With its roundabouts, belching traffic and building sites, few would claim New Park to be the loveliest suburb of Harrogate.
But it could have been renamed News Park this week due to its constant appearances on the Stray Ferret — not all for good reasons.
On Friday, we revealed how contractors grinding tree stumps at the Tesco site somehow propelled a lump of concrete through the window of a house on Electric Avenue.
Work on the nearby Ripon Road site where the charity Harrogate Skills 4 Living is building supported living flats has also not gone entirely smoothly. The charity said this week it hopes the flats will be up by Christmas after partially-built apartments on the site were recently demolished.
Elsewhere at the ‘crossroads of North Harrogate’, as New Park has been dubbed (by me), plans to build 135 homes off Skipton Road look set to be approved and, in perhaps the only New Park news to be celebrated this week, the local primary school was rated ‘good’ by Ofsted.
Good news was, however, plentiful elsewhere. You could barely move in Harrogate town centre last Saturday night because the Beam Light Festival was so popular. And Knaresborough Tractor Run, that infectious parade of joy, attracted a record 401 tractors and raised £27,500 for Yorkshire Air Ambulance.
Drone photographer Colin Corker joined me at the start and then hotfooted it around the route to capture some amazing footage. Check this out.
Channel 4 captured the somewhat earthier footage of a room of people squabbling when it attended the parish meeting in Ripon called to discuss the cathedral’s plans to build an annexe.
Our man on the ground in Ripon, Tim Flanagan, sent this photo of Channel 4’s chief correspondent Alex Thomson with tree campaigner Jenni Holman alongside the veteran beech tree at risk of being felled.
Knaresborough Town Council was unusually convivial on Monday night, but there was plenty of crackle in the room when Harrogate Spring Water managing director Richard Hall, flanked by helpers, fielded questions for almost 90 minutes on the company’s plans to expand its bottling plant, which would involve felling 450 trees.
A resolution to this saga seems some way off.
Read more:
- Cycling infrastructure in Harrogate and Knaresborough ‘absolutely terrible’
- French brasserie Côte to close Harrogate restaurant
- No date for completion of £18 million Ripon leisure scheme
Many North Yorkshire residents ‘unaware about incoming mayoral combined authority’
With just five weeks to go until York and North Yorkshire’s first elected mayor is installed, the top officer of the region’s incoming combined authority says he believes most residents remain unaware of the election or the role of the mayor.
In a wide-ranging interview, York and North Yorkshire Combined Authority’s interim head of paid services James Farrar has revealed:
- There is a “real risk of a low turnout” at the ballot box due to national politics and people being unaware of how the mayoral combined authority will aim to improve lives.
- None of the cost of the combined authority would come directly from taxpayers, but rather from the £18m annual Mayoral Investment Fund given by the government and from funding for specific programmes.
- Following concerns the combined authority would focus efforts on its largest urban area, York, it has been agreed to monitor and publish where all funds are distributed.
Mr Farrar said while some people perceived a mayor to be “robes and regalia”, in the first four-year term, the combined authority’s elected mayor’s main responsibilities would be growing the economy and taking on the governance of the police and fire services.
He was quick to dismiss criticisms from opposition politicians the combined authority would lack accountability as four of the five members of its decision-making executive were appointed by York and North Yorkshire councils.
Pointing toward the combined authority’s directly elected leader in the mayor, he said residents and business owners needed to get their voice heard at the ballot box as the mayor would be responsible for the combined authority, which would oversee investment of more than £600 million into the region.
Mr Farrar said:
“There is a fundamental issue we have got to address in raising awareness of what the mayor will be responsible for.
“People aren’t engaged in local politics, so the vast majority won’t be aware this is coming and there’s also a pretty negative view of national politics at the moment.
“The combined authority has been legally created now, but what’s really important is on May 2 people are motivated to vote for whichever mayor they want.”
When asked how the combined authority would balance its responsibilities between the contrasting areas of York and North Yorkshire, Mr Farrar said the two areas were already interdependent.
He pointed towards how money was being pumped into a new railway station at Haxby, north of York, it had helped strengthen the case for half-hourly trains to Scarborough.
He added:
“The combined authority should be making investment decisions based on what’s best for the whole region.
