Disability Action Yorkshire has submitted plans to demolish its 20-bed care home in Harrogate and build a 36-home facility instead.
The charity wants to construct three new apartment blocks on the site of its current home at 34 Claro Road and an adjacent parcel of disused land.
The development aims to partly the shortage of accessible supported housing for local disabled people.
Disability Action Yorkshire plans to complete the scheme in partnership with Highstone Housing Association, which is in the process of buying 34 Claro Road from the charity and the disused land from Harrogate Borough Council.
If the land sales go ahead, and the council grants planning permission for the scheme, work will begin in March to build two apartment blocks consisting of 24 one and two-bedroom flats.
Claro residents will then move in to these and their current care home will be demolished and the final block built.
All current residents will be guaranteed a flat to live in.
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It is hoped the project is completed by the end of 2023.
Jackie Snape, Disability Action Yorkshire’s chief executive, said:
“Our vision is to empower disabled people to live the lifestyle of their choosing, and independent living is at the heart of this.
“This is an incredibly exciting move for us, and something we have been planning for a number of years. Our partners, Highstone Housing Association, are experts in building supported housing.
“Whilst they will develop the site, it will be our staff supporting the residents, all of whom will have tailor-made care packages put in place before moving in.
“Our customers at 34 Claro Road have been fully consulted, and they looking forward to having their own front doors!”
Independent living
Founded 84 years ago, Disability Action has its headquarters and training centre on the town’s Hornbeam Park, a residential care home on Claro Road, and a holiday lodge in Lincolnshire.
It aims to empower disabled people to live the lifestyle of their choosing, through its training, preparation and other living skills.
Gareth Lloyd, Highstone Housing Association’s development and partnerships director, said:
“Highstone have over 30 years of development experience specialising in the delivery of bespoke quality accommodation for people with learning and physical disabilities, alongside complex needs.
“Our developments enable our tenants to have their own front door, living independently, with support.”
First suspected omicron cases found in Harrogate district
The first suspected cases of the omicron covid variant have been found in the Harrogate district.
Data from the UK Health Security Agency shows there have been five possible cases so far.
in the week to December 6, one covid sample in the district failed an S-gene test, which is a sign that a sample may be omicron.
Four failed in the previous week.
The UKHSA estimates that if omicron continues to grow at the present rate, the variant will become the dominant strain, accounting for more than 50% of all covid infections in the UK by mid-December.
Dr Mary Ramsay, head of immunisation at UKHSA, said:
“These early estimates should be treated with caution but they indicate that a few months after the second jab, there is a greater risk of catching the omicron variant compared to delta strain.
“The data suggests this risk is significantly reduced following a booster vaccine, so I urge everyone to take up their booster when eligible.”
The Great Yorkshire Showground vaccine site in Harrogate is asking people to turn up for walk-in boosters between 1.30pm and 4pm today as it was busy with booked appointments this morning.
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Ripon Farm Services given go-ahead to open twelfth depot
Ripon Farm Services has received planning permission to build a 22,000 sq ft depot at Eden Business Park near Malton.
It will be the 12th depot owned by Ripon Farm Services, which is one of the largest agricultural equipment dealers in the UK.
The company, which employs more than 250 staff, is a John Deere main dealer that supplies agricultural machinery brands such as, Kramer telehandlers, Kuhn cultivation equipment, Bailey Trailers and Sumo cultivators across Yorkshire, Teesside, Lincolnshire and Nottinghamshire.
Construction on the new building will begin immediately, with completion scheduled for August next year.
Richard Simpson, commercial director at Ripon Farm Services, said:
“This is a tremendously important move for us and a significant milestone in our 40-year-old history.
“Our new flagship building, will feature offices, training suites and meeting facilities for staff and customers and has been specially designed to accommodate our rapidly growing combine harvester business, including the John Deere X9.
“We are especially pleased to be moving to Malton, which has the enviable – and entirely justified – reputation as the food capital of the north. It is at the centre of North Yorkshire’s extensive agricultural community, which we are looking forward to serving.”
