Another Week Beyond – 2019

Dear Friends,

We continued to enable internet connectivity and have pushed out another 40 computers to students who needed them. Digital inclusion is social inclusion and especially now, when it facilitates the strong social connections that are so important for our wellbeing.  Internet connectivity among our members will be uneven for a while more, even as we work at resolving the issue for the near and longer term.   As we provide devices to meet immediate needs, we are also working closely with IMDA and MOE to get our members onto government digital inclusion programmes.

Some members who had a head start with internet connectivity are those on our Community Independence Initiative project.  Last October (AWB -1940), they were issued tablets to monitor their income and personal development.  They are now reasonably proficient with the device and meeting online this week was a breeze. It was also a breath of fresh air that lifted spirits for members of the group.

A father of four teens has been working as a private-hire driver and a security guard.  Currently he has gone into security work full-time which means being requested to show up at least 3 times a week.  It is still a part-time job, but he reckons it is better than driving around for 3 hours and drawing a fare of $20 which does not cover car rental and petrol.  He shared that there is too much competition   because many white-collar workers have their fingers in the pie.  He added that these workers are currently employed but participating in the gig economy as a back-up plan in case they get retrenched. “Aiyah, I can’t do office work but now office workers take my job,” this father reflected wistfully.

Another participant lost her cleaner and play assistant jobs because the places that hired her  closed.  She thought that she could still hold on to her graveyard shift at a 24-hour convenience store but that closed too. “Things come in 3 lah, so now something new can come up,” was her hopeful posture.  A storekeeper in the group then assured her that he will speak to his boss about an opening because   the company had lost many   employees from Malaysia who are unable to leave their country.  This offer of help lifted everyone’s spirit as the opportunity appeared viable and it even attracted the interest of the father in security work as he wanted to be working more days.

The optimism and never-say-die attitude among the many low wage workers is admirable and as such, many take on 2 or more jobs to make ends meet.  Jobs where wages may fluctuate and often do not come with employment benefits. As we continued calling our members this week, many told us that they have been warned by their employers that their wages will drop when businesses reopen.  It has also come to our attention that gross family income often comes from small contributions made by different members of the household.  The efforts of teenagers, grandparents and parents add to the rice pot which is now empty because none of them have work.

Wage work pays from $5 to $10 an hour and many told us that with overtime, they take home about $50 to $70 a day.  Hence, families have been getting by because of the availability of long workdays with responsibilities that cannot be fulfilled working from home.  When we listen to all this, we cannot help wishing that the employment conditions of low-wages workers will improve soon.  The work we do does not command the same amount of wages, but it should at least command a level of respect that safeguards one’s health and the choice to call it a day after 8 hours of labour.

As of today, our Covid-19 Family Assistance Fund has   committed $ 462,370 to help 398 families get over this period. We will continue systematically to reach more families.

Wishing you and all at home, good health and peace of mind.

Sincerely,

Gerard

Our prime purpose in this life is to help others. And if you can’t help them, at least don’t hurt them. – Dalai Lama

PAST AWB POSTS

2610 – Oranges, Dates, and Party Plates

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2609 – How We Spend Our Time

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2608 – Holding The Middle

Written by The Beyond Editorial Team She has always cared for others. Long before we knew her, Mdm Sng* was already checking in on elderly neighbours, helping them navigate services, passing along information, gathering what they needed. When we began working in the area, she reached out quickly. Not for herself. For others. Over time, though, something shifted. There was no single incident. Just the quiet accumulation of strain. Our team had become leaner. Priorities evolved. Expectations were not always spoken clearly. Along the way, misunderstandings surfaced. Community tensions are rarely linear. They sit in the middle of relationships –

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2607 – Refreshing Our Purpose

Story Contributed by Shariffah, Community Worker In January, we gathered again in a familiar circle. Since then, three Capability Building sessions have brought together 26 Neighbourhood Leaders and Community Volunteers from three neighbourhoods. It was not a workshop in the traditional sense. It was a space to pause, reflect and ask ourselves what kind of community we are shaping together. The most recent session, Refreshing Our Purpose, did exactly that. It slowed the momentum of activity and returned us to the questions underneath the work: What are we building? For whom? And how do we know it is truly shared?

