Category Archives: HDB

Most town councils not raising fees

RESIDENTS outside of Aljunied and Jurong can breathe easy for now, as most town councils say they will not be raising their conservancy fees just yet.

Aljunied and Jurong town councils announced two weeks ago that they will be increasing their service and conservancy (S&C) fees from next month, due to higher operating and maintenance costs.

However, 13 of the 14 remaining town councils say they will not be raising their fees just yet. The last town council – Hougang – did not respond to queries.

But some did say rising costs have made it increasingly difficult for them to maintain the status quo.

Aljunied and Jurong town councils had made known to their residents that they will raise monthly conservancy charges by between 50 cents and $4.50 for Singapore home owners, depending on the type of flat.

The increase for permanent residents and foreigners will be between $2.80 and $7.50.

Some of the 13 town councils The Straits Times spoke to said they were able to balance their budgets and thus will not raise S&C fees.

Just how do they do it?

Tanjong Pagar Town Council chairman Koo Tsai Kee said his council had set aside ’sufficient accumulated surpluses’ in both its operating and sinking funds.

Most town councils keep a sinking fund for future maintenance works and projects like the Lift Upgrading Programme.

Another chairman, Tampines Town Council’s Masagos Zulkifli, puts it down to ‘prudent cash flow management’ and also residents who have been punctual with their payments.

The town councils say they try to stretch their dollar, for example, by using energy-saving lights and increasing the productivity of their employees with the help of technology.

Said a spokesman for Marine Parade Town Council: ‘The town council is also mindful of the long-term maintenance costs needed when we consider installing additional facilities in the estates.’

But Ang Mo Kio-Yio Chu Kang Town Council chairman Inderjit Singh said it has become tougher to manage the budget.

‘Costs have gone up everywhere, significant of which is manpower cost. The costs of materials and contracts have also been steadily increasing. Utility charges also form a significant part of our costs, especially electricity,’ he said.

Hong Kah Town Council said 40 per cent of its operating expenses for its last financial year (2008/2009) went towards its utility bills.

Its spokesman said the tariff hike also cost the town council an additional $2.9 million.

Switching to energy-saving lights has helped to trim 10 per cent off its electricity bill.

Mr Singh said: ‘So far, we have managed to do everything at the highest quality without increasing any charges to the residents.’

But his town council will not rule out future hikes. ‘If we don’t (raise charges), we will run at a deficit, which is not tenable and will affect our quality of work if we cannot get the right resources because of the deficit,’ he said.

Mr Singh added that his town council had planned to raise charges a few years ago, but held back due to a goods and services tax increase.

It also held back last year due to the recession, and focused on controlling costs.

‘I hope residents will realise that we cannot not increase (our charges) in the coming years,’ he added.

West Coast Town Council chairman Arthur Fong said that while the newer flats in the town council district might require less repairs now, they will cost more down the road when repainting works are done.

Though he does not see a need to increase the S&C fees immediately, Mr Masagos said the Lift Upgrading Programme and town development programmes do ’cause a drain’ to the sinking fund.

It may not be entirely fair to compare town councils, Mr Singh and Mr Fong pointed out, as each one is different and operates independently of others.

The ages of the estates are different, and they have been maintained and improved at different rates as well.

‘The cost to maintain different types of properties of different ages means that comparing councils is not meaningful,’ said Mr Fong.

Even within a town council district, property types in the different divisions are different.

Precincts within the same division may also differ, resulting in different costs, schedules, and attention from the town council.

‘We have been very careful in that we try to do things in a no-frills way, but again, to manage the expectations of residents who are comparing with others is a constant challenge,’ Mr Fong said.

Source : Straits Times – 22 Mar 2010

New rental block? Neighbours say welcome

The new rental HDB block (centre), located in Tampines Street 22, has 270 units and will be completed by the end of this month. — ST PHOTO: SAMUEL HE

A NEW rental HDB block is coming up in Tampines Street 22 – and unlike their neighbours in Pasir Ris and Tampines Street 83, residents there are happy to have it near them.

All 20 residents interviewed by The Straits Times yesterday expressed no objections. Some were even welcoming of their future rental block neighbours who are expected to move in around May.

Their only gripe: the loss of the football field on which the new block is coming up.

Said project manager Koh Chin Lee, 40, whose Block 294 is next to the rental block: ‘It is good that we have a place for the poor people to live. They are humans, too. This is a nice neighbourhood and they are welcome here.’

Retiree J. Lim, 68, is confident that the rental block will not affect the value of his five-room flat.

‘This is a very good location. We have a market nearby and the MRT station is not too far away. One rental block is not going to change anything,’ he said.

The reactions of the Tampines Street 22 residents are a marked contrast to that of residents in Tampines Street 83 and Pasir Ris Drive 6, who kicked up a fuss last month when they discovered that new rental blocks were coming up in their neighbourhoods.

Their main worry: that the rental blocks would lower the quality of the neighbourhoods and the value of their homes.

Some of the residents said they should have been informed earlier.

In the case of Tampines Street 22, MP Irene Ng had mobilised her grassroots leaders to inform residents of the upcoming rental block when she first got the news early last year.

Ms Ng yesterday told The Straits Times that she is very proud of her constituents for not protesting against the rental block in their midst.

‘They have been very understanding. Some of them were concerned about space, but when we explained to them properly, they were okay,’ she said.

She added that a welcome party will be planned for the new residents when they move in some time around May.

The rental block, which has 270 units, will be completed by the end of this month, the Housing Board confirmed yesterday.

The HDB had earlier told The Straits Times that it is building 7,000 rental flats for the poor and needy over the next three years, to be spread across the island ‘to achieve a balanced social mix’.

There are currently about 42,000 rental flats across the island, occupied by those with low income.

Mr K.G. Tan, 58, who lives in Tampines Street 22, believes rental flat residents should not be snubbed.

Said the contractor: ‘You never know when your luck is going to change. One day, you might end up living in a rental flat. Just imagine, how will it feel to have everybody not wanting to live near you?’

Source : Straits Times – 18 Mar 2010