Many charities in the Harrogate district rely significantly on Harrogate Borough Council for funding.
So the council’s abolition next year could pose a threat to the financial stability of some of the best-known voluntary organisations in the district.
Richard Cooper, the Conservative leader of the council, said last month it had been a generous funder of charities and urged organisations to prepare for the change in the local government, which will see a single new unitary authority called North Yorkshire Council come into existence next year.
He said:
“One of the key things voluntary organisations must do over the next year is build relationships.”
Local Fund
One of the district’s main funding sources for charities is the Local Fund for the Harrogate District, which was set up in 2018 as a three-way partnership between Harrogate Borough Council, Harrogate & District Community Action and Two Ridings Community Foundation.
Last year the fund awarded £85,000 to 29 community groups. Applications for its next funding round open on Monday.

An event last year celebrating the Local Fund.
Last year Harrogate Borough Council gave £200,000 to Two Ridings Community Foundation, which administers the fund, to go towards an endowment so that the fund continues in perpetuity.
It also receives a steady stream of income from the Local Lotto — and the future of this is less certain because it is run by Harrogate Borough Council.
At least 60% from each £1 ticket sold on the lottery, which has a weekly £25,000 jackpot, goes towards the fund.
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Jan Garrill, chief executive of Two Ridings Community Foundation, said
“The Local Fund will continue and thrive as it is a fund with Two Ridings and out of any local government process.”
But Ms Garrill added she “could not comment” on the future of the Local Lotto because it is run by the council.
Who else could be affected?
Some charities also rely on council grants for funding.
When the Stray Ferret asked for a list of recipients, the council directed us to a report from October last year that listed five beneficiaries of its voluntary and community sector strategic funding programme, which awards grants to charities to ‘deliver key services across the Harrogate district’. But it does provide other grants.
The recipients and sums received are:
Harrogate and District Community Action – £40,000
Harrogate and Craven Districts Citizens Advice – £60,000
Harrogate Homeless Project – £22,500
Nidderdale Plus Community Partnership – £8,000
Community First Yorkshire – £5,000
Frances Elliot, chief executive of Hadca, which supports other charities in the district, said that besides its £40,000 grant, it received a separate £32,000 grant from the council.

Frances Elliot
Ms Elliot said:
“It’s a difficult time for lots of organisations but it’s relatively early in the transition. I genuinely don’t know what will happen. We are optimistic for our funding over the next financial year and we will have to wait and see after that, People at the top don’t know what’s happening yet.
“We have a good relationship with both Harrogate Borough Council and North Yorkshire County Council and we hope that continues.”
All the North Yorkshire councils facing abolition have various workstreams underway, considering what will happen after the shake-up. The voluntary sector is among the issues being discussed.
‘Don’t destroy a model that works well’
Pateley Bridge charity Nidderdale Plus works in partnership with Harrogate Borough Council and North Yorkshire County Council to provide services, such as a community library, a front desk for local council and police matters and a tourist information point.
It receives three council grants worth a total of £21,000, which helps it employ 2.5 staff and manage 150 volunteers to provide the services.
Chief executive Helen Flynn said:
Harrogate council awards £280,000 electric vehicle contract to London firm“We hope we don’t have to destroy this community support model that has been working so well.
“We are starting to build relationships with North Yorkshire County Council. I do feel they want to work with us. They have been good at talking to us so far.
“I wouldn’t say I was relaxed but I am engaged with developments.”
A London company has been awarded a £280,000 contract to install 34 electric vehicle charging points across the Harrogate district.
Connected Kerb, which installs charging points across the country, has been appointed to oversee the project.
The company has already overseen electric vehicle charging point projects in Kent and Swindon.
Harrogate Borough Council has commissioned the company on a contract due to start this month.