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2606 – Still Here

As shared by Daybet, Former Beyond Youth Twenty years had passed since Daybet last walked through the doors of Beyond’s office. The space felt smaller than he remembered, but not unfamiliar. Before he could fully take it in, he saw a face that pulled him straight back into memory. “Uncle George!” George paused. It took a second. Then recognition landed – fittingly, on the very day he marked 23 years of working at Beyond. What followed was the easy rhythm of reunion: updates exchanged, laughter over half-forgotten details, stories filling in the years that had slipped by. “You remember Daybet?”

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2605 – It Takes Time

Written by Wilson, Community Worker I first met Jamie* early last year. She sat close to her mother and said very little. When I asked her questions, her mother often answered first, then turned to Jamie to check if she wanted to add anything. Jamie listened carefully, nodding, offering short replies when she felt able to. Her mother had approached us for support because Jamie was no longer in education or employment. Since leaving school, Jamie spent most of her time at home. Apart from attending school previously, she rarely went out, and once that routine ended, her days became

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2604 – When Learning is Small Enough to Notice

Story Contributed by Jie Ying, Community Worker Last Saturday, we gathered to mark the end of a small Early Learning Programme class at Lengkok Bahru. The class began in June last year with seven children. Over time, some families moved on as needs shifted and priorities changed. By January, three children remained. We did not see this as a shortcoming. Community work often teaches us that participation ebbs and flows, and that small numbers are not a sign of failure but an invitation to pay closer attention. With fewer people in the room, there is more to notice. Parents sat

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2603 – When Youths Take the Field

Story Contributed by Yik, Resource Mobilisation In December last year, a small group of children gathered at Delta Sports Centre for a football session. There were six of them, between four and nine years old. One of the youngest arrived with his mother, staying close as the day unfolded. The session wasn’t run by adults or coaches brought in from outside. It was planned and led entirely by Learning Coaches – youths from the community who already spend their weeks supporting younger children with learning. Over time, these youths have become familiar faces to families, people children listen to and

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PAST AWB POSTS

2610 – Oranges, Dates, and Party Plates

Story Contributed by Dira, Neighbourhood Leader Some evenings come together in unexpected ways. Our monthly community birthday celebration in Ang Mo Kio happened to fall at a time when Chinese New Year was still in the air and Ramadan was already underway. So the evening became a mix of all three – oranges for the New Year, dates for those breaking fast, and party plates laid out for the children celebrating their birthdays that month. Close to a hundred residents – seniors, adults and children – came downstairs to join the gathering. A few of us residents helped organise the

Read more >

2609 – How We Spend Our Time

Story contributed by Anne Marie, Resource Mobilisation It has been some years since we last stood behind a volunteer recruitment booth in a school setting, and so earlier this month, when we were invited to take part in Nanyang Technological University’s Social Impact Week, it felt like a return of sorts. For two afternoons, we found ourselves in the middle of student activity, surrounded by clubs, social enterprises and fellow agencies. We were there with a simple invitation: to talk about volunteering, particularly in support of the older youths in our academic programmes. At our booth, we asked visitors to

Read more >

2608 – Holding The Middle

Written by The Beyond Editorial Team She has always cared for others. Long before we knew her, Mdm Sng* was already checking in on elderly neighbours, helping them navigate services, passing along information, gathering what they needed. When we began working in the area, she reached out quickly. Not for herself. For others. Over time, though, something shifted. There was no single incident. Just the quiet accumulation of strain. Our team had become leaner. Priorities evolved. Expectations were not always spoken clearly. Along the way, misunderstandings surfaced. Community tensions are rarely linear. They sit in the middle of relationships –

Read more >