Harrogate hospital has “learned lessons” following the death of a woman who became disconnected from her ventilator when she was left alone in a room with the door closed.
Karen Smith was 44 when, in October 2020, she was admitted to the hospital with covid.
She was put on a temporary intensive care ward that had been set up by Harrogate and District NHS Foundation Trust to deal with the high demand of the pandemic.
An inquest heard this week Ms Smith died on the ward after her oxygen mask became disconnected.
The continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) oxygen machines used on the ward were not connected to the nurses’ station in the way they were on the established ICU.
When Ms Smith’s mask came off and the tube became disconnected around 5am on Saturday, October 24, although the machine’s alarm sounded, there was no way of it sending a signal to the nurses’ station for a rapid response.
The previous day, the hospital’s infection control team had visited the ward and recommended that the doors to each bay, which had been open, should be closed to help reduce the spread of covid.
Dr David Earl, a consultant in anaesthesia and critical care, told the inquest:
“The doors were closed on that Friday and I don’t think enough work was done to recognise the implications of how that might make nursing quite difficult, because you can’t hear behind the doors.
“This is when things start to go a bit wrong, I think, on that Friday.”
On the Saturday evening, a nurse who was covering a meal break had left Miss Smith’s bay to go to the toilet urgently. She had no way of contacting another nurse to cover for her, but believed the original nurse was about to return from her break.
The inquest heard that, during the pandemic, staff were required to remove extensive personal protective equipment (PPE) and go to a bathroom nearby, rather than the one on the ward, which took much longer than usual.
When the nurse she was covering for returned, the disconnection was noticed and Ms Smith’s mask had been completely removed.
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Dr Earl told the inquest many patients find CPAP masks uncomfortable and can attempt to remove them when slightly disorientated, such as when waking up.
The machine’s log indicated Ms Smith had been without hers for around four-and-a-half minutes. A new mask was immediately brought from the store cupboard nearby.
Staff said they hoped the short time of disconnection meant that Ms Smith would not have been affected by the lack of oxygen supply.
The inquest heard that, although her blood oxygen levels quickly rose again, it became apparent to the team on the next shift that she was more sleepy and less responsive than usual.
That night, as her condition further deteriorated, staff called her mother, but she was not allowed to come into the hospital because of covid restrictions.
Addressing Ms Smith’s mother Audrey and brother John, who were at the inquest, Dr Earl said:
“At the time, we were following national guidelines about visiting.
“As someone who worked through all of this, not having visitors all the time was terrible. On intensive care, we spend a lot of time with families getting to know them. To suddenly not have families there was absolutely awful for us, but we know it was even worse for families like yourselves.
“It we could go back, we would get you straight in when we knew [she was dying]. Now, that’s the national guidelines.”
Ms Smith said her daughter had been well enough the day before to be messaging her friends. However, Dr Earl said given the number of days she had been reliant on the CPAP without any sign of improvement, his experience with covid patients suggested she was more likely than not to have succumbed to the virus in the end.
Walkie-talkies introduced
Dr Earl said the hospital had “learned lessons” from Ms Smith’s death and a number of changes had been implemented to prevent the same situation arising again, including changes to nurse rostering and the introduction of walkie-talkies to allow nurses to communicate with each other even when in separate rooms.
He added:
“We realise we can’t make everything perfect, but we try to list all the things where we think there’s a potential danger there and try to minimise them.
“In this new area, we had one of those risk registers and recognised it was constantly evolving, but in these circumstances, it was the best we could do.”
Delivering a narrative conclusion, senior coroner for North Yorkshire Jonathan Heath said Ms Smith, who lived in Wetherby, had died from a hypoxic brain injury caused by becoming disconnected from her oxygen machine. A secondary cause of death was her high body mass index.
Mr Heath said there was no evidence of how Ms Smith’s mask came to be removed and the tube disconnected, so he did not want to make any assumption.
Mr Heath said:
Stray Ferret Christmas Appeal: ‘It’s our privilege to care for each other’“I am satisfied that a ‘prevention of future deaths’ report is not required.
“Whatever I would be saying to the hospital appears to have been addressed already.”
