Independent craft shops in North Yorkshire are coming together to launch a yarn trail across the county to encourage people to buy local and get into knitting.
The North Yorkshire Yarn Trail is running between September 17 and 24.
Thirteen shops will be taking part, including Yarn etc and the White Rose Sewing Machine Co in Harrogate, Knitting Pretty in Knaresborough, and Masham’s Each One Unique.
The trail is happening as part of the UK Hand Knitting Association’s first ‘Yarnstravaganza’ where wool shops nationwide host special knitting-related events.
The shop owners hope it will encourage people to use local businesses and not buy their materials on the internet.
Fiona Burks, who owns Yarn etc. on Knaresborough Road, said:
“We’re trying to keep people offline. It’s a very tactile thing, buying wool. It’s the colour, it’s the feel, the texture. It’s an experience.”
People who want to take part can pick up a “yarn passport” at a participating shop. They then get a stamp for each one they visit.
Anyone who visits all 13 shops will be entered into a prize draw. The winner will receive a £100 voucher to spend in the participating wool shop of their choice.
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The yarn trail will take in 13 shops across North Yorkshire (photo: North Yorkshire Yarn Trail)
Ms Burks also wanted to promote what she saw as the mental health benefits of knitting. She said:
“To knit or crochet, you need to spend time and process and there’s lots of repetition. It’s really quite a good and meditative thing.”
Along with Sharon King, who owns fellow participating shop Ewe and Yarn in Thirsk, the Yarn etc owner had the idea for a yarn trail a few years ago. However, the pandemic delayed their plans.
Both were inspired by trails they saw being run by wool shops in the United States. Ms Burks said:
Report says North Yorkshire mayor will ‘promote local democracy’“The ones in America are just huge. They cover big areas but they’re amazing… They have these wool shops and they’re huge. They have cafés in them – basically, they’re absolutely brilliant.”
A review of proposed sweeping changes to local government in North Yorkshire and York has concluded having an elected mayor and a combined authority “will promote local democracy”.
The claim, in a report to a meeting of North Yorkshire County Council’s executive on Tuesday, comes ahead of an eight-week public consultation over the devolution deal that local authorities have struck with the government alongside local government reorganisation.
Concerns have been raised repeatedly by councillors in North Yorkshire that the substitution of the county’s district, borough and county councils for a single unitary council and a mayor-led combined authority will erode residents’ ability to shape key decisions.
Earlier this month, Independent Cllr John McCartney said many residents engaged in local democracy felt “irked and discombobulated” as their local councils were being swapped for a remote one in what he described as “a power grab” by county hall in Northallerton.
Independent group leader Cllr Stuart Parsons described the potential substitution of hundreds of district and borough representatives for two North Yorkshire and two City of York councillors on a combined authority as a blow for democratic representation and decision-making.
Green Party group coordinator Cllr Andy Brown said devolution “did not appear to be a great exercise in democracy” in the county.
However, the officer’s report to the executive highlights how local government reorganisation was a prerequisite of devolution, which under the proposed deal would bring £540m of new government investment to spend on local priorities.
The report states:
“The deal means that decisions previously taken centrally would now be taken closer to the people affected and the region is not disadvantaged as other regions acquire their own devolution deals.
“The proposed mayoral combined authority will promote local democracy through direct democratic accountability. The introduction of a directly-elected mayor will enable a greater focus for change that will seek to enhance economic growth.”
Read More:
- North Yorkshire devolution concentrates power into ‘hands of few’
- Mayor for North Yorkshire agreed in £540m historic devolution deal
- Explained: What is North Yorkshire’s combined authority?
The county council’s leader, Cllr Carl Les, said the consultation would see the authority argue very strongly that the devolution deal would see more decision-making by locally elected politicians, rather than civil servants and ministers in Whitehall.
He said while much of the structure of local government in North Yorkshire would not change, the most notable differences would be having an elected mayor to act as a strong voice for the county and city and a combined authority to provide strategic decision-making.
Addressing concerns over local democracy, Cllr Les said while all residents would continue to a locally elected councillor to represent them, the council was in talks with a number of parish and town councils about what services they would like to have jurisdiction over.
He said there was “nothing on or off the table” in terms of the powers towns and parishes could take on.
