Businesses in the Harrogate district have given a mixed reaction to Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s route out of lockdown restrictions today.
Mr Johnson outlined a four-phase “roadmap” that he said would be “cautious but irreversible”.
Step one will see schools re-open and care homes allow visits on March 8 and outdoor sports resume on March 29; step two will see non-essential retail and pubs and restaurants reopen non April 12; step three will see two households permitted to meet indoors and hotels and cinemas reopen on May 17; stage four will see all remaining restrictions lifted on June 21.
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Kimberly Wilson, chair of guesthouse association Accommodation Harrogate, welcomed bars and restaurants being in the same bracket as hotels.
She said:
“I’m glad to see that they are in the same strand so everything can reopen at the same time
“But we would want as much notice for reopening for hospitality. It takes time to get your ducks in a row.”
She hoped government offers support to hospitality businesses over the next few months before reopening.

Kim Wilson, of the Camberley Hotel on Kings Road, Harrogate.
Ms Wilson said measures such as an extension to the cut in VAT and the furlough scheme would help hospitality businesses survive.
But Paul Rawlinson, owner of Baltzersens cafe in Harrogate, said:
“We’re still in February and mid-May feels like a long way away. It’s a long, old slog.
“We’ll pick ourselves back up and push on. In two or three months we might be in a more normal position.”
David Steca, owner of barbershop Steca No 6, said he was “fed up” with the restrictions.
He added:
“Hopefully we will receive more financial support if we are closed another seven weeks.”
“It’s nice to be able to start to plan towards a date.”
Andrew Jones, MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough, said the district “can go into the spring sharing a strong sense of optimism but should continue our cautious approach”.
He added:
Police issue fine for 200-mile Scotland to Harrogate trip“Our emergence from the shadow of covid will throw up new challenges about preparation for the possibility of future pandemics, about the future of high street retail, about how we work, about how changes to human activity, demonstrated during the pandemic, affect the environment and many more challenges too.”
A person has been fined for driving 200 miles from Glasgow to Harrogate to meet a friend in a motorhome.
The unnamed person was one of seven who received fixed penalty notices in the Harrogate district in the past week for lockdown breaches.
The friend, from Wakefield, was also fined.
A total of 186 fixed penalty notices have been issued for lockdown breaches in North Yorkshire over the last seven days — the most in any week during the third lockdown.
Seven were issued in the Harrogate district — all for visitors to the district.
Since January 6, 55 lockdown fixed penalty notices have been issued in the district, with 39 of them going to visitors.
Read more:
North Yorkshire Police Superintendent Mike Walker told a press briefing of the North Yorkshire Local Resilience Forum today the police will continue to target “the reckless minority”.
He said:
Harrogate garages see increase in pothole repairs despite lockdown“To the public who want to breach regulations and travel into North Yorkshire, we are putting more resources out there to respond to public concerns and reports of breaches.
“Our message to people who think North Yorkshire is the place to come and offer various different unacceptable excuses — expect to be encountered by a police officer.”
Garages in Harrogate have said they are experiencing a rise in demand for pothole-related repairs despite the national coronavirus lockdown.
It comes as the government announced today £51 million in funding to repair roads in the Yorkshire and Humber region over the next year.
This is the second instalment of a national £2.5 billion “potholes fund”, which Chancellor Rishi Sunak revealed in last year’s Budget.
However, it seems there are plenty of holes for North Yorkshire County Council to fill locally.
The council currently has 781 potholes on its reporting system for Harrogate, Knaresborough and Pateley Bridge. Ripon and Masham have 175.
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While not all the reports require action from the council, those numbers can be a good indicator of the demand it is currently facing.
The recent cold weather has also caused more potholes. When water enters the road and freezes, it expands and creates holes in the surface. Traffic then exacerbates the problem.
Harrogate’s garages then deal with the consequences of damage caused by vehicles driving over potholes.
Finlay Bunce, the manager at Universal Tyres Harrogate, told the Stray Ferret that it recently repaired 10 cars on one day due to potholes:
“People should not be travelling as much but we are still seeing quite a few cars with pothole-related damage.
