FSCC Board of Trustees Special Meeting June 11, 2026

Ellis Fine Arts Center on the campus of Fort Scott Community College, 2401 S. Horton.

FORT SCOTT COMMUNITY COLLEGE
BOARD OF TRUSTEES SPECIAL MEETING
ELLIS FINE ARTS CENTER
JUNE 11, 2026 – 12:00 P.M.

PUBLIC AGENDA

1.0 CALL MEETING TO ORDER – CHAIR DOUG ROPP

1.1 Roll Call of Trustees by the Clerk:
Bailey, Brown, Cosens, Hoyt, McKinnis, Ropp

2.0 FLAG SALUTE & INVOCATION
3.0 LEADERSHIP REPORTS & UPDATES (INFORMATION)

3.1 Academics – Vice President of Academic Affairs – Dr. Larry Guerrero
3.2 Advancement – Dean of Advancement – Lindsay Hill
3.3 Athletics – Athletic Director – Dave Wiemers
3.4 Finance – CFO – Vice President of Finance & Operations – Gina Shelton
3.5 Student Services – Vice President of Student Affairs – Vanessa Poyner
3.6 Grant Updates – Dean of Advancement – Lindsay Hill
3.7 Presidential Update – President Dr. Jack Welch

4.0 REVIEW OF JUNE 15TH AGENDA ITEMS (INFORMATION)
5.0 PERSONNEL

5.1 Enter Executive Session – Personnel Matters (ACTION)
5.2 Exit Executive Session – Return to Open Session (ACTION)

6.0 BOARD MEMBER TRAINING (INFORMATION)
7.0 ADJOURN (ACTION)

Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office Daily Reports June 10

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

Arrested

Rodriguez, Ashley Katherine (Age 32) – Arrested 6/9/2026 12:30 PM by Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office. Charge: Warrant – Fort Scott Municipal. Bond: $500.00 Cash. Released 6/9/2026 1:15 PM.

Released

Rodriguez, Ashley Katherine – Released 6/9/2026 1:15 PM via Cash Bond (Self).

Sawyer, Emily A (Age 41) – Released 6/9/2026 2:49 PM via Surety Bond (Able Bonding).

Total Inmates Released: 2

Documents:

Reports of Sheriff Martin’s Collapse at Congressional Ceremony Tuesday

Multiple sources say that Sheriff Martin collapsed and hit his head during a Congressional Records presentation at FSCC on Tuesday June 9th. FortScott.biz reached out to the Sheriff’s office for an official statement soon after the event, but no one was available for comment. The Sheriff’s office Facebook page was updated shortly after 3pm on Tuesday to say they were closed for the rest of the day.


Posts on Bourbon County GOP, Senator Marshall, Bourbon County Sheriff’s and The City of Fort Scott’s Facebook pages are  full of comments with calls for prayers for his quick recovery.

2:34 update statement from Bill Martin’s Family:

Sheriff Martin suffered a medical emergency during an awards assembly on 6/9/26. As of this morning the Sheriff is in critical condition but is stable at this time. The family and the Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office appreciates the prayers and everyone who respected our privacy during this time.

FortScott.biz will update with more information when it becomes available. 

Chamber Coffee Hosted by Varia Quality Resale Clothing on June 11

Join us for Chamber Coffee

hosted by Chamber Member

Varia

Quality Resale Clothing

Thursday, June 11th

 

8am

@ Varia
114 E. 23rd St.

We hope to see you there!

The Fort Scott Area Chamber of Commerce invites members and guests to a Chamber Coffee hosted by Varia Quality Resale Clothing, 114 E. 23rd St. this Thursday, June 11th at 8am.

Coffee, juice, and refreshments will be served, and attendees may register to win a special drawing.

Varia offers affordable prices and a variety of high-quality used items, including women’s, teens’, and children’s clothing, as well as purses, shoes, jewelry, and more. Owner, Robin Kendrick, is celebrating her 5th year in business and is excited to host this event and welcome the community to join in the celebration.

Varia’s June Special will feature a $25 store credit drawing. Customers who spend a minimum of $20 when shopping in-store may register for the drawing.

For more information, contact the Chamber at (620) 223-356. Visit the Events Calendar at fortscott.com and select the Chamber Coffees category for upcoming locations.

Click HERE to visit

Varia Facebook Page!

Click HERE to visit

Varia website!

