Showing posts with label Environment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Environment. Show all posts

07 November 2009

A country, a city, a garden or a hotel?

Things are getting "curiouser and curiouser", as Alice said in The Land of Oz ...

But it may go some way to explain why we are "Hotel Singapore Inc" (no longer "Singapore Inc") ...
  • why homes are commoditized for en bloc flipping ...


  • why the law technically provides for en bloc sale immediately upon issuance of Temporary Occupation Permit (viz, when owners take possession of their spanking new condominium/apartment unit) ...


  • why condos of 15-25 years of age are pulverized under a wrecker's ball despite flavour-of-the-day hype about Sustainable Development, bearing in mind that some of these condos were designed by renowned architects and some with still-stunning aesthetics as part of post-independent Singapore's modern architectural legacy ...


  • why our collective sense of community, of rootedess, of time and of space in our nascent nationhood are yanked out thoughtlessly and almost zealously ...


  • why ownership of a refrigerator made in Malaysia outlasts ownership of a condo unit built on Singapore island ...
In August 2009 around the time of our National Day celebration, we learned from Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew's response to NMP Viswa Sadasivan's high-falutin' maiden speech in Parliament that our National Pledge enshrines mere "aspirations". Uh-oh ...

Less than three months later, our Law Minister Mr K Shanmugam affirmed at the Q&A session of the New York State Bar Association (NYSBA) Rule of Law Plenary Session on 28 Oct 2009 that in fact "We are a city. We are not a country". Voila!

Oi, before you can finish uttering "Majullah Singapura", the powers-that-be may well say that we are possibly only a garden, and not even a city (much less the oft-touted "City In A Garden")!

Now, on a more serious note (ie, not so tongue-in-cheek, although I have absolutely no idea where else to store my tongue these days in the face of recent ministerial pronouncements), it was indeed thought-provoking to read Singapore Chief Justice Chan Sek Keong's keynote address at NYSBA's Annual Fall Meeting on 27 Oct 2009 that:

-- "rule of law simply means the supremacy of the law, without reference to whether the law is just or unjust";

-- "the Constitution declares that any law inconsistent with the Constitution is null and void but it does not expressly provide for a procedure for nullifying and voiding such law. But because the judicial power of Singapore is vested in the judiciary, the legislature and the executive have accepted the legitimacy of the courts to exercise this power";

-- "the courts have the power to review legislation and executive acts to determine whether they are unconstitutional. They also have the power to review executive acts to determine whether they are contrary to law. So long as the power of judicial review exists, the rule of law exists".

The speeches and events arising from NYSBA's Annual Fall Meeting have indeed made me "curiouser and curiouser" as to when has the Singapore Judiciary exercised its review powers, if at all? Surely, in our 44 years of nationhood, there would have been occasions, even if rare, on the assumption (and presumption) that we have the best of men and women with the kindest of intentions amongst the powers-that-be?

Now, we all know what curiosity eventually did to the cat! But do indulge me with some vocal room for plaintive meowing:
Who checks the checker when checker doesn't check?

Or maybe there is nothing to check? Or maybe the checks affirmed that everything was 100% A-OK at all times? Or maybe if something was a little askew at one time, the checker just had a quiet word with the checked and everything was straightened out pronto without we suckers being made any wiser. As the old sayings go: "Silence is golden"; "Ignorance is bliss"; "What you don't know won't hurt". Who am I to doubt such ancient wisdom, eh?

But, but, but ... now that we know our independent Judiciary has "the power to review legislation and executive acts to determine whether they are unconstitutional ... the power to review executive acts to determine whether they are contrary to law", perhaps they should exercise such judicial independence and their powers to review the Land Titles (Strata) Act, especially within the present context of "our own political, social and cultural values", as our Honourable Chief Justice puts it.

The proof of the pudding is in the eating. Such review would showcase the judicial independence that Singapore is trying so darn hard to convince all and sundry, especially after the International Bar Association Human Rights Institute Report of July 2008 entitled "Prosperity versus individual rights - Human rights, democracy and the rule of law in Singapore". http://www.ibanet.org/Human_Rights_Institute/Work_by_regions/Asia_Pacific/Singapore.aspxore.aspx

Perhaps, initiating a judicial review to "make an unjust law just" and also "do right by the people" may go some way to lend greater credence to Singapore's assertion of judicial independence.
In other words, a whiter-than-white exercise - without any punning intention on my part with the People's Action Party all-white party dress colour!

