Harrogate is not expected to be added to the government’s Covid watchlist this week, according to North Yorkshire’s public health bosses.
However, they said the situation could change if the number of infections is not brought under control.
Scarborough and Selby districts are currently on the watchlist as “areas of concern” and neighbouring Leeds was put into local lockdown last week.
Further restrictions were announced elsewhere in the north today, including Middlesbrough, Hartlepool, Warrington and Liverpool.
Dr Lincoln Sargeant, director of public health at North Yorkshire County Council, said the county had asked for a cautious approach to putting districts on the watchlist after Scarborough and Selby were added to it even though other districts that are not on the list have higher infections rates.
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He added:
“As the national system is revised in terms of where the whole country is, we will probably get some more detailed guidance about how the watchlist system will work in the future. That may or may not come out this week.
“But we have no expectations that Harrogate will be added this week. That does not mean that situation may not change for next week.”
Meanwhile, Richard Flinton, chief executive of the county council, said yesterday in a council newsletter that the transmission of infections was mainly between households.
Latest Public Health England data shows 519 new cases in the county in the past two weeks at a weekly rate of 36 per day.
Harrogate saw 16 new coronavirus cases yesterday and hit a three-week daily high of 19 on Tuesday.
Mr Flinton said the county’s infection increase was in line with the national picture.
He said:
Harrogate TSB to close next month“We are studying the data carefully and can clearly see that the majority of cases can be linked back to household and social transmission.
“This is important, because what it also tells us is that our schools are safe places to be. That, in turn, is testament to all the hard work schools, colleges and childcare setting have put in to plan for a safe return for pupils.”
Harrogate TSB will close next month, with the bank attributing the move to a shift in customers to online banking.
The branch on Oxford Street, which was part of the first wave of 82 TSB closures announced last year, will close on November 27 .
TSB has since announced a further 164 branch closures as part of plans to save £100 million by 2022.
When the Harrogate branch closes, the nearest TSB bank will be in Leeds.
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A TSB review into the use of the Harrogate branch found 73 customers visited it regularly each month.
It also revealed weekly transactions had gone up in 2019 compared to the same time in 2016.

A notice in the bank’s window.
Debbie Crosbie, chief executive of TSB, said:
“We are reshaping our business to transform the customer experience and set us up for the future. This means having the right balance between branches on the high street and our digital platforms, enabling us to offer the very best experience for our personal and business customers across the UK.”
Another central Harrogate bank, The Co-operative Bank, is due to close by December 1. The Co-op also blamed a drop in footfall for it closure.
Harcourt Drive death ‘not suspicious’, say policeNorth Yorkshire Police has said it is not treating the death of a man on Harcourt Drive in Harrogate last month as suspicious.
Multiple police cars and ambulances attended the incident at around 7.15pm on Sunday, August 23.
One man was certified dead at the scene and another taken to hospital.
Police subsequently cautioned a 42-year-old man for distributing “distressing images” of the incident on social media.
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Now officers have confirmed they are not treating the death as suspicious and a file is being prepared for the coroner’s office.
Detective inspector Steve Menzies, senior investigating officer at North Yorkshire Police, said:
Harrogate High School reports covid case“The overarching circumstances will be for HM Coroner to rule upon but this is a very sad incident where the deceased has inflicted injuries on himself and caused injury to his relative who tried to help him.
“Despite valiant attempts by neighbours, police and ambulance staff to administer first aid in a traumatic situation, his injury proved to be fatal.
“This was an isolated and tragic incident and North Yorkshire Police are not looking for anyone else in connection with it. Thankfully the injured man is making a good recovery. The full circumstances will be heard at the inquest.
“Subsequently a Harrogate man was issued with a police caution for attending the area and posting live images of the incident on social media as first aiders were desperately trying to save the man’s life. Such actions show no compassion or thought for those involved, are distressing for extended friends and family and will not be tolerated.”
Harrogate High School has become the latest school in the district to report a positive case of coronavirus.
It is the eighth local school the Stray Ferret has reported as having a positive result since pupils went back this month.
In a letter to parents yesterday, Harrogate High School said a “small number” of students were identified as being within close contact of the infected pupil,
They have been sent home to self-isolate for 14 days.
In the letter, the headteacher Ms Charlotte Clarke said:
“We have been advised by Public Health England that there has been a confirmed case of Covid within the school.
“The small number of children who have been in close contact with the individual have been informed that their child must stay at home for 14 days.”
