Tag: HDB

  • Help! My Neighbour Is Camping Along The Corridor

    Help! My Neighbour Is Camping Along The Corridor

    Stomper Anonymous’ neighbours have set up a tent along the corridor of the Jalan Bukit Merah block he lives in and camped outside for more than a week.

    According to the Stomper, his 12th-storey neighbours at Block 105 Jalan Bukit Merah even installed their own lights and fans.

    In the photos he said are taken by his neighbours, a purple tent and a mattress can be seen. The wiring of the block had also been tampered with, presumably during their light and fan installation.

    The Stomper said:

    “They have been there for more than a week. They are always sleeping outside their house.

    “Neighbours walk past but they cannot do anything.”

    When asked if they had been confronted for setting up camp in the common walkway, the Stomper said it was ‘no use’.

     

    Source: www.stomp.com.sg

  • Hari Raya Tahun Ini Yang Terakhir Di Dakota Crescent Bagi Penduduk Islam

    Hari Raya Tahun Ini Yang Terakhir Di Dakota Crescent Bagi Penduduk Islam

    Hari Raya tahun ini adalah yang terakhir di Dakota Crescent bagi para penduduk Islam di kawasan itu.

    Flat-flat yang dibina pada 1958 itu bakal dirobohkan untuk memberi laluan kepada projek pembangunan semula.

    Meskipun akur dengan keputusan tersebut, sebahagian penduduk berasa keberatan untuk berpindah kerana mempunyai kemudahan serta jiran-jiran yang baik.

    Bagi seorang penduduk, Cik Rohani Mahmood, keriangan Syawal tahun ini bercampur-baur dengan rasa sedih.

    Setelah 14 tahun mendiami flat 2 bilik di Blok 6 Dakota Crescent, beliau terpaksa berpindah pada Disember nanti.

    Sambutan Hari Raya di Dakota Crescent mungkin tidak semeriah di rumah lamanya di Pasir Ris dan Yishun kerana kebanyakan penduduk di sini merupakan warga senja. Namun lebih utama bagi Cik Rohani adalah kemudahan pengangkutan yang baik di kawasan itu.

    “Baru-baru kakak pindah di sini agak susah sikit sebab MRT belum siap, masih kotor, nyamuk banyak. Kami buka almari, nyamuk terbang-terbang, banyak air di longkang-longkang.

    “Tetapi selepas dua tahun kakak tinggal di sini, MRT pun dah siap, Alhamdulillah, sangat bagus. Cuma kakak kadang-kadang tidak mahu fikirkan yang ini adalah hari raya terakhir di sini sebab kalau difikirkan memang sedih,” kata Cik Rohani.

    Cik Rohani, seorang ibu tunggal, tinggal di flat itu bersama salah seorang daripada empat anaknya. Dua anaknya sudah berhijrah ke luar negara.

    Rumah itulah tempat anggota keluarganya berkunjung dari rantauan sempena Syawal.

    Anak Cik Rohani, Rifqi Mohd Kamil, berkata: “Memori yang paling manis adalah tahun lepas, bila kakak saya dari Amerika Syarikat semua turun, berkumpul bersama di sini. Saya rasa itulah yang membuat saya dan keluarga saya gembira.”

    Seperti Cik Rohani, Cik Wahidah Said juga akan berpindah dari Dakota Crescent ke sebuah flat sewa yang dibina berhampiran di Cassia Link.

    Cik Wahidah, 87 tahun, sudah tinggal di kawasan itu sekitar 40 tahun. Menurut salah seorang anaknya, para penduduk di situ, tidak kira kaum atau agama, sangat rapat dan mengambil berat antara satu sama lain, terutama terhadap mereka yang uzur dan lanjut usia.

    “Mengapa nenek suka tinggal di sini? Kawan-kawan datang menjenguk nenek, tanya khabar, bagus,” kata Cik Wahidah.

    Semangat kejiranan yang kuat itu membentuk identiti unik estet perumahan di Dakota Crescent.

    Kesemua 17 blok flat di Dakota Crescent yang merupakan antara yang tertua di Singapura, akan dirobohkan di bawah pelan pembaharuan estet Mountbatten.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Grandma Sues Grandkids For Trying To Sell HDB Flat

    Grandma Sues Grandkids For Trying To Sell HDB Flat

    Madam Tan Teck Soon says, for 26 years, she has paid the Housing Board $277 each month – mortgage instalments for the three- room flat that she lives in.

    She paid over $117,000, including upgrading costs and conservancy charges, said the 76-year-old canteen vendor, but she might soon have to leave her home. In March, she said, she learnt her granddaughters were trying to sell the flat.

    To stop this, she has sued both Ms Michelle Ng Li Xuan, 26, and Ms Isabella Ng Su Xi, 25.

    The case is pending in the High Court, and the two sides met for a pre-trial conference on Tuesday, said lawyer Chia Boon Teck, who is representing Madam Tan pro bono.

    Both sisters are registered owners of the flat, which they inherited when their father died in 2009.

    But Madam Tan said she had single-handedly paid for the flat since its purchase in 1990. Her granddaughters were only holding it in trust for her, she said. In her affidavit, she said they were trying to sell it and “swallow” the proceeds.

