A Harrogate mum has launched a series of information sessions following a rise in teenagers and pre-teens using potentially harmful skincare products.
Skin care specialist, Debbie Songhurst was so concerned after her 11-year-old daughter started asking for products which are not suitable for young skin that she is now trying to raise awareness of the issue among children and their parents. She said:
“Although I’m a skin specialist, I wasn’t really aware that children were using these products. I thought, this is quite scary. So I started asking people what products their children were using, then looking into those products and what was in them. I was so shocked at what I found.”
What Debbie discovered was a wide range of products using ingredients that are unsuitable or even damaging for young skin. Many have only ever been tested on adults and contain potentially harmful active ingredients intended for adults only. These include exfoliating acids and anti-ageing properties which can provoke serious side effects on young skin.
But with their appealing packaging and gushing reviews from social media influencers, these products are becoming must-haves for a younger audience. Added to that is the pressure teens and pre-teens feel to aspire to unrealistic images of flawless skin, and to buy products that all their friends are using. Debbie said:
“Children are talking about having ‘problematic’ skin or needing to use anti-ageing or firming products. They are using ingredients that are too strong and not safe for their young skin. This can cause skin irritation, early ageing and premature pigmentation. It can break down the skin barrier and can have long-term implications on their skin.”
“Approach children’s skincare with caution”
Debbie, a former pupil at Rossett Acre Primary School and Harrogate Grammar, trained as a medical tattooist and now works as a consultant for companies such as modelling agencies, educating people on how to look after their skin.
She said concerns around under-18s’ skincare is growing; a recent BBC report highlighted the issue, while the British Association for Dermatologists has warned of children as young as eight using skincare products that could leave them with irreversible skin problems. Debbie said:
“I wouldn’t let my children use the products that I use. Teen and pre-teen skin is much more delicate than adults’ skin and using unsuitable products makes it vulnerable. These products absorb a lot quicker into children’s skin and break down the protective barriers.
“When it comes to children’s skincare, it’s essential to approach it with caution and prioritise safety. Using gentle products specifically formulated for their age group is crucial.”
A ‘minefield’ – with added ‘natural’ confusion
Even with more education, Debbie said it can be hard for people to know exactly what the ingredients on a skincare bottle are, as there are so many different words for the same thing. One lady she worked with was using three different products that were basically all the same.
Adding to the confusion is the myth that ‘natural’ ingredients or products are safer. An example of this is the anti-ageing ingredient glycolic acid, sometimes called sugar cane, which is unsuitable for children’s skin. Debbie said:
“It’s a minefield. So many parents have said to me, ‘My kids are using this product because it’s natural’. But ‘natural’ doesn’t necessarily mean good, and often there are synthetic equivalents.”
Ingredients to avoid
Although there are so many ingredients out there that it’s hard to be specific, Debbie mentioned the following as being harmful for younger skin:
- Vitamin A / Retinol / Bakuchiol – Debbie said to think of retinol as like a volcano as it brings the base layer of the skin to the surface. It’s used in anti-ageing products because it’s increases cell turnover bringing the new derma to the top at a faster rate. She said: “Many people think that vitamins must be good for the skin. Most seem to have heard of retinol and some kids know that it’s not suitable for their skin. But they don’t know that it’s also called Vitamin A or that Bakuchiol is very similar and is also a potent active ingredient. Kids have got much thinner skin than adults and so their skin absorbs more, and these active products could break down their protective barrier. Even in adults, you would build up the retinol very slowly to allow the skin to get used to it and almost certainly have to include a strong SPF daily to protect the skin.”
- Glycolic acid / Sugar cane / AHA – Debbie said: “Glycolic acid is in quite a lot of products. It’s an exfoliant with a small molecular size, which allows it to penetrate the skin deeply into the skin, children don’t need such a strong exfoliant as this. A simple microfibre cloth will suffice and is much gentler on young skin.”
Recommended skincare routine for teens
While she said it’s not a bad thing to have a skincare routine at any age, Debbie stressed that it’s not necessary for pre-teens and teens to use lots of products. She said skincare for children should be “really uncomplicated” and recommends this three-step routine using products designed for sensitive skin:
- Firstly, remove dirt and bacteria with a simple face wash and microfibre cloth.
- Then apply a moisturiser.
- Finally, and most importantly, an SPF should be used. Debbie said: “Twenty-five per cent of sun damage to your skin happens before you are 18. A lot of the ageing and damage to our skin that we are trying to treat with all these products as adults is down to not using SPF when we were younger.” She said SPFs are regulated and organic ones use a more natural approach to protecting the skin so are best for young more sensitive skin. She also warned against thinking that skin is protected from the sun’s rays if you use make-up containing an SPF, as the amount of SPF that ends up on the skin is not enough to provide sufficient protection. Instead, apply an SPF and then put make-up on afterwards.
Debbie added that other simple things can also help teen skin that’s prone to breakouts, such as changing pillowcases regularly and cleaning your phone as this harbours a lot of bacteria.
She added that if teens have especially problematic skin, they should see a specialist who can devise an individualised approach to address the issue.
Skincare education events
Debbie’s first two teen and pre-teen skincare information sessions, held in Harrogate last month, were so popular that she is planning a third event in June. She is also looking at potentially offering sessions for schools. She said:
“The aim is to raise awareness among children and their parents about the importance of looking at the ingredients in products, like we do with food. I don’t want to scare people; I just want to help them question the benefits and possible problems of putting certain skincare products on their skin.”
The next information session is on Tuesday, June 4, at the West Park Hotel in Harrogate. Book tickets here.
Read more:
- The local women raising awareness of the menopause
- The Harrogate hospital worker bringing cheer for 50 years
Readers’ Letters: Harrogate’s cycleway extension is an ‘extraordinary waste of public funds’
Readers’ Letters is a weekly column giving you the chance to have your say on issues affecting the Harrogate district. It is an opinion column and does not reflect the views of the Stray Ferret. Send your views to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk.
