The Crown Hotel in Boroughbridge has completed the first phase of a major refurbishment.
The project has seen a coffee bar added to the historic 38-room hotel and the ground floor given a totally fresh look.
The Coaching Inn Group bought the hotel in February after its parent company, RedCat Pub Company, purchased it from Best Western for an undisclosed fee.
Kevin Charity, chief executive of the Coaching Inn Group, attended a Boroughbridge and District Chamber of Trade event on Monday to talk about the project.

The Crown Hotel
Mr Charity said the previous management team had done a great job looking after the Grade II listed coaching house, whose spa and leisure facilities include a swimming pool, but it had been “time for a change”. He said:
“We wanted to improve the decor, bring the standard of food up and create a coffee shop.”
The Coaching Inn Group, which owns 32 hotels, including the Golden Fleece Hotel in Thirsk, the Talbot Hotel in Malton and the King’s Head in Richmond, has so far invested £720,000 on the Boroughbridge hotel.
Mr Charity told the Stray Ferret the company, which employs 1,400 staff, planned to redecorate the outside and introduce new signage in spring and longer-term planned to refurbish the leisure facilities and the function room.
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The restaurant

The bar
£1.2bn Allerton Park incinerator recycling rate worsens
The £1.2 billion Allerton Park waste recovery plant continues to be dogged by mixed performance more than four years after being launched.
The waste recovery plant and incinerator between Knaresborough and Boroughbridge takes 220,000 tonnes of waste collected by councils in York and North Yorkshire and 50,000 tonnes of business waste annually,
A performance report has revealed it is significantly exceeding its target for diverting waste from landfill, achieving almost 90%.
However, it is recycling and composting just over one per cent of the waste, against a target of 5%.
North Yorkshire and City of York councils awarded a contract to private company AmeyCespa to create the facility in 2014 following a high-profile battle with residents of villages surrounding the plant, such as Marton-cum-Grafton.
Last year councillors raised concerns over the plant’s recycling performance after it emerged it had never met its recycling targets, leading the councils to levy £653,000 in performance deductions for the first three years of its operations.
An officer’s report to a meeting of the county council’s transport, economy and environment scrutiny committee next Thursday shows the plant’s recycling performance has marginally worsened during the last year.
The report states issues with the mechanical treatment equipment meant sometimes the plant had to be run in by-pass mode, which meant recyclates were not extracted.
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£1.2bn Knaresborough incinerator has never met recycling targets
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The report states following maintenance works this year the mechanical treatment performance has significantly improved, with Amey forecasting recycling performance to rise to almost half the targeted proportion.
However, the amount of unplanned downtime at the energy from waste plant significantly improved this year, falling from 61 days to 29, which allowed more waste to be processed.
The report states the latest figures show the best year to date for landfill diversion and energy from waste.
The report concludes further opportunities are being explored with the councils, Amey and Yorwaste seek “to optimise the types of waste delivered to the plant” to secure continued performance improvements.
The county council’s executive member for open to business, Conservative councillor Derek Bastiman, said while the recycling target remained well below what was wanted, the lack of improvement this year had been largely due to unforeseen mechanical issues.
He said the energy from waste scheme had proven to be a good investment by the councils.
Ouseburn division Green Party councillor Arnold Wareneken said any profits from the scheme should be used to increase recycling rates.
He said:
Traffic and Travel Alert: Harrogate district update“We need to recycle the money as well – it just needs a bit more investment. The problem I see is we are not collecting food waste separately or enough food waste from industry.
“All local authorities are meant to be collecting food waste.
“We have got to make it more easier for people to put compostable waste in wheelie bins.”
The main routes into Harrogate, such as Wetherby Road, Knaresborough Road and Skipton Road, appear to be flowing normally in the approach to rush hour.
Here is your Stray Ferret traffic update.
Roads
Drivers heading towards Wetherby should be aware of temporary traffic lights still in place on the A661 Harrogate Road near Spofforth.
