Harrogate Borough Council‘s Conservative leaders took a parting swipe at the BBC, Gary Lineker and local media at the final cabinet meeting last night.
The council will be abolished in just over a week’s time to make way for the new North Yorkshire Council.
The cabinet met to accept a £2.5 million grant from central government to help buy 21 homes for Afghan and Ukrainian refugees, as reported last week.
Graham Swift, deputy leader of the council, said:
“One of the frustrating things about being a councillor in Harrogate is the amazing good things that are done by the Conservative government.
“This is another example, £100 million putting into the aid of people who really need it most and yet is ignored by the Gary Linekers of the world, the BBC of the world and media organisations in Harrogate who aspire to operate under the same principles of the BBC.”
Cllr Swift, who lost to Liberal Democrat Peter Lacey in his bid to represent Coppice Valley and Duchy division on North Yorkshire Council, added:
“I think it’s just fantastic that these sort of things are carried out. “
Council leader Richard Cooper, who did not stand for election to the new council, nodded in support of Cllr Swift’s comments and replied by saying what the government does “dun’t fit with the narrative sometime”.
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Cllr Mike Chambers, the cabinet member for housing and safer communities, added:
“It’s well known that Harrogate Borough Council over the years has always stood by those people who are in greater need than many of us.”
The money will come from the government’s Local Authority Housing Fund, which is a £500 million grant fund launched enabling English councils to provide housing for those unable to find accommodation.
In the Harrogate district, just over £2 million will go towards buying 19 homes for Ukrainians and just under £500,000 will help buy two larger four-bedroom homes for Afghan families currently in temporary accommodation.
200-home Pannal Ash scheme ‘fails to address infrastructure’, say residentsA plan for 200 homes at Harrogate’s former police training centre “fails to address” increased pressure on infrastructure in the area, say residents.
The plans from Homes England and Countryside Properties include the conversion of several former training centre buildings into 16 homes and building 184 new properties.
Homes England, which is the government’s housing agency, already had permission to build 161 homes on the site but wanted to increase this by 23% to 200 homes by building on three planned football pitches and one cricket field.
Harrogate Borough Council granted outline permission for the scheme to go ahead in December 2021.
But Harlow and Pannal Ash Residents’ Association has criticised the plan.
In a letter to the council, the group raised concern over the “over-intensification” of affordable housing, the impact on carbon emissions and disruption caused by construction traffic.
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Hapara added the proposal did not address how the increased pressure on infrastructure will be addressed.
It said:
“Disappointingly, this application, like many others, fails to specifically address the increased pressure that will be placed on infrastructure. Where do children go to be educated when schools in the vicinity are already at capacity?
“Where will people receive primary medical care when there are no doctors’ surgeries in the area?
“Will people really catch a bus into town rather than take their cars when the nearest stop is 1km away?”
Homes England appointed Countryside Properties in a £63 million contract to build the homes and a reserved matters application has now been submitted for the scheme.
This includes details such as landscaping, how the homes will look, and the site layout.
The developers said in a planning statement that the scheme will be of “high quality”.
It said:
Planning issues lead complaints against Harrogate council“Careful consideration has been given to the detailed design of the proposal to ensure that it creates a high-quality and distinctive development that establishes a strong sense of place and provides an attractive and comfortable place to live.”
Sixteen complaints were made against Harrogate Borough Council in 2022/23.
The figure was included in a report that will go before councillors next week regarding alleged misdemeanours of council departments.
Another report includes details of four complaints made against councillors.
Issues ranged from allegations of a council bin lorry causing damage to a property and an accusation the council refused to chop down a problematic overhanging tree.
Most of the complaints were resolved by the local government ombudsman without action being taken against the council.
One of the complaints is still under investigation and another is still waiting to be investigated.
Several complaints directed towards the council were regarding planning matters.
These included an accusation about how the council had enforced planning permission over a number of years.
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Another planning complaint questioned how the council handled an application that it claimed would impact negatively on a Harrogate district village.
However, in both cases, the ombudsman decided to close the investigation as it was unlikely to find fault by the council.
Another resident complained to the ombudsman after it accused the council’s building control department of not carrying out proper checks on their home after it discovered it had no insulation.
But the ombudsman said it did not find fault with the council and expects anyone buying a home to have had a full survey done before completing the purchase.
There were four complaints made against councillors. The report does not name them but says three were against councillors on Harrogate Borough Council and one was a parish councillor.
The council consults its ‘Independent Person’ before making a decision about a standards allegation against a councillor.
Two of these complaints related to their conduct on social media.
However, no investigation was brought forward due to a lack of evidence and the complainant choosing not to take the issue further.
