Yorkshire’s only council-run lottery has been described as a “lifeline” for charities during the pandemic after thousands of pounds was raised for good causes in the Harrogate district.
Harrogate Borough Council launched the Local Lotto in 2018 despite some concerns over encouraging gambling and it has since raised more than £161,000 through the sale of £1 tickets with funds from each going to the buyer’s choice of charity.
This includes £56,000 raised over the past year when many charities have struggled to survive due to donations drying up during covid.
Ann Duncan, partnership and engagement manager at the council, told a cabinet meeting on Wednesday that the lottery had been a “lifeline” during this time. She said:
“The supporters of the Local Lotto have remained strong and this has been really important for those good causes because traditional fundraising methods have been limited.
“The Local Lotto provides unrestricted funding so there are no stipulations as to what the charities can spend the money on.
“They can spend it on their electricity or insurance, it’s up to them, so for some of the good causes it has been a real lifeline when funds have been quite desperate over the last 18 months.”
£25,000 jackpot
The council takes no income from the £1 ticket sales with 60p from each going to the buyer’s choice of charity, 20p into the prize fund, 17p to an external lottery manager and 3p to cover VAT.
Funds raised are paid to signed-up charities selling tickets and around £19,400 has been handed out in winnings over the past year.
Some buyers have won up to £2,000, although the top prize of £25,000 has yet to be claimed.
Read more:
- Harrogate’s Local Lotto raises over £160,000 for good causes
- Queues in Harrogate as demand for booster jabs soars
The Local Lotto is also linked to the council’s Local Fund – a pot of cash which charities can apply for grants from.
Councillor Stanley Lumley, a Conservative who represents the Pateley Bridge and Nidderdale Moors ward, described the council’s decision to launch the lottery as “controversial” but said it had proved to be a “great success”. He said:
Meet the showground heroes boosting Harrogate’s vaccine programme“We took a gamble, if you’d pardon the pun, three years ago when we introduced this. It was controversial and people were sceptical whether it would work.
“It clearly has worked and worked extremely well.
“The beauty of this lottery is that a person buying the ticket decides where they want a portion of the money to go.
“My ticket money goes to something close to my heart – Nidderdale Plus at Pateley Bridge which is a really good community hub that needs support.”
About 20,000 people are expected to receive booster jabs at Harrogate’s Great Yorkshire Showground between December 6 and 22. Another 35,000 are set to follow in the New Year.
Most people who go agree it’s a slick, well-run operation. That it works so well is down to the efforts of 50 staff and 60 volunteers behind the life-saving operation.
The Stray Ferret spoke to some of those on site this week. The 60 volunteers are divided into four teams of 15 volunteers a day supplied on alternate days by community groups Boroughbridge Community Care, Harrogate and District Community Action, Nidderdale Plus and Knaresborough Connectors.
The Boroughbridge team, led by volunteer coordinator Jan Seymour, was on duty when we visited.
Ms Seymour was holding a box of chocolates, donated by a patient. All such gifts get shared between the helpers. She jokes:
“The people we like most are the ones that bring us chocolate and cake!

Jan Seymour
The set-up at the Yorkshire Event Centre is the same as it was from February to August this year when some 120,000 first and second dose vaccines were administered.
The volunteers remain relentlessly cheerful and helpful but there is a wearier feel to the place than there was in spring. Ms Seymour says:
“When we opened in February everyone was absolutely desperate to get it. Now the attitude is ‘I’m a bit busy today, can I come tomorrow?'”.
Volunteers typically do half a day each, either from 8am to 1pm or 1pm to 6pm. They meet and greet people, direct traffic and take people to one of the 16 vaccination pods, which can cater for up to eight vaccinators. Ms Seymour says:
“During lockdown it was easy to get volunteers but recently it’s become harder. Some people are back at work and many volunteers are older people who have childcare duties.
“The majority of patients are absolutely wonderful. They could not be more thankful. We get the odd one who isn’t. One guy had a go at me on Monday when he said ‘why can’t I go to my doctor for this? But that’s unusual. Most people are great.”
Staffing fatigue
Yorkshire Health Network, which is a federation of the 17 GP practices in the Harrogate district, manages the vaccination sites at Harrogate and Ripon racecourse.