This letter follows news of the cycleway on Harrogate’s Otley Road being extended.
I’d like to echo the furore over plans to extend the cycleway. It is an extraordinary waste of public funds and has created more confusion and danger.
I walk it every day and I fear a cyclist using the path (perfectly legally) will plough into the back of me at 30mph. I’m reliant on their sense of speed, but I may hear the “whoosh” too late as my back is to them.
It’s the minority that cycle a little slower as they hit the dual area of pedestrians and cyclists – but it is not a road.
The joy of a stroll has been taken away. I can no longer amble along this route – it will be lights out for me if I do.
Then there’s the Prince of Wales roundabout. Most drivers don’t even indicate! This only exacerbates the dangerous lottery of trying to cross the road.
A pelican crossing would surely be a fantastic safety investment and a tiny cost compared to the cycle path.
Shaun Bohan, Harrogate
I can’t help but feel the authorities just want a ‘quick fix’ for our roads…
This letter is in response to several stories about potholes and footpaths poor condition in the Harrogate district.
Further to your stories about the state of our roads and footpaths, one problem is the people repairing potholes have no idea how to do it properly.
It’s not the answer to just pour tarmac in the hole and ram it smooth. It should be dug out, a heavy base put in first, then a topcoat should be applied and sealed with hot tar. That’s how they did it fifty years ago and it worked.
I can’t help but feel the councils and government just want a quick fix to appease the likes of me…
Phil Turton, Harrogate
The plans for Victoria Avenue will only increase traffic in the town centre
This letter is in response to North Yorkshire Council’s decision to scrap plans to create cycle lanes on Victoria Avenue. The move means new measures, such as parking metres and making the Belford Road junction left-turn only, could be put in place.
There is a simple first principle to managing traffic congestion for a town, which is to direct incoming traffic to peripheral car parks and then when traffic leaves, guide it back out without it passing through the town centre. The current plans for Victoria Avenue seem to overlook this.
Tower Street has two public car parks with capacity for approximately 400 cars. Although there is signage to these car parks for vehicles arriving from the south, there is currently no signage as to how those vehicles should then exit the town.
The proposal to make the Belford Road junction with Victoria Avenue left-turn only will increase the number of cars that find themselves back on West Park, heading towards Parliament Street, then either cutting down Montpellier towards Cold Bath Road, or looping back round by the station.
There needs to be a sharper focus on the town centre map to plan exit routes from the Tower Street car parks.
Turning right out of Belford Road is actually optimal to take traffic away from the centre and maybe the infrastructure changes should make that easier and safer.
John Wann, Harrogate
Do you have an opinion on the Harrogate district? Email us at letters@thestrayferret.co.uk. Please include your name and approximate location details. Limit your letters to 350 words. We reserve the right to edit letters.
Read more:
- Readers’ Letters: ‘Harrogate’s roads are deteriorating before our eyes’
- Readers’ Letters: Of course the Lib Dems won the Harrogate by-election – the candidate wore a tie!
- Readers’ Letters: Bins weren’t overflowing when Harrogate Borough Council existed
Kids are using harmful skincare products, warns Harrogate skin care specialist
A Harrogate mum has launched a series of information sessions following a rise in teenagers and pre-teens using potentially harmful skincare products.
Skin care specialist, Debbie Songhurst was so concerned after her 11-year-old daughter started asking for products which are not suitable for young skin that she is now trying to raise awareness of the issue among children and their parents. She said:
“Although I’m a skin specialist, I wasn’t really aware that children were using these products. I thought, this is quite scary. So I started asking people what products their children were using, then looking into those products and what was in them. I was so shocked at what I found.”
What Debbie discovered was a wide range of products using ingredients that are unsuitable or even damaging for young skin. Many have only ever been tested on adults and contain potentially harmful active ingredients intended for adults only. These include exfoliating acids and anti-ageing properties which can provoke serious side effects on young skin.
But with their appealing packaging and gushing reviews from social media influencers, these products are becoming must-haves for a younger audience. Added to that is the pressure teens and pre-teens feel to aspire to unrealistic images of flawless skin, and to buy products that all their friends are using. Debbie said:
“Children are talking about having ‘problematic’ skin or needing to use anti-ageing or firming products. They are using ingredients that are too strong and not safe for their young skin. This can cause skin irritation, early ageing and premature pigmentation. It can break down the skin barrier and can have long-term implications on their skin.”
“Approach children’s skincare with caution”
Debbie, a former pupil at Rossett Acre Primary School and Harrogate Grammar, trained as a medical tattooist and now works as a consultant for companies such as modelling agencies, educating people on how to look after their skin.
She said concerns around under-18s’ skincare is growing; a recent BBC report highlighted the issue, while the British Association for Dermatologists has warned of children as young as eight using skincare products that could leave them with irreversible skin problems. Debbie said:
“I wouldn’t let my children use the products that I use. Teen and pre-teen skin is much more delicate than adults’ skin and using unsuitable products makes it vulnerable. These products absorb a lot quicker into children’s skin and break down the protective barriers.
“When it comes to children’s skincare, it’s essential to approach it with caution and prioritise safety. Using gentle products specifically formulated for their age group is crucial.”
A ‘minefield’ – with added ‘natural’ confusion
Even with more education, Debbie said it can be hard for people to know exactly what the ingredients on a skincare bottle are, as there are so many different words for the same thing. One lady she worked with was using three different products that were basically all the same.
Adding to the confusion is the myth that ‘natural’ ingredients or products are safer. An example of this is the anti-ageing ingredient glycolic acid, sometimes called sugar cane, which is unsuitable for children’s skin. Debbie said:
“It’s a minefield. So many parents have said to me, ‘My kids are using this product because it’s natural’. But ‘natural’ doesn’t necessarily mean good, and often there are synthetic equivalents.”