    The 10th-storey flat in Bedok South was bought under the name of her son – the sisters’ father, Mr Ng King Nguang – said Madam Tan, who was then registered as co-owner of another flat with her older son. The disputed flat has an estimated value of about $330,000 now.

    “The flat was registered under Ng’s sole name at that time with the understanding between Ng and me that I was the sole owner,” she said, adding that she paid the initial sum of $20,000 for the down payment and renovations.

    She was registered as an owner of the flat in 1992, after the other flat was sold. But seven years later, Mr Ng chalked up about $100,000 in debts, she said. He then purportedly asked her for help. She said he wanted her to sell him her share of the flat so he could get an HDB loan on the pretext of paying her.

    She said she did not get any money from the sale, but lent him $61,000 instead. He used the entire sum to pay creditors, she said.

    “I’m not a lawyer. I didn’t understand the implications. My son and I understood the flat still belonged to me,” she told The Straits Times.

    In 1992, Mr Ng divorced his wife, who got custody of Michelle. Isabella, about one then, grew up in the flat with her father and Madam Tan.

    In 2009, Mr Ng died after a heart attack. The sisters inherited the flat, along with his mortgage life insurance payout of $40,200.

    “I did not understand how (they) could sell the flat and throw me onto the streets when I had paid for the flat entirely single-handedly,” Madam Tan said in her affidavit.

    Both sisters denied trying to sell the flat without her knowledge.

    Ms Michelle Ng disputed that Madam Tan had made all payments for the flat. “What I understand is that my dad was the one doing the payments,” she said, adding that she and her sister let Madam Tan live there as it was near Madam Tan’s workplace.

    Ms Ng said Madam Tan made some payments for the flat after Mr Ng died, but that was because Madam Tan was living there then.

    Ms Ng said the flat was an asset passed down to both sisters by their father, which they should be able to sell, and they had offered Madam Tan an alternative place to live – with Ms Isabella Ng at her upcoming BTO flat in Choa Chu Kang.

    Said Ms Michelle Ng, a former marketing executive: “I’m not working at the moment. I’m expecting my second child. I’m not taking the money to go and enjoy myself.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Singapore Homes Seriously Unaffordable

    Singapore Homes Seriously Unaffordable

    Singapore’s market cooling measures have been effective in reducing the prices of HDB flats and private homes over the past few years, but housing costs here are still seen as too high, revealed findings published by a global report last month.

    According to the 12th Annual Demographia International Housing Affordability Survey, Singapore has a “seriously unaffordable” rating of 5.0, no change from last year’s survey.

    The report used the median multiple indicator, which is the median house price divided by gross annual median household income, to rate housing affordability across 367 cities in nine countries.

    A grade of 3.0 and below is considered affordable, 3.1 to 4.0 (moderately unaffordable), 4.1 to 5.0 (seriously unaffordable) and 5.1 and over (severely unaffordable).

    Despite being seen as expensive, the report noted that “Singapore has been far more successful in controlling housing affordability than in markets that have followed the British urban containment model”.

    Specifically, the HDB was recognized for ramping up the supply of new flats and reducing new home prices.

    “One strategy has been to increase what are effectively “across the board” subsidies for all new houses (not counting special grants, such as for first home buyers).

    “Should the present policy continue, it is likely that resale house prices will rise slower or even fall in the future, improving Singapore’s housing affordability,” said Demographia.

    Eligible first-time buyers of new HDB flats currently enjoy up to $80,000 in housing grants, comprising up to $40,000 in Special CPF Housing Grants and up to $40,000 in Additional CPF Housing Grants.

    Meanwhile, Hong Kong has the least affordable housing in the world, with a median multiple of 19.0. This rating is also the highest recorded in the 12 years of the Demographia Survey.

     

    Source: www.propertyguru.com.sg

  • My Malay Neighbour Unhappy With My 2 Year Old Child Crying And Playing, Harassed Us Frequently

    My Malay Neighbour Unhappy With My 2 Year Old Child Crying And Playing, Harassed Us Frequently

    Jiran i pun sama…diapun melayu juga..anak saya umur baru masuk tiga tahun..baik budak ni nanggis atau tengah bermainpun dia marah..call police lah…call HDB lah..

    pekik sana pekik sini..tendang kita punya gate la..tapi herannya dia ta na cakap face to face dgn kita…

    dia taruh letter kat semua letter box jiran..mengatakan kita ta lih didik anak…

    nasib baik jiran yg lain semua paham and side kita…semua letter kita taruh balik ke letter box dia…padam muka dia…kita ta layan dia….

    merekapun ada anak tp da besar..

    ***

    My neighbours also the same….they are fellow Malays…My child is 2 years plus…whether the baby is crying or playing, they will be angry..they called the police and HDB

    They screamed and shout…kicked our gate…but the funny thing is they have never complained to us face to face

    They put a letter in all the neighbours’ letter box saying that we are not teaching our child.

    Luckily the rest of our neighbours are understanding and side with us. All the letters they put back in their letter box.  Serve them right. Everyone ignored them.

    They also have a child but is already grown up.

     

    Editor’s Note: Endang Leatari was commenting on an All Singapore Stuff article, www.allsingaporestuff.com/article/neighbor-slips-angry-note-flat-over-babys-crying-gets-trolled-big-time

    Source: Endang Leatari