A special thank you to our Chamber Champion members below…
Fort Scott Area Chamber of Commerce

231 E. Wall St., Fort Scott, KS 66701

620-223-3566

fortscott.com

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Inside the Bourbon County Election Process: A Step-By-Step Walkthrough

The County Clerk and Election Officer Susan Walker and Deputy Clerk Amber Page walked FortScott.biz through the election process showing the procedures their office uses to take in, track, and reconcile every ballot cast in a Bourbon County election.

This article shows the order that an election unfolds, starting with building the ballot weeks before Election Day and ending with the canvass after Election Day.

Important Terms:

KNOWiNK Poll Pad: The electronic tablet voters sign in on at the polling place. KNOWiNK is the vendor; Poll Pad is the device.

ePolls: The Clerk’s office shorthand for the electronic pollbook export from the Poll Pads. The data feeds into ELVIS after the election.

ELVIS: Election Voter Information System. The Kansas Secretary of State’s statewide voter registration and credit system.

Clear Ballot: The scanner system voters insert marked ballots into at the polling place.

ClearDesign: Clear Ballot’s ballot-design software. Used by the Clerk’s office to build each election’s ballot manually, race by race and precinct by precinct.

UOCAVA: Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act. Federal law governing absentee ballots for military and overseas voters.

Manual pollbook: Paper backup pollbook used when Poll Pads fail. Voters sign by hand and are credited in ELVIS afterward.

Provisional ballot: A ballot cast under questioned circumstances (e.g., wrong polling place). Whether it counts is decided later, at the canvass.

Chain-of-custody sheet: Daily log signed by both Walker and Page when retrieving and validating mail-in advance ballots from the office mailbox.

Canvass / Board of Canvassers: Post-election review by the Board of Canvassers (typically the county commissioners) that decides which provisional ballots count and finalizes results.

Supervising judge: The election worker overseeing a specific polling place on Election Day. They serve once a year.

Precinct part: A sub-unit of a precinct that votes on slightly different combinations of races, created by redistricting.

1. Building the ballot

Designing a Bourbon County ballot is a weeks-long process, handled primarily by Page. She uses Clear Ballot’s design software, called ClearDesign. Every piece of information has to be typed in manually: the name of the election, the date, every race, every district, every precinct, which races appear on each precinct’s ballot, which voter groups can vote on each race, and which polling places each precinct’s ballot is available at.

Primary elections add another layer. Every contest has to be mapped to the parties that will appear in it, and every candidate has to be linked to the correct party, so they show up on the right party’s ballot.

Recent redistricting in Bourbon County added significantly to that complexity by creating more precincts and what Page called precinct parts. These are sub-units that vote on slightly different combinations of races. The Clerk’s office relies heavily on the district map to determine which precinct or precinct split a given voter belongs to.

Walker said that last year, after an issue discovered with the early voting ballots forced Page to rebuild an entire election configuration, work that would normally have taken several weeks, in hours to have them ready in time for voting day.

The Clerk’s office uses multiple internal and external reviewers to look at the ballot before it goes live, including people outside the office checking for spelling and other errors. Walker said the goal is to keep iterating on the process, “we keep trying to do everything better. We keep doing new processes to make it simpler.”

2. Preparing ballots for the polls

Once the ballot is finalized and printed, every ballot the Clerk’s office sends to a polling place is sealed with a numbered seal. The supervising judge at each polling place is required to keep those seals and return them. If a seal has to be broken, a new seal goes on and is logged. All seals are audited against the equipment they were applied to.

The Clerk’s office also manually counts every ballot before sending it out. On the morning of Election Day, the polling-place staff recount what was delivered and validate the count with the Clerk’s office. At the end of the day, the polling-place staff recount the unused ballots before sending everything back.

3. Voter check-in at the polling place

When a voter walks in to vote, they sign in on a Poll Pad — an electronic check-in tablet running software from a company called KNOWiNK on an iPad. The Poll Pad captures the voter’s signature and identifying information.

If the Poll Pad system goes down, there is a paper backup with the manual pollbook. Voters sign the manual pollbook, and the Clerk’s office later enters those records into the state voter system by hand. Walker described one recent example: on the first day of early voting before the November 2025 election, the Poll Pads malfunctioned, and 29 voters signed the manual pollbook. All 29 were later manually credited with voting in the state system.

