Business Breakfast is sponsored by Harrogate law firm Truth Legal.
Small businesses and start-ups in the Harrogate district that want to grow are being urged to sign up for a range of fully funded support under a programme launched by the York & North Yorkshire Growth Hub.
The hub, in partnership with Harrogate Borough Council, aims to stimulate economic development by helping businesses improve their competitiveness and productivity.
Available until March 2023, the support includes mentoring and online and in-person seminars, around specialist topics such as HR, finance, sales and marketing, digital skills, and business planning.
The move follows the hub’s covid recovery-funded business support programme delivered last year.
Andrew Raby, manager of the hub, said:
“We know businesses of all types and sizes still face difficult challenges as they recover from the covid pandemic, and are battling issues including supply chain disruptions, further changes to the rules on imports and exports of goods to the EU, along with rising interest rates, inflation, and energy costs.
“We remain steadfast in supporting business in all sectors, whether a fledgling start-up or a growing business with premises and staff, in overcoming these prolonged tough trading times and set firm grounds to help businesses not just survive but thrive.”
Face-to-face events will be held at venues in Harrogate and will focus on rebuilding the economy across key sectors and inspiring growth, creativity, and innovation.
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Harrogate hospital chair and manager shortlisted for awards
The chair of Harrogate and District NHS Foundation Trust and the trust’s business development, charity and volunteer manager have been shortlisted for a Helpforce Champions Award 2022, which recognises volunteering in the health and care sector.
Sarah Armstrong has been shortlisted for Health Leader Champion for Volunteering Award, whilst Sammy Lambert has been shortlisted in the Volunteer Manager of the Year category.
The awards are a chance to shine a light on those who give their time to help staff in the NHS and voluntary and community organisations, and support patients and their families and carers.
Mark Lever, chief executive of Helpforce, said:
“2020 and 2021 have seen the NHS and all our healthcare services face one of the biggest challenges in their history, and we have seen volunteers step up in their thousands to help.
“This year, we have received a record number of entries for the Helpforce Champions Awards with so many brilliant examples of innovation, great practice, commitment, and real passion for patient care and support for staff across the health and care sector in the UK.”
The trust’s chair, Sarah Armstrong, said:
“It is a real privilege to have been shortlisted for the Health Leader Champion for Volunteering Award. I am passionate about the value of volunteering and the unique contribution volunteers can make within health and care settings..
“Within my role of chair of HDFT I have many responsibilities, but working with our volunteers and helping to develop a successful volunteer programme for our Trust is certainly one of the most rewarding.”
Sammy Lambert said:
“I am delighted that I was nominated for the prestigious Volunteer Manager of the Year award by our amazing team of nearly 500 volunteers and staff who work so hard every day to make such an amazing difference for our patients and service users”
Chair of HDHFT Sarah Armstrong (L) and Sammy Lambert the Trust’s business development, charity and volunteer manager (R)
Winners will be announced on Helpforce’s website and social media channels on Monday 7th November.
Arrests in Harrogate and Ripon as police target drug dealingNorth Yorkshire Police has arrested 27 people during a national week of action to tackle county lines drug dealing.
County lines involves drug dealers from larger cities dealing drugs in smaller towns, often exploiting vulnerable people in the process.
It’s been a constant problem in Harrogate and Ripon with gangs from West Yorkshire targeting the towns.
The national week of action, between October 3 and 9, was coordinated by the National County Lines Coordination Centre.
Harrogate Arrests
On Monday, officers arrested a 33-year man in Harrogate who was suspected to be delivering drugs from his vehicle. He was found to be in possession of approximately £1,500 worth of cannabis and approximately £500 of cash.
On Friday, officers suspected that a drug deal had just been conducted in a vehicle in the Jennyfields area of Harrogate. One man was arrested, but the passenger managed to flee from the police. After a chase and extensive area search, officers successfully detained and arrested a 48-year-old man on suspicion of supplying a class-A drug – suspected to be heroin.
Later that night officers arrested a 31-year -old man from Manchester on Wetherby Road in Harrogate. He was suspected to be in the area dealing drugs. Officers conducted a search of the man and his vehicle and located approximately 30 individual packets of suspected cocaine.
