Statutory sick pay and parental rules changes are now in place
Alan Jones and Beth Abbit Mancunian Way newsletter editor
00:01, 06 Apr 2026
More than a million workers will get access to statutory sick pay for the first time thanks to new employment rights. New rules on sick pay and parental leave come into force today (April 6).
The TUC said 1.2 million workers – mostly low-paid women – are set to get access to statutory sick pay for the first time. While 8.4 million people will benefit from sick pay paid from the first day of illness.
Previously, workers who earned below a threshold of £125 a week were not eligible for statutory sick pay. The TUC said that before today’s changes, workers had been left with no choice but to go into work when they were ill.
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Tens of thousands of workers will also get access to day one paternity leave under measures in the Employment Rights Act. It means that as well as stronger sick pay, fathers and partners will now have a day-one right to paternity leave – and all parents will gain the day-one right to unpaid parental leave.
The TUC said this first tranche of rights being delivered through the act represented a “landmark day” for workers. Business Secretary Peter Kyle said: “Day-one rights mean exactly that: rights that are there for you from the moment you start a job, and from the moment you get sick.
“Whether you’re a low-paid employee who’s been forced to work while unwell, or a new parent who wants to be there for their family, these changes are for you. We’re delivering the most significant upgrade to workers’ rights in a generation.”
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TUC general secretary Paul Nowak said: “After years of campaigning from unions and workers, the first individual rights from the Employment Rights Act are coming into force – and they will change lives up and down the country. Sick pay for all, paid from day one of illness is a huge step forward.
“For too long, low-paid workers – especially women – have missed out on any form of sick pay. Even those who were eligible for statutory sick pay had to wait four days before they could claim it.
“That left many with no choice but to go into work when ill – risking spreading and prolonging their illness. That’s why today’s changes are much needed.”
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Abby Jitendra, principal policy adviser at the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, said: “Good jobs give us security and stability. The new rights introduced today extend the security many of us in good jobs enjoy to millions of low-paid workers.
“Workers will no longer pay a penalty for being on a low income and falling sick, with sick pay for all workers from day one. New dads will also have a right to time off to look after their partner and bond with their newborn from their first day at work.
“The changes in the Employment Rights Act bring more workers closer to jobs that they can be proud of, where they truly get out what they put in.”
Petra Wilton, the Chartered Management Institute’s policy director, said: “Managers are not being given the tools they need to fully understand how the rules of the workplace are changing, some of them quite dramatically. This creates a real risk for both employers and employees and could lead to preventable workplace tensions.”
From April 6, some financial firms will be able to offer targeted support, giving people more tailored guidance on what to do with their finances, based on what the firm would typically recommend to others in similar situations.
Under the change, banks, pension providers and other authorised firms will be allowed to give suggestions aimed at groups of customers who share common characteristics, rather than only offering generic information.
This targeted support is intended to bridge the gap between broad, general guidance and fully personalised, paid-for financial advice, so that more people can make confident, informed decisions.
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Customers will receive “ready-made” options designed for groups, without undergoing a full, in-depth assessment of their individual circumstances.
In December, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) said that at least 18 million people could be offered extra help with their investments and pensions over the next decade with the introduction of targeted support.
According to FCA data, around seven million adults in the UK with £10,000 or more in cash savings could be missing out on the benefits of investing throughout their lives.
Lucy Castledine, director of consumer investments at the FCA, said: “Too many people aren’t getting the help they need to navigate their financial lives.
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“Without the right support to make decisions about their investments and pensions, many people risk falling short in retirement.
“Targeted support is designed to change that. It will help millions of people make better informed decisions and understand the potential rewards and any risks, including of not investing.”
Chira Barua, chief executive of Scottish Widows said: “The arrival of targeted support is a game changer for people who want help with their money but don’t know where to start.
“It bridges the gap between doing nothing and getting full financial advice, empowering millions to make better financial decisions.
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“Technology will be key to making that support available at scale.
“Our AI (artificial intelligence) agent in the Scottish Widows app will work like sat nav, by helping people understand their options and choose a route that makes sense for them, based on others on a similar journey.”
A survey commissioned by KPMG UK found that more than two-fifths (44%) of people are confident they will use targeted support if it becomes available to them.
More than half (58%) of people surveyed said they have never sought professional advice on pensions or long-term savings and a similar proportion (53%) said they would welcome being offered targeted support.
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Jane Wilson, targeted support lead at KPMG UK, said: “The fact that almost one in two consumers want to receive targeted support creates a once-in-a-generation opportunity to close the advice gap and support the UK’s ambition to create a nation of savers.”
KPMG found that of those consumers who have never sought professional financial advice, nearly a third (31%) feel they do not have enough money to make advice worthwhile, while around a quarter (26%) said it would be unaffordable.
When looking across the age brackets, people aged between 25 and 44 who were surveyed were most open to using targeted support, with 58% of 25 to 34-year-olds saying they are likely to use the support and 56% of 35 to 44-year-olds also saying this.
Those over 65 were the least inclined to access targeted support, at 22%, which KPMG suggested is driven by this age group being particularly likely to have already made pension decisions.
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Ms Wilson added: “The notion that financial advice is only needed if you have notable wealth is simply not true; people with modest finances perhaps need support more than anyone else.
