Newcastle Building Society to hold first BIG talk at Ripley Castle

Sponsored by Newcastle Building Society


Home ownership, putting money into savings and having a comfortable retirement are all possibilities that should be open to anyone.

That is the message from Newcastle Building Society, which says it wants to offer vital financial education, through BIG talks, to help people improve their lives and plan for their futures.

In partnership with North Yorkshire Council, Newcastle Building Society opened its Knaresborough branch last year, after the last bank branch left the town in 2021. Since then, the long term addition to the town has become an integral part of the community.

The organisation chose its base in Knaresborough Library in order to ensure face to face financial services continued to be available in the town, and were accessible to all.

It launched a UK-first pilot this year with fintech OneBanx, offering a multi-bank kiosk within the branch, giving local residents and small business owners a way to access their accounts to deposit and withdraw cash, no matter who they bank with.

The branch has awarded grants of £2,000 to Orb Community Arts, and £4,000 to Chain Lane Community Hub, to mark its entrance into the community. While the team behind the branch has volunteered and taken part in local events.

Now, the Newcastle Building Society team is aiming to do more to give residents in the town and surrounding area access to the best financial education to ensure they can achieve what they want now and in the future.

Branch Manager Heather Pearman said:

“We believe everyone deserves a home and to have the opportunity to save and plan for their future.

“Our commitment to face-to-face banking services delivered in the community has never been stronger and since we opened in Knaresborough last year, we have been so pleased to be able to support local people to achieve their financial goals.”

The first BIG talk event at Ripley Castle

Over the past 10 years the Newcastle Building Society’s BIG talk events have helped hundreds of people make a start in improving their financial know-how.

Newcastle Building Society’s Community Specialist, Ken Hines, and Knaresborough Branch Manager, Heather Pearman, will be hosting the event.

The talk will focus on building understanding around saving for the future, why Newcastle Building Society is here and what else they are doing in the community in order to help people make smarter economic choices.

There will also be the chance to discuss personal circumstances and discover how the building society can tailor its services to meet individual needs.

The BIG talk will take place at Ripley Castle on Thursday, June 22, from 11.30am for around an hour. Refreshments will be served from 11am, with a light lunch to follow the talk.

The event is free, but there is limited capacity and attendees must book a space. To book, call 01423 648750, drop into the Knaresborough branch or click here.


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For more information about Newcastle Building Society and the Knaresborough branch, visit https://www.newcastle.co.uk/our-branches/knaresborough.

Harrogate councillors renew calls for public involvement in Station Gateway plans

Councillors from Harrogate and Knaresborough have reiterated calls for “meaningful” involvement in the £11.2 million Station Gateway scheme.

The request followed the news that representatives of the Department for Transport and West Yorkshire Combined Authority visited Harrogate yesterday.

They were given a tour of the town centre and shown through plans for major changes to Station Parade and surrounding routes.

Speaking at today’s meeting of Harrogate and Knaresborough area constituency committee, North Yorkshire Council‘s head of major projects and infrastructure Richard Binks said:

“It was the first time they had actually visited the site in person. They were really taken with what they saw.

“They really think the scheme’s fantastic and were showing a great deal of support for the project.”

However, members of the committee expressed surprise that they were unaware the visit was taking place.

At a heated meeting on May, the same committee had agreed to support the project, provided the committee was given “meaningful involvement” in its execution.

NYC’s officers were also asked to meet face-to-face with local residents and businesses, which today’s meeting also heard had not yet happened.

The committee members were presented with a petition of 2,000 signatures opposing the Station Gateway project by local resident Rachel Inchborough, who told the meeting:

“We feel we’ve had a lack of any in-person consultation for residents and it is of a key significance. We’ve been offered a quick Zoom session online, at short notice, to tick boxes.

“Residents feel this was a complete insult.”

Councillors voted in May to support the Station Gateway scheme

Some of the committee members queried the petition’s veracity, saying its signatories included people from as far away as South Africa.

They also pointed out that even 500 local signatures – the threshold needed to have the petition debated by the committee – were not representative of all views from local residents.

