NHS managers have objected to plans for 49 homes at Kingsley Farm in Harrogate and warned that the town’s health infrastructure has “very limited capacity”.
The homes, which have been proposed by Quarterly Kingsley Ltd, are earmarked for the north and north east of the site off Kingsley Road.
The developer said in a planning statement submitted to Harrogate Borough Council the scheme would help to offer a “sense of place”.
However, Nick Brown, of the NHS Humber and North Yorkshire Integrated Care Board, has objected to the plan.
In a letter to the council, he warned GPs were “extremely concerned” about further development within Harrogate.
He said:
“As primary care providers, the GPs and primary care networks are extremely concerned regarding any proposals for further residential development within Harrogate.
“The existing health infrastructure in Harrogate already operates above optimum capacity and has very limited capacity to absorb additional pressures.
“Primary care and community services within the area are already running at, or far beyond their existing capacity.”
Read more:
- Developer reduces planned Kinglsey Drive scheme to 162 homes
- Starbeck residents pledge to fight 181-home Kingsley Drive plans ‘tooth and nail’
The Kingsley area has seen multiple planning applications lodged to build houses on Kingsley Farm, including a revised proposal for 162 homes by Persimmon Homes.
Residents in the area have long held concerns about the amount of housebuilding in the area and its affect on traffic, noise and loss of green space.
Harrogate Borough Council will make a decision on the Kingsley Farm proposal at a later date.
Stray Ferret Business Awards: Does your business have the Best Employee Development?The Stray Ferret Business Awards 2023 are for businesses across all sectors in the Harrogate district.
In this final week before entries close, we are revealing the last of what our judging panel is looking for when it comes to each of the 10 categories.
Next up is the Best Employee Development Award, which is sponsored by Jones Myers, Family Law Solicitors.
This award is designed to highlight businesses that develop their employees, giving them the best start for a new career.
Those looking to enter this award need to give details of the business values and culture that lead to the creation of the training programme and highlight employee successes that came as a result.
Do you know a person that deserves to win the Best Employee Development Award at the Stray Ferret Business Awards? Entries close on January 16. It’s simple and quick, so enter today!
Click here or the banner below to enter for the Stray Ferret Business Awards, sponsored by Prosperis.
Three men charged with possessing gun in Harrogate districtRead more:
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Ambulance workers form picket line in Harrogate today
Striking ambulance workers are operating a picket line in Harrogate today.
Members of the GMB union began their 24-hour action at Harrogate Ambulance Station, which is on Lancaster Park Road close to the hospital, at midnight.
They were joined by members of Unison at noon.
It is the second time staff at Yorkshire Ambulance Service have gone on strike in the last month, although they continue to respond to the most serious category one calls.
GMB rep and paramedic Neil Summers told the Stray Ferret the state of the NHS was the main reason for the industrial action. He said:
“We are literally sitting outside hospitals with patients in our ambulances for hours and hours because they have nowhere to go.
“The hospitals are full and it means we are not able to do our jobs. We hear calls for cardiac arrests and can’t do anything.”

Todays picket line
Mr Summers said York Hospital was particularly bad but paramedics could still be waiting at Harrogate District Hospital for “up to three or four hours”.
He said there needed to be greater investment in the NHS as well as social care to ease problems caused by bed-blocking.
He said pay was also a concern, as many staff had not had an increase in wages for years.
“My pay isn’t terrible but some people’s is appalling.”

