Lenita “Lyn” Ellen Pulliam, 81, of Fort Scott, Kansas, passed away at home on Saturday, June 13, 2026. She was born on November 19, 1944, to Sergeant Benjamin Earl Pulliam, and Cora Alice and Alvin Vernon Tucker.
After attending Fort Scott High School, Lyn worked at various companies over the years, having spent much of her career at Frito Lay in Dallas, Texas, and Tulsa, Oklahoma, and later returning to Fort Scott and retiring from the State of Kansas Social and Rehabilitation Services Office.
Lyn was a devoted Christian who often found strength in the pages of her Bible. She loved spending time with her family and friends, and was usually full of long talks, loud laughs, and occasional tears. Going to the movies, reading a good book, and margaritas by the pool, were some of her favorite pastimes. Most importantly, her grandchildren and great-grandchildren were the center of her world and her greatest joy in life. The love, laughter, and endless support she shared with them, will remain her lasting legacy.
Lyn is survived by her daughters, Toni (Rusty) Felt, Lisa (Brent) Neubauer, and Cheryl (Dale) Gates; grandchildren, Jerod (Tracie) Felt, Jordan (Kory) Harding, Nathan Uttinger, Trenton (Jacie) Uttinger, Colton Manley, and Grayson Manley; great-grandchildren, Brady Felt, Karrington Harding, Karoline Harding, Ryan Austin, Mason Uttinger, Tucker Felt, and Adalyn Uttinger; siblings, Sharon Dean, Verna (Phil) Sibona, Frank (Melanie) Tucker, Cindy Breese, and Khris (Jeff) Simpson.
Lyn was preceded in death by her son, Jeffery Dean Uttinger; parents, Earl Pulliam, and Alice and Alvin Tucker; sister, Vivian Tucker.
There was cremation. Rev. Leon Weece from Miami, Oklahoma, will conduct a memorial service at 10:30am on Thursday, June 18th at Cheney Witt Chapel. Private burial will take place at the Deerfield Cemetery. Memorials are suggested to the Scott View Apartments (Highrise) Activity Fund 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.
Although this week’s meeting did not take place I want to take a moment to talk to you all. I want to commend the people who put themselves out there and open their lives to the scrutiny that may follow. Whether it is running for office, speaking at meetings, authoring articles, or simply standing up and sharing an opinion.
I believe in hard work, respect, accountability, and having the backbone to stand on your decisions and the humility to change your mind. Folks say they want more people involved in government. I agree. People deserve choices (did you notice we will have lots for Governor this year?!). We could also continue as a community with willingness to accept that not everybody is going to think the same way. I believe expectations of 100% alignment are green in this climate. My experience tells me if you think different than the man to your left or right hope for respectful dialogue but prepare to defend.
Recently I have witnessed a decline in self-accountability. We live in a tech driven era where words come easy not always with complete understanding and reality is easily altered through AI and misinformation. With this I expect to bring receipts, and that suits me simply fine, it does not bother me to show and tell rather than just tell.
The part I think can be a large deterrent to potential candidates is when politics turn into twisting words, false narratives, nasty memes, personal attacks, under reporting, over reporting and tearing people down for thinking differently. If media and influencers push narratives and outcomes rather than just delivering facts it becomes troubling for me. Trust your readers, trust your electorate, get out there and help your neighbors understand both sides and let them choose what they believe in and respect them when you cannot align.
From me to you I will continue voting the way I believe is right for Bourbon County. I will continue being upfront and speaking clearly because the people of this county deserve that. Bourbon County deserves representatives who do not hide behind double meaning phrases. Different opinions are part of freedom and if you cannot stand behind yours, then consider change. Moving forward together is important. We have recently seen that if leadership cannot work together, we will not move at all.
Character matters more to me than titles. Ethics matters more to me than gains. Integrity matters more to me than the cost of doing business. I am pure country, raised to work hard, speak with candor, hold my opinion until I have enough verifiable information to form one, tell the truth, keep my faith, and continue working through the storm. I answer to God, my conscience, and the people who elected me to do the job. Strong communities are built by people willing to work, serve, and lead with grit and honesty. If you want to work with me, work as hard as me. If you want to stop me, outwork me. Bullying, intimidation, and half-truths aren’t going to do the trick.
There is one more thing I want to talk about again. Over the last several months, I have watched conversations in our community about who should be asking questions, and continuing to stay informed. Let me just say, “everyone” this is so important!
