OPINION BY
Judge BROBSON.1Shawnee Tabernacle Church (Church) and Dennis Bloom (Bloom) (collectively, Petitioners) petition for review of the May 11, 2012 order of the Pennsylvania State Ethics Commission (Commission). In that order, the Commission denied the Church’s petition to intervene in an administrative proceeding initiated by the Commission against Bloom under the Public Official and Employee Ethics Act, 65 Pa. C.S. §§ 1101-1113 (Ethics Act). Because the Commission did not abuse its discretion, we affirm the Commission’s order.
BACKGROUND
A. Commission Proceeding
On or about November 10, 2010, the Pocono Mountain School District (School District) filed a formal complaint with the Commission. (Reproduced Record (R.R.) 4a-10a.) In its complaint, the School District contended that Bloom, in his capacity as Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the Pocono Mountain Charter School (Charter School), violated the Ethics Act. The School District contended that Bloom engaged in a series of self-dealing and conflicts of interest stemming from his role as CEO of the Charter School and his simultaneous role as Senior Pastor of the Church, which happens to be the Charter School’s landlord. More specifically, the School District alleged the following:
[D]uring his tenure as Senior Pastor of the Landlord-Church and CEO of the Tenant-Charter School, [Bloom] authorized over $900,000.00 in public taxpayer funds, to be spent on installing a parking lot on the church-owned land, as well as installing an elevator, gymnasium floor, lockers, etc., without obtaining any offset credit against the annual rent that the Charter School pays to the Church. The Charter School pays an annual rent of $920,000.00 to its Landlord, the ... Church, for use of a building that shares a common entranceway with the Church and whose exterior has a sign stating, “Shawnee Tabernacle”, with the Church logo. The ... Charter School spent approximately $89,000.00 to install an electronic message board that contained the name “Shawnee Tabernacle Church” in the most prominent location of the sign, and [the] Charter School continues to promote the Church to run messages on the sign, with no charge, pursuant to an unwritten agreement. [Bloom] and his wife drew salaries from the School that approximated $200,000.00 per year. [Bloom] authorized the Charter School to pay for the gymnasium floor and include the words “Shawnee Tabernacle”, on said floor.
(R.R. 6a.) The School District noted in its complaint that on October 6, 2010, its Board of Directors (School Board) voted, after a hearing, to revoke the Charter School’s charter based on what the School District characterized as an “entanglement that exists between the Church and the publicly-funded Charter School.” The School District asked the Commission to investigate, stating:
*119A full blown investigation is required so that the mandates of the ... Ethics Act are upheld and so that ... Bloom is held accountable for using taxpayer monies for his own pecuniary benefit and/or for his church’s benefit, at the cost of the taxpayers.
(Id.)
On or about February 24, 2012, the Investigative Division of the Commission (Investigative Division) filed an Investigative Complaint/Findings Report (Complaint) against Bloom. (R.R. lla-94a.) In that Complaint, the Investigative Division notes that it received the School District’s complaint and initiated a preliminary inquiry, which it concluded in 60 days. Thereafter, it determined that a full investigation was warranted. Based on that full investigation, the Investigative Division filed the Complaint.
The Investigative Division alleges that Bloom served as CEO of the Charter School from its creation in or about 2003 until December 10, 2010 — i.e., the period at or around which the School District raised its concerns about Bloom’s conflicts of interest and sought to revoke the Charter School’s charter. Bloom and his wife formed the Church on or about February 9, 1995. Since that time, Bloom has served as the Founder and Pastor of the Church. On or about June 28, 1999, according to the Complaint, the Church purchased approximately 10.5 acres of land in Monroe County, which would become the future home of the Church and the Charter School (Tobyhanna Property). Bloom incorporated the Church in 2001 by filing appropriate papers with the Pennsylvania Department of State, identifying himself as President.
Between 1999 and 2002, Bloom operated the Tobyhanna Christian Academy (TCA), a private school which ceased operations due to a lack of financial resources. At or around the same time that TCA ceased operations, Bloom began the process of creating a charter school to be operated on the Church’s property. He formed another corporate entity, the Pocono Mountain Learning Academy (PMLA), which the Investigative Division alleges is the successor to TCA. The corporate purpose of the PMLA was “to provide charter school educational instruction as an alternative to public school.” Bloom later amended the corporate charter to rename the entity as the Charter School.
Bloom filed an application for a charter for the Charter School with the School District, proposing a start date of August 25, 2003, and identifying the proposed location of the school as the Tobyhanna Property. The application disclosed, inter alia, that the Charter School would rent space from the Church and that an addition to the building on the property is under construction to accommodate the students. The School Board approved the application on February 19, 2003.
