Insurance brokers Clegg Gifford opened their office in Harrogate yesterday with their superhero mascots in tow.
Clegg Gifford moved into the former Skipton Building Society office on Princes Street and launched with a party, inviting clients and local businesses.
It took just five weeks to get the office, which underwent a full refurbishment, ready for opening.
The move into Harrogate has employed four people so far but the office has the capacity for up to 15.
Toby Clegg, CEO of the Clegg Gifford group, told the Stray Ferret:
“We like to have fun. Insurance is not the most exciting topic but we’re different, we like to bring a bit of fun and put our people at the forefront.
“We find that approach gets a better outcome for our customer and ultimately makes them happier. We have always had a book of business here through our Westminster Insurance so we are building on that good foundation.”
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Scott Markham, branch manager at the new Harrogate office, said:
“We’ve had a fantastic turnout today, it’s just what we’ve been hoping for. It’s a fabulous location and well appointed.
“It’s about creating a really warm welcome, we want to be at the centre of the community as friends and neighbours with our potential clients.”
Plans lodged to convert former Parliament Street shop and nightclub into flats
Plans have been lodged to convert a former retail unit and part of a nightclub on Parliament Street into flats.
JC Robinson Ltd has tabled the plans to North Yorkshire Council which would see seven apartments created at the Grade-II listed building.
The proposal would see the former Sofa Workshop, which is next to the now closed Bijouled store, converted.
It would also see the upper floor of the former Moko nightclub and office space adapted to become flats.
In documents submitted to the council, the developer said the application would cause no harm to the listed building.
It added:
“Subject to further detailing of internal and external works including the design of new window and door openings to the exterior of the building, it is considered that the development can be undertaken without giving rise to harm to the significance of the listed building.”
The move comes as the retail units at the site have been empty for some time.
The Bijouled unit, which would be retained under the plan, closed its doors in February this year.
Meanwhile, the former Sofa Workshop shut in April last year after the company entered administration.
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Two arrested in Jennyfields after police drugs raid
Police arrested two people in the Jennyfields area of Harrogate today on suspicion of supplying class A drugs.
A North Yorkshire Police statement this afternoon said officers attended a property on Norwich Drive after receiving reports of suspicious activity.
A man and a woman were arrested and a suspected weapon, drugs and mobile devices were seized.
The pair remain in custody.
No other details were released.
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Confirmed: Harrogate Hydro to reopen after school holidays
North Yorkshire Council has confirmed Harrogate Hydro will not re-open until after the school summer holidays.
The Hydro is undergoing a £13.5 million refurbishment and will welcome customers back under the new name Harrogate Leisure and Wellness Centre.
With schools set to break-up today, many families would have been looking forward to using the swimming pool, which has now been closed for 15 months.
But the Stray Ferret revealed this week that was unlikely to happen.
Nic Harne, corporate director for community development at the council, has now confirmed:
“We had hoped that the Harrogate Leisure and Wellness Centre would be open in late August but, unfortunately, due to unplanned works being required, it will now be early September.
“Refurbishment projects often uncover historic issues that need to be resolved and this complex construction is no different.
The leisure centre in Jennyfields closed in April last year for what was supposed to be a nine-month refurbishment costing £11.9 million.
But January’s scheduled re-opening did not happen. In May, North Yorkshire Council said the cost of the scheme had risen to £13.5 million and customers would be welcomed back in August.
Now the scheme has been pushed back again but there was better luck for leisure centre users in Knaresborough, with news that the town’s new facility has not been further delayed.
Mr Harne said:
“The new Knaresborough Leisure and Wellness Centre remains on-track to open in November.”
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Decision delayed on new homes in Crimple Valley
A decision on controversial plans for houses near a busy road in south Harrogate has been delayed.
North Yorkshire Council had set a target date of yesterday for determining the plans for 17 homes in the Crimple Valley.
However, it has now confirmed the decision will not be made this week.
The council’s assistant director for planning, Trevor Watson, said:
“Our consideration of this application remains ongoing and will not be resolved in time to determine it this week.
“We are nevertheless committed to issuing a decision on the application as soon as is practicable and have informed the applicant of this.”
The plans for seven affordable homes and 10 self-build plots have attracted more than 350 objections from residents.
They focused on the location of the site in the Crimple Valley special landscape area, as well as access to the new homes from the A61 at the bottom of Almsford Bank.
