Category: Singapuraku

  • Malaysia Construction Worker Jailed Three Weeks For Taking Upskirt Video

    Malaysia Construction Worker Jailed Three Weeks For Taking Upskirt Video

    A construction worker was jailed for three weeks on Wednesday for taking an upskirt video of a woman on an MRT station escalator.

    Cheong Chap Mun, a 38-year-old Malaysian working in Singapore, turned on his mobile phone’s video recorder and placed it facing upwards in a bag which he put between the woman’s legs.

    The incident, on June 1, 2012, came to light after he was caught 11 days later.

    Cheong had been travelling on a bus when a fellow passenger spotted him taking a photograph of her upper body with his mobile phone.

    She confronted him and approached the bus driver for help. The driver then alerted the bus service staff who called the police.

    They seized Cheong’s mobile and found out he had taken upskirt videos.

    Deputy Public Prosecutor Lin Yinbing said there was a risk that the videos could have been circulated, causing his victim further humiliation.

    She noted that he had also been convicted and fined for possession of an obscene film in 2007.

    Three other charges were taken into consideration during sentencing.

    Cheong, who was not represented, asked for a lighter sentence, saying that he had realised his mistake and will mend his ways.

    He added that he is getting married in May and has to take care of his elderly mother.

    District Judge Crystal Ong said she agreed with the prosecution, adding that he did not commit the offence in the spur of the moment as he had plans to conceal his phone to avoid detection.

    For insulting the modesty of a woman, he could have been jailed up to a year and fined.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Residents To Clean Own Neighbourhood On Cleaners’ Day Off

    Residents To Clean Own Neighbourhood On Cleaners’ Day Off

    Cleaners with various town councils this year will be given a day off, with residents instead mobilised to clean up their own neighbourhoods, as part of fresh efforts to tackle the littering scourge.

    The standard of cleanliness in Singapore has fallen, with surveys showing that from 2006 to 2010, the number of litter items collected almost doubling, said Minister for the Environment and Water Resources Vivian Balakrishnan in Parliament today (March 11).

    He joined Members of Parliament who spoke at his Ministry’s Committee of Supply debate in calling for greater civic consciousness, as he signalled his resolve to reduce the littering menace.

    Hougang MP Png Eng Huat called for public cleanliness posters, jingles and banners of decades past to be “recycled” this Jubilee year to drive home the message to the community to keep their surroundings clean.

    Dr Balakrishnan said campaigns have never stopped. “I think what has changed is behaviour and perhaps our propensity to enforce in the past. But now that we have changed onto a higher enforcement posture, and with more volunteers and with everyone being prepared to exert peer pressure, I’m determined to make a difference on the ground as far as littering is concerned,” he said.

    Several new ways to address the littering problem here include equipping enforcement officers with body-worn cameras to document abusive behaviour of litterbugs, providing more training to volunteers, and encouraging organisers to involve participants in cleaning up after major events.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • 10 More Hawker Centres To Be Built Over Next 12 Years

    10 More Hawker Centres To Be Built Over Next 12 Years

    The Government will build 10 more hawker centres over the next 12 years, located in new estates or existing ones that are relatively under-served, said Second Minister for the Environment and Water Resources Grace Fu today (March 11).

    Speaking in Parliament during debate on the ministry’s budget, Ms Fu said five of these centres will be located in Bidadari, Sengkang, Choa Chu Kang, Bukit Panjang and Bukit Batok. The remaining locations will be made known later in the year.

    In 2011, the ministry announced that 10 new hawker centres will be built over 10 years. The first two centres in Bukit Panjang and Hougang will open this year. Taken together, the 20 new hawker centres centres will add more than 800 cooked food stalls and help to further moderate rentals, said Ms Fu.

    Today, Members of Parliament (MP) raised concerns on rising rental prices, the feasibility of the social enterprise model for hawker centres, among other issues.

    Mr Yeo Guat Kwang (Ang Mo Kio GRC) noted that existing and potential hawkers are concerned with impact of the outsourcing model on stall rentals, while consumers worry if increases in rental will translate to higher prices.

    Ms Fu said that findings from an annual survey of more than 1,000 hawkers showed that rentals take up only 12 per cent of hawkers’ total costs. On the other hand, cost of raw materials took up more than half the total costs, while manpower, utilities, table-cleaning and other costs took up 17, 9 and 3 per cent of the total costs respectively. The survey used data from the National Environment Agency’s Cost Component Survey of hawker cooked food stalls in 2012 and 2013, as well as price data from the Department of Statistics.

    Among the hawker stalls which experienced rental changes, more than half did not change their food prices, according to the survey. “Hence, there is little substantive evidence to say that rentals are the main driver of hawker food prices,” said Ms Fu.

    She also noted that the Government has taken steps over the last few years to moderate rentals to ensure it does not drive up food prices. Currently, sub-letting or assignment of stalls is prohibited for stallholders. Following a three-year grace period, all non-subsidised stallholders also have to personally operate their stalls from April, she added.

    Both Dr Lee Bee Wah (Nee Soon GRC) and Mr Yeo also asked about the new management model of hawker centres, where they are operated by social enterprises on a “not-for-profit” basis.

    In response, Ms Fu said as these managing agents have only run these models for a short period of time, time will be needed before assessing their effectiveness.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Lui Tuck Yew: ERP Revenue Fell Last Year

    Lui Tuck Yew: ERP Revenue Fell Last Year

    The Government collected S$152 million in Electronic Road Pricing (ERP) revenue last year, which is a dip from the S$160 million consistently collected in preceding years, said Transport Minister Lui Tuck Yew to Parliament on Wednesday (Mar 11).