Officers said across North Yorkshire it had arrested 27 people on suspicion of drugs offences. Two bladed weapons were recovered as well as over £5,000 in cash and £10,000 in what is suspected drugs. It also made 60 welfare visits to vulnerable people
Read More:
- Inquest hears how Harrogate boy had taken multiple drugs
- Police seize drugs, knife and machete from car near Harrogate
The force’s operation expedite team, which is responsible for tackling county lines, was on the streets stopping people and vehicles that are linked to the supply of drugs. The force said Harrogate’s Neighbourhood Policing Team as well as licensing officers from North Yorkshire County Council were also involved.
Specialist dogs were used to disrupt the supply of drugs linked to the night time economy in Harrogate and Ripon.
Detective Chief Inspector Andrew Simpson who supported the coordinated the week said:
“Although this is a fantastic set of results from the last seven days, it’s important to stress that this is very much business as usual for North Yorkshire Police.
“Out teams are out and about conducting warrants and intercepting the supply of drugs, week in week out.
“Drug use has serious implications on people’s health and impacts on the quality of life for communities.
“We will not tolerate the use of drugs in our county. I would urge anyone with information about drug dealing in their community to call us on 101, we treat every piece of information as important.”
Look out for the signs:
Cuckooing is the term given when drug dealers take over the home of a vulnerable person and use it at a base to sell and store drugs, often using violence and intimidation to achieve this.
Cuckooing victims are often drug users themselves, or people who are vulnerable due to a mental or physical disability, their age or lifestyle, such as sex workers and single mothers.
Signs of cuckooing to look out for include
- Increased callers at a property at all times of the day or night
- Increase in cars pulling up for short periods of time
- Different accents at a property
- Antisocial behaviour at a property
- Not seeing the resident for long periods of time
- Drug-related rubbish – small plastic bags, syringes
- Windows covered or curtains closed for long periods
- Unexplained or untreated injuries
Children are groomed and exploited to deal drugs on behalf of organised criminals. These are the signs to look out for:
- Persistently going missing from school or home and / or being found out-of-area
- Unexplained money, clothes, or mobile phones
- Excessive receipt of texts / phone calls
- Relationships with controlling / older individuals or groups
- Leaving home / care without explanation
- Suspicion of physical assault / unexplained injuries
- Carrying weapons
- Significant decline in school results / performance
- Gang association or isolation from peers or social networks
- Self-harm or significant changes in emotional well-being
- Travelling long distances on public transport – is it term time? Should they be in school? Are they paying high cost fares with cash?
Police Advice:
Anyone with concerns about county lines is asked to speak to their local police on 101 or call 999 in an emergency.
If you’d rather stay anonymous you can call the independent charity Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.
If you are a young person who is worried about being involved in county lines, or knows someone who is, you can speak to an adult and let them know how you feel.
You can also contact www.fearless.org who allow you to pass on information about crime anonymously.
You can also contact Childline on 0800 1111 – they are a private and confidential service where you can talk to counsellors about anything that is worrying you.
Harrogate’s first Lidl to open tomorrowHarrogate’s first Lidl supermarket is due to open on Knaresborough Road tomorrow.
Work began on the store in February this year on the site of a former car dealership.
The much anticipated store has a 1,263 square metre sales area, an in-store bakery and 94 parking spaces. The company says the store has created 40 new jobs.
To celebrate its opening tomorrow, Lidl said it is offering bargains on some products including bluetooth speakers, fan heaters and heated under-blankets.
The new store will be open daily from 8am to 10pm Monday to Saturday and 10am to 4pm on Sunday.
A spokesperson for Lidl GB said:
“It is fantastic that we are able to open our doors and welcome everyone into our new store in Harrogate.
“We have received overwhelming support from local residents, and we would like to thank all those that have played a part in delivering this new store.
“We now look forward to serving our multi-award winning products to everyone within the local community.”
The new Harrogate store is part of Lidl’s current expansion plans – it is now the sixth largest supermarket in the UK.
Read More:
- Drone shots reveal progression of new Knaresborough Road Lidl
- Work begins to build new Harrogate Lidl
Harrogate Borough Council installed 76 new CCTV cameras in past 3 years
The Harrogate district’s increase of 36% over the past three years ranks it above the national average of 22%.
