Plans have been lodged to convert the former Airline Taxis office in Harrogate into a one bedroom flat.
The ground floor offices on East Parade are currently vacant after a liquidator was appointed to wind up the company in June last year.
A directors report to creditors, signed by Airline’s sole director Mohammad Suleman, said the company experienced a “significant decline” in turnover due to lack of travel during the first covid lockdown.
Now, plans have been submitted by developer Mr T Halliday to Harrogate Borough Council to convert the offices into a one-bedroom flat.
Read more:
- Badgers delay approval of 133 homes at Kingsley Road
- Harrogate’s Airline Taxis to be wound-up with £55,000 debts
Documents lodged to the authority say that the building would retain its existing features and the same floor area as the taxi company office.
Harrogate Borough Council will make a decision on the plan at a later date.
North Yorkshire devolution deal could be done by summerA devolution deal for North Yorkshire that includes a directly elected mayor could be reached by summer, according to the leader of the county council.
County council officials have met with senior civil servants after the government included a deal for the county as part of its levelling up white paper in February.
Cllr Carl Les, Conservative leader of North Yorkshire County Council, and Cllr Keith Aspden, Liberal Democrat leader of City of York Council, have also met with ministers to discuss devolution in North Yorkshire and York.
Council officials submitted a list of requests for devolved powers to government in December 2020 but negotiations were delayed by covid and the publication of the levelling up white paper.
In a statement to a full council meeting next week, Cllr Les will say that it is possible a deal could be reached by the parliamentary summer recess in July.
He says:
“What is clear is that all asks will need to be negotiated with vigour – the principle of devolution has been agreed, there is no automatic right of passage.
“Myself and the leader of City of York Council have had a first meeting with the responsible minister where he observed that we were first in the queue and he hoped we would maintain that position.
“There is a possibility that a deal can be done before the parliamentary summer recess.”
Read more:
- North Yorkshire could get directly elected mayor by 2024
- 5 lessons to learn from devolution in Tees Valley
Ministers made it a requirement that a unitary council for North Yorkshire be established before any negotiations about a devolution deal could proceed. Last week’s elections for the new North Yorkshire Council brought that to fruition.
In December 2020, council bosses submitted to government a 140-page document which outlined £2.4 billion worth of spending and proposals to take back further powers from Westminster.
More powers over transport, skills, regeneration and energy were included in the submission, as well as a mayoral funding pot worth £750 million over 25 years.
Richard Flinton, chief executive of the county council, said previously that the timetable for devolution negotiations could see an elected mayor in place by May 2024.
The mayor could have powers over areas such as transport and economic development. They could also take on the role as police and crime commissioner.
The negotiations come as the Conservatives retained control on the county council following the local elections last week, but with a smaller majority.
Speaking to the Stray Ferret, Cllr Les said he was willing to work with any party over the issue of devolution and local government reorganisation.
He said:
Harrogate man charged with supplying cocaine and assaulting police“It has always been my policy in the county council to reach out to other groups and to talk with them.
“I will continue to do that.”
Harrogate man Ermal Biba has been charged with supplying cocaine and cannabis and assaulting two police officers.
Mr Biba, 37, of Trafalgar Court, is accused of supplying cocaine and cannabis in Harrogate and supplying cannabis in Rochdale, Greater Manchester on or before May 5.
He is also accused of assaulting a female police officer at Ashfield Road, Harrogate on Thursday last week and of assaulting a male police officer at Nydd Vale Road on the same date.
On Saturday, North Yorkshire magistrates sent Mr Biba for trial at York Crown Court on June 6. He was remanded in custody.
Read more:
Traffic and Travel alert: Temporary York Place lights causing delays
Drivers are warned to expect long queues on York Place in Harrogate due to three-way temporary traffic lights.
The lights are in place at the junction with Queen Parade and are causing tailbacks at busy times.
CityFibre has put the temporary lights in place as part of maintenance work. The lights are expected to be in place until Thursday, May 12.

Three-way traffic lights on York Place are causing long queues at busy times.
Read more:
- Simon Pegg shoots new film in Harrogate
- Harrogate mum hosting family fun day to mark daughter’s legacy
Redevelopment of former Harrogate council headquarters approved
Plans to transform Harrogate Borough Council’s former headquarters with a two-storey extension and rooftop restaurant have been approved five years after the authority vacated the building.
The proposals for Crescent Gardens – which has sat empty since 2017 – also include a gym and new office space.