Concerns over exploitation in North Yorkshire as number of young carers risesChildren’s services bosses say a “significantly higher” number of children are coming forward as young carers, partly due to physical and mental health conditions not being treated during the pandemic.
A North Yorkshire County Council meeting heard precise numbers of people aged 18 and under who care for a friend or family member who cannot cope without their support had not been established since the pandemic as the 2021 census data was still being analysed.
However, the meeting was told it was believed the number of young carers had risen sharply since the 2011 census, when 1,107 young carers aged 15 and under were identified in the county, 70 of whom were providing 50 or more hours of care a week.
Some councillors expressed surprise after hearing the 2011 census also identified 2,436 unpaid carers aged 16 to 24, 203 of whom provided 50 or more hours of care a week.
Councillors heard the council’s annual Growing Up In North Yorkshire survey of children would also help establish accurate figures of the rise.
The young people’s scrutiny committee meeting heard to meet its legal duty to provide all carers with an assessment of their needs and put in services to protect their health and wellbeing, the authority was working with numerous bodies, and in particular schools, to identify as many young carers as possible.
Officers said the authority had strengthened a drive to identify young carers, some of whom are reluctant to ask for help for fear of being perceived as weak or facing bullying.
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They said the council’s successful awareness-raising campaign may have contributed to the increase in young carers by removing stigma and instilling a greater willingness among young people to come forward and seek help.
An officer added:
“Coming out of the pandemic we know that some people’s health issues haven’t been addressed or have deteriorated, and particularly we are yet to see the impact on mental health, both for adults and young people.
“We are certainly seeing some impact already on children’s services. I think we will see an increase in the number of carers as a result of the pandemic.”
In response, councillors said children were providing a free service that the authority should be providing instead.
Conservative councillor for Bilton & Nidd Gorge, Paul Haslam, said the young carers were “providing care on the cheap”.
Conservative councillor for Thorp Willoughby, Cliff Lunn added:
“It could be seen that we are merely training them to do the job properly rather than addressing the problem. In the bigger picture we could be seen to be exploiting childhood.”
A senior officer replied that any service could not completely fill the gaps that families, and in some cases young children, provide.
She added:
Eight-week consultation to be held on creating North Yorkshire mayor“I think that’s a really valid point. One of the aspects of the services provided is to make sure the adults who need the care are aware of all the sources of support that they can access, including financial benefits that may help them to pay for care to relieve the carer responsibilities for the child.”
An eight-week public consultation looks set to start in October asking people in North Yorkshire if they support devolution and the election of a mayor.
North Yorkshire County Council’s executive will be asked to agree to the consultation when it meets on September 6.
It will also be asked to pay an initial £600,000 to cover the costs of the consultation exercise and other early implementation costs.
If devolution goes ahead, it will lead to the creation of a combined authority for North Yorkshire and York and the election of a mayor for the region.
A draft deal was signed on August 1, which is Yorkshire Day, in York. The 32-page document promised £540 million over 30 years and more devolved powers over skills, transport and energy.
Now councillors are being asked to move to the next stage of the process.
Councillor Carl Les, the Conservative leader of the county council, hailed the deal as “life-changing for the region’s economy”, adding:
“I have been a huge supporter of the devolution of powers and money from Whitehall to the Town Hall and of local-led decision making set against our own priorities.
“I have no problem in recommending the acceptance of the draft deal and of asking my executive colleagues to agree a public consultation.”
Earlier this month, the Liberal Democrats in Harrogate and Knaresborough called for a public vote on the deal saying it gave too much power to one person.
Read more:
- North Yorkshire devolution concentrates power into ‘hands of few’
- Strayside Sunday: Is the £540m Devolution Deal good enough?
- Explained: What is North Yorkshire’s combined authority?
If the consultation is agreed, it will run through the autumn and close before Christmas.
York and North Yorkshire councillors will then consider the results and make a decision on a submission back to the UK government in the spring.
The current timeline then outlines the formation of a combined authority for the region in winter 2023, with the public electing a mayor in May 2024.
The deal can be found on the Government’s website, here.
The executive paper can be read here.
Harrogate district to get 20 new electric vehicle chargepoints
North Yorkshire is set to receive 140 new chargepoints for electric vehicles under a scheme announced today by the Department for Transport.
The county’s seven districts, including Harrogate, will each get 20 chargers.