Funding for this new depot was by provided by HSBC.
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Killinghall resident looks into ways to reopen village pub
A Killinghall resident is looking to investigate what can be done to re-open the only remaining pub in the heart of the village.
The Greyhounds Inn, a Samuel Smith‘s pub at the junction of Ripon Road and Otley Road, has been closed for several years.
Its loss has been particularly keenly felt since the Three Horseshoes opposite was razed to the ground last year to make way for a new Tesco Express store, which is due to open next year.
It means the rapidly expanding village has gone from having two pubs in its centre to none.
Jonny Smith, who moved to Killinghall five years ago, recently floated the idea on social media of villagers getting together to see what could be done to re-open The Greyhounds.
Mr Smith said:
“I’m trying to understand where we stand, and whether as a collective we can do anything.
“It’s a nice old building with so much potential. It has a lovely old pub feel to it and just needs some TLC. Killinghall has more homes and families than ever so it could do well.”
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Sam Smith’s occasionally posts adverts looking for people to run the pub but it has been closed for about five years. Mr Smith said:
“I know others in the village want to see it re-open. I’m hoping somebody might have an idea on where we go from here but I don’t have a massive amount of hope.”
The Stray Ferret attempted to contact Samuel Smith’s but has not yet received a reply.
Tesco has begun advertising for 15 staff to work at the Express store that is being built on the site of the former Three Horseshoes pub.
The advert initially said the positions were for a Jack’s store, which is Tesco’s budget brand, but a spokesman for the company told the Stray Ferret this was an error and it would be an Express.
The Tesco spokesman also said a planning application for the proposed new full size Tesco store in Harrogate, about a mile from the site of the Killinghall Express, was “imminent”.
Aaron Bertenshaw memorial service to be held next month
A memorial service celebrating the life of Harrogate singer-songwriter Aaron Bertenshaw will be held at St John’s Church in Bilton on January 4.
Aaron, a former pupil at St Aidan’s Church of England High School, died suddenly aged 26 this month. He had struggled with diabetes and mental health issues.
Sammy Oates, his mother, said everyone was welcome to attend the service, which begins at 11am. A wake will be held afterwards at The Empress on the Stray.
Donations will go to Diabetes UK and CALM, the campaign against living miserably.
Sammy added the church has capacity inside for 160 people and the event would also be livestreamed because Aaron had family in New Zealand and South Africa.
She said the service would be an upbeat celebration of Aaron’s life and asked people not to wear black suits. Aaron loved tweed and Sammy suggested this as a possible alternative.
A fundraising page set up by Sammy to help people with diabetes overcome mental health problems has so far raised over £5,000. You can donate here.
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Sammy said she planned to raise the issue of diabetes and mental health to parliament as part of her campaign to fund a service that treats both illnesses together.
She is trying to find a counsellor within a 20-mile radius of Harrogate who is either diabetic or understands the disease.
Anyone who can help put her in touch with a suitably qualified person can contact her on social media or email us and we will forward on messages. You can email us at contact@thestrayferret.co.uk.
Aaron was a popular figure on the Harrogate district music scene. He was a regular at the Blues Bar, where he first performed and at many other venues, such as Hales Bar.
Harrogate lottery a ‘lifeline’ for charities during covidYorkshire’s only council-run lottery has been described as a “lifeline” for charities during the pandemic after thousands of pounds was raised for good causes in the Harrogate district.
Harrogate Borough Council launched the Local Lotto in 2018 despite some concerns over encouraging gambling and it has since raised more than £161,000 through the sale of £1 tickets with funds from each going to the buyer’s choice of charity.
This includes £56,000 raised over the past year when many charities have struggled to survive due to donations drying up during covid.
Ann Duncan, partnership and engagement manager at the council, told a cabinet meeting on Wednesday that the lottery had been a “lifeline” during this time. She said:
“The supporters of the Local Lotto have remained strong and this has been really important for those good causes because traditional fundraising methods have been limited.