Harrogate-based property developers Impala Estates bought the building for £4 million in 2020 and are behind the plans after previous proposals for luxury apartments and an art gallery fell through.
Speaking at a council meeting today, David Hartley, director at Impala Estates, said the latest plans would bring “significant public benefits” to the town.
He said:
“Unusually for an application of this size, there have only been five letters of complaint from members of the public.
“The small number of complaints is perhaps testament to the level of pre-application public consultation we undertook and that the final design has, where possible, taken this into account.
“This scheme brings significant public benefits which include bringing an empty building back into use and creating quality office space.”
Knapping Mount
Crescent Gardens was vacated by the council when it moved into its new Knapping Mount headquarters in 2017.
At the time, the council announced it would sell the building to property developer Adam Thorpe who had plans for a £75 million redevelopment including luxury apartments, an art gallery, underground car park, swimming pool and restaurant.
However, Mr Thorpe’s company ATP Ltd then fell into administration with debts of almost £11 million, including £24,394 owed to the council.
The latest proposals from Impala Estates had attracted objections from Historic England which questioned the public benefits and said the roof extension should not exceed one storey.
Read more:
- Netflix movie being filmed in Harrogate today
- Harrogate council HQ ‘like the Mary Celeste’, says councillor
Some residents living on Swan Road raised further concerns over their privacy and how else the rooftop terrace could be used if the restaurant failed.
Speaking at today’s meeting, resident Jackie Davis said:
“Mr primary concern is the roof terrace – this must have adequate screening, preferably trees behind the roof glass balustrade to try to protect our privacy.
“As we already know, many restaurant spaces are empty in Harrogate. The Royal Baths directly opposite the building has recently failed.
“I worry that this venue will follow the same fate over the years, leading to the possibility of a bar or perhaps a nightclub ending up there.”
In response, council officers said licensing restrictions would be put on the building’s use.
It was also agreed that extra screening would be installed on the rooftop terrace.
Furthermore, Mr Hartley said double-yellow lines would be introduced on the nearby Swan Lane to reduce disruption from parking and deliveries which he added would be “significantly less” than when the council occupied the building.
Long-running saga
Today’s decision to grant approval will have felt like a big weight off the shoulders of the council which is keen to see the long-running saga of Crescent Gardens come to an end.
But attention will soon turn to the future of its new Knapping Mount headquarters which has been brought into question ever since last year’s announcement that the council will be abolished in April 2023.
The council said the building cost £13 million. However, the Stray Ferret investigated the overall cost of the move from Crescent Gardens and put the figure closer to £17 million.
A decision on how the site is used in the future could well fall into the hands of the newly-elected members of the forthcoming North Yorkshire Council.
Harrogate business man praises ‘amazing’ charity following £2m aid convoy into UkraineA top Harrogate businessman has praised the “amazing efforts” of a Yorkshire charity after returning from an aid mission to Ukraine.
James Rycroft, managing director of Vida Healthcare, was part of a team that drove eight wagons containing aid worth about £2 million for Ukrainian soldiers and citizens who intend to stay in the country.
The five-day mission, which featured a number of volunteers from Harrogate, was organised by Yorkshire Aid Convoy, a charity which has been running overseas aid expeditions for more than 30 years.
‘Really proud’
Mr Rycroft, whose company owns several specialist dementia care homes around Harrogate, said:
“We did it, it was successful and I am really proud of what we have done.
“Yorkshire Aid convoy is an incredible charity and Mark Murphy, who heads it up, lives in Harrogate. He has done it for years and is one of these silent heroes that does amazing things.
“The charity has already delivered 16 wagons. They ran a mission about four weeks before we went.
“It’s really hard work as you drive for 12 to 14 hours a day. It’s a proper mission.”

James Rycroft.
The convoy carried around 100 tonnes of items, including medical equipment, beds and hygiene products.
It is also took a mobile classroom, which was donated by the Knaresborough-based business, Training and Testing Services.
Read more:
- Simon Pegg shoots new film in Harrogate
- Harrogate mum hosting family fun day to mark daughter’s legacy
Mr Rycroft said:
“A man called Dave Wood came with us. He and his company donated a mobile classroom.
“We filled it with aid and they drove it over and then it got put on a train and taken straight to the front line.
“It is now being used as a wounded soldier hospital. It was named after Dave’s late mother Trish.”

‘Trish’, the mobile classroom, is being used a wounded soldier hospital in Ukraine.
The volunteers met Ukrainian military administrators at the border, where they were escorted to a secure hub inside the border to deposit the goods. They then immediately turned round and headed home.
