

Leadership Message
Inspiring and preparing young people for success


We are pleased to share our impact report highlighting Junior Achievement of Greater Boston’s success during the 2024-2025 academic year.
This year, as we celebrate our chapter’s 75th anniversary, our accomplishments feel particularly meaningful. We are proud of our history and of the many ways our programs, mentors and volunteers have empowered young people to believe in themselves and to unlock their full potential. And, the evolution our program has experienced over the last seven decades.
We want to thank the 200+ partners, sponsors and donors who have made generous investments in our 75th anniversary thus far, helping us raise $5.2 million toward our ambitious $5.6 million campaign goal. Your investment is a testament to the power of the JA community. In particular, we want to thank the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the Cummings Foundation, Delta Air Lines, the Eos Foundation, Liberty Mutual Insurance, RSM and Staples for their leadership.
We continue to implement our strategic vision to close the wealth and opportunity gaps for youth in key impact communities in our region; currently, these include Boston, Chelsea, Lawrence, Lowell, Lynn, Quincy and Somerville. We do so by creating middle school to career pathways, igniting youth entrepreneurship, and preparing financially savvy youth. This focus is an extension of JA’s historic roots, updated to reflect the changing needs of Greater Boston’s young people.
Last year, we served 6,208 students, 98% of whom are from our seven
impact communities. We continued to operate the JA Innovation Center @ RSM and opened a second JA Innovation Center at Lawrence High School in fall 2024.
We also hosted our third JA Inspire, engaging 1,200 middle school students in hands-on career exploration. This event helps students make informed decisions as they enter high school and consider future pathways.
At Lawrence High School, our largest school partner, all 9th graders completed JA Financial Literacy, and 1,100 students participated in the JA Stock Market Challenge lessons, with 78 joining the culminating simulation at EY.
At Holland Tech, Boston’s 3DE program completed its second year, connecting curriculum to real-world problem-solving and demonstrating strong potential for future expansion.
We also strengthened our JA Career Pathway for Alumni, supporting more than 100 alumni with career readiness tools. Ninetytwo percent completed at least one professional touchpoint, and we welcomed 38 students into our JA Career Launch, placing 36 alumni in paid internships across Greater Boston.
As we celebrate 75 years of impact, we are deeply grateful for your partnership. Thank you for honoring our history and investing in what comes next. We look forward to empowering the next generation of Greater Boston youth for decades to come.
“We want to thank the 200+ partners, sponsors and donors who have made generous investments in our 75th anniversary thus far, helping us raise $5.2 million toward our ambitious $5.6 million campaign goal. Your investment is a testament to the power of the JA community.

Radhames Nova President & CEO

Smaiyra Million Chair, Board of Directors
6,208 Students 278
125,042 Instructional Contact Hours

20 Average Contact Hours Per Student


JA Inspire
We hosted our third annual JA Inspire in November. 978 8th graders from Boston, Chelsea, Lawrence, Lowell, Lynn, Quincy, and Revere excitedly funneled into the Hynes Convention Center to interact with 54 exhibitors representing companies and public services around the Greater Boston Area. Our exhibits delivered a dynamic day, and students arrived prepared to make full use of their experience! Prior to the event, students completed a career assessment - a valuable tool for beginning to frame their passions and interests. One student had this to say about the experience: “My highlight of the JA experience was undoubtedly the event itself. The diverse range of companies brought so much joy, and the atmosphere was vibrant and hands-on. It was incredible to engage with people from all walks of life.” Another student said: “My highlight of the JA experience was getting to learn about marine biology, but mostly being able to explore other careers that I truly didn’t know existed. I would go again if I had the choice to.” Educators were inspired by what this opportunity was bringing to their students. One teacher from Thurgood Marshall Middle School in Lynn said, “JA provides marginalized students with much-needed access that closes gaps. It’s bringing equity to the educational system.” Another teacher from Robert Frost Middle School in Lawrence noted: “We had an absolutely wonderful experience. Everything was extremely well-planned, and my students had an absolute blast. Furthermore, my students were also having wonderful discussions on the way home about some of the careers they learned about.” Staples was the Signature Sponsor for the second consecutive year – many thanks to them for continuing to support this incredible program at the highest level.















