Harrogate estate agents take on Yorkshire Three Peaks for charity
Harrogate estate agents, Feather Smailes Scales (FSS) are hoping to raise more money for Maggie’s Centres by climbing the Yorkshire Three Peaks.
The team at FSS said they wanted to support a charity that helps those undergoing treatment.
Maggie’s Centres builds centres next to NHS hospitals to offer professional support for anything from treatment side effects to money worries.
The FSS team will take on the 24-mile hiking challenge tomorrow.
Partner and auctioneer Richard Smailes said:
“Last November, I was incredibly touched by the enthusiasm of those supporting the charity. Those who were affected by cancer planned to carry out incredible tasks to raise money for a cause that supports those suffering take back control when cancer turns their life upside down.”
To donate click here.
Networking event for SMEs at Harrogate Convention Centre this month
Harrogate Borough Council and SME Growth Managers have organised an event for Harrogate district businesses to share ideas and solve problems.
The event, on April 21, is aimed at local SMEs, small to middle-sized businesses.
‘Five tips to sales and marketing effectiveness in challenging times’ will hear from numerous business owners about the impact of marketing.
The event lasts 90 minutes and is free to attend. It will highlight funding opportunities and give business owners the chance to meet with similar, like-minded businesses.
The event begins at 9.30am at Co-Lab Harrogate, through entrance three at the convention centre.
Death of Harrogate man, 45, was due to drugs, inquest hears
The death of a 45-year-old man at a Harrogate hostel was due to “multi-drug toxicity”, an inquest heard today.
The inquest into the death of Stephen Paul Cattanach on October 26, 2020 was heard at Northallerton Coroners Court this afternoon.
At the time of his death, Mr Cattanach was living in temporary accommodation provided by Harrogate Borough Council at Cavendish House on Robert Street.
The inquest heard the 45-year-old was found in his room by a member of staff on the afternoon of October 26.
Dr Joy Shacklock, of the Spa Surgery in Harrogate, told the inquest Mr Cattanach had a “complex history of drug and alcohol addiction and mental health issues”.
Dr Shacklock added her patient had suffered a number of overdoses, most recently twice in July 2020. She said Mr Cattanach insisted neither was intentional.
A toxicology report performed after his death, found high levels of drugs, including morphine and heroin, in his blood.
Read more:
- Inquest concludes no single factor led to Harrogate woman’s suicide
- Inquest finds homeless Harrogate man endured a ‘drug-related death’
He had previously been helped by North Yorkshire Horizons, an adult drug and alcohol recovery service. Mr Cattanach reached out for support from Horizons five days before his death and had a follow-up appointment booked for October 27, the day after he died.
Coroner Jon Heath agreed with the post-mortem assessment and concluded that his death was drug related. He said:
‘Worried’ Tories dig up old Facebook posts of Harrogate Lib Dem“I am satisfied that the cause of death was multi-drug toxicity, this alongside the police evidence which found no suspicious circumstances or suicidal indications suggests he did not intend to take his own life.
“I am able to conclude that on the balance of probability his death was drug related.”
The Harrogate & Knaresborough Liberal Democrats have said an article on a local Conservative Party website that digs up old Facebook posts from a prospective Lib Dem candidate “shows they are worried” about the upcoming council elections.
The article on Community News, which is run by Andrew Jones MP’s office, posted screenshots from the Facebook page of Michael Schofield, the Liberal Democrat candidate for Harlow Hill & St Georges.
Mr Schofield is the landlord of the Shepherd’s Dog pub on Otley Road.
The article included one of his Facebook posts in 2019, which the Conservatives called an ‘expletive-laden, bizarre online rant’ that referred to Brexit, Donald Trump and Guy Fawkes.
The post from March 2019 was written at the height of the wrangling in Parliament over Brexit. It said:
“This country needs one person to stand up! A Trump, a Thatcher, a Guy Fawkes. Politicians have shown their colours and let our country down. Nail your colours to either side but be Brexit or Remain not one of these self wanting a****** deserve a vote. GUY FAWKES WE NEED YOU”.
The article also posted a screenshot of Mr Schofield reposting a satirical article from December 2019, which said then-Lib Dem leader Jo Swinson should be in Bagpuss’s window with “all the other lost and broken things nobody wants anymore”.
Voters go to the polls on May 5 to elect councillors to sit on North Yorkshire County Council and its successor authority, North Yorkshire Council, which comes into existence in April 2023.