If a voter shows up at the wrong polling place, they sign a separate provisional pollbook and fill out additional provisional paperwork. Whether that ballot ends up counting is decided later, at the canvass described below.

4. Mail-in and advance ballots

Some voters cast their ballots by mail rather than in person. Mail-in advance ballots are checked every single day during the advance-voting window. Walker and Page personally retrieve ballots from the mailbox together, count and validate them, log them on a chain-of-custody sheet, and both sign off. The log records how many ballots came in that day but not the voters’ names.

The office tracks who was mailed an advance ballot and who has returned it. If something is wrong — for example, a voter and their spouse have signed each other’s envelopes — the office returns the ballot for correction. Some ballots come back from the post office because of bad addresses. Those, too, are handled manually.

Kansas recently changed the law on advance-ballot returns. Previously, ballots could arrive up to three days after Election Day and still count. Under the new rule, advance ballots must be in by 7 p.m. on Election Day to count. Walker noted the new deadline is currently the subject of litigation, but the Kansas Secretary of State has directed county election officials to plan as though the 7 p.m. deadline is final.

Military voters and overseas voters are tracked separately under federal UOCAVA (Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act) rules. Walker said Bourbon County typically sees about two UOCAVA ballots a year.

5. Casting the ballot: the scanner

When a voter inserts a filled out ballot into the voting machine at the polling place, they’re using a system called Clear Ballot. At the end of the day, the Clear Ballot machine produces a report listing how many ballots passed through it.

Occasionally there are anomalies. Walker described one example: a voter who was issued a provisional ballot can sometimes tear the ballot off and run it through the regular scanner instead of returning it to the supervising judge. Those anomalies are noted at the end of the day.

6. Reconciling the count

After Election Day, the Clerk’s office reconciles every election against three independent systems:

  1. The Poll Pad / ePolls export — the electronic check-in log that captures every voter who signed in on a Poll Pad and, after the election, gets imported into the state’s voter system.
  2. ELVIS — short for Election Voter Information System, the Kansas Secretary of State’s statewide voter registration and credit system. ELVIS receives both the automatic Poll Pad import and any manual entries (provisional ballots, manual pollbook entries, etc.).
  3. Clear Ballot — the scanner-side count of ballots that physically went through the machines on Election Day.

Walker said all three numbers are expected to tie out. If they don’t, the office investigates. In her experience, when the numbers don’t match, the discrepancy is almost always in advance ballots or provisionals — what she called “the most room for human error.”

As a concrete example, in last year’s election the office processed 36 provisional ballots, of which 12 didn’t count, and 13 advance ballots.

7. The canvass

After the initial reconciliation, a Board of Canvassers — typically the county commissioners themselves, though they can appoint someone else to do it on their behalf, which Walker said has happened on many occasions — meets to go through every provisional ballot and decide which ones count.

Provisional ballots are evaluated against specific statutory standards. Ahead of the canvass, Page goes through each provisional and identifies which statute applies and whether the ballot likely qualifies, in order to speed up the commissioners’ review. The commissioners make the final call. Once the canvass is complete, the results are entered into ELVIS.


Voters interested in verify their own voting history can go to the Kansas Secretary of State website and enter their name and birthdate. That lookup queries ELVIS.

Walker described cases of voters who had voted but couldn’t find a record on the state site. The cause was usually a name-entry error from years earlier — for example, an entry that placed a voter’s first name into the middle-name field, so the lookup didn’t return a match. The Clerk’s office can fix those records once notified. Walker said voters who can’t find their record on the state site should call the office. (620-223-3800 ext. 100)

Each polling place is overseen by a supervising judge — election workers who are on duty only once a year. Walker said training has historically been short for that reason. The Clerk’s office is planning longer training this year to walk supervising judges through specific responsibilities and procedures.

The Clerk’s office was recently awarded an $8,500 election-security grant from the state.

Walker said the office plans to use the grant to:

  • Buy five carts to securely hold ballots in transit. Currently, supervising judges — many of whom are elderly volunteers — have to move ballots to the polling places the night before Election Day. With the carts, ballots can stay sealed in the carts and be delivered for them.
  • Add additional security cameras. Walker mentioned that the office had previously had a camera missing from the election room; the grant will pay to address that as well.

Walker said the grant had been approved just the week before the May 22 walkthrough.

This article is based on a May 22, 2026 demonstration at the Bourbon County Courthouse. The videos of the walk through of the process are shown below.

