North Yorkshire Council looks set to propose a council tax hike as part of its first budget.
The authority, which will take over Harrogate Borough Council and North Yorkshire County Council, is set to recommend a bill of £1,759.96.
However, the total bill will also include precepts for fire and police services which will be decided next month.
Here is all you need to know about your council tax this coming year.
What will my council tax be?
For 2023/24, taxpayers will no longer pay council tax to Harrogate Borough Council and North Yorkshire County Council.
Instead, tax will be paid solely to the new North Yorkshire Council.
As part of its first budget, authority officials are proposing a band D rate of £1,759.96 for the year – an increase on last year by 4.99%.
That does not include the precepts for fire, police and parish councils which will be decided separately by those organisations.
Why has the council chosen to increase council tax?
The council is proposing the sum in order to meet costs for providing public services across the county.
It has also decided that council tax rates will be harmonised for the next two years – meaning taxpayers will pay the same sum across the county.
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The council has calculated that council tax for the average band D property in Harrogate would normally be valued at £1,783.35.
But, the harmonised average for the county – which includes a 4.99% hike – will be set at £1,759.96.
The council also says it has to make income in order to tackle a £30 million blackhole caused by inflation and spiralling costs.
What has the council said about the proposal?
Despite an increase in funding from the government, the new authority is set to start the next financial year from April with a predicted shortfall of more than £30 million in its budget.
The council is set to receive an additional £22 million from government as part of the announcement.
However, soaring inflation and the impact of the covid pandemic is still set to leave a blackhole in the authority’s finances.
A council press release said the shortfall would be met “by the one-off use of reserves as well as some savings”.
Senior councillors will meet to discuss the council’s first budget, including council tax, on January 24.
Conservative Cllr Carl Les, who will assume the leadership of North Yorkshire Council from April, said:
Nurses and ambulance workers set to strike in Harrogate on same day“We are facing the greatest ever financial challenges in North Yorkshire, which means we have a huge task in ensuring that services can be delivered effectively and efficiently for the public.
“However, without the opportunities presented with the launch of the new council, the situation would be a great deal worse, and it is vital that we take full advantage of these opportunities.
“We have the chance to make millions of pounds in savings by reorganising the way services are delivered, meaning that we get the most out of every pound of taxpayers’ money in North Yorkshire.”
Nurses and ambulance workers in the Harrogate district are set to strike on the same day in just over two weeks’ time.
Picket lines could be organised within yards of each other on Lancaster Park Road in Harrogate, where the hospital and the ambulance station are both located.
Unless strikes are averted, the Royal College of Nursing plans to carry out two days of industrial action on February 6 and 7.
Unite has scheduled another ambulance strike in Harrogate on February 6.

Ambulance workers striking in Harrogate this year.
There is also the prospect of schools being affected on February 1, when members of the National Education Union plan to strike before staging further walk-outs in February and March. A union official has predicted some schools will have to close.
Sandy Lay, a nurse at Harrogate District Hospital and a Liberal Democrat councillor representing Otley and Yeadon on Leeds City Council, told a full council meeting on Wednesday the government rather than striking nurses were harming patients.
But he added arrangement for patient care were often better on strike days than non-strike days because minimum service levels were in place,
He said:
“We want minimum service levels and minimum staff levels, but it has to be every day, not just on strike days.”
Hospital: ‘regrettable some services have been affected’
Asked what impact this week’s strikes had had on the hospital, and whether it would amend its plans for future strikes, a spokesman for Harrogate and District NHS Foundation Trust said:
“Comprehensive plans are in place to maintain the safety of patients requiring our services during the Royal College of Nursing’s industrial action.
“We are committed to providing the best possible levels of healthcare in any eventuality, and as ever, during the industrial action our focus has been on maintaining the safety of our patients.
“Whilst it is regrettable that some of our services have been affected by industrial action, we have ensured that essential services have remained available. Whilst we have been operating at reduced staffing levels in a number of areas such as inpatient wards, we worked with the RCN to ensure that we had sufficient nursing staff working to maintain patient safety.
