Board of Commissioners

The Pennsylvania Board of Game Commissioners is comprised of nine board members, each selected by the Governor, and confirmed by majority vote of the state Senate. Title 34, the law that governs the Board, requires that each member be a citizen of the Commonwealth, and well informed about wildlife conservation and restoration. Commissioners are appointed from various geographical districts of the state to ensure uniform representation for all residents. These districts are not the same as Game Commission agency regions.​

Commission Members

Game Commissioners individually hold office for terms of four years and may be reappointed for a maximum of two additional terms. Commissioners receive no compensation for their services, but may be reimbursed for travel expenses.

Commissioners function as a board of directors, establishing policy for the agency. They are not agency employees. Although they are selected by district, they represent all Pennsylvanians and the state's 480 species of wild birds and mammals.

The Board of Game Commissioners holds quarterly meetings, generally in January, April, June and October, and at other necessary times, if necessary. By law, it is the duty of the commission to protect, propagate, manage and preserve the game or wildlife of Pennsylvania. Specific duties include:

  • Fix seasons, bag limits and hunting hours;
  • Remove protection, declare an open season, or change or close a season;
  • Revise bag limits;
  • Define geographic limitations for hunting;
  • Limit the number of hunters or trappers in an area;
  • Prescribe methods of hunting and trapping;
  • Govern the use of calls for taking game or furbearers;
  • Prohibit the possession, importation, exportation, or release of animals considered harmful to the state;
  • Revise the state classification of any wild bird or mammal, such as threatened or endangered;
  • Manage and develop state game lands and private lands under public access programs;
  • Collect data and preserve statistics about wildlife;
  • Select an agency Executive Director; and
  • Serve the interests of sportsmen and sportswomen by preserving and promoting recreational hunting and trapping by providing adequate opportunity to hunt or trap out wildlife resources.

The Board of Game Commissioners works hand-in-hand with the Executive Director and agency staff to ensure that all wild birds and mammals, and their habitats are managed for current and future generations.

District 3 - President

​Scott H. Foradora

Foradora grew up in Brockway in Jefferson County, where the hunting tradition runs deep in his family. He’s been hunting since he was 12, more than 40 years. He enjoys hunting all game and trapping in Pennsylvania, but, like many hunters, deer are his favorite, followed by turkeys. When he’s not hunting, fishing or trapping, Foradora can be found in his insurance-business office in DuBois, where he puts his accounting and economics degree from Indiana University of Pennsylvania to use.

 

Foradora is a member of the NRA and the Eastern Wild Sheep Foundation.

 

District 2 - Vice President

Dennis R. Fredericks

Fredericks is serving his second term on the board. He served a prior term from 1991 to 1999. He’s the sixth individual to s​erve a second term as a commissioner. During his prior tenure on the board, he served as chairman of the Wildlife Management Bureau committee for six years of his eight-year term.

Fredericks was born and has lived his entire life in Washington County. He’s a lifelong hunter and trapper, and has hunted all big and small game, but now really enjoys hunting for ruffed grouse. Fredericks graduated from Penn State Mont Alto campus in 1972 with a degree in forest technology. In 1992, he attended Colorado State University for a structured course in wildlife management designed for individuals who have been politically appointed to a position to affect management policy for wildlife resources. Now retired, Fredericks had a 42-year career as an environmental engineer and manager of conservation properties and activities for CONSOL Energy, where he was responsible for coordinating natural-resource management on 500,000 acres in several states.

Fredericks is a member of many sportsmen’s organizations and conservation groups, including the NRA, Ruffed Grouse Society, National Wild Turkey Federation and Ducks Unlimited, to name a few.

Appointed June 5, 2018 to serve a four-year term.

District 5 - Secretary

Allen DiMarco

Di Marco was selected from District 5, which includes Bradford, Columbia, Lycoming, Montour, Northumberland, Sullivan, Tioga and Union counties.

Di Marco was originally from Elimsport and has been a hunter since 1959. He’s a member of the Grays Run Hunting and Fishing Club, has mentored three sons in the hunting and trapping traditions, and has been a Hunter Access Program cooperator since 1974.

Di Marco graduated with a bachelor’s degree in Business Education from Shippensburg College in 1969. He went on to earn a master’s degree in Student Personnel Management in 1972 from the Pennsylvania State University. Di Marco began his career in 1969 as a teacher in the Loyalsock Township School District. In 1989, he became assistant high school principal, and in 1994 the principal, retiring in 2009 with 40 years in public education.

