The coronation will be broadcast live on a big screen in the grounds of Knaresborough House on Saturday, May 6.
Knaresborough Town Council announced today it had secured access to a locally sourced LED screen for what it hopes will be a joyful day of picnics and celebration.
Besides showing the ceremony at Westminster Abbey, the free event will also include the broadcast of two family films.
Town councillor James Pickard, chair of the council’s king’s coronation working group, said:
“We are looking forward to welcoming the Knaresborough community and visitors alike to share this once in a lifetime event. It’s not often we get to see a king crowned.
“We hope the day will be a relaxed event where people can simply come and soak up the atmosphere whilst watching the ceremony.
“We plan to extend the day by showing two family films throughout the afternoon. This will be a free local event for the entire community to enjoy.”
Cllr Pickard added the grounds were a natural theatre with scope for catering for large crowds throughout the day, from 10am to 5pm.
He added people were welcome to bring picnics but food and refreshment stalls would also be available.
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Town councillor Hannah Gostlow, who is also a member of the working group, added:
Knaresborough councillor says male-dominated executive not tackling road safety concerns“It’s great that both residents and visitors to Knaresborough will have a fantastic opportunity to come together to view the king’s coronation live on a big screen at the iconic location of Knaresborough House.
“The event will give everyone the opportunity to have a memorable experience to mark this exciting and historic event.”
North Yorkshire County Council’s leadership has defended itself amid claims that its largely older male membership has not experienced the impacts of motorists speeding through market towns and villages.
Knaresborough councillor Hannah Gostlow and Selby member Melanie Ann Davis told a meeting of the authority’s transport scrutiny committee action to tackle road safety in built-up areas was being limited due to the executive having different experiences to those of women, people with pushchairs and young people.
The council’s 10-member executive features two women and the majority of its members are aged above 50.
The meeting examining road safety and the introduction of 20mph zones in built-up areas also heard claims North Yorkshire Police were routinely failing to tackle motorcyclists as well as refusing to enforce 20mph zones.
The meeting heard while road incidents in the county had seen 36 people killed in 2020 and 37 the year before, motorcyclists had accounted for seven of the deaths in 2020 and 11 in 2019, which represented a far higher proportion than the volume of motorbikes on North Yorkshire’s roads.
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Councillors heard the council had been examining the decision to make Wales one of the first countries in the world to introduce legislation to have a 20mph speed limit on roads where cars mix with pedestrians and cyclists.
Cllr Gostlow told the committee the majority of people supporting the Welsh move had been women and those with young families and that North Yorkshire’s executive lacked the experience of walking on narrow paths beside busy roads.
She said the executive needed to listen to grass roots views rather than “deal down from the top”, adding:
“I am worried that the executive do not represent the people who are going to benefit.”
Cllr Davis agreed, saying the “car was king because it represents economic power” and that the views of women and young people were being overlooked.
After the meeting, the authority’s leader, Cllr Carl Les said he did his best to balance the executive in terms of gender, between retired people and those in work and in terms of geographical coverage.
He said:
“I think we are all road users and represent those people in our communities and I wouldn’t say it has any adverse effect on our decisions.”
Mobile cameras ‘effective’
A North Yorkshire Police spokesperson said its mobile safety cameras were effective when used on any vehicle, including motorbikes.
The force said it had publicised a significant amount of prosecutions involving motorcyclists, including riders who have been recorded exceeding 120mph and riders who have been prosecuted for various dangerous driving offences.
The spokesperson added:
Campaign launched to achieve bathing water status on River Nidd“Independent research by Newcastle University has found that North Yorkshire Police’s mobile safety cameras have reduced casualties by 20 per cent in the areas they’ve been deployed to.
“The force decides where to deploy cameras based on lots of different factors around risk and safety. These include data about previous collisions, demand from communities and even the weather.
“We never consider locations based on the revenue they could generate. This is a common misconception, but finances are made publicly available every year. The figures clearly show that some years the service costs slightly more to run than it generates, and other years vice versa.
