Three candidates have been revealed for a by-election on Harrogate Borough Council.
Green Party’s Hannah Katherine Gargett Corlett, Conservative Sam Green and Liberal Democrat Chris Knight will compete for the Wathvale ward seat, which is vacant following the resignation of Conservative councillor Bernard Bateman.
Voting will take place on Thursday, May 5 – the same day as elections to the new North Yorkshire Council.
The successful candidate will sit on Harrogate Borough Council for just under a year before the authority is scrapped and replaced by the new North Yorkshire Council in April 2023.
Read more:
- No deals expected between Harrogate district opposition parties ahead of election
- Council chiefs promise ‘seamless transition’ to new North Yorkshire Council
- Full list of election candidates in Harrogate district revealed
As well as competing in the borough council by-election, the Green Party’s Hannah Corlett and Liberal Democrat Chris Knight are also standing for the Wathvale and Bishop Monkton division on the new council.
They were named in a list of 77 candidates competing for 21 seats which will represent the Harrogate district on the new council.
The Conservatives, Liberal Democrats, Labour Party, Green Party and Yorkshire Party have all fielded candidates for the election. There are also 10 independents in the mix.
The deadline to register to vote for both elections is April 14 – and those who are already on the electoral register should have received a polling card or letter during the last two weeks in March.
Polling stations will open from 7am to 10pm on election day.
Those who are unable to vote in person can apply to vote by post or proxy.
Hot Seat: Farewell to the Harrogate district’s transport chiefIn less than a month’s time, the curtain will come down on the career of one of the most influential — and divisive — politicians in the Harrogate district this century.
Don Mackenzie served 16 years as a Harrogate borough councillor, but will be best remembered for his current role as executive member for access at North Yorkshire County Council.
His portfolio includes transport, which means he has led on key decisions, such as the Harrogate Station Gateway, the junction 47 upgrade of the A1(M) near Knaresborough, realignment of the A59 at Kex Gill and numerous schemes to promote cycling and walking.
In an era when some politicians pick and choose which media to talk to, and hide behind press officers, Cllr Mackenzie has always been willing to pick up the phone and front up. He believes in transparency, he says. Colleagues say he’s on top of his brief, and some think he would have made a good county council leader.
But the judgement of the people is more brutal. Barely a day passes without references to ‘Dismal Don’ or calls for his resignation on social media. Complex transport schemes rarely please everyone and rarely progress swiftly and he is remarkably relaxed about the fallout:
“If I let these things upset me, I would have given up years ago. The only thing that occasionally annoys me is social media, especially anonymous posters.
“Tough decisions have to be made and all they do is sit in the comfort of their own home posting anonymous criticism. It’s cowardly.”
‘Right time to go’
On the day we met Cllr Mackenzie, who has lived in Harrogate since 1973 and represents Harrogate Saltergate, he received an email asking how dare he approve 770 houses being built on Otley Road — the decision has not been made yet and will be taken by Harrogate Borough Council, of which he has not been a councillor since 2018.
Such confusion will end when North Yorkshire County Council and Harrogate Borough Council are abolished next year to make way for North Yorkshire Council, which will become the new unitary authority for the county.

New weather stations have been introduced to help drivers in difficult conditions.
That looming seismic change has persuaded Cllr Mackenzie, 72, not to seek re-election on May 5. He is the only one of 10 members of the county council executive not to do so. Wasn’t he tempted to continue?
“No I wasn’t. It’s a five-year commitment. I felt that my time as a county councillor had come to a natural end. Many of my colleagues have great difficulty deciding when and if to retire. Many people say a career in politics always ends in tears so I feel this is the right time to go.”
Read more:
- Harrogate bus plans in tatters after government rejects £116m funding bid
- £7.8 million awarded to help make Harrogate Bus Company’s fleet all-electric
- Transport leader Don Mackenzie to step down next year
Nevertheless he will be sad to depart.
“I’ve enjoyed almost every minute of it.
“Most councillors set out to do something for their local community. Most people like me are in it to make a difference and sometimes it’s difficult to make that difference. There are inevitably disappointments. We’ve been disappointed this week with our Bus Service Improvement Plan.”
The county council’s plan involved bidding £116m to the Department for Transport to improve bus services in North Yorkshire. It received none. A significant chunk would have been spent easing congestion in Harrogate. But in March the government awarded the council and Harrogate Bus Company £7.8m to make the firm’s fleet all-electric.