“One woman last week had only driven 160 miles in her brand new car when she drove over a pothole. She needed two new tyres.”
Sam Burton, manager of Just Tyres in Harrogate, said it had seen a 15% increase in pothole repairs since early January when the country went into lockdown. He said:
Harrogate district parents ‘crushed’ about schools not reopening“We have had quite a few people complain about Otley Road in Harrogate. I drive down it regularly and it looks as if someone has lost control of a jackhammer. It all needs to be resurfaced.
“Some cars are so badly damaged as a result that we cannot even do a repair. Wagons and cars are driving all over the roads to avoid the holes.”
For many parents in the Harrogate district, yesterday’s announcement that schools were unlikely to fully reopen until at least March 8 was not what they wanted to hear.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson said reopening was dependent on “lots of things going right”, including infection rates.
It means many parents and guardians are looking at another lengthy stint as teachers, placing more stress in particular on working parents.
Although parents agree safety is paramount, they are concerned about the impact of lengthy home schooling.
Sally Haslewood, who is managing director of Harrogate Mumbler and a mother of two daughters, said:
“I am really struggling with home schooling them both as well as trying to keep them healthy, happy and run my own business. To be perfectly honest, Boris’ statement last night was crushing.
“The general feeling amongst the other parents I speak to is that they are all incredibly fed up and don’t know how long they will cope for. The emotional drain of it all is an absolute killer.”
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“It was really deflating. I have friends who can’t work at the moment so have no income. I thought of them, and how much the kids are missing their friends and it all becomes overwhelming.“I am finding home schooling extremely difficult as they are just nowhere near as engaged as they would be at school.”
Mental health
“We all saw the numbers escalate in September when the schools and universities reopened, and if we are to get out of this mess we need to get the numbers right down otherwise we will be back to square one again.“I worry about mental health, mine included. My son has had his head in his studies every day since this started, but with no idea as to what is happening with A-levels and how things will be graded it is a concern.”
Resit year
“My youngest has autism and struggles socially and certainly isn’t ready to start high school next year. My eldest has found it incredibly difficult to complete art assignments due to the resources needed from school. I feel that to put them back a year would be so beneficial.”
“The children have missed an awful lot of schooling. I think it is only fair for those that want the opportunity to catch up to have the opportunity to re-take the year. By missing so much they are at a huge disadvantage!”
With many of us staying at home with tons of spare time, we asked for your stories on discovering a new skill or reigniting an old passion during lockdown three.
Two women have already been in touch.
Sue Coates picked up a paint brush for the first time. She began in lockdown one and, almost 12 months on, she has found her painting style.
She said she loves to paint landscapes in particular, but some days goes for something completely different like fish.
After losing her job at Leeds Bradford Airport in August, Ms Coates found a new job in a Harrogate cafe but again she finds herself at home whilst the cafe is closed. This has given her plenty of time to paint around 50 paintings for her Otley home.
Ms Coates said:
“I saw some friends on Facebook were starting an art group so joined it and we did a weekly challenge. Then just started to draw and paint most days as I really enjoy it. I try whatever takes my fancy. Painting takes your mind off things.”

A piece Ms Coates is currently working on.
Ms Coates said this lockdown had been harder than those before because it is in winter so she can’t go on walks as easily.
She is determined to continue her new hobby and has even begun painting friends’ pets for them.
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In Harrogate, Kim Wilson was used to 17 hour days working as a hotelier before lockdown was enforced. Now she has begun to fill her time with knitting and cross stitch.
Prior to lockdown, Ms Wilson said she would have to try and fit her hobbies around work but after months of closure she has found more time to dedicate to them.
Her hobby has also allowed her to help community efforts locally, in the form of Harrogate scrubbers, and abroad by making face masks for African children.

One of Ms Wilson’s huge cross stitch projects.
Ms Wilson added:
“I’d rather do something useful with my time whilst I can’t do anything else. I’ve also joined some online groups of crafters, we all have something in common and help each other when we can. There’s a real community feel.”
Ms Wilson has also continued to support local businesses, using craft shops’ click and collect service to get her material.
