Harrogate Business Improvement District has given its new street ranger a licence to fight grime.
It may not be as glamorous a role as James Bond’s, but street ranger Chris Ashby is set to become a familiar figure in the town centre.
Mr Ashby’s job is to give visitors a better first impression of Harrogate by cleaning, painting and pointing out anti-social behaviour.
His work is in addition to Harrogate BID’s four major deep-cleans in a year and Harrogate Borough Council’s usual street cleaning work.
Harrogate BID manager Matthew Chapman said the role was a key part of the organisation’s ambition to create a ‘safe, clean and welcoming’ town centre. He added:
“Harrogate is the jewel in Yorkshire’s crown, and Chris will be there to give it an extra sparkle.
“The council already does a great job in terms of ridding pavements of litter, and Chris will be building on their day-to-day work.
“His battery-powered vehicle will carry a variety of tools including brushes, bin bags and a power washer allowing him to quickly react to any unsightly or hazardous incident that businesses might report, and what and he sees with his own eyes.”
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- Residents petition calls on council to reject Harrogate Tesco plans
- Harrogate BID ‘waste of money’, says pub landlord
Mr Ashby said:
Residents petition calls on council to reject Harrogate Tesco plans“Living in Harrogate, I’m aware of a what a very special town it is.
“I’m really looking forward to taking on this new role with Harrogate BID and getting to know business owners and levy payers as I carry out my grime fighting duties.”
Residents living close to the former gas works in New Park have started a petition calling on Harrogate Borough Council to reject Tesco’s application to build a supermarket.
If given the go-ahead, Tesco would build a 38,795 square feet store and a petrol filling station on the site near the New Park roundabout.
Electric Avenue residents have cited various concerns, including pollution, road safety fears and environmental damage,
They say the disused site has become a home to wildlife since Northern Gas Networks moved out more than 20 years ago.
Two days since resident Nicki Balmforth set up the petition, more than 140 people have signed it. In the petition description she said:
“We believe that this new application should be rejected in full due to the time that has passed the abundance of wildlife now thriving on this land, and the certain destruction of their habitats.
“The site is home to and/or feeding ground to the following wildlife, roe deer, badgers, foxes, newts, frogs and toads, squirrels, hedgehogs, owls and more.
“We do not need another supermarket in this area, in a five-mile radius from this site there are 14 food stores including Aldi, Asda, Sainsbury’s, Morrisons, Co-op, and express shops. We do understand the need to support the new homes being built, but this is not the right location!”
Read more:
- Tesco consultation results reveal support for new Harrogate store
- Tesco to revive controversial Skipton Road supermarket plans
Electric Avenue residents are holding a meeting tomorrow night to discuss the plans.
Tesco has harboured ambitions for a new store in the town for almost 20 years. The retailer previously had plans approved in 2009.
The supermarket giant held an online consultation about the plans last year — 187 people responded. Of those, 62% said they supported proposals.
Traffic and Travel Alert: Heavy traffic on Skipton Road near roadworksNorthern Gas Networks is carrying out works on Skipton Road close to the New Park roundabout.
There are temporary traffic lights in place, which has lead to heavy traffic in the area this morning.
Works are due to finish on Friday, January 28.
The Stray Ferret has changed the way it offers Traffic and Travel alerts.
We will now notify you instantly through app notifications and flash tweets when there is an urgent alert. This could include heavy traffic, dangerous weather and long delays or cancellations of public transport.
The alerts are sponsored by The HACS Group.
Harrogate BID ‘waste of money’, says pub landlordA Harrogate pub landlord has described the town’s Business Improvement District as a “waste of money” — and is refusing to pay the £370-a-year levy.
Marik Scatchard has been the landlord of Christies Bar on King’s Road for 14 years. He told the Stray Ferret that his pub has seen little benefit from the BID, which was set up in 2019 to improve Harrogate town centre
Businesses within Harrogate’s town centre pay the BID 1.5% of their rateable value a year on top of their usual business rates. Harrogate BID brings in around £500,000 from local firms.
Because a majority of companies voted to set up the BID, Christies is legally obliged to pay the levy. However, Mr Scatchard said he would not pay because the BID does not offer good value for money to levy payers and is run by a “private mates’ club”.
He said:
“We’re having to pay these levies but all they seem to do is put stickers in shop windows. I’m not paying. They can lock me up.”
