Stray Views is a weekly column giving you the chance to have your say on issues affecting the Harrogate district. It is an opinion column and does not reflect the views of the Stray Ferret. Send your views to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk.
Station Gateway is ‘long overdue’
I’ve read the debate and articles, many of them in the Stray Ferret and have become increasingly disillusioned by the negativity. I think it’s now time for those like me who think this proposal is long overdue to say so.
It’s not perfect and personally I would like it to go further, but it goes some way to rebalancing the area in favour of those who choose/have to walk and cycle and to revitalise this area. It will help reconnect the town centre with surrounding communities and better link the railway and bus stations to the town. This type of scheme has been successfully done in other towns and cities and has proved truly transformative.
Station Parade is a ‘great’ example of the type of traffic planning which was inflicted on communities in the last century, across the country. These ring roads were designed to speed traffic through towns but with little regard for the impacts of the surrounding communities or other forms of transport.
With this scheme we now have a chance to start to put some of this right.
Much of the debate has been about how many seconds will be added to journeys and the impact on businesses. With the reduced impact of traffic in this area, better connection of the town centre and a revitalised local area, there must be the potential for a better business environment. There may be some extra seconds on journeys but the bigger picture of improved lives and business success must surely be worth it.
Let’s not also forget that this scheme is being achieved through external government finance, a pretty rare thing these days. If we miss this opportunity and fail to deliver, don’t be surprised if the next time we ask for help there is a sceptical response.
So let’s get behind this scheme and show what we’re capable of achieving.
The consultation closes on 23 August. Have your say, it will be too late afterwards wishing you’d bothered to respond, when the doom merchants talk it out of time. Fill in the survey here.
Ian Brown, Knaresborough
Read more:
- Stray Views: Noisy cars in Harrogate should be monitored at weekends
- Stray Views: Station Gateway ‘will degrade things’
Relief at Beech Grove LTN end
Thank goodness the boxes are to be removed.
We used Beech Grove to park our car for the last 50 years as it allowed us to walk on the Stray for pleasure or just going into the town centre. Why did Beech Grove almost always have parking space available?
With the boxes installed we had no means of taking pleasure of walking across the Stray.
It is almost impossible to have a walk on any of the Stray as all parking places are occupied nearly all day. This makes the Stray a useless piece of land as the residents of the area plus visitors cannot use it.
Going back to Beech Grove, I have always thought that it should be a one way going up from The Avenue to Otley Road. As a two way traffic route it meant that a lot of speeding took place to get past the cars parked on it.
Allan Campbell, Harrogate
Do you have an opinion on the Harrogate district? Email us at letters@thestrayferret.co.uk. Please include your name and approximate location details. Limit your letters to 350 words. We reserve the right to edit letters.
Campaign to promote cycling arrives in Harrogate this monthA campaign for anyone wishing to rediscover or start cycling is arriving in Harrogate this month.
Ten free workshops for adults will take place in Harrogate in August and September as part of the Big Bike Revival 2022; aiming to break down barriers to cycling, improve bike confidence and help people cycle more safely on the roads.
Free bikes and helmets can also be pre-booked in advance and locations include Cardale Park, Hornbeam Park, OneWellness Clubs, on Mowbray Square, St Marks Church and the Great Yorkshire Showground.
Places are filling fast, according to organisers Cycling UK, so anyone inspired to get more active by the Lionesses, Tour De France or Commonwealth Games is advised to book early.
Read more:
- Beech Grove decision leaves Harrogate in slow lane for cycling
- New cycling plans for Harrogate to be drawn up next month
Workshops will be delivered by accredited British Cycling coach, Kate Auld, from The Personal Cyclist, which is based in Harrogate.
She said:
“These sessions are about encouraging and supporting everyone to try cycling again. I wanted to get behind this important campaign to help everyone rediscover the joys of cycling in daily life; from getting fitter to saving money on fuel.”
According to latest research by Cycling UK, leisure cycling increased from 35% to 55% during 2020 and 42% of people in England own or have access to a bike. In 2020 this rose to 47%.
To book contact Kate on 07779 152750 or email: thepersonalcyclist@gmail.com.
