Road safety campaigners say they are shocked after data revealed the Harrogate district has the highest number of fatal accidents in the county.
Data released by North Yorkshire Council, showed 16 of 89 fatal collisions in North Yorkshire happened in the Harrogate district. Only Selby had the same number.
The data is taken from January 1, 2019, to December 31, 2022.
Hazel Peacock, Dr Jenny Marks, Dr Vicki Evans and Ruth Lily of the Oatlands and Pannal Ash Road Safety & Active Travel Campaign, told the Stray Ferret:
“It is shocking and sad to hear Harrogate has one of the highest fatal collision rates in North Yorkshire.
“Given the overwhelming evidence between speed limits and road safety we urge North Yorkshire Council (NYC) to take a proactive approach to delivering improvements across the Harrogate town and the wider area.”
The group said the statistics show the need to reduce speed limits from 30mph to 20mph is “really clear”.
Annual fatal accident statistics
2019: Six fatal collisions happened in the Harrogate and Scarborough districts which is the highest number within the period – equating to around one every two months.
During the same period, Richmondshire did not report any fatal collisions, while Selby reported just one.

A breakdown of collisions (and the severity) in the Harrogate district. Credit: North Yorkshire Council.
However, the statistics show numbers more than halved in the Harrogate district during the pandemic.
2020: Three fatal incidents happened but in Craven and Selby numbers shot up with six fatal crashes in the same year.
2021 and 2022: After lockdown restrictions lifted, the Harrogate district saw a further seven fatal collisions.
Selby reported another nine during the same period, while Craven and Richmondshire saw just two.
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The number of fatal collisions in the Harrogate district is inconsistent over the four-year period.
Although the Harrogate district has the largest population many people will question why the figure is so much higher than the rest of the county.
Cllr Keane Duncan, North Yorkshire Council’s executive member for highways and transportation, said:
“We take our road safety responsibilities very seriously. Every fatal collision that occurs on our roads network is inspected by an investigation team and, where appropriate, we put in place measures to reduce the risk of further incidents.
“Harrogate is the county’s largest, most heavily populated town, with significant local and through traffic.
“This number of collisions is the result of a variety of factors, including population density and distances travelled.”
The Harrogate district also saw 730 road collisions in total during the period — the highest in North Yorkshire – which accounted for almost a quarter of all collisions across the county.
Mr Duncan added:
“We invest heavily in road safety engineering across North Yorkshire and long-term collision numbers in the county are down.
“We have also recently committed to an ambitious new approach to setting speed limits that will see these reviewed on every inch of the county’s 5,750-mile network. We will soon consult on our most extensive 20mph zone in Pannal Ash and Oatlands.
“We will continue to work with our partners, including the emergency services, in an effort to ensure this downward trend in collisions continues.”
2023 – a bad year
Throughout 2023, the Stray Ferret has already reported on six fatal collisions in the Harrogate district, meaning this year’s figures have increased again.
Five people died in car crashes on the A61, which runs between Ripon and Harrogate, this year.
A 59-year-old motorcyclist was killed on the A61 on August 29. Officers believe that the motorcyclist was travelling with a group of unknown motorcycles immediately before the collision and he was at the rear of the group.
Just a few days later, three members of a Ukrainian family were killed in a three-vehicle crash that involved a double decker bus on Sunday, September 3. One child was left orphaned.
Most recently, a man in his 90s was hit by a car on the road, near Killinghall, after getting off the 36 bus.
Fatal collisions also happened on Brimham Rocks Road, near Pateley Bridge, North Park Road in Harrogate and the B6265 near Boroughbridge.
Landmark Ripon clock finally repaired after months of standstillThe Victoria Clock Tower in Ripon is now correct more than twice a day, having finally been repaired by North Yorkshire Council.
The landmark clock at the junction of North Street, Palace Road and Princess Road has been plagued by problems in recent years, sometimes running too fast, sometimes too slow, and most recently not at all.
While most people passed by without giving it a second thought, for others it was a source of concern.
Local resident Bernard White reported the problem to North Yorkshire Council in August, and followed it up at the beginning of November. He told the Stray Ferret:
“The clock’s been out of commission as much as it’s been in commission for the last three or four years. This time, it had been broken for about four or five months.
