Labour are predicted to win a landslide at the next general election and Geoff Foxall is hoping some of that optimism will rub off on his campaign to become the new councillor for Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone.
He believes John Ennis and the Conservatives “don’t stand a chance” so he hopes people who typically vote tactically for the Lib Dems will feel confident enough to vote Labour this time.
Mr Foxall said:
“We have to try and persuade voters in the division it’s worth voting Labour in this by-election. I would say in Harrogate voters are pretty smart.”
Born and raised in Harrogate, he was a councillor for Labour on Harrogate Borough Council for eight years in the 1990s.
He’s also a former teacher in the town and has been saddened at how council finances and public services have been squeezed.
He said:
“The changes have accelerated over the last 14 years since the coalition. I’ve never witnessed so much diminishing of the budgets coming from central government. It’s had an impact on all services. As the Labour group on North Yorkshire Council, we’ve got to try and increase that funding.”
Mr Foxall was a campaigner against the relief road through the Nidd Gorge and is a board member of Long Lands Common, the community woodland between Harrogate and Knaresborough.
He also organises weekly walks for elderly residents and says improving social care and helping people to live independently is an issue he’s passionate about.
He said traffic and congestion are a huge issue in the division, particularly around Wetherby Road, and would like to see a park-and-ride scheme introduced for Harrogate and improvements to buses.
He added:
“Harrogate has already started operating electric buses but we would aim to require all public transport road vehicles to be electric by 2030 as well as all the council’s own vehicles.”
Mr Foxall is optimistic about his chances and hopes he can be a bold voice for Harrogate on North Yorkshire Council. He said:
“Harrogate has been controlled by Conservatives and Lib Dems for years with little growth or progress. Just look at the mess they have made of the Station Gateway project. Labour in Harrogate can provide the change that is needed.”
The by-election will take place on Thursday April 11. For more information visit the council’s website.
A full list of candidates is below:
- Conservative – John Ennis.
- Green – Gilly Charters.
- Labour – Geoff Foxall.
- Liberal Democrat – Andrew Timothy.
- Reform – John Swales.
Read more:
- Stray, Woodlands & Hookstone by-election preview: Gilly Charters, Green Party
- Stray, Woodlands & Hookstone by-election preview: John Ennis, Conservative
Government inspector to assess plans for new town in Harrogate district
Plans to build a town the size of Thirsk in the Harrogate district are to be assessed by the government’s Planning Inspectorate.
North Yorkshire Council said in a media release today it had submitted its draft new settlement development plan for Maltkiln to the inspectorate for independent examination.
The settlement, for a minimum of 3,000 homes, would be centred on Cattal rail station 10 miles east of Harrogate. Nearby villages, including Green Hammerton, Kirk Hammerton and Whixley, would be affected. The settlement would be built by developers Caddick Group.
The draft plan gives a broad 30-year vision for Maltkiln and a policy framework to guide how it is developed. However, many residents have concerns about the lack of detail that has been released so far.
They have also expressed concerns of feeling “bullied and threatened” after the council threatened to compulsory purchase land for the scheme after a disagreement with a landowner.
‘Acute need for housing’
Nic Harne, the council’s corporate director of community development, said:
“We are acutely aware of the need for more housing across the whole of North Yorkshire to meet the demand for homes so that people can choose to live in the communities that they wish to.
“The Maltkiln development is a major scheme and is aimed at addressing the housing needs in the area.
“We have now submitted documents for the independent examination, and we will wait for the inspector’s comments to see how we can then hopefully progress the development.”
The draft plan, as well as accompanying evidence and consultation responses, will now be examined by an independent inspector to assess whether it has been prepared in accordance with legal and procedural requirements and if it is ‘sound’.
In most cases the examination will include hearing sessions which are held in public. The inspector will determine the appropriate format for these sessions.
At the end of the examination, the inspector will send a report to the council recommending whether or not it can adopt the plan, and if any modifications are needed.
Today’s statement said Maltkiln would be “heavily themed around sustainability and the environment and is set to provide local amenities and facilities alongside the new homes, as well as extensive areas of open space and landscaping”.
