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11
May 2021
An investigation by the Stray Ferret into whether Harrogate Borough Council has a culture of secrecy has found the authority has a shocking record of withholding information from the public.
Our findings raise serious questions over how and why the council decides to keep so much information out of the public eye on matters that are of public interest and involve large sums of public money.
The council kept information from local taxpayers on key decisions, such as contracts on the Visit Harrogate tourism website and the dire financial state of the Harrogate Convention Centre.
The findings show Harrogate Borough Council had three times more restricted papers than the second highest council and nearly 25 times as many as the lowest.
A total of 222 of Harrogate’s reports were marked “commercially confidential” as a reason for being kept from the public.
By comparison, South Kesteven District Council restricted 79 reports, East Lindsey District Council 48, East Hampshire District Council 11 and Test Valley Council had 9.
In December alone Harrogate withheld information in 46 reports.
While one would accept that each authority varies in population size (the lowest being 120,000, the highest 140,000) and each has different local issues to tackle, the sheer scale of the gap suggests Harrogate has a systemic attitude of withholding information.
It begs the question as to why so many papers were withheld from the public and how the decisions were arrived at, especially on major spends of public money such as the Harrogate Convention Centre.
The Stray Ferret has looked at three examples of where the authority has chosen to exempt information on big investments using taxpayer cash and questions whether it was necessary or appropriate to do so.
£60m or £35m: What is the value of Harrogate Convention Centre to the district?
The council was so upset about the leak that it held an internal investigation to establish who had sent us the document.
Yet we would argue that public has a right to know about the performance of one of the council’s biggest assets, owned by taxpayers, ahead of a huge investment of public money.
Although the council says it has major projects underway, our research shows the next highest council in our comparison - South Kesteven - also had commercial projects in the past year.
South Kesteven council set up a new leisure company and transferred its assets over to the business. The council was also involved in an investment project at St Martin's Park in Stamford.
Tomorrow, we will look at the council's response to Freedom of Information requests and general enquiries from the press and public.
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