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ROLLING STOCK TO LAUGHING STOCK: WHY IS SINGAPORE’S METRO STRUGGLING, WHEN HONG KONG’S IS A HIT?

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ROLLING STOCK TO LAUGHING STOCK: WHY IS SINGAPORE’S METRO STRUGGLING, WHEN HONG KONG’S IS A HIT?

Breakdowns, floods and a lack of executive accountability. The Lion City’s reputation for efficiency is going down the tube

BY BHAVAN JAIPRAGAS

21 OCT 2017


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Unfortunate souls: Commuters at an MRT station in Singapore. Photo: AFP
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THIS STORY

How Hong Kong’s MTR takes on local rail giants in Europe


The public scolding that Singapore’s public transport tsars handed down this week to a handful of rail maintenance workers over a large-scale breakdown is raising questions about where the buck stops in the management of the Lion City’s metro network, as rival Asian metropolises like Hong Kong and Taiwan pull ahead with superior train reliability.

In a rare move, transport minister Khaw Boon Wan on Monday criticised workers in charge of anti-flood measures at the metro operator SMRT Corp, after an October 7 flood in a underground tunnel near the suburban Bishan station caused a near 20-hour disruption to parts of the rail network. It was one of Singapore’s worst ever rail breakdowns.

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A mechanism designed to remove stormwater from the tunnel failed to work because it was poorly maintained.

Khaw said the maintenance team had “failed us”, and urged the metro operator to “nail down who [is] responsible”.

“I look to SMRT to do what is right … something must happen to the staff,” Khaw said.

Khaw’s comments were accompanied by a rebuke by SMRT’s chairman Seah Moon Ming, who said the team members’ bonuses would be affected and that the leader of the maintenance team had been removed.

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Singapore’s MRT: Once a leader, now a laggard. Photo : Alamy

While Khaw, Seah and the SMRT Chief Executive Desmond Kuek apologised, commuters and observers said their implications that rank-and-file workers bore responsibility raised questions on whether a lack of executive accountability was behind the metro network’s woes.

Singapore’s MRT network, once touted as one of Asia’s best, has been dogged by major breakdowns and delays in recent years. A high-level inquiry convened after two massive breakdowns in December 2011 found the system had been plagued by years of poor maintenance and outdated equipment.

The breakdowns, which occurred on two separate occasions, affected 221,000 commuters. SMRT was later fined Sg$2 million (HK$11.5 million) for the disruptions.

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong’s government has since spent hundreds of millions of dollars overhauling the network – in service since 1987 – but it continues to lag Hong Kong’s MTR and the Taipei MRT in reliability.

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How things should be done: A MTR train in Hong Kong. Photo: Dickson Lee

Singapore’s heavy rail network spans 198.6km, compared to 230.9km in Hong Kong and 131.1km in Taipei. It handles over two million passengers a day, compared with 4.89 million in Hong Kong and 2.1 million in Taipei.

Last year, trains in Singapore travelled an average 174,000km before encountering delays of more than five minutes, compared to around 360,000km in Hong Kong, and around 800,000 in Taipei – seen as the global gold standard.

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Political commentator Eugene Tan said while there had been public pressure on Khaw to “crack the whip” on the MRT, “there was a sense of unfairness that the buck did not stop with the management but that the maintenance team had to take the flak”.

“Perception of the ‘passing of the buck’ did not sit well – it was like the maintenance team was thrown under the train by their own management,” Tan said.

Samuel Ng, who commutes to work on the MRT, said Khaw and SMRT officials were wrong in thinking average Singaporeans wanted to see heads roll.

fe6212dc-b566-11e7-95c2-e7a557915c7a_1320x770_195609.jpg
Singaporean student Perry Zhao checks his iPhone on the MRT. Photo: AFP

“I think most people are just tired of all this … You don’t know when you will be stuck in the train for two hours. Give us a firm deadline. By when will you fix all the maintenance issues? When can we go back to pre-2011 standards?”, said the accounts executive at the downtown Tanjong Pagar station.

