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Program To Replace/Rehabilitate Deficient Bridges Reinstated
KDOT program will replace and rehabilitate deficient bridges on a local road system.
The Kansas Department of Transportation (KDOT) has reinstated a popular program designed to help replace and rehabilitate city and county deficient bridges. KDOT Secretary Julie Lorenz announced the program today at an event in Butler County joined by leaders from the Kansas Association of Counties, the Kansas County Highway Association and the Kansas Contractors Association.
The Kansas Local Bridge Improvement Program is a $5 million state-funded program that helps cities and counties by providing up to $150,000 toward the replacement or rehabilitation of a bridge on the local roadway system. To qualify, bridges must be rated as deficient, have a daily vehicle count of less than 100 and be 20 to 50 feet in length. Cities and counties can garner an additional $50,000 by closing a deficient bridge. Local jurisdictions that are awarded funds must provide a 10 percent match.
“Kansas’ local road system is critical for getting people and goods where they need to go,” said Gov. Laura Kelly regarding the program. “I’m pleased to see state and local government working together and combining resources to replace aging infrastructure – creating healthier communities and economies.”
Funding for the program is part of the $216 million in sales tax authorized by Gov. Kelly to remain in the state highway fund in fiscal year 2020. Those funds will be used to increase highway preservation, help complete delayed T-WORKS projects, improve safety and provide new funding opportunities for cities and counties.
“This was a popular program when it was offered in 2014 and I’m very happy that we’re able to bring it back,” said Secretary Lorenz. “Reinstating the Kansas Local Bridge Improvement Program was one of the top recommendations coming out of last year’s Joint Legislative Vision Task Force and is a great way for us to work together with cities and counties to address needed improvements.”
There are approximately 19,000 bridges on Kansas’ local road systems. About 20 percent – or 3,800 — of those bridges are in poor condition – or unable to meet today’s weight and vehicle requirements.
Under the previous program, 110 bridges were replaced or permanently closed during the two years it operated.
“The counties are excited and appreciative of this new bridge replacement program,” said Justin Mader, Saline County Engineer and president of the Kansas County Highway Association. “It will be good for agriculture, good for safety, will put construction workers to work and boost the Kansas economy while building and rehabilitating bridges that will benefit Kansas for decades into the future.”
Applications will be accepted through mid-September and KDOT will select projects in early October. Details are posted on KDOT’s website and can be seen at the links below:
New UJHS Social Science Teacher: Gabrielle Studer

Extend the Season with a Fall Garden

District Extension Agent, Horticulture
Southwind Extension District
111 S. Butler
Erie, KS 66733
Office: 620-244-3826
Cell: 620-496-8786
I know there is still a lot of summer left. But in just a few weeks, students will be back in school and fall will be here in the blink of an eye. Although our summer gardens are going strong, it is time to start thinking about getting our fall vegetables planted. Believe it or not, fall is a great gardening season!
When you think about it, fall weather is much like spring – warm daytime temperatures and cool nights. Rainfall is typically more abundant in the fall than summer (although we have had plenty this summer) so less irrigation is needed and fall gardens often have fewer insect pest and disease problems. Combine all of these and you have the ingredients for a great garden! And of most importance is the taste of the produce grown. Flavors of fall grown vegetables are often sweeter and milder in taste than those grown during hot summer weather.
Some of the best vegetables for a fall garden are lettuce, spinach, radishes, beets, cabbage, turnips and carrots because of their frost-tolerance. These vegetables can be planted directly into your garden wherever space can be found – next to plants still growing in the garden like tomatoes, cucumbers and pumpkins. Plant mid-August until the first week of September.
Left over seed from spring planting can be used as long as it was stored in a cool, dry location. To speed up germination and seedling emergence, soak the seeds overnight before planting. If you are purchasing new seed, look for the shortest season cultivars that you can find to insure harvest before a killing frost. The average fall freeze date for our area is around October 24 according to the Weather Data Library on the K-State campus.
