Each month the Stray Ferret tracks what the three MPs in the Harrogate district have been up to in Parliament and their constituencies.
As this is the last month of the year, this time we have provided a round-up of the activities of Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones, Skipton and Ripon MP Julian Smith, and Selby and Ainsty MP Nigel Adams throughout 2020.
The district’s three elected Conservative representatives in the House of Commons have a combined 30 years’ experience as MPs but nothing could have prepared them for 2020 and the arrival of coronavirus.
As always, we asked all three if they would like to highlight anything in particular. Once again, we did not receive a response from any of them.

Andrew Jones, Harrogate and Knaresborough MP.
In Harrogate and Knaresborough, here are some of the key moments from Mr Jones’s year:
- Fresh from a fourth straight general election victory, Mr Jones began the year by speaking out on his website against what he described as the toxic nature of modern political campaigning. He wrote: “Politics needs to grow up and step away from this old-fashioned and frankly US-style attack ad approach. I hope over the next few years – at least locally – there will be agreement to adopt a more positive approach.”
- In April, at the height of the first lockdown, Mr Jones warned constituents about the dangers of covid: “This virus doesn’t discriminate between rich and poor, by race, by religion, by nationality, by gender or sexuality or by political allegiances.”
- One of Mr Jones’s nine tweets in June was that he found some car keys near to Tewit Well in Harrogate.
- On his website in June, Mr Jones wrote to the head of Bauer Media to “seek assurances” about the future of Stray FM. The radio station rebranded as Greatest Hits Radio in September.
- On August 2, Mr Jones hailed Harrogate Town’s win at Wembley as “the best news in ages”. He also tweeted about Notts County’s non-existent equaliser, which was quickly deleted. This led to the Stray Ferret’s Paul Baverstock suggesting that Mr Jones might not have been actually watching the game.
- Mr Jones released a statement apologising for the government’s u-turn over A-Level results. He said: “I am sorry for the distress and uncertainty this has caused pupils. In all about 20 students contacted me personally and I am writing to each of them”.
- Mr Jones refused to comment on a Stray Ferret story involving a police investigation into allegations of missing Porsche sports cars from GMUND in Knaresborough. The company was run by Andrew Mearns, while his wife Cllr Samantha Mearns was a company secretary until late 2018 and is now a caseworker in Mr Jones’s office.
- At Prime Minister’s Questions in October, the MP urged Prime Minister Boris Johnson to commit to a support package for the conference and exhibition industry.
- In October, Mr Jones voted against an opposition motion to extend the provision of £15-a-week school meal vouchers throughout the October half term through to the Easter 2021 holidays. Following a backlash, Mr Jones responded in the local press and in a local Conservative news bulletin email. The email said: “I know that many of you will have seen the coverage about free school meals during the holidays in the news lately. I hope that people who know me, or who have been helped by me, would realise that I would not vote to increase child hunger or ensure children starve.”
- Mr Jones said on October 20 “a blanket national lockdown is wrong and local interventions are what we need now to tackle this crisis”. On November 2 he voted in favour of a new national lockdown.

Julian Smith, MP for Skipton and Ripon.
In Ripon, here are some of the key moments from Mr Smith’s year:
- In February, Mr Smith was sacked as Northern Ireland secretary. Despite lasting just 204 days in the role, he was widely praised for his work, including brokering talks between rival political parties to restore a power-sharing government at Stormont.
- In May, the MP contacted the Bishop of Ripon, the Rt Rev Dr Helen-Ann Hartley, offering support after she received death threats for speaking out over Dominic Cummings’ decision to travel with symptoms of covid-19, against government advice.
- In July, Mr Smith voted against protecting the NHS in a future trade deal with the US. Unlike Mr Jones, he wrote to the Stray Ferret to explain why he voted this way. He said: “No future trade agreement will be allowed to undermine the guiding principle of the NHS.”
- Throughout the year, Mr Smith has raised residents’ concerns about the 1,300-home Ripon barracks development to local health leaders and Harrogate Borough Council officials, including chief executive Wallace Sampson.
- The Stray Ferret revealed in August that Mr Smith has been appointed as an external advisor to a hydrogen company at a rate of £3,000 per hour.