SMRT, one of the Lion City’s two metro operators, was bought by state investment arm Temasek last year. The move saw it delisted from the Singapore Exchange and was supposed to make it easier for the company to focus on reliability.

Lee Der-Horng, a transport researcher at the National University of Singapore, said while public frustration was understandable, the improvements SMRT had made since 2011 should be acknowledged.

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A four-year effort to replace 188,000 timber sleepers with concrete versions on two of the oldest and most disruption-prone lines – the North-South and East-West lines – concluded last year.

Overhauls of the lines’ third rails, which supply trains with power, concluded in September.

A new signalling system is also on trial. It has caused several low-key delays since trials began in March. Other overhauls, including new trains and the replacement of power supply systems, are to be completed by 2024.
“Overall ... the efforts by the operators to improve reliability is quite evident,” Lee said. “The operators have responded to the wake up call of 2011, when they realised they were not up to the standards of Hong Kong and Taipei,” he added.

Walter Theseira, a Singapore-based transport economist, said the “statistics speak for themselves” in showing a “clear improvement in reliability as measured by mean kilometres between incidents”.

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An MRT carriage in Singapore is decorated with promotional materials for the film Star Wars: The Force Awakens. Photo: Xinhua

GENERAL-TURNED–CEO UNDER SCRUTINY

One issue that gnawed at observers was chief executive Kuek’s comments on Monday that part of the operator’s troubles since 2011 had to do with “some deep-seated cultural issues”.

However, Kuek, a former military general who took the helm in 2012, said he took “full responsibility for all that has happened under my watch”.

Lee, the NUS researcher, said: “He has been CEO now for more than five years. If he can’t change the mindset of the company, then who else can?”

Tan, a law professor at Singapore Management University, said there was a “perception that he should shoulder the lion’s share of blame. It came across as being too convenient to blame the culture and maintenance team”.

Online, some commentators took aim at Kuek’s military background, casting doubt on whether his experience as chief of the defence force – the country’s top military position – was relevant.

Some also questioned Kuek’s recruitment of other military men.
“Singaporeans have their doubts that the top military brass can lead as well in Singapore Inc,” Tan said, referring to government linked companies like SMRT.

“High expectations have been made of these former military brass and so when these are not met, there is that blowback naturally.”

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Ng, the commuter, said he would give Kuek the benefit of doubt. “Action speaks louder than words … you deliver the results, and the criticism will go away.” ■
 
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ROLLING STOCK TO LAUGHING STOCK: WHY IS SINGAPORE’S METRO STRUGGLING, WHEN HONG KONG’S IS A HIT?

Breakdowns, floods and a lack of executive accountability. The Lion City’s reputation for efficiency is going down the tube

BY BHAVAN JAIPRAGAS
21 OCT 2017

f8edbbb2-b566-11e7-95c2-e7a557915c7a_1280x720_195609.jpg
Singapore's problems will not likely go away soon.
What to expect when most of the work and maintenance is done by cheap foreign workers from India.
Maybe we should let the Chinese and their hard working workers run our MRT.
A lot of our SMRT bus drivers are from China.

I remember when our estates were maintained by cheap foreign workers, they were busy collecting and stealing material to sell instead of cleaning the estates. On their day off, they will bring their foreign maid girl friends and have a swim at our roof top drinking water pool until they were found out.
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Let’s not politicise transportation problem

Our MRT trains are not working as well as they should and this is well-known.

However, recent comments by SMRT’s management are now being singled out and scrutinised, by those trying to politicise the issue. This is unhelpful.

Singaporeans should cultivate a collective, constructive, problem-solving mentality, rather than take a destructive, criticism-based one, which leads to the imbroglio we now see developing.

I dare not imagine what would happen if a terrorist attack happens here. Instead of banding together to fight the common enemy, we would be enmeshed in our own battles and bickering.

http://www.todayonline.com/voices/lets-not-politicise-transportation-problem

SMRT incident: Holding leaders accountable is not ‘politicising’ the issue

I refer to the letter, “Let’s not politicise transportation problem” (Oct 25), and beg to disagree with the writer.