The chargepoints will installed at on-street locations and at larger petrol-station charging hubs.
It is hoped the move will give drivers without home chargers more confidence to switch to electric, and reduce ‘range anxiety’ among existing electric vehicle users by helping to ensure motorists are never far from a chargepoint.
North Yorkshire County Council was awarded the funding today.
The council previously suggested that Markington, Pateley Bridge and Conyngham Hall in Knaresborough could receive new chargepoints in the Harrogate district. But it has yet to confirm the locations after today’s news.
Councillor Greg White, the council’s executive member for climate change, welcomed the funding. He said:
“The switch to electric vehicles is necessary as North Yorkshire moves towards becoming carbon zero, but the rural nature of the county presents some significant challenges.
“We worked hard to come up with an innovate scheme which will begin to provide the answers motorists need if they are to have the confidence to go electric.”
The chargers are part of the new Local EV Infrastructure (LEVI) pilot scheme where the council and industry work in partnership.
Companies are putting £200,000 towards the scheme.

The council will install more electric chargers (photo: Andrew Roberts/Unsplash)
Harrogate currently has six public charging points – though the type and number of charging points varies between each station.
Knaresborough currently has two charging points whilst Ripon has four.
National plans
North Yorkshire is one of the first nine areas to receive funding.
A total of £20 million has been allocated for the pilot scheme nationally.
The government plans to eventually invest £450 million into the scheme nationwide.
It intends to grow the network of charging points around the country with more than 1,000 new charging stations set to be installed.
Decarbonisation minister Trudy Harrison said:
‘Everybody matters’: Marie Curie’s UK medical director on why she has the ‘best job in the world’“We want to expand and grow our world-leading network of EV chargepoints, working closely with industry and local government, making it even easier for those without driveways to charge their electric vehicles and support the switch to cleaner travel.”
When Dr Sarah Holmes was on a hospital ward round and it became clear a long-term patient was dying, a consultant said they didn’t need to see her anymore.
“Outraged” at this, Dr Holmes, who had only recently qualified, snuck away and went to see her.
It was at this moment she realised she wanted to pursue a career in palliative medicine.
Now, just over 20 years later, she is a consultant in this field and is the medical director of Marie Curie Hospice Bradford, where she has worked since 2007.
In July 2020, she became UK medical director for Marie Curie, and combines this role with her ongoing clinical work in the hospice.
‘There is loads we can do to make life better’
Dr Holmes, who is set to move to Harrogate in the coming weeks, told the Stray Ferret:
“I just really wanted to make sure that people are looked after right until the end of their lives, not just if an illness is fixable.
“Even if the illness can’t be cured, there is loads that we can do to make life better. From working at Marie Curie for so many years, I see that every day.”
Marie Curie is the UK’s leading end of life charity. It provides frontline nursing and hospice care, a free support line and a wealth of information and support on all aspects of dying, death and bereavement.

Marie Curie Bradford Hospice.
Describing the work of Marie Curie, Dr Holmes explained that the team looked after anyone with a life-limiting illness.
She explained:
“A lot of people think we just look after people with cancer, but it can be any life-limiting illness. So I see lots of people with motor neurone disease or Parkinson’s disease or lung conditions. All sorts of conditions really.
“When you tell people you work with people who have got life-limiting illnesses, they say ‘oh gosh that must be really depressing’. But actually, it’s just an amazing job. It’s the best job in the world.
“It’s all about life and living and getting the most out of life.”
Dr Holmes said there were obviously sad moments, as they were looking after people who were dying.
However, she said there was an enormous sense of satisfaction to know that you had supported a person to die peacefully and comfortably.
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She added:
“You also make a difference to the family afterwards as well. We are here to look after them and make sure they get all the support that they need.
“People are amazing. They let us into their lives at points that are really difficult. It’s just an incredible privilege what they share with us.
“I feel really lucky to be doing this job.”
Nursing service
Dr Holmes said while the Bradford hospice supported that particular population, there was a nursing service in North Yorkshire made up of qualified nurses and healthcare assistants.
She said:
“In the Harrogate area, if someone was at home and dying, one of our healthcare assistants or nurses would go and be with them overnight.
“It gives the family a chance to get some rest because sometimes it can be quite hard work looking after someone all the time at home. So it allows the family members to get some sleep and be confident that their loved one is being looked after.”
