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Trump’s deregulatory record doesn’t include much actual deregulation

Cutting red tape is a high priority, but the execution hasn’t always led to results. AP Photo/Evan Vucci

One year ago, the Trump administration’s deregulatory push was in full swing. The administration was preparing a proposed rule to repeal the Waters of the United States (WOTUS) regulation, and to delay and repeal the restriction of methane emissions from oil and gas extraction on public lands.

Surely these well-publicized deregulatory initiatives which the Trump administration has made a big show of taking credit for have taken effect by now.

Well, not exactly. The WOTUS proposal has not been finalized, and the methane extraction rule is tied up in a thicket of court cases.

President Trump’s record on deregulation has gotten a great deal of attention. He brags about it regularly. It is often placed alongside the tax cuts passed by Congress when his chief accomplishments are recounted. To listen to the president (or the media), one would think that thousands of regulations were repealed.

But as the WOTUS and Bureau of Land Management extraction rules indicate, the actual extent of deregulation is much more limited. At the same time, other moves to dismantle the “administrative state” have quietly been more effective.

No more easy routes

Early in the Trump administration, Congress used the Congressional Review Act, a statute that allows the Senate to bypass the filibuster to repeal recently issued regulations. By May 17, 2017, Congress had repealed 14 Obama regulations using the CRA in a wide array of policy areas. They would add one more regulation from the Consumer Protection Financial Bureau by the end of 2017.

But these repeals are largely the work of Congress and frequent punching bag for President Trump, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. And now, most Obama-era regulations are off limits for the CRA (although Congress has explored expanding its use). That leaves President Trump and his administration to rely on the typical route for writing and revising regulations – the executive branch – if they want to repeal any more of the thousands of regulations issued during the Obama administration.

In seeking to roll back fuel economy standards and other regulations, EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt’s staff hasn’t shown the same attention to the rule-making process as his predecessor.
Gage Skidmore, CC BY-NC-ND

Making announcements about a desire to repeal regulations is easy. President Trump did so in December (although his claim that 22 regulations had been repealed for every new regulation was vastly exaggerated). Actually repealing significant regulations is much harder, as the administration is finding out.

An agency must start by developing a proposal to repeal a regulation. This must often be accompanied by a detailed economic analysis of the repeal. The proposal and the analysis are then sent to the Office of Management and Budget for a review. When that review is complete, the proposal is published in the Federal Register for public comment. Agencies must review the public comments, respond to them, make any changes they feel necessary to their proposal and analysis, and then resubmit it to OMB before publishing a final rule. Finally, the rule is subject to litigation.

To navigate this process takes time and expertise. President Trump and his Cabinet members, particularly Scott Pruitt at the EPA, have instead tried to rush through the many steps of this process. This has meant that the last step, the litigation over regulatory repeals, has proven particularly problematic for the administration. At the EPA, courts have struck down delays or repeals of regulations six times already. This pattern holds across the government.

Another kind of damage

Part of the problem for the Trump administration is that while they have been hasty in trying to repeal regulations, the Obama administration was thorough in promulgating them. Over the course of eight years, Obama appointees solicited comments on their proposals, did detailed economic analyses, and built strong cases for many of their regulations. For example, the former EPA administration compiled a 1,217-page analysis done over years to buttress its fuel economy rules, while the current administration generated a 38-page document dominated by auto industry comments to justify reviewing and rescinding them.

Repealing existing regulations requires the work of government staffers who know the processes but a number of agencies, including the EPA, have lost many significant employees.
AP Photo/Alex Brandon

In order to repeal these regulations, the Trump administration will have to convince courts that there are sound legal reasons to ignore all of this work. The statute that governs the creation of regulations, the Administrative Procedure Act, requires agencies to demonstrate that they are not arbitrary and capricious.