There have been other successes, such as the Bond End double mini roundabout in Knaresborough, which eased congestion at one of the most polluted spots in the Harrogate district.
“It was a highlight because many people thought it would not work and were worried about safety and taking away the traffic lights.”
Junction 47, trains and Kex Gill
Cllr Mackenzie lauds the A1(M) junction 47 upgrade, due to end end anytime now, as a rare example of infrastructure investment coming before development.
He says train services are far better now, with more frequent direct trains to London, than before he became a councillor despite rail operator Northern’s announcement last month of cuts to Harrogate services. He says:
“Northern have assured me these reductions will be short-term only.”
He admits to being a “little frustrated” the Kex Gill realignment won’t be completed before he leaves office. Delays, he says, are inevitable when “taking a major trans-pennine highway across a sensitive area of countryside”. Peat deposits are among the vexed considerations. But the project has levered £56m from the Department for Transport and should start this year.
Walking and cycling schemes
Active travel schemes have been the most contentious, particularly the Harrogate Station Gateway. It was one of three initiatives worth £42million funded by West Yorkshire Combined Authority.

Making the case for the Station Gateway at a business meeting.
Cllr Mackenzie says the Selby and Skipton projects “have been problem free”; Harrogate has been anything but, with strong opposition from businesses and residents to reducing Station Parade to single lane and pedestrianising part of James Street. He remains a staunch advocate:
“It’s bringing £11million of much needed investment into the town centre. It will be a radical improvement to a part of town that needs improving and it will be good for the visitor economy.”
He says he would be “inclined to continue’ with the closure of Beech Grove in Harrogate to through traffic when the 18-month experiment ends in August, with the caveat that he “would be guided by the data”.
As for Otley Road cycle path, he was “a little surprised to hear complaints from the cycling lobby” because “what we have delivered is exactly what the plans showed so they had plenty of time to raise concerns then”.
He says the council will conduct another round of consultation on phase two “so people are absolutely clear” about the plans this time.
Why have these schemes provoked so much anger?
“In Harrogate, when one attempts change — in this case to improve facilities for walking and cycling — you get roughly half the population behind you and half against you.
“Also, many people feel any restrictions on car driving is a bad thing whereas if you want to overcome congestion you have to have a realistic alternative.”
Conservative for 40 years
Don Johannes Josef Mackenzie was born in Germany and is bilingual — his dad stayed there after the war and met a German woman. The family moved before Cllr Mackenzie’s first birthday and he grew up in Ipswich.
He became managing director of MMP International, which supplied industrial repair and maintenance products worldwide. The job brought him to Harrogate 49 years ago.
MMP was acquired by US company ITW in 1998. Mr Mackenzie was a minority shareholder and stayed on for 10 years as business manager. He then became self-employed, “doing small things representing British manufacturers worldwide”.
A Conservative Party member for 40 years, he cut his political teeth as a Harrogate borough councillor in Pannal from 1987 to 1991 before a 15-year hiatus to concentrate on his career and raising his daughter, who would later become the agent for Andrew Jones, the Conservative MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough. Who are his political heroes?
“I liked Mrs Thatcher but I don’t have any political heroes. I also liked David Cameron — I thought he was very good.”
He returned to serve three terms in Harrogate from 2006 to 2018, during which he became the cabinet member for planning and transport for three years — a role that included oversight of the creation of the original Local Plan — a document that outlines where planning can take part in the development.

Speaking at an online county council meeting.
The plan allocated 390 new homes a year in the district — a number that was rejected by the government’s Planning Inspectorate as too low and was eventually bumped up to around 700, leading to ongoing concerns about the number of new developments. He says:
“In hindsight 390 was a little low. Now it’s nearer 700. I don’t have a problem with 700 but recently it’s been much higher than that.”
Cllr Mackenzie was appointed executive member for public health at the county council in 2013 until council leader Carl Les moved him to his access portfolio in 2015.
It’s a bruising role but says the only time he gets real abuse is when he’s knocking on doors canvassing. It doesn’t seem to bother him — he likes a good argument. Or as he puts it:
“I can’t say I enjoy it but I wouldn’t shrink from it.
“I belong to that generation when a candidate didn’t rely on social media. I relied on public meetings. But there’s far less of that face-to-face stuff and that has led to a decline in behaviour because people think their behaviour doesn’t matter as much.”
