Questions have been raised over whether the planning process is democratic after a controversial housing application in Harrogate was deferred for a third time.
The 53-home proposal for Knox Lane was discussed at a planning committee meeting at the end of May, but councillors were told this week that residents were unhappy about the way it had been conducted.
The plans were recommended for approval, but councillors did not follow planning officers’ advice.
Instead they voted to defer it again because the developer, Jomast, had not carried out the land contamination report requested at the last meeting.
This week, nearby resident Adele Laura Wilson asked North Yorkshire Council‘s Harrogate and Knaresborough area constituency committee why the report had been brought to the planning committee again by officers when the requested information was still not available.
She also said a motion was put forward at the meeting to reject the application, but officers advised them they needed to have planning reasons for turning the plans down otherwise the decision would be overturned at appeal, with costs to the council.
Ms Wilson added:
“That motion was not allowed to be voted on. This surely is in contravention of the democratic process.”
She also said incorrect information was given to the committee about the site, which an officer said was only partially in a special landscape area (SLA). The whole site was in fact part of the SLA, Ms Wilson said, but there was no opportunity for this to be corrected during the planning meeting.
She said:
“I would ask this committee to consider if the current planning committee is being given the powers to truly consider and question planning applications or are they redundant? And are planning applications being decided by just the planning officers and the solicitors?”
Read more:
- Controversial Knox Lane 53-homes plan deferred for third time
- Plans approved for Kingsley Road and Tesco — but Knox Lane decision deferred
Resident Alison Hayward said she was addressing Thursday’s area constituency committee on behalf of residents in Knox and Bilton, who were “extremely disappointed and outraged” by the situation.
Ms Hayward said:
“We believe that it was unconstitutional and contrary to the principles of fair representation of the community.
“Although we are disappointed in the result [of the vote to defer the application again], this statement is relating to the process of the meeting rather than that result.
“We ask this constituency meeting to reflect on the failures and the conduct of the planning meeting and consider how to correct the injustice to the local community and democracy.”
She said the meeting had been held during the half-term holidays, when fewer local people were available to attend.
Ms Hayward also raised concerns about the fact the planning meeting had not been streamed live, as it would usually be, because of “technical problems” on the day. She said this meant there was no “proper record” of the meeting, as the minutes did not record everything discussed.
In a statement read by clerk Mark Codman, NYC’s legal, planning and democratic services departments responded:
“The council does apologise for the lack of a live stream. The issue was only discovered on the morning of the meeting and it couldn’t be resolved.”
The statement said there was no legal requirement for a meeting to be recorded and minutes were never verbatim. Live streaming was only introduced in Harrogate during the covid pandemic, and was not used for all meetings across North Yorkshire.
The statement also said:
“It was made clear to members of the committee that they were free to vote in whichever way they wanted, but were advised of the implications of their choosing to do so on the basis of inadequate material planning reasons.”
FoI reveals Harrogate council spent nearly £3,000 on booze for staff party
Harrogate Borough Council spent almost £3,000 of taxpayers’ money on booze for a staff party, a Freedom of Information request has revealed.
The party was held to mark the abolition of the council at the end of March — even though nearly all staff transferred to the new North Yorkshire Council the following day on the same terms.
The Stray Ferret reported last month the party cost £14,910. But a full breakdown of the costs, including the amount spent on alcohol, was not known.
The FoI has now revealed the costs included £1,438 on beer, cider and lager, £630 on wine and £587 on spirits. Just £376 was spent on soft drinks.
The council also spent £4,745 on food, £450 on a DJ, £765 on event staff and £302 on decorations. A further £5,556 went on technical equipment for the event, which was held at the council-owned Harrogate Convention Centre on February 23.

The party was held at Harrogate Convention Centre.
The Stray Ferret was alerted to the party by an unnamed source who said they were “appalled, disgusted and downright annoyed that this amount was spent without the prior knowledge and consent of the people paying for it”.
Conor Holohan, media campaign manager of the pressure group the TaxPayers’ Alliance, added:
“Taxpayers will be shocked to find they were funding parties for council staff.
“While residents were struggling with the cost of living crisis, town hall officials were charging them for dinner and drinks.”
Final day parties
Seven district councils and North Yorkshire County Council were abolished on March 31 to make way for the new North Yorkshire Council.
Harrogate Borough Council’s final day staff party cost the most.
