Skipton and Ripon MP Julian Smith has said the supply of covid tests is improving after complaints that the system is in “chaos”, with health workers and residents left empty handed.
Mr Smith was told at a North Yorkshire County Council meeting on Friday that there have been no lateral flow tests available at Skipton’s pharmacies with staff at the town’s vaccination centre also unable to get tested as demand soared over the festive period.
Conservative councillor Mike Chambers, who represents the Ripon North division, described the system as being in “chaos” after people in the city have struggled to get test kits.

Mike Chambers
Independent councillor Andy Solloway, who represents Skipton West, told the meeting the shortages were putting a strain on the local economy and had also led to some residents launching abuse at pharmacy staff. He said:
Conservative MP Mr Smith said the government recognised there has been a surge in demand for tests and that while supply chains were improving, he would write to Health Secretary Sajid Javid to highlight the issue.
He said:
“The government is aware there was a big crunch point just after Christmas and they are now more confident on supply.
“This is an important issue as we need to get people confident to go to their workplaces, particularly health workers and others on the frontline.”
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‘Ridiculous situation’
Friday’s meeting also heard complaints from Conservative councillor Stuart Martin that health workers – including a family member – had been unable to get tested.

Stuart Martin
Councillor Martin, who represents Ripon South and is also chairman of the county council, said:
“My daughter is a paramedic and some of her colleagues came to my door over the Christmas break as they were unable to access any testing kits whatsoever.
“Luckily we had a couple of tests that we were able to give them, but this is a ridiculous situation.”
It comes as the government has said the current Plan B covid restrictions will remain in place for now.
Changes from tomorrow
It has also been announced that people who test positive with a lateral flow test do not need a follow-up PCR test if they do not have symptoms. These changes come into force from tomorrow.
Mr Smith told Friday’s meeting that he believed the Plan B rules – which include working from home, face coverings on public transport and in public places, and NHS covid passes – were “relatively soft” and that the decision to stick with them was “proportionate”. He said:
Harrogate district covid rate remains high as vaccine centre moves“It feels as if that judgement has been correct, but obviously there are still very strong crosswinds on parts of the NHS.
“We are not out of the woods yet and we all need to do whatever we can to encourage the following of the rules.”
The Harrogate district’s covid rate continues to climb after another 325 infections were reported today.
Latest figures show that the district’s seven-day covid average stands at 1,543 per 100,000 people.
But it remains below both the county average, which stands at 1,680, and the England rate of 1,853.
No further deaths from patients who tested positive for covid have been reported at Harrogate District Hospital, according to NHS England.
According to government figures, 103,687 booster or third jabs have been given in the Harrogate district, as of today.
A total of 135,761 have had first jabs and 126,742 have had second jabs.
Latest available hospital figures show a total of 23 patients who tested positive for covid are currently being treated at Harrogate District Hospital.
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North Yorkshire County Council this week stepped up emergency planning to mitigate for what it calls a “significant reduction” in staff across critical care services and the wider care sector amid rising covid rates.
Meanwhile, Harrogate’s main vaccination centre has moved out of the Yorkshire Event Centre and into the goat shed on the opposite side of the showground.
Those due for a booster or anyone who wants to get their first or second dose should enter the Great Yorkshire Showground site by the Sainsburys entrance off Wetherby Road.
Continue past Fodder and the Harrogate Caravan Park. Signs and volunteers lead to the vaccine centre, which is on the right hand side through the gates. Park under shelter of the sheep shed.
Harrogate vaccine centre moves to smaller showground siteHarrogate’s main vaccination centre has moved out of the Yorkshire Event Centre and into the goat shed on the opposite side of the showground.
Those due for a booster or anyone who wants to get their first or second dose should enter the Great Yorkshire Showground site by the Sainsburys entrance off Wetherby Road.
Continue past Fodder and the Harrogate Caravan Park. Signs and volunteers lead to the vaccine centre, which is on the right hand side through the gates. Park under shelter of the sheep shed.

