Tag: Lee Bee Wah

  • MPs – Public Service Serving With No Heart, Compassion

    MPs – Public Service Serving With No Heart, Compassion

    Several Members of Parliament yesterday called for greater compassion from a public service that has, in Nee Soon GRC MP Louis Ng’s words, “lost its heart”, citing examples of how people have been turned away because public servants were doing things strictly by the book.

    Citing a resident who was slapped with letters demanding mortgage and tax payments while struggling to provide for her late sister’s two children, Mr Ng said: “I asked the HDB (Housing and Development Board) why they did that. The answer was that they didn’t know the letter was sent as it was computer generated … Our aim seems to be to process each case as fast as possible and to follow the book as strictly as possible.”

    He lamented: “In our pursuit to automate most things, we now have a system without a heart.”

    Nominated MP Kuik Shiao-Yin, meanwhile, urged the Government to extend a “compassionate” helping hand to those mired in the poverty cycle.

    While the slew of handouts — from education subsidies to Goods and Services Tax U-Save Vouchers — were helpful, they are but “drops in a constantly-leaking bucket” for these families, said Ms Kuik, who called for more universal support to meet needs such as eldercare, quicker access to affordable housing and respite for caregivers.

    The working poor, she noted, hold full-time jobs and slog to support their families but still cannot seem to break the poverty cycle.

    Not only do they feel left out, those struggling to make ends meet are left behind by the Government’s calls each year to “upskill”, “internationalise” and “innovate”.

    This is neither the result of nonchalance nor laziness, but because “they’re just busy trying not to drown under wave after wave of new demands, new costs and new changes”. To this group, even the “calmest and most reasonable technocratic explanation” on why a water price hike is justifiable would feel like “salt on a wound”, said Ms Kuik.

    What preoccupies them is that they “don’t have enough, I’ll never have enough and I’m not enough and you don’t care”, she added.

    The disadvantaged lack the luxury of breathing space to weigh alternatives and plan for their future, and rather than brush them off with “don’t know, go talk to your MP” — as some frontline officers do — conveying available solutions compassionately is the key, she said.

    Dr Lee Bee Wah (Nee Soon GRC) noted that some civil servants tend to be more concerned with the “rules of their own agency” than what might benefit Singaporeans.

    And public agencies often have requirements that contradict one another, said Dr Lee, citing the example of an “incomplete” covered linkway in Khatib that was left with a gap because the HDB could not meet other agencies’ requirements to build a seamless linkway.

    “These are only small projects and we meet so many obstacles … Can’t our civil servants be more result-oriented and objective-driven, instead of just guarding your own turf?” she asked.

    Calling for better communication between the Government and the public, Ms Joan Pereira (Tanjong Pagar GRC) said: “Seniors used to joke that the answers to their queries at Government departments always start with ‘www’… Making adjustments to accommodate our seniors is a signature of a caring society.”

    Saying that the public service defends policies rather than listen to ideas on how to make them better, Mr Ng called for greater innovation in the public service.

    “A crucial player in the implementation (of the Budget) is our public service … I hope that every public servant has a heart full of grace and a soul generated by love,” he said.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Lee Bee Wah: Yishun Is Normal

    Lee Bee Wah: Yishun Is Normal

    A trending topic on social media has recently been this question: What in the world is wrong with Yishun?

    “Build a wall around Yishun,” says a popular meme, while a Twitter account has been set up, dedicated to weird happenings in this northern town.

    Somehow, Yishun has developed a reputation for bad news. Alongside the everyday events, Yishun is also home to cat abuse, murder, car chases, brothel raids, civilians trying to attack policemen with stun guns, loan sharks, falling concrete slabs, sinkholes, feuding taxi drivers, shopping mall stabbings and more.

    Could it be something in the air? Or perhaps the water?

    But it turns out that the problem with Yishun is simple, just like what most people won in the Toto draw last week: Nothing.

    It is a made-up phenomenon, driven by media coverage and confirmation bias.

    Assistant Professor Liew Khai Khiun, from Nanyang Technological University’s Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, said Yishun’s reputation boils down to “public imagination”.

    By coincidence, one or two sensational things happen in the estate that draw widespread coverage, some enterprising wags seize upon it and soon the idea that the place is jinxed enters almost mainstream thought.

    “For example, Woodlands had that murder case on Chinese New Year, along with the water tank murder in 2013, but the place is not associated with dysfunctionality.”

    Emphasising the role of media attention, Mr Louis Ng, an MP for Nee Soon GRC, said cat killings had been going on since 2012, but most people did not know about them at the time.

