Monthly Archives: May 2025
The Artificers June Newsletter
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FSCC Board of Trustees Amended Agenda for May 19
Board of Trustees
Fort Scott Community College
2108 S. Horton
Fort Scott, KS 66701
The Board of Trustees of Fort Scott Community College will meet in regular session on Monday, May
19, 2025. The meeting will be held in Cleaver-Boileau-Burris Hall at Fort Scott Community
College.
5:30 p.m. Regular monthly Board meeting
THE AGENDA
5:30 ROLL CALL, 3
PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
MISSION STATEMENT
Fort Scott Community College is an institution of higher learning with a long history of culture and
diversity that provides affordable academic, technical and occupational programs to meet student needs while
fostering a mutually supportive relationship between the college and its communities.
CALL TO ORDER, 4
A. Comments from the Chair, 4
B. Comments from the Public, 4
C. Recruiting/Admissions Update, 4
CONSENT AGENDA, 5
A. Approval of Agenda, 5
B. Approval of Minutes of previous Regular Board Meeting conducted on April 21, 2025 and
Special Meeting conducted on May 12, 2025, 6
C. Approval Treasurer’s Report, 10
D. Approval of Personnel Actions, 5
DISCUSSION ITEMS, 42
A. Gramm Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA) Information Security Program and Policy, 43
B. Construction Trades and Heavy Equipment Plan, 42
ACTION ITEMS , 52
A. Scheduled Policy Review and Approval, 52
B. Consideration of Dress Code and Appearance Policy, 56
C. Consideration of Collection Agency RFPs, 58
D. Consideration of Elsevier Contract Termination, 61
E. Consideration of Canvas Learning Management System Contract, 62
F. Consideration of Sale of Greyhound Lodge, 69
G. Consideration of One Time Donation to Fort Scott Nazarene Church, 70
H. Approval of Revised Tuition and Fees for 2025-26 Academic Year, 71
I. Consideration of Vice President Contracts for the 2025-26 Academic Year, 75
J. Approval of Agreement between the Joplin Outlaws and Fort Scott Community College, 76
K. Approval of Respondus Lockdown Browser License Renewal, 801
CORRESPONDENCE AND ADMINISTRATIVE UPDATES, 81
EXECUTIVE SESSION, 96
ADJOURNMENT, 97
UPCOMING CALENDAR DATES:
• May 19, 2025 Board Meeting
• May 26, 2025 Campus Closed -Memorial Day
• June 16, 2025 Board Meeting
Sincerely,
Bryan Holt, Chair
Sara Sutton, Interim President
FSCC’s vision for the future is to support “Students First, Community Always” through a
central focus on teaching and learning; advancing strong, innovative programs and
departments; maximizing and leveraging opportunities; initiating efficient and effective
processes; and developing the region’s workforce.2
ROLL CALL
_____ Ronda Bailey
_____ John Bartelsmeyer
_____ Jim Fewins
_____ Bryan Holt
_____ Chad McKinnis
_____ Doug Ropp3
CALL TO ORDER
A. COMMENTS FROM THE CHAIR
B. COMMENTS FROM THE PUBLIC
C. RECRUITING/ADMISSIONS UPDATE4
CONSENT AGENDA
A. APPROVAL OF AGENDA
B. APPROVAL OF MINUTES OF PREVIOUS MEETINGS
Attached are the minutes of the Regular Board Meeting conducted on April 21, 2025 and Special
Meeting conducted on May 12, 2025
C. APPROVAL OF TREASURER’S REPORT AND CHECKS
Attached are the Treasurer’s Report, Financial Report, and Checks Written, Cleared, or Voided
D. APPROVAL OF PERSONNEL ACTIONS
Additions
1) Cecilia Kroen, Nursing Instructor, effective July 1, 2025
Separations
1) Ashton Nolan, Accounting Clerk, effective May 9, 2025
2) Ronnie Jackson, CDL Instructor, effective June 30, 2025
3) Sonia Gugnani, Vice President of Academic Affairs, effective June 30, 2025
RECOMMENDATION: It is recommended that the Consent Agenda items be approved as presented.
BOARD ACTION: MOTION _____ SECOND _____ VOTE _____
DISCUSSION:
VOTE: Bailey Bartelsmeyer Fewins
Holt McKinnis Ropp5
Obituary of Bob McFAll

