Traffic lights will be in place at busy junctions on Skipton Road in Harrogate at the start of the New Year.
Northern Gas Networks will install temporary lights at the junctions with Knox Avenue, Bilton Grange Close and Skipton Crescent while it replaces metal pipes with plastic ones.
The company will begin the upgrade at January 4 at the junction with Knox Avenue. This will see three-way temporary traffic lights in place for two weeks.
From January 17, the lights will be moved to Bilton Grange Close where two-way lights will be placed at the junction of Skipton Road for a further week.
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For the final two weeks of the project, the two-way temporary traffic lights will be moved along Skipton Road, to the junction with Skipton Crescent.
Northern Gas Networks said in a statement that although most work will be carried out on the road, engineers will need access to customer properties to complete the project and ensure the continued safe and reliable supply of gas.
Scott Kitchingman, business operations lead for Northern Gas Networks, said:
‘Terrifying but rewarding’: Harrogate home carer reflects on another covid year“We would like to apologise in advance for any inconvenience caused during these essential works.
“We greatly appreciated the patience that Harrogate customers showed us when we carried out work at Skipton Road earlier this year, and we’ll be doing our very best to minimise any disruption during this project at Knox Avenue and Bilton Grange Close.
“However, it is vital we complete the work in order to continue to maintain a safe and reliable gas supply to the residents of Harrogate.
“Northern Gas Networks is continuing to carry out its essential activities while following strict guidelines for safe distance working, where possible, and following good hygiene practices as we continue to live with coronavirus.
“We want to assure residents and road users that we will be working hard to complete this essential scheme as safely and as quickly as possible.”
A Harrogate home carer has said working through a pandemic for 20 months has been some of the hardest months she’s had to face.
Throughout the pandemic home carers have continued to go into the homes of the vulnerable even if covid was present. One of those is Rachel Yarwood, an assistant manager at St Margaret’s Homecare, which assists people in their homes in and around Harrogate.
She said coronavirus has meant her job can be both “terrifying and rewarding”.
Working through different tiers in full PPE has not been easy for anyone on the frontline, but Ms Yarwood said she felt home carers in particular were the “forgotten group”.
She said doing 17-18 calls a day while trying to bathe people was extremely tough. At the height of the pandemic in 2020, the St Margaret’s staff were making aprons out of car seat covers to prevent them running out.
“The NHS have been amazing but we have worked hard too to keep people out of hospital and at home.
“It’s been extremely hard at times. I remember having a chat with my daughter at the beginning giving her instructions on how to look after my other two kids in case I got it because back then we didn’t know how bad it would be.”
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For many of the clients, Ms Yarwood and her team were the only people they were seeing for a long time. She said “we became like family”.
“Some were really depressed at times. It was really hard to see some of them deteriorate and feel so lonely.”
Looking ahead to next year, Ms Yarwood said:
“We aren’t becoming complacent, we know covid isn’t going anywhere. But we are much more prepared now. We’ll just keep pulling together as a team.”

The November image from the charity calendar
Ms Yarwood and her team have also been photographed for a charity calendar to raise money for Mind. She said the ‘Covid Calendar Girls’ calendar came about after seeing the impact of isolation on clients.
She said:
“We just wanted to do out bit and it was a lot of fun. I hope it makes a few people smile and more importantly raises money for Mind.”
To find out more and support the calendar appeal, click here.
Harrogate drug dealer jailed for supplying heroin and cocaineA Harrogate heroin and cocaine dealer has been jailed for seven-and-a-half years.
Mark Richard Bowden, 47, was sentenced at York Crown Court today after pleading guilty to seven drug supply offences earlier this month.
North Yorkshire Police’s Operation Expedite County Lines Team watched Bowden sell heroin from his car near his home address on Cheltenham Crescent on December 20 last year.
Bowden, who has numerous previous convictions for dealing Class A drugs, was arrested the following day and a year-long investigation began.
Police searched his home and found heroin and cash worth more than £1,500.
Despite the ongoing investigation, Bowden was arrested again on November 30 this year. Officers found heroin, cocaine and cash again worth around £1,500.
Bowden was also told by York Crown Court to hand back £1,500 which is believed to be from the sale of heroin on the streets of Harrogate.
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PC Michael Haydock, who led the Operation Expedite County Lines Team investigation, said:
Harrogate jewellers Fattorini sets closing date after 190 years“The criminal actions of Bowden and other drug dealers like him are truly deplorable.
“Motivated only by greed to make cash through the exploitation of often young and vulnerable drug-users, they think they can operate without impunity or just receive a ‘slap on the wrist’ from the authorities if caught.