    Only after a press conference in December 2015 did people begin looking out for such incidents and highlighting them.

    Soon, Yishun became synonymous with the phrase “cat killer”.

    Mr Ng, who is also head of animal welfare group Acres, said cat abuse happens in other neighbourhoods – most recently in Tampines, Ang Mo Kio and Redhill – but the publicity does not reach the same level.

    “There’s a balance of positive and negative news with every estate. But a lot more people read the bad news,” he noted.

    There is also an expectation that a public housing estate in the heartland is insulated from problems that beset more worldly areas.

    Prof Liew said: “For example, Geylang is not associated with being a family-friendly place like the HDB heartland.”

    So if something occurs in Yishun, people sit up and take notice.

    These factors combine to create an often darkly funny, dystopian image of the town.

    “Perhaps people want to reaffirm their own geographical biases,” said Prof Liew. “For example, people in the east may not like to travel that far, so they pick on this to justify themselves.”

    He added that Yishun’s demographics are similar to those of other housing estates and its social problems, such as poverty, are found elsewhere in Singapore as well.

    That Yishun’s popular image is firmly tongue-in-cheek is clear in the negligible impact on property values.

    R’ST Research director Ong Kah Seng said: “I wouldn’t say the spate of bad news would affect property prices there.”

    He added that buyers make decisions based on budget and location and take into account the available amenities and connectivity to the city centre.

    Property in Yishun still draws buyers, he pointed out.

    He said: “In 2015, a private residential project, Northpark Residences, was launched. Although prices were on the steeper side, averaging $1,300 per sq ft, there was still overwhelming interest.

    “This was because the project offered integrated amenities.”

    There is also a more sinister side to the misrepresentation of Yishun, said Ms Lee Bee Wah, an MP for Nee Soon GRC.

    Though netizens may find it funny to cherry-pick incidents and poke fun at the town, the jokes may hurt the feelings of some.

    Ms Lee has received feedback from upset residents, some of whom have been the target of insensitive jokes. “It will affect the morale of the hard-working police and other community partners in Yishun,” she said. “If you work hard every day to make somewhere a peaceful home, but only the negative incidents get blown up, you would be a little discouraged too.”

    She urged people to also acknowledge positive events in Yishun.

    Vegetable seller Jenny Ong, 47, has lived in Yishun Avenue 6 for almost two decades. She said: “People here are actually nice and normal. My neighbours are friendly and we are all on good terms.”

    She regards her regular customers as friends, having served them for years, and does not mind when some make purchases on credit.

    “There’s that trust,” she said. “Some people say Yishun is a kampung because it is far from the city, but I find it cosy.”

    Mr Muhamad Riduwan, 24, a driver, has lived in Yishun Ring Road for more than a year. He first noticed the jokes on Facebook a few months ago but laughs them off.

    The parrot enthusiast said that with developments such as the Seletar West Link, Yishun is not as inaccessible as some make it seem.

    “Things like fighting, murder and animal abuse happen everywhere,” he said. “We can’t stop people from saying what they want.”

    To put the stereotypes to rest, Prof Liew suggests making relevant statistics public.

    “Perhaps it’s time to raise the question of whether Singapore’s police should release figures for crime rates by region,” he said. “If not, such stereotypes might persist.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Lee Bee Wah: Reward People Who Catch Litterbugs In Action

    Lee Bee Wah: Reward People Who Catch Litterbugs In Action

    While the rest of the neighbourhood in Nee Soon South is sleeping, about 120 volunteers were out early on Sunday morning (Oct 11). Armed with litter pickers and gloves, they sorted the garbage into bags for rubbish and recyclables.

    Headed by Nee Soon South MP Lee Bee Wah, the ward is the first in Singapore to do this on a monthly basis.

    The programme – called HABIT @ Nee Soon South (Hold on And Bin IT, make it a HABIT!) – started about three years ago, and organisers said they have seen a gradual decrease in the amount of litter collected. Meanwhile, the number of residents volunteering has also increased.

    National Environment Agency (NEA) said it wants to replicate the monthly scheme in other parts of Singapore. It said representatives from Jurong and Queenstown have expressed an interest, and have attended Nee Soon’s monthly litter picking programme to learn more.

    However, Ms Lee said picking up litter is not enough. She is encouraging her residents to look out for those who litter habitually.

    She also suggested to the authorities to reward people who catch litterbugs in action. For example, after a resident takes a video of someone littering, he submits the evidence to NEA, and he gets to earn half of the summons.

