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Empty elderly persons accommodation an increasing problem in York

Oakhaven

The enthusiasm shown by the York Council in moving elderly people out of their homes is being questioned.

Some empty Elderly Persons Homes have yet to be reused

We highlighted the neglected state of Willow House last month. It has been empty for over a year.

..but this pales to insignificance when you consider what has happened at Oakhaven on York Road.

Residents moved out of the building 3 years ago.

In 2015 the Council announced that a new facility would be built there as part of a plan to provide 525 new elderly persons places “before the end of 2018”. Work at Oakhaven was timetabled to be complete with the new facility ready for occupation by May 2018.  We said at the time “Given the Council’s shambolic record on project management, we doubt if we will see any improvements much before the end of the decade”.

More than a year ago the Council said that a new facility would not open until “2019 at the earliest”.

There is still no sign of work starting.

Oakhaven site plans published earlier in the year

In February the Councils preferred operator for a new facility Ashley House – who had been appointed in March 2017 – consulted on a proposed design but nothing more was heard about the plans.

No redevelopment timetable has been published by the Council and an update report doesn’t even figure in the Councils forward plan which cover the period up to the end of March. There will be an item on the November Executive agenda but this refers only to Lincoln Court and Glen Lodge

There has been  some short term use of the buildings to house potentially homeless people but these are now well catered for by a  new building at James Street

In the meantime, the delays will mean more pressure on hospital beds as managers struggle during the winter period to find suitable accommodation into which recovering older people can be transferred.

Prime York city centre redevelopment site still unused

The former Willow House elderly persons home on Long Close Lane, next to the Bar Walls, is still empty. The buildings, which are in reasonable condition, were abandoned by the Council in early 2017.

The site was slated for use as student flats following a successful planning application in October last year.

The site was then  subject to a wrangle about the use of, and continued access to, adjacent green space.

The security fencing makes a poor backdrop for the many visitors who walk along the adjacent walls.

Further down Long Moor Lane, highway officials have allowed  bushes  to completely block the public footpath; adding to the general impression of neglect in the area.

Willow House stands abandoned with no sign of redevelopment work starting.

Hedges completely block public footpath

£100 to park your car. Expensive neighbourhood

Firearms training taking place in Oakhaven former elderly persons home

Council “forgets” to mention Lowfields school site in new social care report

All residents have now been moved out of the Oakhaven elderly people’s home in York Road.  The Council says that there will be a “delay” before work starts on building a specialist Extra Care facility on the site.

A report to a meeting next week says

Bunholme "hub" layout. click to enlarge

Bunholme “hub” layout. click to enlarge

“we have closed down Oakhaven: shutting off water and gas so that all is safe (but leaving on the electricity so that the fire and security systems continue to operate) and moving out equipment for reuse elsewhere, if in reasonable condition, or for disposal.

The building will then stand empty while we procure a partner to redevelop it as an Extra Care facility. While it is empty we have offered its use as a temporary kitchen while Poppleton Road school kitchens are refurbished and for fire arms and dog training by North Yorkshire Police [no live ammunition]”.

Residents may be sceptical about just how long the site will remain derelict. The Oliver House saga dragged on for three years (and counting) while the former Lowfields school site – ideal as a location for accommodation for elderly residents because it is close to amenities – hasn’t even been put on the market yet.

Another elderly person’s home (Grove House) is being sold off.

The Council seems to be concentrating all its resource son the east of the City with the Burnholme school site set to be turned into a well-being hub. (see above right)

The Council is now consulting on the closure of Morrell House (Burton Stone Lane), Willow House (Long Close Lane), Windsor House (Ascot Way) and Woolnough House (Woolnough Ave)

All existing York Council Elderly Persons Homes set to close before 2019

£2 million price tag put on Lowfields site – Future of playing fields unclear.

Labours plans to abandon the super care home project mean that 7 existing elderly persons homes will close:

  • Grove House,
  • Haxby Hall,
  • Morrell House,
  • Oakhaven,
  • Windsor House,
  • Willow House and
  • Woolnough House.

