Health bosses have urged people to be patient on the covid vaccine as a further 76 cases have been confirmed in the Harrogate district.
The number takes the total number of coronavirus cases since the start of the pandemic up to 5,236, according to Public Health England figures.
The district’s seven-day coronavirus rate stands at 471 per 100,000 people and is the fourth highest in North Yorkshire.
Meanwhile, health bosses in North Yorkshire have urged people to be patient over the rollout of the coronavirus vaccine.
It comes after vulnerable residents told the Stray Ferret earlier this week that they were frustrated at the lack of information on the vaccine locally.
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The jab is currently being offered to the over 80s, frontline health staff and care home workers and residents. Those over 75, over 70, as well as clinically and extremely vulnerable patients, will follow.
Earlier this week, Prime Minister Boris Johnson set a target to vaccinate those four priority groups by February 15 following the country being placed into another national lockdown.
But local health officials have asked people to be patient and wait to be invited by their GP for their vaccine appointment as the programme is ramped up nationally.
Amanda Bloor, NHS North Yorkshire CCG accountable officer and chair of the North Yorkshire and York group of NHS and local government chief executives, said:
“It’s heartening to see patients’ enthusiasm to have the covid vaccine, but it’s important those at most risk of falling seriously ill and dying from coronavirus are vaccinated first.
“Your GP surgery is following the necessary guidance and will be in touch with you when it’s your turn to be vaccinated – please do not contact them.”
Meanwhile, Harrogate District Hospital is currently treating 24 patients who tested positive for coronavirus.
The number is an increase on the 16 which the trust reported last week.
According to NHS England figures, a further patient who tested positive for covid died at the hospital on January 6. It takes the total number of deaths at the hospital since March up to 111.
The hospital has treated and discharged 335 people diagnosed with covid – 11 of these since last week – but its current number of in-patients with covid has risen from 16 on New Year’s Eve to 28 yesterday.
Killinghall bypass ‘could cost in excess of £20 million’A new bypass for Killinghall could cost in excess of £20 million, county council officers have said.
The project would come as part of a plan proposed by North Yorkshire County Council to tackle congestion in the Harrogate district.
Councillors on the Harrogate and Knaresborough Area Committee heard the proposals at a meeting today, along with other measures to cut traffic.
It comes after the county council conducted a study in 2019 to find ways to ease congestion in the district.
Initial proposals included building the bypass along with a western relief road. However, that idea has now been taken off the table and a standalone bypass has been suggested.
Allan McVeigh, senior highways officer at the authority, told the committee that the project is estimated to cost “in excess of £20 million”.
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But he added that the figure was a “high level estimate” at the moment and more work needed to be done on the scheme if it were to be taken forward.
A report before the committee said the current bypass proposal would cost less to construct than the relief road and would offer “high value for money”.

Cllr Don Mackenzie, executive county councillor for access, speaking before the Harrogate and Knaresborough Area Committee.
Meanwhile, concern was raised from residents and campaign groups over cycle routes and the increase in flow of traffic into Harrogate as part of the project.
Rod Beardshall, of Zero Carbon Harrogate, called on the county council to oppose the plan. He added that “all non-road solutions for Killinghall should be considered before a bypass.”.
In response to concerns, Cllr Don Mackenzie, executive member for access at the authority, said a bypass was necessary to remove congestion from the “fastest growing village in the county”.
He added that the scheme would include active travel measures, such as cycle routes..
He said:
“We have a duty to respond to the many residents and local members who feel that they want to take some of this traffic out of their village.
“That includes 44-tonne lorries which could not be replaced by a person walking or cycling. That is why we firmly believe that certainly further consideration of a bypass to take this traffic out of the village is needed.”
The bypass is set to be added to the county council’s list of major schemes, which would require funding from the Department for Transport.
Harrogate district covid rate six times higher than a month agoThe Harrogate district’s seven-day covid rate has passed the 400 mark for the first time as infection rates continue to rocket.
The average now stands at 460 people per 100,000 and is the third highest in North Yorkshire.
The rate is now nearly six times higher than it was four weeks ago when the figure stood at just 79.
North Yorkshire’s average is 444 while the national rate is 636.
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Public health bosses in North Yorkshire warned this week that case rates were likely to worsen in the coming weeks.
A further 120 infections were confirmed today in the district by Public Health England.
The figure takes the total cases since the start of the pandemic up to 5,160.
Meanwhile, the vaccination centre at the Great Yorkshire Showground reopened today.
Residents raised concerns about a lack of information on the centre earlier this week when it appeared to have been closed for most days over the Christmas period.