Cllr Arnold Warneken, a Green Party member who represents Ouseburn on the council, said:
“I want to stress to residents that if they made representation to the inspector on the original document they have a right to comment on this amended document.
“I still have serious concerns about its deliverability and viability, relying on including land that is not available and thus using compulsory purchase orders is fundamentally wrong.
“There is still no agreement with Network Rail which is required to make this so called exemplar in sustainability and environmental terms.”
Read more:
- Council’s approach to Maltkiln has left locals feeling ‘bullied and threatened’
- Maltkiln land identified for compulsory purchase could be worth £170m
Body found in search for missing Molly, 25
A body has been found in the search for missing 25-year-old Leeds woman Molly Ann Garbutt.
North Yorkshire Police joined West Yorkshire Police in the search today after Molly’s black Renault Clio was seen in the Grassington area last night and then found just before 8am today parked near Dibbles Bridge at Hebden, about two miles from Greenhow in the former Harrogate district.
But in a statement tonight, North Yorkshire Police said the search “has been called off after a body was found at around 3.15pm today”.
The statement added:
“While formal identification has not yet taken place, Molly’s family have been informed about the death and they are being supported by the police.
“We ask that their privacy is respected at this difficult time as we prepare a report for the coroner.”
RAF Mountain Rescue, Upper Wharfedale Fell Rescue Association and a HM Coastguard helicopter joined the search for Molly, whose disappearance on Tuesday night led police to say they had “immediate concerns for her welfare”.
Officers urged anyone with information that could assist their enquiries to call 101, select option 4, and speak to the force control room. Quote reference number 12240057708.
Read more:
- Missing Leeds woman’s car found close to Harrogate district
- Ex-Tory council leader named Harrogate Homeless Project chief executive
Harrogate Town post £2.5 million loss
Harrogate Town lost £2.5 million last year — more than double the amount it lost the previous year.
The club’s financial statement for the year ended June 30, 2023 appeared on the Companies House website today.
The 12-page statement does not include a copy of the profit and loss account, which it says “the directors of the company have elected not to include”.
But it reveals the club made a loss of £2,475,345 compared with £1,168,631 in 2022.
It also highlights the club’s ongoing dependence on chairman Irving Weaver, who owns 86% of shares.
It says despite the £2.5 million loss and net current liabilities of £2.7 million, the directors have prepared cash flow forecasts “which indicate that, taking account of reasonably possible downsides, the company will have sufficient funds, through funding from its controlling shareholder, R I Weaver, to meets its liabilities as they fall due for that period”.
It adds:
“Those forecasts are dependent on R I Weaver not seeking repayment of the amounts currently owed to him, which at 30 June 2023 amounted to £2,458,074, and providing additional financial support during that period.
“R I Weaver has indicated his intention to continue to make available such funds as are needed by the company, and that he does not intend to seek repayment of the amounts due for the period covered by the forecasts.”
The financial statement added that no interest had been charged on the £2.5 million owed to Mr Weaver — and that the club owed him £4.4 million in 2022.
The statement also revealed the club employed on average 66 staff in 2023, compared with 55 in 2022 — an increase of 20%.
Simon Weaver, Irving’s son, has steered Town to within four points of a League Two play-off place this season with five matches to go.
Read more:
- Harrogate to host three-day electric vehicles event
- Major changes announced to bus routes in Harrogate district
Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone by-election preview: Gilly Charters, Green Party
Green Party candidate for the Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone by-election, Gilly Charters, points to the controversial planning approval of Wetherby Road’s Leon drive-thru, soon-to-be Starbucks, as an example of where things have gone wrong in the division.
Critics say the site, which opened as a Leon in 2022 after the government overturned the council’s decision to refuse it, has increased congestion, contributed to rubbish being tossed out of car windows and has taken business away from cafes in town.
It’s a car-led development that Ms Charters wants to see less of. She favours improving active travel infrastructure so it’s safer and more environmentally friendly to get around whilst improving air quality.
She says streets like Oatlands Drive and Hookstone Road in Harrogate should become a more pleasant place where people can cycle to work, go to school, or meet friends without fearing they’ll be knocked over by a car.
Then there are the potholes, which can make riding your bike in Harrogate akin to navigating a ski slalom.