Dr Holmes said the work of Marie Curie was vital.
She said:
“I think it is really important actually. Just looking after people at the end of life is really important.
“Whatever advances we have in medical science, we are all going to die at some point. We get care from before we are born, but actually I think sometimes not everybody gets the care at the end of their life that they should get.
“We feel at Marie Curie that we have got a really important role to raise awareness of the importance of that.
“Everybody matters and everybody should be able to get the care and support that they need right up until the end.”
Fundraiser
The Marie Curie Brain Game is returning to Yorkshire for a fourth time on Thursday, January 26 and for the first time in Harrogate in the newly refurbished Majestic Hotel & Spa.
Guests will be treated to a drinks reception before enjoying a gourmet three-course dinner. The celebrity-hosted quiz will run throughout the evening and guests will also have the opportunity to bid for exclusive lots in the live and silent auctions, and win prizes in the grand raffle.
This black-tie event invites companies from across Yorkshire to come and enjoy an evening of brain-teasing entertainment and battle it out in the ultimate corporate quiz to be crowned Yorkshire Brain Game champions.
To book a table, click here.
Explained: What is North Yorkshire’s combined authority?As part of a devolution deal which was announced this week, a combined authority will be set up for North Yorkshire and York.
The move will be historic for the county as it joins Greater Manchester, West Yorkshire and Tees Valley in setting up such an authority.
Should it be given the go-ahead, a combined authority could be set up for North Yorkshire and York by autumn 2023.
But what is a combined authority and how would it work?
What is a combined authority?
A combined authority is a body set up for two or more councils to make joint decisions.
In this case, the upcoming North Yorkshire Council and City of York Council would come together to make decisions on matters such as economic development and transport.
The combined authority will be chaired by the elected mayor of North Yorkshire and York.
It will be a separate body to North Yorkshire Council and City of York Council.
Four councillors from North Yorkshire Council and City of York Council will sit on the mayor’s executive, should it wish to operate on such a system.
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An overview and scrutiny committee will also be set up to scrutinise the decisions of both the mayor and combined authority. Six councillors from each council will be nominated to sit on the committee.
The closest example of this is West Yorkshire Combined Authority, which recently has led on the £10.9 million Station Gateway scheme, as well as similar schemes in Skipton and Selby.
In West Yorkshire, Labour and Co-Operative representative Tracy Brabin has been the elected mayor of the county and head of the combined authority since 2021.
What decisions will it make?
The combined authority’s powers focus mainly on overarching matters that affect more than one place, for example transport and economic development.
Under the devolution deal agreed this week, the authority would also oversee skills and adult education.
Services such as bin collections and highways will remain with the unitary council.
Why do we need one?
Under the devolution deal agreed with government, a mayor and combined authority must be set up in order to access further funding for areas such as housing and economic development.
It is also required for some powers to be devolved from Westminster to North Yorkshire and York.
North Yorkshire council officials feel the move will help the county be able to make strategic decisions jointly with York.
Liberal Democrats call for public vote over North Yorkshire devolution dealHarrogate and Knaresborough Liberal Democrats have called for a public vote over a £540 million devolution deal which was announced this week.
The historic deal for North Yorkshire and York was signed by government and county council officials on Monday and comes with an elected mayor for the region.
But opposition Liberal Democrat councillors have said residents should be “allowed to make their own decision” over whether to accept the deal.
Cllr Pat Marsh, leader of the party on Harrogate Borough Council, said the agreement concentrated “too much power into the hands of one person”.
She said:
“I have serious reservations about this deal. It’s being framed as devolution – but it is just not. Harrogate and Knaresborough residents lose out.
“We are not even guaranteed any investment towards the renovation of Harrogate Convention Centre as part of the deal. I do not see how anyone can think the concentration of power into the hands of one person is devolution – the government have created North Yorkshire unitary authority, that is not even up and running yet and they are already pushing for a mayor.
“We’ve moved from smaller district and borough councils to one enormous unitary authority, and now we’re set to get a mayor ruling over all of us and the City Of York, with more power and less local accountability and scrutiny than any of our councillors or MPs.
“The mayor will have the authority to impose an additional council tax precept on households and to raise business rates.”
The deal, which was signed by Greg Clark, secretary of state for levelling up, housing and communities, will see the county given £540 million over 30 years.