Ingredients to avoid
Although there are so many ingredients out there that it’s hard to be specific, Debbie mentioned the following as being harmful for younger skin:
- Vitamin A / Retinol / Bakuchiol – Debbie said to think of retinol as like a volcano as it brings the base layer of the skin to the surface. It’s used in anti-ageing products because it’s increases cell turnover bringing the new derma to the top at a faster rate. She said: “Many people think that vitamins must be good for the skin. Most seem to have heard of retinol and some kids know that it’s not suitable for their skin. But they don’t know that it’s also called Vitamin A or that Bakuchiol is very similar and is also a potent active ingredient. Kids have got much thinner skin than adults and so their skin absorbs more, and these active products could break down their protective barrier. Even in adults, you would build up the retinol very slowly to allow the skin to get used to it and almost certainly have to include a strong SPF daily to protect the skin.”
- Glycolic acid / Sugar cane / AHA – Debbie said: “Glycolic acid is in quite a lot of products. It’s an exfoliant with a small molecular size, which allows it to penetrate the skin deeply into the skin, children don’t need such a strong exfoliant as this. A simple microfibre cloth will suffice and is much gentler on young skin.”
Recommended skincare routine for teens
While she said it’s not a bad thing to have a skincare routine at any age, Debbie stressed that it’s not necessary for pre-teens and teens to use lots of products. She said skincare for children should be “really uncomplicated” and recommends this three-step routine using products designed for sensitive skin:
- Firstly, remove dirt and bacteria with a simple face wash and microfibre cloth.
- Then apply a moisturiser.
- Finally, and most importantly, an SPF should be used. Debbie said: “Twenty-five per cent of sun damage to your skin happens before you are 18. A lot of the ageing and damage to our skin that we are trying to treat with all these products as adults is down to not using SPF when we were younger.” She said SPFs are regulated and organic ones use a more natural approach to protecting the skin so are best for young more sensitive skin. She also warned against thinking that skin is protected from the sun’s rays if you use make-up containing an SPF, as the amount of SPF that ends up on the skin is not enough to provide sufficient protection. Instead, apply an SPF and then put make-up on afterwards.
Debbie added that other simple things can also help teen skin that’s prone to breakouts, such as changing pillowcases regularly and cleaning your phone as this harbours a lot of bacteria.
She added that if teens have especially problematic skin, they should see a specialist who can devise an individualised approach to address the issue.
Skincare education events
Debbie’s first two teen and pre-teen skincare information sessions, held in Harrogate last month, were so popular that she is planning a third event in June. She is also looking at potentially offering sessions for schools. She said:
“The aim is to raise awareness among children and their parents about the importance of looking at the ingredients in products, like we do with food. I don’t want to scare people; I just want to help them question the benefits and possible problems of putting certain skincare products on their skin.”
The next information session is on Tuesday, June 4, at the West Park Hotel in Harrogate. Book tickets here.
Read more:
- The local women raising awareness of the menopause
- The Harrogate hospital worker bringing cheer for 50 years
Yemi’s Food Stories: food as a universal language of love and connection
Yemi Adelekan is a food writer and blogger who was a semi-finalist in the 2022 series of BBC TV’s Masterchef competition.
Every Saturday Yemi writes on the Stray Ferret about her love of the area’s food and shares cooking tips – please get in touch with her if you want her to review a restaurant, visit your farm, taste the produce you sell or even share a recipe.
In a world of diverse cultures and traditions, food serves as a common ground that transcends boundaries. Sharing a meal with loved ones or strangers alike is an act of communion, where stories are exchanged, laughter is shared, and bonds are strengthened. Food has the remarkable ability to evoke emotions, ignite nostalgia, and create unforgettable experiences.
Some words transcend all languages and they include ‘yummy’, ‘yum’ and deep sighs of ‘hmmm’. When you hear them, you immediately know the deliciousness of a dish is the subject matter. Looks are shared, smiles are exchanged and heads are nodded towards strangers when one is enjoying great food. That is the power of food.
Food also has a role in healing and connection due to its remarkable ability to heal and uplift spirits during challenging times. Whether it’s preparing a comforting dish for a loved one or sharing a meal with neighbours, food acts as a conduit for empathy and compassion. In times of celebration or sorrow, a shared meal has the power to bring solace, foster camaraderie, and remind us of our shared humanity.
Growing up in Nigeria, many vegetables, roots, spices, herbs and seeds were used to nourish people back to health, fatten brides ahead of their wedding days or help a nursing mother to produce enough milk for the baby. Some dishes helped mothers regain their bodies after child birth. Some dishes’ aromas were reputed for making your spouse stay at home.
Food is best enjoyed when shared with others and it really doesn’t have to be fancy. A simple green salad with grilled chicken, boiled potatoes tossed in herby butter and a dressing followed by a bought-in dessert is enough to share with others.
Many of us wait for the perfect time to get together with others but it rarely ever happens that all the stars are aligned. I haven’t hosted a barbecue in recent years but I’m hopeful that this is my year.
Here is what you can do to get ready for entertaining at a moment’s notice:
Set the stage
Get your barbecue out, give it a good clean, and make sure you have gas. Alternatively buy a disposable one and have it ready. Spring clean your kitchen.
Source your ingredients
Get your ingredients ready and store them in the freezer; season what can be seasoned. This can include prepping your chicken, fish and buying your sausages or part baked breads. Ketchup and mayonnaise have a decent shelf-life so you can buy in advance and homemade chilli oils will last a couple of weeks.
Invite others
Let people know in advance that you are committed to sharing a meal with them and pencil in some tentative dates. Watch the weather reports and be ready to enjoy the sunshine at short notice.
Leverage shortcuts
Ask people to bring a drink, side dish or salad so it’s not all on you; most people would want to bring something anyway. Prepared salads and dips will lighten your workload. Elevate shop bought baguettes with garlic butter, balsamic glaze or chilli oil.
