Law firms collaborate to keep justice system moving and meet growing demand for making wills

Law firms across the Harrogate district are collaborating in an unprecedented way in order to meet changing demands during the coronavirus crisis.

Harrogate and District Law Society has reported a rise in demand for wills and powers of attorney, as people see the worrying news of more deaths each day.

Solicitors are also trying to keep routine work moving during the crisis, including dealing with emergency applications to family courts and processing house purchases.

Georgina Parkin, president of The Harrogate and District Law Society and managing director of Truth Legal Solicitors, said: “Over the years, lawyers in this area have always collaborated.

“During these unprecedented times, I am pleased to report that lawyers are collaborating to far higher level than I have known, all in the best interests of their clients. Once coronavirus is defeated, my hope – and my expectation – is that this collegiate attitude will continue.”

As the coronavirus has unfolded, lawyers have been sharing useful updates, such as changing court opening hours or ways of working, including hearings using video conferencing software.

On behalf of the society, Ms Parkin thanked staff and judges at Harrogate Justice Centre, which is continuing to deal with cases, as well as to police, prison officers, social workers, and postal and delivery staff who are keeping the process of justice going. Meanwhile, a litigation trial was held by video conference for the first time last week, while family courts are responding quickly to emergency applications during the crisis.

With many solicitors working from home and juggling the pressures of balancing home life and casework, especially with clients distressed by the situation, Ms Parkin said the law society was offering additional support for members’ mental health.

She added: “In Harrogate and district, the rule of law is alive and well even during these trying times. The solicitors in our region are adapting to these challenging times and continue to provide their clients with an excellent level of service.”

Harrogate care home confirms a number of suspected coronavirus deaths

The national charity which operates Berwick Grange in Harrogate has confirmed that a number of its residents  have died of suspected coronavirus at the home but said without testing it cannot be certain.

MHA which was founded by the Methodist Church, operates Berwick Grange and is the largest UK provider of care with 133 homes. Berwick Grange has 52 residents and is a specialist dementia care unit.

The company said residents have died of suspected coronavirus at a number of its homes- Berwick Grange had seen cases but was not one of the worst affected. It said it could not confirm specific numbers at individual homes as residents aren’t being tested. Some had existing illnesses or had been on end of life care.

In a statement MHA said

A small number of our homes have already been badly affected, although the extent to which these losses can be attributed to Covid-19 is debatable as our residents are not being tested. Without that testing, we may never know the true extent of outbreaks in our homes.

Our residents are a second family and this will take its toll on our teams as they sadly lose people they have cared for, in some cases for a number of years. We will make sure we care for our colleagues as well as our residents throughout all of this and would urge you to support us and our colleagues at this difficult time

MHA said it has set up a Critical Incident Management system – convening daily bronze, silver and gold command meetings that are modelled on emergency service disaster responses to manage the rapidly changing nature of the emergency. It has highlighted a serious shortage of PPE (personal protective equipment) to protect its residents and staff- saying its weekly allocation of 300 face masks for a home of 70 residents can be used in a single day.

We convene three daily meetings taking rapid decisions to re-allocate PPE stock across regions, staff cover and analyse the spread of the virus across our services taking immediate appropriate action; this includes suspected, confirmed and recovered cases.

The company has put out a plea to schools, colleges and factories to consider donating any supplies that are not currently needed.

 

 

North Yorkshire Police repeat call to stay at home this Easter

Easter weekend usually marks the start of a very busy summer season across the district, but officers are stressing that making unnecessary journeys could literally mean the difference between life and death.

Police have already stepped up patrols in Harrogate after they’ve seen an increase in the number of people visiting the town and flouting the coronavirus lockdown rules.

Harrogate’s Neighbourhood Policing Inspector Penny Taylor of North Yorkshire Police said:

“Whilst we know the majority of people in the town are doing the right thing and staying at home, despite the beautiful weather, it is unacceptable that some people are showing such a blatant disregard for the Government’s guidance.

North Yorkshire Police said it was disappointing and meant the force would be stepping up patrols elsewhere in the area, so increased police presence should be expected over the Easter weekend.

Guidelines state people should stay at home except to buy food or medicines, or go to work.

Richard Flinton, chair of the multi-agency North Yorkshire Local Resilience Forum and chief executive of North Yorkshire County Council, said:

“The next few weeks are critical in the nation’s fight to slow the rate of infection of this very dangerous virus.  We all have our part to play and what we do now will have a bearing on whether more people die or whether lives are spared. If we act irresponsibly more people will die.  The instruction is to exercise from your doorstep once a day and not to travel to other places for this.”