To do so, the Trump administration will have to rely on the expertise that lies within the federal bureaucracy. But President Trump and his appointees have regularly denigrated those whose help they now require. As a result, many of the most talented people at the agencies have left public service. At the EPA alone, more than 700 employees have left during this administration.

This means not only has the administration failed thus far to repeal many regulations beyond those overturned by Congress using the CRA, but their prospects for doing so in other cases are not strong. These cases include the WOTUS regulation, the Clean Power Plan to limit carbon emissions from power plants, and the recently announced plans to roll back emission standards for automobiles and take on California over their auto emission requirements.

Stephen Bannon listed the deconstruction of the administrative state as a goal of the Trump administration. The repeal of regulations is often trumpeted as the most important sign that Trump is succeeding. But while the administration is failing at the piece of deconstruction they are talking about most loudly, there are signs that they are succeeding in other ways.

The first is the enforcement of existing regulations. While the Trump administration has ramped up enforcement of immigration regulations, it has ratcheted down enforcement of environment and worker safety requirements. This selective pattern of enforcing regulations sends signals to firms that they don’t need to worry about complying with the law when it comes to the environment or public health.

Meanwhile, there has been an exodus of employees from the federal government which will likely have a corrosive long-term effect. Replacing talented public servants is not something that can be done overnight, even by a new administration dedicated to doing so. Training these new government employees will take even longer. As government becomes less effective because of the talent drain, faith in government diminishes further and a cycle of cynicism about public service is made worse.

The Trump administration has declared war on the regulatory state. But the things the administration is reluctant to take credit for, notably not enforcing the law and driving out talented public servants, are likely to have a much larger impact than its largely nonexistent regulatory repeals.

The Conversation

Stuart Shapiro does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.


Source: US-Politics

Singapore’s checkpoints not closed, ICA says Whatsapp messages circulating are fake

Obbana Rajah

Viral messages stating that Singapore’s checkpoints are closed have been circulating Whatsapp messenger and Facebook.

These messages have been going around just as Singapore’s closest neighbour, Malaysia goes through its 14th general election and the checkpoints see high volumes of traffic as people go in and out of the two countries to cast their votes.

However, the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority (ICA) has confirmed that these messages are indeed fake.

In a Facebook they state, “[8 May, 10.20pm] ICA is aware of social media posts alleging that travellers heading towards Malaysia are stranded at our land checkpoints. This is not true. ICA would like to clarify that there are no issues with our clearance systems”.

In a second Facebook post last night, they reaffirm the public that the checkpoints are indeed still in operation.

They state, “[9 May, 11.25pm] ICA is aware of false information circulating via whatsapp chatgroups that Singapore’s land checkpoints may be closed. This is untrue. Our checkpoints are still in operation. We urge the public not to spread such rumours. The public should also check official information sources such as ICA’s website and social media platforms for information regarding Singapore’s checkpoints”.

Their Facebook posts were shared by both Gov.sg and the Singapore Police Force.

Apparently, the video was also circulating Facebook groups that monitor traffic at both Woodlands and Tuas checkpoints. However, it has been found that the video has been circulating since December 2016 and is not a recent one.

Netizens seem rather pleased with how efficiently the officers at the checkpoints are, during this period of high traffic.


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Pritam Singh in the hot seat

Obbana Rajah

It was a moment fit for the record. Workers Party’s new Secretary-General Pritam Singh sitting in the front row where Low Thia Khiang used to sit during this week’s Presidential Address session. Low sat in the second row with WP Chairman Sylvia Lim.

There to help capture the moment was PAP MP Zainal Sapari.

Smile! Click! Nice.


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Facebook removes “We Are Against Pink Dot” public group for hate speech

Facebook has apparently removed the “We Are Against Pink Dot” (WAAPD) public group for violating its community standards. Following a link to the Facebook group shows that the page has indeed been deactivated.

Facebook user Roy Tan shared a screenshot of a notification the user who reported the page received from the social media website informing them that the page has been removed. Tan shared: “Great news, everyone! Facebook has removed We Are Against Pink Dot in Singapore for hate speech.”