“I wrote to the council to ask for an update and they told me it was a faulty pendulum. They came this week and repaired it and it seems to be working fine now.”
The Victoria Clock Tower was commissioned to mark Queen Victoria’s Diamond Jubilee in 1897 and in the following June it was officially unveiled to a huge crowd at a civic ceremony. The Grade II listed building passed into council ownership in 1974.
Mr White added:
“The clock’s a feature in itself – the only other clock I know of in Ripon is at the town hall. It was built as a clock, and it should go as a clock, so it’s wonderful to have it back in working order.”
As we reported earlier in the year, the clock was due to be repaired in in March. It is unclear whether it was but had since developed another fault, or whether it never was fixed, perhaps due to the handover of responsibility for its running from Harrogate Borough Council to North Yorkshire Council on April 1.
The Stray Ferret has contacted North Yorkshire Council for comment.
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EXCLUSIVE: Stray Ferret reveals not a single litter fine in Harrogate district for past three years
There has not been a single fine for littering in the Harrogate district over the past three financial years.
The figure was revealed by North Yorkshire Council following a Freedom of Information request by the Stray Ferret after repeated coverage of residents’ concerns about litter.
The council said it is “very fortunate” that most local people choose to do “the right thing” and dispose of their litter responsibly.
It also said dedicating officers to catching and fining people is “very resource intensive” and requires them to “be in the right place at the right time”.
A spokesperson for the council said:
“We have a team who are out every day, in all weathers, keeping the district clean and tidy.
“Dedicating officers to deal with catching and fining people is very resource intensive, and requires us having people in the right place at the right time to catch someone committing an offence within the 505 square miles of what was the Harrogate district.”
The Stray Ferret also asked the council to breakdown any littering fines into specific locations where they were issues – including Harrogate, Knaresborough, Boroughbridge, Ripon and Nidderdale. The number remained at zero.
Neil Hind, chairperson of Pinewoods Conservation Group, said litter remains a “constant problem” in the Pinewoods area, and feels there is a lack of enforcement locally:
“It seems clear there is no real enforcement undertaken.
“As such we have taken our own direct action with regards to litter within the Pinewoods that has made a noticeable difference.
“We have a committed group of volunteers who regularly collect litter across the woods to keep the area tidy.”
An ongoing problem
The results of our FOI is likely to upset many people in the district.
Throughout 2021, Pinewoods volunteers urged people to “just use a bin” after a rise in littering, while post-covid parties on the Stray left the land carpeted with rubbish.
More recently the council’s decision to reduce the number public waste bins but make them larger, has also caused concern.
In August this year, the Stray Ferret reported on a call for an urgent review of litter bins in the Jennyfields area after reports of dog poo bags piling up.
In July, we reported on a Starbeck community group which gathered to litter-pick after seeing an increase in rubbish around the area.
The issue of litter is a subject that always raises the public’s blood pressure. It’s likely many residents will struggle to accept the council’s approach and be appalled at a total absence of litter fines.
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Just three years since its last overhaul, Harrogate’s leisure services look set for another restructure.
With the formation of Brimhams Active, a council-owned company, Harrogate Borough Council officials promised a new dawn for facilities in the district.
This came in the shape of multi-million pound investments in Harrogate and Knaresborough leisure centres – the latter of which is set to open on December 11.
Now, three years on, North Yorkshire Council looks set to carry out another overhaul of its leisure operation.
Bringing services in-house
The council’s plan, which is detailed in a report due before councillors on Monday, would see the entirety of its operators brought in-house over the next four years.
Currently, the county is served by five separate leisure providers – including Brimhams Active in Harrogate – which cover 19 leisure centres, 16 pools and three well-being hubs.
A private company called Everyone Active provides services in Ryedale and Scarborough; Richmond Leisure Trust runs facilities in Richmond and a charity called Inspiring Healthy Lifestyles oversees sites in Selby. Services in Craven and Hambleton are ran in-house.

The Knaresborough Leisure and Wellness Centre.
The council has argued in its report that the current management of leisure is “complex” and bringing it in-house would represent a “bespoke model for the unique circumstances of North Yorkshire”.
