What Can’t You Live Without? by Patty LaRoche

Patty LaRoche

By Patty LaRoche

Packing to move afforded Dave and me the perfect opportunity to clear out the clutter. If I were to grade us on achieving that goal, we would deserve a D. Even the accordion I had purchased at a garage sale 15 years ago, the one with the three stuck pegs, the missing pearl button and the tattered leather straps seemed too valuable to get rid of it. Why? It’s not like I was being recruited to join a polka band. Preserved in the back of a basement closet, this instrument now either needed to go, or I needed to take accordion lessons. Adios, accordion.

This instrument was the least of my “unnecessaries.” I spent days laboring over old speeches, written before computers but still filled with nuggets of scriptural advice. Would I find the time to consolidate the meaningful messages on my HP? Probably not. I burned out our shredder on old lesson plans, archaic and replicatable with AI’s help, along with warranties on items we no longer had. Dirty flower pots, houses to greenery I had managed to kill, were thrown away, as well as hardened Miracle Gro and rose bush fertilizer (for the bushes we had in our previous house). This all sounds noble, but at the end of our packing, we still filled three railroad cars with our possessions, and now, living in the basement of the house we are renovating, we see how few things we actually need. No doubt, there will be another decluttering when we unpack all of our “can’t live without” belongings. Still, it could be worse.

Years ago, I needed to drop something off at a student’s house. Nothing prepared me for the hoarding I saw as I entered her home. A small pathway, lined with who-knows-what led to the back of the house, and I left there, wondering how someone could live in those piles.

I picture my heart like that house. How much of God’s truth, peace and joy are hidden under mounds of distractions, worries and unnecessary baggage? Unconfessed sin, misplaced priorities or people-pleasing weigh me down, block my intimacy with God and destroy my peace. Hebrews 12:1 (NIV) is a delicate reminder of the need to rid myself of those problems: “Let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles, and let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us.”

Spiritual clutter slows us down and keeps us from running the race God has set before us. There is something invigorating that happens after we declutter a closet, a work place or a kitchen drawer, but even more satisfying is when we clean out our spiritual, sacred space. In doing that, we make room for the Creator, and I cannot think of a better way to finish the race He has set before us.

2026 Bourbon County Primary: Full Candidate List & Ballot Question

2026 Bourbon County Primary Election: Candidates and Ballot Question

The Bourbon County Clerk’s office has released the official list of candidates and ballot question for the August 2026 Primary Election. Below is a complete breakdown of every race and the constitutional amendment question that Bourbon County voters will see on their ballots.


Democratic Primary Candidates

United States Senator

  • Damon Anderson – Shawnee
  • Christy Davis – Cottonwood Falls
  • Adam Hamilton – Stilwell
  • Jason Hart – Wichita
  • Kevin Latz – Mission Hills
  • Erik Murray – Kansas City
  • Sandy Spidel Neumann – Overland Park
  • Anne Parelkar – Overland Park
  • Patrick C. Schmidt – Topeka
  • Michael “Mike” Soetaert – Wellington
  • Noah Taylor – Kechi

U.S. House of Representatives – District 2

  • Don Coover – Galesburg

Kansas Governor / Lt. Governor

  • Ethan Corson / Renee Duxler – Salina
  • Cindy Holscher / KC Ohaebosim – Wichita
  • Curt Skoog / Jennifer Bacani McKenney – Fredonia

Kansas Secretary of State

  • Jennifer Day – Overland Park
  • Samuel Lane – Shawnee

Kansas Attorney General

  • Chris Mann – Lawrence

Kansas State Treasurer

  • Juan C. Luengo – Olathe

Commissioner of Insurance

  • Dinah Sykes – Lenexa

State Board of Education – District 9

  • Heather Guernsey – Chanute

Bourbon County Commissioner – District 1

  • Clinton L. Walker – Mapleton

Bourbon County Commissioner – District 3

  • No candidate filed

Bourbon County Commissioner – District 4

  • No candidate filed

Township Clerk (Democratic)

No candidates filed in Drywood, Franklin, Freedom, Marion, Millcreek, Marmaton, Osage, Pawnee, Scott, Timberhill, or Walnut townships.