“Retirement no longer means handing in your lanyard and putting on your slippers; people work part-time, take on new challenges, or dip in and out of work to suit their changing lifestyles or meet their financial needs.
“The strong appetite for targeted support amongst the young shows there’s a chance to move people beyond saving and give them the confidence to invest for the long term.
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“Done well, this can help individuals grow their wealth in line with their ambitions, while also channelling capital into the parts of the economy that drive sustainable growth.”
KPMG commissioned OnePoll to carry out the survey among 2,000 people across the UK in March.
Tom Shields, senior policy adviser, long-term savings policy at the Association of British Insurers (ABI) said: “We’re delighted to see targeted support now becoming a reality.
“After years of collaboration between industry, government and the FCA, this new approach is a significant step towards helping people get the support they need through their financial lives.
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“We look forward to continuing to work closely with our members and the regulator as more firms bring the service to market.”
The Labour Mayor of York and North Yorkshire, David Skaith, has heralded a four-year transport capital funding settlement of £456 million as a “defining moment” for the region.
He added: “We’re moving away from short-term fixes and delivering the long-term solutions residents expect.
“We’re now in the driving seat with greater funding and local control that was previously out of reach and I’m investing a record amount to fix our streets and make them safer for everyone that uses them.”
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York and North Yorkshire Combined Authority has agreed £298.4 million for highways maintenance and £17.5 million for active travel over the next four years.
An additional £30 million has been ringfenced for road safety work including improvements outside schools.
This pot also includes £2 million for the county’s first fixed and average speed cameras for the county.
Locations of the cameras would be determined by road safety partnerships.
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For road maintenance, North Yorkshire Council will receive £63.8 million in 2026/27 — up from £57.8 million it received the previous year.
City of York Council will see its allocation rise to £7.1 million in the same period, up from £4.4 million in 2025/26.
But the decision on the settlement was taken without the support of North Yorkshire Council leaders who say their authority will receive around £20 million less over the four years than it would if the money came directly from the Department for Transport.
They are unhappy that extra money provided by the government has been “top sliced” by the mayor for other transport schemes.
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They have also opposed a change to the calculation for road maintenance funding which means £4 million of their allocation will be diverted to City of York Council.
Conservative council leader, Councillor Carl Les, said: “To be clear, this is a decision made locally that will mean we have less money to maintain our roads.
“We had asked the mayor to reconsider the plans, and it is extremely disappointing that the proposals have now been voted through.
“There are no guarantees beyond the next financial year, and the allocations could change again to make the situation even worse.
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“The approach actually risks a worsening rating for our highways from the Department for Transport, which could lead to a further reduction in funding.”
During the meeting at County Hall in Northallerton, North Yorkshire Council’s deputy leader, Councillor Gareth Dadd, questioned what data the Combined Authority had to support the introduction of speed cameras.
In response, Jo Coles, Deputy Mayor for Policing, Fire and Crime, said 2,000 people had been killed or seriously injured on North Yorkshire’s roads in the last five years.
She added: “Lancashire’s own introduction of fixed and average speed cameras, which I think is probably about ten years ago now, has had a significant impact on the numbers of people killed and seriously injured on the roads of Lancashire.”
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Later in the meeting, the mayor stopped Cllr Dadd from speaking for a second time about the settlement.
In response, Cllr Dadd said it was “utterly disgraceful” that he was being “gagged” over the issue.
Both he and Cllr Les voted against the settlement.
But Councillor Peter Kilbane, deputy leader of Labour-led City of York Council, welcomed the extra funding for road maintenance for his authority.
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He said: “Conservative Liberal austerity destroyed our roads.
“We are now setting about fixing them with that additional £105 million extra over that period. I think it’s bizarre that this has been resisted and spun as somehow being the worst thing that’s ever happened to North Yorkshire.”
Last year, a fixed speed camera installed as part of a trial on the A64 in Sherburn, between Malton and Scarborough, was deliberately knocked over hours before it was due to be switched on.
Sydney Sweeney starring as real-life boxing legend Christy Martin in the movie “Christy” and “Hacks” launching its fifth and final season on HBO are some of the new television, films, music and games headed to a device near you.
Also among the streaming offerings worth your time this week, as selected by The Associated Press’ entertainment journalists: Country hitmaker Ella Langley releasing her sophomore album, Nintendo dropping the monster combat game Pokémon Champions and “Malcolm in the Middle” fans getting a four-episode revival with Frankie Muniz, Bryan Cranston and Jane Kaczmarek.
New movies to stream from April 6-12
— Sydney Sweeney stars as real-life boxing legend Christy Martin in David Michôd’s “Christy” (HBO Max, Friday, April 10). The film, which Sweeney also produced, drew some of her best reviews. Her distinctly unglamorous performance spans Martin’s small-town West Virginia beginnings to a professional career shadowed by her abusive manager-turned-husband (Ben Foster). In her review, AP’s Jocelyn Noveck wrote that Sweeney “imbues her no-holds-barred portrayal of Martin with both sweetness and rage, with brio and real vulnerability.”
