If your child attends a Tamil school that needs repairs, this session brought a mix of relief and urgent deadlines. The government has finally approved the rebuilding of SJK(T) Ladang Jeram, ending a 20-year wait for students studying in shipping containers. Additionally, RM12.8 million was approved for school equipment, and free tuition will be funded for 200 schools. However, applications for next year’s repair funds open earlier than usual on 1 December, so your school board must act immediately.
The Third Meeting of the 15th Parliament was defined by the Prime Minister's confirmation of the SJK(T) Ladang Jeram reconstruction under a massive RM2 billion school upgrade allocation. While the Ministry of Education Malaysia (KPM) introduced earlier maintenance grant timelines and specific funding for Indian community education, backbenchers from both sides intensified scrutiny regarding the transparency of allocation breakdowns by school stream. The session highlighted a persistent tension between high-level policy announcements and the bureaucratic reality of implementing upgrades for the nation's 528 Tamil-medium national-type schools (SJKT).
Key Findings
-
End to 20-Year Infrastructure Crisis for SJK(T) Ladang Jeram In a significant policy shift, Prime Minister YAB Dato' Seri Anwar bin Ibrahim announced the rebuilding of SJK(T) Ladang Jeram in Pahang. This decision resolves a critical infrastructure failure where students had been attending classes in shipping containers for two decades. The project was included as one of 38 new schools to be built under the RM2 billion allocation for upgrading dilapidated (Daif) schools. This move directly addresses the infrastructure deficit in one of the country's most neglected educational facilities.
-
RM23.8 Million Package for Equipment and Tuition Support The government committed specific funds managed by the Malaysian Indian Transformation Unit (MITRA) to support SJK(T) operations. This includes:
- RM12.8 million allocated for equipment, furniture, and minor maintenance across government-aided SJK(T)s.
- RM8 million approved for the 'Kalvi MADANI' free tuition initiative, designed to assist primary students in 200 Tamil schools.
- RM2.994 million spent to distribute 6,000 refurbished laptops to 520 schools. While the provision of devices addresses the digital gap, the use of refurbished units rather than new ones was explicitly noted by the Minister, citing budget constraints to maximise reach.
-
Maintenance Grant Timeline Shifted to December Deputy Minister of Education YB Tuan Wong Kah Woh announced a major procedural change for school maintenance grants. Applications for the 2026 allocation will open on 01 December 2025, significantly earlier than the previous April or May timelines. This administrative shift aims to resolve chronic delays in fund disbursement that have historically hampered repair works during the school year.
-
Relocation Challenges for Under-Enrolled Schools The issue of under-enrolled schools—currently 154 nationwide—was prominent, with specific focus on SJK(T) Ladang Mentakab. The 100-year-old school, located in a plantation area with no remaining residential population, has requested relocation. KPM clarified its policy that relocation is the preferred option for schools with critically low enrolment where local demand has ceased, though no specific timeline was confirmed for this case. Conversely, the relocation of SJK(T) Kuala Pilah was reported as stalled despite approval in 2016, highlighting the gap between policy intent and execution.
-
Transparency Concerns Over Funding Breakdowns Multiple MPs questioned the opacity of the RM2 billion school upgrade allocation. Unlike previous years, the Budget 2026 presentation did not provide a specific line-item breakdown for SJK(T), Chinese-medium national-type schools (SJKC), and national schools (SK). This lack of granular data makes it difficult for stakeholders to track whether the 528 SJK(T)s are receiving an equitable share of the national infrastructure budget relative to their needs.