“Well, for Bowden, he can now think again. This substantial custodial sentence will hopefully hit him with an equally substantial dose of reality of the repercussions of dealing Class A drugs in our neighbourhoods.
“We will not tolerate it and will act on any information or intelligence about such activity to tackle the scourge of drugs, which can cause so much harm to individuals and to communities as a whole.”
A well-known Harrogate jewellers which designed the FA Cup and has been in the same family for 190 years has set a date for its closure.
The Stray Ferret revealed in November that A.Fattorini The Jewellers was due to close when the current manager Anthony Tindall retires.
In the months following Fattorini held a closing down sale to clear the remaining stock before Christmas.
There are still some pieces left which Mr Tindall hopes to sell before he closes the shop for good on January 8.
If the jewellers have not sold everything by that date he plans to take whatever remains to an auction house.
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It is unclear what will happen to the iconic building where Fattorini has been based since 1884 when it closes.

A. Fattorini through the decades.
Mr Tindall, whose great, great grandfather Antonio Fattorini founded the business in 1831, hopes to find a buyer or tenant. He told the Stray Ferret:
“Ever since we said we were closing the response has been fantastic but I am certainly looking forward to that closing date now. I suppose you could say I am getting demob-happy.
“Ideally a buyer could take on the shop and continue the Fattorini name, but that would take a lot of trust. I have lots of special memories here.”
While there have been a couple of interested buyers, Mr Tindall believes the latest wave of coronavirus driven by Omicron has forced them to be a little more cautious.
Car ploughs into Masham Bridge and almost ends up in riverA Masham man was lucky to escape unscathed after he crashed his car into Masham Bridge and almost ended up in the River Ure.
North Yorkshire Police said it happened at around 7.30am on Wednesday morning and the driver was a local man in his early 30s.
A police spokesman said the man “was very lucky to escape without any injuries”.
The car was recovered at around 9.00am and damage to the bridge was reported to the county council highways department.
Photos of the aftermath were shared with the Stray Ferret by Masham resident Jason Drew.
It appears a tree was the only thing stopping the car from entering the river.
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Plan to convert former Harrogate working men’s club into apartments
Plans have been submitted to convert a former Harrogate working men’s club into apartments.
The National Reserve Club, East Parade, formally closed in July following an unanimous resolution from its members last year.
The organisation had been registered as a working men’s club since July 11, 1913, when it was known as the Harrogate Battalion National Reserve of the West Riding of York Club.
Now, documents submitted by ID Planning to Harrogate Borough Council propose converting the building into two apartments.
According to the proposals, a three bedroom and two bedroom apartment would be built.
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ID Planning, which has submitted the plan on behalf of Ashleigh and Caroline Wells, said in its plans that the scheme would help a viable use for the building.
It said:
“The proposed development offers an opportunity to secure a long-term, viable use for the building while delivering two dwellings in a highly sustainable, brownfield location.”
Harrogate Borough Council will make a decision on the plan at a later date.
Although the closure of the National Reserve Club represented the end of an era, the district is still served by working men’s clubs.
Clubs are registered with the Club and Institute Union, which represents more than 1,600 societies across the country.
According to the CIU website, nine clubs are affiliated with the union in the Harrogate district.
You can read an in-depth history on working men’s clubs in Harrogate written by historian Malcolm Ness for the Stray Ferret here.
Thieves steal wrapped Christmas presents from Harrogate homeThieves have stolen wrapped presents from a Harrogate home just days before Christmas.
Police are appealing for witnesses following the burglary on East Parade, which took place yesterday between 2pm and 5.30pm when the residents were at work.
As well as the presents, several other high-value items were stolen and police believe they may have been carried away in a duvet cover, which was also missing.
A police statement added:
“We are appealing for information about any sightings of someone in the immediate vicinity carrying these items, items possibly concealed within a bedsheet or any relevant CCTV.”
Anyone with information on the incident should contact North Yorkshire Police on 101, select option 2, and ask for Katie Jacobs. You can also email katie.jacobs@northyorkshire.police.uk
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A new estate agents is opening in Harrogate after its owner, Libby Watt, decided to leave London to return home.
After more than 20 years in the capital working for firms such as Featherstone Leigh and Manors, Ms Watt said she chose to move back home to be closer to her parents and set up a new firm, Barclay Watt Estates.
The new agency will cover all of Harrogate and surrounding towns.
Ms Watt said she is hoping her London contacts and love for property will help her stand out among the numerous well-established Harrogate agencies.
She said:
“I’m obsessed with property and never ever tire of visiting clients and seeing other peoples houses.
“I am always friendly, always fair, but will fight to the death to get my clients the best deal, and ensure their transaction is pushed along to a swift and satisfactory conclusion.”