Holding the Government and SMRT management accountable is not politicising the matter, but protecting the interests of Singaporeans.

The problems that have plagued our MRT network are almost a decade old.

It took us a decade to build an industrial estate out of a swamp, clean up filthy Singapore River, and build an award-winning airport. Yet, we continue to muddle with the problems affecting our train systems.

Granted, the assets are ageing and need replacement, but many of the issues are preventable, if there were proper management and maintenance.

Following the two major breakdowns in 2011, a Committee of Inquiry identified that those faults were preventable. Commitments were made in Parliament that SMRT would take preventive actions.

Since then, breakdowns have continued to occur, and no one has ever been held accountable for them.

No apologies were made until 16 Oct 2017.

SMRT management’s interests do not appear to be aligned with the commuters, and the Government has allowed them to continue. And, during all these times, our elected representatives in Parliament have been very silent.

http://www.todayonline.com/voices/smrt-incident-holding-leaders-accountable-not-politicising-issue

Hard not to ‘politicise’ matter when Govt urges citizens to use more public transport


The letter writer of “Let’s not politicise transportation problem” (Oct 25) failed to realise that the issue is being “politicised” because SMRT is Singapore’s premier transport provider and it started out as a state-owned company providing a “public good”.

The minister overseeing transport matters, the chiefs of the Land Transport Authority and SMRT have a duty to resolve the problems, but there has been no improvement.


Citizens are being encouraged to give up car ownership to go “car-lite” and to rely on public transport, but the reliability of public transport is still not up to mark.

The MRT network recorded an overall Mean Kilometre Before Failure of 393,000 train-km (distance travelled before hitting delays of more than five minutes) in the first half of the year, and this is still a long way to the Government’s target of one million train-km by 2020.

http://www.todayonline.com/voices/h...govt-urges-citizens-use-more-public-transport

The Government is part of the equation when addressing transport woes

Facebook users were almost all united in disagreeing with the comments made in the letter, “Let’s not politicise transportation problem” (Oct 25), saying that the criticisms levelled against SMRT’s management in handling train breakdowns are justified, and they gave reasons to support their own views.


We are not politicising the issue, but just want the problem to be solved. It has been taking too long and there is no concrete evidence that SMRT’s management is putting enough measures to solve the problem. ALEX NG



When the transport minister has come out to speak on the issue, there is already a political element/pressure... People are problem-solving creatures, first by asking questions about how things could have failed. MATTHEW LEE



Then the role of operator and regulator must definitely be separated. Regulator should not rationalise the problem on behalf of the operator, which is a service provider. This service provider should be answerable to its customers (all those who use its service one time or other). What do buyers do to a lousy service provider?... Now, the regulator (Government or minister) should step in to ensure the provider step up or ship out. JAMES TOH



This is basic accountability to the public for managing an important infrastructure of the country. RAYSON GOH



Criticising incompetence is not politicising the issue. It is just pointing out the obvious and expecting accountability. KEN LIM



When the issues are recurring and repetitive, it points to structural or systemic root causes. Changes are needed to address such leadership concerns. WHRICHARD WONG



Should we just keep quiet?... Don’t mix accountability with responsibility. The management is responsible, period. HM NG



Lousy service is a fact, it is not political. If they can’t run X number of trains within a given timeframe, then reduce the number. That allows commuters to plan their time accordingly. JEFF HO



When the politicians made it their responsibility to defend fare “adjustments” in Parliament, change the model to gain more direct oversight and control of the infrastructure and operations, disburse hundreds of millions to upgrade infrastructure and catch up on badly neglected maintenance, it is not political? LUKE WONG



To make progress in any field, there is a vital need to accept criticism and be aware of any form of neglect or breakdown... As good citizens, we cannot just stand by in silence to see rot creeping in and setting the stage for dereliction, chaos and disaster. RUAK REDNIHAM