Asparagus and Ricotta Tart
Connecting over food takes intentionality but we can make it happen. As the world gets more insular with loneliness a societal challenge, we can leverage the emotive power of food to connect, uplift, and inspire through gathering around the dinner table with family or new friends.
Here is an easy recipe that comes together quickly allowing you to entertain friends at a moment’s notice.
Ingredients:
- 1 sheet of puff pastry, thawed
- 1 bunch of fresh asparagus, trimmed
- 1 cup ricotta cheese
- Baby plum tomatoes sliced in half
- Zest of 1 lemon
- Salt and pepper, to taste
- Olive oil, for drizzling
- Fresh basil leaves, for garnish
Instructions:
- Preheat the oven to 200°C (400°F).
- Roll out the puff pastry onto a baking sheet lined with parchment paper.
- In a bowl, mix the ricotta cheese with lemon zest, salt, and pepper.
- Spread the ricotta mixture evenly over the puff pastry, leaving a border around the edges.
- Arrange the trimmed asparagus spears on top of the ricotta in a single layer.
- Dot the tomatoes around the gaps, cut sides up.
- Drizzle olive oil over the asparagus and season with additional salt and pepper.
- Bake for 20-25 minutes or until the pastry is golden brown and the asparagus is tender.
- Remove from the oven and let cool slightly before garnishing with fresh basil leaves.
- Slice and serve this delightful asparagus and ricotta tart as a shared springtime treat.
Read more:
- Yemi’s Food Stories: top tips for cooking with limited ingredients
- Yemi’s Food Stories: a taste of France at Kendell’s Bistro, Leeds
- Yemi’s Food Stories: embracing spring by celebrating seasonal produce
- Yemi’s Food Stories: making healthy eating delicious and irresistible
It was, by far, our most commented-on story of the week. An event that drew gasps.
Not the mayoral election, of course, but news that a naked walk is returning to the Himalayan Garden and Sculpture Park this summer.
British Naturism, which is organising the event, helpfully sent us PG-rated, buttock-only photos of naturists along with the request that ‘they must be used exactly as they are. No censorship — blurring, pixellation or covering with clip-art for example’.
The most shocking angle for me was not the nudity but the prospect of freezing to death between Ripon and Masham.
The Conservatives were stripped of their political ambitions this week when Labour’s David Skaith swept to victory in the North Yorkshire mayoral election.
Two hours later, Mr Skaith popped up on TV alongside Labour leader Keir Starmer on the pitch at Northallerton Football Club.
It was a great day for Labour and a crushing first ever electoral defeat for Tory Keane Duncan, who instead of sloping out a side door as many politicians do took it on the chin and answered every question posed by a long line of journalists.
The bathing season gets underway this month and those making a beeline for Knaresborough Lido on the River Nidd will be delighted to know they can now check almost real time data on sewage being pumped into rivers by Yorkshire Water. Perhaps naked walks are safer…
Read more:
- Tense day ends in clear victory for Labours Harrogate-born mayor
- Ripon campaigners prepare for post D-Day battle with the bulldozers
- Brew York to open today in historic Knaresborough pub
As it happened: Labour’s David Skaith wins North Yorkshire mayoral election
Labour’s David Skaith was elected mayor of York and North Yorkshire at Harrogate Convention Centre today.
Mr Skaith will be paid £81,300-a-year to lead the new York and North Yorkshire Combined Authority, overseeing an annual budget of £18 million. He will have new devolved powers from Westminster and will champion the largest geographical region of any mayor.
Here’s a look back at today’s election count at Harrogate Convention Centre.
2.41pm: Keane Duncan magnanimous in defeat
The Conservative candidate was well beaten but he applauded winner David Skaith and is giving interviews now to a long list of journalists.
We have grabbed a word with him and all the other candidates. Look out for extensive reaction and analysis on the Stray Ferret over the next few days.
2.34pm: Final vote
2.29pm: Clear win for Labour
David Skaith is giving his acceptance speech. The final result was drowned out but he beat Conservative Keane Duncan by about 15,000 votes.
2.24pm: LABOUR’S DAVID SKAITH WINS!
2.20pm: Candidates reappear
Poker faces all round but someone just shook David Skaith’s hand. Has he won? We are awaiting the announcement.
2.08pm: Candidates being told results
Returning officer Richard Flinton announces provisional results being shared with candidates and election agents. They have disappeared into a room.
The result should follow very soon, unless one of the candidates is granted a recount.
This is tense — nobody seems to be making any confident predictions but most people are leaning towards Labour’s David Skaith.
2.05pm: Result expected imminently
A media person has just told us ‘don’t go for any long walks’ as a result is due very soon.
2pm: David Skaith returns
The elusive Labour candidate is back in the building, looking understandably pensive.
1.49pm: Result within the hour?
A big screen here at Harrogate Convention Centre shows the counts at the four other locations, and all appear to have finished.
That could mean a result is not far away. We are hearing it could be as soon as half an hour. But there is also the possibility of a recount if it is close.
1.35pm: Will high turnout help Tories?
There is speculation that the higher than expected turnout could suit the Conservatives.
There were fears among Tories that many of their voters would stay at home but the 30% turnout has buoyed hopes that a good proportion did register their votes yesterday.
A 30% turnout may not seem that high but by comparison, the final North Yorkshire Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner election, won by Conservative Zoe Metcalfe in 2021, attracted a 14% turnout.
Remember, the commissioner’s role will be taken over by the new mayor.
1.29pm: Nervous moments as result looms
There’s not much happening now. But the result can ony happen as fast as the slowest count. We understand one of the two Scarborough counts has finished but there are also counts in Northallerton and York.
We managed a word with Keane Duncan, who seems cheerful and agredd to pose for a photo but declined to comment until afterwards.
There is still no great certainty here, other than that it’s a two-horse race between the Conservatives and Labour, whose candidate David Skaith has not been seen since his brief appearance earlier.
