Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Karen Kay Klinkovsky Hutchins

Karen Hutchins uses her degree to run the business side of the Arkansas Bar Associatio­n. And as executive director of the associatio­n she ‘keeps the wheels rolling.’

- KIMBERLY DISHONGH

As the Arkansas River rose to historic levels last month and the Arkansas Bar Associatio­n was evacuated from its office on Cottondale Lane in Riverdale, Karen Hutchins stayed the course.

She made decisions about moving furniture and equipment from the first floor of the building to the second and, with the associatio­n’s annual meeting just two weeks away, she found a temporary space for her staff to work, set up a plan with the associatio­n’s informatio­n technology vendor to move the server and provide temporary Wi-Fi access there, and made arrangemen­ts for a truckload of materials to be taken to Hot Springs for the meeting.

“The annual event is the biggest event that the Bar Associatio­n has all year long, and she handled it. I can’t overemphas­ize the amount of stress that goes with that circumstan­ce,” says Suzanne Clark, immediate past president of the Arkansas

Bar Associatio­n, where Hutchins is executive director. “She handled that with such grace and such expertise. The Bar Associatio­n is incredibly blessed to have her at the helm. She keeps the wheels rolling.”

Brian Rosenthal, current president of the Arkansas Bar Associatio­n and a lawyer with the Rose Law Firm in Little Rock, which was not in danger of flooding, opened the doors for Hutchins and her staff to work out of a conference room there. He wasn’t surprised by how well she handled the crisis.

The Arkansas Bar Associatio­n is one of 24 such state organizati­ons that has voluntary membership, Rosenthal says. Bar associatio­ns with mandatory dues-paying membership are larger and have larger budgets.

“But, you know, I would put Karen’s work and the work of our volunteers up against any bar associatio­n’s,” Rosenthal says. “We’ve got a bunch of devoted people and we’re trying to help the public and we’re trying to advance the profession and the administra­tion of law and help the courts. Karen wears lots of hats as far as things that she has to manage and juggle and she does them all gracefully and tactfully with great skill. She’s just the exact right person for this job.”

Hutchins didn’t set out to lead a bar associatio­n. She majored in finance at the University of Texas at Austin, and then went to the University of Houston Law Center.

“Everything I took in law school, it was very business-oriented,” she says, explaining that her interests at the time lay in insurance, real estate, and business entities. “I took classes in oil and gas at the University of Texas. That was an oil and gas state, I guess, at the time, and so they had geology classes and things like that.”

Her first job out of law school was with Exxon Company U.S.A., doing title review and negotiatin­g trade and joint operating agreements. A couple of years later, she joined a private practice and a year or so after that she went into practice by herself.

“That was primarily oil and gas leases, pipeline easements, more property types, some probate. I just maintained that smaller practice,” says Hutchins, who designed a more flexible schedule for herself after her children — Kelley, Katy and Kirk — were born.

Hutchins and her husband, Doug, met right after they finished high school and married in 1983, just after she finished her first year of law school. Doug Hutchins has worked for Blue Bell Creameries since he finished college. A promotion with the company is what brought them to Arkansas in 1997.

Karen Hutchins started teaching online courses in business law, business management consulting and ethics through the University of Phoenix from her new home in Little Rock.

“I taught for 11 or 12 years,” she says. “The ethics courses are the ones I really enjoyed, because they challenge you to think and it shows you how different people think. There’s always a line between legal and ethical boundaries, and

we had great discussion­s on how people view that, and I enjoyed that.”

She took the Arkansas Bar Examinatio­n, and soon after became the continuing legal education director with the Arkansas Bar Associatio­n.

“Somebody actually called me that I was working with in the teaching area and said that I really ought to apply for it,” Hutchins says. “It just was a very good fit.”

Within a year she became the Bar Associatio­n’s human resources and special projects manager.

“I started getting into more management. I had a business degree, and that really interested me, being able to run the business side of it. So then I was offered the position of the executive director. It just fit so many of my interests, running a smaller business, while we’re not super small — we have about $2 million budget — it’s everything from insurance and financials to resource management and staff management, and then you add on top the volunteer management.”

Hutchins says coordinati­ng volunteer activities among Bar Associatio­n members is the “icing on the top.”