In his simultaneous capacity as CEO of the Charter School and Founder/President of the Church, Bloom participated in the process that led to the lease agreements between the Charter School and the Church. Indeed, according to the Complaint, Bloom was the point of contact on the leases for both the Charter School, as tenant, and the Church, as landlord. Bloom actively negotiated the leases for 2003, 2004, and 2005, which the Charter School’s Board of Trustees approved. The Investigative Division alleges that in 2006, when the charter came up for renewal, questions were raised about Bloom’s role, presumably with the Church and the Charter School. From then on, the Investigative Division alleges, Bloom concealed his involvement by having members of the Charter School Board of Trustees sign documents.
*120The gist of the Investigative Division’s Complaint is that Bloom acted for both the Church (landlord) and the Charter School (tenant) from 2003 through 2010 with respect to lease terms and negotiations between the Church and the Charter School. During this time, the leased area increased and the amount of rent paid by the Charter School to the Church increased. In addition, according to the Complaint, in 2006, the Charter School and the Church executed a lease amendment that called for the Charter School to pay 100% of the debt service on the Church’s mortgage loan of $2.2 million, incurred from the development and expansion of the facilities on the Tobyhanna Property (Expansion Project).
The Investigative Division also details allegations relating to how Bloom, by using his official capacities with the Church and the Charter School, personally profited from the operations of the Church and the Charter School. Bloom, as CEO of the Charter School, directed the Charter School’s business manager to make rent and expense payments to the Church, which were deposited into a business checking account at First National Bank of Palmerton. Bloom and his wife both had signature authority on that account. According to the Complaint, without those lease and expense payments, the Church had difficulty maintaining a positive balance in that checking account. In addition, Bloom, in his capacity as Pastor of the Church, either made payments to himself or directed Church staff to make payments to him out of that same checking account. Indeed, the Investigative Division alleges five specific instances where either on the same day or within one day of the Charter School depositing money in the bank account, a check was issued out of that account to Bloom, ranging from $12,000 to $45,000 (a total of $146,500). The Investigative Division further alleges that while these payments were characterized as loan payments, there is no record substantiating a loan of this size by Bloom to the Church.
The Investigative Division also alleges that Bloom used his position as CEO of the Charter School to hire his son and daughter as part-time employees of the Charter School, for which the Charter School paid them $15,651.88 and $18,039.60, respectively.
With respect to the Expansion Project, the Investigative Division alleges that Bloom served as the point man for both the Church and the Charter School on the project and that he secured the financing for the project. It alleges that the financing would not have been possible if not for the lease terms that essentially had the Charter School funding the project through increased rental payments. Bloom, as President of the Church, opened a construction checking account with the lender, with himself and his wife having signature authority on the account.
The Investigative Division alleges that following the solicitation of bids for the Expansion Project in early 2007, Bloom, as Pastor of the Church, selected a company called Radium, Inc. (Radium) to serve as the general contractor. From September 2006 on, Bloom was the sole owner and operator of Radium. Bloom authorized payments from the Church’s construction account to Radium and to himself personally in 2007. Though Bloom, in his capacity as CEO of the Charter School, updated the Charter School Board of Trustees on the status of the project during the latter half of 2007 and in January 2008, he never disclosed that Radium, his company, was serving as the general contractor for the project. The Investigative Division alleges that Bloom further concealed his involvement with Radium in other ways, including *121in a Waiver and Release of Mechanic’s lieri form for Radium. The affidavit accompanying the form was signed by a Shalako Simon for Radium, who, according to the Investigative Division, was Bloom’s son-in-law and had no formal position with Radium.
The Investigative Division alleges that Bloom’s multiple and simultaneous positions with the Church and Radium allowed him to choose which portions of the Expansion Project would be paid from the loan proceeds or by the Charter School. Indeed, the Charter School opened its own separate construction account, with Bloom as a signatory. This account was used to pay for expenses of the Expansion Project that were not paid for through the loans taken out by the Church. Bloom, in his capacity as CEO of the Charter School, directed payments out of that construction account for such things as doors, a sign board, an elevator, the parking lot, gym flooring, and bleachers. By directing such expenses to the Charter School, Bloom, the Investigative Division alleges, freed up loan proceeds secured by the Church to be paid to Radium as the general contractor and him, as the owner of Radium, by extension.