Picket line Jan 2023
The pickets have been joined today by local campaigner Lindis Percy, a former nurse, midwife and health visitor. She said:
“What’s going on in the the health service is shocking and this government has caused it.”
Health Secretary Steve Barclay said this morning the NHS is under “very severe pressure”.
He added the government has announced further investment for emergency departments, as well as looking into ways of targeting how to get patients who are fit to leave into social care.
Read more:
- Ambulance workers in Harrogate district begin strike
- Picket line at Harrogate station as latest RMT strikes near end
Vandals damage Mercedes in Harrogate
Police are appealing for help after vandals damaged a Mercedes in Harrogate.
The incident happened on Alderson Road, off Leeds Road, shortly before 6.30am on Monday this week.
A North Yorkshire Police statement said two men in dark clothing approached the vehicle on foot from the Leeds Road junction. It added:
“One appears to have kept a look-out while the other damaged the windows of an unattended black Mercedes.
“North Yorkshire Police are requesting the public’s assistance to establish the full circumstances surrounding the incident.
“In particular, officers are asking a female jogger to get in touch. She was wearing a high-vis harness, and may have run past the offenders on Leeds Road immediately prior to the junction of Alderson Road.”
Police also want to contact the driver of a white pick-up truck — possibly a milk delivery vehicle — that pulled into Alderson Road as the damage was taking place.
Anyone else with information or dash cam footage is also asked to email peter.henderson@northyorkshire.police.uk or call on 101, select option 2, and ask for PC 1668 Henderson.
If you wish to remain anonymous, you can pass information to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111. Quote the North Yorkshire Police reference number 12230004592.
Read more:
- Flooding ‘expected’ at caravan park in Harrogate district
- Harrogate businessman spared jail for sexually assaulting woman in street
Business Breakfast: Last remaining days for Stray Ferret Business Awards entries
Now is your time to shine with the Stray Ferret Business Awards. We are encouraging businesses of all sizes from right across the Harrogate district to enter for our awards and get recognition from our top panel of judges. Entries close on January 16.
There are only a few days left to send in entries for the Stray Ferret Business Awards as the closing date approaches.
The Stray Ferret Business Awards, sponsored by Prosperis, is on March 9 at the Pavilions of Harrogate and will celebrate success and excellence in the business community across the district.
The closing date for entries for the 10 categories is on Monday 16th.
The judging panel will meet a week today so submissions cannot be accepted after the closing date.
The event promises to be a celebration of local business – the key note speaker is the Chief Executive of the new North Yorkshire Council, Richard Flinton.
New forager to be showcases at Ripon Farm Services show
Ripon Farm Services is set to showcase its new forager at its new year show next week.
The John Deare 9700 will be unveiled at the event at the Great Yorkshire Showground on Wednesday, January 18.
The show will be held over two-days and showcases leading agricultural machinery.
Geoff Brown, managing director of Ripon Farm Services, said:
“We can’t wait to welcome our customers and guests for what promises to be a very busy event, for the first time since the global pandemic hit three years ago, our show is back to normal, without any covid-related restrictions.
“We are absolutely delighted to be showcasing John Deere’s pioneering self-propelled 9700 forager harvester model. We are confident this new machine, following on from the success of John Deere’s 8000 Series, will prove a very popular attraction.
“In addition, we are featuring the latest innovations from our Technology Team to help our customers reduce input costs and improve profitability through more efficient production.”
For more information on the Ripon Farm Services new year show, visit the company website here.
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Second consultation to be held on whether to form Harrogate town council
A second consultation is to be launched into the creation of a Harrogate town council.
North Yorkshire County Council will write to households across Harrogate as part of an eight-week survey starting on February 20.
Harrogate and Scarborough are the only parts of North Yorkshire which do not have a parish or town council.
The second consultation is expected to be more detailed than the first one, which merely invited people to say whether they supported the idea.
Residents will be sent information including the number of councillors, assets and reasons for why it is needed.
A further survey on the matter was approved by senior county councillors today.

The areas in Harrogate which would fall under the new town council.
Cllr Michael Harrison, the Conservative executive member for health and adult services who represents Killinghall, Hampsthwaite and Saltergate, said while he supported the second consultation, he had reservations over the town council.
He said:
“Members will be aware of my concerns more generally about proceeding to the next stage of consultation. I have made my views both informally and on a one-to-one basis.
“We are removing a layer of local government by moving to a unitary authority and we are immediately going to be replacing it in the Harrogate area with another, so there is an underlying concern there.
“We are creating a likely future tax liability on a population without any real idea of what that tax would be or what the residents would get for paying that tax and I think that was one of the comments that came back in the consultation.”
Read more:
- Harrogate set to get town council after 75% back the idea
- Revealed: the Harrogate areas set for new council tax charge
- Just 3.5% responded to Harrogate town council consultation
However, Cllr Harrison added he understood it would be “an anomaly” to leave an unparished area in a county full of parish areas.
He said:
“I do acknowledge that there is an aspiration for double devolution with the new unitary council which clearly you could not achieve without a town or parish council for Harrogate.”
The consultation is set to be held instead of a local referendum, which the county council said was not “legally possible” after a request from Harrogate Borough Council.
The county council added it could not “fetter its discretion” to hold a referendum and that a further survey of residents may elicit a similar outcome.
Cllr Harrison told senior councillors that it was “vital” that every household was written to as part of the consultation in the absence of a referendum.
River Island to close in Harrogate as landlord plans apartmentsA town centre shop in Harrogate is set to close in just over three weeks’ time.
River Island is holding a closing down sale as it prepares to close its doors on Cambridge Street for the last time on February 4.
A spokesperson for River Island said:
“The closure is due to change of use of the building by the landlord.”
Plans were approved in summer 2020 to refurbish the ground floor of the building and convert the first floor, as well as adding a roof extension, to create 14 apartments. Work would need to begin on the building by June this year to comply with the terms of the planning permission.
The building is owned by a Santander pension fund.
Read more:
- Plan approved to create five flats above Cambridge Street shops
- Sneak peek at Harrogate’s new Cosy Club
Last summer, Cosy Club opened in the same stretch of units, becoming the first bar along the street. Sainsbury’s Local and Skipton Building Society also opened branches earlier in the year.
Further east on the same street, plans were approved last February to convert the upper floors of some retail units into flats.
Today, York-based property company Grantside announced it had acquired the 10,000 sq ft building and was intending to use the flats as holiday lets.
Steve Davis, chief executive of Grantside, said:
Rain highlights concerns about state of Harrogate district drains and gullies“This is a great opportunity and a brilliant location – in the heart of Harrogate town centre.
“Our vision for the building is to bring it back into full use through the conversion of the upper floors into apartments, which will be used as holiday accommodation and help the town’s economy.”
Heavy rain in recent days has heightened concerns about the state of drains and gullies in the Harrogate district.
The Stray Ferret has been contacted by residents in separate parts of the district frustrated about how quickly flooding occurs because of blockages in the drainage infrastructure.
Huby resident John Chadwick said flooding caused by blocked culverts, drains and ditches was a major problem in Huby and Weeton and concerns raised by the parish council had brought “minimal results”. He said:
“There is a particularly serious issue at the moment at the junction of Woodgate Lane, Crag Lane and the main A658.
“When there is even little rainfall, water cascades off the fields on the north side of the A658. Because the ditches are blocked, water flows down over the main road and then down onto Woodgate Lane. Recently this froze over causing a risk to life. This is not an exaggeration, a vehicle could easily have skidded.
“I walk my dog regularly in the area and even as a complete novice in the subject, I can see that the problem would be easy to solve by clearing ditches, gulleys and drains.”