The full programme:
BIKE CONFIDENCE SESSIONS:
- Tuesday, August 1 at 12pm, Cardale Park
- Tuesday, August 20 at 12pm, OneWellness Clubs
- Wednesday, September 7 at 10am, St Marks Church
- Thursday, September 8 at 1pm, Hornbeam Park
- Tuesday, September 13 at 12pm, Great Yorkshire Showground
SOCIAL CYCLE DATES:
- Wednesday, August 17 at 12pm, from Cardale Park
- Wednesday, August 31 at 12pm, from One Wellness Clubs
- Thursday, September 8 at 10am, from St Marks Church (WAITLIST)
- Friday, September 9 at 1pm, from Hornbeam Park
- Wednesday, September 14 at 12pm, from the Great Yorkshire Showground
The owner of a new home in Birstwith said he has been left without a wheelie bin for household waste for weeks after moving in.
Sid Evans moved into the West House Gardens development at the beginning of July and discovered there was no wheelie bin with the new home.
He contacted Harrogate Borough Council, but said he was told it would not be possible to deliver a bin for another 12 weeks, in early November.
Mr Evans said:
“That means we aren’t going to have a wheelie bin for over four months.
“According to what I’ve read online, if I reported it damaged or stolen, I would get a new wheelie bin sent out.”
A spokesperson for the council said:
“We would never knowingly leave a new property without a bin. If the resident – and any others that the developer has failed to supply a bin to – gets in touch with our customer services team we will arrange for delivery in the next couple of weeks. Until this time, black bags can be presented for collection.”
Read more:
- Plan for new home to increase council’s social housing in Boroughbridge
- Harrogate district village wins eight-year battle for more planning control
The council said the situation was caused by the developer, Newby, failing to place an order in time:
“It is the developers’ responsibility to arrange and pay for delivery of containers for household waste through the planning phase. We ask developers for a 12-week notice period to allow for production and delivery from the manufacturers, and this should be undertaken in advance of properties being occupied.”
Newby declined to comment on the situation, but the Stray Ferret has seen an email chain which shows bins and recycling boxes and bags for five of the 33 homes were ordered in February.
All of the recycling boxes and bags were delivered, along with two bins, but three bins did not arrive. When Newby chased the remaining bins in July, it was told by the council’s parks and environmental services department that the original order had not been processed and an invoice had never been raised.
The council employee said a new ordering system had been introduced that month and a new order would have to be placed, with a 12-week wait.
Having lived in the Harrogate district for 40 years, Mr Evans said he was frustrated by the situation.
Cyclist suffered ‘serious injuries’ in Harrogate crash“Whether it’s the builder’s fault or the council’s, I’m not the slightest bit interested.
“I pay council tax and I don’t want to have weeks of waiting for a wheelie bin.”
A cyclist suffered serious injuries in a crash with a car in Harrogate yesterday, police said today.
A stretch of Cold Bath Road was closed for hours following the collision at the junction with West Cliffe Grove.
The air ambulance landed on the Stray so paramedics could offer medical treatment quickly.
North Yorkshire Police said it had now traced the driver of a dark-coloured hatchback who they appealed for help finding yesterday.
Officers are now appealing to anyone who saw a white Vauxhall Viva travelling uphill on Cold Bath Road from the direction of the Fat Badger hotel bar roundabout or saw the cyclist travelling in the opposite direction to get in touch.
A police statement said:
“The rider of the pedal cycle suffered serious injuries at the scene and was taken to hospital for medical treatment following the incident at around 1.40pm on Friday.
“Police appeal for any witnesses to the collision or anyone who has CCTV/dash cam footage that may assist the investigation to come forward.”
If you can help, contact North Yorkshire Police on 101 and quote incident 12220142867. Or email 001282@northyorkshire.police.uk.
Quote reference number 12220142867 when providing details.
Read more:
- Witness appeal after collision on Harrogate’s Cold Bath Road
- Fears for Harrogate Convention Centre if new Leeds venue goes ahead
Fears for Harrogate Convention Centre if new Leeds venue goes ahead
Senior figures in Harrogate are angry with plans to build a multi-use conference centre in Leeds, as they fear it could drive business away from the North Yorkshire town.
Provisional plans to build an events space on the doorstep of Leeds Arena were discussed at a meeting by the city’s councillors on Thursday.
