預算辯論 · 2026-03-05 · 屆國會 15

2026社會及家庭發展部供給委員會辯論:AI深偽保護與殘障就業

AI 安全與倫理 AI 經濟與產業 AI 治理與監管 爭議度 3 · 實質辯論

MSF供給委員會辯論中兩個AI議題引發關注。議員Rachel Ong提出AI深偽技術(特別是性剝削內容)對兒童和弱勢群體的威脅,要求政府說明保護措施以及MSF如何與其他部門協調應對。同時,議員Neo Kok Beng指出AI自動化正在取代殘障人士傳統就業崗位(包裝、分揀、基礎行政、程式設計),呼籲從"保護性就業"轉向建設殘障人士在AI經濟中的韌性。

關鍵要點

  • AI深偽性剝削內容威脅兒童和弱勢群體
  • 要求跨部門協調應對AI濫用
  • AI自動化取代殘障人士傳統崗位
  • 需要建設殘障就業在AI經濟中的韌性
政府立場

多部門協作應對AI深偽威脅

質詢立場

Sylvia Lim關注弱勢群體保護力度

政策訊號

AI深偽立法和殘障就業轉型成為社會政策新焦點

參與人員 (6)

完整譯文(中文)

Hansard 原始記錄 · 2026-05-02

主席:第一部分,社會及家庭發展部(MSF)。謝耀權議員。

下午6時10分

保持社會流動性

謝耀權議員(裕廊中部):主席,我提出動議:“將估算表第一部分的總撥款減少100元。”

本院兩黨議員都曾熱情洋溢地談論新加坡的社會流動性。因此,對我們中最弱勢群體的同情心並非某一方的專利,提升他們的理念也沒有專利。

社會流動性是社會及家庭發展部工作的一個重心。作為政府議會委員會(GPC)主席,我想借此發言為相關討論貢獻一份力量。在此,我也宣告,我同時在一個專注於社會流動性的基金會工作。

但首先,讓我們準確界定新加坡社會流動性的挑戰。讓我從這一點開始。

幾十年來,新加坡顯著提升了低收入家庭的生活水平。所有群體都取得了廣泛的進步。從技術角度看,新加坡保持了絕對社會流動性。總體而言,每一代人,包括最低收入群體,都能比上一代獲得更好的生活結果。

然而,在家庭之間,高收入家庭積累優勢的速度比低收入家庭更快。因此,在每一代人中,來自高收入和低收入家庭的孩子們的起點差距越來越大,生活中機會差距也在擴大,導致他們晚年結果的不平等加劇。

從技術角度講,儘管我們保持了絕對流動性,新加坡的相對社會流動性正在放緩。財政部(MOF)2015年和2025年的偶發論文證實了這一點。衡量相對流動性的關鍵指標是:出生於40多歲父親收入處於最低20%群體的孩子們,在30多歲時的收入分佈。換言之,這些孩子的起點是出生於收入最低20%的家庭,指標是他們成年後的收入位置。

理想情況下,這些孩子中有20%會進入其同齡人中收入最高的20%;20%會像他們的父親一樣,仍處於收入最低的20%;其餘則分佈在中間。理想世界中,向上流動、停留中間或保持底層的機會基本均等。

但現實顯然不理想。新加坡1985至1989年出生的群體中,13.8%出生於最低20%的孩子進入了收入最高20%,而25.3%仍處於最低20%,與其父親相同,存在過度集中現象。與1978至1982年出生的群體相比,1985至1989年出生的群體進入最高20%的比例減少了近一個百分點,仍處於最低20%的比例增加了一個百分點。

因此,儘管我們保持了廣泛的進步,新加坡的相對社會流動性正在放緩。相對流動性自然趨勢將繼續放緩,正如許多其他發達經濟體所經歷的那樣。

不過,我必須指出,我們在相對流動性方面表現優於其他發達經濟體。在法國,出生於最低20%的孩子進入最高20%的比例不到10%;即使在北歐國家丹麥,這一比例也只有11.7%。我們是13.8%,表現並不差。

但新加坡從未僅以超越其他社會的表現來定義我們的價值觀和理想。我們走自己的路,設定自己的價值和理想。我認為我們必須繼續成為一個儘可能保持相對流動性活躍的社會,甚至在可能的情況下加強它。保持這一比例儘可能接近20%,抵抗相對流動性隨時間放緩的自然壓力。

具體而言,這意味著要抵抗生活起點差距不斷拉大和機會差距隨時間累積的自然壓力,幫助今天的孩子們。

下午6時15分

我們底層的家庭並非停滯不前,遠非如此,但我們必須幫助他們的孩子跟上那些快速拉開差距的高收入家庭。從生命之初及其一生中幫助底層孩子趕上。正如林瑞蓮女士2018年在本院所說,受父母環境影響的孩子必須“得到支援或幫助突破困境”。

然而,雖然我們可以指望政府利用政策槓桿確保所有人都取得廣泛進步,即實現絕對流動性,但相對流動性的情況則大不相同。

保持相對社會流動性活躍,實質上是控制你我孩子之間的機會差距,幾乎不能僅靠政府或社會部門單獨完成。這需要我們所有人共同努力。那些取得成功、能為子女提供最多資源的人必須積極參與,成為解決方案的一部分,為起點較低的孩子創造機會。

事實上,知名研究者如Raj Chetty和Matt Jackson在美國的研究顯示,低收入家庭的孩子如果有機會與高收入家庭的同齡人互動,成為高收入者的機會更大。這在新加坡也可能適用。因此,這需要我們所有人。

正如張有然在其著作《這就是不平等的樣子》中所述,機會不平等不僅是政策的結果,還取決於社會各階層如何在社會環境中相互作用、選擇互動以及採取或不採取某些行動。

所以,再次強調,這需要我們所有人。那些取得成功的人必須積極創造機會,幫助起點較低的孩子。這就是新加坡“我們優先”和流動社會的樣子。我認為,成為這樣的社會並以此方式保持相對流動性,將是我們時代的決定性挑戰。

那麼,我們需要什麼來實現這一目標?

首先,我認為我們需要科學的知識和理解。林瑞蓮女士在2018年的同一場演講中呼籲進行縱向研究,“追蹤底層家庭的命運”,並“超越數字,深入挖掘他們為何無法趕上社會其他部分的原因”。

財政部2015年和2025年的偶發論文確實提供了底層家庭狀況的縱向視角,是很好的開端。但我同意林女士的觀點,今天我想在她的呼籲基礎上進一步提出。

為了真正幫助我們縮小終生機會差距,保持新加坡相對社會流動性活躍,我認為我們需要超越群體平均描述性相關的縱向研究,深入揭示驅動社會流動性的機制,基於個體層面建立模型,預測和模擬社會流動性如何隨驅動因素變化而變化。

用非常技術和學術的語言,我們可以利用理論網路博弈和微觀基礎結構方法,克服計量經濟學中簡化形式同伴效應分析的反射問題,實現這一目標。

但簡單來說,我們應當建立模型,展示個體如何基於內在因素、外在因素及同伴影響做出決策並假設人生軌跡。所有這些都只有在擁有合適資料集的前提下才可能實現。因此,我們必須從資料開始,收集正確型別、正確精度的資料。

我們需要關於底層新加坡人社會網路的資料,需要認知和行為特徵資料,需要他們參與經濟活動的資料,不僅是正規部門,也包括非正規部門,尤其是後者。我們還需要關於信貸參與的資料,同樣包括正規和非正規部門,並且需要長期資料。

據我所知,新加坡尚無此類資料集,或許正因收集此類高精度資料極具挑戰。它需要長期深入的實地調研,首先建立強大的信任關係。需要遵守高倫理標準,包括隱私標準,確保不傷害我們試圖理解和提升的弱勢群體。這些都意味著需要大量且持續的資金支援。

順便說一句,這類資料集遠超行政資料。行政資料仍然關鍵,但所設想的研究需要遠超行政資料。我敦促政府考慮建設此類資料集,投資於縱向資料集,旨在支援模型真正轉變我們對社會流動性驅動因素的理解,明確針對哪些驅動因素的干預可能有效及其程度。

但即使有此類研究,按定義,我們只能在35至40年後真正知道今天所做工作的結果。社會流動性本質上是縱向的。換句話說,我們不能等到縱向研究結束後才決定現在該做什麼,來縮小今天孩子們的機會差距。現在的決策將既是藝術也是科學。

我們需要利用現有證據基礎,審慎判斷,全面考慮各種想法,儘可能避免傷害,但必須立即行動。35至40年後,我們才能真正評估成效。

那麼,我們現在系統性地需要做什麼,才能從生命之初及其一生中縮小機會差距?讓我提出三個關鍵原則。

第一,沒有“靈丹妙藥”。我們需要跨多個領域的相互關聯的解決方案體系——學術、非學術、社會資本形成、財務穩定、住房、健康——各方案協同工作,共同縮小機會差距。

第二,我們需要大規模的良好方案,而非僅停留在優秀試點。更難的工作往往是規模化和持續化。我們必須完成這項更難的工作,才有機會真正縮小機會差距。

第三,我們需要貫穿一生的方案,不僅僅是某一生命階段,而是跨多個階段,克服機會差距的累積效應。早期生活至關重要,我們必須在早年大量干預,但不能止步於此。我們需要延伸至成年後的干預,貫穿一生縮小機會差距。

因此,我呼籲社群夥伴、資助者和公民共同努力,跨領域、擴大規模、貫穿一生,縮小我們孩子們的機會差距。政府可以發揮領導作用,指引、協調、支援、提供資源並激勵各方。

【(程式文本)動議提出。(程式文本)】

持久授權書(LPA)費用及專業受託人改革

張文彬議員(阿裕尼):主席,關於《精神能力法》下持久授權書(LPA)和代理權的管理存在缺口。專業受託人框架過於有限,過度依賴指定個人。第12(1)(b)條規定個人福利受託人必須是個人,組織僅允許擔任財產及事務受託人。

公共監護人辦公室(OPG)登記的專業代理人名單說明了後果。TOUCH社群服務的六名社會工作者和一名會計師以個人身份列出:地址相同,電子郵件相同,電話號碼相同。他們作為一個組織運作,但法律強制必須個人任命。當該社會工作者離職時,委託人必須支付費用任命替代者。在代理案件中,費用由無行為能力者的資產支付。讓委託人為法律缺陷買單似乎不妥。

個人任命也存在實際問題。LPA通常在啟用前多年甚至數十年制定,個人受託人可能已退休、移民或去世。多年以前任命的受託人是否能履職存在很大不確定性。

澳大利亞各州通過公共監護人辦公室解決了這一問題,無論員工變動如何,都能為個人福利決策提供連續性。他們收取適度費用,並提供作為最後受託人的選項。

我想問,MSF是否考慮修訂第12條,允許認證組織擔任個人福利受託人?此外,新加坡公共監護人是否能像澳大利亞各州一樣,擔任最後受託人?OPG是否會發布指導,說明專業受託人從登記冊除名時的處理辦法?鑑於這是為最弱勢群體提供的信託服務,而非競爭市場,OPG是否考慮制定專業受託人服務的規定收費指導?

加強LPA制度

林瑞蓮議員(阿裕尼):主席,截至今年一月,部委已登記了41萬個LPA。隨著LPA益處被更廣泛理解,勢頭正在形成。

我今天的目的是強調兩類可能未能從LPA制度中受益的人群,原因不同。第一類是沒有親屬或朋友可指定的人;第二類是我們的低薪外勞。

首先是沒有親屬或朋友可指定的人。我的黨友張文彬已詳細說明當前LPA制度在要求指定個人而非組織擔任專業受託人管理個人福利方面的不足。我同意他的觀點,我們應考慮允許委託人指定公共監護人或公共受託人擔任受託人,正如澳大利亞等司法轄區所做。這一選項將幫助委託人,因為任命能經得起時間考驗。

第二類目前在LPA方面遇到困難的是持工作準證的新加坡外勞。儘管他們相對年輕,但部分人在存在嚴重傷害風險(包括精神能力喪失)的條件下工作。例如建築和海事等體力要求高的行業。這些外勞在新加坡沒有近親,朋友可能不熟悉新加坡的系統和服務。如果他們突然失去精神能力,若有受託人協助其個人福利決策或管理資金(如匯款回家),將大有裨益。

主席,令人欣慰的是,新加坡人隨時準備提供幫助。這包括關心外勞福利並願意貢獻的志願者,也有願意免費出具LPA或擔任志願受託人的律師。

然而,外勞面臨的問題是LPA註冊費用過高。非公民及非永久居民的註冊費目前固定為230元。對低薪外勞而言,這筆費用過高,佔其月薪很大比例,實屬負擔不起。公共監護人不應對所有外國人一視同仁收取統一註冊費,既包括高薪就業準證持有者,也包括低薪工作準證持有者。

我們的低薪外勞在艱苦的體力條件下工作,承擔了許多新加坡人不願做的工作。我們至少應讓他們能實際辦理LPA,免收或收取象徵性費用。這將極大體現我們的關懷。

重新思考家庭政策

林國權議員(淡濱尼):主席,MSF一貫強調強大家庭的重要性,我支援這一目標。但談及“強大家庭”,我們必須問:我們說的是哪些家庭?我們的政策是否完全符合新加坡家庭的現實?

讓我先談單親家庭。

單親家庭面臨獨特且疊加的壓力——經濟緊張、時間匱乏、照顧負擔、住房限制,有時還有社會汙名。與雙收入家庭不同,單親既要養家又要照顧孩子,缺乏家庭內部支援。

下午6時30分

雖然MSF提供援助計劃,但整體框架仍主要圍繞雙親家庭設計。單親家庭往往只有在滿足嚴格收入門檻後才能獲得支援,許多單親家庭處於經濟夾縫中,收入過高無法持續獲得援助,卻又不足以輕鬆應對不斷上漲的生活成本。

這些父母全職工作,獨自照顧孩子,卻隨時可能因一筆意外賬單陷入經濟不穩。

因此,我想請教部長。社會及家庭發展部是否專門追蹤單親家庭的長期經濟流動性結果?是否有計劃重新調整住房、托兒和工作支援計劃,以更好地反映單親家庭特有的時間和收入限制?部裡是否進行過全面審查,評估現有家庭政策是否無意中假設了核心雙親模式?

主席先生,這引出了一個更廣泛的問題。社會及家庭發展部鼓勵穩固家庭的許多努力似乎集中在推廣婚姻、育兒和共享規範的公共教育活動上。雖然公共宣傳有其作用,但如今許多家庭的困境並非因缺乏意識,而是因累積的壓力——生活成本、住房負擔能力、昂貴的托兒費、課外輔導期望和長時間工作。

在國家層面,我們理應優先發展勞動力和經濟競爭力。但我們的家庭政策是否獲得同等的系統性優先?或者我們是否無意中將家庭穩定簡化為一場宣傳活動,而非作為一個經濟和跨部委設計的問題來對待?

傳統的核心家庭是否仍是主要的政策參照點?如果是,這是否充分反映了當前的現實,包括單親家庭、重組家庭、晚婚和雙職工壓力?