All will close by March 2019.  The first will close its doors next year.

The Council expects many of the occupants to move into homes provided by the “independent sector”

Houses will be built on most of the vacated sites.

It is proposed that the Lowfields site be used for the provision of “over 100 new homes” including “downsizing” homes to rent and buy for older people as well as “starter homes to rent and buy so that younger families can get on to the housing ladder”.  

The Council says that a capital receipt of “at least £2m” for the land will also be realised, confirming that any redevelopment will be by the private sector.

Whether the playing fields are included in this purchase price is unclear

Oakhaven

Oakhaven

It is proposed that the “facilities for older people originally envisaged as part of the Community Village on the Lowfields site be, instead, provided at a newly built Extra Care and Health Hub which is expected to replace the Oakhaven OPH on “Front Street” (sic)”.

The Council says it

will be on making best use of the existing stock of Extra Care Housing in the city.  There are five dedicated sheltered housing with ‘extra care’ services in York containing 205 units of accommodation.

Four of these are Council managed schemes – Marjorie Waite Court, Gale Farm Court, Barstow House and Glen Lodge, whilst the fifth (Auden House) is managed by York Housing Association. All homes in these schemes are to rent”.

The Council claims that many of those occupying places in these homes don’t need “extra care” facilities and hints that they may be moved out to make way for those judged to have higher needs!

They say, “We will work with exiting residents to keep disruption to a minimum

The report concludes,

York is also under-supplied with Extra Care Housing given the city’s demographics and the anticipated growth in the numbers of over 75s expected over the next decade.

Analysis suggests that there will be need for 490 units of Extra Care accommodation by 2020, rising to 645 in 2030, based upon nation benchmarks. There is a need for both Extra Care to rent and Extra Care to buy; currently just one third of the provision in York is to buy despite 81% of York’s older residents owning their own home.

The independent sector is beginning to address this need. For example, McCarthy & Stone are currently building 28 new sheltered homes to buy at Smithson Court on Top Lane in Copmanthorpe. Elsewhere in Yorkshire they are beginning to build and provide their Extra Care offer – called Assisted Living – and we would expect that they will continue to provide new accommodation as the market demands”.

With the overcrowding in York NHS hospitals reaching crisis point over the last few months, partly as a result of a lack of availability of the right kind of care places for the elderly in the City, the prospect of another 4 years elapsing before the issues are resolved is deeply worrying.

York Stars perform for exclusively for care home residents

A young people’s theatre group has devised, written, produced and performed a short play for residents of the city’s care homes.

The York Stars, a small, local theatre company specialising in community-based productions, was one of four organisations to receive a grant through the Community Play fund. The £90,000 fund was set up to provide fun, stimulating play opportunities, activities and events for children and young people, as well as their parents and carers, within the local community. The programme was managed by Your Consortium on behalf of the council.

Around 20 young people were involved in the project, which got under way at Easter. They put together their own performance, entitled The volcano in Ashraino, writing and directing the play themselves, before embarking on a tour of four residential care homes during the autumn of 2014. They performed at Oakhaven, Willow House, Red Lodge and Dower Court, for almost 60 residents in all.

To view a review of the scheme click

To find out more about the projects being funded through City of York Council’s Community Play fund click here 

Council choir tours residential homes

City of York Council’s staff choir will be touring council residential homes in York to celebrate the Grand Départ with a good sing with residents.

Cansing! is make up of council staff who enjoy making music, and some 20 choir members will give their time to visit City of York Council’s residential homes at Willow House, Woolnough House and Grove House on Saturday 28 June. They’ll sing a variety of songs to give residents a taste of the build-up to the Tour de France coming to York on 6 July.

Ted Schofield, chair of the choir, said: “We sang at Willow House before Christmas which went down really well with the residents. It gave us the idea of taking part in York: Be Part of It and bringing old favourites like ‘Daisy, Daisy’ and other cycle-themed songs to bring a flavour of the tour to these communities.”

