A village phone box has been saved after residents objected over concerns that it may be required for emergency use.
BT launched a consultation on a proposal to remove the red phone booth from Grantley, near Ripon, after it said there was sufficient mobile coverage in the area.
It planned to remove the phone box, along with two others in Bishop Monkton and Markington.
However, Grantley and Sawley Parish Council objected to the move over concerns that the village has a defibrillator which is used by residents and passing cyclists and walkers.
In a letter to BT, David Taylor, clerk of the parish council, said:
“The parish council supports a defibrillator in the village for the benefit of the local community and for walkers and cyclists who regularly pass through the village.
“It is absolutely essential that a reliable means of telecommunication exists in the event that the defibrillator unit requires deployment.
“Until there is a universal and reliable mobile telephone and broadband service in the area, the village are very much opposed to the de-commissioning and removal of the payphone.”
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As a result, Harrogate Borough Council objected to the removal of the phone box.
However, it has offered no objection to removing those on Boroughbridge Road in Bishop Monkton and High Street in Markington.
A BT spokesperson confirmed the booth would remain in place and added that the company was encouraging residents to adopt red phone boxes for community use.
The spokesperson said:
“With the vast majority of people now using mobile phones, it’s led to a huge drop in the number of calls made from pay phones. At the same time, mobile coverage has improved significantly in recent years due to investment in masts.
“There are many pay phones that see no calls made from them each month. So, we’re giving communities the chance to decide how best they can use their local phone box.
“We’ve consulted with Harrogate Borough Council on the proposed removal of three pay phones in the area. The council raised an objection to the removal of a payphone in Grantley, so the service will stay in place. We received no objection to the removal of two pay phones in Markington and Bishop Monkton.
“For iconic red kiosks, we’re encouraging communities or charities to adopt them for only £1, so they can transform them into things like lifesaving heart defibrillator units, or libraries. Communities can also adopt glass ones for defibrillators. More than 6,400 kiosks have been adopted already through our website, bt.com/adopt.”
Last year, BT Group announced plans to remove 32 inactive booths across the Harrogate district, 22 of which were built in the traditional red style.
Oatlands Community Group saved a disused red phone box on St Hilda’s Road from the scrapheap by turning it into a community library.
Markington woman suffers severe burns from oven cleanerA professional cleaner from Markington says she suffered severe burns from an oven cleaner readily available for anyone online.
Vicky Buck has been cleaning for nine years but last month was left shocked when a cleaning product burnt through her skin, deep enough to cut her nerves.
Ms Buck runs her own cleaning company in the district, Ultraviolet clean. She said it was the Vanquish Heavy Duty Oven Cleaner that burnt her.
Whilst wearing protective clothing Ms Buck said “less than a teaspoon” of product fell through the tongue of her shoe and left her with a 50p size burn on the side of her foot.
Her sock had fused to her skin and she will be permanently scarred. It had also burnt through her gloves but luckily her hands healed.
After speaking to doctors at Harrogate District Hospital she has been referred to a burns specialist.

This is the burn Ms Buck was left with after a small drop of oven cleaner dripped onto her skin.
The incident happened on April 16, a few days before her 45th birthday, since initial treatment Ms Buck returned to A&E today after continuous pain. The doctors dug out the remaining dead flesh in hopes it will heal faster.
She said it was “surreal and grim” watching them remove the black skin without being able to feel it due to nerve damage.
She said:
“The bottle says professional use only and I am professional that has taken courses on chemical products but it still burnt me. It shouldn’t be so easily available, how many people could this happen to?
People really need to get the professionals in to do this. It’s no more oven cleaning for me.”
She says she is sharing her story in hopes others will be hesitant when using cleaners
The product is still available online for around £9 via a large online seller. Ms Buck suggested a product such as this should only be available to those with a licence.
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Ms Buck says when it first happened she had to take a few days off work as it was so swollen she couldn’t put shoes on or use her car pedals.
Ms Buck is on a number of cleaning forums with other professionals often asking for advice on good products, she hopes that going public with her story will stop people buying the product so easily.
The product manufacturer, Clover Chemicals Ltd, had been approached for a comment but had not responded at the time of publication.