Read more:
- Full list of election candidates in Harrogate district revealed
- Harrogate pub landlord on why he’s standing for the new council
Responding, Mr Schofield said:
“My response is quite clear. I apologise if language was offensive however at that time no party had a leader of credibility and I do believe it was the vote of a lifetime to make a difference.”
David Goode, chair of Harrogate & Knaresborough Liberal Democrats, criticised the campaign tactics used by the Conservatives.
He said:
“It’s no more than we’ve come to expect. It’s very standard practice for them to try and besmirch the opposition. It shows they are worried about the election.
“This election is so important for a whole raft of different reasons and they will try every trick in the book. I’d like to think we’ll keep more to the issues. We’ll have a go at them on their record, not at individuals.”
Mr Goode defended the comments of the publican Mr Schofield, which he said makes him a “far stronger candidate” due to his “passion”.
“At the time there was a lot of emotion flying about Brexit. From Michael’s perspective, he probably used some language he shouldn’t have used. It reflects his passion and truly that’s what what we need. We need people with passion who care.
“With any political party people fall in and out out of love at certain times. We can’t always be 100% enthusiastic. In a way it makes him a far stronger candidate, he’s gone through bad times with the party and come back.”
What is Community News?
Community News launched in September 2020.
The home page makes no reference to the fact that it’s set up by the office of Andrew Jones.
This only becomes clear when you click on the “About” page, which also says the aim of the website is to provide news stories about Harrogate, Knaresborough and Boroughbridge in a “positive” and “non-political way”.
Mr Jones’ office manager is current council leader Richard Cooper. The office also employs current Conservative councillors Matt Scott and Ed Darling.
Following the 2019 general election, Mr Jones commented on negative campaigning. He said: “politics needs to grow up” and “I don’t use these tactics”.
Mr Jones wrote on his website:
“I don’t like it when candidates spend much of their time demonising their opponents.
“I don’t use these tactics. I simply say what I do in the local area and describe how I represent local people and our communities. My literature and my team were positive about our achievements and our ambitions. We didn’t pull down opponents or manipulate people to vote differently to their beliefs to ‘stop someone else winning’.
“Politics needs to grow up and step away from this old-fashioned and frankly US-style attack ad approach. I hope over the next few years – at least locally – there will be agreement to adopt a more positive approach.”
The Stray Ferret asked Andrew Jones, Richard Cooper and the Conservative candidate for Harlow Hill & St Georges, Steven Jackson, to respond to Mr Goode’s comments but we did not receive any responses.
Harrogate Hydro to close on Friday for £11m refurbishmentThe Hydro swimming pool in Harrogate will close for nine months on Friday ahead of a £11.8m refurbishment.
The facility will get a two-storey extension as well as a new entrance, cafe and reception area.
There will also be new diving board equipment, a new fitness suite and the changing areas will be upgraded.
The existing gas boilers will be replaced with air source heat pumps and 250 solar panels, as well as new metering and energy monitoring and control systems.
The pool is run by Brimhams Active on behalf of Harrogate Borough Council.
It means until January, the nearest available council-run pools will be in Starbeck, Knaresborough, Patelely Bridge and Ripon. Opening times are available on the Brimhams Active website.
Read more:
- Harrogate Hydro renovations a long-term gain, says diving club
- Hot Seat: Leading the Harrogate district’s leisure revolution
The project will be carried out in phases, with the refurbished pool hall and changing rooms re-opening in January 2023 and the ‘dry side’ activity space by April 2023.
Work to build the new Knaresborough Pool will start on April 26. The current facility will remain open.
Wallace Sampson, Harrogate Borough Council’s chief executive, said:
‘Somebody knows something’ — Killinghall peacock mystery deepens“This investment at both the Hydro in Harrogate and a new facility in Knaresborough follows our investment at the Jack Laugher Leisure and Wellness Centre in Ripon and shows our commitment to providing first-class leisure facilities for Harrogate district residents.”
A Killinghall woman has contacted the RSPCA as part of the attempt to solve the mystery of the village’s missing peacocks.
A muster of peacocks has roamed the village for years but there are fears about 10 have been killed.
The number of peacocks rose sharply in the last couple of years, prompting some residents to say they were sick of the noise and calling for action.
Just two peahens remain, prompting fears somebody has taken matters into their own hands.
Sarah Leanne Hughes said it was possible the birds had been re-homed by the animal charity, which re-homed Peter the Peacock from Bilton. She added:
“I have spoken to three different people at the RSPCA. I’m just asking for advice to see if they have been reported.”