A drain in Huby
Mr Chadwick urged North Yorkshire County Council, the highways authority, to do more to tackle the problem, particularly as a school bus stop is located at the junction.
Read more:
- Firefighters rescue horse trapped in floodwater in Harrogate district
- Sharow pub owner appeals housing plan refusal
Sharow resident James Thornborough sent photos of Sharow Lane, which he said flooded within an hour of heavy rain on Saturday.
“The blind bend road was flooded where the sewage operation is running 24/7. It took just one hour of torrential rain to achieve the pictured lake. The electric power packs for the traffic lights were submerged in water.
“Yorkshire Water jetted the drains about six weeks ago, which is not a sustainable solution because every other drain on Dishforth Road is blocked, offering a downhill runway.

Sharow Lane last weekend
North Yorkshire County Council’s executive member for highways and transportation, Cllr Keane Duncan, said:
“Funding for the upkeep of drains and gullies is part of our annual highways maintenance budget of around £55 million which covers planned maintenance programmes as well as responding to problems as they arise.
“Over the last financial year we invested an additional £500,000 to improve how we maintain road drainage systems across the county.
“We have in-house high-pressure jetting capability on our gully cleansing machines which assist in unblocking drainage systems and ensuring they are operating effectively.”
Talks to save 24 bus from Pateley to Harrogate as cull loomsTalks are taking place to maintain the 24 bus route between Pateley Bridge and Harrogate.
The service provides a lifeline for many people in rural parts of Nidderdale, including Birstwith, Darley and Summbridge.
But North Yorkshire County Council said today its survival was in the balance — amid uncertainty over the future of 80 bus services in the county.
Until October 2022, all Monday to Saturday journeys on the 24 were operated commercially by the Harrogate Bus Company, which is owned by French transport firm Transdev.
But in October the company announced the service was no longer commercially viable and it intended to withdraw most journeys, which prompted the county county to prop it up until April this year.
North Yorkshire County Council’s executive member for highways and transportation, Cllr Keane Duncan, said today:
“We are currently seeking costs from operators to continue service 24 after April in the hope it can be maintained at a similar level. We will update the public on the future of the service as soon as possible.
“The issues affecting the 24 service come at a time of immense pressure for bus services both nationally and across North Yorkshire.”

Cllr Keane Duncan
Read more:
- Bilton bus services to merge under new route changes
- £2 cap on Harrogate district bus fares starts today
Cllr Duncan said passenger numbers were currently on average about 80 per cent of pre-pandemic levels. In addition, operating costs have increased and there is a national shortage of drivers. The Conservative politician added:
“Combined with government grant funding coming to an end in March, around 80 routes are at risk of needing to reduce their frequency or cease altogether.
“While we already use £1.6m of council funds each year to support services that are not commercially viable, this funding is likely to become increasingly stretched given the scale of the challenge we are facing across the county.
“We continue to work closely with operators to encourage more people to choose the bus. We are supporting the government’s £2 fare cap, which applies to the 24 and tens of other services in North Yorkshire.
“We meet regularly and are sharing information in a bid to ensure we are doing everything we can to protect as much of the network as possible through this difficult period. This will ensure we have the best basis for building services back in the future.”
Bus fares charged by the Harrogate Bus Company and Connexions Buses were capped at £2 for three months from the start of this year as part of the government-funded Help for Household scheme.
Michael Harrison, a Conservative who represents Killinghall, Hampsthwaite and Saltergate on the county council, said the 24 route, which passes through his division, was highly valued by many people. He added:
“I’m hopeful we will be able to keep the service running in the new financial year. In the meantime I would really encourage people to to take advantage of the £2 bus fare cap to demonstrate there is a demand for it.”