Scarborough was the next highest, spending £9,004, followed by Hambleton at £3,783. Ryedale awarded staff a £148 bonus and spent £3,001 on a party. North Yorkshire County Council did not spend anything.
Staff from the district councils, except the chief executives and a handful of others, transferred to North Yorkshire Council on April 1. It said in a statement:
“The new council for North Yorkshire did not play any part in sanctioning or organising any parties.
“For any further comment you will need to ask the district and borough council decision-makers who were in place at those councils at the time.”
Former Harrogate Borough Council leader Richard Cooper has declined to comment on council business since the authority was abolished.
Read more:
- Harrogate Borough Council spent £15,000 on staff leaving party
- Brew Bar owner opens new Harrogate coffee shop
Crowdfunder launched to keep Knaresborough partying
A crowdfunding campaign has been launched to enable Knaresborough to stage free annual parties in the grounds of the town’s castle.
Party in the Castle will feature a live big screen broadcast of the Glastonbury festival on June 24. People are invited to turn up with a picnic and enjoy the sounds of the likes of Guns N’ Roses, Lizzo and Lewis Capaldi.
Organisers Knaresborough and District Chamber hopes the event will have a similar vibe — and good weather — to the free coronation party at the castle last month.
Chamber member Kelly Young said it will hopefully become an annual event. But she added although entry is free, funds need to be raised for the big screen and to cover other costs such as first aid and insurance.
The crowdfunder therefore aims to raise £2,000 and has already achieved about £1,400. Any surplus will be used on future events.
Cllr Hannah Gostlow, who represents Knaresborough East on North Yorkshire Council, has also applied to the council to allocate £2,500 of her Locality budget on the event. Each councillor receives an annual Locality budget of £10,000 to spend locally.
Party in the Castle will take place from 5pm to 11pm. Anyone wishing to support the crowdfunder can do so here.
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- Knaresborough’s Conyngham Hall to hold outdoor Pink Floyd classical concert
- Knaresborough’s ex-crime commissioner sells marketing firm
Call for speed bumps on Pateley Bridge High Street
Pateley Bridge Town Council is to investigate the possibility of installing speed bumps on High Street following a complaint by a resident.
The unnamed resident, who lives on Kings Court, wrote to the council calling for speed bumps at the top and bottom of the narrow street.
They said it would deter “speeding cyclists, motorbikes and boy racers”.
At their monthly meeting last night, town councillors agreed to look into the idea, although any final decision would be taken by North Yorkshire Council, which is the highways authority.
Andrew Murday, who is a town councillor and also the Liberal Democrat councillor for Pateley Bridge and Nidderdale on North Yorkshire Council, said he would look into the criteria for allowing speed bumps.
Cllr Mike Holt said the issue of speeding on High Street, which cyclists approach downhill in all directions, had been debated many times and speed bumps were the only realistic option, although he added the faded double yellow lines could be re-painted.
Cllr Neil Thompson said illegal parking on the street was the main problem, although it was mentioned that disabled people with Blue Badges were entitled to park on double yellow lines for up to three hours and this had to be taken into account.
Councillors agreed to consult on the idea before contacting North Yorkshire Council if the idea was viable.
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- Second arrest in Pateley Bridge petrol station attempted arson
- Yemi’s Food Stories: Perfect pies in Pateley Bridge
Plan for new cafe on Harrogate’s Cambridge Street
A plan has been submitted to open a new cafe on Harrogate’s Cambridge Street.
The proposal, which has been submitted by Doncaster-based Imyco Construction Ltd, would see the cafe created next to beauty and toiletries shop Bodycare in the town centre.
The allocated space is currently a staircase, which has been “mothballed”, according to planning documents.
The cafe would be situated on the ground floor and be accessed from Cambridge Street.
Further details on the cafe, including name and opening hours, have yet to be revealed.
North Yorkshire Council will make a decision on the proposal at a later date.
The site is currently subject to plans for 14 new apartments above the planned cafe and Bodycare.
The proposal, which was approved in June 2020, will see the first floor of the building converted into accommodation.
Read more:
- Plan approved to convert former Cold Bath Road shop into bar and cafe
- Knaresborough’s ex-crime commissioner sells marketing firm
- Revived Farmison fully reopens Ripon shop
Call for North Yorkshire police commissioner to resign rejected
A move to press North Yorkshire’s police commissioner to resign, amid claims she has failed in her duty to hold the force’s leadership to account, appears to have been swept aside.