“All I want to know is where the birds have gone. It’s the not knowing that’s awful. People are starting to point fingers. Somebody’s name has been mentioned a couple of times but it’s not a witch hunt.”
Ms Hughes set up the Killinghall Peacocks Facebook page two years ago to celebrate the peacocks, which used to visit her garden regularly.
She moved to Killinghall from Bilton and whereas sightings of Peter were rare, she saw the Killinghall birds regularly. Her home, on Cautley Drive, is close to the tree where the animals roost.
Ms Hughes said the number of page members had doubled recently amid concern for the peacocks’ welfare. She said:
“It’s causing a lot of upset in the village. Somebody knows something and they should do the decent thing and say what has happened.”
Ms Hughes has asked Killinghall Parish Council to discuss the peacocks at tonight’s monthly meeting.
The Stray Ferret has asked the parish council if the matter will be raised and whether it plans to take any further action to investigate the plight of the birds.
Sue Reid, the clerk, said the peacocks were not on the agenda for the monthly meeting at 7pm but the annual parish meeting, which followed at 8pm, was an open forum that gave residents the opportunity to raise any subject they liked.
Health officials warn of 12-hour waits at Harrogate hospital A&E
Health managers are warning of waiting times of up to 12 hours at Harrogate District Hospital’s emergency department.
West Yorkshire Association of Acute Trusts, which is a partnership of six hospital trusts including Harrogate, has urged patients to only attend the department for life-threatening injury or illness.
Hospital officials have warned that some patients are waiting as long as 12 hours for treatment.
Latest figures show that Harrogate District Hospital had 4,595 attendances to its emergency department in February 2022.
The national standard for emergency department waiting times is to admit, transfer or discharge 95% of patients within four hours.
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According to NHS England figures, 65% of patients were seen within that time at Harrogate hospital.
Dr Andrew Lockey, consultant physician in emergency medicine with Calderdale and Huddersfield NHS Foundation Trust, which is one of the six trusts that belong to West Yorkshire Association of Acute Trusts, said:
Full list of election candidates in Harrogate district revealed“It’s really important that people only come to an accident and emergency department if they really need to. Our hospitals are extremely busy, and people are having to wait a long time to be seen.
“Over the past two weeks we’ve faced huge challenges with the sharp uplift in the number of people attending accident and emergency. This places additional pressure on our teams who are responsible for treating patients with serious and life-threatening conditions.
“If you are unwell and are unsure which healthcare service you need, call NHS 111. A highly-trained clinical advisor will direct you to the most appropriate service.”
The list of candidates standing for election to the new North Yorkshire Council in the Harrogate district has been revealed.
Voters will head to the polls on May 5 to elect councillors to the authority, which will replace both North Yorkshire County Council and Harrogate Borough Council.
The Labour Party, Liberal Democrats, Conservatives, Green Party and independents have all fielded candidates ahead of polling day.
Harrogate Borough Council has published a list of election agents and names of candidates. A full list of party candidates will be published today (April 6).
A total of 21 councillors will be elected from the Harrogate district as the council is made up of new divisions.
The deadline to register to vote is Thursday, April 14. You can register here.
