east west line

Commuters travelling along the North. East Line were inconvenienced as a train fault at Little India station disrupted services during morning peak hours today. There was a similar disruption only two days ago on the East West Line.

At 7.35 am, service operator SBS Transit announced on Twitter that services would be delayed due to a train fault. Commuters were informed 20 minutes later that there would be no train service in both directions between Outram Park and Potong Pasir stations. Free shuttle bus services were deployed to bridge affected commuters between the two stations.

Frustrated commuters reported on social media that the delays took longer than what SBS Transit led them to believe. Commuters also decried the exorbitant prices that were being charged for taxis and cars on private-hire ride hailing platform Grab because of high demand:

SBS Transit tweeted that train service resumed around 8.35 am, but advised commuters that stations might still be crowded. Commuters were also told to expect an additional 15 minutes’ travelling time between Punggol and HarbourFront stations.

This latest train disruption comes just two days after a train fault along the East West Line caused a three-hour disruption on Monday morning.

Commuters reported swelling crowds in East West Line stations and shared that services along the line were delayed since 7.11 am that morning, but service operator SMRT only began tweeting updates on the situation from 7.36 am onwards.

SMRT then released a flood of tweets, informing East West Line commuters that they were working to resolve the issue and asking commuters to add 15 minutes, 20 minutes, 25 minutes and 10 minutes additional travel time at multiple intervals:

Disgruntled commuters questioned the usefulness of shorter operational hours over weekends, to allow more time for technicians to resolve technical issues, since service disruptions still occur:

https://theindependent.sg.sg/sleeping-on-the-job-expert-who-helped-convince-lky-to-build-mrt-network-says-signalling-system-was-to-be-upgraded-in-2002/