The main issue or question is the issue of accountability, which had been made worse with the transport minister joining the fold to blame the lower-ranking staff members for these breakdowns rather than... accepting criticism... (and) resolving the problems. On the subject of politicising these issues, it could be fair to say that the Government brought it upon themselves with their own authoritative approach to these matters. TITO HSIAO



I agree, but the Government controls almost everything including transportation, so it’s unavoidable that frustration is pointed at them. GEOFFREY LIM MING HUI



I think we are seeing the result of months of poor communication from all stakeholders, LTA , SMRT and Ministry of Transport. TSAI TECK SEE



Well, shouting “Keep up the good work” won’t help either. LIM FOONG FEE



*Comments were first posted on TODAY’s Facebook page and are edited for language and clarity.

http://www.todayonline.com/voices/government-part-equation-when-addressing-transport-woes
 
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I never knew Singapore have this problem, I always assumed the infrastructure is always upkeep at top notch conditions.
 
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I never knew Singapore have this problem, I always assumed the infrastructure is always upkeep at top notch conditions.

It's not that bad. I take the train almost everyday since 2013 and I have never experienced a breakdown. Maybe I'm lucky.

However it's a fact that our rail reliability pales in comparison to HK or Taipei.

Last year, trains in Singapore travelled an average 174,000km before encountering delays of more than five minutes, compared to around 360,000km in Hong Kong, and around 800,000 in Taipei – seen as the global gold standard.

What I'm glad is that the authorities admit their service is not up to mark and the media is holding them accountable for it by publishing commuters dissatisfaction. Like one of quotes in the article in my previous post said, "To make progress in any field, there is a vital need to accept criticism and be aware of any form of neglect or breakdown".
Otherwise we will be contented in living in our happy bubble and will never seek to improve.

And to be fair to them, things are improving. We have reached HK standards in reliability for the first half of 2017.

This is the statistics for 1Q 2017.
20170524_Fig1.jpg


https://www.lta.gov.sg/apps/news/page.aspx?c=2&id=dfde4510-8fb3-4f69-b992-a0c52a20a6f6

We are aiming for Taipei's standard and reach a MKBF (mean km between failure) of 1million km by 2020.

On the new MKBF target, Mr Khaw pointed out that the previous goal was benchmarked against the Taipei Metro’s performance of clocking 800,000 train-km. But it has since “upped the game” to achieve 1 million train-km last year, he said.

Operators and the Land Transport Authority (LTA) should work towards this “best-in-class performance”, he added.

The preliminary data on Singapore’s rail network also showed that the number of major delays exceeding 30 minutes – another indicator used to measure rail reliability apart from the MKBF – has also gone down from 10 in the first half of 2016 to three over the same period this year.

Since taking over the transport portfolio in October 2015, Mr Khaw has been setting targets for rail reliability. Last year’s figure of 174,000 train-km fell short of the 200,000 train-km target which he had set.

The goal for next year is to reach the 400,000 train-km mark, he said. Although the rail network’s recent performance in terms of reliability was “satisfactory”, Mr Khaw said: “This is not yet the steady state we are hoping for, but versus what we had inherited two years ago, I think this is maybe C+. Next year we should go for B. The following year, certainly before election, must be an A.” Mr Khaw was referring to the next General Election, which must be held by January 2021.

http://m.todayonline.com/singapore/rail-reliability-has-improved-khaw-sets-new-higher-standards
 
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I never knew Singapore have this problem, I always assumed the infrastructure is always upkeep at top notch conditions.
This is actually a good platform to compare the productivity of the Chinese in Hong Kong and Taiwan and the work done in a similarly developed economy but by Indian foreign workers in Singapore.

The problem is not with our city planning and execution, but in the build quality and maintenance by mostly cheap Indian foreign workers. Similarly our Internet fiber network is mainly done by Indians and supervised by Pinoy technicians and we have experienced numerous problems as well.