List of Harrogate district election candidates
Coppice Valley and Duchy
- Patricia Ann Foxall, Labour Party
- Peter Charles Lacey, Liberal Democrat
- Leighton Anunda Regayre, Green Party
- Graham Kevin Swift, Conservative
- Daniel Jonathan James d`Arcy Thompson, Independent
Valley Gardens and Central Harrogate
- Lucy Jayne Gardiner, Independent
- Samuel John Gibbs, Conservative
- David Johnson, Liberal Democrat
- Paul Ko Ferrigno, Green Party
- Andrew Williamson, Labour Party
Bilton Grange and New Park
- Matthew Robert Scott, Conservative
- Monika Slater, Liberal Democrat
- Tamsin Jade Worrall, Green Party
- Andrew Morris Zigmond, Labour Party
Harlow and St Georges
- John Charles Adams, Labour Party
- Sarah Jane Hart, Independent
- Steven Jackson, Conservative
- Andrew Rickard, Green Party
- Michael John Schofield, Liberal Democrat
Read more:
- No deals expected between Harrogate district opposition parties ahead of election
- Council chiefs promise ‘seamless transition’ to new North Yorkshire Council
Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone
- Helen Burke, Labour Party
- John Radcliffe Ennis, Conservative
- Patricia Ann Marsh, Liberal Democrat
- Anna Rosanna McIntee, Independent
Fairfax and Starbeck
- Philip Anthony Broadbank, Liberal Democrat
- Elizabeth Susan Lumby, Conservative
- Gordon Schallmo, Green Party
- Christopher John Watt, Labour Party
Bilton and Nidd Gorge
- Paul Steven Haslam, Conservative
- Deborah Anne Havercroft, Labour Party
- Andrew Graham Kempston-Parkes, Liberal Democrat
High Harrogate and Kingsley
- Christopher James Aldred, Liberal Democrat
- Geoffrey Ronald David Foxall, Labour Party
- Timothy Ian Myatt, Conservative
Knaresborough West
- David Tom Crosthwaite, Labour Party
- Philip George Ireland, Conservative
- Matthew James Walker, Liberal Democrat
Knaresborough East
- Sharon-Theresa Calvert, Labour Party
- Edward William John Darling, Conservative
- Hannah Gostlow, Liberal Democrat
Killinghall, Hampsthwaite and Saltergate
- Edward Charles Clayson, Labour Party
- David Ryland Goode, Liberal Democrat
- Michael Harrison, Conservative
- William James Rigby, Green Party
Oatlands and Pannal
- Justin James Peter Chan, Liberal Democrat
- Gillian Rosemary Charters, Green Party
- John Mann, Conservative
- Margaret Smith, Labour Party
Boroughbridge and Claro
- Andrew Bell, Liberal Democrat
- Noel Frank Evans, Independent
- Clark Pearson, Green Party
- Jonathan William Starkey, Independent
- Robert Windass, Conservative
Read more:
- How the Harrogate district’s wards will change ahead of local election
- Dispute over Harrogate council by-election raised in House of Lords
Spofforth with Lower Wharfedale and Tockwith
- John Philip Hall, Yorkshire Party
- Alexandra Graham Marsh, Green Party
- Andrew John Paraskos, Conservative
Pateley Bridge and Nidderdale
- Alison Harris, Yorkshire Party
- Stanley Lumley, Conservative
- Andrew James Murday, Liberal Democrat
Ripon Minster and Moorside
- Thomas James Averre, Conservative
- Thomas Mark Cavell-Taylor, Liberal Democrat
- Andrew Williams, Independent
Ripon Ure Bank and Spa
- Barbara Jean Brodigan, Liberal Democrat
- Robin John Burgess, Green Party
- Michael Geoffrey Chambers, Conservative
- Sidney James Hawke, Independent
Washburn and Birstwith
- Ian Roger Galloway, Independent
- Nathan Roger Hull, Conservative
- Paul Geoffrey Trewhitt, Green Party
- Thomas Watson, Liberal Democrat
Wathvale and Bishop Monkton
- Nicholas Malcolm Brown, Conservative
- Hannah Katherine Corlett, Green Party
- Christopher James Knight
Ouseburn
- Richard Musgrave, Conservative
- Arnold Francis Warneken, Green Party
Masham and Fountains
- Margaret Edna Atkinson, Conservative
- Felicity Clare Cunliffe-Lister, Independent
- Judith Mary Hooper, Liberal Democrat
Harrogate Borough Council has agreed to pay developers behind a planned Leon drive-thru on Wetherby Road £25,000 for appeal costs.
The authority had been in discussions with Blackburn-based Euro Garages after it took the council to appeal over its decision to refuse the proposal.
In July 2021, a government planning inspector granted permission for the new drive-thru, which was initially proposed to be a Starbucks.
Helen Hockenhull, the inspector who approved the plan, awarded costs against the council after it “demonstrated unreasonable behaviour”.
A spokesperson for the council confirmed that it had agreed to pay Euro Garages £25,000 as part of the appeal cost.
The spokesman said:
“Officer recommendations are always taken with a balanced approach and are based on careful consideration of a wide range of issues, including local and national planning policy, case law, consultation responses and anything else considered to be ‘material’ to the decision, including the comments of local residents.
“In this case, the officer recommendation of approval was overturned by the planning committee and permission was refused, which has led to an appeal by the applicant.
“The council lost at appeal as it was unable to substantiate the committee’s grounds for refusal. The planning committee was therefore found to have acted unreasonably in taking this decision and the council is required to pay costs to the sum of £25,000.”
