Fed-up residents living in one of Harrogate’s busiest areas for new housing have called a ban on open-top construction lorries – but the council says it has no powers to take action.
After years of disruptions from the building of 700 new homes, Kingsley residents last night called on Harrogate Borough Council to only allow sealed wagons in and out of the area, which has rapidly expanded in size and will continue to do so for years to come.
John Hansard, a member of Kingsley Ward Action Group, told a full council meeting that the authority had an obligation to protect residents from harm and that this has “fallen very far short of acceptable levels”.
He said:
“We are simply requesting that we are no longer poisoned by harmful and dangerous construction waste.”
However, Cllr Tim Myatt, cabinet member for planning at the council, said the authority did not have evidence that the dust was toxic and that a ban on open-top lorries could not be enforced.
He said:
“It is a highly unusual practice to require sealed containers to transport items to and from development sites.
“This can not be retrospectively imposed as a planning condition and neither residents or members of the planning committee asked for this to be conditioned at the time of the application.
“Further, the local highways authority has informed the borough council that they would not be able to mandate the use of sealed containers.
“They believe the use of such can only be required for certain processes such as the removal of radioactive material and asbestos.”
Cllr Myatt also said housing developers had repeated their offer to clean roads and pavements in the area, but this was “vociferously opposed” by residents.
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Construction work in Kingsley began in 2019 and residents have long complained that not enough has been done to minimise disruptions to their daily lives.
There have also been complaints that improvements to roads, public transport, health services and community facilities have not kept up with the level of new housing in the area.
Around 700 new homes are already built or under construction, with hundreds more in the pipeline.
Mr Hansard told yesterday’s meeting that without action from the council, residents would continue to be left to “suffer the consequences”.
He said:
Changes to Harrogate district bin collections for Queen’s funeral“These wagons have continually polluted Kingsley Road over a three year period, causing potential long-term serious illness for residents.
“We reluctantly understand that the road has to be used for access to the construction sites, but this must not be at the risk to the health of residents.”
Changes to bin collections across the Harrogate district have been confirmed for the state funeral of Queen Elizabeth II.
Harrogate Borough Council has announced that all collections will take place a day later than usual from the day of the funeral which is being marked with a bank holiday on Monday 19 September.
This will affect garden waste, refuse and recycling collections, and all household waste recycling centres will also close on Monday.
The date changes for bin collections are as follows:
- Monday 19 September will be Tuesday 20 September
- Tuesday 20 September will be Wednesday 21 September
- Wednesday 21 September will be Thursday 22 September
- Thursday 22 September will be Friday 23 September
- Friday 23 September will be Saturday 24 September
Normal collections will then resume on Monday 26 September.
Meanwhile, all council-run leisure centres in the Harrogate district will also close on Monday “to allow the team to pay their respects to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II,” the council said.
Customer services for both the borough council and North Yorkshire County Council will also be unavailable on this day when Harrogate’s Civic Centre will close.
Anyone who needs to get in touch with the borough council in an emergency should call 01423 556300.
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Call for referendum over Harrogate town council
Senior Conservative councillors in Harrogate are set to call for a referendum on whether to create a town council.
Harrogate Borough Council will no longer exist from April 1 when the new unitary authority, North Yorkshire Council, is created.
If a new town council is created it could be given control over areas including parks, tourism and events.
Some think a town council would boost local decision-making while others regard it as an unnecessary extra layer of bureaucracy.
Next week, Cllr Richard Cooper, leader of the council, and Cllr Graham Swift, deputy leader of the authority, will table a motion calling on the county council to hold a referendum.

Cllr Richard Cooper (left) and Cllr Graham Swift.
North Yorkshire County Council has launched a review into whether to create a lower tier authority in the town. A consultation into the matter is currently being held.
The motion, which will go before a full borough council meeting on September 21, says:
“This council calls upon North Yorkshire County Council to hold a binding referendum of Harrogate town residents who would be constituents of a new Harrogate Town Council to determine whether such a council should be formed.
“Information should be made available before the vote on what duties the new town council will have and how much the additional council tax precept will be to pay for those duties.
“Such a referendum will give democratic legitimacy to the new town council in the eyes of those who fund it and are affected by its decisions.”
Harrogate and Knaresborough Liberal Democrats have already called for Harrogate to have its own town council.
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Harrogate and Scarborough are the only major places in North Yorkshire not to be parished.
Earlier this year, Conservative leader of the county council, Cllr Carl Les, said he hoped the matter could be resolved “as soon as possible”.
When asked when the referendums could be held, Cllr Les told the Local Democracy Reporting Service that this was currently unclear. He said:
“We are getting a lot of requests about town councils made to us from people including local politicians, as well as the business community and groups like Harrogate Civic Society.
“There is clearly an appetite to do something about this.
“And of course the sooner we can do it, the sooner we can find out whether there is an appetite amongst the general population.
“They are the key people in all of this. They have to be asked for their opinion and will say yea or nay.”
A public consultation over setting up a town council for Harrogate is currently open. You can have your say here.
The consultation will close on September 30.
