Killinghall Cricket Club has been given the go-ahead to build a new two-storey pavilion.
North Yorkshire Council approved the club’s planning application today, after saying previous designs would have been too large and overbearing.
The decision paves the way for the demolition of the current 1970s building, which has two small changing areas and communal showers that give little privacy.
The club hopes the new pavilion will be more appealing to female players and umpires, who currently have to arrive in kit or get changed in the toilets or communal areas.
Trevor Watson, assistant director of planning at the council, included a series of conditions attached to the decision.
They included that development must begin within three years and construction work can only take place between 8am and 6pm from Monday to Friday and from 8am to 3pm on Saturdays.
Killinghall finished fourth in division one of this year’s Nidderdale and District Amateur Cricket League.
Since the demolition of the Three Horseshoes pub and the long-term closure of The Greyhounds Inn, the club pavilion and bar has become a social centre for the village at weekends.
It hopes the new pavilion will enhance this and encourage junior players.
The club said in planning documents:
“This development is very much needed to the club and the village community.”
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Wind warning for Harrogate district as storm approaches
A weather warning has been issued from noon tomorrow until 7am on Thursday as Storm Agnes approaches.
The Met Office has forecast “a spell of strong and disruptive winds through Wednesday afternoon into early Thursday” for most of Britain.
In Harrogate, gusts of up to 44mph are predicted, with the worst of the wind expected tomorrow evening.
The Met Office has issued a yellow weather warning, which is less severe than amber and red warnings.
It said power cuts, damage to building and travel disruption are possible.
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Harrogate passengers to get more seats on direct London trains
London North Eastern Railway is to introduce longer trains on some of its direct services between Harrogate and London on Sundays.
Five of the current five-carriage Sunday trains will be upgraded to nine or 10-carriage trains, meaning more seats for passengers.
LNER announced the news today as part of a series of changes in response to a 30% increase in demand for Sunday leisure travellers since 2019.
The company will also introduce three additional Sunday services — two between Leeds and London King’s Cross and one between Doncaster and London.
Although these will not stop at Harrogate they will benefit people who want to get direct London trains from Leeds and Doncaster.
The new services and longer trains will start in December this year.
Brian Dunsby, leader of the Harrogate Line Supporters Group, said:
“This is a great testament to the popularity of the direct Harrogate to London services and the increasing demand for travel on Sundays.
“We are also aware that LNER are currently planning to reschedule their east coast mainline services in December 2024 so we are hopeful for gaining an earlier morning service from Harrogate to King’s Cross and a later evening return to Harrogate.”
David Horne, managing director at LNER, said its plans “will provide more than 3,000 extra seats from December”.
Rail minister Huw Merriman said travel patterns had changed since the pandemic and this was “a real win for passengers”.
Which services are affected?
Services which will become 10 carriage Azuma services:
Northbound
- The 09:05 London King’s Cross to Harrogate
- The 17:05 London King’s Cross to Harrogate
These two services will no longer be able to call at Horsforth due to the platform length.
Southbound
- The 13:15 Harrogate to London King’s Cross service will increase from five carriages to nine.
Services which will become nine-carriage Azuma services:
Northbound
- The 11:03 London King’s Cross to Harrogate
- The 15:36 Harrogate to London King’s Cross
People wanting to get to London earlier on a Sunday by train and can get to Leeds will be able to do so. The 08:05 on Sundays from Leeds to London King’s Cross will no longer call at Retford, Newark Northgate and Grantham resulting in a shorter journey time.
The service will arrive at London King’s Cross at 10.18 – 19 minutes earlier than before.
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Council spends £478,000 on halving number of litter bins
Almost half a million pounds of taxpayers’ money is being spent on halving the number of litter bins in the Harrogate district.
Council staff are replacing 1,500 old bins with 775 new, larger bins.
Some dog walkers are upset because bins on popular routes have been taken away and replaced by ones alongside main roads that are easier to empty.
A freedom of information request by the Stray Ferret to North Yorkshire Council revealed the new bins cost £478,000.
The council said the cost of replacing the old bins would have been £339,000.
It estimated it will save £16,000 a year by no longer having to buy 240,000 bin liners because the new receptacles don’t require them.
It also expects to save between £17,000 to £19,000 a year because the new bins can be handled more efficiently by bin wagon. The council also expects to save an unspecified sum on fuel, because there are fewer bins to empty.
The freedom of information response by North Yorkshire Council said the management board at the now-defunct Harrogate Borough Council signed off the new system.
A spokesperson from the council’s environment directorate said:
“The main aim of the project was to reduce the number of duplicate journeys between different services.
“This does provide a level of savings, coupled with a benefit to the environment, through a reduction in annual mileage and almost eradicating the need for the 240,000 single-use liners used on the smaller bins.”
They added:
“It provides further benefits by allowing the streetscene team to provide a more proactive service in regard to littering, fly tipping, and the clearance of detritus.