“Residents frequently raise concerns about speeding in their communities specifically request mobile safety cameras, which we’ve deployed on a wide range of roads including village high streets, outside schools, suburban routes, main roads and rural roads.”
Organisations have agreed to work together to achieve designated bathing water status on the River Nidd at Knaresborough.
Longstanding concerns about water quality were heightened in summer when people and dogs fell ill after entering the Nidd.
If the bathing water bid is successful, the Environment Agency would be obliged to put plans in place to monitor and protect the water.
Not a single waterway in North Yorkshire currently has bathing water status but the River Wharfe in Ilkley has achieved it.
Knaresborough has been chosen because of the amount of recreational river users it attracts, but if the campaign succeeds the rest of the Nidd would also benefit from the measures introduced.
Anglers, the Environment Agency, Yorkshire Water, Nidderdale AONB, Yorkshire Dales Rivers Trust, Leeds University, councillors and Andrew Jones, the Conservative MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough, are among those involved after a meeting this month.
They must demonstrate the river attracts a large number of bathers and has support for such a move. Landowners must also support applications for privately owned sites.

Shan Oakes
Shan Oakes, a Green Party councillor in Knaresborough chairing the group, said the government was not setting high enough water quality standards and action was necessary. Ms Oakes, who is also on Knaresborough Town Council, added:
“It’s not going to be a quick fix. We need to consult with a lot of groups.”
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Last week Hannah Gostlow, a Liberal Democrat who represents Knaresborough East on North Yorkshire County Council, agreed to chair a cross-party sub-group of the council’s Harrogate and Knaresborough area constituency committee that will examine the issue. She said:
“We are well placed to achieve this but we need the support of the community and the town council.”
Knaresborough lido, which is particularly popular with recreational river users, will probably be the focus of the campaign. Cllr Gostlow said:
“The river plays a big part in the local economy but people are getting ill so we need to do something.”
She added she hoped the campaign might succeed by summer 2024.
Action by anglers
The Nidd Catchment Angling Group held a meeting in August to discuss concerns about the Nidd near Darley sewage treatment works.
A further meeting on October 3 was held to address wider concerns about the river.
David Clayden, honorary secretary of Harrogate Fly Fishers’ Club, said:
“We’ve broadened and deepened our membership, and are pursuing a number of shared objectives.
“I am the lead for the improved monitoring and analysis of the Nidd’s water, while Shan Oakes, of Knaresborough Town Council, is leading on the bid to get Knaresborough established as a safe bathing water location.
“We also have established a strong link with staff and postgraduate students from the University of Leeds, through James McKay, who will help us with research studies about quality of the Nidd catchment’s water course, and the efforts by local people to maintain and improve them.
“We are all agreed of the importance of Knaresborough achieving this designation, and are working together to achieve this.”
Mr Jones raised the matter in Parliament this week when he called for a debate on how to establish more designated bathing areas on rivers, However, he did not respond to questions by the Stray Ferret on the Nidd campaign.
Two councillors in Knaresborough are launching a consultation over the town’s high street after saying it has been neglected over a number of years.
Cllr Hannah Gostlow and Cllr Matt Walker, who were both elected to North Yorkshire County Council in May for the Liberal Democrats, will be in the town centre tomorrow asking local residents, shoppers and business owners for their views.
Under the title Starter for 10, they want to hear opinions about Knaresborough High Street as well as views on what improvements are needed.
Cllr Gostlow said:
“There has been little or no investment in Knaresborough by North Yorkshire County Council over the last 10 years and residents and businesses are fed up.
“Now we want North Yorkshire Council to invest in Knaresborough High Street and not just the cars passing through it! Cllr Walker and I want to push for positive change and we want to make sure the voices of those in Knaresborough are heard.”
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Residents and business owners can also take part in the consultation online or by calling Cllr Gostlow on 07867 797594 or by email.