The opposition leader on North Yorkshire Council, Cllr Bryn Griffiths, told a meeting of the authority’s corporate and partnerships scrutiny committee he had issued the notice of motion after hearing Conservative commissioner Zoe Metcalfe’s response to a highly critical inspection of the force.
The Liberal Democrat leader said his Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire and Rescue Services re-inspection of how the force keeps children safe took place about a year after Mrs Metcalfe was elected as commissioner and that she had ample time to recognise and start tackling some of the issues.
After the report found 14 of the force’s child protection cases were inadequate and eight required improvement, Mrs Metcalfe said the force had “let the public and the most vulnerable in our society down”.
In a 1,650-word letter to the committee, Mrs Metcalfe said her “activity is aimed at robustly scrutinising and driving assurance on behalf of the public, to see to it that North Yorkshire Police continues its journey to being exemplary”.
She added she would submit a report to highlight her actions to North Yorkshire and York’s police, fire and crime panel, for its consideration on June 21.
However, Cllr Griffiths said the motion was not political, but rather “a failing by the admiral of the fleet, for not keeping control of the captain running the ship”.
He said while the commissioner had spoken of her “surprise” about the report’s findings, it appeared Mrs Metcalfe did not know “what was going on in her own patch”.
Cllr Griffiths said:
“She was monitoring, she wasn’t managing, she was not in charge of direction for her captain, the chief constable. If oversight had been under control she would have known what was going on and she would have been asking the right questions to the right people.
“This police, fire and crime commissioner has not been doing their job.”
Read more:
- Crime commissioner’s office to move to Harrogate Police Station
- North Yorkshire Police ‘still needs to improve’ on child safeguarding, say inspectors
Other councillors questioned the commissioner’s performance and whether she had held the force’s senior officers to account sufficiently.
Independent councillor for Hunmanby and Sherburn, Michelle Donohue Moncrieff, said the motion represented “a very tempting but simplistic answer”, but it was the police’s leadership, rather than solely the commissioner, who needed to be held to account.
She added:
“Bearing in mind even if the commissioner did resign, we are running down the clock towards a mayoral combined authority, what net benefit would there be in having a by-election?
“I sometimes feel that she is representing the force to us, rather than us to the force. Some of the things in that report are not acceptable at any level. They need resolving now.”
Conservative colleagues of Mrs Metcalfe highlighted the commissioner was “not the manager of North Yorkshire Police”, but rather was “the public voice” who had “elected oversight” of the force.
Former police officer Cllr Malcolm Taylor called for the committee to take no further action, saying the right body to deal with the matter was the police, fire and crime panel, and instead the commissioner be invited to address the serious issues highlighted in the report with the committee.
Describing the motion as “wrong-headed” and misguided, another former police officer, Cllr Tim Grogan, said the proposal had wasted the time of the committee.
Ahead of a vote to call the force’s chief constable, Lisa Winward, to answer councillors’ questions, Cllr Grogan said the commissioner had turned around the persistent issue of long waiting times for the non-emergency police phone line and if she dealt with the child protection issues as robustly he had every confidence in her.
Developer resubmits plan to build 13 homes on former Ripon timber yardA developer has resubmitted plans to build new homes on a former Ripon timber yard.
Red Tree Developments wants to demolish the buildings on the former NY Timber site off Trinity Lane and replace them with houses.
The site was home to a timber yard from 1860 to 2018.
The fresh plans would see 13 two-storey, two- and three-bedroom homes built.
A government planning inspector rejected a similar plan by Red Tree last month over concerns that the scheme did not have sufficient ground investigations and about the impact on nearby heritage assets.
However, in documents submitted to North Yorkshire Council, the developer says the new application addresses the reasons given for refusing the previous plan.
The developer said:
“The 13 proposed dwellings are all designed as two-storey dwellings, mostly with rooms in the roof and will have no adverse visual impact upon views from any angle in the area. The scale of the proposed dwellings is entirely appropriate within the context.”
Read more:
- Developer appeals refusal of 13-home Ripon scheme
- Government rejects 13-home plan on former Ripon timber yard
Red Tree bought the 0.64-acre plot, which is adjacent to the listed buildings, Holy Trinity Church of England Junior School and St Wilfrid’s Catholic Church, from Cairngorm Capital for an undisclosed sum in 2020.
In a previous planning application, the developer said the timber yard, which is not listed, must be replaced due to its “poor state of repair”.
