The findings of a council-run review into Harrogate’s hosting of the 2019 UCI Road World Championships could be revealed before the end of this year.
Members of Harrogate Borough Council’s overview and scrutiny commission are running the review into the cycling event, which was hailed as a success by organisers but criticised by many businesses and residents who had complaints over road closures and diversions.
The nine-day event will also be remembered for leaving West Park Stray severely damaged after it was used as a spectator area during heavy rainfall, with repairs works and upgrades later costing £130,000.
Cllr Nick Brown, who is one of several councillors leading the cross-party review, told a meeting on Monday that the commission had asked residents to give their views on the event as part of a consultation which will now be opened up to businesses.
He said:
“The public consultation has been undertaken – we have got about 700 responses which for a consultation is quite a lot.
“Those have been analysed and we are going to do some further consultation with the business community and a number of other organisations.
“This has taken rather longer than I would have liked, but obviously we have had covid so it has not been a very easy time.
“We will hopefully have a report to the commission in December.”
Read more:
- Council Stray repairs contract given under ‘urgent circumstances’
- Questions raised over timing of Harrogate council’s UCI review
- UCI World Championships caused ‘major disruption’ in Harrogate, says report
If the findings are published in December, it will mark more than two years since the event was held in September 2019 when hundreds of international cyclists competed in races starting in different towns and cities across Yorkshire but with each finishing in Harrogate.
The review of the event was launched last year with the aim of “building on its successes and identifying any areas for improvement to inform the organisation of future events,” the council previously said.
It is also separate to an economic impact study of the event which was carried out by accountancy firm Ernst and Young at a cost of £19,000 to the council.
The study concluded the championships was watched by a global television audience of 329 million and resulted in an economic boost to the local economy of £17.8 million.
However, it did not take into account losses by businesses affected by road closures and a reported drop in town centre footfall – something the new review is aiming to cover.
New signs will ‘make people think twice’ about parking on Stray, says councilNew signs on Oatlands Drive in Harrogate will “make people think twice about parking” on the Stray, according to Harrogate Borough Council.
Cyclists have long been frustrated by vehicles parking on the Stray and blocking the cycle lane along the busy road.
It often happens when activities, such as football, take place on the Stray at weekends.
The signs that appeared this week warn that parking on Stray land is an offence and could lead to a £100 fine or the vehicle being removed.

Cars parked on Oatlands Drive.
A council spokeswoman said:
“We continue to work with the county council to try and find a more permanent solution to the parking situation on Oatlands Drive in Harrogate.
“Until this time we have installed signage to advice people, that by parking on the Stray, they are breaching the Stray Act.
“A breach of the act allows the borough council — as custodians of the Stray — to issue a £100 fine to anyone caught parking on the Stray, or to have their vehicle towed away.
“We hope that the signage will make people think twice about parking on Oatlands Drive and allow cyclists to use the cycle path as intended.”
Read more:
- Cycle group welcomes new ‘no parking’ signs on Harrogate’s Oatlands Drive
- Controversial Oatlands Drive active travel scheme scrapped
Cycle group welcomes new ‘no parking’ signs on Harrogate’s Oatlands Drive
A cycling group has welcomed new signs on the Oatlands Drive section of the Stray in Harrogate saying it is an offence to park on the land.
Cars frequently mount the kerb to park when activities take place on the Stray, blocking one of the cycle lanes — much to the fury of cyclists.
One side of Oatlands Drive has double yellow lines but the side where vehicles park does not.

Cars mounting the kerb and blocking the cycle lane on Oatlands Drive.
The issue became a particularly sore point this year when proposals to make Oatlands Drive one-way for traffic and improve the cycle lanes were rejected after protests by residents.
So the newly-installed signs, warning that parking on the Stray could lead to a fine or vehicles being removed, has been hailed as a “step forward” by Kevin Douglas, chairman of Harrogate District Cycle Action, which promotes cycling.
He said:
“The principle of putting signs up is a step forward.
“It’s something that we have been asking them to do for some time. People parking there is forcing cyclists into the middle of the road.
“We support any action which helps improve cycling.”
The Stray Ferret has approached Harrogate Borough Council, which erected the signs, for further details.
Read more:
- Ill feeling lingers after decision to scrap Oatlands cycling scheme
- Video highlights issue of motorists parking on Oatlands cycle lane
Stray Views: Greed and high house prices are forcing people out of Harrogate
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. See below for details on how to contribute.
Greed has made Harrogate homes unaffordable for many
I read your series of articles about Harrogate’s high housing costs and its impact on hospitality workers with interest.
