Community spirit thrives despite covid crisis

Coronavirus has devastated many lives this year but for one Harrogate street, the pandemic has at least brought neighbours closer together.

Since lockdown in March, residents of St Helen’s Road have been using a WhatsApp group to help each other out.

People have used the group to offer help with shopping, look out for neighbours who are shielding or share unwanted items. 

Six months on the group, set up by Holly Jones, continues to foster community spirit during these dark times in the street, which is near St Aidan’s Church of England High School. 

Colette Lain, who lives on St Helen’s Road, said:

The street has gone from a fairly anonymous place before lockdown to a really lively and supportive neighbourhood.

“It gave you the security that there were people that cared, and that was fantastic.

Ms Lain decided to make the most of the community spirit by organising a street charity raffle to raise money for the Yorkshire Air Ambulance. Ms Lain volunteers for the charity but was unable to do so during the pandemic. 


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Friends and neighbours donated prizes, and residents bought tickets by posting money and their addresses through Ms Lain’s front door. 

Colette Lain

Colette Lain, picking the winner of the raffle.

She raised £250 for the air ambulance, and has plans to generate more through a bumper Christmas raffle in December. 

Jane Kennerly and Holly Jones have also set up a book swap in a telephone box on the street in another move to bring neighbours together.

The Stray Ferret wonders how many other streets in the Harrogate district have come together in this way during the pandemic.

New Harrogate rescue centre rehomes 19 cats

While most independent businesses were forced to close down during lockdown, one local cat rescue has thrived since it first opened in April.

Celia Dakin, owner of Harrogate Cat Rescue, had always planned to open a centre for rehoming stray cats.

Due to the covid-19 pandemic, many national animal charities had to stop neutering feral animals, including cats, and this has increased the number of kittens being born without a loving home. Celia felt this was the perfect opportunity to set up a rescue business.

In just over three months, the rescue centre has rehomed 19 cats and kittens and is currently in the process of homing a further 10 kittens and three adult cats. Celia has always been ‘cat mad’ and has two 11-year-old cats of her own, Geoff and Lady.

Celia told the Stray Ferret:

“Initially, I was approached by a lady who told me that there was a fairly large colony of cats where she worked, and that she had seen kittens. So, I started my rescue.”

Celia runs her business from her home in Harrogate, which has a no-kill policy. This means that no healthy or treatable cats are euthanised or killed even if the shelter is at full capacity.


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She currently houses a poorly five-year-old shorthair cat, Mack, who tested positive for feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV), an incurable viral infection.

He has a large wound on the side of his neck caused by a cat bite, which has now become ulcerated. He also needs dental surgery to remove his rotten teeth. Despite his tough life, Mack has a friendly nature and is in need of a loving home.

The cat lover currently has 22 cats in foster care, including Emily, a six-year-old Ragdoll and Bengal crossbreed, who was sent to Celia when her owners chose to travel abroad.

The rescue encourages new owners to get their cats neutered at four months old, if they haven’t been already.

Celia said:

“I believe that every cat deserves a chance, as most stray and outdoor cats have been failed by humans. I am active in encouraging co-operation between me and other rescues in Yorkshire, with the aim of working together for the benefit of all cats.”

“Neutering cats is an extremely high priority; unneutered males age quicker and are more prone to disease, as they have to fight for food, females and survival. Unneutered females leave home as their hormones dictate and are repeatedly raped by the unneutered males, leading to multiple pregnancies, causing stillbirth, deformity and disease.”

All cats and kittens that are cared for by the Harrogate Cat Rescue receive a veterinary health check, flea and worm treatment, microchip and at the least their first vaccination. The adoption fee for an adult cat or kitten is £90 each.

To find out more about the adoption process, visit the Harrogate Cat Rescue website.

New budget amid coronavirus costs ‘not necessary’, says council

Harrogate Borough Council bosses have said setting an emergency budget is not considered necessary at this time, despite the authority facing a £15 million shortfall due to coronavirus.

Council officials have outlined a financial recovery plan as part of the authority’s response to loss of income as a result of the pandemic.

It comes as councils across the UK are warning that some may have to issue section 114 notices – an emergency measure in dire financial circumstances – and potentially cut services to deal with the financial gaps.


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Meanwhile, Leeds City Council recently warned that it faces £200 million costs amid the pandemic. Leader of the council, Judith Blake, said the authority may have to cut vital services in order to balance its books.

But, the borough council has said that any section 114 notice or mid-term budget is not necessary and it will monitor the situation.

Harrogate Borough Council’s cabinet will meet virtually again next week to discuss its financial recovery plan.

Council Virtual Meeting

In a report due before a cabinet meeting next week, Wallace Sampson, chief executive of the authority, will say that the council will review its 2020/21 budget and reserves as part of its recovery plan. It says:

“Across local government some councils are having to consider whether to produce a new mid-year budget or to issue a section 114 notice in the event that resources are unlikely to be sufficient to meet expenditure.

“However, at this time it is considered that neither of these actions are necessary, although the situation will be regularly monitored.”

The authority faces a £15 million shortfall due to loss of income on such things as leisure and car parking. A grant of £1.65 million was granted to the council by government to help with cash flow.

In an effort to tackle the deficit, senior officers at the authority have outlined a financial recovery plan which will go before senior councillors.

As part of the plan, council bosses will review the authority’s 2020/21 budget, reserves, investment plans and capital expenditure including borrowing.

Officers are expected to report more on the council’s financial position once the reviews are complete.

Meanwhile, the authority has already frozen all but essential spending and implemented a recruitment freeze on all but critical services.

It comes as both the district council and the county council face a combined deficit of around £57 million due to the pandemic.

What is a section 114 notice?

A section 114 notice means that a local council cannot set a balanced budget and new expenditure is banned.

Once a notice is served by the council’s chief finance officer, councillors and senior officials have 21 days to come up with a new budget to balance its books.

In 2018, Northamptonshire County Council was forced to serve two section 114 notices as it failed to tackle its spiralling spending which resulted in an estimated £70 million deficit. The council will now be scrapped in April 2021 and replaced with two unitary authorities.