North Yorkshire Council will make a decision on the proposal at a later date.
Harrogate village bridge set for lengthy closureA Harrogate village bridge looks set to be closed to traffic for a long time after a large crack appeared.
North Yorkshire Council closed the bridge on Church Lane in Hampsthwaite suddenly and without warning on Friday.
It acted after a two-inch wide gap appeared at the side of the bridge, prompting safety concerns. It was possible to look through the gap and see the River Nidd.
In an update today the council said 15 metres of the parapet, which is the safety barrier, on the damaged side of the wall needed to be rebuilt.
No timescale or cost was given but the scale of the work indicates long-term closure is likely.
The update did, however, say plans were being drawn up for pedestrians to use the undamaged side of the bridge, which joins Hampsthwaite and Clint.

The crack in the bridge
It is not yet known if cyclists will be permitted to cross.
The cause of the problem remains unknown.
The statement said:
“Following an onsite assessment by engineers we are able to confirm that the parapet has been pushed out over the edge of the bridge deck and this has damaged several of the corbels that support from beneath.
“These need to be repaired and 15 metres of the parapet taken down and rebuilt using hot lime mortar.
“The bridge will remain closed to traffic – due to ongoing safety concerns and the fact the bridge is narrow – until the repairs can be completed. Engineers are working on a scheme and aiming to get contractors on site to start them in July.
“Plans are currently being drawn up to open a section across the bridge, on the opposite side to the damaged parapet, to allow safe crossing for pedestrians.”
Read more:
- Bridge near Harrogate closes suddenly after crack appears
- Harewood Bridge to be closed for repairs for four weeks
See where your councillor spent their locality budget
North Yorkshire Council has revealed the spend for councillor’s locality budgets for the last financial year.
Each councillor on the authority is given a budget of £10,000 to spend in the area they represent.
The money is spent on small schemes which “promote the social, economic or environmental wellbeing of the communities they represent”.
This can include items for local charities, maintaining public footpaths and cleaning memorials or attractions.
Projects and activities can include services provided by the council provided that these are additional to normal service levels and do not create an ongoing expenditure commitment for the council
Here is a breakdown on what councillors in the Harrogate district spent in the last financial year.
Cllr Chris Aldred – High Harrogate and Kingsley
£2,000 Provision of essential items for the Winter Warmth Project / Harrogate District Foodbank
£1,000 Fund the purchase and planting of new trees on the Stray in Harrogate / Harrogate Borough Council Parks and Environmental Services
£750 Fund the children’s visit and travel costs to the Elf Village in Harrogate / Grove Road Community Primary School
£2,000 Purchase and installation of LED lighting at Harrogate Community House / Harrogate & District Community Action
£3,000 Provide a contribution towards the creation of the sensory garden / Harrogate Neighbours
£1,250 Fund the Willow workshop, Willow planting and pond development at the school / Northern Star Academies Trust at Harrogate High School
Cllr Margaret Atkinson – Masham and Fountains
£1,090 Fund the rent increase and purchase of projector and trolley / Harrogate and District Community Action (HADCA).
Cllr Atkinson died last year while serving as a councillor
Cllr Philip Broadbank – Fairfax and Starbeck
£5,000 Fund phase two of new playground equipment at the school / Willow Tree School Parent Teachers Association.
£5,000 Fund the replacing of the door to the ground floor side entrance at Harrogate Community House / Harrogate and District Community Action (HADCA).
Cllr Barbara Brodigan – Ripon Ure Bank and Spa
£1,195 Purchase of tools, equipment and a customised picnic bench / Ripon Community Link.
£500 Fund the cutting of the grass verges and planting flowering bulbs along Ripon by-pass / Ripon Rotary Club.
£500 Fund the venue hire and equipment for the 5th Poetry Festival in Ripon / Ripon Poetry Festival £1,000 Fund the provision of financial literacy advice and guidance for the community hub / Ripon Community House.
£2,500 Fund the services of a youth leader at the drop-in sessions / Ripon YMCA.
£1,000 Fund the materials for children’s workshops and activities in Ripon Library / Ripon Theatre Festival.
£1,000 Fund the wool and fixings for the knitted displays around Ripon / Ripon Community Poppy Project.
£1,009 Purchase of a digital printer for the students / Evolve.