The Investigative Division further alleges that Bloom, in his capacity as CEO of the Charter School, gave permission to his daughter to use school-leased facilities to operate her own business — The Tobyhan-na Impact Athletic Center (Athletic Center). The Athletic Center, however, did not pay either the Church or the Charter School to use the facilities for its operations. The checking account for the Athletic Center identifies Bloom as one of the authorized signatories for the account. Bloom signed several checks from the account, including a November 25, 2008 check made payable to cash. That same day, Bloom made a $2,000.00 cash deposit to his personal checking account.
The Investigative Division further alleges that in 2009, Bloom, as CEO of the Charter School, directed the Charter School’s business manager to issue bonus checks to Bloom and his wife, which Bloom deposited in his personal checking account. No such bonuses were authorized by the Charter School’s Board of Trustees. Soon thereafter, Bloom’s wife leased a 2009 Mercedes automobile for $422.68 a month with a $4,500.00 down payment. ' Bloom paid for the down payment from his personal checking account. Thereafter, Bloom, as CEO of the Charter School, instructed the business manager to issue monthly $450.00 payments to him as a car expense. Pursuant to this directive, the Charter School paid Bloom $4,950.00 as a car expense for the period of August 2009 through November 2010. Again, according to the Investigative Division, this expense was not authorized by the Charter School’s Board of Trustees. The Investigative Division also alleges Bloom authorized vehicle lease reimbursements by the Charter School to him during the 2003-2004 school year.
Based on the foregoing, the Investigative Decision claims that Bloom, a public official/employee based on his capacity as CEO of the Charter School, violated Sections 1103(a) and (f) and 1105 of the Ethics Act. Section 1103 prohibits a public official or employee from engaging “in conduct that constitutes a conflict of interest.” 65 Pa.C.S. § 1103(a). “Conflict” or “conflict of interest” is defined in-the Ethics Act as follows:
Use by a public official or public employee of the authority of his office or employment or any confidential information received through his holding public office or employment for the private pecuniary benefit of himself, a member of his *122immediate family or a business with which he or a member of his immediate family is associated. The term does not include an action having a de minimis economic impact or which affects to the same degree a class consisting of the general public or a subclass consisting of an industry, occupation or other group which includes the public official or public employee, a member of his immediate family or a business with which he or a member of his immediate family is associated.
Id. § 1102. Section 1103(f) limits self-dealing by providing:
No public official or public employee or his spouse or child or any business in which the person or his spouse or child is associated shall enter into any contract valued at $500 or more with the governmental body with which the public official or public employee is associated or any subcontract valued at $500 or more with any person who has been awarded a contract with the governmental body with which the public official or public employee is associated, unless the contract has been awarded through an open and public process, including prior public notice and subsequent public disclosure of all proposals considered and contracts awarded. In such a case, the public official or public employee shall not have any supervisory or overall responsibility for the implementation or administration of the contract. Any contract or subcontract made in violation of this subsection shall be voidable by a court of competent jurisdiction if the suit is commenced within 90 days of the making of the contract or subcontract.
Id. § 1103(f).
Section 1104 of the Ethics Act requires public officials to file a statement of financial interests. The Investigative Division accuses Bloom of failing to include the following required information in his statements of financial interests:
(5) The name and address of any direct or indirect source of income totaling in the aggregate $1,300 or more. However, this provision shall not be construed to require the divulgence of confidential information protected by statute or existing professional codes of ethics or common law privileges.
(8) Any office, directorship or employment of any nature whatsoever in any business entity.
(9) Any financial interest in any legal entity engaged in business for profit.
Id. § 1105(b).
Pursuant to the Ethics Commission’s regulations, specifically 51 Pa.Code § 21.21(a), on or about March 23, 2012, Bloom requested a formal hearing on the charges against him. (R.R. 95a.) He also filed a paragraph-by-paragraph response to the Complaint, along with additional averments under the heading of “New Matter and Affirmative Defenses.” (R.R. 96a-170a.) In that document, Bloom denies every allegation of the Investigative Division material to its claim that Bloom violated the Ethics Act.
B. Church Intervention Petition
On April 13, 2012, the Church filed a petition to intervene in the matter before the Commission. (R.R. 171a-74a.) Excluding contentions of law, the Church alleges the following in its petition to intervene:
1. [The Church] is a Pennsylvania nonprofit corporation formed in August 2001.
2. [The Church] owns property located at 16 Carriage Lane, Tobyhanna, PA, which includes rental space leased to the Pocono Mountain Charter School.
*1233. [The Church] is governed by a Board of Directors, including trustees, deacons and elders.
