Failed tourism body Welcome to Yorkshire owed £3m to creditors, according to the latest liquidator report.
The organisation was placed into administration in March 2022 after officials blamed the impact of covid and the “task of securing sufficient funding”.
A report by Armstrong Watson, which was appointed liquidator in August last year, showed that it owed £3 million to unsecured creditors.
A previous administrator’s report from April 2022 had initially estimated Welcome to Yorkshire would owe £1.8 million to 67 creditors.
Among them is North Yorkshire Council, which is due £1.3 million in relation to the North Yorkshire Pension Fund.
The Stray Ferret has approached the council to ask whether it is still pursuing the money and if it expects a repayment from liquidators. However, we had not received a response by the time of publication.
Armstrong Watson said in its report that it was unable to confirm what payment would be made to creditors at this stage.
It said:
“I am currently in the process of reviewing and agreeing unsecured creditors’ claims as there will be sufficient funds to pay a dividend.
“Unfortunately, at this stage I cannot confirm the level of the dividend payable as this is contingent upon agreeing both secondary preferential and unsecured creditor claims.”
Meanwhile, staff claims totalling £9,570 have been repaid in full.
A sum of £296,000 owed to HMRC is also expected to be paid in full, but liquidators are continuing discussions with the body.
Keith Tordoff, who is running for independent mayor of York and North Yorkshire, said the loss of the brand was “a massive failure”.
He said:
“The loss of the Welcome to Yorkshire brand and of course the invested monies is a massive failure by some members of the North Yorkshire Council who were either on the board of Welcome to Yorkshire or those authorising the unsecured loans.
“The taxpayers deserve better and those councillors on North Yorkshire who were involved should consider their position.”
The move comes after administrators sold the tourism body’s assets and website last year.
Yorkshire Dales business, Silicon Dales, purchased Yorkshire.com, its social media accounts and the rights to the Tour de Yorkshire.
North Yorkshire Council had initially bid for the assets, but was outbid by the private firm.
Read more:
- Welcome to Yorkshire enters administration
- Welcome to Yorkshire chief executive resigns
- Chief executive defends Welcome to Yorkshire after accountability allegations
Handrails installed at Pateley Bridge war memorial after veteran falls
Safety rails were installed around Pateley Bridge war memorial today ahead of this weekend’s Remembrance Day service.
It comes after an elderly veteran tripped when laying a wreath during last year’s service.
Suzanne Smith, clerk to Pateley Bridge Town Council, said the man was not hurt but the incident “highlighted the need for a handrail”.
Ms Smith added:
“In a joint venture, Pateley Bridge Town Council and Bewerley Parish Council had to jump through a lot of bureaucratic hoops to get the necessary permission to install the handrails.
“Fortunately, we succeeded, just in time for this years’ service.”
The handrails have been made by Chiltondale Architectural Wrought Ironsmiths, which is based in Summerbridge. Ms Smith said:
“They are high quality, galvanised and powder-coated to ensure they are almost maintenance free.
“They have been designed to match the existing handrails on the bandstand in the Recreation Ground and also the very small rail that runs round the bottom of the war memorial.”
The production and installation of the handrails cost £927.42 and has been funded by North Yorkshire Council’s Locality Fund – a £10,000 budget given to councillors to support local communities.
Ms Smith added:
“Bewerley Parish Council, Pateley Bridge Town Council and the Royal British Legion are very grateful that at the Armistice Day event this Saturday, the handrails will ensure that veterans and parishioners can safely and independently access the memorial to lay wreaths.”
The annual Armistice Day parade and service will take place at the Pateley Bridge war memorial on Saturday, November 11, from 10.30am.
Read more:
- Remembrance Day: A guide to services in the Harrogate district
- Harrogate district adorned in poppies as Remembrance Sunday approaches
‘Teething issues’ to blame for more missed Harrogate bin collections, says council
North Yorkshire Council has blamed “teething issues” for an increase in missed bin collections in the Harrogate district.
Latest figures from the council show there were 1,579 missed collections in the first quarter of the year. The number is an increase on 1,535 in the same period last year.
Council officials said part of the reason for the missed collections, most of which were for garden waste, was due to a “route optimisation process” carried out by Harrogate Borough Council, which was abolished on April 1.
