North Yorkshire Police has reassured people in Harrogate that an incident on Harcourt Drive yesterday was isolated and officers are not looking for anyone in connection with it.
Police confirmed in a statement that one man was pronounced dead at the scene and another was being treated in hospital.
Multiple police cars and ambulances attended the incident at around 7.15pm on Sunday evening. An air ambulance was also called out to the incident.
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DI Steve Menzies, senior investigating officer at North Yorkshire Police, said this morning:
“I want to reassure the residents of Harrogate that this is a tragic and isolated incident and we are not looking for anyone else in connection with the incident.
“Our thoughts and sincere condolences go out to the family of the man who sadly lost his life.
“I would like to appeal again to anyone who witnessed, including recording, the incident or events leading up to it to get in touch by calling 101, quoting reference 12200147262.”
North Yorkshire Police said investigations are ongoing into the incident. One local resident said people were asked to move away from the scene and return to their homes while officers dealt with the incident.
They said:
Man dead after incident near Harrogate town centre“Nothing like this happens around here.
“We came outside and were asked by an officer to move along. Another lady came out but was asked to go back into her house.”
Police have confirmed that one man has died and another is being treated in hospital after a serious incident near Harrogate Town centre last night.
Police and the ambulance service attended the incident on Harcourt Drive near believed to be a double stabbing.
Multiple police cars and ambulances attended the incident at around 7.15pm on Sunday evening. An air ambulance was also called out to the incident.
A North Yorkshire Police statement said:
“Around 7.15pm this evening police attended an incident on Harcourt Drive, Harrogate.
“Two men had sustained injuries, one is currently being treated in hospital and the second man was sadly pronounced deceased at the scene.
Investigations are ongoing and North Yorkshire Police is asking anyone with information or who may have witnessed the incident to call 101, quoting reference: 12200147262.”
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One local resident said people were asked to move along from the scene and return to their homes while officers dealt with the incident.
They said:
Former Leeds star Danny Mills urges rethink on James Street pedestrianisation“Nothing like this happens around here.
“We came outside and were asked by an officer to move along. Another lady came out but was asked to go back into her house.”
Former England and Leeds United star turned businessman, Danny Mills, has called for an urgent rethink on a decision to temporarily pedestrianise James Street in Harrogate.
Mr Mills, who has lived in Harrogate for 20 years and owns four properties on the street, described the decision as “very damaging” and said businesses need all the help they can get.
Speaking to the Stray Ferret, Mr Mills said the decision would affect businesses which have already been through enough during the coronavirus pandemic.
It comes as the county council lent its support for a temporary pedestrianisation of the street, which could be in place as early as next month.
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- Two thirds of James Street businesses against full pedestrianisation, says BID
- James Street pedestrianisation would be welcomed, says charity
- Hoopers store warns: ‘Harrogate is not bulletproof anymore’
The borough council, which put the request in for the closure, said the move was needed to help “safety and social distancing measures” and that it would benefit shoppers and businesses.
But Mr Mills, who owns buildings at Kuoni Travel and Ecco Footwear among others, said the decision would only make matters worse for shops and landlords.
He said:
“We have had to take a hit already and I feel we have done our bit and it’s bizarre that such a decision would be made without speaking to the businesses it affects.
“All the businesses are struggling to get footfall through the doors and I think the parking restrictions make it look a little bit unsightly at the moment.
“There are so many potential advertising opportunities because of the traffic is going through the street. It would be very, very damaging.”

James Street, which has already seen its pavements widened, has been earmarked for pedestrianisation.
As part of his opposition to the plan, the former England defender has written to both Cllr Carl Les, leader of North Yorkshire County Council, and Cllr Richard Cooper, leader of Harrogate Borough Council, urging them to reconsider the decision.
He said those who own property on the street want the best for the town and want to see Harrogate succeed.
“The last thing that the council needs is for shops to close.
“People come to Betty’s and to see the Stray and if that means that shops are boarded up then that’s not good for the town.”
Mr Mills said he has had no contact from either council over the measure. But, he added that it was not too late for council bosses to change their minds and speak with those affected.
Mr Mills said:
“The most important thing is to open dialogue with business and talk with landlords. We all want want is best for Harrogate.