My thoughts, I support journalism for all. Communities need people willing to attend meetings, ask questions, review records, and keep the public informed. If there is a idea that asking questions should belong exclusively to one group of professionals, it is my opinion that sentiment no longer exists and possibly for good reason. I think journalism, public announcements and citizen involvement can coexist. All have an important role in keeping communities informed.
We live in a time where information moves quickly. Citizens attend meetings. Citizens request records. Citizens make phone calls. Citizens ask questions and compare what they hear with what they see. Many spend hours digging into issues because they care about their community. That involvement should be encouraged, not discouraged.
The answer to information you disagree with is more information. The answer to questions is answers. The answer to concerns is transparency. I trust people to sort through information and make decisions for themselves. I trust them to look at facts, ask follow-up questions, and come to their own conclusions. Not every citizen will get everything right. Not every journalist or elected official will get everything right. That is why facts and records matter. That is why accountability matters. I believe the people of Bourbon County are best served when they can hear from multiple sources, and learn to review the information for themselves, and decide what they believe.
Nobody should be afraid of an informed public. If someone has questions, ask them. I will answer all I can, you may hear me say “I have to ask the county counselor first,” and I hope you understand.
The future of Bourbon County will not be shaped by one journalist, one Facebook page, one elected official, or one voice. It will be shaped by citizens who care enough to get involved, do their homework, and become informed voters, the future of this county belongs to you the citizens! You the voters have more power than you know, you are The People at the Top. I hope you understand that and stay informed and get out there and vote!
Although this week’s meeting did not take place I want to take a moment to talk to you all. I want to commend the people who put themselves out there and open their lives to the scrutiny that may follow. Whether it is running for office, speaking at meetings, authoring articles, or simply standing up and sharing an opinion.
I believe in hard work, respect, accountability, and having the
backbone to stand on your decisions and the humility to change your mind. Folks say they want more people involved in government. I agree. People deserve choices (did you notice we will have lots for Governor this year?!). We could also continue as a community with willingness to accept that not everybody is going to think the same way. I believe expectations of 100% alignment are green in this climate. My experience tells me if you think different than the man to your left or right hope for respectful dialogue but prepare to defend.
Recently I have witnessed a decline in self-accountability. We live in a tech driven era where words come easy not always with complete understanding and reality is easily altered through AI and misinformation. With this I expect to bring receipts, and that suits me simply fine, it does not bother me to show and tell rather than just tell.
The part I think can be a large deterrent to potential candidates is when politics turn into twisting words, false narratives, nasty memes, personal attacks, under reporting, over reporting and tearing people down for thinking differently. If media and influencers push narratives and outcomes rather than just delivering facts it becomes troubling for me. Trust your readers, trust your electorate, get out there and help your neighbors understand both sides and let them choose what they believe in and respect them when you cannot align.
From me to you I will continue voting the way I believe is right for Bourbon County. I will continue being upfront and speaking clearly because the people of this county deserve that. Bourbon County deserves representatives who do not hide behind double meaning phrases. Different opinions are part of freedom and if you cannot stand behind yours, then consider change. Moving forward together is important. We have recently seen that if leadership cannot work together, we will not move at all.
Character matters more to me than titles. Ethics matters more to me than gains. Integrity matters more to me than the cost of doing business. I am pure country, raised to work hard, speak with candor, hold my opinion until I have enough verifiable information to form one, tell the truth, keep my faith, and continue working through the storm. I answer to God, my conscience, and the people who elected me to do the job. Strong communities are built by people willing to work, serve, and lead with grit and honesty. If you want to work with me, work as hard as me. If you want to stop me, outwork me. Bullying, intimidation, and half-truths aren’t going to do the trick.
There is one more thing I want to talk about again. Over the last several months, I have watched conversations in our community about who should be asking questions, and continuing to stay informed. Let me just say, “everyone” this is so important!
My thoughts, I support journalism for all. Communities need people willing to attend meetings, ask questions, review records, and keep the public informed. If there is a idea that asking questions should belong exclusively to one group of professionals, it is my opinion that sentiment no longer exists and possibly for good reason. I think journalism, public announcements and citizen involvement can coexist. All have an important role in keeping communities informed.
We live in a time where information moves quickly. Citizens attend meetings. Citizens request records. Citizens make phone calls. Citizens ask questions and compare what they hear with what they see. Many spend hours digging into issues because they care about their community. That involvement should be encouraged, not discouraged.