Have you found a new hobby in lockdown? Have you learnt a new language, started baking for the first time or turned your hobby into a new business, we want to hear from you! Email contact@thestrayferret.co.uk
Number of lockdown fines increases in North YorkshireThe number of fines issued to people for flouting lockdown restrictions in North Yorkshire has increased this week.
North Yorkshire Police revealed today it handed out 134 fixed penalty notices during the second week of lockdown, compared with 107 during the first week.
But the number of fines specifically in the Harrogate district fell from 22 in the first week of lockdown to 12 in the second.
Of that number, eight were for being outside without reasonable excuse, one for an outdoor gathering and three for an indoor gathering.

A breakdown of the number of fines issued by North Yorkshire Police for lockdown breaches since January 12. Data: North Yorkshire Police.
Police issued 10 of the fines to visitors to the district; two were to local residents.
It comes as the force said it would be tougher enforcing lockdown restrictions and “no longer waste time” with covid rule breakers.
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Chief inspector Charlotte Bloxham said today it was disappointing to see the rise in fines.
She said:
“Many people do understand the seriousness of the situation and are staying at home and saving lives and I’ll say thank you to those people who make daily sacrifices to protect the vulnerable among us.
“However there is a stubborn minority who do not believe the rules apply to them and do not understand the risk they pose to themselves and the wider community.
“That is why when we encounter these people we will take enforcement action against them.”
Last week Superintendent Mike Walker said that the fear of lockdown needed to be restored for people to comply with restrictions.
He said there was less compliance and fear among people under current restrictions compared with the first lockdown last year, which saw streets empty and more businesses close.
Lockdown fear needs to be restored, says senior police officerFear needs to be put back into the public to bring coronavirus rates down during lockdown, the police officer leading North Yorkshire’s response to covid said yesterday.
Superintendent Mike Walker said there was less compliance and fear among people under current restrictions compared with the first lockdown last year, which saw streets empty and more businesses close.
His comments came after North Yorkshire Police said it will come down harder on covid rule breakers. The force also revealed it had issued 107 fines in the first week of the third lockdown — more than double the amount in the first week of the first lockdown.
Superintendent Walker told a meeting of the North Yorkshire Police, Fire and Crime Panel that the force has had to “put back that fear” into communities for them to understand the risk of flouting covid rules.
He said:
“Unfortunately, that fear needs to be put back into the public for them to understand there is a reason why this lockdown is here because of the rates, the excess deaths and the number of people going into hospital on a daily basis.
“Until we see the impact of the national lockdown, you will not see that curve flattening and going down again.
“It’s not ideal that we want to put fear into the communities, but they need to understand the risk that is associated to them.”
Superintendent Walker said the messaging was not scaremongering as the figures in the county are so high. Currently, the North Yorkshire seven-day covid rate is 380 people per 100,000.
He added it was “sad to see” a lack of compliance when North Yorkshire had some of the highest rates in all of Yorkshire.
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- North Yorkshire Police pledge to get tougher on covid rule breakers
Of the 107 fixed penalty notices issued in North Yorkshire during the third lockdown, 57 were to people from outside the county and 50 were to those living in the county. Harrogate police issued 10 fines.
Superintendent Walker said on Wednesday (January 13) officers would “no longer waste time” reasoning with people who flout the rules and “have no regard for the safety of others”.
Meanwhile, Julia Mulligan, North Yorkshire Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner, said the rules of the lockdown were clear.
She said:
Harrogate district trains and buses to run reduced timetable“The rules and regulations are already very clear but there is a significant minority who seem to think they don’t apply to them.
“The message is simple – stay at home apart from for very specific reasons. Those reasons do not include taking a day trip to North Yorkshire from elsewhere, or travelling to a different part of North Yorkshire if you live here.
“Exercise should be taken close to your home, not close to other people’s homes far from yours in communities who are doing all they can to stop the spread.”
Trains and buses in the Harrogate district are operating reduced timetables during the third national lockdown.
Northern announced yesterday it will begin its new timetable on Monday, with the company warning there will be fewer trains.
From Monday there will be 30 daily departures from Harrogate to Leeds on Monday to Friday, compared to 38 before the new timetable.