It has also promised a “renewed focus on physical and mental health and wider well being”.
The overhaul is expected to cost in the region of £135,000.
In a press release issued on Tuesday, Cllr Simon Myers, executive councillor for culture, arts and housing at North Yorkshire Council, said:
“The strategic leisure review provides us with an exciting opportunity to transform the delivery of our leisure service and improve outcomes for communities across North Yorkshire.
“What we are recommending puts us at the forefront of a national movement to transform services with a renewed focus on physical and mental health and wider well-being.”
Brimhams’ facilities ‘envy of North Yorkshire’
It comes at a time when North Yorkshire Council is shaping its services, such as licensing, planning and housing, following devolution.
However, it also represents yet another service overhaul for the Harrogate district’s leisure services.
In 2020, the Stray Ferret reported extensively on the borough council’s review of its leisure facilities which culminated in the creation of Brimhams Active in August 2021 to run centres across the district.
The company, which is now owned by North Yorkshire Council, recently embarked on £46 million worth of projects at Harrogate Leisure and Wellness Centre and Knaresborough Leisure and Wellness Centre.

Mark Tweedie, managing director of Brimhams Active.
In an interview with the Stray Ferret in September, Mark Tweedie, managing director at the company, described the facilities as the “envy of North Yorkshire”.
Centres in Ripon, Harrogate and Knaresborough also feature Brimhams branding, which could be removed not long after they were put up.
In its report, the council acknowledges that the company’s model is “particularly advanced” and could be scaled up.
However, despite the advanced nature of Brimhams’ operation, the council still plans to streamline its operators and bring them in-house.
The report adds:
“Whilst there is a desire to streamline the current position into a single operating model, this is no reflection on the current provision or providers who deliver much valued and high quality services across the county.”
‘Devil in the detail’
Brimhams currently employs 160 staff and has a turnover of £8.4 million.
At the time of its creation, unions raised concern over the transfer of staff to Brimhams and sought reassures over terms and conditions for leisure workers.
In the end, staff transferred to the company under the Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations, better known as TUPE, on August 1, 2021.
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Speaking on the fresh proposals, Dave Houlgate, secretary of the Unison Harrogate Local Government branch, said he supports facilities being brought in-house.
However, he added that the “devil will be in the detail”.
He said:
“The key for us is the delivery of quality public services but also improving the terms and conditions and pay for our members who are currently enduring a cost of living crisis.
“If this proposal delivers on these two things and avoids any compulsory redundancies then we are likely to give it our full support.”
The proposal appears to represent the council embarking on a transformation of its services in its image for North Yorkshire following devolution.
However, it also raised questions over how the Harrogate district’s leisure facilities will look and function in the future.
North Yorkshire Council’s transition overview and scrutiny committee will consider the leisure review proposal at a meeting on Monday (December 4).
Council silent on claims it ignored safety warnings on collapsed Knaresborough wallNorth Yorkshire Council has failed to respond to claims it ignored warnings about the state of a wall that collapsed in Knaresborough.
The stone wall on Briggate fell onto the highway on September 14 this year.
Fortunately, nobody was injured on what is one of the town’s busiest routes for pedestrians and motorists — but traffic lights have caused delays and disruption ever since.
Several residents and councillors have told the Stray Ferret they contacted the council about the wall before it fell. We were also told the council had a safety report on the wall.
Nearly three months on, the council has yet to respond to these claims.

The wall collapsed in September.
Cllr Hannah Gostlow, a Liberal Democrat who represents Knaresborough East on North Yorkshire Council, alerted the council in an email on June 16 last year.
Her message, seen by the Stray Ferret, said several old stone walls in Knaresborough needed “investigating and possibly monitoring for safety”, with Briggate top of the list.
It added:
“I am unsure who owns each wall but in each case they would either impact a road or path if they were to break down, and could potentially be a risk to life and also their repair could cause significant congestion in the town.”
Cllr Gostlow (pictured), who is also the current Knaresborough mayor, told the Stray Ferret:
“This issue was widely known about by residents and councillors.”
After the wall collapsed, Briggate resident Catherine Rogerson told the Stray Ferret she had reported the structure to North Yorkshire Council the previous month because it appeared to be buckling. She added:
“I said it was an emergency and could collapse, causing a nasty accident.