Bird watching
Cllr Mackenzie, who is 72, doesn’t intend to retire. He has applied to become a non-executive director of a British public sector organisation and wants to keep busy.
“I wouldn’t like to think I didn’t start each day without an active programme ahead.”
He’s a keen bird watcher who engages in his hobby on family holidays in Norfolk. He doesn’t cycle but walks a lot. He often catches the bus or strolls into town from his home, near Leeds Road about a mile from the town centre. He says it’s too close to go by car.
He claims not to have any major regrets. What does he think his legacy will be?
“I would like people to think that whatever decision I took, I took with the best of motives and I thought the decision was right. I can’t claim to have got every decision right – but they were all taken with the best of intentions.”
With many of his schemes set to outlast him, his legacy will be felt in the district for years to come.
Council orders Harrogate Leon developer to remove advertising sign
The developer behind a Leon drive-thru in Harrogate has been ordered to take down an eight-metre advertising sign after it was put up without permission.
Pictures from the Wetherby Road site show a sign advertising a Leon restaurant being erected yesterday.
The developer has applied for the installation of 15 advertising boards, which include drive-thru directions, menus and a height restrictor bar.
However, Harrogate Borough Council has yet to approve the advertisements.
Joe Shields, a resident who lives directly opposite the drive-thru, saw the pole being put in place by contractors at around 8am in the morning. He alerted planning officers to the situation.
Speaking to the Stray Ferret, Mr Shields said he was disappointed that the developer had erected the sign without permission.
Mr Shields said:
“There are changes at the site on a daily basis.
“My impression is that they will just continue wacking this [the Leon] up.”

The current construction site at the Leon on Wetherby Road.
A spokesperson for Harrogate Borough Council confirmed that a planning officer attended the Wetherby Road site to order that the advertisement be taken down.
The spokesperson added:
“We have also received an application for advertising at the site. Any works undertaken before the application is at the applicant’s own risk.”
The Stray Ferret asked Euro Garages for a response on the advertisement, but it declined to comment.
£25,000 appeal costs
The move comes as the borough council has agreed to pay Euro Garages £25,000 in appeal costs over the development.
Last year, Helen Hockenhull, a government planning inspector, granted permission for a Starbucks drive-thru on the former Dental surgery site.
It has since emerged that the site will become a Leon drive-thru instead.
Read more:
- New Harrogate Leon set to open early May
- Harrogate council to pay Leon developer £25,000 in appeal costs
Ms Hockenhull awarded costs against the council after she said it “demonstrated unreasonable behaviour”.
The council turned down the development back in 2019 on air quality and highways grounds, but later withdrew its objection.
The move forced residents fighting the proposal to defend the authority’s reasons for refusal at the hearing.
Harrogate Theatre scaffolding to come down from this weekendThe scaffolding that has covered one of Harrogate’s most-loved historical landmarks for almost a year will be coming down from this weekend.
Harrogate Theatre was in need of a huge, £1 million restoration on its roof. The works were initially meant to be completed last September but covid delays and bad weather meant they were only finished last month.
As a council-owned building, the project has been run in conjunction with Harrogate Borough Council and Harrogate Theatre Trust.
Now that additional works to the building on Oxford Street have been completed, Harrogate Borough Council has confirmed the scaffolding will be dismantled from this weekend.
The scaffolding on Oxford Street will come down first with the rest on Cheltenham Parade coming down towards the end of the month.
A council spokesperson said:
“Like any heritage building of this age, the investment project at Harrogate Theatre has been complex and faced a number of challenges. Not least, material and labour shortages – impacted by Covid-19 and isolation requirements – as well as the numerous storms in the last few months.
“During the removal of the scaffolding, final work will take place to re-point brickwork, re-glaze the canopy above the front entrance, along with decoration to the windows and the shop frontages.”
Read more:
The renovations haven’t been without their challenges, during stormy weather in November and February the theatre had to close and cancel performances. In November, the theatre had to cancel a full weekend of its pantomime performances due to a leak and again in February, the final performance of Kinky Boots was cancelled after a second leak.
There was also an incident in January where three young teens scaled the roof and caused £800 damage.
Despite all the ongoing works the theatre has continued to stage multiple productions including its annual pantomime.
It is not clear if the delays have caused the £1 million restoration fee to increase.
Sharow Parish Council continues village pub fightResidents in Sharow are continuing their fight to keep a former pub in the village for community use.
The Half Moon Inn pub on Sharow Lane was opened in 1822 but closed down back in 2016.