    This was in response to questions from several MPs who wanted to know if ERP rates could be adjusted on certain roads.

    Mr Lui said the smaller revenue is in part due to the opening of the Marina Coastal Expressway, which saw ERP charges along both the MCE and ECP, lowered, for three consecutive quarters.

    He explained that the optimal speed for expressways is 45 to 65km/hour. When speeds reach above 65km/hr, ERP charges are lowered or removed. Correspondingly if speeds go consistently below 45km/hr, rates are raised, for the particular time belt. The same goes for arterial roads.

    The speed parameters for that is between 20 and 30km/hr. If speeds are consistently above the upper threshold, ERP charges will be reduced, and likewise raised, if it is consistently below the lower threshold.

    Mr Lui added that charges for entry into Orchard Road will remain, on Saturdays.

    “We still feel that there is a need to have this on Saturday afternoon. And for those who find the ERP charge is a burden, then maybe the possibility is for them to shop on Sundays instead because Sundays is entirely free and the traffic speeds a little bit better,” he said.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Lui Tuck Yew: Displeased Over Disruption, No Women-Only Cabins

    Lui Tuck Yew: Displeased Over Disruption, No Women-Only Cabins

    Key performance indicators such as the number of train withdrawals and service delays have been improving in recent years as a result of a change to the approach to maintenance adopted by public transport providers.

    “But while the statistics show improvement, the recent incidents are a stark reminder that we still have a significant way to go”, Transport Minister Lui Tuck Yew said in Parliament on Wednesday (Mar 11).

    Mr Lui noted that for most of 2014, public transport operators have made “significant inroads in improving reliability”. For instance, the number of train withdrawals on the North-South (NSL) and East-West Lines (EWL) were halved to 1.1 per 100,000 train-km, compared to 2.2 in 2013 – back to 2007 standards.

    “I feel that we can do better in the coming years as this improved rate is still double that of the North East Line and Circle Line,” he qualified.

    Service delays lasting more than five minutes have also improved on the NSL and EWL, down to 1.3 in 2014 compared to 1.6 in 2012 – an improvement of close to 20 per cent, the minister said.

    Similarly, the withdrawal rate for the Bukit Panjang LRT had come down to 4.5 per 100,000 car-km in 2014, compared to 6.1 in 2012. For the Sengkang-Punggol LRT, it was 0.7 in 2014, compared to 1.5 in 2012, he said.

    Commuters were more satisfied with public transport last year. Survey results involving over 4,000 people showed satisfaction levels improving from 88.5 per cent in 2013, to 91.3 per cent last year.

    Satisfaction with train services hit 92.8 per cent, after a four-year decline, while for buses, it was up for a second year to reach 90.2 per cent, from 88.3 per cent in 2013.

    Mr Lui said: “It reflected the prevailing sentiments that commuters were starting to feel the effect of the improvements and investments that we have made in our buses and trains over the last few years.

    “And for the MRT, I must point out that we look at a range of attributes, from waiting time, to reliability to comfort and so on, and the attributes that had scored the highest for at least the past two years were safety and security.”

    ‘I AM MOST UPSET’

    However, a recent spate of breakdowns has shown that much work still needs to be done, said Mr Lui.

    “While I can accept the occasional breakdown or even a more severe disruption if it occurs very rarely, I am most upset with the current situation in the last few weeks,” he said.

    “The operators must persevere and redouble their efforts to do better. They need to intensify their maintenance regime, undertake additional preventive and detection measures, as well as improve their processes to enable prompt and effective response to maintenance issues,” he said, adding that his ministry will work with these companies to continue with track renewal and mid-life upgrades of their trains.

    The Land Transport Authority (LTA) will augment SMRT with additional engineering expertise where required, and will also step up audits of the latter’s maintenance procedures and resources.

    “In the event of a disruption, like in the Bukit Panjang LRT incident, LTA will require SMRT to deploy more service ambassadors to better assist commuters,” Mr Lui said. “I would like to assure Members that we will spare no effort to find out the cause of the recent spate of breakdowns, and take the necessary steps to stem the problems.”

    In January, the LTA announced a higher bar set for Singapore’s rail network to cut waiting times and disruptions. For instance, it plans to further tighten the Operating Performance Standards (OPS) for train frequencies during morning, evening and shoulder peak periods for the North-South and East-West Line, North East Line and Circle Line. This will be introduced progressively from 2016.

    By 2019, there will be 99 new trains, for the North-South and East-West Line, North East Line and Circle Line. Mr Lui said: “We are constructing these new lines at a pace unprecedented in Singapore’s history. By 2030, our rail network will be almost as dense as New York and London, and we would have achieved this in under 50 years, compared to the more than 100 years that it took the two cities.”

    “The overall train fleet will increase by about 50 per cent and we can expect that peak period wait times will come down by 25 per cent on average across all train lines,” he added.

    WHAT ABOUT WOMEN-ONLY CABINS?

    In response to suggestions by Members of Parliament Lily Neo and Low Thia Kiang to deploy women-only train cabins, Mr Lui said this idea had been raised and looked at carefully before.

    “There are practical difficulties and challenges, such as how to and how strictly to enforce the rule, and also how this could sub-optimise the capacity of our trains,” the minister said.

    “From the experience of other systems, the women-only cabins are often utilised less, meaning that more commuters will have to crowd into the other cabins or wait for the next train.”

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

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