Democratic Precinct Committeeman/Committeewoman

Precinct Position Candidate
7th Ward Committeewoman Tracy J. Schafer – Fort Scott
Marmaton D2 Committeewoman Thelma J. Quirin – Redfield
Millcreek Committeewoman Jane L. Gaines – Fort Scott
Scott D4 Committeewoman Carol K. Lydic – Fort Scott
Timberhill Committeeman Clinton Lee Walker – Mapleton
Timberhill Committeewoman Rachel Walker – Mapleton
All other Democratic precinct positions: No candidate filed

Republican Primary Candidates

United States Senator

  • Roger Marshall – St. John
  • Pond Naramore – Lawrence

U.S. House of Representatives – District 2

  • Derek Schmidt – Independence
  • Chad E. Young – Lawrence

Kansas Governor / Lt. Governor

  • Ty Masterson / Jeffrey Klemp – Lansing
  • Charlotte O’Hara / Michelle Dombrosky – Olathe
  • Nick Reinecker / Katy Reinecker – Inman
  • Stacy L. Rogers / Michael W. Smith – Lansing
  • Philip Sarnecki / Joy Eakins – Wichita
  • Vicki Schmidt / Joe Newland – Neodesha
  • Scott Schwab / Ken Rahjes – Agra

Kansas Secretary of State

  • Pat Proctor – Leavenworth

Kansas Attorney General

  • Kris Kobach – Lecompton

Kansas State Treasurer

  • Steven Johnson – Assaria

Commissioner of Insurance

  • Daniel Hawkins – Wichita

Kansas House of Representatives – District 4

  • Rick James – La Cygne

State Board of Education – District 9

  • Destry Brown – Fort Scott
  • Kristian Gerken – Paola
  • Renee Slinkard – Parker

Bourbon County Commissioner – District 1

  • Lyle K. (Pete) Owenby – Redfield
  • Mike Hueston – Mapleton
  • Lisa Dillon – Fort Scott

Bourbon County Commissioner – District 3

  • Joe Allen – Fort Scott
  • Josh Jones – Fort Scott

Bourbon County Commissioner – District 4

  • Gregg Motley – Fort Scott

Township Clerk (Republican)

  • Drywood: Laura Krom
  • Franklin: No candidate filed
  • Freedom: No candidate filed
  • Marion: Brent M. Smith; Michael Ramsey
  • Millcreek: No candidate filed
  • Marmaton: No candidate filed
  • Osage: No candidate filed
  • Pawnee: No candidate filed
  • Scott: Donald Banwart
  • Timberhill: Jennifer Epting Williams
  • Walnut: No candidate filed

