Tag: safety

  • If You Are Using These 4 Electrolux Gas Cooker Hobs, You Better Stop Now

    If You Are Using These 4 Electrolux Gas Cooker Hobs, You Better Stop Now

    Four models of glass gas cooker hobs made by Electrolux could potentially explode, warned national standards and accreditation body SPRING Singapore on Friday (Jan 6).

    The four model numbers are EGT9637CKP, EGT7637EGP, EGT7637CKP and EGT7627CKP. The products were sold between 2014 and 2016. SPRING is urging all consumers to stop using these cooker hobs with immediate effect.

    The agency said it has received reports of glass shattering and small explosions when the affected glass gas cooker hobs were in use. In one case, it resulted in a user being scalded as a result of this incident.

    The matter is currently under investigation.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

     

     

  • Uber Drivers Don’t Take Rest So They Can Make More Money

    Uber Drivers Don’t Take Rest So They Can Make More Money

    Dear Admin,

    As an Uber/Grab driver, I would like to share with you some irresponsible and possibly dangerous behaviour. For the sake of money, some drivers are willing to work continuously for 24 hours with minimum rest. If you are a customer and you see the driver is tired or dozing off, please continue to talk to them and keep them awake to prevent accidents. If you are drunk or sleepy and driver also very tired then I also dunno how to help u.

    This guy Ad~ actually shared that he drive from 5pm to 3pm the next day with no sleep and very little breaks. And I tell u he’s not the only one working like this during long weekend and public holidays. He earned over $1K and he will be doing it again later.

    Stay safe during festive period. Money can earn back but life only got 1.

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • Give Singaporeans A Chance, Don’t Compromise Safety And Security By Hiring Foreign APOs

    Give Singaporeans A Chance, Don’t Compromise Safety And Security By Hiring Foreign APOs

    Singapore security and safety should be taken care by Singaporeans or at least SPR. No ..No to foreigners! Auxillary police companies should redesign the work of auxillaey police officers so that they will attract more Singaporeans into the workforce.

    They should emulate the Singapore Police Force or better than SPF. Offer better worklife balance and higher remuneration due to the high risk and high demand of work.

    I am sure out of thousands Singaporean retrenched workers in 2016 , ord NSmen and young school leavers and graduates could be attracted if they are given better worklife balance and emplyment package.

    There are something wrong with the HR departments in these large companies. There are many potential Singapore candidates who have applied and never even shortlisted for interviews. Why they making difficult for Singaporeans to work in their companies.

    They don’t even give opportunities to many of the Singaporean applicants who were rejected. They set high requirements for Singaporean applicants and substandard requirements for foreign applicants. We can see that in the transport and service industries where majority foreign workers can’t even speak English being employed against Singaporeans who can speak English.

    Govt should scrutinise the HR practices of these companies….mabye the management aren’t Singaporeans and building their foreign based of workers here.

     

    Source: Baharudin Nordin

  • Quick Thinking ICA Officers Ensured Safety Of Motorists From Falling Canopies At Tuas Checkpoint

    Quick Thinking ICA Officers Ensured Safety Of Motorists From Falling Canopies At Tuas Checkpoint

    Quick-thinking checkpoint officers to the rescue!

    This morning’s strong wind at Tuas Checkpoint had caused the canopies at the car and motorcycle arrival zones to topple. Here are some photos of quick-thinking officers who acted promptly to ensure motorists’ safety.

    Falling Canopy 2

    Kudos to CPL Anthony, CPL Leow, SGT Nur, SGT Herman, SSGT Farhan, WPC Atiwah, WPC Surinah, LCP Hisham, CPL Max and SGT Salam for their quick-thinking and fast response!

     

    Source: Immigration & Checkpoints Authority

  • Some SMRT Staff Upset Over Apparent Disregard For Workers’ Safety

    Some SMRT Staff Upset Over Apparent Disregard For Workers’ Safety

    In the aftermath of the two SMRT employees’ deaths, some of their colleagues are upset by what they see as an apparent disregard for workers’ safety over the need to assuage commuters’ grouses about train breakdowns. Others said they were kept in the dark about the tragedy on Tuesday (March 22) even as they had to continue performing their duties.

    Speaking to TODAY on the condition of anonymity, an SMRT engineer said: “We are very angry and sad that such a thing has happened. It was an accident that could have been avoided. Safety should always come first and not be compromised, even when the management wants problems to be fixed fast to avoid delays to the train service.”

    While “technicians on the ground are essential for the reliability of operations”, the engineer said, he was “devastated” when he heard the news that they were killed on the tracks.

    “When the machines on the track are malfunctioning, it is sometimes necessary that we have to send people down to fix them. But safety should never be compromised in the process,” he stressed.

    Another SMRT employee, who declined to be named, said that ground crew personnel were not given much information after the accident. He himself was not told about what was happening at the accident scene, or about when the station may be re-opened: “(At that time), people were asking how long the delay would last, and I said, ‘I’m not sure’.”

    He recalled that the signal light “turned to red” at around 11.20am at the station, “indicating that something had happened”. “After that, my officer gave me instructions saying that people from the platform were coming down. He said, ‘Just open the gates and let the people go out; (to) just clear the crowd’.”

    Another SMRT ground staff member said she heard that the maintenance workers were from another station and were at Pasir Ris to check on the tracks, and some of the ground crew had to leave with the police for investigations.

    Train services between Pasir Ris and Tanah Merah stations were suspended for about three hours on Tuesday afternoon when two maintenance workers were hit by an oncoming train about 150m from the train platform.

    Singaporeans Nasrulhudin Najumudin, 26, and Muhammad Asyraf Ahmad Buhari, 24, were trainees who had just joined SMRT in January. The two were part of a 15-member technical team, including a supervisor, who went on the tracks to check on a reported alarm from a condition monitoring device for signalling equipment.

    When TODAY arrived at the scene around 12.30pm, the gates to the station were closed, and SMRT officials were handing out information flyers and diverting commuters to Pasir Ris bus interchange for free bus services.

    Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) personnel and family members of the deceased entered and exited the train station even as it was off-limits to the public at that point, while members of the press and some bystanders lingered at the station entrance.

    A 55-year-old Pasir Ris resident, who asked to be identified only as Mr Yong, said he was walking to the MRT station at around noon when he saw SCDF personnel guiding passengers — about 20 — from the stalled train to the station.

    A homemaker in her 50s, who wanted to be known only as Madam Foo, said she had gone to the upper floors of a nearby apartment block to find out “why the train is just (stuck) on the tracks like that”. “I saw a body on the track. It was already wrapped up. I got a shock, of course,” she said.

    One commuter, technician Timothy Hoong, 53, told TODAY that such an incident “shouldn’t have happened in the first place”.

    “When the train is operational, nobody should be on the tracks for safety reasons … It’s all right to delay the train service than to just go ahead with the maintenance (and resulting) in somebody getting killed.”

    Mr Hoong believes the accident may have been prevented if “proper communication” took place.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com