There was one allegation that a councillor made disrespectful comments during a public meeting but the investigation found the comments fell within the definition of ’emotive’ behaviour and in a political context they did not “cross the line” into unacceptable conduct.
Temporary £300,000 gym at Ripon’s Jack Laugher centre to open next monthA £300,000 temporary gym in the car park at the Jack Laugher Leisure and Wellness Centre site in Ripon will be opening next month.
Its installation will enable the closure of the existing gym on the upper floor of the 28-year-old leisure centre next to the new swimming pool that opened last March, paving the way for ground stabilisation works costing £3.5million to be carried out under the building.
To ensure the temporary gym can be installed safely, the leisure and wellness centre and playground will be closed from 6pm Saturday (March 25) until Monday morning (March 27) .
The announcement has come from Harrogate Borough Council 10 days before it is abolished and becomes part of the new North Yorkshire unitary authority.
Last July, the council announced that the temporary gym would open ‘in the autumn’ (of 2022) but this date was subsequently put back.
This morning the council, which runs the site through its leisure company Brimhams Active, said:
“A temporary gym at the Jack Laugher Leisure and Wellness Centre in Ripon is set to open next month (April) to ensure residents can keep fit and active.
“The gym will include the high-quality, state-of-the-art Technogym equipment currently available in the existing leisure and wellness centre, as well as expert advice and guidance from the Brimhams Active team.
“Customers will still be able to use the changing and shower facilities in the new pool area – as well as the sauna and steam suite – as they will remain open as normal.
“Group exercise classes will also continue to be provided at Hugh Ripley Hall.”
The council statement added:
“The temporary gym, which has started to be installed, is being used to provide customers with an alternative offer while the ground stabilisation works take place.
“These works come following the discovery of a void underneath part of the original leisure centre. The void is understood to have been present for a number of years and was only discovered when the reinforced concrete slab, which provides the foundation for the new swimming pool, was cast.
“On discovery of this void, the borough council appointed a contractor to carry out a thorough investigation programme under the original leisure centre to determine what work may be required to ensure the facility can continue to be used for many years to come.”
Councillor Stanley Lumley, Harrogate Borough Council’s cabinet member for culture, tourism and sport, and chair of the board of directors at Brimhams Active, said:
“We remain committed to enabling people to enjoy physical activity. By providing a temporary gym, while the ground stabilisation works take place, we can minimise the disruption to current and potential customers and ensure they can continue to maintain their health and well-being goals.”
“The fantastic new swimming pool will also remain open as usual and continues to provide an excellent health and wellness experience.”
A total of £29,190 is to be diverted from the Harrogate district’s street lighting budget to pay for the replacement of decorative lights on the Stray.
The trees line the Stray around West Park, Otley Road, Leeds Road, Montpellier Hill and York Place and are a popular winter attraction.
Last autumn Harrogate Borough Council replaced the old sodium lights with energy-efficient LED bulbs and wrapped them round trunks to prevent them hanging from branches and getting damaged.

The new lighting being installed
In a report due before Cllr Mike Chambers, cabinet member for housing and safer communities at Harrogate Borough Council, council officers are set to request retrospective permission to pay for the lights.
The report says the cost of the new lights “has been partly funded by parks and environmental service budgets” but a £29,000 shortfall remained.
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The report says responsibility for annual maintenance of the Stray tree lights rests housing and property services.
It adds:
“However, parks and environmental services were able to provide one off funds to contribute from the cost of the new lights from underspends in the financial year 2021/22. This left a shortfall in funding of £29,000.
“The housing and property reserve includes £84,680 which has built up over the years in relation to street lighting cyclical works which had not been carried out.
“It is recommended that £29,190 of this should be utilised to fund the cost of Stray lights.”
The report adds the council has only received one complaint about the new lighting.
Harrogate Turkish Baths nude ban: police probe ‘ongoing’
North Yorkshire Police has said an investigation into “inappropriate behaviour” at Turkish Baths Harrogate is ongoing.
Harrogate Borough Council banned nude bathing at the Victorian baths last week after it received a complaint.
Until the decision, clothing was optional at two single sex sessions for men and women. It is compulsory at mixed sessions.
But the council, which runs the venue, made swimwear compulsory for all sessions without consulting users following the complaint.
In a statement, it said the complaint was of a “serious nature”, adding:
“We have a duty of care to our customers and staff members, and in order for all single sex sessions to operate in a safe environment, it has been decided that swimwear must be worn until further notice.”