North Yorkshire Police’s Traffic Bureaus are also urging drivers not to use the county’s roads as a racetrack, having recorded speeds of up to 132mph over the past two weeks. Police patrols and safety camera vans, which are operated by key-worker police staff rather than officers, have been used at key locations to try to prevent further casualties and protect valuable emergency service and NHS resources.

 

 

 

Harrogate churches coordinate for a continuous prayer over Easter weekend

19 Harrogate Churches have organised a continuous, uninhttps://thestrayferret.co.uk/harrogate-church…r-easter-weekend/terrupted prayer over the Easter weekend for those affected by coronavirus.

Pray for The Peak is part of a wider global movement for virtual 24/7 prayer.  The Harrogate Hub, which works to coordinate projects across the town’s churches, has organised a prayer which aims to last 72 hours.

Colin Ashurst from the Harrogate Hub said:

“We have been aware of the 24/7 movement and we felt with the Nightingale hospital coming here and the risk of there being real grief in Harrogate and for people self-isolating at home, this was something churches could do, to spend time in prayer. The movement has given us advice and guidance on how to do this virtually.”

A 24/7 prayer room in normal times

There is a calendar people can sign up to individually to pray for an hour or more – last night every slot was filled. Mr Ashurst said:

“We’ve had a good response as we only got the word out yesterday. We’re doing ok- we got through last night and we’ve still got people coming in. It’s looking good for tonight but after that there are some gaps and we’d encourage people to get involved.. I’m signed up for the midnight and one o’clock slots tonight.”

For those interested in being involved, you can register at http://theharrogatehub.org/24-7/.

Rainbow pictures springing up across the Harrogate district

Handmade rainbows are appearing in windows all over the Harrogate district as the community aims to spread a little happiness in uncertain times.

Many of the posters have been drawn or painted by children, while other messages of support for the NHS have also appeared in various locations.

The isolation art appearing in house windows has often been accompanied by messages to stay home, stay safe and stay positive.

With schools closed and the UK in lockdown, “chase the rainbow” is a way for children to connect with each other from a distance.

 

 

Harrogate’s NHS Nightingale hospital lit up blue in special ‘Clap for our Carers’

Harrogate’s Convention Centre turned blue tonight as it took part in a special ‘Clap for Carers’ ahead of its opening.

NHS Teams, emergency services and construction workers stood outside the front of the centre itself to join in with the applause. There was a real sense of community support as residents clapped from nearby gardens, balconies and doorways.

Yorkshire Lighting and Electrical Services, which is based in Harrogate, has installed 20 blue lights around the front of the building. Views For Fun also based in Harrogate donated blue fairy lights for the 12 trees that line the Kings Road beside the centre.

 

 

 

Harrogate Nightingale to turn blue in special clap for the NHS

Blue lights will be switched on tonight at 8pm at the Harrogate Nightingale Hospital as part of a special Clap for Carers to mark its construction.

Harrogate Convention Centre and the NHS Nightingale Hospital Yorkshire and Humber want to encourage residents nearby to ‘Clap for Carers’ or to bang pots, cheer and generally make a noise. Emergency services, construction workers and NHS teams will also be invited to join the applause at the centre itself.

The lighting is part of a national movement to light theatres, bridges and cathedrals, castles, sports stadiums, and national landmarks for the #lightitblue campaign.

Around 20 blue lights have been lent to the HCC by AV Matrix from Wetherby and Yorkshire Lighting and Electrical Services which is based in Harrogate installed them around the front of the building.  Glen Molloy, the owner of Yorkshire Lighting and Electrical Services, said:

“Normally it would take about 2 weeks to get it organised but on this occasion we turned it around in a matter or hours.

Lights For Fun also based in Harrogate have donated blue fairy lights for the 12 trees that line the Kings Road beside the centre. Jo Naughton Co-Founder of Lights for Fun told The Stray Ferret:

“The whole centre will be illuminated blue. The idea is that we are all behind the NHS and that Harrogate is in full support of having a Nightingale hospital here in our town. We just wanted to show appreciation for what the NHS does for us and it feels good to help.”

Paula Lorimer, the HCC’s Director said:

“All who have worked on the project, including Convention Centre staff from caterers to electricians, have put their heart, soul, sweat and tears into the transformation, working around the clock to support the NHS. I am incredibly proud of my team, and I hope all the town will want to show their thanks tonight.”

NOTE: Residents in or near Kings Road are asked to please not leave gardens, balconies, doorsteps etc. or congregate in any way outside of the venue. Residents across Harrogate are also asked to not congregate in any way at the venue, and to stay in their homes and comply with government guidelines on social isolating.