In a subsequent comment, Tan revealed that he was not the one who reported the page this time: “WAAPD wasn’t reported by me, though. It was done by a friend studying overseas and others.” He added in another comment, “When I reported WAAPD for hate speech several years ago, Facebook didn’t do anything. This coup was achieved by others reporting it only recently.”

Another Facebook user, Yew Hing Yappy Yap, shared in a comment: “FINALLY!! I have reported before too but FB did nothing. I suspect this time round it might be due to what is happening in the US n led to FB tightening n tidying to present a “cleaner” image. FB even sent me a note asking if I need help for managing my stress when I shared an article on assisted suicide. They probably feel that I wanna kill myself. LOL!”

Latest: Facebook has reinstated We are against Pinkdot but the group's administrator has warned posters to be more civil (see screen grab at the bottom of the comments section below.)

Posted by Roy Tan on Wednesday, 9 May 2018

WAAPD has called itself a “public advocacy group” in the past. An earlier, unrelated statement set out the mission of the group, which had thousands of members, as such:

“WAAPD is made up of a cross section of Singaporeans from all walks of life, belief systems, ethnicity, gender and creed.
“We were set up to discuss the attempt to promote a homosexual movement in Singapore. This movement is not part of our traditional family values.
“We are clear that our position is to reject the promotion of the homosexual lifestyle.”

Viral video of woman smoking at Changi Airport that riled Singaporeans is from months ago

A viral video showing a woman smoking within Changi Airport Terminal 3 is circulating on social media and has riled several netizens who questioned what airport security and officers from the National Environment Agency (NEA) are doing.

In the video, posted by Facebook user Clement Chia, a woman can be seen smoking beside a trash can. Chia, who shared the video on Monday, revealed that he was not the one who shot the video:

https://www.facebook.com/clement.c.chia/videos/10155157819527101/

The video quickly began trending online, ruffling the feathers of several netizens. While some questioned what airport security and NEA was doing, others wondered whether the person who filmed the video stopped the woman:

A spokesperson from Changi Airport Group has since revealed that the incident happened months ago. While the Group noted that the act captured in the video is illegal, it did not elaborate on whether action was taken against the woman captured in the viral video.

The spokesperson said: “The incidents captured in the videos are not recent, having occurred months ago. The actions of the individuals in the videos contravene existing laws.”

Beverage prices at coffeeshops climb in spite of Indranee Rajah’s assurance that drinks prices “should not” rise with water price hike

The Chinese daily reported last Friday (4 May) that beverage prices at several coffee shops have gone up as a result of the water price hike by the government. At one coffeeshop, the prices of coffee, tea and canned drinks have increased by $0.10 while the price of beer has climbed by $0.20.

This coffeeshop, the Kim San Leng coffee shop at Bishan Street 13, is one of several in a chain of coffeeshops owned by grassroots leader Hoon Thing Leong that have imposed the beverage price hike. Reporters who visited the coffeeshop found a handwritten note pasted at the cash register that read, “Drinks Coffee increase $0.10”.

When the publication contacted Mr Hoon, he confirmed that the coffeeshops in his chain imposed the drinks price hike from 1 May this year. He added: “We have not raised prices for 2 years. But in the last 1 year, our cost has increased by around 20%. So I think the price increase is reasonable.”

Mr Hoon – who sits on the boards of various associations, such as the Foochow Coffee Restaurant and Bar Merchants Association, besides serving as a grassroots leader – added that many coffeeshops increased their prices last July itself to cope with the hefty water price hike.

Mr Hoon, who was awarded the Public Service Medal by the Prime Minister when he served in the Environment Ministry in 1999, shared that his chain of coffeeshops is the last to raise their drinks prices.