Several Conservative members of the committee said they did not want to undermine the original vote in May to support the proposal.

Cllr Michael Harrison, a Conservative who represents Killinghall, Hampsthwaite and Saltergate, added:

“There’s a fundamental point here that this committee passed a resolution that we wanted a meaningful role in the implementation of the scheme.

“The chair is against the scheme. The chair wants to stop the scheme. The chair, despite what this committee said, went to the executive committee and implored them to stop the scheme. The petition wants to stop the scheme. The two things are at odds.

“We’re talking about people who want to stop the scheme, not who want meaningful input in the scheme. You can say what you like, but that’s the fact of the matter.

“I’m quite happy to have a meaningful role in implementing the scheme but we’re kidding ourselves if we think this is what this is.”


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However, other councillors called for officers to uphold the wishes of the committee to engage with the community about the detail of the proposal.

Cllr Monika Slater, a Liberal Democrat who represents Bilton Grange and New Park, said:

“This isn’t about trying to overthrow a motion we already passed at the previous meeting.

“This is genuinely about looking at the concerns of specific individuals and seeing if there are ways of mitigating and therefore bringing more of the public on side of actually supporting a scheme and involving the local councillors much more in that process.”

Councillors voted by eight to four in favour of asking for a full list of meetings to be held with local groups and for committee members to be invited as well. They also supported the proposal of a working group being set up, with representation from both the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats, to focus on the Station Gateway project.

Cllr Chris Aldred, the Lib Dem representative for High Harrogate and Kingsley who put forward the motion, said:

“This is not designed to stop the scheme. It is designed for a scheme to continue.

“I voted for the original proposal and I’ve always said there are some parts of this scheme I find really attractive, One Arch being one of them.

“I do sincerely believe that we need to demonstrate that we’ve listened to the voices of the people who came to the last meeting, the people who’ve signed this petition.”

Brew Bar owner opens new Harrogate coffee shop

The owner of Brew Bar has opened a new coffee shop in the centre of Harrogate.

Simon Somerville-Frost, who has operated his original venture on St Winifred’s Avenue since 2018, opened the new coffee shop on Royal Parade this week under the name &… Harrogate.

&… Harrogate provides lunch and brunch as well as a wide range of coffees, pastries and bakes. It plans to transition to also operate as an evening bar in the weeks ahead.

It took about nine weeks to transform the former Gron building, which closed last year.

Mr Somerville-Frost said &… Harrogate was designed to look and feel completely different to Brew Bar, which has established a reputation as a community coffee shop in the saints area of Harrogate.

Brew Bar

Brew Bar

He said:

“We just decided to something totally different. It’s a completely different look from Brew Bar and a really nice space.

“It’s a natural evolution from Brew Bar. I didn’t want the space to look too ‘coffee shop’.We’ve gone for a quite darker aesthetic so we can transition easily into an evening bar.

“People feel comfortable in both environments and we are excited to get going.”


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Former Harrogate solicitor jailed for indecent exposure in Knaresborough

A former Harrogate solicitor has been jailed for four weeks for indecent exposure.

Richard Wade-Smith, 67, was charged with exposing his genitals on Stockwell Lane in Knaresborough.

York Magistrates Court heard the incident happened between May 7 and May 10 this year.

Wade-Smith, who appeared in court via link from HMP Hull on Monday, pleaded guilty to the offence.

He was jailed for four weeks and ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £154 and court costs of £85.

A court document detailing the sentence said the offence was serious because it caused a “distressing experience in presence of children and occurred on multiple occasions”.

It added that Wade-Smith’s guilty plea was taken into account when sentencing him.


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Wade-Smith, who worked for various law firms in Yorkshire and later ran his own legal service from Wedderburn House, had previously been jailed for breaching a restraining order in December 2022.

The 67-year-old was given the order by York Crown Court after he rammed his car into his wife’s home in Harrogate on Boxing Day 2021 and subjected her to “mental torture”.