4. As a result of an investigation of Dennis Bloom, the State Ethics Commission issued an Investigative Complaint/Findings Report on February 24, 2012.
5. In its Investigative Complaint/Findings Report, [the Church] is repeatedly named with regard to certain business transactions with Dennis Bloom and Pocono Mountain Charter School.
8. [The Church] is extremely concerned about the ramifications of the Findings Report and subsequent action of the State Ethics Commission in this matter.
12. [The Church] seeks to intervene to protect its interests and the interest of its members in support of Respondents’ Answer to the Investigative Complaint/Findings Report....
(R.R. 171a-72a.) In terms of responding to the Complaint against Bloom, the Church incorporates by reference certain paragraphs of Bloom’s answer. In addition, the Church alleges the following:
[The Church], by way of further answer, avers that any reference in the Commission’s Report to [Bloom’s] relationship to the Church is objected to, as this is outside the scope of the Commission’s authority and an impermissible intrusion by the State into Church affairs in violation of the constitutional principal of separation of Church and State.
The activities of [the Church] in leasing its property to the [Charter School] and in expanding its physical plant to accommodate the growth of the [Charter School] are activities that occurred between the [Charter School] and [the] Church, each a valid and lawful not for profit corporation each governed by a Board of Trustees and each properly run by their respective Boards and, therefore, are not the proper subject of inquiry of an investigation concerning the individual Dennis Bloom.
(R.R. 173a.)2 Bloom filed a document with the Commission, joining in the Church’s petition to intervene.
C. Decision Denying Intervention
On May 11, 2012, the Commission issued its order, denying the Church’s petition to intervene. In that order, the Commission acknowledged that the Church was not the subject of the Commission’s investigation and is not a respondent in any matter pending before the Commission. The Commission noted the request to intervene, as well as Bloom’s joinder therein. The Commission further acknowledged receipt of the Investigative Division’s answer in opposition to the petition.
In support of its decision to deny intervention, the Commission opined, in relevant part:
The Church lacks standing and does not meet the criteria of 1 Pa.Code § 35.28 for eligibility to intervene, in that: (1) the requested intervention would not be necessary or appropriate to the administration of the Ethics Act; (2) the Church is not and would not be the subject of a Commission investigative proceeding; (3) there is no statutory right for a non-party to intervene in a Commission investigative matter; (4) there is no basis for concluding that the Church has any interest in any ongoing Commission proceeding, and any *124claimed interest would be speculative, remote and indirect; (5) the Church would not be bound by action of the Commission as to Dennis Bloom; and (6) there is no public interest that would support intervention by the Church[.]
Commission investigative matters are strictly confidential (65 Pa.C.S. § 1108),[ 3] and there is no basis for allowing the Church as a non-party to intervene and/or have access to discovery in any investigative matter before the Commission; and
There is no basis for concluding that references to Dennis Bloom’s relationship to the Church would constitute an impermissible intrusion by the State into Church affairs.
(R.R. 177a.)
D. The Present Appeals
The Church thereafter filed a petition for review -with this Court (docketed at No. 1082 C.D. 2012). Bloom also filed a petition for review (docketed at No. 1170 C.D. 2012). The Commission filed separate motions to quash these petitions. By separate, single-Judge opinions and orders dated September 27, 2012, the Court denied the Commission’s motions.4 The Commission filed a petition for reconsideration, which the Court, again acting through a single judge, denied. Subsequently, by order dated October 2, 2012, this Court consolidated the petitions for review for disposition.
DISCUSSION
As the Commission points out in its brief, neither the Ethics Act nor the Commission’s regulations governing its investigation and enforcement procedures5 provide for third-party intervention in an enforcement hearing against a public official or employee accused of violating the Ethics Act. While the Commission in its *125brief appears to question the wisdom of allowing intervention at all in such proceedings, it nonetheless analyzed the Church’s petition to intervene below under the General Rules of Administrative Practice and Procedure (GRAPP), 1 Pa. Code §§ 35.27-32. We, therefore, will apply the same rules in evaluating the merits of the Commission’s order denying the Church’s petition to intervene.6
In reviewing an agency’s decision to deny intervention, we employ the following standard of review:
While an agency has considerable discretion to grant or deny a petition to intervene, such decisions remain subject to review of this Court and will be reversed where the agency’s decision constitutes an error of law or an abuse of discretion. An agency’s decision on intervention will not be disturbed absent a manifest abuse of discretion. An abuse of discretion is not merely an error in judgment. Rather, discretion is abused where the law is overridden or misapplied, or the judgment exercised is clearly unreasonable, or the result of partiality, prejudice, bias, or ill-will, as shown by the evidence or the record.
