Traffic restrictions, new crossing points and vehicle activated signs are to be introduced to make schools safer in the Harrogate district.
A meeting was held at St Aidan’s Church of England High School yesterday in response to growing concerns about traffic outside schools.
School leaders, councillors, road safety leads from the emergency services and campaigners Hazel Peacock, Dr Vicki Evans and Dr Jenny Marks were among those attending.
Cllr Keane Duncan, North Yorkshire County Council’s Conservative executive member for highways and transport, said afterwards a series of measures would be introduced to “make travelling to school safer, healthier and happier”.
Full details are yet to be revealed but the measures will include Harrogate’s first School Streets pilot at Oatlands Junior School, which will see traffic banned except for residents and emergency vehicles on roads outside the school at busy times during school terms.
Cllr Duncan said:
“Today’s meeting represents a crucial step towards improving road safety and promoting more sustainable journeys for children and families.
“We are working closely with all Pannal Ash and Oatlands area schools, local councillors and residents to make improvements in these busy areas.
“The council has agreed to a comprehensive package of highway improvements to be delivered in the immediate term, including new crossing points, vehicle activated signs and Harrogate’s first School Streets pilot at Oatlands Junior School.
“We are continuing to work on further measures to be delivered in the longer term, including consideration of requests for new 20mph zones.”
Read more:
- Pressure grows as politicians join calls for road safety outside Harrogate schools
- Road safety charity lodges complaint against North Yorkshire transport chief
Concern about pupil safety was heightened when two 15-year-old boys from Rossett School were seriously injured outside Ashville College on February 2.
The 20’s Plenty for Us campaign, which wants 20mph to be the default option on residential streets and in town and village centres, has also been calling for change.
Representatives from the following schools attended the meeting: Harrogate Grammar School, St Aidan’s Church of England High School, Rossett School, Western Primary, Rossett Acre Primary, Oatlands Junior School, Oatlands Infant School, St John Fisher’s Catholic High School, Ashville College, Harrogate College and Willow Tree Primary.
10 students at St Aidan’s and St John Fisher associated sixth form get Oxbridge offers
Ten year 13 students from the St. Aidan’s and St. John Fisher associated sixth form in Harrogate have been offered places at Oxford and Cambridge for September 2023.
The neighbouring Christian schools created an associated sixth form in 1973 to pool resources. With 1,150 students, it is the largest school-based sixth form in the country.
A spokeswoman for St Aidan’s Church of England High School said:
“It reflects their hard work, impressive academic ability and the dedication of their teachers, whose encouragement and support has helped them to make successful applications.”
Each university has made five offers.
Ben Chumas (physics), Ella Colburn, Matthew Featherstone (maths), Euan O’Connell (geography) and Malachy Stockdale (maths) have been offered places at Cambridge.
Thomas Jenner (physics), Isabel Miles (French and Russian), Ben Mitchell (medicine), Manuela Pasman (French and Spanish) and Ben Roylance (history and politics) have been offered places at Oxford colleges.
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Teen denies stealing bikes from Harrogate school
A teenager is set to stand trial after being charged with stealing multiple bikes in Harrogate, including from St Aidan’s Church of England High School.
The 16-year-old, who cannot be named for legal reasons, appeared before youth court held at Harrogate Magistrates Court on Friday on a string of charges.
He denied stealing two bikes from a secure bicycle unit at St Aidan’s on Oatlands Drive on October 8.
He also pleaded not guilty to stealing a bike from The Matrix on Hornbeam Park on October 4 and another bike from Harrogate Sports and Fitness Centre on October 16.
The teenager denied a charge that he dishonestly undertook or assisted in the retention, removal, disposal or realisation of stolen goods in relation to the bike stolen from The Matrix.
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A trial date for the charges was set for January 19, 2023.
Meanwhile, the teenager also denied using threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour towards another boy in McDonalds, Boroughbridge Road, in York on November 3.
He is set to stand trial on January 30, 2023, in relation to the charge.
However, the teenager admitted to failing to comply with a youth rehabilitation order imposed by the court on September 5 in relation to a separate charge.
The teenager had failed to attend statutory appointments, returned home late for curfew twice and on two occasions failed to connect a GPS enabled device to electricity supply as required by the court.
The court adjourned the matter until December 9 for a pre-sentence report to be prepared.
Calls for safer cycling on Oatlands Drive in new Harrogate surveyCalls to make Oatlands Drive safer for cycling feature prominently in the initial responses to a new survey on active travel in Harrogate.
North Yorkshire County Council opened a public engagement this week on how to encourage more people to cycle and walk in the densely populated area bordered by Wetherby Road, York Place, Leeds Road and Hookstone Drive and Hookstone Road.
It is hoped the exercise will lead to the introduction of traffic calming measures that result in fewer vehicles and more cycling and walking, especially as the area includes two large secondary schools — St. John Fisher Catholic High School and St. Aidan’s Church of England High School.
People can have their say on an interactive map, which has generated 271 responses so far in its first week.

The narrow cycle lanes on Oatlands Drive.
Oatlands Drive, which passes St Aidan’s, has attracted a strikingly high number of responses, with many focussing on how unsafe the narrow cycling lanes are. The comments include:
“The cycle lane is actually worse than having no lane as cars see it as a segregated lane and pass really close in their lane.”
“Please, please do something to stop people parking their cars at the side of this road. When I cycle on this road, I am forced to undertake potentially dangerous positional moves.”
Other Oatlands area suggestions include banning hospital workers from parking in the Saints area and better cleaning of drains to prevent flooding.
