McColl’s convenience store on King Edward’s Drive in Bilton will rebrand as a Morrisons Daily later this month.
The store will close today and reopen on Thursday next week following a refit.
It will still be owned and operated by McColl’s but will include Morrisons items.
In March, Morrisons announced it had extended its wholesale partnership with McColl’s as part of an agreement to convert more of its stores to the Morrisons Daily format.
Under the deal, 300 McColl’s branches will be converted to Morrisons Daily stores by 2027.
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McColl’s chief executive Jonathan Miller said:
“I am delighted to extend our partnership with Morrisons, ensuring the continued supply of a supermarket-quality offer across our entire estate, as well as the planned conversion of additional Morrisons Daily stores.
“In Morrisons we retain a long-term partner with best-in-class sourcing and manufacturing capabilities and a leading convenience offer for the local neighbourhood communities we serve across the country.”
Starbeck and Bilton post offices raise almost £2,000 for local boy
The Red Box post offices in Starbeck and Bilton have raised £1,980 for a five-year-old Harrogate boy with an incurable blood condition.
Archie Flintoft has Diamond-Blackfan anemia, which means his bone marrow doesn’t create the red blood cells he needs to survive.
Only 1,000 people worldwide have the condition and Archie needs to go to Leeds General Infirmary for blood transfusions every three weeks just to stay alive. He also has to travel to London for a special check-up two or three times a year.
Two years ago mum Vicky set up a Facebook group called Archie’s Army, where followers can keep up with what Archie’s doing and support fundraising projects that pay for his specialist care. But since covid it’s been difficult to raise money.
The Red Box launched an appeal for funds this year and visitors to the two post offices have donated £760, which was matched by The Red Box. Post Office Ltd also donated £200.
Andrew Hart, who owns The Red Box, said:
“Archie is a bright and vibrant child who, when feeling well, does not let life get him down. He is a huge fan of super heroes, and would love to become one when he grows up! To those who know and love him, he already is.”
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- Appeal launched for Bilton boy Archie’s life-saving treatment
- Knaresborough family determined to ‘leave a legacy’ for baby daughter
The Red Box has now started a grand Christmas raffle in conjunction with Doors Direct, which hopes to raise a further £5,000 for Archie. First prize is a 50” Smart TV.
Tickets are available from tomorrow at both post offices and online.
Bilton artist sells paintings from his garage to millionaires abroadTucked away in a garage in Bilton is a local artist who, when not teaching, can be found splashing colour onto canvases for people across the globe.
Martin Sloan graduated from Sunderland University with a Fine Art degree in 1999. He said like many creative people he dreamed of making money out of his passion.
Now, he is the head of art at King James’s School in Knaresborough and sells his art for as much as £3,000 to hang in homes and offices around the world.
When he’s not teaching you will find him paintbrush in hand in his garage studio putting all his energy and emotion onto the canvas.
Mr Sloan uses wild and bright colours to create his abstract art and calls it “his escape and biggest passion”.

His studio in Bilton.
Living in Bilton for 16 years, Mr Sloan said his art sales have really picked up in the last year with one going a millionaire dollar mansion in New York.
He said:
“Art still really excites me, I’m surrounded by it all the time at school and then at home. Sometimes I’m inspired by a walk along the Nidd sometimes it’s a holiday in the South of France. That’s why I love it.”
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Mr Sloan puts his style of art down to his “transient lifestyle growing up in the military”. He says the abstract nature is a reflection of moving a lot and only settling to an area later in life with his wife and children.
He is often amazed by where his art ends up:
“It’s amazing that it comes from my garden shed in Bilton and they go all over the world.”

Hidden away in Bilton
A woman from Harrogate has spoken of her shock at discovering there was a hand grenade in her garden today.
Sandra Warburton’s family home on Gordon Avenue, in Bilton, became the centre of a police operation today when the explosive device was found.
The house has been in Ms Warburton’s family for 60 years but it was only today, the day after she sold it to her daughter, that the grenade was discovered.
Ms Warburton, who received a call from her son-in-law this morning saying he’d found the device, said she was shocked and bewildered. She added:
“It could have been there when we were little”.
Her son-in-law contacted North Yorkshire Police, which quickly responded by placing a cordon on the street and giving nearby residents the option to evacuate.
Two bomb disposal experts arrived just after 1.15pm and were able to safely remove the device and leave, along with other police officers, about 30 minutes later.
Ms Warburton said:
“These things just don’t happen. My son-in-law that found it this morning, he just rang and said someone was on their way to deal with it. He was moving all sorts of things around and he found it in the garden.
“But they’ve found it and said it was fine now. I just can’t believe it.”
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Police cordoned off three streets in Bilton after the discovery on Gordon Avenue, just off Bilton Lane, late this morning.
A police statement said:
Police cordon lifted after hand grenade discovered in Harrogate“Police evacuated a small number of houses whilst the Ministry of Defence made an assessment on the device.
“The MoD recovered the device and the cordon is now lifted.”
A Harrogate street has returned to normality after bomb squad officers dealt with a hand grenade in a garden.
Police cordoned off three streets in Bilton after the discovery on Gordon Avenue, just off Bilton Lane, late this morning.
