Ripon Grammar School‘s boarding school has been rated ‘good’ by Ofsted.
A report published on Saturday said children “enjoy boarding at this school”, safeguarding arrangements are “effective” and “the school is very well supported by a skilled, experienced governing body”.
Government inspectors rated the boarding provision ‘good’ in all areas assessed. It was rated ‘outstanding’ at its previous Ofsted inspection in 2017.
Ripon Grammar has 929 boys and girls aged 11 to 18 years, of which 94 are boarders. Yearly fees for years seven to 11 are £11,719.
Accommodation is provided in two houses: School House for boys and Johnson House for girls.

School House
The latest Ofsted visit took place from February 8 to 18 this year.
The report said:
“Children enjoy boarding at this school. They make new friends and enjoy socialising with children of all ages. Older children help the younger children, or those new to boarding, to feel at home.
“Children feel they are fortunate to board at this school. They believe that the experience helps
their overall development.“Children are helped to settle as boarders. There is a well-established routine of visits
to the school before children begin boarding.”

Headteacher Jonathan Webb
Boarders told inspectors their boarding houses were like ‘big families’. The report said:
“Everyone has someone they can talk to, which means that children feel reassured
about being away from family members.”
Areas to improve
Ofsted recommended improvements in three areas. It described the arrangements for auditing medication as “mixed”, adding:
“This reduces the effectiveness of the oversight of medication that is stored in the boarding houses. The head of boarding accepts this shortfall and plans to improve these processes.”
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Inspectors also said that although most areas are well maintained “the physical condition of the boarding houses varies” and that “some bathrooms need improving and one of the houses lacks homely touches” .
“Given that some children stay in the boarding houses for long periods, this is detrimental to their experiences.”
Ofsted also said there was a potential risk to children, recognised by leaders, due to the siting of the artificial playing field and their were plans “to improve screening to enhance the protection afforded to children”.
Headteacher ‘extremely pleased’
Mr Webb said:
700 scooters converge on Knaresborough“Overall we are extremely pleased with the outcome of this report given the increased rigour, now evident from Ofsted, which is being applied to the inspection framework.
“Since our last inspection in 2017, boarding at RGS has most definitely moved on with some essential, possibly less eye-catching, initiatives such as the considerable amount of investment we have made to site and fire security in both houses, extensive upgrades to staff accommodation to ensure we recruit and retain highly qualified and committed staff, and improvements in some of the social spaces such as communal kitchens and common rooms.
“Last year we also added a further 10 new bedrooms in School House to accommodate boarders. In addition, a huge amount of work has been done to standardise routines across both houses and promote boarders’ independence.”
More than 700 scooters converged at Conyngham Hall in Knaresborough yesterday for a pre-season ride-out to York.
The event, organised by Yorkshire Scooter Alliance, saw the riders depart for York at 1pm.
Scooters travelled up the high street and on to York Rugby Club where there was music and trade stands.
Gemma Hart, one of the scooterists taking part, said:
“It was a well organised event that gave the scootering community chance to meet prior to the start of rally / ride-out season.
“A lot of members of the public came to look around the scooters and watch them ride out.”
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- Harrogate council approves sale of Knaresborough flats
The leader of Conservative-run Harrogate Borough Council has attacked the local Liberal Democrats for using a firm in Dundee to print a leaflet urging people to ‘buy local’.
Richard Cooper criticised the move in a post on the Community News website run by Andrew Jones, the Conservative MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough. Cllr Cooper is employed by Mr Jones as his office manager,
It is a sign that the North Yorkshire Council election campaign is hotting up ahead of the vote on May 5.
Mr Cooper said it was “critical that we use local businesses where we can”.
According to the post, other local Liberal Democrat literature has been printed in York and Chesterfield.
Cllr Cooper said:
“It is critical that we use local businesses where we can and there are a lot of good local printers who would have wanted this business.
“It really is strange to call on others to ‘buy local’ when you are buying from York, Chesterfield and even Dundee!”.