1.05pm: Conservative candidate Keane Duncan arrives
Conservative candidate Keane Duncan has arrived, which means all six candidates have been spotted at Harrogate Convention Centre. He’s smiling and chatting with local Conservatives but these must be nervous moments.
Still no sign of Andrew Jones or Tom Gordon.
12.44pm: Labour still saying ‘too close to call’
About the only people not predicting a Labour victory here today are the Labour Party.
We just had a quick word with the regional media team who said they were very wary of predictions, and were still waiting for updates from the other counts taking place in York, Scarborough and Northallerton.
David Skaith has still not returned since his brief appearance earlier. The only other candidate who does not appear to be in the room here is Conservative Keane Duncan.
12.29pm: Ben Houchen wins – good omen for Tories?
Conservative Ben Houchen has just been declared the winner of the Tees Valley mayoral election. Some were predicting his defeat — is this a good sign for the Tories a few miles south in North Yorkshire?
12.02pm: Lib Dem candidate thinks she will finish third
It appears to be a straight fight between the Conservatives and Labour, with most people predicting a Labour win — but nobody appears to be doing so with any great certainty.
Lib Dem candidate Felicity Cunliffe-Lister says it looks like she may finish third. She adds:
“I was a little bit late entering the race than I would have liked. It just took a long time for the selection process so I didn’t hit the ground running,”
Ms Cunliffe-Lister says she is the only candidate to have been to all 17 hustings, and says she has enjoyed her foray into politics since being elected as Lib Dem councillor, a role she continues to fulfil.
ps the man in the previous post was Don Mackenzie, the former highways chief on North Yorkshire County Council.
11.48am: Count in full swing
Ballots are being counted. Quick question – who is the man standing with his back to the camera? Clue — he was a major figure in local politics until the 2022 local elections.
11.42am: 37 media outlets expected
There is a lot of media interest in the election of the county’s first mayor. Officials say 37 media outlets have been accredited. The media area is starting to fill up.
11.38am: David Skaith arrives
Labour candidate David Skaith has arrived at Harrogate Convention Centre. We asked for a photo, something the other four candidates here so far have obliged us with, but he politely declined, saying he was popping out and would be back.
11.34am: Tories and Lib Dems on opposite tables.
Elections are tribal: the Lib Dems are on the left table; the Conservatives are on the right. There isn’t much interaction between the two.
No sign yet of Andrew Jones, the Conservative MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough, or Tom Gordon, the Lib Dem who wants to succeed him. We understand Mr Gordon’s mother is standing for election in West Yorkshire and he is expected later.
11.26am: Turnout is 30%
Returning officer Richard Flinton announces the figure.
11.20am: Result could be declared early afternoon
The verification process, which was due to end at noon, is over and the word is the result could be declared early, at about 2pm, but election counts operate in a parallel universe full of rumours and nothing is confirmed.
We are told, however, the turnout figure is expected shortly. There’s a rumour (that word again) the figure is 30% at the Northallerton count, which isn’t too shabby for a mayoral election.
11.06am: Green candidate predicts Labour win
Kevin Foster, the Green Party candidate, is at Harrogate Convention Centre with his daughter (pictured above). Four of the six candidates appear to be here now, the exceptions being Conservative Keane Duncan and Labour’s David Skaith.
Mr Foster says he thinks Labour have done better here than expected and will win overall, although he suspects it will be close, with a margin of between one and five percent.
As for himself, he says he hopes to get between 5% and 10% of the vote. Candidates need 5% to get their £5.000 deposit back. He says the Greens are a small party that only received 220 donations in North Yorkshire last year.
10.52am: Strong turnout of Lib Dems at convention centre
There is a large turnout of local Lib Dem activists and councillors, Candidate Felicity Cunliffe-Lister is sporting a rosette.
10.43am: Independent candidate predicts Labour win
Bilton councillor Paul Haslam, who left the Conservatives to stand as an independent in the mayoral contest, says he gets the sense the voting has been “tribal” and he feels David Skaith will win overall.
10.27am: Rumours begin
The count has yet to begin but supporters at the verification process are seeing crosses on ballots and making claims. So NOTHING IS CONFIRMED but the whisper is the Liberal Democrats are doing well at this count, the Greens are doing poorly and Keith Tordoff is the leading independent.
Remember, the Harrogate count includes votes cast in the Harrogate and Knaresborough, Selby and Ainsty and part of the new Wetherby and Easingwold constituencies, so about two-and-a-half constituencies.
10.16am: First candidate arrives
Independent Keith Tordoff, looking dapper and sounding chipper, is the first candidate to arrive. He says he’s attended every hustings he’s been invited to — about 17 — and achieved a broad coalition of support from diverse groups including the Yorkshire Party, local mosques and Reform UK.
He says:
“Win, lose or draw I will wake up happy tomorrow because I am healthy and I love life.”
Mr Tordoff says he feels the mayor should be independent because a Labour mayor would favour Labour-controlled City of York council and a Conservative mayor would favour Tory-controlled North Yorkshire Council.
10.10am: 120 counters in Harrogate
There are 120 counters here at Harrogate Convention Centre. Counts are also taking place at Northallerton and Scarborough but the result will be declared here,
There were 668 polling stations across York and North Yorkshire yesterday, which were manned by 2,000 volunteers. The size of the electorate is 485,105 in North Yorkshire and 154,105 in York. The turnout still remains unknown.
9.39am: Verification process underway
Returning officer Richard Flinton, the chief executive of North Yorkshire Council, is expected to declare the result mid-afternoon. He has just taken to a plinth to announce the verification process is underway. The actual count is due to start at noon.
9.15am: Will Tory pain extend to North Yorkshire?
It’s been a bad night for the Conservatives, with losses in the Blackpool South by-election and in council elections. Will the pain extend to the traditional Tory heartlands of North Yorkshire in today’s mayoral vote? We will provide update throughout the day from Harrogate Convention Centre, where the winner is expected to be announced this afternoon.