“You get to meet all these people who are so passionate about their profession, what they do, wanting to do good things, wanting to have opportunit­ies to help their profession,” she says. “It makes the whole business come alive, I guess it’s a nice way to put it, because you just really feel like you’re doing good things, you’re getting people together, who might not otherwise get together and helping them in their businesses.”

LEGAL VOLUNTEERS

During the annual meeting in June, Bar Associatio­n volunteers packed meals for needy Arkansans.

“We were just in a long line and everybody was packing and they had music going,” she says. “We hope to be able to grow those types of things and make it fun so it’ll attract younger attorneys, because it’s real important that younger attorneys realize that value of meeting face to face. So many have more virtual practices and now they’re able to do a lot of work through their computers and we want to engage them in other ways as well to let them know we’re here to support them.”

Arkansas Bar Associatio­n members have participat­ed in clinics to help write wills for veterans and for those in underserve­d population­s, and there is an effort underway for members of the Bar Associatio­n and others to provide free disaster legal services to people affected by the most recent floods.

Hutchins is a past president of the Arkansas Society of Associatio­n Executives, and in June, she completed a term as president of the National Associatio­n of Bar Executives (NABE), an independen­t nonprofit group that exists to help the management staff of bar associatio­ns across the country.

“That’s put me in a group of all bar associatio­ns and how they work. Many of them are structured so differentl­y, but we’re all here to support our members and we’re all facing the same issues that come down the pike,” she says.

Rosenthal says the Arkansas Associatio­n has benefited from Hutchins’ initiative in seeking out that national leadership role.

“It gives her the opportunit­y to bring us new ideas,” he says. “If somebody has a good idea, and it’s in Chicago or Kansas City, New York, or San Diego or wherever, we can collaborat­e and say, ‘How did you do that? How did your members like that? How many people participat­ed?’ With Karen’s help we have been able to be among the first bars in America to provide cyber protection services to its lawyers. So that’s real cutting-edge type stuff.”

Robert Craghead, executive director of the Illinois Bar Associatio­n, has worked with Hutchins through the national board for many years.

“Karen is intelligen­t, analytical and thoughtful, and most importantl­y, she cares about people. She is a recognized leader in our chosen field. She is exceptiona­l in her ability to analyze and develop solutions to problems that the NABE has confronted over the years with respect to which way we’re going to head in the future,” Craghead says. “Karen was part and parcel of an extensive strategic planning effort that began roughly four years ago, if memory serves me correctly, that involved every member of the board, participat­ing in a strategic planning process, and then an implementi­ng task force that looked at the recommenda­tions that came from that particular effort. Karen has been at the focal point of implementi­ng those recommenda­tions so that NABE can do an even better job in serving the multi-generation­s of the members in NABE.”

Clark, whose presidency at the Arkansas Bar Associatio­n overlapped Hutchins’ presidency with the national organizati­on, compliment­s Hutchins’ grace and diplomacy.

“I kind of joke with Karen about how she’s got to deal with the personalit­ies of new presidents every single year, with somebody new coming in with their grand ideas of what they think the associatio­n is supposed to do and be about,” Clark says. “She navigates that so expertly — it’s very impressive because, really, the person who is running the Arkansas Bar Associatio­n is Karen Hutchins. The person who keeps that organizati­on going day in day out is Karen, and she and her staff have done a phenomenal job.”

KNITTING AND MEDITATION

Clark and Hutchins bonded over cooking, and when Clark’s term ended she gave Hutchins a cookbook, a serving platter and some small dishes as a thank you gift.

Hutchins has long enjoyed cooking, although her husband has taken on the task periodical­ly through the years so she could focus on her work. When their children were growing up, Hutchins made decorative birthday cakes for them every year. These days, her focus has turned from baking to healthier fare.

To relax, she picks up her knitting needles.

“The only thing I have found that totally shuts off my brain — and I just saw an article about this, that actually they’re proving it’s equal to meditation — is knitting,” she says. “Knitting patterns that are not just knitting the same stitch but where you have to count and you have to keep up with patterns and color changes and all, that gives me relaxation and it helps me shut off my thoughts.”

Hutchins’ grandmothe­r taught her to sew and a friend of her family taught her some knitting basics when she was about 10 years old. Seeing a friend knitting a few years ago led her back to the craft.

She has created scarves, boot cuffs and blankets, but her biggest project to date was a gold sweater she made for her daughter Kelley to wear over her strapless wedding gown six years ago.

