Tag: HDB

  • Two-Hour Shouting Match Between Seller And Buyer In HDB Dispute

    Two-Hour Shouting Match Between Seller And Buyer In HDB Dispute

    After the former owners were sent to jail, Madam Herni Fadhillah Saad thought she could finally move into the flat that she bought five years ago.

    Mr Lim Teck Choon, 59, and his wife, Madam Tan Poh Lee, were jailed for contempt of court after defying court orders to vacate the flat.

    But after they were released on Thursday evening, Madam Herni ended up in a two-hour shouting match with Mr Lim after he showed up at the flat.

    Madam Herni told The New Paper on Friday that she had gone to the flat at Bedok South Road at 10pm on Thursday and was shocked to see Mr Lim standing outside the door.

    ”When I asked him why he was there, he started shouting, insisting that it is his home,” she said. Mr Lim said he had returned to his old flat because his current rental flat was unliveable.

    A neighbour, who declined to be named, said she saw four policemen at the lift landing when she returned home at about 8.30pm.

    Mr Lim was sitting outside the flat.

    Another neighbour living a floor below, Madam Png Ah Hock, 75, said she heard shouting coming from upstairs at about 10pm.

    “The shouting was very loud and they sounded very fierce,” she said in Mandarin.

    “I didn’t go and take a look because I was so frightened. I stayed at home. I was too scared to open the door.”

    When TNP went there close to midnight, Mr Lim was sitting forlornly outside the flat.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • HDB Wants To Increase My Rental By 37% After Elections End?

    HDB Wants To Increase My Rental By 37% After Elections End?

    Dear Editors,

    In a sign of skyrocketing costs of living and business after this upcoming polling day, HDB had sent us a letter right after the election was announced warning us that they intend to raise the rental of our HDB rental unit by a whooping mind-boggling 37%! That’s more than one-third of our current rental and more than $700 per month! But that’s not all. It seems like the letter (see the attached) is a standard letter that is sent to all HDB commercial and industrial property tenants, so we are not the only tenant who is affected.

    The PAP ministers had repeatedly claimed they wanted to help Singaporean businesses and workers thrive in Singapore. However, their actions speak louder than words. By increasing our rental by 37% and more than $700 per month, we will have no choice but to cut our workers’ salaries, retrench one of them, or increase our product prices to offset our rental increase so that we can stay in business and pay HDB the higher rental.

    We are a small setup and we hire strictly Singaporeans only, so our labour costs are already much higher than our competitors who hire foreigners. We value our workers and we do not wish to put them out of job. But if you are in our shoes, faced with a worsening economy, increasing competition, declining business and skyrocketing rental, you will also have no choice but to take one of the above-mentioned courses of action or go out of business. Increasing our product prices will make our products less competitive and result in lower sales, so it is not an option. Cutting our workers’ salaries will lower their morale and they may quit in no time. Retrenching one of our workers is therefore the only option and the remaining workers will just have to share some of the additional workload. This is not an ideal situation but what else can anyone in our shoes do when forced by HDB to cough out more money for them?

    As the largest landlord in Singapore, the PAP government, be it HDB, CapitalMall, Temasek Holdings or otherwise, wields the sole power to set our costs of living and business, and by extension, our quality of life. We elected them and pay them multi-million dollar salaries to work and fight for a better standard of life for us, not to make life miserable and worse off for us. As Mr Low Thia Khiang rightly pointed out, we are the owners of this country instead of the government. Why do we have to keep paying HDB, CapitalMall, Temasek Holdings etc. more and more to use our own land to do business or live?

    SG50 is not working out well for us so far, so we cannot imagine how much worse SG100 will be.

    Mai Kee Chiu
    A.S.S. Contributor

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • Residents In Sunshine Gardens Still Plagued By Faulty Pipe Issues, HDB Say ‘Nothing Wrong’

    Residents In Sunshine Gardens Still Plagued By Faulty Pipe Issues, HDB Say ‘Nothing Wrong’

    We were informed by residents of Sunshine garden in CCK of these recurring problems that is still left unsolved.

    When there is a heavy rain the void deck of some blocks keep getting floods, this has happened quite a few times and it seems that nothing was done to it.

    Although the flats are only a few months old, there are many units with the piping problem that gave the residents much headaches.

    Sunshine Garden Problem 1 Sunshine Garden Problem 2

    On one particular night many residents heard a big loud bang in the night and after which many units have a systematic looking hairline crack at the center of living room the cracks are aligned together with the bedrooms. They thought that these problems can’t be coincidental.