The company will be tasked with installing, maintaining and managing charging points at:
- Victoria Multi-Storey Car Park, Harrogate
- Hornbeam Park Car Park, Harrogate
- Civic Centre Car Park, Harrogate
- Claro Depot, Harrogate
- Ripon Cathedral Car Park
- Masham Market Place
- Knaresborough, Chapel Street Car Park
- Pateley Bridge Southlands Car Park
Cllr Phil Ireland, Harrogate Borough Council’s cabinet member for carbon reduction and sustainability, said previously:
“The Harrogate district has seen a rapid uptake in the purchase of electric vehicles, outstripping all other districts in North Yorkshire.
“If we are to achieve our ambition of net-zero by 2038 it is important we support those residents that have the ability to purchase electric cars, while also encouraging more cycling and walking.
“These new charging points will support the uptake in electric vehicles for both our residents and our visitor economy.”
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The contract is due to end in January 2027, however a council report published last month recommending the contractor be appointed said this could be extended.
The move comes as the council aims to get 10,000 electric vehicles on the districts’ roads by 2023.
To help hit this target, the authority plans to install charge points at several council-owned locations to encourage motorists to make the switch ahead of the government’s ban on the sale of petrol, diesel and hybrid cars in 2030.
Harrogate councillor encourages people to have their say on mosqueA Harrogate borough councillor has been encouraging residents to submit their views on a proposed mosque.
Conservative Cllr Sam Gibbs circulated a leaflet, which doesn’t contain any personal views, to people living close to the mosque’s proposed location.
Harrogate Islamic Association has submitted plans to build what would be the district’s first mosque on the corner of Tower Street and Belford Road.
The location falls within the Harrogate Central ward rather than the Harrogate Valley Gardens ward Cllr Gibbs represents.
However, the two wards will join after May’s local government elections.
Cllr Gibbs, who is also the constituency agent for Chancellor and Richmond MP Rishi Sunak, asks in the leaflet whether people support the application and for additional comments.
Some people have raised concerns on social media about a councillor canvassing views on the subject.
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However, Cllr Gibbs told the Stray Ferret he had only “circulated a leaflet – a neutral information piece that reported the details of the development factually”.
He added:
“As a local councillor I am aware that residents do not always realise when a development is submitted in their area.
“I also believe a good councillor does what they can to raise awareness of things that will affect residents.
“I do this regularly for planning applications. It is what good councillors do and it is certainly not unusual for me to do localised surveys on a wide variety of issues.
“This is about making it easier for residents to have their say and ensuring no one is disenfranchised.”
Cllr Gibbs has forwarded copies of replies sent to the local Conservative Party office on East Parade, Harrogate to the case officer dealing with the planning application at Harrogate Borough Council.
Sunday deadline for comments
Residents have until this Sunday to have their say on the mosque. So far 80 people have written in support while 60 people have objected.
Households across Harrogate reported receiving anonymous leaflets encouraging them to oppose the plans with a guide on how to word the objection. Those leaflets had nothing to do with Cllr Gibbs.
Zahed Amanullah, from the Harrogate Islamic Association, told the Stray Ferret:
“We appreciate that our application has drawn significant attention and have pledged to respond to any concerns.
“But we’ve also had people misrepresent us before through leaflets to residents and we’d ask anyone concerned to speak with us directly. We have nothing to hide.”
The HIA was established in 2011 and has been looking for a permanent place to convert into a mosque for years. Other attempts to find a home have fallen through.
Around 100 worshippers currently meet in the Quakers’ Friends Meeting House on Queen Parade.
A council spokesperson said:
Council refuses to say if jobs at risk at Harrogate Convention Centre“The council has a Planning Code of Good Practice for members and officers. Elected members are entitled to take an interest in planning applications outside of their ward.”
Harrogate Borough Council has refused to say whether any jobs are at risk of redundancy as part of an ongoing staffing review at Harrogate Convention Centre.
The review began last year and is expected to conclude in April.
