Students lose thousands in foreign placement rowpublished at 08:34 British Summer Time 28 March 2021
Medical students are refused refunds despite Covid forcing them to cancel global work trips.
Read MoreMedical students are refused refunds despite Covid forcing them to cancel global work trips.
Read MoreAiden O'Brien's first-half winner sees Sunderland maintain their promotion push with victory at lowly Bristol Rovers.
Read MorePaddy Madden scores his first goal for Stockport as County and Hartlepool share a 1-1 draw in the National League.
Read MoreLeading politicians in Newcastle pay tribute to Nigel Todd, a councillor for more than 40 years.
Read MoreJill Mortimer has been selected to stand for the vacant Hartlepool seat.
Read MoreThe maps dating back to the 1700s were discovered along with a hidden servants' quarters.
Read MoreGum dropped in the 20 new bins in Middlesbrough can be recycled into coffee mugs and phone cases.
Read MoreGrand Central suspended its services from Bradford and Sunderland three times during lockdown.
Read MoreVideos show youths setting a bin alight next to the temple and jumping over the flames.
Read MoreNewcastle University's Dr Jo Smith Finley is sanctioned by the Chinese government along with MPs.
Read MoreMore than 40 people have been blocked from using the scheme in Newcastle.
Read MoreA hairdressers and a barbers in Middlesbrough are each fined £1,000 for breaking lockdown rules.
Read MoreMiddlesbrough boss Neil Warnock is fined £7,000 for comments he made following his side's 2-1 defeat by Swansea.
Read MoreAfter three people were jailed for killing Hemawand Ali Hussein, four more men are being hunted.
Read MoreA watchdog says five wards run by Tees, Esk and Wear Valleys NHS Foundation Trust are "inadequate".
Read MoreOne student was almost four times over the drink-drive limit, a court is told
Read MorePaul Robson denies being "a cold and calculating killer" while giving evidence at a murder trial.
Read MoreThe chief executive of the Royal Stoke and County hospitals has said there is a sense of relieft as coronavirus patient numbers fall.
Tracy Bullock said they're currently treating about 50 patients across both hospitals, with seven in critical care.
Ms Bullock said staff have "faced problems that have required all of us to think very differently" while they were "dealing with a highly infectious disease that none of us had ever encountered".
And she said the trust had been forced to redesign the hospitals, to reduce the risk of infection.
Newcastle council hopes banning parents driving to school gates will cut pollution and congestion.
Read MoreDaniel Holland
Local Democracy Reporter
The Metro will be fully operational again by 11 April, the day before non-essential shops, hairdressers and leisure facilities are due to reopen.
The network, which has needed more than £40m of government funding to keep it going during the pandemic, has been running a reduced timetable since late November due to a shortage of drivers.
Thirty new recruits were taken on last September, but with delays to training because of lockdown, 20% of train services had to be cut from the timetable.
Nexus chief operating officer Martin Kearney said: “We are now nearing a full complement of driver resource and we are performing very well at the moment."
Last week, it was confirmed that the Metro has secured an additional £8m government grant that will allow it to keep trains running at reduced passenger levels until 21 June.