The answer to information you disagree with is more information. The answer to questions is answers. The answer to concerns is transparency. I trust people to sort through information and make decisions for themselves. I trust them to look at facts, ask follow-up questions, and come to their own conclusions. Not every citizen will get everything right. Not every journalist or elected official will get everything right. That is why facts and records matter. That is why accountability matters. I believe the people of Bourbon County are best served when they can hear from multiple sources, and learn to review the information for themselves, and decide what they believe.
Nobody should be afraid of an informed public. If someone has questions, ask them. I will answer all I can, you may hear me say “I have to ask the county counselor first,” and I hope you understand.
The future of Bourbon County will not be shaped by one journalist, one Facebook page, one elected official, or one voice. It will be shaped by citizens who care enough to get involved, do their homework, and become informed voters, the future of this county belongs to you the citizens! You the voters have more power than you know, you are The People at the Top. I hope you understand that and stay informed and get out there and vote!
Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office Daily Report – June 15, 2026
Arrested
Young, Corey Danielle (Age 52) — Arrested 6/12/2026 2:00 AM by Fort Scott Police Department. Charges: Cultivate/Distribute/With Intent Opiates/Opium/Narc/Stim, Possession of Certain Hallucinogenics with 1 Prior Conviction, Use/Possession of Drug Paraphernalia/Human Body (x2). Bond: $250,000.00 Cash/Surety.
Blevins, Roger Dean (Age 57) — Arrested 6/12/2026 2:09 AM by Fort Scott Police Department. Charges: Cultivate/Distribute/With Intent Opiates/Opium/Narc/Stim, Possess Opiates/Opium/Narc Drug and Certain Stim, Use/Possession of Drug Paraphernalia/Human Body (x2). Bond: $250,000.00 Cash/Surety.
Crites, David McArthur III (Age 36) — Arrested 6/12/2026 9:49 AM by Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office. Charge: Warrant Bourbon County (Failure to Appear). Bond: $0.00 No Bond.
Mallory, Troy Thunder (Age 38) — Arrested 6/12/2026 3:00 PM by Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office. Charge: Sentenced (KDOC). Bond: $0.00.
Evans, John W (Age 44) — Arrested 6/12/2026 3:24 PM by Fort Scott Police Department. Charge: Warrant Bourbon County (Probation Violation). Bond: $1,000.00 Cash/Surety. Released 6/12/2026 8:17 PM via Surety Bond (Able Bonding).
Lotterer, Jared W (Age 36) — Arrested 6/12/2026 4:00 PM by Fort Scott Police Department. Charge: Warrant Bourbon County (Failure to Appear) — Warrant No. BB-25-CR-241. Bond: $5,000.00 Cash/Surety.
Eisenbrandt, Jonah (Age 46) — Arrested 6/12/2026 6:00 PM by Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office. Charge: Sanction. Bond: $0.00 No Bond. Released 6/14/2026 6:11 PM via Time Served.
Shadden, Sammuel A (Age 47) — Arrested 6/12/2026 11:43 PM by Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office. Charges: Possess Opiates/Opium/Narc Drug and Certain Stim, Use/Possession of Drug Paraphernalia/Human Body. Bond: $7,500.00 Cash/Surety. Released 6/13/2026 5:04 PM via Surety Bond (Larry Lamb).
LaRoche, James Edward (Age 36) — Arrested 6/13/2026 8:45 AM by Fort Scott Police Department. Charges: Aggravated Interference with Parent Custody; Impede Return, Battery, Criminal Damage to Property (Misdemeanor), Interference with LEO; Obstruct/Resist Felony, Violation of Court Order. Bond: $500,000.00 Cash/Surety.
Knackstedt, David Michael (Age 54) — Arrested 6/13/2026 11:36 AM by Fort Scott Police Department. Charges: Aggravated Domestic Battery, Domestic Battery; Physical Contact in Rude Manner. Bond: $20,000.00 Cash/Surety.
Singmaster, David Dakota (Age 32) — Arrested 6/13/2026 2:30 PM by Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office. Charge: Warrant – Fort Scott Municipal. Bond: $500.00 Cash/Surety. Released 6/13/2026 3:12 PM via Cash Bond.
Gier, Christian Lee (Age 48) — Arrested 6/14/2026 10:02 AM by Fort Scott Police Department. Charges: Criminal Trespass; Unknown Circumstance, Disorderly Conduct; Fighting Words/Noisy Conduct, Warrant – Out of County (Warrant No. W0003368). Bond: $1,000.00 Cash.