Bob McFall, 78, passed away Dec. 30, 2024, in Woodburn, Ore.
Bob was born to B.R. “Blackie” and Ruth McFall on May 6, 1946, in Fort Scott, Kan.
Growing up directly behind Fort Scott High School, Bob was able to enjoy an active childhood with practice fields, backstops, tennis courts, and a creek just steps away from home. As a teen, he took on the responsibility of being a paper carrier for the Fort Scott Tribune for six years and working at Whitesides IGA.
After graduating from Fort Scott High School in 1963, Bob attended Fort Scott Community College for a year before transferring to Kansas State Teachers College in Pittsburg, now known as Pittsburg State. At Pittsburg State, Bob got involved singing in choir. The joy of singing remained with him for the rest of his life.
The Vietnam War interrupted his education and Bobby Reynolds McFall, as he legally was known, spent three years in the U.S. Army from 1967 to 1970. While in Vietnam Bob was awarded a Bronze Star. In one of the numerous examples·of his selfless nature, Bob stayed a little longer in Vietnam than he would have needed to so his next youngest brother, John, would not be exposed to the draft for that year.
Returning from Vietnam, he married Kathy Hayes. They later divorced. The Army stationed him in Fort Lewis, Wash., for his final year of service.
After leaving the service, Bob trained as a special agent with Western Insurance. While in training with The Western, Bob was fortunate to spend some time working in the Kansas City office where he met Connie Clark Summers. Bob and Connie married and moved to Seattle where Bob started working as a special
field agent for The Western. After a year, Bob transferred to the Portland, Ore., office and there Bob, Connie, and their daughter Christy lived.
After working for The Western for five years, Bob had the opportunity to work for a specialty lines insurance company and made the move. After a couple of years there, Bob took a big leap. In 1981 he opened McFall General Agency. Working with a phone from a picnic table in his garage and a Rolodex of all the contacts he had established in his years working in the Pacific Northwest, Bob started his company. Eventually Connie and later Christy joined McFall General Agency. They grew the company to as many as 30 employees working out of a suburban Portland office, later adding an office in Seattle as well. Their company would place high risk or unique insurance with carriers of such as Lloyds of
London. During his time as president and owner of McFall General Agency, he served on the board of directors of the National Association of Professional Surplus Lines Offices (NAPSLO). Bob also developed the training curriculum for the NAPSLO. In 2007 Bob and Connie sold their company and retired.
Although he worked very hard, Bob was not all about work. He travelled extensively both in the U.S. and internationally, he coached and umpired softball, officiated ski races, was involved in his church and his church choir. He spent time with Connie, Christy and his grandchildren Devon and Jaci at Cannon Beach, Oregon and later, after they built a beach home on the Pacific coast, at Rockaway Beach, Oregon.
Bob enjoyed life and the fruits of his labor and generously shared them with others. A few examples: He and Connie had Portland Trailblazer season tickets for years and generally shared them with friends and clients. An employee of McFall General Agency had a parent die and could not pay for the funeral.
He paid for it. Family members were in Las Vegas for a basketball tournament and he surprised everyone with tickets to a Backstreet Boys concert. He had a favorite Mexican restaurant in Aloha, the
Portland suburb where he, Connie, and Christy lived. When he went there, the waiter would ask everyone at the table what they wanted except Bob. He was a regular and he was going to get the same
thing so they did not bother asking.
In March of 2013, Bob had a stroke, which limited his ability to talk to maybe 10 words or so. It did not limit his ability to communicate. He could respond with an enthusiastic hi, a chuckle, yes and no and a
few more words and direct where he wanted to go. His family marveled how during visits to Oregon Bob would point and nonverbally direct them on where to turn as he rode along in the car, sometimes taking back roads that still resulted in everyone getting to the final destination. Although he was technically
non-verbal the last years of his life, he still could enjoy his love of singing. Hymns, rock songs from his youth and more.
Bob McFall lived life as builder of relationships, a builder of a business, with a sense of adventure and travel and of experiences that he could only have dreamed of growing up in a small Kansas town.
His mother, Ruth Hewett McFall, his father Bert Reynolds “Blackie” McFall, his wife Connie McFall, preceded
him in death. He is survived by his daughter Christy Jones, Washougal, Wash., his grandson Devon Jones, granddaughter Jaci Jones; his brother John McFall and sister-in-law Gina McFall of Olathe, Kan., and their five children Manda, Brett, Jeremy, Kimi and Clint; his brother Brent McFall and sister-in-law Gail McFall of Buckeye, Ariz., and their three children, Rebecca, Joshua and Brandon; his brother Brian McFall and sister-in-law Carol McFall of Lawrence, Kan., and their two children Allison and Mallory.
Graveside services for Bob will be at the Fort Scott National Cemetery on Wednesday, May 28, 2025 at 12:30 p.m.
Streeter Turned Fascination With Animals Into A Business

