Some casino staff told to leave (ST 23 Jan)
Jan 23, 2010
Some casino staff told to leave
Applications to work at gaming tables rejected by the authorities

IT WILL be months before the first cards are dealt at Singapore’s two casinos, but several employees have already been fired because of stringent rules that dictate who can work there.
Resorts World Sentosa (RWS) has fired more than 30 casino employees, while Marina Bay Sands (MBS) has also told an unknown number of workers to go.
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Opinion: Poor Employment Practices – Lack of Compensation Package

Our Poor Employment Practics – Lack of Compensation Package
Written by: Gilbert Goh
Many people who were retrenched during the recent recession lamented how badly they were treated after been laid off by their companies. Though retrenchment is generally expected by many people when there is a down turn, more can be done by the authorities to ensure that compensation is paid out when someone is being laid off.
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My ST Forum Online Letter: Let’s strive for a kinder and softer society (19 Nov)
Nov 19, 2009
Let’s strive for a kinder and softer society
I APPLAUD the initiative by the Singapore Kindness Movement (SKM) last weekend to push for a kinder society. I hope each of us will bring kindness to our everyday life and not just that weekend.
Singapore has much progress to make in spreading kind acts throughout society. Many people are too stressed out by the struggle to make ends meet. The economic downturn does not help. In fact, it has forced many to strive to put themselves ahead in the workplace, oblivious to the feelings of their colleagues. Survival of the fittest seems to reign.
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Pregnant? You’re fired (Sunday Times 8 Nov)

The tough economic times – and more generous maternity benefits – appear to be prompting increasing numbers of firms to fire pregnant women or deny them their full entitlements.
There were 119 ‘pregnancy- related’ complaints lodged with the Ministry of Manpower (MOM) in the first nine months of the year – up from 72 for the whole of 2007, and 95 last year.
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Teachers and trainers are happiest: Poll (ST 19 Oct)

Teachers and trainers are happiest: Poll
Job portal also finds civil servants are happier than workers in private sector
By Gabriel Chen
IF YOU want to be happy at work, become a teacher or work in the service sector.
That is the key message that emerges from an online poll of 5,460 working adults conducted by JobsCentral. The job network portal asked respondents across Singapore how satisfied they were with
various aspects of their jobs to produce an overall ‘happiness’ score, with 100 signifying ‘very happy’ and 50 ‘neutral’.
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More than 100,000 employers to receive $890 million (Asiaone 22 Sep)
More than 100,000 employers to receive $890 million
Tue, Sep 22, 2009
AsiaOne
More than 100,000 employers, with whom about 1.4 million local workers are employed, will receive $890 million from the third payment of Jobs Credit on September 30, 2009.
Eligible employers will receive a letter of notification from the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (IRAS) by Thursday, September 24. This letter will inform them of the amount of Jobs Credit they will receive for the third payment.
Employers do not need to sign-up, as eligible employers will automatically be granted the Jobs Credit. This includes those who did not qualify during the first two installments.
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Facing Joblessness With Confidence – Be Prepared

This article was reproduced here in Jan 09.
Many who visited this blog site I believe will have been retrenched or preparing for retrenchment. However, it is not the end of the world yet.
The unemployed need to prepare themselves well if they are retrenched. Those with severance package definitely have the upper hand to wait out the prolonged down turn. Those without will face the future with less confidence.
Nevertheless, staying prepared for retrenchment even if one is working now help.
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She quit job as secretary to be a cabby (Asiaone 18 Sep)
She quit job as secretary to be a cabby

