Unapproved Minutes of the Uniontown City Council on Jan. 12

 

The Regular Council Meeting on January 12, 2026 at Uniontown Community Center was called to order at 7:00PM by Mayor Jurgensen.  Council members present were Amber Kelly, Mary Pemberton, Savannah Pritchett, and Bradley Stewart at 7:10PM and Councilmember-elect Kyle Knight.  Also in attendance for all or part of the meeting was Mike Ramsey, City Superintendent Bobby Rich, City Treasurer Sally Johnson and City Clerk Haley Arnold.

 

SPECIAL CONSIDERATIONS/PROJECTS

Motion by Pemberton, Second by Pritchett, Approved 3-0, to approve Mayor Approval of 2026 CMB License Applications.

 

City Clerk Arnold administered the oath of office to re-elected Mayor Larry Jurgensen and to newly elected Councilman Kyle Knight.

 

Open discussion took place on the available councilmember position. After discussion on possible new councilmembers, Amber Kelly volunteered to fill the vacant position.

 

Motion by Stewart, Second by Pritchett, Approved 4-0, to approve Amber Kelly for an additional term of office on the Council.

 

Council thanked Kelly for serving another term as councilwoman.

City Clerk Arnold administered the oath of office to Amber Kelly.

 

Motion by Pemberton, Second by Pritchett, Approved 4-0, to approve Bradly Stewart as president of the Council.

 

CITIZENS REQUEST

Mr. Mike Ramsey addressed the Council with questions regarding the memorial stones and the process for purchasing a stone. Council advised that, at this time, only one memorial stone requires repairs. Council further stated that there is no specific numbering or designation system for individual stones within the park. Individuals wishing to purchase a stone must provide a description of the stone’s location.

Council informed Mr. Ramsey that the $150 purchase fee includes the stone itself and lifetime maintenance of the stone. Mr. Ramsey was provided with the memorial stone design form and advised that the form was officially adopted at the previous month’s Council meeting. Council explained that prior to purchasing a stone, both the purchase fee and the proposed engraving design must receive Council approval before engraving may proceed.

 

FINANCIAL REPORT

Treasurer Johnson presented the December 2025 Treasurer’s Report.  Beginning Checking Account Balance for all funds was $210,072.85, Receipts $51,497.04, Transfers Out $20,016.00, Expenditures $40,808.43, Checking Account Closing Balance $200,745.46. Bank Statement Balance $218,472.49, including Checking Account Interest of $45.08, Outstanding Deposits $0, Outstanding Checks $17,727.03, Reconciled Balance $200,745.46.  Water Utilities Certificates of Deposit $38,724.94, Sewer Utilities Certificate of Deposit $23,332.48, Gas Utilities Certificates of Deposit $45,677.57, Total All Funds, including Certificates of Deposit $308,480.45. Year-to-Date Interest in Checking Acct is $623.56, and Utility CDs $2,458.47 for a Total Year-to-Date Interest of $3,082.03.  Also included the status of the Projects Checking Account for the month of December 2025, Beginning Balance $0, Receipts $0, Expenditures $0, Ending Balance $0.  December Transfers from Sewer Utility Fund to Sewer Revolving Loan $1,400.00; from Water Utility Fund to GO Water Bond & Interest $1,616.00; from General Fund to Capital Improvement-Streets $4,000.00; from Water Utility Fund to Capital Improvement-Streets $2,000.00, for Total Transfers of $20,016.00.  Net Loss for the month of December $9,327.39, Year-to-Date Net Loss $63,118.28.  Budget vs Actual Gas Fund YTD Revenue $118,624.48 (88.1%), Expenditures $134,188.42 (87.9%); Sewer Fund YTD Revenue $35,276.00 (94.8%), Expenditures $45,483.46 (98.6%); Water Fund YTD Revenue $114,866.39 (92.7%), Expenditures $129,756.54 (81.4%); General Fund YTD Revenue $181,648.12 (121.3%), Expenditures $231,798.36 (108.5%); and Special Highway YTD Revenue $8,101.28 (111.6%), Expenditures $7,251.44 (99.9%).  The January 2026 payables to date in the amount of $13,788.21. Treasurer Johnson reported that she has further corrections to make to the budget for the beginning of the 2025 year.