    She said: “In Taiwan, every resident is an enforcement officer. They can video, they can take photo of the litterbug and submit to their NEA. And if there is successful prosecution, their NEA will give the resident who reported it half of the summons collected.

    “My residents have given this suggestion and I thought it is a good one. So now I’m working with NEA, and we will try to pilot this in Nee Soon South in the near future.”

    Channel NewsAsia understands there are challenges in its implementation, as the legislation needs to be amended.

    Said NEA chairman Liak Teng Lit: “I think the Government needs to think through what are the things we need to do. If you look at the equivalent of what is happening on the road, many people today have their in-vehicle cameras and not many people dare to make funny claims about accidents because there is a risk that whatever you say could be contradicting what’s on the camera in someone else’s vehicles.

    “So certainly having neighbours watching over the environment and watching over each other will be very helpful. For the good citizens, there is nothing to worry about. In fact, people will be filming you doing good things and praising you rather than reprimanding you.”

    Ms Lee also launched a second recycling point in her ward, after a successful pilot. The scheme is being supported by the Tzu Chi Foundation.

    Residents take their recyclables to the void deck at Block 873, Yishun Street 81. These items will be sorted, and taken to recycling centres.

    She said this will educate residents on what can and cannot be recycled. This could prevent uninformed residents from contaminating recycling bins with waste.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Battle For Sembawang GRC Shapes Up

    Battle For Sembawang GRC Shapes Up

    The battle for Sembawang GRC is shaping up.

    The People’s Action Party (PAP) slate of candidates is starting to take shape in the five-MP GRC that was substantially affected by new electoral boundaries last week, and its MPs have begun working the new ground.

    Party chairman Khaw Boon Wan yesterday said he and his team were reaching out to the 53,177 new voters added to Sembawang GRC from areas that were under Nee Soon GRC, while “handing over” the areas with 61,061 voters that have been carved away to the new Marsiling-Yew Tee GRC.

    In the 2011 General Election, Sembawang GRC saw a contest between the PAP team and a Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) team.

    he PAP won 63.9 per cent of the vote against the SDP, whose slate included academics James Gomez and John Tan.

    The SDP confirmed it will again contest the GRC at the coming general election. But party leaders have yet to name their slate for the GRC.

    With the boundary changes, two members of PAP’s current team in the GRC – Senior Parliamentary Secretary Hawazi Daipi and first-term MP Ong Teng Koon – will see their wards go to Marsiling-Yew Tee GRC, said Mr Khaw, who is the National Development Minister.

    But Dr Lim Wee Kiak, a two-term MP in Nee Soon GRC’s Canberra ward, will join Sembawang GRC.

    This leaves a spot open in Sembawang GRC. But Mr Khaw would not confirm if lawyer Amrin Amin, 35, a PAP new face spotted in the GRC, will join his team.

    But he added: “He’s in my group. He’s proactive. I need a Malay after (the) carving out of Marsiling.”

    The two other MPs in the Sembawang GRC team are Ms Ellen Lee and Mr Vikram Nair.

    Mr Khaw gave the likely line-up for his GRC – and partially for Marsiling-Yew Tee GRC – to The Straits Times when he met Nee Soon GRC MP Lee Bee Wah at a coffee shop in Yishun Avenue 11.

    His disclosure reinforced a point that PAP organising secretary and Defence Minister Ng Eng Hen made at a SingHealth Nurses’ Day event yesterday: that the party would disclose its slate of candidates early, probably well ahead of Nomination Day.

    At the meeting between Mr Khaw and Ms Lee, she briefed him about the 51 blocks that were being transferred to Sembawang GRC following the boundary changes.

    Mr Khaw said boundary changes have the greatest impact on the PAP, and in some cases are “quite drastic … We’ve invested time. Now, new relations have to be forged”.

    Losing Marsiling, which has a predominantly elderly population, Mr Khaw said, will lower the median age for Sembawang GRC and bring it nearer to the national median age of just over 40 years.

    Yesterday, SDP members went on a walkabout in Holland-Bukit Timah GRC, and party activist Paul Tambyah said it would return to the areas it contested in 2011 – including Sembawang – “because the residents know who we are”.

    “We have been going back there over the years… on a regular basis, so these are a natural fit for us.”

    That opposition parties aim to contest all 89 seats at the next general election, is a prospect relished by first-term Tanjong Pagar GRC MP Chia Shi-Lu.

    Speaking to reporters at an event yesterday, he said that he and his fellow GRC MPs were at a “disadvantage” as theirs was the only uncontested constituency in 2011.

    As the GRC, previously helmed by the late Mr Lee Kuan Yew, has no history of contests to indicate how it would do in the face of a challenge, “we actually have to work harder than most others”, he added.

