One of the Harrogate district’s most senior politicians has said the time has come to accept the Harrogate Nightingale hospital will never be used for covid and handed back.
Lord Newby, the Liberal Democrats leader in the House of Lords, said the NHS should let Harrogate District Council take back control of the building.
Lord Newby spoke to the Stray Ferret after receiving what he described as “non answers” to a series of questions he submitted to the government about staffing and bed capacity at the Nightingales in Harrogate, Sunderland and Manchester.
He asked how many nurses were required and was told by the Conservative peer Lord Bethell that “each Nightingale team has been developing a clinical model that can be scaled up as and when additional capacity is required in the region”.
Lord Newby said last month he doubted the Harrogate Nightingale had the staff to fully open and has now said:
“The only conclusions which one can draw are that the NHS has no firm plans to staff up the Harrogate Nightingale.
“If it were ever to be used for covid patients, it would obviously have to be staffed by existing staff now working in regional hospitals – all of which are already stretched – and cannot easily release doctors and nurses..
“I do not therefore believe that the facility in Harrogate will ever be used for covid and that the government should now accept this reality and hand the site back to the council.”
‘Flawed concept’
The government has described the Nightingales as “insurance policies”. But with the peak of the second wave of the pandemic believed to have passed, and a vaccine on its way, the chances of them being used have receded.
Lord Newby said the concept of using the Nightingale was “flawed from the start”. He added:
“The government should instead have looked at ways in which it could have freed up facilities in existing NHS facilities to allow for greater intake of covid patients, if this had been required.”
Read more:
- Exclusive: Harrogate Nightingale hospital ‘unable to open safely’
- Yvette Cooper MP: ‘no spare staff for Harrogate Nightingale’
The Stray Ferret has requested interviews with the NHS about the Harrogate Nightingale, which was set up to treat covid patients in Yorkshire and the Humber, on numerous occasions but so far has not received one.
A spokesperson for the hospital said in a statement:
“The NHS Nightingale Yorkshire and the Humber is getting ready to care for patients should it be needed and has been operating a clinical imaging service since June to support local trusts in delivering diagnostic and surveillance CT scans, with more than 3,000 patients having now been seen at the clinic.”
Lord Newby replied:
Civic Society opposes bid to convert Harrogate’s former post office“‘Getting ready’ is very different from ‘being ready’. The fact they’ve got a scanner there is irrelevant. The are plenty of other sites in Yorkshire where they could have put this.”
Harrogate Civic Society is to oppose plans to convert the town’s former post office into offices and 25 flats.
Post Office Ltd wants to add a fourth floor on to the three-storey sandstone terraced building, which closed last year after more than 100 years as a post office.
The society, which is a charity that aims to keep Harrogate beautiful, said in a statement it welcomed the principle of redeveloping the site into a mixed-use facility but added:
“We are, however, concerned about the impact of an additional floor to this building in the conservation area, as the proposal does not address the whole of the building as originally designed.
“The appearance of the new floor results in a design solution which is not fully considered or refined and therefore does not enhance the existing roofscape in its present form.”
Read More:
- Bid to turn former Post Office in Harrogate town centre into 25 flats and offices
- Tier 2 restrictions still give hope to Harrogate hoteliers
Property development company One Acre Group has submitted plans on behalf of Post Office Ltd to Harrogate Borough Council to convert the building. If approved, work could start in the summer.
The post office controversially relocated to WH Smith last year amid claims by Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones the service was being “downgraded”.
The society said the application would encourage retail and make the area more vibrant. It added:
“We support the principle of re-use of vacant upper floors in the town centre for residential purposes.
“We believe this concept should be encouraged and developed in all areas of the town centre so that buildings and streets as a whole appear to have life at all times.”
But the organisation said it was “concerned about the relationship of the proposed extension to the existing buildings along Cambridge Terrace”, adding:
“The society is of the opinion that the developer’s proposal as it stands should be resisted.”
Harrogate independents band together to beat coronavirus
A Harrogate street full with independent retailers has banded together to beat coronavirus.
Commercial Street has a new retailers group designed at promoting all of the shops online.
Shops pay £52 a year to join and all of that money goes into a pot to pay for the website and any future campaigns.
More than 70% of the street is already signed up. They all hope that it can help them get a bumper Christmas after a difficult year.
Read more:
- Tier two gives Harrogate district hotels hope for winter
- Harrogate district to enter tier two restrictions
Sue Kramer, of Crown Jewellers and head of the Commercial Street Retailers Group, said:
“It’s been a tough time for shops. But we hope that we can come out of coronavirus in a strong position.
