Yorkshire Post

Two sex assaults are investigat­ed

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HE WAS a shopkeeper dubbed the “Basil Fawlty of books” and whose rudeness sparked more than 20 complaints.

Steve Bloom, the owner of Bloomindal­es high in the Yorkshire Dales, was branded “the bookseller from hell” by the chairman of Hawes Parish Council, who mounted a campaign in January to get him to change his ways or be forced out.

Now Mr Bloom has decided to sell the business but denied that he was being forced out of town.

Mr Bloom, 64, who famously charged browsers 50p and admitted calling a GP from Shropshire who was perusing the shelves “a pain”, said it was his choice to sell up and the campaign to have him kicked out had failed.

He said there were a “number of factors” that made him decide to put a handwritte­n sign in the window saying “book shop for sale”.

“I must have been feeling a bit low”, he said.

Within days a buyer came forward and the sale is now going through.

He admitted one factor in the sale was the “aggravatio­n” at the beginning of the year when he was in the headlines for his rudeness, leading him to admit at the time that he was “not really a people person”.

He did not like visitors to Hawes pointing him out, saying: “That does happen and when I hear it, it aggravates me, it’s like being gawped at.”

Mr Bloom said the parish council, which applied pressure on the hall where his shop is based, tried to get him out following the complaints.

“They failed to get rid of me, they could not get rid of me, so I won,” he said.

But he conceded that by choosing to leave, he has given his opponents the “victory” they desired.

After 15 years in the shop, Mr Bloom said he will continue in the book trade, selling at fairs and online.

The row began in January when it was revealed Mr Bloom had prompted a string of complaints.

At the time John Blackie, chairman of Hawes and High Abbotside Council, said the organisati­on had discussed the “dreadfully rude and offensive” bookseller five times since 2013, and in the past four years had received more than 20 complaints.

The decision to charge people an entry fee was often the cause of the upset, Mr Blackie said.

“I’m afraid we have the bookseller from hell,” he added, calling the shop a ‘discredit to Hawes’.

“He seems to have a strategy unlike anybody else’s,” Mr Blackie said. “He charges 50p, people object, and he is very rude to them. Yet he feels that improves his business.” He added: “The trouble is, he is doing a disservice to the other traders, to the reputation of the town, which is very much a friendly town.

“We welcome people to come and visit us.”

Mr Bloom admitted it had been wrong to insult his customers. But the 63 year-old bookseller said the council had given the matter “more importance than it deserved”.

At his home near Settle, he said of the offending remark to the complainin­g customer: “I regretted it as soon as I said it.” But he insisted his 50p browsing policy was a way of finding out whether customers were serious or not.

Police are investigat­ing whether two sexual assaults in the city last week are related.

Both incidents took place in the area around North Street near the Park Inn.

In the first, a woman was assaulted as she left a citycentre nightclub in the early hours of Thursday morning.

In a second incident, a woman was sexually assaulted as she walked along the riverside path between Bridge Street and the Park Inn.

The second attack happened between 12.30am and 12.45am on Saturday.

 ??  ?? Steve Bloom is going but insists the decision was his.
Steve Bloom is going but insists the decision was his.
 ??  ?? The premises where Steve Bloom runs his book shop, which is in the process of being sold.
The premises where Steve Bloom runs his book shop, which is in the process of being sold.

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