It’s in the Roman Catholic cathedral of a nearby city, placed next to the Holy Family.
Here in USA I have never seen a statue of St. Sharbel or St. Maron in a Latin church. They are of course in the Maronite churches, and are also in some shrines where there are dozens of statues of saints.
The Latin churches in USA tend to have a fairly standard set of saints who are portrayed in statuary. Almost every church has the exact same ones: Mary and Joseph of course, St. Therese of Lisieux, St. Anthony of Padua, St. Patrick, St. Francis of Assisi, St. Jude, and whatever saint the church is named after. Some churches will have a recent sainted Pope or St. Anne with the young Mary as well. If there happens to be a US saint local to the area they may have him or her too (we have very few saints so this is also rare). That’s about it. It’s fairly rare to find a statue (not a painting, but a statue) of any saint outside these categories except for old Italian-American churches where they go a little nuts with the statues, but the saints there will all be European and often all Italian.
Edited to add: In addition to this statue, the cathedral had the following saint statues:
The Holy Family
St. Anne with young Mary
St. Francis of Assisi
St. Anthony of Padua
Our Lady of the Rosary
St. Jude
St. Peter (name saint of the cathedral) outside by the front steps
So it was a pretty standard subset.