Tanner Streeter, 25, is an artist whose specialty is animals.
“I’ve been an artist my whole life, with a primary focus on animals,” he said. “I grew up hunting and fishing, so I’ve always been surrounded by nature. I spent much of my time studying animals I saw in life, in books, or on TV so that I may understand their anatomy well enough to draw them accurately.”
“My parents would take me on trips to zoos to satisfy my fascination with animals, as well as places like Cabela’s or Bass Pro Shops. In those places, the taxidermy on display captivated me at a very young age. I would think of taxidermy as almost magical, since I could not comprehend how it was accomplished.”
“When I was 18 and about to graduate my senior year of high school from Christian Learning Center, I began practicing taxidermy on small animals that I could acquire.”
He was inspired by a taxidermy how-to book that his parents, Bernard and Torrie Streeter, had given him for Christmas.
“Much to my surprise, after making a Facebook post about my endeavors in taxidermy, a mutual online friend, Dale Robertson of Wild Heritage Taxidermy in Young, Arizona, reached out to me and offered me an apprenticeship with him. He had followed me for my artwork that I would post, and I followed his taxidermy work, so that’s how we were connected. Dale is a renowned taxidermist with multiple prestigious awards.”
“I packed everything I owned into my little Chevy Blazer and drove to Arizona, where I lived for a year and a half in a trailer at the Robertson’s home and learned everything a beginner needed to know about taxidermy and then some. I competed at the last Arizona state show (their association is no longer active) in 2019 and won the title Best New Competitor and a 2nd and 3rd place with a coyote and a deer I had brought.”
Streeter learned much in that time.
“When I came back, I got a job at Outdoors Indoors in Pittsburg, KS. I got to do some taxidermy from all over the world…Africa, Greenland, and New Zealand, along with locals. My ultimate goal was to have my own business, and my first year on my own, I got an LLC (limited liability company business structure).”
He has competed at state, national, and the World Taxidermy Show, earning an assortment of first, second, and third-place ribbons.
He’s earned the titles of Best Professional Gamehead of Kansas 2023, Best Professional Small Lifesize Mammal of Kansas 2025, and Best Professional Open Mouth Whitetail of Kansas 2025.

“Competing is vital for me since it sharpens my craft and allows me to learn from the best of the best in seminars and from my judges during critiques.”
His business model prioritizes quality over quantity.
“I take a limited number of animals each year… I take extra effort to make each animal as accurate as possible, and I try to capture the unique qualities of each specimen. I’m recreating that particular animal down to the smallest anatomical detail. From muscles and hair patterns to glands and membranes in the corner of the eye. Nothing is too small to overlook.”
“Taxidermy is an art, and I treat it just as another medium. Just like if I choose to draw with a pencil or paint with a brush. I am trying to recreate God’s creation to the best of the ability He gave me.”
He started his business, Tanners Wildlife Artistry LLC, in 2022 and shares a business building with Whitetail Properties Real Estate at 306 E. 23rd, next to Riggs Chiropractic.
“I do roughly 70-80 animals annually. This keeps turnaround times and my workload reasonable.”

