Redundancies at Henshaws after ‘reorganisation’Harrogate college Henshaws retains ‘good’ Ofsted rating

Henshaws has retained its ‘good’ rating in an inspection report published today.

The independent specialist college in Harrogate, which provides education and training for learners with profound and multiple disabilities and complex needs, was praised for its “effective and caring support”.

The three-day visit by three inspectors in May was Henshaws’ first Ofsted inspection since 2018.

Their report said:

“Learners behave well in lessons and around the college as a result of the effective and caring support of staff.

“Learners are respectful towards each other, staff and visitors. Staff create a calm environment, which enables learners to flourish.

“Learners know that staff will not tolerate poor or unkind behaviours, such as swearing and name calling.”

They added “staff support learners well to become active citizens and members of their communities” and that leaders and managers have a “clear vision” that enables learners to build confidence, develop independence and achieve their aspirations.

The report said:

“They support learners, for who it is appropriate, to prepare for employment or to participate in volunteering opportunities.

“They help learners to make friends, learn to live more independently and to look forward to a positive future.”

Safeguarding is described as “effective”. However, Ofsted said a small number of sessions “are not age appropriate” and urged the college to “ensure that the pace of learning in all lessons is appropriate to enable learners to make the progress of which they are capable”.

Besides its overall ‘good’ rating, Henshaws was assessed as ‘good’ in five of the six sub-categories. It was rated ‘outstanding’ in the sixth, which was for personal development.

‘Wonderful to be recognised’

The college on Bogs Lane provides day and residential provision for 66 people. Most learners are aged 19 years and over and all have an education, health and care plan coordinated by their local authority.

The personalised curriculum includes subjects such as art, music, dance, horticulture, English, mathematics, a forest school and swimming.

Sally Daniels interim chief executive and director of education and care services, said it was delighted by the outstanding mark, adding:

“The new inspection framework is generally viewed as being more challenging and we are very pleased to have maintained our overall ‘good’ rating.

“In addition, our safeguarding processes were rigorously challenged during the inspection and found to be highly effective.

“We work tirelessly to provide our students, their families and their carers the best support and curriculum we can and it is wonderful that this has been recognised by our regulator.”


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Freemason grants totalling £94,000 given to district charitable organisations

Eight organisations in the Harrogate district have benefitted from a share of £94,000 worth of grants provided by the Freemasons.

Freemasonry is a male only, fraternal organisation that traces its origins back to the local guilds of stonemasons.

A total of 40 grants have been distributed to organisations across Yorkshire, with many charitable organisations, including youth clubs, food banks, community groups and schools.

Those Harrogate District organisations benefiting from the latest round of grant giving were:

James H Newman, OBE, The Provincial Grand Master of The Province of Yorkshire West Riding, said:

“With these grants we are able to financially support 40 organisations, which are each integral to the local area in their own way, is something I am very proud of.

“Each year, we donate some £200,000 from this specific fund to good causes around the Province, with the money coming directly from our members, keen to help support the community they live and work in.

“These grants were a superb way to end 2022, and the money each of these 40 recipients is receiving will help them continue the work they do in their own individual communities.”

Based on the old West Riding, the Province has around 5,000 members and reaches from Sheffield in the South to Ripon in the North, Goole in the East to Bentham in the West.


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18-month road closure order begins on Starbeck’s Bogs Lane

An 18-month closure order came into place on Bogs Lane in Starbeck today amid ongoing development work in the area.

The street, just off the main A59, is a busy residential area that has been affected by numerous new housing schemes.

Henshaws Specialist College, which has about 80 students with special educational needs and disabilities, is also based on Bogs Lane.

North Yorkshire County Council‘s roadworks map says the closure is for ‘carriageway works’ and is due to end on March 26, 2023.

The Stray Ferret understands residents and businesses will still able to get in and out of the road during the work but we were unable to get clarification from the council on precisely how often the road will be closed over the next year and a half.

With a similar 18-month closure order already in place on Kingsley Drive, locals are already used to dealing with road closures.

Barrie Mason, assistant director for highways and transportation at the county council, said in a statement:

“An 18-month order is processed should there be a need for multiple works on site, for example, surface dressing.

“An-18 month order also allows for changes in the programme if necessary. When the dates are confirmed they are published on our roadworks map.

“Wherever possible we alert residents and road users to roadworks in advance.”


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The road is often used as a cut-through by motorists to avoid tailbacks on the A59 so any closures over the months ahead could increase traffic on Knaresborough Road.

Follow our morning Traffic and Travel blogs for live updates on roadworks and delays. 

Henshaws Hundreds fundraises for struggling charity

Henshaws has launched a new fundraising initiative to raise vital funds after experiencing shortfalls it attributes to coronavirus.

Its new Henshaws Hundreds Challenge will begin on September 21. Participants are asked to pick a hundred of any distance they like and get sponsored for it.

It costs £5 to sign up and all fees and sponsors will go to the charity to help support those living with disabilities to build skills and develop confidence. Participants can choose to complete their 100 alone or within a group and are asked to use a mobile app to track their distance.

Gemma Young, Henshaws Fundraising Manager for Yorkshire, said

“Inclusivity is at the heart of the Henshaws Hundreds challenge. It’s possible to cover your chosen distance in a wheelchair, using a walking frame, walking on your hands, or by running, walking swimming or cycling. Plus we hope we’ll also attract a few fun entries with people perhaps skateboarding, hula-hooping, or pogo-sticking their challenge!”

