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Tiger Swimmers Earn Firsts

City Commission Meets Sat. Feb.8
Lauber Municipal Law will be holding a City Officials Training Seminar on Saturday, February 8th, 2020 from 8:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. The seminar will be held in the City Commission meeting room. The City Commission has been invited and a majority of the City Commission may attend, although this is not a formal meeting of the Commission, nor will binding action be taken. This gathering may be subject to the Kansas Open Meetings Act and thus it is considered an open meeting.
The seminar’s agenda includes topics in Kansas Local Government law.
The Fort Scott Police Department Daily Reports Jan. 31 to Feb. 4
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Ribbon Cutting Following Chamber Coffee Feb. 13 For Visage Skin Care Spa
February 13th, Chamber Coffee & Ribbon Cutting Ceremony!
The Fort Scott Area Chamber of Commerce announces that the weekly Chamber Coffee will be hosted by Visage Skin Care & Spa Thursday, February 13th at 8 a.m. Please meet at the new location at 5 E. Wall St., Fort Scott. Immediately following the Chamber Coffee a Ribbon Cutting Ceremony.
Chamber members and guests are invited to Chamber Coffee events each Thursday at 8 a.m. to network, make announcements, hear about happenings in the community as well as learn about the business or organization hosting the Coffee. Contact the Chamber of Commerce at (620) 223-3566 for more information. Visit the Events Calendar and category of Chamber Coffees on fortscott.com for upcoming locations.
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Bolton Law Office Moves Dowtown

Attorney Andrew Bolton moved his office to a downtown location in November 2019.
He specializes in family law.
“Divorce, custody, adoptions,” Bolton said. “I also do estate planning and other help. A general practice, like small-town lawyers do.”
Bolton said he enjoys helping people and the profession allows him to do that. He often works with people at a low point in their life.
” It’s nice that in a small town I usually know the person,” he said.
He can be reached at 620-644-9210.
Bolton said he is usually at his Fort Scott office on Thursdays and Fridays.
Bolton graduated from Fort Scott High School in 1999, went to Pittsburg State University and then earned his law degree from Notre Dame University in 2006. He worked for with a firm in Lawrence until 2012 when he started his own firm.
In 2015 he opened an office in Fort Scott and Louisburg, and just recently moved his office downtown, 14 S. Main.

Chamber Coffee at Domino’s Pizza Feb. 6
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The Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office Daily Reports Feb. 5
Great Backyard Bird Count at Fort Scott NHS this Month

A National Park Service Ranger will lead two easy, one-mile, two-hour birdwatching walks starting from the Visitor Center. Rangers and participants will record all bird sightings and upload the data to the Great Backyard Bird Count (GBBC). This walk is for birders of all skill levels and you don’t have to stay for the entire program to make a difference. Birders are encouraged to bring binoculars and layered clothing.
Since 1998, “The Backyard Bird Count has been an opportunity for citizen scientists around the world to contribute to the understanding of wild birds, their environment, and numbers,” said Betty Boyko, Superintendent, Fort Scott National Historic Site. “We encourage everyone to join us each month for additional bird walks and programs.” Watch for scheduled bird walks in the park throughout the year on Facebook or at the Fort Scott NHS Website www.nps.gov/fosc.
For more information about the Great Backyard Bird Count, contact Ranger Abby at Fort Scott National Historic Site by calling 620-223-0310.
Each checklist submitted during the GBBC helps researchers at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and the National Audubon Society learn more about how birds are doing, and how to protect them and the environment we share. Last year, more than 160,000 participants submitted their bird observations online, creating the largest instantaneous snapshot of global bird populations ever recorded. The results of these bird counts are available at https://gbbc.birdcount.org.
Senator Richard Hilderbrand Newsletter
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Leap into Science at the Wind Science Tinker Lab

The Wind Science Tinker Lab will be at Buck Run Community Center onFebruary 24, 4 – 5 p.m.
Experiment with wind science at the Buck Run Community Center with Miss Val and FSCC education student Courtney Williams, Jennifer Terell from the K-State Extension Office and 4-H, Michelle Stevenson from the Fort Scott Early Childhood Program, Star McClellan from Parents as Teachers, and a SEK-CAP representative.
Participants will take part in science activities, listen to a story about wind, reflect on what they’ve learned, and enter to win an Airzooka wind cannon! Each pre-registered parent or educator will also receive a mini science kit packed with wind science experiments and instructions and a free book (while supplies last).
To pre-register, visit this link: https://forms.gle/p8pq7vVCyp7MrfGi9 and fill out the form, or stop by the library to fill out a paper form.
Admission is FREE and refreshments will be served.
This event is made possible in part through a grant from Leap into Science, courtesy of the Franklin Institute.
To learn more about the Leap into Science program, visit http://leap.fi.edu/
Follow the event on Facebook at this link: https://www.facebook.com/events/584053252374595/
Escaped Resident Taken Into Custody
Escaped Resident from Parsons State Hospital Treatment Program in Custody
PARSONS – The Labette County Sheriff’s office has confirmed to the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services (KDADS) that Parsons State Hospital Sexual Predator Treatment Program (SPTP) resident Randy Snodgrass was arrested and taken into custody at 1:30 a.m. this morning in Neosho County near K-47 Highway and Ness Road.
Snodgrass, a 58-year-old male, was being transported by a hospital staff member yesterday morning when he escaped.
“This morning I want to extend a sincere thank you to local law enforcement officials for their effective efforts to keep the public advised and updated about this situation and their thoroughness in tracking down and taking Mr. Snodgrass into custody,” KDADS Secretary Laura Howard said. “I believe their immediate and focused attention was critical to his capture.”
Snodgrass is currently being held in Neosho County.