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The school declined to provide any further information.
Yesterday, a further 19 cases of Covid were reported in the district, which was the highest daily increase in three weeks.
The letter contains advice from Public Health England saying if a child develops symptoms of Covid, they should remain at home for at least 10 days.
Harrogate district MPs vote as Brexit bill clears CommonsTwo Harrogate district MPs voted in favour of the government’s Internal Market Bill yesterday, helping to take it to the next legislative stage.
Andrew Jones, Harrogate and Knaresborough MP, and Nigel Adams, Selby and Ainsty MP, voted in line with the government but Julian Smith, Skipton and Ripon MP, abstained.
The legislation paves the way for the UK to override parts of the Brexit Withdrawal Agreement. MPs voted it through at the third reading last night by 340 to 256.
The Bill sparked controversy after Northern Ireland secretary, Brandon Lewis, said it would break international law in a “specific and limited way”.
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The Stray Ferret contacted Mr Jones, Mr Adams and Mr Smith asking why they voted the way they did. None had replied by the time of publication.
The Bill will now undergo further scrutiny in the House of Lords.
What is the Internal Market Bill?
After the UK left the EU on January 31 it signed the Withdrawal Agreement.
The agreement included a Northern Ireland Protocol, which was designed to prevent a hard border returning to the island of Ireland.
The Internal Market Bill attempts to override parts of the agreement. It would allow the UK to modify or reinterpret state aid rules if the two sides do not strike a future trade deal.
Police charge Harrogate woman, 72, after major cannabis findPolice have charged a 72-year-old Harrogate woman with producing cannabis after a raid in the town at the weekend.
North Yorkshire Police attended reports of a disturbance on Saturday evening and found “cannabis littering the entire street” on Alexandra Road.
The officers investigated a house on the road and discovered a “large quantity” of cannabis plants inside.
Not long after the police also discovered two other cannabis grows on Somerset Road and on Woodlands Road.
1/3 *Last Night*
Attended a street in #Harrogate following the report of some vehicle disorder. At scene we have found a large quantity of cannabis littering the entire street. A nearby property was identified as insecure and evidence of a substantial Cannabis grow found.. pic.twitter.com/AVmpFtgw83— Just Dave! (@PC_769) September 27, 2020
Six other suspects travelling in two vehicles left the scene of the original incident on Alexandra Road but Hertfordshire Police intercepted and arrested them.
The six people were charged with possession of class B drugs with intent to supply. They were sent to court, which remanded them in custody.
A man in his 20s was also arrested on Monday and has since been released on bail, taking the total number of arrests up to eight.
The 72-year-old woman was charged with three counts of cannabis production and awaits a trial at crown court on bail.
Missing Harrogate cat on lockdown adventure 20 miles from homeA cat from Harrogate has been found after four months in Poppleton, more than 20 miles from his home. One theory is that he caught the train..
Jasper, the black cat, lived with his owners in Harrogate, who adopted him from Harrogate Cat Rescue.
He was last seen on May 13 but was found again this weekend when his owners got a call from a York vet.
Jasper had found his way to Poppleton and was taken in by a family in June. The family mistook him for a pregnant female and took him to the vets this weekend.
When his microchip was scanned they learnt he had been reported missing.
His owner, Anna Whitehouse, said:
“It still feels so surreal having him back. It was heartbreaking at first when he didn’t remember me or his name. We never used to let him out at night but over lockdown it was so much quieter so we did.
When the Minster Vets in York rang us over the weekend it was amazing, we’d spoke the week before about stopping his insurance because he’d been gone so long.If only we had a camera to know what he’d been doing.”
Jasper had been missing for 19 weeks in total. His owners had searched for him for weeks during lockdown and put appeals on local social media groups. Only to find out he never was in Harrogate.

From being in his owner’s art studio to lounging in the sun in Poppleton, Jasper’s lockdown adventure will remain a mystery.
While many of us were having an uneventful lockdown. Jasper had gone on a summer getaway to Poppleton.
Phil Brierley found the cat in June and he became a part of his family. He said:
“He kept hanging round our door and he looked desperate and hungry – he really was on his last legs. I am a die hard Leeds football fan, so even though we thought he was a girl, we called him Bielsa. He was very skittish at the beginning but after a few weeks he was happy to come sit with you.
We were disappointed to send him back because he’s got a great character but I was delighted he had a family that had been missing him.”