This year’s Stray Ferret Christmas Appeal is for Resurrected Bites in Harrogate and Knaresborough. Today, community grocery manager Carolyn Aitken tells us why working with people who rely on the groceries has been such an uplifting experience. Please give generously to support local people who are struggling this Christmas. They need your help.
When I took on the role of community grocery manager a year ago, I had never imagined what a privilege it would be.
That I would meet some of the most amazing people I’ve ever known, that this would be a role in which I would see such a broad spectrum of life and experience such a wide range of emotions, often all in one day.
From the heart-breaking revelation of a recently widowed wife or a bereaved parent, to the overwhelming kindness and generosity of a young couple who have given up their weekly takeaway to buy food to help others.
From the dad with a family to support, who lost everything including his home and business during the pandemic, or the beautiful young mother fighting long covid whilst caring for a newborn, to a group of elderly residents in shared accommodation giving a jar or packet or tin each week to help us to fill our shelves.
Volunteers who daily go above and beyond, collecting food from supermarkets late at night in all weathers or early mornings before most of us are awake, or who give up mornings or afternoons week after week to restock shelves and ensure everything’s displayed beautifully or to run the stores or cafes, always with a caring smile and a kind word for each customer.
We all wish we weren’t needed – everyone who plays a part in the life of Resurrected Bites agrees that there shouldn’t be the food waste that we collect each week – that we are a society that wilfully throws away perfectly good produce, because it’s not quite the right shape or size or has just passed its best, or there’s just been too much produced, and that such waste is wrong.
We agree that community groceries and foodbanks shouldn’t be needed in the UK in 2022, but we are moved by the needs of so many and so we try to make life just a little better for those in our community who are struggling.
Read more:
- Stray Ferret Christmas Appeal: Ukrainian refugees relying on Resurrected Bites for food in Knaresborough
- Where would you turn if you couldn’t afford to feed your family?
Every day we wish we could do more – we can signpost our customers to other agencies and organisations who may also be able to help, with needs such as debt management, fuel vouchers, benefits advice or simply where to access clothes or furniture, but our hope is that one day, it won’t be like this.
That is the hope of our founder and director Michelle, who tirelessly works long hours, securing grants, arranging fundraisers, co-ordinating a plethora of supporters and volunteers, juggling a small team running the cafes, the community groceries, the pay-as-you-can tables and the warehouse. Resurrected Bites was her vision, one that was so inspirational that it has been caught by the communities of Harrogate and Knaresborough and grown into the amazing work it is today.
And it’s that word ‘community’ that shines out of all that we do and all that we’re a part of. Our tiny, beautiful corner of Yorkshire is incredibly community focused, people have told me that’s why they moved here to live.
As a community they care for one another, and as a community, it will be our privilege to continue to care for them, while we can.
Nobody in the Harrogate district should go hungry this Christmas.
It costs £300 to run the community grocery for one day. Please help to keep it open for everyone who relies on it.
Click here to contribute now. Thank you.
Hosepipe ban lifted after wet autumn across Harrogate districtThe hosepipe ban covering the Harrogate district has been lifted with immediate effect.
Yorkshire Water said the public’s efforts to save water, combined with more wet weather than average during the autumn, meant the restrictions imposed on August 26 were no longer needed.
The company said an average of 28 million litres of water had been saved each day under the restrictions, taking pressure off its reservoirs. However, Yorkshire is still classified by the Environment Agency as being in drought conditions.
Neil Dewis, director of water at Yorkshire Water, said:
“We’re really grateful to our customers for their efforts to save water whilst the weather was drier than usual.
“Thanks to a number of emergency drought schemes, drought permits, increased leakage activity, rainfall, and everyone’s efforts to save water, reservoirs are now looking much healthier – with the average level across the region now at 75%.”
Yorkshire Water said it had hired more technicians to deal with leaks and working seven days a week to carry out repairs. It said leakage had reduced by more than 9% this year, as it works towards a goal of a 15% reduction by 2025.
Mr Dewis added:
“As we’ve seen this year, climate change is making weather patterns more extreme.
We recently submitted our latest draft water resource management plan to the Department of Environment Food and Rural Affairs. The document predicts future water use, weather patterns, and sets out our action plan to reduce the likelihood of future restrictions and ensure we can continue to meet demand over the next 60 years.
“We’d welcome feedback from customers and other stakeholders on our draft plan, which can be viewed on our website.
