Every month the Stray Ferret tries to find out what our local MPs have been up to in their constituencies and in the House of Commons.
In August, parliament was in recess for the summer. However, MPs were recalled to the House of Commons due to the escalating situation in Afghanistan.
However, none of our district MPs contributed to the debate on August 18.
We asked our three Conservative MPs, Harrogate & Knaresborough’s Andrew Jones, Skipton and Ripon’s Julian Smith, and Selby and Ainsty’s Nigel Adams if they would like to highlight anything in particular that they have been doing this month, but we did not receive a response from any of them.
Here is what we know after analysing their online presence.

Andrew Jones, Harrogate and Knaresborough MP.
In Harrogate and Knaresborough, here is what we found on Mr Jones:
- Mr Jones posted twice on his MP’s website in August. One post saw Mr Jones call for people to help to reduce their carbon footprint after the publication of the Independent Panel on Climate Change report.
- On August 14, Mr Jones updated his website to back a local bus service bid by North Yorkshire County Council of up to £20 million.
- Mr Jones was branded a “hypocrite” over a post he made on his Community News website about food banks. He did not respond to requests for comment by the Stray Ferret.
- Mr Jones’ Twitter account is for ‘retweets only’.

Julian Smith, MP for Ripon and Skipton.
In Skipton and Ripon, here is what we found on Mr Smith:
- Mr Smith updated his website once in August. The post reflected on what he did in his constituency in July.
- He tweeted six times in August. Among his social media posts were to congratulate Damian Hinds MP for being appointed security minister.
- Mr Smith posted six times on his Facebook page. He encouraged 16 and 17 year olds to get their covid vaccine after becoming eligible.
Read more:

Nigel Adams, MP for Selby and Ainsty which includes rural parts of Harrogate.
In rural south Harrogate, here is what we found on Mr Adams:
- A regular Twitter user, Mr Adams tweeted 12 times in August.
- Among his tweets were support for the Paralympic Games and congratulating Indonesia on its independence day.
- On August 23, Mr Adams visited an Afghanistan Crisis Centre set up by the Foreign Office. He said it was a “great to see all the fantastic work” the centre had done.
- He tweeted on August 25 that he and the Foreign Office would continue to resolve the crisis in Myanmar and paid tribute to the Rohingya muslims who have lost their lives.
- Mr Adams updated his website once in August. This was to publicise the North Yorkshire Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner’s consultation on priorities for fire and policing over the next four years.
- According to MPs register of interests as of August 23, Mr Adams had received £6,000 worth of free hospitality tickets to England’s Euro 2020 games.
A Hull-based engineering company has been awarded an £827,000 contract to construct the first phase of the Otley Road cycleway in Harrogate.
North Yorkshire County Council appointed PBS Construction for the project, which is known as the West Harrogate Scheme, with a start date earmarked for September 20.
The company has largely carried out projects in East Yorkshire and northern Lincolnshire, but has previously repaired the Kirkby-Masham bridge in North Yorkshire at a cost of £229,500.
The firm is also a sponsor of Hull FC rugby league club.
According to government procurement documents, the contract is valued at £827,100 and is set to end in November this year.
Melisa Burnham, highways area manager at the county council, said:
“The bid process allows any interested companies to bid. All tenders are evaluated and in this case PBS Construction Ltd were the stand-out applicants.
“Work is scheduled to begin in September and we will be issuing an update shortly.”
Work will include widening Otley Road on the approach to Harlow Moor Road as well as the creation of a designated left turn lane on the western approach to Harlow Moor Road and designated right turn lane on the eastern approach.
Read more:
- More road changes around Beech Grove and Otley Road
- Transport leader expects Harrogate’s Beech Grove road closure to be made permanent
An off-road cycle route will also be created between Harlow Moor Road and Cold Bath Road as part of the contract.
Traffic light junctions will also be upgraded.
The county council previously confirmed to the Stray Ferret that the final two phases of the scheme would also be awarded via open tender.
Negotiations with the Duchy of Lancaster over the exchange of Stray land have caused delays.
Harrogate Borough Council agreed in March to designate a plot of land on Wetherby Road as Stray land in exchange for the loss of grass verges on Otley Road for the new cycle path.
Traffic fears over plans for 560 homes on Harrogate’s Otley RoadA proposed 560-home development on Harrogate’s Otley Road has sparked fears over traffic.
Homes England, which is the government’s housing agency, wants to build the homes at Bluecoat Wood Nurseries, which is where the charity Horticap is based.
Homes England has submitted an Environmental Impact Assessment Scoping Report to Harrogate Borough Council for the 26-hectare site, which is required ahead of a formal planning application.
