Posts Tagged ‘Funds’

Apply RM500 Bantuan Rakyat 1Malaysia

December 12th, 2011
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The Bantuan Rakyat 1Malaysia (BR1M) whereby households with monthly income of RM3000 and below can get RM500 one-time payment is out since 10 December. Those interested can download the form from Treasury website at:

http://www.treasury.gov.my/pdf/br1m/Borang_BR1M.pdf  or LHDN offices as well selected location like some schools.

REMEMBER, the form is FREE, FREE, FREE.

Need help understanding if you are eligible or not? refer the below diagram:

Note that need to submit copy of your MyKad and also payslip (if have). And those registered in e-Kasih also eligible.

 

 

 

Even if your married children stay with you and have their own income, you can still claim (and they also can claim) as long your income is below RM3000.

Single parents or those staying alone also can claim, as long as monthly income below RM3000.

You can also refer the document at: Mekanisma Bantuan RM500 9 Dis 2011 Edaran Laman Web

 

For help,  you can call/email:

Talian hotline : 1-800-222-500 (Bebas Tol)

Waktu operasi : 9.00 pagi hingga 5.00 petang (hari bekerja)

Emel : belanjawan2012@treasury.gov.my

Perkhidmatan mulai 7 Disember 2011 (Rabu)

Bilik Operasi Bajet
Aras 10, Blok Tengah
Kompleks Kementerian Kewangan Malaysia
1-800-222-500 (Hotline)
03-8882 3786 (Faks)

You can also refer to your MP or ADUN for the forms.

Hurry to register by end of the year 10 January 2012.

 

31 Dec deadline for govt fund applications via MIC

November 29th, 2011
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Do spread the word around. Hope the schools, NGOs and temples are aware of this.

 All state MIC liaison committees have until Dec 31 to submit applications for Federal Government allocations to assist Tamil schools as well as Indian places of worship and NGOs in the respective states.

MIC president Datuk G. Palanivel said the deadline was to enable funds to be disbursed next year.

After receiving the applications, MIC’s headquarters would prepare a budget for allocations to be given out, either once or twice a year.

“It is difficult when they keep asking us for funds all year round.

“We cannot be going to the Prime Minister’s Department every now and then asking for allocations on their behalf,” he said after presenting RM185,000 in federal aid to six temples, a church and an NGO at the Penang state library auditorium here yesterday.

Palanivel, who is also Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department, said once he knew the amount, it would be easier to obtain the allocation.

He said the money was usually for minor projects such as repairs and extensions, upgrading of toilets, electrical wiring, water pipes and drainage systems as well as for community programmes.

He encouraged Indian community leaders to contact MIC division leaders in their respective areas to submit proposal papers for the projects they planned to carry out.

“Some temples and NGOs miss out on the allocations because they submit their applications late and all the funds have been disbursed,” he said.

source: http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2011/11/14/nation/9898174&sec=nation

getting RM50 only as welfare aid

November 26th, 2011
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The article didn’t mention if the adult children are staying with her, so that may be one of the reasons why she’s getting just RM50 as aid.  But being one of the 30 cases, then there may be some other issues here. The Welfare Dept’s guideline may also need to be updated, if there’s any provision for RM50. Nowadays even RM300 also not enough for the urban poor.

She lost her factory job and her husband died several years ago. Without a steady income, her health has deteriorated and her two adult children cannot even afford to fend for themselves.

Single mother Savunthary Muniandy, 49, is crying for help.

“My 22-year-old daughter is a single mother who has a baby to feed. My son, 26, has been wayward for a long time now.

“I can’t even afford to pay my medical bills for diabetes, high blood pressure and cholesterol problems. I owe my relatives over RM3,000 for my bills,” she said yesterday.

Savunthary is one of 30 single mothers from Cempaka Flats in Gombak, who sought help from the Umno Youth Community Complaints Bureau after they claimed their appeals for financial support from the Welfare Department had fallen on deaf ears.

She receives RM50 a month from the department which can hardly pay for her flat rental of RM450.

Bureau chairman Datuk Muhd Khairun Aseh said the single mothers received between RM30 and RM150 when they should be getting a minimum of RM300 a month, depending on their situation.

“How are they going to survive?” Muhd Khairun asked, adding that he had prepared a memorandum to be submitted to department officials on Monday for them to act on their complaints.

source: http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2011/11/25/nation/9972898&sec=nation

3 months no reply on welfare application?

