Tag: LTA

  • Cars Too Expensive, Singaporeans Rent Cars By Becoming Uber Driver

    Cars Too Expensive, Singaporeans Rent Cars By Becoming Uber Driver

    In one of the most expensive countries in the world to own a car, Peter Chiu is finding a novel way to pay for one.

    The 58-year-old retired policeman rents a car in Singapore, drives three to four hours a day for Uber Technologies Inc. to cover its cost, and has a shiny Honda Vezel the rest of the time for his personal use. Hiring a vehicle to work for Uber is becoming a more common sight in the city-state, where Chiu’s SUV costs more than a BMW M3 luxury sports sedan does in New York.

    “Buying a car in Singapore is so expensive,” said Chiu. “If you want to drive around to cover expenses, that is quite easy. And any extra money you get, that’s more income for you.”

    New technologies are not only disrupting traditional industries in Singapore — a trend that Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said will force the economy to transform — but also changing consumers’ behavior as they try to cope with rising costs and unemployment at a six-year high.

    “Uber is another avenue for employment,” said Brian Tan, an economist with Nomura Holdings Inc. in Singapore. “It makes the labor market more efficient, because it provides you with an alternative career. You don’t need a special license for that.”

    A Honda Vezel like Chiu’s typically sells for more than S$100,000 ($71,000) in Singapore, almost four times the price in the U.S. On top of taxes, car owners in the city state are forced to buy permits — called Certificates of Entitlement — which are limited in supply and auctioned by the government to help curb road congestion and pollution. At the most recent offering this week, the permit cost S$50,789 for the smallest vehicles.

    Rental Surge

    Chiu drives six days a week for Uber, just enough to cover the S$500 weekly cost of his vehicle, which he rents from Lion City Rentals, a local subsidiary of the car-hailing company. He doesn’t mind the part-time work or the traffic in a country that’s smaller than Rhode Island in the U.S.

    Between 2014 — the year after Uber began operating in Singapore — and 2015, the number of rental cars in the country soared more than 50 percent to 29,369, surpassing the number of taxis on the road, according to official data. Even so, the total vehicle population decreased by 1.5 percent.

    Simon, a 45-year-old former property agent who preferred to give his first name only, rents a Toyota Corolla and drives for Uber four hours a day at most. A slump in home sales since the government began imposing measures to rein in prices has pushed many in the industry to seek other sources of income, including ferrying commuters around the island for Uber.

    Simon said his main job now is making “alternative investments” and the Uber gig allows him to have a car of his own to use on weekends, when he makes trips about 20 kilometers (12 miles) across the border to Malaysia with his wife and two kids. The journey has an added cost-saving advantage: he buys gas for his car in Malaysia, where it’s cheaper.

    Uber is using auto rentals and financing to attract and retain drivers around the world, as are rivals such as GrabTaxi Holdings Pte in Singapore and Lyft Inc. in the U.S. While for many drivers, earning an income may be the main reason they turn to the ride-hailing companies, in Singapore, having the car may be just as important.

    “It makes a lot of sense to rent a car,” said Tang Kin Yee, 53, whose main job is in commercial photography and advertising. Business was slow last year and he started driving for Uber to supplement his income.

    He now rents a Honda Vezel and is thinking about driving for Uber full time.

     

    Source: www.bloomberg.com

  • 15,000 Jurutera Diperlukan Untuk Industri Kereta Api Jelang 2030

    15,000 Jurutera Diperlukan Untuk Industri Kereta Api Jelang 2030

    Terdapat hampir 10,000 jurutera dalam industri kereta api sekarang ini, namun jumlah itu dijangka meningkat kepada 15,000 menjelang 2030, kata Menteri Pengangkutan Khaw Boon Wan hari ini (23 Feb).

