This article is sponsored by Wolseley.
Beth Stephenson has become a rising star at Wolseley in just ten months with the Ripon company’s award-winning Talent Guild.
The Loughborough University student, who is reading accounting and financial management, was debating where to go for her placement year when she found the perfect fit in Wolseley.
Wolseley is the UK’s leading plumbing, heating and cooling specialist with 560 branches across the UK and its headquarters in Ripon.
The company employs more than 320 people in the city and recently completed a £500,000 refurbishment of the Ripon office.
So this is an exciting time to join the team and there’s no better way to get your foot in the door than through the Wolseley Talent Guild.
A taste of different career paths
The opportunity to move around and learn in different parts of the business through the Wolseley Talent Guild was a major draw for Beth, who is originally from York.
She started in August 2021 with the transactional input team but she has also worked with the tax and treasury teams. Beth, 22, said:
“That experience with different departments has meant it is much easier for me to understand the whole business and piece it altogether.
“It seemed daunting at first but I had heard from other people that they had gone to a business and stayed in one department the entire time – sometimes it’s an area they don’t like.
“Now I know which areas I like so when I progress, I can start my career in the area I like. It’s beneficial for my career but also for Wolseley as I have been able to connect the different teams.
“Ripon is lovely. I am from York so Ripon is similar to York but smaller so it’s a very nice place.
“There are lots of lovely places to walk and lots of independent shops. There’s a new vintage shop that has just opened up too which I am excited about.”

Beth is a student at Loughborough University.
Why join Wolseley?
Wolseley’s award-winning Talent Guild is a great way for employees to ensure progression and realise career goals. This industry-leading approach received formal recognition in December 2021, when Wolseley scooped the HR Excellence Award for Talent Management Strategy of the Year.
It includes apprenticeship programmes, talent boosters and career ladders, right through to more technical qualifications and higher education programmes.
Wolseley is currently training more than 130 apprentices across the UK and boosting the skills of more than 150 existing employees.
When employees progress they will notice that Wolseley strives to do the right thing – whether that is in the way they treat customers, suppliers or employees.
Wolseley knows how to attract, develop and retain the best people. The company offers competitive salary, holiday entitlement, a fantastic pension scheme, life insurance and much more.
Would you like to join Wolseley and unlock your potential with the Talent Guild? Click or tap here to find out more information.
Lib Dem leader Ed Davey to visit Harrogate next weekThe leader of the Liberal Democrats, Ed Davey, is to visit one of the party’s target constituencies — Harrogate and Knaresborough — next week.
Mr Davey will be in Harrogate on Wednesday to meet local members and speak at the Local Government Association conference, which takes place at Harrogate Convention Centre from June 28-30.
The local party is in buoyant mood following last month’s local election results, which saw it become the largest party on North Yorkshire County Council in the constituency area. However, the Conservatives retained overall control of the council.
Nationally, the Lib Dems overturned a 24,000 Tory majority to win yesterday’s Tiverton and Honiton by-election.
David Goode, chair of Harrogate and Knaresborough Liberal Democrats, said:
“He will meet with members and will want to talk about the fantastic Tiverton and Honiton success where we overturned a massive majority.
“It’s also a good opportunity to share our own successes with him and our plans for the general election.”
The Conservative Andrew Jones has been the MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough since 2010 and has won four elections. He succeeded Liberal Democrat Phil Willis.
In the 2019 general election, Mr Jones won 29,962 votes, beating Lib Dem candidate Judith Rogerson by almost 10,000 votes.
The Lib Dems did gain a 12-point swing on 2017, which largely came at the expense of the Labour Party.
Read more:
- Lib Dem leader Ed Davey says Conservatives have ‘taken Harrogate for granted’
- Ex-Lib Dem candidate will not stand in Harrogate and Knaresborough at next election
Mr Goode said the Lib Dem’s prospective parliamentary candidate could be announced as soon as next month, with the selection process currently underway.
Last week, former candidate Ms Rogerson ruled herself out for personal reasons.
Mr Goode added:
Man arrested for attempted murder of two children in Beckwithshaw“There are rumours of a potential autumn election and we want to be ready.
“Andrew Jones is going to be a worried man. It looks like it’s becoming an unrecoverable position for the Conservative government.”
A 40-year-old man has been arrested for the attempted murder of an 11-year-old child and a 10-year-old child, following an incident in Beckwithshaw on Monday.
The man has also been arrested for an assault on an emergency worker.
A 13-year-old child also sustained minor injuries during the incident.
