Harrogate District’s Chamber of Commerce is due to hold its monthly Business Safari event.
The members-only speed networking event will be held next week at St George’s Hotel.
You can sign up to the monthly agenda through the Harrogate Chamber website.
Plant competition for school children hosted by Johnsons of Whixley
Johnsons of Whixley in Harrogate is holding a competition for primary school children.
To celebrate the Queen’s platinum jubilee and gardening, £250 worth of plants will be sent to the winner’s school, including ten plants for their own home garden. Those in second and third place will also win a plant.
Children under the age of 11 can participate by drawing an imaginative Jubilee Garden. The form can be downloaded here.

Children must create a drawing of a jubilee garden as part of the competition
JW is a three-generation run family business which grows and supplies trees, shrubs and plants to UK-wide planting schemes.
The company plays an active part in the community, having collected donations for Ukraine and providing plants to Baby Rainbow Memorial Garden last month.
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- Daleside Garage in Pateley Bridge to relocate this year
- North Yorkshire economy recovering from pandemic, says report
Fire brought under control tonight at Ripon recycling company site
Two fire crews tackled a scrap metal fire at K. A. Anderson metal recyclers on the Dallamires Lane industrial estate in Ripon this evening.
The North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service were called to the large recycling site shortly before 8pm.

Dark acrid smoke billowed into the evening sky
A member of the K.A Anderson management, who was on the main gate to the premises to give fire crews access to the site, told the Stray Ferret:
“Nobody has been injured, it’s simply a fire that has started in a skip.”

The fire was quickly brought under control by the fire crews
Thick clouds of dark acrid smoke billowed into the sky over Dallamires Lane, as officers worked to put out the fire.
They quickly had it under control.
K. A Anderson, a specialist in all aspects of metal recycling, is a third generation family-run business, operating for almost half a century,
It says on the company website that the recycler has built a professional reputation for scrappage, processing and raw metals supply throughout the UK.
The company provides a complete metal recycling service, for many businesses and its major clients include Google and Lord’s Cricket Ground.
Ripon pub set to unveil new £170,000 renovationsThe Golden Lion pub in Ripon is set to open a new beer garden after undergoing renovations costing over £170,000.
The pub in Allhallowgate will open the space, which the owners describe as a “secret garden”, this weekend.
Pub owner Nigel Ayton explained:
“We started renovations before Christmas and are set to open this Saturday. We’ve called it the secret garden due to the fact that looking at the pub you would have no idea it had such a beautiful open area at the rear.”
Mr Ayton and partner, Shelly Herron, initially took over The Black Swan in 2019 on a trial tenancy, before taking on a pub in Easingwold.
But due to the location and the distance from their families, Mr Ayton and Ms Herron decided to move back to Ripon after enquiring about The Golden Lion in January 2021.
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Despite initially being told it wouldn’t be a long-term agreement, in October 2021, Greene King announced they would invest £170,000 into the pub.
Mr Ayton added:
Meet the women behind Ripon’s royal miles of jubilee bunting“It’s not been the best of starts for us as we decided to go into the pub trade/business in December 2019, only to be faced with lockdowns. But now we feel things have turned the corner and can’t wait to get the Golden Lion on the map.”
A team of dedicated knitters are creating Ripon’s royal miles of bunting to wrap around the city in celebration of the Queen’s platinum jubilee.
The all-woman Knit and Natter Club has combined needlecraft and design skills to make masses of red, white and blue bunting emblazoned with golden crowns and the initials E:R.
With less than two months to go until the extended June bank holiday jubilee weekend, organiser Hazel Barker told the Stray Ferret:
“We have received hundreds of requests from shops, businesses and other organisations in Ripon, who want to decorate their buildings to mark the Queen’s 70 years on the throne.
“We’ve still got a little way to go, but we are getting there.”
Collectively, thousands of hours of unrelenting effort has gone into this proud production line.
Mrs Barker, who was made a Freeman of the City of Ripon, for services to the community, said:
” At our homes we are spending every spare minute beavering away making the various elements of the bunting, from flags to the emblems of the four UK countries.
“A group of us then meet on Mondays to create the displays in readiness for them to go on everything from railings to retail premises, the town hall and the entrance to Spa Gardens.”