Government rejects Harrogate working men’s club flats planThe government has rejected plans to convert a former Harrogate working men’s club into flats.
The National Reserve Club, on East Parade, formally closed in July 2021 following a unanimous resolution by members. It was also known as ‘The Nash’.
The organisation had been registered as a working men’s club since July 11, 1913, when it was known as the Harrogate Battalion National Reserve of the West Riding of York Club.
ID Planning, which submitted a plan to convert the club into flats on behalf of Ashleigh and Caroline Wells, took Harrogate Borough Council to appeal after it refused its conversion plan in May this year.
The council said there was insufficient evidence that the building could no longer be used as a community facility.
But the developer said in a statement to the government that the reasons for rejection were “unfounded”.
It said:
“Based on the assessment provided, it is considered that the reasons for refusal of the planning application given by Harrogate Borough Council are unfounded and the proposed development accords with all relevant local and national planning policy.”
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Robert Walker, a government planning inspector, said in a decision notice that he could not conclude that continued use of the site as a community facility would cause “planning problems”.
He said:
“I recognise that there are residential properties nearby, including flats in the appeal building.
“However, the appeal site is located close to the town centre in a mixed area on a busy street. It is not in a quiet residential area.
“Such a location and relationship to upper floor flats or other nearby residential properties is not unusual.
“Moreover, the former working men’s club operated on the site for a considerable number of years and no substantive evidence has been provided of problems from its past use.”
Mr Walker added that there had not been “sufficient evidence provided to justify the permanent loss of the existing community facility”.
New Harrogate Town clubhouse plan approvedHarrogate Town has had plans for a new clubhouse at its Wetherby Road stadium approved.
The club tabled a planning application to build the two-storey facility in the north-west corner of the ground back in March this year.
It would be used to serve fans refreshments on match days and include an upper floor area for supporters to gather.
Harrogate Borough Council has now given the go-ahead for the plan.
The facility would be needed for the club to meet its English Football League membership criteria, which requires all member clubs to provide refreshment facilities for home and away fans in separate areas of the ground.
A planning report by Harrogate Borough Council said:
“This application seeks to construct a two storey building as a spectator facility.
“This is to ensure the club has sufficient facilities for home fans, further contributing to meeting its EFL membership requirements.”
The club has already seen a number of developments approved by the council since promotion, including a new ticket office and turnstiles at the EnviroVent Stadium which were backed by the council in April 2021.
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Valley Gardens sculptures to be removed today
The kiwi and marlin sculptures are being removed today from the New Zealand garden in Valley Gardens due to rot.
The garden commemorates Harrogate’s twinning with Wellington and the country’s airmen being stationed in the town during the Second World War.
Chainsaw sculptor Mick Burns carved the marlin, kiwi and a carved Maori bench in 2010.
In 2020, suspected vandals also ripped chunks out of the Kiwi bird and hastened its decline.
Friends of Valley Gardens, a charity that helps Harrogate Borough Council look after the park, said:
“It was always known that when these sculptures were carved that they had a limited life, the softwood rots naturally, but they will be sadly missed.”
The Stray Ferret has asked Harrogate Borough Council if it has plans to replace the sculptures.
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Developer proceeds with ‘unseemly’ Maltkiln event in mourning period
The developer behind a proposed new Harrogate district town of up to 10,000 people are proceeding with a consultation event today despite calls for it to be deferred.
Caddick Group is holding a public drop-in event at Green Hammerton Village Hall from 3pm to 7pm.
The proposed new town, called Maltkiln, will be built in the Hammerton and Cattal area and include up to 4,000 homes, as well as two primary schools, shops and a GP surgery.
But some councillors and residents feel the event should be postponed until after the Queen’s mourning period ends.

Cattal train station would be at the heart of the new development.
North Yorkshire County Council and Harrogate Borough Council have postponed meetings this week.
Paul Townsend, a member of Kirk Hammerton Parish Council, questioned whether it was appropriate for the event to proceed. He said:
“The guidance we have been given as parish councils is that it is expected that non-urgent business should be deferred until after the period of national mourning.
“I have therefore informed the scheme promoters that Kirk Hammerton parish councillors will not be attending the event in their official capacity.”
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- Council faces calls to hold in-person Maltkiln consultation events
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Today’s event is not part of any official consultation process. Harrogate Borough Council, the planning authority, is expected to open an official consultation next month.
Local resident Alex Smith said:
“It feels unseemly right now even to be drawn in to a debate about whether or not this event should go ahead. I think many residents were just assuming Caddick would postpone it out of respect — and also out of a professional concern to have an effective consultation, with residents’ full attention.
“Volume developers aren’t renowned for their sensitivity, and if Caddick have pressing commercial reasons to hold this event right now, however compromised it might be and whatever the optics — they’re within their rights to do.”
‘Cancelling now would cause confusion’
A spokesman for Caddick said it was “shocked and saddened” to hear of the Queen’s death, adding:
“In line with government guidance on the period of national mourning, which was published on Friday, we decided that the correct course of action is to continue with our consultation event.
“To cancel this at very late notice would risk causing confusion amongst the 1,250 residents and businesses we have written to in the local area, and it is important that we conclude this specific consultation process well before Harrogate Borough Council consults on their draft development plan document in October.