Tim Yarrow, operations manager for the network, says the Harrogate site can handle greater numbers of walk-in patients because of its size and abundant parking.

Tim Yarrow
The quietest time, he says, is early to mid afternoon, then numbers soar towards the end of the day as many people try to get in at the end of their working days. The decision to allow walk-ins this week sparked a surge of visitors with queues of up to an hour at peak times.
Mr Yarrow says:
“We set this up in one-and-a-half days. It was easier second time round. We knew the snagging points from last time.
“The main challenge is staffing fatigue. During lockdown we had a lot of people with not a lot else to do. As people have gone back to their day jobs their availability has become more sparse.”
Yorkshire Agricultural Society, which owns the site, has “bent over backwards to enable it to happen”, says Mr Yarrow. When the site re-opens in January, jabs will take place in another building at the showground so the society can resume holding events in the Yorkshire Event Centre.
Moderna provided
Barnaby Roe, general manager of Yorkshire Health Network, oversees the operation at the showground.
In a makeshift office on site, he explains that the 50 staff are comprised of GP practice staff, who are helping for free on their days off, members of Yorkshire Health Network, pharmacists, pharmacist technicians and nurses. Half work the morning shift and half work in the afternoon.
“This programme will be for 20,000 to December 22 then going forward we think it will be another 35,000.”

Barnaby Roe
The site is giving doses of the Moderna booster but also administers some Pfizer jabs to children from immunosuppressed families.
“The people who work here have done it for some time and it’s down to a fine art.”
Booster appointments can be booked at the showground here. The site provided some walk-in appointments this week for over-18s who were eligible for jabs and has yet to decide whether they will be available next week.
Green Shoots: What it’s like to own an electric car in HarrogateHarrogate residents Ralph Armsby and his partner Judy Carrivick ditched their petrol car for an electric Kia e-Niro earlier this year.
They got the car on a four-year lease and pay around £450 a month plus £460 a year in insurance.
Because it’s a low emission vehicle they pay zero car tax, and when they charge it at home it ends up costing just over 1p a mile to drive.
Mr Armsby said switching to an EV was “a no-brainer” due to the environmental cost of driving a petrol car.
“We’re very aware of air pollution, not just from the car but it starts when they take the oil out of ground, to tankers driving around the UK.
“You should get something that is powered down a wire rather than being pumped out at stations all over the place.”
Mr Amsby said it’s important to check with Northern Powergrid that your home is able to install a charging point because there was a lack of fast public charging points in Harrogate.
It cost the couple around £600 to install one, which they plug into the car overnight whilst they sleep so they can wake up with a full charge.
If they decide to charge the car throughout the day, it works out at around 3p a mile.
Range anxiety
Mr Armsby said he sometimes suffers from “range anxiety”, the phenomenon where EV drivers are worried their car will run out of charge before they find somewhere to power it up. But on a full charge, their car can manage over 280 miles, depending on driving style.
They use an app called ZapMap to find public charging points. During a recent trip to Wales, they found towns much smaller than Harrogate were better equipped for EV drivers with more places to charge.
Harrogate has several public charging points, with 7kw, 24kw and 50kw connections.
The only fast 50kw charging points are at Harrogate Borough Council’s civic centre at Knapping Mount, where it costs more to charge than at home. There are also three fast charging points outside Lidl in Knaresborough.
If you charge your car at the civic centre it takes around half an hour to get a full charge.
Read more:
- Green Shoots: Why Harrogate should be at the vanguard of tackling climate change
- Harrogate’s addiction to SUVs contributing to climate crisis
- Green Shoots: Harrogate district plumber swaps ‘dirty diesel’ for vegetable fat
Mr Armsby said the council charging points were welcome, but Harrogate needed more and was poorly equipped for business travellers who might be using the convention centre.
He said:
“If you come here on a conference, you’ll be fighting for a space there.
“We desperately need more fast charging points.”
There are other slower charging 7kw charging points around the district, which are able to give an EV a short boost.
There are even now charging points at the almost 1,000-year-old Fountains Abbey. Mr Armsby said he has visited twice because he could charge his car outside the ruin.
In total, the Harrogate district has 53 EV charging points in 30 different locations, but some can only be used by Teslas.