“The council has to have a rethink and a consultation process. We are not doing this to be spiteful, we are doing this for the town. I do not want a town where shops are closing.”

Nick Hubbert is the general manager at Hoopers.
Meanwhile, Nick Hubbert, general manager at department store Hoopers, has also written a strongly worded letter to borough council leader, Cllr Cooper, regarding pedestrianisation.
Mr Hubbert told the Stray Ferret that he does not believe that the temporary pedestrianisation of James Street will help businesses and said he based that on years of experience:
He added that he is not against pedestrianisation long term but he does not think that the middle of a pandemic is the right time to change things.
Strayside Sunday: Pay MPs more and ban outside interestsStrayside Sunday is our weekly political opinion column. It is written by Paul Baverstock, former Director of Communications for the Conservative Party.
What are we to make of this weeks’ news that two Conservative MP’s and former cabinet ministers, Sajid Javid, the former Chancellor of the Exchequer and Ripon’s own Julian Smith, the former Norther Ireland Secretary, are both supplementing their income to the combined tune of almost a half a million pounds. This from “interests” beyond the walls of the Palace of Westminster? Mr. Javid is to work for the American bankers JP Morgan, for a reported salary of £400,000. Mr. Smith is set to work for a company called Ryse Hydrogen Limited and, as the register of member’s interests states, will provide 20 hours advice annually for the princely sum of £60,000, a billable rate of a cool £3,000 per hour. How do you like those apples?
Before I go on I should point out that both Javid and Smith asked for, and received, advice on the propriety of their new positions from the government’s Advisory Committee on Business Interests. Both sinecures were approved by the committee, led by former Conservative Cabinet Minister and professional Yorkshireman, Eric (now Baron) Pickles. In short, Javid and Smith played by the parliamentary rule book and their commercial actions and activities have been given a clean bill of health. Well that’s ok then. But it isn’t really, is it? Not now, not ever.
Let’s first look at the numbers. The salary of a Member of the United Kingdom Parliament is £81,932. None too shabby when one considers that the average full-time salary in the UK is £36,611. We pay MPs more than twice the average wage to exercise their duties – and I contend they are duties – as public servants. Given they ask for our vote and seek our trust at election, isn’t full-time working the least we can expect from them in return? I think so and that it is fair to demand it. I believe that MPs should not be allowed outside interests, however my view is that we don’t actually pay MPs enough to attract individuals of a calibre to deliver good government.
Most of our current crop of MPs seem like intellectual pygmies in comparison to the politicians we grew up with and that polls show we respected a great deal more than today’s lot. Margaret Thatcher, Michael Heseltine and Ken Clarke for the blues; Harold Wilson, Barbara Castle, Dennis Healey for the reds; and Roy Jenkins, David Owen and Shirley Williams for the yellows. Giants all.
Being an MP was an entirely different proposition then of course: Far greater power was vested in local government, meaning that the volume of business conducted in Westminster was much less than it is today, constituency mailboxes could be dealt with (in written hand) in one good sitting per week, and the demands of the media and social media were not 24/7. Our politics was better because of it and our politicians were unambiguously superior. But nostalgia for the good old days will not a significant improvement make.
What do we need to do to make things better? Let’s say that we paid MPs a salary of £150,000 per annum and that outside interests are, in-turn, banned. By way of comparison and perspective, the basic pay for an NHS consultant (a Doctor with 5 years of medical school training and then another 8 years of on the job experience) tops out at £107,688. With bonuses known as Clinical Excellence Awards consultants pay nears the £150,000. This places them just below the average UK Chief Executive, who makes £156,000 per year. My argument, not original, is that increasing MPs pay will attract a much better quality of potential candidate and that politics can once again become one of the respected professions. In my view there should also be a lower age limit on parliamentarians, say 30 years old, so that they have to bring several years-worth of real-world experience into their role as elected representatives. I would create too an independent public HR body to vet potential parliamentary candidates of all parties for their suitability for the profession.
When one is recruited to any paid position of employment these days, expert interviews are held, salary benchmarking is conducted, reference checks are made, and personality tests are assessed – especially if the process is handled by a professional headhunting or recruitment agency. Which brings me back to the Right Honourable Julian Smith. Before he entered parliament Mr. Smith founded and ran a successful recruiting company. I doubt very much that he achieved a billable rate of £3,000 an hour for any of the candidates he placed.