“It was just very special to me, and so I put a lot of hours into it,” she says. “It was with sleeves, but it was what I call ballet length, so just kind of a shorter bolero kind of length, with some fancy stitching on the cuffs and on the edge. It kept her shoulders warm.”

Her friend, Janet Floyd, is also a knitter.

“We talk about whatever we’re working on, and we’ve done some yarn shopping together,” says Floyd, who goes to church at Highland Valley United Methodist Church with Hutchins and has a son who attended elementary school with Hutchins’ son. “Karen is a person who puts her faith up front and is always looking for a way to model that faith for others in our day-to-day lives.”

Floyd says Hutchins has always emphasized the importance of education for her family.

Kelley, who has a doctorate in aerospace engineerin­g and works for NASA, was a dancer growing up and has returned to dancing as a profession­al for a small company in San Francisco. Katy and Kirk both graduated from Baylor. Katy is an optometris­t in Little Rock, and Kirk has gotten a job with Late Model Restoratio­n in Waco, Texas.

“She’s strong with her family. She makes trips back and forth to Texas all the time,” Floyd says. Hutchins’ parents, Edward J. and Doris Klinkovsky, live in Temple, Texas. “Her dad has a cardiologi­st that he sees in Houston and she goes out there and drives him to Houston for his doctor’s appointmen­ts.”

Hutchins’ father was a soil conservati­onist when she was growing up. Her mother worked in the administra­tive areas of elementary schools and in a two-year college.

“Both of my parents have acreage from their parents that they farm still, even though my dad is 86,” Hutchins says. “I was very interested in being very respectful of agricultur­e and farming and real estate and oil and gas so property just made sense to me, that area of law.”

Hutchins’ older brother, Eddie, was diagnosed with Hodgkin lymphoma when he was in sixth grade; she was in third.

“He lived till he was 29, and I think he was a bit of a miracle back in the day,” she says. “But he had recurrence­s, four or five and then it turned into lymphoma and he went to college and got a master’s degree and was a profession­al electrical engineer. Shortly after that, he passed away.”

She remembers staying with friends while her parents went to be with her brother in the hospital on several occasions, and she remembers how precious times were when they could all be together.

“That really made me want to focus on my family as much as I could, so for Doug and I both, it was it was truly a partnershi­p,” she says. “I think my struggle is trying to do everything I feel I should be trying to do better — be a better daughter, be there for when my parents need me to be there, when my family needs me to be there. My husband has been extremely patient and understand­ing and allowing me to do what I find to be rewarding in my career.”

Hutchins can see the still-receding waters of the Arkansas River from her office in Riverdale.

“I’m a little more family-oriented. And I love this job. So I guess it’s just a nice combinatio­n,” she says. “I’m proudest just of my family. But on a career note it’s not accomplish­ments, it’s just being a part of it all — a part of all the legal community and being able to be heard and just to be so involved in it. It’s kind of unique to have this wide of a viewpoint with the profession, and so I am very proud to be able to have that.”

 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/JOHN SYKES JR. ?? “You get to meet all these people who are so passionate about their profession, what they do, wanting to do good things, wanting to have opportunit­ies to help their profession. It makes the whole business come alive, I guess it’s a nice way to put it, because you just really feel like you’re doing good things, you’re getting people together, who might not otherwise get together and helping them in their businesses.”
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/JOHN SYKES JR. “You get to meet all these people who are so passionate about their profession, what they do, wanting to do good things, wanting to have opportunit­ies to help their profession. It makes the whole business come alive, I guess it’s a nice way to put it, because you just really feel like you’re doing good things, you’re getting people together, who might not otherwise get together and helping them in their businesses.”
 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/JOHN SYKES JR. ?? “I’m a little more family-oriented. And I love this job. So I guess it’s just a nice combinatio­n. I’m proudest just of my family. But on a career note it’s not accomplish­ments, it’s just being a part of it all — a part of all the legal community and being able to be heard and just to be so involved in it. It’s kind of unique to have this wide of a viewpoint with the profession, and so I am very proud to be able to have that.”
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/JOHN SYKES JR. “I’m a little more family-oriented. And I love this job. So I guess it’s just a nice combinatio­n. I’m proudest just of my family. But on a career note it’s not accomplish­ments, it’s just being a part of it all — a part of all the legal community and being able to be heard and just to be so involved in it. It’s kind of unique to have this wide of a viewpoint with the profession, and so I am very proud to be able to have that.”

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