因此,我希望部長澄清社會及家庭發展部是否打算對家庭政策設計假設進行更廣泛的審查;“家庭穩固”的結果指標是否超越專案參與率,衡量不同家庭型別的穩定性、財務韌性和兒童福祉;以及是否正在加強跨部委協調,特別是與人力部、國家發展部和教育部合作,解決我們住房、勞動力和教育系統中根深蒂固的壓力,而不僅僅依賴宣傳活動。

主席先生,這項政策調整並非意在減少對家庭的支援,而是表明需要重新評估我們的框架是否跟上了社會變遷。如果我們真心致力於建設穩固的家庭,那麼我們的政策必須圍繞新加坡家庭今天實際面臨的現實,而非理想化的模型來設計。

加強家庭

黃益財議員(拉丁馬士選區):主席先生,新加坡的家庭在我們快節奏且競爭激烈的社會中面臨巨大壓力。許多家庭必須應對住房、教育、醫療和日常生活的費用。對於低收入家庭來說,這些負擔尤其沉重。同時,為了保障工作安全和職業發展,長時間工作往往減少了父母與子女相處的時間,給家庭關係帶來壓力。

因此,強大且有韌性的家庭需要持續支援。加強家庭計劃通過諮詢、育兒工作坊和家庭聯誼活動發揮重要作用。隨著家庭需求日益複雜,社會及家庭發展部打算如何進一步提升和擴大該計劃,更好地支援面臨多重壓力的家庭?

主席先生,我還想提出一個相關問題。海外研究觀察到,非婚生子女存在代際模式,往往受社會經濟因素影響。我們應警惕防止此類迴圈在新加坡紮根。

在堅持婚姻和穩定家庭重要性的同時,我們也必須確保兒童不會因出生環境而處於不利地位。

目前,未婚父母無法獲得嬰兒獎金現金禮金,也不符合工作母親子女減稅和育兒稅務回扣等稅務優惠資格。這些差異對低收入單親家庭尤其有實際影響。社會及家庭發展部能否審視如何更好地支援未婚父母滿足子女需求,以及是否可以開展更多本地研究,以更好地理解和防止潛在的代際迴圈?

獨立幼兒園的可行性

張文彬議員:主席先生,賴維美女士在我的選區經營“公園旁幼兒園”。早期兒童發展局(ECDA)於2023年授予她中心的“Make*Believe”專案創新獎。國家早期兒童發展學院(NIEC)將她作為遊戲式學習的專家代表。

今年一月,她的利歡中心宣佈關閉;52位家長聯名挽救。兩位家長,妮可和茉莉,相信學校的價值,決定自行接管。我們祝願她們成功。但結構性挑戰依然存在——全日制學費為每月1,655新元,且無政府補貼。附近的合作運營中心(POP)收費650新元,差距達1,000新元。僅憑熱情無法彌補這一差距。

主席先生,這一差距不是市場造成的,而是政策造成的。當政府補貼將市場80%的價格定在610至650新元時,這就成了幼兒園應有的收費標準。家長們並非選擇合作運營中心(AOP)的教學法而非遊戲式學習,而是選擇支付AOP的價格。在1,000新元的差價下,實際上沒有真正的選擇。

這一擠壓也影響勞動力。由補貼資助的AOP和POP的薪資目標成為整個行業的工資基準。獨立幼兒園必須匹配,否則將失去教師,這不是為了更好的教學法,而是為了更好的補貼薪酬。每當薪資目標上升,獨立幼兒園的成本也隨之增加,但收入卻沒有增長。那20%的獨立幼兒園被期望創新,但憑什麼?

差別待遇不僅限於學費。我感謝早期兒童發展局今年一月將人力招聘補助擴充套件至獨立幼兒園,但這花了兩年時間。

從2024年到2026年,只有AOP和POP享有補貼的人才發展計劃。獨立幼兒園則需全額成本競爭日益縮小的教育者資源。這是同一監管機構資助一方的球員發展預算,卻質問另一方為何跟不上。

最終結果是兩極分化,沒有中間層。大眾市場的政府幼兒園一邊;超高階國際學校另一邊。蒙特梭利、雷焦艾米利亞、遊戲式及包容性專案等中間層正在崩潰。中產家庭失去有意義的選擇。

進步就是曾經的小眾教學法成為我們為下一代構建的基礎。

馬來西亞正在這樣做。2025年12月,其政府改革了國家幼兒園課程,優先推行遊戲式、以兒童為中心的學習。今年四月,吉隆坡舉辦世界早期照護與教育論壇,吸引來自40多個國家的500名參與者。馬來西亞教育者邀請新加坡運營者在其論壇上分享遊戲和專案式學習經驗,並計劃來新加坡考察。他們的政府積極推動這些改革。

我們的鄰國投資於我們的資助模式使之不可行的領域。如果他們對早期兒童教育的判斷正確,我也相信如此,那麼隨著我們驅逐他們想學習的教育者,教學法差距將在柔佛海峽兩岸拉開。

我有兩個請求。第一,資助孩子,而非學校。如果補貼隨孩子流向任何持牌、質量有保障的中心,所有家長都能選擇政府機構認可有效的教學法。當差價為80新元時,家長可以權衡不同。

第二,教師資助應獨立於運營者。如果教師持有L2認證,為什麼他們的薪資支援要取決於僱傭他們的運營者?

專業人才就在這裡。我們的機構也認可該教學法有效。缺失的是讓家長能夠據此做出選擇的資助結構。我請求讓家長擁有選擇權。

支援早期兒童教育者

黃益財議員:主席先生,便利、負擔得起且優質的幼兒園是給予每個孩子良好起點的基礎。

首先,便利性意味著確保幼兒園名額充足且分佈在社群各處,方便家庭輕鬆入學。其次,負擔能力確保各收入層家庭都能無經濟壓力地接受早期教育。第三,質量至關重要。由受過良好培訓的教育者支援、適齡課程和安全設施營造的關懷和激勵環境,有助於兒童認知、社交、情感和身體的全面發展,為小學及以後階段做好準備。

強大的早期兒童教育者隊伍為孩子們的成長奠定基礎。

主席先生,部裡能否提供加強幼兒園行業便利性、負擔能力和質量的最新進展?

同時,早期兒童教育者承擔的職責日益增加。隨著家庭規模縮小和家長期望提升,教育者的工作量不斷加重。人力短缺和職位空缺填補所需時間進一步加劇這一問題。在這方面,社會及家庭發展部是否考慮擴大學習支援教育者的角色和能力,超越特殊需要支援,以幫助緩解緊張的早期兒童教育勞動力壓力?

照顧假政策

莊佩珊議員(非選區議員):主席先生,我這一代人既被要求多生育,也要支援年邁父母居家養老。往往是同時發生,且共用同一假期資源。

在我的首次發言中,我說過照顧工作是勞動,我們可以且應該做更多支援照顧者的工作。如今,托兒假和延長托兒假仍是唯一立法規定的帶薪照顧假。每位父母每年獲得兩至六天,不論子女數量。然而我們知道,照顧需求隨子女增加而倍增,而非在兄弟姐妹間平均分配。我們的假期框架應反映這一現實。

工會、僱主和政府三方制定了無薪照顧假標準,但該標準是自願的,僅涵蓋住院事件,且僅被少數僱主採納。它還鼓勵員工先用帶薪年假。因此,我們回到了我首次發言中提出的挑戰——照顧者消耗本應用於休息的年假,且無收入保障。

新加坡人不應在照顧親人和照顧自己之間做選擇。我呼籲社會及家庭發展部認真考慮這些建議。

兒童收養

林麗儀議員:主席先生,新加坡每年約有400宗收養申請。收養應被鼓勵,不僅因為它體現了無私的愛,也有助於緩解我們慘淡的總生育率。

因此,印尼調查涉嫌向新加坡供應嬰兒的非法嬰兒販賣團伙的訊息令人非常擔憂。這引發了關於區域合作打擊兒童販賣的疑問。

2025年11月,工人黨非選區議員盧安德烈提出關於東盟國家間合作防止跨國收養兒童販賣的議會質詢。社會及家庭發展部長馬薩古斯提到2016至2025年的東盟消除針對兒童暴力區域行動計劃。國內方面,他強調兒童販賣已被《收養兒童法》刑事化。

他進一步強調收養程式的嚴謹性,包括核實兒童身份檔案、旅行證件,並與生父母核查,確保其給予有效同意,且未因不當經濟或物質利益而提供兒童。

2022年,社會及家庭發展部提交《收養兒童法案》,引入專門的收養監管框架。該框架要求收養父母向法院披露向生父母及其他相關方支付的款項,並尋求法院批准。通過欺詐、脅迫或不當影響獲得生父母同意將構成犯罪。問題是,針對來自海外的兒童,這些規定的效力如何?

最後,印尼的持續調查導致收養父母申請新加坡公民身份的延遲。期間,收養父母需承擔更高的托兒相關費用,且無明確終點,造成壓力和士氣低落。我再次呼籲社會及家庭發展部為這些兒童提供公民費率,尤其當雙方父母均為新加坡公民時。

寄養——整體方法

梁國明博士(提名議員):主席先生,我想宣告我是社會及家庭發展部註冊的寄養家長。我目前有三名寄養兒童,包括一名幼兒。

主席先生,寄養家長嚴重短缺。目前約有500多名兒童接受寄養,另有500多名在機構中,這並非理想狀況。但寄養家長約有600多名。因此,我認為我們應加大力度在社群中提高意識,與寄養機構合作,如男孩鎮、恩典之家、穆罕默迪亞協會和PPIS好家園。

晚上6點45分

另一個問題是寄養家長是全天候“線上”的。他們不僅是“寄養家長”,更是“寄養家庭”。他們必須照顧、穩定並培養孩子。

但寄養兒童的資訊訪問存在問題。他們無法訪問學校門戶,也無法線上預約醫療。這些是部裡可能考慮開展設計思維專案的領域。應全面審視寄養家長和兒童的整個體驗流程,找出痛點。給予他們完整訪問許可權,因為孩子是我們主要照顧的物件。

另一個是對寄養的更整體看法。目前是試驗系統,生父母和寄養家長之間缺乏溝通,社工充當“中間人”。這有其積極面和存在的理由——避免雙方過多互動或衝突。

然而,我認為我們可以探索更密集的共同育兒,在可能的情況下,將寄養家長和生父母聚集在一起,以孩子為中心。作為寄養家長,我們的使命是穩定孩子、建立信任和紐帶,然後與生父母互動或重新融合。我們希望確保紐帶持續,而非半途而廢。

保護兒童與共同育兒

彭麗燕議員(海濱-布萊德爾高地):主席先生,我今天發言關於離婚夫婦。但先做個簡短澄清。我已婚,且婚姻幸福。但我談論離婚,是因為新加坡離婚率呈上升趨勢。

我特別想談談社會及家庭發展部為幫助父母從配偶轉變為共同育兒者所提供的支援。離婚不僅是婚姻的結束。對許多家庭來說,這是漫長共同育兒旅程的開始,而當這段旅程管理不善時,付出最大代價的是孩子。

在這方面,我支援針對有21歲以下子女的離婚夫婦的強制共同育兒計劃的政策意圖。該計劃結構良好,合理。線上學習部分設定基礎認知,隨後進行面對面諮詢,討論離婚後的實際共同育兒安排,體現了共同育兒作為公共利益的理念。但既然如此,支援必須及時、易得,並針對最需要的父母。

主席先生,我提出兩點建議,供社會及家庭發展部務實改進。我獲悉面對面諮詢預約需等待數週,節假日及需求旺盛的家庭服務中心等待時間更長。我敦促部裡從三方面加強計劃實施。第一,增加輔導員人數和預約時段,包括週末和平日。第二,擴大計劃覆蓋範圍,包括增加需求持續高漲地區的家庭服務中心容量。第三,在適當情況下采用影片諮詢,避免實體容量限制成為瓶頸。

其次,主席先生,如果該計劃旨在通過提升共同育兒準備保護兒童,目前的參會要求存在缺口。

目前,只有發起或同意離婚的父母需參加。但爭議離婚或相關事項的父母,可能最需要該計劃,卻被豁免。如果此類父母未參與,干預只覆蓋共同育兒的一方,削弱政策目的。因此,我敦促社會及家庭發展部考慮將該計劃更公平地適用於所有有21歲以下子女的離婚父母。

主席先生,這與第二個問題有關,這個問題常在高衝突離婚中出現,尤其在節日期間,孩子的探視權和家庭時間變得更加情緒化時尤為突出。在這個農曆新年期間,許多家庭團聚慶祝,但對一些父母來說,這是全年最艱難的時刻,因為他們的孩子被另一方家長單方面帶走或扣留,且沒有任何法院命令,聯絡被切斷,他們只是被告知“去法院”。

殘酷之處在於法律程式需要時間,而在這些案件中,時間尤為重要,因為分離的最初幾天和幾周可能擾亂孩子的日常生活,使不真實的敘述得以形成,並侵蝕孩子與被留下的父母之間的紐帶。換句話說:遲來的正義就是被剝奪的正義。

雖然國際兒童綁架會根據《海牙公約》啟動緊急返還機制,但新加坡境內的國內帶走案件沒有相應的快速響應通道,導致被留下的父母在法院處理申請期間需等待數月。然而對孩子而言,突然分離造成的傷害同樣真實且持久。

因此,我敦促將國內兒童綁架視為一個時間緊迫的兒童福利問題,通過追蹤和公佈核心指標,建立一個加速的司法路徑,進行早期中立審查,適當迅速恢復安全的臨時探視,對一方家長的不誠信行為進行相稱的威懾,併為父母提供全方位的操作支援,以保護真正的安全案件,同時防止濫用“先帶走,後解釋”的策略,保障兒童的最大利益。

所以,我想問社會及家庭發展部:與更廣泛的家庭司法系統合作,還能做些什麼,確保在高衝突案件中探視權被突然切斷時,孩子不會因時間延誤而承擔後果?

主席先生,這些是對現有問題的實際改進,但它們觸及了社會及家庭發展部的核心理念。強大的家庭不僅在危機前建立,也應在危機中得到保護。我希望部委考慮這些改進,使系統實現其應有的目標:更好的共同育兒、更少的衝突和更好的兒童結果。

防範有害人工智慧使用

王瑞秋女士(丹戎巴葛):主席先生,人工智慧的濫用,尤其是通過性剝削的深度偽造內容,帶來了新的風險。兒童和弱勢群體,包括殘障人士,可能面臨身份冒充、脅迫以及更難報告傷害的情況。

請問部長:目前有哪些保障措施保護家庭,特別是兒童和弱勢群體,免受有害人工智慧使用的影響?社會及家庭發展部如何與其他政府機構合作,加強家長和照顧者的數字素養?是否有專門的支援服務幫助人工智慧驅動的剝削受害者,尤其是兒童和殘障人士?

加強對所有人的支援

提名議員桑吉夫·庫馬爾·蒂瓦里:主席先生,建設“我們優先”的社會提醒我們,增長必須提升每個家庭,關懷不能僅靠個人承擔。

一個“我們優先”的社會必須承認照顧工作是真正的勞動——無論是單親平衡工作與育兒,抑或是照顧有特殊需求兒童的家庭,在治療預約和教育之間周旋,還是中年職工在照顧年邁父母的同時努力保持經濟活躍。

照顧者每天都體現著這種精神。他們承擔的不僅是自己的責任,還有家庭和親人的責任,通常還要繼續工作併為社會做貢獻。

對許多照顧者來說,挑戰不僅是經濟支援,更是有信心在照顧需求隨時間不可預測地變化時,能及時且可預見地獲得幫助。

因此,部長能否分享社會及家庭發展部如何加強對照顧者的綜合支援服務?社會、就業和醫療接觸點如何更好地協調,為照顧者及其家庭在照顧旅程的不同階段提供連續性、保障和持續支援,使他們能夠自信地繼續照顧、工作和貢獻?