Initially, Ms Watt was planning to buy a second home to be closer to her parents and commute regularly but said it was her experience with local agents planted the seed to set up her own firm.
“After registering with pretty much all the agents, only three made contact with me. I also made an offer on two properties – one I never heard back from, and the second emailed about five days later.
“I was genuinely shocked, after all, clients give you their properties to sell/let in good faith and to me it is just not acceptable to not get back to people, or not to act in your clients best interest. I discussed setting up on my own with friends here, who had been left frustrated when buying or selling properties here, and they thought it was a great idea – so here I am.”
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Ms Watt has said she will be focussing on sales, lettings, management and property acquisitions. In London, she said it is common for agents to close deals on homes before they hit the market she is hoping to offer the same in Harrogate.
She is currently working alone but said she hopes to hire more staff in the future.
Ms Watt said she is also in the process of securing an interior designer to work alongside her and will also offer a national, and international Global Relocation service.
Two men charged with murder at Mayfield Grove flatTwo men have been charged with murder after a man was found dead at a flat in Mayfield Grove, Harrogate.
Police arrested the men, 36 and 38, on Monday night after receiving a report at around 11.30pm that a man had died there.
The two men are due to appear at York Magistrates Court.
A third man arrested in connection with the incident has been released with no further action.
DCI Jonathan Sygrove, of North Yorkshire Police’s major investigation team, said:
“I’d like to thank local residents for their patience and support while we carry out enquiries. I can reassure people that this was an isolated incident, and officers will remain in the area to provide ongoing reassurance and support to the community.”
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Station Gateway hit with second petition calling for project to be halted
A second petition demanding the Harrogate Gateway project is halted has been delivered to council bosses behind the £10.9 million scheme.
In what marks another sign of growing opposition against the major plans to reshape key parts of the town centre, the petition from Harrogate Residents Association has been backed by 714 signatures and will be debated at a council meeting on January 6.
This comes just days after the results of a latest council-run survey revealed 55% of 1,320 respondents feel ‘negative’ about the project, while 39% feel ‘positive’.
The remaining 6% were either ‘neutral’ or said they didn’t know.
North Yorkshire County Council – which is leading on the project – declined to comment on the latest petition.
It also did not say whether the opposition to the project could mean key parts of it – including the part-time pedestrianisation of James Street and reducing Station Parade to one-lane traffic – are scrapped or changed.
In its petition, Harrogate Residents Association said its main concerns are that the proposed road changes would be bad for business and only divert traffic elsewhere – something council bosses have argued against.
The residents association said:
“All we need to do is look at Oxford Street, Cambridge Street and Beulah Street to see the detrimental effects pedestrianisation has on shops, businesses and the appearance of our town.
“We need a flow of people through the town to support business, not to cut it off.
“These visitors bring a substantial amount of income to hospitality and retail without which we fear it would be terribly damaging to the town’s economy.”
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The residents association – which previously petitioned against Harrogate’s first Low Traffic Neighbourhood on Beech Grove – also claimed cycle lanes are not the answer to improving sustainable transport. It said:
“We welcome improved cycling provisions across the district to encourage people to walk and cycle, however, what we are opposed to is anything that could have a detrimental impact on our livelihoods, environment, businesses, conference trade and town as a whole
“Wholesale introduction of cycle lanes through the town is not necessarily the answer. Harrogate has steep roads and the climate is not always warm and sunny – too often it is cold, windy and wet.”
The petition will be debated at a virtual meeting of North Yorkshire County Council’s Harrogate and Knaresborough Area Constituency Committee on January 6 when members of the residents association and council officials are expected to speak.
This comes after the Granville Road Area Residents Association previously delivered a petition against the Gateway project to Harrogate Borough Council which is supporting the scheme.
As well as changes to James Street and Station Parade, the plans also include improvements to Station Square and the One Arch underpass with the aim of providing better links to the train and bus station.
Cllr Don Mackenzie, executive member for access at North Yorkshire County Council, recently said the responses to the latest survey were now being considered before designs are finalised and recommendations are presented to the council’s executive in the New Year.
He also argued sustainable transport measures were well supported during the Harrogate Congestion Study – a major survey held in 2019 when thousands of residents said a greener town centre was needed. He said:
“The clear message sent to us by members of the public then was that they wanted more walking and cycling infrastructure, greater support and use of public transport, and encouragement to leave cars at home when making short journeys.
“It was made clear that the best way to combat congestion was to change travel behaviour, to walk, cycle and use public transport more often.
“At a time when climate change is a global priority, these proposals will play a part in improving the environment in the town centre by encouraging less use of motor vehicles.”
The Gateway project is being funded by the government’s Transforming Cities Fund, with a deadline for the money to be spent by early 2023.
If approved, construction could start in spring 2022.