Over our 44 years of nationhood with 2nd and 3rd generational Singaporeans as present condo owners, how many more times are Singaporeans expected to sacrifice yet again in the name of our country (... errrr, city) (... ooops, garden) (... I mean, hotel)? [Whew, the cat nearly got my tongue!] This was the poser in para 6 of my previous blog entitled "A horse dumbstruck by a mutant 3-hump camel" dated 7 Oct 2009: http://singaporeenbloc.blogspot.com/2009/10/horse-dumbstruck-by-mutant-three-hump.htmlhump.html

QUESTION - Is this en bloc law:

(a) still "consistent with our Constitution", and
[L'est we forget - Do bear in mind that we are no longer demolishing slums nor building infrastructural/community facilities over the demolished condos under police powers for public safety or eminent domain powers for larger communal good.]

(b) not "contrary to law", and [Undoubtedly, an unjust law is still law. Ordinarily, the courts will justly dispense justice under unjust law. Now, would that make it "Just Injustice" or "Unjust Justice"??? Kind of comparable to the innocence of "1 + 1 makes 11", eh??? Ahhh ... but one should take heart from what the Chief Justice also said in the same NYSBA keynote address when he quoted a 1962 speech made by our founding father, Mr Lee Kuan Yew, to the University of Singapore Law Society: "Justice and fair play according to predetermined rules of law can be achieved within our situation if there is integrity of purpose and an intelligent search for forms which will work and which will meet the needs of our society".]

(c) "just and fair" within our present context of "political, social and cultural values"? [Context: This law impinges on strata-title private property rights in a land where (i) Singapore is the world's most densely populated city at 6,814 persons per sq km (Singapore surpassed Hongkong in 2009) and (ii) Singapore has the 3rd highest GDP at PPP per capita in the world at 49,288 international dollars (Singapore ranks after Luxembourg and Norway but ahead of the USA, Hongkong and even Switzerland according to World Bank 2008 data).] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(PPP)_per_capita#cite_note-1-1

On the one hand, the majoritianism powers invoked by this law are draconian. Yet on the other hand, the purported collectivism which birthed the majoritianism is thinly veiled and brazenly (purportedly legally) undermined from what I could piece together from the numerous en bloc battles fought in court (viz, some Majority Consenters and/or some Minority Dissenters could be paid more under separate private treaties with gag orders). Scant regard is paid to minority rights even where it affects something so basic as a ceiling over one's family that one has bought with 100% personal savings and provident funds!

As a classic Homer Simpson quote goes: "Never under-estimate the power of stupid people in large groups". Majoritianism is cleverly capitalized upon to unlock land value primarily for corporate developers because - in my opinion - the law is skewed and calibrated (not unwittingly, if you know our Gahmen) against extant individual homeowners. My opinion is buttressed by the stark and harsh reality invariably faced by nearly all homeowners of "twice the price, half the size, quarter the value" post-en bloc, as reflected in numerous press reports and even a mini-survey done by The Straits Times. That's why I reckoned the South Korean model of urban rejuvenation under their Hapdong Redevelopment laws mandating one-for-one (1-4-1) exchange is more just and equitable, being the lesser of two evils when majoritianism is allowed to prevail over private property rights (Gahmen has been made aware of South Korea's Hapdong Redevelopment laws since Aug 2007).

Other than occasionally fighting over Hello Kitty toys at McDonald's, petrol discounts and talking on handphones during cinematic screenings, Singaporeans generally are a law-abiding lot. However, to wit:

- The overwhelming caseload of the Strata Titles Boards resulted in a significant and hurried expansion of the tribunal in 2008 to cope with the backlog of en bloc battles, escalating into protracted en bloc legal battles at High and Appellate Court levels;

- The widely reported criminal acts committed by ordinary folks in various condo estates (so much for gracious living of the upper-middle and upper social class who could afford private property prices in Singapore);