“During the industrial action we have rescheduled appointments where it has been necessary. We have worked with the RCN to ensure that our services have remained safe.
“While pay is a matter for government and the trade unions, we greatly value our staff and respect those who have chosen to take part in industrial action. We want to see a resolution as soon as possible to ensure we can continue to focus on delivering high quality patient care to all those who need it.”
Read more:
- Union predicts some Harrogate district schools will close due to strike
- First ever nurses’ strike begins at Harrogate hospital
Harrogate firms prepare to vote on whether to continue funding business group
Firms in Harrogate town centre will be balloted in June over whether to continue to fund a business improvement district.
A total of 462 businesses in Harrogate town centre currently pay a levy of 1.5% on top of their rateable value to fund Harrogate Business Improvement District.
It is one of more than 350 BIDs in the country, set up to increase footfall by providing additional services to those run by councils.
Harrogate BID was set up in 2018 when businesses voted by 108 to 23 in favour of the initiative.
Businesses will vote again in June on whether to continue supporting it. The ballot will open on June 1 and close on June 28. The result will be announced the following day.
Ripon has a BID but Knaresborough rejected one.
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BID chief executive Matthew Chapman outlined the organisation’s achievements at this week’s annual general meeting at the Crown Hotel and made the case for the continuation of the organisation.
Mr Chapman said businesses could step into the void created by the abolition of Harrogate Borough Council on April 1. He said:
“It’s a key time with Harrogate Borough Council going. The town will lose a voice for a time and we believe we can step in and be that voice.
“BIDs in their second terms often go on to bigger and better things.”

Sara Ferguson speaking at the annual general meeting.
The BID spent £608,844 last year to record a deficit of £13,737. Mr Chapman said the deficit would be wiped out when levy bill reminders and court summons prompted some late payments.
The BID funded initiatives such as free car parking, free buses into town, street cleaning, street entertainers, floral displays, Christmas lights, Harrogate lego trail and the platinum jubilee celebrations on the Stray.
Dan Siddle, general manager of the Crown Hotel, and Primark manager Andrea Thornborrow recently replaced Sara Ferguson and Richard Wheeldon as chair and vice-chair respectively.
Streets included within the Harrogate BID boundary:
Albert Street, Beulah Street, Bower Road, Cambridge Crescent, Cambridge Road, Cheltenham Crescent, Cheltenham Mount, Cheltenham Parade, Cold Bath Road, Commercial Street, Crescent Road, Crown Place, Dragon Parade, Dragon Road, East Parade, East Park Road, Haywra Crescent, Haywra Street, James Street, John Street, Kings Road, Market Place, Montpellier Gardens, Montpellier Parade, Montpellier Road, Montpellier Street, Mount Parade, North Park Road, Oxford Street, Park Parade, Park View, Parliament Street, Princes Square, Princes Street, Prospect Crescent, Prospect Place, Queensway, Raglan Street, Ripon Road, Royal Parade, Springfield Avenue, Station Avenue, Station Bridge, Station Parade, Station Square, Studley Road, Swan Road, The Ginnel, Tower Street, Union Street, Victoria Avenue, Victoria Shopping Centre, West Park, York Place
Harrogate’s former Kimberley Hotel being used for drugs and crime, say policeA Harrogate police inspector has expressed concerns that the site of the former Kimberley Hotel is being used for drugs and crime.
The 70-bedroom hotel on King’s Road closed in December 2020 after more than 50 years.
Insp. Ed Rogerson, who works for North Yorkshire Police’s Harrogate outer area, said the former hotel had become a “problem area” when he gave an overview of local policing to Harrogate Borough Council’s overview and scrutiny committee this week.
He said the hotel was awaiting redevelopment, adding:
“This empty building has been a problem area. Although it’s boarded up people keep breaking in.
“It’s primarily young people but it’s also being used by adults. People have used the location for taking drugs.
“It’s a concern that these vulnerable people are mixing with adults in that location where there’s crime and anti-social behaviour.”