The knitters meet weekly at Hazel House, in the grounds of Community House
The weekly meetings are at Hazel House – a building in the grounds of Community House, named in honour of Mrs Barker for her work with the Girlguiding Association.
In addition to this, other knitters work from home, with regular supplies of wool provided for them.
The team, totalling 30, is also responsible for the countless hours of behind-the-scenes work that creates Ripon’s Remembrance displays.
They are part of the Ripon Community Poppy Project, founded by Mrs Barker and Councillor Stuart Martin, to mark the 100th anniversary of the end of the First World War in 2018.
Funding for the project
The community project is funded by donations from members of the public and businesses and supported by organisations such as the North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service and an army of volunteers who put up the displays.
For the platinum jubilee display, £2,500 of the sum used to buy the wool, netting and other materials was raised from the sale of decorative covid masks with Christmas designs on them.
And it comes as no surprise to discover that those whose painstaking work will be seen on the city streets in June, are the women behind the masks as well.
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- The waters beckon for Harrogate district paddlers
- Will regeneration of a Ripon pub site reduce crime?
Full list of election candidates in Harrogate district revealed
The list of candidates standing for election to the new North Yorkshire Council in the Harrogate district has been revealed.
Voters will head to the polls on May 5 to elect councillors to the authority, which will replace both North Yorkshire County Council and Harrogate Borough Council.
The Labour Party, Liberal Democrats, Conservatives, Green Party and independents have all fielded candidates ahead of polling day.
Harrogate Borough Council has published a list of election agents and names of candidates. A full list of party candidates will be published today (April 6).
A total of 21 councillors will be elected from the Harrogate district as the council is made up of new divisions.
The deadline to register to vote is Thursday, April 14. You can register here.
List of Harrogate district election candidates
Coppice Valley and Duchy
- Patricia Ann Foxall, Labour Party
- Peter Charles Lacey, Liberal Democrat
- Leighton Anunda Regayre, Green Party
- Graham Kevin Swift, Conservative
- Daniel Jonathan James d`Arcy Thompson, Independent
Valley Gardens and Central Harrogate
- Lucy Jayne Gardiner, Independent
- Samuel John Gibbs, Conservative
- David Johnson, Liberal Democrat
- Paul Ko Ferrigno, Green Party
- Andrew Williamson, Labour Party
Bilton Grange and New Park
- Matthew Robert Scott, Conservative
- Monika Slater, Liberal Democrat
- Tamsin Jade Worrall, Green Party
- Andrew Morris Zigmond, Labour Party
Harlow and St Georges
- John Charles Adams, Labour Party
- Sarah Jane Hart, Independent
- Steven Jackson, Conservative
- Andrew Rickard, Green Party
- Michael John Schofield, Liberal Democrat
Read more:
- No deals expected between Harrogate district opposition parties ahead of election
- Council chiefs promise ‘seamless transition’ to new North Yorkshire Council
Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone
- Helen Burke, Labour Party
- John Radcliffe Ennis, Conservative
- Patricia Ann Marsh, Liberal Democrat
- Anna Rosanna McIntee, Independent
Fairfax and Starbeck
- Philip Anthony Broadbank, Liberal Democrat
- Elizabeth Susan Lumby, Conservative
- Gordon Schallmo, Green Party
- Christopher John Watt, Labour Party
Bilton and Nidd Gorge
- Paul Steven Haslam, Conservative
- Deborah Anne Havercroft, Labour Party
- Andrew Graham Kempston-Parkes, Liberal Democrat
High Harrogate and Kingsley
- Christopher James Aldred, Liberal Democrat
- Geoffrey Ronald David Foxall, Labour Party
- Timothy Ian Myatt, Conservative
Knaresborough West
- David Tom Crosthwaite, Labour Party
- Philip George Ireland, Conservative
- Matthew James Walker, Liberal Democrat
Knaresborough East
- Sharon-Theresa Calvert, Labour Party
- Edward William John Darling, Conservative
- Hannah Gostlow, Liberal Democrat
Killinghall, Hampsthwaite and Saltergate
- Edward Charles Clayson, Labour Party
- David Ryland Goode, Liberal Democrat
- Michael Harrison, Conservative
- William James Rigby, Green Party