Backlash to previous Oatlands Drive plans
The survey was launched this week — more than a year-and-a-half after proposals for one-way traffic on Oatlands Drive were scrapped following a backlash from residents.
A 20mph limit and traffic filters were then proposed, however, residents were still unhappy.
Kevin Douglas, chairman of Harrogate District Cycle Action, has urged the council to “have the backbone to deliver” this time.
Cllr Keane Duncan, executive member for highways at the authority, said previously:
“The public engagement demonstrates our commitment to ensuring local people are involved in the design process from the outset.”
To have your say on the proposals, click here.
Harrogate district schools support pupils following death of the QueenSchools across the Harrogate district are supporting pupils following the death of the Queen.
Many have spent the day commemorating the life of her Majesty and have paid tribute to the “constant in all our lives”.
At Ripon Grammar School there was a sad, sombre atmosphere in school as students reflected.
Silences were held in assembly and tutor groups, while classes engaged in discussions about the significance of the Queen’s death.
Addressing students this morning, headmaster Jonathan Webb said:
“As a school we will reflect on how we can commemorate the life and work of Elizabeth II as we enter now a period of 10 days official national mourning.”
In a letter to parents David Thornton, headteacher at St Aidan’s Church of England High School in Harrogate, said:
“Our thoughts and prayers go to the Royal Family and everyone in our community as we process this news.
“As a school we have an important role to play in reassuring and supporting our students at times of sadness, particularly when caused by significant national and global events.
“Staff at St Aidan’s will be available to support the school community over the coming days. Our students will be offered the opportunity to reflect on the life and significance of Her Majesty the Queen in assembly and during tutor periods.”
Read more
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Amy Ross, headteacher at Hampsthwaite Primary School, said the main priority would be to continue to support children and the wider community through this “upsetting and difficult time”.
She said:
“We will be spending time reflecting on and paying tribute to Her Majesty the Queen, both in class and as a whole school.”
A statement on Harrogate’s Ashville College website said:
“Everyone in Ashville’s community will share the sadness at the news of the death of the Queen. Her Majesty has been a constant in all our lives and very few of us will have known any other monarch. Our thoughts and prayers are with our new King, Charles III, and all the Royal Family.”
Ex-Harrogate headteacher welcomes end to ‘dangerous’ Beech Grove closure“Our school community is saddened to hear of the death of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, and we join with people across the UK and around the world in offering our condolences to the Royal Family.”
Former Harrogate headteacher Dennis Richards has spoken of his relief at the decision to end the Beech Grove closure.
Mr Richards, who was headteacher at St Aidan’s Church of England High School from 1989 to 2012, lives on Victoria Road, close to Beech Grove.
He said closing Beech Grove to through traffic to encourage cycling and walking was well intentioned but had led to a large increase in speeding traffic on Victoria Road.
So he was delighted when North Yorkshire County Council announced yesterday that restrictions on vehicles using Beech Grove and Lancaster Road in Harrogate will end on August 14.
Mr Richards said:
“The impact on Victoria Road has been traumatic.
“It has been very dangerous, particularly at the top end where it runs into Otley Road, especially during term time.
“Since Beech Grove closed, Victoria Road has become a race track so I’m delighted from a safety point of view.”
Read more:
- Beech Grove road closure in Harrogate to end in 10 days
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Being a former headteacher, Mr Richards said he sympathised with the aim of creating a low traffic neighbourhood to improve the environment.
But he said the scheme was “half-baked” because it had the unintended consequence of making the surrounding roads worse.
Victoria Road, he said, was particularly badly affected because the narrow section from Lancaster Road to Otley Road, where Mr Richards lives, doesn’t have any speed bumps to slow motorists. He said:
“Harrogate Grammar School is only 150 yards up the road and this will make the roads safer.”
St Aidan’s in Harrogate appoints interim head
St Aidan’s Church of England High School has appointed an interim headteacher who will start in September.
David Thornton, an experienced head who has led five schools, will join the school on a temporary basis until a permanent appointment is made. He will be the school’s third headteacher in the last 12 months.
Mr Thornton will replace Chris Ives, who has been acting head since Chris Burt left in December 2021 due to health reasons.
Mr Ives has been offered a post as head of an international school in Kathmandu, Nepal.
Mr Thornton will spend some time at St Aidan’s before the summer holidays start. A school spokesperson said he does not want to be considered for the role permanently and it will be recruiting for another headteacher.
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- St Aidan’s new 3G pitch set to be open until 8pm
Yesterday, St Aidan’s announced it had received a ‘good’ rating from Ofsted after being rated ‘inadequate’ in January.
The previous report was critical of the school’s leadership and management but the latest report said leaders “have acted swiftly to address the concerns raised at the previous inspection”.
St Aidan’s has shared with the Stray Ferret a letter its governors sent to parents about the change in leadership. It says:
“Mr Thornton is a very experienced head and teacher of history who has led five schools in his career. From establishing a new school in County Durham to supporting the development of new school leaders while in interim roles, his expertise and experience shone throughout the process. We have every confidence that he will be an excellent addition to our school community.
“Alongside his impressive track record, most recently at a school in the south east, Mr Thornton also demonstrated the values that are so important to St Aidan’s. One line from his application really stood out to us, and he evidenced throughout our discussions that he wants to be, ‘Of service to young people and their community and deliver an outstanding inspirational educational experience for all.’
“We remain enormously grateful to Mr Ives for all that he continues to do as acting headteacher. During this extraordinary year he has led the school in a calm and purposeful manner which has undoubtedly been of significant benefit to staff and students alike. While we know Mr Ives will be hugely missed by us all, we are also excited to be welcoming Mr Thornton to St Aidan’s.”