North Yorkshire’s Police Fire and Crime Commissioner has declined to respond to a call for her to resign after a government watchdog found some vulnerable children “remain at risk unnecessarily” due to delays in police investigations.
Zoe Metcalfe, who is aiming to be the Tory candidate to be the first North Yorkshire and York elected mayor, said she would not be commenting on a notice of motion lodged by North Yorkshire Council’s opposition leader, Cllr Bryn Griffiths, which is tabled to be considered at a full meeting on Wednesday.
However, rather than debate the issue at the meeting, one option for the council’s chairman would be to refer the notice of motion to one of the authority’s scrutiny committees for consideration.
The critical Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary report followed its assessment last year which found the force was “not effectively safeguarding children”.
Last week, at a public accountability meeting Ms Metcalfe said the information she had been provided about the force’s progress over its failings was bogus.
She said:
“We were led to believe that North Yorkshire Police were in a better position than they ultimately were and we accept this.
“And as a result, we have entirely overhauled our scrutiny and assurance process, I have clearly set out how I will hold North Yorkshire Police to account for delivery.”
Read more:
- Crime commissioner’s office to move to Harrogate Police Station
- North Yorkshire Police ‘still needs to improve’ on child safeguarding, say inspectors
- Crime commissioner Zoe Metcalfe under pressure following critical report
Cllr Griffiths called for Ms Metcalfe’s resignation to be debated at the meeting.
He said the second report, published earlier this month, had examined 33 child protection cases, of which 11 were found to be good, eight required improvement and 14 were inadequate.
He said:
“For so many cases to be found inadequate is a damning entitlement not only on the police, but also on the overall management of the force by the police and fire commissioner.
“The police, fire and crime commissioner is elected to be responsible for generally overseeing both police forces and fire services. Clearly has failed and is continuing to fail to hold the North Yorkshire Police force to account and keep the public and in particular children safe.
“Urgent action is therefore needed to remove the existing commissioner immediately and replace with a far more effective manager.”
In response, a spokeswoman for Ms Metcalfe said the motion was being put to the council “for discussion only, and so we will not be commenting at this time”.
Some of Ms Metcalfe’s Conservative former colleagues on the authority said they believed the notice of motion was “political” and that they would not be supporting the call for her to resign.
The Tories said those behind calls for her resignation had misunderstood the situation as the reports referred to a time before she was the commissioner.
Crunch Harrogate Station Gateway meeting set for this week
Harrogate and Knareborough councillors will have the opportunity to back or oppose the Station Gateway scheme at a meeting on Friday.
The meeting has been specially arranged by North Yorkshire Council and the authority’s ruling Conservative executive has pledged to abide by whatever decision local councillors collectively make about the project.
A final decision on whether it goes ahead is expected in the summer.
The £11.2 million Station Gateway has been in development for three years after funding was won from the government’s Transforming Cities Fund to make the town centre more accessible to cyclists and pedestrians.
But it’s proved to be controversial with the results of the latest round of public consultation, published in January, suggesting the Harrogate public are narrowly against it.
For or against?
This week’s meeting will include 13 councillors — eight Liberal Democrats and five Conservatives.
Conservative councillor for Bilton and Nidd Gorge, Paul Haslam, is a proponent of the Station Gateway.
He has argued it would give a boost for active travel in the town and the changes would result in a better first impression of Harrogate for people arriving by bus or train.

Station Gateway proposals show Harrogate’s James Street pedestrianised.
Liberal Democrat councillor for Harlow and St Georges, Michael Schofield, came out against the project last week.
He questioned the council’s track record in delivering active travel schemes following the Otley Road cycle path saga and he believes the disruption caused around Station Parade during construction would hurt town centre businesses.
Public responds to traffic orders
The council’s head of major projects and infrastructure, Richard Binks, has prepared a report for councillors that includes details of proposed traffic regulation orders that were submitted last month in anticipation of the Gateway scheme going ahead.
The orders include making the section of Station Parade to the junction with Bower Road one-way and introducing a northbound one-way section on Cheltenham Mount between Cheltenham Parade and Mount Parade.