 

 

CONSENT AGENDA

Motion by Kelly, Second by Stewart, Approved 5-0, to approve Consent Agenda:

  • Minutes of December 9, 2025 Regular Meeting
  • December Treasurer’s Report, Profit & Loss Report by Class & January Accounts Payables
  • Designate Union State Bank as official bank
  • Designate Fort Scott Tribune as official newspaper
  • Resolution 2026-0112-01 GAAP Waiver
  • Destruction of records for 2015 and prior

 

DEPARTMENT REPORTS

City Superintendent Bobby Rich informed the Council that several water and gas meters are in need of replacement. The Council discussed the price differences between purchasing new versus used meters, the total number of water and gas meters currently in use, and the average number requiring replacement each year. The Council instructed Superintendent Rich that the City should plan to replace 15 water meters and 12 gas meters annually. The Council further advised Superintendent Rich to conduct an inventory of meters currently in stock and to provide updated pricing information at the next Council meeting.

 

Clerk Arnold asked the Council if the city was interested in our yearly rabies clinic on the last Saturday in March. Council advised to go ahead with the clinic.

 

Arnold also asked if the city wanted to provide a donation to the SOS party.

 

Motion by Kelly, Second by Pritchett, Approved 5-0, to approve a $100 donation to the SOS party.

 

Arnold informed the council of the upcoming 2026 Municipal Court Clerks Conference and the CCMFOA Spring Conference both in March and inquired if the city would approve her to attend both conferences.

 

Motion by Kelly, Second by Stewart, Approved 5-0, to approve City Clerk Haley Arnold to attend 2026 Municipal Court Clerks Orientation and Conference on March 26th and 27th.

Motion by Kelly, Second by Stewart, Approved 5-0, to approve City Clerk Haley Arnold to attend the CCMFOA Spring Conference on March 11-13th.

 

COUNCIL REPORT

Councilman Knight – nothing

Councilwoman Kelly – nothing

Councilwoman Pemberton – nothing

Councilwoman Pritchett – nothing

Councilman Stewart – nothing

Mayor Jurgensen – Informed the Council of an upcoming water rate increase from Consolidated Rural Water District #2. The Council was advised that Carey Spoon, the SEK Regional Planning Commissioner, will attend the February Council meeting to discuss potential grant opportunities. Jurgensen stated that one of the primary focuses for a grant would be the cleaning, camera inspection, and lining of the City’s sewer system lines. Discussion followed regarding possible project costs and the types of grants that may be available.

 

OLD BUSINESS

FEMA Flooding– Marbery Concrete Inc is scheduled to resume work on Wednesday, weather permitting. The crew will be working on Union Street, 1st Street, and Clay Street as they continue with the remainder of the project. During discussion of the ditches at 1st and Clay Streets, Council agreed that contractor should proceed with any work necessary to complete the project.

NEW BUSINESS

Executive session not needed.

Moved by Kelly, Second by Stewart, Approved 5-0, to adjourn at 8:18PM.

Pancakes and Groundhog (Sausage) Fundraiser at Southern Baptist Church on Feb. 7

 

The First Southern Baptist Church, 1818 S. Main.

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST CHURCH,
1818 S MAIN, FORT SCOTT KS
INVITES YOU TO JOIN US FOR OUR 7TH ANNUAL
“ALL YOU CAN EAT PANCAKES WITH A SERVING OF GROUNDHOG (SAUSAGE)
AND OR ALL YOU CAN EAT BISCUITS WITH GROUNDHOG GRAVY.
DINE IN OR CARRY OUT

BID ON OUR SILENT AUCTION BASKETS

FEBRUARY 7, 2026 FROM 8:00 A.M. TO 2:00 P.M.
CHILDREN 7 AND UNDER FREE, 8 TO ADULT $6.00 IN ADVANCE OR
$7.00 AT THE DOOR

FOR ADVANCED TICKETS CONTACT
IDA FORD 417-262-3948 OR
TERRI WILLIAMS 620-215-3202.
**All proceeds to go FSBC Building Fund

Feb. 4 Planning Commission Meeting Agenda

The north wing, east side of the Bourbon County Courthouse.

There will be a planning commission meeting at 5:30PM, Feb. 4 at 210 S National. This meeting will be streamed on YouTube.