Markington shopkeeper overwhelmed by villagers’ birthday surprisesA popular shopkeeper who has gone the extra mile to help villagers during covid was flooded with presents on her 60th birthday today.
Lynn Raffle, who has owned Markington Post Office and General Store for seven years, said she was overwhelmed by the show of affection.
She told the Stray Ferret:
“I feel totally blessed. Balloons were hung outside the shop, I’ve received a portrait of my dog who died last year, I’ve been given Prosecco, a bracelet and six bouquets of flowers — it’s amazing.”
Karen Moss, who painted the portrait, said Ms Raffle had been the beating heart of the village, which is between Harrogate and Ripon, over the last 12 months:
“She has organised provisions for people who couldn’t go to the supermarket.
“She organised a group of volunteers to pick up prescriptions and do any other errands, she was there for whatever people needed.
“She’s a real unsung hero who looks out for everyone, she’s just a really lovely lady that needs to be recognised.”
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Another Markington resident, Meg Nelson, said:
“It always cheers me up popping in to get my bits and having a chat and a giggle with Lynn.
“Thank you for doing such an amazing job of providing us all with a shop and getting hold of anything people request during these hard times.”
Ms Raffle was a cook in the village school for 14 years before taking over the post office.
She works seven days a week, rising at 5.30am every weekday and being in the shop an hour later until 6.15pm at night. She joked:
“I get a lie-in until 6.30am on Sundays.”
The shop was built in 1846 as a chapel and has had many purposes since.
Many old features remain, including meat hooks from its time as a butcher’s shop. Ms Raffle said:
Cat shot in Markington ‘on the brink of death’“It’s been the best day ever. I can’t remember a day like it since I went on the Orient Express when I was 50.”
The RSPCA is appealing for information after a cat called Timmy was found with a shot wound on his shoulder in Markington.
RSPCA officers found the seven-year-old ginger tomcat in the village, which is between Ripon and Harrogate, after a resident alerted the animal welfare charity.
Timmy was rushed to the vets where an X-ray revealed an entry wound from a pellet had shattered his shoulder.
The cat had shrapnel all over his body, and the RSPCA said it was “lucky” the pieces missed his vital organs.
Timmy is now recovering well and the RSPCA has launched an investigation.
The vet believed the shot was fired by a shotgun at close range meaning “someone really wanted to hurt Timmy”.
RSPCA inspector Natalie Taylor said:
“This poor cat would have been in terrible pain from the gun wound. Poor Timmy was on the brink of death before the vets operated on his shoulder and saved him.
“His owners are understandably distraught, this was a callous and horrible act of cruelty against him.
“It is very distressing to think that people take pleasure in causing such horrific injuries to defenceless animals. These are deliberate and brutal acts of cruelty.”
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Ms Taylor said cats and wildlife were often victims of shootings because they are out in the open.
Airgun attacks are most commonly used but the shrapnel suggested a shotgun had been used in this case.
Anyone caught deliberately injuring an animal can face up to six months in prison. They could also be ordered to pay an unlimited fine, if found guilty under the Animal Welfare Act.
If you have any information you can call the RSPCA inspectorate appeal line on 0300 123 8018.
The Harrogate district’s top five covid hotspotsThere have been 633 covid infections recorded in the Harrogate district in the last seven days, according to government statistics.
The infection rate has rocketed over the last month and the current seven-day average rate is now 494 people per 100,000.
But there are considerable variations within the district.
The government breaks each district into smaller areas known as middle super output areas, each with a population of about 7,200 people.
According to the latest figures, the middle super output areas with the most current infections are central Harrogate and central Knaresborough.
The more rural Pateley Bridge and Nidd Valley, which has been consistently less affected throughout the pandemic, has the fewest current infections.
Most infections
1 Central Harrogate 76
2 Knaresborough Central 61
3 Harrogate West and Pannal 59
4 Killinghall and Hampsthwaite 53
5 Starbeck 47
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Fewest Infections
1 Pateley Bridge and Nidd Valley 13
2 Hookstone 17
3= Dishthorpe, Baldersby and Markington
3= Spofforth, Burn Bridge and Huby 19
5 Masham, Kirkby Malzeard and North Stainley 21