Follow the directions of signs and volunteers.
Appointments are available but people are free to go without one as a walk-in.
The centre will be open on weekends from 8.30am until 5pm and until late on one day only during the week.
Since September the Yorkshire Health Network‘s vaccine centres in Ripon and Harrogate have given out 42,000 booster vaccines.
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There was a national effort to give out as many boosters before Christmas. At its peak, the Harrogate vaccine centre team gave out 1,800 jabs in one day.
According to government figures, more than 80% have had a second dose and 67% have had a third dose in the Harrogate district.

The new vaccine centre is smaller.
With much of the work already done and three other vaccine centres in the district, the Harrogate team is confident it can cope with two vaccinators.
Cath Dixon, the GP clinical lead for Yorkshire Health Network, told the Stray Ferret:
Harrogate headteachers ‘nervous’ as schools return during covid surge“Over the last couple of days we have been dismantling the equipment we had up at the Yorkshire Event Centre to set up again here on the other side of the showground.
“This is the first day we are open here. Now the Yorkshire Event Centre can use the hall we were in for events and we will be able to stay here until March.
“The current JCVI advice is to only offer three doses of the vaccine. But who knows? Things change all the time and we will be here to help get the Harrogate district vaccinated.”
Harrogate headteachers say they are “nervous” about this week’s return to school as covid testing and face masks are reintroduced to minimise disruption during an expected rise in infections.
Secondary school pupils will now have to wear masks in class as well as in communal areas to help tackle the spread of the Omicron variant.
All students will also be expected to take an on-site test and complete twice-weekly testing from home under rules reintroduced by the government in response to surging cases.
Neil Renton, headteacher at Harrogate Grammar School, said that although infections amongst staff and students were currently low, a rise was expected and this could lead to extra measures including entire year groups learning from home. He said:
“We have got seven staff who have tested positive, but this is not enough to significantly disrupt our provision.
“At this stage we are fine, but we are nervous and do have some trepidations about the term ahead.
“We had a point before Christmas where 30 staff members were off due to covid. We didn’t have to close year groups, but it was very tight.
“This is not new to us as for the past almost two years we have had significant disruptions.
“I’m confident we can continue to deal with this. Where I have a nervousness is if staff absences become so high we have to make a decision on whether it would be better to send a year group home.
“This is a decision I and many other headteachers may have to wrestle with in the coming weeks.”
Sylvia Brett, principal at Harrogate Ladies’ College, also said plans were in place to deal with any disruptions, including the recruitment of supply staff and combining classes. She said:
“We will do everything we possibly can to continue to deliver the high quality of education our pupils and families expect during these difficult times.”
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The return to school comes as there is a further push for staff and more young people to get vaccinated.
Latest figures show 77% of 16 to 17-year-olds and 58% of 12 to 15-year-olds in the Harrogate district have received vaccines which are being made available at sites including the Great Yorkshire Showground, Ripon Racecourse and local pharmacies.
Support to schools
After cancellations in 2020 and 2021, the government is currently planning for exams to go ahead as normal this summer.
Stuart Carlton, corporate director of children and young people’s services at North Yorkshire County Council, said support would be offered to schools throughout the year and that the top priority was to ensure all students receive face-to-face education “where possible”. He said:
Harrogate and Ripon vaccination sites reopen today“Being educated in the classroom, among their friends and with the support of teaching staff, is the best place for pupils.
“Schools have worked hard to ensure they remain safe places and to minimise the spread of the virus, with the support of the council.
“We have provided updated risk assessment templates with the latest government guidance for education settings in the county.
“Schools have access to public health colleagues for advice and we are providing support and guidance in other areas such as health and safety, human resources and property issues.”
The vaccination centres at the Great Yorkshire Showground in Harrogate and Ripon Races reopen today for the first time since Christmas.
The two sites are run by Yorkshire Health Network, which represents the 17 GP practices in the Harrogate district.