Read more:
- Business groups claim they’ve been ignored in Station Gateway consultation
- In Depth: To BID or not to BID? Divided opinion in Harrogate, Knaresborough and Ripon
Whilst the landlord said the BID provided the pub with some furniture after lockdown and sponsored the Pubwatch scheme, he dismissed recent BID initiatives such as a ping pong table in the Victoria Shopping Centre.
He said the BID should focus its efforts on cleaning up King’s Road and Parliament Street, which he said were regularly strewn with litter.
BIDs have been criticised for doing jobs that have traditionally been under the remit of local councils, effectively taxing businesses twice.
Mr Scatchard said:
“Hardly anyone is in the ping pong room when I’ve been past. It’s a joke. It won’t bring anything to town.
“You don’t see them doing anything around the King’s Road area. It just winds me up, it doesn’t benefit me at all.”
BID’s response
Matthew Chapman, Harrogate BID Manager, said:
Administrators reveal state of Harrogate firm CNG Energy’s finances“We are well aware of Mr Scatchard’s views on the BID and the levy. Whilst he hasn’t paid his levy for the last two years, he has been happy to accept support from us, in particular outdoor furniture to help him out of the first lockdown in July 2020. He also had BID-funded flower boxes surrounding his venue.
“Christies also benefits from our sponsorship of Harrogate Pubwatch, and if he so chose to, he could take advantage of the LoyalFree app to help promote his business, and also become a member of the Harrogate Gift Card Scheme.
“He could also apply for a £750 match-funded grant, which would more than pay for one year’s levy! And whilst happy to criticise us on social media, he isn’t keen to speak with us in person, which we have tried to do on several occasions.
“Even though he personally doesn’t like the ping pong parlour, which I’m delighted to say is reopening at the end of the month, there are many who do, and these people make special trips into town to make use of this BID-funded activity.
“Finally, perhaps he’d like to pass comment on our recent festive partnership with Harrogate Borough Council and Destination Harrogate? Without BID and the levy, much of this would simply have not been possible.”
The state of CNG Energy’s finances has been revealed after its administrators published its first report into the company.
The Harrogate-based company, which had offices on Victoria Avenue, fell victim to spiralling wholesale gas and electricity prices and went out of business last year.
A report published by Interpath Advisory, the administrators appointed to take charge of the company, has revealed CNG owes £3.6 million to HMRC and other “secondary preferential creditors”.
Although the administration process is still in the early stages, the report says it expects to pay “a dividend” to those creditors.
The report says:
“Based on current estimates, we anticipate that secondary preferential creditors should receive a dividend.
“We have yet to determine the timing and quantum, but we will do so when we have completed the realisation of assets and the payment of associated costs.”
The company also owes more than £4 million to trade creditors and £6 million to consumer creditors.
London-based IT consultancy firm Gentrack UK Ltd is owed £450,759 and is among the highest creditors in the report.
Read more:
- In Depth: Why Harrogate success story CNG ended in collapse
- Harrogate energy firm CNG ceases trading
Meanwhile, the company has also made all but 21 employees redundant. CNG employed around 145 staff in Harrogate.
Staff still working are currently assisting with the transition of customers over to new suppliers.
Company was operating on ‘thin margins’
Administrators also found that the company had been experiencing financial difficulty for some time due to “significant cash flow pressures primarily caused by sharp price increases in wholesale gas prices and the general volatility in the energy market”.
The company was already operating on “thin margins” prior to the covid pandemic and had taken out a secured loan of £35 million from Glencore, a multi-national oil and gas firm.
However, the failure of a number of key customers and spiralling wholesale costs left the company unable to finance itself. The report says:
Local woman sets up charity for Malawi schoolchildren“In the absence of the financial and operational support of CNG Wholesale and other group entities, the company did not have the financial resources required to operate as a standalone business or bear the £35 million loan that was due to Glencore.
“As a result, the directors and Glencore began to explore ways to facilitate an orderly exit from the market.”
Jasmine Lehnis-Leitao worked in Malawi for 15 years before moving to Harrogate. Now she has set up the not-for-profit organisation Care In Action for Malawi to fund young people’s secondary and further education.
Ms Lehnis-Leitao went to Malawi in 2001 and has since worked on various projects there, including with local charity Open Arms Malawi, which cares for orphaned babies, and is closely linked with Harrogate communities.
Her new organisation will raise money through sponsorships and other fundraising to fund young peoples’ education, paying school fees and supplying them with books, supplies, and necessary technology. She is currently applying for charitable status.