“To achieve this, the old infrastructure, totalling close to 1500 bins, is being replaced with 775 new bins. With the greater capacity, fewer bins are required which helps reduce street furniture, particularly in locations where two bins may have been placed close together.”
Dog walkers in Knox, Jennyfields and Knaresborough have contacted the Stray Ferret with concerns about the new system.
In Jennyfields, where new bins have been sited on main roads rather than in the field near the leisure centre, Elizabeth Horner said “the amount of rubbish from having no bins in the area has got disgusting”.
Another dog walker, Diana Salama, said there was now “nowhere to easily dispose of poo”.
Under the new system, dog waste is no longer classified as hazardous waste and can be placed in any bin. This means dog waste can be placed in owners’ general waste bins.
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Fink grocery store in Boroughbridge sold
Fink grocery store in Boroughbridge has new owners.
Co-owner Hugh Fink announced at the weekend he and Sharon Longcroft, who took over the business when it was the Fruit Basket in November 2013, had sold to London retailers Vikas Patel and Miraz Mehta.
The new owners will take over the shop on Boroughbridge High Street on October 2.
Mr Fink said he will continue to support Mr Patel in the months ahead while Ms Longcroft will focus on her picture framing business.
The Fruit Basket was owned by Chris Thompson for 21 years before it was acquired by Mr Fink and Ms Longcroft a decade ago.
It rebranded as Fink in 2016 and two years later was named local shop/village store of the year at the national Farm Shop and Deli Show in 2018.
Mr Fink said:
“It has been a pleasure to have served the people of Boroughbridge and beyond and we are delighted to have found a buyer with such a strong understanding of the market we serve.
“With his vast retail experience and energy, we look forward to seeing him develop Fink to the next level.”
Mr Patel, who until recently managed a general store in Chelsea, added:
“When my wife Miraz and I came to Boroughbridge, met some of the people and saw the shop, we immediately knew this would be a great place to settle and bring up our son Aarish.
“Having moved from London we know there is a lot to learn but we look forward to meeting new people and learning to speak Yorkshire!”
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Knaresborough hosts main running race of year
More than 200 runners took part in the Knaresborough Crag Rat Run yesterday.
The five-mile race around the town is the primary event organised each year by running club Knaresborough Striders.
Harrogate Harriers provided the top female athlete, Davina Ellis, who finished the mixed terrain course in 32 mins 11 seconds.
The men’s race was won by Mark Holden, of Dewsbury Road Runners, who blitzed around in 28 mins 27 seconds.
Gareth Somerville, of Harrogate Harriers, was the second male and Jack Brierley, of Nidd Valley Road Runners, was third.
The race, organised annually by Knaresborough Striders since 2016, started and finished at Knaresborough Cricket Club. A total of 217 runners took part.
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Stunning photo of Northern Lights over Ripon this morning
Photographer Paul Oldham captured this stunning shot of the Northern Lights over Ripon last night.
Mr Oldham took the image at How Hill at about 2.30am last night.
The Milky Way is also visible in the top left too.
Mr Oldham, who specialises in photographing nature and landscapes in Ripon and the Yorkshire Dales, has taken plenty of outstanding photos before.
But he described last night as “definitely the best photography night of my life”.
The Northern Lights have been visible over England recently. Caused by activity on the surface of the sun, they create a natural light display of green and red.
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Train strikes to hit Harrogate and Knaresborough this week
More train strikes are set to disrupt services in Harrogate and Knaresborough this week.
Rail company Northern has said no services will operate on Saturday due to industrial action by train drivers’ union Aslef.
It added in a statement:
“Additional disruption is expected on Friday, September 29 and from Monday 2 to Friday 6 October due to action short of strike called by Aslef and customers are advised to check before they travel as there may be some short notice cancellations to services running on these days.
“There will also be no services on Wednesday, October 4 – when an additional strike has been called by the union.”
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Mick Whelan, Aslef general secretary, said:
‘Our leisure centres will be the envy of North Yorkshire’‘While we regret having to take this action – we don’t want to lose a day’s pay, or disrupt passengers, as they try to travel by train — the government, and the employers have forced us into this position.
“Our members have not, now, had a pay rise for four years – since 2019 – and that’s not right when prices have soared in that time.”
Leisure centre visitors in Harrogate, Ripon and Knaresborough have been as likely to wear hard hats as swimming costumes in recent years.
All three sites have undergone lengthy projects to refurbish or replace council-owned facilities.
Those in charge probably wish they too had hard hats to protect themselves from the flak caused by soaring costs and delays. The nine-month delay refurbishing the former Harrogate Hydro meant it reopened two days before the end of the school summer holidays.
But finally there is something to cheer.
The new Harrogate Leisure and Wellness Centre has already attracted almost 2,000 members. It has an eight-lane pool and diving boards, a well-equipped gym twice the size of its previous incarnation and three plush exercise studios.