Cllr Cooper, who has said he will not be seeking re-election next month, also said the leaflet’s ‘greener’ agenda was at odds with its creation.
Carbon footprint
He said:
“Even if they didn’t want to use local printers for some reason was it really necessary to go 60-odd miles north of Edinburgh? The carbon footprint of their literature is enormous.
“When you tell people you want to ‘buy local’ and ‘be greener’ you have to match your actions with words.”
The post said all election campaign leaflets published by Harrogate and Knaresborough Conservatives were printed in Harrogate and Mr Jones’ annual reports were printed in Knaresborough.
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Pat Marsh, leader of Harrogate and Knaresborough Liberal Democrats, told the Stray Ferret that the Conservatives “should really have bigger things to be worrying about than where we print our material”, such as spiralling energy bills, the fallout of war in Ukraine and “businesses feeling the bite of Brexit”.
Cllr Marsh added:
“This is a particularly strange attack from the Conservatives who, during the pandemic, took £10,000 of grants to pay for their office.
“We think these grants should have been used to support local businesses, not on political party campaigns. Since they print a lot of their material at their office many people will be questioning whether their taxpayers money is helping to fund Conservative election leaflets.”
She added that the Liberal Democrats’ process for using outside suppliers was to “try and get the best value for money”, which was “something Conservative-run Harrogate council could learn from”, adding:
“They spent £5,000 on a giant snow globe that was displayed in London for two days over Christmas and £700 on social media influencers. This is on top of the £13 million they wasted on a council office for a council their own government is abolishing.”
Stray Views: Skipton Road ‘improvements’ have made delays worse
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. Send your views to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk.
Skipton Road ‘improvements’ have made delays worse
At 9.30am today (Wednesday) it took me 16 minutes to drive between the New Park and Empress roundabouts in Harrogate, a distance of just over a mile.
The recent ‘improvement’ to the traffic lights at the junction of King’s Road and Woodfield Road has made Skipton Road jams much worse, in both directions.
When will North Yorkshire County Council return to remedy these problems where the traffic lights are not giving anything like enough time to motorists on the main Skipton Road, and how much has this wasted work cost so far?
Liz Carnell, Knox Way, Harrogate
Get it beeping right!
I read your articles about beeps at pedestrian crossings.
I have reasonably good eyesight and hearing but I entirely agree with Mr Raho that beeps are really necessary at pedestrian crossings and should be installed, as they do help so much when trying to cross.
Patricia Perry, Harrogate
Our MP is in first gear
I read last week’s letter about Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones’ lack of communication on his website.
It’s because it’s such a safe seat and he thinks he will walk it again at the next election — he’s in first gear all the way.
Michael Ward, Knaresborough
Do you have an opinion on the Harrogate district? Email us at letters@thestrayferret.co.uk. Please include your name and approximate location details. Limit your letters to 350 words. We reserve the right to edit letters.
Harrogate district house severely damaged in fire
Firefighters from four fire stations were called to a blaze at a house in the Harrogate district last night.
Crews from Knaresborough, Harrogate, Ripon and Boroughbridge were summoned to the home in Brearton just after 10pm.
The house suffered severe fire, heat and smoke damage to the living room, hallway and front of the property, according to North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service.
The rest of the property suffered moderate smoke damage.
Brearton is about three miles from Knaresborough.
The fire service’s incident log said “the incident remains open whilst the cause is investigated”.
It added:
“Crews used eight breathing apparatus, four hosereel jets, two main jets, thermal imaging cameras, nine-metre ladder, triple extension ladders, small tools and lighting.”
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How the Harrogate district’s wards will change ahead of local election
When voters in the Harrogate district head to the polls on May 5, the wards they fall into will look very different.
Twenty-one of the 89 councillors elected to the new North Yorkshire Council will be from the district.
Currently, councillors elected to Harrogate Borough Council and North Yorkshire County Council represent 57 wards – 40 on the borough council and 17 on the county council.
