The Isle of Man Examiner continues to give you the best information about the effects of the coronavirus on our island.

This week’s newspaper includes:

Public sector workers who leave the island could be jailed under new powers if they leave the island without permission.

People stranded off the island will be able to return - but they’ll still have to wait and they’ll have to be quarantined in a new facility.

Businesses active across sectors such as aerospace, oil and gas, and ceramics have been turning their expertise to designing and producing essential medical equipment to help combat the spread of the virus.

The Health Minister dismisses social media rumours about a lack of needed medical equipment.

How Ramsey’s rugby club is helping the vulnerable during the pandemic crisis.

We catch up with the Lieutenant Governor and find out how he is working now.

The self-employed are particularly badly hit as they cannot work. We meet Ivan Kelly, who teaches dressage, and find out what he has been doing.

While people are in lockdown, it is feared that domestic violence will rise. We find out what Victim Support is recommending.

Tynwald Day is going to be disrupted, it has been revealed.

Council leader David Christian responds after the Manx Independent reported shopkeepers’ anger over new rates bills.

Meanwhile, the Treasury Minister acknowledges that retailers are being badly hit by the crisis.

The boss of Isle of Man Creamery has spoken of the ’major challenges’ facing the business since the coronavirus crisis began.

While the coronavirus is dominating the news, there are more stories.

Onchan could be the home of an 80-bed five-storey care home with splendid sea views.

The employment tribunal has been criticised in a high court judgment after a claimant got ’caught up in a legal mess’.

A playgroup manager from Peel who lost 10 stone has appeared on the front page of weightwatchers magazine.

We have a two-page feature about the grand houses built on the Ballabrooie Estate off Peel Road in Douglas. Susan Temple looks at how inhabitants of both were affected by the Isle of Man Joint Stock Bank crash, and the legacies of their inhabitants.

In our new nostalgia feature, we look at the front page of the Isle of Man Weekly Times from 60 years ago.

The sea link between Douglas and Fleetwood was in jeopardy then. Heysham wasn’t considered a good enough alternative

Our sports team report what’s happening to the rugby clubs’ positions now that the season has been cancelled.

Plus there are your letters, two pages of puzzles, planning notices, property sales and lots of community news.

The paper is in newsagents and shops where you’ll buy food.

You don’t have to go to a shop to buy a copy.

You can also read it online if you buy the digital edition.

To find out how to buy it, go to the ’Digital Editions’ section of the website on the grey line near the top of this site.

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And we also now have a podcast in which some of our staff discuss the island’s news.

Visit https://audioboom.com/channel/iomnewspodcast to find out more or look us up at @iomnewspodcast on Twitter or Instagram.