The Stray Ferret Business Club’s next meeting is a breakfast event on Thursday, 27 July at Banyan in Harrogate between 8-10am.
The Business Club provides monthly opportunities to network, make new connections and hear local success stories. Get your tickets by clicking or tapping here.
A Harrogate property company has launched two new brands and appointed a property director.
Artium Group, which is based on Cheltenham Crescent, has hired Andrew Maxwell to oversee the launch of its new subsidiaries Allure Holiday Lettings and Alteza Student Accommodation.
Allure will operate as a a holiday lettings specialist with a portfolio of 30 properties within the Harrogate district.
Alteza will be a develop and operate purpose-built student accommodation in cities across the north of England including Durham, Leeds, Newcastle and York.
Mr Maxwell said:
“I am delighted to have joined Artium Group and am excited about this opportunity to help build the property management division alongside a talented and highly skilled team.”
Thomas Shotton, director and co-owner of Artium Group, added:
“We have ambitious growth plans across the business and Andrew’s experience and expertise will be invaluable as we work together to achieve these.”
York and North Yorkshire LEP launches skills programme
York and North Yorkshire Local Enterprise Partnership has launched a new skills programme.
Called Skills Bootcamps, the schemes are designed to help existing businesses develop their own workforces.
The enterprise partnership has pledged to meet 90% of costs for employers enrolling staff on the programmes.
The Skills Bootcamps offer a range of courses in areas such as cyber security, game design, programming, forestry, rail engineering and care.
Courses will be led by organisations such as Learning Curve Group, City of York Council, Calderdale Council, Coders Guild, Corecom Technology Academy and Northern Regeneration CIC.
Peter Emery, chair of York & North Yorkshire Local Enterprise Partnership skills and employability board, said:
“Skills Bootcamps offer a great way for learners to progress their careers and for employers to gain additional expertise.
“This latest menu of courses offers an exciting range of opportunities and can be tailored to a company’s actual needs thus making them a very attractive option to many SMEs and micro-businesses.”
For more information on the courses, visit the Skills Bootcamp website here.
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Harrogate survives mass cull of train station ticket offices
Harrogate has been spared in today’s announcement that hundreds of train station ticket offices in England will close.
The Rail Delivery Group, the industry body which represents train companies, proposed the closures of almost 1,000 ticket offices, saying it would move staff to “more face-to-face support for customers”.
Northern plans to shut 131 ticket offices — but Harrogate, plus others including Blackburn, Blackpool, Leeds and Skipton, will remain open on amended hours.
Harrogate ticket office will be open from 6am until 6pm Monday to Saturday, as opposed to its current hours of 6.15am until 7pm, and from 9am until 5pm on Sundays.
Tricia Williams, chief operating officer at Northern, said the “traditional ticket office is no longer required at most staffed Northern stations” as only one on six journeys were paid for through a ticket office.
She added:
“We need to modernise to meet the changing needs of our customers and we are seeking views from the public on these proposals.”
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Andrew Jones, the Conservative MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough, said the decision to retain Harrogate ticket office “will be welcome news to passengers who value the ability to buy tickets face-to-face”. He added:
“Rail companies are looking at this as the numbers of people purchasing tickets in person has plummeted with the rise of online booking and user-friendly electronic terminals at stations. All the plans are subject to consultation.”
Consultation on today’s recommendations runs from today until July 28. You can have your say here.
Brian Dunsby, of the Harrogate Line Supporters Group, said:
“The closure of ticket offices is inevitable.
“It’s the way the world is going, but Harrogate has largely been spared.”
Of the stations between York and Leeds on the Harrogate line, Horsforth is earmarked by Northern to have its ticket office closed.