- The neighbourhood and even matrimonial acrimony hearsay one encounters not infrequently over the past couple of years (and still persisting after the 2007 legislative amendments);

- The tribunal of their own accord even poked its fingers in an attempt to stop the collective sale of one controversial condo estate (viz, Regent Garden) for valuation reasons;

- The tax authorities (again, of their own accord) stepped in to claim their share of the spoils by way of overdue stamp duties that - according to en bloc market practice until the case of another condo estate (viz, Regent Court) - are paid only if the tribunal issues collective sale order; and

- The public disagreement (rare but distinct - thankfully healthy for being both rare but distinct) between the judicial courts and the tribunal over some landmark en bloc legal battles (viz, Horizon Towers, Regent Garden).

Perhaps (or surely?), the above symptons are a litmus indicator of the injustice and unjustness of this law. The aforementioned state of affairs already and unequivocably FAILS the Chief Justice's quote of the statement made by our founding father, Mr Lee Kuan Yew, in his 1962 address to the University of Singapore Law Society that "the acid test of any legal system is not the greatness nor the grandeur of its ideal concepts, but whether in fact it is able to produce order and justice in the relationships between man and man and between man and the State". And if I may add, "between one state organ and another state organ".

The Chief Justice's equanimity worries me when he said that "the very fact that we still debate this sort of question shows that the rule of law is very much alive and well in Singapore". Wah lau, surely the crux of the matter lies NOT in the "debate" but in the "execution"!

I am sufficiently perturbed as a Singaporean that Singapore seems to apply either the thick or the thin versions of the rule of law as it suits the powers-that-are according to each circumstance. Broadly, as the Chief Justice pointed out, "the thick describes the rule of law in liberal democracies". According to The Economist (15 Mar 2008), "the thick definitions treat the rule of law as the core of a just society" and "the 'declaration of Delhi' drawn up by the International Commission of Jurists in that city in 1959 followed this line in saying that the rule of law 'should be employed to safeguard and advance the civil and political rights of the individual' and create 'conditions under which his legitimate aspirations and dignity can be realised'."

As Singapore clearly does not fall into the above description and cannot be classified as a "liberal democracy" by any stretch of imagination, that must mean Singapore applies the thin version of the rule of law. However, Singapore traces her legal tradition back to common law (similar to the U.S. and the U.K. versus civil-law countries such as France and the Scandanavian bloc). Yet "common-law countries have more secure property rights, better protection of shareholders and creditors, more diversified share ownership, and tougher disclosure and liability laws" (The Economist, 15 Mar 2008). This en bloc law does anything but provides "secure property rights"!

Grrrr ... things just don't add up in this little red dot! So what else is new, eh? Such shilly-shally pattern in the legal arena is only consistent with Singapore's Prices and Earnings trends captured in UBS' 30 July 2009 report. Namely, on the one hand, Singapore rivals First World Countries in the areas of GDP, COL, Price Level but on the other hand, we rival Third World/Emerging Countries in terms of Wage Index, Domestic Purchasing Power, Purchasing Power of Wages (Big Mac/iPod), Working Hours - please double-click on the table in para 9 of my previous blog at: http://singaporeenbloc.blogspot.com/2009/10/horse-dumbstruck-by-mutant-three-hump.html

The Chief Justice with more hair than Yul Brynner but somewhat less dashing as Chow Yun Fatt drew a succinct analogy with the musical 'The King and I' where "the King is puzzled by the changes his kingdom has undergone. He sings a song which ends with these words:
When I was a boy
World was better spot
What was so, was so
What was not, was not
Now I am a man
World have changed a lot
Some things nearly so
Others nearly not.
Singapore has changed a lot in 50 years, some things nearly so, others nearly not".

Well, will the en bloc law change a lot next year, nearly so or nearly not?

They say: "Talk is cheap". In fast-paced Singapore in a fast-forward world, a decade from 1999 when the en bloc law first came into effect is nearly long. It's time to walk the talk! Otherwise, my movable refrigerator made-in-Malaysia will outlast my immovable real estate built-in-Singapore as I get "furiouser and furiouser" ...

12 August 2009

Who else is coming to the en bloc block party?