“Whilst the hosepipe ban is no longer in place, it’s really important that we all continue to save water where we can. Adopting small habits like reusing grey water or installing a water butt will save water and energy, helping to reduce bills and protect the environment.”
To view the draft water resource management plan, click here.
Read more:
- Reservoirs are filling up but Harrogate district is still in drought, says water firm
- Parliament debates bathing water status for River Nidd at Knaresborough
Free Christmas trail to raise funds for Oatlands community
Windows around the Oatlands area of Harrogate will be lit up to tell a festive tale a week before Christmas.
Families are being invited to tour the streets and follow the story of Robin Red Breast on his mission from Santa, to gather his friends together and cook a Christmas meal to feed the community.
It is being organised by Oatlands Community Group and will, fittingly, raise funds for A Seat At My Table, a series of community meals it serves each year to 40 local people who would otherwise eat alone.
The Christmas meal will be held at Oatlands Community Centre on Sunday, December 18, and the Christmas trail takes place that afternoon from 4pm to 6pm.
Organiser Vic Smith-Dunn said:
“While the trail is completely free, we are hopeful that if people enjoy the trail they will consider making a donation to our fundraising efforts to keep Oatlands Community Centre running.
“The community centre depends heavily on fundraising to generate an income to ensure that it can remain open and an asset to our community.”
The Christmas window trail has been held every year since 2016 when Oatlands Community Group was established. There are nine windows decorated on a route that takes in Mount Street, Cromwell Road, Hookstone Avenue, Beech Road and Leeds Road.
One of the Oatlands window displays and some of the knitted robins to be given to children.
On returning to the community centre, participants can enjoy hotdogs, popcorn, cakes, mulled wine and hot chocolate served by volunteers.
There will also be an opportunity to meet Father Christmas and each child will be given a robin knitted by a member of the Oatlands community.
Anyone who would like to take part is asked to register on the event’s website to ensure there are enough knitted robins to go around.
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Mrs Smith-Dunn said any donations received would go back into running the community centre and putting on events to support people in the area.
She also appealed for volunteers to help organise the events, including the four community meals which range from afternoon teas in the summer to a Christmas meal with a quiz and other entertainment.
She added:
“There is no charge for residents to attend these events which makes it accessible to everyone who attends. We’re able to do this with the support of local independence like KD fruiterers and Verity Frearsons who generously donate.
“The community centre is the home of Oatlands Community Group and the myLifePool social enterprise, without access to this valuable community space, community initiatives like A Seat At My Table would not be able to deliver community out reach.
“It would be fantastic if this Christmas, Harrogate people would come along and enjoy this community event and in turn support the sustainability of Oatlands Community Centre.”
While this year’s Christmas meal is fully booked, anyone interested in future community meals can call Oatlands Community Group on 07596 838508. To make a donation to the group, visit its website.
Review: Making magical memories at the Harrogate Father Christmas ExperienceThis article is sponsored by Enchantica’s.
One of my happiest memories as a child was visiting Father Christmas every year.
We always went to Victoria House – later called Sunwin House – on the site of what is now the Everyman Cinema building.
The visit began with a ride through the stars on a sleigh that really moved, followed by a walk through a winter wonderland to Santa’s grotto.
It felt truly magical – and it’s an experience I’m keen to recreate for my own children as they grow up.
Of course, the sleigh ride and Sunwin House are long gone, but when we heard about the Elf Training Workshop organised by Enchantica’s, I thought it might just offer some of that magical feeling I’d loved as a child.
From the moment we arrived at the Cedar Court Hotel, it did. We were greeted by elves who, through the power of QR codes on our e-tickets, were able to greet each child by name. They said to each other:
“Look, it’s Poppy! She’s the one we’ve been waiting for!”
The look of amazement on the children’s faces was lovely to see.
We walked through to the elf village where, on long picnic tables, we were invited to make paper chains ready to decorate the village. Hot chocolates, soft drinks and even beers were flowing, with sweet treats also on offer.
The elves flitted from table to table, chatting to the children about their creations. Adding to the magic, they also knew a little about each child:
“Lily, you’ve been learning to swim this year, haven’t you? You’ve been doing so well with your lessons. Will you keep trying your best next year?”
