A Harrogate woman has published her first book, focussing on coercive control.
Emily Trisk wrote the novel, called Fractured Lives, to raise awareness of the issue.
The book focuses on Kate McConell, a mother of a 16-year-old, who realises that her life has been made unbearable by her abusive partner.
While the novel is not the story of Emily’s own experience, she hopes it will help to bring the issue to the forefront of people’s minds.
She said:
“Coercive control is an extremely important subject, the signs of which everyone should become more aware of.”
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Emily, a qualified teacher of children with severe learning disabilities, was the victim of domestic abuse herself.
However, despite the trauma, she said she “has always tried to look on the bright side of life”.
The novel is Emily’s first and she is currently researching material for her second book.
Fractured Lives is available on Amazon now. You can find out more information here.
Valley Gardens ceremony to mark Harrogate’s 70 years of links with New ZealandA sculpture symbolising eternal friendship and loyalty will be unveiled in Harrogate’s Valley Gardens this weekend.
The Maori pikorua symbol forms part of the newly-refurbished New Zealand Gardens, along with a new bench and an information board.
The garden was created in 1953 to mark the links between Harrogate and Wellington, the capital of New Zealand, forged during the Second World War. Four men from Wellington are among the 23 New Zealand Air Force crew buried in the Commonwealth war graves at Stonefall cemetery.
The refurbishment – the first work for more than a decade – has been funded by individual donors, along with support from North Yorkshire Council, including local councillors Sam Gibbs and Peter Lacey.
It follows the deterioration of the previous installations in the area, including wooden sculptures and a bench which were affected by the weather and targeted by vandals in 2020.
Dennis Richards, chair of Harrogate International Partnerships, which oversees Harrogate’s twinning programme, said:
“It’s not a memorial garden, but the trigger for it was the New Zealand air crew buried at Stonefall. It was a vision of the two towns to create this garden which celebrates history, culture and friendship.
“It has taken a long, long time to get the money together to do the refurbishment.”
The unveiling of the garden will take place at 11am tomorrow, Saturday.
Flt Lt Dan Channon of the Royal New Zealand Air Force will represent his country and its capital, Wellington, at the ceremony.
Tewit Intermediate Band will play from 10.40am before the ceremony is opened by Mr Richards at 11am.
It will include short speeches about the history of the garden, its links to Stonefall, and the significance of the pikorua sculpture.
Among those speaking will be Fran Pride, the daughter of Tony Sissons who was instrumental in its development through his roles with the Friends of Valley Gardens and Harrogate in Bloom.
His widow, Bobbie, will officially reveal a new information board explaining the links between the towns, before Virginia Partridge, whose late father Alan Rollinson had strong links with both Harrogate and New Zealand, unveils the new sculpture.
The national anthems of both countries will be performed, with soloist Amelia McQuire singing New Zealand’s.
Alongside the garden refurbishment, Harrogate International Partnerships is working to build stronger links between the people of Harrogate and the communities in their twinned towns.
As well as Wellington, Harrogate has twinning agreements with Barrie in Canada, Bagneres de Luchon in France, and the Unesco world heritage site of Montecatini Terme in Italy.
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‘No more new houses’: Harrogate residents and councillors call on council to remove sites from Local Plan
Residents and councillors who are facing the prospect of thousands of homes being built around Harlow Hill have called on North Yorkshire Council to remove sites from its new Local Plan.
Around 50 people attended the Green Hut on Harlow Avenue last night for a meeting of Harlow & Pannal Ash Residents Association (HAPARA).
Up to 4,000 homes could be built in the Western arc of Harrogate but there have been long-standing concerns that the area’s roads, schools and healthcare facilities will not be able to cope.
Residents were dismayed at the publication of a ‘parameters plan’ document last year that was drawn up by Harrogate Borough Council to identify infrastructure requirements for the area.
Plans for 770 homes and a primary school on land behind RHS Harlow Carr has already been submitted by Anywl Land and Redrow Homes.
On the other side of the road, Homes England has submitted plans to build 480 homes.
The homes would be built in phases meaning residents living in the area could face a decade or more of disruption.
Neither application on Otley Road has been approved yet and residents at the meeting said there was a glimmer of hope that North Yorkshire Council could remove the sites when it develops its new county-wide Local Plan.
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Harrogate Borough Council’s Local Plan will be replaced by the document before 2028.
Malcolm Margolis said HBC’s plan was “obviously out of date and needs changing.”
He said:
“I read about 50 local authorities have cancelled their Local Plan and started again. I can’t understand why North Yorkshire cant take a similar approach and revisit all this.”
One woman said:
“The government says we don’t need as many houses as before. It seems sensible to me as a layperson why aren’t these plans revisited and some sites taken out?”
Conservative councillor for Oatlands & Pannal, John Mann, said he will be pushing the new authority to reconsider sites that have not already been granted planning permission.
He said:
“I will be insisting we look afresh at some of these sites that are in the plan and have not yet come forward and I will call for these sites to be revisited.”
However, chair of Haverah Park with Beckwithshaw Parish Council, Derek Spence, said residents would have to be realistic as the new Local Plan is five years away from completion and in that time developers would look to secure planning permission.