Update following PM Lee Hsien Loong's National Day Rally Speech on 16 Aug 2009: PM Lee said: "... it’s not just the hardware, but also the heartware, the memories which we are creating, which is what makes Singapore tick”. With such en bloc laws in place - what "heartware" is PM yabbing about when the "memories" are of neighbours forcing you to sell the roof over your head without your consent, throwing acid over your family car, super-glueing your main door to the door-frame, giving you a dirty look within the confines of the lift or taking you to court many times over??? Fostered by the type of laws, policies and practices in our country, "what makes Singapore tick" at the bottomline is the base value of "what's in it for me"! Is that what you, you and you want for our young nation? Sigh ... tragic ...
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Hmmm ... now that IRAS is NOT dancing until the music stops, I wonder who else is coming to the en bloc block party this National Day?
http://singaporeenbloc.blogspot.com/2009/07/iras-is-not-dancing-until-music-stops.html

Will the Ministry of Law (MinLaw) step up to the plate soon? Or is MinLaw still jiggling on the dance floor, eyes glazed-over ... in a daze after the 2006/07 kinetic en bloc frenzy and now bobbing mindlessly in a stupor, waiting for the en bloc tempo to pick up?

We waited for nearly a decade before the Land Titles (Strata) Act was amended in Oct 2007 - mostly in form but not much in substance. The Horizon Towers' en bloc saga exposed and settled so many fundamental issues and is a landmark court case for en bloc sales. The Appellate Court judges too did NOT dance until the music stopped. So how long do we have to wait with bated breath for MinLaw to stop pussying around?

It is noteworthy that the en bloc law was promulgated because of urban renewal and higher land-use intensity considerations. These considerations are manifestly under the purview of the Ministry of National Development (MND). Yet MND is NOT the primary driver for this en bloc law! Instead, it is MinLaw who in turn take on various passengers on this merry en bloc joy ride ... from MND, Urban Redevelopment Authority (URA), Building & Construction Authority (BCA), Singapore Land Authority (SLA), the Attorney General's Chambers (AGC), etc.

I probed and prodded about this curious state of affairs as to why MinLaw is the key "driver" (as opposed to being the dutiful "scribe" in crafting the legislation). Not surprisingly, I never got the answer. Hence, I mulled and mused as to whether it arose from a governance perspective (bearing in mind the overwhelming 80:2 composition of our Parliament and the application of party whip in parliamentary vote) - perhaps a need to instill institutional check-and-balance in the en bloc equation ... discreetly distancing MND from the key beneficiaries of this piece of legislation (viz, the Developer-buyers) because of the way Singapore's en bloc laws are skewed under Progressive Corporatism?

Personally, I do not doubt the wisdom of urban rejuvenation and I (grudgingly) accept the necessary evil of higher land-use intensity in teeny Singapore. Hence, these national needs are - to me - valid and, as a citizen, I support the "What" portions (viz, urban renewal and higher land-use intensity) but NOT the "How" bits (viz, the laws/policies as they presently stand). There are times when I ask what can I do for my country, just as there are times when I ask what is my country doing for me!!! Give-and-take, lol!

To achieve a national agenda item, there are many roads to go up this mountain, one of which is to use the engine of PPP (Public-Private Partnership). As PPP is used in many of Singapore's endeavours (locally, regionally or globally as we spread our wings to Suzhou and other parts of China, Indonesia's Batam, Malaysia's Johore Iskandar, etc), working relationships are naturally forged through the years under such PPPs. Whilst there is probably mutual appreciation of each other's desires and limits, I have no doubt that there is at ALL times a clear line dividing the PPP conjugal bed that is NEVER crossed. But that dividing line may well shift more to the left at certain times of the night or on certain days of the month or for certain seasons of the year, eh? After all, there are times to give and there are times to take - part of Life, eh? Whilst PPP is clearly NOT applicable to en bloc initiatives, can we deny that en bloc legislation promulgated by the PUBLIC sector is the very engine oil that directly lubricates PRIVATE sector Developer-buyers' smooth entry into existing sweet spots of prime/popular residential land? Whaddayou think???