“Several other local people have also contacted them about it. We all stressed it was in a dangerous state.”
Failed to act
When the wall came down, we asked the council to respond to Ms Rogerson’s claims.
Melisa Burnham, the council’s highways area manager, said traffic lights would remain in place until repairs to the wall are carried out and “we are liaising with residents of nearby properties and are in discussions with contractors to ensure the work is completed as quickly as possible”.
We replied to the council’s media office, which handles all media enquiries, to say Ms Burnham’s response did not address the claims the council had failed to act on warnings.
However, we did not receive a response so we subsequently submitted a freedom of information request asking how many people had complained about the state of the wall in the previous two years and what action the council had taken. We also asked to be sent the council safety report.
Public bodies are supposed to respond to freedom of information requests within 20 working days.
After six weeks without a response, we pursued the matter with the council this week. It said the delay was “due to the request initially being under the incorrect service area” and a response would be sent “as soon as possible”.
Cllr Matt Walker who represents Knaresborough West said the council’s response since the wall collapsed has been wholly inadequate. He said:
“The council have avoided answering questions including providing a safety report that was done days before the wall fell. I wonder why?
“A full investigation needs to be done to understand why it happened in the first place and lessons learned. Residents have lost faith in the highways team to do anything and so have I.”
Cllr Walker also said he had received several reassurances work would start at the beginning of November but it only began on November 27, causing weeks of traffic lights around the unattended rubble.
At one point there were reports on social media of fed-up residents attempting to remove the rubble themselves.
That never happened and now the rubble is off the highway, but traffic lights remain.
Karl Battersby, the council’s corporate director for environment, said on November 22 the “works are now more complex than first anticipated” because of residents’ concerns about the cellars that were impacted by the collapsed wall”.
Roadworks are usually prohibited during Knaresborough’s annual Christmas Market Weekend, which begins today.
But the ongoing saga of the wall means they will continue to operate on Briggate, and are likely to do so for many weeks to come.
Read more:
- Briggate roadworks likely to last ‘several months’ in Knaresborough
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- Frustration grows over ‘rubble on the road’ saga in Knaresborough
Plans submitted to convert Harrogate Debenhams into 34 flats
Fresh plans have been lodged to convert the former Debenhams building in Harrogate into 34 apartments.
Wetherby-based Stirling Prescient No. 1 Limited has tabled the proposal to North Yorkshire Council for the site on Parliament Street.
The building has been home to different retailers for more than a century. Before Debenhams, it housed the Buckley’s and Busby’s stores.
A previous application from Stirling Prescient had proposed the demolition of the building to make way for 50 flats. However, this was withdrawn in May 2022.
The fresh plan would retain the site and see the upper floors converted into 34 flats. The ground floor and basement levels would be used as “flexible commercial space” or a “drinking establishment”.

Debenhams on Parliament Street, Harrogate pictured in April 2020.
It also proposes erecting a rooftop extension, plus the removal and replacement of canopies, shop fronts and slate roof, and removal and re-cladding of the facade of the 1960s element of the building.
A secure cycle store and seven car parking spaces are also included in the plan.
In documents submitted to the council, the developer said the new proposal would help to restore the site.
It said:
“The proposed development is located within the heart of the town centre with excellent pedestrian and public transport links and will provide a high quality and vibrant new residential development.
“The proposed building will create a new focal point along Parliament Street, restoring and sympathetically converting the current buildings on the site.”
‘Substantially revised’ proposal
The move comes as previous proposals to demolish the site were met with opposition.
In March 2022, Emma Gibbens, conservation officer at Harrogate Borough Council, said the demolition of the building would harm the local area.
She said:
“The loss of the traditional building form and architectural detail would be harmful to the street scene and character and special interest of the conservation area, the building forming part of the designated heritage asset in a manner that contributes positively to its character.”
The objection followed similar concerns from campaign group Save Britain’s Heritage, which said the developer had failed to provide “clear or adequate justification” for demolishing the building.
Read more:
- Heritage groups say ‘no justification’ for Harrogate Debenhams demolition
- Plans submitted to demolish former Harrogate Debenhams
- Harrogate council conservation officer ‘cannot support’ Debenhams demolition
However, Historic England said it supported regeneration of the site but added that there should be a “sensitive conversion” of the two older department store buildings.
