4 minute read
Beyond the design
Garver President and CEO Brock Hoskins knows leadership goes well beyond the corner office. It’s about honoring the values that have made Garver its clients’ most trusted advisor for over 100 years. And with an award-winning employee experience and best firm culture, Brock is ensuring that Garver’s tradition of excellence will endure for years to come.
Congrats, Brock, on being selected for AMP’s 2023 C-Suite Executive list!
President and CEO
CONGRATULATIONS
L I N D S A Y L I N D S A Y W I L M O T T W I L M O T T
As a community bank that's been dedicated to serving Arkansas communities forward for 115 years, we're incredibly honored to have our Chief Operations Officer included in the prestigious Arkansas Money & Politics list of leaders shaping the future of our great state.
Under Roberts’ leadership, Encore Bank has completed three successful common equity raises, adding more than $368 million in capital, and expanded its footprint into 20 high-growth markets across eight states. As of Feb. 15, Encore had $3.58 billion in total assets, more than 1,900 shareholders and approximately 330 employees.
Randy Scott
Farmers Bank and Trust
Randy Scott is president and CEO of Farmers Bank and Trust, a $350 million bank headquartered in Blytheville. He has been in banking for 33 years, including the last 23 years with Farmers.
Scott currently serves as chairman of the Arkansas Bankers Association. He also served as chairman of the Arkansas State Bank Board in 2019, where he continues to serve on the board. In addition, he serves as chairman of the board of trustees at Arkansas Northeastern College.
His previous community involvement includes serving as a member of the board of directors of the Greater Blytheville Area Chamber of Commerce. He served on the Chamber Executive Committee and then as president of the organization. He recently was recognized by the chamber with its Lifetime Community Achievement Award.
John Selig
Arkansas Foundation for Medical Care
John Selig is president and CEO of the Arkansas Foundation for Medical Care (AFMC), an organization working with health care providers, advocates and state leaders to improve the health of individuals and communities while reducing health care costs. Prior to joining AFMC, he was vice president of Optum Public Sector, where he led business development efforts in the southeastern United States.
From 2005 to 2016, Selig served under three governors as the director of the Arkansas Department of Human Services. While there, he led work on the state’s private option approach to Medicaid expansion and its multipayer transformation to episodes of care and patient-centered medical homes. His previous positions for the state include director of Behavioral Health and director of In-Home Health Services.
Matt Troup
Conway Regional operating) officer, a senior executive responsible for managing the day-today operations of a company or other institution.
Matt Troup has more than 20 years of executive leadership experience in the health care industry, serving in various administrative roles at hospitals in Texas, Oklahoma and Florida. Troup came to Arkansas in 2014 as vice president of ancillary and support services at CHI St. Vincent, and was named president and CEO of Conway Regional Health System within one year. He is an energetic leader whose tenure has seen historic growth in net revenue and increases in employee and physician engagement with the organization achieving a best place to work designation six years in a row. Troup views healthcare as a faith-driven calling — a sentiment that is reflected in the way he interacts with his team each day.
Courtney Bishop Pinnacle Pointe Behavioral Healthcare System
Courtney Bishop is passionate about providing the best possible care to Arkansas’ children. As the COO of Pinnacle Pointe Hospital, the state’s largest mental health facility devoted to the care of children, she is focused on developing and implementing leadership initiatives to improve processes throughout the hospital and continuum of care. Providing the best possible environment for healing and growth is her goal. Courtney previously served as the director of assessment and referral at Pinnacle Pointe since 2017. She is a licensed professional counselor and has worked in the mental health field since 2004 as a clinic director, primary therapist, mobile assessor and associate professor at Ouachita Baptist University.
She received a bachelor’s degree in psychology and biology from Ouachita, a master’s in counseling psychology from the University of Central Arkansas and her Ed.S. in counseling from George Washington University.
Christina Clark
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
As chief operating officer of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS), Christina Clark provides critical oversight for the day-to-day operations of the state’s only academic medical center. She leads campus operations, information technology, police, security surveillance and emergency preparedness for UAMS. She also serves as a liaison for both internal and external stakeholders.
Clark was appointed the institution’s first institution-wide chief operating office in January 2019. Under her leadership, UAMS completed a $150 million energy project, which has and will continue to reduce carbon emissions by reducing energy use. She earned a bachelor’s degree in psychology from the University of Arkansas at Little Rock (UALR). She received her master’s degree in business administration with an emphasis in health care from UALR in May 2017. Clark sits on the Little Rock Tech Park Board and serves as secretary/treasurer for the Proton Center of Arkansas board.
Boris Dover
First Community Bank
With more than 40 years of community banking experience, Boris Dover is the president and chief operating officer of First Community Bank, a locally owned and managed financial institution that opened in 1997 in Batesville. It currently operates 34 locations across Arkansas and Missouri. First Community Bank opened for business at 710 St. Louis Street in Batesville with 14 employees, Dover included, and $3.5 million in capital. Today, the bank has grown to 565 employees and is proud to be the ninth largest bank chartered in Arkansas.