Tag: low-income

  • Embracing Ramadan – Help Children In Single-Parent Families To Break Poverty Cycle

    Embracing Ramadan – Help Children In Single-Parent Families To Break Poverty Cycle

    Visited this single-parent Malay family at their one-room rental flat in Marsling.

    Reminded me of my growing up years when my parents were staying in such housing for about 16 odd years before we could afford to buy our own place.

    I grew up sleeping on the floor with a mattress and learn to appreciate what I have while growing up.

    I spent alot of my growing up years poring over novels from the Famous Five series to Alfred Hitchcock thrillers as they allowed me to escape into another world.

    We also want to take this opportunity to thank the many Good Samaritan who bought milk powder, pampers and food grocery for the young family when we publicised their request for assistance.

    One of their 8-year-old daughter is also being sponsored in our sponsor-a-child programme for children living in vulnerable condition.

    Some of you have contributed one-off financial help for the needy family.

    It broke my heart to hear that the family does not have any Macdonald meals before due to the cost factor and they only bought the $2 burger for the kids.

    We also agree to break fast with the family during the Ramadan fasting month to foster community goodwill.

    If you welcome us to break fast with you at your home, please let us know. We are more than willing to do so.

    Editor’s note: not all the kids in the photo belong to single mum Suriani – some are from the neighbouring unit next door.

     

    Source: Gilbert Goh

  • Kidney Patient Robbed Of Last $50 In Sembawang

    Kidney Patient Robbed Of Last $50 In Sembawang

    All the kidney patient wanted was a drink from the vending machine.

    She ended up getting into a fight for her handbag that contained the last $50 she had for the week to feed her two sick sons.

    The robber was too strong and made off with her bag after a short but violent struggle.

    She was left with a sprained arm and an anxious wait of several days for her salary to come in so she could put food on the table for her family.

    Madam Jurina Johari, 42, has been a kidney patient for 25 years.

    The part-time assistant pharmacist was on her way home from work when she felt thirsty.

    She stopped to buy a drink at a vending machine at Block 512, Wellington Circle in Sembawang at around midnight on April 24. She was retrieving the can when she felt a violent tug.

    Speaking to The New Paper last Thursday from her one-room rental flat, the mother of two sons, aged 21 and 22, said: “I was flung around. I managed to only catch a glimpse of the robber.”

    She said she suspected the robber was a man in his 20s.

    Madam Jurina said: “I held on to it (bag) as tightly as I could because the money in my bag was all I had. I didn’t want to let it go.”

    A male passer-by, who was walking home with his mother, also gave chase, but he was too late as well.

    Madam Jurina made a police report the next day and wrote to TNP to highlight the incident.

    She said: “I was trembling. Everything happened in less than a minute.”

    Madam Jurina, who is in the process of finalising her divorce from her husband of nearly three years, also lives with her mother, 60, who is diabetic and has heart problems.

    Choking back tears, Madam Jurina said: “When I lost the money, I felt like I failed as a mother to put food on the table for my children.”

    STRUGGLE

    Madam Jurina has been struggling with chronic kidney disease since she was 17 – she had her right kidney removed eight years later.

    Her older son, Mr Muhammad Shafiee Junadi, who is waiting to enlist into national service, was diagnosed with mild chronic kidney disease when he was an infant.

    He has been a part-time mover after graduating from the Institute of Technical Education two years ago.

    Said Madam Jurina: “He gets sick easily, so I was worried that he took on such a labour-intensive job.

    “But he assured me the daily pay will allow him to support himself, so I’m just glad.”

    She added that Mr Shafiee would at times complain of aches and pain near his left kidney, but the family cannot afford to seek treatment at the hospital.

    “Medication for the four of us can amount to more than $1,000 a month.

    “So we visit the doctor only when one of us is really sick. Otherwise, we just try to bear the pain,” said Madam Jurina.

    “After I was robbed, Shafiee gave me $50 and told me to buy groceries. So I cooked one dish, reheated it for two to three days before cooking again.”

    She said the money lasted her till she received her salary on April 28.

    Madam Jurina’s younger son, Mr Muhammad Shahirul Junadi, was diagnosed with autism when he was one.

    He attends the Goodwill, Rehabilitation and Occupational Workshop at the Cerebral Palsy Alliance Singapore (CPAS) from 10am to 4pm on weekdays.

    The workshop provides vocational training and sheltered employment for adults aged 16 and above with cerebral palsy and other associated disability conditions.

    When Madam Jurina called out to Mr Shahirul, he responded with a bright smile before lunging into her arms.

    Planting a kiss on Mr Shahirul’s forehead, Madam Jurina said: “I couldn’t work full-time because there must always be someone to take care of him. So when my mother is sick, I have to take some time off work to help.”

    SOCIAL AID

    The family has also been receiving monthly food rations such as rice, biscuits and tinned food from the Lee Foundation through CPAS.