Pateley Bridge police station to be soldPateley Bridge’s police station is to be sold for an estimated £142,000 to save money.
The building on King Street will be offloaded and officers relocated in an effort to save £19,000 per year.
Julia Mulligan, North Yorkshire’s Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner, made the decision to sell the station shortly before Christmas after agreement with the force’s chief constable.
In a decision report, the commissioner said police officers will move to Harrogate Borough Council’s offices across the road.
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The report added the sale could bring in £142,000 on top of the estimated savings.
Ms Mulligan said the money could be reinvested in frontline policing and the decision was part of a strategy to relocate officers alongside other public and third sector services.
She added:
“Pateley Bridge station is a large building and is relatively expensive to run.
“Whilst local officers and staff are based there, the building is far too large for the size of team based there.
“New mobile working technology means officers are spending less time in the station and more time in the community, which has also affected how often the current station is occupied. This will decrease further as new applications are added to the technology.”
The commissioner said in the report that the front counter service, which is currently at Nidderdale Plus office due to coronavirus, will remain open.
700 Harrogate hospital staff to be vaccinated this weekHundreds of hospital staff in Harrogate have had their first doses of the coronavirus vaccine.
On Monday, Harrogate District Hospital began offering the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine to its staff after the first batch was delivered.
Seven hundred staff have been booked in this week to be vaccinated and 266 had received the jab after the first two days of the programme.
A total of 820 staff from high risk categories were invited to be inoculated first.
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“It was a necessity to have this vaccination because I have two auto-immune conditions and my husband is classed as vulnerable because he has an auto-immune condition.“I’ve got elderly parents and a young grandson. I’ve had this to protect myself, my family and the patients we deal with.”
It comes as public health officials in North Yorkshire said they expected the Oxford-Astrazeneca vaccine to arrive in the county by the end of the week.
It means more care home residents will be able to access the vaccine as it is easier to transport.
The government has ordered 100 million doses of the vaccine, however just 530,000 were cleared for use earlier this week.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson said yesterday the NHS would begin to publish daily figures on the number of vaccinations from next week.
Harrogate district covid cases hit another high as 157 confirmedThe Harrogate district’s daily coronavirus cases hit another record high today as infection rates continues to soar.
Latest Public Health England data show a further 157 people tested positive in the last 24 hours.
The figure is an increase on the previous record high of 141 on Monday.
It takes the total number of cases in the district since the start of the pandemic to 5,040.
Central Harrogate is the worst affected area, with 43 infections in the last seven days.
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The district’s seven-day infection rate has now increased to 387 people per 100,000. Richmondshire remains the highest district rate in the county with 469.
The county-wide rate stands at 399, and the England average is 608.
The figures come as public health bosses in North Yorkshire warned yesterday that case rates will likely worsen over the next two weeks.
Officials said the new variant of coronavirus, which spreads between people easily, was almost certainly in the county.
£60 million A59 Kex Gill reroute in line for approval
A major plan to build a three-mile reroute of the A59 at Kex Gill near Harrogate is in line for approval next week.
The £60 million project is due to go before North Yorkshire County Council’s planning committee and council officers have recommended that the application is approved.
The project would take a year to complete and see the creation of a diversion west of Blubberhouses at Kex Gill.
It comes as the site has a long history of landslips, which have blighted travel on the road for years.
County council bosses have bid for funding from the Department for Transport and brought in consultants WSP to draw up blueprints for the diversion.

The site on the A59 at Kex Gill, which has a history of landslips.
The government has indicated it will offer up to £56 million towards the project, with the county council covering the remaining £4.95 million.
In its planning statement, the authority said intervention was required to protect road users.
It said:
“Without intervention the evidence suggests that the road and road users continue to be at significant risk from future and more severe landslips; potentially resulting in serious injuries or fatalities.
“Due to the nature of the landslips at Kex Gill, it is considered that it is necessary to realign the vulnerable section of the A59.”
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Landslips in recent years have caused weeks of disruption.
In January 2016, the road was closed for eight weeks and traffic diverted through Ilkley and Otley after heavy rain caused a landslip.
According to the council’s planning documents, between October 2000 and May 2019, five landslips were recorded at the site and the retaining wall failed four times.
In that time, the total cost to repair the damage, which include works to resurface the road or repair damage to the retaining walls, is estimated to be £2.23 million.
Should the project be approved and work start in the summer, Cllr Don Mackenzie, executive member for access, said it could begin without traffic disruption.
However, he told the Stray Ferret back in November that some disruption may happen when the road is aligned with the existing A59.
Councillors will vote on the application on Tuesday.
Harrogate businesses could get grants of up to £9,000Harrogate businesses could be in line for further financial support as more grants have been announced by the government.