However, I read Alex Goldstein’s contribution with increasing incredulity. I’m not sure whether he was being deliberately provocative or is completely heartless.
I was brought up in one of Harrogate’s less affluent areas in the 1950/60s and many of my neighbours and my friends’ parents worked in the hospitality sector. Strangely enough, they were able to support a family on their earnings, possibly because they lived in either council houses or reasonably priced rental accommodation.
It must be plain for everyone to see that the disparity between high priced accommodation and hospitality sector wages means it is inevitable that those wishing to work in this sector are no longer able to afford to live in Harrogate.
My heart bleeds for the buy-to-let investors who would be hurt by rent caps. Their greed has made Harrogate unaffordable for more and more ordinary workers.
I do hope that Mr Goldstein will soon be able to afford his Lamborghini and drive off to Mayfair where his despicable ideas may be better appreciated.
Margaret Fox, Harrogate
Read more:
- Are Harrogate’s high housing costs to blame for the hospitality recruitment crisis?
- Harrogate council began talks with new Christmas market organiser in March
The Montpellier Hill Christmas market experience was a nightmare
I’m sorry, I’ve totally lost my rag with this nonsense. What person thinks there is “no more appropriate” a site than Montpellier Hill for this event?
In a town with more than 200 acres of readily accessible open space and a half vacant town centre, we persist year after year on shoving hundreds of traders and tens of thousands of visitors on a muddy slope in the most cramped and inappropriate part of green space Harrogate has to offer.
As a local of more than 15 years, you soon learn to stay well clear of the Christmas market, such are the miserable circumstances under which it is delivered. Its absolutely horrid — thousands pushing past one anther in an obscenely small space, with narrow alleys and a sense that if you browse, you are blocking the crowds and inconveniencing everyone else.
If we had a modicum of common sense, we would relocate to another part of the Stray and have wide, airy corridors, with space between units so people can take a leisurely stroll and browse at their own pace, thus probably spending far more than they might have otherwise.
I love the concept of a Christmas market, I am ashamed of the way Harrogate delivers it simply because of the location. Look at Leeds, Durham, York — anywhere else as a better example of how it can be done without it being a positively suffocating (and covid-breeding) experience.
Mark Fuller, Cold Bath Road, Harrogate
Universities offer more than degrees
I have just read Marilyn Stowe’s column about the anxiety of not getting the A level grades you would have hoped to get.
As a lecturer for almost 40 years in a post-1992 university and an admissions tutor for much of that time, I spoke to and advised many university applicants in that position and I am gratified to say that my institution provided a more than satisfactory and welcoming academic, social and diverse community to a great number of them.
I am particularly proud of those who took up places at our university who saw the opportunity afforded to them not just as a chance to rise to the top but to serve the wider community, including an international one, in a professional capacity.
The pandemic has shown us just how much we need and rely on those whose work supports as a matter of course the wider community and those of every social constituency who find themselves in need.
Glyn Hambrook, Harrogate
Do you have an opinion on the Harrogate district? Email us at letters@thestrayferret.co.uk. Please include your name and approximate location details. Limit your letters to 350 words. We reserve the right to edit letters.
Is Harrogate’s rewilding experiment increasing hay fever?
Harrogate Borough Council‘s rewilding to encourage bees and other wildlife has delighted many in the district this summer.
But one group of long-suffering residents believe it could be exacerbating their hay fever.
The pollen count has been at its mid-summer peak recently, especially on warmer days.
Many areas of the district, including parts of the Stray, have been left to grow wild, resulting in more pollen than in previous years.
Stray Ferret reader Clare Winsor got in touch to say she suspects her family’s recent bouts of hay fever could be related to the longer grass and wildflowers.
She said:
“My family and I are really suffering from hay fever this year, much worse than we would normally.
“I think this may be due to an increase in pollen/seeds/allergens produced by the overgrown areas.”
“Not sure how right I am but could this be the reason so many are complaining of hay fever locally?”
Fellow hay fever sufferer Sophie McCallum also believes the longer grass is “definitely making it worse”.
She told the Stray Ferret:
“This year is the worst I’ve ever had it and have been really suffering every day.”
Read more:
- Harrogate’s ‘rewilding’: untidy or biodiversity boon?
- Harrogate district’s wild grass verges continue to divide opinion
However, some experts believe lockdown, rather than longer grass and wildflowers, could be a contributing factor because people are spending more time indoors.
Dr Naveen Puri, associate clinical director at Bupa Health Clinics, told Cosmopolitan magazine:
“Over the last year, social distancing restrictions have meant that we’ve spent more time indoors than perhaps we usually would.
“As a result, you may have been exposed to less pollen than usual, and this could make your hay fever feel worse.”