Documents submitted to the council as part of the fresh proposal acknowledged that plans to demolish the store were not well received.
However, it added that the scheme had been “substantially revised and positively respond to the feedback received”.
It said:
“The proposals will secure the long-term future of the site which will deliver wide ranging and lasting benefits to the town centre. Flexible commercial space at ground level and new residential development will strengthen the town’s long-term vitality and viability.”
North Yorkshire Council will make a decision on the plans at a later date.
Council quashes hopes of west Harrogate bypassNorth Yorkshire Council has no plans to build a western bypass in Harrogate, with one councillor saying the move would “reopen old wounds”.
Business group Independent Harrogate published a document this month called A Vision for Harrogate that set out an alternative course of action for the controversial £11.2m Station Gateway scheme.
The document, written by retired architect Barry Adams, also puts forward suggestions to tackle congestion, such as establishing a park and ride scheme and building a western bypass.
A bypass proposal has been debated for decades, with Independent Harrogate arguing it could be key to link west and north Harrogate and reduce congestion.
Cllr John Mann, the Conservative councillor for Oatlands and Pannal, asked Cllr Keane Duncan, the council’s executive member for highways, if North Yorkshire Council would commit to building the bypass as a long-term project.
Cllr Mann said:
“I do know that congestion in Pannal and Oatlands would be much relieved if a relief road would be constructed.
“I think there’s merit in the idea, as we’ve only built 700 out of 4,000 scheduled homes for western Harrogate.
“Congestion is already quite severe and dangerous to motorists, cyclists and pedestrians.”
However, Cllr Duncan poured cold water on the idea and said the council’s predecessor, North Yorkshire County Council, held a widely publicised consultation about congestion in 2019, which rejected more roads being built in favour of sustainable travel, like improved cycling or walking routes.
The council abandoned unpopular plans to build a relief road by the Nidd Gorge following the consultation.
Cllr Duncan said:
“The results resoundingly favoured sustainable transport and demanded management solutions to congestion rather than the provision of new roads. The council then determined to respect that outcome and the council does not now plan to reopen old wounds.”
The council is working on a document called the Harrogate Transport Improvement Programme that will set out improvements to walking, cycling and bus infrastructure.
A report is expected in spring 2024.
Read more:
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Residents urge government to reject Bishop Monkton 23-home appeal
Residents have urged the government to reject an appeal to build 23 homes in Bishop Monkton.
Kebbell Development Ltd tabled a plan to build the houses on Knaresborough Road in the village.
At a meeting of the Skipon and Ripon area constituency planning committee in August,
councillors rejected the plan amid concern it would increase the amount of raw sewage released on streets.
The decision went against North Yorkshire Council officers’ recommendations to approve the scheme.
As a result, the developer has appealed the decision to the government’s Planning Inspectorate, which deals with planning disputes.
In a statement of case submitted to the inspector, Kebbell Development Ltd argued that there was no planning reason for the scheme to be refused.
However, Bishop Monkton Action Group has urged the government to throw out the appeal.
In a 26-page letter of objection submitted to the Planning Inspectorate, the campaign group said the scheme would “threaten the sustainability of our village”.
The group said it had concerns over the impact on drainage and sewage, as well as a “historic lack of investment” in the area’s sewer system.
It said:
“We have highlighted the key issues within the scheme as submitted by the applicant that threaten the sustainability of our village.
“However, the historic lack of investment in our sewer infrastructure is already threatening the sustainability of our village.
“This is evidenced in raw sewage discharge on our streets, in people’s drives and gardens plus sewage discharges onto our Beck and the Ure in a Drinking water safeguard zone. Please do not make this any worse for us.”
Read more:
- Councillors call for building moratorium in Bishop Monkton over flood fears
- Village housing scheme rejected amid fears of sewage in streets
- Developer appeals decision to refuse 23 homes in Bishop Monkton
The move comes as councillors rejected the proposals at a council meeting three months ago.
One councillor said having more properties in the village could exacerbate the “abomination” of raw sewage being released into the streets during heavy rainfall.