This included changing routes and removing one lorry from the rounds.
However, Michael Leah, North Yorkshire Council’s assistant director of environmental services, described the process as an “overall positive”.
He said:
“I am pleased of the level of waste collection services provided across the county. For the Harrogate area, the optimisation of the garden waste collection service has been positive overall for the council, both in terms of efficiency and reduction in its carbon footprint.
“We noted some ‘teething issues’ from this work with a slightly higher rate of missed garden waste bins during the first quarter of the year. We are already well ahead with resolving any issues arising from that work.”
Read more:
- Metal fences to remain in Harrogate’s Crescent Gardens until next year
- Lib Dem leader accuses Tories of ‘pinching’ Harrogate Station Gateway ideas
It comes as Harrogate and Knaresborough councillors raised concern over missed collections after it was claimed just 129 bins were missed across the county in the first 100 days of the new council.
Cllr Hannah Gostlow, a Liberal Democrat who represents Knaresborough East, raised the issue at a full council meeting in July when she challenged council leader, Carl Les, over the accuracy of the authority’s figures.
She said:
“Talking with my colleagues across the former Harrogate borough and hearing from my own residents, I understand that there has been a much higher than normal missed general, garden and recycling waste bins.
“Unfortunately it also includes assisted bin collections.”
Cllr Les apologised for the inaccuracy and later sent the correct figures to Cllr Gostlow.
36 community groups in Harrogate district awarded £92,000Thirty-six voluntary organisations have celebrated being awarded a total of £92,828 by The Local Fund for the Harrogate district.
The fund awards grants of between £200 and £3,000 each year to small organisations with charitable aims in the Harrogate district where a small amount of money can make a significant difference.
It is funded by The Local Lotto, with support from North Yorkshire Council, Harrogate and District Community Action and the Harry Bolland Trust Fund. Two Ridings Community Foundation, which coordinates local giving in North and East Yorkshire, administers the fund.
Two Ridings organised Monday night’s celebration at West Park Hotel in Harrogate, which recognised volunteers from the organisations awarded grants.
They provide services ranging from providing lunches for the homeless, tackling domestic abuse and enabling people in Nidderdale to run safely to improve their wellbeing.
North Yorkshire high sheriff Clare Granger, who joined local councillors at the event, said the successful applicants provided ‘literally a lifeline’ for many people in North Yorkshire.
Celia McKeon, chief executive at Two Ridings, said the fund supported groups with basic running costs, to ensure they can keep their doors open.
Read more:
- Metal fences to remain in Harrogate’s Crescent Gardens until next year
- Remembrance Day: A guide to services in the Harrogate district
Here is a list of the successful applicants, how much each one received and for what purpose.
Community Group | Amount Awarded | Project Description |
Artizan | 2688 | Funding towards staff, craft supplies and refreshments for craft and socialising opportunities for children and teens with Special Educational Needs, alongside support for their parents. |
Badapple Theatre Company | 1580 | Funding towards staff, hall hire, DBS checks and training to run youth session in the rural area of the Ure Valley, and to enable them to earn a recognised award. |
Bilton dragon bowling club | 1000 | Funding towards sprinkler system to make water use more efficient and to support club members with maintenance. |
Boroughbridge and District Community Care | 3000 | Funding towards staff and room hire to train befriending volunteers for people experiencing bereavement, or living with dementia or disabilities, for recently recruited, existing and to-be recruited volunteers. |
Claro Enterprises | 3000 | Funding towards staff, insurance and utilities to run community workshop to support people with mental health difficulties to improve their health and wellbeing. |
Dales and Bowland CIC | 3000 | Funding towards running rural bus service on Sundays and Bank Holidays. |
Dancing for Well Being | 1200 | Funding towards operational costs, including a Dance Movement Therapist, for a trial series of sessions to support those who care for family members with dementia, to support carer’s own needs. |
Darley Playing Field Association (DPFA) | 3000 | Funding towards outdoor play equipment for children in rurally isolated village. |
Harlow Hill Community Centre Association | 2000 | Funding towards new doors to improve the carbon footprint and look of community building. |
Harrogate & District Community Action | 3000 | Funding towards staff and room hire to support befriending and signposting services for older members of the community, particularly the weekly club and where some clients have more complex needs. |
Harrogate Hospital Radio | 1170 | Funding for radios to lend to lonely in-patients in the Harrogate area hospitals. |
Inspire Youth Yorkshire | 3000 | Funding for staff and overheads towards free weekly youth activities. |
Jenny Ruth Workshops Limited | 3000 | Funding for staff and travel costs to offer workers with learning disabilities outreach opportunities, including sales at local shows, visits to stockists and delivering talks to other local groups. |
