[Sg] - OYK says KF Seetoh is talking nonsense

Calls grow for reform as Bukit Canberra Hawker Centre faces scrutiny over fees and charity clauses
KF Seetoh’s criticism of Bukit Canberra Hawker Centre’s storage fees and charity meal clauses has intensified public debate on Singapore’s Socially-Conscious Enterprise Hawker Centre model. Many urge systemic reforms to protect hawker culture, balance community support with sustainability, and ensure transparent, fair management.


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14 August 2025
The Socially-Conscious Enterprise Hawker Centre (SEHC) model has come under heightened scrutiny after hawker advocate KF Seetoh raised concerns over storage space fees and charity meal clauses imposed by the operator of Bukit Canberra Hawker Centre, Canopy Hawkers Group.

Despite a clarification issued on 12 August 2025, online discussions continue to press for further examination of the hawker management model.

Many netizens are calling for a systemic overhaul and stronger national collaboration to safeguard Singapore’s hawker culture.

Canopy Hawkers Group responds to KF Seetoh’s claims over storage fee and charity meal clauses
Canopy Hawkers Group managing director Joey Tan told CNA on 12 August that storage charges — excluding GST — only apply to hawkers who opt for permanent fixtures such as cabinets or shelves behind their stalls.

The arrangement is formalised through a Temporary Occupation Licence (TOL) for the lease period. Hawkers leaving temporary items, such as blue baskets for overnight deliveries, are not charged.

Tan explained that enclosed storage was introduced following hawker requests to improve hygiene and deter pests.

Dispute over “Backyard Cluster” fee
The dispute began on 4 August when Seetoh alleged hawkers were billed for leaving delivery baskets behind stalls.

Minister for Health Ong Ye Kung responded on 11 August, stating there was “no practice of charging” hawkers for the use of blue baskets.

On 12 August, Seetoh posted an invoice, rental receipt, and WhatsApp exchanges with a hawker showing a S$70 “Backyard Cluster” TOL fee.

He argued that operators should charge only for fixed cabinets, not for holding goods temporarily.

He noted that the 0.48 square metre space was sometimes used for deliveries and sometimes for cabinets.

Canopy Hawkers Group did not dispute that the hawker had paid the fee but maintained it was for permanent storage.

The operator said enclosed cabinets support cleanliness and reduce contamination risks.

Charity meal clauses questioned
Seetoh also renewed criticism of SEHC contracts requiring hawkers to provide free meals to low-income residents — 30 meals monthly under a Community Relationship Management initiative and another 30 under “Pay-It-Forward”.

He noted that the contractual term “shall” made the clause binding and potentially enforceable.

Tan confirmed the scheme has not yet started, with preparatory work still underway, and expressed support for community contributions while declining to comment on removing the clause.

Seetoh urges national “hawker hackathon” to tackle systemic issues beyond storage fees and charity meal clauses
In a 13 August Facebook post, Seetoh urged Singaporeans to treat the dispute as an opportunity to unite rather than focus on blame.

While the immediate debate centred on storage fees and charity obligations, he argued these were symptoms of a deeper systemic problem in hawker management.

He called for a national rethink of hawker culture, covering governance, entrepreneurship, community, sustainability, tourism, and support systems.

Seetoh proposed a “hawker hackathon” involving government, hawkers, industry experts, and the public to develop a guide and rulebook for future hawker operators — including Housing and Development Board coffeeshops — under a new government department with independent advisors.

Calls grow for transparent, fair, and collaborative reforms to sustain hawker culture and community support
Comments on Seetoh’s Facebook page, Bukit Canberra Hawker Centre’s page, and CNA’s Facebook platform show broad agreement that reforms should prioritise fairness, transparency, and voluntary rather than mandatory charity.

Jack Sim, founder of the World Toilet Organization, warned that taxing hawkers to fund charity discourages newcomers at a time when the trade is ageing.

He criticised what he saw as the government’s reluctance to acknowledge flaws, arguing that denial prevents resolution of simple issues, such as dirty coffeeshop toilets.

Benny Se Teo, founder of Eighteen Chefs, echoed Seetoh’s sentiment that the issue is non-political and not about petty disputes but a call for collective action to rethink and rebuild hawker culture through systemic reform.


Questions on bid criteria and management fees
Veteran journalist Bertha Henson sought clarification on whether budget meals or pay-it-forward schemes are criteria in selecting operators. She also pressed for disclosure of management fees the government pays operators.

Henson criticised the inclusion of charity clauses in contracts when preparatory work had not begun, calling it premature even if the clauses are variable.


Suggestions for alternative community support

Some comments proposed offering 50% discounts during off-peak periods as a sustainable way to support the community while maintaining profitability.

Others called for reviewing all charges to better manage living costs.


A receipt shared by Seetoh also drew criticism for a “Table Cleaning Fee” of S$650, or 42.5% of stall rental.

With GST, the charge rises to S$708.50. Some questioned the fee’s necessity when diners already return trays and clean tables themselves.


Broader criticisms of SEHC model
Several comments targeted the perceived power imbalance between SEHC operators or government agencies and individual hawkers.

Critics argued hawkers should not be compelled to act as soup kitchens, especially if they face their own financial pressures, and questioned whether they receive subsidies in return.

Restrictive contract terms were also flagged, including fixed workdays, menu limitations, bans on cost-saving measures, and enforced charity obligations.

One comment likened this to imposing unpaid charity work as a key performance indicator on civil servants or ministers.


Concerns over rigid management style
A netizen described a negative experience applying for a stall at Bukit Canberra Hawker Centre, criticising Canopy Hawkers Group’s management style as overly rigid and more suited to running food courts than hawker centres.

The hawker cited rules such as rear-only stall access, no storage at back walkways or stall fronts, compulsory use of management-approved containers, and enforced clock-in/clock-out procedures with leave subject to approval.