North Yorkshire Police confirmed today it was looking into the matter. A spokesperson said:
“Police received a report of an incident of inappropriate behaviour at the Turkish Baths earlier this month. Enquiries are at an early stage and are ongoing.”
The baths opened in 1897 and with its restored Moorish design is one of Harrogate’s premier attractions.
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What will be the legacy of Harrogate Borough Council?
From the towns of Knaresborough, Masham and Pateley Bridge to the villages of North Rigton, Summerbridge and Kirkby Malzeard, life will continue without Harrogate Borough Council.
For anyone still not aware, the council will be abolished at the end of this month after 49 years of existence.
From April 1, a new council called North Yorkshire Council will be created for the whole county and HBC will eventually become a distant memory.
Harrogate Borough Council has played a role, small or large, in the life of every resident so the Local Democracy Reporting Service asked four different people in the Harrogate district the same question — what will be its ultimate legacy?
The view from residents

Rene Dziabas
For some residents, the council begins and ends with when their bins are collected.
Others are more engaged with the ins-and-outs of council business and how it spends public money.
Rene Dziabas is the chair of Harlow and Pannal Ash Residents Association, a group that covers an area from Harlow Hill to Rossett Green and Arthurs Avenue to Castle Hill.
Mr Dziabas has lived in Harrogate for 40 years. He said even though the town has seen major changes on the council’s watch he would still move here today if he could.
He said:
“The recycling set up and bin collection has been good. The Valley Gardens and the Pinewoods look good. Those elements are still nice features of Harrogate. The Mercer Art Gallery is an absolute jewel, it punches above its weight. Its exhibitions are really good and well-curated.”
But despite these uniquely Harrogate benefits that the council delivers, Mr Dziabas said over-subscribed schools, poor quality roads and pressure on Harrogate District Hospital have all been made worse by planning decisions taken by Harrogate Borough Council.
Over 4,000 homes could eventually be built in the west of Harrogate over the next decade, including over 1,000 homes in fields next to RHS Garden Harlow Carr on Otley Road.
As with elsewhere in the district, these new developments will change the face of Harlow Hill and Pannal Ash forever. However, residents were disappointed with a document drawn up Harrogate Borough Council last year that said how the homes will link up with local roads, schools and healthcare services.
Mr Dziabas said:
“In this neck of the woods, Harrogate Borough Council is not leaving it in a better state. I can’t think of any major piece of work that’s really had a significant mitigation effect on the problems at the west of Harrogate.”
The council’s Harrogate district Local Plan 2014-35, which outlines where development can take place, will mean thousands more people can enjoy living in the Harrogate district but Mr Dziabas said there are lessons to be learned when it comes to consulting with residents about development. He added:
“Harrogate Borough Council ought to have been more communicative with the public in general. Ultimately we live in a democratic society, we are funding those institutions and I don’t think it’s unreasonable for them to communicate.”
The view from the staff

The Civic Centre in Harrogate
Local government union Unison estimates Harrogate Borough Council has employed around 10,000 people since it was created in 1974.
David Houlgate, who has been Harrogate branch secretary at Unison for the last 18 years, said it’s these people who will be the council’s “enduring and lasting legacy”. He said:
“They are the ones who have delivered services over the years, they are the ones who kept those services going during the pandemic, they are the real stars of Harrogate Borough Council.”
The vast majority of council staff will automatically transfer over to the new authority North Yorkshire Council on April 1.
Mr Houlgate is hopeful these staff members will deliver quality services to residents despite the well-documented cost pressures the new council will face. He said:
“If it gets things right and works with its staff and the trade unions to deliver joined-up and effective services then it’s likely that Harrogate Borough Council will fade in the memory. If the new council fails to deliver on what it has said it would then inevitably Harrogate council will no doubt be missed.”
Mr Houlgate has worked for the council for the last 26 years and is currently a local taxation team leader.
Since 2010, the government has slashed funding for the council, which he said has resulted in higher workloads and stress for staff. He added:
“It has changed an awful lot in my time at the council. It delivers more with less which has been necessary as a result of drastic cuts to funding from a central government that only seems to pay lip service to public services.
“To do this it has, over the years, cut the terms and conditions of staff, pay has not kept pace with inflation and workloads and stress absences have increased.
“As it comes to an end, there are recruitment and retention issues like never before. It probably does not offer the career paths it once did. The new council will hopefully offer more opportunities. We will have to wait and see.”
The view from outside of Harrogate

Cllr Andrew Williams
Harrogate Borough Council was created in 1974 as an amalgamation of smaller councils including those in Knaresborough, Nidderdale, Ripon and Harrogate.
The council has been based in Harrogate for all that time, moving from Crescent Gardens to the Civic Centre in 2017.