A bomb disposal unit from the Ministry of Defence rushed to the street, which is between Richard Taylor Church of England Primary School and Bilton Cricket Club.
The team departed at about 1.40pm and the police cordon was lifted and people allowed to return to their homes.
A spokesperson for North Yorkshire Police said:
“An explosive device was found by a member of the public in their garden at a property on Gordon Avenue today.
“Police evacuated a small number of houses whilst the MOD made an assessment on the device.
“The MOD recovered the device and the cordon is now lifted.”
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A resident on Gordon Avenue told the Stray Ferret about the “mad moment” police knocked on their door.
The resident, who requested anonymity, was evacuated at around 12.30pm, said:
“This is obviously not something that happens everyday, it is quite mad really. Definitely rare for Harrogate.
“We saw that the police were on the street. The next minute the officers were knocking on my door.
“They said that they had called in the bomb squad because the neighbour had found a bomb.
“Not everyone was evacuated, just the residents who live quite close by. Police were quick to get people away.”
Police: no rise in far right activity in Harrogate districtNorth Yorkshire Police has said there is nothing to suggest an increase in far right activity in the Harrogate district despite several shocking incidents this year.
The Stray Ferret has reported three instances of swastikas and anti-semitic slogans appearing in Harrogate and Knaresborough in 2021, including one last weekend.
In addition, racist stickers appeared on the window of a disused shop on James Street in September.
A Freedom of Information request to the police revealed it had logged just five incidents of anti-Jewish hate crime in total in 2017, 2018 and 2019.
So far this year swastikas have appeared on Trefoil Drive and Bilton Lane in January, on the iron bridge in Bilton in August and on Knaresborough castle last weekend.
A North Yorkshire Police spokesperson said:
“These incidents are clearly abhorrent and disturbing. We can assure the local community that the police take such matters extremely seriously.
“It is unclear what the motivation was behind the recent incidents in Knaresborough, and it is not yet known if they are linked or have any connection with the previous incidents of this nature at Harrogate.
“However, there is nothing to suggest an increase in extreme right-wing ideologies or activity in the local area.”
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The constabulary urged residents to report hate-related incidents, such as graffiti and criminal damage, by dialling 101.
The Stray Ferret approached the Harrogate Hebrew congregation to ask if it had noticed any increase in ant-semitic activity but it declined to comment.
The swastikas and a vile anti-semitic message sprayed on Knaresborough castle last weekend have now been removed.
Police said a 49-year-old man was arrested in connection with the attacks in January and remains under investigation.
Bilton residents voice frustration over crime at public meetingThere was frustration and anger at a meeting of Bilton and Woodfield Residents’ Association last night about crime and anti-social behaviour in the area.
Residents voiced criticism towards North Yorkshire Police for a perceived lack of action over the issue.
The meeting was held at Bilton Grange United Reform Church and residents asked questions to a panel that included PC Brendan Frith from NYP, Bilton Conservative councillors Matt Scott and Paul Haslam, Liberal Democrat councillor and Mayor of Harrogate Trevor Chapman and Julia Stack from Harrogate Borough Council’s safer communities team.
It was chaired by Reverend Alan Crump who invited questions from around 30 residents that were in attendance.
The main topic of debate was anti-social behaviour and crime with several questions focusing on issues around the Woodfield Road and Albany Avenue areas of Bilton.
One person received a round of applause after they said the area had deteriorated.
“I’ve been on this street for 50 years and it’s never been like this. Good neighbours are moving out and we are sick of it”.
Another said:
“We’re stuck here but we’re not living the lives we want to live. Nothing gets done.”
Cllr Scott, whose Bilton ward includes Woodfield Road, said he is in regular contact with residents of Albany Avenue about what he called “a very complex situation”.
He added:
“There is an issue with tenants who don’t respect neighbours. That isn’t right. They are being let down by a small minority.”.
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Andrew Hart, the owner of Bilton’s post office, said the community police officers in Bilton were doing a “good job” but his reports of suspected drug dealing had been ignored. Other residents told the panel that they did not have faith that their reports to police would be followed up.
Mr Hart said:
“I sent names of drug dealers dealing crack to NYP. Did I get a response? No, nothing seems to happen and you feel like you’ve interrupted them.”
In response, PC Frith said the police often need more information before they can take action. Cllr Haslam also urged residents to report any suspected criminality to the police.
PC Frith said:
“We need a lot of information. If we want warrants for a drugs bust we need information from more than one person. We need to be sure that we will get results.”
Speeding
Also discussed was speeding in Bilton, with calls to make the whole of the Harrogate suburb a 20mph zone.
Cllr Scott said he was in favour of traffic calming measures in Bilton but there were obstacles to overcome.
“Getting a 20 mph zone is not as easy as I’d like it to be. I can’t wave a magic wand and get them.”
PC Frith reiterated that the public must report to the police issues of crime or anti-social behaviour, including speeding.
Scrutiny of loss-making Brierley Group delayed by nine months“We’ve had zero reports of speeding on Woodfield Road. We know it’s happening but we need reports.”
North Yorkshire County Council has been criticised for delaying scrutiny of its loss-making Brierley Group.
