SINGAPORE - A woman was killed after a tree fell on her in Marsiling Park on Thursday morning (Feb 18). The Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) said that they were alerted to the incident at about 8.15am and found a person trapped under a fallen tree. SCDF used cutting equipment to extricate the trapped woman, who is believed to be in her late 30s. The person was pronounced dead at the scene by paramedics. According to eyewitnesses, a loud crack was heard just before the tree fell, pinning the woman under it. About 10 passers-by tried to lift the tree to help the woman but were unsuccessful. Secondary 3 student Kayden Teo and his friend were among those who tried to help. The 15-year-old said: "We were walking across the bridge (over the pond) and heard a loud crack and a splash. A tall tree fell and we ran over to help a woman who was stuck underneath it." He added that SCDF officers arrived soon after. Apart from police and emergency services officers, the park was mostly empty on Thursday morning when The Straits Times visited. A large section of walkway had been cordoned off and a blue tent was seen on the walkway. A large blue canvas was used to cover the area where the tree had fallen. The Straits Times has contacted NParks for comment. NParks personnel investigating fallen tree in Marsiling Park A body being brought away from the scene at Marsiling Park on Feb 18, 2021. ST PHOTO: GAVIN FOO More on this topic Related Story 1 killed, 4 injured after huge Tembusu tree falls at Botanic Gardens Related Story 14 people taken to hospital after tree falls in Sembawang Park
SINGAPORE - With the Covid-19 pandemic, public transport ridership fell last year as expected, a slide which broke a trend of consecutive rises in the previous 15 years. The Land Transport Authority (LTA) said on Wednesday (Feb 10) that average daily ridership for buses and trains fell by 34.5 per cent to 5.04 million - an 11-year low. Trains bore the brunt of the pandemic-induced change which forced many to work from home. MRT and LRT rides fell by 41 per cent to 2.162 million a day. Bus ridership fell by 30 per cent to 2.878 million a day. The taxi and private-hire car sector, which is considered a hybrid between public and private transport, also took a hit. Taxi rides dropped by 38 per cent to 219,000 a day, while private-hire car trips fell by 29 per cent to 297,000. This is the first time that the LTA has released annual private-hire numbers along with taxis, and it shows what many observers have suspected for some time - that taxis have now taken a backseat to private-hire cars. The drop in public transport usage has raised questions about the financial sustainability of the network, which was designed with pre-pandemic usage in mind. Singapore University of Social Sciences (SUSS) transport economist Walter Theseira said it is unclear if usage levels will return to pre-pandemic levels, and whether efforts to persuade people to work more from home would ever take root permanently. "It is really hard to evaluate this because previous efforts to get workplaces to adopt flexible work and other practices have failed to deliver significant changes. The question is whether this time is different," he said. "As more data come in from places like China, where the pandemic has been under control for many months, we may have a better sense of whether work-from-home can really be maintained after the authorities lift restrictions." Either way, he said the financial implications for infrastructural investments and operational viability are vast. "You won't want to assume that there will be high work-from-home rates, only for the pattern to reverse quickly," he noted. "For commercial viability, I think not just in Singapore but also globally, this calls into question any licensing model which requires operators to cover costs and make profits based on fare revenues." More on this topic Related Story Fewer commuters satisfied with Singapore’s public transport last year compared with 2019: Survey Related Story Covid-19 pandemic still taking a toll on public transport worldwide Prof Theseira said a government contracting model, where the state assumes revenue risk (such as the bus operations here), might be more viable. "It's basically likely to be cheaper for government to provide that guarantee than for operators to absorb the risk and change the terms they bid on," he said. "Government can raise funds through taxes; operators will have to tap capital markets or beg the government for bailouts." The head of SUSS' Urban Transport Management Masters programme also said that the whole premise of public transport subsidies may have to be tweaked. "It's an equity issue because it's only a minority of public transport users who really need high subsidies," he noted. "Moving to a system where fares go up, but income targeted subsidies also go up, may be fairer in the long run." More on this topic Related Story US travel site ranks Singapore's public transport system best in the world Related Story Satisfaction with taxis and private-hire cars in S'pore improved last year: Survey


