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Jan 2023
The incoming chief executive of the new North Yorkshire Council has raised questions about the future of Harrogate Convention Centre.
In a significant change of tone, Richard Flinton refused to commit to a £49 million redevelopment of the venue proposed by Harrogate Borough Council, which will be abolished at the end of March.
Mr Flinton also questioned the future use of the site, saying the conference and events venue needed to be vibrant and relevant in the face of competition from a new venue in Leeds rather than "an enormous drain on public finances".
Speaking at Harrogate District Chamber of Commerce's monthly meeting at Rudding Park last night, Mr Flinton said the council had "inherited issues we didn’t expect" about the centre and decisions were not "straightforward". He said:
Mr Flinton at last night's meeting
Harrogate Borough Council has consistently defended the loss-making centre on the basis that the thousands of visitors it attracts benefit the town's hotels, bars and restaurants and bring a wider economic benefit to the district as a whole.
But control of the venue will transfer to North Yorkshire Council on April 1, when it comes into existence and Harrogate Borough Council ceases to exist.
The new local authority, based in Northallerton, could find it harder to justify to residents in places such as Scarborough and Selby the merit of spending almost five per cent of its annual £1.2 billion budget on a single building in Harrogate.
Cllr Carl Les and Richard Flinton last night
Carl Les, the Conservative leader of North Yorkshire Council, said:
In October, Harrogate Borough Council and North Yorkshire County Council formed a working group to discuss the convention centre’s £49 million redevelopment plan and how it could be funded, as well as how the venue should be run in the future.
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