Bourbon County Planning Committee Agenda for Wednesday February 4, 2026

1. Pledge
2. Roll
3. Approval of Agenda
4. Approval of minutes from Dec. 10, 2025; Jan. 14 and Jan. 28
5. Discussion on RFP for Comprehensive Plan and firms to submit to
6. New Business
7. Public Comment
8. Next Meeting and Agenda
9. Adjournment

ARTEFFECT JOINS IN CELEBRATING BLACK HISTORY MONTH

Unsung Heroes from top left to bottom right: Elizabeth Jennings Graham, Vivien Thomas, Autherine Lucy Foster, Lt. James Reese Europe, Claudette Colvin, and Olaudah Equiano.
ARTEFFECT JOINS IN CELEBRATING
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
ARTEFFECT celebrates Black History Month by spotlighting these remarkable individuals listed below. From pioneers in civil rights and education to trailblazers in science, the arts, and beyond, these Unsung Heroes have made a positive and lasting impact on history. Learn about their stories below:

Through ARTEFFECT, educators and their students are invited to consider and creatively interpret the stories of Unsung Heroes through visual artworks and written impact statements. View the approved list of over 130 Unsung Heroes for the 2026 ARTEFFECT competition using the online directory.

ARTEFFECT Competition
Steps to Participate

Step 1: Choose Your Unsung Hero
The 2026 ARTEFFECT Competition for middle and high school students is open through April 21, 2026! The first step for young artists in creating an ARTEFFECT submission is to select an LMC Unsung Hero—an individual who resonates as a role model.

The ARTEFFECT website now features an Unsung Heroes Timeline that situates civil rights and wartime Unsung Heroes in their specific time periods. Explore this interactive to learn about how these individuals made a positive, profound and lasting impact on the course of history!

Timeline Interactive
Remembering the Holocaust Session
Wednesday, February 18, 2026
4:00-5:15 PM Pacific Time
All educators are invited to join the next ARTEFFECT online session. Led by 2020 Nebraska Teacher of the Year and 2021 LMC Fellow Megan Helberg, this session explores best practices for guiding students in the creation of visual artworks representing stories of Unsung Heroes from the Holocaust and other genocides. All registrants will receive the lesson plan and recording. Attendees to the live session will receive a Certificate of Participation. Free to join—registration required. Learn more about the session and instructor.
Register Now
JOIN THE GROWING COMMUNITY OF EDUCATORS:
ARTEFFECT Educators Facebook Group
For inquiries, contact: [email protected]
ARTEFFECT Facebook
ARTEFFECT Instagram
ARTEFFECT
ARTEFFECT YouTube
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Amended Ft.Scott Commission Agenda

NOTICE OF AND AGENDA FOR REGULAR

MEETING OF FORT SCOTT CITY COMMISSION

City Hall Commission Room – 123 S. Main Street, Fort Scott, KS 66701

February 3, 2026  –  6:00 P.M.

 

 

                                                            AMENDED

  1.     Call to Order
  2. Pledge of Allegiance

III.       Invocation

  1. Approval of Agenda
  2. Consent Agenda
  3. Approval of Appropriation Ordinance 1401-A – Expense Approval Report –

Payment Dates of January 15, 2026 – January 27, 2026$420,842.25

  1. Approval of Minutes: Regular Meeting of January 20, 2026

                                                                                                     

  1. Public Comment

VII.      Appearances

  1. Stephen MitchellIT Update

 

VIII.   Unfinished Business – ADDITION OF ITEM

  1. Status update of Alleged Unsafe and Dangerous Structure at 602 S. Barbee – L. Kruger

 

  1. New Business

            Public Hearings:

  1. Consideration of RESOLUTION NO. 9-2026 RESOLUTION DIRECTING THE REPAIR OR REMOVAL OF AN ALLEGED UNSAFE AND DANGEROUS STRUCTURE AT 310 N. CLEVELAND – L. Kruger

 

  1. Consideration of RESOLUTION NO. 10-2026 A RESOLUTION DIRECTING THE REPAIR OR REMOVAL OF AN ALLEGED UNSAFE AND DANGEROUS STRUCTURE AT 601 S. LITTLEL. Kruger

 

Action Items:

  1. Status update of 18 S. HOLBROOKTabled from November 18, 2025 – L. Kruger

 

REMOVAL OF ITEM

  1. Consideration of changes to Ordinance No. 3793 – AN ORDINANCE REGULATING PUBLIC OFFENSES WITHIN THE CORPORATE LIMITS OF THE CITY OF FORT SCOTT, KSANSAS; INCORPORATING BY REFERENCE THE UNIFORM PUBLIC OFFENSE CODE FOR KANSAS CITIES, 41ST EDITION, PROVIDING CERTAIN PENALTIES AND REPEALING ORDINANCE NO. 3749K. Salsbury

 

  1. Approval to go out for bids for Cape Seal Project – B. Matkin

 

  1. Discussion – City lake propertiesB. Matkin

 

  1. Discussion – Contractor Licensing – B. Matkin
  2. Discussion – Condition of Horton Street – J. Dickman

   

  1. Reports and Comments

 

  1. Adjourn

 

District 3 County Commissioner Joe Allen Sworn In

The north wing, east side of the Bourbon County Courthouse.