Promise’s Story
Ms Lehnis-Leitao hopes her organisation will make a direct impact. She tells the story of Promise, a girl she worked with:
“Promise did well at primary school, but for secondary school she couldn’t afford the fees. Her parents had died, she was living with her aunt who sold tomatoes for a living. Her cousins and her aunt would all tell her ‘Why are you interested in books? You should be finding a man who can support you.’”
Care in Action for Malawi’s partner charity in Germany was able to step in to fund Promise’s education and Promise is now at a college for nursing. Ms Lehnis-Leitao adds:
“Once Promise becomes a nurse, that’s a career for life, it’s no longer about finding a man to rely on its about relying on yourself. It’s about having your career, having skills that you can give to your community.”
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Local involvement
Ms Lehnis-Leitao aims to reach more people with her new organisation by working in collaboration with partners. She remarks that cooperation is key to “build strong partnerships locally and put more kids more through school”.
Ms Lehnis-Leitao hopes the Harrogate district will get involved with fundraising and she emphasises how a little can go a long way, saying:
“Get involved with events, which can be as simple as a pub quiz. Come along and support. We want to get to know people’s interests and what they can contribute.
“For £300 a year you can put someone through secondary school. For £500 a year you can put them through teacher training college which is only two years.”
To get involved or offer sponsorship, you can get in contact at info@care-in-action.org.
For more information, click here.
Harrogate headteacher ‘concerned’ by Cold Bath Road pollution dataWestern Primary School installed a pollution sensor in June last year, amid concerns about heavy traffic on Harrogate’s Cold Bath Road.
Headteacher Tim Broad was worried about the sheer volume of traffic plus the fact he could tase diesel in his mouth when larger vehicles passed.
Six months on, The Stray Ferret has reviewed the data, which suggests levels of pollutants meet national objectives but exceed guidelines set by the World Health Organisation.
The sensor, which was installed within the school grounds, revealed concentrations of PM2.5, PM10 and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) all fell within the national objectives’ limits for short and long-term exposure.
However, a local pollution campaigner expressed concern that PM2.5 and NO2 levels exceeded WHO guidelines both short- and long-term.
PM2.5 particles are man-made particles suspended in the air, produced by woodburning stoves and transport, as well as industrial processes. When breathed in, these particles can get into the blood and lodge themselves in organs.
NO2 is a gas produced by combustion of fossil fuels. Eighty percent of roadside NO2 pollution is caused by road vehicles. Exposure to the gas can cause inflammation to the airways and exacerbate pre-existing heart and lung conditions.
‘No safe threshold for air pollution’
We showed our findings to Western headteacher Tim Broad, who said he was “concerned” by the exceedance of WHO guidelines, Mr Broad added:
“I intend to follow up with an investigation in school, with a view to passing on the findings to the appropriate people at Harrogate Borough Council and North Yorkshire County Council.”
Read more:
- Western Primary School in Harrogate gets second speed sign
- St Aidan’s school in Harrogate rated ‘inadequate’ by Ofsted
Local campaigner Brian McHugh claimed the national objectives were too weak, and children were at risk. He added:
“The concern with using numbers and limits sometimes can be that there is a belief formed that anything up to that level is ‘safe’. There is no safe threshold for air pollution.
“The harm of air pollution on humans is well documented. The increased harm to children, with developing lungs, cannot be overstated.”
Better monitoring needed
Western Primary School is believed to be the only school in the district with an air pollution sensor, and live measurements from the sensor are available to the public online here.
Mr McHugh called for better monitoring of pollution in and around schools. He said:
“It is incredibly useful that we are even able to have this data and analyse it. Huge thanks must go to Western Primary for having the foresight to install an air quality sensor and it is hoped that other schools in the Harrogate district follow their example, so we have accurate information on which to base policies and initiatives.”
In its 2021 Air Quality Annual Status Report, Harrogate Borough Council used 63 monitors throughout the district to measure NO2 levels but had no monitors for PM2.5 particles.
The council itself stated PM2.5 can have a significant impact on health, including “premature mortality, allergic reactions, and cardiovascular diseases”, but it relied on council data from Leeds and York to estimate levels of the pollutant in the district.
Harrogate College to host week of networking events for businessesHarrogate College is to host a week of sector-specific networking events for businesses next month.
The events will be held between Monday 14 and Friday 18 February. They are free and open to anyone who books a place via the college’s Employers’ Network page.