CGI Innovate IT Challenge
In May we held the culmination of the 4th Annual CGI Innovate IT Challenge at RSM. This exciting initiative is a mobile app challenge where high school students work in teams of 2-4 to conceptualize, design, and build a mobile app aimed at solving a real-world problem important to them. Over the course of 11 weeks, students and mentors from CGI met virtually after school. They identified a problem they wanted to solve and used Thunkable to develop the app that would address the problem. Five teams participated from Chelsea High School, Chelsea Virtual Learning Academy, Lawrence High School, and North Quincy High School. Students learned the technical skills of basic coding and app development as well as critical thinking, problem-solving, and collaboration. Student teams developed apps that helped their communities reduce food waste, provide caregivers access to support and resources from within their own community, teach financial literacy to people of different ages and cultural backgrounds, provide students with a personalized college list, and an app to provide essential resources that target the needs of the people within Chelsea. The winning team of three students came from North Quincy High School. The team was awarded a $20,000 college scholarship to split evenly, leaving the three high school juniors each with $6,666 in their 529 college savings plans.








JA Stock Market Challenge
In May we hosted our Annual JA Stock Market Challenge at EY. 1,100 high school students from Boston, Chelsea, Lawrence, Lowell, and Quincy participated in JA Take Stock in Your Future, a curriculum that teaches them the basics of investing and the stock market. The top teams from each participating high school competed in the JA Stock Market simulation to put to practice what they learned in the classroom. This financial literacy program teaches young people critical life skills like preparation, critical thinking, making decisions under pressure, collaboration, and communication that will help them be better prepared to succeed as adults. Boston Latin School took first and second place and Somerville High School took third place. Thank you to Delta Air Lines and Fidelity Investments for being our top sponsors, EY for hosting us and all sponsors for making this impactful program available to our students.


JA Company Program
JA Company Program is our flagship entrepreneurial program where high school students create, operate, and liquidate their own start-up business. This year, we had 42 students participate across 5 teams that each worked to create a product to address an unmet need in their community. Our dedicated mentors from businesses in and around Boston met with teams weekly to provide them with invaluable, real-world guidance and business expertise. This year marks the third-year anniversary of our JA Innovation Center @ RSM, and teams utilized the space and tools like our laser cutter and vinyl cutter to prototype or create their products.
Over the 21-week program, students participated in our events such as the design thinking workshop, seed funding competition, entrepreneurial expo, and the annual JA of Greater Boston regional pitch competition. The student-run company, The Geni (hosted by Reading Cooperative Bank in Lawrence), won first place and the title JA of Greater Boston Company of the Year. Created by first-generation high school students from Lawrence, The Geni sold travel-sized magnetic accessories to keep bags off dirty floors and used all profits to fund a scholarship for firstgeneration students in their community. This is the first time a team from Lawrence has won our regional pitch competition. The students were even invited to and recognized at the State House by elected officials from the hometown of Lawrence.















3DE Schools

3DE Schools by Junior Achievement is transforming education by integrating realworld relevance into everyday learning. Through dynamic case challenges codeveloped with industry partners, such as Delta Air Lines, Deloitte, Enterprise Mobility, and Staples, 9th and 10th graders at Holland Tech in Dorchester engaged in problem-solving that builds critical thinking, communication, and collaboration skills. This innovative model breaks down traditional barriers, increases student engagement, and equips young people with the competencies needed for success in the workforce and beyond. We are proud of the partnership we continue to build with the administration and teachers at Holland Tech and look forward to adding the 11th grade in our third year of partnership.

71% of respected, 10th graders demonstrate primary sense feeling and seeing their
10th graders levels mindset, believe things.

of 9th graders felt accepted, respected, and included at school graders continued to demonstrate growth in 3DE’s primary engagement indicators: a of belonging at school ( 92% ), feeling cared for by teachers ( 97% ), seeing school as relevant to futures ( 73% ). graders also showed high levels of self-confidence and growth mindset, with 97% saying they believe it’s important to try new things.

JA Career Pathway For Alumni
The 2025 JA Career Launch program consisted of 38 recently graduated high school seniors representing the following impact communities; Boston, Lawrence, Lynn, Quincy and Somerville. Alumni participated in 70 hours of career readiness programming, and each received a $1,000 stipend through the generosity of Experian and Lawrence High School. Thank you to AIG, Biogen, CBT Architects, and Slalom Consulting for hosting our alumni for Job Shadows, to ALKU, Citisoft, Dellbrook/JKS, Delta, EY, Fiduciary Trust, and Robert Half, for providing our alumni with career prep workshops, and to the many individual volunteers who attended JA Alumni Networking Event, providing our alumni with role models.
Through our corporate and community partnerships, we placed 38 JA alumni in paid internships earning a total of over $300,000, two JA alumni in full time jobs, and supported over 100 JA alumni through resume review, interview prep, salary negotiations, and connections to informational interviews. One JA alumna who was recently hired at Voya said, “I am incredibly grateful for the opportunities and consistent support JA has given me over the past three years, and now that I am starting my job at Voya, I am excited to give back to JA in any way I can”.








