Agenda
Bourbon County Commission Room
1st Floor, County Courthouse
210 S. National Avenue
Fort Scott, KS 66701
Date: October 18, 2022
NO COMMISSION MEETING TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2022.
Agenda
Bourbon County Commission Room
1st Floor, County Courthouse
210 S. National Avenue
Fort Scott, KS 66701
Date: October 18, 2022
NO COMMISSION MEETING TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2022.
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Unified School District 234
424 South Main
Fort Scott, KS 55701-2697
www.usd234.org
620-223-800 Fax 620-223-2760
DESTRY BROWN
Superintendent
October 14,2022
Parent/Teacher conferences for the USD 234 School District will be held on Monday, October 17, and Tuesday, October 18. Conferences will be held at the following times:
Fort Scott Preschool Center – 4:00 to 7:50 p.m.
Winfield Scott and Eugene Ware – 4:15 to 7:45 p.m.
Fort Scott Middle School and Fort Scott High School – 4:30 to 8 p.m.
There will be no school for USD 234 students on Friday, October 21.
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Ascension Via Christi will be closing its Family Medicine clinic in Fort Scott as of Nov. 11.
On the heels of that closing, Girard Medical Center is planning to reopen its practice in Ascension Via Christi clinic’s current location at 109 S. Main St, which will be staffed by Katrina Burke, MD, the clinic’s current physician provider.
“Our goal when we established the clinic was to ensure Fort Scott residents’ access to primary care services,” says Drew Talbott, president of Ascension Via Christi Hospital in Pittsburg. “This transition of the clinic to a new owner does that, which is in keeping with our overall goal of using our resources to ensure rural Kansans’ continued access to close-to-home care.”
To receive care at the Fort Scott clinic after Nov. 11, patients will need to call 620-232-0453 to request a transfer of their medical records.
“Our Fort Scott Ascension Via Christi Emergency Department, established almost four years ago when the Fort Scott hospital closed, will continue to provide 24/7 Emergency Care,” says Talbott.
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About Ascension Via Christi
In Kansas, Ascension Via Christi operates seven hospitals and 75 other sites of care and employs nearly 6,400
associates. Across the state, Ascension Via Christi provided nearly $89 million in community benefit and care of
persons living in poverty in fiscal year 2021. Serving Kansas for more than 135 years, Ascension is a faith-based
healthcare organization committed to delivering compassionate, personalized care to all, with special attention to
persons living in poverty and those most vulnerable. Ascension is the leading non-profit and Catholic health system in
the U.S., operating more than 2,600 sites of care – including 145 hospitals and more than 40 senior living facilities –
in 19 states and the District of Columbia. Visit www.ascension.org.
1 Corinthians 10:26: The earth is the LORD’s, and everything in it.
When Dave and I moved back to Fort Scott in the early 80’s, we attended various churches in order to decide where we best fit. It was a season for tithing sermons, I guess, a subject we were not too keen on obeying. I mean, we gave to charities and tossed some dollars into all of the collection plates, but if these churches were going to browbeat us into feeling guilty, they weren’t for us.
Embarrassing, I agree.
As relatively new Christians, we had missed out on a basic tenet of Faith, namely, God owns everything we think we own. Everything. He has blessed us with the ability to accumulate what we have, so we cannot take credit for any of our possessions.
When you read the Old Testament, it becomes evident that God wants the first 10% of what we make. The “first” 10%. Then Jesus arrived on the scene, and the New Testament tells us to “live generously.” No longer is a specific amount noted, so most scholars claim that 10% should be a minimum we give.
Pastor Todd Mullens, from the church Dave and I attended three years ago in Jupiter, Florida, made a powerful demonstration of how that minimum plays out. On the stage, he had a large basket of fruit. He pulled out 10 bunches of carrots, carefully counting them as he laid them on a table. He removed one bunch and placed it in a smaller basket. That was God’s portion. He did likewise with apples and cucumbers.
Then he told a story about his son’s sixth birthday party. For a present, his grandpa had given Jefferson 10 one-dollar bills. Todd asked his son who gave him the money and was told “Papa did.” Todd agreed but reminded young Jefferson that God had given Papa the ability to make the money. Todd took the bills and placed them side-by-side on the kitchen table, counting them out slowly.
“Jefferson, every time we get some money, we need to give God 1/10 of what we have received. You need to give God one dollar out of these ten. You get to keep the rest.”
Jefferson picked out one bill, looked at his father and asked, “Gee, Dad, this is all God wants?” A perspective we all should share.
According to the “Generous Church” organization, the average Christian gives 2.5% of his/her earnings to God. Should they give 10%, between $165 billion and $300 billion (depending on the source), more could be amassed. Look at how that plays out:
Add it up. That still would allow at least $100 billion to be used elsewhere. Scripture says that “God loves a cheerful giver.” Something tells me that those who give 2.5% of their earnings to God probably don’t fit that definition.
Wagner was charged on Oct. 11, 2022 for an assault, kidnapping and forcible rape that happened in the Branson, Missouri area August 15, 1992, in Henning State Park in Taney County, Missouri.
The Taney County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office filed the following charges against 61-year-old Tony Lee Wagner, of Fort Scott, on October 11, 2022 with two counts of assault first-degree, kidnapping first-degree and forcible rape.
While they were walking, they encountered an unknown man. Authorities say he started to assault both women.
The MSHP states, “One of the women was able to escape and summoned help from a passing motorist. Law enforcement officers quickly began a search of the park.”
Authorities found the second victim in the park in an area away from the original scene. Emergency personnel took both women to area hospitals.
The Missouri State Highway Patrol states that it and the Taney County Sheriff’s Department immediately launched a joint investigation. They didn’t identify any suspects during the initial investigation and the case went cold.“Continued investigation efforts and advances in forensic science technology led to Wagner being identified as a suspect,” states the Missouri State Highway Patrol.
Troop D Division of Drug and Crime Control Unit, the Missouri State Highway Patrol Crime Laboratory Division, Fort Scott (Kansas) Police Department, and Parabon Nanolabs worked together to solve the case.
The Taney County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office charged Wagner on October 11, 2022.
Fort Scott (Kansas) Police Department officers arrested Wagner. They are holding him without bond in the Bourbon County, Kansas, jail pending extradition to Missouri.