Mr Armsby plugging in
Mr Armbsy said many more on-street charging facilities were needed in Harrogate so people can plug in whilst they shop.
He added:
“Other countries have had on-street charging and had it for years, we’re not world beating in the UK, we’re miles behind European countries.”
Joy to drive
The couple are retired and use their car mainly for leisure and shopping.
Mr Armsby said:
“It’s a joy to drive, we’re fighting each other on who’s going to drive!”
Whilst electric vehicles still produce emissions through their tyres — and there are concerns over the mining of minerals to make the batteries — Mr Armbsy said he would never go back to driving a petrol car.
He said:
“Harrogate is quite polluted. Cold Bath Road, for example, is a rat run in the mornings with kids being dropped off in Range Rovers. It would be so much nicer on these roads if everyone was driving electric.”
Do you have an interesting project or passion that improves the environment and could feature in Green Shoots? Contact thomas@thestrayferret.co.uk
Dog thefts more than double in Harrogate districtThe number of dog thefts in the Harrogate district more than doubled in 2020 compared with 2019, according to police statistics.
The figures were released after a member of the public made a Freedom of Information request to North Yorkshire Police.
They show there were eight thefts in 2020 compared with three in 2019. The three previous years saw just seven thefts in total.
Although the numbers are small, the 2020 figure represents a significant increase.
The Harrogate district also had the highest number of thefts in North Yorkshire in 2020, with Scarborough and Ryedale the closest with five.
The figures also revealed only two thefts ended in a person being charged. Most reports didn’t lead to court action either because no suspect was identified or there were evidential difficulties.

A table showing the number of crimes where a dog has been recorded as stolen. Photograph: North Yorkshire Police
Border Collies and Pugs were the most commonly stolen breeds in North Yorkshire, with 10 and eight thefts recorded respectively between 2016 and 2021.
Read more:
- Ripon dog owners want to maintain a cycle-free area
- Warning for dog walkers after four sheep killed near Pinewoods
The police recently appointed its first officers dedicated to dealing specifically with pet theft.
Amongst other duties, the officers will conduct reassurance visits, in which they accompany pet theft victims on walks to help them feel more confident when walking their dogs.
Harrogate vaccine walk-ins: go in afternoon tomorrow to avoid queuesStaff giving vaccines at the Great Yorkshire Showground in Harrogate have advised anyone planning a walk-in booster jab tomorrow to go in the afternoon.
The decision to allow over-18s to just turn up and get boosters prompted a wave of visitors to the showground today. Some people queued for an hour to get jabbed.
Tim Yarrow, operations manager for Yorkshire Health Network, which is a federation of the 17 GP practices in the Harrogate district, said the site had a lot of booked appointments tomorrow morning but the afternoon was quieter.
Anyone arriving for morning walk-ins would receive a booster, said Mr Yarrow, but they might have to wait for up to an hour.
He said it was likely to be quieter after 12.30pm.
Read more:
Another 102 covid infections were reported today in the Harrogate district.
The district’s seven-day infection rate has fallen slightly to 422 cases per 100,000. The North Yorkshire average is 380 and the England average is 505.
No further covid-related deaths have been reported at Harrogate District Hospital, meaning the overall total remains at 200.
Live: Harrogate district traffic and travelGood morning everyone. It’s Connor here this morning to try and keep you up to date with all your latest traffic and travel news from across the Harrogate district.
If there’s anything I’ve missed, and only if it is safe to do so, give me a call on 01423 276197.
These blogs are brought to you by The HACS Group.
9am – Full Update
That is all from me this morning. I hope you find the blog helpful and have a good weekend. I am heading over to the news deak now but Suzannah will be back with you on Monday morning.
Roads
The roads are starting to become busy this morning, here are the hotspots on our traffic map:
- Wetherby Road in Harrogate, busy between Forest Lane and Empress roundabout
- Skipton Road in Harrogate, busy between Grove Road and Empress roundabout
- High Street in Knaresborough, very busy due to construction works
Road closures:
- Cambridge Street in Harrogate Town centre – closed for the Christmas market
- Pannal Avenue – road closure
- Weeton Lane, Weeton – road closure and diversion
- Newby Crescent, near Saltergate Junior School – road closure
- Bogs Lane and Kingsley Drive, Starbeck – rolling road closures
- Woodfield Road, Harrogate – emergency footpath closure which may impact traffic
- A1(M) junction at Flaxby – road closures on all slip road roads. Work is now set to overrun by at least six months due to the discovery of great crested newts.
