Community

Blocked MyKhas Portal Hurts the People of Subang

My Dear Subangites,

For this month’s jottings, I bear not good news.

As most of you are aware, the access to my parliamentary office’s MyKhas Portal account has been blocked without notice by the Implementation Coordination Unit (ICU) under the Prime Minister’s Department (JPM).

This portal account is a vital platform used to upload, manage, and process applications under the Projek Mesra Rakyat (PMR), as well as various other critical constituency allocations meant for the people of Subang.

This service disruption was discovered on Wednesday, 20th May 2026, at 12:00 PM, when my officer attempted to upload several PMR funding applications for schools within the Subang parliamentary constituency.

Upon contacting the relevant authorities for clarification, my officer was orally informed by a civil servant that access had been blocked on the explicit instructions of superiors in Putrajaya.

It has now been more than 10 days since my parliamentary office was denied access to the MyKhas Portal. Despite multiple official communications, including hand-delivered letters to both ICU JPM Selangor and the ICU JPM Headquarters in Putrajaya, no official written explanation has been provided and access to the portal has yet to be restored.

The continued denial of access is no longer merely an administrative inconvenience to my office. It is directly affecting critical Projek Mesra Rakyat (PMR) applications intended for the people of Subang across these five categories.

CATEGORY 1: SCHOOLS

Prior to the denial of access imposed on our MyKhas Portal account, our office has successfully uploaded PMR applications involving 40 schools within the Subang parliamentary constituency.  However, due to the continued denial of access to the portal since 20th May 2026, applications involving the following six (6) schools, together with the projects they had planned under the PMR allocation, have been affected and remain unable to be uploaded.

  1. SJKC Chee Wen: Repair works for the school’s tilted perimeter fence;
  2. SK Seksyen 2 Bandar Kinrara: Repainting works for the school building;
  3. SK Puchong Jaya 2: Upgrading of the science laboratory and students’ waiting area;
  4. SJKT Castlefield: Installation of polyboards for school information displays and procurement of netball equipment;
  5. SK USJ 12: Upgrading works for the main hall flooring; and
  6. SK Subang Jaya: Installation of an awning by the school hall.

Out of the 6 schools affected: Four (4) are Sekolah Kebangsaan (SK); One (1) is Sekolah Jenis Kebangsaan Cina (SJKC); and One (1) is Sekolah Jenis Kebangsaan Tamil (SJKT).

Additionally, under PMR, Tabika Kemas in USJ 1 was also slated for infrastructural repairs. All these are schools serving ordinary Malaysian families whose applications are now delayed.

CATEGORY 2: UNDERPRIVILEGED COMMUNITIES

People’s Housing Projects (PPR) and underprivileged communities are also affected, namely, Pangsapuri Angsana USJ 1 and Pangsapuri Melur Taman Bukit Kinrara.

These communities consist largely of lower-income families who rely heavily on government assistance and community support programmes. The delay in PMR-related applications and allocations directly affects welfare-related initiatives, basic community facilities, and assistance programmes intended to ease the burden of vulnerable residents facing rising living costs and economic hardship.

CATEGORY 3: AUTISTIC CHILDREN AND INDIVIDUALS WITH SPECIAL NEEDS

Two Pusat Pemulihan Dalam Komuniti (PDK), PDK Cahaya Kasih in SS15 and PDK Wawasan in Puchong Jaya, are also impacted by this restriction.

Our office had planned to assist both centres with the development of sensory rooms to better support autistic children and individuals with special needs. These initiatives are now delayed because access to the portal remains blocked.

CATEGORY 4: FEDERAL AGENCIES

The following federal agencies are also affected:

  1. Balai Bomba dan Penyelamat Subang Jaya;
  2. Balai Bomba dan Penyelamat Puchong;
  3. Ibu Pejabat Polis Daerah USJ 8;
  4. Ibu Pejabat Polis Daerah Serdang;
  5. Balai Polis SS17 and
  6. Pejabat Kebajikan Masyarakat Cawangan SS15.

These agencies provide essential frontline services to the people of Subang, including emergency response, public safety, crime prevention, welfare assistance, and social support services for vulnerable communities.

The delay in processing PMR-related applications and allocations will inevitably affect the quality and efficiency of services delivered to the public. This includes support and assistance intended for firefighting and emergency response facilities, police stations serving high-density residential communities, as well as welfare-related initiatives coordinated through PKMD Subang Jaya for families and individuals in need.

CATEGORY 5: RELIGIOUS INSTITUTIONS

Surau Al-Mukminin in PJS 9 is among the affected institutions, including its planned repairs for a leaking roof, which can no longer proceed under the PMR process.

Similarly, Kuil Sri Subramaniar in PJS 7 has also been affected by this blockage.

The surau and temple serve as important community and religious centres for local residents, including congregational prayers, religious classes, community programmes, and welfare-related activities. The delay in repair works not only affects the comfort and safety of congregants, but also disrupts the broader community functions carried out by the surau and temple for residents in the surrounding area.

What is deeply disappointing is that all these parties, schools, low-income communities, OKU centres, federal agencies, and religious institutions, continue to bear the consequences of an administrative restriction imposed on my parliamentary office without notice, without explanation, and without due process.

To date, ICU JPM has neither restored access nor provided any formal justification for the restriction. As I have stated previously, my office has long been recognised, including by ICU JPM Selangor itself, as among the parliamentary offices that manage government allocation files, documentation, and financial accounts in a professional, orderly, transparent, and procedurally compliant manner.

For more than a decade, we have also publicly published our community allocations and expenditures every six months in line with our commitment to transparency and accountability. This is why the continued silence from the authorities is particularly troubling.

If the government continues to refuse to restore access or provide an explanation, then perhaps the Prime Minister’s Department should clarify whether my officers are expected to physically travel to Putrajaya and use JPM’s own computer terminals to upload PMR applications on behalf of the people of Subang.

If that is the preferred arrangement, then so be it. My office is not interested in taking credit. We simply want the schools, the underprivileged groups, special needs communities, federal agencies, and religious communities to receive the assistance they deserve.

If this “punishment” is politically motivated, I would like to request the Prime Minister’s Office to state so in writing, following which I shall seek the advice of my lawyers as to whether this constitutes an abuse of administrative power.

I want to stress that government administrative systems and allocations exist to serve the rakyat, not to selectively disadvantage elected representatives carrying out their responsibilities to their constituents.

Teoh

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