- In September, he abstained on both Internal Markets Bill votes, which related to Brexit. Opponents of the bill said it could lead to a trade border between Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK.
- That month, the MP visited Ripon Cathedral to view its new £6m design plans, which include new toilets, a cafe and the creation of rehearsal space for Ripon Cathedral Choir.
Read more:
- MPs watch: Free school meals, food safety and lockdowns
- MPs WATCH: Care home visits, the Brexit bill and a visit to Ripon Cathedral

Nigel Adams, MP for Selby and Ainsty which includes rural parts of the Harrogate district.
In rural south Harrogate, here are some of the key moments from Mr Adams’s year:
- The arch Brexiteer celebrated January 31 when the UK left the European Union. He wrote on Facebook: “Today is a historic day but tomorrow, the work to take our country forward continues with renewed enthusiasm.”
- In April, the MP offered his “thoughts and prayers” to prime minister Boris Johnson, who was in hospital with coronavirus. He wrote: “The Boris I know is a fighter and will defeat this.”
- In July, Mr Adams hit out at Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer saying he had an “obsession” with undermining the Brexit vote.
- In September, he criticised environmental group Extinction Rebellion after it blocked vehicles from leaving a printing press in London, causing disruption to several national newspapers. He called the group “socialist anarchists masquerading as well-meaning hippies”.
- In October, Mr Adams voted against the amendment to the Agriculture Bill. In a post on his website, he defended his decision. He said: “Several people have been in touch who appear to have been misled into thinking that Tuesday’s vote on the Agriculture Bill was somehow a vote against our high food standards. This is not the case. In fact, the amendment to the bill which was defeated was well meaning but I believe unnecessary as well as having some negative unintended consequences.”
- Ahead of a planning committee hearing into 72 homes in Spofforth in November, Mr Adams’s office confirmed to the Stray Ferret that he had made representations to councillors ahead of their decision, which was ultimately to refuse the plans in their current form.
The Harrogate district looks set to move to a higher tier, and possibly even tier four, following a flurry of developments this afternoon.
Sharon Stolz, director of public health at City of York Council, told ITV News it was “inevitable” the city would face tougher restrictions in the coming days.
Any changes affecting York would also apply to the Harrogate district unless the government changes its policy of maintaining the same tier level across North Yorkshire.
Health Secretary Matt Hancock is due to announce the outcome of the latest tier review tomorrow afternoon.
North Yorkshire is in tier two but Ms Stolz said this was “no longer sufficient to contain the spread of the virus”.
She said although the city had not seen large outbreaks yet, the numbers were creeping up.
Her comments came on the day the R number for the Harrogate district rose above one for the first time in over a month.
Ms Stolz added:
“Without some additional restrictions coming in, my worry is that we will just see the virus spread and we will start to see large outbreaks.
“So I think it is inevitable there will be some announcement tomorrow of additional restrictions for York.”
Read more:
- My Year: Harrogate covid group founder’s hope for community in 2021
- Harrogate Nightingale remains ‘on standby’ amid new covid strain
Also today, Kevin Hollinrake, the Conservative MP for Thirsk and Malton said he still wanted a “super local approach” that would allow some parts of the county to stay in tier two but added:
“Regrettably, I think we can reasonably expect York and North Yorkshire to enter a higher tier in the next few days, my best guess being the early hours of New Year’s Day.
“In terms of which tier, it appears that infection rates are not dropping significantly in those areas currently under tier three restrictions.
“My view then, and I speak as the parent of a child taking their A levels this year, I would prefer a shorter, sharper, shock with wider closure of the economy together with extended financial support for businesses and with schools providing a full timetable on an online-only basis until the end of January.
“At that point, with vaccinations starting to have meaningful effect we should be through the worst of this desperately damaging crisis.”
My Year: Harrogate estate agent ‘luckier than most’ amid pandemic
For businesses, it has been a challenging and worrying year, in many different ways. Tim Waring, leading estate agent and chartered surveyor at Lister Haigh, reflects on what started as a normal year but soon began to change.
Looking back over the past year, one of my happier times was a fabulous day during a group ski trip to France. We’d just had a day with blue sky and sunshine in Val D’Isere, and then the Saturday night dinner is our dining highlight of the trip.
But this tranquil setting came to an abrupt end. After the first course, we were told everything was closing that night.