There is a proposed order to bring in a 24-hour bus lane on the northern section of Station Parade.
Another order has been proposed to part-pedestrianise James Street between Princes Street and Station Parade.
Since the orders were proposed in March, 41 comments have been received with most being negative. However, the report notes that letters of support about the orders are not usually expected.
Read more:
- Dutch-style roundabout ditched from £11.2m Harrogate Station Gateway
- ‘It will hurt businesses’: Lib Dem councillor to vote against Harrogate’s Station Gateway
Concerns have been raised by residents about the potential for increased congestion due to Station Parade becoming single-lane.
In response, the council has said modelling has suggested the gateway could mean it takes just 50 additional seconds to travel across town during the evening rush hour.
However, it called this a relatively small increase and said it does not take into account “successful strategy modal switch outcomes”, which essentially means getting people out of their cars and onto bicycles — one of the key ambitions of the project.
How to watch the meeting
Next week’s meeting starts at 10am at the Civic Centre in Harrogate and it will be streamed live on YouTube.
Anyone who wishes to speak at the meeting or ask a question has until midday today to submit a request. More information on how to get in touch with the council can be found here.
‘Few teething issues’ with North Yorkshire Council launch, say political leadersFew teething issues have emerged during first month of the new North Yorkshire Council, the leaders of its political groups have agreed.
Councillors said residents facing confusion over who to contact and delays of about 30 minutes when trying to phone the council’s call centre had been the most major cause of concern since the county council and seven district authorities fused operations on April 1.
Ahead of North Yorkshire Council’s launch its chief executive Richard Flinton warned while the authority’s basic infrastructure had been created ahead “snagging issues” were expected when the new council launched due to the scale of the merger and “eight different ways of working”.
When asked whether he was pleased with how the transfer had gone so far, the Conserative-run council’s leader, Cllr Carl Les said:
“Yes. It has gone surprisingly well, but with the amount of effort put in by Richard Flinton and his team I shouldn’t be surprised.”
He added:
“We always said if you are going to chose a time to do local government reorganisation you wouldn’t necessarily be coming out of a pandemic with a war going on in Ukraine and various other things happening.
“You wouldn’t chose to launch on April 1, when council tax bills are going out for a new authority and people renew their garden waste collection waste collections with the new authority, but still have phone numbers for the old authorities.”
Read more:
- Civic society backs creation of Harrogate town council
- Just 3.5% responded to Harrogate town council consultation
- Liberal Democrats back creation of Harrogate town council
Speaking ahead of a meeting behind closed doors with Mr Flinton and the other political group leaders to discuss the council’s first month, Cllr Les said the unitary’s contact centre had become deluged, resulting in lengthy answering delays and potentially some residents hanging up.
He said:
“The contact centres have been busy and have not been as to strength as we thought they might be. We are taking steps to increase recruitment and increase training.”
The leaders of the council’s other political groups agreed no other major issues had emerged during the authority’s first month.

North Yorkshire Council civic centre at Knapping Mount.
Labour group leader Cllr Steve Shaw Wright said while the unitary authority appeared to be “generally working”, its call centre had been “an absolute abomination”.
He added:
“Selby Town Council just can’t do anything because people have been forever ringing them up because North Yorkshire’s call centre doesn’t work.”
Green group leader Cllr Kevin Foster said:
“This has been a massive undertaking and on the whole things have gone very well. There’s still lots of work to do, but if you’d asked me if I’d have accepted this when the changeover went in I would have grabbed it with both hands.”
Liberal Democrat group leader Cllr Bryn Griffiths said residents struggling to find phone numbers to contact the unitary, which was “trying to force people to use the internet a lot”, and delays in answering, had represented “a mixed start” for the unitary.
He added:
“With a big organisation of about 10,000 employees there are bound to be a few hiccups.”
Independent group leader Cllr Stuart Parsons added:
“Things could have gone better, but it also could have gone a lot worse.”
He said the centralised call centre had not appeared to work as well as “phoning the old numbers for district council call centres”.
