logo
'No room for complacency': Chan Chun Sing says Public Service must continue to innovate in face of rising expectations, Singapore News

'No room for complacency': Chan Chun Sing says Public Service must continue to innovate in face of rising expectations, Singapore News

AsiaOne2 days ago
Singapore's civil service must continue to innovate in the face of rising public expectations and global competition, said Coordinating Minister for Public Services Chan Chun Sing on Tuesday (July 8).
Giving a speech at the opening of the Public Service Festival in One Punggol, Chan, who is also Minister for Defence, said that the Public Service as contributed much to Singapore's survival and success over the past 60 years — citing National Service and the Central Provident Fund as "key examples of our pioneering spirit".
He added that while Singapore is also ranked highly in many global indices comparing quality of life and government services, other countries are catching up or have "overtaken us in certain areas".
Chan gave an example of how Estonia has become the first county fully digitise its government services, and China is serving over a billion citizens with artificial intelligence-powered services.
"These are all calls to action for us to continue to hone what we have done well, to keep improving so that we stay ahead of the curve… to attract those investments that will create good jobs and pay good wages for our people," he added.
"My greatest concern is that we become complacent. Success must not become the albatross for our future."
Chan said that among his prioritises, the Public Service must continue to innovate with citizens at the centre of "what we do".
"Nobody enjoys going to the doctor and having to be asked the same question over and over again. Everyone expects them to tell the doctor once and the record will be there to be shared across different agencies," he said. "And that is the same standards we expect across all agencies."
Chan said that there has been progress in the government agencies coordinating their services together to deliver a more "seamless and integrated experience" for the public.
This includes ServiceSG centres which provide Singaporeans with access to services from across 25 different government agencies — from resetting Singpass accounts to filing taxes and passport renewals.
Another way for the different government agencies coming together to maximise resources, according to Chan, is through building integrated lifestyle and community hubs like One Punggol and Our Tampines Hub.
"We have swimming pools, a library and a ServiceSG centre here," he said. "It's a bit like a Swiss Army Knife.
Chan said that such projects was not easy at first as it requires the different agencies to "synchronise their requirements and make compromises".
"But imagine if we have done it differently, where each agency continues to only do things for themselves. First, it will have cost us much more. Second, it would have required much more land," he added.
"But most importantly, our service delivery will be fragmented, and what the public can see and enjoy will also be fragmented."
A total of 140 awards were presented at Tuesday's event to public agencies and officers for their initiatives and innovations.
The Immigration and Checkpoints Authority (ICA) was awarded the Transformative Agency of the Year Award for implementing passport-less clearance at Singapore's air and sea checkpoints, as well as through the QR code system at the land checkpoints in Woodlands and Tuas.
ICA said that its New Clearance Concept allows the authority to upskill the job roles of over 3,000 frontline officers, adding that it enables them to take on higher-value roles to better safeguard the borders.
"ICA is honoured to receive the Transformative Agency of the Year Award, which recognises our efforts in transforming checkpoint operations and affirms our commitment to delivering a more seamless, efficient, and secure immigration clearance experience under the NCC," said Senior Assistant Commissioner Kelly Lim, director at ICA's Operations Division.
"ICA will continue to refine and enhance our checkpoint operations to deliver a world class travel experience for travellers and keep Singapore's border secured."
As for Carolina Lee from the People's Association (PA), serving the community meant more than wining the Exemplary Service Excellence award.
The 59-year-old first joined PA in 1992 as a childcare teacher and is currently manning the counters at Toa Payoh East Community Club to help residents who need help.
It was where she met Mr Lim, an elderly blind wheelchair user who first sought help with his CDC vouchers.
She later volunteered after her working hours to take him to a Traditional Chinese Medicine clinic days before Chinese New Year this year, and coordinated with a social worker to ensure that his meals are delivered uninterrupted during the holidays.
"I feel really good. Helping someone is very contagious. Not only to the residents, but also our colleagues," said Lee.
chingshijie@asiaone.com
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Russian attack on Kyiv kills two as US resumes arms deliveries to Ukraine
Russian attack on Kyiv kills two as US resumes arms deliveries to Ukraine

