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- Bins removed from Ripon gardens to keep rats at bay
- Lightwater Valley 10K to raise money for North Stainley school
Stray Views is a weekly column giving you the chance to have your say on issues affecting the Harrogate district. It is an opinion column and does not reflect the views of the Stray Ferret. Send your views to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk.
Although it may be a tad disappointing not to have a formal switch on of the Christmas lights, it’s reassuring to hear that the BID are listening to members and thinking about return on investment. They don’t have money to waste.[No Christmas lights switch-on event in Harrogate this year]
It may be a “nice to do” but does it actually help local businesses? Perhaps not. Whereas street cleaning, murals, lighting, flowers, window dressing and advertising does feel (and look) as though the BID is doing a good job.
I don’t run a local business but as a resident, I can see the impact and it does feel notably better than the lacklustre efforts from whatever was being done (or not) several years ago.
So if ever businesses are questioning their investment in the BID, please be assured that from someone who lives in the town centre, it’s making a positive impact.
But FYI – please sort the dangling lights that have been brought down by the recent weather (especially Montpellier Hill), before some morons decide to vandalise them instead. Thank you!!
Mark Fuller, Harrogate
I note that the cost of the garden waste collection will rise next year to £46.50 and that a member of the Council stated that those people who do not use the service should not be expected to pay towards it. [Harrogate district garden waste fees set to increase by 7%]
I can think of many service’s I pay towards that I do not use but am happy to pay for.
Five years after its launch, the controversial £1.4 billion energy-from-waste incinerator near Knaresborough has been declared a success, even by some of the community leaders who voted against it.
The landmark Allerton Park plant, near the junction of the A1(M) and the A59 east of Knaresborough, drew fierce opposition and High Court legal challenges after being declared the best solution to managing 320,000 tonnes of waste a year to improve green disposal methods and avoid landfill costs.
Since the facility opened in 2018, Allerton Waste Recovery Park has continuously exceeded its 70 per cent target for diverting residents’ waste from landfill, achieving nearly 93 per cent last year.
However, the facility has never met the City of York and North Yorkshire Council’s target of recycling five per cent of items in the general waste, only managing just over two per cent for the first time last year.
But Councillor Greg White, North Yorkshire Council’s executive member for waste management, said the continued failure to hit the recycling target was partly caused by a positive reason.
Speaking ahead of a meeting of the council’s transport, environment and economy scrutiny committee examining the plant’s performance, he said that since residents separated high amounts of recyclable materials from their general waste, relatively little material of sufficient quality to recycle was being left to mechanically separate at the plant.
He said overall the facility had proved a success, but needed to increase the amount of energy which could be extracted from general waste at the same time as pressure was mounting from the government to have separate food waste collections.
The meeting heard Robert Windass, the Conservative councillor for Boroughbridge, claim that missing the waste recycling target was due to “the idleness of people who live in the houses who cannot be bothered to put it in their recycling bins”.
Cllr Windass, who went against his Conservative colleagues by voting against the facility as he did not believe the facility would be the best deal for taxpayers, said:
There were a lot of people in the community worried about pollution coming out of the chimneys, but there hasn’t been.”
Cllr Windass said chairing a residents’ liaison committee with the site had been “a hell of a job to start with”, with people fearing the plant would impact on their quality of life and house prices. He said:
“It does work very well. Residents are much more relaxed about it now. The only complaint which we get is HGVs queuing on the road if they can’t get into the site.”
The scrutiny committee heard that since the facility was launched it had dealt with more than 1.5 million tonnes of waste and saved 330,000 tonnes of carbon emissions.
But the meeting also heard that councils were effectively incentivised to provide as much waste as possible as they are paid for it by the site’s operator, which in turn acted as a disincentive to educate residents more about what to recycle.
Councillors were told while processing waste from Derbyshire increased North Yorkshire’s carbon emissions at the site, efforts were underway to cut overall emissions from the site.
After the meeting, the authority’s leader, Conservative Councillor Carl Les, said:
“I thought it was the right thing to do at the time and I still think it’s the right thing to do.