Read more:
- Axed bus service for Ripon and Masham cost £15.57 per passenger
- Masham council explores measures to prevent traveller camps
- MPs Watch: River Nidd and King Charles coronation
Cllr Nick Brown – Wathvale and Bishop Monkton
£2,000 Provision of a traffic management scheme with a 40mph speed limit in Cundall Village / Cundall and Norton le Clay Parish Council.
£2,000 Purchase and installation of a VAS for Sharow Village / Sharow Parish Council.
£1,500 Fund the purchase of materials and equipment for the creation of a Garden of Sanctuary/Bishop Monkton CE Primary School.
£312.50 Purchase of food, refreshments, prizes and decorations for the village community Coronation event / Marton Le Moor Parish Council.
£312.50 Purchase of food, refreshments, prizes and decorations for the village community Coronation event / Hewick and Hutton Parish Council.
£312.50 Purchase of food, refreshments, prizes and decorations for the village community Coronation event / Roecliffe and Westwick Parish Council.
£312.50 Purchase of food, refreshments, prizes and decorations for the village community Coronation event / Wath and Norton Conyers Parish Council.
£312.50 Purchase of food, refreshments, prizes and decorations for the village community Coronation event / North Stainley with Sleningford Parish Council.
£312.50 Purchase of food, refreshments, prizes and decorations for the village community Coronation event / Cundall and Norton Le Clay Parish Council.
£312.50 Purchase of food, refreshments, prizes and decorations for the village community Coronation event / Langthorpe Parish Council.
£312.50 Purchase of food, refreshments, prizes and decorations for the village community Coronation event / Rainton with Newby Parish Council.

Councillor Sam Gibbs (centre) at the installation of tree lights in Harrogate
Cllr Sam Gibbs – Valley Gardens and Central Harrogate
£1,500 Fund the coach hire for the ladies’ team away games / Harrogate Rugby Club.
£3,000 Fund the materials to carry out building and plumbing repairs and install LED lights / Harrogate and District Community Action (HADCA).
£4,000 Purchase and installation of ‘ball catch’ netting and a rope barrier / Harrogate Pythons RUFC £1,500 Fund the Pikorua sculpture in the New Zealand Garden in the Valley Gardens in Harrogate /Harrogate International Partnerships.
Cllr Hannah Gostlow – Knaresborough East
£1,000 Provision of weekly food supplies from Fareshare / Resurrected Bites.
£1,000 Fund the staffing costs for the kiosk at Conyngham Hall / Chain Lane Community Hub. £1,250 Fund the purchase of a replacement cooker for the Wellbeing Hub’s kitchen /Knaresborough Wellbeing Hub.
£750 Provision of funding for the festive tea party, catering and Christmas project / Knaresborough Lions Club.
£1,000 Fund the purchase of replacement benches for Jacob Smith Park, Knaresborough / Friends of Jacob Smith Park.
£1,500 Fund the support for the running costs of the Junior Youth Club / Inspire Youth Yorkshire. £1,000 Installation of a defibrillator and cabinet in Old Scriven Village, Knaresborough / Scriven Parish Council.
£2,500 Provision of 4 Vehicle Activated Speed signs for Knaresborough / Knaresborough Town Council.
Cllr Michael Harrison – Killinghall, Hampsthwaite and Saltergate
£500 Purchase of reusable plastic glasses for the event in July / Hampsthwaite Feast.
£1,000 Fund the restoration of the flagpole at the village church / Hampsthwaite PCC.
£1,160 Fund the improvements to PROW 15.65/18/1 at Crag Lane Killinghall to improve safety and accessibility / NYCC PRoW.
£1,340 Provide a contribution to the operational costs of the No 24 Winter Bus Service / Dales & Bowland Community Interest Co.
£750 Fund the preparation of drawings for the expansion project / Hampsthwaite Memorial Hall.
£300 Fund a contribution to the running costs and white goods replacement / Hampsthwaite Village Room.
£3,950 Fund the resurfacing of the public footpath in the churchyard forming the Medieval Way/Hampsthwaite – Thomas a Becket Church.
£500 Fund a contribution to the cost of various potential initiatives in the parish / Killinghall Parish Council.
£500 Fund a contribution to the cost of the digital champion / Nidderdale Plus Community Hub.

Bilton and Woodfield Community Library
Cllr Paul Haslam – Bilton and Nidd Gorge
£2,558 Fund the room hire and volunteer costs for the weekly support group / New Beginnings.£3,438 Provide a contribution to the running costs of New Park Grocery / New Park Resurrected Bites.