“All areas will benefit, but it won’t just be a carve up of the money between the two councils, looking at connections such as how Craven and Harrogate connect into West Yorkshire and Hambleton and Richmondshire link to Teesside.
“The purpose of the mayor is to be able to take that strategic overview across these geographies and make decisions on how people, product and business work, rather than be constrained by local authority boundaries.”
Read more:
- York and North Yorkshire Combined Authority launches
- What will the new combined authority mean for Harrogate?
- North Yorkshire mayor to be paid £81,300
Mr Farrar said he believes the councils, which currently have Conservative and Labour leaderships, would be able to work together for the common good, and had already agreed a shared set of economic priorities for the combined authority.
He said set the mayoral combined authority would set the strategic vision and ambitions for York and North Yorkshire, secure investment to deliver the vision and to make investments to improve people’s lives, enable business growth and create jobs.
Mr Farrar added the councils would have an important role in delivering the objectives of the combined authority, which would go out and secure the investment.
Responding to concerns that pressing social issues such as housing and access to public transport, Mr Farrar said such issues would be picked up as part of the authority’s focus on improving places to attract investment.
He said affordable housing was “writ large in our economic framework”, adding:
Cycling infrastructure in Harrogate and Knaresborough ‘absolutely terrible’“You can’t deliver a successful York and North Yorkshire if people can’t afford to live there.
“We know public transport is a challenge, we don’t quite know what the answer is to that problem. The mayor will bring the ability to invest, to find out the solution and put it in place.
“We are not thinking the mayor will swan in and answer difficult issues immediately. I think there needs to be a strategic review across the piece.”
Councillors have criticised North Yorkshire Council for not prioritising the needs of cyclists in Harrogate.
At a meeting of Harrogate and Knaresborough councillors, Alex Kay, the council’s senior transport planning officer delivered a presentation that included options for future cycle links in the town.
These included Bilton to Starbeck and Jennyfields to the town centre with cost estimates running into the millions.
In recent years the council has built a widely-criticised stretch of cycle route on Otley Road and abandoned the next phase, scrapped a Low-Traffic Neighbourhood on Beech Grove and decided against creating a one-way system on Oatlands Drive.
Meanwhile, funding bids have been rejected by the government for new cycle paths on Knaresborough Road and Victoria Avenue.
Its flagship active travel scheme, the £12.1m Harrogate Station Gateway, has also been drastically scaled back following opposition from local businesses with only a small section of Station Parade now set to include a cycle lane.
Cllr Matt Walker, a Liberal Democrat for Knaresborough West, criticised the state of the cycle infrastructure in the area.
He said:
“To improve things you have to acknowledge there’s a problem. Active travel is absolutely terrible. Roads are gridlocked and full of potholes, buses are missed all the time between Harrogate and Knaresborough.
“We have to make improvements and the council needs to step its game up. It needs to get its act together so people can get out of cars and get around in a quick and environmentally-friendly way.”
Cllr Arnold Warneken, a member of the Green Party for Ouseburn, added:
“The frustration of people who want to cycle in Harrogate and Knaresborough isn’t being taken seriously.”
With several of the proposals put forward by the council years from being built, Cllr Paul Haslam, an Independent for Bilton and Nidd Gorge, said there are not enough “shovel-ready” schemes on the table.
The council’s predecessor North Yorkshire County Council undertook a much-publicised Harrogate Congestion Survey in 2019 which showed there was an appetite for improving walking and cycling infrastructure in the town so people are incentivised to leave their cars at home.
Cllr Philip Broadbank, a Liberal Dem for Fairfax and Starbeck, said:
“I get frustrated with talks and plans and various things we spend time preparing [regarding cycling] yet year-in-year-out nothing happens.”
However, Cllr John Mann, a Conservative for Oatlands and Pannal, defended the council and said it “hadn’t done a bad job” on active travel in his constituency.
Cllr Mann said:
“They’ve installed numerous cycle lanes, several 20mph zones, and school streets. The gateway scheme has not been without teething problems and it’s progressing.
“We shouldn’t be too hard on the highways team. The bigger picture is difficult on financing and funds. Costs of construction projects have gone up enormously and inflation is huge.”