North Yorkshire Police said this morning the man has been released from hospital and is now in police custody for questioning by officers from the major investigation team.
Detective Inspector Steve Menzies, senior investigating officer, said:
“The incident took place around 8:10am both inside and outside a property in Beckwithshaw which is situated on the main road, the B6161 Otley Road, and is very close to the local primary school.
“I reiterate that this incident is not connected to the school, however I am appealing to anyone who may have been dropping off children at the school, or commuters passing by, to check their vehicle dashcam and report any footage that may have captured any part of the incident prior to the attendance of the emergency services”.
The police appealed to anyone with information to contact them by calling 101, then pressing option two and asking to speak to the major investigation team.
Quote reference number 12220105995 when passing on any information.
Read more:
- Forensic experts at serious police incident in Bilton
- Harrogate council charge police over £110,000 for CCTV since 2016
Harrogate firefighters issue smoke alarm warning after house fire
Harrogate fire station has urged people to ensure they have working smoke alarms after attending a fire this morning.
Fire ripped through the roof of a bungalow but fortunately nobody was hurt because the alarm sounded.
The incident took place at 2am in York and the aerial ladder from Harrogate was required to help firefighters from York and Huntington tackle the flames.
An investigation is underway.
Harrogate fire station said the blaze, at a time when most people are sleeping, served as a warning to everyone to check their smoke alarms.
It said in a Facebook post:
“In the early hours of today, we were at a house fire. Luckily the occupants had working smoke alarms and got out safely.
“Please make sure yours work if you have them and if not you can contact you local fire station to see about getting some fitted.”
Smoke alarms are free. You can book for them to be installed here.
Read more:
- Harrogate firefighters rescue dogs from hot car
- Leon set to confirm Harrogate opening date for early July
Reassurances issued over ‘onerous’ social care revamp across Harrogate district
A council has denied claims its scheme to ensure high social care standards has been designed to “weed out” some care providers.
Hundreds of residential and home care providers and day services have been asked to reapply to be on North Yorkshire County Council’s approved care providers lists.
It is the first stage of a huge transformation of the social care market in North Yorkshire.
A meeting of the authority’s care scrutiny committee heard while some £160m of taxpayers’ money was spent annually buying social care services in the county, the current system allowed providers to set their own rates and give few details about their coverage.
Although many local authorities have been able to set rates for providing care as they dominate their area’s care market, about half of care services in North Yorkshire are paid for privately, so the county council has regularly been forced to watch some providers’ rates soar.
North Yorkshire County Council’s offices in Northallerton.
Councillors were told contracts with care providers would in future be based on a set of service specifications.

Jill Quinn, chief executive of Dementia Forward.
Committee member Jill Quinn, chief executive of Burton Leonard-based charity Dementia Forward, told the meeting completing the new process to be an approved provider was “onerous”.
She added the process appeared to aim to prevent certain providers from being placed on the lists.
She said:
“We understand why it needed revamping and the need for quality markers. Can we reassure people that are applying that it’s not meant to catch them out and that there will be sympathy and support, otherwise I feel we will lose some good people.
“I’m quite seasoned at this and I’m half-way through doing mine and it really is like quite a job.”
The meeting heard trying to maintain quality standards across 155 care home providers and 225 residential and nursing homes was a huge undertaking for the council.
Cllr Michael Harrison, who represents Killinghall, Hampsthwaite and Saltergate and is North Yorkshire County Council’s executive member for adult services and public health, said the process aimed to identify providers who are able to give the level of service that both the 90,000 residents receiving care and the council could afford.
He said:
“We are wanting to make sure the residents who are receiving social care receive a quality that they and we are happy with. We are absolutely not wanting to weed any providers out. ”
Read more:
- Carers recognised for covid efforts in Harrogate and Ripon at team celebration
- Residents moved from Harrogate care home with rodent droppings
Cllr Harrison said setting clear standards for care was vital, adding the council had moved people out of a residential care home earlier this month after becoming concerned for their safety.
He said:
“That’s a last resort, but it’s also a good example that we’re not prepared just to take any service just because it’s available.
“It’s got to be a service that is safe and appropriate for the individuals receiving it, which include some of the most vulnerable people in society.”
Cllr Harrison (pictured above) said the changes would ensure a transparent process for people to bid for contracts from the county council and confirm providers were getting the funding they need from the authority to be viable and sustainable, including paying their staff a decent wage.
He added:
“We need to make sure what we pay for the service is delivering what we need. Whilst we need to go through the process, we need to make sure that we don’t put providers off from coming on to our approved provider list because the process is too onerous.”