It was a real wake up call given I guess we had been in our world for three or four days beforehand. My other half had ironically told me I was in a bubble and didn’t appreciate how difficult things were becoming.
It proved to be a prophetic turn of phrase. It all seems such a long time ago given everything that has happened since.
I was lucky my estate agency was only closed for two months. Since reopening, the property market has been a hive of activity, helped, in no small part, by the stamp duty incentive offered by the Chancellor.
Meanwhile, I have friends in the retail and hospitality sectors who have seen their businesses decimated after two national lockdowns and ongoing tier restrictions. Some may well not re-open in 2021.
Read more:
- Harrogate estate agents relieved at stamp duty holiday
- District estate agent reports a surge in home-buyer interest
So I cannot consider myself hard done to, when one of the things I missed out on this year was celebrating a big birthday with friends in April.
Lockdown has fast tracked my relationship with the aforementioned girlfriend to the point that I now consider we are partners, and happily in a support bubble.
But yet, one friend has died from this awful virus, and at least two others have had hard times in hospital because of it.
I might have not seen my son who lives in London for many months, but fortunately technology has allowed us to keep in contact in a way that wouldn’t have been possible just a few years ago.
My grandson, Arthur, was only five months old when this wretched thing started. Now he is walking and already proving to be a typical toddler. He lives in Harrogate, so I have been able to see him regularly.
I love re-watching a video of him trying to walk and instead falling over in the leaves. Yet another reason to feel I have been luckier than most in 2020.
So that’s why, all things considered, I think I’ve been luckier than most of late. What happens next year – who knows?
When the Bank of England says things are “unusually uncertain”, maybe that says it all.
The Latin phrase carpe diem, “seize the day”, comes to mind when one reflects on the last 12 months.
Looking back: A challenging year for high street and hospitalityAs 2020 draws to a close, the Stray Ferret looks back at the news stories that stood out among a year of extraordinary events.
Today, we focus on the impact on businesses, from high street to hospitality.
For most business owners, it has been a very worrying and difficult year. From moving their staff to home working to switching to delivery or click and collect, businesses have adapted to constantly changing rules in order to survive the last 10 months.
For some, though, it has been more challenging than others.
Among the industries to suffer most in 2020 were events and hospitality. Bars and restaurants found themselves in and out of lockdown, posing huge problems for planning and ordering supplies.
What made it all the more difficult was the continuing use of Harrogate Convention Centre as the NHS Nightingale. In a district economy which relies heavily on tourism and events, hospitality businesses found their income drastically below what it would usually be.
Reopening ‘vital’
As the first lockdown eased, some of the district’s major employers were emphasising just how vital it would be for them to reopen and to receive support from the public.
When news came that the Nightingale would remain in place, preventing events from being held even if restrictions were eased, it was a blow to the sector.
Major events were postponed and called off for many months ahead, leaving businesses staring at a blank calendar for the foreseeable future. Among the casualties in hospitality were the Country Living St George Hotel, Ripon Spa Hotel, and The Old Deanery, which announced it will close its doors next summer. The Kimberley Hotel also announced its closure in December.
Restaurants were not immune to the challenges of the trading environment, with Harrogate’s Bistrot Pierre and Las Iguanas among the big names failing to reopen their doors.
It made one leading hotel manager’s prediction of ‘carnage’ in May look worryingly prescient – and with uncertainty still ahead, it’s likely we haven’t heard the last of the closures as the new year approaches.
Events industry
Events businesses, meanwhile, were unable to trade at all, spelling the end for one of Harrogate’s longest-established names.
Joe Manby Ltd was well known for helping to stage events at the convention centre, as well as elsewhere around the country. Andrew Manby, a director of the family firm established in the 1970s, had warned repeatedly that more support was needed for companies unable to trade because of restrictions.
In October, with no sign of improvement ahead, the company announced it would go into liquidation.
There were casualties on the high street, too, with several big-name brands announcing they would be closing branches in our district, along with long-standing independent businesses. Among those lost were AP&K Stothard’s pet shop, The Bookstall newsagent at Harrogate railway station, Edinburgh Wooden Mill and Ponden Home in Ripon, Wren’s department store, and menswear shop Jon Barrie.