£749 Fund the purchase of essential cleaning products and accessories for the River Nidd water improvement project / Bilton Conservation Group.
£750 Fund 6 months of rent for Dean Park Community Group / St Johns Church Bilton.
£345 Purchase a replacement folding table and banner for the library / Bilton and Woodfield Library.
£2,160 Purchase fleeces for the volunteers and 2 months fresh fruit & veg / Harrogate Foodbank.
Cllr Peter Lacy – Coppice Valley and Duchy
£1,500 Purchase soft furnishings and equipment for the ‘Warm & Well’ space / Coppice Valley Primary School.
£1,500 Fund the Pikorua sculpture in the New Zealand Garden in the Valley Gardens in Harrogate /Harrogate International Partnerships.
£1,500 Fund the trip to Harrogate Theatre for pupils to see the pantomime / Coppice Valley Primary School.
£1,000 Purchase a vehicle activated sign for the village / Duchy Residents Association.
£2,960 Purchase of furniture and fittings for Birk Crag Girl Guiding Centre / Birk Crag Girl Guiding Centre.
£982 Fund the plants, materials and labour for the Bog Garden at Coppice Valley Primary School / Horticap Nursery.
£558 Fund the cost of converting Harrogate Community House to high quality LED lighting with individual controls / Harrogate & District Community Action.
Cllr John Mann – Oatlands and Pannal
£1,000 Fund the WOW walk to school scheme / Oatlands Infant and Junior Schools.
£4,000 Funding of the general running costs for Oatlands Community Centre / The Trustees of Oatlands Community Centre CIO.
£1,500 Purchase and installation of a commemorative bench for Queen Elizabeth II / Pannal and Burn Bridge Parish Council.
£3,500 Fund the re-furbishment, replacing and provision of additional lights within the 7-8 trees on the Green / Pannal and Burn Bridge Parish Council.
Cllr Pat Marsh – Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone
£300 Purchase of training balls and match balls, with any remainder put towards coach transport to away matches / Harrogate Rugby Club.
£500 Fund the minibus hire and activities to support people with Dementia / Dementia Forward.
£300 Purchase of gardening equipment for junior school children / Hookstone Chase Primary School £380 Purchase a speed radar gun / The Langcliffe Community Group.
£1,000 Fund the WOW walk to school scheme / Oatlands Infant and Junior Schools.
£2,000 Fund the purchase and installation of LED lighting at Harrogate Community House / Harrogate & Area Council for Voluntary Service Ltd.
£500 Fund the heating costs for the Warm Wednesday community club / Oatlands Community Group.
Cllr Andrew Murday – Pateley Bridge and Nidderdale
£1,500 Fund the co-ordination of the community transport service/Nidd Plus Partnership.
£750 Fund the accommodation, transport, catering, tutors’ fees, venue hire, music purchase and hire for the winter residential course / Vacation Chamber Orchestras (VaCO).
£1,500 Fund the winter Sunday service on bus route 24 between Harrogate and Pateley Bridge/Dales & Bowland Community Interest Co.
£1,000 Purchase and installation of a servery with disabled access in the foyer of the Playhouse/Pateley Bridge Dramatic Society.
£725 Purchase of materials to enclose the kitchen in the workshop / Nidderdale and Pateley Bridge Men’s Shed CIO.
£1,000 Fund the purchase of materials for the redecoration of the Pateley Playhouse / Pateley Bridge Dramatic Society.
£1,000 Fund the maintenance of the Christmas lights / Pateley Bridge Town Council.
£1,000 Fund the resurfacing of the courts at Dacre Tennis Club / Dacre Tennis Club.
£1,000 Purchase a replacement oven for the village hall kitchen / Dacre and Hartwith Village Hall.£525 Fund a contribution towards the Digital Champion Coordinator’s salary / Nidderdale Plus Community Hub.
Cllr Andrew Paraskos – Spofforth with Lower Wharfedale & Tockwith
£300 To purchase a replacement battery for the defibrillator / Wighill Parish Council
£1,000 Fund the materials and hire of the petting farm for the show / Tockwith and District Agricultural Society.
£500 Fund the printing of the parish and village Christmas edition of the magazine / The Church of the Epiphany.
£300 Provision of an ice cream van for the pupils on the last day of term / Tockwith CE Primary School.