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— One of the highlights of last year, Akinola Davies Jr.’s tender father-son drama, “My Father’s Shadow,” begins streaming Friday, April 10, on MUBI. The film, penned by Davis and his brother, Wale, is loosely autobiographical. Their father died when they were young. But in “My Father’s Shadow,” two Nigerian boys have unexpected day with their father ( Ṣọpẹ́ Dìrísù ) in Lagos, at a pivotal time for the country. In her review, AP Film Writer Lindsey Bahr called it “a gem, a deeply felt memory piece and vibrant portrait of Nigeria in 1993.”
— Jonah Hill made his directorial debut with the coming-of-age skate film “Mid90s.” He returns to directing in “Outcome,” a Hollywood satire starring Keanu Reeves as a movie star named Reef Hawk who fears a video could destroy his reputation. Hill, who co-wrote the movie, also co-stars as Reef’s crisis-management lawyer. It debuts Friday, April 10, on Apple TV.
— AP Film Writer Jake Coyle
New music to stream from April 6-12
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— A chart-topping country hitmaker preps her sophomore album: Ella Langley — known for such radio mainstays like the throwback “You Look Like You Love Me” with Riley Green and the George Strait-referencing No. 1 “Choosin’ Texas,” co-written with Miranda Lambert — will release a new record on Friday, April 10. If the whole of “Dandelion” is anything like those songs, she’s got a long career ahead of her.
— The English disco-pop singer Jessie Ware will release “Superbloom,” also on Friday, April 10. She’s as ready to soundtrack a late night on the dance floor as she’s ever been — like on the single “Ride,” which interpolates the theme from the 1966 spaghetti Western film “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly” and melts into her sequined synths. “Come be my cowboy, baby, come, let’s ride,” she sings, more discotheque than honky-tonk. “You know I want you, I need you tonight, tonight.”
— AP Music Writer Maria Sherman
New series to stream from April 6-12
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— “The Boys” launches its fifth and final season Wednesday on Prime Video. The critically acclaimed series is based on comic books and follows villainous superheroes and the crew trying to thwart them. Series regulars Jack Quaid, Karl Urban, Antony Starr, Erin Moriarty and Jessie T. Usher and Chace Crawford are all returning, as are more recent additions played by Jeffrey Dean Morgan and Jensen Ackles. “Hamilton” star Daveed Diggs also joins the cast.
— Hulu’s sequel to “The Handmaid’s Tale,” called “The Testaments,” also premieres on Wednesday. Ann Dowd reprises her Aunt Lydia character from the original and is now in charge of a school for girls that basically prepares them for adulthood, marriage and babies. These young women have never known anything other than Gilead. It stars Chase Infiniti and Lucy Halliday and is also based on a novel by Margaret Atwood.
— Elizabeth Banks and Matthew Macfadyen lead a new sci-fi comedy, “The Miniature Wife,” for Peacock. They play a couple working on their marriage when their lives are further complicated after an unusual accident. It premieres Thursday.
— Another series launching its fifth and final season is “Hacks” on HBO. The show, debuting Thursday, follows the love-hate relationship between a legendary comedian (Jean Smart) and a talented writer played by Hannah Einbinder. The series has racked up a lot of hardware, including an Emmy for outstanding comedy series. Smart has won four consecutive Emmys for the show while Einbinder has taken home one.
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— Do you ever wonder how your favorite former TV stars would fare in the present day? “Malcolm in the Middle” fans are getting their wish. Twenty years after their show went off the air, Frankie Muniz, Bryan Cranston and Jane Kaczmarek return to TV for a revival where Muniz’s character is now a dad to a teenage girl. The four episodes of “Malcolm in the Middle: Life’s Still Unfair” premiere on Friday, April 10, on both Hulu and Hulu on Disney+.
— Alicia Rancilio
New video games to play from April 6-12
— Nintendo is pulling out all the stops to celebrate the 30th anniversary of Pokémon. Just a month after releasing the cozy community-builder Pokémon Pokopia, it’s dropping the considerably less comfortable Pokémon Champions. This time it’s all about the combat, as you recruit and train monsters before pushing them into the arena to fight other trainers’ creatures. You can compete in ranked events with players from around the world, or enjoy casual or private battles that won’t affect your ranking. It’s a free-to-start challenge, but you may want to set some cash aside for in-app purchases. The fight club opens Wednesday on Switch and Switch 2, with iOS and Android versions coming later in 2026.
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— Annapurna Interactive’s People of Note tells the tale of a pop singer named Cadence who decides she wants to start a band. That means she’ll need to trek across the world of Note, where each city is defined by its own style of music. In her travels, though, Cadence learns that a Harmonic Convergence is disrupting music itself, and she and her bandmates will have to solve puzzles, explore dungeons and fight tone-deaf villains to stop Note from going silent. Los Angeles-based Iridium Studios promises that “each battle is an interactive musical performance,” and you can pump up the volume Tuesday on PlayStation 5, Xbox X/S and PC.
Hundreds of people lined the streets as a record-breaking 1,264 bikers arrived at Darlington Memorial Hospital.
Easter bunnies, Captain America, Cookie Monster and Minions were some of the bikers chosen attire for the feel-good ride which brought families and people of all ages together.
The streets of Darlington were filled with the sounds of revving engines, children screaming and shouting and dogs barking. In one word, excitement.