The report proposes building 560 homes on the site — 25 per cent more than is allocated in Harrogate District Local Plan 2014-35, which outlines development in the district until 2035.
Council officials consulted a range of bodies on the environmental impact of the development and what would be needed to be addressed, such as traffic and infrastructure.
Read more:
- Controversial plans for 200 homes in Pannal Ash halted indefinitely
- Government to build 800 homes in Harrogate and Ripon
- Homes England submits final plans for 390 homes near Ripon
Henry Pankhurst, of Harrogate Civic Society, which was among those consulted, said it objected to the plan on the grounds of traffic, encroachment onto greenfield land and adverse affect on the landscape.
Mr Pankhurst told the council in a letter:
“It seems logical that a much more intensive use of the land must have adverse consequences. The increase in dwellings, 110 units, from 450 to 560, is very significant – almost a quarter more.
“Traffic will increase, any buffer zones at the boundaries may well be reduced and amenity space both private and public may be compromised. Intensification in these and other ways will harm the special landscape area and harm the setting of the green belt.”
Meanwhile, the Harrogate Group of the Ramblers Association said the site had no recorded public right of ways or bridleways.
It said:
“With a site of this considerable size we would like to see a number of footpaths created through the site, and incorporated within natural green spaces.
“These should be of generous width, with a suitable surface, and routed logically. The routes should fulfil anticipated need.”
Homes England projects in Harrogate district
The proposed development is one of three sites in the district that Homes England has purchased for housing.
One of the other sites is the former Police Training Centre on Yew Tree Lane, which is earmarked for 200 homes. That site is in the Local Plan for 161 homes and faced similar criticism for “unjustifiable planning creep”.
The government agency has also submitted final plans for 390 homes at a site in Littlethorpe.
Homes England said previously that the environmental impact assessment for the Bluecoat site was an “early stage of the planning process” and that further consultation will be required for a formal planning application.
82 covid infections in Harrogate district reported todayAnother 82 covid infections have been reported in the Harrogate district, according to today’s Public Health England figures.
The district’s weekly infection rate now stands at 296 per 100,000 people. The North Yorkshire rate is 309 and the England average is 312.
According to the latest figures, Harrogate District Hospital is treating 10 patients for covid.
The hospital has not recorded any covid deaths in the last 24 hours, according to NHS England statistics. However, two people have recently died at the hospital after testing positive for coronavirus.
Read more:
- Harrogate hospital reports second coronavirus death in a week
- Harrogate district covid rate increases for sixth day in a row
Those two deaths followed a four-month period at the hospital when it did not record any coronavirus deaths.
It means the number of people at the hospital who have died from covid since March 2020 stands at 181.
Elsewhere, 124,161 people have received a first covid vaccine in the Harrogate district and 113,458 have had a second dose.
‘We will not resort straight away to criminal prosecution’ of travellers, say policeNorth Yorkshire Police has said it will not “resort straight away” to criminal prosecution of travellers who set up illegal encampments.
Travellers have pitched up at Hay-a-Park in Knaresborough and on the playing field at Ashville College in Harrogate this month.
Asked today by a member of the public why officers did not use the Criminal Disorder Act 1984, which prohibits trespassing, deputy chief constable Phil Cain said the police always looked to resolve the matter at “the earliest opportunity”.
But he added the force had a “graduated response” to dealing with such incidents.
DCC Cain, speaking at a North Yorkshire Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner public accountability meeting, said police had to balance the human rights of all those involved, particularly as the travelling community often has families with small children.
He said:
“The graduated response from North Yorkshire Police, as it is with other forces, is that we will not resort straight away to criminal prosecution. We will engage with the travelling community and the land owners as we have done on this occasion.
“We will seek to resolve the matter at the earliest opportunity using the least intrusive means possible. That includes graduating up through private land owners utilising powers in civil courts for unlicensed travellers settlements all the way through to the final element, which would be criminal prosecution.
“On this occasion, local officers have engaged with the travelling community and they have agreed to move on without the need for us to resort to criminal prosecution.”
Read more:
- Travellers set up camp at Harrogate’s Ashville College – and demand £5,000 to leave
- ‘Significant hurdles’ could delay moves to evict Ashville College travellers
- Travellers leave Ashville College without causing damage
“It’s not that we are not prepared to use these powers, it’s that there has to be a graduated response and we have to show that graduated response in order to show that we are complying with the Human Rights Act.”
Last week travellers set up camp on Ashville College’s rugby pitch and demanded £5,000 to leave, according to a college spokesperson.
However, after less than two days the travellers hitched up their caravans and moved on. The college said they left of their own accord.