Oatlands and Pannal
- Justin James Peter Chan, Liberal Democrat
- Gillian Rosemary Charters, Green Party
- John Mann, Conservative
- Margaret Smith, Labour Party
Boroughbridge and Claro
- Andrew Bell, Liberal Democrat
- Noel Frank Evans, Independent
- Clark Pearson, Green Party
- Jonathan William Starkey, Independent
- Robert Windass, Conservative
Read more:
- How the Harrogate district’s wards will change ahead of local election
- Dispute over Harrogate council by-election raised in House of Lords
Spofforth with Lower Wharfedale and Tockwith
- John Philip Hall, Yorkshire Party
- Alexandra Graham Marsh, Green Party
- Andrew John Paraskos, Conservative
Pateley Bridge and Nidderdale
- Alison Harris, Yorkshire Party
- Stanley Lumley, Conservative
- Andrew James Murday, Liberal Democrat
Ripon Minster and Moorside
- Thomas James Averre, Conservative
- Thomas Mark Cavell-Taylor, Liberal Democrat
- Andrew Williams, Independent
Ripon Ure Bank and Spa
- Barbara Jean Brodigan, Liberal Democrat
- Robin John Burgess, Green Party
- Michael Geoffrey Chambers, Conservative
- Sidney James Hawke, Independent
Washburn and Birstwith
- Ian Roger Galloway, Independent
- Nathan Roger Hull, Conservative
- Paul Geoffrey Trewhitt, Green Party
- Thomas Watson, Liberal Democrat
Wathvale and Bishop Monkton
- Nicholas Malcolm Brown, Conservative
- Hannah Katherine Corlett, Green Party
- Christopher James Knight
Ouseburn
- Richard Musgrave, Conservative
- Arnold Francis Warneken, Green Party
Masham and Fountains
- Margaret Edna Atkinson, Conservative
- Felicity Clare Cunliffe-Lister, Independent
- Judith Mary Hooper, Liberal Democrat
A Harrogate-based employment law firm has expanded its offices to London.
Boardside in London is close to St Paul’s Cathedral and the Bank of England. The location will mean it is easily accessible for clients in the city.
The company now has branches in three different regions, with its headquarters in Harrogate.
The firm wrote in its newsletter:
“Almost five years after launching our niche employment law practice in Yorkshire, we are delighted to announce that we now have a presence in the capital.
“We believe that by having offices in the two biggest legal centres (Leeds and London) in the country, it will be easier for us to meet clients from across the UK.”
Boardside is run by owners Richard Port and Nadine Martson.
Support for Ripon businesses
Ripon’s Business Improvement District has appointed the Place Support Partnership to help firm in Ripon save on running costs.
PSP will visit BID businesses to support and advise them on reducing costs associated with utility and trading bills.
Lilla Bathurst, manager of the BID, said:
“The Place Support Partnership offers various services and acts as a savings scheme to support businesses.
“During the consultation process, businesses identified that they would like 10% of their levy to go on business support.”
Ripon BID says it has also worked to make businesses aware of the Omicron Hospitality and Leisure Grant.
OHLG grants totally £141,342 were distributed to hospitality businesses in Ripon which were negatively affected by the pandemic.
Harrogate BID provided a business grant of up to £750 last month, for qualifying businesses to improve paintwork, signage and accessibility.
Read more:
- Bid to save ‘at risk’ Harrogate district bowls clubs
- Harrogate shop closes as sofa company enters administration
Empty Ripon pub plagued with anti-social behaviour to be redeveloped
The Ship Inn, in the shadow of Ripon Cathedral, was once one of the city’s landmark pubs.
Since its closure, two years ago, the vacant site has been the location for a number of incidents of violence, anti-social behaviour and vandalism.
The area has planning permission for the creation of ten dwellings but in the meantime, the premises have been secured with metal shuttering on doors and windows, while a sign says that all internal valuables have been removed.
The former pub, is to be converted into five apartments and the 0.34 acre site will also include a detached house and four terraced houses.
Architects Watson Batty Properties LLP has submitted a planning application to Harrogate Borough Council, seeking ‘a changed location by 3m to the northwest of 4 terraced houses and revised fenestration featuring ivory sandblasted masonry walling with pewter split face feature banding.’