    Encik Khaw, yang juga Menteri Penyelaras bagi Prasarana, berkata sepanjang lima tahun lepas, LTA dan kedua-dua pengendali kereta api, SMRT dan SBS Transit, sudah meningkatkan jumlah pekerja yang diambil mereka untuk kejuruteraan, operasi dan penyenggaraan sebanyak 50 peratus kepada jumlahnya sekarang ini, namun, lebih ramai pekerja diperlukan.

    “Menjelang 2030, kami menjangkakan bilangan ini akan meningkat lagi – sekurang-kurangnya sebanyak lagi 50 peratus kepada 15,000. Tapi saya rasa kami akan memerlukan lebih ramai daripada itu. Ini menjadikan industri kereta api sebuah industri pertumbuhan, yang prospek pengambilan pekerjanya hampir dijamin untuk dekad seterusnya,” katanya.

    Menteri itu berkata demikian di pelancaran Akademi Kereta Api Singapura hari ini, yang bertujuan membangunkan generasi jurutera akan datang untuk rangkaian infrastruktur kereta api yang kian meluas di Singapura.

    Akademi itu ditubuhkan di dalam Penguasa Pengangkutan Darat (LTA) yang berpangkalan di Kampus Bedok, dan di situ, para bakal jurutera dan teknisyen boleh meraih kemahiran dan pentauliahan yang diperlukan untuk menyertai industri kereta api. Akademi tersebut juga akan berperanan sebagai pusat kajian dan pengembangan (R&D) untuk kejuruteraan kereta api, dengan menjalankan kajian gunaan bersama institut kajian yang lain serta Institut-Institut Pengajian Tinggi.

    Akademi itu kini sedang bekerjasama dengan Institut Pekerjaan dan Daya Kerja (e2i) untuk membangunkan program latihan yang disasarkan kepada para jurutera dan teknisyen yang memulakan kerjaya mereka dalam sektor kereta api, serta para pekerja yang melangkah ke industri itu semasa pertengahan kerjaya.

    Program itu sudahpun mengalu-alukan kumpulan pertama hampir 30 jurutera dari SBS Transit, SMRT dan LTA, yang selesai menjalani modul asas selama tiga hari yang pertama kali disediakan, dari 9 hingga 11 Januari. Modul itu meliputi topik-topik seperti aspek kawal selia dan kewangan sistem kereta api Singapura, pemikiran tentang reka bentuk dalam kitaran kejuruteraan kereta api, dan dasar tambang pengangkutan awam.

    Dikenali sebagai program Career On-boarding for Railway Engineering (CORE), e2i akan menyediakan geran-geran latihan bagi semua peserta program yang layak. Modul-modul pertengahan dan lanjutan akan juga dibangunkan selaras dengan rangka kerja kecekapan industri kereta api.

    MEMBANGUNKAN BAKAT TEMPATAN

    Di acara itu juga, satu memorandum persefahaman (MOU) dimeterai antara LTA, Institut Teknologi Singapura (SIT) dan Majlis Antarabangsa tentang Kejuruteraan Sistem (INCOSE) untuk membangunkan tenaga manusia berkemahiran dalam kejuruteraan sistem untuk menyokong keperluan tenaga manusia dalam pengangkutan awam di sini.

    Ketiga-tiga pihak akan bekerjasama untuk membangunkan kurikulum-kurikulum pembelajaran berdasarkan pembangunan industri bagi latihan sebelum pekerjaan dan program-program pendidikan dan latihan yang berterusan.

    Sejajar dengan kerjasama itu, LTA juga mengumumkan pembukaan dua makmal di SIT untuk menjalankan latihan dan kursus-kursus untuk para pelajar di program sarjana muda Kejuruteraan Infrastruktur Mampan (Darat) SIT, program sarjana muda Kejuruteraan Sistem (Sistem Elektromekanikal) SIT-DigiPen serta para jurutera.

    Sebuah makmal juga dilengkapi dengan sofwe simulator kejuruteraan kereta api untuk membolehkan para pelajar dan pelatih cuba mereka rangkaian kereta api, dan didedahkan kepada pelbagai operasi isyarat kereta api dan simulasi. Sofwe itu diperolehi dari London Underground, dan disesuaikan untuk rangkaian kereta api Singapura.