Again let’s place this in perspective; a leading London commercial “silk” (a barrister appointed Queen’s Counsel; “Her Majesty’s Counsel Learned in Law”), of which there are very few, following 20 years of practice and an ascent to the very pinnacle of their profession, might, just might, be able to bill their multi-national corporate clients up to £2,000 per hour. I cannot, in any view, see how Mr. Smith can justify £3,000 an hour for the advice he is giving to a private company to his Ripon constituents (and, for that matter, to himself). It would be good to hear from Mr. Smith precisely the kind of advice he is to provide for such riches. It looks just awful.
With behaviour like this the Conservative Party is in grave danger of appearing (again) to harness the worst excesses of “the market” to fill its boots, rather than focussing on the now immense twin tasks of rebuilding our nation’s shattered economy and delivering the much vaunted “levelling up” agenda. This, by the way, at a time when competence and empathy seem in terribly short supply (think Robert Jenrick and his planning fiasco and; see also Gavin Williamson’s exam results debacle). When I worked for the party our obsession was to lose the tag of being “the nasty party.” If the current tone-deaf behaviour of its cabinet members continues it won’t be long before we regain that most unwelcome moniker.
And talking of tone deaf, what of the handling by Harrogate Borough Council of its plans to close James Street (the town’s main shopping thoroughfare) to traffic? Sara Ferguson, the acting chair of Harrogate Business Improvement District, felt moved this week to call out the fact that the council appears to have decided unilaterally on the pedestrianisation of James Street. The council had asked the BID to canvass opinion among local business about the plan and, in so doing, the BID found that two thirds of businesses on the street are against full pedestrianisation. However, with more than a whiff of fait accompli it seems that the council had no intention of waiting to hear the views of local business leaders and had already put in a request to North Yorkshire County Council to close the street for “safety and social distancing measures” (a measure since backed by NYCC to come into effect as early as next month). Through bull-headed incompetence Harrogate Borough Council, much like the United Kingdom government, is testing our patience and goodwill to the limit.
That’s my Strayside Sunday.
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Hoopers store warns: ‘Harrogate is not bulletproof anymore’
Hoopers has warned that the store is not sustainable in its current form and that Harrogate’s retail sector is “not bulletproof anymore”.
The department store’s general manager, Nick Hubbert, has spoken openly about its financial difficulties as a result of the coronavirus pandemic for the first time.
He said that the way they have to operate under social distancing rules means that it is not able to make enough sales.
Hoopers’ struggle in numbers
- Trading is down 50% on the year
- Only able to use 50% of the space
- Staffing levels at 40%
Mr Hubbert told the Stray Ferret that he has concerns about the furlough scheme coming to an end:
“We are preparing for the worst. How long can businesses survive when they are losing money. Hoopers has been in Harrogate for a long time but this has been by far the most difficult time. Some people think that Harrogate is bulletproof but it isn’t anymore. It’s not sustainable, we cannot afford to fully open and we cannot afford to trade the full week. That is not ideal.”
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- Shop owners open-minded ahead of James Street pedestrianisation
- Charity welcomes James Street pedestrianisation plans
- Harrogate retailer threatens to rip up pavement widening cones
Mr Hubbert has also weighed into the pedestrianisation debate on James Street with the general manager writing a strongly worded letter to Harrogate Borough Council.
James Street could be temporarily closed to traffic as early as next month after Harrogate Borough Council requested the measures.

Hoopers is based on James Steet which has been full with traffic cones for months.
Mr Hubbert does not believe that the temporary pedestrianisation of James Street will help businesses and said he is basing that on years of experience:
He added that he is not against pedestrianisation long term but he does not think that the middle of a pandemic is the right time to change things:
Harrogate homelessness figures show need for eviction ban extension, say Lib Dems“Customers want to park up and jump into the shops. It’s easy for young families and it’s easier for older people. That’s what increases footfall. We just need to leave things as is and concentrate on the basics. When someone pulled the cones away it was half full in half an hour and people were getting straight into the shops.”
Harrogate’s Liberal Democrats have called for an extension to an eviction ban after official figures show 53 families in the district are deemed at risk of homelessness.
