A further 69 cases of coronavirus have been confirmed in the Harrogate district, according to today’s Public Health England figures.
It takes the total number of cases since the start of the pandemic up to 3,247.
Meanwhile, the district’s weekly rate has dropped to 292 per 100,000 people but is still above the England average of 257.
Scarborough continues to have the highest rate of all the districts in the county at 576.
Read more:
- Harrogate Nightingale ‘could open with five days notice’
- ‘Do not be afraid’: Harrogate woman’s testing centre experience
- Yvette Cooper MP: ‘no spare staff for Harrogate Nightingale’
It comes as Harrogate’s Nightingale Hospital could become a vaccination centre when a coronavirus vaccine is ready to be rolled out.
The Prime Minister’s spokesperson said the country’s Nightingales were “one possible way” of offering the vaccine to significant numbers of people.
James Street social distancing cones to be replaced with plantersCones used for social distancing on James Street in Harrogate will be replaced with planters in an effort to make the street more attractive.
Harrogate Borough Council and North Yorkshire County Council will introduce the planters as part of funding from both the European Regional Development Fund and government.
They will also replace the social distancing cones on parts of Albert Street.
It comes as a trial pedestrianisation of James Street was proposed in September, but county council bosses later postponed after pressure from local business owners. It’s unlikely the planters will be welcomed by some shop owners on the street who have opposed the cones and want the return of on-street parking.
Cllr Graham Swift, deputy leader of the borough council and cabinet member for resources, enterprise and economic development, said:
“We recognise the majority of businesses and stores in Harrogate are currently closed.
“But we hope in the run-up to Christmas, and the anticipation that the current lockdown will be lifted, people will be able to return to the high street and do so safely with the addition of these new eye-catching social distancing measures.”
As well as the planters, additional signs will be put up to reassure shoppers that it is safe to shop on the streets in the run up to Christmas.
Read more:
- James Street pedestrianisation ‘timely and appropriate’, says council
- Hoopers store warns: ‘Harrogate is not bulletproof anymore’
- Two thirds of James Street businesses against full pedestrianisation, says BID
Parking suspensions will remain in place until the end of January to support social distancing measures, but the county council will continue to monitor and review the situation.
However, suspensions that are currently on Albert Street, between Princes Square and West Park, will be removed and parking will be available
Cllr Don Mackenzie, executive county councillor for access, said:
“Our local highways team is working with Harrogate Borough Council’s parks team to install these planters alongside signage that will reinforce the message that it is safe to shop local.
“We are confident that the introduction of more attractive social distancing measures will offer reassurance to the public that they can shop safely and at the same time give much needed support to our local businesses.”
The county council will temporarily close both roads on November 18 and 19 to implement the planters.
It comes as the county council had initially planned a temporary pedestrianisation of James Street.
The measures were criticised by local business owners and landlords, including former Leeds United and England footballer Danny Mills.
After a meeting with local businesses in October, county council bosses decided to postpone the trial until after Christmas.
Yorkshire Ripper case ‘fundamentally changed’ policing, says former top copThe case of the Yorkshire Ripper Peter Sutcliffe changed the way police forces tackle major incidents, says a former senior North Yorkshire police officer.
Dai Malyn, who this year retired from his position as detective superintendent, oversaw the homicide investigations team for North Yorkshire and Cleveland and said the Ripper case saw “fundamental” changes for police forces across the country.
Sutcliffe, who has died at the age of 74, murdered 13 women across West Yorkshire and the north west between 1975 and 1980.
He was interviewed nine times by West Yorkshire Police over the course of the investigation, but avoided arrest. He was eventually convicted in 1981.
Read more:
- Harrogate binman caught by paedophile hunter group
- Almost 90 arrests in three years as police tackle county lines drug crime
Amid public concern over the investigations into Sutcliffe, an inquiry was launched by Sir Lawrence Byford, the then chief inspector of constabulary, into how the case was handled.
At the time, officers said they were unable to connect vital pieces of information due to a backlog of paperwork.

Sir Lawrence Byford, who lived in Pannal, Harrogate, when he died in 2018.
Sir Lawrence , who died at his home in Pannal in 2018, recommended that major incident rooms across all police forces were standardised and that senior officers were trained for serious crimes, such as serial killers.
Mr Malyn said the most “fundamental” change was setting up the Home Office Large Major Enquiry System.
Known as “HOLMES”, the computerised system stores every piece of evidence and helps senior investigating officers link them together.
Mr Malyn said the changes helped to tackle serious incidents.
He said:
“It has changed the way we now operate major incidents, every scrap of information is put into the system.”
He pointed to the case of Mark Hobson as an example of the changes in action.