Sometimes establishing a fall garden can be difficult during the summer when soil temperatures are extremely high. One way to avoid this is to establish plants in containers or pots for transplanting into the garden later in the season when the weather begins to cool. Cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower, and collards can be grown in cooler protected areas for 2-4 weeks prior to setting in the garden. Be sure to acclimatize crops for several days before transplanting directly into the garden.
Garden soil should be prepared just like for spring. An application of fertilizer will probably be necessary for optimum plant growth. Use one pound of a complete analysis fertilizer, such as 12-12-12, applied per 100 square feet of garden area. Weeds and grasses will also grow well in a fall garden so mulching may be warranted.
Everyone gets geared up to plant vegetables in the spring, but the fall season offers many benefits to gardening. Few take advantage of the season, but consider giving it a try this year.
The Extension office has the “Vegetable Garden Planting Guide” publication available free of charge. This guide offers information such as days to first harvest, days to germination, planting depth, frost resistance, and more.
Krista Harding is a K-State Research and Extension Agricultural agent assigned to Southwind District. She may be reached at [email protected] or 620-244-3826.
K-State Research and Extension is an equal opportunity provider and employer.
Chamber Coffee and Ribbon Cutting at Nelson State Farm and Meeks Law Firm
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WEEKLY CHAMBER COFFEE REMINDER
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The Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office Inmate Release Daily Report Aug. 7
Click below:
The Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office Daily Reports Aug. 7
08/06/2019 – 08/07/2019
293 E 20th St., Fort Scott, KS 66701
Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office
Arrest Summary Report
Charges, Bond Type, Bond Amt.
LYMAN, ZACHARY RYAN, 27, – 2019-000724
Warrant Type
8/6/2019 1:07:00 AM
CRIMINAL DEPRIVATION OF PROPERTY; CIRCUM
UNKNOWN
NO CASH/SURETY 2500.00
Bond Total 2500.00
CLEMENTS, AMANDA LAKIN, 32, -2019-000726
Warrant Type
8/6/2019 1:20:00 AM
DOMESTIC BATTERY; KNOWING CAUSE PHYS CONTACT
2ND
NO CASH/SURETY 5000.00
INTERFERENCE WITH LEO; OBSTRUCT/RESIST FELONY NO CASH/SURETY 0.00
Bond Total 5000.00
MITCHELL, JERRY LEE, 60, – 2019-000727
Warrant Type
8/6/2019 8:54:00 AM
WARRANT BOURBON COUNTY ( BOND REVOKE) * NO 19CR313 NO BOND 0.00
WARRANT BOURBON COUNTY ( BOND REVOKE) * NO 19CR170 NO BOND 0.00
Bond Total 0.00
KEEDY, AUTUMN RENEE, 29, – 2019-000728
Warrant Type
8/6/2019 10:33:00 AM
WARRANT BOURBON COUNTY ( BOND REVOKE) * NO 2019-CR-0046 NO BOND 0.00
Bond Total 0.00
WILLIAMS, ANTHONY ED, 38, – 2019-000729
Warrant Type
8/6/2019 11:33:00 AM
DISTRIBUTE CERTAIN HALLUCINOGENS NO NO BOND 0.00
DISTRIBUTE OPIATE/OPIUM/NARC/STIM IN 1000′ SCHOOL NO NO BOND 0.00
ENDANGERING A CHILD NO NO BOND 0.00
WARRANT – OUT OF STATE * NO 1259613 NO BOND 0.00
Bond Total 0.00
25
Warrant No
MERRIMAN, CALEB ANTHONY, 25, -2019-000730
Warrant Type
8/6/2019 3:16:00 PM
WARRANT BOURBON COUNTY ( BOND REVOKE) * NO NO BOND 0.00
Bond Total 0.00
RICE, MONICA IRENE, 26, – 2019-000731
Warrant Type
8/6/2019 4:11:00 PM
CULTIVATE/DISTRIBUTE/W/INT
OPIATES/OPIUM/NARC/STIM
NO NO BOND 0.00
DISTRIBUTE CERTAIN HALLUCINOGENS NO NO BOND 0.00
Bond Total 0.00
COULTER, KEENA LEIGHANN, 23, -2019-000732
Warrant Type
8/6/2019 4:51:00 PM
DISTRIBUTE CERTAIN HALLUCINOGENS NO NO BOND 0.00
DISTRIBUTE CERTAIN OPIATES BY 18YOA W/IN 1000′ SCH NO NO BOND 0.00
ENDANGERING A CHILD NO NO BOND 0.00
Bond Total 0.00
PORTER, MICHAEL ALLEN, 43, – 2019-000733
Warrant Type
8/7/2019 12:11:00 AM
WARRANT BOURBON COUNTY ( FAILURE TO APPEAR) * NO 0.00
Bond Total 0.00
The Fort Scott Police Department Daily Reports Aug.6
Click below:
Unofficial Election Results for Bourbon County Primary Election
Just in from the Bourbon County Clerk’s Office.