Republican Precinct Committeeman/Committeewoman

Precinct Position Candidate(s)
1st Ward Committeeman Kevin W. Davidson
1st Ward Committeewoman Cheryl L. Adamson
2nd Ward Committeeman Robert J. Uhler
2nd Ward Committeewoman Laurie R. Uhler
3rd Ward Committeeman Brian Rhoades
3rd Ward Committeewoman Brandy L. Rhoades
4th Ward Committeeman Matthew Wells
4th Ward Committeewoman Katie Wells
5th Ward Committeeman No candidate filed
5th Ward Committeewoman Jana R. Walker
6th Ward Committeeman Douglas E. Niemeir
6th Ward Committeewoman No candidate filed
7th Ward Committeeman Michael Hoyt; Robert S. Love
7th Ward Committeewoman Patricia S. Love
Drywood Committeeman Larry Shead
Drywood Committeewoman Vickie Shead; Laura Krom
Franklin Committeeman Tony Bradbury
Franklin Committeewoman Kaitlyn Bradbury
Freedom D1 Committeeman No candidate filed
Freedom D1 Committeewoman Janice Seested
Freedom D5 Committeeman Lawrence Paddock
Freedom D5 Committeewoman Karen A. Paddock
Marion Committeeman No candidate filed
Marion Committeewoman Nancy Holt
Marmaton D2 Committeeman Jeffrey L. Reed; Micheal Bryant
Marmaton D2 Committeewoman Angela Soetaert
Marmaton D4 Committeeman No candidate filed
Marmaton D4 Committeewoman No candidate filed
Millcreek Committeeman Boa Casper
Millcreek Committeewoman Katie K. Casper
Osage Committeeman Joshua Kee; Marvin Creager
Osage Committeewoman Mika Milburn-Kee
Pawnee Committeeman Kevin Wagner
Pawnee Committeewoman Rachel Wagner
Scott D1 Committeeman Jim Sackett
Scott D1 Committeewoman Gayle Sackett
Scott D2 Committeeman Bryan Holt
Scott D2 Committeewoman Tara Holt
Scott D3 Committeeman Luke Demko
Scott D3 Committeewoman No candidate filed
Scott D4 Committeeman Roy D. Dare
Scott D4 Committeewoman Anne Dare
Scott D5 Committeeman Bill Lalman
Scott D5 Committeewoman Glenda Lalman
Timberhill Committeeman Timothy H. Emerson Sr.; Brandon Whisenhunt
Timberhill Committeewoman Rebecca Whisenhunt
Walnut Committeeman Jason Sutterby
Walnut Committeewoman Rebecca Sutterby

Constitutional Amendment Question

In addition to candidate races, voters will be asked to decide on a proposed constitutional amendment regarding how Kansas Supreme Court justices are selected.

Explanatory Statement

This amendment gives voters the right to elect the justices of the Kansas Supreme Court. The justices shall serve terms of six years, with elections of justice positions 1, 2 and 3 to occur in 2028, positions 4 and 5 to occur in 2030, and positions 6 and 7 to occur in 2032, and every six years thereafter. The rules applicable for such elections and the designation of position numbers shall be provided by law. Any vacancy on the court for an unexpired term shall be filled at an election as provided by law.

A vote FOR this proposition would give Kansas citizens the right to elect Kansas Supreme Court justices as provided by law. Justices will hold office for terms of six years. The Kansas Supreme Court nominating commission, whose membership consists of a majority of lawyers, would be abolished.

A vote AGAINST this proposition would continue the current system in which the Kansas Supreme Court nominating commission, whose membership consists of a majority of lawyers, provides the governor a list of three individuals to choose from for vacancies on the Kansas Supreme Court. Justices hold office for a term of six years and retain their offices if they win a retention election in which they do not face an opponent.

Proposed Amendment Text (§ 5 – Selection of Justices of the Supreme Court)

The citizens of Kansas who are qualified electors shall elect the justices of the supreme court. The rules applicable for such elections and the designation of position numbers shall be provided by law. Justice positions 1, 2 and 3 shall be elected at the general election in November of 2028, justice positions 4 and 5 in November of 2030 and justice positions 6 and 7 in November of 2032, and every six years thereafter, respectively. Any vacancy occurring on the supreme court for an unexpired term shall be filled by election as provided by law.

The full text of the amendment, including proposed changes to §§ 8 and 15 of the Kansas Constitution, is available in the attached ballot PDF.

Source: Bourbon County Clerk’s Office.

Documents:

Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office Daily Report – July 10, 2026

Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office Daily Report – July 10, 2026

Arrested

Herrington, John Thomas (Age 56) — Arrested 7/9/2026 3:24 AM by Fort Scott Police Department. Charges: Giving a False Alarm; Emergency Services, Interference with LEO; Obstruct/Resist Felony. Bond: $0.00.

Jefferson, Tyler (Age 32) — Arrested 7/9/2026 11:18 AM by Douglas County. Charge: Other Agency Hold. Bond: $0.00.

Jackson, Ontareo (Age 23) — Arrested 7/9/2026 11:36 AM by Douglas County. Charge: Other Agency Hold. Bond: $0.00.

Kerron, Dakota (Age 28) — Arrested 7/9/2026 11:47 AM by Douglas County. Charge: Other Agency Hold. Bond: $0.00.

Released

Carr, Randle R — Released 7/9/2026 10:52 AM via Transferred Out (Douglas County).

Dalager, William Paul — Released 7/9/2026 10:55 AM via Transferred Out (Douglas County).

Garrett, Brandy Sherie — Released 7/9/2026 11:15 AM via Transferred Out (Crawford County).

Heffner, Evan — Released 7/9/2026 10:54 AM via Transferred Out (Douglas County).

Total Inmates Released: 4

Documents:

Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office Daily Report – July 9, 2026

Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office Daily Report – July 9, 2026

Arrested

Cox, Melissa Ann (Age 45) — Arrested 7/8/2026 9:23 AM by Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office. Charge: Warrant Bourbon County (Probation Violation). Bond: $0.00 No Bond.

Hendrix, Bryan William (Age 40) — Arrested 7/8/2026 11:24 PM by Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office. Charge: Warrant – Out of County. Bond: $0.00 No Bond.

Herrington, John Thomas (Age 56) — Arrested 7/9/2026 3:24 AM by Fort Scott Police Department. Charges: Giving a False Alarm; Emergency Services, Interference with LEO; Obstruct/Resist Felony. Bond: $0.00.

Released

Brashear, Julie Irene — Released 7/8/2026 11:35 AM via Surety Bond (Able Bonding).

Reinkens, Jenise Michelle — Released 7/8/2026 11:22 AM via Surety Bond (Able Bonding).

Total Inmates Released: 2

Documents:

Clerk Asks Judge to Deny County Attorney’s Motion, Send Recall Lawsuit to Trial

Bourbon County Clerk Susan Walker has filed her written response to County Attorney James Crux’s request to end her recall lawsuit without a trial — and she is asking the judge to reject that request and let the case proceed.

The response, filed July 8 in Bourbon County District Court, is the latest step in Walker v. Crux (BB-2026-CV-000048), the suit Walker brought in May to challenge a recall petition being circulated against her.

In late June, Crux — the defendant in the case — asked the court for a “judgment on the pleadings,” a request to decide the case on the written filings alone, without a trial. In that motion, Crux argued the recall petition is legally sufficient and should be allowed to go to the voters, and he asked the court to bring the three recall committee members back into the case.

Walker’s July 8 filing asks the court to deny that motion. Notably, she is not asking the court to rule in her favor now. She is asking it to let her two claims move forward “to trial so it may fully examine the facts and law.”

Walker makes two main arguments, both drawn from her amended petition.

First, she says the county attorney did not do what the law requires. Under K.S.A. 25-4322(b), the county attorney must review a proposed recall petition and determine whether it is legally sufficient. Walker contends Crux reviewed and rejected an earlier draft but never independently reviewed the second, amended version that was actually circulated for signatures. She argues Crux effectively concedes this in his own motion, and that he cannot rely on “substantial compliance” with the statute because, if he never reviewed the petition, he met none of its requirements. Reading the recall law generously in favor of voters, she writes, “does not erase” the county attorney’s duty to follow the procedure.

Second, she says the petition itself is too vague to be valid. The petition cites no statutes, which Walker argues leaves her unable to respond meaningfully within the roughly 200-word rebuttal the law allows a targeted official — pointing to the Kansas appellate cases Reynolds v. Figge and Baker v. Gibson. She also argues the petition still implies “misconduct” and “disenfranchisement,” accusations she says a reasonable signer could read as claims that she broke the law.

Walker asks the court to deny Crux’s motion and allow her petition to proceed to trial. Her underlying suit seeks a court declaration that the recall petition is invalid and an order blocking any recall election based on it. In the same filing, she also opposes a separate bid by recall organizers Kyle Parks, Kevin Wagner and Lyle Owenby to join the case as parties. You can read Walker’s full response here.

How the case got here:

  • May 22: Walker sues to block the recall petition, naming Crux and three committee members (original report).
  • Late May: Walker narrows the suit to name only Crux; a judge dismisses the committee members, and one member asks to undo that (update).
  • June 23: Crux answers the suit and files his motion for judgment on the pleadings.
  • July 8: Walker files the response described here.

