Tag: Town Council

  • KPMG: ‘Pervasive Control Failures’ In AHTC

    KPMG: ‘Pervasive Control Failures’ In AHTC

    Independent auditors have found that flawed governance in the Workers’ Party-run Aljunied Hougang Town Council (AHTC) led to improper payments running into the millions to various parties, including to its former managing agent FM Solutions & Services (FMSS) and service provider FM Solutions and Integrated Services (FMSI).

    In a report made public on the town council’s website on Tuesday (Nov 1), KPMG said improper payments to FMSS and FMSI alone amounted to over S$1.5 million.

    AHTC also overpaid when it appointed FMSS as its managing agent by more than S$1.2 million, said KPMG, which was appointed by AHTC on court orders to help fix compliance and governance lapses uncovered in a special audit by the Auditor-General’s Office.

    Flagging “serious conflicts of interest” and a “failed control environment” at the town council, the auditing firm also warned that if the issues involving FMSS and FMSI were deliberate, “they could amount to criminal conduct, the implications of which the Town Council should consider”.

    KPMG’s latest report centred on improper payments made by the council to various parties, in particular to FMSS and FMSI, which were appointed between 2011 and last year.

    Their appointments “exposed the Town Council to serious conflicts of interest as the direct owners of FMSS and FMSI (with a profit motive) concurrently held key management and financial control positions in the Town Council (charged with a service motive)”, said KPMG.

    For example, Mr Danny Loh – who died last year – was secretary in the town council as well as shareholder of FMSS, and sole proprietor of FMSI.

    “The situation of FMSS is unlike that of the Town Council’s previous managing agents. In the former case, those approving payments for the Town Councils were not beneficiaries engaging in a profit-motive transaction with the Town Council,” said KPMG.

    In the case of FMSS, the “conflicted persons” were in effect “approving payments to themselves”.

    Meanwhile, the Town Councillors relinquished an “unacceptably high degree of financial responsibility” to the conflicted persons.

    “In this regard, payments with an aggregate financial value of at least SG$23 million involved approvals by the conflicted persons of payments in effect to themselves through payment vouchers, which is an important gateway in the Town Council’s payment approval process,” KPMG said.

    In this “failed control environment”, the improper payments to FMSS and FMSI included amongst others, overpayments to FMSS for project management fees, overpayments to FMSS for purported overtime and CPF contributions payments to FMSS without certification that work had been performed, as well as payments to FMSS that were made without the requisite co-signature of members of the town council.

    These amounted to about S$1.5 million, of which at least S$600,000 ought to be recovered by the town council, said KPMG.

    The firm also said the tendering out of the contracts to FMSS and FMSI was “deficient in numerous respects”.

    For one, for the first managing agent contract, FMSS was more expensive than the comparable contract with the former Aljunied Town Council managing agent.

    When the contract was renewed — the second managing agent contract — the rates increased significantly. The increase in the managing agent’s costs in the first year under FMSS amounted to approximately S$500,000, while under the second managing agent contract the rates were, conservatively, S$700,000 million more that what might have cost to retain CPG as the managing agent.

    Overall, KPMG reported “pervasive” control failures cutting across key areas of AHTC’s governance, financial control, financial reporting, procurement and records management over the audit period. Such flawed governance has potential to “conceal and hinder the detection and identification of all instances of proper payment”, said the accountants.

    As a result, KPMG said it was unable to conclude whether the improper payments and the amounts that ought to be recovered identified in the report are exhaustive.

    Noting that it is beyond the auditors’ mandate to conclude whether an offence has been committed, KPMG said: “While our work was not focused on identifying potential criminal acts arising from the issues we observed, we are advised that, had the shortcomings (identified in) this report been committed deliberately, they could amount to criminal conduct, the implications of which the town council should consider.”

    AHTC said it is studying the report and will respond in due course.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Heavy Rain Causes Ponding At Lift Landing, Concerned Makcik To The Rescue

    Heavy Rain Causes Ponding At Lift Landing, Concerned Makcik To The Rescue

    After heavy rain, my mother would often sweep the common areas in front of the lift of her HDB flat. (Due to poor upgrading work, we get ‘ponding’ in front of the lift after heavy rain.)

    When I asked her why. She told me she is concern that neighbours in a hurry might fall and break their bones. She tells me she is worried especially about the elderly on our floor and a nurse-neighbour whom she noticed is always rushing to work. And she considered it no big deal to take care of the common areas.