He said in response to the concerns, the council would offer support to any providers that found the process difficult.
Harrogate firefighters rescue dogs from hot carHarrogate firefighters rescued two dogs yesterday when they got stuck in a car on one of the hottest days of the year.
The car self-locked when the owner went into the boot and was unable to get back into the vehicle shortly after 11am.
With the temperature rising, and the dogs still in the back of the car, the owner summoned help.
The fire crew was called to the incident at Harlow Carr Gardens, Harrogate.
North Yorkshire Fore and Rescue Service’s incident log says:
“Crews cooled the vehicle with one hose reel jet, then released the dogs using a glass punch and gave water to them.”
Read more:
Harrogate council charge police over £110,000 for CCTV since 2016
Harrogate Borough Council has charged North Yorkshire Police over £110,000 to check and supply its CCTV footage since 2016, the Stray Ferret can reveal.
The council has a network of 212 CCTV cameras across the district to help prevent and detect crime. It has a manned control room that operates 24/7.
But it does not supply footage to the police for free and last month the Stray Ferret reported it asks the force to pay a fee of £57 per hour for the service.
We submitted a freedom of information request to the council that asked how much it has charged North Yorkshire Police in total since 2016.
The answer revealed a total bill of £114,005, which amounts to about £20,000 a year on average. The sum fell noticeably during covid lockdowns in 2021/22.
The annual breakdown is below:
- 2016/17 £23,410
- 2017/18 £19,598
- 2018/19 £20,251
- 2019/20 £18,992
- 2020/21 £13,400
- 2021/22 £18,354
Crime prevention
Ripon has been plagued by well-documented anti-social behaviour and crime in recent years.
The council operates 10 CCTV cameras in the city but Andrew Williams, the leader of Ripon City Council and the North Yorkshire county councillor for Ripon Minster and Moorside, said the charge deters police from following up crime reports.
He said:
“It is ironic that Harrogate Borough Council’s homes and safer communities team appears more interested in making commercial charges to the police, rather than working in partnership with them to help in the detection and arrest of criminals.”

Cllr Andrew Williams
Cllr Williams calculated that the £18,354 charge for the last financial year worked out at less than one hour of CCTV footage a day.
He suggested this means NYP is being selective in which footage it requests and could be missing out on catching criminals.
He added:
“When considering the size of the Harrogate district and the number of CCTV cameras installed across it, that indicates that police, with pressure on their budgets, are having to be selective in their purchasing of footage and only calling on the services of the HBC CCTV monitoring team for the most serious incidents that they are investigating.”
“At a public meeting in Ripon last month, police admitted that nobody had been arrested for the vandal attacks, in part because they could not pinpoint the exact time of each incident and would have to go through hours of footage, which would not necessarily provide the quality of footage required to identify an individual or individuals.”
Read more:
- No update from police following blade incident in Beckwithshaw
- Family of murdered Harrogate policeman seeks permanent memorial
‘Shameful’ charges
Business owner Andrew Hart, who owns the Red Box post offices in Bilton and Starbeck, has previously raised concerns about anti-social behaviour in both areas.
Mr Hart has two private CCTV cameras in his post offices. He said he supplies any footage to the police for free if they ask for it and called the council’s decision to charge “shameful”.
The council currently operates one CCTV camera in Starbeck.

Andrew Hart
He said:
“We are often needing to refer back to our two CCTV systems on both police and private request. It is something we do out of a sense of duty to both the community and in our joint responsibility to fight anti-social behaviour.
“Yes, it takes time and costs us money but we all have to do our bit, surely. I think it is shameful that any council should charge our grossly overstretched police for this service.”
Council’s response
A council spokesperson said:
“CCTV across the Harrogate district, which is owned and managed by Harrogate Borough Council, has ongoing infrastructure and running costs.
“As well as the costs to maintain the service, there are also costs associated with a CCTV control room, staffing and the on-going safe storage of footage.
“Should anyone wish to obtain a copy of any footage, this would require an appropriate individual reviewing it first, followed by providing the footage securely along with a witness statement. All while adhering to the Data Protection Act 1998.
“Therefore, any third-party that wishes to view and use any CCTV footage – such as an insurance company, enforcement agency or the police – is charged to do so.”
North Yorkshire Police declined to comment.
Leon set to confirm Harrogate opening date for early JulyA new fast food drive-through restaurant is set to open in Harrogate early next month.
Leon will welcome customers from “early July” to its new Wetherby Road premises, though it has not yet confirmed an exact date.