A case management conference — where the judge is expected to take up the recall organizers’ motion to intervene and a related motion — is set for July 14 at the Bourbon County Courthouse in Fort Scott.

Being named in a lawsuit is not a finding of wrongdoing, and the filings described here reflect each party’s arguments, not the court’s conclusions. FortScott.biz will continue to follow the case.

 

Bourbon County Commission Tackles Budget, Tables Comprehensive-Plan Contract Again — July 6, 2026


Bourbon County Commission meeting

The Bourbon County Commission met Monday, July 6, 2026, for a meeting dominated by budget season — a possible new ambulance, requested raises in the county attorney’s office, and whether to hold the line on the revenue-neutral property-tax rate. The board also fielded pointed public comment, including an asbestos-safety claim from a former employee and a pre-suit legal notice served on the chairman, and once again put off signing the county’s comprehensive-plan contract while it works out how to pay for it.

At the top of the meeting the board revised its agenda, moving financial consultant Matt Lawn’s budget presentation earlier to accommodate his schedule, removing a Murphy Tractor training-dispute update, and dropping a statement item from Commissioner Joe Allen.

The commission approved the July 2 accounts-payable batch of $144,022.62 and, in a separate vote, approved a postage charge that had been tabled from the June 29 meeting — the courthouse “postage overage” Commissioner Mika Milburn-Kee had questioned two weeks earlier.

Redemption House roof funded from opioid settlement

Don Tucker, appearing with Redemption House live-in manager Jennifer Simhiser, returned to ask the county to help replace the aging roof on the recovery home, which has been patched repeatedly but is failing. The lowest bid the group received was about $24,000.

Milburn-Kee moved to approve $25,000 from the county’s opioid settlement fund for the roof, noting the settlement dollars are restricted and that a roof over a recovery house fits their allowed use. The motion passed unanimously.

Public comment: an asbestos claim and a legal notice

Three residents addressed the board.

Kevin Allen urged the commission to look hard at the Bourbon County Transfer Station’s finances before raising gate fees or leaning on the mill levy, arguing the operation has shed major costs — a building payment that has been retired, a fourth employee who is gone, and a lost bean contract. Because the transfer station is self-funded, he said, “rather than say, raise the gate fees … you get the money, but” the underlying costs still need scrutiny, and he pushed the board to weigh equipment financing instead.

William Jackson, the county’s former maintenance director, told the commission he had found “deteriorating insulation and damaged building materials that warranted asbestos testing” in the courthouse while on the job, and that he was terminated “within hours after raising these concerns.” He asked the county to release inspection and testing records: “If there is no hazard, prove it. Release the inspection records, show the testing, let the facts speak. … No government should ever punish anyone for asking whether a public building is safe.” (Later in the meeting, Chairman Samuel Tran said the Kansas Department of Health and Environment had inspected the building and given it a clean bill of health.)

Michael Hoyt served Chairman Tran with a notice under K.S.A. 12-105B — a required precursor to a lawsuit against a governmental official — saying Tran had declined to recognize him during the June 15 discussion of the Hidden Valley roads. At that June 15 meeting the board had adopted Resolution 23-26, reaffirming that the Hidden Valley roads in the Mound City/Mapleton area are designated for law-enforcement access only and not for county maintenance. Hoyt said the notice named Tran “in your capacity as chairman and individually” and that he would file a stamped copy with the clerk.

Budget: a possible new ambulance, attorney raises, and the revenue-neutral question

Matt Lawn of Baker Tilly, the county’s outside financial consultant, walked the board through the EMS and county attorney budgets.

On EMS, Director Teri Hulsey is holding a position vacant and projecting essentially flat wages, but the department is weighing the replacement of a 2018 ambulance (EMS-3) that is nearing the end of its service life. Commissioners discussed financing a new unit over a multi-year lease rather than buying outright, and Hulsey noted the county would have to absorb the full cost: “There’s no grants out there to purchase an ambulance. There is for equipment, but there’s not for an ambulance.”