The council’s highways department has also raised concerns about the applicant’s proposal to reduce the speed limit to 40mph between Pannal and Harrogate.
A previous application for 35 homes on the land was rejected by Harrogate Borough Council, whose local plan guiding development in the area did not include the site.
Plans submitted in 2019 for 35 homes were withdrawn, as was a scheme for 65 houses put forward in 2018.
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Business Breakfast: Harrogate law firm appoints senior associate
There’s not long to go until the Stray Ferret Business Club’s breakfast event on Thursday, 27 July at Banyan in Harrogate between 8-10am.
The Business Club provides monthly opportunities to network, make new connections and hear local success stories. Get your tickets now by clicking or tapping here.
A Harrogate law firm has appointed a commercial property specialist to its team.
Claire Baker-Kemp has joined McCormicks, which is based on East Parade, as a senior associate.
Since qualifying as a solicitor, Ms Baker-Kemp has acted for the NHS, a major supermarket chain, the Department for Transport, an international shopping centre developer, financial institutions and local authorities.
She joined McCormicks from an investment company and has experienced in dealing with acquisition and disposal of freehold and commercial leasehold properties, as well as transactional landlord and tenant work.
Peter McCormick, senior partner at McCormicks, said:
“Commercial property has been a busy aspect of our legal work for many years and Claire’s background and experience will undoubtedly prove an asset.”
Harrogate firm sponsors Hull City Ladies FC
A Harrogate law firm has agreed a sponsorship deal with Hull City Ladies FC.
The agreement will see Truth Legal sponsor the club’s away shirt for the forthcoming 2023/24 season.
The firm, which is based on Victoria Avenue, said the move would help grow the women’s game in Yorkshire.
Georgina Parkin, managing director at Truth Legal, said:
“Through this partnership, we hope to not only contribute to the growth of women’s football in the region but also showcase our unwavering commitment to serving clients in Hull.”
Danny Johnson, Hull City Ladies FC managing director, said:
“I’m delighted that the club has formed an exciting partnership with Truth Legal and I’m pleased that Truth Legal will appear proudly on the front of our new away shirt 2023/25.”
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MW Craven wins top crime novel award in Harrogate
MW Craven has been named as the winner of the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year award in Harrogate tonight.
Carlisle-born Mr Craven joined the army at 16 and became a probation officer role before taking up writing.
He won the award for The Botanist, which is his latest thriller featuring the character Detective Sergeant Washington Poe.
He received a £3,000 prize, as well as an engraved beer cask handcrafted by one of Britain’s last coopers from Theakston Brewery in Masham.
More than 17,000 tickets have been sold for the four-day festival at the Old Swan in Harrogate, which began today.
Numerous best-selling authors and celebrities are in town for the event, which is run by Harrogate International Festivals.
A record 14,110 readers cast their votes between six shortlisted authors for crime novel of the year.
The shortlist included:
Elly Griffiths (The Locked Room)
Doug Johnstone (Black Hearts)
Fiona Cummins (Into the Dark)
Ruth Ware (The It Girl)
M.W. Craven (The Botanist)
Gillian McAllister (Wrong Place Wrong Time)
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The judges, including Simon Theakston, Steph McGovern, Matt Nixson from the Daily Express, journalist Joe Haddow, Lisa Howells and Gaby Lee from Waterstones, met yesterday to decide the winner, with the public vote counting as the seventh judge on the panel.
Ms Griffiths was highly commended for the penultimate mystery in her bestselling Dr Ruth Galloway series The Locked Room. She has now been nominated for the award six times, and this is her first highly commended.
Ann Cleeves honoured
Tonight’s ceremony also saw Ann Cleeves receive the Theakston Old Peculier Outstanding Contribution Award in recognition of her writing career.
Cleeves, the author of more than thirty-five critically acclaimed novels, is the creator of detectives Vera Stanhope, Jimmy Perez and Matthew Venn, who can be found on television in ITV’s Vera, BBC One’s Shetland and ITV’s The Long Call respectively.
Previous winners include Sir Ian Rankin, Lynda La Plante, James Patterson, John Grisham, Lee Child, Val McDermid, P.D. James and last year’s recipient Michael Connelly.