So the new wards will be much bigger and there will be far fewer in total. Each one will average 6,194 residents to one representative.
The cull of councillors has led to allegations that the district will be under-represented on the new North Yorkshire Council
But ruling Conservatives on the current North Yorkshire County Council argue the new authority will be more efficient and that the new boundaries could be subject to change in five years time.
What are the new wards?
The Harrogate district will have 21 seats on the new council.
Of that number, 13 are in Harrogate and Knaresborough with the remaining eight covering Pateley Bridge, Masham and Ripon.
Harrogate itself will have nine wards, while Knaresborough will have two and Boroughbridge a single seat.
The changes to boundaries have seen seats such as Starbeck merged with Fairfax and Hookstone and Woodlands now joins the Stray to form a new ward.
Meanwhile, Bilton have two seats with Bilton and Nidd Gorge and Bilton Grange and New Park.
In Knaresborough, the town will be divided into Knaresborough East and Knaresborough West.
The full list of wards
- Bilton & Nidd Gorge
- Bilton Grange & New Park
- Boroughbridge & Claro
- Coppice Valley & Duchy
- Fairfax & Starbeck
- Harlow & St Georges
- High Harrogate & Kingsley
- Killinghall, Hampsthwaite & Saltergate
- Knaresborough East
- Knaresborough West
- Masham & Fountains
- Oatlands & Pannal
- Ouseburn
- Pateley Bridge & Nidderdale
- Ripon Minster & Moorside
- Ripon Ure Bank & Spa
- Spofforth with Lower Wharfedale & Tockwith
- Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone
- Valley Gardens & Central Harrogate
- Washburn & Birstwith
- Wathvale & Bishop Monkton
Harrogate and Knaresborough ‘considerably underrepresented’
The proposal for the wards was signed off by the government as part of the Structural Changes Order in January.
However, Philip Broadbank, a Liberal Democrat councillor on both Harrogate Borough Council and North Yorkshire County Council, attempted to change the boundaries after criticising them as underrepresenting Harrogate and Knaresborough.
He said:
“In my view, it makes this largest urban area in the county considerably underrepresented on the new authority.”
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Cllr Broadbank submitted a fresh proposal, which would have reduced the average resident to councillor number from 6,194 to 5,329 – which is the number seen in other districts. However, this was rejected by the government.
However, Conservative Cllr John Weighell, who led the working group on the council boundaries, told Cllr Broadbank previously:
“I do accept underrepresentation, I always have, but I think this is absolutely the only way to maintain community identity.
“Of the 18 Harrogate and Knaresborough members currently in the borough council area, 16 are twin-hatted and that says everything really.
“Some people are saying ‘we can’t represent that number of residents’ – but they are doing it already.”
The new arrangements will stay in place until 2027 when the Boundary Commission will carry out a full review.
Across North Yorkshire, there would be 89 councillors serving the county’s 600,000 population.
This would be a higher proportion of representatives than the 99 that serve Leeds’ 800,000 residents, but a lower proportion than the 126 councillors who serve County Durham’s 425,000 population.
Have missing Killinghall peacocks been secretly killed?There are fears that about 10 peacocks have been secretly killed in Killinghall.
A muster of peacocks has roamed the village for years. But the number exploded last year to as many as 16, upsetting some residents with their loud screeching and damage to gardens.
There were calls for the peacocks to be rehomed — but it seems someone may have taken matters into their own hands.
Killinghall Parish Council said in a statement on social media yesterday it was “made aware that there are concerns regarding our resident peacocks”.
It added:
“There have been sightings of only four of the birds and people are speculating as to what has become of the rest.
“If action was taken to remove any of the peacocks, the parish council is unaware of this and certainly had no involvement.”
Parish council unfairly blamed
Last year, after receiving complaints about peacock anti-social behaviour, the parish council had suggested working with residents to address the problem.