In last year's 2008 National Day trilogy, I posited that - at a minimum - en bloc purchases meant "Buy one; Get one free" for Developer-buyers (if both could be sold at double price, then it would be 1-4-4 effectively). In case you are exclaiming "Oh" on a high note as you read this, here are 4 Os for you - Obviously Obscene Orgiastic Orifice for successful en bloc purchases! http://singaporeenbloc.blogspot.com/2008/08/en-bloc-why-it-is-not-right-for.html

If you are not breathless by now, you will appreciate why I concluded that en bloc sales are neither "right" for Majority Consenters (except en bloc flippers and serial condo raiders) nor Minority Dissenters!!! Rightfully, en blocs should PULL UP everybody (NOT just selected parties of Gahmen, Developer-buyers and en bloc flippers)! Instead, en blocs now PUSH DOWN existing owners who find themselves in a "Lose-Lose" situation (especially Owner-occupiers who heeded Gahmen exhortations to be prudent in using Central Provident Fund (CPF) savings to buy only one residential property as the roof over their heads)! The spiel of legal wrangles in Strata Titles Board, High Court and Appeal Court buttress my conclusion as we witness Minority sue Majority and vice versa, Majority sue Developer, and Developer threatens to sue Minority ... even the Strata Titles Boards joined the brawl but they lost!
For 2009, my National Day mullings and musings are provoked by the Straits Times article (10 Aug 2009) entitled "En bloc debate, HK style - Territory's debate holds up a useful mirror to practices in Singapore".

First off, Hongkong's existing en bloc legislation is much tighter and finely calibrated to:

(A) be more respectful of private property rights (90% collective consent),

(B) ensure sustainable redevelopment (property must be at least 40 years' old, taking into account the state of repair), and

(C) empower the tribunal to apply their mind and a more even hand - not just from a silo financial perspective but also from the multi-faceted social, historical, community and environmental perspectives.

Even then, Hongkong's proposed relaxation to 80% collective consent comes loaded with additional conditions where all but one unit has been acquired and the property is at least 50 years' old. The Straits Times reported: "And yet. the opposition to the proposed change in some quarters in Hongkong has been fierce. The change, they say, is tantamount to a subsidy for developers as it would mean that they would not need to entice as many homeowners with a good sale price".

Hongkong already has inherently tighter en bloc legislation even IF the proposed relaxation is passed, bearing in mind that (i) Hongkong severed her colonial ties only in 1997 (merely 12 years ago) compared to Singapore's 44 years of nationhood and (ii) Hongkong is reputedly sharper and nimbler when it comes to wheeling-and-dealing.

South Korea mandates "one-for-one" exchange in en bloc redevelopment to unlock the land value for existing owners even as their country achieves urban renewal and higher land-use intensity.

Singapore has an en bloc framework where there are only two certainties:

(1) Developer-buyer "buys one, gets one free" at a minimum because land value is primarily unlocked for the developer in an en bloc (NOT the existing owners) and the Gahmen takes a cut through development charges, differential premiums and stamp duties; and

(2) Owner-occupiers are guaranteed NOT being able to replace their homes sold by courtesy of their neighbours unless they are prepared to be a Squatter, Refugee, Downgrader or Downsizer - instead of the Utopia promised during the en bloc process, owners (especially owner-occupiers) find themselves in Ethiopia in the en bloc aftermath as they face-up to the harsh reality of "double the price, half the size, quarter the value"!

It almost borders on being a "legalized scam" (a classic oxymoron) conveniently brought to glorious fruition by Homer Simpson's home-truth of "never under-estimate the power of stupid people in large groups"! In "Hotel Singapore Inc" (sigh ... we have since graduated from "Singapore Inc"), I don't know about Majullah Singapura anymore! It is more a case of Merdeka Singapura, eh?

Incidentally, more than two years ago, I posted a blog entry suggesting a minimum 30-year timeframe before an estate could be considered for en bloc sale:
http://singaporeenbloc.blogspot.com/2007/03/en-bloc-knowledge-ten-year-timeframe.html
On the one hand, Gahmen has over the years raised the minimum standard of concrete quality in response to changes in design trends and building technologies. Thus, compared to buildings built in the 1960s-70s, the newer buildings are built with concrete with a higher deterioration tolerance. But on the other hand, Gahmen passed laws that have apparently resulted in the ignominious "youngest en bloc" record of a 4-year old building (Portofino at Sarkies Road) being demolished pursuant to an en bloc sale!