Read more:
- Business case approved for £12.1m Harrogate Station Gateway
- Demolished Harrogate charity flats set to be completed by December
Cycling infrastructure in Harrogate and Knaresborough ‘absolutely terrible’
Councillors have criticised North Yorkshire Council for not prioritising the needs of cyclists in Harrogate.
At a meeting of Harrogate and Knaresborough councillors, Alex Kay, the council’s senior transport planning officer delivered a presentation that included options for future cycle links in the town.
These included Bilton to Starbeck and Jennyfields to the town centre with cost estimates running into the millions.
In recent years the council has built a widely-criticised stretch of cycle route on Otley Road and abandoned the next phase, scrapped a Low-Traffic Neighbourhood on Beech Grove and decided against creating a one-way system on Oatlands Drive.
Meanwhile, funding bids have been rejected by the government for new cycle paths on Knaresborough Road and Victoria Avenue.
Its flagship active travel scheme, the £12.1m Harrogate Station Gateway, has also been drastically scaled back following opposition from local businesses with only a small section of Station Parade now set to include a cycle lane.
Cllr Matt Walker, a Liberal Democrat for Knaresborough West, criticised the state of the cycle infrastructure in the area.
He said:
“To improve things you have to acknowledge there’s a problem. Active travel is absolutely terrible. Roads are gridlocked and full of potholes, buses are missed all the time between Harrogate and Knaresborough.
“We have to make improvements and the council needs to step its game up. It needs to get its act together so people can get out of cars and get around in a quick and environmentally-friendly way.”
Cllr Arnold Warneken, a member of the Green Party for Ouseburn, added:
“The frustration of people who want to cycle in Harrogate and Knaresborough isn’t being taken seriously.”
With several of the proposals put forward by the council years from being built, Cllr Paul Haslam, an Independent for Bilton and Nidd Gorge, said there are not enough “shovel-ready” schemes on the table.
The council’s predecessor North Yorkshire County Council undertook a much-publicised Harrogate Congestion Survey in 2019 which showed there was an appetite for improving walking and cycling infrastructure in the town so people are incentivised to leave their cars at home.
Cllr Philip Broadbank, a Liberal Dem for Fairfax and Starbeck, said:
“I get frustrated with talks and plans and various things we spend time preparing [regarding cycling] yet year-in-year-out nothing happens.”
However, Cllr John Mann, a Conservative for Oatlands and Pannal, defended the council and said it “hadn’t done a bad job” on active travel in his constituency.
Cllr Mann said:
“They’ve installed numerous cycle lanes, several 20mph zones, and school streets. The gateway scheme has not been without teething problems and it’s progressing.
“We shouldn’t be too hard on the highways team. The bigger picture is difficult on financing and funds. Costs of construction projects have gone up enormously and inflation is huge.”
Read more:
- Business case approved for £12.1m Harrogate Station Gateway
- Demolished Harrogate charity flats set to be completed by December
Young flautist and actor win top prizes at Harrogate Competitive Festival
Flautist Alannah Saphir was crowned Young Musician of the Festival and actor Isabella Withy won the Speech & Drama Championship at the final concert of this year’s Harrogate Competitive Festival for Music, Speech and Drama.
Alannah, a sixth former at St. Aidan’s, performed the last two movements of Carl Reinecke’s challenging sonata Undine, the same work that won her the woodwind section final two weeks before.
Alannah, who is about to take her A levels, has been playing the flute since the age of six. She already holds a performance diploma and is also a talented pianist. She currently studies both instruments with her mum Nichola, herself a professional musician and Royal College of Music alumnus. Nichola said:
“We are so delighted and proud of this achievement. It has come just at the right time for her.”
Alannah hopes to study at one of the London conservatoires next year and will be preparing for auditions after leaving school.
Isabella, who attends Ripon Grammar School, reached the finals of the competition after coming first in the Shakespeare category with a solo piece from Twelfth Night. She also performed a duo from the play Bird with her fellow student Amber Stevenson-Mian.
The 18 year old has ambitions for a career in theatre and television, and is hoping to pursue an acting degree next year. She has already secured offers from the prestigious Guildford School of Acting and the Chichester Conservatoire.
Isabella entered the festival with a group of students from the Upstage Academy in Ripon, which she joined when she was nine. Her win marked the fourth year running that Upstage have won the festival’s overall speech and drama trophy. The academy’s founder, Amelia Urukalo, said:
“Issy has been entering the festival since primary school and this is her last year before she leaves us, so for her to win is incredible.”