According to official figures, 89 households in Harrogate are assessed as being threatened with homelessness with another 78 assessed as homeless from January to March this year.
33 of households who were homeless or threatened with homelessness cited the end of a private rented tenancy as the reason for losing their last settled home.
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- Visible return of rough sleeping in Harrogate as lockdown eases
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Meanwhile, three households in the district were also revealed to be rough sleeping between January and March.
Cllr Trevor Chapman, housing spokesperson for the local Liberal Democrats, said the government must extend the eviction ban to prevent homelessness.
He said:
“Families in Harrogate & Knaresborough must be protected from homelessness. Instead, it seems like the Conservatives are happy to leave people to fend for themselves at a time when jobs are at risk and people are struggling.
“People deserve better. These figures are yet further proof the Government must rethink its heartless decision to resume evictions from August 23.”
Following the end of the government’s “Everyone in” scheme, Harrogate Borough Council has sought to work with those in temporary accommodation to find a permanent place.
Part of the council’s plan is to get more people into Avondale Hostel, which it has just bought. It plans to renovate the building and make sure that it is only families living there.
Another key part is the council’s new hostel on Spa Lane. The construction works have been delayed and the expected completion date of October has been moved back to early next year.
Public support vital for Harrogate’s first community woodlandPlans for a 30-acre community-owned woodland are dependent on public support to meet an ambitious financial deadline.
Harrogate community project, Long Lands Common, has to raise £300,000 by mid-November if it is to succeed. Currently the amount raised stands at just over £60,000, less than a third of what is required. It would mean 4,765 individual purchases of a £50.00 share are needed.
The greenbelt plot of land stands between Bilton Triangle and The Avenue in Starbeck. An official shareholding scheme was launched last week to allow people to buy into the community project.
Jo Smalley, Membership Secretary of Long Lands Common, said:
“Our fundraising target to purchase the land is currently November 20 as agreed by the landowner. Despite the encouraging response so far, we know we cannot be complacent and must continue to push on with determination. There is a lot of hard work going on behind the scenes by our experienced team of volunteers to put us in the best position to make the project a success. It is humbling to be working alongside such a committed team of local people.”
Long Lands Common Limited (LLCL) is made up of volunteers from the Nidd Gorge Community Action Group, the team responsible for blocking North Yorkshire County Council’s plans to build a relief road through Nidd Gorge.
The committee’s vision is for the Harrogate community to come together to create an accessible space for families, future generations and wildlife habitats.
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LLCL have said the space will be hugely beneficial for the Harrogate district’s mental health. The project will also support the Northern Forest’s goal which is to plant 50 million trees across Northern England.
A duck pond, wildflower meadow, sensory garden and woodlands craft area has been included in visionary plans. Sights are also set on a children’s woodland and educational area to support learning. Over 1500 people have pledged their interest to date.
Ms Smalley said:
“A £300,000 target is of course an ambitious one but we are feeling confident given the support we have received so far from the communities of Harrogate and Knaresborough in the pledging stage, and those people who have already gone on to buy their shares since they went on sale just two weeks ago. We appreciate the support very much and look forward to seeing the rest of our pledges turned into pounds!”
Volunteers are asking for all who have shown an interest to further their support by buying shares. Shares have to be bought in £50 lots, with the minimum amount set at £50 up to £37,500.
Shares can be bought on behalf of an organisation, business, as a gift or donated as inheritance wishes. Anyone buying shares has to be at least 16 years of age.
To learn more and buy shares, go to the Long Lands Common website.
New Harrogate rescue centre rehomes 19 catsWhile most independent businesses were forced to close down during lockdown, one local cat rescue has thrived since it first opened in April.
Celia Dakin, owner of Harrogate Cat Rescue, had always planned to open a centre for rehoming stray cats.
Due to the covid-19 pandemic, many national animal charities had to stop neutering feral animals, including cats, and this has increased the number of kittens being born without a loving home. Celia felt this was the perfect opportunity to set up a rescue business.
In just over three months, the rescue centre has rehomed 19 cats and kittens and is currently in the process of homing a further 10 kittens and three adult cats. Celia has always been ‘cat mad’ and has two 11-year-old cats of her own, Geoff and Lady.