“The Local Lotto provides unrestricted funding so there are no stipulations as to what the charities can spend the money on.
“They can spend it on their electricity or insurance, it’s up to them, so for some of the good causes it has been a real lifeline when funds have been quite desperate over the last 18 months.”
£25,000 jackpot
The council takes no income from the £1 ticket sales with 60p from each going to the buyer’s choice of charity, 20p into the prize fund, 17p to an external lottery manager and 3p to cover VAT.
Funds raised are paid to signed-up charities selling tickets and around £19,400 has been handed out in winnings over the past year.
Some buyers have won up to £2,000, although the top prize of £25,000 has yet to be claimed.
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The Local Lotto is also linked to the council’s Local Fund – a pot of cash which charities can apply for grants from.
Councillor Stanley Lumley, a Conservative who represents the Pateley Bridge and Nidderdale Moors ward, described the council’s decision to launch the lottery as “controversial” but said it had proved to be a “great success”. He said:
Meet the showground heroes boosting Harrogate’s vaccine programme“We took a gamble, if you’d pardon the pun, three years ago when we introduced this. It was controversial and people were sceptical whether it would work.
“It clearly has worked and worked extremely well.
“The beauty of this lottery is that a person buying the ticket decides where they want a portion of the money to go.
“My ticket money goes to something close to my heart – Nidderdale Plus at Pateley Bridge which is a really good community hub that needs support.”
About 20,000 people are expected to receive booster jabs at Harrogate’s Great Yorkshire Showground between December 6 and 22. Another 35,000 are set to follow in the New Year.
Most people who go agree it’s a slick, well-run operation. That it works so well is down to the efforts of 50 staff and 60 volunteers behind the life-saving operation.
The Stray Ferret spoke to some of those on site this week. The 60 volunteers are divided into four teams of 15 volunteers a day supplied on alternate days by community groups Boroughbridge Community Care, Harrogate and District Community Action, Nidderdale Plus and Knaresborough Connectors.
The Boroughbridge team, led by volunteer coordinator Jan Seymour, was on duty when we visited.
Ms Seymour was holding a box of chocolates, donated by a patient. All such gifts get shared between the helpers. She jokes:
“The people we like most are the ones that bring us chocolate and cake!
The set-up at the Yorkshire Event Centre is the same as it was from February to August this year when some 120,000 first and second dose vaccines were administered.
The volunteers remain relentlessly cheerful and helpful but there is a wearier feel to the place than there was in spring. Ms Seymour says:
“When we opened in February everyone was absolutely desperate to get it. Now the attitude is ‘I’m a bit busy today, can I come tomorrow?'”.
Volunteers typically do half a day each, either from 8am to 1pm or 1pm to 6pm. They meet and greet people, direct traffic and take people to one of the 16 vaccination pods, which can cater for up to eight vaccinators. Ms Seymour says:
“During lockdown it was easy to get volunteers but recently it’s become harder. Some people are back at work and many volunteers are older people who have childcare duties.
“The majority of patients are absolutely wonderful. They could not be more thankful. We get the odd one who isn’t. One guy had a go at me on Monday when he said ‘why can’t I go to my doctor for this? But that’s unusual. Most people are great.”
Staffing fatigue
Yorkshire Health Network, which is a federation of the 17 GP practices in the Harrogate district, manages the vaccination sites at Harrogate and Ripon racecourse.
Tim Yarrow, operations manager for the network, says the Harrogate site can handle greater numbers of walk-in patients because of its size and abundant parking.
The quietest time, he says, is early to mid afternoon, then numbers soar towards the end of the day as many people try to get in at the end of their working days. The decision to allow walk-ins this week sparked a surge of visitors with queues of up to an hour at peak times.
Mr Yarrow says:
“We set this up in one-and-a-half days. It was easier second time round. We knew the snagging points from last time.
“The main challenge is staffing fatigue. During lockdown we had a lot of people with not a lot else to do. As people have gone back to their day jobs their availability has become more sparse.”
