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About Us: Our Board of Directors

 

The Board

Company Shops Market Board of Directors. Back row, left to right, Charlie Sydnor, Patrick Harman and Rusty Holt. Front Row, left to right, Eric Henry, Sam Moore, Sharon Dent and Wayne White

The Company Shops Board of Directors is responsible for governing the organization at the highest level including hiring a Project Manager and ultimately a General Manager to oversee store operations. The board is very active and is currently involved in fundraising, event planning, securing a location, committee formation and policy creation. The board meets on the 2nd Thursday of the month at 4PM at TSDesigns located at 2053 Willow Springs Lane in Burlington. The public is welcome to attend.

Company Shops Market Board of Directors:
 

 

Caroline Ansbacher

A strong sense of community and a deep connection to mother earth have intersected at this particular time in Caroline Ansbacher’s life, to lead her to the work of Company Shops Market. Having grown up in South Carolina among extended family members whose avocations included farming, gardening, and conservation, she adopted these interests through osmosis. Though never a farmer herself, she has had a garden most of her life, and is drawn to anything and everything that has a connection to nature in all its magnificence.

Temporarily sidetracked from these interests during college and early adult life, Caroline graduated from Randolph-Macon Woman’s College, Phi Beta Kappa and Cum Laude, with a degree in economics. Thereafter, she worked as a Systems Engineer for IBM in Boston for seven years, but gave up her career to raise three children with Ben, her husband of 40 years. They owned and operated a computer business together until they sold it in 1998. Along the way, she earned a Masters Degree in Liberal Studies from Duke University.

The community part of Caroline emerged soon after her family moved to Burlington, North Carolina in 1973, as she worked to found both Family Abuse Services and Rape Crisis Alliance. As a result of these experiences, plus her work on the Burlington Planning and Zoning Commission, the Alamance Community College Foundation and the vestry at the Episcopal Church of the Holy Comforter, she learned to plan, to organize, and to execute. These skills proved useful later as Caroline served on The Burlington City Council for twelve years, eight of them as Mayor Pro Tem. During this time, she also served as Chair of the Environmental Committee of the North Carolina League of Municipalities. An appointment by Governor Hunt in 1996 to a six year term on the North Carolina Clean Water Management Trust Fund, as a founding member, allowed her to continue her interest in environmental issues after she left the city council. At the present time, Caroline serves on an advisory committee of Elon University Environmental Studies.

During all these years, she has maintained an avid interest in all things related to good health, especially exercise (she is a strong advocate of sidewalks), but more importantly, healthy eating. A co-op that offers locally grown foods will make a significant contribution towards that end, and at the same time build community for our people. Caroline has invested $5,000 in Company Shops Market.

 

Sharon Dent

Sharon, a native of Florida, has lived in Burlington for 18 years, and is a commercial paralegal at Wishart, Norris, Henninger & Pittman, P.A. She serves as Chairperson of the Board of the Wishart, Norris, Henninger & Pittman, P.A. Charitable Foundation, Inc. Sharon also sits on the Board of Directors of the Humane Society of Alamance County and on the Board of New Leaf Society, a nonprofit organization formed to beautify the community with landscaping and hardscaping, through public and private cooperation. Excited about Company Shops Market since its inception, Sharon believes that she can contribute ideas from a consumer’s perspective as to the benefits of organic foods and products, particularly those produced locally, and Alamance County’s need for an organic market. She asserts traditional grocery stores and the marketing engines behind them have conditioned consumers to what and how they should eat and the products they should purchase. It is Sharon’s belief that local and organic markets can expose consumers to other choices and remind them of the real taste of fruits, vegetables, meats, and grains. Sharon has invested $5,000 in Company Shops Market.

 

Dr. Patrick Harman

Dr. Patrick Harman has served as the Executive Director of the Hayden-Harman Foundation since April 2001. He is responsible for making giving recommendations as well as monitoring and guiding the foundation’s processes for determining charitable activities. He is accountable for evaluating the manner in which recipients achieve their goals with Foundation grants. His management activities include keeping abreast of the latest changes in North Carolina and federal nonprofit laws and implement any required changes and developing and utilizing capacities to improve the functioning of the Foundation.