    This is why the team campaigned in 2011, going door to door and meeting residents, as if they were facing a real election.

    “We take nothing for granted because of this unknown element, which I suppose spurs us to work even harder,” he said.

    The Singaporeans First party and Democratic Progressive Party are keen on Tanjong Pagar GRC.

    But the SDP, which said in January that it was also considering Tanjong Pagar, confirmed yesterday that it would not target the GRC.

    Said Professor Tambyah, who was accompanied by SDP chief Chee Soon Juan and party activists: “Many people in Tanjong Pagar are very keen to vote but, at the same time, there are many other parties that have expressed interest.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • 3rd Gold Medal For Singapore Table-Tennis

    3rd Gold Medal For Singapore Table-Tennis

    Unleashing a guttural roar with each winning point, Yang Zi glared at his opponents from across the competition table, as if daring the Thai pair of Padasak Tanaviriyavechakul and Suthasini Sawetthabut to beat him and his partner Yu Mengyu to the SEA Games mixed doubles gold.

    The game of intimidation appeared to work for the Singaporean paddlers today (June 3), as the Thais’ earlier bravado – they had upset top seeded Singaporeans Li Hu and Zhou Yihan 4-3 in the semi-finals – deserted them in the final, leaving Yang and Yu to claim victory in straight sets (4-0) and win the Republic’s third gold medal at the SEA Games.

    Yu and women’s doubles partner Feng Tianwei had lost the gold to teammates Lin Ye and Zhou Yihan yesterday, and the 25-year-old was delighted to pick up her first title here.

    “Today my partner played very well and his spirit inspired me,” she said. “I didn’t think before this that it would be this relaxed. My teammates lost to them so Yang Zi and I made sure we did sufficient preparation for this.”

    While local fans had expected an all-Singaporean final in the mixed doubles, they were left disappointed today as top seeds Li and Zhou – who won the men’s and women’s doubles gold medal respectively yesterday – were eliminated in the semis. Despite charging ahead to a 3-1 lead, the Singaporeans found the Thais’ fiery attacking game too hot to handle, losing the match 4-3 to Tanviriyavechakul and Sawettabut.

    A five-time gold medallist in the mixed doubles, Yang has not lost his grip on his crown since the 2005 SEA Games, and he was not about to let the Thais usurp his throne. Fired up from the get-go, Yang’s deadly smashes proved too much for Tanviriyavechakul and Sawettabut to handle, as the Singapore pair first claimed the lead 1-0, before making it 2-0. As the score went to 3-0, it was clear that the Thais were in trouble. Yang and Yu then powered past their opponents to claim victory in the fourth game 11-6.

    Yang insisted that there was no secret to his success, as he added: “There’s no secret, just hard training. We played them at the recent world champs…it was very close but we won. This time we prepared very well and played well. Semi-finalists Vietnam and Thailand are the strongest opponent in South-east Asia and we prepared very well by watching videos everyday.”

    While it was mission accomplished for Team Singapore’s 10-member table tennis team with a third gold in the bag, there was frustration and disappointment for local-born player Isabelle Li.

    The 20-year-old, who won two silver medals in the women’s singles at the 2011 and 2013 SEA Games, suffered a 3-2 loss to Vietnam’s Nguyen Thi Nga in the women’s singles group stage. Only the top ranked player in each of the four groups will advance to the semi-finals, and the loss could see defending silver medallist Li eliminated from the singles. Li will only advance to the top four if she beats Laos’ Seangdavieng Douangpanya in her final group match tomorrow, and Nguyen loses to Myanmar’s Khin Kaung San.

    Li was close to tears after today’s match, as she said: “I think my chances of getting into the main draw has ended here. I wasn’t feeling physically good today and made a lot of mistakes. I played her at the SEA Championships last November (Li won 3-0) and she was a lot fiercer today. I wasn’t able to bring my form on court today and that gave her confidence.”

    Li’s potential exit will leave world No 4 Feng Tianwei with the responsibility of winning the singles gold for Singapore. With Team Singapore’s 749-strong contingent aiming to win more than 50 gold medals in the first home Games since 1993, expectations are high for the paddlers to win all seven medals on offer at the indoor stadium.

    “Getting the third gold is not less of a burden, but more of a burden,” said Singapore Table Tennis Association president Ellen Lee. “I’m very disappointed (with Li’s loss) and there is a lot of expectation heaped on Isabelle. But it is a growing up process, and the good thing is that she is still young and this is a good experience for the younger players.”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com