Since then, a long running saga has unfolded over how best to put the building to use.
A working group on the local parish council was set up to look into the viability of the pub for community use.
Alison Da Costa, who is part of the group, said a recent survey by the parish council found that a majority of people from around Sharow, Copt Hewick, Littlethorpe, Marton-le-Moor and Hutton Conyers wanted the former pub to be put to community use.
Read more:
The group said the survey received 234 responses via online and the post. Of that number, 95% said they wanted the pub to open with a cafe and shop.
The move comes after Mark Futon, owner of the building, has reapplied to Harrogate Borough Council to change the use of the Half Moon Inn into a four bedroom house.
In documents submitted to the council, Mr Fitton said “all avenues” had been explored to reopen the pub but had proved unviable.
In a planing statement, the developer said:
“It could hardly be clearer that there is no reasonable prospect of the Half Moon Inn re-opening as a viable hospitality venue.
“All avenues for such an opportunity have been fully explored, over an extended period of time, by agents with strong commercial credentials, unrivalled local coverage and a national licenced-premises specialism.”
However, proposals to convert the pub have been long opposed by the parish council.
Harrogate Borough Council will make a decision on the latest plan at a later date.
180 homes in North Yorkshire ready to welcome Ukrainian refugeesUkrainians who have fled war in their homeland have started to arrive in North Yorkshire, where around 180 households will welcome the refugees into their homes.
Council officials said the first refugees will be housed “very shortly” under the Homes for Ukraine scheme, which allows residents to sponsor a Ukrainian.
Those who have signed up as hosts will have their homes checked by local councils to ensure they are suitable.
A spokesperson for Harrogate Borough Council said the process also includes background checks on sponsors and arranging education for refugee children.
The spokesperson said:
“In partnership with our colleagues at North Yorkshire Council County, North Yorkshire Police and the other district councils across North Yorkshire, we are working together to do whatever is necessary to help Ukrainians fleeing the ongoing devastation.
“Early data indicates around 180 households across the county have signed-up and are likely to receive guests, some very shortly.”
The government-led scheme has been criticised for not working quickly enough to grant visas to Ukrainians fleeing the Russian invasion.
Read more:
- Ripon fundraisers for Ukraine aim to beat £20,000 target
- Harrogate’s John Shackleton hoping to deliver ambulance to Ukraine
There are also concerns that councils have not been provided all the information they need to run the programme.
Craven District Council has signed up to the scheme and said it was awaiting guidance on when the home checks should take place and how they will work.
It also said it was awaiting more information on how payments will be made to hosts.
Paul Ellis, director of services at Craven District Council, said:
“Our officers are taking the necessary steps to support our Ukrainian friends escaping the violence in their homeland.
“The government is providing funding of £10,500 per person to councils to enable them to provide support to families.
“This will be reimbursed for paying sponsors £350 per month, tax-free, for up to 12 months. Again, we are awaiting further government guidance on this.”
Unlike other refugee schemes, the government is assuming that all local authorities will participate, rather than inviting them to take part.
As well as individual households – charities, community groups and businesses can also apply to bring Ukrainians to safety, including those with no family ties to the UK.
In the first phase of the scheme, people will need the name of a specific Ukrainian individual or family they wish to sponsor.
The government advises them to “get in contact with them directly, and prepare to fill in a visa application with all their details and yours”.
Those who don’t personally know anyone fleeing Ukraine can still register their interest on the government’s website.
Daleside Garage in Pateley Bridge to relocate this yearA well-known Pateley Bridge garage is set to move this year.
Daleside Garage, which has been based on Bridgehouse Gate for the last four years, is set to relocate to another base in the town.
The garage, which offers MOTs and repairs, will move to a site on Corn Close off Low Wath Road in September.
It follows plans being submitted by Chartwell Barns Ltd to Harrogate Borough Council to build a three-storey block of flats on the Daleside site.
Carly Haley, who owns Daleside Garage with her husband Glenn, told the Stray Ferret that the business will not be closing and will instead relocate to a new site.
She said:
“We’ll still be offering MOTs, repairs and tyre checks as normal.
“We just wanted people to know that we will not be closing down.”
Read more:
- Plan resubmitted to convert Sharow pub into house
-
‘Serious concerns’ over 770 homes planned for Harrogate’s Otley Road
- Plans to build 15 flats at Daleside Garage site in Pateley Bridge
The building, which is now owned by the developer behind the apartment plans, has been subjected to various planning applications over the years.