- Savage Yard, Knaresborough – road closure
- Copgrove to Fish Pond Bridge – road closure and diversion
- Knaresborough Road, Bishop Monkton – road closure
- Westerns Lane, Markington – road closure
- Reservoir Road, Thrucross – road closure
- Hall Square, Boroughbridge – road closure
Temporary lights:
- Otley Road, Harrogate – near Harlow Moor Road
- Westminster Drive, Burn Bridge
- Station Road, Pannal
- Whinney Lane near Ashville College
- Rudding Lane, Harrogate
- Wedderburn Road, Woodlands, Harrogate
- Stanhope Drive, Harrogate (behind Halfords)
- Grainbeck Lane, near Killinghall
- Hollins Lane, Hampsthwaite
- Forest Moor Road, Calcutt
- York Road, Goldsborough, at the junction with the A59
- Boroughbridge Road, near the junction for Farnham Lane
- Main Street, Staveley
- High Moor Lane to Minskip
- Kirkby Hill Moor to Roecliffe Lane, Boroughbridge
- Bar Lane, Boroughbridge
- Well House Farm to Kalashandy Warehouse, near Smelthouses
- Lupton Bank, Glasshouses
- Law Lane to Scarah Bank, Bedlam
- Markington to Quarry Track (near Markington Post Office)
- Harrogate Road, Ripon – near Quarry Moor Park
- Harrogate Road, Ripon – at the junction for South Crescent and Shirley Avenue
Trains
- No issues on the Harrogate lines after earlier delays
Buses
- Harrogate Bus Company is running a reduced timetable due to driver availability. The 36 bus will run every 30 mins between Harrogate & Ripon, and every 15 mins between Harrogate & Leeds
- Due to driver unavailability, the following buses are unable to run today: 08.49 – 1C Harrogate to Carmires, 09.14 – 1C Carmires to Harrogate, 09.56 – 1B Harrogate to Eastfield, 10.22 – 1B Eastfield to Harrogate
8.30am – Full Update
Roads
The roads are starting to become busy this morning, here are the hotspots on our traffic map:
- Wetherby Road in Harrogate, busy between Forest Lane and Empress roundabout
- Skipton Road in Harrogate, busy between Grove Road and Empress roundabout
- High Street in Knaresborough, very busy due to construction works
Road closures:
- Cambridge Street in Harrogate Town centre – closed for the Christmas market
- Pannal Avenue – road closure
- Weeton Lane, Weeton – road closure and diversion
- Newby Crescent, near Saltergate Junior School – road closure
- Bogs Lane and Kingsley Drive, Starbeck – rolling road closures
- Woodfield Road, Harrogate – emergency footpath closure which may impact traffic
- A1(M) junction at Flaxby – road closures on all slip road roads. Work is now set to overrun by at least six months due to the discovery of great crested newts.