這也讓我們作為“我們優先”的社會意識到,我們還必須關心那些為他人服務的人。社會服務專業人員和社會及家庭發展部官員在高接觸、情緒要求高的環境中工作,常常面臨人手緊張。

隨著部委推進數字化和服務轉型,如何確保案件負荷的可持續性,保障官員的職業發展和技能提升,維護心理健康並減輕倦怠風險,使社會服務行業成為官員們有回報且可持續的職業?

如果我們真心相信“我們優先”,那麼照顧者和陪伴他們的官員必須感受到系統堅定地支援他們。

支援Comlink+家庭

楊益財先生:主席先生,一些低收入家庭面臨層疊且持續的挑戰,即使有設計良好的激勵措施,也無法迅速解決。他們可能正應對不穩定的就業、照顧責任、債務、住房限制或有額外發展需求的兒童。這些挑戰往往相互作用並相互加劇,即使家庭真誠努力,參加輔導、報名專案、尋找工作或提升技能,進展也可能緩慢且不均衡。

諸如清償債務、維持就業或確保幼兒園持續出勤等里程碑需要時間,尤其是在遇到挫折時。在這種情況下,基於成就的進展方案雖出於良好意圖,但可能顯得遙遠且難以實現。當目標看似過於雄心勃勃時,家庭可能會感到氣餒,儘管他們付出了真誠的努力。這可能會抑制動力,影響參與度,尤其是對那些已經覺得這條路艱難的人。

因此,我歡迎今年對ComLink+的增強,包括新的支付、更小但更可實現的里程碑和現金激勵。認可漸進式進步並慶祝一步步的成果,將更好地支援家庭走上一條現實且有尊嚴的穩定和向上流動之路。

部委能否分享更多關於這些新里程碑如何校準,以及增強支付如何更好地反映持續努力的細節?社會及家庭發展部如何計劃加強ComLink+生態系統,包括僱主和社群合作伙伴,更好地招聘、支援和留住受益人在持續就業中?

主席:蔡銀洲先生,您可以把您的兩次發言合併。

兒童和家庭的螢幕排毒

蔡銀洲先生(碧山-大巴窯):謝謝主席先生。我這兩次發言將聚焦於保護低收入家庭兒童的防護措施。

在《孤獨共處》一書中,作者特克爾探討了對數字裝置和社交媒體日益依賴的現象,以及在日益數字化的世界中既感到連線又感到孤獨的矛盾。除了孤獨感,學術研究顯示技術成癮會導致焦慮、抑鬱,甚至攻擊性和注意力缺陷多動症症狀。

雖然政府已禁止中學使用智慧手機,但課外過度使用螢幕時間仍是挑戰,尤其是對低收入家庭的兒童。

在我走訪組屋租賃區時,常見父母用螢幕——智慧手機、平板和電視——來安撫兒童甚至嬰兒。父母向我分享他們因工作繁忙、健康或照顧責任而面臨的挑戰。因此,孩子們常常被留給自己的裝置——字面意義上的。在這種情況下,使用數字螢幕的孩子無人監管,也沒有家長的限制防護措施。

在我們推動全國範圍內減少兒童在學校的螢幕暴露和提供適齡內容的同時,確保家庭環境不被忽視至關重要。

我想問部委,如何具體考慮低收入家庭的需求和背景,並與其他機構合作,在制定學校、課後及家庭的螢幕時間政策時提供額外支援?

保護脫離家庭的兒童

主席先生,雖然2026年預算正確加強了對ComLink+家庭的支援,但這種支援的有效性完全依賴於成功的參與。在與家庭的互動中,我觀察到反覆出現的挑戰:家庭保持不合作或深度脫離。這通常源於多重承諾的疲憊、個人危機或對拼湊系統缺乏信任。

這種缺乏參與造成了關鍵的盲點,使家庭輔導員難以評估真實需求,維持關懷連續性,或在涉及家庭暴力或兒童安全等嚴重問題時升級案件。當參與不穩定時,專職輔導員建立的人際信任和關懷容易喪失。

我們必須認識到,不回應本身往往是更深層複雜挑戰的訊號。我們不能讓這些家庭,尤其是他們的孩子,掉隊。

我有兩點澄清。

第一,ComLink+聯盟工作組及其合作機構針對重新接觸失聯家庭,有哪些具體的參與協議?

第二,部委是否考慮為此類案件設立正式的升級通道,將其轉介至家庭服務中心進行更深入的社會工作干預,當初步輔導努力未能取得進展時?確保這些家庭兒童的安全和福祉必須是我們的絕對優先。

晚上7點

ComLink+的增強措施

瑪麗亞姆·賈法爾女士(實龍崗):本屆議會早些時候,我談到需要在教育、健康和職業領域建立貫穿家庭人生轉折的連貫縱向路徑,確保無人掉隊。2026年預算通過增強的ComLink+框架,在這方面邁出了有意義的一步。

ComLink+不僅是短期救助,更是流動性平臺。其優勢在於進展引擎。當支援整合、里程碑明確且進展持續時,家庭不僅能應對,還能前進。

我歡迎2026年預算中的增強措施——與穩定就業和幼兒園出勤掛鉤的更高現金支付、中間裡程碑、更高上限以及新的每季度500元合作支付。這些強化了激勵結構。

但若ComLink+要成為現代社會流動性的架構,五個轉變至關重要。

第一,整合必須是結構性的,而非盡力而為。一個家庭可能同時面對家庭輔導員、醫療團隊、就業官員和學校代表,人員眾多。我們能否朝著跨機構共享一個進展計劃——一個儀表盤、一套目標、一條協調的旅程方向前進?我請部長說明社會及家庭發展部是否朝此方向努力,讓家庭體驗真正的整合支援,而非平行的個案檔案?

第二,設計應考慮脆弱性。進展很少是線性的。合同工作結束,祖父母生病,一次小衝擊可能逆轉數月努力。我們必須認可動力,而非僅僅里程碑。隨著ComLink+規模擴大,社會及家庭發展部如何確保家庭無法控制的暫時挫折不會永久剝奪其進展支付資格?

第三,規模擴大不能稀釋信任。信任是轉變的基礎。一個瞭解他們故事、關心他們、在他們不自信時相信他們的可信賴人士,能帶來巨大不同。隨著規模擴大,我們如何保護這種關係核心?

第四,衡量轉變,而非交易——不僅是發放的支付,而是保住的工作、持續的幼兒園出勤、減少的債務、穩定的壓力。輔導員是否有能力和工具承載這項深層工作?

第五,流動性必須包括未來準備。隨著人工智慧重塑經濟,數字素養、人工智慧熟悉度和技術驅動的收入路徑必須成為進展目標的一部分。如果我們不裝備家庭應對未來經濟,就有可能讓他們僅僅穩定於過去。

如果我們做對了,ComLink+不僅支援困難家庭,更將恢復信念。在一個面臨不平等和技術變革的社會中,信念或許是我們最寶貴的資產。讓我們設計ComLink+不僅作為脫困的階梯,更作為新加坡社會流動性從不偶然的國家宣言。

殘障人士終身保障工作組

潘麗萍女士(惹蘭勿剎):主席先生,感謝政府成立由國務部長吳佩明主持的殘障人士家庭保障工作組。

該工作組時機恰當。新加坡已有《賦能藍圖2030》這一強有力的國家路線圖。但家庭尤其關注成年後生活的關鍵問題。工作組若不解決這些關鍵問題,無法給予家庭保障。

讓我聚焦四個應由工作組果斷解決的持續缺口。

一、資金改革。主席先生,當前殘障支出主要集中於兒童期,而成人服務資金極為緊張,儘管成年期可能長達60年以上。因此,我們需要基於生命週期的資金改革。

一種前進方向是兩級結構。先從明顯的日間活動中心(DAC)和為中高支援需求成人提供的住宿模式開始。

首先,為每位DAC或住宿中心服務的客戶提供普遍基礎資金。該基礎金額應基於現實的護理成本標準計算,反映人員配比、專案費用和運營實際。其次,在此基礎上實施按需資助,確保有需要的家庭負擔得起。

服務提供者,如社會服務機構,並非天真。如果每增加一位客戶都需更多籌款,系統將不可持續。最終,服務提供者可能撤出,政府可能需直接運營這些服務,成本更高。

資金改革必須協調護理複雜性、勞動力現實和可持續性。

二、人工智慧經濟中殘障就業韌性。先生,許多傳統的殘障人士入門級藍領和白領崗位,如包裝、分揀、基礎行政工作甚至編碼,正被人工智慧驅動的自動化取代。如果我們無所作為,過去十年取得的包容性僱傭成果將被逆轉。因此,我們必須從保護舊崗位轉向設計新工作。

工作組應考慮設立國家殘障崗位重設計基金,支援識別風險崗位,發掘新經濟崗位,重設計工作流程以讓能貢獻的殘障人士參與,並強化崗位輔導能力。不這樣做,將有意無意地逆轉SG Enable、殘障夥伴和包容性僱主多年來的努力。

三、人生規劃與父母后保障。家庭最常問的問題是:當父母失去能力或去世時怎麼辦?因此,我們應制度化人生規劃和連續性協議,鼓勵家庭成為解決方案的一部分,而非憂慮。規劃應得到支援、補貼和常態化。當死亡或失能發生時,系統必須迅速、協調且穩定地響應。

對高需求家庭,引入家庭生活導航員模式,類似ComLink+中的家庭輔導員。

正如ComLink+為弱勢家庭提供跨人生轉折的專職引導,生活導航員可幫助殘障家庭規劃學校到工作的過渡、住房選擇、照顧者老齡化和長期照護安排。

一個有韌性的系統賦能並支援家庭提前行動,而非僅依賴政府。

最後,關於與主流老年服務的深思熟慮融合。先生,隨著新加坡人口老齡化,殘障與老齡問題將日益重疊。殘障服務與老人護理服務的界限將模糊。許多殘障成年人面臨與老年人類似的挑戰,只是年齡較輕。

新加坡已建立強大的社群老齡基礎設施——活躍老齡中心、社群護理公寓、居家及社群護理服務,甚至銀髮世代大使和更健康的新加坡計劃。如果我們設計一個更智慧、更周到連線殘障與老齡系統的支援架構,將減少重複、改善外展並增強社會契約。這正是家庭所需的保障,也是我們必須消除的後學校斷崖。

先生,讓我們富有遠見且大膽。我祝願工作組一切順利。

支援特殊需要家庭

郭文婷女士(提名議員):二十一年前,我有幸迎來最小的孩子。我的兒子患有自閉症且不會說話。作為他的母親是一種喜悅,但也是我生命中最大的挑戰。

在我擔任提名議員的短暫時間裡,我有機會更多瞭解部委支援家庭應對撫養和照顧特殊需要親人的複雜旅程的計劃。我感激部委對此領域的重視和將其作為建設更包容社會關鍵方面的承諾。

我知道政府的出發點是好的,但確保我們真正實現成為一個更具包容性的社會這一既定使命的關鍵,在於我們如何執行我們的計劃。為此,我們必須傾聽我們所服務的家庭的聲音。這就是為什麼我要分享我作為家長和照顧者的觀點。

第一,我們必須提供一個穩定和安全的照護環境。

如果你照顧有特殊需要的人,你會知道讓他們適應新環境需要多長時間。這就是為什麼過渡期是最困難的。

我們所希望的只是讓他們儘快適應能夠支援他們需求的學校、職業學院或日間活動中心(DAC)。等待數月甚至數年才能安置,不僅是物流上的延誤,還會導致技能倒退、社交退化和孤立,並將全部照護負擔重新轉嫁給家庭,常常導致照顧者長期壓力、身體疲憊,甚至焦慮和抑鬱。

對於這個脆弱群體來說,動盪和變化尤其具有創傷性。特殊教育(SPED)畢業生的安置名額短缺問題已經存在多年。

想象一個自閉症譜系障礙(ASD)兒童已經適應了學校的日常生活,卻發現沒有現成的地方可以去。如果這是我們普通學生遇到的情況,那是不可想象的,但我們卻期望有特殊需要的家庭等待,明知對這群體來說,規律的時間表尤為重要。

到2030年,我們將新增3000個特殊教育學校名額。如果需求不存在,我們不會這樣做。雖然已經宣佈到2030年將新增500個日間活動中心名額,但我堅信這遠遠無法滿足實際需求。看起來我們總是在努力追趕一個不斷擴大的服務缺口。

我們可以而且必須做得更好。我們需要積極擴充套件設施,並承諾徹底消除等待時間。特殊教育學校畢業生應有現成且可用的安置選項,確保無縫過渡。為此,我們需要向日間活動中心提供更多資金,幫助他們應對高昂的服務成本,使他們能夠自信地擴大服務範圍,招聘更多受過培訓的員工,並維持高質量的照護。

第二,我們必須讓需要的人負擔得起這樣的照護。日間活動中心的高費用可能導致實際需求被低估。對於那些需要高支援的日間活動中心,即使有現行的按收入測試的補貼,當前費用對許多夾心階層仍然難以承受。

這必須被重新審視。沒有什麼比知道自己負擔不起為孩子提供更多幫助,或者不得不犧牲其他孩子的需求來滿足特殊需要孩子的開支更讓家長痛苦或感到無助的了。

第三,我們需要讓家長安心,知道有一個長期計劃,確保他們特殊需要成年子女的持續學習和有意義的參與。家長最大的擔憂是,當他們不在了,誰來照顧他們的孩子?我們需要支援整個家庭單位,包括兄弟姐妹和大家庭成員,使他們準備好承擔持續照護的責任。在這方面,我支援黃淑英女士的建議。

一個社會的真正衡量標準在於我們如何對待最脆弱的人及其照顧者。我們必須承諾一個未來,不讓任何家庭在等待名單的陰影中掙扎。通過提供及時、保障的關鍵服務,我們不僅幫助個別家庭,也強化了我們社群的基本結構。

超越照護的關懷壽命

潘國賢教授(提名議員):主席先生,我在這一領域的利益宣告是,我曾任新加坡彩虹中心的主席,該機構是一家為殘疾人士服務的社會服務機構,同時我也是一名研究神經發育障礙人士生命歷程的研究員。

大約二十年前,我進行了一項關於新加坡自閉症人士未來的研究,我問家長的最難回答的問題之一是——剛才也提到過——當你們不再能夠照顧孩子時,有什麼計劃?

大多數家長分享了他們的擔憂和憂慮。有些家長描述了計劃,通常涉及兄弟姐妹或親戚。對其他人來說,回應是沉默,許多談話伴隨著淚水。

在相關研究中,殘疾人士的家長始終將與安全、穩定和個人滿意度相關的結果列為對子女的首要關注。然而,許多人仍不確定如何實現這些目標。

現在有更緊迫的三大原因。

第一,由於醫療護理的進步,殘疾人士的壽命顯著延長。例如,2024年社群健康外展服務的一份本地報告顯示,唐氏綜合症患者的預期壽命約為60歲。

第二,雖然照顧者壽命延長,但壽命與健康壽命之間的差距意味著許多家長預見到一段時間,他們可能仍然活著,但已無法在身體或認知上持續提供照護。

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第二,雖然照顧者壽命延長,但壽命與健康壽命之間的差距意味著許多家長預見到一段時間,他們可能仍然活著,但已無法在身體或認知上持續提供照護。

第三,家庭規模變小。這意味著可承擔長期照護責任的兄弟姐妹和大家庭成員減少。

綜合來看,這些趨勢表明,殘疾人士的家庭不能像過去那樣主要依賴非正式的家庭支援。未來的支援需要被預見、結構化並得到支援。

先生,在預算辯論中,我提出了四個問題,作為考慮新舉措如何加強新加坡社會基礎的視角。我想將它們應用於當前殘疾人士在父母照護不再可用時的情況。

我認為重要的是承認,新加坡通過連續的賦能總體規劃,在成人殘疾服務方面取得了重要進展,我也認可由州務部長吳佩明主持的多機構家庭殘疾人士保障工作組的近期成立。

成人殘疾支援通常跨越數十年。因此,這對我們提出了更廣泛的系統性考慮。我們是否有一個一致的預見性框架來規劃殘疾人士的照護連續性和參與?特別是,我希望部長能澄清我尊敬的同事黃淑英女士和郭文婷女士早前提出的問題。

第一,是否在照顧者無法繼續提供支援之前,已啟動結構化的家庭照護路徑?第二,如何系統地讓兄弟姐妹和其他潛在照護者參與過渡規劃?第三,如何有意義地將殘疾人士自身的聲音納入關於他們未來安排、支援結構和社群生活參與的決策?