It is being headed by centre director Paula Lorimer who has a core team of 21 staff including managers, accounts and admin staff and events planners.
The council, which owns the venue, said in a statement that changes to the staffing structure are being considered because the reopening of the centre after covid restrictions had “highlighted a need” to review how events are delivered.
However, the council refused to say if any jobs were at risk of redundancy.
A council spokesperson said:
“Following on from successfully redeploying two-thirds of the convention centre’s employees to assist in delivering our critical frontline services, the return to providing event operations in a post-pandemic industry has highlighted a need to review how these are delivered.
“This review is ongoing and is anticipated to be concluded in the spring.
“At this stage, there is nothing further to add.”
The staffing review is due to be discussed at a meeting of the council’s human resources committee on February 10.
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The committee previously discussed the changes behind closed doors in December, and it is likely this will happen again at next week’s meeting.
Ms Lorimer – who is one of the council’s top earners with a £104,502 salary – said in a report that the convention centre did not earn any income from events in 2021/22.
She said this was because of covid cancellations and the venue’s use as an NHS Nightingale hospital, although she added events have since made a positive return.
Ms Lorimer said:
“Following venue reinstatement and the reopening of the events industry we have welcomed back a significant number of existing and new clients, contributing to the prosperity of the district.
“Our sales strategy continues to focus on attracting larger association conferences.
“There have been a number of events attracted to the convention centre as a result of both the sales strategy and the national publicity regarding the use of the venue as a NHS Nightingale.”
£47m refurbishment in pipeline
The staffing review comes after the council created a new destination management organisation in 2020 when Gemma Rio was appointed as its head to promote the Harrogate district as “exceptional place to visit, meet and invest”.
It also comes as the council is pushing ahead with plans for a major redevelopment of the convention centre.
This week the council’s cabinet backed the spending of £2.8 million in cash reserves to speed up the first phase of the works at the venue’s studio two.
Overall, the whole project could cost up to £47 million over three phases if approved and involve three exhibition halls being demolished to make way for a new 5,000 sq m hall and a refurbished auditorium.
A decision on the plans is expected from councillors in summer.
Harrogate council responds to calls for recycling wheelie binsHarrogate Borough Council has responded to calls to introduce recycling wheelie bins, which were backed by 200 residents.
The Stray Ferret asked readers whether they would welcome the change after last weekend’s storms blew recycling left out for collection across streets throughout the district.
We received an overwhelming response to the question on our Facebook and Twitter pages. Of 200 comments, the vast majority were supportive of the proposal.
Currently residents in the Harrogate district use blue bags to recycle paper and card and a black box for tins, plastic and glass.
In some other areas of the country run, people use large wheelie bins for recycling.
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Given the level of support for the change, we asked Harrogate Borough Council if it would be possible to roll out recycling wheelie bins. A spokesperson for the council said:
Harrogate district church leaders back mosque“Using wheelie bins for recycling can in some instances lead to higher contamination rates (items presented that can’t be recycled). So any changes would need to be carefully considered.
“Another challenge we would need to overcome is the wagons used for collection. At the moment they cater for black boxes so any change would require adaptation of the fleet.”
“Recycling rates have increased significantly across the Harrogate district year-on-year and the current contamination rates are less than one per cent. This community effort ensures our recycling is high-quality and easily accepted at the processing sites so we’d like to say a massive thank you to the residents for always going above and beyond to help us and our crews.”
Church leaders in the Harrogate district have shown their support for a planned mosque in the town.
Twenty-two leaders have signed a joint statement backing the plans, saying the “time is right” for a place of worship for Muslims.
Signatories include the Bishop of Ripon, the Rt Revd Dr Helen-Ann Hartley.
Harrogate Islamic Association has lodged plans to Harrogate Borough Council to convert the former Home Guard Club into a place of worship.
The joint statement from church leaders says:
“As church leaders in Harrogate, we the undersigned wish to express our support for our Muslim friends and neighbours as they seek a suitable site for a dedicated place of worship.
