Tag: SMRT

  • SMRT And OMGTEL To Cooperate On Bid For Singapore’s Fourth Wireless Telco Carrier Licence

    SMRT And OMGTEL To Cooperate On Bid For Singapore’s Fourth Wireless Telco Carrier Licence

    Transport operator SMRT has announced that it has entered an agreement with OMGTEL (OMG) to work exclusively with OMG in connection with OMG’s bid for Singapore’s fourth wireless telecommunications (telco) carrier licence.

    OMG is a company incorporated by local tech firm Consistel on Oct 20, 2014, for the purpose of bidding for the telco licence. It had originally announced its intentions to be the Republic’s fourth telco in October.

    Under the announcement posted on the Singapore Exchange on Wednesday (Apr 15), SMRT and OMG will collaborate on the provision of goods and services, and will seek to leverage SMRT’s extensive media presence and commuter reach.

    “The above transaction is not expected to have a material impact on the company’s financial performance for the financial year ending Mar 31, 2016,” SMRT said.

    The transport operator also announced that it was offered an opportunity to invest up to S$34.5 million via an option to subscribe for shares in OMG. The exercise of the option will be at SMRT’s election, and subject to OMG obtaining the telco licence, satisfactory due diligence on OMG, and the execution of definitive agreements between SMRT and OMG, among others, it said.

    “OMGTEL believes SMRT will make a significant and strategic contribution to making OMGTEL a success in the years to come,” said OMGTEL chairman Masoud Bassiri in a statement on Wednesday.

    In preparation for the bid, OMG said it has appointed an advisory board, which includes former Foreign Affairs Minister George Yeo, former Commissioner of the Singapore Police Force Khoo Boon Hui, as well as former deputy CEO of the Media Development Authority Michael Yap.

    The company also announced that in addition to its tie-up with SMRT, it has also entered into a mobile backhaul services agreement with SP Telecommunications, which it said, offers “established optical networks”.

    “OMGTEL will be a true Singaporean alliance to be of service to all Singaporeans for many years to come,” said Mr Masoud. “It will build a cutting edge telecommunications network and provide exceptional service to its members, building on many years of knowledge and expertise acquired in Singapore as well as in other countries.

    “OMGTEL is in discussions with potential shareholders, private and institutional, and other strategic partners, including technology experts and infrastructure funding providers.” Mr Masoud said OMG expects IDA to announce licence bid conditions in the near future.

    OMG-SMRT VS MYREPUBLIC

    Forrester Research analyst Clement Teo said he thinks the OMG-SMRT partnership stands an equal chance of getting a licence, as broadband provider MyRepublic, which first announced its intentions to occupy the fourth telco spot last June.

    “Neither side has ever built a full telco network, so in terms of experience, they are both almost zero,” he said. “OMG will probably get access to the train tunnels, and that might give them better coverage. But right now, it is everybody’s game. It all depends on who can handle the challenges of the industry – such as pricing, talent and IDA’s expectations – better.”

    But he said more details on the bid are needed to assess its merits. “We don’t yet understand the arrangement – who owns the network, and who builds it?

    “If everything is in order and they have already established the foundation, including the size of market capture, how are they planning to differentiate themselves? If they are going to be the cheapest, well, price doesn’t move a lot of people – they will need to have value-add.”

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • 88 Year Old Faced With Possibility Of Never Walking Again After Leg Amputated Following Bus Accident

    88 Year Old Faced With Possibility Of Never Walking Again After Leg Amputated Following Bus Accident

    Despite her 88 years, Madam Ting Lan Kin lived an active lifestyle, taking the bus from her Woodlands Circle home to the market daily and going to Toa Payoh thrice a week to meet her friends.

    That routine may well change after the retired widow met with a horrific accident on Friday at a bus stop on Woodlands Centre Road.

    As she was alighting from SMRT service 913, the bus suddenly moved off and she fell. The rear wheel of the bus then rolled over her left foot, crushing it.

    Doctors later had to amputate part of her foot, including the toes.

    Madam Ting and her family are now worried sick that she may never walk again.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Passengers To Get Cash Back If Train Is Two Minutes Late

    Passengers To Get Cash Back If Train Is Two Minutes Late

    Rail passengers will get an automatic compensation pay-out if their train is more than two minutes late under a new crackdown by the Government.