Released
Denyer, Durand Cole — Released 6/12/2026 1:51 PM via Time Served (Self).
Eisenbrandt, Jonah — Released 6/14/2026 6:11 PM via Time Served (Self).
Evans, John W — Released 6/12/2026 8:17 PM via Surety Bond (Able Bonding).
Luttrall, Leslie Paul — Released 6/12/2026 2:23 PM via Own Recognizance (Self).
Shadden, Sammuel A — Released 6/13/2026 5:04 PM via Surety Bond (Larry Lamb).
Singmaster, David Dakota — Released 6/13/2026 3:12 PM via Cash Bond (Self).
Tucker, Sky Marie — Released 6/12/2026 3:06 PM via Probation (Self).
Wallace, Jeremiah — Released 6/12/2026 10:57 AM via Own Recognizance (Self).
Keys to the Kingdom
By Carolyn Tucker
Forget the Riddles of Life
All curious little kids are the same; therefore, history repeats itself. I can remember being in the kitchen with my mom and asking her one question right after another. Eventually, she got tired of it and her patience flew out the window. I asked another, “Why does this….” and her answer was, “Just to make you ask questions!” Her tone was not as sweet as her first answer had been, so I knew not to ask anything else that day. My own kids did the same thing to me and so do my granddaughters. Answering a few legitimate questions is fine, but a constant barrage of this type interaction becomes annoying. “Why… why… why is water wet?”
I wonder if God sometimes sighs when His children ask Him so many questions that don’t amount to a hill of beans. I suspect most everyone has a gunnysack full of life’s riddles that we can’t solve. Philosophers and scientists have been trying to explain life’s mysteries for years. I don’t believe God gets angry because we ask Him “why” questions; He knows we’re human. But shouldn’t we have an honest understanding that we’re humans and not Almighty God?
Many of God’s ways are past finding out. Job bluntly responds to his so-called friend Bildad: “God stretches the northern sky over empty space and hangs the earth on nothing. His Spirit made the heavens beautiful, and His power pierced the gliding serpent. These are just the beginning of all that He does, merely a whisper of His power. Who, then, can comprehend the thunder of His power?” (Job 26:7,13-14 NLT). These scriptures point out the fact that there’s a million miles between our understanding and God’s.
God didn’t create mankind to be as smart as Him on purpose. We might as well be thankful for God’s unfathomable ways and give our tired brains a rest. We’re liable to blow a gasket if we don’t learn to bury some of our questions in the bosom of our heavenly Father. God tries to help us see that we aren’t going to be able to solve all the riddles in our life. “For My thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways My ways, says the Lord. For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are My ways higher than your ways and My thoughts than your thoughts” (Isaiah 55:8-9 AMP).
God operates in ways that are beyond our understanding, so we should simply learn to trust His methods and focus on being the best disciple we can be. “Oh, how great are God’s riches and wisdom and knowledge! How impossible it is for us to understand His decisions and His ways! For who can know the Lord’s thoughts? Who knows enough to give Him advice?” (Romans 11:33-34 NLT). It’s never advisable to give God a piece of your mind – like me, you don’t have any to spare.
Believers could greatly benefit in pulling away from trying to solve the mysteries in life. Instead, passionately pursue God and His will. His generic will for everyone is found in His Word and His unique, individual will for us is often discovered through prayer. King David penned, “Show me the right path, O Lord; point out the road for me to follow. Lead me by Your truth and teach me, for you are the God who saves me. All day long I put my hope in You” (Psalm 25:4-5 NLT).
The Key: It’s OK to ask God “why” but it could be a waste of your time.
