Jump to content

Phuket lifeguards ordered to pull down 'unsightly' beach station


webfact

Recommended Posts

Phuket lifeguards ordered to pull down 'unsightly' beach station
Phuket Gazette

lg.jpg
Karon Municipality officers have declared the lifeguard station on Karon Beach 'unsightly' and ordered it to be pulled down. Photo: Karon Municipality

PHUKET: -- Karon Municipality has decided to remove the Phuket lifeguard stand on Karon Beach on the grounds that it is unsightly and not fit for use.

“Karon municipality officers led by Karon Deputy Mayor Ittiporn Singkaew have inspected the lifeguard station. It does not look nice and it is not well organized,” Karon Municipality Chief Administrative Officer (Palad) Weerasak Anekwongsawat explained.

“We have contacted Phuket Provincial Administration Organization [PPAO] about the messy facility and have requested they remove it,” Palad Weereasak told the Phuket Gazette today.

“I have ordered staff to pen a letter to order the station be removed from the beach. It will be sent to the lifeguards tomorrow.

“However, we will give them 30 days to remove the station as the PPAO need time to design and fund an improved facility,” he said.

“The lifeguard station is the PPAO's responsibility. Our duty is to make the beach nice and clean for tourists,” he added.

PPAO Tourism Department officer Nararit Touyon told the Gazette today she had been notified of the municipality's intention to have the lifeguard station pulled down.

“We will talk about this and find a solution. We will release news of developments as soon as we've figured out how best to proceed,” she said.

Uten Singsom, head lifeguard at Kata-Karon beaches defended the lifeguard station.

“My staff built this simple place with materials they found in the area because they need shade for themselves and for their life saving equipment," he told the Gazette.

“Karon’s Deputy Mayor came to see the station, but we have yet to receive any order to remove it. It is here because this is one of the most dangerous stretches of beach in Phuket,” he said.

Source: http://www.phuketgazette.net/phuket_news/2013/Phuket-lifeguards-ordered-to-pull-down-unsightly-beach-station-22208.html

pglogo.jpg
-- Phuket Gazette 2013-09-10

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I guess anywhere else, the local municipality would help build suitable premises while recognizing the extreme importance of the service.

Agree 100%

Also with all their talk about how they want tourists to feel safe whilst holidaying on the island the construction of a decent life saving club (with first aid station) would go a long way to installing confidence in guards also. At the moment they don't look very professional.

I watched a show a couple of months ago showing some of the Phuket lifeguards undergoing training on Bondi Beach, Australia and how the Deputy Australian Ambassador presented a cheque on behalf of the Australian people in 2011 (around 15K AUD raised from donations in Aust) to the Phuket life saving club to help construct facilities. I wonder what happened to this money surely they could have constructed something a little better than the one in the pic for around 450K baht.

I also believe that clubs from around Australia are still actively involved in projects like fund raising and training (little nippers club) for Thailand. Australia sends many tourists to the island and this benefits them also not just Thais.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Why don't some of the dozens of farangs that these lads saved last month pony up a few dollars to build a proper tower.

Australia gave them 15K AUD 2 yrs ago to do that, it sounds as tho they only had enough left over to build this humpy.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

It will always be amazing to me what the local officials think is "unsightly" to farangs. In respect to what garbage is actually on the beach, I'm ok with a shotty lifeguard house. I'm not ok with all the metric tons of actual trash and trashy types on the beach. Wouldn't it be great to put together a joint farang-thai clean up committee so everyone could at least agree what the expectations of each other really are.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

It will always be amazing to me what the local officials think is "unsightly" to farangs. In respect to what garbage is actually on the beach, I'm ok with a shotty lifeguard house. I'm not ok with all the metric tons of actual trash and trashy types on the beach. Wouldn't it be great to put together a joint farang-thai clean up committee so everyone could at least agree what the expectations of each other really are.

Thai beaches, including Karon, are a marketplace. In a free market there is supply and demand. Suppliers generally heed the wants and needs of their customers in order to maintain sales. However, in Thailand, the suppliers don't give a damn about what the customers want or need. Thus, all the "quality" tourists have departed and the suppliers are left sitting on their parked up jet skis, scratching their lice infected heads and wondering what went wrong.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I guess anywhere else, the local municipality would help build suitable premises while recognizing the extreme importance of the service.

Agree 100%

Also with all their talk about how they want tourists to feel safe whilst holidaying on the island the construction of a decent life saving club (with first aid station) would go a long way to installing confidence in guards also. At the moment they don't look very professional.

I watched a show a couple of months ago showing some of the Phuket lifeguards undergoing training on Bondi Beach, Australia and how the Deputy Australian Ambassador presented a cheque on behalf of the Australian people in 2011 (around 15K AUD raised from donations in Aust) to the Phuket life saving club to help construct facilities. I wonder what happened to this money surely they could have constructed something a little better than the one in the pic for around 450K baht.