The Harrogate Competitive Festival has been a mainstay of the town’s artistic life since 1936 when it was established as an educational trust by the then Harrogate Town Council.
This year’s festival, which attracted more than 1,000 entries, was held over three weekends at Harrogate High School this month.
Nowadays, it is run by a large team of volunteers and a committee that works all year round.
Read more:
- Harrogate youngsters shine but competitive festival faces uncertain future
- The Stray Ferret is moving into the heart of Harrogate town centre
- Concern as school suspensions rise by 40% in Harrogate and Knaresborough
Harrogate residents say convention centre visitors stealing parking spaces
Residents who live in the shadow of Harrogate Convention Centre say they are struggling to park outside their own homes due to spots being taken by visitors to the facility.
John Birkenshaw told Harrogate and Knaresborough councillors that a group of 61 residents living on Springfield Avenue, Spring Grove, Spring Mount and Springfield Mews had signed a petition calling for parking restrictions to be toughened up around the area to stop the current system being “abused” by visitors to the town.
On these streets, the North Yorkshire Council allows motorists to leave their vehicles for up to three hours for free if they display a parking disc.
However, after 6pm parking restrictions end until the morning.
Mr Birkenshaw said spaces are being filled by people attending events at the convention centre and shows at the Royal Hall with the problem worsening in recent years.
He said:
“They regularly park in these streets, often overnight, to save on parking fees.”
Mr Birkenshaw said residents had purchased residential parking and visitor permits from the council but “can’t benefit from the privileges they are paying for.”
He added:
“Many of us park hundreds of yards away which is a safety issue for residents when there’s poor weather, dark nights and uneven pavements.”
A statement was read out on behalf of senior council transport officer Melisa Burnham that said traffic regulation orders could eventually be issued on the streets.
However, she added there are several stages in the council’s process before it could finally be implemented.
Cllr Peter Lacey, Liberal Democrat councillor for Coppice Valley & Duchy division, said this illustrates the “tortuous” routes residents need to go through from the council to get a “blatantly obvious” solution to their problem.
He added:
“The local group are not warriors, they just want to see sense. I’ve wanted to champion their cause because it’s perfectly reasonable and sensible.”
Read more:
- Trading Hell: ‘We cannot force people to do something’, says homeless charity
- The Stray Ferret is moving into the heart of Harrogate town centre
Council confirms closure of Nidderdale primary school with no pupils
Fountains Earth Church of England Primary School will officially close for good at the end of this month.
North Yorkshire Council’s Conservative-run executive met yesterday in Northallerton to approve the closure following a consultation.
The school in Lofthouse near Pateley Bridge has faced dwindling pupil numbers in recent years and currently has no pupils on its books.
The council’s executive member for education Annabel Wilkinson said “nobody wants to close a small school” and it was “a very hard decision”.
Fountains Earth is part of Upper Nidderdale Federation alongside St Cuthbert’s Church of England Primary School in Pateley Bridge and Glasshouses Community Primary School.
Earlier in the meeting, Cllr Andrew Murday (Liberal Democrat, Pateley Bridge and Nidderdale) pleaded with councillors to delay a decision as he called for an investigation to take place first into the leadership of the school’s federation related to its academic and financial performance as well as communication with parents.
He noted that the school received a ‘good’ rating from Ofsted in 2022 and if the issues were resolved, he believes parents would bring their children back.
Cllr Murday said:
“There would be pupils if the dispute with the federation hadn’t happened. Families have put houses up for sale because the school’s not there. It’s a chicken and egg situation.
“Rural schools are important for communities and they gain something from being small and within the community.”
However, the council’s legal officer Barry Khan suggested it would be out of its remit to investigate governance at the federation.
The number of pupils at the school had declined from 20 in 2017 to 10 in 2022.
This led executive member for finance Cllr Gareth Dadd to say keeping a school open with such few potential pupils “would be doing a disservice to those children”.
Cllr Greg White, executive member for environment, said for rural schools to remain open, residents need to “breed and have children”.