The grassroots leader’s admission stands in stark contrast to the Government’s assurances that the water price hike should not affect beverage prices, after Finance Minister Heng Swee Keat announced last year that the price of water would increase by 30% to “reflect the higher costs of desalination and NEWater production.”

Speaking to reporters after Heng’s announcement, then-Senior Minister of State for Finance and Law Indranee Rajah assured that the water price hike would have “very minimal impact” on the price of coffee and tea. She emphasised that the cost of goods such as coffee and tea “should not and ought not” go up with the hefty water price hike, at a REACH post-Budget forum she chaired.

Indranee was promoted to full minister during the latest Cabinet reshuffle that went into effect this month. She now serves as Minister in the Prime Minister’s Office, Second Minister for Finance and Second Minister for Education.

Sale by EOI of rare freehold shophouse at Havelock Road

Savills Singapore on 8 May announced the sale of a freehold shophouse along Havelock Road for sale by EOI (Expression of Interest). The EOI closes on the 12th June 2018 Tuesday at 3pm.

The intermediate 3-storey freehold shophouse at 772 Havelock Road consists of a ground floor retail shop and residential units on the upper floors. Located along Havelock Road, just after the junction with Beo Crescent, the property is within a row of shophouses famous for its eateries.

The city fringe property has a gross floor area of about 3,767 sq ft and land area about 1,574.8 sq ft. Under the 2014 Master Plan, it is zoned Residential with Commercial at 1st Storey and has a Plot Ratio of 3. Subject to approval, there is potential to undertake addition and alteration works to further enhance the value of the property.

Nestled amongst public housing estates Havelock View, Beo Crescent and Tiong Bahru View, there is a large catchment of foot traffic. Other notable landmarks such as Tiong Bahru Plaza, Delta House and Valley Point are located nearby.

The shophouse is easily accessible as it is well positioned near the main junction of Alexandra Road and Lower Delta Road which is also well served by public transportation. There are ample carpark lots within close proximity to the property and Tiong Bahru MRT is a short walk away.

“This Havelock shophouse presents an opportunity to own a rare collectible along this row of shophouses popular for its eateries. Prospective buyers can consider renting the ground floor space to a F&B operator and home office cum co-living concepts for the upper floor units, subject to approval. Hence while they enjoy immediate rental now, in future they can look to reposition the property through tenant upgrades and enhancement works.” said Donald Goh, director of investment sales at Savills Singapore.

The Havelock Road property is among similar freehold shophouses which have been put up for sale by EOI in recent months.  In early April, Knight Frank Singapore reported that a row of four adjoining two-storey freehold shophouses with attic at 71 to 73B Jalan Besar have been put up for sale by EOI at a guide price of over $20 million.

The sale by EOI of the freehold property comes at a time when the office market showed continued signs of recovery in the fourth quarter of 2017, with active leasing activity gathering pace. A February 2018 report by Knight Frank on Office Market snapshot said: “The ‘flight to quality and efficiency’ supply-led demand for prime office space that was dominant in 2017 is expected to continue in 2018. Tenants are relocating to larger and more efficient floor plates to fulfil their evolving operational requirements, over less and / or scalable office space through various activity-based workplace solutions. Prime office rents are expected to rise by at least 8.0% to 12.0% year-on-year by Q4 2018.”

If you are currently renting your retail shop or office space, you may consider using our calculator whether to buy commercial property. However if you are aiming to buy for investment, then you will need to consider carefully the potential rent that you could obtain from the unit.

In property, there are fundamentals and there are sentiments. When sentiments run wild, that can defy logic for an extended period of time. And ultimately when everyone makes silly decisions, it is also possible that the person that is not silly will lose out.


If you are home-hunting, our Panel of Property agents and the mortgage consultants at icompareloan.com can help you with affordability assessment and a promotional home loan. Just email our chief mortgage consultant, Paul Ho, with your name, email and phone number at [email protected].