She said:
“People feel happier with active transport. The potholes are just ludicrous too and it means some people don’t want to be on bikes. It’s a real concern. I’d like to see much slower speeds outside schools. Children and elderly people deserve to be looked after.”
Ms Charters has lived in Harrogate since 1981, including 20 years on Hookstone Drive, but now lives just outside the division.
She was a teacher at King James’s School in Knaresborough for 25 years and now works part-time supporting boys who are struggling with mainstream education.
She’s been spirited by the success of fellow Green Party councillors in North Yorkshire including Arnold Warneken in Ouseburn. He’s been a strong voice in favour of active travel and green policies in Harrogate and the county since he was elected in 2022.
Ms Charters believes that it shows that the Greens are now a trusted electoral force in North Yorkshire.
With the council in the early stages of formulating its Local Plan that will map out where housebuilding can take place across Harrogate for the next few decades, Ms Charters hopes to encourage greener housebuilding, which she said has been a missed opportunity in previous years.
She said:
“People throughout Harrogate are aware of the amount of house building going on. Really good insulation, solar panels and heat pumps have been missed time and time again.
“If we want fuel security, we have to look at these things. If we let builders build on green land, they have to do their bit.”
The by-election will take place on Thursday, April 11. For more information visit the council’s website.
A full list of candidates is below:
- Conservative – John Ennis.
- Green – Gilly Charters.
- Labour – Geoff Foxall.
- Liberal Democrat – Andrew Timothy.
- Reform – John Swales.
Read more:
- Stray, Woodlands & Hookstone by-election preview: John Ennis, Conservative
- Lib Dem mayor candidate pledges support for Flaxby train station
Village idiot visits Harrogate
A YouTuber who plans to visit all 10,474 civil parishes in England is turning his attention to Harrogate.
Andy Smith, who calls himself The Village Idiot, has visited more than 1,000 parishes since he started in 2020. He expects it will take him 30 or 40 years to complete his challenge.
Mr Smith uploads a video after each trip and last Friday he published a 14-minute account of his trip to Kirk Deighton. His escapades have attracted 9,300 subscribers.
He also visited North Deighton, Little Ribston, Spofforth with Stockeld, Follifoot, Plompton, Goldsborough and Flaxby on the same two-day trip, and will upload videos about each one on forthcoming Fridays.
Mr Smith said:
“The idea is to create a visual record of every single village and small town in the country, with some historical bits and quirky features thrown in to the mix.
“I’ve already been featured in national newspapers, the most notable being the Guardian. I’ve also appeared on Channel 4 on Steph’s Packed Lunch.”
Former teacher Mr Smith, who lives in Rotherham, said he usually spent two days a week on the road with his GoPro camera.
He plans to tick off all 139 parishes in the Harrogate district in the weeks ahead and upload the videos over time on to his YouTube site. He said:
“I plan to visit Sicklinghall, Pannal and Burn Bridge next and then move on towards Ripon.
“Before I came to Harrogate I didn’t know much about it. But I like going back. Every time I arrive I think it’s so clean and tidy and welcoming.”
Read more:
- Major changes announced to bus routes in Harrogate district
- Local history spotlight: Blind Jack of Knaresborough
Stray, Woodlands & Hookstone by-election preview: John Ennis, Conservative
The Conservative John Ennis is hoping his previous 12-year stint as a Harrogate councillor will stand him in good stead for the upcoming by-election.
Voters will go to the polls on April 11 following the resignation of Pat Marsh.
Mr Ennis believes his experience means he can better navigate the large Conservative-controlled North Yorkshire Council on behalf of his residents.
He said being a councillor is not for the faint-hearted and requires someone who already understands the intricacies of local government in Northallerton. He added:
“There is a mystery about the new council with some people perceiving it as being a bit remote.”
Mr Ennis was born in Northern Ireland and had a career in the NHS where he worked in Leeds.
He’s the only candidate standing in the by-election who lives in the division, which he says gives him a better insight into the issues.
Potholes are one of the area’s biggest problems and he said he has experience in battling for repairs.
He also said that residents in Hookstone are poorly served by the number 8 bus route and hopes to lobby the bus operator to make changes if elected.