    Source: BeritaMediacorp

  • Power-Assisted Bicycle Impounded In LTA Enforcement Operation

    Power-Assisted Bicycle Impounded In LTA Enforcement Operation

    As part of our regular enforcement, LTA conducts periodic enforcement operations against the riding of non-compliant Power Assisted Bicycles (PABs) and unregistered vehicles on roads.

    During one of our operations last week, our enforcement officers stopped a rider who had been riding his device, with a motor capable of propelling it up to 80km/h, along Woodlands Street 83 and Woodlands Ave 4.

    pab-1

    The non-compliant device has since been impounded, and the rider is currently assisting LTA with investigations.

    We would like to remind everyone that only LTA-approved PABs affixed with an LTA seal, and in compliance with the following rules http://bit.ly/2hXQleE, are allowed for use on the roads. LTA will continue to conduct regular enforcement against errant PAB riders and unregistered vehicle drivers, to ensure the safety of all users.

    Let us all stay safe this holiday season and ride into a better 2017 ahead!

     

    Source: Land Transport Authority – We Keep Your World Moving

  • LTA Steps Up Checks On Illegal Taxi Services

    LTA Steps Up Checks On Illegal Taxi Services

    The Land Transport Authority (LTA) will conduct more frequent checks to nab unlicensed private cars as well as private-hire cars plying illegally for fares, it said in a press release yesterday.

    Enforcement operations will be stepped up at areas with high traffic and locations where the LTA has received a lot of feedback.

    Nineteen drivers have been issued warnings by the body.

    One driver was fined $15,000, banned from driving for a year and his vehicle was forfeited.

    He was convicted in January for using his car to ferry passengers and driving without valid insurance.

    Police reports had been lodged against him for charging fares of between $30 and $1,050.

    Some areas where the LTA will be stepping up enforcement by plainclothes and uniformed officers are Clarke Quay, East Coast Seafood Centre, HarbourFront Centre, Marina Bay Cruise Centre Singapore, Resorts World Sentosa and the Singapore Zoo/Night Safari.

    Private cars cannot be remunerated for carrying passengers, and private-hire cars cannot tout, pick up customers in the street or use taxi stands.

    Offenders face a maximum penalty of a $3,000 fine and six months’ jail, and their vehicles may be seized.

     

    Source: The New Paper

  • Traffic Lights Malfunctioned At Yio Chu Kang Road Junction, Chaos Ensued

    Traffic Lights Malfunctioned At Yio Chu Kang Road Junction, Chaos Ensued

    Traffic lights at the junction of Yio Chu Kang Road and Ang Mo Kio Avenue 5 stopped working on Sunday (Nov 20) during a heavy downpour, causing a traffic jam.

    Pictures of the incident taken by Ms Dilah Ali showed a chaotic scene as cars and buses headed in different directions made their way slowly across the junction.

    Ms Ali, 31, was on her way from Punggol to Toa Payoh on bus service 88. When she experienced the slowdown in traffic at about 12.30pm, she thought at first that it was was due to the heavy rain.

    “However, I saw a minor accident at the junction involving four cars. Then I realised that the traffic lights on all sides were not working,” she said.

    The bus was caught in the jam for about 15 minutes, according to Ms Dilah.

    “The cars were coming in all directions and none gave way, they just tailgated each other. I felt a bit angry that the cars did not give way to the bus, and I heard many passengers from the lower deck urge the bus drive to ‘just go!’” the receptionist said.

    She also added that she only saw a traffic police officer arriving just as the bus emerged from the jam.

    “The cars should have given the buses the right of way, but people were ‘kiasu’. Surprisingly, I did not hear any honking,” Ms Dilah said.

    The Straits Times understands that a ‘technical issue’ had occurred with the traffic lights at the junction, and that the lights were fixed by around 1.15pm.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com