Total votes cast for that person is the first number.
2019 CITY/SCHOOL PRIMARY UNOFFICIAL RESULTS
BOURBON COUNTY, KANSAS
AUGUST 6, 2019
RUN DATE:08/06/19 07:55 PM REPORT-EL45A PAGE 001
TOTAL VOTES % ELECTION DAY EARLY VOTE
PRECINCTS COUNTED (OF 16) . . . . . 16 100.00
REGISTERED VOTERS - TOTAL . . . . . 9,771
BALLOTS CAST - TOTAL. . . . . . . 1,340 814 526
VOTER TURNOUT - TOTAL . . . . . . 13.71
CITY COMMISSION FORT SCOTT
VOTE FOR 3
Cheryl L. Adamson. . . . . . . . 219 7.38 122 97
Harold (Pete) Allen . . . . . . . 247 8.32 157 90
Kevin "Skitch" Allen. . . . . . . 301 10.14 213 88
Cynthia Bartelsmeyer. . . . . . . 333 11.22 179 154
Casey Bolden . . . . . . . . . 58 1.95 43 15
Tracy Dancer . . . . . . . . . 110 3.70 73 37
Bobby Duncan . . . . . . . . . 99 3.33 64 35
Bob Farmer . . . . . . . . . . 213 7.17 116 97
Josh Jones . . . . . . . . . . 215 7.24 133 82
Deb McCoy . . . . . . . . . . 329 11.08 195 134
Diana Morriss . . . . . . . . . 198 6.67 118 80
Jeanie Parker . . . . . . . . . 204 6.87 111 93
Lindsey Watts . . . . . . . . . 285 9.60 185 100
Matthew Wells . . . . . . . . . 158 5.32 106 52
SCHOOL BOARD MEMBER POSITION 3 USD 234
VOTE FOR 1
Kellye Barrows. . . . . . . . . 643 49.46 377 266
Joe Foulk Sr. . . . . . . . . . 36 2.77 26 10
Michael J. Hoyt . . . . . . . . 133 10.23 83 50
Josh Jones . . . . . . . . . . 302 23.23 189 113
Aaron Judy . . . . . . . . . . 186 14.31 118 68
#E
Obituary of Winifred Daly

Winifred Ada (Winnie) Daly, age 89, a resident of Fort Scott, died early Tuesday, August 6, 2019, at the Medicalodges of Fort Scott.
She was born January 18, 1930 in Richards, Missouri the daughter of Ross Albert Leek and Hazel Gwendolyne West Leek
. She graduated from Fort Scott High School in 1947.
She married Bob Daly on November 1, 1950, in Ft. Scott.
She taught in a one room schoolhouse near Hiattville, Kansas, and then later Deerfield, Missouri. She then got a position as the first Head Start teacher and worked there for 30 years.
Winnie enjoyed quilting, crocheting, and gardening. She loved fishing and attending her grandchildren’s sporting events.
Survivors include her children, Becky Davis and husband, Don, of Ft. Scott, Judy Hayden and husband, Sam, of Maxville, Kansas, Gwen Lancaster and husband, Don, of Ft. Scott, and Max Daly and wife, Laurie, daughter in law Sharon Daly, all of Ft. Scott; fifteen grandchildren and 23 great-grandchildren. Also surviving are two sisters, twin sister Wanda Giddens, Tulsa, Oklahoma, and Fleeta Antrim, of Fort Scott.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Bob, parents; a son Jeff Daly; two grandsons, Eric Hayden and Joel Daly, Four brothers, Hollis, Wayne, Max, and infant brother Wilbert Leek.