Mr Brierley is certain Jasper jumped on the train near his home by Hornbeam Park station and “popped off at Poppleton”.
Neither family will ever know what happened to Jasper on his travels but both are happy he’s safe and sound, once again.
Harrogate group campaigns to get more women drinking beerA Harrogate-based equality initiative is launching a campaign to get rid of the stereotype that beer is a man’s drink.
The Beer Glass Project, which is being run by the community interest company Women On Tap, aims to showcase beer as aesthetic and indulgent rather than something “guzzled in a laddish manner”.
Women on Tap will post photos, key facts and articles on social media during the five-week campaign that sets out to challenge perceptions of beer – how it looks, tastes and who it’s for.
A report by women and beer interest group Dea Latis revealed the UK has one of the lowest percentages of female beer drinks in the world at 17%.
The report identified barriers that put women off drinking beer, including male-orientated advertising, judgement from others and the calorie content.
Women On Tap founder Rachel Auty said:
“We need a reset button to enable us to stamp out inequality so that beer is accessible to all.
“We need to change the way it is represented, talked about and marketed.”
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A different style of glassware will be used to present the beer throughout the project.
Rachel added:
Allow care home visits, says Andrew Jones MP“Women want great glassware and are more likely to choose a drink that is presented in a beautiful and aspirational way. Women are strong and independent and they will choose a drink that helps them make a bold statement about who they are.
“I hope to make more women realise there really is no better way to do that than with a great beer in a fabulous glass.”
Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones has told Parliament visits to care homes should be allowed.
Speaking in a Covid debate yesterday, Mr Jones said several constituents “desperate to see their loved ones” had raised concerns about current restrictions with him.
The Stray Ferret reported yesterday that Harrogate woman Judy Bass had joined a group called Rights for Residents that campaigns against restrictions.
Mr Jones said Ms Bass, along with Dr Joanne Ridpath, Helen Owens, Anna McIntee and others had raised the matter.
Mr Jones said:
“These families are just desperate to see their loved ones and have truly heartbreaking stories.
“Balancing wellbeing and isolation is very difficult but the emotional consequences of no visits are absolutely profound.”
North Yorkshire County Council this week advised care homes in the county to end routine visits in October. Thousands more care homes nationally are also forbidding visits.
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The Conservative MP suggested visits could be allowed through glass or windows.
“While this is impersonal, it is clearly better for people to see their loved ones than not.
“Perhaps designated very close family members in limited numbers could be given staff status, which would allow them access to testing and could then allow a degree of home access.
“Nobody is suggesting an open-door policy, but right now, the restrictions are profound.
“The capacity for residents to understand what is going on and why they cannot see their loved ones is almost inevitably limited, yet the need to see their loved ones is so important.’
Mr Jones also said told the debate that civil liberties were being compromised during Covid and decisions needed parliamentary scrutiny. Some backbench Tory MPs have expressed similar concerns. He said:
“A transparent approach to the science and decision making is necessary to ensure that we take people with us. If we do, and if they understand why a decision has been taken, I think we will see greater compliance, allowing people to resume their lives safely.”
Harrogate charity Frank’s Fund moves comedy night online
A comedy night, which raised £13,000 last year for a fund set up in memory of a 14-year-old Harrogate schoolboy, will be staged online this year.
Frank Ashton’s family set up Frank’s Fund to raise awareness and funds for Ewing’s sarcoma, which is a rare form of bone cancer,
A comedy night at St Aidan’s school in Harrogate last year raised over £13,000 for the fund, which has achieved total donations of £158,000 so far.
The comedian Maisie Adam, who like Frank attended St Aidan’s, performed at the event and is a patron of the charity. This year’s online event is set to go ahead before the end of the year although a date has yet to be confirmed.
The charity has missed several fundraising events this year due to Covid.
Supporters have found other ways to raise funds, such as running a marathon throughout the month of September.
Maisie Adam, who is among those running marathons, said:
“It’s all about keeping Frank at the forefront of people’s minds. I am devastated the plan isn’t going ahead in Harrogate.”

Maisie is one of several people running a marathon this month to raise money for Frank’s Fund.
She added:
“What shocked me in particular is just how underfunded Ewing’s sarcoma is. Everyone assumes when money is donated to big charities it is distributed evenly but it definitely isn’t.
With Frank’s Fund, all of the money goes to research for this disease.”
To support Maisie’s marathon, click here.
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