The committee had also called for Yorkshire Water to provide more detail on how the scheme would impact on foul water drainage in the village.
No representative from the company appeared at the meeting.
But the company said “most, if not all” of the “sewage escapes” in the village were caused by residents putting excessive toilet paper, fat, oil and grease down toilets and sinks which caused pipes to block.
A government planning inspector will make a decision on the appeal at a later date.
Council spends £850 on photographer for Ripon hornblowerNorth Yorkshire Council spent £850 on a photographer who captured images of the Ripon hornblower on the River Thames.
The council revealed the sum following a Freedom of Information request by the Stray Ferret.
Allison Clark, the city’s first female hornblower, represented Ripon and North Yorkshire’s tourism industry at the World Travel Market event this month after Ripon City Council granted a special dispensation.
As part of this, she “called the watch” on a City Cruises boat on the River Thames.
The event was jointly hosted by North Yorkshire Council, Visit York, Visit Leeds and Herriot Country Tourism.
The council told the Stray Ferret it spent £1,658 of taxpayers’ money on the trip.
More than half of this — £850 — went to the photographer, who took other images of the City Cruises event besides the hornblower.
Read more:
- Council plans to bring North Yorkshire leisure services in-house
- Ripon hornblower ‘calls the watch’ in London for first time in 1,000-year history
The council contributed £500 towards commissioning the cruise.
It also spent £175 on a standard room at a Premier Inn, including breakfast, plus rail fares for the hornblower and a representative of Ripon City Council, which cost a further £132.
Asked if the trip had been beneficial to local tourism, a spokesperson for North Yorkshire Council said:
“The purpose of the City Cruise was to provide a platform for the tourism businesses of North Yorkshire, York, Leeds and Herriot Country, to connect with buyers from the travel industry.
“There are many great stories to tell the travel industry about North Yorkshire, and on this occasion we chose to tell them about the fascinating history of the Ripon hornblower.
“This demonstration undoubtedly made an impression on the travel industry representatives on board and we hope that this memorable event, together with the connections they made with businesses, will encourage them to bring more and more visitors to North Yorkshire in the coming months and years.”
Tesco agrees to pay £50,000 for Harrogate bus stop improvements
Tesco is set to pay £50,000 to improve bus stops as part of the planning agreement for its new store in Harrogate.
The supermarket was granted planning approval subject to conditions for a store on the former gasworks site on Skipton Road in February.
As part of its section 106 agreement with North Yorkshire Council, Tesco will pay for improvements to five stops as part of a service in the Killinghall area.
The agreement, which has recently been published on the council website, says the money will go towards new extended shelters with information boards, seating and “where necessary raised kerbs to each carriageway”.
The five bus stops would be on Skipton Road and Ripon Road.
A council report said:
“North Yorkshire Council wish to provide a new bus service in the Killinghall area as part of the bus service contribution from the housing development on Penny Pot Lane and these additional improvements would add value to the new service and help encourage sustainable travel by bus to reach the new store.”
It added that the council felt the contribution was a “reasonable request”.
Read more:
- Still no start date for work on new Harrogate Tesco
- New Tesco supermarket would threaten future of Jennyfields Co-op, warns report
The supermarket has also agreed to pay £5,000 towards a travel plan for the area.
It has also agreed to provide a replacement store at Jennyfields Local Centre should the existing store close within five years of Tesco opening.
Tesco has also committed to on-site and off-site provision, maintenance and monitoring habitat provision for biodiversity.
The move comes as construction work has yet to start on the new store nine months on from its approval.
Planning documents say a new roundabout will be built at the store entrance and the A59 will be widened to provide a filter lane.
The Stray Ferret approached Tesco for an update on when it intends to start work on the scheme, but we had not received a response by the time of publication.
The council received 82 representations about Tesco’s planning application. A total of 24 were supportive and 57 objected, mainly on the grounds of amenity, traffic, environmental and drainage impacts.
But the council’s planning committee went along with case officer Kate Broadbank’s recommendation to grant approval.
She said the development would “create jobs and provide social, environmental and economic benefits to the local area” and was “in accordance with the development plan policies”.
Tesco first secured planning permission on the site in 2012 but revived its plans in December 2021.