Yet it wasn’t all bad news. For some determined entrepreneurs, the pandemic was no reason not to make their business dreams a reality – including a new taco business and a travel agent.
From music to clothes shops and even a pop-up bakery, Knaresborough seemed like the place to be in the second half of the year. It also saw a pop-up from popular Harrogate bakery Baltzersen’s.
Nevertheless, uncertainty remained, and the second lockdown left owners desperate to know whether they would be able to reopen in time for Christmas.
The district’s tier two restrictions meant they were able to do so in early December, aiming to make the most of the final few weeks of trading. Residents can only hope it was enough to get their favourite businesses through the coming weeks and months until the situation begins to improve.
Read more:
- Looking back: Clap for carers and scrubbing up for key workers
- Looking back: Extraordinary effort to build a Nightingale hospital in Harrogate
My Year: Harrogate covid group founder’s hope for community in 2021
Susie Little set up the Facebook group Covid Co-Operation, Harrogate, as the first lockdown began, and has spent the year co-ordinating community support in all sorts of ways. She tells the Stray Ferret about the insight that has given her into the realities of people’s lives.
I was asked the other day what have I missed the most since the start of the pandemic and, without question, it’s hugs.
Not just hugs from the people I love, but the ability to hug all the amazing, kind and generous people I’ve met this year through the Facebook group, Covid Co-Operation, Harrogate, which I started in March, just before the first lockdown started.
If someone had told us before Christmas last year what December 2020 would look like, I don’t think anyone would’ve believed such a year could actually happen.
When creating the group, I thought we might end up with 100 or so people who wanted to help, and seeing it turn into a group with nearly 11k members at its peak, has been quite an experience. The wonderful group admin team and members have helped hundreds, maybe thousands, of Harrogate people over the last 10 months, with everything from shopping to buddy phone calls to furnishing new homes for homeless people who have nothing.
We raised over £11,000 for six very local charities during the first lockdown, and nearly £2,500 for Christmas presents for disadvantaged children during the second. Over and over again, people have stepped up and given their time and money to solve the problems and needs of others without hesitation.
News of the vaccine approval earlier this month has had a profound effect, certainly for me, on mental health going into the new year.
2020 has been so difficult mentally for everyone, irrespective of financial status or domestic set-up. Those who live alone crave company; those who don’t crave solitude! Already vulnerable families have become more so, families doing OK previously have dropped into the vulnerable category without warning, and domestic abuse has seen a truly horrific increase.
The vaccine, with enough take-up, gives us freedom to improve living conditions for the most vulnerable in our area. It gives hope and light; a belief that one day soon this will be behind us.
Personally, 2020 has given me an insight into just how difficult everyday life is for so many people, and it has been a privilege to play a small part in alleviating some of that hardship during a year which every single one of us fervently hopes never ever happens again.
Read more:
- Harrogate Covid Co-Operation raises money for Xmas gifts for kids
- Harrogate covid group ‘still here to help’, says co-founder
Treacherous conditions on A59 near Harrogate
Reports are coming in of dire driving conditions on the A59 Skipton Road, just a few miles from Harrogate.
Heavy snow has fallen and some vehicles have had to be rescued. A lorry also got stuck.
With sub-zero temperatures forecast tonight, the outlook is unlikely to improve overnight. Indeed, the combination of ice and snow could make matters even worse.

The A59 tonight. Credit: North Yorkshire Weather Updates
The North Yorkshire Weather Updates social media pages have been showing numerous videos and photographs of hazardous conditions, particularly around Blubberhouses and Kex Gill.
Storm Bella brought widespread flooding to the district today also.
Be careful and let us know if you have got caught up in the travel chaos.
Read more:
- Homes in Masham and Pannal in peril as flooding strikes
- Pannal woman speaks of her Storm Bella flooding ordeal
Looking back: Extraordinary effort to build a Nightingale hospital in Harrogate
As 2020 draws to a close, over the coming days the Stray Ferret will look at the news stories that stood out among a year of extraordinary events.
Today, we reflect on the story of Harrogate’s Nightingale hospital.
Harrogate found itself in the headlines when its convention centre was commandeered by the NHS to create one of the seven national Nightingale hospitals across the UK.
On March 30 – one week after the first national lockdown began – the armed forces arrived in town to begin the process of constructing a field hospital in the events venue.