The council set up the Brierley Group in 2017 to bring together council-owned companies and save money.
But the group, which includes housebuilding company Brierley Homes, reported a loss of £639,000 last year.
Brierley Homes’ developments include Woodfield Square in Bilton and Millwright Park in Pateley Bridge.
Council officials this week told a shareholder committee the group had bounced back with a “really positive” first three months of the financial year.
But a Conservative councillor questioned why the Tory-run authority had delayed its corporate scrutiny committee examining the performance of the Brierley Group by some nine months.
Cllr Richard Musgrave, who represents Escrick, said:
“Our scrutiny is pretty much pointless if it is so out of date considering it.
“The Brierley Group made a whacking great loss for the year to March 2021.
“I certainly have some questions I would like to ask about the performance of the Brierley Group.”
Does council have business acumen?
Cllr Musgrave’s concerns follow other members of the authority questioning whether the council has the necessary business acumen to run the array of firms, in particular housebuilding.
However, senior county councillors said they were positive the losses could be recouped.
The committee was told the Brierley Group was seeing “promising shoots of recovery”, with a predicted profit by the end of the year of £51,000 as complications arising from the covid pandemic begin to wane.
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Members heard the Brierley Group’s education service was adapting to meet changing demands and its internet access arm had seen a strong start to the year.
They were also told First North Law, a council-controlled law firm, had been buoyed by improved performance, waste management company Yorwaste had performed well and its building design consultancy was forecasting a return to profitability.
However, Brierley Homes was forecast to generate a loss for the year of £712,000.
The meeting heard a primary concern for Brierley Homes was the availability of materials and labour to complete committed projects to time, cost and quality.
Brierley has a ‘perception problem’
Cllr Don Mackenzie, executive member for access, said the outlook for Brierley Homes was much more positive than the council had become accustomed to over the last year, and highlighted how the authority was forecast to receive £4.3 million in savings and benefits this year from its companies.
Cllr Gareth Dadd, the council’s finance executive member, said Brierley Homes was suffering from a “perception problem” due to upfront housebuilding costs and when its developments in Harrogate and Pateley Bridge were completed next year the figures would look different.
He said:
Harrogate’s ‘forgotten’ war memorial restored to former glory“If you were a layman looking at that sort of balance loss or perceived loss you would be quite startled by it. We know that it is not a true reflection.
“We have a duty to shoot this loose rabbit dead that it is costing the taxpayer hundreds of thousands of pounds or has even snowballed into millions.
“It is going to take some time before we realise the benefits of it. Politically we are going to have to live with the perception issue with the hope that those who are casting doubt on it listen to the full story and not just a headline figure.”
A dilapidated war memorial in Harrogate’s Grove Road cemetery has been restored.
The memorial contains the names of 16 men from the Bilton and High Harrogate areas who lost their lives in the First World War.
When the nearby methodist church in which it stood was converted to flats, the memorial was relocated to the cemetery.
It was left in parts on pallets and had remained there since, almost forgotten in the undergrowth.
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Paul Haslam, a Conservative councillor who represents Harrogate Old Bilton on Harrogate Borough Council and Harrogate Bilton and Nidd Gorge on North Yorkshire County Council, spearheaded a campaign to see it restored.
Work cost about £6,000 and was paid for by Harrogate Borough Council. It was completed by local builders Dean Alexander and Nathan Procter, who are both ex-servicemen.

Dean Alexander and Nathan Procter
Cllr Haslam said he was “delighted” to see it finished.
He added:
Woodfield school taking ‘effective action’ to improve, says Ofsted“We look forward to Armistice Day when people can commemorate the sacrifices these people made with the fitting memorial restored to as it was intended”.
Harrogate’s Woodfield Community Primary School is taking “effective action” to improve after being placed under special measures by Ofsted.
Ofsted inspectors rated the Bilton primary school as “inadequate” in January last year.
They found children were not attending school, lessons did not “follow a logical sequence” and there was no strategic plan to allocate funds for disadvantaged pupils.
Inspectors recommended that the school be put in special measures as it was “failing to give its pupils an acceptable standard of education” and added that those responsible for governing the school were not “demonstrating the capacity to secure the necessary improvement in the school”.
When a school is placed in special measures it is given an action plan to improve and is inspected regularly by Ofsted to ensure it is improving.
However, officials now say the school is taking action to improve.
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Ofsted visited the school in June and said staff were working well with management to systemically improve.
It added that parents were positive about the school. All those who responded to an Ofsted online questionnaire would recommend the school to other parents.

Woodfield Community Primary School
Mathew Atkinson, executive headteacher at Woodfield, said:
“There are many things to celebrate in the report: attendance, SEND, behaviour and the curriculum have all improved and we have clear areas to continue to develop.
“We are taking the right actions towards the removal of special measures and we are looking forward to another great year at Woodfield.”
Jo Marwood, head of school, said:
“We are proud of the report from Her Majesty’s inspectors and it confirms all the hard work that our students, staff, parents and governors put in to making Woodfield such a great school for our community.
“We would like to say thank you for the dedication of staff, the children, parents and governors and the support we have received from the local community.”