County Attorney James Crux requested salary increases to keep his office competitive with surrounding counties, centered on raising the pay for his full-time assistant county attorney position, along with raises for legal support staff. He also asked to move the county’s SANE-kit line item (sexual-assault forensic exams) off his office budget and into the general fund.

Long recommended the board formally notify the county clerk of its intent to exceed the revenue-neutral rate, which preserves flexibility during budget-setting; the board can always adopt a lower rate later. Long cautioned that holding to revenue-neutral year after year, with rising health-insurance costs and cost-of-living adjustments, becomes “death by a thousand cuts.” A public hearing on any rate above revenue-neutral cannot occur until after the state’s notice deadline in late August.

Comprehensive-plan contract still waiting on funding

The board again declined to sign its contract with Confluence, the firm the Planning Commission — represented by Brian Ashworth II and Pete Owenby — recommended on June 15 to write the county’s first comprehensive plan and an updated zoning code. That work is tied to the development moratorium the commission adopted the same night. Confluence’s original proposal was $105,500 for the comprehensive plan plus an optional $46,500 zoning-code update; at the June 29 meeting the firm brought a “best and final” of about $116,500 by combining phases and trimming outside costs. Commissioners have said they want a funding source settled before signing.

Commissioner David Beerbower, who carries the item, said he had no funding update. With the paperwork in hand, Tran said, “this is the contract for Confluence. We need to sign it,” but agreed with colleagues that signing without the money in place was premature: “No, we don’t want to sign it yet.” The board tabled the contract for two weeks, to its July 20 meeting.

Hospital donation agreement: commission split on pressing forward

The board revisited its decision to have MSB Law examine the donation agreement and lease tied to the former county hospital building, now operated under an arrangement involving the Kansas Renewal Institute (KRI) and Freeman. Commissioner Milburn-Kee said she would prefer to pull the county’s involvement: “I would personally like to pull our involvement in this.”

Commissioners Gregg Motley, Beerbower and Allen wanted to continue. Motley argued the county has an obligation to protect local health care: “We have two entities that are losing money out there every month. … We owe it to this community to explore all options.” He pushed back on the framing that the county was headed to court: “We are not entering litigation. … What we are doing is exploring options.” Allen put it simply: “I don’t want to lose a hospital.”

Tran, while agreeing the community needs a hospital, cautioned about the county’s odds if a dispute went to court: “Historically, courts and judges don’t like it when government get involved in private entities.” Separately, Chairman Tran said he would bring the county’s forensic-audit RFP — the bids received and the firms’ scope of work — to the board on July 20.

Old business: minutes, warrant checks, audit and software

After a month of disputes over errors in the county’s minutes, the board voted to adopt the short version of its minutes going forward, which Beerbower said “provides just what is necessary by law.”

The commission approved Resolution 25-26, canceling a batch of stale, uncashed warrant checks. It tabled the Jarred Gilmore Phillips 2026 audit engagement so commissioners could compare firms, and tabled the CIC software renewal — a roughly $55,465 IT-budget item — until unused payroll and time-clock modules can be identified and stripped out.

Commissioner comments

Tran reported that KDHE had inspected the courthouse and, despite the building’s age, given it a clean bill of health. He also floated a town-hall meeting at Fort Scott Community College on July 22 at 6 p.m. to talk with residents about taxes and the budget ahead of the county’s rate decisions.

Beerbower distributed a draft policy-and-procedure manual resolution for discussion on July 20. The meeting adjourned.

Kansas Community Empowerment Program Now Accepting Applications

TOPEKA – Lieutenant Governor and Secretary of Commerce David Toland today announced the Kansas Community Empowerment (KCE) program is accepting new member applications from Kansas communities. KCE supports locally driven projects that strengthen quality of place, volunteer engagement and long-term community vibrancy. The enrollment period will close August 31.

Backed by the Kansas Department of Commerce, the program provides tools, training and funding that help local leaders turn great ideas into lasting impact.

“Kansas communities are full of character, history and charm — and those qualities aren’t just a point of pride, they’re an economic asset,” Lieutenant Governor and Secretary of Commerce David Toland said. “Any project — big or small — can turn charm into growth, and that’s exactly what this partnership with the state is designed to do.”

