Stray Views is a weekly column giving you the chance to have your say on issues affecting the Harrogate district. It is an opinion column and does not reflect the views of the Stray Ferret. See below for details on how to contribute.
Police speed clampdown is a joke
The police pledge to clamp down on fast and noisy cars in Harrogate is beyond a joke. My wife and I live in Hartwith Drive, a street that has a supposed 20mph speed limit… or so the signage indicates.
Several years ago I attempted to encourage the police and council to take steps towards enforcing the limit. A speed monitor was attached to a street lamp-post and data downloaded. I still hold a copy of the results.
North Yorkshire Police’s deputy chief constable, however, made clear that it did not support 20mph. The irrelevant police commissioner also gave absolutely no support to our case. Years later and cars and motorbikes are still driven, frequently, at well over the 20mph limit. We can regularly hear the unmistakable sound of speeding vehicles within earshot from Ripon Road.
The police should be taking a hardline stance against the problem of speeding vehicles but the sad fact is that they need support from the public and that may well be sadly lacking. There is no point the police making bold statements if they are not prepared to follow them up with action.
Tim Walls, Jennyfields
Boy racers are a daily occurrence
Prior to the recent crash on Mayfield Grove, we have for many years suffered from boy racers tearing up and down our road. Most seem to have removed the baffles from the exhaust.
Every day we have about six cars speeding up and down Mayfield Grove and going up Franklin Road. You can also hear them racing up King’s Road.
I will shortly be setting up a Mayfield Grove and Mayfield Terrace residents association with other neighbours who are concerned about the speeding cars, cars being damaged and drug dealing in the area.
Paul Ivison, Mayfield Grove, Harrogate
If anyone would like to join this association email us at contact@thestrayferret.co.uk and we will pass on your details to Mr Ivison.
Rewilding is great – but plastic flowers are awful
I was heartened by the positive responses to the rewilding of the Stray, which I certainly welcome.
Those who feel that the horticultural prestige of the town is threatened by borders of wild flowers would be far better focusing their ire on the proliferation of plastic garlands, which appear to be the latest ‘must-have’ outdoor decorations at bars and shops around the town.
Not only are they no match for the real thing in terms of attractiveness, they also produce yet more plastic pollution at a time of increasing environmental awareness.
Yes, hanging baskets and tubs take time and energy to maintain but are well worth the effort and I know which most visitors would prefer to see. For a town that’s been a Britain in Bloom gold medal winner, it’s a disappointing new trend.
Gillian Parkin, Harrogate
Great to see wildflowers on the Stray
I’d like to add my support to Harrogate Borough Council on its rewilding efforts.
We need more wildflowers everywhere. The Stray has previously been kept as an ecological desert.
Encouraging wildflowers can only be good for our local insect life and should be widely supported on purely scientific grounds.
Well done Harrogate Borough Council on being led by the science!
Charlie McCarthy, Harrogate
Don’t let Harrogate become a dead town
I was shocked to find all parking both sides of James Street blocked with boxes full of plants.
Only three places were available for blue badge holders. Thankfully, I have a blue badge and parked. Ironically there were some signs saying SHOP LOCAL. Well, people would if they could park.
I know several who go to Northallerton now: easy parking and free in many places. The shops are having a bad time and have been for 14 months. Some have closed and gone.
Please don’t subject us to being a dead town. It’s so sad to see Harrogate’s style and variety taking a hard knock.
Christine Hill, Burton Leonard
Read more:
- Harrogate’s controversial James Street planters could go after June 21
- Big thumbs-up for Harrogate district’s new wild look
Could a Claro Road rail station solve Harrogate’s congestion?
A Harrogate conservative councillor has suggested a rail station could be built near Claro Road to ease the town’s congestion problems.
Paul Haslam, who lives in Bilton and represents the area on both North Yorkshire County Council and Harrogate District Council, is gathering support for the idea.
He thinks a station could be built near the footbridge at Dragon Junction between Harrogate and Starbeck stations on the Leeds to York line.
He told the Stray Ferret the station would be a “win-win” for Harrogate because it could reduce traffic congestion on Skipton Road, improve links to the Claro Court Business Centre and improve the quality of life for local residents.
He said it would also promote cycling because of its proximity to the Nidderdale Greenway.
Cllr Haslam said:
“I am convinced this would make significant inroads to congestion on Skipton Road, our quality of air, our reduction in CO2 emissions and most importantly the quality of life to those who live in this area.
“It should also improve links to the business park and therefore help local prosperity and jobs. Adding a supermarket would also add jobs whilst improving the facilities in the area.”