JA Innovation Center @ LHS
The JA Innovation Center @ LHS served as an extension of Lawrence High School’s pathway and elective courses. Inside the space, students explored careers connected to their pathways, strengthened essential technical skills, and cultivated both an entrepreneurial and growth mindset. Through experiential learning, they applied classroom knowledge, tested new methods and models of presentation, and took risks in a monitored, safe environment.
During the 2024–2025 year, the Center achieved several key milestones:
• Students across all 10th grade Business Pathway classes learned core skills from JA curriculum including JA Be Entrepreneurial, JA Business and Technology, and JA Pop-Up, and used equipment in the Center to prototype and test products for the culminating fall JA Pop-Up program.
• Afterschool JA Company Program participants used the space and its equipment to design and produce their business products.
• We hosted multiple career panels aligned with LHS pathways and elective areas, connecting students directly with industry professionals.
• The LHS school store was reopened, supported by a student group that used the JA Pop-Up program to plan, stock, and relaunch the store.
• Students and teachers received ongoing support from a full-time dedicated JA staff member who managed the Center, provided training on all equipment, and coordinated JA curriculum instruction in partnership with volunteers.





JA Innovation Center @ RSM


JA Company Program students use the JA Innovation Center to make and package their products.



Anna Li
JA Student of the Year
In June, we awarded the $10,000 Steve Sullivan Scholarship and the title of JA Student of the Year to Anna Li from North Quincy High School. A rising senior with a passion for both STEM and entrepreneurship, Anna has demonstrated outstanding leadership, innovation, and purpose through her involvement in the classroom and the JA Company Program.
As CEO of Ecozip and Faunara, she led her teams in launching two socially conscious ventures—one focused on accessibility and sustainable design, the other on environmental awareness. Along the way, she gained real-world skills in research, collaboration, product development, and strategic leadership.
Her experience with JA helped her make a powerful discovery: she doesn’t have to choose between science and entrepreneurship; she can pursue both. “My experience in these JA programs has shown me that I can combine my curiosity in science, my interest in making an effort to help other individuals, and my knowledge of entrepreneurship when pursuing a future career.”
After high school, Anna plans to pursue medical school and a career that blends innovation and impact. Her story reflects the heart of JA’s mission: preparing young people to thrive in school, work, and life.
Erika Neilssen
JA Volunteer of the Year

Last May, we proudly honored Erika Neilssen as Junior Achievement of Greater Boston’s 2025 Volunteer of the Year!
A Senior Manager in Capital Markets at Accenture, Erika exemplifies what it means to go above and beyond. From recruiting fellow volunteers and shaping innovative programming, to demystifying the consulting world for high school students, her impact runs deep. She’s even helping create pathways for JA alumni through internships at Accenture— transforming mentorship into meaningful career opportunities.
This is what true partnership looks like: when a company and a volunteer invest in students not just for today, but for their future.
“Partnering with Junior Achievement students is an incredibly rewarding experience. To help young people discover their potential, gain confidence in their future, and be part of their early career journey is inspiring. I feel proud to play even a small role in empowering the next generation of leaders and innovators.”

George Albrecht, Sr.
2025 Alumni Hall of Fame
Last June, Junior Achievement inducted George Albrecht, Sr. Fame, recognizing his exceptional philanthropic leadership and his to JA’s mission.
George’s journey from humble Boston to becoming a respected leader is a powerful testament and service. Raised in poverty adversity, he found refuge and organizations, including the Boston YMCA, and especially Junior he first discovered the world growth.
In 1977, after building experience management roles, George co-founded Motors with support from an SBA grew into today’s Albrecht Auto

of Greater Boston proudly Sr. into its Alumni Hall of exceptional civic, professional, and his enduring commitment
humble beginnings in inner-city respected business and community testament to resilience, vision, poverty and facing significant inspiration in community Roxbury Boys Club, the Junior Achievement, where of business and personal experience across sales and co-founded Woburn Foreign SBA loan. This small operation Auto Group, an award-winning