“Christmas is such an important time so we are very happy to be in tier two. The new group has come at a great time.’
She hopes that the new group can encourage customers to keep coming back and exploring Commercial Street.
Despite the difficult year Sue believes that independent shops like the ones on Commercial Street will be the heart of town centres in years to come.
More cases and one more coronavirus death in HarrogateThere are 22 new cases in the Harrogate district today as the hospital reports another coronavirus death.
Public Health England figures for the district, which have been dropping steadily since the start of November, are now at 3,536 cases overall.
Harrogate District Hospital is now at 99 coronavirus deaths in total after it reported one more death today.
The death, while reported today, happened on Thursday. November 26.
It also comes as the Harrogate district prepares to move into tier two restrictions on Wednesday as the national lockdown ends.
Read more:
How Harrogate district avoided toughest tier rules
The government has explained how the Harrogate district avoided the toughest tier rules.
While case rates had been rising rapidly before the latest lockdown, they are improving in all but one of the districts in North Yorkshire.
The rates are lower than other parts of Yorkshire and the Humber, most of which are in tier three.
Scarborough, while at a higher rate than the rest of North Yorkshire, has seen its cases falling.
Positivity of cases is at 8.5%. The government will keep an eye on these indicators and may even change the tiers in a couple of weeks when they are up for review.
Read more:
- Tier two gives Harrogate district hotels hope for winter
- Harrogate district to enter tier two restrictions
Areas in tier three tend to not only have higher rates than North Yorkshire but also have pressure on NHS hospitals.
Meanwhile there were no new deaths reported at Harrogate District Hospital. The total count remains at 98.
Daily cases also continue to fall in the Harrogate district. The latest figures show an increase of 14 today up to a total of 3,514.
Harrogate Town plans for first match with fansHarrogate Town are planning for their first match with fans after a surpise announcement from the government.
The club are currently working on safety measures that will inevitably reduce the number of spectators.
In tier two, which Harrogate will be in from next week, large events can go ahead with up to 2,000 spectators outdoors.
However, with smaller grounds like the EnviroVent Stadium it is unlikely that many fans will head through the turnstiles.
Town had been in talks with Scunthorpe United to move the fixture back by a day but it was too short notice for The Iron.
Read more:
It may not be a long wait for the first match with fans though. The club has an another home fixture with Forest Green Rovers next Saturday.
Whenever the first match with fans happens it will be a special occasion as the first time supporters will be able to watch their club play in the football league.
Garry Plant, the managing director at Harrogate Town, said:
“Allowing spectators into football grounds has taken everyone by surprise but what a boost.
“It has come with no notice and some clubs still have safety officers on furlough.
“We will release regular updates regarding our progress, ticket distributions and the organisation of matches when we have them.”
Harrogate Town will ultimately need permission from the North Yorkshire safety advisory group, the sports ground safety authority and Public Health England.
The club are working on their plans but said they will lose 1850 capacity immediately to separate the teams and match officials from spectators.
Further capacity reductions will come as a result of terracing and the egress pinch points.
Harrogate planner: ‘council mistakes have created massive urban sprawl’A planning specialist has blamed Harrogate District Council’s “parochial mindset” and “lack of vision” for the district’s “massive urban sprawl”.
David Howarth, who was employed by the council for five years in the 1980s and then worked for it as a private consultant for 30 years, contacted the Stray Ferret to give us his views after reading our series of planning articles this week.
Mr Howarth said the coverage had “brilliantly identified the major problems we have had over the last 20 years”.
He said the district’s planning department had been in a “state of disarray for two decades”, which had left the area at the mercy of developers.

David Howarth
Mr Howarth said the “acutely embarrassing debacle” of the Local Plan, which maps planning in the district and took six years to finalise between 2014 and 2020, was the critical failure. He said:
“When you get to the position where you have no Local Plan it becomes a free-for-all.
“You can’t blame the developers. They’re just doing their job. You can’t criticise them any more than you can Volvo for selling cars.”
Read more:
- Housing Investigation: Calculations reveal houses covering over 700 football pitches will be built in the Harrogate district by 2035.
