Letter to the Editor: Randy Nichols

Fort Scott Emergency Room

Attending a recent meeting I was reminded how critical Emergency Room (ER) services are to our community.  As you recall, recently a man with a gun was reported near the middle school.

In response to that report our ER staff immediately took the initiative to begin preparing for the nightmare of a mass shooting.  Local staff checked vital supplies like blood, IV fluids and medical equipment.  They also coordinated with the Ascension Via Christi Pittsburg emergency response team.

This resulted in additional staff being notified, the referring ER being prepared and even notification of emergency air transport that sent a helicopter to Ft. Scott for emergency standby.

Fortunately, there was no shooting.  My point however, is two-fold.

First, to say thank you to our local staff and to the team at AVC-P for being here and prepared.

Second though is to remind us, as a community, of the critical importance of having an Emergency Room in Ft. Scott.

While there was no mass shooting, our community is not immune to acts of violence, natural disasters, accidents from sports, to farm, to industrial, to motor vehicle, medical emergencies like stroke and heart attack and all the other emergencies that require a fully operational ER and cannot be handled at an urgent care facility.

Having an emergency room is a critically important foundational piece of our community’s health care.

 

Please take this letter for what it is meant to be.  A reminder to ourselves and our elected officials of how important an ER is to safeguard our medical security.

Realize also it is critical to our future economic well-being.  Not having Emergency Room services would impact the ability to both maintain and attract people, business and industry.

We as a community have helped finance other health care.  At some point we may need to do the same to secure our ER.  Let’s appreciate having this service and not forget it’s importance.  We’ve lost a hospital, let’s not lose an ER.  We must be ready to step up to the plate.

 

Randy Nichols MD

U234 Special Meeting at 8 a.m. on May 19

Unified School District 234

424 South Main

Fort Scott, KS 66701-2697

www.usd234.org

620-223-0800   Fax 620-223-2760

 

 

DESTRY BROWN                                                                                                                                                        

Superintendent                                                                                                                                            

 

 

 

 

BOARD OF EDUCATION SPECIAL MEETING

MAY 19, 2023 – 8:00 A.M.

AGENDA SUMMARY

1.0       Call Meeting to Order                                  Danny Brown, President

 

2.0       Flag Salute

 

3..0      Other Business – Personnel Matters

3.1       Enter Executive Session – Personnel Matters (Action Item)

3.2       Exit Executive Session

3.3       Approval of Personnel Report (Action Item)

 

           

4.0       Adjourn Meeting

                        President Brown

House To Be Auctioned To Benefit Fort Scott Parks

Chris Yoder, Devon, and three of his sons, Melvin, Willard and Joseph, work on stabilizing the roof of the  house at 1311 S. National in January 2018.
1311 S. National Avenue, May 2023.

 

The vacant house at 1311 S. National Avenue has the beginning work of rehabilitation done by several volunteers and others.

 

“We were notified by the Fort Scott Codes Department in 2017 of a house on National that they thought could be rehabbed,” said Carolyn Sinn, a member of the Youth Activity Team, which took on the project to repair then sell the house to benefit Fort Scott’s Ellis Park.

A veteran living in the home at the time was relocated.

“He was relocated with help from a lot of people in the community,” Sinn said. “To a quality place.”

The city thought the house was salvageable and YAT paid $4, 101 for it, which included the prior years taxes, she said.

The Youth Activities Team, the Good Neighbor Action Team and the Fort Scott Fire Department helped with the demolition, Sinn said.

A new roof and windows (paid for by Peerless Products, Fort Scott) were put on the house.

“We hired Amish carpenters to repair the porch and stabilize the garage,” she said. “Jeff Allen did some electrical work for us a donation.”

Then the COVID-19 Pandemic happened.

“The work got stopped,” she said. “During COVID, materials got out of control.”

All together they have invested approximately $26,000 in the house.

“When it was over, we looked at it again and decided to sell the house and hopefully get it back on the tax rolls,” Sinn said.

The YAT asked the City of Fort Scott to auction it off and any money made will be transferred to the parks committee, to be used for sensory park equipment, she said. Sensory equipment allows more easily accessed playgrounds for children of all abilities.

The City of Fort Scott voted to allow the YAT to sell the house at the commission meeting on May 16, 2023.

The original YAT was comprised of Sinn, Eric Bailey, Laura George, Tom Roberts, Paul Martin, Larry Fink and Diana Mitchell.

Following the sale of the house, the YAT will be dissolved, Sinn said.

“We have a lot of enthusiastic people in the community now,” she said.

Through the years YAT has raised money for upgrades and improvement to Ellis Park, on 12th Street, near the Fort Scott Middle School.

They installed lighting, put in a sand volleyball court, a basketball court, a walking trail, and UMB Bank helped with building a pavilion at the park.