But Harrogate Convention Centre, Destination Harrogate and the town’s Crown Hotel have all come out against the scheme.
Harrogate District Chamber of Commerce and Harrogate Business Improvement District (BID) are also objecting.
An independent study commissioned by Leeds City Council suggested the impact on Harrogate Convention Centre would be minimal.
That is hotly disputed by the objectors.
Speaking to Leeds councillors at Thursday’s meeting, Paula Lorimer, centre director at the convention centre, said the study was “flawed, inaccurate, out-of-date and in some areas totally wrong”.
She claimed it had under-estimated the adverse impact on the centre itself by around “50 per cent” and relied on out of date figures.
Ms Lorimer also said there was upset in Harrogate over an “absence of dialogue” from Leeds City Council about the scheme. She claimed she’d only found out about the plans at the end of last week – just four days before they were due to potentially be approved in principle.
She told councillors:
“We would have expected to be consulted in advance of this application.
“We are hoping this is an inadvertent oversight (that we weren’t).
“If this had taken place we may have avoided having to take the route we have done today by objecting. Unfortunately we were left with no choice.”
Read more:
- Harrogate Convention Centre to face competition from Leeds events venue
- Harrogate Convention Centre ‘could lose £250 million without investment’
The meeting was told that Harrogate Borough Council‘s chief executive and Ms Lorimer had been made aware of the original plans last year, but that no response had been forthcoming.
But Ms Lorimer said that the proposed centre was now a third bigger in size than had been originally touted last year.
If approved, the venue would be built on land vacated by the planned demolition of the old Yorkshire Bank HQ on Clay Pit Lane, which is now redundant.
Two blocks of student flats would also flank the venue on either side. That aspect of the development is less controversial with the Harrogate objectors having stated they’re not opposed to that.
Councillors voted to defer the application until next month before making a decision.
Hot Seat: The Harrogate man leading the way in luxury careWhen Graeme Lee was in his mid-20s, he organised a holiday for 24 people in two chalets in France. Tragically, two of them died on the trip.
Devastated, he took a year off from his job as a senior manager at Marks & Spencer. His sabbatical drifted into a second year until it ended abruptly when his mother fell ill and he rushed home to be with her. Within four weeks she was dead.
Thirty years on, Mr Lee is one of Harrogate’s most successful businessmen. His company Springfield Healthcare has six care homes, a £30m turnover and 1,500 staff, including domiciliary care. It wasn’t university or education that forged him, but those early losses.
He says:
“They were two of the most traumatic things that have ever happened to me.
“I can’t tell you how responsible I felt for what happened on the holiday. One of the girls wasn’t going to go and I lent her the money.
“Those two years away transformed me. I learned a lot about the meaning of life.”
It has been some journey. Mr Lee grew up in a small care home his mum and dad owned in Garforth, West Yorkshire, regularly moving bedrooms to accommodate residents and watching TV with them at night.
He then struck out on his own at M&S until his mother’s death proved a turning point. He says:
“Shortly before she died, Mum asked if I would look after Dad and the business and my two sisters. I’ve tried to do that ever since.”
Care homes are light years away from what they were when Mr Lee was young. He says:
“Care homes in the 1970s had bad reputations. Your grandma would say ‘don’t ever put me into a care home’. That’s driven me over the years. I want to change how older people perceive care homes.”
Today Springfield Healthcare, which has six homes providing 500 beds, is at the forefront of luxury care. Think cinema days, rooftop terraces and gin bars.
Harcourt Gardens, which opened close to Harrogate town centre in December, is registered for 115 residents. Its facilities include a cinema room, gym, hairdressing salon and spa, and landscaped gardens. He adds:
“The most important thing for me is that it’s in the heart of the community. Older people want to live in their community.”
Naturally it isn’t cheap — prices in Harrogate start at £1,250 a week. Mr Lee says his company creates an option for people able to afford the choice and provides value for money.
Harcourt Gardens, which employs 50 staff, took more than seven years to go from vision to completion. Covid and a flooded basement added to the delays.
How does he top that? Another site in Harrogate could raise the bar even higher.