The sessions will cover energy and construction, health and social care, hospitality and retail, digital, education and training and business and finance.
They have been set up to facilitate talks between employers working in similar fields.
The college will use feedback from participating businesses to tailor its curriculum — and, if required, start new courses — to ensure it is delivering the skills that are most in demand by local firma.
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Harrogate College’s partnerships and development manager, Holly Hansen-Maughan, urged businesses to sign up.

Holly Hansen-Maughan
Ms Hansen-Maughan said:
“Launching the employers’ network sparked such a positive discussion between all kinds of businesses, and this is a great chance to build on that.
“These sessions will allow people to mingle with others in their own industries, find out more about each other and potentially mutually beneficial opportunities, and explore those kinds of discussions further.
“You do not have to be a current network member to take part – you just have to book a place through our website.
“The network is growing and thriving and we look forward to welcoming new businesses along in February to find out more about it, and the benefits it brings.”
For full details, and links to book a place, visit the Harrogate College website.
Hampsthwaite doctors’ surgery conversion finally approvedA plan to convert Hampsthwaite’s former doctors’ surgery into a house has been approved at the second attempt.
Dr Bannatyne and Partners, which was based at Winksey Cottage, High Street, in the village, closed in March last year.
The surgery was part of Church Avenue Medical Group and shut down after practitioners felt the cottage was no longer a viable place for a medical practice.
Mozaffar Nami, a developer, lodged plans to convert the building into a house.
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Harrogate Borough Council initially rejected the proposal in November on the grounds that the applicant had not demonstrated that the site had been empty for more than three months.
Now the developer has had plans approved after resubmitting proposals for the former surgery.
Mr Mari said in documents submitted to the council that the building had been previously used as a house before becoming a surgery and could be “readily converted back” into a home.
Green Shoots: Harrogate Town’s vegan footballer who is passionate about environment
Harrogate Town midfielder George Thomson is part of a growing cohort of professional footballers who are vegan and passionate about the environment.
Fan favourite Thomson joined Town in 2017. He’s played more than 160 matches and been a key cog in Simon Weaver’s history-making side that was promoted to the English Football League for the first time in the club’s 100-year existence. Town are at home to Oldham this afternoon.
Players including Manchester City legend Sergio Aguero and England player Jesse Lingard have gone vegan for health reasons but Thomson told the Stray Ferret his conscience couldn’t allow him to continue eating meat. He made the switch five years ago.
He said:
“Agriculture is one of the main contributors to global warming, it gives off a high percentage of greenhouse gases. It’s known to contribute more than even cars.”
Thompson was shocked after watching the Netflix documentary Cowspiracy, which exposed the impact of meat on climate change, water use, deforestation and ocean dead zones.
He also said that ethically he could no longer eat meat due to the suffering caused to animals.
He added:
“I saw what happens and I didn’t want to be a part of it. I didn’t want that on my conscience.
“There’s so much information now so I did lots of research.”
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Green Shoots: What it’s like to own an electric car in Harrogate
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Green Shoots: The Harrogate wind farm that powers 8,000 homes
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Green Shoots: Knaresborough mum sells eco alternative to clingfilm
Thomson, who is known as one of the fittest players in Town’s squad, said it’s a misconception that becoming vegan will result in a lack of protein.
“I wasn’t going to be deficient in something that would affect my job. What stuck with me, no vegan player has been to a doctor with a protein deficiency. There’s protein in every single food. We eat a lot of beans and lentils that are high in protein. It’s like anything, you get used to it and it becomes easy.”
He’s not the only vegan at the club: midfielder Alex Pattison also recently made the switch, although Thomson said they face some friendly banter from the meat-eaters in the dressing room.
‘Something I believe in’
Forest Green Rovers, who play in League Two alongside Harrogate, have been described by FIFA as the “greenest club in the world” and they’ve even been recognised by the UN for their eco-credentials.
Only vegan meals are served at their ground, which is powered by 100% renewable energy and includes electric vehicle charging points.
Thomson, who cycles to training, said he supported the club’s model:
“It’s a great concept what they’ve done at Forest Green, even the kit is made of recycled plastic.
“The environment is a massive topic at the minute, everyone is beginning to be more conscious about their carbon footprint. For me, being vegan helps massively and you have the health benefits on top. I’d support what they’ve done there massively, it’s something I believe in”.
And with vegans options now much more mainstream, he said he doesn’t have to miss out on a celebratory pizza with teammates after a match thanks to Dominos’ vegan option.