Tricia Williams, the chief operating officer at Northern, said:
“We will focus on delivering services during the morning and evening peaks so those who need to travel can get to where they’re needed and have the space to maintain social distancing.”
“We’re therefore calling on people to check carefully before they travel and behave responsibly on our trains.”
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The Harrogate Bus Company started its new timetable on Sunday and said it will run eight out of 10 journeys. The following applies:
(The 1) Harrogate to Knaresborough:
- Monday to Friday: Buses every 10 minutes daytime; evening every 20 minutes.
- Saturday: Buses every 20 minutes daytime; evening every 30 minutes.
- Sunday: Buses every 30 minutes daytime; evening every 60 minutes.
- On Saturday evening and all day on Sunday, buses will show route number 1 and follow a route in Knaresborough serving Aspin, Eastfield and Carmires.
(2A) Harrogate to Bilton and Dene Park:
- Monday to Friday: Buses every 20 minutes daytime; evening every 60 minutes.
- Saturday and Sunday: Buses every 60 minutes.
(2B) Harrogate to Bilton and The Knox:
- Monday to Friday: Buses every 60 minutes daytime only.
- Saturday and Sunday: Buses every 60 minutes.
(3) Harrogate to Jennyfield:
- Monday to Friday: Buses every 20 minutes daytime; evening buses every 60 minutes.
- Saturday: Buses every 30 minutes.
- Sunday: Buses every 60 minutes.
(6/X6) Harrogate to Pannal Ash:
- Monday to Friday: Buses every 45 minutes daytime only. X6 runs as normal.
- Saturday: Buses every 45 minutes.
- Sunday: Buses every 60 minutes.
(7) Harrogate to Wetherby and Leeds:
- Monday to Friday: Buses every 30 minutes Harrogate – Wetherby daytime, and every 60 minutes to/from Leeds; evening buses every 60 minutes.
- Saturday and Sunday: Buses every 60 minutes.
(36) Ripon to Harrogate and Leeds:
- Monday to Saturday: Buses every 15 minutes Harrogate – Leeds daytime, and every 30 minutes to/from Ripon; evening buses every 30 minutes.
- Sunday: Buses every 30 minutes Harrogate – Leeds, and every 60 minutes to/from Ripon.
The Harrogate Bus Company’s chief executive Alex Hornby said:
Teachers call for tighter key worker rules as schools under pressure“Our message to our customers is that we are still very much here for you – our buses are clean, safe and ready to go, just as they have always been throughout the pandemic.
“We know from experience that our buses provide a vital service for key workers and others who depend on us to reach essential shops and services.”
A schools leader in Harrogate has called for greater clarity on lockdown rules and guidance on who qualifies as a key worker as demand for classroom places remains high.
Richard Sheriff, CEO of the Red Kite Learning Trust (RKLT), said primary schools in particular have seen far more pupils attending in person than was the case in the first lockdown last year.
While he sympathised with parents trying to balance home schooling with work, he said the pressure on schools was significant – and could mean lockdown measures would not achieve the results needed for restrictions to be eased.
“There’s a big difference between what’s happening in secondary and primary schools. Although there’s some rise in secondary, it’s nothing like the increase in primary. This indicates it’s about the ability of parents to cope with younger children at home and carry on working, or going to work.”
The RKLT is a group of 13 schools, including five in the Harrogate district. As well as Harrogate Grammar School, there are four primaries: Coppice Valley, Oatlands Junior, Rossett Acre and Western. Other schools outside the group have also reported much higher attendance in the current lockdown than last year.
Mr Sheriff said headteachers generally knew which parents were key workers such as doctors, nurses, care workers and others. However, he said the government’s extensive list of jobs which qualify for key worker status meant many people could ask for their child to be given a place at school.
With most children being taught from home, he said teachers needed to spend significant time supporting online learning. However, the number of pupils in schools and the need to keep them in small bubbles was placing extra pressure on staff.
‘Goodwill of parents’
In some cases, headteachers have spoken to parents who had requested a place and found a way for the child to be kept at home. Mr Sheriff said:
“We’re managing with the goodwill of parents in not utilising that place. It’s parents’ goodwill towards schools that’s allowing us to continue to function.