Celia told the Stray Ferret:
“Initially, I was approached by a lady who told me that there was a fairly large colony of cats where she worked, and that she had seen kittens. So, I started my rescue.”
Celia runs her business from her home in Harrogate, which has a no-kill policy. This means that no healthy or treatable cats are euthanised or killed even if the shelter is at full capacity.
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She currently houses a poorly five-year-old shorthair cat, Mack, who tested positive for feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV), an incurable viral infection.
He has a large wound on the side of his neck caused by a cat bite, which has now become ulcerated. He also needs dental surgery to remove his rotten teeth. Despite his tough life, Mack has a friendly nature and is in need of a loving home.
The cat lover currently has 22 cats in foster care, including Emily, a six-year-old Ragdoll and Bengal crossbreed, who was sent to Celia when her owners chose to travel abroad.
The rescue encourages new owners to get their cats neutered at four months old, if they haven’t been already.
Celia said:
“I believe that every cat deserves a chance, as most stray and outdoor cats have been failed by humans. I am active in encouraging co-operation between me and other rescues in Yorkshire, with the aim of working together for the benefit of all cats.”
“Neutering cats is an extremely high priority; unneutered males age quicker and are more prone to disease, as they have to fight for food, females and survival. Unneutered females leave home as their hormones dictate and are repeatedly raped by the unneutered males, leading to multiple pregnancies, causing stillbirth, deformity and disease.”
All cats and kittens that are cared for by the Harrogate Cat Rescue receive a veterinary health check, flea and worm treatment, microchip and at the least their first vaccination. The adoption fee for an adult cat or kitten is £90 each.
To find out more about the adoption process, visit the Harrogate Cat Rescue website.
No coronavirus deaths at Harrogate hospital for a monthToday is the first time that Harrogate District Hospital has gone a full month without reporting a single coronavirus death.
It has been a long road to this point. The hospital reported its first covid-19 death on March 20 and the most recent – the 82nd – on July 19. That patient died four days earlier on July 15.
The district hospital said at the end of July that it had no coronavirus positive patients for the first time since the start of the pandemic. It has not revealed since whether it has taken on any new patients.
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This is the longest time that the hospital has gone without reporting a coronavirus death. The second longest time was for 16 days at the start of July.
Now Harrogate and District NHS Foundation Trust faces a different challenge. The trust is trying to get as many people as possible to sign up to the local coronavirus vaccine trial.
Despite there being no coronavirus deaths for a month the NHS has extended its contract to keep NHS Nightingale Yorkshire and the Humber as a hospital until March 2021.
That move may not have gone down well with those in the events and hospitality sector locally but the NHS wants to stay prepared in case a second wave hits in winter.
Harrogate College to offer extra support to new studentsHarrogate College has put several measures in place for new students who will have had six months off from learning and for those who may not get the GCSE grades they need.
The further education college teaches vocational courses and BTEC qualifications. It’s concerned that many of its students arriving next month will have been away from a teaching environment for six months and may find returning to learning difficult.
The college is also providing additional teaching for students who need to pass their GCSE in maths and english for a particular course and hired more pastoral and counselling support staff.
Principal of the college, Danny Wild, said:
“We are expecting this cohort to do the same as what we’ve seen in the previous three or four years because the grades are assessed in the centres. There is a place for them here to get to where ever they want to be. We will help and support them in every way. If they haven’t received the grade they want we can put plans in place for them to start on a level two course.
“We always knew we’d have to put additional support in place after most students have had six months off. Regardless of their grades we are confident we have the right plans in place. This is just a small bump in the road for students they can get to where they want to be regardless of their grades.”

New and returning students can expect there to be new safety measures in place.
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- Harrogate College has welcomed the government’s incentives for businesses to hire apprentices.
- On average 37% of A-level grades in the district were changed by Ofqual, now these will be changed back to those predicted by teachers.
The college is putting further measures in place to facilitate students hoping to begin an apprenticeship. The college has said some of its partner businesses are struggling to accept students within the current climate but hopes the government’s monetary incentives will encourage them to hire again.
When the college reopens a ‘bubble’ system will be in place to control the chances of coronavirus. Its measures should ensure that if there is a positive case the disruption will be limited to a small group of students and staff.