It has experienced the 53rd largest percentage increase in cameras of the 308 councils that replied to the survey.
In Yorkshire as a whole, only York and Doncaster increased the number of CCTV cameras at a faster rate than Harrogate.
Overall the research found the number of public CCTV cameras in the UK has now risen to more than 100,000, with some local authorities more than quadrupling their surveillance over the last three years.
The authority with the highest increase in the UK was Gwynedd, in north-west Wales, where the council now operates 468 cameras – a whopping increase of 363%.
“CCTV is an integral part of modern-day society, and cameras have grown more commonplace in recent years as technology and connectivity have improved.
“The increases revealed in our research might raise privacy concerns, but generally CCTV benefits the safety and security of both the public and businesses, and the upwards trend is unlikely to stop anytime soon.”
Read More:
- ‘Deeply alarming’: Harrogate council uses CCTV from Chinese Communist Party controlled firm
- Harrogate council charge police over £110,000 for CCTV since 2016
Councillors call for 20 mph limit to be trialled in Harrogate and Knaresborough
A campaign for speed limits to be reduced from 30mph to 20mph has been backed by Harrogate and Knaresborough councillors who have called for the changes to be piloted in larger areas.
The slower limits were described as a “popular” way to make roads safer at a meeting of North Yorkshire County Council’s Harrogate and Knaresborough Area Constituency Committee.
However, not everyone is in support of the ’20s plenty’ campaign, with some councillors raising questions over enforcement and the costs involved.
The area committee voted nine for, two against and with one abstention in their calls for the county council’s executive to agree to test out 20mph limits in towns and villages.
But the authority is already standing firm in its belief that the lower speed limits work best in a more targeted approach, such as outside schools.
Allan McVeigh, head of network strategy at the county council, told the meeting that 20mph limits should only be introduced where they are “appropriate for that part of the network”.
He said:
“The county council is committed to making the network safe and accessible for all road users, and will continue to engage with local communities
“Introducing a 20mph speed limit or zone to a road where drivers do not already conform to lower speeds will likely result in poor compliance and consequently understandable local complaints.”
Mr McVeigh said the costs of introducing lower speed limits across the Harrogate and Knaresborough area would exceed £1 million, although he added this could be more as roads where drivers regularly exceed 24mph would require more measures than just signage and road markings.
These extra measures could involve speed bumps and chicanes which councillors admitted are not always popular.
Read More:
- Majority of residents want 20mph speed limit, councillor says
- Calls for blanket 20mph speed limit dismissed again
Across North Yorkshire, more than 100 parishes have voted for default 20mph speed limits across built-up areas.
Campaign supporter Malcolm Margolis said that targeting schools only “achieves little or nothing”:
“People need to be able to walk and cycle safely from home to school, and to friends, relatives, play areas and other destinations.
“The 30mph limit was introduced in 1935 to tackle a spate of road casualties – I hope you agree it is no longer fit for purpose.
“Please support the default 20mph to make our communities safer and better places to live.”
Ouseburn councillor Arnold Warneken also said it was “inadequate” to have the lower speed limits on just some streets and that questions over enforcement are a “smokescreen” for not introducing the changes on a wider basis.
He said:
“The same problems exist whether you are enforcing 30mph or 20mph.
“There are problems, I acknowledge that, but I don’t think we should let that stand in the way of doing what is right.”
Earlier this year, the county council’s executive approved a policy to introduce 20mph speed limits on a “targeted, evidence-based approach”.
This followed a review by the authority’s Transport, Economy and Environment Overview and Scrutiny Committee which will revisit the issue in January.
New independent pet store to open on Cold Bath RoadA new independent pet food shop is to open on Cold Bath Road in Harrogate this month.
HG Pets is taking the space previously occupied by the Refilling Station, which closed in August this year after three years of trading.
The new store will offer a full range of traditional dog and cat dry foods and a couple of ranges of raw food.
There’ll also be a range of toys, beds, leads and collars — plus flea and tic treatments and shampoos.
Owner Jon Bradley told the Stray Ferret:
“I’ve been looking for premises to set up either a pet shop or garden centre for 20 years but never had the opportunity financially to do it.