Bensalem Racing Ass’n v. Pa. State Harness Racing Comm’n, 19 A.3d 549, 554 (Pa.Cmwlth.2011) (en banc) (citations omitted).
Under GRAPP, request to intervene is by petition, 1 Pa.Code § 35.27(2), which must be in the following form:
Petitions to intervene shall set out clearly and concisely the facts from which the nature of the alleged right or interest of the petitioner can be determined, the grounds of the proposed intervention, and the position of the petitioner in the proceeding, so as fully and completely to advise the parties and the agency as to the specific issues of fact or law to be raised or controverted, by admitting, denying or otherwise answering, specifically and in detail, each material allegation of fact or law asserted in the proceeding, and citing by appropriate reference the statutory provisions or other authority relied on.
Id. § 35.29. With respect to who is eligible to intervene, Section 35.28 of GRAPP provides:
(a) Persons. A petition to intervene may be filed by a person claiming a right to intervene or an interest of such nature that intervention is necessary or appropriate to the administration of the statute under which the proceeding is brought. The right or interest may be one of the following:
(1) A right conferred by statute of the United States or of this Commonwealth.
(2) An interest which may be directly affected and which is not adequately represented by existing parties, and as to which petitioners may be bound by the action of the agency in the proceeding. The following may have an interest: consumers, customers or other patrons served by the *126applicant or respondent; holders of securities of the applicant or respondent; employes of the applicant or respondent; competitors of the applicant or respondent.
(8) Other interest of such nature that participation of the petitioner may be in the public interest.
(b) Commonwealth. The Commonwealth or an officer or agency thereof may intervene as of right in a proceeding subject to this part.
Id. § 35.28. While Section 35.28 establishes criteria for a third party’s eligibility to intervene in a proceeding before an administrative agency, that section does not require the agency to grant intervention. Pa. Dental Ass’n v. Ins. Dep’t, 122 Pa.Cmwlth. 241, 551 A.2d 1148, 1151 (1988); see also Keystone Redevelopment Partners, LLC v. Pa. Gaming Control Bd., 5 A.3d 448, 460-61 (Pa.Cmwlth.2010) (“[E]ven if [petitioner] satisfied all the criteria set forth in the regulation, the Board would not be compelled to permit intervention. Rather, the Board’s decision on intervention is an exercise of discretion, the review of which is deferential.”). Instead, the agency may exercise its discretion to deny intervention even if the eligibility criteria of Section 35.28 are satisfied.
Bloom filed a brief in support of his appeal, in which the Church joined pursuant to Rule 2137 of the Pennsylvania Rules of Appellate Procedure. In support of the appeal, Bloom highlights the Church’s property interest in the Tobyhanna Property and its concern about how the proceeding before the Commission against Bloom might affect the lease between the Charter School and the Church. The entirety of Bloom’s argument is as follows:
As previously set forth, the investigation by the ... Commission in this case focused on the dual role of Pastor Bloom as Chief Executive Officer of the Charter School and Pastor of the Church. The thrust of the Complaint was the relationship of the School and the Church because of the dual role. In the Investigative Complaint, the Church is referenced in 79 averments or thirty-seven (37%) percent of the Commission’s Investigative Findings (R.R. pp. 11a-94a).
It is the position of the Commission in the Investigative Complaint that because of the improper relationship, the School is paying too much in rent for the Lease of the School facilities and there were improprieties in the construction of the expansion of the School facilities by the Church and the monies expended therefor.
The Church, in order to pay for the construction of the expansion and pay off the mortgage for the construction of the initial phase of the School, borrowed funds using the Church property as collateral. These funds totaling $3,900,000 were borrowed from Sovereign Bank. Without the money from the rent being paid by the School, the Church would be unable to make the mortgage payment resulting in the loss of the Church property and, therefore, the School (R.R. p. 186a).
As was previously set forth, it was counsel for the Pocono Mountain School District that filed the Complaint instituting the proceedings against Pastor Bloom. This action was taken after the School Board decision to revoke the Charter was overturned by the Charter School Appeal Board. As part of the revocation proceedings, which the School District is attempting to have reopened, the School District attempted to attack the validity of the Lease contending that it is overbearing and fraudulent.
From the Investigative Complaint, it is clear that the commission is attempt*127ing to have the Lease declared invalid. If it is declared invalid, no rental payments will be forthcoming from the School, since the School District will cease funding the Charter School (R.R. p. 93a). Without these payments, the Church will be unable to pay the mortgage and the Church will lose its property (R.R. p. 186a.)