先生,我們面臨的問題不僅僅是服務的提供,而是確保我們的殘疾公民即使在父母照護不再可用時,仍能過有尊嚴、穩定和參與的生活。

主席:蔡銀洲先生不在。黃瑞秋小姐。

殘疾人士的生活和工作支援

黃瑞秋小姐:主席,許多殘疾人士和僱主仍然不瞭解包容性就業和日常生活支援的可用資源。新加坡管理大學(SMU)最近的一項調查發現,八成殘疾人士從未聽說過就業培訓專案,且不到一半的僱主知道工作場所補助和招聘激勵。

雖然像SG賦能指南這樣的入口網站提供了有用資源,但資訊分散在多個平臺,使殘疾人士和照顧者難以導航支援。

請問社會及家庭發展部,如何改進關於殘疾人士就業、生活和社群支援的溝通,使個人和僱主更好地瞭解?政府是否考慮建立一個集培訓、就業、住房、社交活動和經濟援助於一體的單一集中門戶,使殘疾人士和照顧者更容易獲得支援?

提升殘疾人士就業

黃志明先生(加冷):主席,我感謝社會及家庭發展部,特別是SG賦能,為提升殘疾人士所做的工作。如今,超過30%的殘疾人士已就業,目標是到2030年提升至40%。

殘疾人士家庭保障工作組也將在就業、社群生活和負擔能力三個關鍵領域做更多工作。

我在加冷有特殊需要兒童的家庭。這些家庭的主要關切包括教育和支援服務的可用性;經濟支援;是否能幫助孩子找到工作或保持參與;以及他們去世後孩子的去向。

去年,我遇到一對年邁的父母,照顧他們30多歲的自閉症兒子。他的需求屬於嚴重譜系。後來,父親去世,母親獨自照顧兒子。

我想問部委,將採取哪些切實策略更好地支援有殘疾人士的家庭,尤其是那些已畢業於學校系統的?還能做些什麼來改善他們的就業前景,或確保他們在一生中保持參與和照護?

聾人心理健康支援

黃瑞秋小姐:主席,目前新加坡很少有輔導員接受新加坡手語培訓。因此,聾人客戶常依賴本已稀少的社群中的口譯員。這常限制了隱私,且阻礙了自我尋求幫助。

一位聾人經過長時間尋找後才獲得輔導。在加拿大等國家,手語輔導是標準服務。

請問部長:如何擴大新加坡手語培訓輔導員的隊伍,並將手語能力支援整合進主流心理健康服務?社會及家庭發展部是否會審查資金和支援計劃,確保新加坡手語口譯在輔導、社會支援中心和危機響應服務中系統可用,使聾人新加坡人能保密且公平地獲得幫助?

主席:馬沙古斯·祖爾基夫利部長。

社會及家庭發展部長(馬沙古斯·祖爾基夫利先生):主席,我感謝議員們的意見。社會及家庭發展部旨在培育一個支援所有家庭在生命各階段按其方式茁壯成長的新加坡社會。

在詳細說明我們的做法之前,請允許我介紹同事們將分享的內容。州務部長朱卡奈因·阿卜杜勒·拉希姆將詳述支援低收入家庭的增強措施,高階議員蔡艾利將闡述我們對殘疾人士家庭的努力,州務部長吳佩明將談及如何加強對家庭的支援。

社會及家庭發展部的政策基於四大核心原則:以家庭為中心、積極主動和前瞻性干預、基於優勢的方法以及全社會合作。這些原則是持久的,即使我們面臨日益複雜的問題。

首先,我們優先考慮以家庭為中心,因為家庭是社會的基本單位,提供情感支援和價值觀傳遞。單獨與個人合作可能解決眼前症狀,但無法觸及問題根源。我們必須建立牢固的家庭關係,以實現可持續的改變。這就是為什麼我們為所有兒童尋求在家庭關係和環境中奠定健康和發展的良好基礎。對於ComLink+家庭,我們在評估需求後與家庭共同制定整體行動計劃。對於殘疾人士,我們不忽視照顧者和家庭成員的福祉。

第二原則是積極主動和前瞻性干預。我們努力提供早期支援,建立堅實基礎,解決根本原因,防止問題升級。

第三,我們關注客戶的優勢而非缺陷。通過利用他們的優勢和資產,個人和家庭能夠並且被賦能實現良好結果。

第四,我們與全社會合作,編織強大的支援生態系統。

社會及家庭發展部一直與社會服務機構(SSA)、企業、高等學府(IHL)和社群合作,更好地瞭解客戶需求,調整政策和專案,並陪伴客戶前行。

這種強有力的合作關係至關重要。合作時,我們釋放新的協同效應,激發創新,打造更好的解決方案。為了為所有家庭建設更美好的明天,我們將進一步加強這些合作。我們將通過以下“三個C”實現:與合作伙伴協作,與區域和國際同行在共同優先領域合作,以及共同創造未來的創新。請允許我詳細說明。

第一個“C”指與合作伙伴協作,更好地服務家庭和個人。近年來,我們加強了與行業夥伴的合作,以產生更大影響。我們將繼續投資於此類合作,特別是與四大關鍵群體:政府機構、社會服務機構、企業和高等學府。

首先,我們與政府機構合作,更好地支援低收入家庭,提升社會流動性,這是謝耀權先生提出的關鍵關切。2025年,社會及家庭發展部與衛生部試點社會健康整合模式,針對ComLink+家庭,確保健康問題不阻礙其社會流動性。在該模式下,家庭教練和醫療人員共同支援家庭採納健康生活方式並獲得合適服務。今年晚些時候,我們將讓更多ComLink+家庭參與試點。

目前,只有40歲及以上居民可註冊“更健康新加坡”計劃。自2027年起,衛生部將把該計劃註冊資格擴充套件至符合條件的25至39歲ComLink+居民。這樣,更多ComLink+居民可享受可信賴家庭醫生的個性化護理、篩查測試和疫苗接種補貼,並可通過健康促進局的Healthy 365應用訪問相關專案。我們將適時分享更多細節。

第二,我們與社會服務機構合作支援家庭。家庭可能需要幫助解決衝突。例如,社會及家庭發展部與“強化家庭計劃”下的社會服務機構緊密合作,為家庭提供輔導支援。過去十年,我們與家庭司法法院密切合作,採用治療性司法模式解決家庭糾紛,使家庭受益於恢復性、整體性和麵向未來的方法。

我們擴大了對離婚夫婦的支援,正如彭麗安女士所述。自2024年7月起,所有有未成年子女的夫婦在申請離婚前,必須參加由強化家庭計劃中心舉辦的共同育兒課程。我們希望這能防止日後對子女探視的爭議。但若爭議發生,夫婦仍可向家庭司法法院申請調解、探視令或執行探視令。我們鼓勵更多夫婦及早尋求幫助,而非僅在離婚時。

因此,社會及家庭發展部將與強化家庭計劃中心合作,提升家庭輔導能力。到2030年,我們將能服務12,000個案例,是目前的兩倍。公眾將能獲得面對面和線上輔導服務。與此同時,我們將持續提升家庭輔導的可及性,並在線提供自助資源,更好支援家庭。

第三,我們與企業合作,推動更有影響力的慈善事業。2024年,社會及家庭發展部與全國社會服務理事會(NCSS)推出可持續慈善框架,鼓勵企業將社會影響融入業務目標,進行更持續的捐贈和志願服務。我欣慰看到許多企業採納了該框架。例如,星展銀行承諾未來十年投入高達10億新元和150萬員工志願服務小時,支援弱勢群體,包括向KidSTART捐贈650萬新元,向ComLink+進步包捐贈3000萬新元。星展銀行還將慈善融入企業文化,我們希望更多組織效仿。

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第四,我們合作開展研究和專案評估,為未來解決方案建立堅實的證據基礎。我們與多所高等學府合作,積累新加坡最佳實踐的知識庫。

謝耀權先生呼籲進行縱向研究,更好理解社會流動的驅動因素。我們同意,因此與新加坡政策研究所合作開展名為《新加坡家庭路徑與軌跡》的縱向研究。其他合作還包括與政策研究所和新加坡社會科學大學評估ComLink+進步包的有效性。

通過這些合作,我們希望高等學府培養知名專家,建立有影響力的家庭支援知識體系,從而在該領域領先。

第二個“C”代表合作;在此語境下,是指與區域和國際夥伴合作。因為我們需要與他人攜手合作,超越國界,共同加強家庭建設、早期兒童發展和社會流動性。我們希望在政府、學術界以及從業者層面實現這一目標。

這是因為新加坡面臨的挑戰並非獨一無二。通過與志同道合的夥伴合作,我們可以交流思想,發展最佳實踐,更好地服務各自的客戶。

其中一項舉措涉及我們的區域鄰國:柬埔寨、菲律賓和泰國。他們一直熱衷於借鑑我們設立早期兒童發展局(ECDA)和KidSTART計劃的經驗。上個月,我們啟動了能力交流計劃,為這些國家的政府官員和從業者創造學習和交流的機會。該計劃將建立強大的網路,促進基於證據的方法的跨國分享,以惠及幼兒和家庭。

其他平臺包括會議,研究人員和政策制定者可以在此互動,孕育思想和建立關係。去年,社會及家庭發展部(MSF)與新加坡政策研究所(IPS)聯合舉辦了首屆“機會社會國際會議”(ICSO),匯聚本地及國際思想領袖,探討如何更好地為人民創造機會並加強社會流動性。我們將在2027年的ICSO上進一步推動此類合作。

我們還舉辦了兩年一度的亞洲家庭會議,這是一個專注於區域政策、實踐和研究的平臺,討論新興的家庭趨勢、政策和實踐。今年晚些時候,我們將分享新加坡與東盟成員國之間首次區域合作的成果,這將使我們及區域夥伴更好地支援各自國家的家庭。

我對這些夥伴關係帶來的新機遇感到興奮,因為這將使我們能夠更好地為人民服務。

在談及第三個“C”之前,我先談談我們的專業人員。專業人員是我們行業的中堅力量。為了讓他們發揮最佳水平,我們必須首先確保他們得到良好的支援和關懷。Sanjeev Kumar Tiwari先生詢問了對專業人員發展和福祉的支援。

社會服務機構(SSA)可以利用專業能力資助(Professional Capability Grant)下的培訓補貼和贊助,支援員工發展和技能提升。最近,我們優化了相關計劃,使更多專業人員受益,支援他們的發展和留任。符合條件的社會服務專業人員還可申請休假計劃(Sabbatical Leave Scheme),享受10周帶薪假期以充電和恢復活力。

針對保護從業者,我們推出了保護從業者關懷基金(Protection Practitioners Care Fund),使社會服務機構能夠實施福祉舉措和實踐,更好地支援他們。

社會及家庭發展部的官員可以使用Well-being@Gov平臺,該平臺提供福祉資源、輔導和諮詢服務。保護服務人員還獲得額外支援,包括臨床督導和同伴支援小組。

但對專業人員的支援不僅止於此。我們將利用人工智慧(AI)和技術工具提升他們的生活質量,同時使工作更具影響力。這就是第三個“C”的意義——共創。共創未來的創新,改善社會行業專業人員和客戶的生活質量。

作為行業發展者,全國社會服務理事會(NCSS)正與公共和私營部門機構緊密合作,開發並推動全行業採用人工智慧和技術解決方案。其中一個例子是由開放政府產品(Open Government Products)開發的Scribe工具,它能翻譯和總結多語言對話,並將轉錄內容轉化為結構化筆記。僅在過去一年,就有超過100個社會服務機構採用了Scribe。許多社會工作者反饋,Scribe節省了大量時間,使他們能專注於最關心的事情——他們的客戶。

對於早期兒童領域,Melvin Yong先生會高興地知道,在更新後的行業數字計劃下,早期兒童發展局將支援幼兒園採用人工智慧工具,包括AI影片分析解決方案。具體來說,這些工具將支援幼兒園教育者和領導者完成課程規劃、檔案管理和閉路電視錄影回放等任務。

我們的最終目標是減輕專業人員的工作負擔,提升他們的福祉,並改善兒童的照護和教育。

在社會及家庭發展部,我們同樣引入了人工智慧和技術解決方案,支援官員的工作。例如,在青少年之家,耗時的流程如填寫文書和交叉核對檔案現已通過“之家中央資訊系統”數字化。官員們還使用如Pair和AIBots等AI工具生成初稿,幫助他們更高效地工作。

綜合來看,像Rayner Hoe先生這樣的青少年指導官員現在有更多時間與青少年互動,這是工作中最有成就感的部分。

除了這些例子,技術在提升專業人員生活質量方面仍有巨大潛力。

接下來,我將談談我們的客戶。過去幾年,社會及家庭發展部與行業密切合作,共同創造創新解決方案,使我們的服務更加以客戶為中心。一個例子是我們在2024年宣佈的家庭服務格局審查。我們一直在與社會服務機構、從業者及其他利益相關者交流,重新構想如何更好地在客戶所在處提供支援——打造一站式服務,這也是Mariam Jaafar女士所倡導的。

另一個例子是“賦能生活計劃”(Enabled Living Programme),我們與合作伙伴一起試點創新方法,賦予殘障人士獨立生活的能力,建立有意義的聯絡,並提升整體福祉。

此外,我們希望突破界限,共同創造直接提升客戶生活質量的人工智慧和技術解決方案。

去年我訪問中國和卡達時,深刻感受到創新AI解決方案的應用及其為殘障人士工作、生活和娛樂帶來的可能性。

對於像Raiyme先生這樣的聽障人士,他是NCS的桌面工程師,新興技術在社交方面極具賦能作用。例如,LLVision的AI智慧眼鏡具備即時轉錄和翻譯功能,使Raiyme能更好地與家中以馬來語唇讀的母親交流。當然,AI機器還需更好地學習馬來語。他也能與女兒的普通話老師交流,無需翻譯,因為AI會幫他完成。

在卡達,公共場所包括公共交通站點安裝了能夠通過手語與聽障人士交流的全息助理。這些技術可能隻影響社會中的一小部分人群,但對受益者及其家庭的影響深遠。當我們與區域夥伴合作時,可以更大規模地支援此類技術的發展和應用。

針對殘障人士,新加坡賦能中心(SG Enable)將繼續倡導負責任地使用人工智慧和技術解決方案——這是Rachel Ong女士非常關心的話題。殘障人士可通過輔助技術基金(Assistive Technology Fund)獲得補貼,購買輔助技術裝置,實現獨立生活。新加坡賦能中心將策劃並持續開發更多包括AI增強功能的輔助裝置。

在賦能生活倡議資助(Enabling Lives Initiative Grant)下,也提供資金支援改善獨立性和擴大殘障人士就業機會的AI解決方案。例如,AiSee是一款AI驅動的可穿戴裝置,幫助視障人士通過語音提示更好地瞭解周圍環境。

除了擔心人工智慧和技術會奪走工作崗位的觀點外,它們實際上可以成為推動善舉的力量;成為支援我們專業人員和客戶開創新局面的助力。我對其潛力和機遇感到興奮。

主席先生,我現在結束髮言。我們的目標明確。我們希望為所支援的客戶和家庭帶來更好的成果、更好的機會和更好的生活。這是社會及家庭發展部工作的動力。實現這一目標的方式是我們所有人共同努力,保持團結,尤其是在全球不確定性加劇的背景下。

在社會及家庭發展部,我們正與社會服務行業的合作伙伴、企業、高等教育機構、志願者及社群攜手取得進展。我們共同努力,培育有韌性的個體、堅強的家庭和關懷的社會。

自去年啟動“新加坡奉獻”(SG Gives)以來,我感到欣慰的是,我們已收到超過1億新元的捐款,匯入社群基金、總統挑戰和“共建更強社會”集體。政府將配捐這些捐款,以放大我們的集體影響力,支援有需要的社群。

但我們還能做得更多。

我呼籲所有新加坡人加入我們的行列。當我們攜手合作時,將開啟新的可能,實現遠超單打獨鬥的成果。正是這種集體精神和新加坡人相互支援與賦能的意願,推動了真正且持久的變革。這也是社會及家庭發展部即將啟動“更好,從我們開始”(Better Starts with Us)運動的原因,因為我們相信,正是通過這種共同承諾,我們不僅在建設一個強大團結的社會,更是在打造一個讓所有家庭實現目標和抱負的美好新加坡。[掌聲]

晚上7點43分

主席:高階國務部長朱卡奈因·阿卜杜勒·拉希姆。

英文原文

SPRS Hansard · Fetched: 2026-05-02

The Chairman : Head I, Ministry of Social and Family Development (MSF). Mr Xie Yao Quan.