Over the following days, huge volumes of materials arrived, from scaffolding to hospital equipment, with ambulances seen pulling into the car park and officials given tours of the site.
Only on April 2 did NHS England confirm the plans, revealing the Harrogate Nightingale would offer 500 beds for covid patients.
Sir Simon Stevens, NHS chief executive, said it was “nothing short of extraordinary” that the new hospital in London had been set up in less than a fortnight, with support from the Ministry of Defence.
“The NHS, working with the military, has done in a matter of days what usually takes years. Now we are gearing up to repeat that feat at another four sites across the country to add to the surge capacity in current NHS hospitals.
“We’re giving the go ahead to these additional sites, hoping they may not be needed but preparing in case they are. But that will partly depend on continuing public support for measures to reduce growth in the infection rate by staying at home to save lives.”
During construction, the Nightingale became the focal point for public tributes to NHS staff as part of the weekly Clap for Carers.
Work continued for three weeks before the hospital was officially opened on April 21 by Captain Tom Moore, via a video link.
On the eve of the opening, two videos were produced thanking those who had helped in its construction. The first was created by Harrogate Convention Centre and Cause UK, while the second was made by hotelier Simon Cotton and actor Neil Granger.
No covid patients
After the hospital was opened, the district waited to see when the first patients would be admitted.
However, eight months on, the hospital is yet to treat a covid patient, instead being used to offer CT scans through Harrogate District Hospital. It was confirmed in May that the NHS was not paying rent for use of the site, which is run by Harrogate Borough Council.
The agreement to use the site was initially for three months to the end of June, before being extended for another month.
As lockdown restrictions eased, hospitality and events businesses called for a decision to be made so they knew whether the venue would be able to host any of its usual conferences in 2020.
Negotiations continued and rumours cicrulated until, finally, the NHS confirmed on August 17 that the hospital would remain in situ until next March. A break clause at the end of October was not activated.
It then emerged that the NHS was paying £126,000 per month to HBC in utilities, and that the total set-up costs for the hospital were £27.3m.
‘Hand it back’
Even when the decision was announced, there were still calls for the convention centre to be handed back to HBC in order to be ready to reopen when restrictions allow, for the benefit of the local economy.
Lord Newby, the Liberal Democrat leader in the House of Lords, who lives in Ripon, has been a vocal critic of the continued use of the venue.
He told the Lords in October that the venue will not be able to open safely because existing NHS employees are expected to staff it, rather than additional staff being recruited. Labour MP Yvette Cooper backed up this claim in the House of Commons the following month.
Lord Newby has since called for the venue to be handed back to the council, accepting that it will “never be used”.
A spokesperson for the NHS Nightingale Yorkshire and the Humber, however, said the venue was on stand-by ready to be scaled up with “the right mix of skills” when needed.
Meanwhile, the vaccination programme for the district began just a few days before Christmas at the Great Yorkshire Showground.
Read more:
- Harrogate Nightingale remains ‘on standby’ amid new covid strain
- £100,000 Skipton Road traffic light scheme delayed due to Nightingale
Harrogate district covid rate now almost a quarter of national average
Another 30 people in the Harrogate district have tested positive for coronavirus, according to today’s official statistics.
It means the seven-day average rate of infection for the district is now 97 people per 100,000 — almost four times lower than the national average of 364.
The district’s rate has been gradually increasing for the last couple of weeks but at nowhere near the speed of southern England, where the new mutant strain of covid has been most predominant.
The district’s rate remains the lowest of the seven local authority areas in North Yorkshire. Scarborough is the highest at 234. The overall rate for North Yorkshire is 151.
Today’s figures, from Public Health England, bring the total number of infections in the district since the start of the pandemic to 4,127.
There have not been any covid hospital deaths in the district since December 10.
The district’s R number, which refers to the rate at which the virus spreads in the community, remains at 0.9. This means every 10 people with coronavirus will pass it on to nine others.
Starbeck is the worst affected local area, with 18 positive cases in the last seven days — one more than the figure for Ouseburn, Hammerton and Tockwith.
Read more:
- Harrogate Nightingale remains ‘on standby’ amid new covid strain
- Knaresborough tug-o-war over the river falls victim to covid
White Christmas in Harrogate district – just!