One child, upon seeing Captain America rev his engine, screamed: “I love you Captain America”, to which the Avenger gave a little salute.
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Orgainsers said it was the biggest Durham Easter Egg Run yet (Image: Chris Booth)
Organiser Graeme Mills said he was “flabbergasted” by the number of bikes which turned out and thanked the public who lined the streets.
He said: “It was our biggest year ever, with 1,264 bikes. It has gone fantastic, that’s the only word I can say.
“I think this has been the biggest year for public support along the route. It makes it a spectacular event, and I am really pleased the public turned out to support in some not so good weather conditions too.”
Children and families lined the streets for the Durham Easter Egg Run (Image: Chris Booth)
The event has been a staple since 2005 when just a few hundred bikers took part, with the event getting bigger and bigger each year.
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It took just under 30 minutes for all 1,264 bikers to make their way along Woodland Road, onto Hollyhurst Road and into the hospital.
The Durham Easter Egg Run outside Darlington Memorial Hospital (Image: Chris Booth)
The sun was shining on their arrival, as children and families got a glimpse of the bikes.
The bikers set off from the Durham Tesco in Dragonville at 10am, travelling en-masse to Darlington Hospital and arriving at about 11am.
The break meant children had a chance to see the bikes up close and personal and people could deliver Easter eggs to the children’s wards.
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And Graeme spoke about the importance of the run.
“It has become an annual event. It does take a lot of organising, but the feeling you get as a biker is just really nice,” he said.
“Some of the team members have been around SEN groups and autism walks and given Easter eggs out. It pulls at your heartstrings when we get to do this.”
The sun was shining on the bikers as they rode into Darlington (Image: Chris Booth)
The hospital in Darlington was packed with a sea of bikes; there were that many bikes that some even parked outside the hospital.
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Bikers handed out Easter eggs and let children sit on their bikes, and Graeme called it a “fantastic experience”.
He said: “Seeing the looks on the children’s faces, no words can describe it.
“A couple of years ago, we got absolutely soaked on the way down and my helmet was drenched. A kid wanted to try it on, and I did tell him how wet it was, but he put it on and was so happy.”
And Graeme thanked everyone who has donated eggs and money to the run this year.
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The Durham Easter Egg Run outside Darlington Memorial Hospital (Image: Chris Booth)
The organiser said: “There are loads of supermarkets, members of the public who have supported us. We get more and more each year.
“The support of the Easter eggs for the kids in hospital, we could not do that without the public’s support. There are groups, workplaces that also collect Easter eggs to donate. It has become a long-established event, and it is being recognised for all the right reasons.”
Some of the charities benefitting from the run today include the Teenage Cancer Trust, British Heart Foundation, Feeding Families, and Missed A Beat, among others.
At the time of writing, nearly £4,000 has been raised on the GoFundMe page, with hundreds more expected from fundraising across the day.
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You can donate to the fundraiser by visiting: www.gofundme.com/f/durham-easter-egg-run-2026.
A relaxing getaway in the Welsh countryside awaits (Picture: Brook Aurora)
Picture this. You open your eyes in a cosy bedroom that feels like a ship’s cabin, slowly waking to the gentle sound of a flowing river and the scent of freshly baked bread. The only place you have to be today? The spa.
If this sounds like what you need, read on.
Metro has teamed up with a top-rated Welsh hotel to give one lucky reader (and a companion) a chance to win a restorative escape in the heart of the British countryside.
We’re giving away a two-night B&B stay at Albion Aberteifi in Cardigan, voted best hotel in Wales by the Times & Sunday Times in 2023.
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You’ll also get cocktails for two at the hotel bar and a two-hour Nature Spa experience at fforest Farm (Welsh spelling, not typo), a short drive or a walk through a nature reserve.
For your chance to win this gorgeous spring getaway, enter your details into the form below before midnight on Sunday, April 19.
And don’t forget to sign up to The Getaway Expert, our seven-day guide to becoming a more confident traveller.
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Housed in an old shipping warehouse, Albion Aberteifi is inspired by the rich maritime heritage of Cardigan, the charming town that sits at the mouth of the River Teifi as it flows into Cardigan Bay in West Wales.
The hotel is full of quirks that tell the story of its seafaring history, from its salvaged timber furniture, 19th-Century graffiti and wrought iron frame that protects the Grade II-listed building’s original masonry, to its ghostly residents, said to be from the brig Albion which set sail for Canada from Cardigan in 1819.
One of the cosy bedrooms at Albion Aberteifi (Picture: Heather Birnie)
But you won’t be disturbed by any bumps in the night, snuggled up in your cosy double bedroom. Each en-suite, wood-lined cabin boasts a stunning river view, Welsh wool blankets, handmade furniture and a super comfortable king-sized bed for a restful stay.
Guests have raved about the ‘fabulous hotel’, praising in particular the ‘thoughtful attention to detail’ in everything, down to the complimentary Aesop toiletries in the bathroom.
Relax with a handcrafted cocktail in the hotel bar (Picture: Heather Birnie)
The breakfast is unique: they serve up a Scandi-style feast, with a buffet of delights including sourdough, smoked salmon and charcuterie to graze on.
In the evening, head to the Albion’s bar for delicious handcrafted cocktails for two.
