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Singapore may publicise images of litterbugs to catch offenders

LaksaNews

Myth
Member
SINGAPORE: In a crackdown on litterbugs, Singapore may publicise images of offenders in community spaces so members of the public can help identify them.

Identified offenders will be dealt with under the law, including being fined or charged in court, the National Environment Agency (NEA) said.

"Care will be exercised" in cases committed by young children, the elderly or vulnerable groups, the agency added.

Feedback on littering has risen 15 per cent from 2022 to 2023, compared with the two years before the pandemic, said Senior Parliament Secretary Baey Yam Keng, while detailing the Ministry of Sustainability and the Environment's (MSE) spending plans on Monday (Mar 4).

Authorities will increase the number of closed-circuit television (CCTV) deployments by four times to around 1,000 a year to step up surveillance against littering.

The NEA also plans to conduct more, larger scale and higher visibility blitzes at "cleanliness hotspots", from 21 last year to more than 100 this year.

Corrective Work Orders, where recalcitrant offenders are required to clean public areas for at least three hours, will be conducted at hotspots. About 1,600 Corrective Work Orders were issued between 2021 and 2023.

Mr Baey noted that education efforts and campaigns have paid off, and Singaporeans are "generally civic-minded".

"However, we continue to observe some persistent issues, that require us to go beyond just public education," he said.

"This year, we will be working more closely with the community and ramping up our efforts to address persistent pain points ... The pandemic may be over, but Singapore needs a clean environment to be well-prepared to tackle future public health threats."

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CLEANING UP DIRTY TOILETS​


To crank up other public hygiene standards, Singapore is also setting up a task force to deal with dirty toilets and stepping up controls against pests such as rats.

The Public Toilets Taskforce will review ways to improve the cleanliness of public toilets, particularly those at coffee shops and hawker centres.

The move comes after a study last November that found dirty public toilets remain a bugbear despite years of campaigns.

Coffee shop toilets were seen to be as dirty as they were three years ago, although those at hawker centres had improved. The overall perception of public toilets in the study was unfavourable.

Co-chaired by Mr Baey and chairman of the Public Hygiene Council Andrew Khng, the task force will comprise representatives from public sector agencies, town councils, trade associations, non-governmental organisations, academia, professionals, premises managers and industry associations.

The task force will develop measures to improve hygiene standards for all public toilets, including through infrastructure, cleaning and public education.

In 2023, close to 240 public toilet-related enforcement actions were taken against premises owners or managers.

To tackle the growing rat problem, NEA will trial surveillance cameras with thermal detection capabilities in outdoor and back-lane areas.

The data will be used to help premises operators better coordinate cleaning, waste management and rat control measures. It could also be used in investigations against those that do not dispose of waste properly.

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