“I am a mammal specialist, so I currently do not do taxidermy work on birds or fish. I have been blessed to work on a wide variety of animals from around the world, including baboons, warthogs, and antelopes from Africa; red stags, fallow deer, and wallabies from New Zealand; and black bears, elk, and deer from both the U.S. and Canada.”


The Process
With large animals, the animal is skinned, then salted and dried.
“Once I get it, I rehydrate the skin, and then tan it in a chemical bath with a tanning formula. Then the leather must be thinned to put on a foam mannequin. I do a great deal of clay sculpting on the form. I then apply a glue to the form, put the hide on, and put everything into place and sew up any incisions.”

“If an animal has antlers or horns, that part of the skull is cleaned, getting the meat broken down and cleaned off. This is to prevent Chronic Wasting Disease from spreading.”
He charges customers by the time factor plus materials.
“I go the extra mile on every piece,” he said.
Other Artwork Around Fort Scott

One can view some of Streeter’s artistic work on the wall of Structure Hair Salon on National Avenue.
In 2023, he was part of a group of people creating wall murals in Fort Scott. “The Bison” was created by artists Cally Bailey, Emily Bailey, and Tanner Streeter.
Tanner is married to Johnnie, and they have a three-month-old daughter, Annabella.
Find out more on his Facebook and Instagram under the business name or tannerswildlifeartistry.com.
The Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office Daily Reports May 15
Zoning Forum in Uniontown
Roughly 50 people attended a forum at the Uniontown Community Center Wednesday evening to hear what the zoning advisor committee has been working on and to give feedback. After explaining the role of the committee, members explained the facts and recommendations in their hand out and then opened the floor for comments.
Six people took the opportunity to express their opposition to or concern about what was being proposed. The committee then asked the attendees to indicate whether they were for, against, or undecided on zoning. There was some confusion as to what exactly was being voted on and the process, but in the end roughly 6 people were for zoning, about 2 or 3 were undecided, and the rest who voted were opposed.
There will be two more forums next week. May 20th at 6 pm there will be a meeting at Fulton Community Center. The final meeting will be on May 21st at 6 pm at Memorial Hall in Fort Scott.
A video of the meeting can be found below. The meeting starts approximately 10 minutes into the video.
Obituary of Wilmetta Burton

Wilmetta Burton, age 92, a resident of Ft. Scott, Kansas passed away unexpectedly Tuesday, May 13, 2025, at her home. Willie, as she was sometimes called, was born April 8, 1933, in Humboldt, Kansas, the daughter of Oscar William Cline and Daisy Jones Cline. She married William J. “Bill” Burton on December 23, 1948, at Iola, Kansas.
Wilmetta had worked in the business office at Newman Young Clinic for over twenty years. Wilmetta was a devoted wife and mother who dearly loved her family. She especially enjoyed spending time with her grandchildren and great-grandchildren. She enjoyed eating out, especially Chinese food. Always looking for a good deal or treasure, she also enjoyed shopping and going to garage sales.
When visiting her daughter in the Tulsa area, she attended the Brother to Brother Biker Church. Wilmetta, along with her grandson, was baptized on July 8, 2021.
Survivors include her two children, Mike Burton (Judy) of Ft. Scott, Kansas and Debbie Coats (Kenneth) of Glenpool, Oklahoma, six grandchildren, ten great-grandchildren and five great-great-grandchildren. Also surviving is a brother, Doug Cline of Cerritos, California.
Wilmetta was preceded in death by her husband, Bill, on March 20, 2016. She was also preceded in death by her parents and seven brothers and sisters.
Graveside services will be held at 1:30 P.M. Tuesday, May 20th at the U. S. National Cemetery.
Friends and family may meet at the Cheney Witt Chapel prior to leaving for the cemetery at 1:15 P.M.
Memorials are suggested to St. Jude’s Hospital and may be left in care of the Cheney Witt Chapel, 201 S. Main, P.O. Box 347, Ft. Scott, KS 66701. Words of remembrance may be submitted to the online guestbook at cheneywitt.com.
Zoning Advisory Meeting – Uniontown at 6 p.m. today
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K-47 resurfacing work starts this week

The Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT) plans to begin a resurfacing project on K-47 in Crawford County on Friday, May 16. The mill and overlay work will begin at the east city limits of Girard and continue east for 7 miles to end at U.S. 69.
Flaggers and a pilot car will direct one-lane traffic through the work zone during weekday daylight hours, Drivers can expect delays of no longer than 15 minutes. The work should be completed in one month, weather permitting.
KDOT awarded the $1.2 million construction contract to Bettis Asphalt & Construction Inc., of Topeka. People with questions may contact Construction Engineer Bukola Oni, 620-308-7615, or Public Information Officer Priscilla Petersen, 620-902-6433.
K-65, in Northern Bourbon County, to close for pipe replacement on May 20
K-65 to close for pipe replacement on May 20

The Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT) will close K-65 in Bourbon County to replace a crossroad pipe on Tuesday, May 20, weather permitting.
K-65 will be closed between the junctions of K-3 and K-31 for the entire day, reopening in the evening. Drivers should use other routes during the closure.
People with questions may contact KDOT Superintendent Jeff Marks, 620-901-6550, or Public Information Officer Priscilla Petersen, 620-902-6433.
Handout From Zoning Advisory Committee Forum
Zoning in Bourbon County – Facts & Recommendations
The advisory committee determined the Purpose of Zoning in Bourbon County would be:
- To conserve productive farm and ranch lands for future generations and protect such land from the impacts of unfettered development of large scale industrial and commercial uses.
- To protect property values and conserve our natural resources.
- To create a landscape where residential, agricultural, commercial and industrial zones can coexist harmoniously without conflict.
- To promote and encourage economic growth in the county.
- To put in place a process that provides more transparency of large scale industrial land use.
“Zoning” is the classification of land according to how it is used and defines how it can be used in the future – it is planning where certain industries can locate. Zoning itself is not “codes” although the Conditional Use Permit process can allow a few codes to be written into zoning regulations.
Zoning would only relate to unincorporated areas of the county. Incorporated cities, which are Fort Scott, Bronson, Uniontown, Redfield, Mapleton and Fulton will continue to be under the guidance of their city zoning and/or codes regulations.
Kansas statute mandates that land used for agricultural purposes is exempt from all zoning restrictions. This means that you cannot be made to pay a permit fee to construct a barn on your farm. This exemption extends to your personal residence, if located on your ag land.
When zoning is enacted all existing businesses are grandfathered, meaning they cannot be forced to adhere to the new zoning regulations. We are proposing “no-phaseout” which would exempt grandfathered businesses for their lifetime, whether new owners take over or the business grows and expands, etc.
Transparency: Kansas statute requires at least three levels of input/approval prior to zoning being implemented or changed; this gives more citizen input and oversight than currently exists where only 2 commissioners can pass any action they desire with absolutely no public notice or input. These three levels are: 1. Submission to the Zoning Board 2. Required public hearings that allow citizen comments 3. County Commission approval. For the Commission to override the Zoning Board it takes a 2/3 majority vote, which after January will be 4 out of 5 commissioners.
We plan to advise a maximum of 4 zones: Agricultural, Residential Transition, Industrial, Commercial.
We are NOT PROHIBITING specific businesses or land use. We are NOT recommending CODES requirements for anything other than a few large commercial or industrial businesses that would require a Conditional Use Permit due to size, sound, smell, location, or other determinates that would be considered obnoxious to most people living in close proximity. The intention of zoning is not to harass or hamstring anyone with regulations, rather it is to create a method for transparency by which the public can become aware large scale business developments and give our local government official the necessary tools to set terms or negotiate with those businesses for terms that benefit the company and the County taxpayers.
(From the Zoning Advisory Committee)