“I recently left the company I was working with and was able to set this up and do something I wanted to do.”
Mr Bradley, who owns a Dalmatian and a Labrador, thinks there is a market for higher quality dog food in Harrogate — a town of dog lovers:
“I think the main thing is that we are independent and that we’ll offer quality and value.
“We’re going to offer ranges that are different to the national pet retailers such as raw food and offer unique products which are better quality. They’re value for money as they last a lot longer.
“I’ve lived in Harrogate for nearly 20 years – my wife was brought up here and we know that Harrogate is a dog loving town and people are willing to spend on their dogs as long as they get quality.
“I think there is space for us in the independent dog retail and food market Some of the offer pet stores offer different products– half of our store will devoted to feeding.”
HG Pets will also offer a delivery and subscription service. The store is set to open on October 29.
The new store’s logo
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‘Nightmare’ and ‘flawed’: Harrogate’s Otley Road cycle path under further fire
Harrogate’s Otley Road cycle path project has come under further fire from residents who have described the first phase as a “nightmare” and “fundamentally flawed”.
Rene Dziabas, chairman of Harlow and Pannal Ash Residents’ Association, said the group carried out a survey of residents and businesses along the street and that feedback was “very heavily negative” with only two positive comments received.
He told a meeting of North Yorkshire County Council’s Harrogate and Knaresborough Area Constituency Committee today that serious safety concerns were raised over the works completed so far which were also described as like “crazy golf construction”.
He said:
“The general feeling is that this scheme will do very little – if anything – to offset the huge housing to the west of Harrogate and that nothing proposed so far convinces us that the core traffic problem will in any way be mitigated.”
Mr Dziabas called on the county council to carry out a “meaningful and proper” consultation on the next two stages of the cycle path which is facing yet more delays after first securing funding in 2017.
A first stage opened to cyclists at the start of this year, however, it has yet to be fully completed after a safety audit found faults with the works carried out.
Louise Neal, transport planning team leader at the county council, told today’s meeting that the “necessary amendments” to the cycle path would now be made.
Read more:
- Cycle path, housing and more on agenda for Harlow Hill residents
- Will Harrogate cycling schemes ever get out of first gear?
However, it is currently unclear what works this will involve and when they will be completed with contractors hoping to start in early November.
Ms Neal also said a consultation on phase two of the project will be held this month and that residents and businesses will be able to meet with the designers to share their views. She said
“This additional engagement and further consultation is to ensure that all user groups and residents’ views have been carefully considered.”
Lack of progress
The fresh criticism of the county council’s progress comes as other active travel schemes have yet to produce final designs despite being awarded government cash almost two years ago.
This includes cycling and walking improvements on Oatlands Drive, Victoria Avenue and the A59 near Knaresborough.
Kevin Douglas, chair of Harrogate District Cycle Action, said his “major concern” was that this accumulation of delayed projects could mean the county council fails to secure future funding for other improvements to tackle Harrogate’s congested roads. He told the meeting:
“We believe this lack of progress will impact on potential future funding bids.”
“We also see the major problem as a lack of an officer who leads in the cycle agenda in the local area and who has local knowledge and authority to deliver these schemes.”
The county council previously said designs for the Victoria Avenue and A59 schemes – which include cycle lanes, improved crossings and reduced speed limits – were “likely” to be revealed this summer.
This has now been pushed back until at least the New Year.
For the Oatlands Drive plans, the county council previously said a consultation was “likely to start soon after” Queen Elizabeth II’s Platinum Jubilee bank holiday weekend in June.
This is now scheduled to take place this month after original plans for a one-way traffic system were scrapped after a backlash from residents.
Harrogate and Knaresborough committee calls for congestion actionThe Harrogate and Knaresborough Area Constituency Committee met this morning meeting. Congestion on Wetherby Road and Skipton Road, and the otley Road cycle route, were among the topics discussed.
- The 15-person committee, which is controlled by the Liberal Democrats, advises North Yorkshire County Council, which is controlled by the Conservatives.
- Today’s agenda included 20mph speed limits, Harrogate transport improvements, climate change and culture.
- You can watch the meeting here.
Here’s what happened.