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Obituary of Michael Wayne Meanor

Michael Wayne Meanor, 49, passed away on Sunday, June 7, 2026 at the Freeman West Hospital in Joplin, Missouri.

Mike was born January 16, 1977, in Niskayuna, New York, to Linda Lee DeLapp Meanor and Martin Wayne Meanor. The family later moved to the Uniontown, Kansas, area where he grew up and graduated from Uniontown High School with the Class of 1996.

On July 30, 1999, Mike married April Dawn Peck, in Fort Scott, Kansas. Together they raised their two children, Bryce and Marissa.

Following high school, Mike attended Butler County Community College, where he earned a degree in Fire Science. He served his community as a firefighter in the Wichita area and later with the Fort Scott Fire Department. Throughout his working years, he was employed by Bourbon County, Dayco, and Mid-Continental Restoration. However, the work he loved most was farming. Mike found great satisfaction working as a farm hand for both G3 and Cloverdale Farms, where he enjoyed being outdoors and caring for the land and livestock.

Uniontown USD 235 to Hold Board Retreat, Superintendent Search

Uniontown High School.

The Special Board of Education Meeting – Board Retreat for Uniontown USD 235 will be held June 10 from 10AM to 5PM at Greenbush, Girard, KS.

Agenda

I. Call to Order

  • Approve the Agenda

II. Superintendent Search

III. Strategic Plan – Identify 2026-2027 Goals

IV. Capital Outlay Plan

V. Board Survey

  • Superintendent Related Questions
  • Strategic Plan – Related Questions
  • Evaluation – Related Questions

VI. Adjournment

USD 234 Board of Education, June 8 Meeting Minutes

USD 234 Board of Education Building, 424 S. Main

BOARD OF EDUCATION REGULAR MEETING
NEWS RELEASE
Monday, June 08, 2026

Members of the USD 234 Board of Education met at 5:30 p.m. on Monday, June 08, 2026, for their regular monthly meeting at 424 S Main St.

President David Stewart opened the meeting.
The board approved the official agenda.
The board approved the consent agenda.

Board Minutes
05-11-26
Financials – Cash Flow Report
Check Register
Payroll – May 20, 2026 – $1,847,447.95
Activity Funds Accounts
USD 234 Gifts
KASB Policy Updates
Extended Trip Application – Brent Cavin
High School Lunch Increase

There was one present for Public Forum.

Coach Jon Barnes, Assistant Coach Karlie Chipman, and Caleb Hall were present to discuss the Boys’ golf season. As a team they were able to attend the second day of state with many of them scoring the best they had all season. Coach Barnes said he was immensely proud of the team and how they represented Fort Scott High School.

Coach Kent Aikin was present with a few of the girls from the 4A State Champion Softball team. They finished the season 28-3. He also said he was proud of the team and how they managed this season.

Coach Tracy Bogina and Coach Myers along with two seniors, Claire McElroy and Daymeion Anderson, praised the team for their accomplishments this season. They had thirteen qualify in seven events for state. Coach Bogina said they were a young team but proud of the way they finished.

Assistant Superintendent Terry Mayfield provided a shared document and updated on several grants that the district is applying for to help offset some costs of projects. This month will start the budget closeout and start up for next school year’s budget. There are many summer projects underway, and things are busy around the district.

Assistant Superintendent Zach Johnson updated the Board on the HB2299 that will include cell phones not being allowed from start of the school until the end of the school day. This also include two-way
communication between staff and students. There was discussion on where the phones that are in the building will be stored during the day, but no action was taken. During the July board meeting there will be policies that will be discussed and adopted regarding this bill. More information will be available soon.

Special Education Director Tonya Barnes shared an update on the 6B grant. The district has 112 ESY students with forty staff, the summer is going well.

The Board approved the following:
• Demolition & Parking Lot Construction Bids – Skitch’s Hauling & Excavation
• KASB Policy Plus Agreement
• 2026-27 KASB Worker’s Compensation Renewal
• KICS Property & Casualty Insurance Renewal 2026-27
• Iready Subscription Renewal 2026-27
• Winfield Scott Technology Purchase
• Middle School Staff Laptop Purchase
• Student Chromebook Purchase

The Board went into executive session for negotiations.
The Board went into executive session for personnel matters.
The Board went into executive session for contracts.
The Board approved Certified, Classified, Administrative, and Director Salary Schedule.