    Travellers will receive more money for every extra minute their train is delayed – with a full refund if it is over an hour late.

    Operators will be forced to sign up to the hi-tech ‘pay as you delay’ scheme which is designed to make it easier for passengers to get refunds.

    Ministers believe the scheme – to be trialled in one region this year but eventually applied nationwide – will end the perceived rail compensation ‘rip-off’.

    While train companies get massive automatic pay-outs from Network Rail if the track provider is to blame for a delay, individual travellers have to wade through reams of form-filling and red tape to get compensation. Research by watchdog Passenger Focus shows nine out of ten passengers never bother to claim.

    Crucially, the new scheme will compel train companies to pay out automatically. It will rely on passengers switching to new ‘smart’ forms of paying for tickets – such as over the internet, using travel smart-cards, with smartphone apps or even on conventional credit cards.

    These allow companies to pinpoint exactly who is travelling on which service – and who is due a refund. Compensation payments would be made directly into a passenger’s bank account.

    Under the scheme, commuters will receive compensation if a train is just two minutes late. They will receive an additional 3p per extra minute of delay – up to 29 minutes. If a train is between 30 and 60 minutes late, passengers will receive 50 per cent of the value of their ticket. Beyond an hour and they will get a full refund.

    Train punctuality will be measured ‘to the minute’ and ministers say the aim is to create an automatic ‘hassle-free service for passengers’.

    Transport Secretary Patrick McLoughlin told the Daily Mail that trials of the scheme will begin in December with Essex-based operator c2c, with the aim of rolling it out across the UK as each rail franchise comes up for renewal. Among the next in line are Northern, TransPennine, West Coast, Midland Mainline and CrossCountry.

    The minister said: ‘If people are delayed, they should be repaid. I want to end the frustration endured by millions when they are delayed – and then have to jump through hoops to claim compensation. I’ve experienced it myself.’

    The growing trend towards the use of travel ‘smart-cards’ – such as London’s Oyster Card – cashless credit and debit ‘swipe’ cards and even smartphone payments will make the system increasingly widespread, say officials.

    One way of tracking the movement of passengers using open tickets or season tickets is to have them swipe their smart-cards as they get on and off a train, or at the platform entrance and exit.

    A Whitehall source said: ‘The new initiative … is expected to provide a longer term way forward to enable full automation of the compensation process where smart ticketing is in use.’

    Source: www.dailymail.co.uk

  • Lui Tuck Yew: Displeased Over Disruption, No Women-Only Cabins

    Lui Tuck Yew: Displeased Over Disruption, No Women-Only Cabins

    Key performance indicators such as the number of train withdrawals and service delays have been improving in recent years as a result of a change to the approach to maintenance adopted by public transport providers.

    “But while the statistics show improvement, the recent incidents are a stark reminder that we still have a significant way to go”, Transport Minister Lui Tuck Yew said in Parliament on Wednesday (Mar 11).

    Mr Lui noted that for most of 2014, public transport operators have made “significant inroads in improving reliability”. For instance, the number of train withdrawals on the North-South (NSL) and East-West Lines (EWL) were halved to 1.1 per 100,000 train-km, compared to 2.2 in 2013 – back to 2007 standards.

    “I feel that we can do better in the coming years as this improved rate is still double that of the North East Line and Circle Line,” he qualified.

    Service delays lasting more than five minutes have also improved on the NSL and EWL, down to 1.3 in 2014 compared to 1.6 in 2012 – an improvement of close to 20 per cent, the minister said.

    Similarly, the withdrawal rate for the Bukit Panjang LRT had come down to 4.5 per 100,000 car-km in 2014, compared to 6.1 in 2012. For the Sengkang-Punggol LRT, it was 0.7 in 2014, compared to 1.5 in 2012, he said.

    Commuters were more satisfied with public transport last year. Survey results involving over 4,000 people showed satisfaction levels improving from 88.5 per cent in 2013, to 91.3 per cent last year.

    Satisfaction with train services hit 92.8 per cent, after a four-year decline, while for buses, it was up for a second year to reach 90.2 per cent, from 88.3 per cent in 2013.