12.31pm: ‘Nightmare’ and ‘flawed’: Harrogate’s Otley Road cycle path under further fire
A lively debate about the Otley Road cycle path took place at today’s meeting. You can read a full report of the discussion here.
12.22pm: Culture report criticised
A lengthy report on a cultural framework for North Yorkshire is widely criticised by all parties for having ‘gaps’ and not consulting enough with groups in Harrogate and Knaresborough.
The report cost £20,000 of which £10,000 came from the county council and £10,000 from Arts Council England.
11.50pm: Call for congestion action on Wetherby Road and Skipton Road
Liberal Democrat leader Pat Marsh (pictured left) questions the focus on Leeds Road. She says the busiest roads are Wetherby Road and Skipton Road. She adds: “It’s chronic. How are you going to introduce safe cycling?”
Talking about Wetherby Road, she adds: “The traffic tails back so far it’s unbelievable. It’s there day and night. Why that road is not being looked at, I do not know.”
Cllr Marsh adds there is also potential for a park and ride at the Great Yorkshire Showground just off Wetherby Road.
She then suggests building a new secondary school in the New Park area. “Harrogate’s secondary schools are all on the same side of town.”
Green councillor Arnold Warneken says it took him 40 minutes to drive from the Kestrel roundabout to today’s meeting at the council office at Knapping Mount.
Liberal Democrat Philip Broadbank expresses exasperation at the slow speed at which active travel schemes progress. “There is so much consultation.”
The officer’s report is merely ‘noted’, after numerous protests of frustration at the rate of change.
11.40pm: Call for action on Harrogate transport schemes
Conservative councillor Paul Haslam says “I’d like to see more action rather than more process” after an officer gives an update on phase two of the Harrogate Transport Improvement Programme.
The officer says the programme is an evolution of the Harrogate Congestion Study, which received more than 15,000 responses in 2020 and showed support for a park and ride bus service plus more active travel. The A61 Leeds Road was identified as the area for potential of the greatest improvements.
The officer says work on the second phase began in July, and she expects to have further details by end of 2022, promoting Cllr Haslam to say the issue is getting bogged down by process.
He also says a train station at Claro Road would ease traffic congestion.
11.15 Call for pilot 20mph zone approved
Nine vote in favour, two against and one abstain from Cllr Warneken’s motion to introduce a 20mph pilot.
But that doesn’t mean it will happen – it will now go to the county council executive, which will decide whether to act on the outcome.
11.01 Should there be a pilot 20mph scheme?
Green councillor Arnold Warneken calls for a pilot 20mph scheme. Several councillors speak in favour of reducing speed limits but Cllr Michael Harrison, a Conservative, says he is against it.
He says he admires the 20’s Plenty campaign for trying but says enforcement and capital spend are problems. He says there are highways issues in his division that have been hanging around for a while, which he would prefer to see dealing with.
10.53am £1m cost of implementing 20mph limits
Asked how much introducing 20mph limits would cost, council officer says the figure would be “looking at something north of a million pounds”, and would take at least 12 to 18 months to implement.
10.43am: Call for default 20mph speed limit
Cycling campaigner Malcolm Margolis (pictured) is reading a statement on behalf of 20’s Plenty calling for a default 20mph speed limit in towns and villages in Harrogate and Knaresborough.
A council officer says the county council recognises the benefits 20mph limits can bring and wants to make the roads as safe as possible and will continue to consider all options.
10.30am: Parish councillor calls for ‘kick up the backside’

Howard West (right)
Councillor Howard West of Pannal and Burn Bridge Parish Council says nothing in the Harrogate Transport Improvements Programme, a report which is due to be discussed today, satisfies residents that plans are in place to prevent ‘gridlock’ in Harrogate’s western arc when thousands of new homes are built.
He says the council should “shelve the Maltkiln survey” until it has solved what’s happening now in the west of Harrogate. Cllr West said today’s recommendation is to ‘note the report’, adding:
“Our recommendation is for members to effect the equivalent of a kick up the backside and for meaningful action to get immediate results now rather than for procrastination and excuses.”
10.21am: Cycling group’s frustration over cycling schemes
Kevin Douglas, chair of Harrogate District Cycling Action, expresses concerns about the slow pace of the various cycling schemes.