Sugars in mother’s milk help shape baby’s microbiome and ward off infection

Sugar mama? Researchers are teasing out the benefits of various molecules in human milk. Stefan Malmesjö, CC BY

While living in a mother’s womb, cushioned by amniotic fluid and protected from the outside world, babies have only minimal exposure to microorganisms like bacteria and viruses. Shortly after birth, a newborn’s collection of microorganisms – their microbiome – begins to develop as a succession of bacteria colonizes their gut.

A variety of factors, such as mode of delivery (cesarean or vaginal birth) and antibiotic use, influence this population of bacteria. After that, human milk serves as a primary way more bacteria are introduced to a baby’s system, as it can contain up to 700 different species of bacteria.

In my research as a chemist, I’ve been focusing on the complex sugars that human milk contains. My colleagues and I are interested in how these sugar molecules help mold a baby’s microbiome and contribute to overall health. Ultimately we hope that knowing more about individual molecules in human breast milk will lead to the development of better infant formulas that can be used in cases where breastfeeding isn’t possible.

What’s in mother’s milk

You’ve probably heard that breast milk provides all the energy requirements, vitamins and nutrients that an infant needs. In fact, the World Health Organization recommends exclusively breastfeeding babies for the first six months of life when possible. Unfortunately there are a number of reasons that breastfeeding can be a challenge to keep up; and indeed, only about a quarter of American babies meet that guideline.

Breastmilk has a number of health benefits, beyond just keeping a baby well-fed. Exclusively breastfed babies have lower infant mortality due to common childhood illnesses such as diarrhea, pneumonia, urinary tract infection, ear infection, necrotizing enterocolitis and sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), compared to formula-fed counterparts. And antibodies in milk mean breastfeeding helps babies recover quicker when they do fall ill.

Researchers know human milk contains two types of simple proteins, whey and casein, which are easily digested. It also has complex proteins including lactoferrin, which inhibits the growth of iron-dependent bacteria, and secretory IgA, which protects the infant from viruses and pathogenic bacteria. It provides a number of essential fats that are necessary for brain development, vitamin absorption and nervous system development.

And then there are the complex sugars called human milk oligosaccharides or HMOs that have long been neglected by the scientific community. As trained organic chemists, my team took an interest in HMOs precisely because not much was known about them. A few studies had found that these sugars were food for good bacteria, but not the pathogenic ones. It seemed like there must be more to the story. We also knew we’d be able to synthesize in the lab any molecules we identified as important.

Basic techniques of organic chemistry can isolate the sugars from a mother’s milk.
Steven Townsend, CC BY-ND

A closer look at mom’s milk sugars

These complex sugars in human milk appear to provide a growth advantage for good bacteria. For example, breastfed infants have a microbiome rich in two species of bacteria: Bacteroides and Bifidobacteria. Both species are symbiotes, meaning they live with us on a daily basis, but typically cause no harm. They live in the human gut where they use human milk oligosaccharides as energy sources to grow, whereas pathogens do not. Breastfed babies tend to be colonized to a lesser extent by infectious species, meaning they get sick less.

Many of the protective properties of human milk have been attributed to its HMO component. For instance, research has shown that HMO supplementation shortens the duration of rotavirus infection – one of the leading causes of diarrhea in infants.

Bovine milk, which most formula is based on, however, contains a negligible oligosaccharide component. Additionally, bovine milk oligosaccharides lack the structural complexity and diversity of HMOs. So formula-fed infants do not obtain comparable oligosaccharide-fostered protections to those who are breastfed.

A case study: Group B strep

Based on these known effects of human milk oligosaccharides, my research group took an interest in Group B streptococcus. All mothers-to-be are screened during the third trimester of pregnancy for Group B strep; although it isn’t much threat to a healthy adult, this bacteria can be passed to the baby during labor and birth, with an increased risk of infection.

We noted that, even though Group B strep bacteria are present in breast milk, children who breastfeed are not at increased risk for Group B strep infection. Why? Could HMOs be providing protection against this bacteria?