Once that application has been determined the site will be ready for its transformation from empty pub to residential use.

The site is close to Ripon Cathedral
Residents living on Bondgate and adjoining streets, who have witnessed gangs of youths causing trouble in the area, will hope the redevelopment of the site may help tackle the problem.
Government guidance on how new developments can reduce crime and create safer communities, says:
“Good design means a wide range of crimes from theft to terrorism are less likely to happen by making committing those crimes more difficult. It helps create safer places.”
Read more:
- Residential redevelopment of Ripon pub site
- Man jailed for knifepoint robbery in Ripon
- Robbery, thefts and a man with a machete in Ripon’s Bondgate
Harrogate park and ride ‘still possible’ despite £116m funding failure
The councillor in charge of highways for North Yorkshire has said a park and ride pilot scheme for Harrogate remains possible despite a £116million funding bid rejection.
The Department for Transport yesterday awarded North Yorkshire County Council none of the £116million it bid for from the government’s Bus Back Better scheme. Much of the funding was earmarked to reduce congestion in Harrogate.
Councillor Don Mackenzie, executive member for access at the county council, said he was “very disappointed” with the rejection but parts of the county’s Bus Service Improvement Plan could still go ahead without government support.
Cllr Mackenzie said this included the park and ride, which is likely to operate from Pannal, although questions remained about how a permanent service would be funded.
“The park and ride trial was not part of this funding, and the pilot itself will use the 36 service so it won’t be particularly expensive to find out whether it works or not.
“I’m very anxious that this trial scheme still goes ahead irrespective of today’s result.”
Cllr Mackenzie also said the on-demand bus service, YorBus, which is being trialled in Ripon, Bedale and Masham could be expanded.
He added:
“One of the things in our Bus Service Improvement Plan was to expand the on-demand response service, YorBus, and of course that pilot continues.
“If it continues to be successful, we will roll it out in other areas.
“We will also continue to work in close partnership with bus operators.”
Read more:
- Harrogate bus plans in tatters after government rejects £116m funding bid
- Council could sell Harrogate district grass verge cuttings
The Bus Service Improvement Plan included £23 million for new bus lanes, £74 million for other infrastructure changes and £14 million for support for bus services.
‘Plans didn’t lack ambition’
The government claimed areas that failed to get the cash had not shown “sufficient ambition”. In total, just 34 of 79 areas which applied were successful.
In Yorkshire, this included the West Yorkshire Combined Authority which submitted a bid for £168 million, but was given £70 million, while City of York Council wanted £48 million and got £17.4 million.
Cllr Mackenzie said he believed the plans for North Yorkshire were ambitious enough to win funding and that he was now keen to speak to government officials to understand their decision. He said:
“I don’t think our plans lacked ambition. They were worth £116 million over eight years – that doesn’t lack ambition or aspiration.
“Until such time we have spoken to ministers or senior civil servants, I can’t say exactly what was lacking from our submission.
“We knew the Bus Back Better budget had been severely curtailed… but I expected to get some money, not nothing at all, so I’m very disappointed.”
The county council and Harrogate Bus Company have been successful in a separate bid for £7.8 million to make the firm’s fleet all-electric with the delivery of 39 zero-emission buses.
The project will cost almost £20 million in total, with more than £12 million being invested by Transdev – the parent firm of Harrogate Bus Company.
It will see 20 single-decker and 19 double-decker buses bought over the next three years, as well as the supporting charging infrastructure.
Harrogate council housing officer stole from elderly residents
A Harrogate council officer has been found guilty of stealing from two elderly residents at sheltered accommodation in Ripon.
Yvonne Jones, 60, who at the time was a housing and estate officer for Harrogate Borough Council, asked the victims to pay a week in advance for rent at council-run sheltered accommodation – but kept some of the cash for herself, York Crown Court heard.
One of the named victims, a woman “of some years”, was conned out of £405 after moving into a new council-owned flat.
Prosecutor Philip Standfast said the victim, from Ripon, signed for the new flat in January 2018, when Jones visited her and completed the paperwork.
About two weeks later, Jones, from Harrogate, visited her again and asked her for a payment of £405. Mr Standfast said:
“(The victim) asked her if she wanted cash or a cheque and Jones said she would take cash.”