    Mr Lui said: “It reflected the prevailing sentiments that commuters were starting to feel the effect of the improvements and investments that we have made in our buses and trains over the last few years.

    “And for the MRT, I must point out that we look at a range of attributes, from waiting time, to reliability to comfort and so on, and the attributes that had scored the highest for at least the past two years were safety and security.”

    ‘I AM MOST UPSET’

    However, a recent spate of breakdowns has shown that much work still needs to be done, said Mr Lui.

    “While I can accept the occasional breakdown or even a more severe disruption if it occurs very rarely, I am most upset with the current situation in the last few weeks,” he said.

    “The operators must persevere and redouble their efforts to do better. They need to intensify their maintenance regime, undertake additional preventive and detection measures, as well as improve their processes to enable prompt and effective response to maintenance issues,” he said, adding that his ministry will work with these companies to continue with track renewal and mid-life upgrades of their trains.

    The Land Transport Authority (LTA) will augment SMRT with additional engineering expertise where required, and will also step up audits of the latter’s maintenance procedures and resources.

    “In the event of a disruption, like in the Bukit Panjang LRT incident, LTA will require SMRT to deploy more service ambassadors to better assist commuters,” Mr Lui said. “I would like to assure Members that we will spare no effort to find out the cause of the recent spate of breakdowns, and take the necessary steps to stem the problems.”

    In January, the LTA announced a higher bar set for Singapore’s rail network to cut waiting times and disruptions. For instance, it plans to further tighten the Operating Performance Standards (OPS) for train frequencies during morning, evening and shoulder peak periods for the North-South and East-West Line, North East Line and Circle Line. This will be introduced progressively from 2016.

    By 2019, there will be 99 new trains, for the North-South and East-West Line, North East Line and Circle Line. Mr Lui said: “We are constructing these new lines at a pace unprecedented in Singapore’s history. By 2030, our rail network will be almost as dense as New York and London, and we would have achieved this in under 50 years, compared to the more than 100 years that it took the two cities.”

    “The overall train fleet will increase by about 50 per cent and we can expect that peak period wait times will come down by 25 per cent on average across all train lines,” he added.

    WHAT ABOUT WOMEN-ONLY CABINS?

    In response to suggestions by Members of Parliament Lily Neo and Low Thia Kiang to deploy women-only train cabins, Mr Lui said this idea had been raised and looked at carefully before.

    “There are practical difficulties and challenges, such as how to and how strictly to enforce the rule, and also how this could sub-optimise the capacity of our trains,” the minister said.

    “From the experience of other systems, the women-only cabins are often utilised less, meaning that more commuters will have to crowd into the other cabins or wait for the next train.”

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Thomson-East Coast Line To Be Completed In 2024

    Thomson-East Coast Line To Be Completed In 2024

    The new Thomson-East Coast Line will make a big difference to residents, especially those who live in areas currently not served by MRT services, said Senior Minister of State for Law and Education Indranee Rajah on Saturday.

    In a speech at the groundbreaking ceremony of six stations on the Thomson-East Coast Line, Tanjong Pagar GRC MP Indranee said: “Our residents can make use of the Thomson-East Coast Line to connect to the other MRT lines… to go to various parts of Singapore. This will make the travelling journey by public transport much faster and more convenient.”

    The groundbreaking ceremony are for the Napier, Orchard Boulevard, Orchard, Great World, Havelock and Outram Park stations of the 43km Thomson-East Coast Line. These six will serve around 150,000 residents in the Tanglin-Cairnhill, Tanjong Pagar-Tiong Bahru and Kreta Ayer-Kim Seng constituencies. There are 31 stations in total on the new MRT line, which will be completed in 2024.

    More than 100 residents, and over 200 Land Transport Authority (LTA) staff members, contractors as well as guests, attended the event held at the Orchard station site office.

    “Since the first MRT line, we have seen communities grow and thrive when MRT stations are built in their midst. Residents and their estates are drawn closer together and are better connected with the rest of the island,” added Ms Indranee.

    Mr Edmund Lam, chairman of River Valley Neighbourhood Committee added: “These stations will benefit the residents, although they will have to put up with temporary inconveniences like noise and dust as construction works are carried out.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com