Paper chains complete, we were shown through to the elf workshop. It was at the end of a snow-covered pathway, lined with glowing, elf-sized windows, lanterns and wintry scenes.
The path opened out into a classic fairytale setting: fireplace, Christmas tree, toys, stockings, and hundreds of fairy lights. It’s hard to believe that, in the summer, this tipi was serving afternoon teas and cocktails.
Within a few minutes, the show was under way. Chief Elf Tinsel encouraged participation in songs and other activities, even bringing up a few children to help with parts of the show.
The most thrilling part was the arrival of Father Christmas. Without wishing to spoil the surprise, let’s just say he entered in traditional fashion, and took up his spot on the throne by the fire to join in the fun.
The children were all enthralled by the whole thing – even my 19-month-old paid attention throughout the half-hour experience, clapping at the right moments and peering around to see Santa.
Once the show was over, we were brought up in family groups to meet Father Christmas and have our photos taken. Each child received a wooden token to exchange for a toy from the elves.
These were good quality gifts and just right for the ages of the recipients. A cuddly snowman delighted my toddler, while her four-year-old brother has been playing with his snap cards from the moment he unwrapped them.
On the way out, we posed in Santa’s sleigh for photos, observing the snow-dusted Christmas trees and footprints on the ground.
It was this attention to detail that made it work so well. From the quality of the costumes to their engagement with the children, the team of elves kept everything running smoothly and were utterly convincing throughout.
The setting was as luxurious and twinkly as you could wish Santa’s workshop to be, and Santa and Chief Elf Tinsel put on a captivating show that worked for all ages – including a few witty asides for the grown-ups.
I came away with that magical feeling I remembered from my own childhood, seeing the excitement and wonder on my children’s faces. It’s the kind of experience I can imagine becoming an annual tradition for our family.
Can we sign up for next year yet?
- The Father Christmas Experience is recommended for children aged up to seven. Tickets are £11.50 for adults and £15.50 for children (£14.50 and £19.50 on Christmas Eve). There are showings for children with special educational needs on Sunday, December 4 and Sunday, December 11. Click here for details.
- For children aged seven and over, the Codebreaker’s Christmas offers an escape room-style experience where children train at spy school to help Santa on a secret mission. Tickets are £15.50 per person and shows run on Fridays December 2 and 9, and Wednesday, December 21. Click here for more information or to book tickets.
Read more:
- Advent calendar of offers and prizes from Harrogate businesses
- Santa’s Chief Elf Tinsel invites good boys and girls to be fellow elves in Harrogate Christmas show
Stray Ferret Christmas Appeal: Ukrainian refugees relying on Resurrected Bites for food in Knaresborough
This year’s Stray Ferret Christmas Appeal is for Resurrected Bites in Harrogate and Knaresborough. Today, Vicky meets a Ukrainian family who have relied on its support this year. Please give generously to support local people who are struggling this Christmas. They need your help.
“We thought we would come here for a year, then we would go back to Ukraine. Now… I don’t know.”
Andre and Irina left their home near Kyiv after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. They arrived in Knaresborough with their two daughters – then aged three and 11 months – in late May.
With few possessions and no income they were directed towards Resurrected Bites. Andre said:
“Before September, I was looking for work. In September I started a course at Harrogate College in electrical engineering.
“I have a university degree in electrical engineering. I had a good job. UK wiring systems are different, so the course means I will be able to get a job here.”
Both he and Irina, who has been a full-time mum since their children were born, have also been learning English as a second language.
Their eldest daughter, now four, is enrolled in a local pre-school and is becoming more settled every day. Her younger sister will, hopefully, sign up after she turns two next year.
Read more:
- Stray Ferret Christmas Appeal 2022: Help ensure nobody goes hungry this Christmas
- Where would you turn if you couldn’t afford to feed your family?
The family have been living in rooms at a local pub, arranged through the government’s Ukraine programme, but this was only for six months. They have recently been forced to find a new home in order to continue receiving support from the programme for the next six months.
He said:
“After this time, we will have to pay rent. I have no job and I will only be able to find a job after my course ends in July.
“How will I pay for our accommodation until then?”
Not only have the family been supported by Resurrected Bites, they have also become part of the community at Gracious Street Methodist Church, practising their Christian faith and getting to know others in the area.