A previous application submitted to the council in 2018 proposed to convert part of the garage into storage space, a laundrette and offices.
The latest plans would see 15 new flats built on the site, along with an electric vehicle charging point and 27 car parking spaces.
Harrogate Borough Council will make a decision on the current proposals at a later date.
Harrogate estate agents take on Yorkshire Three PeaksHarrogate estate agents take on Yorkshire Three Peaks for charity
Harrogate estate agents, Feather Smailes Scales (FSS) are hoping to raise more money for Maggie’s Centres by climbing the Yorkshire Three Peaks.
The team at FSS said they wanted to support a charity that helps those undergoing treatment.
Maggie’s Centres builds centres next to NHS hospitals to offer professional support for anything from treatment side effects to money worries.
The FSS team will take on the 24-mile hiking challenge tomorrow.
Partner and auctioneer Richard Smailes said:
“Last November, I was incredibly touched by the enthusiasm of those supporting the charity. Those who were affected by cancer planned to carry out incredible tasks to raise money for a cause that supports those suffering take back control when cancer turns their life upside down.”
To donate click here.
Networking event for SMEs at Harrogate Convention Centre this month
Harrogate Borough Council and SME Growth Managers have organised an event for Harrogate district businesses to share ideas and solve problems.
The event, on April 21, is aimed at local SMEs, small to middle-sized businesses.
‘Five tips to sales and marketing effectiveness in challenging times’ will hear from numerous business owners about the impact of marketing.
The event lasts 90 minutes and is free to attend. It will highlight funding opportunities and give business owners the chance to meet with similar, like-minded businesses.
The event begins at 9.30am at Co-Lab Harrogate, through entrance three at the convention centre.

Harrogate Convention Centre
Death of Harrogate man, 45, was due to drugs, inquest hears
The death of a 45-year-old man at a Harrogate hostel was due to “multi-drug toxicity”, an inquest heard today.
The inquest into the death of Stephen Paul Cattanach on October 26, 2020 was heard at Northallerton Coroners Court this afternoon.
At the time of his death, Mr Cattanach was living in temporary accommodation provided by Harrogate Borough Council at Cavendish House on Robert Street.
The inquest heard the 45-year-old was found in his room by a member of staff on the afternoon of October 26.
Dr Joy Shacklock, of the Spa Surgery in Harrogate, told the inquest Mr Cattanach had a “complex history of drug and alcohol addiction and mental health issues”.
Dr Shacklock added her patient had suffered a number of overdoses, most recently twice in July 2020. She said Mr Cattanach insisted neither was intentional.
A toxicology report performed after his death, found high levels of drugs, including morphine and heroin, in his blood.
Read more:
- Inquest concludes no single factor led to Harrogate woman’s suicide
- Inquest finds homeless Harrogate man endured a ‘drug-related death’
He had previously been helped by North Yorkshire Horizons, an adult drug and alcohol recovery service. Mr Cattanach reached out for support from Horizons five days before his death and had a follow-up appointment booked for October 27, the day after he died.
Coroner Jon Heath agreed with the post-mortem assessment and concluded that his death was drug related. He said:
Plans to build 15 flats at Daleside Garage site in Pateley Bridge“I am satisfied that the cause of death was multi-drug toxicity, this alongside the police evidence which found no suspicious circumstances or suicidal indications suggests he did not intend to take his own life.
“I am able to conclude that on the balance of probability his death was drug related.”
Developers have lodged plans for 15 new flats in Pateley Bridge.
Chartwell Barns Ltd has tabled the proposal to Harrogate Borough Council to build a three-storey block on the site of Daleside Garage on Bridgehouse Gate.
The proposal also includes an electric vehicle charging point along with 27 car parking spaces.
A total of three one-bedroom, eight two-bedroom and four three-bedroom flats are included in the scheme.
Read more:
- Plan resubmitted to convert Sharow pub into house
-
‘Serious concerns’ over 770 homes planned for Harrogate’s Otley Road
A previous application submitted to the council in 2018 proposed to convert part of the garage into storage space, a laundrette and offices.
At the time, owner Nidderdale Garages, which owns Daleside Garages, said in a planning statement that the site was “surplus to the business’ requirements” and that the proposal would “make more efficient use of the space”.
Harrogate Borough Council will make a decision on the latest proposal at a later date.