‘Holy grail of care’
Three years ago, Mr Lee bought Grove House, a grade two listed building off Skipton Road that was once the home of Victorian inventor, philanthropist and mayor Samson Fox.
Grove House belonged at the time to the Royal Antediluvian Order of Buffaloes, a fraternal movement. A flag showing the initials GLE hung outside, indicating it was the organisation’s grand lodge of England.
So when Mr Lee, whose car number plate bears the initials GLE after his name, turned up to check out the site, there was a sense of fate. That there is a plaque about Samson Fox near his Harrogate home added to this.
He bought the site for £3 million and now plans to transform it into “the holy grail of care”.
He wants to convert Grove House to accommodate 23 independent living apartments and build a 70-bed care home and eight houses providing supported living for over-65s on land alongside it.
Schoolchildren from nearby Grove Road Community Primary School will be invited to participate in activities alongside residents and use the gardens for study and play. The site will also host an annual garden party for the community.
He says:
“I want to bring Grove House back to life and make it part of the community.
“All of my 28 years in care have led me to this. We are giving back to the community and school. It’s not just about making money; it’s about doing the right things.”
‘Strong regional provider’
Mr Lee, who will be an energetic 57 next month, is eyeing other projects.
He’s bought the former Summer Cross pub in Otley and hopes to get planning permission to convert it into a care home. He’s also looking at a site in Wetherby. But his empire is unlikely to swell much more.
“I don’t want to be the biggest, I want to be the best. I want to be a good, strong regional provider.”
Times, however, are tough. Brexit, he says, has “not had a significant impact” besides the fact that he now employs fewer European staff, but he describes the impact of the cost of living crisis and rising energy bills as “massive”.
“I’ve never known it as challenging in my 28 years. We have increased pay rates by 11% for domcare and fuel allowance by 33% and it hasn’t even touched the sides.”
By contrast, he says some local authorities have only increased the rates they pay private providers by 3%, which he describes as “absolutely unacceptable”.
Read more:
The company is also focusing on staff wellbeing and provides a hardship fund for those in need.
The rise in agency staff is another big change in the care sector, which he attributes largely to evolving work patterns.
“Ten years ago, I didn’t have any agency staff. Now people want to work for four to six weeks and then have a month off.”
Care homes are a major part of the Harrogate district economy but most people, says Mr Lee, make the mistake of not thinking about them until there’s a family crisis. Then they are suddenly forced to make rushed decisions. He says:
“There are so many good care homes on your doorstep here in Harrogate. Go and start looking.”
Mr Lee has two grow-up children from his previous relationship. Son Hugo runs a recruitment company and daughter Rafaela is at university. He now lives with partner Heidi and her three boys.
Away from work, he “plays golf, badly” off a 13 handicap, and is a member of Alwoodley golf club in Leeds. He also enjoys mini-breaks.
He’s come a long way but the 1990s are never far from his mind.
He is close friends with the parents of one of the girls who died and he’s still driven by the promise he made to his mum to look after the business and to keep raising the bar on care homes.
Harrogate district paddling pools to stay open but flower watering to reduce under hosepipe ban“I’m totally committed to providing the holy grail of care. I want it to feel like a hotel when people walk in.”
Watering of public flower displays in the Harrogate district could be reduced over the coming weeks after the announcement of a hosepipe ban later this month.
Harrogate Borough Council said it will be working to reduce its water use in line with Yorkshire Water’s decision, which comes into force on Friday, August 26.
However, the authority said its three public paddling pools will remain open in Harrogate’s Valley Gardens, Knaresborough’s Bebra Gardens, and Borrage Green in Ripon.
A spokesperson said:
“Following the Yorkshire Water announcement about the hosepipe ban, we are looking at what measures we can and should implement to conserve water supplies.
“Unfortunately, this may result in our baskets and floral displays looking a bit the worse for wear but we hope people will understand the reasons why.
“Our paddling pools are currently filled until after the August bank holiday, and we welcome residents and visitors using ours across the Harrogate district rather than their own.”
Meanwhile, North Yorkshire County Council said it would be following the rules when the hosepipe ban comes into force.
Council leader Carl Les, whose portfolio includes emergency planning, said:
“We are looking at our services and where exemptions may apply, and we will be conforming with the rules. We would urge all residents to follow the advice already given out nationally and regionally on how they can conserve water usage, as we will be.