President David Stewart adjourned the meeting.

Freeman Acquires Pinamonti Wellness Center

Freeman Health System Announces Acquisition of Pinamonti Wellness Center  

 

 

JOPLIN, Mo. — Freeman Health System is pleased to announce the acquisition of Pinamonti Wellness Center, a respected community-focused fitness and wellness facility known for its commitment to performance, longevity, and whole-person health.

The center is located at 1014 Mt. Carmel Way, Pittsburg, KS.

 

This strategic investment represents a significant step forward in Freeman’s ongoing commitment to expand access to high-quality orthopedic care, rehabilitation, and preventive wellness services across the region. By integrating Pinamonti Wellness Center into its care network, Freeman is strengthening its ability to support patients across the full continuum of musculoskeletal health, from injury prevention and recovery to long-term performance and well-being.

 

“This is a meaningful opportunity to bring together two strong programs with a shared focus on patient outcomes and whole-person health,” said Mick Ward, Director of Professional Support for Freeman Health System. “Together, we are enhancing access to services that help patients stay active, recover more fully, and live healthier lives, close to home.”

 

Located in a modern, state-of-the-art facility, Pinamonti Wellness Center will complement Freeman’s growing Orthopedic Medicine program by offering expanded programming, stronger integration between clinical care and wellness services, and access to leading physicians and care teams.

 

Freeman Health System also looks forward to supporting the Center’s long-term growth by investing in resources and programming that strengthens community health and empowers individuals to lead more active, healthier lives.

 

“At Freeman, we believe care should extend beyond the walls of a hospital,” Renee Denton, MO/KS Market President for Freeman Health System added. “This partnership allows us to meet people where they are, supporting movement, recovery, and wellness in ways that improve outcomes and enhance quality of life.”

 

The acquisition reflects Freeman’s continued focus on expanding access, strengthening communities, and delivering high-quality care where patients need it most.

 

 

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About Freeman Health System
Locally owned and nationally recognized, Freeman Health System is a not-for-profit health system serving communities across Missouri, Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Kansas through a network of hospitals, physician clinics, outpatient locations, and specialty services. The system includes Freeman Hospital West, Freeman Hospital East, Freeman Neosho Hospital, and the Freeman Health System facilities in Bentonville, Springdale, Willow Creek, and Siloam Springs. Freeman Health System also operates Ozark Center—the region’s largest provider of behavioral health services, and offers comprehensive cancer, cardiology, neurology and neurosurgery, orthopedics, and women’s and children’s services. The system is supported by more than 7,000 employees and is the only Children’s Miracle Network Hospital in a 70-mile radius. For more information, visit Freeman Health System.

 

 

    

#YourHealthIsWhyWeCare

 

 

KS Attorney General Opposes Clemency Requests For Death Row Inmates

Kobach strongly opposes clemency for Kansas death row inmates, urges Gov. Kelly to reject requests and uphold jury verdicts

WICHITA – (June 9, 2026) – Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach today voiced strong opposition to clemency requests filed by nearly all of Kansas’s death row inmates. At a press conference today flanked by law enforcement, Sedgwick County District Attorney Marc Bennett and victim family members, Kobach called on Governor Laura Kelly to reject the petitions and respect the jury verdicts that imposed the ultimate punishment for these heinous crimes.

“These clemency requests are an outrage to the victims of these killers and all Kansans. A jury sentenced them to death. I urge Gov. Kelly to reject clemency and deliver long-overdue justice for the families. As attorney general, I support the death penalty and oppose any effort to set aside the jurors’ decisions to impose this penalty,” Kobach said.

Between May 1 and May 30, eight of the nine individuals on Kansas’s death row initiated formal clemency proceedings. There is a limited window for the public to provide comment.

Kansas employs one of the highest standards in the nation for imposing a capital sentence. Every death row inmate seeking clemency was convicted and sentenced by a jury, upheld by a judge, and affirmed through multiple layers of appellate review. The state has not carried out an execution since 1965, underscoring the deliberate and painstaking nature of the process.