    A Ministry of Social and Family Development spokesman said Madam Jurina’s mother, Madam Saminam, was provided with ComCare’s cash assistance, as well as support for water and electrical bills, from November 2015 to January 2016.

    Representatives from the Sembawang grassroots group told TNP they are looking at how they can provide further assistance to Madam Jurina and her family.

    Still traumatised by the incident, Madam Jurina raised her concerns about the groups of men seen drinking and hanging out at her void deck every weekend.

    TNP spoke to 10 neighbours, who shared the same concern.

    One of them, Madam Sheela Singh, 65, who goes on regular walks around the neighbourhood with her wheelchair-bound husband, said she has seen the group of men get rowdy at times.

    “They will sit in groups of seven to eight people and drink. Especially on weekends, they can be quite noisy and usually leave the place in a mess,” said the retiree.

    Another neighbour, Mr Norjohan Buniran, 43, a security guard, added that the problem has not improved since he moved in six years ago.

    He said: “I have daughters, so I’m very worried about their safety. That’s why I don’t allow my children to play at the void deck.”

    Madam Jurina said she is now more careful when she walks home at night after work.

    “Even the idea of going to the shop at night scares me. I hope this incident will be a lesson to not only myself, but other residents as well to be more vigilant,” she added.

    A police spokesman said investigations are ongoing.

    “Medication for the four of us can amount to more than $1,000 a month. So we only visit the doctor when one of us is really sick. Otherwise, we just try to bear the pain.”

    “When I lost the money, I felt like I failed as a mother to put food on the table for my children.”

    – Madam Jurina Johari

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Why Low-Income Families Make ‘Poor Choices’

    Why Low-Income Families Make ‘Poor Choices’

    For three years, I have been researching the lives of low-income people. I visit families in Housing Board rental flats once or twice a week and talk to them about their routines, worries and aspirations.

    My research has taught me important things. First, everyone makes bad and good choices, but the conditions and outcomes of those choices are not equally bad or good for everyone. Second, parents in low-income situations are deeply invested in their children’s well-being.

    Everyone makes bad decisions sometimes. Most people also make some good decisions. People with low incomes have made both. But they do not always have access to good options. For example, many “choose” to leave school early because no one can support them. This seems obviously a bad “choice”, but may be the best among various poor options.

    “Choices” have long-term effects. People with extra money and social capital can mitigate the consequences of “bad” choices, but people without those buffers face severe consequences over time.

    One woman I met had moved here from another country after marrying a Singaporean man. She had not immediately applied for her daughter to be a Singapore citizen, perhaps partly out of uncertainty about where they should live for the long term. Soon after, she was widowed, and several attempts to secure citizenship failed. Her daughter Jen (not her real name) has been living in Singapore for most of her life and knows no other home. Jen’s mother encouraged her in her studies and she has just completed her A levels. Their limited income and Jen’s lack of citizenship, however, means that she has accumulated arrears in school fees. Unless she pays, her certificate will not be released, barring her from university. The few thousand dollars owed seem insurmountable and the “bad choice” of not applying for citizenship immediately means the vast difference between upward mobility and stasis.

    My second point is about parents’ investment in their children’s well-being, in a society where “investments” that do not involve money are valued less than investments that do.

    The women and men I spoke to for my research talked endlessly about their children – their likes and dislikes, quirky habits and talents – as well as the trials of parenting. These parents are deeply invested in their children’s physical, emotional and social well-being. Contrary to stereotypes, low-income parents care for their children in ways no less profound than better-off parents. They include parents who have been drug addicts, incarcerated, or divorced.

    Their devotion to their children is more difficult and requires more of them than my devotion to mine. Many have long, inflexible work hours in physically taxing jobs. They have multiple dependants, heavy burdens of housework, and additional labour due to being low-income (for example, going to the post office weekly to top up their utilities credit). Parents face great financial stress, worrying about food, clothes and shelter. While the better-off in Singapore complain about children having excess tuition and enrichment classes, low-income parents lack resources to provide those things, which are not only necessities for succeeding in the school system, but also keep children occupied. Most poignantly, low-income parents need their children to listen to them at the same time that they tell them “don’t be like me”.

    As we gain awareness about inequality and poverty, how we look at problems has a real impact on the solutions we craft.

    There is a tendency to paint low-income parents as more likely to be neglectful or abusive. This happens for several reasons. First, accounts of the low-income too often focus only on cases that have surfaced as “problematic”, which are then over-generalised as representative. Second, comparable actions are judged differently across class: A child may be left alone at home after school, or left with a grandparent or domestic worker. In both the low-income and better-off cases, the situation arises because parents need to work, but the former is quickly judged as neglect while the latter is acknowledged as necessity.