“Let’s also take care in these tinder dry conditions to avoid starting fires, which not only use large amounts of water to extinguish, but can also threaten property and in some cases lives.”
Read more:
- Hosepipe ban introduced for Harrogate district
- Temperatures to soar to 30 degrees – but no weather warning for Harrogate district
The hosepipe ban is the first to be introduced in Yorkshire since 1995.
People are asked not to use hosepipes for domestic activities including watering plants or grass, washing cars, filling paddling pools or swimming pools, or cleaning outdoor surfaces.
The activities are still permitted if they are carried out without a hosepipe, such as with a bucket or watering can, or if a water butt is used, for example.
Blue Badge holders, people on Yorkshire Water priority services register and those on the WaterSure tariff for medical reasons are exempt from the ban.
The restrictions do not apply to commercial premises using a hosepipe for essential activities.
Planters moved as Harrogate’s Beech Grove reopensHarrogate’s Beech Grove has re-opened to through traffic.
North Yorkshire County Council introduced an experimental order in February last year closing the road at the junction with Lancaster Road.
The move was initially brought in as a one-year trial but was later extended to 18 months.
It aimed to encourage cycling and walking and there were suggestions the closure could become permanent.
But the council announced this month the order would end.
The decision proved popular with some residents and motorists, who said it merely increased traffic on neighbouring streets, but upset some cyclists, who had been told Beech Grove would be a central part of plans to create an integrated cycle route between Cardale Park and Harrogate train station.
Today the planters enforcing the closure were removed, two days before the experimental order was due to expire.
A council spokesman said this afternoon:
“Beech Grove and Lancaster Road are now open to vehicles.”
But what happens next is unclear.
North Yorkshire County Council’s executive member for highways and transport, Cllr Keane Duncan, said it will review the situation and then “bring forward a detailed and coordinated plan, connecting active travel initiatives such as Otley Road and Station Gateway together”.
Read more:
- Beech Grove decision leaves Harrogate in slow lane for cycling
- Ex-Harrogate headteacher welcomes end to ‘dangerous’ Beech Grove closure
- Beech Grove road closure in Harrogate to end in 10 days
A61 reopens between Ripley and Ripon after Land Rover fire
The A61 has reopened between Ripley and Ripon after a Land Rover caught fire.
Harrogate fire station tweeted about the incident just before 4pm today.
It added:
“The fire has been extinguished but road remains closed due to fuel spillage.”
North Yorkshire Police tweeted shortly after 5pm that the road had reopened.
Thank you for your patience – the A61 south of Ripon has now re-opened in both directions. https://t.co/xdaLIyE7Dg
— North Yorkshire Police (@NYorksPolice) August 12, 2022
It had earlier warned that the surface was unsafe.
Anyone travelling north on the A61 towards Ripon is asked to come off on Moor Road into Bishop Monkton, then follow Knaresborough Road into Ripon.
The A61 is closed in both directions and is likely to remain so for some time, so please plan your journeys accordingly.
(2/2)
— North Yorkshire Police (@NYorksPolice) August 12, 2022
Buses were also affected.
https://twitter.com/harrogatebus/status/1558109060712595456
Read more:
- Firefighters deal with blaze in planter outside shopping centre
- Firefighters tackle field fire in Aldborough
Witness appeal after collision on Harrogate’s Cold Bath Road
Police have issued an appeal for a witness to a serious collision in Harrogate this afternoon to come forward.
Cold Bath Road closed following an incident at the junction with West Cliffe Grove.
The air ambulance landed on West Park Stray following the crash, involving a car and a bicycle at 1.41pm.
North Yorkshire Police tweeted:
Update: we're looking to trace a witness, the driver of a small, dark-coloured hatchback car travelling up the hill on Cold Bath Road when the collision occurred.
We believe they stopped at the scene but left prior to our attendance.
They're asked to please call us on 101 ASAP. https://t.co/9CUIDaW8nw
— North Yorkshire Police (@NYorksPolice) August 12, 2022
The road closed from Queen’s Road to Valley Drive, with traffic being diverted away from the scene in both directions.
North Yorkshire Police has asked motorists to avoid the area.