Andre has begun volunteering in the community grocery on his day off college, giving back support to the organisation that has helped his family.
They are permitted to stay here for three years and to find jobs, but those three years don’t count towards any future citizenship application. That would require a further five years in the UK.
The future remains uncertain for them in so many ways. Returning to Ukraine would not be simple either: the population of the capital city is less than half what it used to be and Andre said it took many years to rebuild after the devastation of the Second World War.
Some of Andre’s family members are now living elsewhere in the UK, but Irina’s parents are still in Ukraine. She said:
“They are OK, but very afraid. It’s a very hard life for them.”
The family still see Ukraine as their home, but at the moment it would be impossible to return. Andre added:
“There’s no electricity – only for a few hours a day. Russian forces destroyed the electricity station. There’s no water.
“It’s winter in Ukraine and it’s freezing. I don’t know how many people will die, because the freeze is very dangerous.”
They are just one example of the Ukrainian refugees living in the Harrogate district who are being supported by Resurrected Bites.
The organisation is a lifeline to people who have fled the war and are trying to build a new life for themselves in the Harrogate district.
Like Andre, many are retraining and hoping to find employment – but the ticking clock of the government’s year-long support hangs over them all.
In the meantime, organisations like Resurrected Bites are ensuring none of them go without food this winter.
Nobody in the Harrogate district should go hungry this Christmas.
It costs £300 to run the community grocery for one day. Please help to keep it open for everyone who relies on it.
Click here to contribute now. Thank you.
Man found guilty of assault after confrontation on Knaresborough’s WatersideA Birstwith man has been found guilty of assaulting a man and damaging his BMW after an altercation on Waterside, Knaresborough.
Aaron Peter Wilson, 43, had been riding a bike east along the road when his pedal collided with the black car, which was being parked by its owner.
Wilson did not stop at the scene, but carried on riding along the road.
Giving evidence at Harrogate Magistrates Court today, the victim said:
“I got back in and I pursued him with the car and parked up probably about 10 metres away from him. I got out and went to go and confront him.
“He was standing in the middle of the road with the bike at his feet. He was inflated, aggressive. He had flexed muscles and was trying to look a bigger person than he was.
“He was very threatening.”
He said Wilson then put his bike between the two of them, before grabbing the victim’s shirt around the collar, causing a deep scratch to his shoulder. He added:
“I was being choked because I had a button-up collar. The buttons were done up, except the top one.”
A member of the public arrived on the scene and the pair tried to stop Wilson leaving by blocking his path. Wilson then began knocking on nearby doors, before entering the garden of a house and lying down.
Meanwhile, the victim had called the police, who arrived a few minutes later and arrested Wilson.
Read more:
- Harrogate man jailed for three years for ‘savage’ attack
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Defending, Martin Townend of Watson Woodhouse Solicitors, argued Wilson was acting in self-defence after the collision, which took place around 10.30pm on July 24 this year.
Mr Townend said the victim began shouting at Wilson and chased him in his car, with the other man joining him in a way that left Wilson fearing for his safety.
Giving evidence, Wilson – whose address on the court lists was in High Birstwith but who was said in court to be of no fixed address – said:
“Thank God I went into that property and laid down. They didn’t cross the threshold.
“They were threatening me. That’s why I went into the property and laid down, just hoping the police would turn up.”
However, magistrates were unconvinced by his argument and said his evidence as a whole was “really not consistent”.
They found him guilty of both causing damage to the BMW and assaulting the man by beating him.
Further charges
Wilson then changed his plea on two other charges relating to an incident at Nidderdale House on Cambridge Road, Harrogate, on July 16. He admitted assaulting a man by beating him, and using threatening or abusive words or behaviour likely to cause harassment, alarm or distress.
He also entered a guilty plea to causing more than £1,100 of damage to a Volvo in Harrogate on July 3.
Magistrates requested a pre-sentence report before he appears again for sentence on January 12.
In the meantime, he remains in prison for breaching a community order handed to him on a separate charge.
Where would you turn if you couldn’t afford to feed your family?This year’s Stray Ferret Christmas Appeal is for Resurrected Bites in Harrogate and Knaresborough. Please read Vicky’s story about the charity’s community grocery below and give generously to support local people who are struggling this Christmas. They need your help.