Read more:
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Insp. Rogerson added officers were working with other organisations, including environmental health, “to ensure the owner and developer of that premises secure it properly”. He added:
“They’ve been reminded that if it doesn’t remain secure then enforcement action can be taken against them”.

The Kimberley Hotel in 2020.
The Kimberley Hotel opened in the 1960s when five townhouses dating back to the turn of the 20th century were converted.
It benefitted from the opening of what was then called the Harrogate Conference Centre in 1982, which is a short walk away.
Harrogate’s Rossett School still ‘requires improvement’, says OfstedOfsted has said Rossett School in Harrogate ‘requires improvement’ in a critical report published today.
High staff turnover, disruptive pupils and extremely high absence rates among disadvantaged students are among the concerns highlighted by the government schools inspector.
The report, which followed a two-day visit on November 22 and 23, acknowledges that for the most part the 1,200-pupil school “is a warm, friendly and welcoming school”. It adds:
“Leaders, governors and staff are deeply committed to the pupils who attend the school. A strong determination to be inclusive and supportive permeates the school.”
But it adds a “notable minority of pupils do not behave well” and “sometimes disrupt the smooth running of the school”.
It then details further behaviour concerns:
“Most pupils who communicated with inspectors feel safe at school, but the conduct of the minority makes some pupils feel unsafe at times.
“Some pupils’ conduct out of lessons is variable, with overly boisterous behaviour. Some pupils ignore staff requests and instructions. Some staff do not apply the school’s behaviour policy consistently. A minority of pupils are regularly late to lessons, or have to be rounded up by leaders and escorted to class.”
Leaders, it said, were “taking action to improve the behaviour of the challenging minority of pupils” but “do not have an accurate picture of whether pupils are late, trying to avoid going to lessons, or both, and consequently this limits their ability to deal with the problem as sharply as required”.
‘Persistent absence’
Regarding attendance, the report said data showed that approaching half of all disadvantaged pupils were “persistently absent”.
The inspectors said leaders were following the school’s policy in attempting to improve this situation, but “it lacks the necessary drive and urgency to bring about the required step change in some pupils’ rate of attendance”.
The report said governors “do not have a fully accurate understanding of the school’s performance”, adding:
“They have a more positive view of behaviour than is the case. They have not been enabled by leaders to rigorously explore those aspects of pupils’ outcomes at key stage 4, which are less strong than others.”
The school, which is part of the Red Kite Alliance collaborative partnership of schools and a university across Yorkshire, was previously rated ‘requires improvement’ at its last full inspection in 2019. Today’s report said:
“Since the previous inspection, there has been a substantial turnover of staff, with 20 new staff joining the school in September 2022.”
The school was rated ‘good’ for quality of education, personal development and sixth-form provision and ‘requires improvement’ for behaviour and attitude, and leadership and management.
But the overall rating was ‘requires improvement’, which is worse than ‘outstanding’ and ‘good’ but better than ‘inadequate’.
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‘We are incredibly disappointed’
The school issued the following statement by John Hesketh, chair of governors, in response to the report.
Harrogate Town to open Hall of Fame“We are incredibly disappointed by the overall judgment, particularly after being upgraded to ‘good’ in the areas of quality of education and personal development, as well as maintaining the ‘good’ rating for our sixth form provision.
“We are delighted with these improved gradings which recognise the progress we have made since our last inspection and reflect the hard work and commitment from our leaders and all our staff. We will continue to build on all our strengths as we strive for continuous improvement in everything we do.
“We immediately remedied some areas for improvement such as the management of sixth form absence, inconsistencies in school uniform, and the reporting process for staff should they have any concerns. We are reviewing all other areas for improvement and are currently formulating an Ofsted action plan.
“We are pleased the inspectors recognised many positives that reflect the strength of our education provision, our values and ambitions, and the commitment and support we provide to our students and their families.
“There is much to be proud of in the report. Inspectors highlighted our warm, welcoming atmosphere, the breadth and ambition of our curriculum, and the fact that our students move on to positive next steps in education, employment or training at the end of their time with us.