- Harrogate district targeted for development during planning chaos
- Housing Investigation: 26,500 more cars on the district’s roads
- Housing case study: 75 homes forced on Killinghall after appeal
Mr Howarth said many councils faced similar challenges but Harrogate Borough Council’s “parochial mindset” had backfired because its unrealistically low housing targets had been rejected by the government and resulted in far more being built. He said:
“We tried to restrict development because places like Harrogate and Knaresborough are nice places to live but when you try to restrict development to the absolute minimum and don’t conform with government guidelines, what happens then is the opposite arises and everybody piles in.
“In 1982 Killinghall Parish Council was screaming for a bypass. That’s 40 years ago — where’s the bypass? What we have instead is massive urban sprawl.
“A bypass could have been included in the Local Plan. The plan could have made developers pay a levy for houses they built Killinghall.”
Afraid to speak out
Mr Howarth said the council’s weak resistance to builders contrasted with its heavy-handed approach to residents seeking planning permission. He said:
“Some developments that have been accepted are very poor but if you put in an application to extend your conservatory they are down on you like a ton of bricks.”
Mr Howarth said the current situation was “predominantly the fault of the people in charge of Harrogate Borough Council” and its planning department needed to be more dynamic and visionary.
He said many planners were reluctant to speak out in case it cost them work with the council. He said:
“I’ve retired and could not care less now. Five years ago I wouldn’t have made this phone call.”
The Stray Ferret has asked Harrogate Borough Council for a response to Mr Howarth’s claims. At the time of publication we had not received one.
Tier two gives Harrogate district hotels hope for winterHotels in the Harrogate district breathed a collective sigh of relief yesterday as the area was told it was moving into tier two.
Tier two restrictions, while closing wet-led pubs, paves the way for hotels to reopen at the end of the lockdown next week.
It may not be the same sort of takings that hotels would normally hope for over the festive period but it is a positive sign for the sector.
Read more:
- Harrogate district to enter tier two restrictions
- Council hopes that North Yorkshire will move into tier one
The Majestic Hotel on Ripon Road will now be able to bring its team back from furlough and it putting reopening plans in place.
Andy Barnsdale, the general manager at the Majestic Hotel, said:
“We are now planning the process of reopening on Wednesday and bringing the team back, which is good news.
“We are looking closely at the guidelines and tailoring our food options for our indoor careering as well as for the outdoor Majestic Winter Teepee.”
Anthony Blundell, the assistant general manager at West Park Hotel, said:
Just 23 covid infections today as R number falls to 0.8“We will of course have all the safety measures in place but I think we might be in for a busy December when we re open next week with lots of bookings already and more coming in.
“I think the substantial meals rule will have an impact, we will just need to convert those people who are coming for a drink into having a meal.”
Just 23 coronavirus infections for the Harrogate district have been announced today by Public Health England.
The figure is well below the record 95 that occurred on November 9 and continues the recent sharp downward trend.
In more good news, the district’s R number, which refers to the rate of spread of the virus, has once again fallen, from 0.9 to 0.8.
It means every 10 people with covid will infect eight, so the virus is declining in the district as a whole.
Read more:
The seven-day average rate of infection has fallen to 128 per 100,000 people. It was over 300 three weeks ago.
The England average is 188 and the North Yorkshire average is 164.
Harrogate was placed in tier two restrictions today but this will be reviewed in two weeks time.
Harrogate district pubs were ‘praying for tier one’Pubs in the Harrogate district have voiced their disappointment at being placed in tier two at the end of lockdown.
Rick Jones, who owns the Water Rat and Valentino’s, said: “We were all praying for tier one. But with a very limited number of areas going into tier one it is not a surprise.”
He expects the impact of tier two to mean that business at the Water Rat pub will be down by around 30% compared to the same time last year.
Mr Jones added: “Celebratory casual drinks in December won’t be happening. There’s only so many times you can go out with your own household. There’s a vaccine in sight. We just have to face this and ride it out.”
Read more:
- Harrogate district to enter tier two restrictions
- R number falls below 1 in the Harrogate district
- Tier one hopes for Harrogate district fade away
While trade will be down for his pubs, wet-led pubs that cannot serve substantial meals with drinks have to close.
Richard Park, of the Little Ale House, also said: “It is something we were expecting but we are of course disappointed. It just makes no sense to close small, safe pubs like ours.
“Just because we don’t have the capacity to cook substantial meals, whatever that means, we are forced to keep our doors shut.”
Megan Fairweather, the social media secretary at Harrogate and Ripon CAMRA, added:
“After an agonising wait, licensees across the country have had their worst fears confirmed – in all but three council areas in the country, pubs will either be closed or only able to open if they are serving substantial meals.”