Bourbon County Commission Meeting Agenda 02.02.26 Revised

Date: February 2, 2026 | Time: 5:30 PM

Meeting Opening

Oath of Office: Joe Allen was sworn in to his new position as commissioner of District 3.


Executive Sessions & Department Updates

Executive Sessions

The Commission will enter three private sessions under K.S.A. 75-4319 (b)(1) to discuss non-elected personnel matters.

  1. Session 1: Led by Greg Motley regarding specific personnel. 15 minutes. Returned with no action.

  2. Session 2: Led by Samuel Tran to protect the privacy of individual personnel. 20 minutes. Returned with action: Allow Tran to sign payroll change forms for the reviews discussed in the meeting. Approved.

  3. Session 3: Attorney Client Privilege. Called by David Beerbower. 10 minutes.  Returned to regular meeting with no action.

County Clerk Susan Walker addressed the commission regarding the need for the County Clerk, Treasurer, and Register of Deeds offices to change to a new independent mail server, managed by CrawKan.

“This change is needed due to decisions made regarding our technology system,” said Walker. “As well as several ongoing security concerns.”

Because each of the offices is separately elected and responsible to the citizens of Bourbon County, this is the most responsible path forward, Walker stated.

The new server is on order. New email addresses will be implemented in the next 7-10 days. It will be housed in the clerk’s office and the network system is already set up for an easy transition. It will be a separate network from the remainder of the county.

This change is necessary because all the offices have had several issues with CIC (Computer Information Concepts, the county’s accounting software provider) when doing entries throughout the day, causing duplicate and triplicate entries in their software. It will also ensure that their data is protected.

Walker said their biggest concern is that they were unable to issue accounts payable checks because of year-end issues that delayed payment almost a month, resulting in penalties to the county.

They contacted the county’s IT company, Stronghold, multiple times and were told that backups four times a day is their standard procedure. Walker also contacted the head of CIC, who told them that they weren’t getting the software updates they should have. She said they have asked numerous times for administrative access to their machines to do updates. When the access has been granted, it’s been temporary.

“This is the only way that we can get our updates timely and make sure that our data is secure,” she said.

Tran said he wished the conversation had come to the table so they could be sure all actions were necessary. He asked if she had gotten a second opinion on the need for a new server.

She said that neither she nor the County Treasurer nor the Register of Deeds trust Stronghold. They do trust CrawKan and RTS.

Tran said that without one entity having control of all the county’s IT, which oversees it “from the 30 thousand foot level,” there’s a lack of safeguards.

Walker said that she was not consulted about the use of Stronghold as the county’s IT department.

“I seriously think this is an ill advised move,” said Tran.

Regarding paying the invoice for the server, Tran said he had serous reservations.

He went on to say that he has personally called Stronghold on numerous occasions on behalf of county officials who had issues. Those officials and some county employees don’t understand the concept of a help desk being there to help you, not fix it for you.

“That’s how the industry is,” said Tran.

Sheriff Bill Martin said they’ve had several issues and he has asked his employees to start documenting them. Most recently, he couldn’t update the software the county uses for accident reports.

He asked Stronghold for administrative rights to his equipment, but they were unable to help him and told him it was an internal problem.

“I would have to agree with Mrs. Walker” about the issues, he said.

Tran said he wished he had heard about these problems earlier so the commission could address it.

“Having one IT department keeps us safe,” said Tran.

Martin reiterated his position that he doesn’t want Stronghold to continue to have the county’s IT contract once the project it is working on for the county is completed.

Tran predicted budget creep would be inevitable in a county with multiple separate servers and no overarching IT department.

Accounts payable were approved, including the new server for the Clerk, Treasurer, and Register of Deeds offices.

Citizen Comments:

Clay Walker: This county commission didn’t even honor a guy that retired after more than 20 years of service. “We need more transparency,” he said. “I don’t see this county taking care of their employees. I’m sorry,” he said as he left the table.

Dereck Ranes came to talk about the noise issue and find out where the county is at in addressing it.

Commissioner David Beerbower responded by saying that he inquired about how to gather evidence and they are looking into who they are going to assign that to and what equipment they will use. He said he would work on it the next day.

“I’d like to file a complaint every day until something gets addressed,” said Ranes.

Department Reports

  • Payroll: Update provided by Milburn-Kee.

