Harrogate Carnival is set to take place on Sunday, July 30.
The free event will begin with a street parade through the town centre before heading to Valley Gardens.
The attractions will include a troupe from Leeds West Indian Carnival and a dance stage with belly dancing.
First staged in 2019, the carnival is commissioned by Destination Harrogate, which is a tourism organisation run by North Yorkshire Council and produced by Harrogate International Festivals.
The event, which celebrates global diversity, costumes, sounds and flavours, will include music, dance, themed food zones, art and craft workshops and street theatre.
John McGivern, destination events manager at Destination Harrogate, said:
“This exciting and unique event is perfectly suited to the Valley Gardens, one of many fantastic event spaces that we’re fortunate to have here in Harrogate.
“Carnival will also draw visitors from further afield to join in the celebrations with our residents, with opportunity to boost our visitor economy and showcase the town as an amazing visitor destination.”
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Cllr Derek Bastiman, the council’s executive member for open to business, said:
“Carnival is a chance for our community to come together, embrace diversity and create lasting memories.”
The full programme will be announced closer to the date on the Harrogate International Festivals website for more information: https://harrogateinternationalfestivals.com/
The arts charity is seeking volunteers to take part in the carnival.
New housing scheme proposed in RiponA developer has submitted plans to build 14 new homes in Ripon.
Manchester-based Atzaro Box Clever Ltd has tabled the proposal to North Yorkshire Council for land off Athelstan Court.
It would see 14 new home build on land next to a former office building.
The office block, which stood empty for 10 years, has since had approval to be converted into 16 flats.

Designs for the new houses on Athelstan Court.
In documents submitted to the council, the developer said the move to build the new homes would be a “natural extension” to the newly approved flats.
It said:
“The council have since accepted a change of use for the conversion of Athelstan Court into residential apartments.
“The remainder of the site would therefore be a natural extension of the residential use across the full site.”
North Yorkshire Council will make a decision on the plan at a later date.
Read more:
- Pannal’s controversial ‘skyscraper’ begins to take shape
- Plan to convert Ripon office block into 16 flats approved
Harrogate district libraries will not ban or censor ‘offensive’ books
North Yorkshire Council has said it will not ban or censor books that readers find offensive in its libraries.
Novels have increasingly become tangled-up in the so-called culture wars, particularly in the United States where thousands of books have been banned in school and public libraries due to complaints about race or LGBTQ+ themes.
The trend has spread to the UK with research published this year by the UK’s library association, the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals, finding that requests to ban books in the UK have increased significantly in recent years.
Its survey of librarians reported a third have been asked by members of the public to censor or remove books and 82% said they were concerned about the increase in the requests.
But North Yorkshire Council, which runs libraries in the Harrogate district, has said it has only received one request to ban a book in the last five years.

Boroughbridge Community Library
The book in question was Hilary Bonner’s crime thriller Deadly Dance and the request related to graphic descriptions the reader found upsetting.
The council declined to remove the book on the grounds that it follows the approach of CILIP, which says access to information should not be restricted. Its guidance states:
“It is the role of a library and information service that is funded from the public purse to provide, as far as resources allow, access to all publicly available information. Access should not be restricted on any grounds except that of the law.”
The council added that its own policy does not permit the removal of any books at the request of an individual or group and that library staff do not label items to warn customers about potentially offensive or harmful content.
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Harrogate businessmen give council notice of Station Gateway legal action
Two Harrogate businessmen have given North Yorkshire Council notice that they intend to press ahead with a judicial review of the Harrogate Station Gateway scheme.
Chris Bentley, of Hornbeam Park Developments, and Dr Terry Bramall CBE have lodged the claim against the scheme.
The pair have concerns over the legality of the council’s consultation process over the gateway.
In a letter from solicitors Walton&Co sent to North Yorkshire Council and West Yorkshire Combined Authority, which are overseeing the project, they argue that the procedure for the gateway scheme was unlawful on six grounds.
It includes claims that the council failed to hold an inquiry on planned traffic regulation orders, that it carried out unlawful publicity of the orders, and that it acted “irrationally” when approving them before receiving funds for the project.