Hobson murdered four people in July 2004, including his 27-year-old girlfriend Claire Sanderson and her twin sister Diane in Camblesforth, near Selby.
An eight-day manhunt involving 500 police officers across 12 police forces was launched. He was arrested on July 25 and later sentenced to life imprisonment.
Mr Malyn said at the time it was the “biggest investigation” in North Yorkshire and was supported by the recommendations from the Byford report.
Harrogate Nightingale could be used as vaccination centreHarrogate’s Nightingale Hospital could become a vaccination centre when a coronavirus vaccine is ready to be rolled out.
The Prime Minister’s spokesperson said the country’s Nightingales were “one possible way” of offering the vaccine to significant numbers of people.
Set up in April at a cost of £27 million, the Harrogate Nightingale has so far not treated a single covid patient.
It comes as health bosses in North Yorkshire said earlier this week that they will be prepared to rollout the vaccine once it is ready.
Read more:
- Harrogate Nightingale ‘could open with five days notice’
- Exclusive: Harrogate Nightingale hospital ‘unable to open safely’
- Yvette Cooper MP: ‘no spare staff for Harrogate Nightingale’
Amanda Bloor, accountable officer at North Yorkshire CCG, told a press briefing of the North Yorkshire Resilience Forum that health bosses were putting plans in place for the county
She said:
“Although there is some uncertainty on timescales, we will be ready in December to deploy a vaccine if it is available.
“But it is likely that wider vaccination will take place after Christmas and into the New Year. Any vaccination that happens before Christmas would be for very vulnerable groups.
“We are planning to be ready for this with our partners.
“Even when we do have a vaccine, we still need to observe any social distancing measures, lockdown measures and the guidance around hand washing and hygiene.”
Dr Lincoln Sargeant, director of public health at North Yorkshire County Council. also welcomed the results of the vaccine but warned that “long term behavioural change” was needed to tackle the virus.
The Pfizer and BioMTech vaccine was revealed to be 90% effective after being tested on 43,500.
A rollout of the vaccine is expected to target older and vulnerable people first.
Government awards North Yorkshire £1 million for walking and cyclingThe government has awarded North Yorkshire more than £1 million as part of plans to encourage more walking and cycling.
The funding is part of a five-year, £2 billion programme by the Department for Transport.
It has awarded £19 million of that sum to councils in Yorkshire. North Yorkshire County Council will be given £1,011,750 as part of the deal.
In the Harrogate district, Oatlands Drive, Victoria Avenue and the A59 connecting Starbeck to Knaresborough by Maple Close could benefit from the funding.
The government said the funding was aimed at creating measures to support walking and cycling, such as segregated cycle lanes, closing off streets around schools and improvements for pedestrians.
Read more:
Grant Shapps, Secretary of State for Transport, said:
“It has been great to see so many people build cycling and walking into their daily travel habits. To support them, we know it’s vital to have the right infrastructure in place so everyone – cyclists, pedestrians and motorists – can use our roads.”
The county council made a second bid for £1 million worth of funding in August amid criticism it was not ambitious enough in the first phase.
In the first wave of emergency funding, the authority received £133,000 from government – half the potential amount available.
As part of the second bid, the county council outlined five roads it intended to improve with walkways and segregated cycle lanes.
Three roads in Harrogate were put forward, including Oatlands Drive, Victoria Avenue and the A59 connecting Starbeck to Knaresborough by Maple Close.
‘Excellent news’
Cllr Don Mackenzie, executive county councillor for access at the county council, welcomed the further funding.
He said:
Taxi fares set to increase in December“We are committed to improving active, sustainable modes of travel for people across the county wherever possible.
“Following public engagement in the summer, we submitted a strong bid to the government’s Active Travel Fund, so it’s excellent news that we have been successful in gaining this funding.
“We now await confirmation of the details of the funding from the Department for Transport.”
Taxi fares for hackney carriages in the Harrogate district are set to increase for the first time in two years.
Under Harrogate Borough Council proposals, the flag fall, or starting charge, will increase from £3.30 to £3.40 during the day and from £4.95 to £5.10 at night.
Also, 3% will be added to the fare for running miles and waiting time.
Rates will also increase for Christmas and New Year from £6.60 to £6.80.
The proposed increase will come into force on December 1.
Read more:
- Reprieve for shoppers fined at Knaresborough retail park
- Harrogate council scraps parking charges for lockdown
The last fare increase was in December 2018.
A council decision notice said:
“The setting of fares is a statutory duty placed upon the council and it is the council’s responsibility to strike a balance between setting a fare that is acceptable to the customer and to the taxi driver.”
Taxi drivers called for the increase and said many drivers had lost work due to coronavirus.
