Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Suzanne Greichen Clark

The president-elect of the Arkansas Bar Associatio­n built a reputation as a stellar communicat­or and litigator, but began her career in engineerin­g. Today, she has her own law firm, a doting husband and five grandchild­ren who keep her grounded in Northwes

- LARA JO HIGHTOWER

Fayettevil­le lawyer and Arkansas Bar Associatio­n President-elect Suzanne Clark has a history of making careful decisions with an eye to the future. It’s a habit that stretches back to her teenage years, when she decided not to run for senior class president — despite having served as president her junior year — because she didn’t want the responsibi­lity of organizing class reunions years down the road.

“I plan for disaster,” she says, laughing. Small in stature, her laugh is big and genuine. “I always have a plan because something is going to fall apart.”

Yet over the years, she has managed to pair these careful decision-making habits with a flair for making audacious moves at just the right moment.

Clark was born in Newport, R.I., one of four children and the only one who moved away from the East Coast. Engineers populate her immediate and extended family — her father, brother and most of her uncles are in the profession — and when Clark showed an acuity for math and science, engineerin­g seemed the natural choice.

Clark went to work for National Semiconduc­tor in Danbury, Conn., immediatel­y out of college, the beginning of her steep rise up the chemical engineerin­g ladder. After stops in Massachuse­tts and California, she eventually landed in Austin, Texas, where she served as vice president of sales and field operations for North America for Millipore, a bioscience­s company.

IN A MAN’S WORLD

Her career climb into the stratosphe­re was even more remarkable given that, as a woman, she was an anomaly in her field.

“I experience­d pretty much every single thing that young working women experience in a male-dominated industry,” she says matter-of-factly. “I did that balancing act that most women deal with, where you decide: Is this something that you just laugh off for the sake of just rolling with it? Or is it objectiona­ble enough that you have to be sure that you don’t laugh so that they don’t think it’s OK? Or is it to the point where you have to push back?

“When I got my first regional manager job, I was the first woman who was being put in this job, and there were three other men at my level. One of them said, ‘I was kind of irritated that we didn’t get to vote on it or anything.’ It was sort of like, ‘This is clearly going to change the dynamics of our meeting’, and he thought he should have a say on whether they should let a woman on the team.”

As Clark rose in the ranks, she took pains to do her part to change the culture of her company.

“As you get more senior and get more power in your own right, you can have some impact in terms of how that dynamic is,” she says.

Her position as a high-ranking executive meant a punishing work schedule. But she still found time to meet her future husband, Steve Clark — former Arkansas attorney general and now president and chief executive of Fayettevil­le’s Chamber of Commerce — while she was in Austin. Steve says

he had heard her speak at various events and asked a mutual friend to get him her phone number. The two had their first lunch in February 1998 and married in November of the same year.

“I realized Suzanne was the person I wanted to marry when I realized that she is the finest person I have ever known,” says her obviously smitten husband. “I clearly married up. People who know us well like her best, and they should. She is much smarter than I am and also a much better person than I am.”

Marriage led Suzanne Clark to reconsider her priorities.

“A good chunk of my time was spent on planes, traveling to China and Singapore and Korea,” Clark says. “All over the world, really, which is fascinatin­g and wonderful for a while. But after a while, it becomes really wearing, and I just wasn’t having as much fun with it anymore. That’s when [Steve and I] had a conversati­on about me kind of blowing it all up and doing something entirely different, which was going to law school.”

INTO THE UNKNOWN

It was a perfect example of her willingnes­s to leave the sure bet behind and jump into the unknown.

“I will say, without a doubt, if I were not married to Steve Clark, there’s not a snowball’s chance that I would have done it,” she says of the man she calls her biggest cheerleade­r. “Because I come from a family that is very security-minded and risk-averse. And when you have a good job, you don’t just walk away from that. And I had a really, really good job. But I was envious of the fact that in Austin, my husband was involved in local boards and very involved in the community. I couldn’t make any kind of commitment to anybody because I never knew where I was going to be.”

With Steve’s support, she took the leap. The two moved to Florida, where Clark completed her first year in law school while Steve taught. When one of Steve’s daughters, Katie Tennant, and her family came to visit the couple, Clark says she and her husband had another revelation.

“We’re sitting in our living room, and I look over at the sofa with my husband laying on the couch and [newborn grandson] Jackson laying on his chest, and Steve was just patting him,” Clark remembers. “After they left, he was depressed for two weeks. I realized I wasn’t going to law school just because I wanted to be a lawyer, I wanted a lifestyle change. I wanted to be able to be involved in my community. I wanted to be involved with our grandchild­ren.” Katie and her family were moving to Fayettevil­le, where Steve’s daughter Donna and her children already lived. The couple decided to join the rest of the family in Northwest Arkansas.

Suzanne Clark transferre­d to the University of Arkansas School of Law, where she graduated summa cum laude and as editor-in-chief of the Law Review. She was hired immediatel­y by Kutak Rock, one of the largest law firms in the state.

Clark was drawn to litigation from the start. Colleagues say her corporate experience made her a natural in the courtroom.

“She wanted to go to court, and she wanted to try cases,” says Russell C. Atchley, managing partner for the litigation group at Kutak Rock. “Her communicat­ion skills were just off the chart — our clients loved talking to her, and they loved the way she communicat­ed. They loved her downto-earth manner and her ability to explain complex, difficult subjects.”

HANGING A SHINGLE

After just four years at Kutak Rock, Clark was ready to take yet another risk — to open her own law firm. She was prepared to struggle through a couple of lean years at first, but her reputation as a great litigator allowed her to hit the ground running.