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Up close and personal with nature
It’s the perfect place to take respite from everyday life. Recent guests have used their time at the hotel to complete a novel, take on the local famous coast path walks, birdwatch in the local nature reserve, or to learn traditional Welsh weaving at local craft workshops.
Just a ramble away on the other side of the Teifi Marshes Nature Reserve is fforest Farm, a trendy hybrid of Welsh farm and Japanese forest retreat, where you can get up close and personal with nature.
Last year, they opened The Nature Spa, a woodland oasis where you’ll find everything you need for R&R, including individual cedar saunas, wood-fired hot tubs and cold plunge barrels.
Sweat it out in one of fforest farm’s cedar barrel saunas (Picture: Brook Aurora)
Wild swimming is encouraged(Picture: fforest Farm)
There’s also a tranquil spa lounge area, where you can curl up by the fire in the cosy lodge or relax on the sunlit terrace, along with complimentary herbal tea, showers and locker access.
For the more adventurous, wild swimming in the river Teifi or the hidden coves of the nearby West Wales coast is encouraged.
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The area is the gateway to famous clifftop walks along the Ceredigion Coast Path, where you’ll find spectacular views over sandy bays, rugged rock formations and woodland gorges.
An artisan haven
Back in Cardigan, or Aberteifi as it’s called in Welsh, you’ll find one of the coolest up-and-coming towns in West Wales.
Once an old-fashioned merchant town, its colourful streets are now a haven for creatives and artisans, with galleries, theatres and cinemas.
Discover the fascinating history of the region at the recently renovated 900-year-old Cardigan Castle, peruse traditional Welsh crafts and artsy modern pieces in the local boutiques and market stalls, and pop into one of their gorgeous cafes for specialty coffees and indulgent handmade bakes. In the evening, head to the Castle Inn for a cosy pint of locally brewed beer and pizza.
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What you need to know
How to get there: Although there’s no train station in Cardigan, it is easily accessible via car or bus from Carmarthen, Fishguard or Aberystwyth.
A CHANCE TO WIN A TWO-NIGHT STAY PLUS NATURE SPA EXPERIENCE FOR TWO IN WEST WALES
Conditions of entry
This prize draw (the ”Promotion“) is only open to legal residents of Great Britain (excluding Northern Ireland). Any employees or agents of either the Promoter and/or the Prize Administrator and/or any company connected with the production or distribution of this Promotion, as well as any members of their immediate family (e.g., spouse, parent, child, sibling) and persons living in the same household as them, whether or not related, are not eligible to enter this Promotion. All bookings at Albion Aberteifi and Fforest Farm, including redemption of the Prize and the winner’s stay, are subject to the Promoter’s standard terms and conditions and rules of stay.
Entrants must be aged 18 years or over at the time of entry. Proof of eligibility must be provided upon request. By entering the Promotion, you are deemed to accept and be bound by these terms and conditions.
Enter between 00:01 GMT 6th April 2026 to 23:59 GMT 19th April 2026 inclusive (the “Promotion Period”).
The Promotion is free to enter; however internet access is required.
To enter, entrants must visit this page and submit their full name, email address, phone number, date of birth and postcode into the form on the page
Only one (1) entry will be accepted per person.
Winner
There will be one (1) winner of the Prize. The winner will win a two-night bed and breakfast stay in one (1) double bedroom at Albion Aberteifi (the “Hotel”) for two (2) adults, cocktails (max one cocktail (1) per person) for two (2) adults at the Hotel bar, and a two-hour Nature Spa experience at Fforest Farm, Cwm Plysgog, Cardigan, Cilgerran SA43 2TB for two (2) adults (“Prize”).
The Prize must be redeemed by 31st May 2026 and is subject to availability. No pets are allowed.
The winner will be selected in a random draw, conducted by a computer process that produces verifiably random results, from all eligible entries, held on 20th April 2026.
Excludes travel and transfers to (and from) the Hotel and Fforest farm. All extras (e.g., mini-bar items) taken are to be paid for by the prize winner on departure. Preferred dates subject to availability.
The Albion Aberteifi will contact the winner directly to book their stay, which must be taken by the 31st May 2026. Once the winner has booked their stay directly with Albion Aberteifi or Fforest Farm, any cancellation of that booking by the winner will result in the Prize being forfeited.
The winner will be notified by the Prize Administrator by email within one (1) week of this date and will be given details of how to accept their Prize. Reasonable efforts will be made to contact the provisional winners, but it is each winner’s responsibility to monitor their email address (including spam folder). Failure by the winner to accept the Prize in the manner specified within fourteen (14) days of the Prize Administrator’s email will make any claim invalid and the Promoter will then select another winner using the same random process.
For the avoidance of doubt, the Prize does not include travel/transportation, accommodation, food, beverages, souvenirs, gratuities, car parking charges, or any other costs of a personal nature (including spending money) that are not explicitly set out in these Terms and Conditions and neither the Promoter nor the Prize Administrator nor any provider of any part of the Prize will be responsible for any such costs.
Gifts, prizes and other promotional items can only be redeemed once, are not transferable nor exchangeable for cash, may not be re-sold and are subject to availability.
Once the winner has booked their stay directly with Albion Aberteifi, any cancellation of that booking by the winner will result in the Prize being forfeited.