Rev. Chuck Russell will conduct funeral services at 10:00 am Friday, August 9, 2019 at the Cheney Witt Chapel.
Burial will follow in the Memory Gardens Cemetery.
The family will receive friends from 5 – 7 pm Thursday at the Cheney Witt Chapel.
Memorials are suggested to Care to Share 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.
Attorney Justin Meeks Gets New Office: Ribbon Cutting Aug. 8

Attorney Justin Meeks has moved into his newly renovated office space at 1801 S. National Avenue after months of hard work.
“It would’ve been way cheaper to tear down and build new,” he said. “But we saved the building….it’s got lots of character.”
Character such as original walls with a hand-painted sign and names sketched in concrete from a different era, which were both preserved.
And a great location with Hwy. 69 and National Avenue in close proximity.
The building was renovated and now is the home to Justin Meeks Attorney at Law and Kale Nelson State Farm Insurance.
Meeks is also the Bourbon County Counselor for the county government, which is a part-time position. The new space is for his private law practice, which is also part-time.
“I moved into this space for my private law practice in late June,” Meeks said. “It’s a very limited private practice: probate, business transactions, human resource issues, contract work, landlord-tenant issues, and banking issues.”
As of October 1, Meeks has been the Bourbon County Counselor for five years. “I’ve been out of private practice for five years,” Meeks said.
“I like helping people, that’s why I’m going back into a limited part-time practice,” Meeks said.
His office hours are Monday through Thursday, appointment only; Friday, 9 a.m. to noon and 1-4 p.m.
History Of The Property
Justin Meeks and Kale Nelson purchased the circa 1925 building last year.
The new office spaces have had many repurposings through the years: a machine shop, Lockwood’s Steakhouse, various liquor store owners including Silver Spur Bar, a pet shop, a vape shop and other business entities.

The renovated building was first used for a machine shop, Meeks was informed by people in the community.
There is a handwritten sign on the exposed brick in his entrance space that says “Leave Tools After Used.”
Then the shop was added onto in the 1960-70s, according to Meeks.
On the concrete floor in a closet, the names Patty Chow and Sharon Manyo are sketched into the concrete.
That’s part of the character of the building that was preserved.
Ribbon Cutting
The Fort Scott Area Chamber of Commerce will have a ribbon-cutting ceremony celebrating the new location of State Farm Insurance, 1805 S. National Avenue and Meeks Law Firm at 1801 S. National Avenue on Thursday, August 8 following the Chamber of Commerce Coffee, which starts at 8 a.m.
Owner of the property is JK Hold’M Properties, a partnership of Meeks and Nelson.
The public is invited to the ribbon-cutting to view the transformation of the buildings to updated and modernized offices.



Bourbon County Commission Agenda Aug. 7
Agenda
Bourbon County Commission Room
1st Floor, County Courthouse
210 S. National Avenue
Fort Scott, KS 66701
Tuesdays starting at 9:00
Date: August 7th, 2019
1st District-Lynne Oharah Minutes: Approved: _______________
2nd District-Jeff Fischer Corrected: _______________
3rd District-Nick Ruhl Adjourned at: _______________
County Clerk-Kendell Mason
9:00-Commissioners to have budget work session.
Justifications for Executive Session:
Personnel matters of individual non-elected personnel
Consultation with an attorney for the body or agency which would be deemed privileged in the attorney-client relationship
Matters relating to employer-employee negotiations whether or not in consultation with the representative(s) of the body or agency
Confidential data relating to financial affairs or trade secrets of corporations, partnerships, trusts and individual proprietorships
Preliminary discussions relating to the acquisition of real property
Matters relating to the security of a public body or agency, public building or facility or the information system of a public body or agency, if the discussion of such matters at an open meeting would jeopardize the security of such public body, agency, building, facility or information system