Hay-a-Park rugby field in Knaresborough was sealed off by police and deemed to be a health hazard due to the amount of human excrement after travellers departed on August 10.

A police cordon sealing off Hay-a-Park rugby field after travellers left.
Nigel Adams MP accepted £6,000 worth of free hospitality tickets to England’s Euro 2020 games, according to the latest MPs register of financial interests.
Mr Adams, who represents Selby and Ainsty, which includes some rural parts of the Harrogate district such as Spofforth and Follifoot, received tickets to three games at Wembley Stadium.
He received a total of £6,038 worth of tickets from three separate companies, including two gambling and betting firms.
He watched England’s semi-final victory over Denmark, which was valued at £3,457 and paid for by Entain, a gambling company based in London whose brands include Coral, Ladbrokes, PartyPoker, and Sportingbet..
Power Leisure Bookmakers, whose brands include Paddy Power and Betfair, paid for Mr Adams to attend the round of 16 game against Germany. The value of the donation was £1,961, according to the register of interest.
Read more:
The Conservative Minister for Asia posted a video from the game on his Twitter feed.
https://twitter.com/nadams/status/1412883736463560710?s=20
Heineken UK, whose Tadcaster brewery is in Mr Adams’ constituency, invited the MP to attend the final between England and Italy — a gift worth £620.
The Stray Ferret approached Mr Adams for comment on the hospitality tickets but did not receive a response.
Gambling Act review
MPs have come under scrutiny for accepting tickets from gambling companies to attend games at this year’s tournament.
Seven Conservative MPs and two members of Labour leader Keir Starmer’s front bench accepted hospitality tickets to games involving England.
Former Conservative minister Esther McVey and Labour’s shadow skills minister, Toby Perkins, were among those who took tickets.
It comes as the government is currently undertaking a review of the Gambling Act to consider stricter rules on advertising.
Another 50 covid cases in Harrogate districtAnother 50 covid cases have been reported in the Harrogate district, according to today’s Public Health England figures.
The district’s weekly rate stands at 333 per 100,000 people.
The North Yorkshire rate stands at 309 and the England average is 328.
According to the latest figures, Harrogate District Hospital is treating nine patients for covid.
Harrogate hospital has recorded no covid deaths in the last 24 hours, according to NHS England statistics.
Read more:
- First covid death in four months at Harrogate hospital
- Homeless people blocked off from Harrogate Debenhams
It means the death toll at the hospital from covid since March 2020 stands at 180.
Elsewhere, 123,908 people have received a first covid vaccine in the Harrogate district and 111,694 have had a second dose.
Harrogate district to get solar farm powering 15,000 homesHarrogate councillors have today backed plans to build a large solar farm between Harrogate and Ripon.
The proposal, submitted by Elgin Energy EsCo Limited, would see Cayton Solar Farm built near the village of South Stainley.
The company says the site could generate 50 megawatts of electricity during peak operation and potentially power 15,000 homes in Harrogate with green energy. It will operate for 30 years.
A report before today’s planning committee said the farm, which will take up the equivalent size of 150 football pitches, would bring “significant renewable energy benefits” to the district and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
A total of 58 people wrote to the council to object to the application but 85 people wrote supporting it.
Councillors on Harrogate Borough Council voted unanimously to defer the plan to officers for approval at a planning committee meeting today.
Global warming
Cllr Pat Marsh, member of the planning committee, said:
“I can see the concerns of those who live close by, if it gets its permission. But, if you go down the A30 into Cornwall, there are solar panels all the way down virtually. It’s there and it exists.
“If you go into the centre of Spain, coming down the mountains into the very middle of Spain there are huge solar farms. I do not hear anybody shouting and screaming and the reason is because we have seen the impact of global warming.
“For once this district is becoming proactive.”
Read More:
- Green Shoots: Is the future of farming in the Washburn Valley?
- City council continues to press for better Ripon bus service
Andrew Mott, agent for the developer, told the committee:
“Considerable care has been taken in the design of the development to ensure that the environmental considerations are protected and biodiversity promoted.
“There are economic benefits in terms of employment opportunities during the construction and operation phases of the proposal. There is approximately £120,000 per year in business rates.”
Sterile landscape fears
Residents that oppose the application are upset about the loss of green fields and agricultural land.
In its submission the council, South Stainley Parish Council objected to the perceived negative impact on the environment. It said:
Harrogate Bus Company completes trial of all-electric bus“The area would become sterilised from an agricultural, environmental and recreational point of view.
“While maintenance staff in white transit vans will prosper, what happens to the farm workers and rural lifestyles which depend on local agriculture?”