- Savage Yard, Knaresborough – road closure
- Copgrove to Fish Pond Bridge – road closure and diversion
- Knaresborough Road, Bishop Monkton – road closure
- Westerns Lane, Markington – road closure
- Reservoir Road, Thrucross – road closure
- Hall Square, Boroughbridge – road closure
Temporary lights:
- Otley Road, Harrogate – near Harlow Moor Road
- Westminster Drive, Burn Bridge
- Station Road, Pannal
- Whinney Lane near Ashville College
- Rudding Lane, Harrogate
- Wedderburn Road, Woodlands, Harrogate
- Stanhope Drive, Harrogate (behind Halfords)
- Grainbeck Lane, near Killinghall
- Hollins Lane, Hampsthwaite
- Forest Moor Road, Calcutt
- York Road, Goldsborough, at the junction with the A59
- Boroughbridge Road, near the junction for Farnham Lane
- Main Street, Staveley
- High Moor Lane to Minskip
- Kirkby Hill Moor to Roecliffe Lane, Boroughbridge
- Bar Lane, Boroughbridge
- Well House Farm to Kalashandy Warehouse, near Smelthouses
- Lupton Bank, Glasshouses
- Law Lane to Scarah Bank, Bedlam
- Markington to Quarry Track (near Markington Post Office)
- Harrogate Road, Ripon – near Quarry Moor Park
- Harrogate Road, Ripon – at the junction for South Crescent and Shirley Avenue
Trains
- No issues on the Harrogate lines after earlier delays
Buses
- Harrogate Bus Company is running a reduced timetable due to driver availability. The 36 bus will run every 30 mins between Harrogate & Ripon, and every 15 mins between Harrogate & Leeds
- Due to driver unavailability, the following buses are unable to run today: 08.49 – 1C Harrogate to Carmires, 09.14 – 1C Carmires to Harrogate, 09.56 – 1B Harrogate to Eastfield, 10.22 – 1B Eastfield to Harrogate
8am – Full Update
Roads
The roads are starting to become busy this morning, here are the hotspots on our traffic map:
- Wetherby Road in Harrogate, busy between Forest Lane and Empress roundabout
- Skipton Road in Harrogate, busy between Grove Road and Empress roundabout
Road closures:
- Cambridge Street in Harrogate Town centre – closed for the Christmas market
- Pannal Avenue – road closure
- Weeton Lane, Weeton – road closure and diversion
- Newby Crescent, near Saltergate Junior School – road closure
- Bogs Lane and Kingsley Drive, Starbeck – rolling road closures
- Woodfield Road, Harrogate – emergency footpath closure which may impact traffic
- A1(M) junction at Flaxby – road closures on all slip road roads. Work is now set to overrun by at least six months due to the discovery of great crested newts.
- Savage Yard, Knaresborough – road closure
- Copgrove to Fish Pond Bridge – road closure and diversion
- Knaresborough Road, Bishop Monkton – road closure
- Westerns Lane, Markington – road closure
- Reservoir Road, Thrucross – road closure
- Hall Square, Boroughbridge – road closure
Temporary lights:
- Otley Road, Harrogate – near Harlow Moor Road
- Westminster Drive, Burn Bridge
- Station Road, Pannal
- Whinney Lane near Ashville College
- Rudding Lane, Harrogate
- Wedderburn Road, Woodlands, Harrogate
- Stanhope Drive, Harrogate (behind Halfords)
- Grainbeck Lane, near Killinghall
- Hollins Lane, Hampsthwaite
- Forest Moor Road, Calcutt
- York Road, Goldsborough, at the junction with the A59
- Boroughbridge Road, near the junction for Farnham Lane
- Main Street, Staveley
- High Moor Lane to Minskip
- Kirkby Hill Moor to Roecliffe Lane, Boroughbridge
- Bar Lane, Boroughbridge
- Well House Farm to Kalashandy Warehouse, near Smelthouses
- Lupton Bank, Glasshouses
- Law Lane to Scarah Bank, Bedlam
- Markington to Quarry Track (near Markington Post Office)
- Harrogate Road, Ripon – near Quarry Moor Park
- Harrogate Road, Ripon – at the junction for South Crescent and Shirley Avenue
Trains
- No issues on the Harrogate lines after earlier delays
Buses
- Harrogate Bus Company is running a reduced timetable due to driver availability. The 36 bus will run every 30 mins between Harrogate & Ripon, and every 15 mins between Harrogate & Leeds
- Due to driver unavailability, the following buses are unable to run today: 08.49 – 1C Harrogate to Carmires, 09.14 – 1C Carmires to Harrogate, 09.56 – 1B Harrogate to Eastfield, 10.22 – 1B Eastfield to Harrogate
7.30am – Full Update
Roads
The roads are running smoothly so far this morning, but keep checking back as things will likely get busier as the morning goes on.
Road closures:
- Cambridge Street in Harrogate Town centre – closed for the Christmas market
- Pannal Avenue – road closure
- Weeton Lane, Weeton – road closure and diversion
- Newby Crescent, near Saltergate Junior School – road closure
- Bogs Lane and Kingsley Drive, Starbeck – rolling road closures
- Woodfield Road, Harrogate – emergency footpath closure which may impact traffic
- A1(M) junction at Flaxby – road closures on all slip road roads. Work is now set to overrun by at least six months due to the discovery of great crested newts.