Cllr Parsons said:
Civic society backs creation of Harrogate town council“It’s been mainly hiccups, nothing major appears to have gone wrong, which is very comforting. It’s just a question of trying to iron out the hiccups and ensuring services improve considerably.”
Harrogate Civic Society has backed plans to create a Harrogate Town Council.
A second consultation on whether to set-up a town council runs until May 5.
North Yorkshire County Council said in March the move would require 35,000 households to pay an additional council tax charge of between £40 and £60.
However, in its submission to the consultation the civic society said the establishment of a town council would mean key decisions could be made by local councillors “who live in the town”.
It added it would want to see the authority take on more powers over time.

The areas in Harrogate which would fall under the new town council.
Harrogate and Scarborough are the only parts of the county not to have a parish or town council.
The civic society submission said:
“The society aims to celebrate our past, enhance our present and shape our future. We believe that this can best be done with a Harrogate town council, so key decisions will be made by local councillors who live in the town.
“We note the possible remit of the new council set out in the consultation document, but would like to see it have more of a role over time.
“This would enable opportunities to raise income, protect and enhance the key assets of the town, have a greater say in planning and development (through a neighbourhood plan), and promote a vision for the town which makes it a premier spa and floral town.”
Read more:
- Second consultation to be held on whether to form Harrogate town council
- Just 3.5% responded to Harrogate town council consultation
- Liberal Democrats back creation of Harrogate town council
The group added it wished to work with the town council in future to “keep the town the jewel in the crown of North Yorkshire”.
Last week local Liberal Democrats came out in favour of the creation of a town council.
Eight Liberal Democrats, including former Harrogate borough councillors and current North Yorkshire councillors, signed a letter in support.
They said the move would enable locally-elected councillors to take control of assets such as off-street car parks, the Stray, Royal Hall, Sun Pavilion and Valley Gardens.
A total of 75% favoured setting up a Harrogate town council in last year’s first consultation but only 1,250 homes — 3.5% of those affected — responded. The low response rate triggered concerns about the validity of the response.
A second consultation into the creation of a town council will close next Friday (May 5). You can have your say here.
Andrew Jones MP appeals for help at ‘critical time’ for River Nidd bathing water bidConservative MP Andrew Jones has issued a plea for volunteers to help in the campaign to achieve bathing water status on the River Nidd.
Mr Jones plans to submit an application for bathing water status at Knaresborough Lido after reports of numerous bathers falling ill last summer.
If successful, it would oblige government agencies to take action to improve water quality.
In a three-minute video on his Community News website, the Harrogate and Knaresborough MP blamed the Victorian-era sewage system, run-off from agricultural land and drainage from housing estates for polluting the Nidd.
He asked for volunteers to help with the campaign. He said:
“May this year is a critical time as it marks the start of the bathing season when evidence must be collected for the bathing water application that I’m leading.
“This campaign is building momentum but we can’t let it slide. That’s why I’m calling out to anyone who is passionate about our environment or who uses the River Nidd to come forward and help with the volunteer work.”
Mr Jones said data would be collected over summer and urged anyone interested in helping to get in touch.
He said he would be working alongside Nidd Action Group between now and September to apply for bathing water designation.

Steve Kirkley, from Blenkhorn’s Boats
Steve Kirkley, from Blenkhorn’s Boats, which operates boat hire on the Nidd, told the video improved water quality would “lead to more enjoyable surroundings” while David Clayden, secretary of Harrogate Fly Fishers’ Club, said it would create “a better environment for the river”.
Nicola Shaw, chief executive of Yorkshire Water, said it was important to work in partnership to improve water quality.
‘Nidd plagued by foul sewage’
This week Tom Gordon, the Liberal Democrat prospective parliamentary candidate for Harrogate and Knaresborough, accused Conservative MPs of “blocking new tough measures on water companies” to tackle sewage discharge.
Mr Gordon said the Sewage Discharge Bill would have introduced automatic fines on water companies breaking their sewage dumping permits but Conservative MPs voted to block it.