He was jailed for 10 months after he breached the order, which banned him from going near his wife’s address, by knocking on her door just four days after being spared jail.

Business Breakfast: Home care company opens Harrogate office

It’s time to join the Stray Ferret Business Club. Our next networking event is lunch at Manahatta, on June 29th at 12.30pm.

Don’t miss out on this chance to network with businesses from across the Harrogate district. Get your tickets by clicking or tapping here.


A home care service has set up a new office in Harrogate.

Radfield Home Care, which was founded in 2018, opened its new headquarters on Tower Street in the town centre this week.

Matthew Nutting founded the company after leaving the NHS five years ago when he saw a “gap in the market for premium care”.

Radfield, which employs 55 staff, offers a range of services including home care, dementia care and personal care.

The new offices on Tower Street include a day care centre on the ground floor, offices on the second floor and a training centre on the top floor.

Mr Nutting said the move to Harrogate would help the care service grow.

He said:

“Our ambition is to be the home care provider of choice for this area and to grow.”

For more information on Radfield Home Care, visit their website here or call 01423 895766.


New Swinton Estate bar opens for the summer

A new bar has open at the Swinton Estate.

The Swinton Rose Bar, which is based in the Terrace Gardens at the Terrace Restaurant and Bar, opened its doors to the public this week.

The new bar offers a range of wines including Château la Gordonne de Provence and Champagne Pommery Brut Rosé Champagne NV.

It will be open until August 31 this year and no booking is required.

For more information, visit the Swinton Estate website here.


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Bilton couple set to celebrate 80 years of marriage

A couple who fell in love as teenagers will become one of Britain’s longest married couples when they celebrate 80 years of marriage this summer. 

Roy and Freda Ward, who are both 98, met at the age of 17 when they both worked at the Dorchester Cinema in Hull. Freda was an usherette and Roy was second projectionist and was also responsible for changing the batteries in the usherettes’ torches. 

Speaking from the couple’s home in Bilton, Roy told the Stray Ferret:

“I always made sure Freda had the brightest torch!” 

Freda said: 

“We would always try to get the same day off, and when we did, Roy would take me for a fish-and-chip supper. It was lovely.” 

A year after meeting, they planned a June wedding, but the Register Office was bombed, so they had to wait three days, before finally tying the knot on July 1, 1943. 

Even when called up to the Royal Navy, Roy carried on as a projectionist with the Entertainments National Service Association, showing films at military bases throughout England. Following demobilisation, he took up plumbing, but carried on working as a projectionist in the evenings.  

The couple owned shops in South Cave and Ferriby, Hull for years, before eventually moving to Harrogate in the 1980s, where they opened a greengrocer’s and delicatessen, RP & F Ward, on Skipton Road. 

Following retirement, they have kept busy; Freda was going to the local gym until she was 95, and still exercises on her rowing machine, and Roy, a keen chef and bread-baker, only stopped driving last month. 

The couple, who plan to celebrate their oak wedding anniversary with family, have three children, Michael, Roger, and Lesley – now all in their 70s – as well as three grandchildren and a great-grandson. 

Asked what the secret to a long and happy marriage was, Roy said: 

“I’ve no idea – I can’t put my finger on it. But we’re happy, so whatever it is, it must work!” 

Freda was more certain. She said: 

“We just love each other. We get on wonderfully well, and we never quarrel. We always discuss things first before doing them, so that we know we’re both happy with it. It just works. We’re very happy.”

The Wards are thought to be Harrogate’s longest-married couple since Starbeck couple Ron and Beryl Golightly celebrated their 80th wedding anniversary in February 2021.

According to the Office for National Statistics (ONS), the average marriage is expected to last for 32 years. Just 16% of marriages reach their 60th wedding anniversary; the figure for the 80th anniversary, although not provided by the ONS, will be far smaller. 


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Bulgarian martial arts experts jailed for dealing cocaine in Harrogate

Two Bulgarian martial arts experts have been jailed for peddling cocaine in Harrogate after delving into the UK drug market within a week of arriving in the country.