Their 3,000-mile journey saw them travel by ferry from Hull to Holland, then to Germany, Austria, Hungary, Slovakia and into Ukraine and back.
‘So welcoming’
Mr Rycroft said:
“It was just organised so well. It’s so amazing what the charity does.
“I just went along and did my bit because I wanted to feel like I was contributing something tangible.
“The Ukrainian people were so welcoming and grateful for what we did. It was ace. It is a a really great thing we feel we have achieved.
“But I’m a tiny part of it, really it’s the Yorkshire Aid Convoy that has been leading this.”

Mark and Felix Murphy of Yorkshire Aid Convoy.
Mr Rycroft said the experience made the war in Ukraine feel “very real”.
He added:
Badgers delay approval of 133 homes at Kingsley Road“People are defiant and life is going on as normal and it almost becomes very normal very quickly when you are amongst it. It’s very strange.
“We felt safe and we were looked after really well.
“It went as smoothly as it possibly could. There are lots of people to be praised for it.
“We feel we’ve made a valid achievement to the effort.”
Final approval for 133 homes on Kingsley Road in Harrogate has been delayed whilst more badger surveys are undertaken in the area.
Redrow Homes won outline planning permission to build the development on appeal in August 2020 after it was initially refused by Harrogate Borough Council.
As part of the application, the developer submitted two ecology studies that found there were four badger setts in the area but only one or two were still actively used.
A previous ecological study undertaken in 2019 by a different developer found no evidence of badgers.
Members of Kingsley Ward Action Group (KWAG) bought a trail cam, which is a camera that is left outside and captures the movement of animals.
They claim their investigation found evidence of 11 badger setts, six of which are still active.
Badger activity
Badgers and their setts are protected by law.
Developers must have a licence from Natural England to remove or modify a badger sett.
This afternoon, councillors on the council’s planning committee met to discuss a reserved matters application that dealt with the appearance and layout of the homes.
However, the four-legged mammals dominated the debate.
Read more:
To the north of the proposed site are train tracks owned by Network Rail.
Dan McAndrew, the council’s principal ecologist, said most of the badger setts are more than 30m away from the site on land owned by the rail body.
Mr McAndrew said he was satisfied the developer had put measures in place to protect the badgers.
He said:
“Badgers actually do well in urban fringe areas, they are able to adapt to those conditions. The key issue is, where are the setts located and can they be maintained?
“The main sett will not be affected and will be left in place.”
However, John Hansard from KWAG said his group’s badger surveys were at odds with the developer’s surveys. He criticised the 2019 survey.
He said:
“If you know what you’re looking for, signs of badger activity were plentiful, clear and unmissable, so why were they missed or ignored?”
‘Somebody has got to speak for the badgers’
Both Sue Lumby, Conservative member for Coppice Valley, and Victoria Oldham, Conservative member for Washburn, cast doubt on the developer’s claims that badgers would not be harmed by the development.
Cllr Lumby said:
“Somebody has got to speak for the badgers and that’s what we are trying to do.
“This population of badgers would have lived here for generations. I’m very, very concerned why the 2019 survey didn’t find any badgers.”
Cllr Oldham added:
“On the assumption you do get licence from Natural England, what mitigation are you prepared to offer for remaining badgers to forage? You are going to put tarmac, concrete where they like to dig for worms, for setts. What are you offering? What wildlife enhancement will there be on this estate?”
In response, Mike Ashworth, on behalf of Redrow Homes, said
“A significant area of site will be undeveloped and landscaped, 30% of the site, a lot more than a normal housing estate. In there you’d have a combination of planting of trees, wildflower, shrubs.”
An unimpressed Cllr Oldham responded:
“Badgers don’t eat pretty flowers, they like to eat worms.”
Further surveys
Mr Ashworth revealed the developer received permission from Network Rail last week to survey the land above the site for badgers.
After councillors rejected the council’s recommendation to approve the scheme, committee chair Cllr John Mann proposed deferment pending the publication of the badger survey, which councillors agreed to unanimously.
Jonathan Dyson set to be North Yorkshire’s new chief fire officerNorth Yorkshire’s Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner has selected her preferred candidate to be the county’s chief fire officer.
Zoe Metcalfe has chosen Jonathan Dyson for the role. Mr Dyson is currently the interim deputy chief fire officer at North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service.
Jon Foster, who is the current interim chief fire officer, will retire from the service after 38 years.
Mr Dyson started his career in South Yorkshire, where he held roles as head of training and head of service delivery.