    So all these many years, she has been sweeping away the ‘ponding’. (I’ve seen her cleaned the lift when there’s pee too but that’s a story for another day).

    Here’s my mother, caught in action, sweeping away the ponding, handbag swinging, at midnight after a late Hari Raya visit.

     

    Source: Saleemah Ismail

     

  • “Shit Bombs” Keep Falling Out From The Sky In Jurong East

    “Shit Bombs” Keep Falling Out From The Sky In Jurong East

    Remember that old phrase, “Money doesn’t fall from the sky”?

    Apparently, shit does – at one HDB block in Jurong East.

    Residents of Block 283 Toh Guan Rd report that for the past 2 months, “shit bombs” have been thrown from one of the units on a higher floor, up to 2 times a day!

    These “shit bombs” have stained clothes, sullied windows, and left a disgusting stench during dinner time for some of the residents.

    So far, no one has reported being hit by one of the “shit bombs”.

    Besides the “shit bombs”, used tampons have also been found, and some residents believe the same culprit is tossing them.

    redwire-singapore-jurong-east-toh-guan-road
    Even with CCTV cameras installed, Jurong Town Council has so far been unable to identify the culprit.

    The town council and the National Environmental Agency are investigating the matter.

     

    Source: http://redwiretimes.com

  • Former AHPETC Managing Agent, FMSS, Issues Legal Letter To AHPETC, Claims It Is Owed $3.5 Million

    Former AHPETC Managing Agent, FMSS, Issues Legal Letter To AHPETC, Claims It Is Owed $3.5 Million

    The former managing agent of Aljunied-Hougang-Punggol East Town Council (AHPETC) has sent a letter of demand saying the town council owes it more than $3.5 million.

    The New Paper has learnt that the managing agent (MA), FM Solutions & Services (FMSS), sent the letter, dated July 20, through its lawyers, Netto and Magin.

    This comes at a time when the Ministry of National Development is asking AHPETC whether it overpaid FMSS and, if so, how it plans to claim back public monies that allowed FMSS to make huge profits.

    FMSS, which was incorporated soon after the Workers’ Party (WP) won Aljunied GRC in the 2011 General Election, was managing agent for AHPETC from July 15, 2011, to July 14 this year.

    It claimed the amount was for money owed for services between April and July 14, when its contract with AHPETC expired.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • HDB Wants To Increase My Rental By 37% After Elections End?

    HDB Wants To Increase My Rental By 37% After Elections End?

    Dear Editors,

    In a sign of skyrocketing costs of living and business after this upcoming polling day, HDB had sent us a letter right after the election was announced warning us that they intend to raise the rental of our HDB rental unit by a whooping mind-boggling 37%! That’s more than one-third of our current rental and more than $700 per month! But that’s not all. It seems like the letter (see the attached) is a standard letter that is sent to all HDB commercial and industrial property tenants, so we are not the only tenant who is affected.

    The PAP ministers had repeatedly claimed they wanted to help Singaporean businesses and workers thrive in Singapore. However, their actions speak louder than words. By increasing our rental by 37% and more than $700 per month, we will have no choice but to cut our workers’ salaries, retrench one of them, or increase our product prices to offset our rental increase so that we can stay in business and pay HDB the higher rental.

    We are a small setup and we hire strictly Singaporeans only, so our labour costs are already much higher than our competitors who hire foreigners. We value our workers and we do not wish to put them out of job. But if you are in our shoes, faced with a worsening economy, increasing competition, declining business and skyrocketing rental, you will also have no choice but to take one of the above-mentioned courses of action or go out of business. Increasing our product prices will make our products less competitive and result in lower sales, so it is not an option. Cutting our workers’ salaries will lower their morale and they may quit in no time. Retrenching one of our workers is therefore the only option and the remaining workers will just have to share some of the additional workload. This is not an ideal situation but what else can anyone in our shoes do when forced by HDB to cough out more money for them?

    As the largest landlord in Singapore, the PAP government, be it HDB, CapitalMall, Temasek Holdings or otherwise, wields the sole power to set our costs of living and business, and by extension, our quality of life. We elected them and pay them multi-million dollar salaries to work and fight for a better standard of life for us, not to make life miserable and worse off for us. As Mr Low Thia Khiang rightly pointed out, we are the owners of this country instead of the government. Why do we have to keep paying HDB, CapitalMall, Temasek Holdings etc. more and more to use our own land to do business or live?

    SG50 is not working out well for us so far, so we cannot imagine how much worse SG100 will be.

    Mai Kee Chiu
    A.S.S. Contributor

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com