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Business Developer Heads to Peace Corps

After receiving an accounting degree from UALR, Kevin White created a “To Do” list: get a master’s degree, pass the CPA exam, get into law school. Now he’s ready to scratch off the last item — join the Peace Corps.

White, who received a master’s degree in taxation from UALR in May 2009, passed all four sections of the Arkansas Certified Public Accountant exam on the first attempt this spring. He has been admitted to the UALR Bowen School of Law, but has deferred his admission.

He ships out Aug. 17 with the Peace Corps for a 27-month stint in Panama, as a community economic development consultant, teaching schoolchildren about entrepreneurship and assisting entrepreneurs with writing business plans, securing financing, record keeping, and marketing.

With two UALR degrees in hand and two years working at the Arkansas Small Business and Technology Development Center in the College of Business under his belt, he believes he is well prepared for the task.

“The job duties will be very similar to what I’ve done here at ASBTDC,” White said. “The fundamentals of owning a business – the skill set, time commitment – are the same anywhere. Record keeping might be hand written instead of on QuickBooks, but it’s still important.”

White, a native of Conway, earned his bachelor’s degree in accounting in 2008 from UALR and was named Most Outstanding Student in Accounting. That summer he entered the master’s program and began working at the ASBTDC as a graduate assistant.

He counseled prospective and current small business owners, helped write and review business plans, assisted in loan package development, created financial projections, performed financial analyses, and reviewed websites for search engine optimization and usability.

Last summer, he became a full-time business consultant at ASBTDC and waded into the lengthy and competitive Peace Corps application process. The Peace Corps receives more than 15,000 applications each year for approximately 4,000 spots in countries requesting assistance around the world.

“They said the application process could take 12 months,” White said. “I didn’t really believe it, but my departure date will be exactly 364 days from the date I submitted my application.”

According to the Peace Corps website, only 34 current volunteers are from Arkansas. Of the nearly 200,000 Americans who have served since the Peace Corps began in 1961, 874 were from Arkansas.

The Peace Corps notified White in December that his application was accepted and assigned him to sub-Sahara Africa. He spent the spring undergoing medical checks, completing forms, and waiting to hear his final placement date and country. An email from the Peace Corps finally came June 2.

“I received an email that an invitation was in the mail for me to leave Aug. 17, and I would be departing for Central America. I wondered if it was a typo,” White said. The invitation to Panama, not a country in sub-Sahara Africa, arrived in the mail three days later.

White said the two-year immersion in a Spanish-speaking culture will translate well when he returns home.

“I’ll be learning about the business customs there and will be familiar with them when I come back, which could be helpful with the growing Hispanic population here,” he said.

White, an avid outdoors man who enjoys hiking and camping, will likely face rustic living conditions in Panama.

“I first thought Panama would be more urban and more developed than Africa until I saw photos,” he said, pointing to a just-returned Panama volunteer’s Facebook photos of her open-air living quarters with a dirt floor, small cook fire, and no electricity. “Now I’m prepared for not-so-developed.”

The mission of the Peace Corps is to promote world peace and friendship. “I’m doing this because I want to give back in some way,” said White, whose last day at ASBTDC is June 30.