Interestingly, The Straits Times (28 Feb 2009) carried an article by the National University of Singapore (NUS) Civil Engineering Deputy Head who wrote about Design for Disassembly (DfD) process. This involves "the management of resources throughout the life cycle of a building - from extraction of raw materials, through manufacturing, design, construction and operation, to the eventual demolition ... the next generation of buildings constructed in Singapore can be viewed as store houses of future building materials". Whilst DfD is made out to be an environment preservation effort, I have niggling suspicions that it will likely fuel the current "throw-away" consumerism in much the same way that it is now cheaper to discard refrigerators, cookers and air-conditioners than to repair them.

Even more interestingly, there is now a trend toward Biomimicry where future buildings will hopefully be designed and built to mimic Mother Nature's symbiotic "waste-not-want-not" value system. Hopefully, biomimicry technology will be priced at a high enough level to deter "throw-away" consumer behaviour and force our urban planners to be more visionary and proact ahead of the curve (instead of react behind the curve).

Under our present en bloc legislation, we have this 10-year estate age distinction. But, technically, we could go en bloc one day after the Temporary Occupation Permit (TOP) is issued if 90% (by share value and strata title area) agree within this 10-year period (majority consent level drops down to 80% once estate hits 10 years in age). Tracing back to the old parliamentary and Select Committee records, this bizarre "10-year estate age" legislative provision came about because the Gahmen was ostensibly concerned about the possibility of say, a small but new development sandwiched between two small/mid-size but very old estates, thus hampering optimal redevelopment of the two adjoining estates.

However, instead of taking the lead from Hongkong where the tribunal would be given the responsibility and discretion of evaluating the circumstances on a case-to-case basis (perhaps in consultation with urban planning authorities) for such OCCASIONAL EXCEPTIONS, Singapore took what I consider to be the easy and lazy way-out, viz, by applying the law carte blanche but with a higher consent level set at 90% (instead of the usual 80%). Hence, whenever I read press reports of Singapore's Sustainable Development initiatives, I'd take it with a huge dollop of salt and let out a snorting laugh from one end (adoi ... no need to ask what emanates from the other end lol!).

In Life, one can't get too serious, eh? And they say that "Laughter is the best medicine" too!

26 April 2007

Sustainable DE-Construction and Sustainable Living

GENTLE REMINDER: The Ministry of Law's Public Consultation on the forthcoming legislative review of this law is ENDING SOON (Closing Date: 12 May 2007).
Pls, pls, pls do your part and e-mail your views to:

MLAW_enbloc@mlaw.gov.sg
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With the Gahmen's latest buzzword being "Sustainable Construction" following Indonesia's sand ban and granite chip control, I have coined the flip-side of:
"Sustainable DE-Construction" and
"Sustainable Living".
PLS SEE THE UPDATE IN MY OTHER COMMENTS UNDER "30-YEAR EN BLOC TIME-BAR" IN THIS BLOG-SITE.

25 March 2007

30-year en bloc time-bar

UPDATE on 26 Apr 2007:
Following Indonesia's sand ban and granite chip control, the Gahmen's new buzzword is "Sustainable Construction".

I'd like to propose the flip-side of this coin: "Sustainable DE-Construction"!

Home ownership in Singapore: 90.9% in 2006 (Dept of Statistics).
Singaporeans in HDB flats: 86% in 2006 (Ministry of National Development).
After discounting PRs in HDB flats and those in landed properties, it may be a fair estimate that strata-title private residential estates probably account for 8% of Singapore's residential housing.

With the last decade's en bloc frenzy and this millennium's frenetic en bloc pace, I would suspect that a fair portion of this 8% aggregate have been or will be redeveloped after successful collective sales. Therefore, it is high time that the Ministry of National Development must work hand-in-hand with the Ministry of Law on "Sustainable DE-Construction" and seriously consider imposing a time bar of 30 years from TOP (Temporary Occupation Permit) against collective / en bloc sales for private strata-title residential properties.

If this 30-year time-bar is adopted in this 2007 legislative review, it would effectively mean that residential estates that obtained TOP on or after 1977 would NOT be available for collective sales in 2007 but in 2008, those apartments that got TOP in 1977 would become available for collective sales.