 

Harrogate man not entitled to any financial support after changing jobs

A Harrogate man claims to be one of thousands who has fallen through the cracks of government support because he changed jobs after February 28.

Mark Foster left his office job in Leeds on good terms on March 13 to work at a Harrogate pub before joining the police’s new graduate scheme in July.

Just a couple of days into his new role, the pub he was working for had to close in line with government social distancing advice.

In response to the pandemic, the government announced a package of support that included the provision to furlough staff and pay 80% of their wages up to £2,500 a month.

But that support is only open for employees who were on payroll on February 28. The pub could only put Mark on unpaid leave and his previous employers refused to help.

He is one of over 64,000 people who has signed a petition to demand that the furlough scheme is opened up to new starters because it is a “major oversight.”

Mark has been left to rely on his partner Aimee Beckett, who is working as a digital content designer from home. He told the Stray Ferret:

“I am not entitled to Universal Credit because I have been put on unpaid leave and because my partner Aimee Beckett is still working. We are fortunate because we have some money saved up in a Help to Buy ISA but we don’t know how long we will be able to last. I don’t think that anybody is at fault. It is just a loophole in the government support that needs to be filled. I have been paying tax and national insurance for over ten years but when I need support it isn’t there.”

Mark Foster (left) says he is being punished for trying to further his career.

The pressure is increasing on the Chancellor Rishi Sunak to open up the furlough scheme to new starters with the Chair of the Treasury Committee admitting that “urgent action is needed.”

Mel Stride MP has sent the following letter to the Chancellor:

“The Chancellor has provided a detailed explanation of the support measures that he has announced so far. However, as the summaries of evidence that we have published show, some people appear to have been left behind. Significant progress has been made and millions of people will be helped by the Government’s schemes, but some people have slipped through the net.”

Harrogate hospital has £4.8 million debt written off

Harrogate District Hospital bosses have welcomed the government’s decision to write off its £4.8 million debt.

The hospital took out the multi-million-pound loan to pay back its suppliers more quickly but said the “reset of finances” was helpful going forward.

107 hospital trusts have an average of £100 million in revenue debt, with the two trusts with the highest debts reaching a combined total of over £1 billion.

In total, the government will write off £13.4 billion of NHS debt to ensure hospitals have the “necessary funding and support to respond to coronavirus.”

Under new rules, hospitals in need of extra cash will be given it with equity, rather than needing to borrow from the government and repay a loan.

Jonathan Coulter, finance director at Harrogate and District NHS Foundation Trust, said:

“The loan we took out was to enable us to be able to pay our suppliers more quickly. In line with the rest of the NHS, we think this ‘reset’ of finances is helpful for trusts both at this point in time and going forward over the coming years.”

The government has said that while many NHS trusts manage strong finances, some took out loans to plug financial gaps in their day-to-day revenue or capital infrastructure budgets.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said:

“As we tackle this crisis, nobody in our health service should be distracted by their hospital’s past finances. Today’s £13.4 billion debt write off will wipe the slate clean and allow NHS hospitals to plan for the future and invest in vital services.”

St Michael’s Hospice in Harrogate welcomes vital government grant

St Michael’s Chief Executive has welcomed the announcement by Chancellor Rishi Sunak that a £750m fund had been set aside to help charities during the coronavirus crisis. Many charities in the Harrogate district have seen huge falls in revenue with their shops shut and fundraising activities postponed. 

The chancellor earmarked £360m of the money to charities “that were on the frontline of fighting the coronavirus”, such as the hospice.

St Michael’s needs £6m a year to run the hospice which cares for people living with terminal illness and its bereavement service- it traditionally gets little government money and is reliant on donations, shop revenue and fundraising activity to operate.

St Michael’s Chief Executive, Tony Collins

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Saint Michael’s Hospice Chief Executive Tony Collins said:

“We welcome this investment in the hospice movement. It is exactly what we need to be able to continue to care for people affected by terminal illness and bereavement and support our community with their emotional wellbeing.

“This includes keeping as many of our traditional services running as possible so we can help release pressure from the NHS.”

As well as keeping its traditional services running to alleviate pressure on the NHS, the hospice’s bereavement service Just B, has a new helpline for those feeling anxious or struggling with their emotional wellbeing during this crisis. Hear to Help is available to everyone between 8am-8pm, seven days a week, and is staffed by specialist support workers. The number to ring is (01423) 856 799.

The hospice is also supporting the national NHS mental health hotline for staff. The phone number is 0300 131 7000 or staff can text FRONTLINE to 85258. Lines are open from 07:00 to 23:00 every day,