He joined the North Yorkshire service in 2020 as director of assurance, leading and delivering organisational change, and was appointed interim deputy chief fire officer last year.
Read more:
Mr Dyson will be recommended to the North Yorkshire Police, Fire and Crime Panel for appointment.
Ms Metcalfe said:
“I’m delighted to choose Jonathan Dyson as my preferred candidate for the role of chief fire officer, who I believe will be excellent at leading the service into the future and continue to keep people safe and feeling safe in North Yorkshire and York.
“Having worked within our service for the past two years, and most recently as interim deputy chief fire officer, Jonathan is someone who knows our community, has the respect of his colleagues, and is committed to creating an even stronger and more sustainable service.
“I look forward to Jonathan’s suitability being approved at the upcoming Police, Fire and Crime Panel’s confirmation hearing later this month, and from there working with him to deliver a modern, inclusive, responsive, and respected organisation that protects people and property, and saves lives.”
Mr Dyson said:
Surface dressing on local roads begins under new contractor“I feel truly honoured to be the preferred candidate for the role of chief fire officer and privileged to continue serving the public of North Yorkshire and York. I will build on the outstanding contribution Jon Foster has made on behalf of the Service, and I wish him the very best on his next venture.
“I want to ensure North Yorkshire remains one of the safest places in the country to live, work, or visit. My desire is to continue building an inclusive, sustainable organisation by transforming our service delivery. A key priority is to develop our partnerships, ensuring our staff, volunteers and partners feel valued and able to be their very best for our communities.”
A new surface dressing programme has begun on roads in North Yorkshire this month.
North Yorkshire County Council has hired a new contractor to carry out this year’s work, which the local authority said can extend the life of a road surface by up to 10 years.
The 2022 programme, which will cover about 200 miles, will be the first delivered by NY Highways, the roads maintenance company created by the county council last year.
NY Highways has recruited Birmingham road construction firm Kiely Bros as its contractor.
Ross Bullerwell, managing director of NY Highways, said:
“Over the past four months we have worked with Kiely Bros to prepare them for the contract, to make sure they understand what we demand in terms of finish and quality.
“The company has already been providing white lining services for us and we have received good local feedback about their work.”
Read more:
- Coming soon! New pothole machine to improve Harrogate district roads
- Ripon’s new councillors to focus on roads, housing and crime
A press release issued by the council today described surface dressing as “a quick, efficient and cost-effective way of maintaining skid-resistant and waterproof road surfaces”.
The process involves spraying the surface with bitumen, then spreading stone chippings on top and rolling these into the bitumen. Once the bitumen has set, the road is swept to remove any loose chippings.
Weather warning
Barrie Mason, assistant director highways and transportation at the county council, said:
“We know the value of surface dressing from experience. It is vital in maintaining the condition of our roads network. That’s why it is a key component of our annual roads maintenance programme.
“Year after year, through the programme we enhance the quality of sections of our road network. This is crucial in ensuring that businesses, residents and visitors can travel with confidence.”
Signs should go up at each location before work starts to alert residents and drivers.
Mr Mason warned the programme can be affected by weather, adding:
“This can makes communicating exact dates challenging, so we urge residents to check the advance site signage regularly. The contractor will amend this to highlight any change in the schedule.
“After a stretch of road has been treated, it is important for drivers to heed the temporary speed limit put in place while the new surface stabilises to prevent damage to their own vehicle and those of other road users.”
For more information about surface dressing, click here.
Accountant jailed for conning Harrogate man out of his homeAn accountant has been jailed for more than five years for conning a man with learning difficulties out of his Harrogate home and more than £30,000 of savings.
Sukhdev Singh, 73 spent the money within a fortnight on expensive jewellery, gambling, bank transfers to accounts he held in India, private school tuition fees and other domestic spending.
Singh persuaded his vulnerable victim into signing over his inherited £300,000 family home in an up-market location in Harrogate. He also made a sustained and determined but failed attempt to have the title deeds to the victim’s inherited Spanish holiday home fraudulently transferred to himself.
Today, detectives who led the investigation said Singh displayed astounding levels of arrogance, remaining unrepentant throughout his trial for what amounted to be a sickening and callous series of frauds perpetrated against a vulnerable victim.
The man Singh targeted, who has not been named to protect his identity, is in his 50s. But a psychologist who assessed him confirmed his mental capacity to be that of a 12-year-old, someone clearly vulnerable to potential exploitation.
Singh convinced the victim to let his sole trader accountancy business, SS Singh & Co, receive and hold his savings subsequent to the death of his parents some years earlier.
