5 July 2008
The Straits Times
SGH tops human resource
industry awards
Taking good care of its shift-working doctors
and nurses has given Singapore General Hospital (SGH) top
honours for its human resource (HR) practices.
The hospital yesterday walked away with the most
awards from the Singapore Human Resources Institute (SHRI),
clinching nine, the most of the 35 organisations surveyed.
Media company Singapore Press Holdings (SPH) and
HSBC led among firms in the private sector, taking home six
awards each.
SGH was lauded for providing a workplace with a
good work-life balance. It also won praise for its efforts in
corporate social responsibility, workplace safety and the use of
technology in managing human resources.
Ms Anna Fok, the hospital's HR director, was
honoured as a leader in the field.
The Ministry of Manpower and the National Parks
Board (NParks) came in as joint runners-up, with seven awards
each.
Other big winners included the Public Service
Division and IBM, with five awards each, and fast-food chain
McDonald's, last year's top dog, with four.
The awards were handed out at a glittering
ceremony held at the Grand Copthorne Waterfront Hotel last
night.
The winning companies, said an SHRI news
release, were those that demonstrated a 'willingness to invest
in their workers' and offered a 'good working environment' with
'fair employment practices'. A total of 35 entries ranging from
large multinationals to small and medium-sized enterprises won
awards, with the top eight receiving additional 'corporate
awards'.
Fifteen individuals, ranging from company chief
executives to HR professionals, were also honoured for 'their
hard work, relentless efforts and contributions to ensure that
the workforce is geared to head on new challenges', SHRI said.
More than 600 executives and HR practitioners
attended the awards ceremony, where the guest of honour, Speaker
of Parliament Abdullah Tarmugi, handed out the trophies.
Human resource is 'an integral element in an
organisation's success and continuity', said Mr Abdullah.
This is especially true for Singapore, a nation
whose only resource is its people, he said in his speech at the
event.
To attract talent, said SHRI president Lim-Ho
Geok Choo, 'a fat pay packet alone is no longer enough'.
Companies that want to hire and keep talented employees, she
said, need to have 'good HR practices, policies and winning HR
strategies'.
SPH's acting executive vice-president for human
resources, Ms Mable Chan, said the company's harvest of wins
'shows that we are a good place to work in'. It would spur SPH
to do even better in the future, she said.
NParks' HR head, Ms Valerie Lee, 39, who scooped
up an individual award for being a leading HR professional, said
she was 'very honoured', and thanked her driven and committed
team for helping her score the award, her first.
Ms Lee has been in HR for 17 years, of which the last three
have been with NParks.
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