Fort Scott City Commission Meeting Minutes Outline – June 2, 2026, 6:00 PM
I. Call to Order & Roll Call
Commissioners Present: Matthew Wells, Tracy Dancer, Tim Van Hoecke (via Teams), Julie Buchta, and Mayor Kathryn Salsbury (via Teams)
Presiding Officer: Julie Buchta
II. Pledge of Allegiance & Invocation
III. Approval of Agenda
Amendment to include an Executive Session after Reports and Comments (Approved 5-0)
IV. Consent Agenda
A. Approval of Appropriation Ordinance 1409-A (Payment Dates of May 14, 2026 – May 27, 2026): $456,069.98 (Approved 5-0)
V. Public Comment
Speaker: Michael Hoyt regarding public record requests
VI. Appearances & Presentations
Kristene, Gavin, and Aleksei Gemsky – Bourbon County 4-H Presentation
Deana Betts / Core Community – Update on poverty reduction programs
VII. New Business & Action Items
A. Consideration of Architectural Contract – Memorial Hall Roof Replacement & Masonry Repairs (Approved 5-0) (Page 1)
B. Consideration of Engineering Proposal – E. Wall Street Phase III & E. National Phase I (Approved 5-0) (Page 1)
VIII. Reports and Comments
City Commissioners, City Attorney, City Manager, and City Engineer Updates
IX. Executive Session
Preliminary discussion regarding the acquisition of real property under K.S.A. 75-4319(b)(6)
X. Adjournment
Detailed Meeting Summary
1. Attendance, Agenda Approvals, and Openings
Meeting Structure: The regular session of the Fort Scott City Commission commenced at 6:00 PM at City Hall (123 S. Main Street), alongside a live broadcast on YouTube.
Quorum & Administrative Presence: A full board was established with Commissioners Matthew Wells and Tracy Dancer physically present, while Commissioner Tim Van Hoecke and Mayor Kathryn Salsbury participated remotely via Microsoft Teams. Commissioner Julie Buchta presided over the session. Key city administrative staff in attendance included City Manager Brad Matkin, City Attorney Bob Farmer, Police Chief Jason Pickert, City Clerk Lisa Lewis, and City Engineer Jason Dickman representing Earles Engineering & Inspections LLC.
Agenda and Consent Items: Following the opening rituals, Commissioner Wells moved to amend the agenda to insert an Executive Session directly after the standard reports and comments. The amendment and the final agenda both passed unanimously 5-0. The Commission then unanimously approved Consent Agenda Item A, validating Appropriation Ordinance 1409-A for city payouts totaling $456,069.98 over the late-May billing cycle.
2. Public Comments and Community Appearances
Citizen Forum: Resident Michael Hoyt addressed the commission during the public comment window, discussing administrative procedures regarding open records requests and past documentation accuracy.
4-H Youth Development: Members of the Bourbon County 4-H program—Kristene, Gavin, and Aleksei Gemsky—provided an informational presentation highlighting local youth projects, agricultural education, and upcoming community events.
Core Community Progress Report: Deana Betts presented a detailed progress update on the operations of Core Community. Her presentation centered on the organization’s systematic, relationship-based programming aimed at helping local families transition out of poverty through education, community support networks, and financial literacy.
3. New Business Capital Infrastructure Approvals
Memorial Hall Renovations: The Commission evaluated the specialized architectural services contract required to manage structural restorations at Memorial Hall. Following a brief discussion on funding lines and timeline protections, a motion to award the contract for the comprehensive Memorial Hall roof replacement and associated exterior masonry repairs was approved 5-0.
Major Street and Traffic Engineering: The second action item focused on long-term infrastructure planning. The Commission reviewed a combined engineering proposal submitted by Earles Engineering & Inspections LLC covering two critical corridors. The board voted 5-0 to approve the engineering services contract to advance design and survey operations for East Wall Street Phase III and East National Phase I.
4. Administrative Reports and Executive Session
Department Updates: Staff and leadership provided a series of operational updates before entering closed session:
City Commission: Members brought forward logistical items, including pedestrian safety around school zones (9th, 10th, and 11th streets), crosswalk repainting schedules, lake lot encroachment issues, and upcoming common consumption area planning.
City Manager & Staff: Brad Matkin outlined street closures for the upcoming Good Ol’ Days festival, highlighted the construction progress on the Gunn Park retaining wall, and previewed city-issued alcohol license updates for the next agenda. The City Engineer provided status updates on the Davis Lift Station and required railroad permitting.
Property Acquisition Recess: Commissioner Buchta read a formal motion to recess the open meeting into an Executive Session. The stated justification was to conduct preliminary negotiations regarding the potential acquisition of real property, fulfilling the legal exception under Kansas Statute K.S.A. 75-4319(b)(6). The session included the five Commissioners, the City Manager, and the City Attorney. The executive session concluded at 8:48 PM, and the board returned to the open chamber, stating that no official action had been taken during the closed portion of the meeting.