Cansing! was founded in 2010 and has sung in York Minster, on BBC Radio York, at York Carnival as well as in their own concerts.The choir can be heard rehearsing every Thursday lunchtime in St Helen’s Church, St Helen’s Square, York.

Are York’s public payphones doomed?

As we reported yesterday, BT have applied to the York Council for permission to remove two public payphones (one in Acomb Wood Drive and the other in Wains Grove).

OFCOM gives guidance on the procedure to be used when requests like these are received.

It has become clear today that, across the City, several other payphones are set to be axed. 26 removals are listed now on the York Council’s web site. Although received 3 weeks ago, the applications have only just come to light.

Residents have until 19th October to respond to the plans.

Some kioks are listed

Some kiosk are listed

Unfortunately, the Council has not published any useful information about the payphones. In other parts of the country proposals like these have been accompanied by details of the number of calls made from the payphones in question.

In particular the number of 101 and 999 calls made from the phones has been revealed.

In Scotland, BT plan to remove 1500 kiosks. The proposal has had a lot of publicity. The issue there is more complex because some of the payphones serve remote rural areas where cell phone coverage can be poor.

No such lists have been produced for the York area. We would expect that Councillors would have, by now, had the opportunity to consult on the plans. They should be checking on the number of emergency calls made from the payphones and also the adequacy of cell net alternatives.

Some of York’s kiosks, like the one in Duncombe Place, are “Listed”. The red K6 design is regarded as an iconic part of the traditional British streetscape. So far none of the Listed kiosk have been threatened with removal.

No one expects public facilities that are not being used to continue to be provided without at least a review. Indeed, some of the BT kiosks have been looking quite tawdry recently (Kingsway West, Foxwood shops, Cornlands Road) while many are easy targets for fly-posters.

Some are magnets for crime of one sort or another.

Some Payphones are run down

Some Payphones are run down

But we do believe that any plan to remove payphones should be transparent.

& that means publishing a full list – and usage statistics –  for all Payphones which could face closure over the next few years.

NB: 93% of the UK population now have the use of a mobile phone. There are 92 million mobile phone subscriptions in the UK (Source OFCOM).  OFCOM claims that we are “spending two hours online on our smartphones every day” There are also 33 million landlines in our homes.

The Payphone kiosks listed to be removed include:

Telephone Box Adjacent 159 Mount Vale York

Ref. No: 16/02131/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016

Telephone Box Adjacent Wains House Wains Grove York

Ref. No: 16/02137/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016

Telephone Box At Junction Of Beckfield Lane And Fellbrook Avenue York

Ref. No: 16/02148/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016

Telephone Box Adjacent 1 The Village Haxby York

Ref. No: 16/02145/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016 | Validated: Fri 16 Sep 2016 | Status: Awaiting decision

Telephone Box Adjacent 150 Holgate Road York

Ref. No: 16/02130/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016

Telephone Kiosk Opposite Acomb Wood Shopping Centre Acomb Wood Drive York

Ref. No: 16/02147/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016 | Validated: Fri 16 Sep 2016 | Status: Awaiting decision

Telephone Box Outside Cemetery Fordlands Road York

Ref. No: 16/02132/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016

Tephone Box Outside The Black Horse The Village Wigginton York

Ref. No: 16/02142/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016

Telephone Box At Junction Of James Nicolson Link And Kettlestring Lane York

Ref. No: 16/02134/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016

Telephone Box At Junction Of Bishopthorpe Road And Balmoral Terrace York

Ref. No: 16/02133/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016

Telephone Box Adjacent The Willows Wetherby Road Rufforth York

Ref. No: 16/02140/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016 | Validated: Fri 16 Sep 2016 | Status: Awaiting decision

Telephone Box At Junction Of Osbaldwick Lane And Tang Hall Lane York

Ref. No: 16/02126/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016

Telephone Box Outside Fox Public House The Village Stockton On The Forest York

Ref. No: 16/02125/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016 | Validated: Fri 16 Sep 2016 | Status: Awaiting decision