One Harrogate resident, Jerry Smith, playfully dismissed the claim that wildflowers increased hay fever and said he’s looking at the bigger picture.
He said:
“I wish for all biodiversity to be removed because it’s all giving me hayfever. I will continue to flourish as a human whilst the rest of the earth collapses.”
A council spokesman said:
Wildflower planting starts on the Stray tomorrow“We have sympathy for hay fever sufferers, especially at this time of the year when the pollen count is higher and farmers are hay making.
“But we need to remember why we are leaving areas to grow and planting wildflowers.
“Pollinators, such as bees and butterflies, play a key role in sustaining the flora and fauna across the district.
“Sadly, they have been in decline for several years and we all need to play our part in supporting their habitats.”
Wildflowers will be planted on the Stray tomorrow in an effort to boost biodiversity and bring colour to busy roadsides.
In recent history wildflower meadows have slipped into a dramatic decline as the species-rich grasslands are ploughed up for housing, farming and roads.
This has prompted a push from campaigners for the young wildflowers called “plugs” to be planted and grasslands left to blossom.
Last year members of the Harrogate and District Green Party called on Harrogate Borough Council to take action.
Now, with the help of volunteers from Bilton Conservation Group, 5,500 wildflower plugs will be planted on two areas of the Stray near Leeds Road and York Place.
The trial could see more areas across the district transformed to support the return of insects from bees to butterflies.
Green Party campaigner Rebecca Maunder said:
“This is a really welcome move that we have been encouraging – it can make a big impact in improving local habitats for our declining wildlife.
“There does also need to be a joined up approach required to increase biodiversity locally and we should cease every opportunity we can.”
Planting will now take place across four days in May with the plugs, hopefully, blooming in September.
Read more:
- Harrogate Borough Council rejects offer from residents to replace astroturf with flowers
- Resident protests have delayed a decision on plans for 200 new homes in Pannal
Sue Wood, horticultural officer at Harrogate Borough Council, told the Local Democracy Reporting Service that there are other ways the authority hopes to bring back biodiversity. For example, some churchyards in the district have been left untouched by lawnmowers so they can blossom into meadows.
She also said the planting of plugs elsewhere would depend on the success of the Stray scheme:
“Climate problems and the loss of habitats have had an impact on insects and pollinators so we hope by planting wildflowers we can increase biodiversity.
“It will be a trial to start with but we hope to expand it elsewhere in the future.”
Horticultural Strategy
In September, Harrogate council revealed its new horticultural strategy which set out how the authority will manage its almost 1,000-acres of green space over the next decade.
The strategy included the planting of wildflowers and extra measures to make sure dogs are kept on leads, but was criticised by Green Party members who welcomed some schemes but called for greater ambition and public involvement.
This forced the council’s cabinet member for environment, councillor Andrew Paraskos, on the defensive with him previously saying “it is in our power to make positive change but we can’t do everything overnight”.
Also included in the strategy are plans for a sensory garden, a review of grass cutting and research into whether parks could be used for bee-keeping.
The wildflower planting comes during a week where the council has faced intense criticism for replacing raised flowerbeds in the town centre with astroturf .
The fake grass created a hugely negative response on social media and the local branch of Extinction Rebellion took action and removed it from one bed and put in its own plants.
Time running out for Stray dining as debate rumbles onTime is running out for Harrogate bars hoping to use the Stray for outdoor dining as the debate rumbles for another week.
Andrew Jones MP reignited hopes two weeks ago by sending a letter to the Duchy of Lancaster, the land owners, but the outcome has left the bar owners disappointed.
The Blues Bar, The Empress and Fashion House Bistro were all hoping to capitalise on the Stray space outside their businesses from April 12.
However, indoor dining is returning on May 17 so Trish Campbell, manager at the Empress, feels that they will likely miss out on the outdoor dining window.
She told the Stray Ferret today:
“This has completely missed the point. We have still got another three weeks but we are really missing out on a good opportunity.
“For some reason we have not had any help. So we are extremely disappointed and upset.”
Read more:
- Harrogate MP backs outdoor dining on the Stray campaign
- Bars not allowed to use Stray land for outdoor dining
In a letter to Andrew Jones MP, the chief executive at the Duchy of Lancaster Nathan Thompson said:
“If the proposals are not permitted by the Stray Act, Harrogate Borough Council would be in breach of its management obligations in implementing them.
“We therefore suggested to the council that they might seek advice regarding compliance before finalising its proposals.
“Given the aftermath of the UCI World Cycling Championships in 2019, the Duchy also requested further clarification of the proposed scale and duration of the proposed temporary licences.”