network of dealerships across Massachusetts and New Hampshire known for its “Customer for Life” philosophy. George’s business culture emphasized trust, service, and employee well-being, and he invested in staff through scholarships, bonuses, and expanded healthcare benefits.
Beyond business success, George has been a steadfast advocate for youth development. He served on the boards of Addison Gilbert Hospital, The Copley Society, and Junior Achievement, returning to the same organization that once offered him hope as a young boy. His longtime support of JA continues this year as the Honorary Chair of JA of Greater Boston’s 75th Anniversary.
George Albrecht’s induction into the Alumni Hall of Fame celebrates not only his professional achievements but also his unwavering dedication to empowering the next generation, fulfilling the same promise that once helped guide his own path.
Our Corporate and Foundation Donors
$250,000 and above
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
$150,00 to $199,999
Anonymous
$100,000 to $149,999
American Student Assistance (ASA)
Delta Air Lines
$75,000 to $99,999
Experian
$50,000 to $74,999
Cummings Foundation
Gemline
RSM US LLP
$25,000 to $49,999
AIG
CGI
Deloitte Foundation
Eos Foundation
Fidelity Investments
KPMG LLP
LendingClub Bank
$15,000 to $24,999
Accenture
Albrecht Auto Group
CNA
DELLBROOK|JKS
eCW Giving Foundation
Enterprise Mobility
Essex County Community Foundation
$10,000 to $14,999
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts
BNY Mellon
Fiduciary Trust
JPMorgan Chase & Co.
Keolis North America
Liberty Mutual Group and Foundation
Staples, Inc.
Anonymous
Mabel Louise Riley Foundation
Santander Bank
Anonymous Wellington Management Foundation
Lincoln Financial Foundation
M&T Bank
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
The UPS Store
TJX Companies, Inc.
Webster Bank, N. A.
EY
Horace A. Moses Foundation
IRS
Needham Bank
Northern Bank & Trust Company
Robert Half
Metro Credit Union Foundation
Saab Family Foundation
Sun Life Financial
US Bank Foundation
Voya
$5,000 to $9,999
ALKU
Audax Foundation
BDO
Beth Israel Lahey Health
Boston Mutual Life Insurance
Brainly
Brookline Bank
Camden National Bank
Charles Street Strategies
Citisoft
Citizens Bank
Comcast
CrossCountry Consulting
CVS
$4,999 and Below
At Work Collaborative
Boston Marriott Cambridge
Boston Scientific
Cambridge Savings Bank
CeriFi
Crowe LLP
Deloitte & Touche LLP
Enterprise Bank
Federal Home Loan Bank of Boston
Insulet Corporation
JA Worldwide
Massachusetts Marine Trades Association
MassPort
Microsoft
MIT Federal Credit Union
Museum of Science
NEI General Contracting
DuPont
Hamilton Company Charitable Foundation
ICE Fixed Income & Data Services
Insight Investment Life Science Cares
Massachusetts Convention Center Authority
MDD Forensic Accountants
MUFG
NNN Properties, LLC
Oliver Wyman
Point32Health
Rockland Trust Charitable Foundation
Slalom
The Colony Group
NESN
Nexamp
Paul R. & Jacqueline D. Fehrenbach Family Fund
PayPal Giving Fund
Red Sox Foundation
Salesforce
Sanofi
SAP
The Cafaro Group Merrill Lynch Wealth
Management
The Plourde Family Charitable Trust