The Promoter and the Prize Administrator reserve the right in their reasonable discretion to substitute any such gift, prize or item with a gift, prize or item of equal or greater value.
By entering the Promotion, each entrant acknowledges that in the event of a win, their surname and county of residence may be disclosed to persons enquiring, where permitted by law. Provided no objection is received from the winners, a winners list will be made available by the Promoter and/or the Prize Administrator four (4) weeks after the end of the Promotion Period, for a period of eight (8) weeks. To request the winners list, please email competitions@mailnewspaper.co.uk. Without prejudice, the Promoter and/or the Prize Administrator will provide winner information to the Advertising Standards Authority when requested by them.
Entrants agree to provide reasonable cooperation to allow the Promoter and the Prize Administrator to use the name and/or likeness of the winner for advertising and publicity purposes in connection with this Promotion including but not limited to publication of the winner’s name and photograph on the Prize Administrator’s and the Promoter’s websites. In addition, by submitting an entry and in consideration of the Promoter and the Prize Administrator granting a right to enter the Promotion, entrants agree to grant the Promoter and the Prize Administrator a perpetual, royalty-free, non-exclusive, sub-licensable right and licence to use, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate, create derivative works from, distribute and exercise all copyright and publicity rights with respect to any materials contained in the entry (including but not limited to text, images or video materials) (the “Materials”) worldwide and/or to incorporate the Materials in other works in any media now known or later developed for the full term of any rights that may exist in the Materials. By submitting Materials to the competition, an entrant:
warrants that the Materials are its own original work and that it has the right to make them available for all the purposes specified above; that it does not infringe any law; that it is not obscene or libellous; and that it does not violate the rights of any third party;
agrees to indemnify the Promoter and the Prize Administrator against all legal fees, damages and other expenses that may be incurred as a result of a breach of the above warranty; and
agrees to waive any moral rights in the Materials for the purposes of its submission to, and publication by, the Promoter and the Prize Administrator and the purposes specified above.
Personal information
Any personal information provided to us during the entry process (including but not limited to your name, e-mail address, telephone number and date of birth) must be correct. We accept no responsibility for any incorrect personal information provided to us.
The Prize Administrator will hold your personal information in accordance with these terms and conditions and its privacy policy (available here).
The Prize Administrator will only share your personal information with the Promoter where you are the winner of the Promotion or where you have opted in to receive direct marketing from the Promoter (if relevant). The Promoter will hold your personal information as a separate controller in accordance with its privacy policy (available here) and shall implement and maintain appropriate technical and organisational security measures in compliance with the GDPR and any other applicable law.
General
The determination and decision of the Promoter and the Prize Administrator on all matters shall be final and no promotional correspondence or discussion will be entered into.
The Promoter and the Prize Administrator reserve the right in their reasonable discretion:
to disqualify any claimant, competitor or nominee whose conduct is contrary to the spirit of the rules or the intention of the promotion and to declare as void any or all of their claims or entries based on such conduct;
to declare as void any claims or entries resulting from any printing, production and/or distribution errors (including but not limited to any error(s) on any website of the Promoter and/or the Prize Administrator, any game cards and/or other printed materials) or where there has been error(s) in any aspect of the preparation for or conduct of the promotion materially affecting the result of the promotion or the number of claimants or the value of claims;
to add to or to waive any rules on reasonable notice; and/or,
to cancel the promotion or any part of it at any stage in the event of circumstances beyond the Promoter’s and/or the Prize Administrator’s reasonable control.
No entries will be accepted in bulk, from agents or third parties.
To the fullest extent permitted by law (and subject to paragraph 27 below), the Promoter and the Prize Administrator hereby exclude all warranties, representations, covenants and liabilities (whether express or implied) relating to this Promotion and/or the Prize.
The Promotion is in no way sponsored, endorsed, administered by or associated with any social media platform or any other third party. All third-party trademarks and other intellectual property rights are hereby acknowledged. Use of and entry to promotions via social media platforms is always subject to the rules, terms and policies of those platforms. By participating in the Promotion, entrants are providing information to the Promoter and the Prize Administrator, not to any relevant social media platform. To the maximum extent permitted by applicable law, the relevant social media platforms shall have no liability to any person in connection with or arising out of the Promotion howsoever caused, including for any costs, expenses, damages, and other liabilities.
Nothing in these terms and conditions shall exclude the Promoter’s or the Prize Administrator’s liability for:
death or personal injury as a result of its negligence;
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any liability that cannot be limited or excluded by law.
The Promoter and the Prize Administrator reserve the right, in their discretion, to modify, suspend or cancel the Promotion should virus, bugs, tampering, fraud or other causes beyond the reasonable control of the Promoter or the Prize Administrator corrupt or hinder the administration, security or proper play of the Promotion.
If any of the provisions of these terms and conditions are held to be invalid or unenforceable in whole or in part that part shall be severed from the remainder of the provisions and the validity of the other provisions and the remainder of the provision in question shall not be affected.
These terms and conditions shall be governed by the laws of England and Wales and any dispute shall be subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the courts of England and Wales, except that residents of Scotland may also bring proceedings in the Scottish courts.