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Keeping Social Mobility Alive

Mr Xie Yao Quan (Jurong Central) : Chairman, I move, "That the total sum allocated to Head I of the Estimates be reduced by $100."

Members on both sides of the House have spoken passionately in this House about social mobility in Singapore. So, there is no monopoly on compassion for the least amongst us and no monopoly on ideas to uplift them.

Social mobility is one centre of gravity in MSF's work. So, as Government Parliamentary Committee (GPC) Chair, I thought to use this speech to contribute to the conversation. And here, I would like to declare that I am also working in a foundation focussed on social mobility.

But first, let us frame the challenge of social mobility in Singapore precisely. And let me start with this point.

Singapore has uplifted lower-income households significantly over the decades. There has been broad-based progress for all. In technical terms, Singapore has kept absolute social mobility very much alive. Each generation has, on the whole, including those in the lowest-income segment, been able to achieve much better life outcomes than the previous generation.

Yet, between households, higher-income households are accumulating advantages even more quickly than lower-income household. Therefore, within each generation, the starting points in life between children from higher- and lower-income families are moving further apart, and the opportunities gap throughout life between children from higher- and lower-income families is widening, resulting in larger inequalities in outcomes much later in life.

In technical terms, therefore, relative social mobility in Singapore is slowing even as we have kept absolute mobility very much alive. The Ministry of Finance's (MOF's) Occasional Papers, in both 2015 and 2025, bear this out. The key measure for relative mobility is the income distribution of children, in their 30s, born to fathers who were in the bottom 20% of earners, in their 40s. In other words, the starting condition for these children was, being born into the bottom 20% by income, and the measure is where these children ended up by income in their adult lives.

In an ideal world, 20% of these children would themselves end up in the top 20% of earners in their cohorts; 20% will end up being in the bottom 20% of earners – like their fathers, and so on. There would be an equal chance, basically, of moving up to the top, or anywhere in between, or remaining at the bottom, in an ideal world.

But the world is obviously not ideal. So, in Singapore,13.8% of those born into the bottom 20% in the 1985 to 1989 cohorts made it to the top 20% of earners while 25.3% ended up in the bottom 20% of earners, like their fathers. So, there is an over-representation. Compared to the 1978 to 1982 cohorts, in other words, those born just seven years earlier, the 1985 to 1989 cohorts have almost one full percentage point less that made it to the top 20% of earners, and one full percentage point more that ended up in the same bottom 20%, like their fathers.

So, relative social mobility in Singapore has been slowing even as we sustained broad-based progress for all. And the natural tendency will be for relative mobility to continue slowing, as it has in many other advanced economies.

I must point out, though, that we have been doing better than other advanced economies in relative mobility. In France, less than 10% of those born into the bottom 20% ended up in the top 20%. And even in a Nordic society like Denmark, the figure is at 11.7%. We are at 13.8%. So, we are not doing badly at all.

But Singapore has never been one to define our values and ideals solely on how we outperform other societies. We chart our own path and we set our own values and ideals. I think we must continue to be a society where relative mobility is alive as much as possible and indeed, strengthened if at all possible. Keep the measure as close to 20% as possible, and lean against the natural pressures of slowing relative mobility with time.

In concrete terms, this means pushing against the natural pressures of ever further starting points in life and the pressures of an ever-widening opportunities gap that compounds through life for our children of today.

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Our families at the bottom are not stuck – far from it – but we must help their children keep up with families at the top who are pulling away faster. Help children at the bottom keep up from the start of their lives, and through life. Or as Ms Sylvia Lim said in this House back in 2018, children impacted by their parents' circumstances must be "supported or facilitated to break out".

However, while we can look to the Government, with its policy levers, to secure broad-based progress for all, in other words, to deliver absolute mobility, it is quite a different story for relative mobility.

Keeping relative social mobility alive, essentially, containing that opportunities gap between your children and mine, almost by definition, cannot be left to the Government, or for that matter, the social sector, alone. It takes all of us. Those who have done well and can provide the most to their children must play an active role and become part of the solution, to create opportunities for those children who start off with less.

Indeed, well-known researchers, like Raj Chetty and Matt Jackson, are showing that in America at least. Children from low-income families have a better chance to become high-income as adults if they get opportunities to interact with peers from higher-income families. This likely holds true in Singapore, too. So, it takes all of us.

And indeed, as Teo You Yenn puts it in her book, "This is What Inequality Looks Like", inequality, in opportunities, through life, is not just the result of policies, but also how everyone, at the top and bottom and in between interact and choose to interact with these policies, interact with one another within a social context and do and do not do certain things.

So, again, it takes all of us. So, those who have done well must play an active role to create opportunities for those children who start off with much less. This is what a "we first" and mobile society in Singapore can look like. And I think becoming such a society and keeping relative mobility alive in this way, will be a defining challenge of our times.

So, what do we need to get there?

First, I think we need scientific knowledge and understanding. Ms Sylvia Lim, in the same speech in 2018, called for longitudinal studies that will, "track the fate of families (at the bottom) over time" and indeed, go "beyond numbers to dig deep into the daily lives and evaluate the reasons why they do not seem to be able to catch up with the rest of society."

MOF's Occasional Papers in 2015 and 2025 do provide a longitudinal view on how families at the bottom are doing. They are a very good start. But I agree with Ms Lim and today, I want to build on her call.

To really help us in our work to close the opportunities gap throughout life and keep relative social mobility alive in Singapore, I think we need longitudinal research in Singapore that goes beyond descriptive correlations amongst group averages, to mechanisms that elucidate what actually drives social mobility, at the individual level and models that can predict and simulate how social mobility might change with certain shifts to the drivers of mobility, again at the individual level.

In very technical and academic terms, we can use theoretical networking games and micro-founded structural approaches that overcome the reflection problem arising in reduced-form peer effects analysis in econometrics to achieve this.

But in simple terms, we should be aiming for models that show how individuals make decisions and assume certain trajectories in life based on intrinsic factors, extrinsic factors and the influence of peers on one another. And all this is possible only if we have the right dataset. So, we must start with data, the right type of data, collected to the right fidelity.

We need data on the social networks of Singaporeans at the bottom. We need data on cognitive and behavioural traits, on their participation in the economy, not only in the formal sector, but also, and perhaps especially, in the informal sector. We need data on participation in credit facilities. Again, both formal and informal and we will need such data over a long period of time.

To my knowledge, there is no such dataset in Singapore perhaps precisely because it is very challenging to collect such data, to high fidelity. It requires extensive and deep fieldwork, over a long period of time and first, building strong relationships of trust. It requires adherence to high ethical standards, including privacy standards, that will do no harm to the vulnerable that we are seeking to understand and ultimately uplift. And all these mean it will require considerable and sustained funding.

And by the way, such a dataset goes well beyond administrative data. Administrative data is still critical. But the kind of research being contemplated will need much more than administrative data. I urge the Government to consider constructing such a dataset, investing in such a longitudinal dataset, with a view to enabling models that will truly transform our understanding of what drives social mobility, what interventions targeting what drivers may work and work to what extent.

But even with such research, by definition, we will only truly know the outcomes of what we do today 35 to 40 years later. Social mobility is that longitudinal by its very nature. Put another way, we cannot wait for longitudinal research to conclude, to tell us what we should we do now, to close the opportunities gap for our children of today. Deciding what to do now to close that opportunities gap will thus be as much art as it is science.

We will need to look to whatever evidence base is available and apply judgement, consider ideas thoroughly, try to do no harm if at all possible, but act now. And then, in 35 to 40 years down the road, we will truly find out how we have done.

But so, what do we need to do now, systemically, to close the opportunities gap from the start of life and through life? Let me suggest three key principles.

First, there is no "magic bullet" solution. Instead, we need a system of interlocking solutions, across multiple domains – academic, non-academic, social capital formation, financial stability, housing, health – each solution working alongside the others, to collectively close the opportunities gap.

Second, we need good solutions at scale, more than excellent pilots that remain as pilots. The harder work – the hardest work – is often in scaling and sustaining at scale. And it is this harder work that we need to do, to have a chance to meaningfully close the opportunities gap.

And third, we need solutions throughout life, not just at any one life stage, but across various life stages, to overcome the opportunities gap that compounds through life. Early life matters and we must intervene heavily in the early years, but we cannot stop there. We need interventions beyond, well into adulthood, to close the opportunities gap throughout life.

So, on that note, I urge community partners, funders and citizens to all come together to create interventions across domains, add scale and through life to close the opportunities gap for our children. And the Government can play a leadership role here to signpost, coordinate, support, resource and galvanise.

[(proc text) Question proposed. (proc text)]

Lasting Power of Attorney (LPA) Fees and Professional Donee Reform

Mr Kenneth Tiong Boon Kiat (Aljunied) : Sir, there is a gap in how we administer Lasting Power of Attorneys (LPAs) and deputyship under the Mental Capacity Act. The professional donee framework is too limited, relying too much on named individuals. Section 12(1)(b) requires personal welfare donees be individuals. Organisations are allowed only for property and affairs.

The Office of Public Guardian's (OPG's) own list of registered professional deputies illustrates the consequence. Six social workers and one accountant from TOUCH Community Services are listed individually: same address at Bukit Merah Central, same email, same phone number. They function as an organisation, but the law forces the appointment to be personal. When that social worker leaves, the donor must pay to appoint a replacement. In deputyship cases, the cost comes from the incapacitated person's own assets. It seems wrong to make the donor pay for a gap in the law.

There is also a practical issue with personal appointments. LPAs are made years or decades before activation, meaning individual donees may have retired, emigrated or died. There is considerable uncertainty whether donees appointed years ago can take up the appointment.

Australia's states have addressed this through Public Guardian offices, providing continuity for personal welfare decisions, regardless of staff changes. They charge modest fees and provide the option of being donees of last resort.

I ask, will MSF consider amending section 12 to allow accredited organisations to serve as personal welfare donees? Beyond that, could Singapore's Public Guardian serve as donee of last resort, as Australian states have done? Will OPG also issue guidance on what happens when a professional donee falls off the register? And will OPG consider prescribed fee guidelines for professional donee services, given this is a fiduciary service for the most vulnerable and not a competitive market?

Strengthening of LPA Regime

Ms Sylvia Lim (Aljunied) : Sir, as of January this year, there were 410,000 LPAs registered by the Ministry. Momentum has built up as the benefits of making LPAs become more widely understood.

My purpose today is to highlight two groups of people who may not be benefiting from the LPA regime for different reasons. They are first, those without any relative or friend to appoint; and secondly, our low-wage foreign workers.

First, those without any relative or friend to appoint. My Party colleague Kenneth Tiong has elaborated on why the current LPA regime is not adequate in requiring named individuals and not organisations to take on professional doneeship to manage one's personal welfare. I agree with him that we should consider enabling a donor to appoint the public guardian or the public trustee as donee, as we see in jurisdictions, such as Australia. Such an option will assist those donors as the appointment will withstand the passage of time.

The second group who currently have difficulties with LPAs are foreign workers in Singapore under work permits. Though they are relatively young, some of them work under conditions where the risk of serious injury, including mental incapacity, is ever present. Examples include those in physically demanding industries, such as the construction and marine sectors. These migrant workers do not have next-of-kin in Singapore and their friends may not be conversant with navigating Singapore's systems and services. Should they suddenly lose mental capacity, they would benefit if a donee could assist them to make decisions about their personal welfare or manage their funds, for example, to send money back to their loved ones at home.

Sir, it is heartening to know that Singaporeans are on standby to help. These include volunteers who care deeply about migrant worker welfare and wish to contribute. There are also lawyers who are willing to issue LPAs without charge or take on the role of a volunteer donee if needed.

However, the issue the workers face is the high cost of registration of LPAs for foreigners. The registration fee for non-citizens and non-permanent residents is currently fixed at $230. For our low-wage migrant workers, this fee is prohibitive, accounting for a significant portion of their monthly salary. To them, it is simply unaffordable. The public guardian should not have a blanket registration fee for all foreigners, which applies to our high-wage Employment Pass (EP) holders and low-wage foreign work permit holders alike.

Our low-wage foreign workers work under tough physical conditions, and we rely on them to do much of the work that Singaporeans are not inclined to do. The least we can do is to make it practical for them to make their LPAs, either without charge or at a nominal fee. Such a gesture would go a long way to showing that we really care.

Rethinking Family Policy

Mr Gabriel Lam (Sembawang) : Mr Chairman, MSF has consistently emphasised the importance of strong families and I support that objective. However, when we speak about "strong families", we must ask: what families are we speaking about and are our policies fully aligned with the lived realities of Singaporean households today?

Let me begin with single-parent families.

Single parents face a distinct and compounding set of pressures – financial strain, time scarcity, caregiving burden, housing constraints and, in some cases, social stigma. Unlike dual-income households, single parents must shoulder both breadwinning and caregiving responsibilities without internal household support.

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While MSF provides assistance schemes, much of the framework remains largely designed around a dual-family baseline. Single parents often qualify for support only after meeting strict income thresholds and many fall into a financially squeezed middle, earning too much for sustained assistance, yet too little to comfortably manage rising costs.

These are parents who work full-time, care for their children alone and yet live one unexpected bill away from financial instability.

I therefore ask the Minister. Does MSF track long-term economic mobility outcomes specifically for single-parent households? Are there plans to recalibrate housing, childcare and work-support schemes to better reflect the time and income constraints unique to single parents? Has the Ministry conducted a comprehensive review of whether current family policies inadvertently assume a nuclear, dual-parent model?