But for some people living outside of the town, Harrogate Borough Council has focused too much on the district’s largest urban area.
Cllr Andrew Williams is a former councillor on Harrogate Borough Council. He currently sits on North Yorkshire County Council as an independent and is also leader of Ripon City Council.
There are hopes in Ripon that the new council will look at the city as an equal to similar-sized market towns in the county like Thirsk, Malton and Northallerton.
Cllr Williams has been an outspoken critic of Harrogate Borough Council as he believes the authority has not given Ripon a fair shake.
The council has invested heavily in the Harrogate Convention Centre, which he believes has resulted in few benefits for his city.
However, he praised the council’s staff for their work in delivering services to residents over the years. Cllr Williams said:
“It would be fair to say that some of the services provided are not unreasonable. The refuse collection service, parks and gardens and the housing department do their best.
“The staff have worked incredibly hard to deliver services for residents across the district.”
Harrogate Borough Council points to its investment in new state-of-the-art leisure facilities in Ripon and Knaresborough as examples of its commitment to towns outside of Harrogate.
Cllr Williams called the new pool in Ripon a “significant improvement” but added:
“One project in 50 years is hardly justification for its previous misdemeanours in my view.”
Cllr Williams said Harrogate Borough Council’s legacy in Ripon will not be positive:
“[Their legacy is] under-investment and a failure to recognise the Harrogate district encompasses more than Harrogate, the conference centre being the prime example.
“Money has been poured into Harrogate at the expense of everywhere else in the district.”
The view from charities

Jackie Snape
Harrogate Borough Council has been a staunch supporter of the district’s voluntary and community sector.
There are more than 700 charitable organisations in the Harrogate district and many have stepped up over the last 13 years as the council has been forced to cut services due to austerity.
The council organises the Local Fund, which was launched in 2018 by Harrogate Borough Council, Harrogate and District Community Action and Two Ridings Community Foundation.
Last year the fund granted £85,000 to 29 different groups.
Jackie Snape, chief executive of Disability Action Yorkshire, said she has enjoyed working with local councillors on various campaigns, including a recent push to improve accessbility at tourist venues. Ms Snape said:
“Harrogate Borough Council was an early adopter of our Think Access campaign, and one of the major factors that we, and other charities, will miss is the local knowledge with individual councillors, often showing a great interest in causes close to their heart and local area.”
Key to the council’s relationship with charities is the role of the mayor, which is a councillor that for 12 months has a packed diary full of meeting charities and attending events.
Current and final Harrogate borough mayor Victoria Oldham was seen getting stuck in with a shovel last year to break ground at Disability Action Yorkshire’s £7.5m supported living complex at Claro Road.
Ms Snape added:
“For many years we were blessed by regular visits by the mayor of the day, all of whom paid great interest in the work we do, both at Hornbeam Park and at Claro Road.
Ms Snape said the council’s legacy of supporting charities will be remembered. Many charities rely on funding from the council and she hopes the new authority will show the same level of support. She said:
“Its work in helping and supporting a raft of charities working with some of the most vulnerable people in society will certainly be remembered for many years to come.
“We hope that when April 1 arrives, and North Yorkshire Council takes over that the same level of local funding and support continues, which is vital to the survival of many charities in the district.”
Looking ahead
If four more people were asked their opinion on what Harrogate Borough Council has achieved and what its legacy will be — it would likely generate another four very different answers.
This perhaps shows the council has done more for the district than it is sometimes given credit for.
But most would probably agree that how fondly Harrogate Borough Council will be remembered is likely to depend on how successful the new council is at the delivering the nuts and bolts services that residents have always expected for the last 49 years.
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MP seeks answers on Scotton solar farm
The Conservative MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough has written to an energy company to ask if it intends to go ahead with plans to build a huge solar farm on farmland north of Scotton.
Andrew Jones was prompted into action by residents in Scotton, Farnham and Brearton who contacted him concerned about the lack of any information about the proposals.
Sustainable energy company Gridserve is proposing to build the solar plant on an 88-hectare site belonging to Lawrence Moor Farm.
Its plans envisage thousands of solar panels generating up to 49.9 megawatts of green energy that could power up to 14,000 homes.
Gridserve, which is headquartered in Buckinghamshire, applied to Harrogate Borough Council for a scoping opinion to see if it felt a formal Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA).
There were objections from nearby parish councils, the Harrogate Ramblers and the Harrogate and Dales Horse Riding Association, as well as the local Green Party, which opposes such developments on agricultural land.
At the end of July 2021, Harrogate Borough Council confirmed that a detailed EIA would be required, but Gridserve has taken no action since.