It floated the idea of rehoming and even looked into the possibility of neutering — an idea that was dropped as impractical.
Read more:
- Some Kilinghall peacocks could be re-homed
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The parish council said yesterday it hadn’t received any further communication from residents since last year.
Nevertheless, its attempts to respond to concerns.have led to some unfair speculation on social media that it was responsible for the missing birds — something it has been keen to clarify that it wasn’t.
Speculation is now rife about the fate of the peacocks, with some suspecting a disgruntled villager may be responsible.
There are also fears for the safety of the remaining birds, which tend to roost in a large tree in the new development at the back of Cautley Drive.
Some residents in nearby Bilton were upset last year when its resident peacock, Peter, was rehomed by the RSPCA animal charity after concerns for his welfare. He is believed to be in Lancashire.
Delight as Summerbridge school rated ‘Good’ by Ofsted
A Nidderdale primary school has been rated ‘Good’ by Ofsted.
Inspectors visited Summerbridge Community Primary School in February and have now given the ‘Good’ rating across all five areas assessed, as well as for its overall effectiveness.
They highlighted pupils’ behaviour and concentration, after-school clubs and residential trips, and the ambitious learning opportunities, as among the areas where the school performed well.
The inspectors’ report said:
“Leaders want the best for pupils at this small village school. The school has a caring ethos where pupils are taught to develop skills and knowledge to maximise their potential… Positive relationships between staff and pupils are evident throughout the school. Pupils feel safe, happy and well cared for.”
The report praised the school’s teaching across numerous subject areas, as well as the special educational needs and disabilities provision. It also recognised the leadership team’s effectiveness, and said staff were positive about their jobs and enjoyed working at the school. It added:
“Staff feel valued and say that leaders are considerate of their well-being.”
To improve further, the school was advised to offer staff the opportunity to refresh and update their knowledge of the method chosen to teach phonics, and to support subject leaders to ensure staff understood how best to deliver lessons that match the intended learning outcomes.
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- Tractor run inspires children’s learning in Pateley Bridge
Reacting to the new Ofsted report, headteacher Nick Coates said:
“I am delighted with the outcome following a four-year journey of hard work by everyone involved with the school.
“The parents, the governors, the staff, the local authority and of course the children have all had a significant part to play in the success of the school and given the challenges of the last two years, this hasn’t always been easy, but we are thrilled that all our hard work has paid off and has been recognised by the inspection team.”
At its last inspection in 2018, Summerbridge Primary School was rated as ‘Requires Improvement’.
Mr Coates became headteacher in September 2016. He has also been headteacher at Darley Primary School since January 2009 and the two schools have formed a federation, with a total of 160 pupils.
Man suffers serious head injuries in minibus collision in KnaresboroughA man in his 70s suffered a serious head injury this morning when he was involved in a collision with a minibus on the A59 in Knaresborough.
North Yorkshire Police said in a statement this afternoon that the pedestrian was taken to hospital. It added:
“He was conscious and breathing following the incident.”
The A59 remains closed between Bogs Lane in Harrogate and Long Walk in Knaresborough.
The incident occurred near Forest Lane Head at about 9.30am.
Diversions have been put in place while collision investigators examine the scene.
The police statement said:
“Witnesses or motorists with dash-cam footage are asked to contact North Yorkshire Police on 101, select option 1, and speak to the Force Control Room. Please quote reference NYP-31032022-0111.
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Kitten rescued from recliner chair in Killinghall
A fire officer saved a tiny kitten when it got stuck inside a recliner chair in Killinghall.
North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service received a call to help the animal after it somehow became trapped in the chair.
Paul Metheringham, station manager at North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service, said a single person was dispatched in a car to help the feline.
Using small tools, the rescuer was able to help the kitten escape unharmed.
The incident happened at about 7pm on Tuesday. No further details are available.
The fire service’s incident log said:
“A fire service officer rescued a tiny kitten that had got stuck inside a recliner chair. The kitten was rescued and had no injuries.”
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