That was the year that was 2020 January to March as the New Year started roadworks were taking place on The Mount. Roadworks in that area and Tadcaster Road were to prove to be an embarrassment for the Council later in the year. A 4% increase in Council Tax levels was announced. There would be expenditure on a £3 million “forest” while a Councillors pay increases would cost £141,000. Plans to provide a “driverless shuttle” service in the pedestrian area were revealed – to be greeted with general incredulity The Council’s new team of graffiti removers was having some success. Council contractors blocked a footpath link from Acomb Wood to Acomb Moor. Twelve months later the right of way is still impassible in wet weather. The Lowfields development got underway. Neighbours were unhappy as delivery lorries blocked roads and damaged verges The Castle Gateway budget was revealed as £55 million. The Council intended to borrow £45.8 million to help fund it. Bootham Park hospital would be sold for use as 125 “independent living” homes Concern was rising about the delay in completing the £42 York Community Stadium. The York Knights said they would play there on 9th February 2020. As 2020 ends, the stadium has still to host its first fixture The Low Poppleton Lane camera enforced “buses only gate” continued to attract criticism about poor signage. The Council gets about £100,000 for fines levied on drivers who misuse the route. The Council stopped publishing responses to Freedom of Information requests on its web site. It was rightly critised for being too secretive. The Council confirmed that the first Coronavirus case identified in the UK had been linked to York University. At the time few realised the impact that the virus would have on everyone’s life during 2020. At the time Public Health officials said that the risk was “very low” The York Council decided to spend £2 million on anti terrorist security measures. New Council bungalows – incorporating electric vehicle charging points – were completed on Newbury Avenue. The controversial Spark container village on Piccadilly was coming to the end of its lease. The owners had not fulfilled some planning conditions and the expectation was that the lease would end and the site would be sold. It didn’t work out that way. The York Council decided to sack its weed control contractor. The City had been overgrown the previous summer. New arrangements worked better during 2020. The amount the Council intended to borrow continued to increase. Critics pointed to high redemption costs and interest charges. The Council increased its investment in flood protection measures Disabled tenants were told that the Council would not cut the grass and hedges in future. There had been no consultation. Later Council officials tried to backtrack on their letter In a “behind closed doors” decision senior Councillors decided to make the York Council’s Chief Executive – who had been on sick leave for nearly a year – redundant. The cost of the exit package was put at over £400,000. The Council and developers updated their plans for the York Central site which lies behind the railway station. The plans involved making the Leeman Road tunnel single lane working – raising a storm of protest. The were an increasing number of complaints about poor quality road maintenance standards. Another Coronavirus case was identified in York on 4th March. Lockdown 1 followed soon afterwards The project to refurbish the Guildhall and establish a “business club” there ran into further difficulties. Costs spiraled. The Council was forced to admit, following a Freedom of Information request, that it owned a large number of empty properties. Some had been empty for over 5 years. The Council agreed to grant the Theatre Royal £500,000 for improvement works The Council confirmed that it would try to sell the plot at Lowfields, allocated for an elderly persons care home, to a private developer. The developer would be expected to provide “extra care ” facilities. In effect the Council reverted to the original plans for the site which was agreed in 2010. The rest of the quarter – and indeed the year – was to be dominated by the fight against the pandemic