“People call it an incinerator, but it’s producing energy from waste. We should all adopt that hierarchy reduce, recycle, re-use, but there comes a point where you can’t any further, so to get rid of the residual waste and generating energy I think is the right thing.
“I would now like to see some way of capturing the waste heat that is generated and capturing that and we are looking at partners to come next to the site and use that heat.”
His comment is likely to draw criticism from Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones, who this week raised concerns about further development – or “industrial creep” – at the site.
Ripon Together steps up bid to make city greenerThe next step in an environmental initiative launched in late January by the community interest company Ripon Together will be taken on Monday (February 27).
The not-for-profit organisation, which has 150 members, brings people together on projects that improve Ripon.
A meeting starting at 7pm in Thorpe Prebend House, High St Agnesgate, is open to all who want to make Ripon a better place to live through the reduction of carbon impacts.
On the agenda will be plans for a Green Fair in the summer and discussion to agree how to take forward work in the areas of energy efficiency and renewables, waste, recycling and litter and nature, biodiversity and access.
Simon Hewitt, a Ripon Together director, said:
“The first meeting was great. It was really well attended and lots of good ideas emerged. We want to start real action to take those forward.
“That is what the second meeting is for and why we want as many people and bodies as possible to get there. It would be great if people could spread the word and let us have their ideas on these issues either at the meeting or by emailing info@ripontogether.com”.
Mr Hewitt added:
“Lots of people are already doing their bit, whether it is litter-picking, recycling, path clearance or reducing their use of plastic or other packaging. Ripon Together wants to bring groups together to make this even better, encourage more volunteering and tackle new challenges.”
Since the first meeting on January 30, Ripon Together has bid for funding for a feasibility study into placing solar panels on many of the city’s schools and installing more charging points for electric vehicles.
Enterprising students concerned about the amount of waste going into landfill have put their principles into action by “repurposing” storm-damaged trees.
The Ripon Grammar School sixth-formers, who set up their own company to make eco-friendly bags, have created a sideline making wooden keyrings from the branches of trees blown down in their school grounds and near their homes.
The hand-made keyrings, decorated with their student-run Totes My Bag company “orange slice” logo are now their best seller.
Ellie Currass, assistant managing director of Totes My Bag, said:
“One of our main goals is to promote a sustainable lifestyle to help reduce the amount of products and waste fabric going into landfill. Our tote bags are made from 100 per cent recycled cotton and our keyrings are crafted from reclaimed wood.”

Assistant managing director Ellie Currass and operations director Anna Bradley show off some the team’s keyrings, made from trees felled by winter storms.
The company’s sustainability director, Ollie Peacock, came up with the idea for the keyrings after spotting a fallen tree in Sharow, outside Ripon, and when two trees at school came down in a recent storm, the students decided they could also put them to good use.
They have now made several hundred pounds’ profit from selling eco-friendly bags, keyrings and also greetings cards in the school foyer at lunchtimes.
Preparing to compete in the Young Enterprise North Yorkshire area final in March, they plan to branch into exam stationery kits, jewellery and badges, in addition to developing new bag designs. The team recently bagged the Best Teamwork prize after attending the Asda Young Enterprise Trade Fair in Harrogate. Ellie said:
“It gave us a brilliant opportunity to practise sales techniques and interact with the public as well as giving us a sneak peek at some of our competition! We made a good profit and are very proud.”
“We have gained valuable skills such as teamwork, professionalism, time management and the all-important ability to compromise.”

The hand-made keyrings, decorated with their student-run company ‘orange slice’ logo, are now the pupils’ best seller.
Financial director Samarth Dasarathi said:
“We began in September 2022 as a student company: run by students, for students and feel a strong sense of community within our team and our message.”
The Young Enterprise team of nine, led by managing director Lucy Crum, work closely together to decorate their bags, using lino prints created by operations director Anna Bradley, and create stencils for the keyrings using the school laser cutter.

The wooden keyrings were made using the school’s laser cutter.
Creative director Neja Mirando, who helped Ollie craft the wood for the keyrings, also created a digital design for their company’s greetings cards.