The Yorkshire Event Centre at the showground will open for booked appointments from 11am until 8pm. Appointments are still available.
The site will also accept walk-ins from 11.30am today but people choosing this option may have to wait because bookings take priority.
The showground will be open at the weekend from 8.30am to 5pm for booked appointments and from 9am to 4pm for walk-ins.
All the clinics are for first, second or booster jabs for over-18s. Special clinics for 12 to 17-year-olds are put on separately.
Ripon Races will be open tomorrow and on Saturday at the usual times of 8:30am to 5pm for booked appointments and 9am to 4pm for walk-ins.
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Staff and volunteers at the Yorkshire Event Centre are due to relocate to another building at the showground on Thursday and Friday, ready for the Saturday clinic.
The new site is currently contracted for use until March. A decision on fourth vaccinations has yet to be taken.
Covid cases fall in Harrogate district after yesterday’s daily record surge
A total of 404 infections have been recorded in the Harrogate district today — down on yesterday’s daily record figure of 493.
However, the district’s seven-day average rate of infection has risen from 1,139 and now stands at 1,329 per 100,000 people.
North Yorkshire’s rate is 1,269 and the England rate is 1,508.
Harrogate West and Pannal Ash remains the worst hit area, with 163 cases in the last seven days.
The number of people who have received a third or booster vaccine in the district stands at 101.983. A total of 364,100 vaccines have been administered.
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The daily record for covid cases in the Harrogate district has been obliterated, with 493 new infections recorded today.
Yesterday’s decline from the previous record of 330 to 279 had suggested numbers could have peaked. But today’s surge has dashed hopes.
The seven-day rate has also set a new record, now standing at 1,139 per 100,000. The North Yorkshire average is 1,140 and the England rate is 1,456.
The growth rate has jumped to 2.2. Harrogate West and Pannal Ash remains the worst hit area, with 156 cases in the last seven days.
Covid has been recorded on the death certificates of 366 people in the district, including one in the last week.
A total of 101,823 booster or third jabs have now been administered in the district.
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New year begins with fall in covid cases in Harrogate district
A total of 279 infections have been recorded in the Harrogate district today — down on yesterday’s figure of 330.
The district’s seven-day average rate of infection has also fallen slightly from yesterday’s record high of 1,094 per 100,000 people to 1,130.
North Yorkshire rate is 1,071 and the England rate is 1,363.
Harrogate west and Pannal Ash is the current covid hotspot, with 149 cases in the last seven days.
The number of people who have received a third or booster vaccine in the district stands at 101.821. A total of 363,883 vaccines have been administered.
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Harrogate not chosen as Nightingale site this time
Leeds has been chosen ahead of Harrogate to provide a Nightingale surge hub for Yorkshire and the north-east of England.
NHS England announced today it was on a “war footing” and had chosen eight hospitals in different English regions to deal with a potential wave of Omicron patients.
St James’ University Hospital in Leeds has been selected in our region to provide a temporary structure capable of housing about 100 patients.
Harrogate Convention Centre was one of eight Nightingale hospitals set up in spring last year in England to treat covid patients.
It had 500 beds but closed this year without treating a single patient.
However, the huge increase in infections caused by Omicron has prompted health managers to devise plans for extra capacity. All eight regional sites chosen this time to be Nightingale surge hubs are within existing hospitals.
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An NHS press release said placing the new Nightingale facilities in hospital grounds would make it easier to flex staff and equipment if there is a surge in admissions.
Other hospital sites could follow — NHS trusts have been asked to identify areas such as gyms and education centres that can be converted to accommodate patients.
4,000 beds
The plan is to create up to 4,000 ‘super surge’ beds across the country.
Professor Stephen Powis, NHS national medical director, said:
“Given the high level of covid infections and increasing hospital admissions, the NHS is now on a war footing.