Rishi Sunak, Chancellor of the Exchequer, unveiled a one-off top up grant of up to £9,000 for retail, hospitality and leisure businesses amid the national lockdown.
The funding comes as part of a £4.6 billion package and the grants will be based on the rateable value of each business.
The government expects the grants will help to support more than 600,000 businesses.
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Mr Sunak also announced a further £594 million worth of discretionary funding for local authorities to target those who will not be eligible for the grant but might be affected by the lockdown.
He said:
“The new strain of the virus presents us all with a huge challenge – and whilst the vaccine is being rolled out, we have needed to tighten restrictions further.
“Throughout the pandemic we’ve taken swift action to protect lives and livelihoods and today we’re announcing a further cash injection to support businesses and jobs until the Spring.
“This will help businesses to get through the months ahead – and crucially it will help sustain jobs, so workers can be ready to return when they are able to reopen.”
It comes as businesses in the district reacted to the announcement of a further national lockdown.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced on Monday evening that a new lockdown would come into force, with a stay at home order.
Sandra Doherty, chief executive of Harrogate District Chamber of Commerce, said the measures would be difficult but were necessary to reduce transmission until the vaccination took effect. She said:
In numbers: rapidly growing covid infection rate in Harrogate district“It’s going to be incredibly tough for all businesses over the coming months, and sadly not all will survive into the spring.
“Until we can resume life as we knew it in pre-covid days, the Government is going to have to continue its support to businesses, and extend it to those self-employed people who have so far not received any financial help at all.”
A total of 973 coronavirus cases were recorded throughout December in the Harrogate district as the country headed for a national lockdown.
The number represents fewer cases than in October and the second lockdown, but the month saw some of the highest daily infections as the new year approached.
The district’s spiking numbers were among those contributing to this week’s decision to introduce a new national lockdown, announced by Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Monday evening.
Fewer cases, but higher daily numbers in December
December saw 973 cases in the Harrogate District, fewer than the 1,119 during the November lockdown and 1,353 in October.
But, while there were fewer positive tests, the daily cases hit record highs towards the end of the month.

The number of cases of coronavirus and reported hospital patient deaths for December in the Harrogate district. Data: Public Health England/NHS. Graph: the Stray Ferret.
On December 29, 103 cases were reported – which was an all time high in the district until Monday’s figure of 141.
The lowest daily number was 10 new cases on December 10.
While daily cases in the district started out low at the start of December, the numbers began to rise as the month wore on.
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Case rate increase
The seven-day case rate in the district also steadily increased throughout the month.
The rate was the lowest in North Yorkshire for much of December. However, Harrogate’s average rate increased, along with the other six districts, throughout December.
On December 10, the rate hit a low of 79 per 100,000 people. By the end of the month, it was 269.
Meanwhile, nine deaths from patients who tested positive for coronavirus were recorded at Harrogate District Hospital in December.
New variant of coronavirus
Much of the rise in cases in the south of England has been put down to the new variant of coronavirus, which experts say spreads more easily.
At a press briefing of the North Yorkshire Local Resilience Forum, a partnership of emergency agencies, public health bosses said the new variant of coronavirus was almost certainly in the county.
Officials warned that the coronavirus case rates will likely worsen over the next two weeks.
Dr Victoria Turner, a public health consultant at North Yorkshire County Council, said:
Harrogate district’s R number increases amid third lockdown“We have talked for the last couple of weeks about the new variant that has been spreading from the south east of England.
“I mean we will certainly have cases of this in North Yorkshire.
“Now we have to act as if this is the predominant form of the virus across the country. We should treat every cases as the new variant.”
The Harrogate district’s R number has increased to 2.1 as the country enters another national lockdown.
It means the virus is spreading more in the district and for every 10 people infected, it spreads to 21 more.
The number, which refers to the reproduction rate, has increased over the past three weeks as cases continue to rise.
On December 15, the figure was just 0.6 – meaning the number of new cases was falling – but it now stands at 2.1 today.
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It comes as today’s figures revealed a further 95 cases of coronavirus in the district, taking the total number of cases since the start of the pandemic up to 4,883.
Meanwhile, the district no longer has the lowest seven-day case rate in North Yorkshire. The average increased to 359 per 100,000 people. Ryedale is now the lowest with 320, while Richmondshire remains the highest at 480.
Public health bosses in North Yorkshire today warned that cases will likely worsen in the county in the coming weeks until the lockdown begins to take effect.
The daily cases in the Harrogate District hit a record high yesterday after 141 were confirmed. Officials said today the new variant of coronavirus was almost certainly in the county.