Ellie added:
“The Totes My Bag team would like to give our wholehearted thanks to our head of careers, Mr Walker, without whom none of this would be possible. We are very happy with what we have achieved, grateful to all those who have helped and advised us and excited to see what the future will bring for Totes My Bag.”
Festive bin collection dates revealed in Harrogate district
Harrogate Borough Council has published details of changes to waste and recycling collection days over the festive period.
This year, there will only be changes on the week commencing Monday, December 26.
Collections will return to normal on Monday 2 January.
Anyone who is unsure of their dates can check here on the council website.
Details of what can be recycled or reused, including wrapping paper, are available here.
Household waste recycling centres in the Harrogate district are open every day over the festive period except Christmas Day, Boxing Day and New Year’s Day.
They are open every other day from 8.30am to 4pm except on Wednesdays, when they are closed.
Details of when the recycling centres and other services run by North Yorkshire County Council are open over the holidays are here.
£1.2bn Allerton Park incinerator recycling rate worsens
The £1.2 billion Allerton Park waste recovery plant continues to be dogged by mixed performance more than four years after being launched.
The waste recovery plant and incinerator between Knaresborough and Boroughbridge takes 220,000 tonnes of waste collected by councils in York and North Yorkshire and 50,000 tonnes of business waste annually,
A performance report has revealed it is significantly exceeding its target for diverting waste from landfill, achieving almost 90%.
However, it is recycling and composting just over one per cent of the waste, against a target of 5%.
North Yorkshire and City of York councils awarded a contract to private company AmeyCespa to create the facility in 2014 following a high-profile battle with residents of villages surrounding the plant, such as Marton-cum-Grafton.
Last year councillors raised concerns over the plant’s recycling performance after it emerged it had never met its recycling targets, leading the councils to levy £653,000 in performance deductions for the first three years of its operations.
An officer’s report to a meeting of the county council’s transport, economy and environment scrutiny committee next Thursday shows the plant’s recycling performance has marginally worsened during the last year.
The report states issues with the mechanical treatment equipment meant sometimes the plant had to be run in by-pass mode, which meant recyclates were not extracted.
£1.2bn Knaresborough incinerator has never met recycling targets
The report states following maintenance works this year the mechanical treatment performance has significantly improved, with Amey forecasting recycling performance to rise to almost half the targeted proportion.
However, the amount of unplanned downtime at the energy from waste plant significantly improved this year, falling from 61 days to 29, which allowed more waste to be processed.
The report states the latest figures show the best year to date for landfill diversion and energy from waste.
The report concludes further opportunities are being explored with the councils, Amey and Yorwaste seek “to optimise the types of waste delivered to the plant” to secure continued performance improvements.
The county council’s executive member for open to business, Conservative councillor Derek Bastiman, said while the recycling target remained well below what was wanted, the lack of improvement this year had been largely due to unforeseen mechanical issues.
He said the energy from waste scheme had proven to be a good investment by the councils.
Ouseburn division Green Party councillor Arnold Wareneken said any profits from the scheme should be used to increase recycling rates.
He said:
Harrogate council spends £400,000 on bin worker overtime“We need to recycle the money as well – it just needs a bit more investment. The problem I see is we are not collecting food waste separately or enough food waste from industry.
“All local authorities are meant to be collecting food waste.
“We have got to make it more easier for people to put compostable waste in wheelie bins.”
Harrogate Borough Council has spent £408,000 on overtime for bin workers over the last three years.
The Stray Ferret sent a freedom of information request to the council after a refuse collector got in touch to express concerns about overtime spending.
The council spent £138,246 on overtime in 2019, £135,636 in 2020 and £134,196 in 2021. The figures do not include casual workers.
The council, which will be abolished in just under six months, employed 93 waste and recycling drivers and loaders in 2020, compared with 95 in 2021 and 100 in 2020.
David Houlgate, secretary of the Harrogate local government branch of public sector union Unison, said the council had been “in a recruitment and retention crisis for some time”, adding:
“There are a number of factors for this crisis but primary it is, in our view, because of pay freezes and below inflation pay rises for over a decade or more as a result of chronic under-funding from central government who do not appear to care about public services.
