatic cost-of-living adjustment that is provided to legislators, executive officials, and judges back to the state Treasury.

In addition to her leadership roles, Kristin serves as a member of the Senate Banking and Insurance, Consumer Protection and Professional Licensure, State Government, and Appropriations committees. She also chairs the Legislative Budget and Finance Committee and serves as a member of the Legislative Data Processing Center.

Kristin earned a bachelor’s degree in political science and a master’s degree in public policy from Rutgers University. She resides in York Township with her husband Rick. Together, they have three grown children: Victoria, Gavin, and Spencer.

Sam Robinson, Deputy Chief of Staff for Consumers and the Environment, Office of Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro

Sam Robinson grew up in Philadelphia and has served in a variety of roles in the Wolf Administration – including as Deputy Chief of Staff for the four years of Governor Wolf’s second term. In this role, Robinson worked closely with Pennsylvania’s environmental and energy agencies, as well as with a number of administrative and regulatory agencies. Prior to joining the Wolf Administration, Robinson served as an Assistant City Solicitor with the City of Philadelphia Law Department. A proud Philadelphian, Robinson received his law degree from The College of William & Mary and his bachelor’s degree from Earlham College. 

Michael Stefan, Vice President for Government and Community Relations, Penn State University 

Michael Stefan joined the Office of Government and Community Relations in 2017. His 15 years of experience in Harrisburg include campaign work, lobbying and executive branch service. 

Prior to arriving at Penn State’s Government and Community Relations, Michael served as the Director of Legislative Affairs for the Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry. As Director, Michael served as a liaison between Governor Wolf’s Administration, the Department, and the State Legislature. Michael previously served as Director of Government Affairs for the Office of Attorney General, and Legislative Director for the Pennsylvania AFL-CIO. He began his career with the House Democratic Campaign Committee in 2007.

Michael earned his bachelor’s degree in business management at Penn State in 2007 and obtained his law degree from Widener University Commonwealth Law School in 2012.

Michael is a native of Palmyra, Pennsylvania, and currently resides in State College, Pennsylvania, with his wife Samantha and two small children, Sylvie, and Michael Jr.

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