Elsewhere, the partially-open Jack Laugher Leisure and Wellness Centre will eventually provide Ripon with a gym and pool on the same site; Knaresborough is weeks away from a new leisure centre and the gym at Pateley Bridge has been refurbished.
Mark Tweedie, managing director of Brimhams Active, the council-owned leisure company that runs the sites, admits the delays have been frustrating but says the benefits of the £46 million investment will soon be felt across the district. He says:
“We will have an estate that will be the envy of North Yorkshire. The investment that’s gone in is unprecedented and significant.”
Harrogate Leisure and Wellness Centre is certainly a cut above the average council leisure centre.
Monthly membership, which provides unlimited access to gyms, pools and classes at all Brimhams sites, is £44.95. That isn’t as cheap as Pure Gym or Coach Gyms but they haven’t got pools. Gym-only Brimhams membership is £33.
Mr Tweedie argues they also don’t have the same focus on community health as Brimhams, which he says is “reinventing conventional leisure services to a more impactful, person-centred health and wellbeing service”.
To underline this, the rather soulless ‘leisure and wellness’ moniker has been slapped across the names of all its sites.
Sinkhole saga
But although Harrogate is fully open, work continues elsewhere.
Ripon, which was the first to reopen as the Jack Laugher Leisure and Wellness Centre in March last year, appears locked in some sort of sinkhole groundhog day of never-ending work on a “void” beneath the old part of the site, which remains closed.
Remedial work is expected to continue until spring. Mr Tweedie says the centre is “looking to reopen the first floor gym in April next year” with the ground floor studio following in summer.
In the meantime, customers will continue to use the temporary gym in the car park and attend group classes at Hugh Ripley Hall in the city centre.
Knaresborough has been less troublesome than Ripon and Harrogate, although it might not seem like it to residents who currently have nowhere in town to swim since the old pool closed a few weeks ago.
Delays meant the seamless transition from old pool to new site didn’t quite happen, but from November people will have access to a six-lane pool, a fun pool with a slide, plus — for the first time — a studio, gym, steam room and sauna.
While others get upgrades, the beautiful Starbeck Baths feels like the forgotten ugly sister. Rumours abound the Victorian pool will be closed and Mr Tweedie’s comments don’t provide much succour:
“The council is reviewing all its leisure sites at the moment. That’s a natural process because it’s just been formed as a unitary council. It will ask for evidence on how its sites perform and the opportunities for development.”
The audit will be followed by a strategy. Does he think Starbeck Baths will still exist in 10 years?
“That’s a decision for councillors. But what I can say is there has been no feedback to me about planning to close Starbeck.”
Membership figures
Brimhams, which employs the full-time equivalent of about 160 staff and has a turnover of £8.4 million, was set up by Harrogate Borough Council in August 2021. But it has been run by the new North Yorkshire Council since April.
Mr Tweedie says Brimhams “was set up to be commercially effective but also to deliver better health outcomes for the community”.
The council currently provides a £1.7 million annual subsidy, which is due to reduce to £1.2 million when the new centres are complete.
The early commercial signs at Harrogate are encouraging. Membership was 600 when the Hydro closed. The new site has 1,800 members — above the 1,750 target for the end of the month.
Ripon, which has less gym competition than Harrogate, has 1,200 members and Nidderdale has 700.
When we last interviewed Mr Tweedie staff shortages was a huge issue but he says this has eased.
Brimhams is the only council-owned trading company in North Yorkshire. A private company called Everyone Active provides services in Ryedale and Scarborough; Richmond Leisure Trust runs facilities in Richmond and a charity called Inspiring Healthy Lifestyles oversees sites in Selby. The former district councils in Craven and Hambleton ran leisure sites.
Brimhams is due to take control of Selby’s services, which includes Selby Leisure Centre and Tadcaster Leisure Centre, in September next year.
That decision appeared to be a vote of confidence in the Brimhams model but uncertainty remains about how leisure services will be managed long-term in the county once North Yorkshire Council has completed its review.
But in the short-term, it’s all about growing membership — and getting Knaresborough and Ripon sorted.
Read more:
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Paraplegic Paralympian rescued after bike overturns at Lofthouse
Firefighters helped a paraplegic Paralympic athlete whose bike overturned on a notorious steep hill near Lofthouse today.
On call firefighters from Lofthouse, near Pateley Bridge, were called to Trapping Hill at 11.56am.
North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service‘s incident report said the unnamed athlete’s adapted recumbent bicycle “overturned while descending a steep hill after the tyre popped off the rim”.
The report added:
“Crew transferred male to a local farmer’s vehicle who then returned him to his adapted van.
“Male then returned to the scene where crew were able to secure his bike in his vehicle.”
With its stunning scenery and steep gradient, Trapping Hill is a popular but highly challenging route for cyclists.
A family needed rescuing from Trapping Hill in December last year when their car got stuck on black ice.
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