“We believe that everyone deserves the opportunity to worship and, without wishing to prejudge the specific suitability of the site currently under consideration, we believe that the time is right for the creation of a permanent mosque to serve the needs of Muslims who live and work in our community.”
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So far, the application has received 135 public comments – 72 in support and 59 objecting.
Traffic and parking concerns
The objections highlight concerns about traffic, parking and the fact that the building is a non-designated heritage asset.
Households across Harrogate have reported receiving anonymous leaflets through their doors encouraging them to oppose the plans with a guide on how to word the objection.
Supporters dispute the concerns. They say there is enough parking nearby, particularly as there is a multi-storey car park on Tower Street, and that it would be good to see the building brought back into use.
HIA was established in 2011 and has been looking for a permanent place to convert into a mosque for years. Other attempts to find a home have fallen through.
Around 100 worshippers currently meet in the Quakers’ Friends Meeting House on Queen Parade.
Harrogate Borough Council will make a decision on the proposal at a later date.
Church leaders who have signed the statement are:
- Revd Dr Alan Garrow
- Rt Revd Dr Helen-Ann Hartley
- Revd Ben Askew
- David Wynn James
- Revd Simon Dowson
- Revd Lesley Taylor
- Revd Sally Pickering
- Revd Matthew Evans
- Pastors Nik and Maggie Gee
- Revd Alan Crump
- Revd Laura Martin
- Adam Price
- Fr Gary Waddington
- Revd Tim Hurren
- Revd David Arblaster
- Revd Kim Mason
- Revd Chris Clayton
- Revd Stroma McDermott
- Revd Ben Clowes
- Revd Phil Carman
- Revd John Smith
Harrogate Borough Council will be asked next week to support the return of community assets to Ripon City Council and Knaresborough Town Council.
A motion due before a full council meeting calls on the council to back requests for Knaresborough House, Ripon Town Hall and Hugh Ripley Hall being transferred back to local communities.
Harrogate Borough Council took control of the assets when it was created following local government reorganisation in 1974.
But the decision to scrap the borough council next year and replace it with a single authority called North Yorkshire Council covering the whole of the county has led for calls for local assets to be returned to town council control.
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A motion due before the council meeting next week, which was first proposed by Ripon Independent councillors Pauline McHardy and Sid Hawke and later amended by Harrogate Fairfax Cllr Chris Aldred and Knaresborough Scriven Park Cllr Hannah Gostlow, who are both Liberal Democrats, will say:
“That this council supports the principle of specific locality community assets, such as Knaresborough House, Ripon Town Hall, Hugh Ripley Hall and other such community facilities across the district being transferred to the ownership of the appropriate city, town or parish council, should these bodies express a wish to take on ownership of their local assets, in preference to ownership transferring to the new unitary authority.
“To start the process that this council writes to local parish, town and city councils to ask which assets they would potentially take ownership of.”
Cllr McHardy told the Stray Ferret previously:
“There’s absolutely no reason for Harrogate to hang on to assets that rightfully belong to us.
“Not a penny was paid for them when they were handed to Harrogate in 1974 and we want them to be transferred back.”
The full council meeting which will debate the motion will be held on Wednesday, February 9.
Major redevelopment of Harrogate Convention Centre could start in OctoberA major redevelopment of Harrogate Convention Centre could get underway in October after councillors backed spending £2.8 million of cash reserves to speed up the first phase of works.
Members of Harrogate Borough Council’s cabinet last night agreed to the spend after warnings that the local economy could miss out on up to £14.9 million through cancelled events unless the centre’s studio two gets an upgrade sooner than originally planned.
The works would see the creation of flexible events space for up to 1,200 people, which centre director Paula Lorimer said was the most crucial part of all the plans.
She told last night’s meeting:
“The convention centre has an auditorium with a capacity of just under 2,000, but it only has breakout space for 560 delegates.