Promoter
The Promoter is Albion Aberteifi, Cardigan Quays Limited, Bridge Warehouse, Cardigan, SA43 3AA (company number 03855973) (“Promoter”).
The Prize Administrator is Associated Newspapers Limited, Northcliffe House, 9 Derry Street, London, United Kingdom, W8 5HY, (company number 00084121) (“Prize Administrator”).
“I had terrible anxiety. I was obsessively thinking about my looks and my weight,” she says. Her mother started going to a Pentecostal church in Battersea and Marrone, after thinking, “Oh my God, you guys are so weird”, decided to join her. “The moment I walked in there, this thing hit me. I felt like all I wanted to do was cry, and no one had even said anything. It felt like something was cleansing me from the inside out,” she says.
A child was hit by a bottle and nine police officers were injured as fireworks, flares and bottles were thrown
12:56, 05 Apr 2026Updated 14:46, 05 Apr 2026
A teenager has been charged to court following disorder which took place before the Irish Cup semi-final match in Belfast on Friday evening.
Police said a child was hit by a bottle and nine police officers were injured as fireworks, flares and bottles were thrown in the scenes at Windsor Park.
It came before the match between north Belfast side Cliftonville and Dungannon Swifts. A number of Cliftonville supporters had taken part in a parade ahead of the clash, which Swifts won on penalties after a 1-1 draw.
A 19-year-old was arrested on suspicion of riotous behaviour and two were reported for offences including the use of flares.
The teenager has since been charged with riotous behaviour, doing a provocative act, possession of fireworks/flares at a regulated match, indecent behaviour and attempted criminal damage.
He is due to appear before Belfast Magistrates’ Court on Friday, May 1.
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As is usual procedure, the charges will be reviewed by the Public Prosecution Service.
Speaking on Saturday, PSNISouth Belfast district commander Superintendent Finola Dornan said during the procession “provocative conduct” and “heavy use of pyrotechnics and fireworks” was observed.
“While the majority of football fans attending Friday evening’s match behaved in a peaceful manner, a number of people chose to engage in disorderly behaviour and provocative conduct,” she said.
“During an approved public procession ahead of the match, which involved approximately 250 people, our officers witnessed provocative conduct and the heavy use of pyrotechnics and fireworks – despite various warnings being issued against this.”
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She said there appeared to be a number of potential breaches of the Parades Commission determinations in relation to the procession which will be investigated.
She added: “The vast majority of fans were there to enjoy the match, however there was completely unacceptable behaviour from a proportion of fans both before and after the match, at what should have been an enjoyable and safe event for all attending.
“Police will not tolerate disorder or criminal behaviour of any kind and, as always, we will continue to work with football clubs to address any inappropriate behaviour linked to people attending matches and ensure that the local community is kept safe.
“We will therefore be conducting a thorough evidence-gathering operation in the wake of last night’s occurrences.”
Borderlands 4 – Story Pack 1: Mad Ellie And The Vault Of The Damned – that’s a damned long name (2K)
The first Story Pack for Borderlands 4 does several things better than the main game, while introducing one of the best new vault hunters in the series.
When Borderlands 4 was released in September last year, it may have felt like something of a throwback, as a story-led first person shooter designed for single or co-operative play, with its familiar cel-shaded visual style and wacky humour. But it was a lot of fun, and highly successful, with developer Gearbox endowing it with an ever-expanding, endgame, along with a surprising level of replayability.
Now Gearbox has released Borderlands 4’s first substantial chunk of DLC; the first of two mooted story expansions, this one entitled Mad Ellie And The Vault Of The Damned. It introduces a whole new area to the planet of Kairos – mainly a glacier, but with way more character and content than you would expect to find in a snowy waste – as well as a new story arc and a new vault hunter, called C4SH.
The Story Pack invites you to use whatever save you might already have going in Borderlands 4 and it starts you off at level 13, which is handy since that gives you some points with which to upgrade your vault hunter’s abilities. You can pick any vault hunter, but obviously it makes sense to play as C4SH.
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In terms of story, as the DLC’s title suggests, some familiar characters from the Borderlands universe feature prominently, notably Ellie, Moxxi’s feisty daughter; Moxxi herself; and the sinister Mancubus, who didn’t feature in the main game.
The story starts off slowly, by introducing the new environment and its deadly flora and fauna to you, as you pick up Ellie’s trail. It’s pleasingly different to that of the rest of Kairos: a much more anarchic space, in which various giant spaceships and pods have crashed, and a mysterious megalith is warping everyone’s minds, causing them to hear ghostly voices.
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Gearbox has availed itself fully of the weirdness that such a set-up allows. For example, your vault hunter gets dragged into dream sequences involving the captain of a doomed, crashing spaceship and his cryogenically frozen son. After that slow start, the story explodes into weirdness (much of it explained by Mancubus, a connoisseur of the weird) and only improves as it continues.
It takes around six hours to complete the main story, but a wealth of side missions add anything up to another nine hours. Plus, there are bunkers to discover and claim (by killing their resident bosses), along with all manner of environmental encounters, so there’s close to 20 hours of new gameplay in the Story Pack, which is pretty meaty – but then again, the price tag is substantial.