It will also see a combined authority set up and the creation of a mayor, who is expected to be elected in May 2024.
Read More:
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- Mayor for North Yorkshire agreed in £540m historic devolution deal
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Cllr Carl Les, Conservative leader of the county council, described the deal as a “huge opportunity” for North Yorkshire.
He said:
“The chance to secure a wide range of decision-making powers as well as bringing in millions of pounds of investment for North Yorkshire is a huge opportunity for us all to shape our own future for many years to come.
“It will make a real difference to the hundreds of thousands of people who live and work in North Yorkshire, driving future prosperity and much better opportunities that are so important to everyone.
“Whether it is improving skills and education, bringing in more investment to the region or helping improve transport links and providing much-needed affordable housing, the proposed deal would enable us to take far greater control of our own destinies.
“An elected mayor representing both York and North Yorkshire would be a powerful figure to have a seat at the table for further negotiations with the Government, bringing real and tangible benefits to the region.”
Councillors on both North Yorkshire County Council and City of York Council will be given a vote over whether to accept the deal in the coming months.
North Yorkshire’s devolution deal: What’s in it and how will it work?The historic devolution deal struck between North Yorkshire and the government on Monday will bring millions of pounds into the county — but it could have been more.
Signed off by Greg Clark, secretary of state for levelling up, housing and communities, the 32-page document promises £540 million over 30 years.
It will also see North Yorkshire and York join other major counties and cities in getting its own mayor and a combined authority to oversee the funding.
Local leaders have lauded the deal as an opportunity not to be missed, but analysis of the document shows it could have offered more.
Guaranteed funding
In 2020, officials at North Yorkshire County Council started discussions with government over the potential for a devolution deal for the county and City of York Council.
This culminated in a 140-page document being drawn up listing the requests for new powers and funding from Whitehall.
It was formally submitted in January 2021 and included proposals such as a £750 million mayoral funding pot over 25 years and more powers over skills, transport and energy.
The funding pot, known as “gainshare”, is guaranteed annual funding from central government.
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Fast-forward 18 months and the fruits of the negotiations between ministers and council bosses have produced something slightly different.
Instead of the requested £750 million funding pot over 25 years, £540 million over 30 years has been agreed.
The initial proposal tabled by council bosses would have seen £25 million a year come into North Yorkshire and York – instead it will be £18 million.

North Yorkshire County Council’s offices in Northallerton.
However, more power over skills and transport will be devolved.
It will see whoever is elected mayor and the new combined authority have control over the adult education budget and the ability to draw up its own transport strategy.
Control over bus franchising has also been granted to the county and the power to set up Mayoral Development Corporations, which have the power to buy land for housing or employment to regenerate a defined area.
Much of the deal echoes what was given to Tees Valley in 2015, whose Conservative mayor Ben Houchen has since exercised his economic development powers to buy Teesside International Airport and Redcar Steelworks.
Extra funding for homes
Aside from the £540 million over three decades, funding has also been allocated for specific areas.
For example, ministers have awarded £12.7 million towards building homes on brownfield sites over the first two financial years of its existence.
A further £2.65 million has been allocated specifically for low carbon and affordable housing.
It suggests that ministers were more happy to part with cash on housing schemes under the deal than in other areas.
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The only other area in the deal awarded specific funding was £7 million to “drive green economic growth” towards the ambition of creating a carbon negative county.
However, this cash is subject to a business case being submitted to government.
No Harrogate Convention Centre money
While the deal offers funding for the wider county, much of the detail on specific towns and areas amounts to “commitments to engage” or mentions already announced cash for schemes.
Harrogate itself is mentioned four times in the document. Three of those mentions are for the A59 Kex Gill realignment and Station Gateway projects, which are underway. Ripon, Knaresborough, Pateley Bridge, Boroughbridge and Masham are not mentioned.
The fourth time Harrogate is mentioned is for Harrogate Convention Centre.
As previously reported, funding for a £47 million upgrade of the centre was requested. But although the centre is mentioned in the devolution document, funding was not pledged.
However, the deal is a provisional agreement and it remains to be seen where the funding will go when the mayor and combined authority is established.
‘Very relieved’
Much of the deal is years in the making for those who have sat around the negotiating table with ministers.