“With the Healthy Bourbon County Action Team we raised $37,600 for the sensory equipment in the park,” Sinn said. “That money we gave to the city parks committee for sensory equipment in the park on Dec. 14, 2022.”

 

 

Obituary of Harriet Ross

Harriet Ann Ross, age 93, a resident of Ft. Scott, Kansas, passed away Tuesday, May 16, 2023, in Ft. Scott.  She was born November 27, 1929, in Topeka, Kansas, the daughter of Lancelot Jameison and Ivalu Thompson Jamieson.  Harriet graduated high school in Prairie Village, Kansas and went on to graduate from Park College in Kansas City.

Harriet loved dancing.  In earlier years she danced professionally and also taught ballet and tap dancing.  She married William L. Ross on May 14, 1955.  As Bill was an air traffic controller, Harriet followed him around the world where he was employed at various airports.  Harriet and Bill made their home in Milwaukee, Wisconsin; Puerto Rico; Panama; Nashville, Tennessee and Wichita, Kansas.

Harriet had been employed for TWA, and as a district manager for Sarah Coventry costume jewelry, and as an office manager for various psychologists.  Following retirement, they moved to Florida.  While living in Florida, Harriet’s love of dance was rekindled, and she organized and taught a dancing group that performed at various community events.  Later in life, Bill and Harriet relocated to Ft. Scott, Kansas to be near family.

Survivors include her husband of sixty-eight years, William, of the home; a son, Mike Ross (Mimi) of Ft. Scott, Kansas and two grandchildren, Krista Park (Matt) and Luke Ross and four great-grandchildren, Jovie, Kenley, Noble and Kansas Park.  Also surviving is a daughter-in-law, Willow Ross of Wichita, Kansas.

Harriet was preceded in death by a son, Steven Ross, her parents, and an infant sister, Janet.

Following cremation, burial will take place at a later date at the Liberty Cemetery in Warrensburg, Missouri.

Local arrangements are under the direction of the Cheney Witt Chapel, 201 S. Main, Ft. Scott, Kansas.  Words of remembrance may be submitted to the online guestbook at cheneywitt.com

Recent Industrial Park Business: Jurassic Fireworks

Cindy Delise straightens up a shelf in the Jurassic Park Retail Store in the Fort Scott Industrial Park on May 12.

Summer is almost here and the 4th of July is the keystone event of the season for many people

Fireworks are a big component in celebrating the independence from Britain in 1776, that the day commemorates.

Fort Scott has its own distributor of fireworks, since October 2021, in the industrial park just off of Hwy. 69, south of the city.

The Jurassic Park Fireworks retail store at 4500 Campbell Drive.

Jurassic Fireworks, 4500 Campbell Drive, sells both wholesale and retail fireworks. This building is the former site of Firstsource Solutions.

The business is owned by a father-daughter partnership of Frank and Bree Elliot, Colorado.

“This is a family run business, started by his father in 1965,” said Cindy Delise, Fort Scott, who mans the business here, and whose title is distributor.

“I’m the only employee here currently, but we are taking applications for the season,” she said.

The fireworks season is June 26 to July 6 in Fort Scott. During that time the hours are 8 a.m. to midnight.

Regular hours are 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. the rest of the year, Delise said.

Jurassic Fireworks, Fort Scott, can be reached at (919) 369-8710.

They have retail stores in Wyoming, Colorado, Missouri, Texas and Indiana, as well.

Chamber Coffee Hosted by Bobbie Kemna on May 18

ANNOUNCING THIS WEEK’S
CHAMBER COFFEE
Join us for Chamber Coffee hosted by
Bobbi Kemna
Thursday, May 18th
8am
1366 215th St.
The Fort Scott Area Chamber of Commerce invites members and guests to the Chamber Coffee Thursday, May 18th at 8am hosted by Bobbi Kemna. The event will take place at the Kemna home located at 1366 215th St., which is approximately ¼ mile north of town on old 69 highway. Coffee, juice, and biscuits and gravy will be served in addition to a door prize drawing.
Local resident and community volunteer Cory Bryars will speak on the 2nd Annual Fort Fest Blues Festival event to be held the last weekend of September Downtown in front of Sharky’s Pub & Grub on Friday evening the 29th and at Riverfront Park on Saturday the 30th from 12pm to 9pm featuring live music, a barbeque contest, vendor booths, and more. The event will benefit “Care to Share, The Sharing Bucket” cancer support organization.
The Chamber had a schedule change for the Chamber Coffee this week, and Bobbi stepped in and offered to open her doors to Chamber members and guests. Bobbi is a long-time entrepreneur in Bourbon County, having owned several businesses in partnership with her late husband, Harry, including the KOA Campground, mobile home sales, a flight school, and The Branding Iron restaurant.
Chamber Coffee guests are welcome to step into The Pot Pantry adjacent to her home, an 1800’s rock house studio and gallery space of her hand-built pottery. Bobbi hosted an Art in the Yard festival two years on her property, and continues to display her pottery at art events near and far including the Backroom Art Gallery at Hare & Crow Barber Shop on Main Street open weekly Wednesday through Saturday and the evenings of First Fridays in addition to The Artificers gallery.
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 host business or organization.
We hope to see you there!
Thank you to our Chamber Champion members
shown below!
FORT SCOTT AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
620-223-3566
Fort Scott Area Chamber of Commerce | 231 E. Wall Street, Fort Scott, KS 66701