These cases represent some of the most brutal crimes in Kansas history, claiming the lives of students, law enforcement officers, mothers, fathers, teachers, and children including:

·       Carrie Williams, a 20-year-old Pittsburg State University student

·       Miki Martinez, a 19-year-old mother from Great Bend

·       Darren Wornkey, a 24-year-old father from Great Bend

·       Matt Samuels, a hero and the Sheriff of Greenwood County, Kansas

·       Jason Befort, originally from Pratt, a teacher and coach from Augusta

·       Brad Heyka, 27, originally from Dodge City, he worked at Koch Industries

·       Heather Muller, a preschool teacher at St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic School

·       Aaron Sander, a 29-year-old who was studying to become a priest

·       Ann Walenta, a gifted cellist and member of the Wichita Symphony Orchestra

·       Dorothy Wight, a mother and grandmother from Burlingame

·       Karen Kahler, a mother and homemaker from Burlingame

·       Emily Kahler, an 18-year-old freshman studying at St. Louis College of Pharmacy

·       Lauren Kahler, a 16-year-old who played tennis and bass guitar in a rock band

·       Jodi Sanderholm, a 19-year-old dancer from Arkansas City

·       Kaylie Bailey, a 21-year-old mother from Ottawa

·       Lana Bailey, an 18-month-old toddler beloved by her family

·       Andrew Stout, a 30-year-old who loved frisbee golf and Mario Brothers

·       Steven White, a 31-year-old

·       Suzette Trouten, a 27-year-old nursing student

·       Izabela Lewicka, a 20-year-old born in Poland, studying at Purdue University

·       Lisa Stasi, a 20-year-old mother originally from Alabama

·       Beverly Bonner, a 49-year-old prison librarian

·       Sheila Faith, a 45-year-old mother

·       Debbie Lynn Faith, a 15-year-old daughter

“Granting clemency to multiple death row inmates — particularly in the final weeks of a gubernatorial term and based on personal opposition to the death penalty — would substitute one person’s policy preference for the considered judgment of juries, judges, and appellate courts,” Kobach emphasized. “Kansas law enforcement asks Governor Kelly to honor the verdicts of the juries, the families of the victims who have waited decades for finality, and the men and women in law enforcement whose safety depends on the strong message this state sends about the consequences of the most serious crimes. As the maxim holds: mercy to the guilty is cruelty to the innocent. The victims and their families deserve justice.”

Letters opposing clemency may be sent to the Prison Review Board at 714 SW Jackson, Ste. 300, Topeka, KS 66603, or emailed to KDOC_Victim_Notification@ks.gov (mailto:_Victim_Notification@ks.gov). Comments may also be directed to Governor Laura Kelly at the Kansas Statehouse, 300 SW 10th Ave., Ste. 241S, Topeka, KS 66612, or by phone at 785-296-3232 or 785-368-8500.

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Official US Flag Disposal Ceremony 

Fort Scott National Historic Site

Fort Scott, Kan. – Saturday, June 13, 2026, at 3:30 p.m., Fort Scott National Historic Site, American Legion Post 25, and Fort Scott Fire Department will be hosting an official US Flag Disposal Ceremony. Bring your: United States, POW/MIA, State, and Service (U.S. Army, U.S. Marine Corps, U.S. Navy, U.S. Air Force, U.S. Coast Guard) flags to the fort between now and 3:30 p.m. Saturday and we will properly and respectfully dispose of them. Just as there’s etiquette for displaying Old Glory, there’s also etiquette for disposing of flags in a dignified manner.

4 U.S. Code § 8k (Respect for flag) states that: The flag, when it is in such condition that it is no longer a fitting emblem for display, should be destroyed in a dignified way, preferably by burning. “As with celebrating this country’s newest citizens at our Naturalization Ceremony and honoring those who have made the ultimate sacrifice for our freedom through the ‘Field of Honor’ during Symbols of Sacrifice, we are proud to be a part in honoring this country’s flag by hosting this ceremony,” said Jill Jaworski, Superintendent, Fort Scott National Historic Site.

Fort Scott National Historic Site, a unit of the National Park Service, is open Friday through Tuesday from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Park grounds are open daily from one-half hour before sunrise to one-half hour after sunset. For more information or to learn how to get involved, call 620-223-0310 or visit www.nps.gov/fosc.

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Credit Photo as: NPS Photo

Submitted by

Carl Brenner
Program Manager for Interpretation and Resource Management
Fort Scott National Historic Site (www.nps.gov/fosc)

National Park Service, DOI Region 5

Office – 620-223-0310

www.facebook.com/FortScottNPS

www.instagram.com/FortScottNPS