New manager Alex Parkinson said a 17-strong team is already in training and she is hoping to add three more to that number. She said:
“I love working for Leon as I love the real sense of family within the teams we create – every store I visit has its own family dynamic but you are always made to feel welcome and at home.
“I enjoy the challenge of being a general manager, but my favourite thing about the role and Leon is developing people and watching people grow. Watching my team grow and develop during training has been my favourite part of Leon so far.”
The Mediterranean-inspired restaurant will be open daily from 7am to 10pm, except Sundays when it opens at 8am. It will have a total of 70 covers, including some outdoor seating.
Its menu includes “carbon neutral” burgers, rice boxes, breakfast muffins, egg pots and cakes.
The company has built its reputation on being good for the environment as well as for people – something which is not normally associated with fast food.
Alex, 28, trained with the company in London and helped to open its first drive-through in Gildersome, Leeds. She said she believes Harrogate is ready to welcome a new take on the fast food concept:
“I think it’s something different in the community, fast food that’s good for your gut and a place to come and sit with friends or family…
“We are mindful of our environmental impact in everything we do which is why we have put a number of processes in place to ensure our drive-through [restaurants] do as little damage as possible.”
Read more:
- Harrogate’s Nelson Inn sold to pub restaurant chain
- Harrogate restaurant to do takeaways only due to staffing issues
The arrival of Leon has proved controversial from the start, long before it was built.
Planning permission was eventually given after the application was initially rejected by Harrogate Borough Council, only for the developer to launch a successful appeal.
It was initially expected to be a drive-through Starbucks, but it was confirmed in March, after construction had begun, that it would instead be a Leon, another brand owned by Euro Garages.
The following month, developers were ordered to remove an 8m advertising sign outside the restaurant which had been erected before planning permission was granted.
However, Alex said now the construction work is complete, she is looking forward to welcoming customers inside.
Harrogate engineering consultants expand into Belfast“I am so excited to launch Leon in Harrogate – it’s probably one of my greatest accomplishments of my career, opening a store as a general manager.
“I could not have done it without the help of my team; they are absolutely amazing.”
Business Breakfast is sponsored by Harrogate law firm Truth Legal.
Harrogate engineering consultants expand
Harrogate-based building services engineering practice, Tate Consulting, has expanded into Belfast.
The move has created five new jobs with Belfast-born director Jim Lee set to continue splitting his time between Belfast and Harrogate.
This will be the fourth office for the company, which provides commercial engineering solutions.
It has already secured a number of contracts, including Belfast Waterside, a development of 500 homes by MODA Living and a logistics facility in Dublin.
Aaron Stevenson and Kevin Gallagher have also joined the team as associate director and mechanical associate.
Jim Lee, Tate consulting director, said:
“This expansion will give us a valuable foothold and added resource in Belfast as well as facilitating further expansion into the Dublin market.
“We’re already working on several high-profile projects and part of this success is due to us being able to attract a highly skilled team, who want to work on career defining projects. It’s great to be able to utilise the talent that exists in Northern Ireland.”
Read more:
- Jules B to open in Harrogate in September
- Harrogate hairdresser to rebrand with new name and new look
Harrogate cafe opens deli shop
Café di Mamma Amelia on Harrogate’s King’s Road has expanded by opening a second shop a few doors down to sell deli foods and home-cooked ready meals.
Owner Antonio Cavinato said recent success had spurred him on to open a second business, similarly named Cucina di Mamma Amelia.
Both businesses are named after Mr Cavinato’s mother, who lives in Italy. The shop will sell a variety of meals to finish at home including the family’s secret recipe tiramisu, pizzas, lasagna and cannolis.

Antonio Cavinato
The new deli has allowed Mr Cavinato to hire two part-time staff and keep on his two full-time staff spreading the four staff and himself across both businesses. He said:
Ongoing police incident in Harrogate“When the opportunity came out of the blue to open a smaller business on King’s Road I came back from Italy and started small, but demand has soon outstripped what we could do in the small shop, and when No 148 became available, I decided to just go for it!
“Harrogate is a great town to run a business in, there is lots of support from locals for a small business, and I will now be running between the coffee shop and the deli up and down the street, so my gym will miss me!”
“We are currently in attendance at a property on Byland Road following an incident earlier this evening.“The investigation is in the early stages and an update will be issued in due course.“Speculation can be unhelpful and we ask anyone posting on social media to be mindful of this.”
Read more:
- No update from police following blade incident in Beckwithshaw
- Family of murdered Harrogate policeman seeks permanent memorial