I also believe that clubs from around Australia are still actively involved in projects like fund raising and training (little nippers club) for Thailand. Australia sends many tourists to the island and this benefits them also not just Thais.

some interesting obs , but why do western countries feel they have to donate to countries in Asia such as Thailand ? it's NOT a poor country , just a greedy and selfish one ,...if every hotel were taxed 1b per day per room, paying for crucial services like life guards would not be a problem , nor would having clean beaches . We pay for their training , then holiday in their country and are lucky enough to be bribed by the BIB and beaten up by taxi drivers . if they cant take care of tourists from their huge budget , they deserve the ultimate consequences .give thais an inch they will want a mile more

Edited by osiboy
  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I guess anywhere else, the local municipality would help build suitable premises while recognizing the extreme importance of the service.

Agree 100%

Also with all their talk about how they want tourists to feel safe whilst holidaying on the island the construction of a decent life saving club (with first aid station) would go a long way to installing confidence in guards also. At the moment they don't look very professional.

I watched a show a couple of months ago showing some of the Phuket lifeguards undergoing training on Bondi Beach, Australia and how the Deputy Australian Ambassador presented a cheque on behalf of the Australian people in 2011 (around 15K AUD raised from donations in Aust) to the Phuket life saving club to help construct facilities. I wonder what happened to this money surely they could have constructed something a little better than the one in the pic for around 450K baht.

I also believe that clubs from around Australia are still actively involved in projects like fund raising and training (little nippers club) for Thailand. Australia sends many tourists to the island and this benefits them also not just Thais.

some interesting obs , but why do western countries feel they have to donate to countries in Asia such as Thailand ? it's NOT a poor country , just a greedy and selfish one ,...if every hotel were taxed 1b per day per room, paying for crucial services like life guards would not be a problem , nor would having clean beaches . We pay for their training , then holiday in their country and are lucky enough to be bribed by the BIB and beaten up by taxi drivers . if they cant take care of tourists from their huge budget , they deserve the ultimate consequences .give thais an inch they will want a mile more

People donate primarily to feel good about themselves.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I guess anywhere else, the local municipality would help build suitable premises while recognizing the extreme importance of the service.

Agree 100%

Also with all their talk about how they want tourists to feel safe whilst holidaying on the island the construction of a decent life saving club (with first aid station) would go a long way to installing confidence in guards also. At the moment they don't look very professional.

I watched a show a couple of months ago showing some of the Phuket lifeguards undergoing training on Bondi Beach, Australia and how the Deputy Australian Ambassador presented a cheque on behalf of the Australian people in 2011 (around 15K AUD raised from donations in Aust) to the Phuket life saving club to help construct facilities. I wonder what happened to this money surely they could have constructed something a little better than the one in the pic for around 450K baht.

I also believe that clubs from around Australia are still actively involved in projects like fund raising and training (little nippers club) for Thailand. Australia sends many tourists to the island and this benefits them also not just Thais.

some interesting obs , but why do western countries feel they have to donate to countries in Asia such as Thailand ? it's NOT a poor country , just a greedy and selfish one ,...if every hotel were taxed 1b per day per room, paying for crucial services like life guards would not be a problem , nor would having clean beaches . We pay for their training , then holiday in their country and are lucky enough to be bribed by the BIB and beaten up by taxi drivers . if they cant take care of tourists from their huge budget , they deserve the ultimate consequences .give thais an inch they will want a mile more

Hotels do pay a room tax............if they are properly registered.

Where does the money go? I haven't a clue. Does anyone know?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I guess anywhere else, the local municipality would help build suitable premises while recognizing the extreme importance of the service.

Agree 100%

Also with all their talk about how they want tourists to feel safe whilst holidaying on the island the construction of a decent life saving club (with first aid station) would go a long way to installing confidence in guards also. At the moment they don't look very professional.

I watched a show a couple of months ago showing some of the Phuket lifeguards undergoing training on Bondi Beach, Australia and how the Deputy Australian Ambassador presented a cheque on behalf of the Australian people in 2011 (around 15K AUD raised from donations in Aust) to the Phuket life saving club to help construct facilities. I wonder what happened to this money surely they could have constructed something a little better than the one in the pic for around 450K baht.

I also believe that clubs from around Australia are still actively involved in projects like fund raising and training (little nippers club) for Thailand. Australia sends many tourists to the island and this benefits them also not just Thais.

some interesting obs , but why do western countries feel they have to donate to countries in Asia such as Thailand ? it's NOT a poor country , just a greedy and selfish one ,...if every hotel were taxed 1b per day per room, paying for crucial services like life guards would not be a problem , nor would having clean beaches . We pay for their training , then holiday in their country and are lucky enough to be bribed by the BIB and beaten up by taxi drivers . if they cant take care of tourists from their huge budget , they deserve the ultimate consequences .give thais an inch they will want a mile more

People donate primarily to feel good about themselves.

possible, then what happens to the money?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.







×
×
  • Create New...