    They had informed their town council and was referred instead to HDB and had told them that there is “nothing wrong” with this problem.

    But why that PAP keep saying that this election is all about Town Council issues?

     

    Source: People’s Power Party

  • After 5-Year Dispute, Buyer Gets To Move Into Flat As Seller Goes To Jail

    After 5-Year Dispute, Buyer Gets To Move Into Flat As Seller Goes To Jail

    After five years, Madam Herni Fadhillah Saad can now look forward to moving into her own home with her two children.

    But only after the Supreme Court yesterday sentenced the former owners to be jailed for contempt of court until further notice.

    Madam Herni’s lawyer had applied to the court to have the couple jailed so that he could arrange for the three-room flat to be vacated and allow his client to move in.

    The flat in Bedok South Road had been an issue of contention since 2010 when Madam Herni agreed to buy it from Mr Lim Teck Choon and his wife Tan Poh Lee.

    But a dispute over the transaction arose, sending both parties to court.

    Even after the Supreme Court ruled in 2013 that the sale of the flat to Madam Herni had to be completed within three months, the couple refused to comply.

    Last November, the court ordered them to vacate the flat by December. Again, they refused despite attempts by court bailiffs to evict them.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • $20,000 Grant To Help Extended Families Live Closer Together

    $20,000 Grant To Help Extended Families Live Closer Together

    Families intending to buy resale flats to live with or near their parents, or seniors who plan to do the same with their married children, are set to receive S$20,000 under the new Proximity Housing Grant (PHG).

    First announced by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong in his National Day Rally yesterday (Aug 23), the scheme, which kicked in today, will replace the Higher-Tier CPF Housing Grant that previously gave first-timer families S$10,000 and singles S$5,000 on top of the basic S$30,000 or S$15,000 CPF Housing Grant they receive respectively.

    Under the scheme, singles will receive grant of S$10,000, half of what a family gets. Recipients of the grant will need to live in their flats for at least five years after receiving the grant, as well the families they live near or with. The grant is available to Singaporean families once, regardless of their household income, any previous subsidies enjoyed or private property ownership.

    Details for this scheme, as well as for a slew of other measures announced by Mr Lee, were released by the Ministry of National Development (MND) and Housing and Development Board (HDB) at a media briefing today. The other measures include raised income ceilings when buying new HDB flats and Executive Condominium units, and bigger Special CPF Housing Grants.

    While more are now eligible to buy flats from the HDB, National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan yesterday sought to assuaged fears that a crush of buyers could outstrip supply and drive up queue times for Build-to-Order (BTO) flats, or prices for ECs.

    Emphasising that MND and HDB will monitor the market to ramp up supply if necessary, Mr Khaw said that the market would adjust itself, with buyers flowing both ways between HDB flats and EC units.

    “Some EC buyers may move into BTOs, some BTO applicants may go up to ECs. At the border (between) EC and (private) condos, there will also be movement. Key point is because we have leverage over supply and we can always adjust the supply, expand and reduce as necessary,” said Mr Khaw.

    On whether developers of EC would capitalise on the higher income ceilings of buyers and raise prices of units, Mr Khaw said developers should be looking at lowering prices, to balance the increased supply of EC units in a market where demand has largely been satisfied.

    And dispelling notions that the measures were introduced to sweeten the ground before the upcoming General Election, Mr Khaw said it was the right time to introduce these adjustments after having cleared the queue of first-timers. Such measures could not have been introduced three or four years ago, he noted.

    “When I took over four and a half years ago, we focused on specific groups where the need was greatest. And that’s how we incrementally adjusted the policies… So now that the first-timers, newly-weds problems are largely resolved, it allows me now to begin to look at other groups – middle income groups and higher income groups … and going forward… including those who are renting HDB flats,” he said.

    Adding he “could not care less when GE is”, Mr Khaw said problems must be solved and schemes will be launched “once I’m confident that those are practical scheme(s)”.

    He also clarified that shifting the focus towards the higher income groups does not be at the expense of the lower income groups. “Even if we expand upwards to a higher income group, we are also improving or enhancing the subsidy for the low income group. But what it means is in totality, more Singaporeans get to benefit from housing subsidy,” he said.

    To that end, the September BTO and Sale of Balance Flats exercise will be slightly delayed — but still held in the same month — to ensure that the next round of buyers will be able to benefit from the changes, said Mr Khaw.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com