Mr Gordon, said:
“The Nidd has been plagued by foul sewage discharges. People across Harrogate and Knaresborough are furious about this, yet the Conservative government keeps blocking new laws to get tough on water companies.”
Read more:
- River Nidd testing begins as clean-up campaign gathers pace
- Yorkshire Water discharged sewage into River Nidd 870 times in 2022
Liberal Democrats back creation of Harrogate town council
Liberal Democrats have come out in favour of the creation of a Harrogate town council.
A second consultation on whether to set-up a town council runs until May 5.
North Yorkshire County Council said in March the move would require 35,000 households to pay an additional council tax charge of between £40 and £60.
But local Liberal Democrats said today a town council would enable locally-elected councillors to take control of assets such as off-street car parks, the Stray, Royal Hall, Sun Pavilion and Valley Gardens.
Harrogate and Scarborough are the only parts of the county not to have a parish or town council.
Eight Liberal Democrats, including former Harrogate borough councillors and current North Yorkshire councillors, signed in support of a town council.
Cllr Pat Marsh, chair of North Yorkshire Council‘s area constituency committee for Harrogate and Knaresborough, said her party supported devolving power. She added:
“Without a new town council, Harrogate would be at a real disadvantage when bidding for services to remain local.
“Harrogate residents need to have a voice when it comes to the future of local assets, just as those in Knaresborough, Ripon, Pateley Bridge, Boroughbridge and many other villages in North Yorkshire have.”

Pat Marsh
Cllr Marsh said “unique decisions relating to Harrogate should be being made in Harrogate by people who have received the endorsement of Harrogate residents” rather than councillors in places such as Catterick, Ryedale and Scarborough.
She added:
“Assets that could be considered for control by the town council include off-street car parks, the Stray, Royal Hall, Sun Pavilion, Valley Gardens and the other green and floral spaces within the town.
“Without local protection, these assets are always in danger of being cut by North Yorkshire councillors not from Harrogate.
“A Harrogate town council would also provide a formal representative voice for local residents on planning applications and other consultations.
“Harrogate is a very special place and decisions about our town need to be made by local people who know, love and understand this town.”
Read more:
- Second consultation to be held on whether to form Harrogate town council
- Just 3.5% responded to Harrogate town council consultation
A total of 75% favoured setting up a Harrogate town council in last year’s first consultation but only 1,250 homes — 3.5% of those affected — responded. The low response rate triggered concerns about the validity of the response.
The statement urges residents and businesses to respond to the second consultation before the May 5 deadline.
The Lib Dem councillors who signed today’s statement are:
Pat Marsh — Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone.
Philip Broadbank — Fairfax and Starbeck.
Chris Aldred — High Harrogate and Kingsley
Peter Lacey — Coppice Valley and Duchy
Mike Schofield — Harlow and St Georges
Monika Slater — Bilton Grange and New Park
Honorary alderman Trevor Chapman
Honorary alderman Matthew Webber
D-Day looms for £11.2m Harrogate Station Gateway
A special meeting has been convened to discuss whether to proceed with the £11.2 million Harrogate Station Gateway.
The new North Yorkshire Council has organised a meeting of its Harrogate and Knaresborough area constituency committee on May 5.
The sole item on the agenda is the gateway, which would see James Street partly pedestrianised and some of Station Parade reduced to single lane traffic to encourage cycling.
The 15-strong committee comprises of nine Liberal Democrats, five Conservatives and one Green.
Area constituency committees are advisory bodies to North Yorkshire Council, whose Conservative-controlled executive retains the final say.
But Cllr Keane Duncan, the Conservative member for highways and transportation at the council, has pledged to abide by the area constituency committee’s decision.
Cllr Duncan said this would fulfil the council leadership’s pledge of “double devolution” whereby more decisions would be taken locally.
But some Liberal Democrats think the Conservatives have given them a hospital pass by passing on responsibility for such a hot political potato that has divided local opinion.

How James Street would look
To date the Liberal Democrats have been quiet on whether they will back the gateway.