- Savage Yard, Knaresborough – road closure
- Copgrove to Fish Pond Bridge – road closure and diversion
- Knaresborough Road, Bishop Monkton – road closure
- Westerns Lane, Markington – road closure
- Reservoir Road, Thrucross – road closure
- Hall Square, Boroughbridge – road closure
Temporary lights:
- Otley Road, Harrogate – near Harlow Moor Road
- Westminster Drive, Burn Bridge
- Station Road, Pannal
- Whinney Lane near Ashville College
- Rudding Lane, Harrogate
- Wedderburn Road, Woodlands, Harrogate
- Stanhope Drive, Harrogate (behind Halfords)
- Grainbeck Lane, near Killinghall
- Hollins Lane, Hampsthwaite
- Forest Moor Road, Calcutt
- York Road, Goldsborough, at the junction with the A59
- Boroughbridge Road, near the junction for Farnham Lane
- Main Street, Staveley
- High Moor Lane to Minskip
- Kirkby Hill Moor to Roecliffe Lane, Boroughbridge
- Bar Lane, Boroughbridge
- Well House Farm to Kalashandy Warehouse, near Smelthouses
- Lupton Bank, Glasshouses
- Law Lane to Scarah Bank, Bedlam
- Markington to Quarry Track (near Markington Post Office)
- Harrogate Road, Ripon – near Quarry Moor Park
- Harrogate Road, Ripon – at the junction for South Crescent and Shirley Avenue
Trains
- 7.51am Harrogate to York running late – due 7.56am
Buses
- Harrogate Bus Company is running a reduced timetable due to driver availability. The 36 bus will run every 30 mins between Harrogate & Ripon, and every 15 mins between Harrogate & Leeds
7am – Full Update
Roads
The roads are running smoothly so far this morning, but keep checking back as things will likely get busier as the morning goes on.
Road closures:
- Cambridge Street in Harrogate Town centre – closed for the Christmas market
- Pannal Avenue – road closure
- Weeton Lane, Weeton – road closure and diversion
- Newby Crescent, near Saltergate Junior School – road closure
- Bogs Lane and Kingsley Drive, Starbeck – rolling road closures
- Woodfield Road, Harrogate – emergency footpath closure which may impact traffic
- A1(M) junction at Flaxby – road closures on all slip road roads. Work is now set to overrun by at least six months due to the discovery of great crested newts.
- Savage Yard, Knaresborough – road closure
- Copgrove to Fish Pond Bridge – road closure and diversion
- Knaresborough Road, Bishop Monkton – road closure
- Westerns Lane, Markington – road closure
- Reservoir Road, Thrucross – road closure
- Hall Square, Boroughbridge – road closure
Temporary lights:
- Otley Road, Harrogate – near Harlow Moor Road
- Westminster Drive, Burn Bridge
- Station Road, Pannal
- Whinney Lane near Ashville College
- Rudding Lane, Harrogate
- Wedderburn Road, Woodlands, Harrogate
- Stanhope Drive, Harrogate (behind Halfords)
- Grainbeck Lane, near Killinghall
- Hollins Lane, Hampsthwaite
- Forest Moor Road, Calcutt
- York Road, Goldsborough, at the junction with the A59
- Boroughbridge Road, near the junction for Farnham Lane
- Main Street, Staveley
- High Moor Lane to Minskip
- Kirkby Hill Moor to Roecliffe Lane, Boroughbridge
- Bar Lane, Boroughbridge
- Well House Farm to Kalashandy Warehouse, near Smelthouses
- Lupton Bank, Glasshouses
- Law Lane to Scarah Bank, Bedlam
- Markington to Quarry Track (near Markington Post Office)
- Harrogate Road, Ripon – near Quarry Moor Park
- Harrogate Road, Ripon – at the junction for South Crescent and Shirley Avenue
Trains
- All trains from Harrogate and Knaresborough look to be running to time
Buses
- Harrogate Bus Company is running a reduced timetable due to driver availability. The 36 bus will run every 30 mins between Harrogate & Ripon, and every 15 mins between Harrogate & Leeds
6:30am – Full Update
Roads
The roads are running smoothly so far this morning, but keep checking back as things will likely get busier as the morning goes on.