MACRO SOCIO-ECONOMIC BENEFITS of this proposal - In addition to all the other equally cogent justifications set out in paragraphs 1-6 below, this 30-year en bloc time-bar mechanism will:

(i) calibrate the supply of developed land relative to the land released by the Gahmen in Government Land Sales, thus improving the accuracy of the Gahmen's target land supply;

(ii) temper the supply of apartments available for rental to the foreign talent/migrant influx, thus minimizing demand/supply distortions and keeping rental rates and Cost of Living Index on a more even keel;

(iii) reduce the immediate demand for sand and granite chips as there will be a curtailed supply of private strata-title land for redevelopment under collective sales; and

(iv) buy time for more incisive studies on "Sustainable LIVING" in glass-and-steel structures in our Tropics which will only get hotter with global warming (surely the Gahmen is not just interested in solving the Developers' one-time problem of higher construction cost without caring about the Citizens' ongoing problem of higher utilities bill if we need more air-conditioning to cool down the heat trapped in our new glasshouses with windows shut tight when we are at work/school, thus negating any cross-ventilation designs and further accelerating global warming).
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1. Existing law: 10-year time-frame - The present law says "less than 10 years" and "10 years or more" . Ten years! This would be hilariously funny if it wasn't so tragic. Technically, collective sale is possible on Day 1 of issuance of TOP (Temporary Occupation Permit)! Bizarre, eh?

2. Context - How long did your fridge last? Mine is still frightfully cold after 13 years! Man, we are talking about bricks and mortar here. And we are talking about an asset ranging from at least half a million bucks to nearly $3mn - depending on size and location!

3. Proposed 30-year en bloc time bar - Given our finite-resource Planet Earth, shouldn't the Gahmen legislate a minimum time bar against collective sales for the first 30 years from TOP? To put things in context, even a JTC factory lease is commonly 30 years + 30 years. That's for a factory - What more of our "apartment homes" with presumably legal freehold/99-year leasehold "air space"?

The first Collective Sale Agreement (CSA) attempt on my estate was four years from TOP - even the central air-conditioning system provided by the developer to me was still under warranty! There were two apartment buildings in District 9 that met their demise at a tender age (viz, a 10-storey apartment block called Devon-something near the junction of Killiney Road/Devonshire Road was demolished some 6-7 years after TOP and it is now part of the construction site for the upcoming One Devonshire condo; another block of about that height called Saint Thomas View at Saint Thomas Walk is about 11 years old and is now under demolition).

4. Other countries - One lawyer commented at a talk given at my town club said that Singapore is the only country in the world with this kind of en bloc / collective sale legislation based on a specified percentage of majority consensus for PRIVATE properties. Not surprising to me as Singapore usually aspires to be the First in something or other, eh? Recently, I gathered from another source that Hongkong is also contemplating urban renewal legislation but the earliest date for a building to be considered for such enforced collective sale is 40 years from TOP equivalent.

5. Other perspectives - Let's look at this issue from various perspectives:

(a) Mega Picture: The Gahmen has announced a target population of 6.5mn people within the next 40-50 years (up by a whopping 45% from the 4.483mn as of 2006). The Singapore Tourism Board's target tourist arrivals for 2007 (just one year) is 10.2mn visitors.

(b) Helicopter View: Pre-1960s, Singapore’s area was 581.5 sq km. After nearly 50 years, we are 699.4 sq km as of 2005 (geez wheez, we are 20% bigger!). Unless Mother Nature and/or God (sorry lah, even the PAP in their angelic white is not in this league) cause tsunamis to shift our neighbours' coastline further away, or seismic movements to shrink their land mass or meltdown from global warming to submerge the nearby lands, this 699.4 sq km plus another 3-7% is about it. Anything more will probably trigger "Close Encounters of the Fourth Kind"!