“The pressure on primary teachers at the moment is really significant.”
He added:
“We have managed to talk to parents in a way that has got demand to a level we can meet. If there was significant change, if everybody sent children who could, it would be impossible. We would be swamped.”
Mr Sheriff said a review of what qualified as key worker status would help to ease the pressure, and would also help with enforcing lockdown measures. With so many children still in school, nurseries still open and cars on the roads, he said mixed messages were being sent, unlike in the first lockdown.
“This feels very different – almost that the schools are a signal to people about the level of activity. If schools were closed, the indication would be we lock up and stay home. Schools staying open is an indication, ‘it’s OK to be out and while I’m out, I’ll pop in to see so and so or have a chat at the school gates’.”
As well as reducing the number of jobs which qualified as key workers, Mr Sheriff said it would be helpful to have clearer guidance on the number of pupils who should be in schools. After the last lockdown, the government said 20% of students should be in at any one time, allowing schools to place limits on the number of pupils in their classrooms.
The RKLT, meanwhile, has prepared ways in which it could prioritise places in schools if needed. However, Mr Sheriff said with continued cooperation from parents and better guidance from the government, he hoped it would not be needed.
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‘We won’t abandon children’ on exams, says Harrogate headteacher
Harrogate Grammar School headteacher Neil Renton says the secondary school “won’t abandon children” as uncertainty on what will happen with GCSE and A-level grades continues.
Yesterday in Parliament, education secretary Gavin Williamson said that a form of teacher-assessed grades will be used in place of exams — but Mr Renton said schools are still awaiting clarity on how this will work in practice.
He said Year 11s and Year 13s in Harrogate are increasingly anxious about how they will be assessed,
“We need information very quickly as last year was a fiasco. Because this lockdown has come earlier than last year, we’ve got to do something to keep Year 11 and Year 13 children engaged in learning.
“We can’t just suddenly stop now and abandon them and just give them grades. We need to collect more information and teach them and finish GCSE and A-Level courses.
“The government needs to come out and give us real clarity on what evidence we will need to give them for their final grades.
“I really, really hope they base this on the information we’ve had from over two years of the course. Children have had so much disruption so we need more time to fully assess the level they’ve achieved.”
‘Chuffed to bits’
Mr Renton said the school is embracing online learning, with every pupil having access to the technology they need and the school maintaining the timetable, including live contact with teachers in each period. He said:
“This means that we’ve been able to protect their provision. We’ve been chuffed to bits with the feedback we’ve been receiving. Parents say it’s given the children structure and they’ve had that interaction with their teacher, which was harder to achieve in the first lockdown.
“Some people say it must be tiring for children to do six hours of Teams or Zoom lessons. We’re mindful of that so they are breaking off to do activities, speak to each other and talk to the teacher. It feels very similar to what they experience in school.”

Children at Harrrogate Grammar School playing in the snow on Friday.
After a heavily disrupted half term up to Christmas, with whole year groups having to self-isolate, a degree of certainty with lockdown has been welcomed. But staff and parents have been left to deal with last-minute announcements by the government, he said.
“The vast majority of the profession are really struggling because of the lateness of information and the number of U-turns by the government but I’ve been proud of our staff and community and how they’ve responded.”
On Friday, the school carried out its first lateral flow covid test, as they are rolled out across the country in an effort to identify asymptomatic cases and reduce transmission of the virus. Staff will begin being tested this week, after which students who are in school because their parents are key workers will be tested every week.

Testing for children began at Harrogate Grammar School today
While national reports suggest there have been many more students in school this time compared to the first lockdown, Mr Renton said the grammar school’s numbers were broadly the same, at around 50 to 60 students. However, he expects the number to rise as any students who are struggling at home are brought back in, and says staff are ready to support them.
Looking to the future, Mr Renton said the current challenges may result in better long-term teaching and learning, such as embracing more use of technology. He added:
“There has been a great kind of bonding. The behaviour in school was so good in September and children were so appreciative to back at school.
“We want there to be a long shadow from this experience and for it to have a positive impact in the future.”