Road closures:
- Cambridge Street in Harrogate Town centre – closed for the Christmas market
- Pannal Avenue – road closure
- Weeton Lane, Weeton – road closure and diversion
- Newby Crescent, near Saltergate Junior School – road closure
- Bogs Lane and Kingsley Drive, Starbeck – rolling road closures
- Woodfield Road, Harrogate – emergency footpath closure which may impact traffic
- A1(M) junction at Flaxby – road closures on all slip road roads. Work is now set to overrun by at least six months due to the discovery of great crested newts.
- Savage Yard, Knaresborough – road closure
- Copgrove to Fish Pond Bridge – road closure and diversion
- Knaresborough Road, Bishop Monkton – road closure
- Westerns Lane, Markington – road closure
- Reservoir Road, Thrucross – road closure
- Hall Square, Boroughbridge – road closure
Temporary lights:
- Otley Road, Harrogate – near Harlow Moor Road
- Westminster Drive, Burn Bridge
- Station Road, Pannal
- Whinney Lane near Ashville College
- Rudding Lane, Harrogate
- Wedderburn Road, Woodlands, Harrogate
- Stanhope Drive, Harrogate (behind Halfords)
- Grainbeck Lane, near Killinghall
- Hollins Lane, Hampsthwaite
- Forest Moor Road, Calcutt
- York Road, Goldsborough, at the junction with the A59
- Boroughbridge Road, near the junction for Farnham Lane
- Main Street, Staveley
- High Moor Lane to Minskip
- Kirkby Hill Moor to Roecliffe Lane, Boroughbridge
- Bar Lane, Boroughbridge
- Well House Farm to Kalashandy Warehouse, near Smelthouses
- Lupton Bank, Glasshouses
- Law Lane to Scarah Bank, Bedlam
- Markington to Quarry Track (near Markington Post Office)
- Harrogate Road, Ripon – near Quarry Moor Park
- Harrogate Road, Ripon – at the junction for South Crescent and Shirley Avenue
Trains
- All trains from Harrogate and Knaresborough look to be running to time
Buses
- Harrogate Bus Company is running a reduced timetable due to driver availability. The 36 bus will run every 30 mins between Harrogate & Ripon, and every 15 mins between Harrogate & Leeds
Nathan Sadler has been appointed the next headmaster of independent prep school Belmont Grosvenor.
Father-of-three Mr Sadler will take up the role in September next year. He is moving from GEMS Wellington Academy Silicon Oasis in Dubai, which he helped open more than a decade ago.
Set in 20-acres of grounds in Birstwith, the school and nursery welcomes boys and girls from three months to 11 years old.
Mr Sadler said he was looking forward to taking the Harrogate prep school forward “to its next chapter”.
He said:
“It is my absolute privilege to be joining Belmont Grosvenor School as headmaster starting next academic year and I am excited by the opportunity to collectively work with staff, pupils, parents and the governors to celebrate and build on the school’s successes and identity and continue to provide the children with strong foundations to thrive in their ever-changing world.
“I’m very impressed with the school grounds and emphasis placed on outdoor learning opportunities and look forward to embracing the whole school community and collectively creating life-long memories for the children.”
Gordon Milne, chair of the governors, said Mr Sadler brought a wealth of experience, including seven years in a senior leadership role in Dubai. He added:
“Nathan displayed a real passion for learning and primary education.”
Mr Sadler will visit the school in March to meet pupils, parents and staff, before taking up his position at the start of the next academic year.
Read more:
- Otley Road cycle route works set to finish next week
- Over 18s invited for walk-in boosters at Harrogate’s Showground
Harrogate planning committee ‘shambles and embarrassing’, says residents group
The chair of Harlow and Pannal Ash Residents Association has described yesterday’s planning committee meeting, at which councillors approved controversial plans to build 200 homes at the former police training centre, as a “shambles” and “embarrassing”.
Councillors debated the application from Homes England, the government’s housing agency, for three hours. Concerns were raised about traffic congestion and the loss of a football pitch on the site.
The planning committee had previously voted in June against a recommendation to approve the application.
Councillors said back then that the scheme should not be passed until publication of the West Harrogate Parameters Plan, a document that will assess transport and infrastructure needs associated with wider plans to build up to 4,000 homes on the western side of Harrogate.
Councillors were told this week a draft version of the parameters plan would not be published until February 2022 but, this time, they decided to approve the plans by seven votes to three.