The victim paid cash and Jones gave her a receipt on a business card, but it showed two figures of £180 and £225 rather than the whole £405. Mr Standfast said:
“(The victim) didn’t question why that receipt was written in that particular way.
“Later, her account was checked by a neighbourhood team leader with the council and there was no record of that cash being paid into that lady’s account.”
Mr Standfast said there were three payments of £85.67 into the council’s account in January and February 2018, but that still left a deficit of £147.72 which had not been credited to the victim’s account.
Fleeced second victim out of £449
The second victim, a man who took up a tenancy at Blossomgate Court in Ripon, was fleeced out of £449 by Jones, whom he first met in February 2018.
She asked him for £200 for rent which he didn’t have on him, but he withdrew it from his bank the following day. Mr Standfast said:
“Despite having asked for £200, (Jones) gave him £20 back, saying he had given her too much.
“It’s not clear why she did that.”
On February 8, Jones met the named victim again and asked for another £200 rent. Mr Standfast said:
“He offered her a cheque, but the defendant said she needed cash and he withdrew it and paid it to her.”
Read more:
- Harrogate district care worker jailed after sexually abusing vulnerable resident
- Four men jailed for Harrogate district burglary spree
In early March 2018, there was a direct debit from the victim’s account to the council for £600, but Jones told him he owed £669. Mr Standfast said:
“She claimed the council could only take an amount of £600 from his account, so he withdrew (the extra) £69 from his bank and paid that to her.”
The victim’s rental account was checked and the £469 he had given her, minus the £20 she gave him back, had not been credited to his account. He notified the council of this.
Acquitted of three other charges
Jones, of High Street, Starbeck, was found guilty of these two thefts following her trial which ended on Friday, April 1. She was acquitted of three other counts in relation to three other tenants.
Mr Standfast said that Jones, who denied all allegations, had been employed as a housing and estate officer at the council from 2014 to 2018, when she was finally caught and ultimately resigned from her post.
‘Her role included dealing with tenants (at Blossomgate and Bondgate Court in Ripon) and “where necessary” taking payments from them for rent and other services.
Mr Standfast said it was “only in exceptional circumstances” that cash should have been taken from a tenant for rent. He added:
“If cash were taken, an official Harrogate Borough Council receipt should have been issued and cash paid in by in by the (housing) officer to a cash-deposit facility.
“That machine would issue a receipt and the cash would be credited to the tenants’ accounts on the following day.”
Mr Standfast alleged that Jones had also taken cash from three other “vulnerable” tenants and either didn’t issue receipts for these payments or did hand them receipts but didn’t forward some of that cash into the council’s account.
These alleged victims included a named man with learning difficulties who needed care and a 77-year-old pensioner with terminal cancer who was receiving housing benefit. However, Jones was acquitted of these three allegations.
Mr Standfast alleged that all the complainants’ accounts were checked by a team leader at the council, who “found discrepancies between what had been paid by the tenants and what was found in their accounts”.
Enquiries were carried out and Jones was suspended in March 2018. She resigned four days later.
Jones will be sentenced for the two convicted offences on April 29.
Plan resubmitted to convert Sharow pub into housePlans have been resubmitted to convert a former Sharow pub into a house.
Owner Mark Fitton has applied to Harrogate Borough Council to change the use of the Half Moon Inn into a four bedroom house.
A similar application was tabled by Mr Fitton in February 2021, but was later withdrawn.
The village pub and restaurant, on Sharow Lane, opened in 1822 but closed in 2016.
In documents submitted to the council, Mr Fitton said “all avenues” had been explored to reopen the pub but had proved unviable.
In a planing statement, the developer said:
“It could hardly be clearer that there is no reasonable prospect of the Half Moon Inn re-opening as a viable hospitality venue.
“All avenues for such an opportunity have been fully explored, over an extended period of time, by agents with strong commercial credentials, unrivalled local coverage and a national licenced-premises specialism.”
Read more:
The proposal to convert the pub into a home has long been opposed by Sharow Parish Council.
Speaking to the Stray Ferret previously, parish council clerk Nick Reed said many people in the village did not want to see the change of use granted.
The parish council set up a working group to link into the viability of using the pub for community use.
Harrogate Borough Council will make a decision on the plan at a later date.