Harrogate businessman broke man’s jaw in unprovoked pub attackA Harrogate businessman has narrowly avoided jail after breaking a man’s jaw with a single punch – apparently because the unsuspecting victim was wearing an orange hat.
Robert Darling, 27, who was unknown to the victim, sidled up to the man who was sat talking to friends outside a pub in Starbeck and struck him to the side of the face, knocking him to the ground.
Prosecutor Sam Roxborough told York Crown Court it was a split-second, “entirely unprovoked” attack for which there was still no explanation as there had been no animosity between the parties and they were strangers.
Tests in hospital showed that the victim had a broken jawbone. Doctors inserted bands into his jaw which meant the victim was unable to eat solid food.
The “bizarre” incident occurred outside the Prince of Wales pub in High Street at about 11.30pm on March 24 last year, just after Darling had been “play-fighting” with his mate.
“[The victim] was sat at a table outside the front of the Prince of Wales pub in Harrogate, speaking with friends,” said Mr Roxborough.
“As he was talking to his friends, the defendant punched him to the side of the face. That was entirely unprovoked and the (victim) did not see the punch coming as he was facing in the opposite direction.
“The impact knocked him off his seat and onto the floor. He felt immediate pain to the side of his face.”
After the man got back to his feet, Darling, from Killinghall, returned, shook his hand, hugged him and apologised, even offering him the chance “to punch him back”.
The victim, fearing further violence, promptly left the pub, reported the matter to police and gave them a description of his attacker.
An officer recognised Darling from CCTV footage of the attack as he had been involved in a “previous police incident”, although he had no previous convictions.
Darling, a self-employed electrician who ran his own business, was arrested and charged with wounding or inflicting grievous bodily harm. He admitted the offence and appeared for sentence today.
Mr Roxborough said the victim took himself to hospital three days after the attack after his jaw began to swell and he was unable to open his mouth. Tests showed he had a fracture to the side of his jaw and he was referred for consultation with a facial-surgery team.
Defence barrister Ian Hudson said that Darling, a married father-of-two, could offer “no explanation” for the “very unusual” incident.
Judge Simon Hickey told the defendant:
“The pub is well-known in Harrogate. There were lots of people milling around and other people walking in the street.
“CCTV footage shows you in a white shirt play-fighting with another friend in a black shirt. You both seem to exchange some words… and then you turn and face your unfortunate victim who is simply wearing an orange hat and dressed differently to you.”
Mr Hickey said it was hard to fathom why Darling would “walk several paces” up to a man he had never met before and “inflict one heavy blow to his face which knocks him off his chair and his feet”.
Notwithstanding the fact that Darling was “extremely drunk”, the only feasible explanation for the attack was that the victim was “dressed differently to you” and was conspicuous by his orange hat, added the judge.
However, Mr Hickey said he had also noted glowing character references which spoke of Darling as a hard-working man whose behaviour that day was out of character. He had no previous convictions and was the main breadwinner for his family.
He said it had been a “close-run thing”, but he had decided to give Darling a chance to stay out of jail.
Darling, of Heather Court, received an eight-month prison sentence, but this was suspended for 18 months. He was told he would have to carry out 200 hours of unpaid work and complete 15 rehabilitation-activity days, along with a 120-day alcohol-monitoring programme.
He was ordered to pay the victim £2,500 compensation.
Read more:
- Labour’s David Skaith pledges to ‘get basics right’ as mayor
- Man arrested after making ‘threats to kill’ on Harrogate road
- Three arrested in fraud investigation at well-known Harrogate firm
Glum Tories in Harrogate see blue wall crumble in Rishi Sunak’s backyard
There was much talk at the last general election about the collapse of Labour’s red wall in its northern heartlands.
Today’s York and North Yorkshire mayoral election was an opportunity to see if the Conservatives’ blue wall of control in England’s largest county was equally wobbly.
It had certainly been creaking: North Yorkshire Council’s Conservative rule is propped up by three independents and Labour’s Keir Mather overturned a large Conservative majority at last year’s Selby and Ainsty by-election.
But surely true blue North Yorkshire, home of Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, would deliver some succour to the Tories after a bruising night of local election results?
Curiously, Andrew Jones, the Conservative MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough, was not at Harrogate Convention Centre to support Keane Duncan. His Liberal Democrat rival Tom Gordon, whose mother was re-elected for the Lib Dems in Knottingley and Ferrybridge on Wakefield Council, arrived later in the day to support Felicity Cunliffe-Lister.
Nevertheless activists for both parties turned out in force.
It soon became apparent this was a two-horse race. Ms Cunliffe-Lister said long before the result was declared she hoped to finish a “good third”, acknowledging her party’s lengthy selection process meant she entered the race too late.
Politicians on all sides leaned towards a Labour victory when we probed but nobody seemed particularly confident. When Conservative Ben Houchen retained the Tees Valley mayoralty, it appeared a good omen and when the turnout was announced at a higher-than-expected 30% it further raised hopes because it suggested Tory voters had not stayed home after all.
Had Mr Duncan’s energetic campaign and machine gun fire of ambitious policy announcements done the trick?
Ms Cunliffe-Lister, Green candidate Kevin Foster and Independents Keith Tordoff and Paul Haslam were happy to talk and mingle but as is often the case at election counts, the favourites were largely invisible. When we approached a local Labour activist for a comment on how it was going, we were hastily marched to a regional media person who was non-committal.
Mr Duncan eventually arrived, with North Yorkshire Council leader Carl Les not far behind. Mr Skaith, looking like he’d been dressed by the same tailor as Labour leader Keir Starmer, was barely seen until the declaration loomed.
Shortly before 2.30pm, an election official briefed the media ‘not to go for a long walk’ as the result was imminent. We were also warned that if it were close — which seemed a distinct possibility — a recount would be held.
The candidates disappeared into a room to be told the results and re-emerged poker faced. But there was a strong clue when a Green politician shook Mr Skaith’s hand.