Henshaws students on their graduation day

The money raised through the challenge will begin to cover the funds lost during missed fundraising opportunities over lockdown.


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The charity’s recent financial struggles forced it to close its arts and craft centre in Knaresborough and cut its supported living services.

Henshaws was criticised at the time by people whose family members were in the supported living facility who accused the charity of financial mismanagement. The families also said there was a disconnect between upper management and those using the service.

The charity responded to these claims and said:

“These are extremely difficult decisions being taken in exceptional circumstances and our team will continue to support people across Yorkshire in every way we can.”

Strayside Sunday: Insipid Liberal Democrats aren’t serving the public

Strayside Sunday is our weekly political column written by Paul Baverstock, former Director of Communications for the Conservative Party:

The Liberal Democrats used to be hugely effective local campaigners.  Not least here in Harrogate where Phil, now Baron Willis of Knaresborough, was a formidable and highly popular Liberal Democrat MP.  Willis served 13 years in parliament and retired ahead of the 2010 election.  From potholes to streetlights, and from parking to dog poo – no issue that affected the daily lives of residents was too small for the Lib Dems to champion.

During these past few months of crisis, the local Lib Dems insipid contribution has largely been to criticise our MPs for returning to Westminster, suggesting the creation of Covid Recovery Response Teams, calling on Harrogate council to declare a climate emergency (something that has even proven beyond Greta Thunberg), and worrying about the council’s “abysmal communication.”

Granted, it is difficult to make any real political impression when you occupy just 7 seats on a council of 40, but an effective Lib Dem opposition should look to serve as a locus for local issues, campaigns and activism, and attempt to frame and lead local political debate.  Let’s hope they can shake their somnolence in the months to come.  The people of Harrogate need a functioning opposition.

In last week’s column I argued against Harrogate Council’s plan to create a Local Authority Controlled Company (LACC) to manage the area’s sport centres and deliver leisure services across the district.  On Wednesday evening, the 7 Conservative members of the council’s cabinet approved unanimously plans to create the new company, called ‘Brimham Active.’  This will now be put to a full vote of the council on July 8th.  If the council rubberstamps cabinet’s recommendation, as the thumping Conservative majority will surely do, it will be a decision taken in the face of public opinion, that was sought through a ‘consultation’ exercise, bought and paid for with public, read our, money.

During my professional life in politics and communication I have written, conducted and commissioned a myriad of polls, surveys and consultations. From experience, I can tell you there is no legitimate basis upon which the leisure service consultation results can be interpreted as supportive of the council’s privatisation plan.  Of 433 opinions sought, just 27% of us agreed with the council’s scheme.  That’s just 117 Harrogate residents who support £300,000 in venture start-up costs and borrowings of £26m to fund the facilities upgrades on which the plan for leisure depends.  In fact, the balance of public opinion was undeniably negative; 46% of us disagreed with the plan.  You have to hand it to the council; it takes some kind of brass neck to ignore a poll result that is 2 to 1 against.  And no, there’s no excuse for the Lib Dems ,who arrived too late in the debate, and then howled about being kept in the dark – this proposal was covered in this publication and others well ahead of the vote.

This week the district has seen the closure of Henshaw’s Arts and Crafts centre in Knaresborough.  These pages also reported on their announcement that its Assisted Living Centre is to shut this coming October.  It appears that Henshaw’s actually made the decision to close four long months ago but, for reasons passing understanding, delayed the news until now.  What has gone so wrong financially it has left 21 families urgently needing alternative arrangements to house their disabled loved ones?  Something else for the local Lib Dems to get their teeth into, perhaps?

Poor old ‘App-less’ Matt Hancock is having a bad war of late.  When appointed to his post, the technophile Secretary of State for Health and Social Care set up a shiny new unit called NHSx and tasked it with the digital transformation of healthcare.  It’s job is to bring the NHS’s prehistoric I.T. kit up to date, make it work well and work most of the time, link and share our patient data across care settings (between your GP surgery and hospital for example) and generally harness the power of innovation to improve care, and to make it more cost efficient for the taxpayer.  I can talk this way because, when I was Director of Communication for Paperless 2020, the former name of the digital transformation programme for healthcare in England and Wales, it used to be my job to talk this way.

The thing is, building technology at pace and scale is both hard and expensive, even if you are a technology company like, say, Apple or Google, to pick but two at random…  Matt Hancock actually has his own app, imaginatively called ‘Matt Hancock MP.’  You should download it.  An hour or so before the Downing Street daily press conference, at which he announced that our “world beating” track and trace app was being binned before it could be launched, he posted a message of congratulations to Frankie Dettori for winning the Ascot Gold Cup.  You couldn’t make it up. Could you?

That’s my Strayside Sunday.


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No plans to close Henshaws College as charity cuts services

There are no plans to close Henshaws College despite the charity cutting back some of its services to balance the books.

Henshaws has cut the Arts and Crafts Centre as well as its supported living services but the college is safe for the foreseeable future.

The charity told The Stray Ferret that the college is a regulated service with different contractual responsibilities and different funding.

It has been open during lockdown with just over half of its pupils attending. The rest are either off because their parents are keeping them away or because the college does not have enough room.

Whether preparing for employment, making friends, or learning to live more independently, the college offers flexible courses for disabled young people.


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Henshaws College is still accepting applications for the next academic year and is planning to hold a virtual open day in July.

The charity says it is proud of the work it has done in the lockdown and has also won praise from the Department for Education and the CQC.