“Consequently, some services such as environmental services have endured staffing issues for a number of years. Your readers may have noticed on some occasions that their refuse or recycling collection has been late or not happened at all, as a result.
“Staff may have been asked to work overtime to alleviate the problem but more concerning is that there has been an over-reliance on agency workers to deliver some services.”
Mr Houlgate said Unison submitted a freedom of information request around the costs of agency workers in 2019 and later wrote to the council’s overview and scrutiny commission asking it to look into the “excessive” sums.
The committee agreed to undertake a review but this was delayed by covid and in July this year Unison was informed it was “unlikely that the agency workers piece of work will be undertaken”. Mr Houlgate said:
“The staffing situation has arisen because council staff have been underpaid and undervalued for well over a decade and the situation now with the cost of living crisis has reached a breaking point.”
The Stray Ferret asked the council what the overtime pay rate is for waste and recycling staff and whether it was able to manage the service better to reduce costs.
A council spokesperson said he didn’t have an answer for the pay rate but added:
“Our waste and recycling service has around 30 rounds out per day collecting household waste, recycling, garden waste and trade waste from the 500 square miles of the Harrogate district.
“There are a number of reasons why overtime is required to support the delivery of this service.
“On a day-to-day basis this could range from roadworks, delays or breakdowns leading to rounds finishing late and employees working over their contracted hours. Short or longer term driver and staff shortages also require additional time to be worked by employees to ensure the delivery of this service.
“It is fair and right that additional time worked by employees over contracted hours – that equates to less than five per cent of the overall delivery of the service – is paid at the appropriate rate in-line with our overtime policy. Equally, where hours are worked on bank holidays to ensure rounds are completed, overtime is rightly paid to employees.
“Without the good will and support from staff to work these additional hours we would struggle to deliver the existing quality of service that our residents and business customers expect to receive.”
Business Breakfast: Harrogate hearing company expands to second practice
Business Breakfast is sponsored by Harrogate law firm Truth Legal.
A Harrogate health business is set to expand to a second branch after four years of success in the town.
The Hearing Suite will open a new practice at No 6 The Grove in Ilkley following growth at its premises on East Parade.
Founder Emily Woodmansey, pictured, set up the practice alone but has expanded to offer a team of three audiologists and an ENT consultant.
Having grown up in Ilkley, she recognised that many of her current patients are making the journey to Harrogate and a closer practice would be more convenient for them.
She said:
“Our Harrogate practice is thriving, our ethos is firmly grounded in having a small group of very happy people, and right now Ilkley doesn’t have a full time, dedicated audiology practice.
“The pandemic has reminded people how precious communication is and I’m excited to share our brand of audiology with the people of my home town.”
The practice will have a dedicated wax removal room on the ground floor, along with a full testing suite on the first floor.
The Hearing Suite’s employee Olivia, a former NHS senior audiologist will be the practice’s head of service and it will offer the same services as the Harrogate branch including wax removal, hearing consultations, tinnitus management and hearing aids.
Businesses in central Ripon could benefit from a collective trade waste contract if plans by the city’s Business Improvement District are supported.
The BID is currently asking businesses for their views on the plans, which could also be opened to businesses which don’t pay the levy in exchange for a fee.
In a message sent out with the survey, BID manager Lilla Bathurst said:
“Ripon BID is seeking to save money for levy payers, improve the waste services they receive and enhance the appearance of local streets by procuring a waste collector to offer a high quality, low cost waste and recycling service.”
The organisation said a central contractor could improve reliability and frequency of collections, as well as reduce the costs to BID levy payers. It could also increase the amount of waste sent for recycling instead of going to landfill.
There is also the potential to improve the city centre environment by making more frequent collections and reducing the number of vehicles being used to complete them, said the BID.
County’s first recycled plastic bridge installed at MashamNorth Yorkshire’s first recycled plastic bridge has been installed at Masham.
The new bridge was fitted at Swinney Beck near to the town and was put in place to provide an alternative to traditional crossings.
The area is prone to flooding and was hit by floods in February 2020. Residents raised concern over the condition of the bridge following the storms.