Jenny Ruth Workshops Limited | 1500 | Funding towards Jennryruth branded t-shirts and fleeces to provide new workers with learning disabilities pride in their work, and being able to represent the organisation at events. |
Kairos Network Church | 1000 | Funding for a second-hand trailer and new security locks, for taking unusual bicycles to events to encourage confidence in cycling, ensuring the organisation no longer has to borrow a trailer. |
Knaresborough Museum Association | 1500 | Funding towards travel, overheads, and display stands to take displays to sheltered accommodation and residential homes to engage those who would not otherwise be able to visit the museum. |
Knot Another Choir CIO | 3000 | Funding towards staging for local inclusive community choir, which will also raise income for the group by being hired out to other community groups. |
Lifeline Harrogate | 2400 | Funding for fruit and veg boxes (subsidised by the provider) to provide a healthy equivalent to crisis loans for food, to people who have recently experienced homelessness and are now accommodated in supported housing. |
Lifeline Harrogate | 2600 | Funding for food and room hire for fortnightly lunch club, to support current and former residents of supported accommodation. |
Living Potential Care Farming | 1740 | Funding for tools, raised beds, compost and seeds to start therapeutic sessions in the walled garden for people living with mental health difficulties. |
Low Harrogate Crown Green Bowling Club | 2250 | Funding to buy bowls and equipment which will make the club more inclusive and to review the irrigation system. |
Masham Community Office | 3000 | Funding towards purchasing the organisation’s premises to secure it as a community asset. |
New Beginnings Peer Support | 2690 | Funding for staff, volunteers, materials etc for workshops looking at self, worth, boundaries and resilience, to increase the health and wellbeing of families, especially children. |
Nidderdale Fell & Trail | 3000 | Funding for training for volunteers to become qualified in leadership and coaching in running, to allow the organisation to expand and offer more running sessions. |
Nidderdale Plus Partnership | 3000 | Funding for three months of Digital Champion Coordinator time to continue to run project to support older people to be safe and confident online, and to stay connected. |
Open Country | 3000 | Funding for staff, volunteer costs, and operational costs towards running an allotment and tree nursery to offer skills development, mental health benefits and social activities for people with disabilities. |
Open Country | 2450 | Funding for staff, volunteers, accessible minibus, and allotment rent to ensure members can access mixed gardening and outdoor activities for those with disabilities or with poor mental health. |
Pateley Bridge & BewerleyMemorial Hall | 1000 | Funding towards extending a local social event by opening for longer, and to offer hot food for the first time as part of the group becoming a warm space, for older people in a rurally isolated area. |
Pinewoods Conservation Group | 2410 | Funding towards tools and PPE to create a new volunteer group to care for the woodland and to support volunteer’s health and wellbeing. |
Reflect | 2800 | Funding for staff, volunteer costs and overheads to publicise support and to increase face to face sessions for people experiencing pregnancy and baby loss, and for those seeking post-termination support. |
Ripon City Festival Trust 1986 | 1800 | Funding to support teenagers to engage more with their local community and to address self-care and mental health, by experiencing live theatre themed around wellbeing, taking part in drama workshops and volunteering to encourage other young people to take part in the Festival. |
Ripon Disability Forum | 2940 | Funding to set up a website, particularly to create an interactive route mapping tool, that people with disabilities can design their own travel routes into and around Ripon and the surrounding area. |
Samaritans of Harrogate and District | 3000 | Funding towards volunteer expenses, operational costs and overheads for organisation seeking to reduce the number of people dying by suicide. |
Supporting Older People CIO | 2940 | Funding for staff, DBS checks are publicity to recruit and train befriender volunteers to support older people, and to start a new social group for older residents. |
Taking Baby Steps CIC | 2530 | Funding for staff, travel expenses and sundries to be able to run community drop in groups as a pilot in rural areas, for parents facing pregnancy loss, baby loss, or peri- and post- natal mental health problems in more rural areas of the Harrogate district. |
The Trauma Centre Community Interest Company | 3000 | Funding towards staff to support the running of heavily subsidised self-help evening classes for people with mental health difficulties, which would help reduce the need for more intensive therapy. |
The Wellness Gateway CIC | 3000 | Funding towards staffing, to set up trial Wellness Hub to offer mental health support and signposting in Ripon and surrounding areas. |
Village Voices Killinghall | 640 | Funding for keyboard and accessories to be able to keep rurally isolated village choir running for years to come. |
Wellspring Therapy & Training | 3000 | Funding towards volunteer travel expenses, to be able to offer more counselling sessions and reduce waiting times for people to support people with poor mental health, experiencing family problems and more. |
35-metre 4G mast near Masham approved
Councillors have approved plans to erect a 35 metres-high communications mast near Masham to boost 4G coverage in rural areas.