Cllr Walker added:
Plans approved for 64 homes on former Trelleborg factory“We are publishing our starter for 10 to begin a constructive and positive conversation about the future of the High Street, what people would like to see and how we can make that happen. A starter for 10 is just that, a start of a discussion.”
Plans for 64 homes at the site of a former rubber factory in Knaresborough have been given the go-ahead.
Harrogate Borough Council granted permission to developers Countryside Properties to build the homes at the former Trelleborg site on Halfpenny Lane, which closed in 2016.
The site, which is not allocated for housing in the council’s Harrogate district Local Plan 2014-35, which outlines where development can take place, had drawn concerns over the impact on traffic and health services.
Knaresborough Liberal Democrat councillor Hannah Gostlow told Tuesday’s planning meeting that increased traffic levels in the area had become “really dangerous” and led to rat-running.
She said:
“There is another big development across the road and already the impact on the Boroughbridge Road junction at Hyde Park Road is causing residents a lot of concern and in my mind is really dangerous.
“We are seeing Halfpenny Lane at the back of Hyde Park Road being used as a rat-run.
“This is also a loss of industrial land which is not good for a town’s sustainability.”
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In response, Robert Harding, town planner at Countryside Properties, said the site had been advertised for employment use for “a number of years” but failed to attract a buyer.
He also said the developers were in negotiations with highways officials at North Yorkshire County Council over contributing cash towards junction upgrades.
He added:
“The proposals are in-keeping with the predominantly residential character of the area and will bring a derelict and underutilised site back into use.
“The site is located within the development limits of Knaresborough and will provide new homes at a location close to the town centre and railway station.”
Town council says homes ‘not needed’
Objections against the plans were made by Knaresborough Town Council, which said the homes were “not needed”.
The NHS North Yorkshire Clinical Commissioning Group also submitted a late objection which said a wave of new housing across Knaresborough threatened to overload the town’s “already massively stretched” health services.
The CCG has asked for £75,937 from the developers to fund improvements to services in the area.
The plans include a mix of one to four-bedroom homes, as well 20 properties classed as affordable.
Originally, the developers had requested permission for 77 homes, however, this was reduced to 64 after a protection order was placed on a group of trees which have been saved from felling.
The plans were approved with seven votes for and one against at Tuesday’s meeting.
Knaresborough councillor supports £13m leisure centre ahead of crunch voteA Knaresborough councillor has called on Harrogate Borough Council to lead by example and “go green” with its plans for a new leisure centre.
The council’s planning committee is due to vote tomorrow on whether to build the new £13 million facility over a play area to the rear of the existing pool at Knaresborough’s Fysche Field.
The plans, which are recommended for approval by council officers, have divided opinion, with some welcoming a modern new leisure centre and others criticising the design and environmental impact.
Hannah Gostlow, a Liberal Democrat who represents Knaresborough Scriven Park on the council, has covid and is therefore unable to attend tomorrow’s meeting.

Hannah Gostlow
But in a statement today she said the scheme must be environmentally friendly and that key issues such as access and car park design needed to be considered.
She said the footpath to the site should be improved and any resurfacing of the car park should use environmentally friendly materials. She added:
“I am supportive of securing the future of Knaresborough’s swimming pool with this planning application, but I ask Harrogate Borough Council to lead by example and make the development as green as possible.
“It is being built by our own borough council and so we need to make sure we are setting the right example and working to the highest standards of ‘green’ design.”
Cllr Gostlow also said the pool needed to be fit for children’s swimming lessons so it would require changing rooms big enough to accommodate local schools as well as a suitable depth of water.
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‘Industrial warehouse’
Knaresborough Civic Society has described the proposed building as looking like an “industrial warehouse” and urged councillors to reject the plan.
It said demolishing the existing facility was “unnecessary” and questioned what would happen when the local authority dissolves in 2023.

Designs for the new site.
The plans include a new six-lane pool, learner pool, fitness suite, spin studio, sauna and steam room, and dry and wet changing facilities.
The council’s website says there have been objections from 28 residents and two letters of support for the plans.
If approved, the project could be completed by the end of 2023.