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Oxford honors tourism leader and hears farmers market report showing strong first-year results
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Summary
The Oxford Board of Commissioners presented a proclamation to Angela P. Allen and received a detailed farmers market report from Wendy Taylor showing roughly 8,100 visitors, 78 vendors, 30,164 pounds of donated food and $31,125 in grant funds; the board approved the 2026 market agreement.
The Oxford Board of Commissioners on Nov. 12 recognized Angela P. Allen, director of the Granville County Tourism Development Authority, with a proclamation praising her work to promote Oxford and surrounding communities.
Wendy Taylor, representing the farmers market board, gave a final-year report on the market’s first season. Taylor said the market drew about 8,143 visitors across roughly 23 Saturdays, registering 78 vendors—most from within 75 miles—and a median weekly attendance of about 377 people. She reported partners and grants that expanded the market’s reach: a Farm to Fridge refrigerator grant of $8,500 placed units in libraries, a senior boxes initiative that purchased $8,825 from local farmers and distributed roughly 10,000 pounds of food to people 60 and older on a third-Saturday distribution, and senior voucher books totaling about $8,800 that, when matched by Blue Cross and Blue Shield, yielded roughly $13,800 in produce for seniors.
Taylor said vendors reported sales increases—one producer told the board overall sales rose 5% while sales in Oxford rose 50%—and the market collected 30,164 pounds of food that were donated to local food programs. She described plans for 2026: an updated memorandum of understanding with the city, recruitment of additional produce and specialty vendors, and consideration of a paid market assistant position funded by grants or other sources.
Commissioners and community members praised the market’s impact. Several raised operational suggestions, including shaded or air-conditioned tent space, additional fans, water availability and assistance getting purchases to cars for older customers. Staff and commissioners confirmed that the market’s food-recovery partnerships include downtown restaurants redirecting surplus meals to organizations serving unhoused residents.
The board later approved a motion to authorize the 2026 farmers market agreement as part of city business. No dissenting votes were recorded.
The presentation and subsequent vote were part of a broader meeting that also included a cybersecurity grant discussion, a public comment about sewer easements, and routine capital and consent approvals.