At 9am on a Friday morning, Gracious Street Methodist Church in Knaresborough is already humming with energy.
The doors to the community grocery run by Resurrected Bites have just opened, but the volunteers have been here for well over an hour.
Amid the scene of boxes being unpacked and food being moved around by a dozen people, I meet grocery manager Carolyn Aitken, who tells me:
“It’s always manic on a Friday morning! It’s our busiest day.
“About 11am is our busiest time. We might get a bit of a break for a coffee, then it’s generally quieter through the rest of the day.”
The grocery was stocked yesterday, she says, with tinned and packaged food, but deliveries of fresh and frozen items continue to arrive throughout the morning.
They mostly arrive with volunteers who have been picking up food from shops across the Harrogate district.
Some are fresh foods about to go out of date, but perfectly safe be frozen to eat later. Others are tinned and packaged foods which will last for months more, but their best before dates don’t meet the exacting needs of supermarkets.
Catherine Crompton is the warehouse manager for Resurrected Bites. She uses her professional experience in food technology and PhD in food science to ensure everything that is sold is still of the right standard, including being properly labelled with allergens.
A delivery from Greggs is meticulously labelled before going on sale
As well as the new stock arriving, there is a steady stream of customers coming to the grocery. To be part of the scheme, each has gone through a registration process, ensuring they are in real need.
These aren’t necessarily people who are unemployed: some have faced a crisis, such as the loss of a partner, serious ill health, or a dramatic change in circumstances. Some simply can’t cover all their outgoings, especially as bills rise.
Carolyn said:
“We have had people who I know work, who use us. That’s all kinds of wrong.
“We give people the opportunity to pay in advance, so they know they can come every week and do their shop until the next time they get their money. It takes the pressure off.”
Members pay an annual membership fee of £5 and then a nominal charge for each shop: £3 for a small household, or £6 for a family of four or more.
Food waste
There are shelves and cabinets heaving with everything you might find in a supermarket: tinned tuna and beans, dried pasta, rice, breakfast cereal, meat, fruit and vegetables, custard, toothpaste, nappies, cleaning products and more.
There’s a counter of bread, cakes and other baked goods – all considered not good enough for supermarkets to sell to their customers, but all perfectly fresh and delicious enough to eat.
Looking at the amount of food here, it’s genuinely shocking to realise that it could all have been thrown in the bin.
Resurrected Bites has intercepted tons and tons of food waste since its first community grocery opened at New Park in Harrogate in October 2021, followed by Gracious Street in December. In total, 5,600 shops have been done by people who could not otherwise afford to feed themselves and their families.
Some of the people who rely on the grocery tell me they feel more comfortable with its model than with hand-outs, because it saves perfectly edible food from landfill – and because they pay.
Deborah Stocks began taking food parcels from Resurrected Bites during covid, when she was caring for her husband who had cancer. He died in late 2020 and, the following year, she began volunteering.
She collects donations from local supermarkets and brings them to Gracious Street on a Friday.
When we meet, she’s sitting with her mum, Jackie Lowden, who tells me:
“I’m on my own and I’m a pensioner. I live in a bungalow, but I haven’t put the heating on this year. I can’t afford it.
“Deborah told me about Resurrected Bites, and I thought, ‘that’s not for me’. But I can’t afford to buy food – it’s that ‘heat or eat’ thing.
“The good thing about this is that you do pay, it’s not just a hand-out. And now I volunteer too.”
Many of the volunteers are grocery members themselves. There’s a real sense of everyone pitching in to ensure it meets the needs of the community – and a very welcoming atmosphere to visitors old and new.
A big operation
But this is no simple set-up. There are 150 volunteers and five staff ensuring Resurrected Bites runs like clockwork.
They sort food in the warehouse, distribute it to the community groceries and cafés, check stock levels, help customers and ensure anyone who needs help can access it.
While Resurrected Bites takes plenty of tinned tuna, dried pasta and soup, it’s often short on ingredients for cooing and baking, such as flour and sugar. Tea bags are plentiful, but instant coffee is not.
To fill the gaps, Resurrected Bites has to buy supplies every week. They often come from national food waste charity Fareshare, which redistributes items from supermarkets and other suppliers.
