An employment tribunal is the lead story in this week’s Manx Independent.

It concerns five people who worked for House and Home at the Tynwald Mills complex.

Our reporter was there to hear it opening.

Also this week:

A review of the island’s national speed limit (or lack thereof).

A serving police officer from Peel has denied a theft totalling almost £50,000.

The security scare at the Post Office’s headquarters.

The woman reputed to be the richest in Africa had a company based in the Isle of Man. She’s at the centre of an international investigation.

Tynwald’s vote on giving the Health Service £8m extra after it overspent again.

Why is Elvis Presley on the back of the Manx £20 note?

People who might jail you one day: A new deemster and six new magistrates.

Bad news for people who use Manx National Heritage’s kiosk in the Sea Terminal.

A man from Anagh Coar who assaulted his wife by grabbing her by the throat twice has been sentenced.

People who describe themselves as ’pro-life’ say why they oppose assisted dying.

A book inspired by the wartime romance of a couple who later settled in the Isle of Man has been published.

A man who uses a motability scooter has complaints about the bus service.

More nurses were recruited from off-island than on-island last year, new figures show.

A page on the continuing teachers’ pay dispute, including what was said in Tynwald this week.

Pop up stalls displaying eco-friendly and organic menstrual products are to appear in the island’s high schools.

Calls for Manx National Heritage to revise its approach to the world’s oldest schooner have fallen on deaf ears.

A teenager who bit two police officers in separate incidents has been sentenced.

The new operators of the Wildlife Park’s cafe.

Repeat drink-driver Francois Cody Cruger, of Ballabrooie Road, Peel, crashed his car then abandoned it in the middle of the road. He has been punished in court.

The Isle of Man’s annual service of commemoration for the victims of the Holocaust and genocides around the world takes place this weekend.

Manx farmers are part of the solution to tackling climate change, not part of the problem, Manx NFU president Tim Johnston tells our Food and Farming reporter Julie Blackburn.

Two of the finest UK jazz players, who have played with some of the very best musicians of the genre, are heading to the island soon. They’re on the front page of our entertainment and leisure supplement Island Life.

The Manx Independent also includes 12 pages of sport, your letters, the Isle of Man’s What’s On guide, a page of puzzles, a page of pictures from the past, readers’ photos, a seven-day television guide and lots of community news.

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You can also read it online if you buy the digital edition. It should be uploaded by 7.30am.

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