(c) Roof-top View or more accurately, your kitchen window view): Bearing in mind the above Mega Pic and Chopper View - if you peer out from your kitchen window, you may see salivating developers/ housing agents/ neighbours hovering around and hoping to force you into a collective sale with various bits of legislation and policies and regulatory gaps whereever convenient in order to facilitate this forcing as the Unseen Hand. Hey, come to think of it ... since Singapore can have an ANTI-SPAM LEGISLATION, shouldn't there be similar protection of home owners from incessant cold calls and other forms of harrassment from marketing agents/developers? We can't even live in peace in our own homes every time the property market goes into a spasmodic en bloc frenzy!

6. Other implications - I am also advocating a minimum 30-year time bar from the date of issuance of TOP because:

(a) Land use efficiency: Given the pressures of urban renewal, shouldn't the Gahmen first review the area set aside for Good Class Bungalows? These will continue to be the most inefficient use of land even as they tear down bungalows to squeeze in a few semi-Ds. No doubt, it would represent a loss of part of our architectural heritage but at least it is on willing-buyer-willing-seller basis and affects only one property owner. Likewise for golf courses - get real, man! Our 699.4 sq km is already pushing the boundaries to the limit before we hit (nah - more likely - get hit with) "Close Encounters of the Fourth Kind" with our neighbours. On this teeny red dot, access to a golf course in Singapore is an ultimate luxury - and rightly so! If I have to lose my home, you can stop playing golf in Singapore unless you are of ultra-high-net-worth or you just trundle your golf cart up north or down south. It's almost obscene when you put things in context. Where GCBs and golf courses are concerned, we have optimal correlation of Minimum Impact-Maximum Benefit.

(b) Environmental impact: Now that Indonesia has banned sand exports and controlled granite supply, it may be timely for the Gahmen to consider the environmental impact of such a feverish pace of CSAs.

This Land Titles (Strata) Act has unwittingly created a senseless contradiction. We harp on Asian values, of which frugality is one. Yet this piece of legislation fosters wanton wastage as gleaming marble floors of less than 10 years (or even of 35 years if well-maintained) go under the wrecker's ball. Expensive double-glazed full-height glass panes get smashed to smithereens. Window frames in perfect condition are left mangled in the demolition rubble. Did you know that to make just one metric tonne of aluminium for our window frames, it takes an obscene amount of energy and causes greenhouse gas emissions of 991 kg of carbon dioxide equivalents?

Whilst we can source for alternative building materials and go hi-tech with intelligent building designs and surround our whole apartment with planter boxes, our tropical climate (which will only get hotter and drier with progressive global warming) unfortunately doesn't lend itself to all-glass-and-metal buildings as these will be more energy-intensive with more powerful air-conditioning needs and lots of planter box watering. Before the advent of air-conditioners, the maharajahs of India built really thick concrete/stone walls to keep cool in their searing summer heat. Even the rural poor in China continue to live in caves to protect themselves from weather extremes. Unlike those in Dubai, we have no oil! Unlike those in Malaysia, the Philippines or Vietnam, we also have no fields to grow oil palms, sugar cane or maize for our bio-fuels!

(c) Architectural legacy: We have already razed a huge part of our architectural heritage from colonial and pre-war days. We are now razing even our modern Singapore architectural legacy. Ever noticed the design differences in apartments built in the 60s, 70s, 80s, and 90s? Even the window grille designs are different from each decade. Our architectural legacy speaks to us - in terms of cultural influences, climatic environment, social values, political events (eg, why apartments built a year or so after the 2007 Indonesian sand-ban have so little concrete structures)!

On the one hand, our Gahmen spends a lot on museums, parks and the arts. On the other hand, it unwittingly destroys our Living Heritage (be it buildings which are our homes, the flora and fauna in little pockets of natural forest, the homegrown artistic talents).

Do we want to see a model of our National Library monument in some exhibition? [Up to now, I still can't believe that we tore down a piece of Singapore history for a short dinky tunnel that saves possibly up to 12 minutes' travelling time in a worst-possible traffic jam ... unless it provides some strategic underground alternative to the nearby Istana that we can only guess at.]

Do we only want to see photos of apartments built in the 60s or 80s? Do we want to just walk in a manicured park? Do we want to visit the Raffles Museum to be sure that we will see what a stuffed-up Buffy Fish Owl looks like instead of keeping alive the habitat where you are likely to chance upon this rare bird as one of Life's unexpected and unplanned pleasures?