Offshore accounts
Singh, of Chelwood Drive, Moor Allerton in Leeds, had learned of all the assets owned by the victim which had been bequeathed to him by his parents.
These assets included the property in Harrogate, an apartment in Spain and tens of thousands of pounds in offshore savings accounts held with banks based in Gibraltar and Jersey.
By 2016, Singh had transferred the victim’s Harrogate house into the ownership of a company owned and controlled by himself; namely SS and SK Lalli Ltd.
The Land Registry title of the property was thereafter held in the name of SS & SK Lalli Ltd, which appeared to show a purchase price paid during the transaction. However, there was in fact no exchange of funds from Singh to pay for the house, which resulted in him obtaining the house for no payment whatsoever.
Read more:
- Harrogate district care worker jailed after sexually abusing vulnerable resident
- Simon Pegg shoots new film in Harrogate
During the same year, Singh travelled to Gibraltar with the victim where he persuaded him to close his savings account and transfer the balance of more than £34,000 into the UK bank account of SS Singh & Co held by Mr. Singh. The victim was led to believe that Singh would look after these funds on his behalf.
Singh then spent the whole of the £34,000 over the following two weeks on jewellery, gambling transactions, transfers to bank accounts held by Singh in India and other personal domestic spending.
From 2016 onwards, the victim continued to live at the Harrogate property, but had unwittingly become the tenant of Singh’s company without so much as a tenancy agreement to protect him.
The crooked accountant then suggested to the man that he could move from his home address into a flat. Had this happened, Singh would have been free to treat the house as his own.
In the meantime Singh made attempts to ‘help’ the victim to close his Jersey-based savings account and to transfer the account funds into the business account of SS Singh & Co. The police investigation was able to prevent this from happening.
Singh also met with an official in Spain and tried to arrange for the victim’s inherited holiday home to be signed over to him. Fortunately, it failed at the eleventh hour as officials became suspicious when Singh could not provide proof that the purchase funds had been paid to the victim.
The defendant created a series of documents containing false statements to support the frauds.
Citizen’s Advice raises concerns
By 2019, the victim’s Harrogate property had fallen into a significant state of disrepair and he approached the local Citizen’s Advice bureau for help.
This started a chain of events whereby Citizens Advice raised concerns with social services. Singh had let the home deteriorate so much that environmental health teams were brought in.
They became suspicious of the title transfer of the victim’s Harrogate home, and reported their suspicions to North Yorkshire Police’s economic crime unit in 2019.
The force’s specialist economic crime detectives began a long and complicated investigation that would ultimately see Singh arrested in July of that year, and the victim’s remaining assets were secured.
Singh was eventually charged with four counts of fraud, all relating to the one victim. During his trial, Singh refused to accept any wrongdoing and claimed he had acted entirely in the victim’s interests and had merely followed his instructions. Singh attempted to portray his victim as a shrewd and articulate man.
However, a jury didn’t believe Singh and found him guilty of all counts on 13th April this year. After the verdict he was remanded into custody.
A judge at York Crown Court today jailed Sukhdev Singh for five years and six months.
‘Sickening and callous series of frauds’
After the sentence, former Detective Constable Ian Sharp, who led the investigation for North Yorkshire Police’s economic crime unit said:
“Sukhdev Singh had been an associate of the victim’s deceased parents, and had full knowledge of his learning difficulties. He is a manipulative fraudster who displayed a callous lack of empathy for his vulnerable victim. He exploited these vulnerabilities for his own advantage in order to systematically asset-strip him.
“Singh has behaved in an arrogant, deceitful way throughout and appears to have no remorse whatsoever for his crimes.
“It was a truly sickening and callous series of frauds committed against someone who should have been able to trust an accountant to act in his best financial interests.
“Once the case had been brought to the attention of North Yorkshire Police, the force’s economic crime unit was able to safeguard the victim’s remaining assets, and to protect him. The fraudulent transfer of the victim’s Harrogate home has been reversed, and we will now pursue a Proceeds of Crime order against this defendant to confiscate his ill-gotten gains and from this compensate the victim for his lost inheritance.
“While this can’t change the facts of the ordeal he suffered at Singh’s hands, I hope it provides him with some comfort and security.
“I would also like to pay tribute to the agencies who played a significant part in bringing Singh to justice and in safeguarding the victim, particularly Harrogate Citizen’s Advice Bureau who first raised the alarm, also North Yorkshire County Council social workers and the environmental health team.”