Mr Chairman, this leads to a broader question. Much of MSF's effort to encourage strong families appears centred on public education campaigns promoting marriage, parenting and shared norms. While public messaging has its place, many families today are not struggling because of a lack of awareness. They are struggling because of cumulative pressures – cost of living, housing affordability, expensive childcare, enrichment expectations and long working hours.

At the national level, we rightly prioritise workforce development and economic competitiveness. But do our family policies receive the same systemic priority? Or have we unintentionally reduced family stability to a messaging exercise rather than treating it as an economic and cross-ministerial design issue?

Is the traditional nuclear family still the dominant policy reference point? And if so, does that sufficiently reflect current realities, including single-parent households, blended families, delayed marriages and dual-career pressures?

I would therefore like the Minister to clarify whether MSF intends to undertake a broader review of family policy design assumptions; whether outcome metrics for "family strength" go beyond programme uptake to measure stability, financial resilience and child well-being across diverse household types; and whether inter-Ministry coordination, particularly with the Ministry of Manpower, Ministry of National Development and Ministry of Education, is being strengthened to address root pressures embedded in our housing, labour and education systems, rather than relying primarily on awareness campaigns.

Mr Chairman, this policy cut is not intended to diminish support for families. Rather, it signals the need to reassess whether our frameworks have kept pace with social change. If we are serious about building strong families, then our policies must be designed not around idealised models but around the realities Singaporean households actually live with today.

Strengthening Families

Mr Melvin Yong Yik Chye (Radin Mas) : Mr Chairman, families in Singapore face considerable pressures in our fast-paced and competitive society. Many must manage the cost of housing, education, healthcare and daily living. For lower-income households, these demands can be especially heavy. At the same time, long working hours in pursuit of job security and career progression often reduce the time parents spend with their children, placing strain on family relationships.

Strong and resilient families, therefore, require sustained support. The Strengthening Families programme plays an important role through counselling, parenting workshops and family bonding activities. As family needs grow more complex, how does MSF intend to further enhance and scale up the programme to better support families facing multiple stresses?

Mr Chairman, I would also like to raise a related issue. Overseas research has observed inter-generational patterns of children being born out of wedlock, often influenced by socio-economic factors. We should be mindful to prevent such cycles from taking root in Singapore.

While upholding the importance of marriage and stable families, we must also ensure that children are not disadvantaged by their circumstances of birth.

Currently, unwed parents do not receive the Baby Bonus cash gift, and they are not eligible for tax benefits, such as the Working Mother's Child Relief and the Parenthood Tax Rebate. These differences can have a real impact, especially for lower-income single parent households. Can MSF review how we can better support unwed parents in meeting their children's needs and whether more local research can be conducted to better understand and prevent potential inter-generational cycles?

Independent Preschool Viability

Mr Kenneth Tiong Boon Kiat : Sir, Ms Loy Wee Mee runs Pre-School By-The-Park in my ward. The Early Childhood Development Agency (ECDA) awarded her centre's Make*Believe programme the Innovation Award in 2023. The National Institute of Early Childhood Development (NIEC) featured her as the expert voice on play-based learning.

In January this year, her Li Hwan centre announced closure; 52 parents rallied to save it. Two of them, Nicole and Jasmine, believed enough in the school to take it over themselves. We wish them the best. But the structural challenge remains – full-day fees are $1,655 a month, with no Government funding. The Partner Operator (POP) centre nearby charges $650. That is a $1,000 gap. Passion alone cannot close it.

Sir, this gap is not market created. It is policy created. When Government subsidy prices 80% of the market at $610 to $650, that becomes what preschools should cost. Parents are not choosing Anchor Operator (AOP) pedagogy over play-based learning. They are choosing to pay AOP prices. At a $1,000 differential, there is no real choice.

The squeeze hits labour too. AOP and POP salary targets funded by subsidy becomes a sector-wide wage benchmark. Independents must match or lose teachers, not to better pedagogy but to better subsidised pay. Every time salary targets rise, independents' costs rise with them, but revenue does not. The 20% is expected to innovate, but with what?

The differential treatment extends beyond fees. I thank ECDA for extending the Manpower Hiring Grant to independents this January. But it took two years.

From 2024 to 2026, only AOPs and POPs had subsidised talent development. Independents competed for the same shrinking pool of educators at full cost. This is the same regulator funding one team's player development budget and asking the other why they cannot keep up.

The end state – two tiers and nothing in between. Mass market, Government preschools on one side; ultra-premium international schools on the other. The mid-tier, wherein Montessori, Reggio, play-based and inclusive programmes for children with diverse needs actually live, is collapsing. Middle-class families lose meaningful choice.

Progress is when what was once a boutique pedagogy becomes the base we build for the next generation.

Malaysia is doing this. In December 2025, its government revamped the national preschool curriculum to prioritise play-based, child-centred learning. In April, Kuala Lumpur hosts the World Forum on Early Care and Education, with 500 participants from over 40 countries. Malaysian educators invite Singaporean operators to speak at their forums on play- and project-based learning. They plan study tours here. Their government is actively driving these reforms.

Our neighbours are investing in what our funding model makes unviable. If they are right about early childhood, and I believe they are, a pedagogy gap will open across the Causeway, as we drive out the very educators they want to learn from.

I have two asks. First, fund the child, not the school. If the subsidy follows a child to any licensed, quality-assured centre, parents, all parents, can choose the pedagogy the Government's own agencies say works. When the gap is $80, parents can weigh the differences.

Second, operator-independent teacher funding. If a teacher is L2 certified, why should their salary support depend on which operator employs them?

The expertise is here. Our own agency agrees the pedagogy works. What is missing is a funding structure that lets parents act on the agreement. I ask that we let parents choose.

Supporting Early Childhood Educators

Mr Melvin Yong Yik Chye : Mr Chairman, accessible, affordable and quality preschools are fundamental to giving every child a strong start in life.

First, accessibility means ensuring that preschool places are available and conveniently located across our neighbourhoods, so families can enrol their children without undue difficulty. Second, affordability ensures that families from all income levels can assess early childhood education without financial strain. And third, quality remains critical. A nurturing and stimulating environment supported by well-trained educators, age-appropriate curricula and safe facilities enables children's holistic development.

A strong core of early childhood educators lays the foundation for our children's cognitive, social, emotional and physical growth, preparing them well for primary school and beyond.

Sir, can the Ministry therefore provide an update on the progress made in strengthening the accessibility, affordability and quality of our preschool sector?

At the same time, our early childhood educators are taking on increasing responsibilities. With smaller families and rising parental expectations, educators are expected to do more than ever before. This is further compounded by manpower challenges and the time required to fill vacancies. In this regard, can MSF consider expanding the roles and capabilities of learning support educators beyond special needs support, so that they can help augment and relieve pressures on our stretched early childhood workforce.

Caregiving Leave Policies

Ms Eileen Chong Pei Shan (Non-Constituency Member) : Sir, my generation is simultaneously asked to have more children and to support our ageing parents so they can age-in-place. Often at the same time and often with the same leave pool.

In my maiden speech, I said that caregiving is work and we can and should do more to support our caregivers. Today, childcare and extended childcare leave remains the only legislated form of ongoing paid caregiving leave. Each parent receives two to six days a year, regardless of how many children they have. Yet we know that caregiving demands multiply with each child and does not divide neatly between siblings. Our leave framework should reflect this reality.

The Workers' Party recommends extending childcare leave on a per child basis up to age 12. We also propose establishing paid family care leave for Singaporeans with primary caregiving responsibilities for elderly parents or family members with severe disabilities.

There is the tripartite standard on unpaid caregiving leave but it is voluntary, only covers hospitalisation events and has only been adopted by a relatively small fraction of employers. It also encourages employees to first use their paid annual leave. So, we are back to the same challenge which I raised in my maiden speech – caregivers burning annual leave time meant for their own rest with no income protection.

Singaporeans should not have to choose between caring for their loved ones and taking care of themselves. I call on MSF to seriously consider these recommendations.

Adoption of Children

Ms Sylvia Lim : Sir, there are annually around 400 adoption applications in Singapore. Adoptions should be encouraged, not just for the wholehearted act of love that it embodies but also to mitigate our dismal total fertility rate.

It is thus very concerning to receive news of investigations by Indonesia into an alleged baby trafficking ring supplying babies to Singapore for adoption. This raises questions about regional efforts to curb child trafficking.

In November 2025, Workers' Party Non-constituency Member Andre Low filed a Parliamentary Question about regional cooperation among the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) countries to protect against child trafficking in inter-country adoptions. In answer, MSF Minister Masagos mentioned the ASEAN Regional Plan of Action on the Elimination of Violence against Children from 2016 to 2025. Domestically, he highlighted that child trafficking was criminalised under the Adoption of Children Act.

He further stressed the robustness of the adoption process, which included the verification of the child's identity papers, travel documents and conducting checks with birth parents to ensure they had given valid consent and had not offered the child for adoption for improper financial or material gain.

In 2022, MSF tabled the Adoption of Children Bill to introduce a specific regulatory framework governing adoption. The framework includes a requirement for adoptive parents to disclose to the Court the payments they have made to the birth parents and others in the process, and to seek the Court sanctions for these payments. It would also be an offence to obtain the birth parents' consent by fraud, duress or undue influence. The question is, when it comes to children's source from overseas, how effective are these provisions?

Finally, the ongoing Indonesian investigations have led to delays in adoptive parents applying for Singapore Citizenship for their children. In the meantime, adoptive parents would have to pay higher childcare-related expenses without a clear endpoint, which has been straining and demoralising. I would like to repeat my call to MSF to extend citizen rates to those children, especially when both parents are Singaporeans.

Fostering - A Holistic Approach

Dr Neo Kok Beng (Nominated Member) : Mr Chairman, I would like to state that I am a foster parent registered with MSF. I have three foster kids with me, including one toddler.

Sir, there is a real shortage of foster parents. There are about 500 plus children under fostering and the 500 plus under institutions, which is really not a good place to be. But there are about 600 plus foster parents. So, I think we should put more effort into generating awareness among the communities, working with the fostering agency, such as Boys' Towns, Gracehaven, Muhammadiyah Association and PPIS Home for Good.

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The other thing is the foster parents; that they are "on" 24/7. It is not "foster parents". It is really the "foster families". So, they really have to look after the kids, stabilise them and nurture them.

But there are really issues on the information access for the foster kids. They cannot access the school portal and they cannot book online medical. Those are the issues that the Ministry might want to consider doing a design-thinking project. Go through the full journey for the foster parents and the foster kids, and see where are the pain points. Give them the full access since the kids are the primary persons whom we are looking after.

The other thing is a much more holistic way of looking at fostering. I think currently is the trial systems, where you have the biological parents, the foster parents. They do not really talk to each other and then you have the case workers serving as "in-betweens". It has its positive and there is the reason for it being so – so they do not sort of interact too much or have conflicts with each other.

However, I think we can explore much more intensive co-parenting, in situations that are possible, to bring both foster parents and the biological parents together, with the kids as the centre of our attention. The whole idea for us as foster parents, is to stabilise the kid, gain trust, build bonds and then interact or integrate them back with the biological parents. That is our mission and we want to make sure that the bonds continue, rather than disrupted halfway.

Protecting Children and Co-parenting

Ms Diana Pang Li Yen (Marine Parade-Braddell Heights) : Chairman, I rise to speak on divorcing couples. But let me start with a quick clarification. I am married; happily married. But I am speaking about divorce today because in Singapore has been going on an upward trend.

In particular, I wish to address the support that MSF provides to help parents transition from being spouses to being co-parents. Divorce is not merely the end of a marriage. For many families, it is the beginning of a long co-parenting journey and the people who pay the highest price when that journey is poorly managed are the children.

In that regard, I support the policy intent behind the mandatory co-parenting programmes for divorcing couples with children below 21 years old. The structure is good, it is sound. The online e-learning component to set a baseline understanding, followed by a physical counselling session to discuss practical co-parenting arrangements after divorce is good. It rightly treats co-parenting as a public good. But if we accept that, then the support must be timely, accessible and directed to the parents who need it most.

Chairman, I make two observations on how MSF can improve this in a practical way. I was informed that the physical counselling session take weeks to book, with longer waits during festive periods and at more heavily subscribed Family Service Centre locations. I urge MSF to strengthen delivery of the programme in three ways. First, increase counsellor capacity and appointment slots, including weekends and weekdays. Second, expand the schemes to more locations, which includes increasing Family Service Centre capacity where demand is persistently high. Third, use video sessions in suitable cases so physical capacity constraints do not become a bottleneck.

Next, Chairman, if the programme's purpose is to protect children by improving co-parenting readiness, there appears to be a gap in who is required to attend.

Currently, only parents initiating or consenting to divorce are required to attend. However, parents contesting the divorce or related matters, who may be the one who need it most, are exempted. If such a parent is outside the programme, the intervention reaches only one side of the co-parenting, which undermines the policy purpose. I therefore urge MSF to consider applying the programme more equally to all parents undergoing divorce with children under 21 years old.

Chairman, this connects to a second issue that often arises in higher-conflict divorces and it is one that is particularly acute during festive periods when children's access and family time become more emotionally charged. During this Lunar New Year period, many families are reuniting and celebrating, but for some parents it is the toughest time of the year because their child has been unilaterally taken away or withheld by the other parent without any Court Order, contact is cut off and they are simply told to "go to Court".

The cruelty is that legal processes take time and in these cases time matters most, because the first days and weeks of separation can disrupt the child's routines, allow untrue narratives to take hold and erode the child's bond with the left-behind parent. In other words: justice delayed is justice denied.

While international child abduction triggers urgent return mechanisms under the Hague Convention, domestic removals within Singapore do not have an equivalent rapid response track, leaving left-behind parents to wait for months whilst their applications are being resolved in Court. Yet for the child, the harm caused by sudden separation can be just as real and just as lasting.

I therefore urge that we treat domestic child abduction as a time-critical child welfare issue by tracking and publishing core indicators and by creating an expedited judicial pathway with early neutral review, swift restoration of safe interim contact where appropriate, proportionate deterrence against bad-faith conduct by one parent and all-round operational support for parents, so that we protect genuine safety cases while preventing abuse of a "remove first, explain later" tactic and safeguarding children's best interests.

So, I ask MSF: what more can be done, together with the wider family justice system, to ensure that children are not left to bear the consequences of time delays in high-conflict cases where contact is abruptly cut off?

Chairman, these are practical refinements to existing problems, but they go to the heart of what MSF stands for. Strong families are not only built before a crisis, they are also protected through a crisis. I hope the Ministry will consider these improvements so that the system achieves what it is meant to achieve: better co-parenting, less conflict and better outcomes for children.

Protection Against Harmful AI Usage

Miss Rachel Ong (Tanjong Pagar) : Chairman, the misuse of AI, particularly through sexually exploitative deepfake content, is creating new risks. Children and vulnerable persons, including persons with disabilities, may face impersonation, coercion and greater difficulty reporting harm.

May I ask the Minister: what safeguards are in place to protect families, especially children and vulnerable persons, from harmful uses of AI? How is MSF working with other Government agencies to strengthen digital literacy among parents and caregivers? Are there specialised support services for victims of AI-enabled exploitation, particularly children and persons with disabilities?

Strengthening Support for All

Mr Sanjeev Kumar Tiwari (Nominated Member) : Mr Chairman, the call to build a "we first" society reminds us that growth must uplift every family and that care cannot be left to individuals alone.

A society that puts "we first", must recognise caregiving as real work – whether it is a single parent balancing work and childcare, families raising children with special needs who juggle between therapy appointments and education, or mid-career workers caring for elderly parents while trying to remain economically active.