A. Consideration of Ordinance No. 3797 – Amending Article 20 of the Fort Scott Zoning Regulations Regarding Accessory Structures and Intermodal Shipping Containers
B. Consideration to Resolve Issues with 118 E. Wall
C. Consideration of Ordinance No. 3799 – Defining Gunn Park Camping Regulations Regarding 14-Day Permit and Repealing Ordinance No. 3606
IX. New Business – Action Items
A. Consideration to Award 2nd Quarter Small Business Grants
B. Consideration to Amend City-Issued Alcoholic Liquor and Cereal Malt Beverage (CMB) Licenses
C. Discussion of City Manager’s Review
X. Reports and Comments
XI. Adjourn
Detailed Information Packet Summary
1. Consent Agenda Financial Approvals & Regular Business
The consent agenda features multiple significant infrastructure payouts and administrative approvals:
Appropriation Ordinance 1410-A: Covers the standard city expense report for expenditures spanning May 28, 2026, through June 9, 2026, totaling $795,782.34.
Public Works Infrastructure Invoices: Includes a progress payment request of $12,150.00 (Application No. 4) submitted by Jeff Asbell Excavating & Trucking, Inc. for ongoing work on the Davis Lift Station project. Additionally, Earles Engineering & Inspection, LLC submitted two distinct billing statements: Invoice# 18628 for $10,350.00, representing the 60% completion mark of the final design phase for East National Phase I, and Invoice# 18629 for $18,214.89 to address extraneous flow evaluations at the Davis Lift Station.
Administrative & Seasonal Business: Includes the official sign-off on the previous regular meeting minutes from June 2, 2026, review of the comprehensive May city financial reports, and the consideration of a seasonal retail fireworks vendor permit for Jurassic Fireworks, located at 4500 Campbell Drive.
2. Scheduled Appearances & Delegations
Temporary Notes Issuance: Garth Herrmann representing Gilmore & Bell will approach the commission regarding the financial management of the Series 2026-1 Temporary Notes. This involves two scheduled actions: reviewing competitive market bids to formally award the sale to the optimal bidder, and passing Note Resolution No. 25-2026 to legally authorize the financial issuance.
Community & Business Presentations: Local updates include Al Niece presenting details regarding the Moody Building, and Kari West from Evergy providing a standard corporate update on the city’s utility Franchise Fee structures.
Cultural Initiatives: Community Development & Human Resources Director Rachel Carpenter will introduce the first official reading of the Gordon Parks Film Initiative.
Local Business & Maintenance Requests: Kristy Holmes, on behalf of Holmtown Pub LLC, is scheduled to formally petition the commission for municipal operational assistance. Additionally, Jess Milburn of JCM Restoration has submitted a combined billing request totaling $50,148.00 for structural work at Gunn Park. This request consists of Invoice# 9204 ($33,000.00) for completed base-bid work on the Gunn Park Retaining Wall Repairs, alongside Invoice# 9205 ($17,148.00) for a change order covering extra work performed beyond the original contract scope.
3. Unfinished Business & Ordinance Considerations
Zoning Changes (Ordinance No. 3797): Presented by L. Dillon, this item revisits proposed amendments to Article 20 of the Fort Scott Zoning Regulations, which seeks to clarify and establish strict legal parameters governing residential accessory structures and the placement of intermodal shipping containers within city limits.
Property Violations: The commissioners will deliberate on actionable strategies to officially resolve ongoing structural or zoning issues tied to the property at 118 E. Wall Street.
Park Regulations (Ordinance No. 3799): Introduced by B. Matkin, this proposed ordinance seeks to refine public park maintenance and tourism policies by adjusting the Gunn Park camping regulations. It establishes an updated framework for 14-day maximum camping permits and officially repeals the legacy regulations under Ordinance No. 3606.
4. New Business Action Items
Small Business Grant Awards: Presented by M. Wyatt, the commission will consider approving the distribution of the 2nd Quarter Small Business Grants. Two local businesses are slated for selection: Kale Nelson / K & K Properties (doing business as Kale Nelson State Farm Insurance) located at 113 S. National, and Dylan Renfro representing M&K Carwash located at 723 E. Wall.
Liquor License Modifications: B. Matkin will guide a commission vote regarding amendments to the municipal codes governing city-issued Alcoholic Liquor and Cereal Malt Beverage (CMB) Licenses. The changes specifically seek to revise technical parameters outlined in Chapters 5.08, 5.12, and 5.14 of Title 5 within the Fort Scott Municipal Code.
Executive Session / Personnel: The final action item designates a set time for the commission to step into a closed review session to discuss the performance evaluation and contracts related to the City Manager.