7 12, 2013

Doctors need to talk to their patients, part 1

2019-08-30T16:34:14+08:00December 7th, 2013|Articles, Stories|

By Benjamin Wong Injuries are the most common type of case Transient Workers Count Too encounters. For workers as with anyone, getting injured is far from a pleasant experience, to put it euphemistically. But as the many stories published have documented, the accident itself is often only the start of a worker's problems and difficulties

6 12, 2013

Who said what to the doctor?

2019-08-30T16:34:14+08:00December 6th, 2013|Articles, Facts, research, analysis, News, Our Stand|

About one in three injured workers, when brought to medical attention after an accident, find that it is the boss or company representative who tells the doctor what caused the injury. The worker doesn't get a chance to speak. Yet, it is rare that the boss or company representative witnessed the accident. Another one-third of

30 11, 2013

Worker couldn’t tell family he’s injured: “I know they will headache”

2019-08-30T16:34:14+08:00November 30th, 2013|Articles, Stories|

By Gabriel Liong After working a long shift plus an additional four hours of overtime, Sahajan was looking forward to a restful night. It was 9.15pm. His day at the shipyard had begun at 7.30am. Climbing into the back of his company’s lorry, Sahajan made himself comfortable for the ride back to the dormitory. Little

29 11, 2013

Plug gaps in system to reduce illegal work

2019-08-30T16:34:15+08:00November 29th, 2013|Media Coverage, News, Our Stand|

Transient Workers Count Too's letter in response to an article about foreign workers working illegally (Straits Times, Monday, 25 Nov 2013, summarised here) was published in the newspaper's letters section on Friday 29 November. This is the text of the letter: Plug gaps in system to reduce illegal work When injured or unpaid foreign workers

23 11, 2013

Menton diary, part 1

2019-08-30T16:34:15+08:00November 23rd, 2013|Articles, Stories|

18 Nov 2013, Monday evening A small group of five men approach TWC2 executive committee members Debbie Fordyce and Alex Au at our free meals location in Little India, telling us that they've not been paid and have lost their jobs. Two more workers arrive and Alex sits down with all seven of them to

19 11, 2013

Issuing payslips do not add significantly to admin cost

2019-08-30T16:34:16+08:00November 19th, 2013|News, Our Stand|

Volunteer Christine Pelly and social worker Karno distribute information flyers (in Tamil) to a worker near Sembawang MRT station 19 November 2013 Media Statement For immediate release Issuing payslips do not add significantly to admin cost; MOM should not accept such an excuse to delay making it mandatory Transient Workers Count Too is

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