In a letter to Cllr Mike Chambers, cabinet member for safer communities, one firm, whose name was not disclosed, said:
“The taxi trade has suffered immensely during the coronavirus lockdown, with many experiencing little or no work whatsoever and certainly at present things are still far from being normal for the trade as far as income is concerned.”
Objections must be made by letter or e-mail to the council by November 19.
North Yorkshire ‘will be prepared’ for covid vaccineHealth bosses in North Yorkshire have said they will be prepared to rollout a coronavirus vaccine in December, if it is available.
Amanda Bloor, accountable officer at North Yorkshire Clinical Commissioning Group, which buys medicines for the county, said it was working with national officials to make sure plans are in place to offer the vaccine.
It comes as preliminary results of the Pfizer and BioNTech vaccine showed that it was 90% effective after being tested on 43,500 people.
Ms Bloor told a press briefing yesterday of the North Yorkshire Local Resilience Forum, a partnership of agencies that tackle emergencies, there was “significant work” to do on the safety of the vaccine but the CCG would be ready for a rollout next month.
Read more:
- Harrogate district covid rate soars past 300 people per 100,000
- Covid patients in Harrogate hospital nearly double in a week
She said:
“Although there is some uncertainty on timescales, we will be ready in December to deploy a vaccine if it is available.
“But it is likely that wider vaccination will take place after Christmas and into the New Year. Any vaccination that happens before Christmas would be for very vulnerable groups.
“We are planning to be ready for this with our partners.”
“Even when we do have a vaccine, we still need to observe any social distancing measures, lockdown measures and the guidance around hand washing and hygiene.”
‘Don’t contact your GP’
Ms Bloor urged patients not to contact GP practices about the vaccine as it is not available. She said once it is, the CCG will be “very clear about the process”.
The government has said that any vaccine will be offered to the public in phases.
The first phase will include people living and working in care homes, those over the age of 80, then over 75, over 70, over 65 and then over 60.
It will then be offered to adults with health conditions that put them at risk, before it is given to those over the age of 55 and then 50.
The vaccine is given in two doses, three weeks apart.
‘Cautiously optimistic’
Dr Lincoln Sargeant, director of public health at North Yorkshire County Council, welcomed the preliminary results of the Pfizer vaccine.
Dr Sargeant said he was “cautiously optimistic” about the results but added there needed to be “long-term behavioural change” to overcome the virus.
He said:
“Any new drug or any new vaccine, the preliminary results are always going to be rosey for a variety of reasons.
“It is likely that when this vaccine is deployed fully that the effectiveness will be somewhat less than 90%.
“But it is still positive news, because it says that we have a vaccine that not only does the biology in terms of triggering the anti-bodies but in practice it can actually prevent infection.”
Meanwhile, a further 75 cases of coronavirus have been confirmed across the Harrogate district according to Public Health England figures today.
It takes the total number of cases since the start of the pandemic up to 3,178.
The seven-day rolling average rate of covid infections for the district has risen above 300 people per 100,000 for the first time.
The rate, which was 160 just over a fortnight ago, is now 307, which is above the England average of 254.
‘No intention’ of becoming mayor, says county council leaderOne of North Yorkshire’s most senior councillors has ruled himself out of standing for mayor in the county after devolution.
Cllr Carl Les, 71, leader of North Yorkshire County Council, told the Stray Ferret the position required a younger, energetic politician to bat for the county and lobby Westminster.
A key player in driving the county towards devolution and shaking up the structure of local government, Cllr Les said he hoped government would return with its preferred council model early in the new year.
In a wide-ranging interview, he stressed the need for investment in the county and his frustration at the delay in kickstarting negotiations with government over more powers.
“Every week that we delay putting to government is a weeks delay in getting the investment of the asks.
“We are falling behind in capital investment in this region.”
Shake-up of North Yorkshire’s councils
The biggest restructure of local government in the county since 1974 should take a further step in the New Year, Cllr Les hopes.
North Yorkshire County Council submitted its plan for a single council last Friday, while district leaders have tabled an alternative.
It means the ball is rolling and spells the end for the county’s seven district authorities and county council.
Read more:
- North Yorkshire devolution: what happens now?
- Call to create Harrogate Town Council
- 5 lessons to learn from devolution in Tees Valley
Cllr Les said the government hopes to come back to the county with its preferred option early in the New Year, before it embarks on a 10-week consultation.
Creating a new authority is a prerequisite to devolving power from Westminster, ministers told council bosses earlier this year.
Cllr Les said both devolution and scrapping of the two-tier system go hand-in-hand. It remains the case that the government wants a single tier council before it offers a directly elected mayor and more cash. He said:
“I have not been told that that has changed.”
Frustrations over devolution
Before the county can receive any powers over such things as transport and housing, it has to submit a list of requests.