The lights are in place while Northern Gas Networks carries out maintenance work and are now due to last until October 18.
Elsewhere in Harrogate, long-term work on Crescent Road means motorists are unable to turn left at the Parliament Street junction. Traffic coming the opposite way on Ripon Road is unable to turn right.
Montpellier Road remains closed until tomorrow as Northern Gas Networks carries out maintenance work.
Stop go boards are due to be in place on John Street today and tomorrow.
Roadworks on the Boroughbridge Road at Scriven are likely to cause delays for motorists travelling between Knaresborough and Boroughbridge.
Looking ahead, work is scheduled to begin on Monday to reconstruct the B6265 at Red Brae Bank, Bewerley, near Pateley Bridge, which suffered a landslip during storms in February 2020.
The scheme requires the road to be closed from October 17 to December 9. A diversion will be in place via Pateley Bridge; the B6451 Dacre; Menwith Hill Road; Duck Street and Greenhow Hill village. Temporary traffic lights will be in place during the remainder of the work.
Trains and buses
Northern services between Harrogate and Knaresborough going to York and Leeds are scheduled to run as normal this morning.
The Harrogate Bus Company is not currently reporting any cancellations but you can get updates here.
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Business Breakfast: 1,000 people attend Harrogate business conference
Business Breakfast is sponsored by Harrogate law firm Truth Legal.
More than 1,000 people attended a business conference in Harrogate yesterday.
Brand Yorkshire held its 12th annual business conference at Pavilions of Harrogate at the Great Yorkshire Showground. Nearly 60 businesses had stalls at the event.
Staff from companies all over the country networked at the event, which attracted many local firms.
Georgina Pogge-von Strandmann, solicitor and branch manager at Ison Harrison in Harrogate, told the Stray Ferret:
“The event has been great to attend. We’re here to explain all of the services we can offer at our new Harrogate branch as a full-service law firm. We’ve spoken to a lot of people, everyone is really friendly.”
Sally Bendtson, who owns Limelight HR, said:
“It’s been really good so far, there is a nice mixture of people we know and people we haven’t worked with yet. Last year we just had a stand but this year we’ve got a stand and I’m doing a talk.”
Brand Yorkshire has been holding business events for more than a decade. They are run by Richard and Mona Norman.
Ms Norman told the Stray Ferret:
“People are still wanting to meet people face to face, especially in Harrogate. We have more than a thousand booked to attend.
“What is music to my ears is when the stand holders come to me, even when the day hasn’t finished yet, to say they are already getting business from the event.”
Boroughbridge chamber holds networking event

The Crown Hotel
Boroughbridge Chamber of Trade is to stage business networking event on Tuesday next week.
The event will also feature a presentation from Kevin Charity, the new chief executive of The Coaching Inn Group, which recently bought the town’s Crown Hotel.
Coaching Inns took over the historic 37-bedroom hotel in February after its parent company, RedCat Pub Company, purchased the building from Best Western for an undisclosed fee. It is investing about £450,000 in refurbishing the site.
The event takes place at the Crown Hotel from 5.30pm to 7pm. Non-chamber members are welcome.
Ex-Timble Inn chef moves to Wild Swan at Minskip
The owners of the Wild Swan, the 19th century inn at Minskip, near Boroughbridge, have hired Paul Murphy as chef.
Alex Bond and Stephen Lennox, who bought the Wild Swan last year, heralded Mr Murphy’s arrival as the start of a new era for the inn.
Mr Murphy previously built up the Timble Inn near Otley into a five-star hotel and worked with chef Frances Atkins at the Michelin-starred Yorke Arms near Pateley Bridge.

Chef Paul Murphy (left) and co-owner Stephen Lennox. Photo: Laura Hargreaves.
Mr Bond said:
“Paul’s appointment is crucially important for the future of the Wild Swan.
“He has a superb reputation and we are in no doubt that he will take the Wild Swan to a completely new level in terms of the quality and the presentation of our food.