“However, we can confirm that we will extend the duration of the consultation period by two days, to midnight on September 21. In addition, as part of our ongoing application and engagement with the local community we are always ready to discuss our proposals and receive comments regarding these.
“We updated politicians and stakeholders advising them as to our decision to proceed with the consultation, on Friday 9th September. We have been absolutely committed to consulting fully on our proposals throughout this process and are constantly reappraising what we need to do as a business to ensure the widest variety of views can be heard.
“If we receive any requests to meet separately with stakeholders, then we will of course consider those and seek to arrive at a suitable outcome. It is of course a difficult time for many and we will further review our approach as the consultation progresses.”
Council meetings postponed as book of condolence opens in Harrogate civic centre
All council meetings in Harrogate and North Yorkshire will be cancelled next week.
Following the death of the Queen, Harrogate Borough Council has decided to suspend its meetings calendar “as a mark of respect”.
Its audit and governance committee meeting on Monday and planning committee on Tuesday have been postponed.
Meetings for the leader and cabinet on Wednesday will also be held at a later date, along with the general purposes committee and a meeting of the cabinet member for housing and safer communities the following day.
Rescheduled dates are yet to be announced.
A book of condolence has been opened at the civic centre in St Luke’s Mount, Harrogate. It will be available to be signed until 4.30pm today, 8.30am to 5pm Monday to Thursday next week and 8.30am to 4.30pm next Friday.
The council has also said floral tributes can be left on the grass in front of the war memorial opposite Bettys. Some have already begun to appear this morning.
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Meanwhile, North Yorkshire County Council has also cleared its calendar for the next 10 days.
Among the meetings to be postponed is the Harrogate and Knaresborough area constituency meeting next Thursday.
A period of national mourning is expected to be announced by the government later today, along with the date of the funeral.
Consultation launched to set priorities for new North Yorkshire council
A major consultation will ask people across North Yorkshire to give their views on public services this month.
North Yorkshire County Council is carrying out the project, titled Let’s Talk, to provide the foundations for decision-making and policy when the new unitary authority comes into effect in April next year.
It will see the existing NYCC and seven district councils, including Harrogate Borough Council, abolished in favour of the single authority for the whole of North Yorkshire, excluding York.
NYCC’s leader, Cllr Carl Les, said the results will deliver a vision for the new council, showing people’s priorities for spending on everything from social care and education to waste collection, recycling and highways maintenance.
He said:
“Having one new council will save millions of pounds by streamlining services and preventing duplication, creating the most efficient and cost-effective way of delivering them that we can.
“This money will help support services to ensure they are stronger and fit for the future and will fund decision-making on the most local level possible.
“It is vital we engage with the public to help shape exactly how the new council will operate, and this biggest ever conversation in North Yorkshire will be the way in which we can glean people’s views.
“I would urge everyone who lives and works in North Yorkshire to take time to put forward their opinions, and we will listen carefully to those views.”
The Let’s Talk campaign begins on Monday, September 19, running until Friday, December 23.
The first topic in the consultation will be on local communities, looking at education, job opportunities, parks and open spaces, and more.
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Future discussions will include public transport, roads and pavements, and access to libraries and museums. Housing provision, climate change and mobile phone and broadband coverage will also form part of the project.
The responses will help to shape policy for North Yorkshire Council over the first three years of its existence.
NYCC has pledged to ensure all communities have the opportunity to engage with the consultations through local events, which are yet to be announced, and online.
Cllr Les added:
“The new council will be the largest geographically in the country as it will cover England’s largest county, but it is being built with local at the heart of everything it will do.
“There will be local staff providing local services, based on local priorities and decision-making taking into account the views of the public.”
To take part in the consultation from September 19, click here. Details of events will also be posted on the same website.
Bilton garages set to be demolished for housingHarrogate Borough Council‘s plan to demolish 10 garages at Woodfield Close in Bilton and build two social homes has been recommended for approval.
The council owns and rents out garages across the district and has increasingly looked at the pockets of land as a way to build social housing.
Harrogate is one of the most unaffordable places to live in England, with average house prices around 11 times the median annual income of people who work in the district.
There are currently 1,867 households on the social housing waiting list.
In planning documents, the council said the development would help to provide “much needed affordable homes”.
The council earmarked the site for housing in August 2021. In total, it has 26 garages.
In November last year, the council was awarded £50,000 of government cash to bring forward housing on the garage site at Woodfield as well as at Park Row in Knaresborough.
The council’s planning committee will meet on Tuesday to decide whether or not to approve the Woodfield proposal.
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Controversial Knox Lane housing plans recommended for approval
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Rise in empty homes adds pressure on Harrogate district housing market
The report to councillors says:
“The provision of two affordable dwellings is a modest addition to the district’s housing land supply.
“The design of the dwellings would respect local distinctiveness and there would be no significant harm to local residential amenity, or highway safety.
“The housing development would provide off-street parking and be a more efficient use of the site.
“The proposal would comply with the provisions of the development plan and national planning policies and guidance, and should be supported.”