Cllr Spence said:
Road closures announced for Harrogate’s St George’s Day Parade“If they see that door closing what are they going to do? Commercially, they’ll start putting in planning applications. It’s pretty obvious. If you were them that’s what you’d have to do to protect your investment.”
Traffic will be prohibited on several roads in Harrogate on Sunday afternoon for the annual St George’s Day parade.
The parade, which was held for the first time in three years last year, sees hundreds of Scouts, Guides, Brownies, Cubs and more join together in uniform to mark the occasion.
North Yorkshire Council, the highways authority, has issued temporary prohibition of traffic orders lasting from 1.30pm to 3pm.
It covers Victoria Avenue and parts of West Park, Beech Grove, Station Parade, Marlborough Road, Queen Parade, North Park Road, Coach Road and Christ Church track.

Victoria Avenue is among the roads affected.
Alternative routes will be signposted.
The closures do not apply to emergency vehicles.
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- ‘It will hurt businesses’: Lib Dem councillor to vote against Harrogate’s Station Gateway
Business Breakfast: Harrogate environmental firm agrees Ministry of Defence contract
It’s time to join the Stray Ferret Business Club. The fourth in our series of networking events, with Banyan Bar & Kitchen, is a breakfast event on April 27 from 8am.
Don’t miss out on this chance to network with businesses from across the Harrogate district. Get your tickets by clicking or tapping here.
A Harrogate environmental firm has agreed a contract to deliver services to the Defence Infrastructure Organisation.
Adler and Allan, which is based on Station Parade, confirmed the contract with VINCI Facilities to carry out maintenance work across the Ministry of Defence’s fuel infrastructure in the south east.
The work comes as part of the Future Defence Infrastructure contract with the Defence Infrastructure Organisation, which oversees the MoD’s estate.
Charles Price, fuel infrastructure director at Adler and Allan, said:
“We look forward to a successful working relationship with VINCI Facilities over the coming years. Adler and Allan is committed to ensuring day-to-day delivery of great customer service and performance across the remit of our work at the 58 MoD sites under VINCI Facilities FDIS Built Estate Contract in the South East.
“Our experience working with MOD facilities across the design, build, installation and ongoing maintenance of fuel infrastructure, and our continued account management and sustainability credentials, positions Adler and Allan as a key supply chain partner for FDIS primes.”
Truth Legal launches new website
A Harrogate law firm has launched a new website.
Truth Legal, which is based on Victoria Avenue, set up the site to make the firm’s services “easily accessible”.
The Harrogate firm specialises in personal injury, immigration, clinical negligence and employment law.
However, the new site also includes information on the company’s professional negligence and business services.
Louis MacWilliam, director at Truth Legal, said in a post on the firm’s site:
“It has been carefully designed to make our wide range of services and free legal resources easily accessible to all.
“And with its open, clean, and vibrant style, we believe it perfectly reflects our values of truth, morality, and the determined pursuit of justice.”
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Model boating to continue in Harrogate’s Valley Gardens
A 99-year-old tradition of model boating looks set to continue in Harrogate’s Valley Gardens.
Members of Claro Marine Modellers and a representative from North Yorkshire Council held talks at the boating lake today about a new fountain.
The model boating club was concerned the fountain would damage boats and bring an end to their hobby in Harrogate.
But Adrian Selway, the new club secretary who has been sailing model boats for 30 years in Valley Gardens, said the talks had reached a solution.

Mr Selway said the council had agreed the fountain will not operate when club members sail their boats on Sunday mornings all year round and on Wednesday evenings during summer.
He added:
“It was a very amicable meeting and the outcome was favourable. The council was anxious to support the club.”
Harrogate Borough Council’s decision to spend £6,000 installing the fountain prompted concerns of boats running aground on the structure.
There were also fears spray from the fountain could ruin boats.
Harrogate Borough Council was abolished at the end of last month. North Yorkshire Council has inherited its assets, including Valley Gardens.
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Blubberhouses crash: lorry driver banned for being three times over limit
A lorry driver who lost control on the A59 at Blubberhouses on Tuesday was three times over the drink-drive limit.
Jacek Borowski, 51, from Poland lost control of his HGV heading down the hill.
His vehicle blocked the road completely for most of the day, causing significant disruption on the main route between Harrogate and Skipton.
Nobody else was involved or injured.

The lorry blocked the road for most of the day.
North Yorkshire Police said in a statement today Borowski had been banned within 24 hours of the incident. It added:
“Officers breathalysed the driver who blew 92 micrograms of alcohol in 100 milligrams of breath – almost three times the legal limit.
“He was remanded into custody immediately and put before York Magistrates’ Court on Wednesday 19 April where he pleaded guilty to driving over the prescribed limit and was disqualified from driving for 23 months.”
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Liberal Democrats back creation of Harrogate town council
Liberal Democrats have come out in favour of the creation of a Harrogate town council.
A second consultation on whether to set-up a town council runs until May 5.
North Yorkshire County Council said in March the move would require 35,000 households to pay an additional council tax charge of between £40 and £60.