Mobile infrastructure provider Cornerstone submitted plans to North Yorkshire Council to build the tower in Ox Close Plantation, Healey where a report said existing 4G coverage is “spasmodic”.
The application is part of the shared rural network venture, which is a £1bn drive between government and operators Vodafone, Three and Virgin Media-O2 to improve the UK’s digital connectivity.
However, because the plantation sits within the Nidderdale Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, which has strict planning laws, a council officer recommended refusing the application to preserve “scenic beauty”.
But at a meeting of the Skipton and Ripon planning committee yesterday afternoon, councillors ignored the recommendation and enthusiastically backed the mast proposal due to its positive impact on residents and businesses in the area.
A statement was read out on behalf of Cllr Felicity Cunliffe-Lister, a Liberal Democrat who represents Masham and Fountains, and who has previously campaigned for better rural internet connectivity.
Although she said she supported the plans, her statement informed councillors she also has an interest as her husband owns the land that the mast would be built on so would receive rent.
Cllr Cunliffe-Lister’s statement said:
“Life without this connectivity would become very challenging and become harder as services such as banking come online.
“Any concern about impact on landscape should be considered but not given priority.”
Read more
- Council to bid for government funding to progress Harrogate social housing schemes
- Communications tower plan near Masham would ‘harm landscape’
Veteran Skipton councillor Robert Heseltine said the plans should be approved “as a matter of principle” so rural communities can receive the same services as urban ones.
Cllr Heseltine said:
“Residents and businesses of rural North Yorkshire have an absolute expectation to receive the same service as the rest of this nation.
“Communications are a necessity for the safety of the public and viability of farming and rural businesses.”
Ripon councillor Andrew Williams, a member of the Conservative and Independents group, said there were exceptions for building in the AONB and the Yorkshire Dales and referred to the giant “golf balls” at RAF Menwith Hill which “obliterate” the landscape and the Bilsdale television transmitter.
Cllr Williams said:
“The landscape has always changed and will continue to change. Here are people who are unable to work from home, they can’t get any form of communication, that has an impact on running businesses.
“It’s not for townies to impose rules and restrictions on rural communities that makes them impossible to be viable. The plans are to be welcomed.”
The plans were approved unanimously.
Metal fences to remain in Harrogate’s Crescent Gardens until next yearThe metal fencing around the pavilion in Harrogate‘s Crescent Gardens will remain in place until the new year, North Yorkshire Council has confirmed.
The fencing was erected last month as a “temporary measure” to prevent a group of rough sleepers from occupying the building.
The group, which inhabited the pavilion for two weeks in September, returned twice after being dispersed by officials.
A spokesperson for the council told the Stray Ferret this morning:
“The fencing is a temporary measure, but will remain in place until the new year as a result of the Christmas ice rink going into the gardens this month.”
The ice rink, which was put up on Crescent Gardens for the first time last year, is part of a three-year Christmas activity licence introduced by the former Harrogate Borough Council.
In a report at the time, Kirsty Stewart, the council’s grounds and maintenance manager, said the festive licence “will generate a minimum income of £37,500 per year”.

A rose arch has been erected as part of the Crescent Gardens revamp.
This has helped to fund a £21,000 revamp of Crescent Gardens.
