

Wednesday at Heckart Funeral Home.īurial will be at 1:00 p.m. The family will receive friends from 5:00 to 7:00 p.m. Thursday at Heckart Funeral Home, with the Pastor Kevin Anstine officiating. She was preceded in death by her grandfather, Floyd Dean.įuneral services will be at 10:30 a.m. Surviving are two children, Ashley Lightner, of Sedalia, and Kasey Anstine (Dakota), of Sedalia four grandchildren, Landen, Mila, Hunter and Olyvia her parents, Jimmie and Janie Cox, of Hutchinson, KS a sister, Jamie Heneha, of Burrton, KS and her grandparents, Alice Weimaster and Una Dean, both of Hutchinson, KS. She was currently pursuing education for police work. She enjoyed competing in pageants and had been crowned Mrs. She had previously owned Chocolate Daydreams. Melissa was a bus driver for First Student.

On June 3, 2000, in Sedalia, she married Eldon Floyd Coleman, who also died in the accident. She was born September 20, 1970, in Hutchinson, KS, daughter of Jimmie Don and Janie Darine Dean Cox. His current project is building a non-toxic, solar powered community in Wiscasset.Melissa Ann Coleman, 43, of Sedalia, passed away Thursday, March 6, 2014, near Hughesville, as a result of an auto accident. He grew weary of the “green” claim for strictly marketing benefit and enjoys Maine Green Building Supply’s core values to provide truly green products. He worked for the largest private homebuilder in Florida as a superintendent and green building advisor. Jason is passionate about facilitating this evolution. He comes from a background in custom and production home building. He strongly believes that it is this generation’s responsibility to change the way we build our immediate environment. After a life threatening illness changed his life he researched what makes humans healthy and found that our immediate environment is one of the largest contributing factors. He has been passionate about health and building for nearly twenty years. He is also certified as a Building Scientist from Joseph Lstiburek Ph.D. Jason attained a Health Educator Certificate from Hippocrates Health Institute, which focuses on raw foods and vegetable juices. She lives in Maine with her husband and twin daughters. Melissa Coleman has written for the New York Times, O Magazine, The Oregonian, Maine, Everett Potter’s Travel Report, and, and is a columnist for the Portland Press Herald‘s Dine Out Maine and Maine Home + Design‘s Bright-Minded Home columns. Her first book, This Life Is in Your Hands: One Dream, Sixty Acres, and a Family’s Heartbreak, was a New York Times bestseller, Indie Next Pick, People’s Pick in People Magazine, and nonfiction finalist for the Maine Literary and New England Book awards.