Indians are not known to excel in engineering and infrastructure building and now I just found out, maybe not even in medical.
I had serious giddiness and short of breath after a major operation 4 years ago by a Indian surgeon. Took a few years of expensive diagnosis and tests to find out he failed to prescribe an essential drug. I will keep clear of Indian(India) doctors from now on.

Pay peanuts get Indian monkeys.
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MRT tunnel flooding: Pump maintenance work not carried out on 3 occasions
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news...maintenance-work-not-carried-out-on-3-9361616.
SINGAPORE: Maintenance works for the Bishan portal sump pump system were not properly carried out since December last year, SMRT investigations into a train tunnel flooding incident have found.

Preliminary investigations show that quarterly maintenance works for Dec 2016, March and June this year were not conducted as prescribed in SMRT's manual, the train operator said in a news release on Tuesday (Oct 31).

Maintenance records were duly signed off and submitted. However, SMRT's investigation showed that there were no track access approvals issued for preventive maintenance of the Bishan portal sump pumps for the maintenance dates.

Pump records for the same dates show that the pumps were not activated on those days, which would have been required as part of the maintenance procedure had the work been done.

The manager and staff responsible for the maintenance of the Bishan portal sump pump system have been suspended and are assisting in the investigations.
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LTA 'deeply concerned' about suspected falsification of maintenance records for Bishan station
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This is actually a good platform to compare the productivity of the Chinese in Hong Kong and Taiwan and the work done in a similarly developed economy but by Indian foreign workers in Singapore.

The problem is not with our city planning and execution, but in the build quality and maintenance by mostly cheap Indian foreign workers. Similarly our Internet fiber network is mainly done by Indians and supervised by Pinoy technicians and we have experienced numerous problems as well.

Indians are not known to excel in engineering and infrastructure building and now I just found out, maybe not even in medical.
I had serious giddiness and short of breath after a major operation 4 years ago by a Indian surgeon. Took a few years of expensive diagnosis and tests to find out he failed to prescribe an essential drug. I will keep clear of Indian(India) doctors from now on.

Pay peanuts get Indian monkeys.
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there's a thread on this before buried somewhere in the Far east section. Their productivity is extremely low- i have seen these Indian workers sleep for hrs at hand(i only saw their supervisor come check on them occasionally) underneath my void deck, indifferent to the local passerbys staring at them. They are either sleeping, chatting with each other or gawking at local women- and yes i have had staring encounters with a few of these lazy f**kers myself.

st-foreign-workers-sleep.jpg

workersmain.jpg

workers.jpg


if i were to take photos of them slothing around myself everytime i pass saw them , it will make a nice photo album.
 
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there's a thread on this before buried somewhere in the Far east section. Their productivity is extremely low- i have seen these Indian workers sleep for hrs at hand(i only saw their supervisor come check on them occasionally) underneath my void deck, indifferent to the local passerbys staring at them. They are either sleeping, chatting with each other or gawking at local women- and yes i have had staring encounters with a few of these lazy f**kers myself.

if i were to take photos of them slothing around myself everytime i pass saw them , it will make a nice photo album.
Indian Workers Sleep.jpg

All these Indian foreign workers sleeping instead of working and they wonder why things go wrong in Singapore.
Go sleeping instead of doing their work and dared to sign off as having done their job.

Indian workers are indeed cheap, but their work productivity is also low.
They are good at bragging, talking, and arguing to death.
That's why a lot of our lawyers are Indian.

Pay peanuts get Indian Monkeys.
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View attachment 434337
All these Indian foreign workers sleeping instead of working and they wonder why things go wrong in Singapore.
Go sleeping instead of doing their work and dared to sign off as having done their job.

Indian workers are indeed cheap, but their work productivity is also low.
They are good at bragging, talking, and arguing to death.
That's why a lot of our lawyers are Indian.

Pay peanuts get Indian Monkeys.
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Work ethics hit all time low.
For such extremely pathetic productivity, they deserve the lowest illegal payment.
 
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