Ms Cleeves said:
“The Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival in Harrogate has always been a very special festival for me because I was in at the beginning. I’m delighted to accept this award and to help the team celebrate 20 years of brilliant crime writing.”
Tory accuses Lib Dems of being ‘anti-cycling’ in Harrogate Station Gateway row
The Conservative councillor in charge of delivering Harrogate’s £11.2m Station Gateway scheme has criticised the Liberal Democrats following the party’s decision to oppose the scheme — just two months after giving it their backing.
In May, the controversial active travel scheme received cross-party support among local Tories and Lib Dems.
A majority of Lib Dems said it should go ahead, providing the council engages with residents, businesses and local councillors “in a meaningful way”.
But the party withdrew its support this month, claiming the council had reneged on its promise to work with locals.
At a full meeting of the council in Northallerton yesterday, Conservative executive councillor for transport and highways, Keane Duncan, delivered a scathing assessment of the Lib Dems’ changing stance on the gateway and also disputed that any promises agreed at the May meeting had been broken.
He said:
‘The position now from Lib Dems in Harrogate is one of being anti-investment, anti-walking, anti-cycling, anti-environment and most gravely and damaging of all, anti-goodwill — a factor and quality that I think is essential now more than ever in this council.
“This executive will continue our support for the gateway. There will be no faltering and no political games.”
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Liberal Democrat councillor for High Harrogate and Kingsley, Chris Aldred, then accused Cllr Duncan of making the statement in order to further his own political ambitions.
On Friday, Cllr Duncan was selected by the Conservatives to be its candidate for the first mayor of York and North Yorkshire with elections next year.
Cllr Aldred later demanded the council investigates the “factual accuracy” of Cllr Duncan’s statement.
He said:
“I was accused of grandstanding and plating party politics. It wasn’t us who brought this up this afternoon.
“He could have written to me couldn’t he? He chose to mention this today. I’d like to congratulate him on the start of his campaign and I hope it goes a lot better than he’s started it today.”
Cllr Duncan’s comments also provoked veteran Harrogate councillor Pat Marsh, who was one of three Lib Dems to oppose the scheme in May.
Cllr Marsh said:
“To say the Lib Dems are anti-cycling, walking, whatever… that is totally, totally wrong. We were against a scheme that will not really deliver for any of that. We want the right scheme and not the wrong scheme.”
The West Yorkshire Combined Authority is current reviewing the business case for the project with a final decision on whether it goes ahead expected later this summer.
New muffin cafe opens in HarrogateA new muffin bakery and cafe has opened in Harrogate.
Muffin Break, which is based in the former Hotter shoe shop, opened its doors on Cambridge Street this morning.
The outlet, which has 60 cafes across the UK, offers a range of freshly baked goods including muffins and cakes, as well drinks such as milkshakes and coffee.
There will also be gluten free and vegan options available.
Customers can even order cakes online to be baked in store and collected.

John Viola, area manager at Muffin Break
John Viola, area manager for Muffin Break, told the Stray Ferret he felt the new outlet would fit into the Cambridge Street scene.
He said:
“Every store has its own feel. The nearest here is in Bradford.
“But I feel like this one has got that Harrogate feel.”
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Mr Viola added that the store will pride itself on giving people a relaxed experience in the cafe.
The cafe will be open from 8am until 5.30pm Monday to Saturday and 10am until 4pm on Sundays.
Muffin Break is a franchise business of FoodCo UK Franchising that first originated in Canada before expanding its cafes in Australia in the late 1980s.
Thousands of people have begun to arrive in Harrogate for the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival, which begins today.
The annual four-day festival sees Harrogate become the centre of the UK literary scene, with numerous best-selling authors and celebrities in town. More than 17,000 tickets have been sold.
This year’s line-up includes TV historian and author Lucy Worsley, who will be interviewed by broadcaster Natasha Knight on Sunday’s final day.
Jeffrey Deaver, who has sold 150 million books worldwide, will be interviewed by broadcaster and author Mark Lawson on Saturday.
Tomorrow’s big names include Val McDermid while tonight sees an appearance by Ann Cleeves as well as the announcement of the winner of the crime novel of the year award.
As usual, the event will be held at the Old Swan, which is where crime writer Agatha Christie was found after she went missing in 1926.
Organised by Harrogate International Festivals, 2023 festival chair and award-winning crime and thriller author Vaseem Khan has curated this year’s programme.
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