“We are looking to establish the Wild Swan’s reputation for excellent food and drink in relaxed and informal surroundings, making it a destination location for food lovers across the county.”
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Mr Murphy said he was “determined to give Minskip and the surrounding district an inn to be proud of”, adding:
“I have completely revamped the menu and am determined to create enjoyable and imaginative food at competitive prices. I haven’t been here long, but the reaction so far has been brilliant.
“I am aiming to replicate the success I had at the Timble Inn, which my wife and I ran from 2009 to 2014. Like the Timble, the Wild Swan has immense potential.
“This is a fabulous opportunity. Alex and Stephen have given us a blank canvas. They simply wants the Wild Swan to be at the heart of the Minskip community and to be loved and treasured by villagers.”
The owners said this year they intended to create a microbrewery at the inn but a spokesman for the venue said those plans were currently on hold.
Stray Views: Knox Lane housing scheme ‘lacks detail’
Stray Views is a weekly column giving you the chance to have your say on issues affecting the Harrogate district. It is an opinion column and does not reflect the views of the Stray Ferret. Send your views to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk.
‘Inconceivable’ Knox Lane housing scheme can go ahead
Regarding the proposed full planning application for 53 residential dwellings at Knox Lane, it is inconceivable that Harrogate Borough Council are prepared to push forward with this without addressing any of the 313 objections that have been submitted.
I would further add that there are no supporting comments added. Fulcrum to this is the historical use of the proposed site.
Damian Bowen, Harrogate
Knox Lane housing scheme ‘lacks detail’
In reference to the proposed 52 homes on Knox Lane in Harrogate.
I am writing to express my dismay at the decision by the Harrogate Borough Council’s planning officer to recommend the application be deferred for approval at the next planning committee meeting on Tuesday.
How can the Harrogate Borough Council planning committee have any confidence in the quality of this application given the current documentation submitted contradicts itself and contains a total lack of required detailed information regarding retaining walls, limited traffic, ecology and contaminated ground surveys and no electric charging point locations?
Given this lack of assessment of public and professional comments, surely the planning department could be leaving themselves open to a judicial review?
Stephen Readman, Harrogate
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Voters ‘have to be realistic’
We have to be realistic. Anyone who is appalled at Liz Truss’s approach to sorting out the economy. i.e giving vast amounts to the rich in the hope that it will trickle down to the poor, has to realise that the only way to get the Tories out and restore fairness and our public services is to vote for candidates most likely to defeat them.
In Harrogate, the only way is to vote for the Lib Dems. If the other parties don’t realise it’s in their interests to stand down, then we the electorate have to take the only way open to us to get rid of the Tories, which in Harrogate means voting for the Lib Dems.
Barbara Penny, Harrogate
Do you have an opinion on the Harrogate district? Email us at letters@thestrayferret.co.uk. Please include your name and approximate location details. Limit your letters to 350 words. We reserve the right to edit letters.
Business breakfast: Ripon firm invests £250,000 in robot laser welderBusiness Breakfast is sponsored by Harrogate law firm Truth Legal.
Econ Engineering has invested £250,000 in a new robot laser MIG welder for its Ripon manufacturing base.
The company, which makes more than eight out of 10 winter maintenance vehicles on UK roads, is using the innovative machine to turn out cut and welded ‘din plates’ — the mounting used to attach plough blades to the front of gritters.
Creating din plates is a labour-intensive process and by automating this method, Econ says its team of welders can now concentrate on more intricate but less time-consuming jobs.
Econ Engineering managing director Jonathan Lupton said:
“Our new robot, which has already become a valued addition to the welding section, is now undertaking the more mundane but time-consuming jobs, which is allowing the welders to perform more interesting tasks.
“It is a superb piece of kit, and watching it work is just incredible. Several of our staff are currently being trained in how to programme and operate it, and in time it will be able to perform different welding tasks.”
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Estate agent Tim Waring joins GSC Grays
GSC Grays in Boroughbridge has welcomed housing expert Tim Waring to its team.