Caregivers embody this spirit every day. They shoulder responsibilities not just for themselves, but for their families and loved ones, often while continuing to work and contribute to society.

For many caregivers, the challenge is not only financial support, but having the confidence that help will be there in a timely and predictable way, as care needs evolve unpredictably over time.

As such, can the Minister share how MSF is strengthening integrated support services for caregivers? How are social, employment and healthcare touchpoints being better aligned to provide caregivers and their families with continuity, assurance and sustained support across different stages of their caregiving journey, so that they can continue caring, working and contributing with confidence?

With that, it also brings us as a "we first" society. We must also care for those who serve others. Social service professionals and MSF officers operate in a high-touch, emotionally demanding environment, often under manpower constraints.

As the Ministry advances digitalisation and service transformation, how is it ensuring caseload sustainability, safeguarding officers' career development and upskilling, mental wellbeing and mitigating risks of burnout, so that the social services sector remains a rewarding and sustainable career for officers?

If we truly believe in "we first", then caregivers and the officers who walk alongside them, must feel that the system stands firmly with them.

Supporting Comlink+ Families

Mr Melvin Yong Yik Chye : Mr Chairman, some lower-income families face layered and persistent challenges that cannot be resolved quickly even with well designed incentives. They may be coping with unstable employment, caregiving responsibilities, debt, housing constraints, or children with additional developmental needs. These challenges often interact and compound one another, even when families are making sincere efforts, attending coaching, enrolling in programmes, seeking employment or upgrading skills. Progress can be gradual and uneven.

Milestones, such as clearing debt, sustaining employment, or ensuring consistent preschool attendance take time, especially when setbacks occur. In such circumstances, achievement-based progress package, though well intention may feel distant and difficult to attain. When goals seem too ambitious, families may feel discouraged despite genuine effort. This can dampen motivation and affect take up, particularly among those who already find the journey daunting.

I therefore welcome this year's enhancements to ComLink+, including new payouts, smaller, but more achievable milestones and cash incentives. Recognising incremental progress and celebrating step by step gains will better support families on a realistic and dignified path towards stability and upward mobility.

Could the Ministry share more details on how these new milestones will be calibrated and how the enhanced payouts will better reflect sustained efforts? How does MSF plan to strengthen the Comlink+ ecosystem, including both employers and community partners, to better recruit, support and retain beneficiaries in sustained employment?

The Chairman : Mr Cai Yinzhou, you can take your two cuts together.

Screen Detox for Children and Families

Mr Cai Yinzhou (Bishan-Toa Payoh) : Thank you, Chairman. My both cuts will address guardrails for protecting our children in low-income families.

In the book "Alone together", author Turkle examines the increasing reliance on digital devices and social media and the paradox of being alone, together. Feeling both connected and disconnected in an increasingly digital world. Apart from loneliness, academic studies show how technology addition leads to anxiety, depression and even aggression and attention-deficit and hyperactivity disorder symptoms.

While the Government has banned smartphone use in secondary schools, excessive screen time outside school hours remains a challenge, especially for children from lower-income families.

In my house visits to rental blocks, I often see parents occupying children and even infants, with screens – smartphones, tablets and TVs. Parents have shared with me their challenges of being busy at work, health or caregiving responsibilities. Therefore, children are often left to their own devices – literally. In this case, the ones occupied with digital screens are unsupervised and without parental restriction guardrails.

It is crucial that whilst we push nationwide for a reduction of our children's exposure to screens in schools and age appropriate content, our home environments are not left behind.

I would like to ask the Ministry how it specifically considers the needs and context of lower-income families and work with other agencies to provide additional support when developing screen time policies in school, after school and at home.

Protect Children in Disengaged Families

Mr Chairman, while Budget 2026 rightly strengthens support for ComLink+ families, the effectiveness of this support relies entirely on successful engagement. In my interactions with families, I have observed recurring challengea: families who remain uncooperative or deeply disengaged. This is often driven by the exhaustion of juggling multiple commitments, personal crisis or a lack of trust in the cobbling system.

This lack of engagement creates a critical blind spot. It makes it difficult for family coaches to assess genuine needs, maintain continuity of care, or escalate cases where serious concerns, such as family violence or child safety may be involved. When engagement is inconsistent, the human touch and the trust built by a dedicated coach are easily lost.

We must recognise that unresponsiveness itself is often a signal of deeper and more complex challenges. We cannot allow these families, especially their children, to fall through the cracks.

I have two clarifications on this front.

First, what specific protocols for engaging within the ComLink+ Alliance Working Group and its partner agencies to re-engage families who have become unresponsive?

Second, would the Ministry consider a formal escalation pathway for such cases to Family Service Centres for deeper social work intervention when initial coaching efforts fail to gain traction? Ensuring the safety and well-being of the children in these households must remain our absolute priority.

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Enhancements to ComLink+

Ms Mariam Jaafar (Sembawang) : Earlier this term, I spoke of the need for joined-up longitudinal pathways in education, health and careers that follow a family across life's transitions, so that no one is left to fall through the cracks. Budget 2026 takes a meaningful step in this direction through the enhanced ComLink+ framework.

ComLink+ is not just short-term relief. It is a mobility platform. Its strength lies in its progression engine. When support is integrated, milestones are clear and progress is sustained, families do not only cope, they move forward.

I welcome the enhancements in Budget 2026 – higher cash payouts tied to stable employment and preschool attendance, intermediate milestones, higher caps and the new $500 quarterly Partnership Payout. These strengthen the incentive structure.

But if ComLink+ is to become the architecture of modern social mobility, five shifts matter.

First, integration must be structural, not best effort. A family may juggle a family coach, a healthcare team, an employment officer and a school representative. That is a lot of people. Could we move towards one shared progression plan across agencies – one dashboard, one set of goals, one coordinated journey? I ask the Minister if MSF is moving in this direction, so families experience genuine integrated support rather than parallel case files?

Second, design for fragility. Progress is rarely linear. A contact job ends. A grandparent falls ill. A small shock can reverse months of work. We must recognise momentum, not just milestones. As ComLink+ scales, how will MSF ensure temporary setbacks beyond a family's control do not permanently disqualify them from progression payouts?

Third, scale must not dilute trust. Trust is the foundation of transformation. One trusted person who knows their story, who checks in, who believes in them when they do not believe in themselves can make all the difference. As we scale, how do we protect that relational core as numbers grow?

Fourth, measure transformation, not transactions – not just payouts issued, but job retained, sustained preschool attendance, debt reduced, stress stabilised. Do coaches have the capacity and tools to anchor this deeper work?

Fifth, mobility must include future readiness. With AI reshaping our economy, digital literacy, AI familiarity and tech-enabled income pathways must be part of progression goals. If we do not equip families for the economy of tomorrow, we risk stabilising them for yesterday.

If we get this right, ComLink+ do more than support families in difficulty. It will restore belief. And in a society facing inequality and technological disruption, belief may be our most precious asset. Let us design ComLink+ not only as a ladder out of hardship, but as a national statement that in Singapore, mobility is never accidental.

Taskforce on PwD Lifespan Assurance

Ms Denise Phua Lay Peng (Jalan Besar) : Mr Chairman, I thank the Government for appointing the Taskforce on Assurance for Families with Persons with Disabilities (PwDs), chaired by Minister of State Goh Pei Ming.

This task force is timely. Singapore already has a strong national roadmap in the Enabling Masterplan 2030. But there are pressing key concerns of families, particularly about adult life after school. The task force cannot give assurance to these families without addressing these key concerns.

Let me focus on four persistent gaps that the task force should address decisively.

One, on funding reform. Mr Chairman, disability spending today is front-loaded towards childhood while adult services operate under very tight margins even though adulthood can last 60 years or more. We therefore need funding reforms based on a lifespan approach.

One way forward is a two-tier structure. Let us start with the obvious Day Activity Centres (DAC) and residential home models for adults with moderate to high support needs.

First, provide a universal base funding component for every client served by a DAC or residential home. This base amount should be calculated using a realistic norm cost of care, reflecting staffing ratios, programme costs and operational realities. Second, on top of this base, apply a means-tested subsidies to ensure affordability for families who need them.

Service providers, such as the social service agencies, are not naive. If every additional client requires more fundraising, the system becomes unsustainable. Eventually, service providers will withdraw and the Government may have to operate these services directly, which could cost even more.

Funding reform must therefore align care complexity, workforce reality and sustainability.

Gap two, disability employment resilience in an AI economy. Sir, many traditional entry-level roles for persons with disabilities in both blue- and white-collared jobs, such as packing, sorting, basic administrative work and even coding, are replaced by AI-driven automation. If we do nothing, then inclusive hire gains that have been made in our last decade will reverse. We must therefore shift from protecting old jobs to designing new work.

The task force should consider a national disability job redesign fund to support the identification of jobs at risk, surface new jobs in the new economy, redesign workflows to allow PwDs who can contribute and strengthen job-coach capability. Failure to do so intentionally and effectively risks reversing the years of good work that SG Enable, disability partners and inclusive employers had already put in.

Gap three, life planning and post-parental assurance. The most common question families ask is this – what happens when parents lose capacity or die? We therefore should institutionalise life planning and continuity protocols and encourage families to be part of the solution instead of worrying. Planning should be supported, subsidised and normalised. When death or incapacity occurs, the system must respond with speed, coordination and stability.

For families with higher needs, introduce a family life navigator model, similar to the family coach approach in ComLink+.

Just as ComLink+ supports vulnerable families with a dedicated guide across life transitions, a life navigator could help disability families plan school-to-work transitions, housing options, caregiver ageing and long-term care arrangements.

A resilient system empowers and supports families to act early instead of relying solely on the Government.

Lastly, on a thoughtful convergence with mainstream elderly services. Sir, as Singapore ages, disability and ageing will increasingly overlap. The line between disability services and elder care services will blur. Many adults with disabilities face similar challenges as seniors in varying degrees, but at a younger age.

Singapore has built strong community infrastructure for ageing – Active Ageing Centres, Community Care Apartments, home- and community-based care services, even Silver Generation Ambassadors and Healthier SG. If we design a support architecture that connects disability and ageing systems more intelligently and thoughtfully, we reduce duplication, improve outreach and enhance social compact. This is the assurance that families are asking for and the post-school cliff we must level.

Sir, let us be visionary and bold. I wish the task force all its very best.

Supporting Families with Special Needs

Ms Kuah Boon Theng (Nominated Member) : Twenty-one years ago, I was blessed with my youngest child. My son has autism and is non-verbal. Being his mom has been a joy, but it is also the biggest challenge in my life.

In the short time I have been a Nominated Member of Parliament, I have had the opportunity to learn more about the Ministry's plans to support families navigating the complex journey of raising and caring for loved ones with special needs. I am grateful for the assurances that this is an area of priority and a key aspect of our plan to become a more inclusive society.

I know that the Government's heart is in the right place, but the key in ensuring that we actually deliver on the stated mission of becoming a more inclusive society is in how we execute our plans. For this, we must listen to the families we seek to serve. Which is why I am going to share my perspective as a parent and a caregiver.

One, we must provide a stable and secure care environment.

If you care for someone with special needs, you will know how long it can take to get them acclimatised to a new environment. This is why the transition periods are the hardest.

All we want is for them to adjust to a school, vocational institute or DAC that can support their needs as soon as possible. Waiting months or years for placement is not just a logistical delay, it results in regression in skills, desocialisation and isolation, and shifts the full burden of care back onto families, often leading to chronic stress, physical exhaustion and even anxiety and depression among caregivers.

Upheaval and change is especially traumatic for this vulnerable group. The shortage of places for those graduating from special education (SPED) has been a problem for years.

Imagine an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) child who has adjusted to the routine of school graduates only to find that there is no ready place for him or her to go to. It would be unthinkable if this happened to our normal school-going students, and yet we expect families with special needs children to wait when we know that the need for predictable schedules is especially important in this group.

We will soon be adding another 3,000 SPED school places by 2030. We would not be doing so if the demand was not there. So, while it has been announced that another 500 DAC places will be available by 2030, I firmly believe that this will not even come close to fulfilling the actual demand. It seems like we are perpetually trying to play catch up to a gap in services that is only getting wider.

We can and must do better. We need an aggressive expansion of facilities and a commitment to eliminate waiting times altogether. Those who graduate from SPED schools should have ready and available placement options for them to ensure a seamless transition. For this to happen, we need a lot more funding to DAC providers who have to meet the high costs of delivering such services so that they are able to confidently expand their offerings, recruit more trained staff and maintain high-quality care.

Two, we must make such care affordable to those who need it. The high cost of DAC fees may be resulting in under-representation of the actual demand. For DACs who cater to those with high support needs, even with present means-tested subsidies, the current fees would still be unaffordable to many in the sandwiched class.

This must be reviewed. There is nothing more painful or emasculating to a parent than knowing that they cannot afford to get their child more help or they have to sacrifice the needs of their other children to meet the expenses of the special needs child.

Three, we need to give parents the peace of mind that there is a long-term plan for the continued learning and enhanced meaningful engagement of their special needs adult children. The biggest fear of parents is, who is going to look after my child when I am gone? We need to support the entire family unit, including siblings and extended family members so that they feel ready to shoulder the responsibility of continuing care. In this respect, I support Ms Denise Phua's suggestions.

The true measure of our society is in how we treat our most vulnerable and those who care for them. We must commit to a future where no family is left to struggle in the shadows of a waitlist. By providing prompt, guaranteed access to vital services, we are not just helping individual families, we strengthen the very fabric of our community.

Care Beyond Caregiving Lifespan

Prof Kenneth Poon (Nominated Member) : Mr Chairman, I declare my interests in this area as the past president of Rainbow Centre Singapore, a social service agency serving persons with disabilities, and as a researcher examining the life course of persons with neurodevelopmental disabilities.

In a study I conducted about two decades ago, examining the futures of persons with autism in Singapore, what must have been the most difficult question I asked parents was – and that was raised just earlier – what are the plans for your child when you are no longer able to care for him or her?

Most parents shared their worries and concerns. Some parents described plans, often involving siblings or relatives. For others, the response was silence and many conversations were accompanied by tears.

In a related work, parents of persons with disabilities consistently ranked outcomes linked to safety, stability and personal satisfaction as their top priorities for their child. Yet many remained uncertain about how those outcomes will be attained.

There is now greater urgency for three reasons.

First, persons with disabilities are living significantly longer due to advances in medical care. For example, a local report by the Community Health Outreach for Wellness in 2024 indicates that individuals with Down syndrome now have a life expectancy of about 60 years.

Second, while caregivers are living longer, the gap between lifespan and healthspan means that many parents anticipate a period where they may still be alive, yet no longer physically or cognitively able to provide the sustained care.

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Second, while caregivers are living longer, the gap between lifespan and health span means that many parents anticipate a period where they may still be alive, yet no longer physically or cognitively able to provide the sustained care.

Third, families are smaller. This means fewer siblings and extended kin available to assume long-term caregiving responsibilities.

Taken together, these trends suggest that families of PwDs can no longer, as in the past, rely primarily on informal family support. Future support therefore needs to be anticipated, structured and supported.

Sir, during the Budget debate, I introduced four questions as a lens for considering how initiatives strengthen Singapore's social foundations. I would like to apply them to the present context of what happens to PwDs when parental caregiving is no longer available.

I think it is important to acknowledge that Singapore has made important progress in adult disability services through successive Enabling Masterplans, and I acknowledge the recent establishment of the Multi-Agency Taskforce on Assurance for Families with Persons with Disabilities chaired by Minister of State Goh Pei Ming.