Rene Dziabas, chair of HAPARA, criticised the decision of councillors on the committee, who he said were “badly briefed” by officers.
He told the Stray Ferret:
“The meeting was a shambles. What communication was there between councillors and the planning department? Given this was a controversial deferral in June, you’d have thought there would have been a great deal of detail buttoned down, and a clear understanding from councillors about what the parameters plan is.
“I felt very let down [by the councillors]”.
Read more:
-
Homes England accused of ‘bullying’ tactics over 200 homes at Pannal Ash
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Football club’s fury at plans to axe Harrogate sports pitch for housing
David Stephenson, senior planning manager at Homes England, warned councillors that while launching a costly appeal against the council was an “absolute last resort” for the body it was a route it was willing to take.
During the meeting, Liberal Democrat councillor Pat Marsh accused Homes England of “bullying” councillors into approving the plans.
Mr Dziabas said the decision to grant planning permission in the face of impending legal action from Homes England had damaged local democracy.
He added:
Harrogate district records 200th covid death“There’s a great deal of talk about local democracy — this was not a good example of it.”
The Harrogate district reached the grim milestone of 200 covid-related deaths today.
The figures published by NHS England show the 200th death was recorded yesterday at Harrogate District Hospital.
A further 95 covid cases were reported in the district, taking the total since the start of the pandemic to 25,095.
The district’s seven-day covid rate has increased slightly to 455 infections per 100,000 people.
Across the county, the average stands at 418 and the England rate is 489.
Harrogate District Hospital currently has 12 covid-positive patients – a figure which has fallen from 25 over the last month.
Read more:
- Great Yorkshire Showground in Harrogate reopens for vaccines today
- Still no omicron infections in Harrogate district as rate drops
Harrogate’s Great Yorkshire Showground reopened yesterday as a vaccination site.
The showground was due to close on December 22 but it now looks set to continue until March, although this has yet to be confirmed, as the government aims to speed up the vaccination programme.
Those eligible can book appointments on the NHS booking site here.
Eco-development could be catalyst for green housing in Harrogate districtThere are hopes nine ‘eco-homes’ that could be built near Knaresborough will be a catalyst for greener housebuilding in the Harrogate district.
Ben Holmes, from Birstwith, has submitted a planning application to Harrogate Borough Council for the cutting-edge development, which would be built to strict environmental standards and include solar panels, air-source heat pumps and super-tight insulation.
There would even be a communal vegetable garden to reduce the need to drive to shops.
A different model
Mr Holmes’ proposed scheme for York Road in Flaxby would be a community self-build development, which is a different model of housebuilding from what is usually seen.
If he is granted planning permission, he will install infrastructure, such as paths, water, drainage and a communal area, on the site.
He will then sell each of the nine plots to people who want to build their own home. The buyers then hire an architect and builder and design a home to suit their family’s needs.
Mr Holmes’ said this allowed for a customisable approach rather than buying identikit cookie-cutter homes on a large estate.
He said:
“You see these houses and they’ve all got their gas boilers. It is wrong way to build houses. Your big developers get as many homes on as possible and there is a lack of variation and creativity. It is soulless.
“There is a different way of building houses.”
Read more:
- Green Shoots: Harrogate’s most environmentally-friendly house?
- Housing Investigation: land the size of 700 football pitches lost to new housing
Lower energy bills
Harrogate Borough Council has a register of about 200 people who want to build their own home. Mr Holmes said there is an appetite in the district who people who want to have more of a say in how their home is built.
Anyone buying a plot to build their home will have to abide by a framework of environmental rules.
This includes Passivhaus certification and the Home Quality Mark from BRE.
Developed in Germany in the 1990s, Passivhaus is seen as a game-changer for low-carbon housing. It’s an innovative design code that prioritises insulation so that a home doesn’t need any heating or cooling at all, resulting in minimal energy bills.
There is only a handful of Passivhaus homes in the district, including the Larners’ house on Bogs Lane in Harrogate.
Mr Holmes also said the houses may be factory-built, bypassing much of the polluting construction process that comes with traditional bricks and mortar homes.
He added:
“Hopefully this site will act as a catalyst for the area to build more Passivhaus. It’s a high bar to get to that standard.”