The Stray Ferret asked area constituency committee chair, Cllr Pat Marsh, the Liberal Democrat for Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone, whether her party would support the gateway.
On March 9, she said:
“Until we have a group meeting to discuss it I am not prepared to comment.”
We asked Cllr Marsh again on Friday whether the Lib Dems had formulated a position. She replied:
“We will let everyone know our opinions on May 5.”
Speaking at a Harrogate District Chamber of Commerce meeting on March 14, Cllr Duncan said:
“I will implement whatever decision is taken. It’s right that Harrogate and Knaresborough councillors have their say.”
He told the meeting the scheme would see the removal of 40 parking spaces — 20 on James Street and 20 on Station Parade.
He added the Station Square water feature had been removed from the scheme “due to practical and cost constraints”. It would have cost £500,000.

Cllr Keane Duncan (centre) at the chamber event
Cllr Duncan committed to four pledges if the scheme goes ahead:
1 To conduct a full review of car parking in Harrogate town centre.
2 To manage disruption, adding: “It cannot be denied there will be disruption. We will draw up a construction management plan.”
3 No compromise on quality of construction materials.
4 Traffic flows will be revisited and reassessed.
The meeting at the Civic Centre in Harrogate on May 5 will take place at 10am and is open to the public.
Commissioner rules out Harrogate fire engine rethink despite faulty dataNorth Yorkshire Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner Zoë Metcalfe has ruled out reconsidering plans to reduce the number of nighttime fire engines based in Harrogate.
Ms Metcalfe’s three-year fire service blueprint last year decided the number of overnight appliances at the Skipton Road fire station would be cut from two to one.
One of the main concerns during consultation was this could lead to life-threatening delays at Starbeck level crossing if a second fire engine were required in an emergency.
Ms Metcalfe allayed fears by telling councillors firefighters knew the train times and could ring ahead to Network Rail if they needed to cross urgently.
But her office admitted last month this information, which it said had been “relayed in good faith by the commissioner”, was incorrect, which heightened concerns.
Ms Metcalfe, a Conservative, responded by saying concerns about Starbeck level crossing had been “the subject of limited media coverage”.
She added there was “misunderstanding on the part of the media and therefore also local stakeholders and the public” about the significance of Starbeck level crossing in her Risk and Resource Model 2022 to 2025, which outlines how fire service resources should be deployed.
She added:
“I want to reiterate that the Risk and Resource Model proposals were subject of a detailed modelling and consultation process undertaken in support of the review of North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service provision.
“The nature of the misunderstanding does not warrant a reconsideration of the resource proposals and statutory planning process that is now complete.”
But Ms Metcalfe added:
“Nonetheless, I recognise that local concerns about this misunderstanding should be addressed and I propose to offer a meeting with myself and North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service, should any local councillor wish to avail themselves of that opportunity.”
‘Gates down for five minutes’
Cllr Pat Marsh, a Liberal Democrat on North Yorkshire Council who raised concerns about Starbeck level crossing with Ms Metcalfe last year, said the issue “cannot be batted away” and called for a meeting at the level crossing. She added:
“I have major concerns when the gates are down for a long period of time and ambulances and fire engines are waiting it can make the difference between life and death as it did in my family.
“The gates are down on some occasions for at least five minutes. If you are having a heart attack or your house is on fire every minute is precious.”
Cllr Paul Haslam, a Conservative on North Yorkshire Council, said he was willing to meet Ms Metcalfe in the hope of putting pressure on Network Rail. He said:
Andrew Jones to stand for election again in Harrogate and Knaresborough“We have been working round this issue for a long time.”
Andrew Jones will stand to be MP for the Harrogate and Knaresborough constituency for a fifth time, the Conservative party has confirmed.
The announcement follows a meeting of the Harrogate and Knaresborough Conservative Association’s executive committee last night.
There, Mr Jones spoke to party activists and took questions, before a secret ballot selected him as the party’s candidate once again.
After the meeting, in a statement on his website, Community News, he said:
“It is a real privilege to represent the area where I have lived since the 1990s. I have never wanted to represent anywhere else and have never stood for any other parliamentary seat.