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The side missions are well worth pursuing; some are primarily designed to make you laugh, while others are more convoluted and introduce you to previously neglected parts of the map. Their general diversity is notable, with some encouraging you to perform ridiculously odd tasks, which is exactly the sort of thing most crave from a Borderlands game. Pretty much all of them give you the impression that Gearbox had great fun crafting them.
The DLC is a little darker in tone than usual (2K)
The new vault hunter, C4SH is definitely one of the highlights of the DLC. He’s a robot and a former professional gambler. He’s not visually that interesting but his action skills may just be the best of any of the game’s vault hunters.
He has three: the ability to whirl around in a frenzy shooting revolvers from each hand, rolling three dice and spawning a golem (whose level depends on what score his dice throw up), and the ability to chuck cards dealing various types of elemental damage at surrounding enemies.
The latter was by far our favourite, as certain coloured cards wreak vast amounts of damage and they can be wielded with precision so that you can use one timed period of card-chucking to reduce a horde of surrounding enemies to near death. And as you level C4SH’s action skill up, it grows even more powerful – you can, for example, unlock red cards that deal instant-kills to the more basic enemies.
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The DLC’s environment also impresses; it has more verticality to it that the main areas of Kairos and points where you really have to use all the tools at your disposal – hover jumps and grapple hooks included – to get to hidden places. Plus, it has diversity: there are lush underground oases in the glacier and pools through which you must swim to access certain places, along with giant wrecked spaceships which also offer traversal challenges.
Overall, the level design feels tighter than that of the main game, perhaps an indication that that aspect of Borderlands 4 – whose map, of course, had a much greater surface area – was a tiny bit rushed. Whether or not that was the case, this is pretty much an essential purchase if you enjoyed the original game. It’s meaty, beautifully designed, and much more uninhibited than the main game; it also has the best vault hunter and is generally up there with the finest parts of the franchise.
If you haven’t played Borderlands 4 but are contemplating it, then it’s a good idea get a version that includes the story DLC. Another reason why now would be a good time to do so, is that Gearbox has worked hard to improve the game technically since release, and it’s noticeably slicker and smoother than it was last autumn.
Plus, it contains vastly more to do when you finish all the storylines. Mad Ellie And The Vault Of The Damned does a fine job of emphasising the fact that Borderlands 4 is a game that is improving over time, a testament to its solid infrastructure design when it was first released.
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Borderlands 4 – Story Pack 1: Mad Ellie And The Vault Of The Damned review summary
In Short: An impressive, near-essential expansion for Borderlands 4, with an excellent new vault hunter and some of the best level and mission design in the franchise.
Pros: Great new vault hunter, tight level design, and imaginative and diverse side missions. Decent new bosses and plenty of content.
Cons: Still some long-running problems, like the dodgy direction indicator. Very expensive, with some patchy voice-acting.
Score: 8/10
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Formats: PC (reviewed), Xbox Series X/S, and PlayStation 5* Price: £26.99 Publisher: 2K Developer: Gearbox Software Release Date: 26th March 2026 Age Rating: 18
The esteemable George Pell, owner of the Suffolk in Aldeburgh, has bought a pub. We expect you’ll want to head that way with determined regularity in the summer. But until Pell’s place opens, try the Dolphin Inn in Thorpeness, a village north of Aldeburgh once owned by the Ogilvie family, which made a fortune in railways in the early 1800s. Most of the land was sold off in the 1970s, but descendent Hamish Ogilvie still owns the Meare, an artificial boating lake.
Asian markets that were open for trading mostly rose Monday, as investors continued to closely watch the war in Iran, soaring oil prices and what President Donald Trump might say next.
Japan‘s benchmark Nikkei 225 rose nearly 1.1% to 53,692.42 in morning trading. South Korea’s Kospi gained 1.5% to 5,460.24. Trading was closed in Australia for Easter, and in Hong Kong and Shanghai for a traditional Chinese holiday.
The Tuesday deadline Trump has given for Iran to open the Strait of Hormuz is looming. Some analyst fear the war may escalate after that. Over the weekend Trump made more threats against Iran, even as the bombing continued in the region. The United States rescued two aviators whose fighter jet was shot down by Iran.
The key market focus continues to be on oil prices.
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Benchmark U.S. crude gained 38 cents to $111.92 a barrel. Brent crude, the international standard, added $1.71 to $110.74 a barrel. Energy markets were closed Friday, but the prices have been surging lately on fears that the Iran war will drag on longer than expected.
The U.S. relies on the Persian Gulf for only a fraction of the oil it imports, but oil is a commodity and prices are set in a global market. Some nations, like resource-poor Japan, import a large portion of their energy needs and rely heavily on access to the Strait of Hormuz.
“As we kick off the first full trading week of April, the word uncertainty is paramount. Last year it was centered on the impact of ‘Liberation Day’ tariffs, this year it’s uncertainty surrounding the ongoing Iranian War,” said Jay Woods, analyst at Freedom Capital Markets in New York.
U.S. markets were closed for Good Friday and will reopen Monday. Some markets in Europe also did not trade on Friday.
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In currency trading, the U.S. dollar inched up to 159.65 Japanese yen Monday from 159.63. The euro cost $1.1509, down from $1.1517.
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AP Business Writer Matt Ott in Washington contributed.
Yuri Kageyama is on Threads: https://www.threads.com/@yurikageyama
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