Harrogate Bus Company has completed trials of the first ever all-electric bus with zero emission technology in the UK.
The Mercedes-Benz E-Ciatro was brought in for trials as part of the company’s plans to convert its entire fleet to zero-emission electric power.
It follows an ambitious bid made in partnership with North Yorkshire County Council, which has requested nearly £20 million of government money to help replace the fleet.
The week-long trials have taken place on The Harrogate Bus Company’s popular route one linking Harrogate and Knaresborough and follow experience gained with two alternative electric single deck buses.
The silver E-Citaro trial bus tested in Harrogate is powered by high-performance water-cooled batteries which use up-to-the-minute technology to extend running time between charges and keep the bus on the road.
Alex Hornby, chief executive of Transdev. which owns the Harrogate Bus Company, said:
“This exciting trial of the Mercedes-Benz E-Citaro marks the first time this new design has been tested in service in the UK, reflecting our ambition to deliver a zero-emission, high quality product for our customers across Harrogate and beyond.
“This is the third stage of our comparative trials of electric bus designs on one of our most popular routes, which will help us to make informed choices between options to invest in electric power.
“We hope that alongside North Yorkshire County Council’s bid for government support, our own multi-million-pound investment will turn our vision of a completely zero-emission bus network powered by a fully electric bus fleet into reality.”
The bid to the Department for Transport would see 39 zero-emission buses introduced over the next three years.
Read more:
- £20m bid to replace Harrogate buses with electric fleet
- Victoria Road one-way scheme will stop ‘rat run’, says cycle group
The buses come with next stop announcements, USB power and free wifi.
There would be an even split of single-decker and double-decker electric buses which would come with supporting charging infrastructure.
A decision from the government on the bid is expected in March next year.
Harrogate Leeds fans raise £2,000 for Alzheimer’s Research with Stan Bowles calendarLeeds fans in Harrogate have raised more than £2,000 for charity after a chance purchase of a calendar of 1970s footballer Stan Bowles.
Dave Rowson, who is a member of the Harrogate and district branch of Leeds United Supporters Group, held a three-day fundraiser last weekend to raise funds for Alzheimers Research UK.
A charity gig at the Manhattan Snooker Club, a “picture with Stan” day outside the Old Peacock pub at Elland Road and Stan Bowles pairs at the Black Swan Bowling Club in Harrogate helped to raise £2,721 for the cause.
A picture with Stan has become a running theme throughout the fundraising initiative and has seen Leeds favourite, Jermaine Beckford, and Angus Kinnear, managing director of the club, posing for a snap with the calendar.
All of this was a result of Dave making a chance purchase of the calendar of the QPR striker on a trip to Loftus Road in 2020.
“What is the Stan Bowles connection?”
Stood outside the Old Peacock on Saturday, some Leeds supporters would have been forgiven for asking why they were being asked for a picture with a QPR player.
Dave said:
“If I had a pound for every time I answered: ‘What’s the Stan Bowles connection?’”
During Leeds’ trip to QPR last year before covid, a charity worker thrust the calendar into Dave’s chest as he was walking past to collect his match ticket.
Initially Dave accepted the gift and went to walk on, until he was told it cost £2.
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- Harrogate man’s 40-year love affair with Leeds United
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Instead of handing the calendar back, he decided to use it as a means of getting into some of the home fans-only pubs before the game by posing as a QPR fan.
Later, he offered to give the calendar as a gift to a fellow supporter, Sarah, for her birthday.
Dave said:
“She said: ‘‘What am I going to do with that? I am on the train and only got a small handbag, you two look after it for me!’. How ungrateful after all the trouble I had gone to.”
Left with the calendar, Dave decided to take random pictures of Stan with punters in bars on trips out across the country and in Harrogate.
The move snowballed on social media and, as a result, Dave decided to put the calendar and the “picture with Stan” theme to better use.
Footballers and dementia
Bowles, who played for QPR for seven years and was voted the club’s greatest ever player in a 2004 fans poll, was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease in 2015.
He’s among a generation of iconic players, such as Jeff Astle, Nobby Stiles and Jack Charlton, who have been diagnosed with dementia or Alzheimer’s after their playing career.
Recent studies have linked the risk of dementia in former professional footballers with persistent heading of the ball.
In the past week, former Liverpool player Terry McDermott and Manchester United favourite, Denis Law, became the latest retired players to be diagnosed with dementia.
The news that professional footballers are at further risk of Alzheimer’s and dementia as a result of heading the ball has since caused further study and debate over the risk to players.
Dave and the Harrogate branch of Leeds supporters are continuing their fundraising. You can donate on their JustGiving page here.