Such being the case, the Church has an interest that is a property right which will be directly affected by a decision of the Ethics Commission. It is submitted this interest is direct and substantive, since it involves a constitutionally protected right. The affect would also be immediate, since if the Lease is declared invalid, the School District can simply refuse to fund it. If the church is not allowed to intervene, it would have no redress in the form of an appeal to contest such a determination, even though it would be aggrieved by such a determination. Rather, the Church would be in a position of sitting hopelessly while suffering the due consequence of losing its property, since it would not be able to defend itself.
Nor, as Judge McCullough determined in her ruling on the Commission’s Motion to Quash, is there any existing party who would adequately represent the Church’s interest. There is no requirement that Pastor Bloom call witnesses to protect the Church’s interest. Given the nature of the proceeding, Pastor Bloom and his counsel are concerned with his defense which is not necessarily the same as the Church. Thus, this prong exists.
(Bloom Br. at 11-13 (emphasis added).) For these reasons, Bloom concludes by claiming that the Commission abused its discretion and committed an error of law in denying the Church’s petition to intervene.
Based on the * foregoing argument, it appears to the Court that the Church is claiming eligibility to intervene only under Section 35.28(a)(2) of GRAPP— “[a]n interest which may be directly affected and which is not adequately represented by existing parties, and as to which petitioners may be bound by the action of the agency in the proceeding.” As we noted in Bensalem Racing, to satisfy this threshold eligibility test, the person seeking intervention must establish an interest that may be directly affected:
It is ... not necessary for an entity seeking intervention in an administrative proceeding to show that it is suffering present “harm” or will definitively suffer harm in the future ... because actual harm, if any, can only be determined after the agency issues its adjudication.
Bensalem Racing Ass’n, 19 A.3d at 556 (emphasis in original). The petitioner then, as the rule provides, must establish that its interest is not adequately represented by an existing party and that the petitioner may be bound by an adverse agency action in that proceeding.
As noted above, we will review the Commission’s decision in this matter to determine whether it can be set aside for an abuse of discretion. Bloom’s first point in his brief is that the Church is referenced in 79 averments, or in 37%, of the factual findings set forth in the Complaint. He argues that “the thrust” of the Complaint is the relationship between the Church and Charter School because of the positions of leadership that Bloom held simultaneously in both entities.
In its order denying intervention, the Commission expressly finds, however, that “the Church is not and would not be. the subject of a Commission investigative proceeding.” Based on our review of the Complaint, the Church is clearly referenced throughout the document. But we *128disagree "with the Church’s characterization, which is at odds with the Commission’s finding, that the “thrust” of the Complaint is the relationship between the Church and the Charter School. To the contrary, the Complaint is, in essence, a charging document against Bloom in his capacity as a public official — ie., the CEO of the Charter School. Bloom is accused of violating the Ethics Act’s conflict of interest and self-dealing limitations. The Church, by contrast, is not accused in the Complaint of violating any laws. While the Church is referenced throughout the document, it is referenced because, according to the Investigative, Division, Bloom used his position as a leader of the Church to line his own pockets, and those of his family members, with public dollars in violation of the Ethics Act. In short, the Church is part of the story, but it is not the subject of the story. This argument, therefore, fails to persuade us that the Commission abused its discretion.
Bloom’s next arguments are based on the lease between the Church and the Charter School. He contends that the Commission, through the Complaint, is seeking to have the lease declared invalid. Because the Church has an undeniable interest in the lease, Bloom contends that the Commission abused its discretion in refusing intervention. We reject this argument.
As noted above, the petition to intervene must “set out clearly and concisely the facts from which the nature of the alleged right or interest of the petitioner can be determined.” 1 Pa. Code § 35.29. Simply stated, the Church did not raise its concern over its lease with the Charter School in its petition to intervene. Accordingly, we cannot say that the Commission abused its discretion in denying intervention by failing to consider an interest that was never presented in the petition to intervene. See Wing v. Unemployment Comp. Bd. of Review, 496 Pa. 113, 117, 436 A.2d 179, 181 (1981) (“[T]he administrative law tribunal must be given the opportunity to correct its errors as early as possible....”).