Last year, the pavilion was used as a makeshift boot room for ice skaters, however its use this year is uncertain following the recent update.
Read more:
- Metal fencing to remain indefinitely in Harrogate’s Crescent Gardens
- Rose arch erected — but will Harrogate’s Crescent Gardens be renamed?
Lib Dem leader accuses Tories of ‘pinching’ Harrogate Station Gateway ideas
The leader of the Liberal Democrats in Harrogate and Knaresborough has accused the Conservative transport chief of “pinching” their ideas for the £11.2 million Station Gateway.
North Yorkshire Council is hastily assembling new proposals for the scheme after admitting its previous plans failed to follow the correct procedure in the wake of legal action.
Councillor Keane Duncan, the Conservative executive member for highways, revealed last week that two of the most controversial aspects of the scheme — reducing Station Parade to one lane and pedestrianising James Street — would be scrapped.
A detailed new plan has yet to be published but it is expected to include improvements to Station Square and One Arch and upgrading traffic signals.
Lib Dem leader Pat Marsh said the Lib Dems suggested dropping the Station Parade and James Street proposals at an online meeting of the council’s Harrogate and Knaresborough area constituency committee working group on October 31 — shortly before Cllr Duncan’s announcement.
She said the 13 members of the area constituency committee are due to walk around the gateway site tomorrow (Thursday, November 8) with a senior officer at the council.
Cllr Marsh said the visit would enable the council to better understand the area and consider a “better connected” Lib Dem plan for the town centre.
She said previous gateway proposals “started nowhere and ended nowhere”.
Cllr Marsh said:
“There are simple solutions that would connect the town better. They would enable cyclists to feel safer and not upset motorists.”
She added she would reveal full details of the proposals after tomorrow’s meeting but said they included improvements to the public realm near the train and bus stations, keeping the Station Parade taxi rank where it is and “tidying up” the area around the train station car park.
Cllr Marsh said:
“What we feel we have come up with is a better connected scheme.
“We are not playing politics — that is why we put something forward and offered to do a walk round.”
The Stray Ferret has asked Cllr Duncan to respond to Cllr Marsh’s comments but has not had a response.
Read more:
- Harrogate BID says amended Station Gateway scheme ‘should proceed’
- Major elements of £11.2 million Harrogate Station Gateway scheme to be scrapped
- Council concedes it should have held public inquiry into Harrogate Station Gateway
Petition calls for investigation into leadership of Harrogate district school
A petition calling for an investigation into the leadership of a Harrogate district school has been launched.
North Yorkshire Council has begun moves to close Fountains Earth Primary School in Lofthouse, near Pateley Bridge.
The school has no pupils left and although the council attributes this and a struggle to recruit teachers as key factors in opening a consultation on closure, parents say long-running leadership issues contributed to its decline.
They say pupil numbers were increasing until parents were alienated and poor leadership prompted them to send children elsewhere.
Their petition has already achieved 500 signatures.
Fountains Earth is part of the Upper Nidderdale Federation, which also includes Glasshouses Community Primary School and St Cuthbert’s Church of England Primary School in Pateley Bridge.
Parents previously said they were “devastated to have been left with no choice but to remove our children” and warned closure would “rip the heart” out of Lofthouse.
Now a petition, launched by Ashley Gatehouse, calls for “a full, objective and thorough investigation into the leadership of the Upper Nidderdale Federation”.
It says small rural schools foster community spirit and can deliver high quality education, when managed and governed appropriately.
The petition says:
“This investigation should carefully assess the leadership and management of the Upper Nidderdale Federation, including their academic performance, financial stability, community engagement and communication with parents.
“It is imperative that all relevant stakeholders, including parents and former parents, direct and non-direct contracted staff as well as local residents, have the opportunity to contribute their insights and concerns during this investigation process.
“We request that this matter is taken seriously and that the best interests of our community’s children are prioritised.
The petition concludes by urging the council to halt closure “until a full and thorough investigation has been conducted”.
A ‘heavy and sad decision’
The Stray Ferret asked the Upper Nidderdale Federation if it wished to respond to the parents’ claims.
A statement by co-governors Helen Nelson and Hugh Smith said:
“The autumn term started at Fountains Earth with no pupils on roll.