Although later offered a stall, the hawker declined, calling it a good career decision.

The hawker claimed veteran hawkers rated the centre poorly for prioritising corporate-style control over hawker needs.


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Lawyer flags potential inaccuracy in Minister Ong’s “no penalties” claim, citing Lianhe Zaobao report
Singapore lawyer Yeoh Lian Chuan says Minister Ong Ye Kung’s statement on Bukit Canberra Hawker Centre’s charity meal scheme could be “false or misleading” under POFMA’s definition. He pointed to a Lianhe Zaobao report showing contracts contain penalty clauses for non-participation.


Published

on

14 August 2025
On 4 August, veteran food critic KF Seetoh alleged in a Facebook post that hawkers at Bukit Canberra Hawker Centre were contractually required to provide 60 free charity meals per month under a “Pay It Forward” scheme, and that penalties could be imposed for non-participation.

On 11 August, Minister for Health Ong Ye Kung — who is also the Member of Parliament for Sembawang GRC, where the hawker centre is located — responded on Facebook.

He stated: “There are no penalties if they do not or are unable to provide the meals. This simple, well-intentioned initiative was meant to encourage our hawkers to ‘Pay-It-Forward’. In any case, the initiative has yet to commence.”

Ong’s post sought to clarify that the programme was voluntary in spirit, not enforced, and carried no consequences for non-participation.

However, on 13 August, Lianhe Zaobao reported it had reviewed stallholder contracts signed in 2022 and found that they did contain penalty clauses tied to both the charity meal scheme and a loyalty programme.

Each breach would result in six demerit points and a S$50 fine.

Accumulating 12 points within a year could prevent lease renewal, while 24 points could lead to lease termination.

The next day, 14 August, Singapore lawyer Yeoh Lian Chuan referred to Zaobao’s report in a Facebook post.

He argued that Ong’s statement was, in his opinion, “false or misleading within the meaning of POFMA” because it could convey to at least some readers that no penalty clauses existed at all — rather than that they simply were not being enforced yet.

Yeoh stressed that he believed any inaccuracy was likely due to inadequate briefing rather than deliberate misrepresentation. Nonetheless, he saw the case as “yet another illustration” of why POFMA is, in his view, “a bad law”.

Context: POFMA’s scope and one-sided powers
The Protection from Online Falsehoods and Manipulation Act (POFMA) allows only ministers to issue correction or takedown directions.

In practice, this means a minister could only be subject to a correction direction if another minister chose to issue one — a scenario that has not occurred.

The Bukit Canberra Hawker Centre case involves a Social Enterprise Hawker Centre (SEHC), part of a government-managed public policy framework.

In theory, the matter could have warranted a POFMA direction from the Minister for Sustainability and the Environment, just as the Minister for Manpower previously issued one over reports by a Chinese-language site, The Online Citizen (TOC) and Gutzy Asia about the identity of a woman who had taken her own life.

Critics argue this shows POFMA’s reach over public policy issues — but also its one-sided nature, since ministers themselves are outside its enforcement scope.

Past use of POFMA on media reporting
The Online Citizen (TOC) has received multiple POFMA correction directions over the years, often not for its own editorial statements but for its reporting of remarks made by third parties.

In The Online Citizen Pte Ltd v Attorney-General [2021] SGCA 96, the Court of Appeal affirmed that under POFMA, it is the issuing minister who has the legal prerogative to determine the meaning of the statement in question.

The court held that challenges must be mounted on whether the statement is false as interpreted by the minister, rather than on whether that interpretation is the most reasonable or accurate reading in the eyes of the public.

This ruling places a high burden on recipients of POFMA directions.

A publisher must prove that the statement, in the meaning assigned by the minister, is true — even if the publisher disputes that this was the meaning they conveyed or intended.

The judgment did not examine how this broad interpretive power interacts with constitutional rights to freedom of expression under Article 14 of the Singapore Constitution, focusing instead on statutory compliance and process validity.

Critics say this creates a one-sided enforcement structure.

Because only ministers can issue correction directions, there is no public mechanism to compel corrections from ministers themselves, even if their own statements are later shown to be inaccurate.

Following two such correction directions in 2024 and 2025 — over TOC’s reporting on questions about People’s Action Party ministers’ sale and purchase of Good Class Bungalows and the circumstances surrounding state-owned rental property — TOC was once again classified as a Declared Online Location.

This designation makes it illegal for the site to receive financial benefits from its operations for the next two years, effectively crippling its ability to sustain itself commercially.

By contrast, Bloomberg and The Edge Singapore, both of which have been the subject of more than three POFMA “statements of fact” over their reporting, have not been issued with a Declared Online Location order.

Despite repeated queries, the Ministry of Digital Development and Information has not provided a direct explanation for this apparent double standard.

Minister Ong, who is also the Member of Parliament for Sembawang GRC where Bukit Canberra Hawker Centre is located, has not publicly addressed the apparent discrepancy between his “no penalties” statement and Zaobao’s reporting of the penalty clauses in stallholders’ contracts.

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Need some advice who ownself SLAP ownself again 9696 rike safe and effective mRNA jabs narrative lololololol
 
Nao he kenna debunked by lawyers too lololololol

Need some advice how to save him from the SHAME lololololol
can ask his cronies from canopy hawkers group to switch to new contract steathily and pofma the whole shbang from seetoh to lawyers to zaobao to hawkers. how can ministar be contradicted and faulted in sg? they are divine and flawless.
 
can ask his cronies from canopy hawkers group to switch to new contract steathily and pofma the whole shbang from seetoh to lawyers to zaobao to hawkers. how can ministar be contradicted and faulted in sg? they are divine and flawless.
PAP is the same as Nazis under Hitler
 
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