MP Scorecard
| MP Name | Constituency | Topic | Stance | Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| YB Tuan Sanisvara Nethaji Rayer a/l Rajaji | Jelutong | SJK(T) Ladang Jeram Rebuild | Advocacy | Budget Allocation |
| YB Puan Teresa Kok Suh Sim | Seputeh | Bureaucratic Delays | Critical | General Rhetoric |
| YB Puan Yeo Bee Yin | Puchong | Allocation Breakdown | Inquiry | General Rhetoric |
| YB Puan Hajah Salamiah binti Mohd Nor | Temerloh | Access Roads & Relocation | Advocacy | Localised Issue |
| YB Tuan Chong Zhemin | Kampar | Vernacular School Fund | Advocacy | General Rhetoric |
| YB Datuk Seri Ir. Dr. Wee Ka Siong | Ayer Hitam | Transparency in Allocations | Critical | General Rhetoric |
| YB Tuan Ganabatirau a/l Veraman | Klang | Infrastructure Upgrades | Advocacy | General Rhetoric |
| YB Dato' Haji Adnan bin Abu Hassan | Kuala Pilah | Relocation Delay | Advocacy | Localised Issue |
| YB Tuan Chow Yu Hui | Raub | School Hall Usage | Advocacy | Policy Shift |
| YB Dr. Siti Mastura binti Muhammad | Kepala Batas | Religious Freedom | Critical | General Rhetoric |
| YB Tuan Wan Razali bin Wan Nor | Kuantan | BM Proficiency | Critical | General Rhetoric |
| YB Dato' Seri Dr. Shahidan bin Kassim | Arau | Government Aid | General Rhetoric | General Rhetoric |
| YB Tuan Sivakumar a/l Varatharaju Naidu | Batu Gajah | Education Sustainability | Inquiry | General Rhetoric |
Executive Responses
| Minister/Deputy | Portfolio | Response To | Verdict | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| YAB Dato' Seri Anwar bin Ibrahim | Prime Minister's Department | School Infrastructure Fund | Commitment Made | 10 Oct 2025 |
| YB Tuan Wong Kah Woh | Deputy Minister of Education | Maintenance Grant Timeline | Resolved | 14 Oct 2025 |
| YB Datuk Seri Dr. Zaliha binti Mustafa | Prime Minister's Department | MITRA Funding & Laptops | Resolved | 29 Oct 2025 |
| YB Dato' Sri Ramanan Ramakrishnan | Minister of Human Resources | ICT Lab Upgrades | Commitment Made | 29 Oct 2025 |
| YB Tuan Wong Kah Woh | Deputy Minister of Education | SJK(T) Ladang Jeram | Commitment Made | 03 Nov 2025 |
| YB Tuan Wong Kah Woh | Deputy Minister of Education | SJK(T) Ladang Mentakab | Deflected | 03 Nov 2025 |
Note on Deflection: Regarding SJK(T) Ladang Mentakab, the Deputy Minister restated the general policy on relocating under-enrolled schools but did not provide a specific timeline or approval for this specific school's request. The School Management Board (LPS) should submit a follow-up written query through their MP to demand a decision date.
Policy Signals
The parliamentary proceedings indicate several alignments with the Malaysia Education Plan (RPM) 2026-2035:
- Infrastructure Upgrades (RPM Commitment: Equitable Access): The allocation of RM2 billion for dilapidated schools, explicitly including SJK(T) Ladang Jeram, signals the government's intent to operationalise the RPM's pledge to upgrade under-resourced schools. This is a move from general planning to specific project funding.
- Digitalisation (RPM Commitment: Curriculum Support): The distribution of 6,000 refurbished laptops and the upgrading of ICT labs in 387 SJK(T)s aligns with the RPM's focus on digital competency. However, the use of refurbished hardware suggests a budget-constrained approach to this commitment.
- Streamlined Governance (RPM Commitment: Efficiency): Moving the maintenance grant application window to December 2025 for the 2026 fiscal year is a procedural improvement designed to ensure funds are utilised within the school year, addressing long-standing complaints about late disbursements.
What to Watch
- Submit Maintenance Applications by 01 December 2025: School Management Boards (LPS) must prepare and submit their applications for government-aided school maintenance grants immediately. The window opens on 01 December 2025. Late submissions risk missing the 2026 allocation cycle entirely.
- Monitor SJK(T) Ladang Jeram Milestones: The Parent-Teacher Association (PIBG) of SJK(T) Ladang Jeram should request a formal construction schedule from the District Education Office (PPD) by January 2026 to ensure the project adheres to the timeline promised by the Prime Minister.
- Demand Allocation Transparency: Community leaders and PIBG coalitions should draft a formal request to the Ministry of Education asking for the specific breakdown of the RM2 billion infrastructure fund by school stream. If this data is not released by the next parliamentary session, request your MP to file a Written Question.