For the sake of her three children, she switched jobs from being a secretary to a taxi driver.
Her husband complimented her career move by becoming a taxi driver himself and they even became partners at work.
Four years ago, Mdm Yu Xiu Yun, 37, resigned from her secretarial job to pursue a career in the male-dominated taxi driving industry.
At the job interview, she said she had grown tired of her former job and resigned to spend time at home taking care of her children who were still schooling.
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Job interview cues that say “hire me” (New York Times 21 Sep)
Sep 21, 2009
WORKING LIFE
Job interview cues that say ‘hire me’
No set rules but courtesy and common sense give applicants the edge
NEW YORK: It is always fun to hear hiring managers recall the most boneheaded mistakes they have seen job seekers make during an interview: showing up in flip-flops, say, or taking a cellphone call while meeting the company president.
But that kind of cluelessness is rare. More common are the subtle missteps or omissions that can cause one candidate to lose out to another. If one person is sending out the right signals and behaving in the right way through each step of the process, he or she has a much better chance of landing the job – even with an inferior resume.
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How working parents can find jobs in a Recession (Business Week 16 Sep)

How Working Parents Can Find Jobs In a Recession
Posted by: Lauren Young on September 16
Even if the recession is over, the outlook for job seekers remains bleak.
I asked Tory Johnson (pictured here), who is chief executive officer of Women For Hire and author of Fired to Hired, to offer her career advice in an unsettled economy.
Question: Unemployment figures show that more men are out of work than women. What are your thoughts on this trend and how it is impacting workers?
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Singapore-born porn actress killed in California (Sunday Times 20 Sep)
S’pore-born porn actress killed in California
31-year-old beaten and suffocated; boyfriend charged with torture, murder
By Jamie Ee Wen Wei

In one of her MySpace accounts, Miss Felicia Lee wrote in her profile: ‘Growing up, I lived in many different places. But I was born and raised in Singapore. My family and I moved around a lot!’ Her family reportedly moved to Los Angeles, California, when she was 13.
A Singapore-born porn actress has been found dead in her apartment in the small city of Monrovia in Southern California.
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What it takes for foreigners to integrate in Singapore (Sunday Times 20 Sep)
What it takes for foreigners to integrate in S’pore
By Radha Basu, Senior Correspondent
At an in-house course a couple of months ago, a colleague voiced her deep apprehension about being crowded out of her ‘own backyard’. At MRT stations and offices, parks and pubs, she bumped into people whose accents and attire advertised their foreignness. Almost overnight, ‘they’ had overrun her tiny nation, she said.
She rationalised that she knew the nation needed foreigners to sustain its economic growth. But her heart, alas, sang a different tune. She felt upset, isolated. A stranger in her own home. Her predicament was not unique.
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Email from a Singaporean PR (15 Sep)
I want to discuss the matter relating to foreign professional in Singapore.
It seemed that local university students tend to face tougher competition once they graduate especially during this present recession.
Some of the foreign students, if my memory is right, were given scholarship by the Spore govt. I was reading the Indonesian newspaper in Indonesia and there is this advertisement by one of the Spore universities encouraging Indonesian student to apply for the scholarship.
There has been a survey that most local students prefer to work in other countries rather than in Singapore.
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The jobs that ate a family (The Daily Telegraph 19 Sep)

Gradma Di, left, daughter India, 11, mum Melissa Blackley, daughter Holly, 8, and dad John Anderson at home / John Fotiadis
SYDNEY mother-of-two Melissa Blackley is so obsessed with work that she doesn’t know what her children eat for lunch and hasn’t cooked dinner in two years.
She maintains her relationship with her partner of 18 years John Anderson via email. And each day the couple run a “dutch auction” to decide which parent will take daughter India, 11, to violin lessons or go to eight-year-old Holly’s extra-curricular activities.
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A Romance Writer Jabs at Singapore’s Patriarchs (New York Times 19 Sep)

Catherine Lim at her home in Singapore.
By SETH MYDANS
Published: September 18, 2009
Singapore
IT is the dress, she said, that catches the eye, the long silk sheath with the slits in the sides that offers what she calls “a startling panorama of the entire landscape of the female form.”
The dress is called a cheongsam, and the woman wearing it is Catherine Lim, 67, arguably the most vivid personality in straitlaced Singapore and, when she is not writing witty romantic novels or telling ghost stories, one of the government’s most acute critics.