 

As a commissioner, Di Marco says his various positions of leadership and his lifelong passion for hunting and trapping will enable him to represent the many varied interests of Commonwealth citizens in wildlife conservation. “As a current Hunter Access Program cooperator, on the board I would like to continue to foster positive relationships between the Game Commission and landowners,” he said. “I am particularly interested in habitat enhancement on private and public lands, and will advocate for additional youth hunting opportunities.”

District 1

​​Kristen Koppenhafer

Commissioner Koppenhafer, of Warren, Pa., was confirmed to the Pennsylvania Game Commission's Board of Commissioners during November, 2019 after being nominated by Gov. Tom Wolf.

Koppenhafer has been a wildlife biologist with the National Wild Turkey Federation since 2011, when she was hired to fill a cooperative position with the Allegheny National Forest overseeing stewardship and challenge-cost-share funds to implement more than $1.6 million in wildlife habitat enhancement work on the forest.

A dedicated parent and hunter, Koppenhafer ​is passing along the tradition to her two young children and to many others through the National Wild Turkey Federation and agency hunter recruitment, retention, and reactivation programs in the state.

District 4

Haley Sankey

Haley J. Sankey of Tyrone, Blair County, was confirmed as a member of the Board of Commissioners on December 15th, 2021.

Sankey was selected from District 4, which includes Bedford, Blair, Cambria, Fulton, Huntingdon and Somerset counties.

Sankey grew up in Clearfield County, and she spends the bulk of her free time outdoors. She enjoys hunting, hiking, fishing, boating, skiing, and biking. Sankey learned about managing soil and water resources, fish migrations and wildlife tagging and tracking in high school environmental science and biology classes, which further piqued her interest in conservation, and she graduated with a bachelor’s degree in Environmental Practice and Policy from Juniata College in 1999. She then earned a master’s degree in Project Management from the Pennsylvania State University. Since 2011, Sankey has been teaching in the Energy and Sustainability Policy Program at Penn State’s University Park campus.

District 7

Stanley Knick Jr.

Stanley Knick Jr. has been an avid hunter and angler for 43 years. He enjoys hunting on state game lands in northeastern Pennsylvania. He also has hunted in New York and Wyoming with his family.

 

Knick was raised on a dairy farm and believes the lessons learned there helped him better understand animal management and habitat.

 

Currently, Knick owns and operates Knick Fence Company in Dupont, Pa. He also has worked for Northeast Arborists, of Pittston, and Mark’s Landscaping, of Dupont.

 

As a commissioner, Knick said he wants to focus on Pennsylvania’s youth.

District 8

Todd A. Pride

Commissioner Pride, of Cochranville, Chester County, was confirmed to the Pennsylvania Game Commission's Board of Commissioners in 2022 after being nominated by Gov. Tom Wolf.

Pride, who is the first African-American appointed to the board, is the founder of Legacy Land & Water Partners, and lead coach with the Mid-Atlantic Youth Anglers and Outdoor Partners, the mission of which is to grow diverse participation in outdoors and conservation activities by introducing and training urban, suburban and rural area youth, and their supporting adults in fishing, boating, archery, hunting heritage, agriculture, conservation, and wildlife education activities. His 14 years of experience with the latter organization will serve him well on the board. He hopes to focus his role as a commissioner to recruit new hunters from all backgrounds.

Pride, who is an alum of The Episcopal Academy and attended Temple University's Fox School of Business in Economics and Marketing, grew up in Philadelphia and has a good grasp on the state's largest city's diverse population where many have come from areas where hunting and the outdoors were important.

District 9

Robert C. Schwalm

Commissioner Schwalm, of Bethlehem, Lehigh County, was confirmed to serve the newly-created seat on the Pennsylvania Game Commission's Board of Commissioners in 2022.

Schwalm grew up in Branchdale, Schuylkill County, and has extensive experience in the outdoors. He has been a hunter in Pennsylvania for 52 years and has hunted in 20 states and three Canadian provinces.

He is a Hunter-Trapper Education Instructor and actively involved in mentoring youth hunters, in addition to involvement in many conservation organizations. He is especially proud of his involvement with the Jerry Zimmerman National Wild Turkey Federation Chapter JAKES event.

Schwalm has a bachelor's degree from Bloomsburg University in Education and is employed by LB Water in Selinsgrove as a sales consultant, where he'll put his business experience and sense of responsibility to work on the board.

"It's an honor and a privilege to serve on the Board of Game Commissioners. As a hunter and conservationist, I feel it is my responsibility to give back. I'm excited to work with the other commissioners to continue creating opportunities to recruit, reactivate and retain hunters and conservationists." – Commissioner Schwalm, District 9