£1,000 Fund the replacement and installation of new equipment for the play area / Kirkby Overblow Summer Arts Festival.
£300 Fund the coach hire for the ladies’ team away games / Harrogate Rugby Club.
£400 Fund the purchase of a Christmas tree and refreshments for the carol service / Kirk Deighton Parish Council.
£1,000 Purchase and install a second defibrillator at the other end of the village / Kirk Deighton Parish Council.
£300 Fund the room hire for the weekly sewing and chatting club / The Crafty Hens.
£800 Purchase and install a new notice board for the village / North Deighton Parish Council.
£300 Fund the production and printing of the by-monthly parish magazine / Wighill Parish Council. £300 Purchase of food for the Christmas Party / Tockwith Community Hub.
£1,000 Purchase and installation of a white gate on the verge next to the highway / Sicklinghall Parish Council.
£1,000 Purchase and install a new defibrillator / Little Ribston Village Hall Committee.
£500 Fund the purchase of a new bench for Follifield Play Area / Follifoot Parish Council.
£1,000 Fund the installation of a new bench / Tockwith with Wilstrop Parish Council.

Rossett Acre Primary School
Cllr Michael Schofield – Harlow & St Georges
£450.99 Purchase a hammer drill, dummy CCTV camera, promotion table, cloth and printing / Harrogate and District Community Action (HADCA).
£875 Purchase 6 copies of each of the Phase 2 Phonics Books so to provide “Guided Reading” in Reception / Rossett Acre Primary School.
£1,500 Fund the swimming for the pupils at the school / Rossett Acre Primary School.
£5,000 Fund the installation of strengthened glass on the balcony at Harrogate Cricket Club / Little Crickets Nursery.
£400 Purchase sensory equipment to aid in the development of children at the nursery / Little Crickets Nursery.
£750 Funding the Green Elf production for the children to educate them on and around ecological issues / Rossett Acre Primary School.
£1,024.01 Fund the Year 6 pupils’ residential trip to East Barnby / Rossett Acre Primary School.
Cllr Monika Slater – Bilton Grange & New Park
£1,872.84 Purchase equipment for the polycom system to evolve the digital activities / Open Country .
£476 Fund the van hire and fuel for the Jamboree trip / 16th Harrogate Club Scout Group.
£5,000 To extend the footpath from Redhill Road up to the corner of Knox Avenue / NYCC Highways.
£302 Fund the purchase of a wheelchair ramp and kitchen equipment for the Big Breakfasts / Bilton Community Centre.
£1,500 Purchase of 13 new mattresses / Harrogate Homeless Project.
£849.16 Fund the purchase of 3 x eDNA bacteria testing kits from Nature Metric / Bilton Conservation Group.
Cllr Matt Walker – Knaresborough West
£2,000 Fund the printing costs of the Harrogate District Breakfree Pack / Open Country.
£500 Fund the purchase of a lawn mower cartridge to rake the grass / Crown Green Bowling Club.
£1,000 Fund the purchase of flags and bunting for the Arts Trail and Entertainment / FEVA.
£500 Purchase of garden supplies for the creation of the community garden at Conyngham Hall/Knaresborough Connectors.
£1,000 Provision of weekly food supplies from Fareshare / Resurrected Bites
£1,000 Fund the purchase of replacement benches for Jacob Smith Park, Knaresborough / Friends of Jacob Smith Park.
£1,000 Purchase a new cooker, hood and extractor fan for the Scout Hut / 1st Knaresborough Scout Group.
£2,500 Provision of 4 Vehicle Activated Speed signs for Knaresborough / Knaresborough Town Council.
£500 Fund the coach hire and entrance fees for the day trips / Harrogate & District Over 50s Forum.
Read more:
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- Harrogate Station Gateway: new report reveals financial risks
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Cllr Arnold Warneken – Ouseburn
£400 Fund the materials for the Jurassic beach at the show / Tockwith Show.
£684 Fund the cleaning of the village war memorial and plaque / Kirk Hammerton Parish Council.
£715.20 Provision of a solar pavilion clock / Whixley Cricket Club.
£992.75 Fund a contribution towards the production of Treasure Island the panto / Badapple Youth Theatre Group.
£1,000 Purchase and install a parish council noticeboard / Nun Monkton Parish Council.
£672 Fund the groundworks and labour for the Parish Woodland Restoration project / Marton cum Grafton Parish Council.