“My approach has always been to speak up for our area first, to be active for the community in which I live and to be positive in my campaigns.”
Mr Jones was first elected in 2010, beating the late Liberal Democrat Claire Kelley by just 1,039 votes, following the retirement of long-standing Lib Dem MP Phil Willis.
He increased his majority to more than 16,000 in 2015, and 18,000 two years later. At the last general election in late 2019, it fell to 9,675, though he still polled his second-highest number of votes, at more than 29,000.
Read more:
- Lib Dems confirm Harrogate and Knaresborough candidate for next election
- Green Party chooses man to fight Andrew Jones in Harrogate and Knaresborough
The next election will have to be held by January 28, 2025.
Mr Jones will face Tom Gordon of the Liberal Democrats, and Paul Ko Ferrigno for the Green Party. Labour has yet to declare a candidate in the race.
When asked in January whether Mr Jones would be standing again, a spokesperson for the Harrogate and Knaresborough Conservative Association said:
“I think I must have missed something… is there a general election? I am able to confirm that the MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough is Andrew Jones.”
This week, reflecting on his 13 years in politics on his website, Mr Jones said:
Liberal Democrat announced as chair of Harrogate and Knaresborough planning committee“I’m really not interested in US-style attack politics where people drag one another down all the time. Where we have differences we should challenge one another respectfully and constructively. It saddens me that too often in local and national politics this doesn’t happen.
“I will keep campaigning for the things people here tell me our area needs building on the successes of the past 13 years. We have more trains to and from London, more services to Leeds and York, the pacers have gone, we have a largely electric bus fleet, our public buildings are being de-carbonised, we have new leisure facilities being built, more electric vehicle charging points are on the way, there is sustained low unemployment and over 10,000 new trees have been planted in the constituency.
“This is only a flavour of our progress locally. There is more to do and none of these things happen because of any one person. They happen because residents, community groups, councillors and the Member of Parliament work together to make them happen. Residents can be assured that my ongoing commitment to those community partnerships is genuine because this is my community too.
“It is an honour to be given the chance to serve our community again.”
Harrogate councillor Pat Marsh will chair the new Harrogate & Knaresborough planning committee on North Yorkshire Council, it has been confirmed.
The Liberal Democrat member for the Stray, Woodlands & Hookstone division on the new council has been a councillor in Harrogate for over 30 years and sits on the current Harrogate Borough Council planning committee.
Because the Liberal Democrats is now the largest party within the Harrogate & Knaresborough constituency area it gets to pick the chair of the new planning committee.
The vice-chair will be Conservative councillor for Bilton & Nidd Gorge, Paul Haslam.
The committee’s other members will be Chris Aldred (Liberal Democrat), Philip Broadbank (Liberal Democrat), Hannah Gostlow (Liberal Democrat), John Mann (Conservative) and Robert Windass (Conservative).
The committee will meet every month and will have the final say over large or significant planning applications in Harrogate & Knaresborough. It’s first meeting is on April 25.
Upcoming schemes include the 770-home Windmill Farm development on Otley Road and the controversial expansion of Harrogate Spring Water’s bottling plant on Harlow Moor Road.
Cllr Marsh told the Local Democracy Reporting Service that she feels “very honoured” to have been asked to take on the role.
She said:
“I am keen to make sure Harrogate and Knaresborough get the right planning decisions.
“It is about having local knowledge that can make all the difference. I have done 33 years of planning none stop and been involved in formulating four Local Plans.
“I have never chaired a planning committee but I think I have a few years’ experience to bring to the role and I am looking forward to that new role.”
Read more:
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- New board to review Harrogate Convention Centre operating model
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A separate planning committee will be formed for Skipton and Ripon which will be chaired by Conservative councillor for Washburn & Birstwith, Nathan Hull.
Harrogate Borough Council’s planning committee is chaired by Conservative member for Harlow & St Georges, Rebecca Burnett. It has one more meeting on Marsh 28 before the authority is abolished on March 31.