Read more:
- New Harrogate Leon set to open early May
- Harrogate council ‘demonstrated unreasonable behaviour’ over Starbucks rejection, says inspector
The council turned down the development back in 2019 on air quality and highways grounds, but later withdrew its objection and did not defend itself at the appeal hearing.
Speaking in May 2021, John Worthington, the council’s executive officer for development management, said officers could not stand successfully at appeal because their previous recommendation would “undermine” their case and that losing also risked legal costs of over £50,000.
The move forced residents fighting the proposal to defend the authority’s reasons for refusal themselves at the hearing.
Ms Hockenhull said she understood concerns from residents, but added that she was not convinced that the development would cause “significant harm”.
In a decision notice last year, she said:
Harrogate BID cleans gum and grime ‘hot spots’“I recognise that my findings will be disappointing to the local residents and ward councillor who gave evidence at the hearing.
“However, based on the technical evidence before me and all that I have seen and heard, with the proposed mitigation measures secured by planning conditions, I am not persuaded that the development would cause significant harm.”
Harrogate BID (Business Improvement District) has sent a crew to steam clean and jet wash ‘hot spots’ across the town centre.
Ahead of the Easter holidays, the BID has paid a team from UK Nationwide Cleaning to spend ten nights removing grime and chewing gum.
Harrogate BID manager Matthew Chapman said:
“Walking around the town centre, it is clear to see where our cleaning team have been, giving pavements a much needed deep clean.
“Our cleaning crew is working across numerous areas, making sure the town centre looks in pristine condition for the traditional start of the 2022 tourism season.
“In the first ever survey asking Levy Payers what they wanted us to do, cleaning was the priority, and with our cleaning contractors, together with our Street Ranger, this is what we are delivering.
“This is the first of a number of visits this year for our cleaning crew, and they will be back on at least two more occasions cleaning different parts of the BID area.”
Harrogate was the first town in the district to form a BID in 2019. Almost 500 businesses pay 1.5% of their rateable value each year.
It’s estimated that the Harrogate BID brings in around £500,000 from levy payers annually.
Read more:
Report says former Harrogate Debenhams buildings should be saved
A report from the national charity SAVE Britain’s Heritage has named the former Debenhams buildings in Harrogate as one of 18 former ‘cathedrals of commerce’ that should be spared from demolition and repurposed.
Wetherby-based property company Stirling Prescient is behind a proposal to demolish the three buildings on Parliament Street and replace them with 50 flats and two commercial units.
The site on Parliament Street has been home to different retailers for over a century. Before Debenhams, it housed the Buckley’s and Busby’s stores.
But the developer has said there is no market for the building to be reoccupied as a department store, and the 1902 and 1920-era buildings should be torn down.
Departing stores
The report, called ‘Departing Stores’, sounds the warning klaxon for a group of former department stores across the UK that are at serious risk of being permanently lost.
As well as Harrogate’s Debenhams, it includes large empty buildings in Liverpool, Bristol and London.
The report says:
“In a new era when large-scale retail is no longer sustainable, these fine structures are at risk of dilapidation or even demolition. And as these hubs of daily life are erased from the map, local communities feel increasingly disenfranchised.
“Protecting and reviving these buildings is not only a matter of preserving precious and distinctive architecture; it is an opportunity to restore a sense of place.”
The report says the demise of Debenhams alone left a hole of 1.3 million square metres of space across the country, with 90% of stores still empty a year later.
Read more:
- Harrogate council conservation officer ‘cannot support’ Debenhams demolition
- Plans submitted to demolish former Harrogate Debenhams
A new fate
The developer Stirling Prescient said in planning documents that there was no scope to convert the Harrogate Debenhams into smaller units “due to its internal layout and the age of the building”.
It said its new plan will “strengthen the town’s vitality and viability, increasing footfall and contributing to the local economy.”
However, the report includes 14 case studies of former department stores that have been successfully regenerated.
These include Bournemouth’s former Debenhams building that closed as a department store in May 2021 and is now home to a wide range of community activities:
“Developers Verve Properties have been imaginative in their ideas for keeping the building in active use. Besides retail, the store now houses an art gallery, beauty parlour and Bobby’s, Bournemouth local makers’ market.
“Later this year a food hall and rooftop terrace bar will open. Several spaces have a social function, hosting knitting meet-ups and children’s entertainers. The varied mix of community-focussed uses seems most faithful to the original department store – a place where people from all walks of life can gather and enjoy themselves.”
Read the full report here.