Before becoming Executive Director of the Hayden-Harman Foundation, he worked for 10 years as a Senior Evaluation Specialist for SERVE, the federally-funded regional educational laboratory located at UNC-Greensboro. In this capacity, he designed and conducted evaluations and research studies on a number of educational initiatives.

The Hayden-Harman Foundation has invested $10,000 in Company Shops Market.

 

Eric Henry

Eric is President of T.S. Designs, a sustainably-minded textile company in Burlington. After almost losing their business to NAFTA (North America Free Trade Agreement), they have made a successful transition to a triple bottom line business that makes the highest quality, most sustainable, printed t-shirts on the market. Eric has been a long time owner of Weaver Street Market in Carrboro and an early owner of Chatham Marketplace in Pittsboro. The idea of a community owned grocery store to reconnect local agriculture back to Alamance County has been a long time goal. Eric also helped to start Burlington Biodiesel which has been making biodiesel at T.S. Designs for almost four years. Eric wants to push the window of sustainability in order to change the direction of American society. Eric is the Board Secretary and has invested $15,000 in Company Shops Market.

 

Sam Moore

Sam Moore is a native of North Carolina. For 30 years he was a research chemist, R+D Director and eventually CEO of Burlington Chemical, a family company started by his grandfather in 1953. His education includes an undergraduate degree from Elon University, graduate studies in textile chemistry at North Carolina State University, a master’s in Organization Management from the University of Phoenix, and he is currently seeking a PhD in environmental management and clean production at Erasmus University in the Netherlands.

Since the sale of Burlington Chemical in the Spring of 2007, Sam has founded a small business consultancy, Ouroboros Holdings, LLC and has started a web-based sales firm marketing a surgical recovery kit for orthopedic patients (www.kneedybag.com). Another project is beginning to develop a cotton appellation branding more sustainable cotton fabrics grown, spun and sewn in the Carolinas.

Sam has a wife of 15 years, Mary Frances, and a daughter Chelsea who is currently a candidate for a doctorate in audiology at University of Southern Alabama. In his spare time he tends to a 20 acre farm and listens to DAWG music with his hound dogs. Sam has been toying with the food co-op idea for years and is very excited to see it moving forward! Sam is the Board President and has invested $15,000 in Company Shops Market.

 

Charlie Sydnor

Charlie Sydnor, in 1963 was faced with the dilemma of whether to get an MBA and run a ranch or whether to go to medical school. Because of certain financial considerations, it was thought that medical school was the better choice. For the next 12 years, heart and soul went into finishing medical school, an internship and a residency.

In 1975 the dream of the ranch resurfaced, and a small farm was purchased in Snow Camp, North Carolina, in the spring of that year. This was the beginning of Braeburn Farm, which for the next 25 years was engaged in a cow-calf and stocker operation, producing calves for the commodity market.

In the spring of 2000, Charlie attended a conference on stocker cattle and was introduced to the idea of multi-species grazing. Also at this time, a growing body of evidence showed that cattle raised exclusively on grass were a healthier product than those fed grain.

The following year, Dr. Sydnor attended the Ranching for Profit course, given by David Pratt, and began to network with a group of ranchers in the West, who demonstrated many innovative practices. He came to believe that he had the wrong cow, producing the wrong product, in the wrong way, and was injuring the environment at the same time.

Consequently, a total remake of the farm began. It was decided to use the New Zealand Red Devon cow because of a history of one hundred years of grass-fed genetics. The product of these cows could not go to the commodity market, but had to be sold as a 100 per cent grass-fed product, processed and sold locally.

In 2004, Charlie joined the Carolina Farm Stewardship Association and found a large number of farmers interested in sustainable agriculture. Discussions with Eliza McLean started in a casual way at that time, but eventually led to the merging of Cane Creek Farm and Braeburn Farm under the banner of Wells Branch LLC. Wells Branch is currently in the process of integrating sheep, pigs, goats, layers, broilers, and turkeys into a cohesive system, such that each species produces a product and a service. Products are being marketed to restaurants, individuals, and at farmers’ markets throughout the Piedmont. Charlie is deeply committed to the establishment of Company Shops Market and the opportunity it will afford local growers and producers of all kinds. He has invested $15,000 in Company Shops Market.

 

 

 

 

 

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