Mr Waring is a chartered surveyor and RICS registered valuer who has 30 years of experience working in the Yorkshire property market.
He will be based at the recently opened GSC Grays office in Boroughbridge and said he is relishing the challenge of a new role.
“I am delighted to be joining GSC Grays at an exciting time for the company as they continue to expand and grow and I am looking forward to being part of their journey.
“There is always going be, in a tough economic climate, a flight to quality and the prime residential property market in Yorkshire will continue to thrive. It remains a fact that quality always sells.”
Guy Coggrave, managing director at GSC Grays, added:
“We are thrilled to be adding Tim’s extensive skills and unrivalled experience to our new office at Boroughbridge. At GSC Grays, our mission is to bring extraordinary people together to deliver an outstanding service and the quality of our staff is the key to our success.”
Harrogate Porsche driver who killed cyclist was ‘scrolling’ through social media
A Porsche driver from Harrogate knocked down and killed a cyclist while scrolling through social media posts on his phone, it’s alleged.
James Bryan, 37, was rushing to get some shopping for his parents during the covid lockdown when his Porsche Carrera 911 ploughed into the back of a bicycle ridden by married father-of-two Andrew Jackson, 36, on the A168 between Wetherby and Boroughbridge, a jury at York Crown Court heard.
Prosecutor Anne Richardson said that at the time of the collision, Mr Bryan’s Instagram and Facebook accounts were open.
She said Mr Bryan must have been looking at, scrolling through, or reading posts on social media in the moments before the crash at Allerton Park.
She said that Bryan had been taking cocaine and drinking at his friend’s house in Cheshire the night before the fatal collision at Rabbit Hill Park.
Although he wasn’t over the limit for either drink or drugs, there were traces of cocaine in his system.
Ms Richardson said that Bryan, who celebrated his 35th birthday just two days before the fatal crash, would have been impaired by the drugs in his system and from being hungover and tired from the alcohol and festivities the night before.
‘Incredibly sad case’
Ms Richardson said that forensic analysis of Mr Bryan’s phone showed that at the time of the collision he had his Facebook and Instagram apps open.
He was on the way to drop some groceries off at his parents’ house. They were isolating during the covid lockdown when the accident occurred at about 1.40pm on May 10, 2020.
Mr Jackson was wearing a helmet on a straight stretch of road where visibility was good. Ms Richardson said:
“The front of the Porsche collided with the rear of Mr Jackson’s bike and Andrew Jackson came off his bike, went up in the air and hit his head on the windscreen and roof of the car, and landed on the road behind the car.”
“He was pronounced dead at the scene by an off-duty intensive-care consultant.
“This is an incredibly sad case. A young mother has lost her husband and father to two (very young) children. Her in-laws have lost their only son.”
Mr Bryan, of St Mary’s Avenue, Harrogate, has already admitted that he caused the death of Mr Jackson by careless driving in that he didn’t leave enough room to drive around the bicycle, but he denies causing death by dangerous driving on the grounds that he wasn’t using his phone at the time.
Head injuries
The prosecution insists that Mr Bryan’s driving was dangerous because he “wasn’t looking at the road ahead of him” as his car approached Mr Jackson. Ms Richardson said:
“If he had been (looking ahead of him) he would have had an uninterrupted view of the road (for) over 500 metres.”
Mr Bryan, who had been at a barbecue the night before to celebrate his birthday and set off for home early the following morning, called 999 moments after the accident and told a call operator he thought the cyclist was dead.
Other motorists, including the off-duty doctor and his medically trained wife, were on the scene in minutes and called police and an ambulance, but Mr Jackson had already died from head injuries.
Police arrived at the scene and arrested Mr Bryan, who was “very distressed” and appeared to be in shock.
A roadside drug-impairment test showed that Mr Bryan was positive for cocaine but not over the specified legal limit.
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Subsequent forensic examination of his phone showed that it was unlocked in the moments before the crash and the Instagram and Facebook apps were open.
Mr Bryan was taken in for questioning and told police that after arriving back home from Cheshire he decided to do some shopping for his parents who were shielding because his father had cancer.