But local Liberal Democrats said today a town council would enable locally-elected councillors to take control of assets such as off-street car parks, the Stray, Royal Hall, Sun Pavilion and Valley Gardens.
Harrogate and Scarborough are the only parts of the county not to have a parish or town council.
Eight Liberal Democrats, including former Harrogate borough councillors and current North Yorkshire councillors, signed in support of a town council.
Cllr Pat Marsh, chair of North Yorkshire Council‘s area constituency committee for Harrogate and Knaresborough, said her party supported devolving power. She added:
“Without a new town council, Harrogate would be at a real disadvantage when bidding for services to remain local.
“Harrogate residents need to have a voice when it comes to the future of local assets, just as those in Knaresborough, Ripon, Pateley Bridge, Boroughbridge and many other villages in North Yorkshire have.”

Pat Marsh
Cllr Marsh said “unique decisions relating to Harrogate should be being made in Harrogate by people who have received the endorsement of Harrogate residents” rather than councillors in places such as Catterick, Ryedale and Scarborough.
She added:
“Assets that could be considered for control by the town council include off-street car parks, the Stray, Royal Hall, Sun Pavilion, Valley Gardens and the other green and floral spaces within the town.
“Without local protection, these assets are always in danger of being cut by North Yorkshire councillors not from Harrogate.
“A Harrogate town council would also provide a formal representative voice for local residents on planning applications and other consultations.
“Harrogate is a very special place and decisions about our town need to be made by local people who know, love and understand this town.”
Read more:
- Second consultation to be held on whether to form Harrogate town council
- Just 3.5% responded to Harrogate town council consultation
A total of 75% favoured setting up a Harrogate town council in last year’s first consultation but only 1,250 homes — 3.5% of those affected — responded. The low response rate triggered concerns about the validity of the response.
The statement urges residents and businesses to respond to the second consultation before the May 5 deadline.
The Lib Dem councillors who signed today’s statement are:
Pat Marsh — Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone.
Philip Broadbank — Fairfax and Starbeck.
Chris Aldred — High Harrogate and Kingsley
Peter Lacey — Coppice Valley and Duchy
Mike Schofield — Harlow and St Georges
Monika Slater — Bilton Grange and New Park
Honorary alderman Trevor Chapman
Honorary alderman Matthew Webber
Plan approved to convert 150-year-old Harrogate church into house
A plan to convert a 150-year-old church in Harrogate into a house has been approved.
All Saints Church on Otley Road was formerly opened in 1871 as a cemetery chapel.
It was designated as a grade-II listed building in 1975, but was forced to shut in November 2006 due to wet and dry rot.
Three-years later the church closed for good as it was considered unsafe.
Now, North Yorkshire Council has given the go-ahead for the church to be converted into a three-bedroom house.
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The application, submitted by ELG Planning on behalf of Mr and Mrs Hunter, said the church could be salvaged and brought back into use.
In a planning statement, the developers said:
Business Breakfast: Harrogate branding agency acquires East Anglian company“The former Church of All Saints is a building in much need of attention.
“The applicant has belief that the existing building can be resurrected with restoration and modification to form a long term home for themselves and enjoyed by family members.
“Without foresight the building can, with the right approach be salvaged, and put to continued use as a sanctuary and place of continued life.”
It’s time to join the Stray Ferret Business Club. The fourth in our series of networking events, with Banyan Bar & Kitchen, is a breakfast event on April 27 from 8am.
Don’t miss out on this chance to network with businesses from across the Harrogate district. Get your tickets by clicking or tapping here.
A Harrogate-based branding agency has acquired an East Anglian company for an undisclosed sum.
Impression Studio, which is based on Albert Street, has made the acquisition of Norwich-based digital marketing firm FLOCC.
The addition of FLOCC will see another two members of staff join the business and add a base in East Anglia.
The company now has 15 staff across two brands, Impression and Next Chapter.
Charlie Hartley, founder and managing director of Impression Studio, said:
“I’m delighted to have added FLOCC to our business. It was clear from initial discussions that the values, expertise, client base and culture of FLOCC aligned so closely with our own, and the skills and capabilities of the existing FLOCC team will add significant value to our offering, and vice versa.
“As a growing and ambitious agency, this acquisition enables us to operate more cohesively in East Anglia, expand the group’s overall service offering, continue to recruit outstanding talent, and inject new life into our service delivery and client services.”
Daniel Swepson, head of marketing at Next Chapter, added:
“We’re really excited to welcome FLOCC’s team and clients to the business and have already identified a wide range of opportunities following the expansion of our service offering and capabilities, which will no doubt be of benefit to Impression, Next Chapter and FLOCC clients alike.”
Harrogate estate agents appoints new head of lettings
A Harrogate estate agency has hired a new head of lettings.
Myrings Estate Agents, which is based on Princes Square, has appointed Georgie Spence to the position.
Ms Spence joins the firm with 10 years experience in the field.
In a Facebook post, Myrings added:
“Georgie joins the team with 10 years of lettings experience, bringing a wealth of knowledge to support and drive the team.
“She is passionate about delivering outstanding customer service and happy to assist Landlords and Tenants throughout their journey with us.”
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