The council officer says: “We accept there has been a delay” on the Otley Road scheme and cites “numerous design issues”. She adds consultation on phase two of the scheme is “due imminently”.
She also says plans public engagement on new plans for Oatlands Drive are “due to start this month”.
10.07am: Residents’ group criticises ‘nightmare’ Otley Road cycle path.
A statement is read by a members of Harrogate and Pannal Ash Residents’ Association saying consultation with residents about the Otley Road cycle path had uncovered comments such as it being “fundamentally flawed”, “a nightmare”, “an accident waiting to happen”.
He asks for a full, meaningful and proper consultation for the remainder of the Otley Road scheme “before designs are firmed up”. he adds:
“The general feeling is the scheme will do v little, if anything to offset the huge housing growth for thew west of Harrogate.”
A council officer says it plans to stage a “meet the designer event to make it possible to have those meaningful conversations going forward”.
Harrogate district businesses ask police for help tackling anti-social behaviour
A Harrogate police officer has said there is “no perfect solution” to town centre anti-social behaviour after businesses asked for help.
A Harrogate District Chamber of Commerce meeting on Monday heard concerns about behaviour on Bower Street and outside McDonald’s restaurant in Harrogate, as well as at Knaresborough castle.
Chief Inspector Alex Langley and Superintendent Theresa Lam started by giving an overview of police issues in Harrogate in which they said Parliament Street was “the busiest ward” in the county for incidents.
A delegate said one business had already been forced to close on Bower Street because of persistent anti-social behaviour and asked whether the police could do anything to prevent people “milling around”.

Chief Inspector Alex Langley
Ch Insp Langley said police had an input on street design but admitted there was little they could do in trouble spots such as Bower Street and outside McDonald’s. Talking about the area outside the restaurant, he said:
“It’s been a problem since I started 19 years ago and will continue to be because it’s the perfect place to sit.
“There’s no perfect solution for moving on people that aren’t committing crimes.”
He said if the problem was tackled in one area it would only move to another.
A Knaresborough businesswoman said late night drinkers congregated in the castle grounds at Knaresborough because the lack of streetlighting made it an “ideal place to go”. But she said they often left broken glass, which was then a problem for dog walkers and tourists the next day.
Chf Insp Langley said he would report the issue to the police neighbourhood awareness team.
He urged businesses and people to report crimes, saying the police could only act if they were aware of problems.
Read more:
- Police start two-week speeding crackdown in Harrogate district
- Business Breakfast: Crime Commissioner and senior police officers to face Harrogate business leaders
Traffic and Travel Alert: Harrogate district update
The main routes into Harrogate, such as Wetherby Road, Knaresborough Road and Skipton Road, appear to be flowing normally in the approach to rush hour.
Here is your Stray Ferret traffic update.
Roads
Drivers heading towards Wetherby should be aware of temporary traffic lights still in place on the A661 Harrogate Road near Spofforth.
The lights are in place while Northern Gas Networks carries out maintenance work and are now due to last until October 18.
Elsewhere in Harrogate, long-term work on Crescent Road means motorists are unable to turn left at the Parliament Street junction. Traffic coming the opposite way on Ripon Road is unable to turn right.
Montpellier Road remains closed until tomorrow as Northern Gas Networks carries out maintenance work.
Stop go boards are due to be in place on John Street today and tomorrow.
Roadworks on the Boroughbridge Road at Scriven are likely to cause delays for motorists travelling between Knaresborough and Boroughbridge.
Looking ahead, work is scheduled to begin on Monday to reconstruct the B6265 at Red Brae Bank, Bewerley, near Pateley Bridge, which suffered a landslip during storms in February 2020.
The scheme requires the road to be closed from October 17 to December 9. A diversion will be in place via Pateley Bridge; the B6451 Dacre; Menwith Hill Road; Duck Street and Greenhow Hill village. Temporary traffic lights will be in place during the remainder of the work.
Trains and buses
Northern services between Harrogate and Knaresborough going to York and Leeds are scheduled to run as normal this morning.
The Harrogate Bus Company is not currently reporting any cancellations but you can get updates here.
Read more:
- Gasworks on Cold Bath Road rescheduled until Monday
- Harrogate district businesses ask police for help tackling anti-social behaviour