Milburn-Kee read a letter to the commission from their administrative assistant requesting permission to put the county’s health insurance payments on auto-withdrawl to minimize manual paperwork and the possibility of missing a payment, which nearly happened in January.

Commissioner Greg Motley looked at the paper work and said that someone on the county’s signature card with ACH authority would have to fill out the form for Blue Cross and Blue Shield.

Susan Walker again addressed the commission, saying that on Jan. 1 everything was handed over to the new administrative assistant. She offered multiple times to walk her through everything and gave her the files and other information she needed to do her job, offering to go over it with her.

“When I handed that off, I just assumed they were being done,” said Walker. There are several things that are late. Walker said she passes those notices on to the administrative assistant as soon as she gets them.

“I do not feel like the ACH is the best approach for us because of how our system is set up,” said Walker. She wouldn’t know when it’s being withdrawn to have the Treasurer transfer the money into the account in time. The money doesn’t go into the account until it’s time to pay the bills.

“There are things hitting our bank account that we cannot say what they are for,” she said. “The communication [with the administrative assistant] is very much lacking.”

Milburn-Kee moved they allow the ACH. Tran seconded. Motley said they need a procedure in place to notify the clerk with the amount and exact date of withdrawl in order for the ACH to be workable.

Milburn-Kee rescinded her motion. She then made a motion for an executive session for non-elected personnel. Motion carried, Motley and Allen voting against. They returned with action.

Tran moved to pay Blue Cross Blue Shield through an ACH and ask the clerk to provide a list of potential bills that the administrative assistant would be responsible for. Motley reminded Tran of the need to give the clerk notice ahead of the bill. The motion was amended to have the clerk notified 5 days in advance of the ACH withdrawl with the exact amount being withdrawn.

Motion carried.

  • County Clerk, Susan Walker gave a comprehensive discussion on inventory management, commission minute procedures, resolutions, and the 2025 end-of-year financials.

The commission voted to make a number of adjustments to various department budgets to close out the 2025 financial year.

Walker said she had yet to receive inventory for what the commission is responsible for. She gave a partial report and asked for a commissioner to do inventory for the commission, including the  emergency management, IT, the commission proper and the executive assistant.

Walker also requested that custodial services to her offices be resumed. She wants keyfob access limited to her employees but not the custodial staff.

Tran asked how much security is required for her election equipment and they discussed it.

She also addressed the job description of the administrative assistant which includes taking minutes of the Commission, reminding them of the state statutes requiring the County Clerk to take the minutes.

Walker also brought up several issues with communication between the board’s administrative assistant and her office.

She also brought up a memorandum that was reported on Fort Scott.biz as having gone out to all the county employees. She said it didn’t go to her office or anyone else housed in the courthouse.

There was then some finger-pointing among the commissioners as to where the memorandum originated with no conclusion.

She then read some minutes from March 29, 2022 saying that elected officials are exempt from following the handbook if they so choose. She also went over records of previous commission meetings where front-loading sick leave was approved, prior to the handbook being updated.

Walker says that the amount of sick leave listed for employees now under the new system begun Jan. 9 is incorrect. She also says several employees have come to her because their sick leave and vacation hours are not right. She then asked that there be, “some cooperation” to have someone from payroll come in and go over it with her.

Finally, Walker presented a letter to the commission from Lora Holdridge, apologizing for her behavior in the last meeting.


Old Business

  • Policies & Planning: Follow-ups on the County Handbook and updates on Strategic Planning and the Commission Calendar.

Milburn-Kee said she talked to KCamp and got an example handbook with updated legally correct languages.

The commission is awaiting a return of the updates in the handbook from the HR department.

  • Strategic Planning: Greg Motley

This will be budget focused planning. He started with the statutes that govern the commission and working to define the commission’s goals and a commission calendar with all their deadlines in one place.

They set a date for a work session for Feb. 12 at 6 PM.

The commission scheduled a special meeting to interview applicants for the position of Emergency Manager right before the Feb. 12 work session.

  • Sewer project progress:

County Attorney Bob Johnson said he spoke with KDHE and the neighbor to the property in violation. KDHE will come out to reinspect and if it’s not fixed, they will file the appropriate action.

  • Administrative Contracts: Ongoing discussions regarding County Benefits. Tran

Tran began by stating that it has been said numerous times that we do not direct public officials and their employees. Tran said his issue is that the commission pays employee benefits for employees hired by those department heads. He asked that the department heads and elected officials notify the board when they hire someone so they can watch the budget.