Telephone Box Adjacent Pippin Barn Main Street Hessay York

Ref. No: 16/02141/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016

Telephone Box At High Grange Moor Lane Haxby York

Ref. No: 16/02144/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016

Telephone Box Adjacent 99 Main Street Askham Bryan York

Ref. No: 16/02135/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016

Telephone Box Adjacent 147 Beckfield Lane York

Ref. No: 16/02149/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016

Telephone Box Whitby Avenue York

Ref. No: 16/02128/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016

Telephone Box Adjacent 11 Viking Road York

Ref. No: 16/02150/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016

Telephone Box Opposite 125 – 127 Bad Bargain Lane York

Ref. No: 16/02127/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016

Telephone Box Opposite Station House Common Road Dunnington York

Ref. No: 16/02129/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016 |

Telephone Box Adjacent Old Joiners Cottage Main Street Askham Richard York

Ref. No: 16/02138/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016

Telephone Box Adjacent Mill Cottage Mill Lane Acaster Malbis York

Ref. No: 16/02136/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016

Telephone Box At Junction Of Brecks Lane And New Lane Huntington York

Ref. No: 16/02143/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016

Telephone Box Outside Telephone Exchange York Road Deighton York

Ref. No: 16/02139/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016

Telephone Box Adjacent 43 North Moor Road Huntington York

Ref. No: 16/02146/TCNOT | Received: Fri 16 Sep 2016

Christmas skill courses announced

Christmas skills courses click to access details

Christmas skills courses click to access details

Courses include glass engraving (snow flakes), felt making (Christmas robins), stained glass (Christmas Stars), willow weaving (Christmas decorations), flower arranging (Christmas wreath and table decoration), dance (Christmas social dance workshop), photography (Christmas lights workshop), cooking (a freezer full of Christmas).

Click graphic to access full list of courses

 

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Friends of York Minster 2013 Christmas Cards

Friends of York Minster 2013 Christmas Cards

The Friends of York Minster have unveiled their 2013 Christmas cards.

Costing£4.00 for a pack of 10 cards, they can be purchased from the Friends Office (Tel: (01904) 557237).

They are also on sale in the Chapter House on Sunday mornings until 8th December.

Bins emptying chaos continues into second week

The chaos on the bin emptying services continues for a second week.

Today the Council are admitting that dozens of more streets have not had their bins emptied.

They say that the following roads have been missed.

Rubbish collection (black bin) –

Dringhouses/Knavesmire area:

◦ Chalfonts

Un-emptied bins on Pulleyn Drive. 5:00pm 16th Sept 2013

Un-emptied bins on Pulleyn Drive. 5:00pm 16th Sept 2013


◦ Nelsons Lane

◦ Goodwood Grove

◦ Hob Moor Terrace

◦ Weddel Close

◦ Lingfield Crescent

◦ Pulleyn Drive

◦ White House Gardens

◦ White House Rise

◦ White House Dale

◦ St George’s Place

◦ Towton Avenue

◦ Moorgarth Avenue

Mount Pleasant Park area (Acaster Malbis) :

◦Lakeside
◦The Willows
◦Oak Avenue
◦The Crescent
◦The Close
◦Cundall Drive
◦Cherry Tree Drive
◦Beech Avenue
◦Lilac Avenue
◦Pleasant Avenue
◦Elm Avenue

The Council says that it will return to these properties to make collections by the end of the next working day. “Please ensure that your bin is out by 7am as the crews will be returning early in the morning”.

Police suspend mobile speed (safety) camera programme in York

The Police have issued the following statement

“As North Yorkshire Police prepares for the transition from a single, mobile safety camera pilot, to three permanent mobile safety cameras, our usual system of deploying to specific routes for a week at a time, will temporarily change.

As part of a quality control check, every route which we have enforced over the course of the pilot scheme will be visited by officers over the coming weeks to ensure it is still suitable for safety camera enforcement. Therefore the safety camera will be present at every site at some point over the next few weeks.

Our usual system of notifying the specific routes each week will be suspended.

We will publicise the launch of the new mobile safety cameras ahead of their operational deployment”.

Mobile safety camera pilot – all deployment routes are listed below:

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