Read more:
- £9.8m upgrade of Knaresborough to Poppleton rail route complete
- Harrogate railway station newsagent to close
Cllr Haslam said he has had conversations about the idea with North Yorkshire County Council, which would need to undertake a feasibility study to determine costs.
The government is keen to open new rail stations and last year awarded funding to help bring back ‘forgotten’ stations axed in the Beeching cuts during the 1960s.
A new rail station opened in Wales earlier this week at an estimated cost of £8 million, but it took over 11 years to develop the plans.
The latest station to open in the Harrogate district was Hornbeam Park in 1992, which was used by 400,000 passengers in 2019/20 and is a popular stop for commuters and visitors.
Don Mackenzie, executive member for highways at North Yorkshire County Council, told the Stray Ferret he supported the idea of a Claro Road station.
However, he said that due to a lack of funding the chances of it being built were slim, and that any final decision would be made by Network Rail.
He added:
WATCH: Do you want to see district councils scrapped?“Just as I supported Hornbeam Park 30 years ago I would be supportive of this, but I can’t see it happening any time soon.”
A devolution deal is yet to be agreed but how do you want the future of North Yorkshire to look?
Harrogate people have mixed feelings on the subject of devolution and whether the district council should be scrapped.
The seven district councils, including Harrogate Borough Council, want to see two councils for North Yorkshire: one for the east of the county and one for the west.
But North Yorkshire County Council would prefer a single unitary authority.
We canvassed views in Harrogate yesterday.

Devolution split opinions for people in Harrogate yesterday.
Latest figures from NHS England show no further coronavirus deaths have been reported at Harrogate District Hospital in the last 24 hours.
It means the total number of deaths from coronavirus at the hospital remains at 82.
Meanwhile, nationally, a further 10 deaths from patients who tested positive for the virus have died in hospital.
Read more:
- North Yorkshire Police Federation say they can’t enforce face masks in shops
- Local company make 7,500 face masks
Of that number, one patient died in the North East and Yorkshire.
NHS England said the patients were aged between 50 and 97 years old and all had known underlying health conditions.
It takes the national death toll from coronavirus up to 29,212.
‘I will not close Starbeck Baths’, vows council leaderThe leader of Harrogate Borough Council has said he will not close Starbeck Baths after approving a shake-up of the district’s leisure services.
Residents in Starbeck vowed to fight any future threat to the 150-year-old baths after a council officer report suggested the facility’s future “would need to be considered”.
But council leader Richard Cooper said he has made it clear that it will not close under his leadership.
It comes as the borough council’s cabinet voted to set up a new company to run services, including Starbeck, as part of an overhaul of leisure and sport.
The council said the move would help to save around £400,000 a year on services. Starbeck Baths were among the facilities which increased in cost year on year.

Harrogate Borough Council’s cabinet addressed the fears over Starbeck Baths at a virtual meeting on YouTube last night.
A Freedom of Information request by The Stray Ferret showed the bill for running the baths increased from £234,193 in 2018/19 to an estimated £239,370 last year.
In a report before cabinet, the council estimated that it would save around £191,000 a year without Starbeck following investment and redevelopment of its other leisure facilities.
Read more:
- Council backs overhaul of Harrogate District leisure facilities
- How much it costs taxpayers to run leisure in Harrogate District
- Nearly half disagree with Harrogate council’s leisure overhaul
Cllr Cooper said at the meeting streamed live on YouTube that he would not close the facility and the authority was being open with the costs of the baths:
“While I sit here, we are not closing Starbeck Baths and in any case it is not part of the plans.
“It is just telling people how much things cost because we want people to know.”
Meanwhile, Michael Constantine, head of culture, tourism and sport, said the move was not a “stalking horse” and that any closure would need a separate council decision.
But Pat Marsh, leader of the Liberal Democrat group, said the she would rather Cllr Cooper had made a whole council commitment to Starbeck:
“I am pleased to hear the comments and to give the people that reassurance, but are we still going to have him as leader in a few years’ time?
“It would have been better if he had said: ‘This council will not close Starbeck Baths’.”
Last night, senior councillors voted to set up Brimham’s Active to run its leisure services which cost the taxpayer £3.5 million in the last financial year.
The authority will also borrow £26 million from the government’s Public Works Loans Board to fund an investment strategy into the Harrogate Hydro and a new leisure centre in Knaresborough.
The new company is expected to be operating by August 2021 and will cost the council £300,000 to set up.