There are three participation tiers applicants can choose from: Communities of Growth, Communities of Action and Communities of Excellence. Communities select what they believe is the best fit for their goals, capacity and preferred level of involvement. For information about each tier, click here.

Admission into the KCE program provides eligibility for both Kickstart and Impact grants. Kickstart grants are designed to build momentum and capacity through smaller, community-driven projects, where Impact grants are meant to support larger, long-term investments.

For the 2026-2027 cycle, the total amount of available funding for the Kickstart grant is $40,000. Application reviews take place monthly. Funding is limited and will be distributed on a first-come, first-served basis.

For this period of funding, the Impact Grant will have $60,000 in total with $30,000 available for each round. The first round was awarded in May, and the final round will be announced in December.

The grants are administered by the Kansas Department of Commerce and funded in part by the Patterson Family Foundation, the Kansas Health Foundation, the Sunflower Foundation and Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas.

“The Kansas Community Empowerment program is ideal for any sized, rural Kansas community,” Assistant Secretary of Quality Places Matt Godinez said. “With the learning opportunities and funding resources this program offers, you can make extraordinary things happen in your community.”

Enrolled communities will participate in monthly check-ins, quarterly training courses and optional pop-up events. This year, communities will attend the inaugural awards banquet, coinciding with a Legislative Day on the Hill. During these events, organizations and communities are encouraged to speak to their legislators about the importance of community development and in turn be recognized for their work.

“KCE’s new chapter with Commerce will help continue to grow our vision of creating more vibrant communities with a positive future,” KCE Board President Doug Helmke said.

Applications must be submitted through the Kansas Community Empowerment online application system.

Communities that have already enrolled in KCE do not need to enroll again unless there is a change in tier status. Questions regarding enrollment applications or funding should be directed to the KCE team at [email protected].

For application details, eligibility requirements and webinar information, visit the Kansas Community Empowerment webpage or contact Matthew Morrison at [email protected].

Caregiver Support Group Meeting – July 14 at Credo Senior Living

Join us at the monthly Caregiver Support Group meeting hosted by Harry Hynes Memorial Hospice at Credo Senior Living & Memory Care.

This welcoming space offers peer support, helpful resources, and practical guidance to help caregivers connect, share, and find encouragement while caring for their own well-being.

All caregivers welcome!

  • Date: Tuesday, July 14, 2026
  • Time: 6:00 PM
  • Location: Credo Senior Living, 820 S. Horton St., Fort Scott, KS 66701

Light snacks and beverages will be provided.

For more information, contact Chaplain Jeff Feagins at [email protected] or by calling 620-231-7223.

Documents:

Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office Daily Report – July 8, 2026

Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office Daily Report – July 8, 2026

Arrested

Reinkens, Jenise Michelle (Age 47) — Arrested 7/7/2026 1:37 PM by Fort Scott Police Department. Charge: Warrant Bourbon County (Failure to Appear). Bond: $2,500.00 Cash/Surety.

Released

Homeier, Bobby Duane — Released 7/7/2026 4:47 PM via Surety Bond (Able Bonding).

Shead, Elijah A — Released 7/7/2026 9:01 AM via Court Order (Self).

Tucker, Blake Micheal — Released 7/7/2026 11:06 AM via Surety Bond (A+ Bail Bonds).

Total Inmates Released: 3

Documents:

Obituary: Laynard Leland Shearer, Age 85

Laynard Leland Shearer

Laynard Leland Shearer, at the age of 85, passed away on July 3, 2026, in Lubbock, Texas, where he resided for the past 14 years. Laynard was born near Almena, Kansas on May 14, 1941, the son of Leslie and Velma (Douk) Shearer. He grew into manhood in rural Norton County, Kansas attending Almena Grade School, Dellvale Grade School and graduated from Lenora Rural High School with the Class of 1959. He holds degrees from Barton County Community College and Northwestern University Traffic Institute.