“We do not yet know exactly how many of those who catch the virus will need hospital treatment, but given the number of infections we cannot wait to find out before we act and so work is beginning from today to ensure these facilities are in place.”
Professor Powis urged the public to “play their part” by getting booster jabs. He said:
“The science is clear. Two doses of vaccine do not provide enough protection against Omicron so if you have not yet had a life-saving booster do not delay any longer.”
Health Secretary Sajid Javid said:
“We hope the Nightingale surge hubs at hospitals will not have to be used but it is absolutely right that we prepare for all scenarios and increase capacity.”
The first eight of the Nightingale surge hubs will be at the following hospitals:
North East and Yorkshire – St James’ University Hospital, Leeds
North West – Royal Preston Hospital
Midlands – Solihull Hospital, University Hospitals Birmingham and University Hospitals Leicester
East of England – Lister Hospital, Stevenage
London – St George’s Hospital
South East – William Harvey Hospital, Ashford
South West – North Bristol Hospital
In this article, which is part of a series on the 15 stories in the Harrogate district that shaped 2021, we look at the ongoing covid problems.
Over the past 12 months, covid has continued to bring misery across the district.
On January 1, the district had recorded 4,653 covid cases since March 2020; now, at the end of the year, that number has risen to more than 25,500 positive cases.
What’s more, the infection rate is sky high again and businesses are ending the year in the same position as they did at the same time last year — wondering if they can survive.
The district started the year under tier three restrictions, meaning people could only meet in groups of six outdoors and pubs and restaurants could only operate as takeaways.
It had previously been in tier 2, which allowed hospitality venues to open as long as they served substantial meals.
The change came in on December 30 and ruined hospitality venues’ hopes of bumper new year takings to offset some of the previous months’ covid losses.
Illegal party
However, the guidelines weren’t followed by everyone. The Stray Ferret revealed in January that pub and hotel manager Simon Cotton held an illegal New Year’s Eve party with 10 guests at the Yorkshire Hotel.
Mr Cotton (pictured above) was alleged to have asked staff to work at the event despite it being against covid rules.
He denied the allegations but the following week North Yorkshire Police issued a £1,000 fixed penalty notice for a breach of coronavirus regulations at a hotel in Harrogate on New Year’s Eve.
Third national lockdown
A short while after, on January 6, the country entered its third lockdown. This was extremely tough for local people and business owners who were once again thrust into home-working, online orders and furlough pay-outs.
The roadmap out of lockdown was announced on March 8 and, from there, schools and businesses began to reopen.
In the same month, the district hit 100 covid deaths at Harrogate and District Hospital. The Stray Ferret wrote a series of article remembering some of the 100 that died.
Events, such as Northern Alborough Festival, returned, cinemas welcomed back customers and the beauty and hair industry reopened with queues of eager people needing a haircut.

Covid precautions in Kate Borgen’s Ikonik hairdresser on King’s Road
A brief spell of normality
Then came summer and a little normality resumed. People went on holiday, visited the theatre and large concerts returned. Face masks were no longer compulsory.
But for the second year running, school exams were cancelled and results based on teacher gradings. Once again, the district saw high percentages for A* to C grades.
By the end of summer, the vaccination scheme was well underway with many over-18s having had two doses. Then came booster jabs.
The rollout began in September, and sites such as Knaresborough Chain Lane Community Hub, Pateley Bridge Pharmacy, Harrogate’s Great Yorkshire Showground and Ripon Racecourse have been at the forefront of the campaign.
Now, more than 80,000 people in the district have had their covid booster.
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Nevertheless the emergence of Omicron has seen rates rocket again. Winter also saw the district reach the grim milestone of 200 covid deaths at Harrogate District Hospital, which stopped routine visits to patients two days before Christmas.
But the Harrogate pantomime has gone ahead, unlike last year, and — at the time of going to press — Harrogate’s hospitality sector was hoping to be open on New Year’s Eve.
But few are expecting bumper takings as covid’s shadow continues to loom large.