The letter also claims the council’s consultation was “unlawful” and that it failed to “take into account material considerations”, such as access to premises, when deciding to proceed with the gateway scheme.
Mr Bentley told the Stray Ferret previously that he felt the council had come up with “utopian ideas” and that the plan should be shelved.
He said:
“They just keep throwing the dice until they get the right answer. I think it should be shelved.
“There is so much other stuff that the town needs.”
Read more:
- Council spends £2m on consultants for Harrogate’s Station Gateway
- North Yorkshire councillors back £11.2m Harrogate Station Gateway project
Mr Bentley and Mr Bramall declined to comment further on the matter.
The Stray Ferret asked North Yorkshire Council whether it would be defending its position against the claims made.
In response, Karl Battersby, corporate director of environment at the council, said:
“We will be responding to the pre-action protocol letter, and we will look to defend our position should legal action be taken.”
The gateway project includes proposals such as the pedestrianisation of part of James Street and the reduction of a section of Station Parade to single lane traffic to encourage walking and cycling.
The scheme is still to receive final approval but won the backing of senior councillors in Northallerton at a meeting last month.
The predicted cost of the scheme is now £11.2m — a sum that has risen considerably from the £7.9m initially suggested by council.
Planning application submitted for new equestrian centre in Harrogate villageA planning application has been submitted for an equestrian centre in a Harrogate district village.
Zarina & Zarina Ltd, a real estate company based in Leeds, submitted an application on June 1 to North Yorkshire Council for an equestrian centre on Harrogate Road, Leathley.
The design and access document was submitted by Dart Engineers Ltd.The application site is currently agricultural land dedicated to equestrian use.
It states:
“It is bounded to the south by Harrogate Road with an existing access to the SE corner and buy agricultural land and residential properties.”

The site plan.
The development will comprise of a parking area with 20 spaces and an access road that will be widened to allow suitable two-way access.
The site would have a large stable block, an office block, a covered lunge pen, a winter turnout area, and a menage.
Lower Washburn Parish Council stated the application “will compromise the visual amenity” as well as suggesting the highway access could cause danger due to the “fast moving vehicles”.
The environmental health officer at North Yorkshire Council also noted several issues, including waste disposal and lack of flood lighting in the application.
The application is yet to be approved or denied, but a planning notice has been put up at the location.
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Stray Views: How long before there is an apology for Station Gateway?
Stray Views is a weekly column giving you the chance to have your say on issues affecting the Harrogate district. It is an opinion column and does not reflect the views of the Stray Ferret. Send your views to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk.
So, Sheffield City Council is sorry that its residents were “misrepresented as unrepresentative and primarily concerned with their own streets” (Sheffield Council issues apology over tree-felling scandal, The Guardian, 20 June).
How long, I wonder, before Harrogate Borough Council and North Yorkshire Council apologise for ignoring the representations from Harrogate residents and business community for going ahead with the Station Gateway Project and its anticipated devastation of our beautiful spa town.
Val Michie, Low Harrogate
Trees on Empress roundabout a hazard
I’m writing a letter regarding the greenery in the middle of the Empress roundabout. How on earth are drivers supposed to see what’s coming from across the Stray with a full leaved tree (or is it two trees) blocking their view.
From experience when I was a driver, I know just how difficult and dangerous trying to get across the roundabout can be. Have the council gone mad?
Will they finally act to take away the trees in the centre if and when (God forbid) someone is seriously hurt in an accident simply because they couldn’t see what was coming from all sides of the roundabout? It is simply ludicrous?
Carole Nowell, Harrogate
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Local government a mess long before devolution
Sir,
Lord Wallace of Saltaire claims that devolution in North Yorkshire has made local government an incoherent mess and destroyed local democracy. His words must have a hollow ring in towns and villages which were placed under Harrogate’s thumb in the last local government reorganisation dreamt up by some genius in Whitehall fifty years ago.
Where was local democracy when Harrogate’s recent Town Plan re-designated parts of the supposedly sacrosanct Green Belt between Harrogate and Knaresborough to accommodate illicit Traveller sites despite massive opposition from the people of Calcutt and close environs ?