Knaresborough Train Station
Other stations, such as Knaresborough, do not have offices and instead have machines for passengers to buy tickets.
The decision to close ticket offices elsewhere in the country was condemned by trade unions.
Mick Lynch, general secretary at the RMT, described it as “a savage attack on railway workers, their families and the travelling public”, adding:
“Travellers will be forced to rely on apps and remote mobile teams to be available to assist them rather than having trained staff on stations.
“This is catastrophic for elderly, disabled and vulnerable passengers trying to access the rail network.”
Appeal for missing man seen in Harrogate
Police are appealing for information about a missing man seen in Harrogate.
Richard Pask, 54, of Bramham near Wetherby, was seen at Enterprise car rental on Ripon Road in Harrogate.
A subsequent police social media post said he was later captured on CCTV getting off a bus at Thorner on Monday.
https://twitter.com/WestYorksPolice/status/1676337464435265536?s=20
West Yorkshire Police described him as white, 5ft 8, bald with white partial hair and stubble.
Richard was wearing a blue raincoat, cream trousers and brown shoes.
Anyone with any information on his whereabouts is urged to contact West Yorkshire Police.
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Reduced speed limit at A59 Kex Gill to remain until September
A reduced speed limit on the A59 at Kex Gill is set to remain in place until September due to an “uneven road surface”.
North Yorkshire Council has introduced the reduction which sees the speed limit lowered from 60 to 40 miles per hour.
Officials at the authority said the measure had been implemented due to the stretch of Kex Gill Road being uneven.
It added that the speed limit reduction will remain in place until September when the road will be closed for two weeks and resurfaced.
Barrie Mason, assistant director for highways and transport at the council, said:
“We have introduced a 40mph speed limit on a section of the existing A59 at Kex Gill due to the uneven road surface. This will only be in place until we carry out a resurfacing scheme.
“A start date is yet to be confirmed but we anticipate early September, lasting for two weeks under full road closures with signed diversions in place. We will notify the public in due course.”
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Business Breakfast: Harrogate builders’ merchants supports retrofitting scheme
The Stray Ferret Business Club’s next meeting is a breakfast event on Thursday, 27 July at Banyan in Harrogate between 8-10am.
The Business Club provides monthly opportunities to network, make new connections and hear local success stories. Tickets will be available later this week.
A Harrogate builders’ merchants is supporting an online training course to teach builders about retrofitting homes.
GH Brooks is hosting a sign-up event at its branch on Claro Road to help the initiative to make buildings more energy efficient.
The course is being launched by the charity Zero Carbon Harrogate on July 7 between 7am and 11am.
It is designed to help prepare the local building trade for home retrofit specifications.
John Kerr, Zero Carbon Harrogate’s retrofit programme manager, said:
“We are so pleased that GH Brooks are helping us spread the word about retrofit and the free training we have on offer.
“A big part of retrofitting homes is supported by good suppliers like them and supporting their customers. We really hope that the local building trades take advantage of this training, preparing them for both demand from homeowners and new legislation in home efficiency measures.”
For more information on how to sign up for the online course, visit the Zero Carbon Harrogate website here.
Rudding Park wins at industry award ceremony
Rudding Park Hotel and Spa has won an award at the annual Good Spa Guide awards.
The spa, which is based on Rudding Lane, picked up the best spa for the eco conscious award.
The ceremony was held at the Spa Life Convention in Gloucestershire on July 3.

Sarah Johnson, Rudding Park head of Spa, collecting the award with members of her team; Lorraine Kennedy, Emma Sorby and Megan Ainsworth.
Rudding Park was one of eight finalists, which also included The Spa at Carden Park and Swinton Country Club & Spa.
Sarah Johnson head of Rudding Park Spa said:
Highways boss defends North Yorkshire speed limit review“As a responsible business the environment and sustainability is a key focus for us combined with ensuring we provide guests with an exceptional spa experience.
“Offering guests something new and embracing our natural environment is really important, so we are absolutely thrilled to have won the award for the best spa for the eco conscious.”
The councillor responsible for highways in North Yorkshire has defended a review into speeding amid concern the local authority is delaying the introduction of 20 miles per hour speed limits.
Campaigners, headteachers and local councillors have called for a timescale on bringing in 20 miles per hour speed limits in Pannal Ash and Oatlands areas in Harrogate.
But Cllr Keane Duncan, the executive councillor for highways at North Yorkshire Council, said today the authority would not support default 20 miles per hour zones within the county.
It will instead draw up a speed management strategy to “guide a countywide review of speed limits across towns, villages and rural road”.
Cllr Duncan said this “tailored approach” to road safety measures that would not delay road safety measures.
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Hazel Peacock, of the Oatlands Road Safety and Active Travel Campaign, and Dr Jennie Marks, of Pannal Ash Safe Streets, told the meeting 20 miles per hour limits in their areas were “urgently needed” and called for timescales on implementation.
Councillors on the council’s Harrogate and Knaresborough area constituency committee passed a motion supporting the campaigners’ plea last year.
Earlier this week, leaders of 13 schools and education settings in Harrogate also backed the measure.
But it required the support of the council’s Conservative-controlled executive today.