The Siegfried Group
Trident Wealth Strategies
Verizon
Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati
Our Individual Donors
$75,000 and above
Christine Barry
$35,000 to $74,999
Glenn Ricciardelli
$25,000 to $34,999
Dustin Neurath
$15,000 to $24,999
Andreana Santangelo
Charlie Hoban
Kevin and Pamela Bolen
Sidney Queler
Mark Reilly
Stephen and Rebecca Sullivan
$10,000 to $14,999
Anonymous (2)
Eddie Perkin
Elke Trilla
$5,000 to $9,999
Chip Barnes
Toly Chea
Migdalia Diaz
Gina Foster
Michael and Lindsay Guerriere
Sheryce Hearns
$2,500 to $4,999
James Boviard
Rommel Espinal
John Ferguson
Kevin Kopanon
Annette Leckie
Keith Linhart
$1,000 to $2,499
Diana Barlow
Tim Behling
Marta Bergamaschi
Don Bramley
Michael Carpentiere
Bernard Dockrill
Jim Goodfield
Charles (Chuck) Gordon
Pooja Ika
Brian J. Kalberer
Dennis Leonard
$500 to $999
Gary Baker
Christine Berberich
Marion Dorsch
Raymond C. Hoefling
Josh Kanter
Michael Kelly
Jack Kerins
Max Lopez
Andrew Malachowski
$499 and Below
Kirk Aharonian
Aisha Ahmad
Ann Anderson
Nate Baynes
Varun Bhandari
Pedro Beato
Gregory Boccio
Jill Borrelli
Valerie Brooks
George Albrecht, Jr.
Bill Meagher and Smaiyra Million
William Herp
Rod Landis
George Moore
Rick Tyson
Christopher Webster
Ellen Mager
Chris MacKenzie
Mark Melito
Richard Alan Renwick
Frank O’Neill
Amy Zidow
Stephanie Marchand
Sasidhar Nayudu
Emily A. Neill
Raju Pathak
Peter Scheve
James M. Suppelsa
Richard White
Sabrina Williams
Sujata Yadav
Stephen J. Ziff
Chris McMahon
Oscar Moreno
Erika Neilssen
Charles Nevejans
Bill Nichols
Jason Pacor
Michael Preite
Candice Stover
Kevin Burke
Jonathan Cain
Lauren Campson
Wendy Colella
David Costa
Kathy Connolly
Owen Connor
Sarah Curran
Catherine A. Daley
Anna Davis
Luiza deCamargo
Olivia DelVecchio
Paul Dombrowski
Eric Dowley
Cole Dragsbaek
Joshua Drew
Joanna Elder
Jessica Ferguson
James Fitzgerald
Mike Foley
Andrew Frazer
James Galvin
Jordan Gauthier
Jacob Girard
Patricia Gizinski
Tom Glynn
Maricel Goris
Anthony Guardia
Rob Granara
Nicholas Grant
Nicholas Graziano
Sammy Grundy
Richard Hammond-Moore
Harry Hanlon
Robert Hazard
Mack Herbert
Molly Howell
William Hull
Victory Y. Hum
Thadeus Jackson
Patrick Jobes
Darien Johnson
Christopher Kelley
Manoha Kodimela
Wil Linell
Kelsey Low
Terrence Lucas
Angela Lynch
Josh & Dana Lewis
Daniel Levites
Timothy Magnotta
Shanon Mansfield
Elaine Marks
Ryan Mastroianni
JP McBride
Jordan McBride
Daniel McCarthy
Taidgh McClory
Matthew McCudden
Zachary Merow
Matthew Morlock
Jasmine Morin
John Moroney
Johsuar Moya
Michelle Murphy
Ian Nackman
Adam Naida
Amber Neal
Andy Nickerson
Lauren Olin
Enda O’Shea
PayPal Giving Fund
Frank Paine
Ilona Perry
Kyle Puffer
Morgan Ryall
Kira Raymond
Madeline Reynolds
Haley Rhodes
Michael Richardson
Jenny Riordan
Rebecca Risk
Isabelle Sanscartier
Ruby Sands
John Saralidze
Grace Sarah Ruvelson
Cheyenne Seatts
Robert Shaw
Kathryn Sheehy
Samantha Sickorez
Drew Smith
John Sokol
Renee Solly
Sarina Sullivan
Eric Turner
John Turtle
Aidan Twomey
Melvin Vargas
Patrick Wacker
Jennifer Wegman
Carly Weider
John Williams
Andrew Whitbeck
Jiang Yao
Tim Zubak
Our Financials
$3,315,964 Other Income (excluding in-kind) $116,105 4%