Yorkshire Agricultural Society, which owns the site, has “bent over backwards to enable it to happen”, says Mr Yarrow. When the site re-opens in January, jabs will take place in another building at the showground so the society can resume holding events in the Yorkshire Event Centre.
Moderna provided
Barnaby Roe, general manager of Yorkshire Health Network, oversees the operation at the showground.
In a makeshift office on site, he explains that the 50 staff are comprised of GP practice staff, who are helping for free on their days off, members of Yorkshire Health Network, pharmacists, pharmacist technicians and nurses. Half work the morning shift and half work in the afternoon.
“This programme will be for 20,000 to December 22 then going forward we think it will be another 35,000.”
The site is giving doses of the Moderna booster but also administers some Pfizer jabs to children from immunosuppressed families.
“The people who work here have done it for some time and it’s down to a fine art.”
Booster appointments can be booked at the showground here. The site provided some walk-in appointments this week for over-18s who were eligible for jabs and has yet to decide whether they will be available next week.
Harrogate vaccine walk-ins: go in afternoon tomorrow to avoid queuesStaff giving vaccines at the Great Yorkshire Showground in Harrogate have advised anyone planning a walk-in booster jab tomorrow to go in the afternoon.
The decision to allow over-18s to just turn up and get boosters prompted a wave of visitors to the showground today. Some people queued for an hour to get jabbed.
Tim Yarrow, operations manager for Yorkshire Health Network, which is a federation of the 17 GP practices in the Harrogate district, said the site had a lot of booked appointments tomorrow morning but the afternoon was quieter.
Anyone arriving for morning walk-ins would receive a booster, said Mr Yarrow, but they might have to wait for up to an hour.
He said it was likely to be quieter after 12.30pm.
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Another 102 covid infections were reported today in the Harrogate district.
The district’s seven-day infection rate has fallen slightly to 422 cases per 100,000. The North Yorkshire average is 380 and the England average is 505.
No further covid-related deaths have been reported at Harrogate District Hospital, meaning the overall total remains at 200.
Harrogate’s Rossett School celebrates GCSE students’ successHarrogate’s Rossett School has held its annual presentation evening in-person after covid forced it to take place online last year.
The event celebrates the achievements of last summer’s GCSE students in a range of academic subjects and other disciplines.
The guest speaker was Joe Joyce, a former chief executive in the manufacturing and construction sector, a director of finance in education and now the owner of his own local family brewing company,
Mr Joyce shared his personal philosophy on the importance of aiming high in life, before presenting GCSE and BTEC certificates, along with the awards and trophies.
Headteacher Helen Woodcock said it was wonderful to be able to hold the event in-person again.
“We are very proud of this year group. They were an excellent year in many different respects, not least in their management of the strangest of times — learning remotely and at school over the last two years — in order to be awarded their TAGs (teacher-assessed grades).
“Their achievements have allowed them to progress on to their chosen pathways, and we were thrilled to celebrate their many successes at the presentation evening.”
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Harrogate shoppers donate chocolate to people in need at Xmas
Harrogate shoppers have responded generously to a plea to donate chocolate this Christmas for people struggling to make ends meet.
Commercial Street Retailers Group is working with Harrogate District Foodbank on the initiative, which runs until December 15.
People can drop-off chocolate at four shops on Commercial Street: Foxy Antiques and Interiors, the Harrogate Town shop, Lilly’s Bistro and Cafe and White Rose Sewing.
The food bank had said it was overwhelmed by demand for help this Christmas and although it had received many donations of staple products, such as tinned food, some chocolate would add a touch of luxury to seasonal food parcels.
Sue Kramer, of Crown Jewellers on Commercial Street and head of the retailers group, said a previous article on the Stray Ferret has generated a huge response.
“it’s going really well so far — Sue from Lilly’s has dropped off the first batch of chocolates and Harrogate Foodbank were both shocked and delighted with how much there was.
“It’s so heartwarming to know that even with everything everyone has been through with covid there is still genuine kindness and compassion in Harrogate for those less fortunate.
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