Cllr Carl Les, leader of North Yorkshire County Council, said he was relieved to have signed off on the provisional agreement with ministers.
He told the Stray Ferret:
“I’m very relieved that we have got to this point. We have now got to explain it to the public.”

Cllr Carl Les, leader of North Yorkshire County Council.
A glance at the main points of the deal shows the government willing to part with millions of pounds worth of funding on the condition that a new layer of governance is set up to oversee it.
For the IPPR North think tank, the new money is welcomed and “should be seized”.
However, Rosie Lockwood, head of advocacy at the think tank, pointed out that cuts due to austerity meant North Yorkshire still faced a difficult future.
She said:
“A devolution deal which unlocks funding and transfers powers from Whitehall to North Yorkshire and York is good news for communities across the area. This is an opportunity to be seized.
“But North Yorkshire and York will face challenges as it moves forward, not least because local government has already been eroded by austerity. We can’t forget that the north saw a £413 per person drop in annual council service spending over the austerity decade.”
What happens now?
Despite the secretary of state for levelling up, housing and communities, putting his signature to the deal, it will still require approval from both North Yorkshire County Council and City of York Council.
A public consultation will also be carried out on the devolution deal in the coming months.
From there, the councils can then undertake a governance review to set up the combined authority and mayor, should councillors back the deal.
If all goes ahead, a combined authority for North Yorkshire and York could be in place by autumn next year and a mayor elected in May 2024.
Opposition councillors raise concern over £540m North Yorkshire devolution dealOpposition leaders in North Yorkshire have given a mixed reaction to the announcement that a devolution deal has been agreed and have questioned whether the county’s residents will be fairly treated.
With the Tories achieving a narrow majority in May’s elections, opposition councillors say they will hold North Yorkshire County Council’s Conservative administration to account over how the gain-share or extra funding from government is divided between the county and York.
The comments come as a historic 30 year devolution deal was announced by ministers today, which will mean North Yorkshire and York will see an elected Mayor in 2024 with £540 million pounds of government cash.
Leader of the authority’s largest opposition group, the Liberal Democrats and Liberals, Cllr Bryn Griffiths said he had reservations over devolution and the combined authority and mayor that went with it.
He said:
“The only way to get significant money from the government at the moment it seems is via combined authorities. I don’t think it’s the right way to do things, but it’s left areas without one in between the Devil and the deep blue sea.
“I don’t think mayors are very accountable, but if it gives access to funding it’s a balancing matter between accountability and funding.”
‘Not a great exercise in democracy’
A number of other authority opposition members have similar concerns that devolution has proved to be an intensely political process.
Independent group leader Cllr Stuart Parsons said:
“It’s worrying in that it’s a political process as that means a change in government in a couple of years’ time could lead to all sorts of problems with it.
“A new government might not want things to work that way, and then the governance rules that appear to be set in place for it would be an absolute farce.”
Cllr Parsons said suggestions that two North Yorkshire and two City of York councillors would form the decision-making body on the combined authority with a mayor would be a blow for democratic representation and democratic decision-making.
He said the councillors on the combined authority would be from a council’s ruling group there would be no “serious political representation on that body”.
Read More:
- Have devolution fears that Harrogate will be voiceless come true?
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Green Party group coordinator Cllr Andy Brown agreed that devolution “did not appear to be a great exercise in democracy” in the county.
He said:
“Genuine devolution would be a fantastic thing for North Yorkshire. Unfortunately it’s not what is taking place.
“At the moment we have a massive exercise in the centralisation of the district councils into one gigantic council and that council has yet to demonstrate it understands fully democratic processes.
“The critical factor will be not how much power central government delegates to Northallerton, but how much power Northallerton genuinely delegates to its communities.”
Meanwhile, Labour group leader Cllr Steve Shaw Wright said while he believed devolution would benefit North Yorkshire, he was uncertain about the timing.
He said the combination of launching a new unitary authority, starting negotiations with City of York Council and holding mayoral elections was “an awful lot all at once”.
Cllr Shaw Wright said:
“I know there’s financial benefits, but it’ll not repay what we’ve had cut over the last 10 years.”
He added suggestions that the combined authority would feature just two York and two North Yorkshire councillors was “a recipe for disaster at the worst and deadlock at the best” and that a larger more politically representative decision-making body would be more effective.