$1,323,529 40%
Events (net of expenses) $199,285 6% Foundations
$1,196,815 36%
Summary of Revenues

Board of Directors
Executive Committee
Smaiyra Million , Chair Educator, Entrepreneur, CEO, Board Member
Kevin Bolen , Treasurer Advisory Principal, Strategic Planning & Investments KPMG
George Moore* Chief Technology & Information Officer CareMetx, LLC
Candice Stover General Manager New England Global Sales Delta Air Lines
George Albrecht, Jr.
President & CEO Albrecht Auto Group
Tim Behling
Vice President of Supply Chain Gemline
James Boviard Assurance Partner PwC
Michael Carpentiere Group Car Sales Manager Enterprise
Toly Chea Chief Operating Officer Sanalife & Aqualite US
Rommel Espinal Vice President, Customer Inclusion Community Leader, Fidelity Investments
Gina Gibbs Foster
Sid Queler , Vice Chair Head of Wealth Management Fiduciary Trust Company
Migdalia Diaz , Secretary Chief Operating Officer Latinos for Education
Ray Hoefling Chair, Finance Committee
Elke Trilla Associate Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati
Members
John K. Ferguson Senior Vice President Mortgage Banking Manager Brookline Bank
Michael Guerriere SVP & Chief Actuary Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts
Carl Hatfield Managing Director, Boston Office Leader Protiviti
Robert Hazard Group Manager, Commercial Banking Senior Vice President M&T Bank
Sheryce Hearns-Brisbon Director, Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Dellbrook I JKS
Charlie Hoban Partner, Health & Life Sciences and Boston Metro Leader Oliver Wyman
Pooja Ika
Founder & CEO
eternalHealth
Michael Kelly
Client Director
AIG New England
Kevin Kopanon
Principal, Boston Market Leader
RSM US LLP
Rod Landis
Managing Director, Senior Portfolio Manager - Middle Market Commercial Banking Webster Bank
Keith Linhart Partner I Transformation Lead CrossCountry Consulting
Ellen Mager
Site Leader, New England Manufacturing & Technology Center - Marlborough Dupont
Mark Melito
Partner Deloitte & Touche LLP
Oscar Moreno
Senior Vice President, Director of Commercial Banking - NH & Markets Camden National Bank
Sasidhar Nayudu
Vice-President, Head Financial and Commercial Business - New England CGI
Dustin Neurath
EVP, Chief Operating Officer Santander Bank
Jason Pacor
Managing Director - Consumer, Manufacturing, and Technology Slalom Consulting, LLC
Raj Pathak
Managing Director
Morgan Stanley
Eddie Perkin* **
Cara Quigley
Managing Director - Growth Services
America Lead Accenture Song
Glenn Ricciardelli
Senior Partner MDD Forensic Accountants
Mark Reilly
Senior Vice President, Government, Regulatory and Corporate Affairs Comcast
Peter Scheve
Senior Vice President, North America
Alternative Client Portfolio Head State Street Corporation
Jimmy Suppelsa Vice-President, Financial Advisor CAPTRUST
Chris Webster Entrepreneurship Professor Endicott College
Sabrina Williams
Sujata Yadav Chief Product Officer Eastern Bank
Amy Zidow Assurance Partner EY
*Past Chairs ** JA Alumni
Our Associate Board of Directors
Kayla Barletta
Senior Consultant, Data Intelligence, Slalom
Nick Barrett
Associate Director, The Siegfred Group
Shauna Bernard Director, Risk Consulting, RSM
Varun Bhandari Investment Specialist Wellington Management
Greg Boccio Audit and Assurance Senior Manager Deloitte & Touche LLP
Lauren Campson Audit & Assurance Manager Deloitte & Touche LLP
Luiza deCamargo
Deputy Chief of Fund Development The New Commonwealth Fund
Shae Fitzgerald Research Associate, Loomis Sayles
Saketh Kamatham Software Engineer, Staples
Darien Johnson Director, Higher Ground
Josh Kanter, Co-Chair Senior Vice President, NNN Pro Group
Jack Kerins Audit Manager, KPMG
JonPaul McBride Wealth Manager, The Colony Group
Erika Neilssen, Co-Chair Manager, Management Consulting, Accenture
Enda O’Shea** Senior, Technology Risk, EY
Ilona Perry Wealth Management Associate, Fiduciary Trust
Mike Preite Vice President, Healthcare Corporate & Investment Banking, Truist
Michael Richardson** Relationship Manager, Salem Five Bank
Carol Warren
Underwriting Consulting Director, Management Liability, CNA ** JA Alumni
Our Staff
Jojo Antonio Director, Sponsorships
Val Brooks Director, JA Career Pathway for Alumni
Yajaira Estrada Education Manager
Wangeci Gitau Education Manager JA Innovation Center @ LHS
Paulo Frade Vice President, Finance & Technology
Tara MacKenzie
Senior Education Manager, JA Innovation Center @ RSM and JA Company Program
Radhames Nova President and CEO
Deirdre O’Connor Mitchell Chief Operations Officer
Oloruntomi Saliu 3DE School Director
Meredith Traquina Chief Development Officer
Alexis Yang Manager, Events