But even assuming the Church had raised this specific concern in its petition to intervene, we have reviewed the Complaint and find no merit to Bloom’s contention that the Investigative Division is seeking a ruling from the Commission that would declare the lease invalid. Indeed, the Commission does not even have the statutory authority under the Ethics Act to grant such relief. Section 1109 of the Ethics Act, 65 Pa.C.S. § 1109, provides for penalties. Nothing in that section empowers the Commission to void contracts. Moreover, Bloom is accused of violating, inter alia, Section 1103(f) of the Ethics Act. Although that provision does provide that contracts entered into in violation thereof are “voidable,” they are voidable only in the context of a suit filed in a court of competent jurisdiction within 90 days of the making of the contract. Id. § 1103(f). The Commission is not a court, and the Complaint was filed well beyond the 90-day period.
The Church also references concerns over past and possibly concurrent efforts by the School District to revoke the Charter School’s charter on the grounds that the lease between the Charter School and the Church is overbearing and fraudulent. Again, we cannot say that the Commission abused its discretion by failing to look at this asserted interest of the Church, because the Church did not allege this interest in its petition to intervene. See 1 Pa.Code § 35.29; Wing, 496 Pa. at 117, 436 A.2d at 181.7 But even if we consider *129it, in examining the Complaint, we do not see any allegation by the Investigative Division, let alone a request that the Commission adjudicate, that the lease between the Charter School and the Church “is overbearing and fraudulent” or otherwise commercially unreasonable, such that it can or should be voided. To the contrary, in examining the relevant allegations of misconduct of the Complaint (R.R. 12a-13a), the Investigative Division is focused not on the legality or reasonableness of the lease terms, but rather on how Bloom (allegedly) personally benefitted from the *130lease, which he negotiated on behalf of both the Church, as landlord, and the Charter School, as tenant. To prove violations of the conflict of interest and self-dealing restrictions found in Section 1103(a) and (f) of the Act, it is not necessary that the Commission adjudicate the fairness or reasonableness of the contract in question. From our review of the Complaint, those questions are not before the Commission in this matter.
CONCLUSION
Based on the allegations in the Church’s petition to intervene below, we cannot say that the Commission abused its discretion, such that we can set aside its decision to deny the Church’s intervention request. And even if we were to consider the Church’s concerns, raised for the first time in its brief to this Court, that the Commission is seeking to void the Church’s lease with the Charter School or to declare the terms of the lease to be commercially unreasonable, overbearing, or fraudulent, we find no support for these concerns in the Complaint itself or in the statutes conferring jurisdiction on the Commission. We, therefore, will affirm the Commission’s May 11, 2012 order.8
ORDER
AND NOW, this 24th day of September, 2013, the order of the Pennsylvania State Ethics Commission, dated May 11, 2012, is hereby AFFIRMED.
. This opinion was reassigned to the authoring Judge on May 23, 2013.
. These additional averments are similar, if not nearly identical, to paragraphs found in Bloom’s answer to the Complaint under the heading "New Matter and Affirmative Defenses.” (R.R. 168a.)
.Section 1108(k) of the Ethics Act provides:
(k) Confidentiality. — As a general rule, no person shall disclose or acknowledge to any other person any information relating to a complaint, preliminary inquiry, investigation, hearing or petition for reconsideration which is before the commission. However, a person may disclose or acknowledge to another person matters held confidential in accordance with this subsection when the matters pertain to any of the following:
(l) final orders of the commission as provided in subsection (h);
(2) hearings conducted in public pursuant to subsection (g);
(3) for the purpose of seeking advice of legal counsel;
(4) filing an appeal from a commission order;
(5) communicating with the commission or its staff, in the course of a preliminary inquiry, investigation, hearing or petition for reconsideration by the commission;
(6) consulting with a law enforcement official or agency for the purpose of initiating, participating in or responding to an investigation or prosecution by the law enforcement official or agency;
(7) testifying under oath before a governmental body or a similar body of the United States of America;
(8) any information, records or proceedings relating to a complaint, preliminary inquiry, investigation, hearing or petition for reconsideration which the person is the subject of; or
(9) such other exceptions as the commis-sipn by regulation may direct.
65 Pa.C.S. § 1108(k). This provision, however, does not prohibit a complainant from disclosing the fact that the complainant filed a complaint with the Commission. See Stilp v. Contino, 743 F.Supp.2d 460 (M.D.Pa.2010).
. In denying the motion to quash the Church's appeal, this Court, through an unreported single-judge opinion authored by Judge Patricia A. McCullough, held that the Commission’s order denying intervention was a collateral order immediately appealable under Pa. R.A.P. 313(a).
. 51 Pa.Code §§ 21.1 — .30.