The Saints area has long faced traffic problems linked to local schools. Mr Ennis said he would be in favour of neighbourhood parking schemes to cut down on parking congestion.
He said:
“There are issues in particular around St Aidan’s. Residents around there say it’s a very dangerous situation with people parking right up to the junctions.”
Nationally at least, there is a sense that the winds of change are blowing, with some people wanting a fresh start and a change from the Tories.
The Conservatives will also face a challenge from Reform UK candidate John Swales who is targeting disgruntled Tory voters.
However, Mr Ennis said he is “not trembling in my boots” about Reform and suggests the party could take votes from all parties.
Despite the Conservatives polling poorly nationally, Mr Ennis hopes his experience as a councillor and promises to tackle nuts and bolts local issues like potholes and parking that will count the most.
He added:
“The division has had a Lib Dem for the last two years so if people want a change, I am a change.”
The by-election will take place on Thursday April 11. For more information visit the council’s website.
A full list of candidates is below:
- Conservative – John Ennis.
- Green – Gilly Charters.
- Labour – Geoff Foxhall.
- Liberal Democrat – Andrew Timothy.
- Reform – John Swales.
Read more:
- Prime Minister Rishi Sunak makes surprise visit to Ripon
- Lib Dem mayor candidate pledges support for Flaxby train station
Workplace safety regulator to investigate Ripon death
The Health and Safety Executive is to lead an investigation into the death of a man at a vehicle recovery garage in Ripon on Friday, March 29.
An unnamed man in his 30s died at Macadam on Boroughbridge Road following what police described at the time as an “industrial accident”.
The victim was from the Darlington area.
Ambulance, air ambulance, fire and police were called at about 8am.
The Stray Ferret asked North Yorkshire Police today whether anyone had been arrested or charged.
The force issued a brief statement today which did not comment on this. It said:
“We are assisting the accident investigation lead by the Health and Safety Executive.”
The HSE, a non-departmental public body, is responsible for workplace safety in the UK.
Read more:
- Prime Minister Rishi Sunak makes surprise visit to Ripon
- Campaigners take their ‘save our trees’ plea to Ripon city centre
- Man dies in industrial accident at Ripon
Poll predicts Tory general election wipeout in Harrogate district
An opinion poll has indicated the Conservatives are in course to lose all three seats that include the former Harrogate district at the next general election.
The MRP poll of 15,029 adults by Survation, commissioned for the Sunday Times, showed that if an election were held now the number of Tory MPs would be reduced from 348 to 98. Labour would win 468 seats and have a huge overall majority of 142.
The seat projection forecasts that the Conservative casualties would include Andrew Jones, who has represented Harrogate and Knaresborough since 2010, and Julian Smith, who has been the Skipton and Ripon MP since the same year.
It also predicts Labour will win the newly created Wetherby and Easingwold constituency, which includes towns and villages such as Boroughbridge, Ouseburn, Marston Moor, Spofforth and Huby.
The poll, which was conducted between March 8 and 22, predicts Mr Jones’ vote will fall from 53% at the 2019 election to 31%, with the Liberal Democrats’ winning with 36% and Labour third with 24%. Reform would be a distant fourth on 7% and the Greens would get just 2%.
Tom Gordon, the Lib Dem parliamentary candidate for Harrogate and Knaresborough, said:
“This is now the latest in a series of polls and seat projections that clearly show the Liberal Democrats are in clear contention to win back Harrogate and Knaresborough from the Conservatives.
“Even Electoral Calculus, which was one of the few remaining sources predicting a Conservative hold, is now suggesting local residents will be turning their backs on the incumbent Conservative MP.”
Electoral Calculus says the Lib Dems have a 63% chance of taking Harrogate and Knaresborough. It puts the Conservatives’ chances of retaining the seat at 27% and Labour’s odds of winning at 9%.
Ripon result on a knife edge?
According to Survation, Labour would win an extremely close contest in Skipton and Ripon, with 36.66% compared with the Tories’ 36.08%. The Liberal Democrats would finish third, with 11%, just ahead of Reform on 10%.
Labour has yet to select a candidate to stand against Mr Smith in this constituency.