“We received praise for the good, polite behaviour of our students, the commitment of our leaders and governors, our effective safeguarding, and our strength in teaching inclusivity, tolerance and respect.
“We’d like to thank all of Rossett School’s leaders and staff, parents, carers and our whole school community who continue to support us to provide the very best education and positive outcomes for all our students.”
Harrogate Town are to open a Hall of Fame recognising people who have made outstanding contributions to the club in its 108-year history.
The Hall of Fame will be located in multiple locations in Harrogate: the new supporters bar at the EnviroVent Stadium on Wetherby Road, the club shop on Commercial Street, the Exercise.co.uk executive lounge at the ground and the Cedar Court Hotel.
A Hall of Fame committee, chaired by supporter Bernard Higgins and consisting of supporters and club officials, has been meeting monthly since June.
The first 11 inductees were selected from an extensive list compiled by club historian Phil Harrison.
Their names will be announced between January 23 and February 2 and an official launch event attended by chairman Irving Weaver and manager Simon Weaver at the Cedar Court Hotel on February 9.

The launch event will be held at the Cedar Court Hotel.
Following the event, details will be revealed on how supporters can help to shape the Hall of Fame and select the 12th and final inductee of the 2022/23 season.
Inaugural Hall of Fame members, along with family of those who have died, will be invited back to the EnviroVent Stadium over the course of the 2022/23 season, where their contributions to the club will be celebrated.
Each season, two more individuals will be inducted to the Hall of Fame.
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Harrogate Mojo applies to extend opening hours until 6.30am
Mojo in Harrogate has applied to extend its opening hours until 6.30am in the morning.
Voodoo Doll Limited, which trades as Mojo, has submitted the licensing request to Harrogate Borough Council for the Parliament Street bar.
It includes amending the permitted sale of alcohol hours from 11am until 4am to 11am to 6am each day of the week.
The proposal would also see the permitted hours for regulated live music, which is currently 11am until 4.30am, changed to 11am to 6am the following morning Monday to Sunday.
The opening hours would be 11am until 6.30am.
Anyone wishing to comment on the application can email licensing@harrogate.gov.uk by February 3.
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It comes shortly after nearby Viper Rooms, which had opening hours until 4.30am, closed last month.
In a statement given to the Stray Ferret by landlord North Yorkshire County Council last month, authority officials said the former club unit had already attracted “significant interest from potential tenants”.
Man jailed for racial harassment and carrying weapon in HarrogateA notorious Harrogate criminal has been jailed yet again, this time for racially aggravated threatening behaviour and carrying a Stanley knife in the town centre.
Graham McMillan, 38, was found shirtless and drinking beer in the middle of the road after police were called out to reports of an incident at Chico’s takeaway in Commercial Street.
York Crown Court heard that McMillan was swearing and shouting racial slurs, even when police warned him about his behaviour.
Prosecutor Brooke Morrison said that when officers searched McMillan, they found a Stanley knife in his jeans pocket.
He was arrested and charged with racially aggravated harassment or threatening behaviour and carrying a bladed article.
He appeared for sentence today via a video link from Wealstun Prison as he was already in custody serving a 42-week prison sentence imposed in September last year for carrying a hammer and swearing at people in the town centre.
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That offence occurred on August 28, just four days after McMillan was arrested for the new offences.
Ms Morrison said the racially aggravated incident occurred on August 24 – the same day that McMillan had been given a two-month suspended prison sentence for possessing heroin and cocaine.
Police were initially called out to the Asda supermarket on Bower Road following reports that McMillan had tried to steal a crate of beer.
This incident did not result in any criminal charges, but later that same day, just before midnight, police received a further report that McMillan was at Chico’s takeaway and was refusing to leave.
Ms Morrison said:
“When police arrived, they found him in the middle of the street, topless, drinking from a bottle of beer.”
She said McMillan was “swearing abuse” and shouting out deeply offensive racial slurs aimed at staff at the takeaway.
When police warned him about his behaviour, McMillan drunkenly replied:
“I don’t give a fxxx – do me for racism.”