Where is the coherence in the massive house building around Knaresborough, and indeed Harrogate itself, with no expansion of amenities other than the odd supermarket and the corresponding increase in commuter traffic being dumped onto already congested roads ?
As for the fantasy of Maltkiln, a sustainable village, it is the environmentally damaging creation of yet more commuting built around an antiquated railway and an inadequate main road and opens the way to further destruction of North Yorkshire’s green and pleasant land.
How can North Yorkshire do worse ? Heaven help us if it can.
Pete Dennis, Knaresborough
Masham councillor to hold public meeting on poor rural broadbandA Masham councillor is to host a public meeting to address broadband problems in rural areas of the district.
Liberal Democrat councillor for Masham and Fountains, Felicity Cunliffe-Lister, said she has worked closely with North Yorkshire Council to improve broadband around Ripon and Masham but many households and businesses still have slow connectivity.
CityFibre spent £46m in Harrogate, Knaresborough and Ripon last year but, despite this investment, many people in rural areas cannot get a superfast broadband connection.
The final phase of delivery from North Yorkshire Council-owned NYnet is due to end imminently. This means many rural residents and businesses who are still waiting for superfast broadband connection will be left without any solutions.
The persistent issues have lead Cllr Cunliffe-Lister to arrange the public meeting.
The council’s director of transformation, Robert Ling, will discuss how the final NYnet phase will be delivered, budget constraints, and whether any other funding options may be available to those who are not going to be connected.
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Project Gigabit, a £5 billion Government scheme aiming to implement superfast broadband into “hard-to-reach” communities, will also be discussed.
The scheme is yet to come to North Yorkshire but the councillor hopes “it might provide connection to those otherwise left behind at some point.”
Cllr Cunliffe-Lister said:
“The meeting is mainly for clarification of who will be covered by phase 4 more than anything else.”
All members of the Masham and Fountains ward are welcome to attend. The meeting will take place in Masham Town Hall at 6.30pm, on Wednesday, July 19.
‘Ripon did not want a Tory and now they have one’, claims councillorRipon councillor Andrew Williams has resigned from the North Yorkshire Independents group after forming a political alliance with the Conservatives.
Cllr Williams, who is also the leader of Ripon City Council, is one of three independents to have joined a new Conservatives and Independents Group.
The Conservatives announced the group on Friday, saying it had been formed “to secure the stable and sustainable governance of North Yorkshire Council” in the wake of the party losing its majority.
The Tories have 45 of 90 seats — precisely half — on North Yorkshire Council following Cllr Mike Jordan’s defection last month.
The new alliance will help them maintain control until the next local elections in 2027.
Cllr Williams was elected to represent Ripon Minster and Moorside on North Yorkshire Council in last year’s local elections with 1,453 votes. The Conservative candidate was third with 312 votes.

Cllr Stuart Parsons
He has yet to respond to questions about his decision from the Stray Ferret but Cllr Stuart Parsons, who leads the North Yorkshire Independents group, said Cllr Williams had resigned “very late on Thursday evening”.
He added:
“The new ‘Tory Group’ just shows what the Conservative Party will do to cling on to power.
“With just over 40% of the vote they still believe that they have a god-given right to rule. Their new name also sullies the use of the word ‘Independent’.
“When a city like Ripon, which had previously returned two Tories, sent their message to North Yorkshire Council it was with one Liberal Democrat and one Independent.
“Ripon quite clearly showed that they did not want a Tory and yet now they have one.”
Read more:
- Conservatives lose majority on North Yorkshire Council
- Ripon Independent councillor Andrew Williams joins Tory alliance
The other independents to join the new group are Cllr Caroline Goodrick, who represents Sheriff Hutton and Derwent and Cllr Robert Heseltine.
However, they are among seven unaffiliated independents whereas Cllr Williams was one of nine members of an Independents group.
Cllr Parsons echoed Lib Dem concerns about whether discussions between the Tories and independents involved using council resources for party political purposes.
He said:
In numbers: Harrogate town council consultation response“We will be monitoring very closely.”