“Unfortunately, this is not an unprecedented situation in North Yorkshire and the governing body has looked at every possible option for the school to keep going.
“Without children, there will be no future per pupil funding for the school from April 2024.
“Taking everything into account, and having discussed the situation with officers at North Yorkshire Council and the Diocese of Leeds the governors took the heavy and sad decision to ask North Yorkshire Council to begin consultation on a proposal to close Fountains Earth school. This is a formal process led by North Yorkshire Council.”
Read more:
- Angry parents say closure of Lofthouse school will ‘rip heart out of community’
- Lofthouse Moor owner fined for illegally burning peat
Amanda Newbold, the council’s assistant director for education and skills, said:
A59 Kex Gill resurfacing to be complete on Friday“We very much recognise the problems of falling pupil numbers at small rural schools, which is an issue affecting a number of communities in North Yorkshire.
“Sadly, there are currently no children enrolled at Fountain’s Earth CE Primary School in Lofthouse in Nidderdale.
“After a challenging time for all, the school governors have made the difficult decision to begin the formal process of applying to the council for a consultation on proposed plans to close the school.
“The request will be formally considered in November. If a consultation is given the go-ahead, it would be undertaken later this year and include a public meeting.”
Work to resurface a section of road on the A59 Kex Gill is set to be completed on Friday.
North Yorkshire Council closed the road for five weeks to undertake the resurfacing between Church Hill and Pace Gate as part of a £500,000 scheme.
It also involved essential stabilising work to the slope of the existing road as well as drainage repairs, gully-clearing, cat’s eyes replacement and maintenance of ground monitoring equipment
The move has caused a lengthy diversion through Pool in Wharfedale and Otley before rejoining the A59.
Now, a spokesperson for North Yorkshire Council has said the work is on schedule to be completed on Friday (November 10).
The move comes as the council is constructing a new road off the A59 at Kex Gill after a series of landslips.
The Department for Transport is providing grant funding of £56.1 million for the £68.8 million Kex Gill re-alignment project, with the remaining £12.7 million allocated from North Yorkshire Council’s capital reserves.
A new four-kilometre stretch of road will be created, replacing an existing part of the A59 which has been affected by the landslips.
The re-aligned route will leave the A59 at North Moor Road and re-join the existing road at Blubberhouses. It is due to be completed by autumn 2025.
Read more:
- Minister ‘open’ to inflation funding discussions for A59 Kex Gill
- Concern about inflation on £68.8m Kex Gill road scheme
Almost 100-year-old Harrogate sports club to get upgrades
North Yorkshire Council has approved plans by Harrogate Racquets Club to resurface its tennis courts and install new LED floodlights.
The members club on Firs Road was founded in 1924 on the same site and as it approaches its centenary next year, there will be a major upgrade of the facility which offers a place to play tennis, table tennis and badminton.
It includes four tennis courts with artificial grass but planning documents state they have been in use for 14 years and are wearing out.
The foundations under the courts have also “deteriorated significantly” and the fencing needs replacing.
Three of the four courts are floodlit but the lights were installed more than 20 years ago. The plans will see the structure under the courts reinforced, the surface of the courts replaced with new state-of-the-art artificial grass, new fencing installed and floodlights on courts 1-3.
Read more:
- St Aidan’s floodlights raises old concerns over light pollution
- Rooms at closed addiction centre near Harrogate could be let to holiday makers
Plans submitted by St Aidan’s CE High School in 2020 to install new floodlights on its sports pitches proved to be controversial due to the potential for light pollution on neighbouring properties.
Harrogate Racquets Club said it sought expert advice and believes the new lighting will reduce the flare currently emanating from the courts and will meet guidance on obtrusive light.
The club sent letters to neighbouring properties and received six responses, none of which raised concerns about the plans.
It has outreach programmes with local schools including Oatlands Primary and Junior schools, Harrogate Ladies College and Pannal Primary School.
The club also runs coaching programmes with over 200 children participating in the weekly programmes across all three sports during term times as well as easter and summer camps.
It’s situated in a residential cul-de-sac off Leeds Road on the south side of Harrogate, opposite the Oatlands Marks & Spencer supermarket.
The facilities are open every day of the week between 8am and 10pm.