Developers behind plans for a Knaresborough retirement home have been told to make the building smaller and move it further away from the River Nidd.
Harrogate Borough Council’s planning committee today deferred a decision on the proposals for 61 extra care apartments near Grimbald Bridge after continued concerns were raised over flooding and the impact on local health services.
This was despite the Environment Agency and flooding specialists at North Yorkshire County Council raising no objections.
The developers, Adlington Retirement Living, also said there is “no record” of the site flooding and have agreed to pay £40,000 to help fund expansions at GP surgeries in the area.
However, local people claim the River Nidd has overflowed at the site as recently as February.
Resident Steve Benn told a meeting today:
“Although pictures on the planning portal show the land dry, the debris on the bank indicates that the site has recently flooded.”
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Mr Benn also claimed there are photos of the site flooded, but council officers said they have not seen any evidence.
Kate Broadbank, case officer at the council, said:
“We haven’t received any verified information that contradicts the applicant’s information which states the river did not overtop its banks on the site in either historic events or more recently in February.
“Irrespective of what has happened in the past, both the Environment Agency and the Lead Local Flood Authority are satisfied that the application provides acceptable mitigation.”
‘Overload’ health services
The Wetherby Road development was refused last year before councillors voted for a deferral in March when the NHS North Yorkshire Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) lodged an objection.
The CCG previously said it was “extremely concerned” that another care facility in the area could “overload” local health services.
However, this objection has now been withdrawn after the £40,000 payment from the developers was agreed.
As well as this, Adlington Retirement Living have offered to pay for a new footpath connecting Grimbald Bridge as well as upgraded crossings after road safety concerns were raised by residents.
These proposals have been agreed in principle by highways officials at the county council.
‘It is too large’
Speaking at today’s meeting, Liberal Democrat councillor Pat Marsh said the retirement home amounted to “overdevelopment” of the site and that it should be reduced in size “considerably”. She said:
“It is the numbers that are being asked for on this site which are problematic.
“It is too large. If they want to do it, I would like to see them cut the numbers down considerably and move that building further away from the river.”
A revised application is now expected at a later date.
Fall in number of Harrogate hospital covid patientsThe Harrogate district has reported another 73 covid cases today, but the number of patients in hospital has fallen.
The district’s seven-day covid rate stands at 361 per 100,000 people, while the North Yorkshire average is 308 and the England rate is 287.
No further covid deaths have been reported at Harrogate District Hospital, according to latest NHS England figures.
It was revealed today that the number of covid patients at Harrogate hospital has fallen slightly.
As of yesterday, there were eight patients at the hospital – down from 11 at the same time last week. The fall has been mirrored across North Yorkshire where patient numbers have fallen by 10 to 122.
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The number of patients in intensive care, however, has gone up by six to 26.
The latest figures were provided by Amanda Bloor, accountable officer for the North Yorkshire Clinical Commissioning Group, who in an update to a meeting of North Yorkshire Local Resilience Forum today also said covid and flu vaccines would be key to minimising pressure on the NHS this winter.
She said:
Harrogate district set to get first covid vaccine injections next week“Winter is always the NHS’s busiest time of year and we expect that to be the same this year.
“In addition, there are still covid patients in our hospitals, we are working together to address the waiting lists which have arisen due to the pandemic and we also still have full covid measures in place.
“The flu vaccination programme is one of the ways we can help protect hospital capacity this winter by helping people stay healthy and well and out of hospital.
“We would like to see as many people as possible get the flu vaccination this winter and will share information through the months ahead to support people with this.”
The first covid vaccines in North Yorkshire will be injected at seven sites across the county next week, it was revealed today.
Amanda Bloor, accountable officer at North Yorkshire Clinical Commissioning Group, gave the news everyone has been waiting to hear at a weekly media briefing of North Yorkshire Local Resilience Forum, which represents all the organisations in the county responding to the pandemic.
Ms Bloor said the sites had been identified but did not reveal where they are.
She said the CCG, which buys medical services for the county, will provide further details when they are finalised.
Ms Bloor described the programme as a “logistical challenge”, but added that it was “fantastic news” that patients were starting to get the vaccine across the country.
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Planning for the vaccination programme is taking place on a regional level, including East Yorkshire, Hull and North Lincolnshire.
People included in the highest priority category, including those aged over 80 and front line NHS staff, will be the first to be offered the jab.
Ms Bloor said she anticipated that more sites will offer the vaccine in the coming weeks.
She said:
“We are currently in final planning for seven sites across North Yorkshire and York to people in North Yorkshire and York from next week.
“I do anticipate that more sites will come on stream in the following weeks and into the New Year.”
It comes as the first coronavirus vaccines were dispatched to 50 hospitals in the UK as the country embarks on the biggest vaccination programme in British history.
Each hospital received a batch of 975 doses. Leeds Teaching Hospitals Trust, which runs St James’s University Hospital, is the closest to offer the vaccine to Harrogate.
Sylvia Harris, an 80-year-old NHS healthcare worker who joined the trust when she was 26, was the first to receive the jab in the city yesterday.