People with disabilities in the Harrogate district have been invited to attend a debate tomorrow night about accessible housing.
Harrogate-based charity Disability Action Yorkshire has assembled a panel of four experts for the event, which will take place at the Cedar Court Hotel in Harrogate at 5pm.
Titled ‘Accessible Housing for Everyone in North Yorkshire’, the event gives disabled people the chance to have their say and influence decisions on assisted living.
Jackie Snape, chief executive of Disability Action Yorkshire, said:
“The aim of the evening is for disabled people to tell us, and more importantly our panellists, about their housing needs.
“Our hope is that their comments will help influence future assisted living decisions made by the new North Yorkshire Council, which in turn will deliver benefits to those disabled people looking to live in their own homes.”
The panel includes:
- Richard Webb, North Yorkshire County Council corporate director for health and adult services
- Sarah Roxby, Wakefield Clinical Commissioning Group‘s associate director of health.
- Cllr Mike Chambers, Harrogate Borough Council cabinet member for housing and safer communities
- Christina McGill, Habinteg Housing Association‘s director of social impact and external affairs
Disability Action Yorkshire chair, Neil Revely, will head the panel.
New 36-bed home
This year, Disability Action Yorkshire, in partnership with Highstone Housing Association, was granted approval by Harrogate Borough Council to replace its 20-bed care home on Claro Road, Harrogate with a new 36-bed care home.
The £7.5 million complex will also include a base for Disability Action Yorkshire staff, who will be on site 24-hours a day.
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Ms Snape said:
“Our assisted living scheme, which will be completed by this time next year, is one of the most significant developments in our 85-year history. It fulfils one of our key ambitions, to give disabled people the independence they crave.
“Whilst our panellists have a wealth of expertise in this area, we believe it’s vital that they hear from the district’s disabled community. These are the people who more often than not need some form of assistance to live independently, and we need to ensure these needs are properly met.”
If you would like to participate in the debate, contact Jackie Snape via email or telephone at: 01423855410.

The breaking ground ceremony at Claro Road with, from left to right, Disability Action Yorkshire chair Neil Revely, The Mayor of the Borough of Harrogate Cllr Victoria Oldham, Harrogate & Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones, and Highstone Housing Association executive director Joanne Hawley.
Wheelchair user praises Harrogate restaurant for buying rampA wheelchair user has praised the owner of Harrogate restaurant Oliveta who personally went out and bought a ramp so she could dine inside.
Now, Nichola Emmerson is calling for other businesses in the town to follow suit in a bid to make eating out more accessible.
Ms Emmerson, who is a campaigner and advocate for disabled access, said she believed any public service should be available to everyone.
She said:
“I’m finding in Harrogate that as much as I love the town, there are an awful lot of businesses that aren’t accessible. I think there are a lot that could be.
“I feel a bit let down by society. I want it to change. The legislation in this country is not good enough for access and there are ways and means of getting around it. So companies get away with not providing access.”
Ms Emmerson, who lives in Harrogate, said she enjoyed going to restaurants, but often ended up being limited to chains, which usually provided access.
A few weeks ago, she spotted Oliveta, on Station Parade, which she saw had steps but decided to call the restaurant to see if there was another entrance.
She said:
“The owner was extremely polite and whilst informing me that he didn’t have wheelchair access, it was something he was working on.
“In the meantime, he suggested that he would put a table and some chairs outside. A great idea I thought, so the following evening, the sun was shining and I met my friend at Oliveta’s. We had a wonderful evening and the food was sublime.”
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- New Harrogate Pret criticised for lack of disability access
- Harrogate disability charity explains why some crossings don’t beep
Since that evening, Ms Emmerson spent time working with the owner, Kole Lleshi, in an effort to get a ramp, doorbell and signage installed to make it wheelchair accessible.
She said:
“To my absolute delight, Kole has now got a ramp, which he funded himself, following an attempt to get help from the local council and failing.
“I am now able to access the restaurant, which has the most wonderful interior and the icing on the cake is knowing there is also a fully accessible disabled toilet. These adjustments make such a different the lives of disabled people.”
Kole Lleshi, who opened the Mediterranean restaurant with his wife Bukurie, in December 2021, said he had tried to seek support from Harrogate Borough Council, but did not get a response.
He said:
“Nichola will be my customer now forever, so I checked the legislation and it said we could use a safety ramp.
“I found a ramp in Doncaster on a website. So I went with my wife, we bought it. I called Nichola and told her to come back and we tried and it’s working. She came in and that night she was supposed to stay only one hour and stayed for three.”
Ms Emmerson explained that there was a huge potential spending power from the country’s disabled people, known as “the purple pound”. This is thought to contribute around £249 billion annually to the economy.
She said:
“Our money is as valuable as anyone else’s. If we can’t get into services to use it, then it’s not good for the economy.”
“The fact that this has happened is very close to my heart. When I went into the restaurant I just felt free. It has also got a disabled toilet. Quite a lot are full of changing tables and they are an after thought, but this is a nice environment.
“I now want other disabled people to come here to enjoy the food and use the facilities and I want other businesses to follow suit.
“Of course Harrogate is hilly and full of old buildings, but I’m finding that retailers are either not bothered about trying to make what in most cases could be a simple change to their premises. Or they are unaware of the the purple pound and the pieces of equipment that are available.”

The disabled toilet at Oliveta.
Harrogate charity Disability Action Yorkshire offers accessibility audits to help businesses do all they can to be fully accessible.
A spokesman for the charity said for some businesses it was impossible to adapt the premises and make them fully accessible. However, he said there were ways of making them more welcoming for disabled people.
He said:
“For someone to buy their own ramp, that’s absolutely fantastic. Now wheelchair users can go and have a meal there.
“If anybody wants advice on this issue, please contact Disability Action Yorkshire. We can work with businesses to help them operate in a disability-friendly way.”
A spokesman for Harrogate Borough Council commented:
Dishforth farm creates strawberry picking experience for wheelchair users“Under the Equality Act 2010, businesses should ensure they do not discriminate against individuals with a disability. Further guidance, including all statutory requirements for businesses, can be found on the government’s website.
“Any eligible individuals who may need financial support to help adapt their home in order to meet the needs of any disabled children or adults living there can apply for a disabled facilities grant (DFG). Further information is available via our website.”
A farm in Dishforth has created a pick your own strawberry and raspberry experience suitable for older people, wheelchair users and people with prams.
It seems such a simple idea but not many pick your own farms around the country offer it.
Mark and Mary Bean run Beau Fraise’s Fruity Berry Fruit Farm, which can be found on Dishforth Road in Dishforth, near Ripon.
The idea was sparked by Mary’s sister, who uses a wheelchair, as well as some of the farm’s previous customers who struggled with access.
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A lot of work has gone into the project.
It has taken about 11 months, 35,000 welds, 70 tonnes of soil, 4,000 strawberry plants and 1,500 raspberry plants but it is now open to the public six days a week. It is closed on Tuesdays.
Mark, who has done the majority of work himself, told the Stray Ferret:
“We have been doing strawberry picking for about 15 years but we decided we needed to make a change for this year.
“This has been a lot of work, a mammoth task really, but it has also been a labour of love.
“People love it, the word seems to be spreading quite quickly and I have lots of messages from people interested. So we have been quite busy already.”
Now the farm is up and running, Mark and Mary are planning to set aside a day a week when only those who are elderly and disabled can go.
The first of those days was held today when a group from Hampden House care home in Harrogate went for a special visit.