A Knaresborough councillor has called for a clampdown on overnight parking at Conyngham Hall.
About a dozen vehicles pitched up at the back of the car park and stayed for three nights a week ago.
Signs say overnight parking is prohibited but the rule is often flouted.

Conyngham Hall car park last weekend.
Cllr Matt Walker, a Liberal Democrat who represents Knaresborough West, said the latest encampment, which he reported to a council officer, was the largest he was aware of.
He said:
“I have on several occasions asked for the gate at the end to have a padlock due to overnight stays of motorhomes.
“There are always excuses and reasons why not.”

Cllr Walker says the gate should be locked at night.
Cllr Walker said the cost of moving on vehicles and cleaning up afterwards could cost taxpayers thousands of pounds.
He added:
“Residents let me know every few weeks over the summer that people are camping in their vans and often leave it a mess, The council haven’t listened so far.”
The Stray Ferret asked the council what action it took against last week’s encampment and why it didn’t lock the gates as suggested by Cllr Walker.
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Steve Brown, the council’s head of parking services, said:
Travellers leave Harrogate’s Ashville College“We started the protocols needed to remove the encampment as soon as we were made aware of their arrival in Conyngham Hall car park.
“However, the process takes time and the travellers moved on by Monday. Our environment team cleaned-up any rubbish left behind.”
“This car park is open 24 hours a day.”
Travellers left Harrogate’s Ashville College last night, three days after they arrived.
The fee-paying school postponed home sports fixtures when caravans pitched up on the sports field off Yew Tree Lane on Friday night.
North Yorkshire Police said last night all vehicles had vacated the field by 7.15pm.
A police spokesperson said:
“The Harrogate neighbourhood policing team has worked closely with the college and community partners to resolve this issue.
“Our officers are continuing to liaise with all parties and are carrying out patrols in the area to address safety and security concerns.”

Ashville College
An Ashville spokesman said it served notice on the travellers to leave the school grounds yesterday morning. He added:
“The police successfully handled the departure and we are delighted to confirm that they all have left the site.
“Crucially, the order served today prohibits a return to our site within the next twelve months.
“We have secured the entrance they forced themselves through on Friday night.
Ashville head Rhiannon Wilkinson said in a letter to parents:
“It has been a challenging three days and I am enormously grateful to my colleagues in boarding who have done an exceptional job looking after the boarders this weekend in what have been difficult circumstances.”
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Police patrols monitoring travellers at Harrogate’s Ashville School
Ashville College in Harrogate said today police were conducting regular patrols after travellers set up camp on the sports field.
An encampment arrived at the independent school on Friday night.
In an update today, a spokesman for the college said it had been working with North Yorkshire Police “and other authorities to expedite the removal of the travellers from our sports field”.
He added:
“As a precautionary measure, there is a fence running the width of the site to separate the school from the travellers.
“They have been instructed by the police, who are carrying out regular patrols, not to go near school buildings or any pupils.”
Home sports fixtures were postponed following the weekend arrival of travellers.
The spokesman said:
“Thanks to the hard work and vigilance of all our teaching and support staff, the school is fully operational today, although there have been some minor adjustments for our youngest pupils in Acorns pre-prep and reception.
“GCSE and A-level examinations are running as usual in the sports centre. Sports lessons, and after-school clubs and activities, are also uninterrupted.
“We are providing regular updates to families until the situation is resolved, and thank them for their continued support and understanding.”
Travellers previously pitched up on Ashville’s sports fields off Yew Tree Lane in August 2021 and demanded money to leave.
The Stray Ferret asked North Yorkshire Police what action it had taken but has not received a response.
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Police alerted after travellers set up camp at Ashville College
A group of traveller families has set up camp on Ashville College’s sports field off Yew Tree Lane in Harrogate.
The independent fee-paying school said is was alerted at 9.00pm last night to their arrival and that police have attended the scene.
In a statement the school said it was working closely with the police to remove the travellers and their vehicles as soon as possible.
This not the first time travellers have pitched up on Ashville’s sports fields. In August 2021 travellers parked on the school’s land and demanded money to leave. They left only to return weeks later. The school then started legal proceedings against them before they eventually departed.
Today Ashville College said:
“Naturally, our priority is to ensure the safety of our pupils and to minimise disruption to normal School life. We have taken a number of precautionary measures today including postponing home sports fixtures and ensuring close supervision of our boarders as they move around the campus.
“All parents were contacted on Friday evening and we will continue to update them as we monitor the situation.
“We are grateful to our families for their understanding, and praise our staff for making every reasonable effort to prevent the break-in. The continued vigilance of our staff and supervision of pupils on-site is of paramount importance”.
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Andrew Jones MP says new police powers will help tackle Traveller issues in Knaresborough
Harrogate and Knaresborough MP Andrew Jones has said new laws will strengthen police powers to tackle crime associated with Travellers in Knaresborough this summer.
Appleby Horse Fair starts on Thursday next week in Cumbria and lasts until June 14.
The event has attracted illegal encampments in Knaresborough and Copgrove in previous years as people make their way to and from the event.
The encampments have also led to widespread concerns about crime and anti-social behaviour.
Mr Jones recently discussed the issue with fellow Conservative Zoe Metcalfe, the North Yorkshire Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner.
He told the Stray Ferret the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act 2022 enabled police to “take quicker and more effective enforcement action where significant harm is happening” and criticised opposition parties for not supporting it.