North Yorkshire County Council officials took the decision to replace the bridge with a recycled plastic structure. They said the material will last longer, will not corrode or rust and will not require painting or maintenance.
Cllr Keane Duncan, executive county councillor for highways and transportation, said that the new bridge fits well with its surroundings.
He said:
“Long-term maintenance costs are a huge consideration when installing new bridges on our public rights of way network. This is why we have taken the opportunity to introduce a recycled plastic alternative which is becoming popular in other parts of the country.
“It’s very exciting to see that plastic waste can be used in construction.
“The appearance of Swinney Beck bridge is in-keeping with the area and the previous structure – the only difference is the increased lifespan and environmental credentials.”
Richard King, who lives in Ellingstring village near to the beck, first raised the concerns over the condition of the bridge with the county council.
He said:
“Villagers and our many holidaying visitors love to walk on the local footpaths as a perfect escape from the stresses of normal life, enjoying the wildlife and the fabulous views we get being high up on the side of Wensleydale.
“In November 2020 I was crossing the old Swinney Beck Bridge on one of my daily outings and I saw that the bridge had collapsed and was partially submerged, and therefore dangerous to use.
“I reported it to the county council and they have replaced it with a handsome, practical and safe new crossing, which should last for many years, and has the added benefit of being made from recycled materials.
“This will allow walkers to enjoy many more years of access to a quiet and tranquil corner of our beautiful landscape.”
Cllr Margaret Atkinson, who represents the Masham and Fountains division on North Yorkshire County Council, added:
Plans to build asphalt plant beside controversial Allerton Park incinerator“This route is well-used by local residents and walking groups who raised its poor condition and have welcomed the replacement.
“The recycled plastic bridge is a pioneering addition to North Yorkshire’s public rights of way network. I hope it proves a success and more are considered elsewhere in the county.”
A Harrogate district Green Party councillor has voiced concerns about plans to build an asphalt plant alongside the Allerton Waste Recovery Centre near Knaresborough.
Tynedale Roadstone wants to produce the roadbuilding material at a new plant next to the recovery centre, which was approved a decade ago by North Yorkshire County Council.
The £1.4bn recovery centre uses an incinerator to generate energy from waste but has been dubbed a blot on the landscape by locals.
Such was the strength of opposition to the incinerator that two MPs and protestors handed in a petition with 10,000 signatures at Downing Street.
The bid to build a second plant alongside it has fuelled fears about industrialisation of the area.
Planning documents state Tynedale claims the asphalt plant is needed on “vacant brownfield land” at Allerton Park, partly for environmental reasons.
The papers state:
“The extent of Tynedale Roadstone’s contracts in Yorkshire is such that a new asphalt facility is required to meet demand and ensure locally resourced product is within easy reach of key contract locations.
“The demand is established and continually fuelled by maintenance works requirements; an additional independent asphalt plant is needed to service it.
“Government and company policies on sustainability, carbon footprints, energy efficiency, transport networks, trafficking and haulage distances are some of the many drivers behind establishing another asphalt plant.”
The planning documents state the site has been identified as the best location to serve demand, as the nearest asphalt plants to the site are in Pateley Bridge and at Stourton, in Leeds.
The Allerton site is close to the A1(M) and A59 junction. Existing plastics from the waste recovery plant could be reused at the asphalt plant.

Cllr Arnold Warneken
Green Party councillor Arnold Warneken, whose Ouseburn division includes villages closest to the proposed plant, said the firm’s description of the site as brownfield was “absolute rubbish” and that increasing the number of heavy goods vehicles entering and leaving the site would be a cause of concern.
He said:
“There will be very little support for this locally. It is a very rural location which has had a blister of a building put on it. The site has a waste plant next to it, but beyond that you’ve got prime agricultural land in a rural setting.
“The original purpose of the site for recycling and incineration has to be retained. Whilst it is good practice to put two industries that are complemented together, you have got to look at the impact of the vehicles that are coming onto that site.
“To get to the A1 the HGVs will have to use the A168 which has already got heavy traffic on it from the waste plant and a quarry, so it would add to an existing problem.”
“It’s an industrialised function which needs to be alongside true brownfield sites.”