To investigate, our team worked to isolate the complex sugars contained in donated human milk. With these molecules in hand, we began to test whether HMOs acted as antibiotics against Group B strep. In an initial study, we tried to grow Group B strep both in the presence and absence of HMOs. It turned out that HMOs do prevent the growth of Group B strep bacteria.

We also observed that different women produced HMOs with varying levels of antibiotic activity. This was not surprising as there are over 200 different HMOs in breast milk. Every woman produces a different set of sugars and they change during lactation. In followup studies, we showed that HMOs have antibiotic properties against a number of additional pathogens, including staph.

Going forward, our goals are to figure out exactly how these sugars are working and why specific women produce sugars that are more antimicrobial than others. Once researchers understand more about which HMOs are the most important ingredients in breast milk for baby health, these compounds can be synthesized and added to infant food products. A better quality infant formula that more closely mimics human breast milk may help close the health gap between breastfed and formula-fed babies.

The Conversation

Steven Townsend does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.


Source: Science-Technology

Brawl erupts at People’s Park Food Centre after man allegedly hits on married woman

The police are investigating a brawl that broke out at People’s Park Food Centre over the weekend. The fight, which involved several men, occurred on Sunday (6 May) around 9pm and erupted after a man allegedly hit on a married woman.

The dispute reportedly began when a trio consisting of two men and a woman walked past a larger group of men who were having drinks at a table. One of the men in the bigger group allegedly caught a hold of the woman’s hand and invited her to join him for a drink.

The woman’s husband, one of the men in the trio, confronted the other man only for the men in the larger group to start hitting him, prompting a fully fledged brawl to erupt:

Brawl breaks out at People's Park Food Centre after man allegedly hits on married woman

Brawl breaks out at People's Park Food Centre after man allegedly hits on married woman https://bit.ly/2rqZvTg

Posted by Stomp on Monday, 7 May 2018

 

Both groups were reportedly not acquainted with one another prior to the incident. The trio suffered superficial injuries but were not taken to the hospital. Police investigations are ongoing.

This latest brawl occurred mere days after several men became embroiled in a riot at Bendemeer Food Centre on Labour day evening. The riot, that occurred last Tuesday around 9pm, saw bottles breaking and chairs flying as the men involved pummeled each other viciously while shouting:

https://theindependent.sg.sg/bottles-break-and-chairs-fly-as-men-pummel-each-other-in-bendemeer-food-centre-riot/

Jurong Region Line to lift fortunes of properties at Choa Chu Kang and Boon Lay along with Jurong Lake District

The upcoming seventh MRT line, Jurong Region Line, is expected to lift the fortunes of not just the properties in Jurong Lake District, but also the real estate in Boon Lay and Choa Chu Kang. Transport Minister Khaw Boon Wan in announcing details of the Jurong Region Line today said that the new line will serve the Jurong area and the western part of Singapore.

Jurong Region Line will connect residents in Choa Chu Kang, Boon Lay and the Tengah New Town, and will also connect the Nanyang Technological University (NTU), the Jurong Industrial Estate and the new Jurong Innovation District.

Mr Khaw said that it will relieve pressure on the crowded Jurong East Interchange Station by directly connecting the north to the Jurong region via a new Jurong Region Line interchange station at Choa Chu Kang. The Jurong Region Line will be developed to support the Government’s urban decentralisation strategy, and car-lite policy.

In announcing the Jurong Region Line, Mr Khaw recounted the evolution of Jurong and the western part of Singapore:

“Until the 1950s, Jurong was mostly swamps, jungles and small fishing villages. In 1961, Dr Goh Keng Swee mooted the idea of turning Jurong into an industrial park, to catalyse Singapore’s economic development. Today, it is a major economic and residential centre, home to 300,000 residents and workplace for 400,000, and growing.