Known as the devolution “asks”, it kickstarts the negotiations between council leaders and ministers over a devolution deal.
The 140-page document, agreed by seven out of the nine councils so far, outlines £2 billion worth of spending power for the county.
But both Ryedale and Hambleton have yet to agree to table the plan to ministers.
While it does not technically require every council to agree, council leaders wanted each authority to support the bid. Cllr Les said the lack of consensus was frustrating.
“Every week that we delay putting to government is a week’s delay in getting the investment of the asks.
“We are falling behind in capital investment in this region and there will have to be a frank discussion on how long we can wait.
“The really frustrating thing is that we can understand someone’s reticence to sign onto something as a last chance, but this is only the start. There will be opportunities later in the process.
“Let’s just get on with it, we cannot just carry on dropping behind just because some people have reticence about it.”
No appetite to be mayor
While Cllr Les has pressed leaders on the need for devolved powers, he has no intention of stepping into the role of elected mayor that comes with it.
Despite being leader of the county council for five years, he said the role needs someone “energetic”.
He pointed to Ben Houchen, the 33-year-old Conservative mayor of Tees Valley, as an example.
At 71, Cllr Les said he felt he was capable of carrying out his current duties but not a new role as mayor.
He said:
“I have no intention of putting my name forward.
“You need a lot of energy to be leader of the council, but I know that I can carry off my responsibilities.
“You would need to be very energetic to take on that role.”
While he may not be interested in becoming mayor, he said he will consider standing as councillor on the potential new authority in the county.
Cllr Les said it is possible that he will be the last leader of the county council, but added it was too early to tell if he would be part of a new authority.
Third covid death at Harrogate hospital since second lockdown“I will reflect on it nearer to the time. Let’s take things one step at a time.”
Harrogate District Hospital has reported a third coronavirus deaths since the start of the second lockdown.
According to NHS England statistics today, the latest death was reported on November 9 and follows two deaths recorded on November 5.
They bring the total number of deaths at the hospital since the start of the pandemic to 91.
The number of covid patients in the hospital has nearly doubled since last week.
Today, county council bosses warned that North Yorkshire faces further restrictions after lockdown if infections are not brought under control.
Read more:
- Harrogate hospital coping well with covid, says chief executive
- Harrogate man who made 3,000 face shields steps up again
- Harrogate district misses out on mass coronavirus tests
Currently the county is above the national average for weekly case rates, with 280 cases per 100,000 people.
The England average is 245.
Scarborough’s rate is the highest of the seven North Yorkshire districts at 463, with Harrogate second on 294.
According to Public Health England figures, the Harrogate district recorded a further 64 positive cases in the last 24 hours.
It takes the total number since the start of the pandemic to 3,103.
Meanwhile, it was revealed at a press briefing today that the permanent testing site on Dragon Parade, in Harrogate is testing on average 200 people per day. The number is up on 150 last week.
Harrogate council gives £31,000 to Welcome to YorkshireHarrogate Borough Council has today agreed to pay £31,472 to troubled Welcome to Yorkshire to help keep the tourism body afloat.
Cllr Richard Cooper, leader of the council, approved the sum at a meeting with council officers.
It comes as Welcome to Yorkshire faces a funding gap of £1.4 million amid the coronavirus pandemic.
The tourism body revealed the shortfall in July and wrote to council leaders in the county asking for support – of which around £450,000 was needed from authorities in North Yorkshire.
The organisation was deprived of £1 million in business rates after councils in North and West Yorkshire saw the pandemic reduce their income.
A further £400,000 shortfall was created when Welcome to Yorkshire suspended its membership fees.
Read more:
- County council approves £290,000 funding for Welcome to Yorkshire
- County council ‘stands by’ under-threat Welcome to Yorkshire
Now Harrogate Borough Council has followed North Yorkshire County Council, which has paid £290,000 in additional funding, to help bailout the organisation.
In a report before Cllr Cooper today, the council said it would fund the contribution from both its revenue budget and business rates retention reserve.
‘Positive projection’
Welcome to Yorkshire said failure to support it would reduce the “positive projection” of the county provided by the tourism body.
A spokesperson for Harrogate Borough Council said:
“This financial support will enable Welcome to Yorkshire to continue to support tourism in Yorkshire and the Harrogate district at a time when it is needed the most.”
Welcome to Yorkshire was hit by controversy when former boss, Sir Gary Verity, resigned in March 2019 on health grounds. He later faced allegations of bullying and inappropriately claiming expenses, which he denied.
Two inquiries carried out after Sir Gary’s resignation cost the tourism body £482,500.
Paul Scriven, a former leader of Sheffield City Council and a Liberal Democrat peer, told the House of Lords Welcome to Yorkshire had a “culture of toxicity” and misused public funds.