£2,141.90 Fund the purchase of materials and tools for the wildlife haven at Goosemoor Nature Reserve/Cowthorpe Community Forum.
£2,250 Fund the supply and installation of a defibrillator at Prince Rupert Drive Tockwith / Tockwith with Wilstrop Parish Council.
£500 Fund the purchase of food and drink for the Green Hammerton Warm Hub and Support Hub /Green Hammerton Parish Council.
£644.15 Purchase a memorial bench for former councillors / Tockwith with Wilstrop Parish Council.

St Wilfrid’s Procession
Cllr Andrew Williams – Ripon Minster and Moorside
£2,500 Fund the services of a youth leader at the drop-in sessions / Ripon YMCA.
£1,000 Fund the support for the scouts to attend the 25th World Scout Jamboree / 6th Ripon Scout Group.
£500 Fund the travel and venue hire costs for the concerts / Vacation Chamber Orchestras (VaCO).
£2,000 Fund the children’s activities on Ripon Market Place / St Wilfrid’s Procession Committee.
£1,000 Funding towards events and staging of the Poetry Festival / Ripon Poetry Festival.
£1,000 Funding towards the events and activities at the library / Ripon Library Volunteer Management Group.
£2,000 Fund the fireworks finale at the coronation event / Ripon City Council.
Cllr Robert Windass – Boroughbridge and Claro
£2,500 Fund the repair and refurbishment of the clock in the Church Tower / St Bartholomew’s Church Arkendale.
£1,953 To purchase and install a defibrillator for Flaxby / Goldsborough & Flaxby Parish Council.
£3,000 To purchase and install VAS units and laptop computer within the village / Staveley & Copgrove Parish Council.
£2,000 Purchase and installation of an outdoor canopy for the outdoor learning area / Scotton & Lingerfield Primary School PTA.
Fears for rural transport as Masham and Ripon minibus service is scrappedCouncillors have expressed disappointment after a flagship on-demand bus service in Masham and Ripon is set to be scrapped.
Last week, North Yorkshire Council took the decision to end its YorBus pilot on June 30 over cost concerns.
It was revealed that the service carried just 14,208 passengers over 12 months, at an average cost per passenger of £15.57 across the year.
Cllr Keane Duncan, executive councillor for transport, said in a statement that the cost of the service was “significantly higher” than traditional routes.
However, some councillors have expressed disappointment that the on-demand service will no longer continue.

Cllr Felicity Cunliffe-Lister.
Cllr Felicity Cunliffe-Lister, who represents Masham and Fountains division, said the bus was used by younger people in her area.
She said:
“I’m very disappointed. There were a lot of the younger generation using it.
“At the same time, it was expensive to run. It was using a lot of money. But it was not a great surprise and I don’t think it was ever to going to get to a break even point.
“However, I think it does demonstrate that there is a need for bus services in rural areas.”
Read more:
- North Yorkshire Council to axe YorBus service
- Axed bus service for Ripon and Masham cost £15.57 per passenger
She added that she would like to see a community service introduced in the place of YorBus.
Meanwhile, Cllr Barbara Brodigan, who represents Ripon Ure Bank and Spa, described the decision as “regrettable but understandable”.
She added that the service was never going to survive in light of the council’s failed £116 million bid to government’s ‘Bus Back Better’ fund.
She said:
“Without government help this has had to be funded by the council. Usage peaked over last summer and then levelled off to about 2.4 passengers per hour, more passengers could possibly have made the pilot more cost effective.”
Cllr Andrew Williams, who also represents Ripon Minster and Moorside, added:
“It’s sad that the innovative idea has failed to take off but NYC can’t justify the continuation of a service which is costing a subsidy of £14 for each journey made,
“I suspect that most council tax payers would think that was pouring money down the drain. We have tried to provide a service but residents have voted with their feet and simply not used it in sufficient numbers to justify continuing further.”
The Stray Ferret approached North Yorkshire Council to ask why the scheme was not scrapped within the first year given the running costs.
A spokesperson for the council said the pilot was extended to “explore options for wider rollout could be explored in more detail, including assessing potential zones and a review of the overall delivery model”.
Meanwhile, Cllr Duncan said that the authority would be reviewing initiatives to help rural transport.
He said:
“While continuing to work closely with operators to support at-risk services, we are also currently reviewing a number of initiatives to improve rural transport and asking the public for their views to help shape our future strategy.”