A picket line is in place outside Harrogate Ambulance Station today in the latest round of strikes.
Staff at Yorkshire Ambulance Service have walked out as part of a national dispute over pay and conditions. A second day of strikes is due to take place on December 28.
Vehicles tooted their horns in support of members of the GMB union picketing on Lancaster Park Road, which is on the same street at Harrogate Disrict Hospital.
Nurses and firefighters have also showed their support and a local cafe dropped off hot chocolate to strikers shivering besides a fire.
Union organiser Katherine Mitchell told the Stray Ferret GMB staff were striking today from one minute past midnight until 10pm. Ms Mitchell said members of Unison were due to join the action at noon today.
She said about 60 staff were employed at Harrogate Ambulance Station and they would continue to respond to the most serious category one incidents during the strike. Some strikers had already been called in to deal with such incidents, she added.
Several staff said the dispute was not only about pay but also about conditions and the state of the NHS. One person said they had waited four hours outside Harrogate District Hospital recently with a patient because the hospital did not have enough staff to escort the person away.
Health Secretary Steve Barclay said this morning NHS contingency plans would not cover all 999 calls and that “ambulance unions have taken a conscious choice to inflict harm on patients” — which drew an angry response from union leaders.
Rail and postal workers in the Harrogate district have been on strike this winter, but Harrogate District Hospital was not included in the first two days of nurses strikes. Firefighters are expected to be balloted in the new year over strike action.
Read more:
- No walkout at Harrogate hospital as part of nurses strike
- Harrogate district braced for rail and postal strikes
Harrogate district planning rules could be ‘radically streamlined’
Businesses in the Harrogate district could receive major tax cuts and fewer restrictions on building as part of a government announcement today.
Ministers revealed North Yorkshire County Council is one of 38 local authorities it is talking to about becoming investment zones.
The government has said the zones will “will drive growth and unlock housing across the UK by lowering taxes and liberalising planning frameworks”.
However, a union has warned they could lead to poorer public services and a race to the bottom on employment terms.
The government has written to local leaders in every part of England inviting them to begin discussions on setting up zones in their area. Conservative-controlled North Yorkshire County Council was today confirmed as one of 38 that are keen to be involved.
The government has said the zones will receive lower taxes and ‘radically streamlined’ planning rules.
Businesses will get 100% business rates relief on newly occupied and expanded premises, full stamp duty land tax relief on land bought for commercial or residential development and a zero rate for employer national insurance contributions on new employee earnings up to £50,270 per year.
To incentivise investment, there will be a 100% first year enhanced capital allowance relief for plant and machinery used within designated sites and accelerated enhanced structures and buildings allowance relief of 20% per year.

Kwasi Kwarteng
Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng said:
“That is an unprecedented set of tax incentives for businesses to invest, to build and to create jobs right across the country.
“If we really want to level up, we need to unleash the power of the private sector.”
‘Race to the bottom’
But the zones, which build on the government’s freeports initiative, was criticised by the North Yorkshire branch of Unison.
A spokesman for the union said:
“Our nervousness, which is probably shared by residents of North Yorkshire, is around a race to the bottom by deregulation.”
The spokesman said the zones set local authorities against each other and would be bad for public services, as well as ushering in a “lower standard of planning”.
He also warned it could lead to businesses in non-zone areas cutting wages and standards to compete. He added:
“I don’t blame local authorities for applying but what we need from government is a strategy that goes for a high skill, high wage economy rather than pitting one local authority against another.”
North Yorkshire County Council has been approached for comment.
Union’s covid concerns about army recruits returning to Harrogate
A trade union has said it still has concerns about young soldiers from around the country spreading covid when they return to the Army Foundation College in Harrogate.
Unison North Yorkshire last week called for a halt to any new recruits joining the college until covid safety is guaranteed.
Shadow Armed Forces minister Stephen Morgan sought similar assurances after hearing there had been more than 100 infections.
The Ministry of Defence said fewer than 40 of the 2,000 personnel working and training at the college on Penny Pot Lane had tested positive for covid and none required medical treatment.
It added trainee soldiers would remain at the college over half-term.
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Union leaders welcomed the MOD’s statement but still have fears about the ongoing impact of the movement of recruits in January.
A spokesperson for Unison North Yorkshire said:
“The MOD has still not provided answers as to why they thought it was appropriate to move hundreds of young recruits to Harrogate from across the country during a lockdown.
“Thankfully the MOD have confirmed that none of the young soldiers are seriously ill with covid, but that is a point that we have never raised.
“We know that young, healthy recruits would not be expected to get ill. We also know that a third of people with covid do not have symptoms.
“Our concern is that our members come into contact with young people from across the country who may have covid, then our members are the ones who take it home to their families and communities.”
Junior soldiers returning to training last month were tested twice with lateral flow tests, which are used to test people who may be asymptomatic.
The MOD said those who tested positive isolated at a purpose built 96-bed accommodation unit for the mandated period of time.
A MOD spokesperson said:
“Fewer than 40 personnel at the Army Foundation College are isolating after testing positive for covid. None of these individuals currently require medical treatment and it is incorrect to suggest we are not coping with the situation.
“The British army takes the health and wellbeing of our personnel very seriously and have been providing lateral flow testing, robust social distancing and hygiene measures in place to protect personnel and prevent further infections.”