Retired nurse Jennie Naylor began volunteering with Resurrected Bites during the covid pandemic, along with her husband Paul, and now helps at the community grocery once a week.
“We really enjoy it, while I would say being shocked at the number of people in this situation.
“It’s the meeting people. We both enjoy feeling useful and giving something to our community.
“We’ve enjoyed getting to know the other volunteers as well – they’re all just wonderful.”
I can’t imagine opening my cupboards at home to find nothing there, while my children are hungry and I know I can’t afford to buy anything. It must be incredibly stressful.
To know an organisation like Resurrected Bites is there to support you when times are tough must be an enormous relief.
Nobody in the Harrogate district should go hungry this Christmas.
It costs £300 to run the community grocery for one day. Please help to keep it open for everyone who relies on it.
Click here to contribute now.
Harrogate council set to agree to buy land for new horticultural nurseryA new home for Harrogate Borough Council‘s nursery could be bought by the authority if a proposal is accepted next week.
The council’s cabinet is set to approve plans to buy the land to relocate its Harlow Hill nursery — but the location remains under wraps.
Details of the proposed piece of land and its cost have not been revealed as the council argues they are commercially sensitive. However, documents published ahead of the meeting next Wednesday say the ward affected by the proposed purchase is Hampsthwaite and Killinghall.
The ward covers both villages, along with land to the south across Penny Pot Lane and down to the northern edge of Beckwithshaw.
The report by commercial and transformation officer Jennie Atherton said:
“Whilst the agreed value is slightly over the asking price, this is proportionate as the transfer would not be subject to an overage clause. This provides security for the council moving forward with the proposed development or an alternative use.
“Furthermore, the difference in value price secures the preferred site that could facilitate future operational needs of the horticultural nursery and enable the service to develop and maximise commercial opportunity including targets to bring net costs to zero and payback the capital investment in full.”
Harrogate Borough Council’s current nursery was described in the report as “no longer fit for purpose”. It was included in the local plan as a site for residential development and the council has agreed to invite expressions of interest in the site.
It has said any sale would be conditional on a new nursery site being available first.
Read more:
- Fears for trees over plans to build 62 houses at Harrogate plant nursery
- New Pannal business park rejected
Next week’s decision would allow officers to proceed with site searches and stage one of the Royal Institute of British Architects‘ eight-phase plan of work for delivering projects.
While the purchase of the site could complete before Harrogate Borough Council is replaced by the new unitary North Yorkshire Council in April, work to develop the new nursery is likely to take longer.
The report said:
Next rescue deal set to keep Joules open in Harrogate“The business case demonstrates that building a modern facility on a new site is the better value option with the potential for significant growth and opportunity.
“It is anticipated that the development and construction of the new nursery will be financed by a combination of several elements: capital investment funding, capital receipt from the sale of the existing Harlow Hill site, and nursery revenue and commercial opportunity.
“Note that whilst sufficient funding is approved within the Harrogate Borough Council capital investment programme to cover the purchase of the land and initial RIBA stage, further funding would need to be agreed once the authority has transitioned to North Yorkshire Council for subsequent RIBA development stages and the actual build of the new facility.”
Harrogate’s Joules shop is set to remain open after the retailer was rescued from administration by founder Tom Joule and high street brand Next.
The deal, announced today, will see 19 Joules stores closed with immediate effect — but Harrogate’s James Street shop is not among them.
More than 130 staff across the country have lost their jobs, but 1,450 have been retained. Next paid £34 million for the business, giving it a 74% share to Mr Joule’s 26%.
He said:
“After three years away from the operational side, I’m truly looking forward to inspiring teams with clear direction to excite and recapture the imagination of the customer again.
“Our customers have always trusted us to lead, not follow, with products that reflect their lifestyle. It’s important that we live up to the high standards they desire in design, quality and… the service they expect.
“I’m so pleased that we have been able to strike a deal that protects the future of the company for all its loyal customers [and] its employees.”
Next is expected to continue to sell from the Joules website, as well as adding the brand to its own site from 2024.
Marks and Spencer has already warned of a difficult time for retail as businesses face rising costs and falling consumer spending.
Read more:
- Uncertain future for Harrogate Joules branch as company to appoint administrators
- Prestigious building on Harrogate’s James Street put on the market