Straits Times

time2 hours ago

  • Straits Times

Russian attack on Kyiv kills two as US resumes arms deliveries to Ukraine

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Russia launched 18 missiles and around 400 drones in an attack which primarily targeted the capital Kyiv. KYIV - Russian drones and missiles bore down on the Ukrainian capital early on July 10, with officials reporting two deaths, 16 injured and fires in apartment and non-residential buildings as Washington resumed weapons deliveries to the war-torn country. Escalating Russian attacks have strained Ukrainian air defences at a perilous moment in the war and forced thousands of people to seek bomb shelters overnight. 'Residential buildings, vehicles, warehouse facilities, office and non-residential buildings are on fire,' head of Kyiv's military administration, Mr Tymur Tkachenko, said on the Telegram messaging app. Russia launched 18 missiles and around 400 drones in an attack which primarily targeted the capital Kyiv, according to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. There was no comment from Moscow about the attack, which came a day after Russia launched a single-night record number of drones targetting its smaller neighbour in what Ukrainians describe as terror tactics. 'Approaches to warfare changed a long time ago, and in its quest to break our society through terror, Russia has opted for combined strikes,' the head of Ukrainian presidential office Andriy Yermak said. Russia says its attacks aim to degrade Ukraine's military. The Russian defence ministry said its own air defence units had destroyed 14 Ukrainian drones overnight, RIA state news agency reported. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Business S'pore to launch new grant for companies, expand support for workers amid US tariff uncertainties Singapore Proposed new law protecting Singaporeans' genetic data to be strengthened: Ong Ye Kung Asia Dr Mahathir at 100: Still haunted by the Malay Dilemma Singapore HDB flats less attainable in 2024 compared with 2022: Report World 'Do some homework': 6 key exchanges between US Senator Duckworth and S'pore envoy nominee Sinha World Trump's ambassador nominee to Singapore Anjani Sinha has a rough day at Senate hearing Multimedia 60 objects to mark SG60: Which is your favourite? Business Fresh grads should 'stay calm' in job search, uptick in hiring seen: Tan See Leng After US President Donald Trump pledged earlier this week to send more defensive weapons to Kyiv, Washington was already delivering artillery shells and mobile rocket artillery missiles to Ukraine, two US officials told Reuters on July 9. Mr Zelensky held a 'substantive' meeting on July 9 with Mr Trump's Ukraine envoy, Mr Keith Kellogg, in Rome ahead of a Ukrainian recovery conference. On July 10, he will hold more meetings with American officials to discuss the adoption of the next package of US sanctions against Russia in the near future, according to the Ukrainian foreign minister. Mr Trump has been growing increasingly frustrated with President Vladimir Putin, saying that the Russian leader was throwing a lot of 'bullshit' at the US efforts to end the war that Moscow launched against Ukraine in February 2022. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio will meet with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on the sidelines of the Asean foreign ministers' meeting in Kuala Lumpur on July 10, the US State Department and Russia's foreign ministry said. The Russian attack on Kyiv on July 10 rattled the city with explosions, Reuters' witnesses said. Videos showed windows blown out, devastated facades and cars burned down. Ukrainian officials said that damage was reported in eight of the city's 10 districts. 'I turned around and saw that the apartment was gone, and a fire had also broken out,' said Ms Karyna Volf, a 25-year-old Kyiv resident who rushed out of her place moments before shards of glass went flying. 'This is terror, because it happens every night when people are asleep.' Thick smoke covered parts of Kyiv, darkening the red hues of a sunrise over the city of three million, Reuters' witnesses reported. Air raids in the capital lasted more than four hours, according to Ukraine's air force data. Closer to the battle zone, a Russian air strike killed three people and injured one late on July 9 in the front-line town of Kostiantynivka in Ukraine's east, the national emergency services said. REUTERS

Childhood shaped by war for two Ukrainian brothers
Childhood shaped by war for two Ukrainian brothers

Straits Times

time2 hours ago

  • Straits Times

Childhood shaped by war for two Ukrainian brothers

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Brothers Andrii Tupkalenko (left), 8, and Maksym Tupkalenko, 6, two of the last children left in their frontline village, pose for a photo with toy guns, their favorite toys, in Kalynove, Kharkiv region, Ukraine, April 11, 2025. Instead of scampering across playgrounds, the brothers climb through abandoned trenches and charred shells of armoured vehicles that sit on the outskirts of the village, playing soldiers and setting up make-believe checkpoints to vet fellow villagers. \"They're kids afflicted by war,\" said their mother Varvara Tupkalenko, 30. REUTERS/Violeta Santos Moura KALYNOVE, Ukraine - Before Russia invaded Ukraine, Varvara Tupkalenko's two sons played at home with miniature cars, like many boys their age. Today, plastic guns are the favoured toys in their living room in the village of Kalynove, just 15 kilometres (9 miles) from the Russian border in the northeastern Kharkiv region. Instead of scampering across playgrounds, Andrii, 8, and Maksym, 6, climb through abandoned trenches and charred shells of armoured vehicles that sit on the outskirts of the village. "They're kids afflicted by war," said Tupkalenko. Europe's largest land conflict since the Second World War is reshaping the fabric of ravaged Ukrainian frontier communities like Kalynove and leaving unseen as well as visible injuries on their youngest. The invisible scars can range from anxiety and fear to longer-term effects like poverty, depression and impaired emotional development, international aid agency Save the Children said in a report in February. "This is how a lost generation becomes a reality," the report said. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Business S'pore to launch new grant for companies, expand support for workers amid US tariff uncertainties Singapore Proposed new law protecting Singaporeans' genetic data to be strengthened: Ong Ye Kung Asia Dr Mahathir at 100: Still haunted by the Malay Dilemma Singapore HDB flats less attainable in 2024 compared with 2022: Report World 'Do some homework': 6 key exchanges between US Senator Duckworth and S'pore envoy nominee Sinha World Trump's ambassador nominee to Singapore Anjani Sinha has a rough day at Senate hearing Multimedia 60 objects to mark SG60: Which is your favourite? Singapore NDP 2025: Diamond formations, 'multi-axis' fly-past to headline parade's aerial display "The longer the conflict continues, the more likely it is that these children will grow up without the opportunities and resources necessary to recover and normalise their lives." LAST REMAINING CHILDREN In late March, when Reuters first visited the Tupkalenkos, the boys were among the six remaining children in shrapnel-marked Kalynove, whose landscape of wide-open fields and gently rolling hills bears the scars of fighting from early in Russia's February 2022 invasion. Now, their mother said, they are the last two. A Ukrainian counteroffensive in late 2022 pushed Russian troops back from the village outskirts, but both armies still trade blows just 20 kilometres away, leaving the Tupkalenkos struggling to live some semblance of a normal childhood. That often means playing soldiers and setting up make-believe checkpoints to vet fellow villagers. Cloth netting adorns their wooden fort - protection, they said, from the drones that have leant a new-age deadliness to the war. Varvara, for her part, is forced to make stark choices for the sake of her children, whose father Yurii was killed on the front line in 2023. When fighting intensifies, she takes them back to the family's apartment in nearby Kharkiv, the regional capital. But Ukraine's second city is itself a major target, and the swarms of drones that pound it at night terrify the boys, she said. "The kids keep crying, asking to come back to the village," she told Reuters during one of two visits to Kalynove. "There are spaces here to play, to walk, to ride bikes. There are no chances for that in the city." More than 3.5 million Ukrainians have been internally displaced by Russia's war, at least 737,000 of whom have been children, according to the United Nations. That number is growing as Russian forces press a grinding advance across much of eastern Ukraine, whose vast landscape has been decimated by fighting that has got heavier during a summer offensive, including in the Kharkiv area. In Kalynove, where the family uses their vegetable storage basement as a bomb shelter, the boys roam relatively freely, buying potato chips from a largely bare village store and helping their grandfather with home repairs. PLAYING ON CONTAMINATED LAND In his yard, shell casings serve as the beginning of a makeshift footpath. Occasionally, the boys turn up jagged pieces of shrapnel or the remains of hand grenades, a dangerous reality in a country widely contaminated with landmines and unexploded ordnance (UXO). At least 30 children have been killed and 120 wounded by mines, or UXO, in Ukraine since Russia's invasion, according to the United Nations' human rights office. After fleeing in the first weeks of the invasion, the Tupkalenkos returned in 2023 following the Ukrainian rout of Russian troops in much of the Kharkiv region. Still, safety is precarious for communities along Ukraine's sprawling border with Russia. Hours before Reuters' second visit, a glide bomb tore into the edge of Kalynove, rattling their house and shaking bits of ceiling free. Another strike targeted the area hours later. Neither Andrii nor Maksym has ever set foot in a classroom because Russia's invasion extended the remote learning over the internet that began during the COVID-19 epidemic, depriving more than one million of Ukraine's seven million children of social contact critical to development, according to the Save the Children report. Around the same number risk developing post-traumatic stress disorder or depression, it said. Standing in front of a wall-mounted map inside their home, Andrii talks about his father's death in a matter-of-fact manner, but with pride. "If he hadn't gone on the assault, he wouldn't have died," he said, pointing to the village of Klishchiivka, just south of Bakhmut in eastern Ukraine's Donbas region. Kateryna Holtsberh, a family psychologist who practices in Kyiv, said the consequences of such losses and traumatic wartime experiences can extend into adulthood. In some cases, she said, the shocks of war can blunt a child's emotional awareness, hampering their development. War can leave children struggling to realise "when another person is feeling pain," Holtsberh said. Like many Ukrainian adults who have suffered horrors in the war, one emotion the Tupkalenko boys express clearly is their anger at the Russians whose invasion their father died fighting. They say "they are murderers" who killed their father, she said. "'We will go to the Donbas and avenge him,'" they say. REUTERS

Asean meeting to condemn Myanmar violence: Draft statement
Asean meeting to condemn Myanmar violence: Draft statement

Straits Times

time3 hours ago

  • Straits Times

Asean meeting to condemn Myanmar violence: Draft statement

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox The meeting will express 'its deep concern over the escalation of conflicts and humanitarian situation in Myanmar'. KUALA LUMPUR - A meeting involving top diplomats from South-east Asia, China, Russia and the United States will condemn violence against civilians in war-torn Myanmar, according to a draft statement seen on July 10 by AFP. The Association of South-east Asian Nations (Asean) has led diplomatic efforts to end Myanmar's many-sided civil war sparked by a military coup in 2021 . But Asean has struggled to implement a five-point peace plan previously agreed by all bloc leaders, including Myanmar's junta. As fighting between the military and a myriad of armed groups rages, Asean foreign ministers are set to meet with their US, Chinese, Russian and other counterparts in the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur on July 11 where the issue will be discussed. 'The Meeting denounced the continued acts of violence against civilians and public facilities,' according to a draft chairman's statement of the Asean Regional Forum seen by AFP. Malaysia is 2025's rotating chair of Asean – long derided by critics as a toothless talking shop. The meeting will express 'its deep concern over the escalation of conflicts and humanitarian situation in Myanmar'. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Business S'pore to launch new grant for companies, expand support for workers amid US tariff uncertainties Singapore Proposed new law protecting Singaporeans' genetic data to be strengthened: Ong Ye Kung Asia Dr Mahathir at 100: Still haunted by the Malay Dilemma Singapore HDB flats less attainable in 2024 compared with 2022: Report World 'Do some homework': 6 key exchanges between US senator Duckworth and S'pore envoy nominee Sinha World Trump's ambassador nominee to Singapore Anjani Sinha has a rough day at Senate hearing Multimedia 60 objects to mark SG60: Which is your favourite? Singapore NDP 2025: Diamond formations, 'multi-axis' fly-past to headline parade's aerial display It will also urge 'all parties involved to take concrete action to immediately halt indiscriminate violence, exercise utmost restraint, ensure the protection and safety of all civilians and civilian infrastructures,' according to the draft. More than 6,600 people have been killed since the coup, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners monitoring group, and millions displaced. Myanmar's junta pledged a temporary ceasefire from early April to June 'to continue the rebuilding and rehabilitation process' after a magnitude 7.7 quake in the country's central belt killed nearly 3,800 people and left tens of thousands homeless. However, the truce was repeatedly broken by air strikes by the junta and attacks by armed groups. Myanmar's junta chief Senior General Min Aung Hlaing in June said the country would hold an election in December and January , the first in the war-torn nation since the military coup four years ago. International monitors have said any elections under the junta would be a sham, while analysts say polls would be targeted by the military's opponents and spark further bloodshed. Junta forces have suffered stinging territorial losses to pro-democracy guerrillas and powerful ethnic armed groups in recent months. Military backing from China and Russia is letting it stave off defeat, analysts say, but huge areas of the country are set to be beyond the reach of any junta-organised democratic exercise. AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store