Andrew Jones MP forwarded the response to the owners of The Empress and Blues Bar and told them:
Harrogate MP backs outdoor dining on the Stray campaign“The council rejected taking legal advice and doing the required engagement because by the time this costly work had been undertaken it would be well past the return of indoor hospitality.
“The council have assured me that they were ready to licence limited use of the Stray. I wanted to see an equally flexible response from the Duchy of Lancaster.
“Instead they have quoted the Stray Act and declined to give a view on whether they support use of the Stray in this manner.”
Harrogate and Knaresborough’s MP has thrown his weight behind a campaign for outdoor dining to return to the Stray.
Andrew Jones MP met Sharon and Simon Colgan, owners of the Blues Bar and The Empress, as well Trish Campbell, bar manager at The Empress, today.
While Mr Jones refused to speak to the Stray Ferret during or after the meeting, the bar owners said that he supported their campaign.
Harrogate Borough Council recently told the Blues Bar, The Empress and Fashion House Bistro that they cannot use tables and chairs on the Stray this year.
Read more:
- Bars not allowed to use Stray land for outdoor dining
- Knaresborough cat lucky to be alive after acid attack
The council did approve the measure last year but said after consulting with land owners the Duchy of Lancaster that it “would not be appropriate at this stage.”
Part of the reason the council gave was that it could “potentially inhibit the open access and enjoyment for all.”
Simon Colgan, co owner of The Empress and Blues Bar, told the Stray Ferret after his meeting with Mr Jones:
Stray Views: Harrogate needs to embrace traffic-reduction schemes“Mr Jones seemed dumbfounded that it wasn’t rolling out again.
“He told us he would look into the council’s response, consult the Duchy of Lancaster and its chancellor Michael Gove.
“That is very positive isn’t it? It is great he did not dismiss us. We just want exactly the same as we had last year, there’s no reason not to do it again.
“We did press him and said time was of the essence, we do not want to miss out on this sun. When you go into town you can see there’s an appetite for it.”
We must accept plans that reduce car use
The change won’t happen overnight, and us older people might still use cars most of the time. The car will still have a place, but the car must not continue to dominate. It is interesting that my two grandchildren are in no hurry to learn to drive. They are both old enough to drive and have been passengers in cars all of their lives, but it seems they have a different view on things.
Litter blights our beautiful Stray
Repair the green shelters on West Park Stray
I travel on the West Park Stray on a daily basis and my heart sinks every time I pass the two semi-derelict shelters.
They have never had any repair or maintenance on them apart from being decorated in an awful green colour. What do visitors think when they encounter them? What were wonderful shelters have become, on Harrogate Borough Council’s watch, unsightly.
Because of their leaning structure they are also becoming unsafe and could be lost to the town. Has the council any scheduled plans in place for refurbishment before the shelters fall down?
Ken Richardson, Harrogate
Got an opinion on the Harrogate district? Email us at letters@thestrayferret.co.uk. Please include your name and approximate location details. Limit your letters to 350 words. We reserve the right to edit letters.
Land on Wetherby Road set to become part of the StrayHarrogate Borough Council agreed this evening to designate a plot of land on Wetherby Road as Stray land in exchange for grass verges on Otley Road.
The verges are currently part of the Stray but will be removed for a new cycle route.
The Stray Act 1985 says that if Stray land is given up a suitable plot of alternative land must be offered in exchange.
The council carried out a 12-week consultation over three plots of land to replace the verges as Stray land.
The majority of respondents backed the council’s preferred option to designate the land on Wetherby Road next to the war memorial.
Read more
- The agony of getting a single cycle route built in Harrogate
- Council to recommend Wetherby Road land for Stray swap
Senior councillors on the authority’s cabinet voted today for the land to be submitted to the Duchy of Lancaster, which is responsible for managing the Stray, for approval to be exchanged.

The area of land outlined in Harrogate Borough Council documents earmarked to be exchanged as part of the Otley Road cycle route.
Cllr Phil Ireland, cabinet member for carbon reduction and sustainability, said at the cabinet meeting:
“Sustainable transport is a key priority for this council and this project does support the promotion of active travel on a main route joining up the town centre with the west of Harrogate.
“This scheme also supports our ambition to see a reduction in congestion, an improvement in air quality and a reduction in carbon emissions while also promoting a healthy lifestyle.”
It comes as North Yorkshire County Council looks to press ahead with plans to create a cycle route on the stretch of road between Harlow Moor Road and Beech Grove in Harrogate.
The project has already been delayed and the negotiations over the Stray land have been a further stumbling block for the second phase of the scheme.