Almost two-thirds of Harrogate residents who took part in the latest consultation have backed a Harrogate Town Council being set up next year.
Every household in what would become the Harrogate parish had the chance to take part in the consultation, which ran for nine weeks from March 2.
However there were only 1,698 responses to the consultation, which makes up 4.7% of eligble households.
We took a deeper look at the numbers to gauge how the public in Harrogate feels about more councillors and a new layer of local democracy being created.
‘We want a more local council’
There were 1,104 respondents (65.0%) who agreed with the recommendation to create a town council called Harrogate Town Council.
With repeated criticism of the new Northallerton-based North Yorkshire Council being too remote, there were 196 additional comments from people saying local representation and decision-making is needed in Harrogate.
Meanwhile, 36 respondents said a town council would be better equipped to look after Harrogate’s heritage and interests and would also be able to improve local services.
‘Waste of money’
Just a few months after the abolition of Harrogate Borough Council many questioned the need to set up a new council for the town.
There were 483 respondents (28%) who said they did not want one setting up.
It has not been confirmed what powers the new council would have but Harrogate households would be asked to pay between £40 and £60 on top of their council tax each year to pay for it.
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This led to 215 respondents saying they were against the proposal because it would be a “waste of money”.
One person said they wanted to see the return of Harrogate Borough Council instead.
Size of new council
North Yorkshire Council has recommended that each of the proposed 10 wards in Harrogate be represented by two councillors per ward, with the exception of Saltergate which would have one councillor, taking the total number of councillors to 19.
This is just under half the number of councillors of Harrogate Borough Council, which had 40 but covered the whole Harrogate district including Ripon and Knaresborough.

The areas in Harrogate which would fall under the new town council.
When asked about the size of the new council, 956 respondents (56%) said they were happy with the size whereas 501 (30%) were not and 241 (14%) were not sure.
Of those who disagreed with the size, 52 people commented that one councillor per ward would be a better arrangement for the new council.
Demographics of consultation
Perhaps unsurprisingly, the highest numbers of responses come from people aged 50 to 64 and 65 to 74.
There were just 37 responses from people in their 20s and 98 from people in their 30s, raising questions about how engaged younger people are in the process to create a town council.
North Yorkshire Council has proposed that the elections to the new council be held on May 2 next year for a reduced terms of three years, with ordinary elections taking place in 2027 and every four years thereafter.
A final decision to create a town council has not been made yet and a full meeting of North Yorkshire Council will debate the proposals later this year.
Businesses vote ‘yes’ to continue Harrogate BIDLocal firms have voted overwhelmingly in favour of continuing to fund Harrogate Business Improvement District for another five years.
About 450 town centre businesses were asked to vote on whether to pay a levy of 1.5% on top of their rateable value to fund the BID for a second term.
The result, announced last night, revealed 76% voted ‘yes’.
It means the organisation — one of more than 350 BIDs in the country set up to increase footfall by providing additional services to those run by councils — will continue until at least the next ballot in 2028.
Since it was founded in 2019, Harrogate BID has funded initiatives such as street cleaning, street art and entertainment and floral displays to make the town centre more welcoming.

Street ranger Chris Ashby is part of the BID team.
Its business plan for the new five-year term, which officially starts in January 2024, focuses on three objectives; pride in our town; a vibrant town and voice and vision.
Dan Siddle, the general manager of the Crown Hotel who chairs Harrogate BID, said:
“The past five years have been quite something. There is no doubt that since Harrogate BID launched, it has comprehensively delivered.
“I am confident that our new five-year business plan and streamlined objectives will help shape the town further over the years to come to ensure Harrogate thrives long into the future.”
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The now-defunct Harrogate Borough Council used its block vote to support the BID in the last ballot.
This time,, its successor North Yorkshire Council chose not to get involved so the vote was a purely business decision.
Harrogate BID manager Matthew Chapman said:
“The fact that businesses voted to retain the BID, without the backing of North Yorkshire Council makes it even more credible.
“Most BIDs have the backing of their local authority as part of the ballot process, which in our case would have added 12 per cent to the result – if nothing else this provides a true representation from the businesses within the BID area.”