Cllr Dadd said:
“I feel very uncomfortable sending a child to a primary school with 8 pupils. I don’t think it can be beneficial to that child. It’s not just about education it’s about social interaction as well.”
Amanda Newbold, assistant director for education and skills at North Yorkshire Council, said this had been a factor when parents withdrew their children.
She said:
“Four to 11-year-olds were being taught in one class. This was a challenge for the one member of staff who then moved on and the school struggled to recruit. They relied on agency staff or other teachers from the federation.
“When a child became the only one in their year group, the parents wanted to move them to schools with other children their own age to prepare for secondary school.”
The school will officially close on March 31 and its catchment area will become part of St Cuthbert’s Church of England Primary School in Pateley Bridge.
Read more:
- Concerns raised about leadership at Nidderdale primary schools
- Angry parents say closure of Lofthouse school will ‘rip heart out of community’
Harrogate businessman charged with stalking
Harrogate businessman Jason Shaw is due to appear in court charged with stalking.
Mr Shaw, 55, of Rutland Drive, owns Pineheath, the 12-bedroom home on Cornwall Road that was once home to Sir Dhunjibhoy Bomanji and Lady Frainy Bomanji. His plans to amend the property were approved by North Yorkshire Council this year.
He is charged with stalking involving serious harm / distress between October 1 last year and March 12 this year in Harrogate.
Mr Shaw is also charged with breaching a restraining order and harassment in February this year.
He is due to appear at York Crown Court on April 15.
Read more:
- Three arrested following police chase between Harrogate and Ripon
- Another 135 homes off Harrogate’s Skipton Road set for approval
Concern as school suspensions rise by 40% in Harrogate and Knaresborough
Concerns have been raised after the number of children suspended in Harrogate and Knaresborough schools rose by more than 40% in the last year.
Figures recently published by North Yorkshire Council revealed there were 459 suspensions in 2022/23 — a rise from 314 in the previous year.
The most common reason for suspensions was “persistent disruptive behaviour”, according to a report.
The chief inspector of Ofsted has said that behaviour in schools has deteriorated since the covid pandemic, with some pupils refusing to comply with rules, talking back to teachers and walking out of class mid-lesson.
The topic was raised at a meeting of local councillors in Harrogate on Thursday.
Cllr Paul Haslam, an independent representing Bilton and Nidd Gorge, said he was “concerned” at the level of suspensions in the area.
He said:
“What we’ve got is a symptom and not a cause. I’m keen to understand the causes of suspensions. I do not underestimate the commitment of teachers.
“As a past school governor and trustee, I know how hard they work but how can we best support them? Can we catch [poor behaviour] at primary school so it doesn’t happen in secondary school?”
Last week, youth education charity Impetus published research that found children suspended from school see their exam results suffer.
It suggested some children were found to be lagging a year behind their peers with some unable to achieve a standard pass in GCSE maths and English.
Amanda Newbold, assistant director for education and skills at North Yorkshire Council, responded to Cllr Haslam and said the rise in suspensions reflected a national trend.
She also said the figures were “linked disproportionately” to children with special educational needs and disabilities.
Ms Newbold said:
“What we’ve seen is an increase in suspensions and exclusions across the county. Those numbers have risen over the last few years. We can link it back to wider issues in families rather than school-specific issues.
“We’ve focused on all things inclusion this academic year and are offering support around suspension and exclusions. We’ve had headteacher workshops to make sure we can do as much preventative work as possible but it will take time to see outcomes.”
Read more:
- Trading Hell: Shocking rise in shoplifting in Harrogate town centre
- Three arrested following police chase between Harrogate and Ripon
- Harrogate primary school launches campaign to fill new library
Firefighters rescue boy trapped in railings in Ripon
Firefighters were called to help a boy whose leg got trapped in railings at Ripon Market Place.
On-call firefighters from the city were summoned to the incident at 8.31am yesterday.
North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service‘s incident report did not say how the boy managed to get stuck.
It added firefighters “released the boy unharmed using hydraulic spreaders”.
Ripon firefighters were back in action at 2.05pm when they responded to reports of a hedge on fire on Dishforth Road in Sharow,
The incident report said:
“Crews extinguished the fire measuring 5m x 5m using one hose reel jet. The cause was accidental.”
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- Four fire crews tackle blaze at Pateley Bridge caravan site