Emilov Andonov, an expert in the Russian combat sport sambo, and his sidekick Stanislav Stefanov, a professional judo trainer, were stopped by police in the Asda car park where officers suspected a drug deal was taking place, York Crown Court heard.

Prosecutor Rachael Landin said Stefanov, a part-time bouncer in his home country, had been driving an Audi, and Andonov was in a Toyota. Police suspected something was amiss when one of the men got into the other’s car.

Officers searched both vehicles and found 11 wraps of cocaine, worth £550, under the gear stick in the Audi.

They found a further 19 wraps of high-purity cocaine under the covering of the gear stick in the Toyota. Those drugs were worth £950.

They also seized three mobile phones which showed that text messages had been pinging back and forth between the two men in the four days preceding their arrest on January 28.

It appeared that Andonov and Stefanov, both national-level martial artists in their homeland, had been working under orders from people higher up the drug chain who provided them with “post codes and instructions” to deliver their illicit wares.

They were each charged with possessing a Class A drug with intent to supply but initially denied the offence, claiming they had “bought in bulk” for their own personal use.

However, they ultimately changed their pleas to guilty and appeared for sentence yesterday after being remanded in custody. They were assisted by a Bulgarian interpreter.

Just arrived in England

Defence barrister Matthew Harding, for Andonov, said both men, of no fixed address, had only been in the country for a week before they got involved in the drug trade.

He said they had been “sent up to the Yorkshire area” to deal cocaine by their drug overlords in London, adding:

“They are clearly delivering under (instruction).

“At times they don’t know where to go or what they are doing.”

He claimed when the two men arrived in the country on January 20, they had no intention of lurching into crime.

He said Andonov, 21, was a judo expert who studied sambo at the national academy in Sofia, the Bulgarian capital. Mr Harding added:

“He and his co-accused have competed in (national) competitions,”

“He will inevitably receive a sentence that means his deportation from this country is automatic.”


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John Batchelor, for Stefanov, said his 21-year-old client was a professional judo trainer and part-time doorman who had studied at the same sports school as Andonov. The barrister added:

“He’s competed at national level and they’ve known each other from school.”

He said the two men arrived in London initially where they were “offered an opportunity” to deal drugs in Yorkshire.

He added Stefanov would go back to judo training and study upon his inevitable deportation to Bulgaria.

Judge Sean Morris told the defendants:

“Within days of arriving in this country you were breaking the law in the most serious way.

“You were being directed where to sell drugs and that meant you were putting the citizens of this country at risk for your own greed.

“I recommend, on the completion of your sentence, (that) you are immediately deported back to Bulgaria.”

Each man was jailed for two years and three months.

 

Dropped cigarette causes late night shed fire in Harrogate

Firefighters from Harrogate dealt with a shed fire that spread to a garden fence last night.

The incident happened shortly before 11pm on Skipton Road,

North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service‘s incident log said two appliances from Harrogate and one from Knaresborough were summoned.

The fire spread to a conservatory, approximately 15 metres of garden fencing and 20 metres of plastic guttering . The log said:

“Crews used two breathing apparatus, two hose reel jets, two thermal imaging cameras and lighting to extinguish the fire.

“The cause of the fire was accidental, due to a dropped cigarette.”

A ventilation fan was used to clear light smoke damage in neighbouring properties.

Shortly afterwards, at three minutes past midnight, Harrogate firefighters were mobilised again to a Ford Mondeo engine fire on Grove Park Avenue.

Crews used breathing apparatus to extinguish the fire. The incident log said:

“The cause of the fire is believed to be an electrical fault. Advice was given to the vehicle owner.”


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North Yorkshire Council spends £171,000 a year on weather services

North Yorkshire Council has agreed to pay £171,000 a year on weather services for the county.

The council uses weather forecasting and data to plan highway services, such as gritting.

It awarded three-year contracts to MetDesk and Vaisala in 2018 to provide forecasting and weather stations respectively.

The contracts were renewed for two years in 2021 and the council has now agreed to extend them for a further two years.

Vaisala’s contract was for £114,000 and MetDesk’s was for £57,000.