Lanny, as he was known to his friends, joined the U.S. Army in 1960 and served three years as a Military Policeman in Japan. After completing his military service, he joined the Norton, Kansas Police Department. After one year, he was accepted as a trooper with the Kansas Highway Patrol. He retired after a 27-year career as the Patrol’s Assistant Superintendent with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. He served the last year of his career as Interim Superintendent of the Kansas Highway Patrol.

He is survived by his wife Cynthia, a brother Gary Shearer (Rovella), and a sister Bernita (Willis) Daniels, both of Norton, Kansas, several nephews and nieces and many friends and relatives.

He was predeceased by his parents, Leslie & Velma Douk Shearer, his wife of 40 years, Kay (Diehl) Shearer, and his brother and wife, Keiford & Lucille Shearer.

Rev. Chuck Russell will conduct funeral services at 2:00 p.m. on Friday, July 10, 2026 at Cheney Witt Chapel. Burial will follow in the Evergreen Cemetery. The family will receive friends Friday from 1:00 P.M. until service time at the Cheney Witt Chapel. Memorials are suggested to the Wounded Warrior Project and may be left in care of the Cheney Witt Chapel, 201 S. Main, P.O. Box 347, Ft. Scott, Kansas 66701. Words of remembrance may be submitted to the online guestbook at cheneywitt.com.

Ad: Josh Jones — On the Record

I’m Josh Jones, and you’ll always know what your commission is doing.

Joshua Jones, Republican for Bourbon County Commissioner, District 3 — On the Record

I’m Josh Jones, a lifelong resident and small-business owner, and I’m running for Bourbon County Commissioner, District 3.

One of the reasons I got involved in the first place is that I wanted to fight for transparency and public trust in our local government. You deserve to see exactly what your government is up to. Back before our local meetings were routinely posted online, I showed up with my own phone and recorded them myself, so citizens could watch the work for themselves. It made some officials uncomfortable — and that’s the point. Putting government on the record keeps everyone honest, including the people in office.

Here’s how I’ve always worked, and how I’ll work for you:

  • On the record — meetings on video, so anyone can see exactly what happened
  • Reachable — I answer questions on social media and meet folks face-to-face at the car lot; I don’t hide from the people I serve
  • Town halls — a real place to be heard, so the regular meetings stay productive

And here’s the thing I never want anyone in office to forget: this is your county, and those elected officials work for you — not the other way around. If you ever feel like no one’s listening, don’t give up. Make a phone call, write a letter, come to a meeting. Your voice is the whole point.

Vote Josh Jones — Bourbon County Commissioner, District 3. On the record. Within reach.

Paid for by Joshua Jones for County Commissioner, Josh Jones, Treasurer.

Learn more and get in touch: Josh Jones on Facebook

Ad: What FSCC Offers

Looking for a college that gives you options? At Fort Scott Community College, students can choose from associate degrees in Arts, Science, Applied Science, and General Studies, along with a variety of certificates that lead straight to rewarding careers. Whether you’re interested in healthcare fields like Certified Medication Aide, Nurse Aide, EMT, Home Health Aide, Manicuring, or Phlebotomy, or want to take on a technical challenge with certificates in Ag Technology (John Deere), Construction, Cosmetology, Criminal Justice, Environmental Water Tech, Farm & Ranch Management, Harley-Davidson Technology, Heavy Equipment Operation, HVAC, Masonry, or Welding we’ve got you covered!

But college isn’t just about the classroom. FSCC offers plenty of ways to get involved through music and performance opportunities (band, choir, theater), student clubs and organizations (like Collegiate Farm Bureau, Phi Theta Kappa, SkillsUSA, STEAM Club, FSCC Media Team, and more), and even competitive judging teams in livestock and meat.

If athletics is more your thing, FSCC is home to intercollegiate sports for both men and women. Compete in basketball, baseball, softball, volleyball, rodeo, track & field, or cross country, all while building friendships and representing the Greyhounds.

And the best part? We’re still growing. New programs, degrees, certifications, and athletic opportunities are on the horizon! There’s never been a better time to join FSCC!

Fort Scott Community College; where opportunity meets possibility.

Bourbon County Local News