AGENDA FOR SPECIAL OF FORT SCOTT CITY COMMISSION on May 17

 

 NOTICE OF AND AGENDA FOR SPECIAL              

MEETING OF FORT SCOTT CITY COMMISSION

CITY HALL COMMISSION ROOM – 123 SOUTH MAIN ST.

May 17, 2023 – 8:00 A.M.

 

  1.  Roll Call:
  2.      Jones     T. VanHoecke     E. Woellhof     K. Harrington     M. Wells
  3.   Flag Salute:

III.   Approval of Agenda:

 

  1. Public Comment:

Sign up required.  Comments on any topic not on agenda and limited to five (5)      minutes per person, at Commission discretion.

  1. Old Business: 

 

  1. Consideration of Acquisition of Land for Economic Development and Construction of a Manufacturing Plant – M. Wells
  2. Consideration of Approval of Boundary Survey for 37+/- Acre Parcel and Certificate of Survey of a 20-Acre Parcel Split out from boundary for the Acquisition of Land for Economic Development and Construction of a Manufacturing Plant to be completed by Earles Engineering & Inspection, Inc. $5,000.00 – M. Wells

 

  1. New Business:

 

 

 

 

XIII.      Executive Session – If requested, (please follow script in all motions for   Executive Sessions)

 

XIV.        Adjournment:

Family Fun Outing: Shead Farm Homestead Festival on May 20

The Third Annual Shead Farm Homestead Festival is Saturday, May 20 at 2468 Cavalry Rd. near rural Garland, south of Fort Scott.

The Larry and Vickie Shead farm, rural Garland.

The day is geared toward sustainable living by a family that is doing just that.

“A lot of people were wanting to know about sustainable living,” Vickie Shead, the matriarch of the family, said. “God is good and we are trying to keep up with all He is leading us to do.”

Sustainable living means understanding how our lifestyle choices impact the world around us and finding ways for everyone to live better and lighter, according to the United Nations Environment Programme https://www.unep.org/explore-topics/resource-efficiency/what-we-do/sustainable-lifestyles

The festival will feature 36 vendors or activities that use creative ways to teach garden/farm knowledge.

“There is no charge to vendors,” Vickie said.  “This is to benefit entrepreneurs who are wanting to start a business.”

“Come join us for a fun filled educational event for the whole family,” said Vickie, who along with her husband Larry and their children and grand children will be hosting the event. “It’s a great family outing!”

Vickie and Larry Shead, 2020, from her Facebook page.

In addition to the Shead family,  they have 106 volunteers helping at the festival, for which they are grateful.

On tap will be live music, lots of children’s activities, a farm tour, and farm store, vendor booths and a food court.

The admission fee for a single ticket is $5 or for a family (4+) $20.

To view a map of the Shead Farm vendors/activities:

https://docs.google.com/drawings/d/1iU4jmeptRhk8mCM4mRgvkluBqMGFbEmW9oPgFOULQ6Q/edit

The Shead’s have a signature product, Veggie Powder, with all the greens grown on the property.

Greens powders are a dietary supplement that aims to help people reach their daily intake of vitamins and minerals, according to https://health.unl.edu/are-greens-powders-actually-beneficial-our-dietitian-weighs

Festival activities include:

Educational garden games/activities

An animal arena

A story station

Learning  how to milk cows

Learning how to make butter

Learning how to do laundry without electricity

The farm tour includes the gardens, greenhouse, animals, beekeeping and learning how to graft a fruit tree.

For sale will be animals, worm farms, plants, berries, carts, compost and trees.

Vendors will be selling soaps and salves, honey, eggs, spices, baked goods, baskets, weaving, spinning wool, plant propagations, farm decor and kitchen items.

The Sheads will be selling walking tacos for $5, and Supercharged Cookies for $2. A snack shack will be selling cotton candy, lemonade, ice cream and pastries.


Shead Farm Store items for sale will be Veggie Powder, toys, hats, aprons, books,quilted Items, bouquets, and more.

Contact them at
Sheadfarm.com

Bourbon County Local News