“About the time that Suzanne started practicing, we had an issue with a covenant and the need to enforce it, so I called Suzanne,” says James W. Smith, who, along with his law partner, Rebecca Hurst, had recently started their own firm and were on the hunt for a litigator. “The law firm on the other side was one of the larger law firms, and they were

taking an aggressive stance. Suzanne came in extremely prepared and won the case. It was a short trial because of the work that she had done.

“I think a good reason for the success of mine and Rebecca’s law firm to this day is a result of Suzanne’s approach and her help with us on our clients. … We’ve always brought her in, and our clients have uniformly been pleased with her.”

“I’ve told people that Suzanne is one of the bravest people I know,” says Niki Cung, a partner at Kutak Rock

and a colleague and friend of Clark’s. “She left Kutak Rock, which at the time was the only national law firm in Northwest Arkansas. She was on the path to partnershi­p, the whole bit, but she chose to leave and start her own firm. It was a huge business decision. I think the fact that she had previously been in the business world allowed her the confidence and also the judgment to make the jump that she did and allowed her to be the success that she is at this point. Not just from a legal standpoint, but from a business standpoint. And that’s a whole different level of business savvy that you have to have, on top of legal skills.”

BALLOT MEASURE

In December, Clark received confirmati­on that her reputation as a lawyer had spread outside the boundaries of Northwest Arkansas when her peers voted to have her become the Arkansas Bar Associatio­n president-elect. Northwest Arkansas lawyer Charles L. Harwell nominated Clark for the position. He met her when she was elected to the Arkansas Bar Associatio­n House of Delegates and was so impressed by her skills and leadership abilities that he encouraged her to run for the Board of Governors. When the time came to nominate an individual for the position of Bar president, Harwell once again thought of Clark.

“To me, it was apparent that she had the skills, temperamen­t and drive to successful­ly lead the Arkansas Bar Associatio­n,” Harwell says. “She will be a great president.

“We are most fortunate that [Clark] landed here, because she was going to be successful wherever she decided to practice law or in whatever field she chose to use her law degree. Not only is she a fine lawyer, but she is a wonderful person.”

Clark will serve as president-elect for a year before being sworn in as president. She says that she expects that a ballot measure scheduled for the 2018 election will take much of her attention during her tenure. Titled the “Cap on Attorney’s Fee and Damages Awards in Lawsuits” Amendment, the measure would limit attorney’s fees and punitive damage awards — as well as “authorize the state Legislatur­e, by a three-fifths vote, to amend or repeal court rules regarding pleading, practice or procedure prescribed by the Arkansas Supreme Court or adopt rules under its own initiative,” according to Ballotpedi­a. It’s this last part that Clark says concerns her.

“It would take the rule-making authority from the Arkansas Supreme Court and put it with the Legislatur­e,” Clark says. “It’s a really big deal for us. I consider it, essentiall­y, a huge issue from a separation of powers perspectiv­e, where the Legislatur­e is literally trying to undercut the judicial branch in terms of their authority, and the idea that they are supposed to be a separate and co-equal branch of the three sections of our government.

“It’s packaged as a constituti­onal amendment that says it’s about limiting contingenc­y fees for lawyers. Who’s going to be against that? It will be a very popular thing in terms of how to promote that. … But it’s an attack on the judiciary, as far as I’m concerned. And so for the Arkansas Bar, representi­ng the legal community, I think that’s going to be a big focus. We’re going to be trying to organize some speaker bureaus to try and educate folks about what’s really behind this.”

GRANDCHILD­REN FIRST

With this new responsibi­lity, Clark’s work schedule will surely accelerate. But, unlike her corporate years, her career won’t consume her life — there are too many things much more important, outside of work. Once upon a time, she enviously watched Steve’s community involvemen­t in Austin, but now she’s the one involved in the community, serving on boards of organizati­ons such as the Fayettevil­le Public Library and Decision Point, a substance abuse treatment center in Bentonvill­e.

But first, always first, are the grandchild­ren.

“There is nothing that comes [before] my children — I don’t care if it’s the deal of the century, she is going to always pick my children first,” says Katie Tennant, Steve Clark’s daughter who calls Suzanne Clark her “bonus mom.” “She loves unconditio­nally, and you want her on your side, because it feels good to be loved by her.”

“I did not give birth. I don’t have children of my own,” Clark says. “So my grandchild­ren are it, and that’s the driver for a lot of what makes me tick. It’s a huge part of what Steve and I focus on. We are super busy folks — we sit down with our calendars and kind of work it out. But we also have plugged into our calendars all of the basketball games, all of the dance recitals, all of that. That’s really what we try to focus on. We are very aware that we’re at a place in life where that means more, every single day. Every single day.”

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK ?? “Within a short period of time, she has ascended to the top of the Arkansas Bar with a solo practice — to me, that shows a level of respect and confidence in Suzanne that is well deserved.” — James W. Smith, Smith Hurst, PLC
NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK “Within a short period of time, she has ascended to the top of the Arkansas Bar with a solo practice — to me, that shows a level of respect and confidence in Suzanne that is well deserved.” — James W. Smith, Smith Hurst, PLC
 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK ?? “[Suzanne] is that stereotypi­cal grandmothe­r who just wants to talk about all of the accomplish­ments of her five grandchild­ren … no question, Suzanne is never happier than when she is spending time with one or more of our grandchild­ren.” — Steve Clark
NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK “[Suzanne] is that stereotypi­cal grandmothe­r who just wants to talk about all of the accomplish­ments of her five grandchild­ren … no question, Suzanne is never happier than when she is spending time with one or more of our grandchild­ren.” — Steve Clark

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