Snow fell on Christmas Day in the Harrogate district yesterday, although it was hardly a deluge.
Most areas experienced a cold, icy day but some parts of the district had a few flakes of snow or even a light dusting.
This image was taken in Blubberhouses on Christmas day afternoon.
Although there was barely enough snow for a snowball fight. it was nevertheless enough to make 2020 a rare white Christmas.
North Yorkshire County Council gritted the main roads in the county yesterday as the cold snap continued.
It is expected to stay cold for the remainder of the year, with sleet forecast in the next few days.
My Year: Harrogate district mayor’s year brought one of ‘darkest moments’The Mayor of the Borough of Harrogate, Cllr Stuart Martin, has had his mayoral year extended after Harrogate Borough Council was unable to hold its annual mayor-making ceremony in May. However, that was just one minor event in what has been an extraordinary year for Cllr Martin and his wife April, as he tells the Stray Ferret:
Little did I know when 2020 started that it would be a year like no other and one that would have a great personal impact on myself and my wife April.
I had been elected to the office of the Mayor of the Borough of Harrogate in May 2019, which was a great honour. A very busy year ensued, with April and I attending many different and varied events. About February, approximately eight months into our Mayoral year, news was circulating around the world of a virus that was making many people seriously ill and unfortunately resulting in many of those infected, dying.
We had our main fund-raising activity planned and it took place in the March, a Black-Tie Ball event raising £10,000 for Yorkshire Air Ambulance. The ball was a magnificent affair and everyone really enjoyed it. We didn’t know it at the time but this was to be our last event before the whole country went into the first lockdown.
Read more:
- Harrogate Mayoress pays tribute to hospital staff in Clap for Carers
- ‘They told me I wouldn’t be resuscitated’ – Harrogate mayoress speaks about her battle with coronavirus
Sadly, the week following our ball, April began to feel unwell – at this stage we were unsure if it was coronavirus. However, within a few days she started displaying symptoms that suggested it was. She had developed an awful hacking cough so we followed the government guidance and self-isolated for 14 days just in case.
As time went on, April became worse, necessitating a call to 111, however the paramedics who visited didn’t feel April was ill enough to go to hospital, which was something April as a former nurse wanted to avoid. However, despite continuing to care for her at home she became so breathless, made even worse by the continued hacking cough. We had no alternative but to call 999; this time April was taken to Harrogate A&E.
This was to become one of the darkest moments of my life. I was told I was not allowed to go with her but I could say goodbye in the back of the ambulance, which I did and I went back inside my house.
This is when I realised, I may never see or speak with April ever again. April was admitted through the emergency department where she was stabilised before being sent to the Intensive Care Unit. We are a close family, but we were not allowed to meet other members of the family. I was left feeling bereft and alone: what do I do, who do I turn too?
Later that night, I had a conversation with the consultant who informed me that April was critically ill and only time would tell if she would pull through.
The turning point was when April came onto a normal ward, still very ill but at least we were able to speak and see each other through modern technology – what a relief and joy that was. In time, April was discharged home and her slow recovery began; in fact, some six months later she still experiences breathlessness and fatigue.
My thanks go to not only the skilled medical staff who did save her life and to whom I will be forever grateful, but also to the ancillary staff who played an enormous part in April’s recovery, many of you who I know offered your own prayers and words of kindness at this terrible time. We were so grateful to those people who dropped off meals at our door and for all the good wishes we received.
Thankfully, we were able to move on with our year, many meetings being held over zoom. We have managed to attend events albeit socially distanced and wearing masks around the district, these included planting of bulbs in the Valley Gardens, visiting an elderly lady for her birthday, attending Remembrance services in a very different way and very early in the morning, to name but a few. However, we now have hope for the future with the vaccine rolling out across the country.
My thoughts are with all of those families who were not as lucky as myself: over 60,000 and the death toll continues to rise. I hold deep in my heart the staff at Harrogate District Hospital. My thoughts also go to the many local and national businesses who have suffered greatly, so many people have lost jobs. Finally, in the festive season, I think about our communities and the efforts and sacrifices made by everyone.
I wish everybody a very Happy, healthy Christmas, stay safe, enjoy the festivities with those you can and look forward to rebuilding our lives in 2021.
Main photo: Andrew Dobbs Photograph