    Certainly, there are parents who are neglectful or abusive, but this is no less true among higher-income ones. Caricatures of low-income parents cannot be the starting point for public discussions of poverty and social inclusion.

    A recent article (“Lifting families out of poverty: Focus on the children“; last Thursday) admonishes society to pay attention to children in poor households while implying that they are innocent of the “poor choices” their parents make. This narrative that “children are innocent” and therefore particularly worthy of assistance is powerful.

    Yet, it does not accurately reflect the general realities of low-income families’ lives. Most of those parents are doing the best they can – at work and at home – under difficult circumstances. It is not “bad choices” per se that are the problem. They have limited options and face especially negative consequences when they make missteps.

    We cannot detach the well-being of children from that of adults. We would find this approach unfathomable for middle- to high-income families – there is no good reason to imagine that low-income families are different.

    Better-off Singaporeans should care about low-income people because they are a part of our society. I am not from a poor background, but I meet people like my respondents every day – when I pay for my groceries, get petrol, or use any public facility that requires cleaning. Like me, they are people with hopes, joys, needs and disappointments. They work hard and make mistakes, as I do. They deserve respect and dignity, no less than I. The deep social gulf between us negates our shared well-being. I want my child to grow up in a society where she has the same opportunities as their children, not more – a society that truly values hard work, equality and justice.

    • The writer, Teo You Yenn, is an associate professor in sociology at Nanyang Technological University.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • More Financial Help Disbursed To Poor In 2015

    More Financial Help Disbursed To Poor In 2015

    A record sum of $116 million in social assistance payments were made to the poor in the last financial year, ending March 2015.

    This was a 14 per cent jump from the previous year and almost double the $61 million given out five years ago.

    This money was used to help 91,093 individuals last year, up from 54,041 five years ago.

    ComCare is a key social safety net for low-income Singaporeans and it provides three broad types of assistance: long-term help, largely for the elderly poor; interim as well as short-to-medium term help for those facing crises, such as illness or retrenchment; kindergarten and student care subsidies for children.

    A portion of the money – $68.5 million – came from interest generated by the Community Care (ComCare) Endowment Fund, set up by the Government in 2005 to help needy families get back on their feet.

    The rest came from the budget of the Ministry of Social and Family Development (MSF).

    The biggest jump last year was in short-to-medium-term payouts, which rose from $55.7 million in 2013 to $68.7 million last year, said the latest ComCare annual report. Five years ago, such payouts amounted to $16.6 million.

    One reason could be the rise in the number of people who live alone and therefore need more support.

    Minister for Social and Family Development Tan Chuan-Jin noted that one- and two-person households under short-to-medium term assistance rose from 51.4 per cent in 2012 to 55.8 per cent last year.

    Households given such an assistance can receive vouchers for transport and rent, monthly cash grants, medical assistance and help in job search or training.

    Spending on long-term help grew to $18.7 million last year, up from $17.3 million the year before. Data from the report showed that 65 per cent of households on such assistance are the elderly who live alone.

    They receive cash handouts for daily expenses and those with children get help with school expenses.

    In a newly created blog called MSF Conversations, Mr Tan wrote: “The increase (in ComCare financial assistance) is not too surprising because we have increased our efforts in the last few years to bring help closer to those in need.”

    The 24th Social Service Office (SSO), that completed Singapore’s social services network, was officially launched in Taman Jurong earlier this week. SSOs administer ComCare assistance and plan social services in their neighbourhoods.

    Mr Tan added: “We have also adjusted some of our income criteria thresholds so that more can be assisted.”

    Since July last year, the household income cap for short-to-medium-term aid was raised from $1,700 to $1,900.

    National University of Singapore’s Irene Ng noted that economic disparity has “improved somewhat” over the past two years.

    But “we are still not past the problems of high income inequality, bottom wage stagnation, high costs of living and fast pace of growth that makes it harder for the less able to catch up”, said the Associate Professor of Social Work.

     

    Source: http://news.asiaone.com

  • One-Room Flat Residents Badly Hit By Haze

    One-Room Flat Residents Badly Hit By Haze

    With four people cramped in a one-room flat, Mr Thiagarajan’s family need three fans to make sure it didn’t get too stuffy.

    As PSI levels hit the unhealthy range this month, they had to buy two more fans just so they could breathe.

    He was one of several people The New Paper team spoke to who live in one-room rental flats at Mei Ling Street and Casa Clementi.

    “The haze makes it hard to breathe. My family is very irritated because we have had no choice but to close the window. It’s hotter than usual so we have five fans. We bought two more fans to keep cool,” said the 27-year-old staff member at a club.

    Despite five fans, Mr Thiagarajan’s family have been feeling ill.

    “My brother is sick with a throat infection and fever. The doctor told us it’s because of the haze and gave him a three-day Medical Certificate,” said Mr Thiagarajan.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg