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Can survive outside army?
Minister for
Environment and Water Resources Vivian Balakrishnan said he hoped to see
more Singaporeans pursue the hawking profession in the future.
Speaking
on the sidelines of the opening of a child care centre on Saturday, Dr
Balakrishnan said with more centres opening in the near future, the next
step will be to encourage people to view hawking more favourably.
"To
make sure that there are enough Singaporeans who want to go into this
business ... I have to make sure that we send the message that there
will be places available, there will be reasonable rentals," he said.
With
the announcement of 10 new hawker centres to be built over the next 10
years, and the removal of minimum bids for stalls in April, rental
prices of hawker stalls have dropped.
"All these factors mean
that rentals are going to fall, and I'm quite happy for that to happen,
because our key objective is to provide good and affordable food for
Singaporeans out in the heartlands," Dr Balakrishnan said.
"We're
also looking at the proposal that there should be some form of training
and opportunities to upgrade skills ... We will even look into
proposals like having some form of central purchasing in order to get
better prices through bulk purchases."
"There are many areas we
can work on to uplift our hawking profession, and I think in the years
ahead, I want to make it an attractive and honourable profession for
Singaporeans to move into, and especially for younger Singaporeans," he
added.
A social enterprise or cooperative to run the Bukit
Panjang hawker centre, the first of the 10 new hawker centres to be
built, will also be announced as early as June.
The move to allow
not-for-profit organisations to run hawker centres is part of a series
of recommendations submitted by a consultation panel in March, following
four months of deliberations and public consultation.
The
Environment and Water Resources Ministry is also looking at having a
single agency to manage the cleaning services for hawker centres, as
suggested by the consultation panel.
Dr Balakrishnan said the
objective of such a measure would elevate standards of hygiene, achieve
economies of scale and improve mechanisation and training in systems.
"We hope we can get both higher standards as well as cost-effectiveness," he explained.
"But
having said that, I also want to caution that over the next few years, I
do want to see the wages of cleaners go up, and I want to see them go
up significantly."
"It's only fair that all of us be prepared if
need be, to pay a little bit more to ensure that the wages of cleaners
go up significantly. That's another area I'm paying attention to," Dr
Balakrishnan said.