. In so doing, we do not rale on the broader question, which the Commission touches on in its brief, of whether third-party intervention is available or appropriate generally in enforcement hearings against public officials under the Ethics Act. See G.L. v. State Ethics Comm’n, 17 A.3d 445, 448 (Pa.Cmwlth.) ("The GRAPP defines the general rales of practice and procedure before Commonwealth agencies, except where an applicable statute provides inconsistent rales or an agency promulgates regulations setting forth rales that are inconsistent with the GRAPP.”), appeal denied, 613 Pa. 648, 32 A.3d 1279 (2011). In light of the Commission's use of GRAPP’s intervention rales below, that question is not before us in this appeal.
. Based on the allegations in the Complaint, the School District took action to revoke the *129Charter School’s charter on October 6, 2010, following 15 hearings on the matter, concluding that the Charter School operated in violation of the Charter School Law, Act of June 19, 1997, P.L. 225, as amended, 24 P.S. §§ 17-1701-A to -1751-A. On September 27, 2011, the State Charter School Appeal Board (CAB) voted to overturn that decision, after the Charter School acted quickly to address the School Board’s concerns. Those actions included: (a) accepting the resignation of Bloom as the Charter School’s CEO, effective December 10, 2010; (b) modifications to the agreements between the Charter School and the Church; and (c) removal of the Church’s name from signage and the gymnasium floor. (R.R. 92a.) CAB, however, never issued a written opinion in support of its September 27, 2011 action. See 24 P.S. § 17-1717-A(i)(8) (requiring CAB to issue written decision within 60 days following its review).
On or about January 12, 2012, the School District requested that CAB reopen the record of the Charter School's appeal from the School District’s revocation decision. In support of its request, the School District cited to an audit report issued by the Pennsylvania Auditor General, critical of the Charter School. By order dated February 28, 2012, CAB granted the request, vacated its September 27, 2011 decision in favor of the Charter School, and reopened the record to consider the audit report. On July 30, 2013, CAB voted unanimously in favor of revocation. It issued a written adjudication on August 2, 2013. Pocono Mountain Charter Sch. v. Pocono Mountain Sch. Dist., Docket No. CAB 2010-06 (Aug. 2, 2013). The adjudication includes 141 separately-numbered factual findings, many of which cover subject matter set forth in the Investigative Division’s Complaint below. In the adjudication, CAB concludes that the Charter School violated Section 1715-A(4) of the Charter School Law (requiring "a charter school ... be nonsectarian in all operations”), because of its "strong entanglement with ... [the] Church and its expenditure of substantial charter school funds for the [C]hurch's benefit and that of its pastor”. Id. at 19. CAB also concludes that the Charter School violated Section 1715— A(5) of the Charter School Law (prohibiting a charter school from providing religious instruction or displaying religious objects and symbols on school premises), "by intentionally exposing its students to religious objects and symbols during the school day.” Id. Finally, CAB concluded that the Charter School violated both Sections 17-1715-A(4) and 1729-A(a)(3) (requiring charter schools to "meet generally accepted standards of fiscal management or audit requirements”), "because [the Charter School] disbursed funds for non-charter school purposes and failed to meet generally accepted standards of fiscal management.” Id.
The Charter School has appealed CAB’s adjudication to this Court. In an unreported single-judge opinion by the Honorable Robert Simpson, this Court stayed the charter revocation pending this Court’s disposition of the Charter School’s petition for review. Pocono Mountain Charter Sch., Inc. v. Pocono Mountain Sch. Dist., 1308 C.D.2013 (Pa.Cmwlth., filed August 13, 2013) (Simpson, J.).
As noted above, the proceeding before the Commission in this case involving Bloom will not and cannot, as a matter of law, result in an adjudication that declares invalid the lease between the Charter School and the Church. Moreover, based on the foregoing, adjudicatory proceedings before the School Board and CAB on the subject of the Charter School's charter have outpaced the proceedings before the Commission against Bloom. To the extent the Church has a legally cognizable interest in the Charter School’s charter, that interest has already been adversely affected by CAB’s decision revoking the charter independent of the proceeding before the Commission. Thus, the alleged connection between the Commission proceeding below against Bloom and the status of the charter upon which the Church relies in this appeal has been severed.
. In footnote 4, the dissent raises a public policy concern involving the religious freedoms of the Church’s membership. Neither Bloom nor the Church, however, raised any concerns about the religious freedoms of the Church’s members to the Commission, and they do not raise such concerns in their briefs to this Court. Moreover, there is no issue in this appeal, and thus nothing in this opinion, that comes close to touching on ecclesiastical matters of the Church.