Jurong’s transport infrastructure has improved in tandem with its evolution. The expressways came first, with the Pan Island Expressway in 1981 and the Ayer Rajah Expressway in 1988.

Trains came around the same time. The EWL was extended to Lakeside in 1988, and Boon Lay in 1990. The same year, a spur line linked up Jurong East and Choa Chu Kang. It was subsequently merged with the rest of the NSL in 1996. The EWL was further extended to Joo Koon in 2009, and to Tuas last year.”

The Minister said that the Jurong Region Line marks a quantum leap in the Government’s improvement of transport infrastructure for Jurong.

The Jurong Region Line will be 24km long with 24 stations, and will run above-ground. It will open in three phases, starting from 2026. The Jurong Region Line will give commuters route choices. For example, the two interchange stations at Choa Chu Kang and Boon Lay will connect the North-South Line (NSL) and East-West Line (EWL), giving commuters alternative travel routes.

“This will help to redistribute and relieve train loading between Choa Chu Kang and Jurong East stations, so that commuters can enjoy more comfortable rides,” Mr Khaw said.

The Jurong Region Line is expected to help develop the Jurong Lake District (JLD) into the largest commercial hub outside the CBD. Beyond the Jurong Lake District, the Jurong Region Line will also support the development of the Jurong Innovation District into a next generation industrial estate. Together with the upcoming Kuala Lumpur-Singapore High Speed Rail, commuters will have convenient connections not just within western Singapore, but also to Malaysia.

Mr Khaw said: “When all these plans come together, Jurong will be a water front business hub nestled in greenery, served by good public transport connections, as well as amenities to support active mobility. This is our vision for Jurong – a vision which I am fully confident that our fourth-generation leadership will be able to discharge and make it a reality.”

And added: “To realise the vision, there will be inconveniences and some heartaches along the way when construction begins. So let me first thank in advance the residents, schools and businesses near the Jurong Region Line construction sites. LTA and the contractors will minimise any inconvenience. In life, no pain is no gain. But for this, we will make sure small pain but big gain.”

It was earlier announced that the high-speed rail (HSR) project connecting Singapore with Kuala Lumpur is expected to deliver higher property prices and rev up commercial and retail activity in the Jurong Lake District area. The Land Transport Authority (LTA) has called for tenders for the design and construction of tunnels and associated facilities for the HSR and construction is expected to start next year.

Developments for the Jurong Lake District are centered around the Jurong East MRT station. With established businesses around the MRT station – like the International business park, IMM (a major shopping mall), along with other new shopping malls, a hospital, educational hubs, high rise offices and residential units – Jurong Lake District is looking very credible as a regional centre.

The Transport Minister’s announcement of the Jurong Region Line now, is expected to boost the prices of properties not just in the Jurong Lake District area, but also in areas where the interchanges are expected to be built – in Boon Lay and Choa Chu Kang.

Besides ramping-up the prices of landed and non-landed private properties in the western region of Singapore, the announcement of the Jurong Region Line may also lift the resale prices of Housing & Development Board (HDB) flats in that area.

According to HDB’s recent announcement, the median resale prices of flats in the Jurong and Choa Chu Kang areas commanded some of the lowest prices.

All this may change with the Jurong Region Line, especially for Choa Chu Kang which is earmarked to be one of the interchanges for the new western line – especially for flats which have more than 60 years in its lease.

HDB resale flat prices fell by 0.8 per cent, from 132.6 in 4th Quarter 2017 to 131.6 in 1st Quarter 2018, but if past property booms are indicative, HDB resale prices will rebound soon as it is unlikely that the Government will allow the HDB resale prices to drop for a continued period without intervening to correct it.


If you are home-hunting, our Panel of Property agents and the mortgage consultants at icompareloan.com can help you with affordability assessment and a promotional home loan. Just email our chief mortgage consultant, Paul Ho, with your name, email and phone number at [email protected].