This week the Isle of Man Examiner reports news that will interest every Manx Gas customer.
It comes after a long-running controversy over charges.
That story is on the front page - plus a long explantion piece inside that tells readers how we got here.
Also this week:
What EU nationals will be charged for staying in the Isle of Man after Brexit.
The amount of tax island resident tycoon John Whittaker pays.
The aftermath of the storms.
A bungling burglar’s bleach bottle blunder. He used bleach to remove traces of his DNA. But forgot about the bottle itself.
Our deputy editor tries out fencing (the sort with foils, not creosote).
Questions asked by a Kirk Michael pensioner have prompted the DHSC to clarify their current policy with regard to the treatment of Age Related Macular Degeneration (AMD). We report more.
A teenager broke into a family’s home carrying a knife after taking cocaine and ecstasy while on a two-day drink and drugs bender. Our court reporter tells the full story.
We meet a man who used to work for Ronald Reagan who’s made his home in the Isle of Man.
Headteacher Ian Walmsley, who leads Henry Bloom Noble primary school in Douglas, is to retire. We catch up with him.
The new rates bills in Port St Mary and Peel.
Plans for two six-storey blocks of flats in Ramsey get the go-ahead.
Boardroom ructions for Flybe.
A whale centre opens in Peel.
One of our senior staff described Alistair Ramsay’s column about the Steam Packet as brilliant. He said the Council of Ministers won’t like it.
The planners’ decision on the bid to change the use of the former Liverpool Arms, in Baldrine, from a pub to residential.
A US senator campaigning to stand for the Democratic nomination for the United States presidency is a fan of Beach Buddies and has praised the environmental work of the Manx charity.
The island is to remain a Fairtrade country for another two years.
In our street interviews, we ask members of the public about their views on the level of provision for people with mental health problems.
Plus there’s business news, your Final Whistle sports supplement, your letters, Terry Cringle’s nostalgia pages and lots of community news.
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