McMillan – formerly of Harlow Moor Drive, Harrogate, but currently of no fixed address – had 31 previous convictions for 56 offences including threatening and racially aggravated behaviour, carrying a blade, possessing an offensive weapon in public and “many” road-traffic matters and breaches of court orders.
Defence barrister Jennifer Coldham said McMillan had mental-health issues. He intended to return to Harrogate upon his release from the inevitable jail sentence.
Judge Simon Hickey said it was clear that McMillan committed offences “under the influence of drink and drugs”.
McMillan was handed a six-month jail sentence, of which he will serve half behind bars before being released on prison licence.
Valley Gardens visitors urged not to feed ducksVisitors to Harrogate’s Valley Gardens are being encouraged not to feed the ducks because of the risk of attracting rats.
Harrogate Borough Council recently installed a notice warning people of the risks associated with leftover food on the ground.
It said this could cause issues with rodents and overfed ducks.
However, the council stressed it had no plans to close the gardens, as occurred at Quarry Moor playground in Ripon 18 months ago when the number of rats caused a public health concern.
A council spokesperson said:
“We understand visitors to Valley Gardens in Harrogate enjoy feeding the ducks. However, doing so can attract rats that may feed on the food that is left, and also result in the ducks being overfed.
“Therefore, we would urge people not to feed the ducks.
“We have absolutely no intention whatsoever to close Valley Gardens.”
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Slimmer cuts weight by a third to reverse liver disease
This story is sponsored by Slimming World.
A Harrogate slimmer is celebrating after reversing her liver disease by losing over a third of her body weight with Slimming World.
Sylvia Skipper was told by doctors that her non-alcoholic fatty liver disease was off the scale, with a liver fat content of over 70%.
“I was heading towards severe cirrhosis of the liver, which could lead to me needing a liver transplant,” said Sylvia.
“The consultant explained the only legitimate way of improving or reversing this was by losing weight. I had struggled with so many diets in the past I had just about lost faith.”
It was then that she turned to Slimming World, whose science-based healthy eating plan has helped thousands of people across the UK achieve their weight-loss goals without ever going on a diet.
“I vividly remember messaging Cate Pervana, who runs Slimming World groups in Harrogate, and sharing my health issues with her,” said Sylvia.
“I had previously had thyroid cancer, so I struggled to control my metabolism and doubted my ability to lose weight.
“But Cate gave me the reassurance I needed, and I joined Westcliffe Hall Harrogate Slimming World group.”
Combining Slimming World’s no-hunger eating plan with its Body Magic physical activity programme, Sylvia soon started to see the weight fall off. Just over a year later, she has lost 6st 7.5lb – over 40 per cent of her original body weight – and is now down from a size 24 to a size 8. Even her feet have shrunk from a 6 to a 4 and she’s now proudly wearing her favourite pair of Christian Louboutin shoes, which had been stuck in her wardrobe for years.

Sylvia Skipper combined Slimming World’s no-hunger eating plan with its Body Magic physical activity programme to lose weight.
“But the best news came this morning,” said Sylvia. “I now have less than 5% fat in my liver, I have completely reversed my liver disease, and I’ve been discharged.
“I am so grateful to Cate and everyone at Slimming World for giving me all the support I needed. Getting healthy again has been my sole motivation on my weight-loss journey, and I feel on top of the world.”

Sylvia Skipper was in danger of needing a liver transplant, but with the help of Slimming World has stopped her liver disease in its tracks.
Slimming World in Harrogate and Knaresborough runs several groups, making it easier to find one to fit into your schedule. Cate Pervana runs groups in Harrogate, and Christine Husband runs them in Starbeck and Knaresborough.
Find out more:
If you want 2023 to be the year you achieve your weight-loss goals, find out more about your local groups by calling Christine Husband (Starbeck and Knaresborough) on 07890 621324, or Cate Pervana (Harrogate) on 07834 897533.
Alternatively, check out the Slimming World Harrogate and Knaresborough Facebook page here.