James Gilroy, team leader for highways asset management at the council, said in a report to councillors, who approved the deals last week:

“The weather forecasts from Metdesk enable an overall winter maintenance plan to be established. The real time data from the Vaisala weather stations allow this plan to be more finely tuned to the situation on the ground.

“Extending the contracts is the lowest cost option and given the current performance of the respective contractors it is a low-risk approach.”

Vaisala weather North Yorks

A council photocall at one of the weather stations last year

The report added 10 new solar/wind-powered weather cameras and two new weather stations had been bought at the cost of £200,000 in autumn 2021.

Sixteen original weather stations were also upgraded at a cost of £265,000 “to broaden the coverage we have across the county”.

Met Office among bidders

A council spokesperson said the weather forecast it used “requires more detail that than the standard free to access services”.

They added the services were put out to competitive tender in 2018, when the Met Office was among the bidders.

The report said there are 10 climatic domains within North Yorkshire’, which are defined as areas with similar weather characteristics.

The domains are Northern Dales, Central Dales, Western Dales, Harrogate, Vale of York and Vale of Mowbray, Selby area, North York Moors, Vale of Pickering, Northern Wolds and Howardian Hills, Eastern North York Moors and Coast and Scarborough and Filey.


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Asked why it was necessary to have 27 weather stations in North Yorkshire, the spokesperson said:

“Weather stations are placed across the county and monitor humidity, road temperature, air temperature and wind speed. Some stations have cameras on them, allowing you to see the road conditions. This helps road users to make more informed travel decisions.

“As you know, weather conditions can change rapidly. Having a wider coverage of stations allows us to make more informed and accurate decisions on gritting.”

Greenhow by John Benson

Greenhow is the highest area around Harrogate. Pic: John Benson

Of the 27 sites, four are located in the Harrogate district, on the A6108 near Masham, the A658 Harrogate bypass, the A59 at Kex Gill and at Greenhow village.

The council is also able to access sites managed by National Highways on the A1(M) near Dishforth.

A list of all the locations in North Yorkshire is available here.

Business Breakfast: Harrogate brewery to host 10th anniversary beer festival

It’s time to join the Stray Ferret Business Club. Our next networking event is lunch at Manahatta, on June 29th at 12.30pm.

Don’t miss out on this chance to network with businesses from across the Harrogate district. Get your tickets by clicking or tapping here.


A Harrogate brewery has announced it is to host its first beer festival to celebrate its 10th anniversary.

Harrogate Brewing Co, which is based on Hookstone Chase, is set to hold the event from August 11 until August 13.

It will include pop-up bars from Northern Monk, Amity Brew Co and Bini Brew Co, as well as live music and street food vendors.

A family day will be held on the Sunday (August 13) where outdoor games and a face painting will take place.

The event will be an all-ticket event and admission prices will be £8 for adults and £3 for children aged between five and 14. A full weekend ticket is priced at £15.

The brewery was originally founded by Anton Stark in 2013. It was taken over by current owners Julie and Joe Joyce four years ago.

For more information on the anniversary event, visit the Harrogate Brewing Co website here.


Harrogate private health group donates to skin charity

A Harrogate private health group has donated £10,000 to the British Skin Foundation.

Circle Health Group, which runs the Duchy Hospital, has made the donation to help fund further research into skin conditions.

As well as the Duchy, the group runs Thornbury Hospital in Sheffield and the Huddersfield Hospital on Birkby Hall Road in Huddersfield.

On making the donation, David Uregbula, head of business development and partnerships at Circle Health Group, said:

“With specialist dermatology services available across our national network of hospitals, we understand the importance of the British Skin Foundation’s work. 

“We are delighted to be playing a pivotal role in supporting their drive to improve research and treatment for future generations.”

Matthew Patey, chief executive at the British Skin Foundation, said: 

“We still have lots of work to do to improve the lives of patients in the UK and across the world.

“This substantial donation from Circle Health Group gives the scientific community’s most talented researchers more resources to continue their ongoing mission.”


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