“This in my opinion is one of the biggest reasons why we have not been able to attract some of the larger conferences.
“The studio two package is a game changer for the convention centre – and it is also a crucial part of the redevelopment to rebuild confidence in our venue.”
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If approved by all councillors, a competitive tender process would be launched under the next stage of the studio two works, which could be completed by February 2023.
Overall, the full redevelopment plans could cost up to £47 million and involve three exhibition halls being demolished to make way for a new 5,000 square metre hall and a refurbished auditorium.
The proposals were first revealed last year when the council said the 40-year-old centre was in “critical need” of an upgrade to keep its national appeal and that without investment its maintenance costs could reach £19 million over the next two decades.
A decision on the whole project is expected from councillors in summer.
Centre unable to attract ‘large and lucrative’ events
The studio two works are being accelerated after Ms Lorimer said the centre had been unable to attract “large and lucrative” events due to competition from more modern conference venues elsewhere in the country.
She said events are planned at least 18 months in advance and that without an upgraded studio two, the centre could lose £1.1 million in lettings revenue in the coming years with businesses also missing out on an economic impact of £14.9 million from the venue.
Cllr Richard Cooper, leader of Harrogate Borough Council, said he supported the plans because of the wider economic impact.
He told last night’s meeting:
Plan to demolish ‘eyesore’ Starbeck building finally approved“Nearly everybody in the Harrogate district knows somebody or have themselves worked in the hospitality and tourism industry.
“That to me always underlines the critical importance of the convention centre to our local economy.”
Harrogate Borough Council has given the green light to plans to demolish the former McColl’s supermarket in Starbeck, over three-and-a-half years since it was ravaged by fire.
Leeds-based developer Bates & Hemingborough submitted an application in November to demolish it under permitted development rules.
This permits the demolition of a building without the prior approval of the council if it is deemed a safety risk.
The owner hopes to build new retail and housing units on the site, although these plans are yet to be formally submitted.
The plans were put on hold in December after the council asked for safety documents, which have now been provided, addressing how the demolition would impact the adjacent St Andrew’s Church.
The council says the developer now has three years to demolish the building.
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Planning agent Pete Gleave from Zerum Consulting told the Stray Ferret the developer will submit a planning application for the new building “in the coming months”.
“There are currently no timescales for demolishing the building. Our client is however looking to progress the redevelopment of the site as quickly as possible and will be working up a planning application in the coming months.”
The fire-damaged building has frequently been described as an ‘eyesore’ blighting the centre of Starbeck.
Andrew Hart, founder of Starbeck Community Group and owner of Starbeck Post Office, said he hopes things can now finally move forward.
Plan approved to create five flats above Cambridge Street shops“Starbeck Community Group are pleased that demolition has been granted but we are hoping that the owners will expedite the work quickly, certainly the demolition.
“We also hope that the original stone frontage and the carved ‘Harpers’ stone can be saved and used.”
Harrogate Borough Council has approved plans to convert space above shops on Cambridge Street into apartments.
Aegon Property Income Fund lodged the proposal to create five flats on the upper floors of 6-14 Cambridge Street.
The ground floor of the properties is currently occupied by the Card Factory and two empty units which were formerly the Phone Doctor and Smiggle. For many years the site was home to Carphone Warehouse.
Under the proposal, the upper floors would be converted into three one-bedroom and two two-bedroom apartments.
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The developer said the flats would be designed with “modern living” in mind. They will be open plan and include dining and kitchen arrangements.
In documents submitted to the council, the developer said:
“The site is in a highly sustainable location within the town centre, accessible by a range of sustainable modes of transport including train and bus as well as walking and cycling.
“The proposal creates additional accommodation within the town centre which will help to contribute to an improved range and distribution of housing and will increase activity in the town centre beyond the normal working day leading to greater natural ‘surveillance’ through a more vibrant after work environment.”