About Ms. May Mon
Ms. May Mon Post built a legal foundation at institutions across Pennsylvania and the region. She earned a B.A. in Philosophy from Haverford College in 1991, followed by an M.A. in Liberal Arts and Social Justice from the University of Pennsylvania in 1996. She completed her legal education at Temple University School of Law, receiving her J.D. in 1999.
Her early career mixed public service and private practice. In 2002 she joined the City of Philadelphia Law Department through its Honors Program, serving as an Assistant City Solicitor in the Labor & Employment Unit. That role placed her inside municipal labor disputes and employment matters, where she handled legal work on behalf of the city and gained firsthand experience in public-sector legal processes. She moved into private practice as an associate at Cohen, Fluhr & Associates in 2007, where she worked for a year before establishing her own firm.
In 2008 she opened The Post Law Office and remains its Owner and Principal. Leading a small firm shifted her responsibilities from staff attorney to practice manager and primary counselor. She has overseen client matters, supervised case strategy and managed the business side of a private practice. Her path reflects a steady progression from public-sector litigation to independent practice.
Beyond casework, Ms. Post has been active in bar organizations and civic legal groups. She has served on the Executive Committee of the Asian Pacific American Bar Association of Pennsylvania since 2002. She took a leadership role in the Philadelphia Bar Association’s Young Lawyers Division Executive Committee from 2002 until 2008. In 2006 she became Chair of the Minorities in the Profession Committee at the Philadelphia Bar Association, a post she continues to hold. She also served as Treasurer for the Campaign for Qualified Judges from 2008 to 2009. Those positions show a long-running engagement in professional governance and efforts to shape local legal institutions.
Her experience in a municipal labor and employment unit informs how she approaches disputes and client counseling. She combines courtroom and administrative experience with the day-to-day demands of running a small law office. Colleagues and peers have seen her move between public service and private practice while maintaining steady involvement in bar leadership.
She is admitted to practice in Pennsylvania and heads The Post Law Office, where she handles legal matters arising under Pennsylvania law.