Survation also predicts a close call in Wetherby and Easingwold. It says Labour has a 39% chance of winning compared with 38% for the Conservatives and 10% for the Lib Dems. Reform is given a 7% chance.
Read more:
- Campaigners’ Yorkshire Declaration on 50th anniversary of Ridings abolition
- North Yorkshire Council: Five things that have changed in Harrogate
Campaigners’ Yorkshire Declaration on 50th anniversary of Ridings abolition
Grassroots campaigners have marked the 50th anniversary of the abolition of the historic Ridings of Yorkshire by calling for the establishment of a regional assembly with budgetary control and tax-raising powers.
One hundred “citizens of the ancient kingdom and cultural province of Yorkshire” have signed a declaration pressing for “real devolution” for the 4,596sq mile area, which will be proclaimed on (Monday) April 1.
The Yorkshire Declaration comes more than five years after the government rejected the One Yorkshire single devolution bid, which had been backed by 18 out of the region’s 20 local councils, with Sheffield and Rotherham opting for a separate South Yorkshire solution.
Communities Secretary James Brokenshire said the plan did “not meet our devolution criteria”.
Before his retirement in 2020, Archbishop of York Dr John Sentamu said he counted the failure to deliver One Yorkshire amongst his greatest disappointments, warning the region’s economy would suffer if a more co-ordinated approach to policy-making was not agreed.
Speaking last week, Dr Sentamu said Conservative ministers Robert Jenrick and Jake Berry had told him they feared One Yorkshire, with an economy bigger than Scotland or the Netherlands, would lead to a republic being established.
Responding to the campaign, Dr Sentamu said as someone named Yorkshireman of the Year in 2007, he was sympathetic towards its aims and a regional government similar to that in London.
He said:
“How come London has a mayor with authority to do this or to do that, I know it’s the capital city, but believe it or not York was one of the greatest cities in England.
“Any structure which is going to deliver more for the people of Yorkshire than at present arrangements has got to be supported.”
Signatories to the document, which accuses successive governments of “neglect, asset stripping and mismanagement” of Yorkshire, include no politicians and instead range from a former Yorkshire Water boss, a knighted former civil servant and a professor of archaeology to a poet and an orchestra conductor.
However, the Yorkshire Declaration urges every resident of the region to support the campaign to ensure that devolution for Yorkshire is a key commitment in manifestos of politicians in the coming General Election.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, numerous council leaders across Yorkshire as well as Yorkshire-based peers were reticent to comment about the campaign ahead of its launch.
The campaigners claim the region has been treated by London-centred monarchs, landed aristocrats and political leaders “as little more than a colonial outpost, whose resources and people are there to be exploited for personal enrichment”.
Despite the establishment of four mayoralties in Yorkshire, the declaration states how differences in community wealth, personal well-being and career opportunities between southern England and those in the North have been allowed to become ever wider in recent years.
The document also points towards studies showing how local government has over the last decade been systematically starved of funding, with 95 per cent of UK tax revenues now being “seized by central government” and 75 per cent of expenditure controlled by Whitehall and Westminster.
The declaration highlights how London has, since 2000, had its own directly elected assembly of 25 members, while in Yorkshire saw the Government Office for Yorkshire and the Humber Region closed by the coalition government in 2012 as a so-called austerity measure.
The declaration states:
“We believe that only through a strong and effective system of regional governance, as established in other more economically successful European countries, can Yorkshire fulfil its true potential.
“The French, Germans, Austrians and Swiss with their Régions Métropoles, Länder and Cantons, all trust their regions to lead the way, enabling people to come together and take control of their own destinies.
“Yorkshire is a proud and beautiful part of Northern England, with its own distinctive history, magnificent landscape, rich culture, ancient Anglo-Viking dialect of English and a gifted, creative workforce.”
Dr Simon Duffy, who runs the Sheffield-based think tank Citizen Network which has published the declaration, said countries with strong democracies and strong economies ensured power is distributed fairly.
He said:
“The extreme concentration of power and money in London has been disastrous for Yorkshire and for the North of England and unless there is urgent reform things will get even worse very quickly.”
Read more:
- North Yorkshire Council: Five things that have changed in Harrogate
- Former Harrogate district MP takes up consultancy role