Milburn-Kee suggested making employee benefits a part of each department’s own budget rather than the having benefits paid by the county.

Human Resources Roundtable Luncheon On July 29

You’re invited!

HR Roundtable

hosted by the Chamber

 

Wednesday, February 11th

11:45am – 1pm

Labconco

2500 Liberty Bell Rd.

The Fort Scott Area Chamber of Commerce invites members to a Human Resources (HR) Roundtable Luncheon on Tuesday, July 29th from 11:45am to 1pm at Labconco, 2500 Liberty Bell Rd. This roundtable event will provide an opportunity to discuss current and relevant topics impacting the workplace.

The February 11th meeting will feature guest speaker Kory Johnson, Vice President of Human Resources for Labconco, speaking to the group on “Building Tomorrow’s Bench: Succession Planning.”

HR Roundtables are open to any Chamber member involved in human resources-related responsibilities, regardless of company size, and are not limited to traditional HR professionals.

Attendees may RSVP at fortscott.com and an optional lunch may be ordered online for $10.

For more information, contact the Chamber at

620-223-3566 or email [email protected]

Click HERE to RSVP.

Thank you to our Chamber Champion members shown below…
Fort Scott Area Chamber of Commerce

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

620-223-3566

fortscott.com

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Obituary of John Joseph Shafer

John Joseph Shafer, age 79, a former resident of Mapleton, Kansas and more recently of Pleasanton, Kansas, passed away Sunday, February 1st, 2026, at his home. He was born on January 12th, 1947, in Kansas City, Kansas, the son of Buster and Margaret (Paddock) Shafer. John served with the United States Navy where he was stationed onboard the USS Forrestal. After receiving a medical discharge, John returned to the Kansas City area. With the middle name Joseph and a past that included more than one Mary, John’s journey eventually led him to Jo, whom he married in November of 1978 — the partnership that anchored the rest of his life. He was united in marriage to Arlene Jo Hart on November 10th, 1978, in Las Vegas, Nevada. Throughout their marriage, John and Jo lived in several small towns, but Kansas City always kept calling them back until finally in 1993, when they moved to Mapleton, Kansas where they remained until 2023 when they moved to Pleasanton, Kansas. John spent most of his life behind the wheel of a truck. He drove for construction and concrete companies, waste management services and for a short time even drove a school bus, but John was also an entrepreneur at heart. He built his own company Precision Mudjacking and Pressure Grouting where he employed mostly family. John enjoyed old cars, riding motorcycles, watching war documentaries, and spending time with family. Many memories were made at annual Memorial weekends and playing the game Axis & Allies with his family. John even constructed his own oversized game board. He also liked working on woodworking projects with his grandchildren.

Survivors include his wife, Jo, of the home; his eight children, Vicki (Herndon) and husband Reinaldo Maldonado of Overland Park, Kansas, Paul and wife Brenda Herndon of Parsons, Kansas, John of Lebanon, Missouri, Tammy (Shafer) Ashwood of Waynesville, Missouri, Sonja (Shafer) and husband Michael Stroble Paola, Kansas, Travis and wife Stacey Shafer of Crescent, Iowa, Crystal (Shafer) and husband Vincent Warren of Winfield, Kansas, Danielle Shafer and partner Eddy Miller of Pleasanton, Kansas; three adopted daughters, Brenda Shafer of Fort Scott, Kansas , Shannon Renee of Lake of the Ozarks, Missouri,  and Melissa Bailey also of Lake of the Ozarks, Missouri; twenty-six grandchildren, twenty-nine great-grandchildren and one great-great-grandson. Also surviving is a brother, Kevin Michael Shafer and many cousins, nieces, nephews, and friends. John was preceded in death by his parents, Buster and Margaret Shafer, his son, Jaime Joe Shafer, a brother, David Lee Shafer, and four grandchildren, Makayla Marie Margaret Shafer, Scott Allen McMannus Jr, Timothy Wayne Shafer, Steven Wayne Brewster.

The family will receive visitors from 5 to 7 PM, Friday at the Cheney Witt Chapel in Fort Scott, Kansas. Funeral services will be held at 10:00 AM, Saturday, February 7th at the Cheney Witt Chapel. Burial with military honors will follow at the Mapleton Cemetery. Memorials are suggested to Mapleton Park and may be left in care of the Cheney Witt Chapel, 201 S. Main, PO Box 347, Fort Scott, KS 66701. Words of remembrance may be submitted to the online guestbook at cheneywitt.com.

Bourbon County Local News