He said that Mr Jackson, who lived locally, “came out of nowhere” but then claimed the cyclist had veered into the middle of the road and that he had tried to overtake him, only for the cyclist to “swerve into my path”.
An accident investigator who carried out a reconstruction of the crash said that the bike was not in the middle of the road, but on the edge of the carriageway, near a grass verge, and that Mr Bryan had not tried to move around the bicycle.
Mr Bryan told police he had gone to Cheshire the day before to view a “potential development site” and that he wanted to become a property developer.
In one message found on his phone on the way back from Cheshire, Mr Bryan told a friend he was hungover from the night before and was “concerned about being late for his parents with their shopping”.
In another sent by Mr Bryan to a female friend while he was at the birthday party, he told her: “I’m so drunk I can’t see.”
‘Fit to drive’
Defence barrister Sophia Dower claimed that Mr Bryan was in a “fit and proper state” to drive and was not using his phone at the time of the crash.
She claimed that Mr Jackson’s bike had veered right from the edge of the road into the path of Mr Bryan’s black Porsche, and that her client “didn’t have enough time to react”.
Witnesses including the off-duty doctor and his wife said they saw the cyclist with torn clothes lying on his back in the road.
The doctor said that when he checked for a pulse there was none, and he certified him dead at the scene.
He said that when he told the Porsche driver the cyclist was dead, he “moved backwards, crouched down and put his hands on his head”.
He said Mr Jackson had suffered a serious head injury and his helmet was broken.
The trial continues.
Autumn Harrogate Flower Show starts tomorrow at Newby HallFloral designers have created a Cinderella-themed display for the Autumn Harrogate Flower Show, which starts tomorrow.
The three-day event takes place at Newby Hall, between Boroughbridge and Ripon.
Harrogate Flower Shows are staged twice a year, in April and September, by the North of England Horticultural Society.
The society announced the relocation of its autumn event to Newby Hall at the end of 2019.
The spring flower, which remains at the Great Yorkshire Showground in Harrogate, will next be staged on April 20-23.
The show at Newby will feature plant nurseries, a giant vegetable competition, live theatre and Britain’s biggest display of autumn blooms.
Visitors will also see arrangements from celebrity floral designer Jonathan Moseley and hear the story of Newby Hall’s rock garden.
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Tickets cost £23.50 for adults and £8 for children aged five to 15. Under fives enter for free. Admission includes access to Newby’s gardens and children’s adventure park.
Show director Nick Smith said:
Boroughbridge man faces jail after man dies“Last year we held the autumn show at Newby Hall for the first time, we were delighted that it was such a huge success.
“This autumn, with so many fantastic exhibitors and an enticing programme of events lined up, we are incredibly excited to welcome our visitors and exhibitors back for what promises to be a bigger, brighter and even better autumn show.”
Two men are facing jail following the death of a man in “terrible” scenes of violence.
Thomas Cressey, of Church Lane, Boroughbridge, and Benjamin Calvert, 22, from Sowerby, appeared at Leeds Crown Court this morning when judge Tom Bayliss KC told them both to expect jail.
Calvert, of Kings Gardens, pleaded guilty to manslaughter or unlawful killing of Alan Barefoot in Thirsk Market Place.
Cressey had already admitted affray, or threatening unlawful violence towards Mr Barefoot, when he appeared at York Magistrates’ Court in August.
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The incident occurred in October last year.
Judge Bayliss adjourned the case for sentence in about five weeks’ time. He told the defendants:
“This is a terrible matter. You, Benjamin Calvert, pleaded guilty to unlawfully killing of Alan Barefoot.
“You must understand that inevitably there’s going to be a prison sentence and you must prepare yourself for that.”
He told Cressey that he too shouldn’t be “too optimistic” about his prospects because he was “part of this (violence)”, adding:
“This is a serious matter and you must prepare yourself for custody as well.”
Both men were granted bail until the sentence hearing on October 21.