Adult disability support often extends across several decades. So, this raises for us a broader systems consideration. Do we have a consistent anticipatory framework for planning the continuity of care and participation of PwDs? In particular, I would be grateful if the Minister could clarify the issues raised also earlier by my hon colleagues Ms Denise Phua and Ms Kuah Boon Theng.

First, whether structured family care pathways are initiated well before caregivers are unable to provide support? Second, on how siblings and other potential caregivers are systematically engaged in transition planning. And third, how the voices of PwDs themselves are meaningfully incorporated into decisions about their future arrangements, support structures and participation in community life?

Sir, the issue before us is not simply provision of services. It is an assurance that our citizens with disabilities will continue to live lives of dignity, stability and participation even when parental care is no longer available.

The Chairman : Mr Cai Yinzhou. Not here. Miss Rachel Ong.

Living and Workplace Support for PwDs

Miss Rachel Ong : Chairman, many PwDs and employers remain unaware of available support for inclusive employment and daily living. A recent Singapore Management University (SMU) survey found that eight in 10 PwDs had never heard of employability training programmes and fewer than half of employers were aware of workplace grants and hiring incentives.

While portals, such as the SG Enabling Guide, provides useful resources, information is spread across multiple platforms, making it difficult for PwDs and caregivers to navigate support.

May I ask MSF, how will communication on employment, living and community support for PwDs be improved so individuals and employers are better informed? Will the Government consider a single, centralised portal that brings together training, employment, housing, social activities and financial assistance, so PwDs and caregivers can more easily access support?

Improving Employment of PwDs

Mr Ng Chee Meng (Jalan Kayu) : Chairman, I thank the MSF, especially SG Enable, for the good work in uplifting our PwDs. Today, more than 30% of PwDs are in employment, with a roadmap to move up to 40% by 2030.

The Taskforce on Assurance for Families with Persons with Disabilities will also be doing more in three key areas: employment, community living and affordability.

I have families in Jalan Kayu with special needs children. Key concerns of these families include the availability of education and support services; financial support; whether they can help their children find employment or remain engaged; and what will happen to their children when they pass on.

In one particular case, I met a pair of aged parents last year caring for their 30 plus-year-old autistic son. He is on the severe spectrum side of the needs. Since then, the father has passed on and the mother now cares for the son alone.

I would like to ask the Ministry what practical strategies will be looked into to better support our families with PwDs, especially those who have graduated from the schooling system? What more can be done to improve their employment prospects, or remain engaged and cared for during their lifetime?

Mental Health Support for Deaf Persons

Miss Rachel Ong : Chairman, today, very few counsellors are trained in Singapore Sign Language. Thus, deaf clients often rely on interpreters from an already small community. This often limits privacy and discourage self and help-seeking.

One deaf individual received counselling only after a long search. In countries, such as Canada, sign-language counselling is provided as a standard service.

May I ask the Minister: how can we expand the pool of Singapore Sign Language trained counsellors and integrate sign language competent support into mainstream mental health services? Will MSF review funding and support schemes to ensure Singapore Sign Language interpretation is systematically available across counselling, social support centres and crisis response services, so deaf Singaporeans can access help confidentially and equitably?

The Chairman : Minister Masagos Zulkifli.

The Minister for Social and Family Development (Mr Masagos Zulkifli B M M) : Chairman, I thank Members for their views. MSF aims to foster a Singapore society where all families are supported at every stage of their life to thrive on their terms.

Before I elaborate on our approach, let me outline what my colleagues will share. Minister of State Mr Zhulkarnain Abdul Rahim will detail enhancements to support lower-income families, Senior Parliamentary Secretary Eric Chua will elaborate on our efforts for families with PwDs and Minister of State Goh Pei Ming will touch on how we will strengthen support for families.

At MSF, our policies are anchored on four core principles: family centricity, proactive and upstream intervention, strength-based approached and whole-of-society partnership. These principles are enduring, even as we face increasingly complex issues.

First, we prioritise family centricity because the family is the basic unit of our society that provides emotional support and imparts values. Working with individuals may address immediate symptoms, but it does not tackle issues at its roots. We must build strong family relationship in order to bring about sustainable change. This is why, for all children, we seek to set good foundations for optimal health and development within family relationships and environments. For ComLink+ families, we develop a holistic action plan with the family after assessing their needs. For PwDs, we do not neglect the well-being of caregivers and family members.

Our second principle is proactive and upstream intervention. We strive to provide early support to build strong foundations and address root causes before they escalate.

Third, we focus on the strength of our clients rather than their deficits. By harnessing their strengths and assets, individuals and families are and can be empowered to achieve good outcomes.

Fourth, we work with the whole-of-society to weave a strong ecosystem of support.

MSF has been working alongside our social service agencies (SSAs), corporates, institutes of higher learnings (IHLs) and the community to better understand clients' needs, finetune our policies and programmes and to journey with our clients.

Such strong partnership is key. When we work together, we unlock new synergies, spark innovation and build better solutions for our clients. To build a better tomorrow for all families, we will further strengthen these partnerships. We will do this through the following "3Cs": collaborating with our partners, cooperating with regional and international counterparts in shared priority areas and co-creating to develop innovations of tomorrow. Let me elaborate.

The first "C" refers to working collaboratively with partners to better serve families and individuals. In recent years, we have stepped up collaboration with sector partners to make a greater impact. We will continue to invest in such collaborations and especially with four key groups: Government agencies, SSAs, corporates and IHLs.

First, we are collaborating with Government agencies to better support lower-income families and improve social mobility, a key concern raised by Mr Xie Yao Quan. In 2025, MSF trialed the social health integration model with MOH for ComLink+ families to ensure that health challenges do not hinder their social mobility. Under this model, family coaches and healthcare staff came together to support families to adopt healthy lifestyles and to access suitable services. Later this year, we will bring more ComLink+ families on board this trial.

Today, only residents 40 and above can enrol in Healthier SG. From 2027, MOH will extend Healthier SG enrolment to eligible ComLink+ residents age 25 to 39. With this, more ComLink+ residents can benefit from personalised care from a trusted family doctor, subsidies for screening tests as well as vaccinations. They will also be able to access Health Promotion Board programmes via the Healthy 365 app. We will share more details in due course.

Second, we are collaborating with SSAs to support families. Families may require support in navigating conflict. For example, MSF works closely with SSAs under the Strengthening Family Programme, which provides counselling support for them. Over the past decade, we have worked closely with the Family Justice Court to adopt a therapeutic justice model in resolving familial disputes so that the family can benefit from a restorative, holistic and forward-looking approach.

We have expanded our support for couples going through divorce, which Ms Diana Pang spoke about. Since July 2024, all couples with minor children must go through the co-parenting programme run by Strengthening Family Programme centres, and that is before they filed for divorce. We hope this will prevent disagreements later over child access. But if such disagreements arise, couples can still approach the Family Justice Court for mediation or apply for a child access order or to enforce an access order. We want to encourage more couples to seek help early and not only at the point of divorce.

Therefore, MSF will work with Strengthening Family Programme centres to ramp up family counselling capacity. By 2030, we will be able to serve 12,000 cases, double of today's caseload. Members of the public will be able to access both in-person and online counselling services. In the meantime, we will make and continue to make family counselling more accessible and provide self-help resources online to better support families.

Third, we are collaborating with corporates for more impactful philanthropy. In 2024, MSF and National Council of Social Service (NCSS) launched the Sustainable Philanthropy Framework to encourage corporates to integrate social impact with their business goals and engage in more consistent giving and volunteering. I am heartened that many corporates have adopted this framework. For instance, DBS has pledged up to $1 billion and 1.5 million employee volunteer hours over the next decade to better support those with less means, including $6.5 million to KidSTART, and $30 million to the ComLink+ Progress Packages. DBS has also embedded giving into their corporate culture and we hope more organisations will do the same.

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Fourth, we are collaborating on research and programme evaluation to build a strong evidence base for tomorrow's solutions. We work with various IHLs to build up our knowledge base of what works best in Singapore.

Mr Xie called for longitudinal research to understand better the drivers of social mobility. We agree, which is why we have collaborated with the IPS on a longitudinal study called Pathways and Trajectories of Households in Singapore to better understand this. Other partnerships include evaluating effectiveness of ComLink+ Progress Packages with IPS and the Singapore University of Social Sciences.

Through these collaborations, we hope that our IHLs will build renowned experts and an impactful body of knowledge on support for families and thereby lead in this field.

The second "C" stands for cooperate; and in this context, cooperating with regional and international partners. Because we need to work together with others, beyond our shores, in strengthening families, early childhood development and social mobility. We seek to do this at Government, academia as well as practitioner levels.

This is because challenges confronting Singapore are not unique. By cooperating with like-minded partners, we can exchange ideas and evolve best practices to better serve our respective clients.

One initiative involves our regional neighbours: Cambodia, the Philippines and Thailand. They have been keen to learn from our experience in setting up the ECDA and the KidSTART programme. Last month, we launched the Capability Exchange Programme to create opportunities for learning and exchanges among government officials and practitioners from these countries. This programme will establish strong networks and foster cross-sharing of evidence-based approaches to benefit young children and families.

Other platforms include conferences where researchers and policy-makers can interact and germinate ideas and relationships. Last year, MSF and IPS co-organised the inaugural International Conference on Societies of Opportunity (ICSO), bringing together local and international thought leaders to discuss how we can better create opportunities and strengthen social mobility for our people. We will further such collaborations at ICSO in 2027.

We also organised the biennial Asian Family Conference, a dedicated regional policy-practice-research platform to discuss emerging family trends, policies and practices. Later this year, we will share findings of the inaugural regional collaboration between Singapore and ASEAN member states that will enable us and our regional partners to better support families in our respective countries.

I am excited by the new opportunities that such partnerships bring, so that we can do better by and for our people.

Before I go to the third "C", let me touch on our professionals. Professionals are the backbone of our sector. To enable them to deliver their best, we must first ensure that they are well-supported and cared for. Mr Sanjeev Kumar Tiwari asked about support for professionals' development and well-being.

SSAs can leverage training subsidies and sponsorships under the Professional Capability Grant to support staff development and upskilling. Recently, we enhanced the schemes to benefit more professionals to support their development and retention. Eligible social service professionals may also tap on the Sabbatical Leave Scheme, which gives them 10 weeks of paid leave to recharge and refresh.

For protection practitioners, we launched the Protection Practitioners Care Fund to enable SSAs to implement well-being initiatives and practices to support them even better.

Officers at MSF can access Well-being@Gov, which provides well-being resources, coaching and counselling services. hose in the Protective Services receive additional support including clinical supervision and peer support groups.

But support for our professionals does not stop here. We will leverage AI and technology tools to enhance their quality of life while making work more impactful. This is how the third "C" comes in – co-creation. Co-creating innovations of tomorrow that will improve the quality of life for social sector professionals and clients.

As the sector developer, NCSS is working closely with public and private sector agencies to develop and drive the adoption of AI and technology solutions across the sector. One such example is Scribe, a tool developed by Open Government Products that translates and summarises conversations in multiple languages and transforms transcripts into structured notes. Just over the past year, over 100 SSAs have adopted Scribe. We have heard from many social workers that Scribe has saved a lot of time and allowed them to focus on what they care about most – their clients.

For the early childhood sector, Mr Melvin Yong will be pleased to know that under the refreshed Industry Digital Plan, ECDA will be supporting preschools to adopt AI-enabled tools, including AI video analytics solutions. Specifically, these tools will support preschool educators and leaders in tasks such as curriculum planning, portfolio management and reviewing closed-circuit television footages.

Ultimately, our goal is to ease our professionals' workload, enhance their well-being and improve care and education of our children.

At MSF, we have also similarly incorporated AI and technology solutions to support our officers in their work. For example, in our Youth Homes, time-consuming processes such as filling out paperwork and cross-referencing files are now digitalised under the Home Central Information System. Officers also use AI tools such as Pair and AIBots that generate first drafts to help officers work more efficiently.

Taken together, Youth Guidance Officers such as Mr Rayner Hoe, now have more bandwidth to engage with youths, which is the most fulfilling part of the job.

Beyond these examples, there is still much more potential for technology to be harnessed to improve the quality of life for our professionals.

But I will now turn to our clients. In the past few years, MSF has worked closely with the sector to co-create innovative solutions to make our services more client-centric. One example would be the Family Services Landscape Review, which we announced in 2024. We have been engaging SSAs, practitioners and other stakeholders to reimagine how we can better support our clients where they are – one-stop shop, something that Ms Mariam Jaafar advocated for.

Another example would be the Enabled Living Programme, where we work with our partners to pilot innovative approaches to empower persons with disabilities to live independently, build meaningful connections and enhance their overall well-being.

In addition, we want to push the envelope and co-create AI and technology solutions that directly enhance the quality of life of our clients.

In my work trips to China and Qatar last year, I was deeply impressed by the adoption of innovative AI solutions and the possibilities they presented to enable persons with disabilities to work, live and play.

For hearing-impaired individuals like Mr Raiyme, who is a desktop engineer at NCS, new technologies coming onstream can be very empowering socially. For instance, with the real-time transcription and translation capabilities of the LLVision's AI-powered glasses, Raiyme is able to converse better at home with his mom, whom he lipreads in Malay. And of course, the AI machine needs to learn Malay better. And also, with his daughter's Mandarin teacher. He does not need translation because AI will do it for him.

In Qatar, hologram assistants that can respond to hearing-impaired persons via sign language are installed in public spaces, including public transportation sites. These technologies may only impact a small proportion of each society, but the impact is profound on the beneficiaries and their families. And when we collaborate and cooperate with regional partners, it allows us to have greater scale to support the development and adoption of such technology.

For persons with disabilities, SG Enable will continue to champion the responsible use of AI and technology solutions – a topic that is close to Miss Rachel Ong's heart. Subsidies are provided to persons with disabilities under the Assistive Technology Fund to purchase assistive technology devices to enable independent living. SG Enable will curate more devices to and continue to create more devices for persons with disabilities, including those enhanced by AI capabilities.

Under the Enabling Lives Initiative Grant, funding is also provided to support AI solutions that improve independence and expand employment opportunities for persons with disabilities. One example would be AiSee, an AI-powered wearable device that enables persons with visual impairment to better understand their surroundings through voice prompts.

Beyond the belief that AI and technology takes away jobs, they can in fact be a force for good; enablers that allow us to break new ground both in how we support our professionals and clients. I am excited by its potential and opportunities.

Chairman, I will now conclude. Our goal is clear. We want better for the clients and families we support: better outcomes, better opportunities, better lives. This is what drives our work at MSF. The way to achieve this is through all of us working together and staying united, especially amidst global uncertainties.

At MSF, we are making progress with our partners across the social service sector, with corporates, with IHLs, with volunteers and with the community. Together, we have been able to make strides in nurturing resilient individuals, strong families and a caring society.

I am heartened that since the launch of SG Gives last year, we have seen over $100 million in donations made to the Community Chest, President's Challenge and the Collective for a Stronger Society. The Government will match these donations to amplify our collective impact and support communities in need.

But there is more we can do.

I call on all Singaporeans to join us in this endeavour. When we work together, we unlock new possibilities and achieve far better outcomes than what we can accomplish alone. It is this collective spirit and the willingness of Singaporeans to support and empower one another that drives real and lasting change. Which is why MSF will soon launch a campaign "Better Starts with Us", because at MSF, we believe it is through this shared commitment that each of us, we are not just building a strong and united society, but a Singapore that is a great place for all families to achieve their goals and aspirations. [ Applause. ]

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The Chairman : Senior Minister of State Zhulkarnain Abdul Rahim.