Mr Jones said:
“I have been in touch with the council’s planning department and no planning application has been submitted since that date. From talking to many local people, I know that residents feel very much like the threat of an application is hanging over them. No-one disputes the need for renewable energy. It is primarily the location and effect on agricultural land which is the issue.
“I have therefore written to Gridserve to ask their intentions for the land. I hope, given the local opposition, that they will be reconsidering the plans, but I will let residents know the position when I receive a response.”
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Harrogate Spring Water ‘reviewing plans’ to expand bottling plant ahead of new application
Harrogate Spring Water has said it is reviewing plans to expand its bottling plant on Harlow Moor Road ahead of a new planning application being submitted.
Since 2017, the Danone-owned firm has had outline planning permission to expand its factory next to the Pinewoods.
But controversially, this would involve chopping down trees at Rotary Wood, a public woodland that includes trees planted by schoolchildren in the 2000s.
In January 2021, a high-profile reserved matters application that was 40% larger than the outline permission and looked to fell more trees than had been agreed was turned down by Harrogate Borough Council‘s planning committee.
The application generated a public backlash and led to a national debate about how a successful businesses can expand in the area of climate change and plastic pollution.
Following the refusal, Harrogate Spring Water confirmed it was putting together another keenly-anticipated reserved matters application that will show what the new building will look like. Crucially, it will also say where the new trees will be replanted.
The company held a public consultation event at the Crown Hotel in Harrogate last July where representatives, including managing director Richard Hall, spoke to residents about the plans.
Eight months later, the company has still not submitted the reserved matters application but a Harrogate Spring Water spokesperson said it remains committed to doing so.
The application will be decided by the new Harrogate and Knaresborough planning committee on North Yorkshire Council.
A spokesperson for Harrogate Spring Water said:
“Following the public consultation last year, we have and are continuing to review the feedback and develop the scheme.
“We are reviewing our plans in light of feedback we have received and are working towards a solution that will deliver for the people of Harrogate, the town and for Harrogate Spring Water.
“We are currently exploring options to address points raised during the course of our consultation process and remain committed to a detailed public consultation on these plans when we are ready to share the updated scheme.
“We plan to host a public drop-in exhibition, as well as engage with key local groups. As yet, we are unable to put a precise date on when this will take place, but we are working towards achieving this in as timely a manner as possible.”
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At a meeting of the Harrogate and Knaresborough area constituency committee this week, campaigner Sarah Gibbs quoted the council’s own planning policies when she addressed councillors about why she believes the expansion should not go ahead.
As several members of the committee will sit on the new council’s planning committee, including chair Pat Marsh, they did not take part in any debate or ask questions.
Ms Gibbs has organised protests against the plans for several years and previously held a weekly vigil outside the council offices dressed as a tree.
She said:
Harrogate Turkish Baths bans nude bathers“Having finally recognised the state of emergency of the planet’s climate, it’s becoming more obvious that nature does not care for our laws policies or planning issues.
“Nature will act. The climate will continue to worsen unless we act, and we must act now. For what we do now is all that matters. What we choose to do now will determine or future, children’s future and future of the planet.”
Swimwear has been made compulsory for all sessions at Turkish Baths Harrogate following a complaint to the police.
Until this week, clothing was optional at two single sex sessions for men and women each week. It is compulsory at mixed sessions.
But a spokesperson for Harrogate Borough Council, which runs the Victorian venue, said:
“Following a complaint at Turkish Baths Harrogate, an operational decision has been made that swimwear is now compulsory at all bathing sessions.
“The complaint related to an incident which due to its serious nature has been reported to the police and is currently being investigated.
“We have a duty of care to our customers and staff members, and in order for all single sex sessions to operate in a safe environment, it has been decided that swimwear must be worn until further notice.”

The Moorish design
The council issued the statement after a bather, who regularly attends men-only sessions unclothed, alerted local media to the change.
The person, who asked to remain anonymous, said recent attendees of single sex sessions received emails yesterday informing them of the change with immediate effect, with no consultation.
He also pointed out the ‘bathing etiquette’ section on the Turkish baths’ website had been amended to say ‘swimwear is compulsory at all sessions (including single-sex sessions)’.
The person said the majority of people at male-only sessions preferred not to wear clothes because they found them uncomfortable.
He added he would monitor the situation in light of the complaint to see whether the unclothed option was reintroduced.
The baths, which has Islamic arches and screens as part of its Moorish design, opened in 1897 and have been fully restored with a plunge pool, steam room and sauna as well as rooms of various temperatures to relax in.
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