Headteachers, councillors and campaigners united to call for urgent road safety measures this week.
In response, Cllr Duncan said measures were already being considered for the areas which are “not narrowly limited to 20 miles per hour limits only”.
He added:
“Work on these measures is already in progress and nothing within today’s new approach to setting speed limits will delay work that is already ongoing nor prevent implementation of appropriate 20 miles per hour zones in Pannal Ash and Oatlands.”
Cllr Duncan added that proposals for the Otley Road sustainable transport package would go before the council’s Harrogate and Knaresborough area constituency committee in September.
Meanwhile, further consultation on the delayed Oatlands feasibility study, which aims to cut congestion in the area, would be carried out later this year.
Temporary lights at Knaresborough’s Bond End to remain until FridayDrivers are set to face delays at Bond End in Knaresborough until Friday.
Temporary traffic lights were installed yesterday by North Yorkshire Council.
According to the council’s roadworks map, the lights are necessary because scaffolding has been erected to enable roofing work to take place.
Motorists have taken to social media to report long delays at the notorious bottleneck.
The council website shows that the lights will remain in place until Friday.
Further roadworks at nearby Scotton are also due to last until Friday.
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English Heritage declines to buy Ripon’s ‘Stonehenge of the North’
English Heritage has declined to buy a section of Thornborough Henges near Ripon after talks with the landowner broke down.
The cluster of Neolithic monuments above the River Ure consists of three large circular henges that have been described as the Stonehenge of the North. They date back 4,500 years.
The northerly henge is currently on the market for £200,000.
Knight Frank, which is selling the freehold of the land on behalf of owner Richard Bourne-Arton, described it as a “unique opportunity”.
However, English Heritage, which currently manages the central and southern sections of the henge, confirmed that it has decided against purchasing the land.
It said part of the decision was because the site was in better condition than the other two, which were added to Historic England’s heritage at risk register in 2009.

The northern section of Thornborough Henges, which is being marketed by Knight Frank.
The charity added in a statement that it also had “limited resources” to be able to go-ahead with the purchase.
A spokesperson for English Heritage said:
“Of the three henges, the northern henge is the best preserved (it is not on the Heritage at Risk register) and it has recently come up for sale.
“However, English Heritage is a charity with more than 400 sites to care for – the vast majority of which are like Thornborough, free-to-enter but not free-to-maintain – and we have limited resources.”
The move comes after the remaining two sections of the monument were gifted to the public free of charge in February.
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Historic England has described the Neolithic site as “probably the most important single ancient site between Stonehenge and the Orkney Islands in Scotland”.
The three large circular earthworks are each more than 100 metres in diameter.
Construction firms Tarmac and Lightwater Holdings gifted the site into the legal ownership of Historic England, which is a non-departmental public body, although it is managed by the charity English Heritage.
The site is located near West Tanfield, between Ripon and Masham, just outside the Harrogate district.
New housing scheme proposed in RiponA developer has submitted plans to build 14 new homes in Ripon.
Manchester-based Atzaro Box Clever Ltd has tabled the proposal to North Yorkshire Council for land off Athelstan Court.
It would see 14 new home build on land next to a former office building.
The office block, which stood empty for 10 years, has since had approval to be converted into 16 flats.

Designs for the new houses on Athelstan Court.
In documents submitted to the council, the developer said the move to build the new homes would be a “natural extension” to the newly approved flats.
It said:
“The council have since accepted a change of use for the conversion of Athelstan Court into residential apartments.
“The remainder of the site would therefore be a natural extension of the residential use across the full site.”
North Yorkshire Council will make a decision on the plan at a later date.
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Business Breakfast: Ripon ad firm agrees Transdev sponsorship
The Stray Ferret Business Club’s next meeting is a breakfast event on Thursday, 27 July at Banyan in Harrogate between 8-10am.
The Business Club provides monthly opportunities to network, make new connections and hear local success stories. Tickets will be available later this week.
A Ripon advertising firm has agreed a sponsorship deal with bus company Transdev.
Adverta Transport Advertising, which specialises in bus and tram adverts, will promote local attractions and businesses across the company’s fleet as part of the deal.
The agreement will see Transdev, which operates Harrogate Bus Company, promoting destinations along its bus routes to encourage greater use of sustainable travel.
Adverta is one of the UK’s largest bus and tram advertising specialists representing 30 bus companies and was acquired by Yorkshire-based outdoor advertising company CP Media in 2022.
Mike Brennan, chief executive of CP Media and Adverta, said:
“When we acquired Adverta it made total sense to extend its model into optimising sponsorship revenues as well. Transdev is one of the most prestigious and respected transport companies in the country and we are thrilled to be working with them.”
Matt Burley, commercial manager of Transdev, said:
“It is really important for us to promote the destinations we serve along our routes to our customers and to form great relationships with these attractions.”
Healthcare practice to takeover Harrogate parkrun
A healthcare practice is set to takeover Harrogate parkrun as part of the 75th anniversary of the NHS.
Moss Healthcare, which is based at King’s Road in Harrogate, will have staff and patients acting as volunteers at the weekly run around the Stray this Saturday.
The Harrogate parkrun is one of many ‘parkrun for the NHS’ events happening across the country to celebrate the milestone anniversary.
James Sharratt, business manager at Moss Healthcare Harrogate, said:
“We have managed to get our staff and patients, including our patient participation group, involved – whether volunteering or taking part in the run itself.”
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