Hay-a-Park in Knaresborough after an encampment two years ago.
Mr Jones added the broadening of existing powers under the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 would also enable police to “ban trespassers from returning to land previously occupied and preventing them from occupying land that forms part of the highway”.
He said:
“These are all matters I have raised with the local police and the police, fire and crime commissioner to ensure that they are fully aware of the tools at their disposal for dealing with anti-social behaviour connected with traveller encampments.
“I am also keen that the council and the police share intelligence on traveller movements, particularly during the summer season of traveller fairs, so that private landowners can be given advice on how to secure their land if they are on the route to these fairs.
“I hope these new powers and continued coordination between the relevant authorities, landowners and residents can prevent anti-social behaviour that is associated with some of the encampments.”
But Mr Jones admitted it was “difficult to address all eventualities and I am sure incidents will still occur”, adding:
“The court process exists for those occasions and our local council has a good track record of using those processes to re-possess public land and can provide guidance to private landowners in that respect too.
“There are sites travellers can use in the district – in fact there are nine council-owned sites across North Yorkshire. The council needs to constantly review whether the number of sites is adequate. It may be that the capacity is enough and the travellers are simply not using them. That is information the council will need to assess in its deliberations over whether the number of sites is adequate.”
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‘No specific actions’
Ms Metcalfe said she took “no specific actions” from her meeting with Mr Jones but said she expected all reports to be “investigated thoroughly”. She said:
Travellers expected to move on from Stray this week“I am aware of community concerns surrounding traveller encampments in the run up to and during Appleby Fair, and I know the force are learning from previous years when incidents involving gypsies and travellers have taken place.
“When meeting with MP Andrew Jones last month he raised no particular issues in relation to traveller encampments, and we spoke about this year’s Appleby Fair and the positive community messaging that had already been circulated by North Yorkshire Police regarding things such as road safety, for example drivers being aware of people travelling to the event and being careful when over taking horse and carts.
“I took no specific actions from the meeting, only to encourage anyone who witnesses or experiences a crime to report it to the police via 999 in an emergency or 101 in a non-emergency. I will continue to scrutinise the force for their handling of calls and expect that all reports made over the duration of the event will be investigated thoroughly.”
Harrogate Borough Council says it expects a group of Travellers will move on from the Stray “in the next couple of days” after it obtained a court order.
An encampment appeared on a section of the parkland between Oatlands Drive and Stray Rein towards the end of August.
Several vehicles are there and the council has provided bins for them to use.
Many Gypsies and Travellers travel the country staying at different places in order to earn a living. In most cases, it has been a way of life for generations.
But the law states that if they camp on private land, the landowner can obtain an order through a county court to remove them. The Stray is managed by Harrogate Borough Council.
A HBC spokesperson said:
“We had a court hearing [yesterday] for a possession order so anticipate they will move on in the next couple of days.”
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Travellers are back on Harrogate’s Stray
Travellers have pitched up on the Stray in Harrogate for a second time this summer.
An encampment has appeared on a section of the parkland between Oatlands Drive and Stray Rein. Several vehicles are on site,
Harrogate Borough Council is the legal protector of the Stray. Asked if it was aware of the Travellers’ arrival, a council spokesman said:
“We are indeed and will be following the normal procedure to ensure they are moved on swiftly.”

The scene on the Stray today,
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A recent spate of arrivals by Travellers in the Harrogate district has led to calls to provide more designated temporary sites.
Six caravans and several cars arrived near to Oatlands Drive on the Stray in the week leading up to Appleby Horse Fair in Cumbria.
Last month Travellers also pitched up on Oatlands Park, off Hookstone Road,
On both occasions, the council instigated legal proceedings and the Travellers moved on quickly.
But more friction occurred when Travellers parked on the old rugby field at Knaresborough this summer.
It prompted Andrew Jones, the Conservative MP for Harrogate and Knaresborough, to write to Home Secretary Priti Patel complaining of “disorder and anti-social behaviour completely off the scale compared to that associated with previous traveller encampments in our area”.
Legal proceedings begin to evict Travellers in HarrogateHarrogate Borough Council has begun moves to evict Travellers from Oatlands Park.
Almost 20 vehicles arrived on the council-maintained park on Friday night.
It is believed they gained access from Hookstone Road, where a post blocking traffic from entering the park had been removed.
A council spokesman said today:
“We are aware of an illegal encampment on Oatlands Park in Harrogate and have started legal proceedings.
“Notices have been served requesting that the occupants leave imminently.”
Local people told the Stray Ferret that police had visited the site.
A North Yorkshire Police spokesperson said:
“Residents have made us aware of a group of caravans which have pitched on an area of Oatlands Park in Harrogate.
“As part of our usual neighbourhood policing response, local officers who were on patrol visited Oatlands and spoke to those concerned.”
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Travellers arrive on Oatlands Park in Harrogate
Travellers have set up a camp on Oatlands Park in Harrogate.
Vehicles, which arrived last night, are believed to have gained access from Hookstone Road.
A post preventing traffic from entering the park was lying on the ground this morning.

Where the vehicles are believed to have entered.
Almost 20 vehicles are parked on the grass, at the side of the field.
The Harrogate Borough Council-maintained park includes public toilets, a play area for children and is a popular place for football matches.
The Stray Ferret has approached Harrogate Borough Council to ask if it is taking any action.

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