Mr Skaith’s near 15,000 winning margin was wider than anyone we spoke to predicted. What was even more surprising was that he came within 3,500 votes of beating Mr Duncan in North Yorkshire before his predicted strong support in Labour-run York saw him home.
His supporters whooped while Mr Duncan graciously applauded and patiently gave interviews to a line of journalists.
Had his bold claims, including buying the Grand Hotel at Scarborough, blown up in his face? He claimed not, suggesting the ‘national picture’ was the main factor before insisting he would continue his role as the councillor in charge of highways at North Yorkshire Council. Back to answering questions on the Harrogate Station Gateway…
Two hours after the result, Mr Skaith had hotfooted it to Northallerton Football Club where he stood alongside Mr Starmer and Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves for one of those stage managed media calls in front of an over-excitable crowd of placard-waving supporters. It was a rather bizarre end to a remarkable day.
Mr Starmer hailed it a “victory in Tory heartlands”. A chunk had indeed been taken out of the blue wall. Will it come crashing down in long-term Tory seats Harrogate and Knaresborough, or Skipton and Ripon, at the next general election?
You can recapture all today’s action in our live blog here.
Read more:
- Labour’s David Skaith pledges to ‘get basics right’ as mayor
- Tense day ends in clear victory for Labour’s Harrogate-born mayor
Tense day ends in clear victory for Labour’s Harrogate-born mayor
Labour’s David Skaith emerged as the clear winner today in the race to become York and North Yorkshire’s first directly elected mayor.
Mr Skaith beat Conservative rival Keane Duncan by almost 15,000 votes, in a result announced at Harrogate Convention Centre at about 2.30pm this afternoon.
The margin of victory was wider than many people expected at the count, where tension was high.
Conservative Ben Houchen’s mayoral victory in Tees Valley raised hopes that Mr Duncan could pull off a similar victory. But it was not to be.
Mr Duncan narrowly won the vote in North Yorkshire by 44,794 votes to Mr Skaith’s 41,122 but the Labour man’s strong York base saw him cruise home.
Liberal Democrat Felicity Cunliffe- Lister was a distant third, ahead of Green Kevin Foster,
Independents Keith Tordoff and Paul Haslam trailed home but both passed 10,000 votes.
Harrogate-born Mr Skaith, who runs a business in York, will now oversee the new York and North Yorkshire Combined Authority, which has devolved powers from Westminster and an annual budget of about £18 million.
It means there are now Labour mayors in North Yorkshire, West Yorkshire and South Yorkshire.
You can relive our live blog from the convention centre here.
FINAL RESULT
- David Skaith (Labour) 66,761
- Keane Duncan (Conservative) 51,967
- Felicity Cunliffe-Lister (Liberal Democrat) 30,867
- Kevin Foster (Green) 15,188
- Keith Tordoff (Independent) 13,250
- Paul Haslam (Independent) 12,370
Read more:
- LIVE: Labour’s David Skaith wins North Yorkshire mayoral election
- Bomb disposal called after WWII bullet found near Harrogate
As it happened: Labour’s David Skaith wins North Yorkshire mayoral election
Labour’s David Skaith was elected mayor of York and North Yorkshire at Harrogate Convention Centre today.
Mr Skaith will be paid £81,300-a-year to lead the new York and North Yorkshire Combined Authority, overseeing an annual budget of £18 million. He will have new devolved powers from Westminster and will champion the largest geographical region of any mayor.
Here’s a look back at today’s election count at Harrogate Convention Centre.
2.41pm: Keane Duncan magnanimous in defeat
The Conservative candidate was well beaten but he applauded winner David Skaith and is giving interviews now to a long list of journalists.
We have grabbed a word with him and all the other candidates. Look out for extensive reaction and analysis on the Stray Ferret over the next few days.
2.34pm: Final vote
2.29pm: Clear win for Labour
David Skaith is giving his acceptance speech. The final result was drowned out but he beat Conservative Keane Duncan by about 15,000 votes.
2.24pm: LABOUR’S DAVID SKAITH WINS!
2.20pm: Candidates reappear
Poker faces all round but someone just shook David Skaith’s hand. Has he won? We are awaiting the announcement.
2.08pm: Candidates being told results
Returning officer Richard Flinton announces provisional results being shared with candidates and election agents. They have disappeared into a room.
The result should follow very soon, unless one of the candidates is granted a recount.
This is tense — nobody seems to be making any confident predictions but most people are leaning towards Labour’s David Skaith.
2.05pm: Result expected imminently
A media person has just told us ‘don’t go for any long walks’ as a result is due very soon.
2pm: David Skaith returns
The elusive Labour candidate is back in the building, looking understandably pensive.
1.49pm: Result within the hour?
A big screen here at Harrogate Convention Centre shows the counts at the four other locations, and all appear to have finished.
That could mean a result is not far away. We are hearing it could be as soon as half an hour. But there is also the possibility of a recount if it is close.
1.35pm: Will high turnout help Tories?
There is speculation that the higher than expected turnout could suit the Conservatives.
There were fears among Tories that many of their voters would stay at home but the 30% turnout has buoyed hopes that a good proportion did register their votes yesterday.
A 30% turnout may not seem that high but by comparison, the final North Yorkshire Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner election, won by Conservative Zoe Metcalfe in 2021, attracted a 14% turnout.
Remember, the commissioner’s role will be taken over by the new mayor.
1.29pm: Nervous moments as result looms
There’s not much happening now. But the result can ony happen as fast as the slowest count. We understand one of the two Scarborough counts has finished but there are also counts in Northallerton and York.
We managed a word with Keane Duncan, who seems cheerful and agredd to pose for a photo but declined to comment until afterwards.
There is still no great certainty here, other than that it’s a two-horse race between the Conservatives and Labour, whose candidate David Skaith has not been seen since his brief appearance earlier.
1.05pm: Conservative candidate Keane Duncan arrives
Conservative candidate Keane Duncan has arrived, which means all six candidates have been spotted at Harrogate Convention Centre. He’s smiling and chatting with local Conservatives but these must be nervous moments.
Still no sign of Andrew Jones or Tom Gordon.
12.44pm: Labour still saying ‘too close to call’
About the only people not predicting a Labour victory here today are the Labour Party.
We just had a quick word with the regional media team who said they were very wary of predictions, and were still waiting for updates from the other counts taking place in York, Scarborough and Northallerton.
David Skaith has still not returned since his brief appearance earlier. The only other candidate who does not appear to be in the room here is Conservative Keane Duncan.
12.29pm: Ben Houchen wins – good omen for Tories?
Conservative Ben Houchen has just been declared the winner of the Tees Valley mayoral election. Some were predicting his defeat — is this a good sign for the Tories a few miles south in North Yorkshire?
12.02pm: Lib Dem candidate thinks she will finish third
It appears to be a straight fight between the Conservatives and Labour, with most people predicting a Labour win — but nobody appears to be doing so with any great certainty.
Lib Dem candidate Felicity Cunliffe-Lister says it looks like she may finish third. She adds:
“I was a little bit late entering the race than I would have liked. It just took a long time for the selection process so I didn’t hit the ground running,”
Ms Cunliffe-Lister says she is the only candidate to have been to all 17 hustings, and says she has enjoyed her foray into politics since being elected as Lib Dem councillor, a role she continues to fulfil.
ps the man in the previous post was Don Mackenzie, the former highways chief on North Yorkshire County Council.
11.48am: Count in full swing
Ballots are being counted. Quick question – who is the man standing with his back to the camera? Clue — he was a major figure in local politics until the 2022 local elections.
11.42am: 37 media outlets expected
There is a lot of media interest in the election of the county’s first mayor. Officials say 37 media outlets have been accredited. The media area is starting to fill up.
11.38am: David Skaith arrives
Labour candidate David Skaith has arrived at Harrogate Convention Centre. We asked for a photo, something the other four candidates here so far have obliged us with, but he politely declined, saying he was popping out and would be back.
11.34am: Tories and Lib Dems on opposite tables.
Elections are tribal: the Lib Dems are on the left table; the Conservatives are on the right. There isn’t much interaction between the two.
No sign yet of Andrew Jones, the Conservative MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough, or Tom Gordon, the Lib Dem who wants to succeed him. We understand Mr Gordon’s mother is standing for election in West Yorkshire and he is expected later.
11.26am: Turnout is 30%
Returning officer Richard Flinton announces the figure.
11.20am: Result could be declared early afternoon
The verification process, which was due to end at noon, is over and the word is the result could be declared early, at about 2pm, but election counts operate in a parallel universe full of rumours and nothing is confirmed.
We are told, however, the turnout figure is expected shortly. There’s a rumour (that word again) the figure is 30% at the Northallerton count, which isn’t too shabby for a mayoral election.
11.06am: Green candidate predicts Labour win
Kevin Foster, the Green Party candidate, is at Harrogate Convention Centre with his daughter (pictured above). Four of the six candidates appear to be here now, the exceptions being Conservative Keane Duncan and Labour’s David Skaith.
Mr Foster says he thinks Labour have done better here than expected and will win overall, although he suspects it will be close, with a margin of between one and five percent.
As for himself, he says he hopes to get between 5% and 10% of the vote. Candidates need 5% to get their £5.000 deposit back. He says the Greens are a small party that only received 220 donations in North Yorkshire last year.
10.52am: Strong turnout of Lib Dems at convention centre
There is a large turnout of local Lib Dem activists and councillors, Candidate Felicity Cunliffe-Lister is sporting a rosette.
10.43am: Independent candidate predicts Labour win
Bilton councillor Paul Haslam, who left the Conservatives to stand as an independent in the mayoral contest, says he gets the sense the voting has been “tribal” and he feels David Skaith will win overall.
10.27am: Rumours begin
The count has yet to begin but supporters at the verification process are seeing crosses on ballots and making claims. So NOTHING IS CONFIRMED but the whisper is the Liberal Democrats are doing well at this count, the Greens are doing poorly and Keith Tordoff is the leading independent.
Remember, the Harrogate count includes votes cast in the Harrogate and Knaresborough, Selby and Ainsty and part of the new Wetherby and Easingwold constituencies, so about two-and-a-half constituencies.
10.16am: First candidate arrives
Independent Keith Tordoff, looking dapper and sounding chipper, is the first candidate to arrive. He says he’s attended every hustings he’s been invited to — about 17 — and achieved a broad coalition of support from diverse groups including the Yorkshire Party, local mosques and Reform UK.
He says:
“Win, lose or draw I will wake up happy tomorrow because I am healthy and I love life.”
Mr Tordoff says he feels the mayor should be independent because a Labour mayor would favour Labour-controlled City of York council and a Conservative mayor would favour Tory-controlled North Yorkshire Council.
10.10am: 120 counters in Harrogate
There are 120 counters here at Harrogate Convention Centre. Counts are also taking place at Northallerton and Scarborough but the result will be declared here,
There were 668 polling stations across York and North Yorkshire yesterday, which were manned by 2,000 volunteers. The size of the electorate is 485,105 in North Yorkshire and 154,105 in York. The turnout still remains unknown.
9.39am: Verification process underway
Returning officer Richard Flinton, the chief executive of North Yorkshire Council, is expected to declare the result mid-afternoon. He has just taken to a plinth to announce the verification process is underway. The actual count is due to start at noon.
9.15am: Will Tory pain extend to North Yorkshire?
It’s been a bad night for the Conservatives, with losses in the Blackpool South by-election and in council elections. Will the pain extend to the traditional Tory heartlands of North Yorkshire in today’s mayoral vote? We will provide update throughout the day from Harrogate Convention Centre, where the winner is expected to be announced this afternoon.