November 20th, 2011
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Wow! 3 months is a long time, especially the low income and poor folks who are in need of such help. Wonder why no reply. If not qualified or application incomplete, can just reply saying so.

Bagan Dalam state assemblyman A. Thanasekharan has threatened to stage a demonstration if the Social Welfare Department continues to delay processing application for aid from Seberang Perai Utara.

He was speaking to reporters after visiting the Social Welfare Department’s office in Kepala Batas on Tuesday.

Thanasekharan had gone to find out the status of 30 applicants who had submitted a request for aid about three months ago and had not received any reply.

“Most of the applicants had complained that they are usually told that the officer is not around, had gone out or no reply from the head office

source: http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2011/11/19/nation/9935105&sec=nation

MIC creates Mainco for economic uplifting

October 21st, 2011
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Yeah, I know, one of the first thing that crosses our mind is – Not another MAIKA! A reader in MK also voiced the same.  Just to quote one example from that letter:

 

… Last but not least, the proposal to set-up 200,000 hectares of Indian owned plantations is eerily similar to Maika’s past record which eventually ended in the fragmentation of these estates in areas such as Tumbuk Estate, Kuala Langat.

To date, there is a community of 30 ex-plantation workers who are still waiting for the houses and gratuity compensation promised by Maika which never materialised, thanks to Maika’s failure to protect the best interests of its employees.

So, here’s the story: MIC has set up a company known as Mainco (Malaysian Indian Company/MIC Investment Company?). The purpose is to access various projects under all the TPs (ETP mainly, but I guess can extend to GTP, RTP too). However, there’s no mention if Mainco will ask the community to invest ala MAIKA. I strongly think they shouldn’t, as the comparison will be made to MAIKA. Perhaps at a later stage can consider listing or cooperative style membership, if the investment is successful.

So far, there’s some mention of getting soft loan from government to kickstart the company.

The other issue is who will benefit from such a company. Would it be cronyism all over? A case of “who you know” rather than “what you know” may get you the projects.  Anyway, we shall wait and see how it progress.  Would be interesting to see the roadmap/blueprint of plans and also how transparency is built-into the operation, organisation and management of the company.

The MIC has set up a special purpose vehicle known as Mainco Bhd to tap into the many development projects unveiled by the government in order for the Malaysian Indian community to reap the economic benefits from these projects.

Mainco, which has already been registered, would vie for business opportunities under the Economic Transformation Programme (ETP) such as those arising from the Mass Rapid Transit and the Greater Kuala Lumpur development projects, MIC president G Palanivel said today.

It would also acquire new businesses or buy into listed companies.

To operationalise Mainco and undertake these activities, MIC will ask for government support by way of soft loans, said Palanivel (right), who is also Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department.

“We want to make Mainco a successful business group and empower the Indian community,” he told Bernama in an interview.

The move would also contribute to efforts to lift the community onto the country’s mainstream of economic development from being a sub-stream community now.

He said the MIC was also requesting the government to award eight percent of the civil contracts in the country to Indian Malaysians.

This will enable Indian Malaysian contractors to make higher profit margins.

“Otherwise, if an Indian Malaysian uses other people’s license, then the profit margin will be very minimal, so we are looking at direct contract award,” he added.

Asked when all these plans would come to fruition, he said, “We need time and the support of the government.”

MIC was preparing the project paper containing all its proposals on how “we can work with the government and the private sector,” said Palanivel.

The MIC president expressed confidence in the government, under the leadership of Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak, which was more sensitive and responsive than before the 2008 elections.

The government’s speedy response was evident when the Suria Cooperative proposed by MIC just after he took over was set up speedily with an RM8 million fund to provide financial help to Indian Malaysian retailers and enable traders to expand their businesses.

Furthermore, in the 2012 Budget, unveiled on Oct 7, he said the government had accepted MIC’s proposal for RM100 million to be set aside for Indian Malaysian entrepreneurs especially for women under Amanah Ikhtiar Malaysia.

The same amount has also been extended to the Chinese Malaysian community.

He said the MIC was also looking at Indian Malaysian participation in future eco-friendly projects such as extracting oil and essences from fragrant flowers.

“There is a demand for such environmentally-friendly products in European countries where consumers are willing to pay a premium,” he said.

Dairy projects including cattle farming to produce milk and milk by-products were also in the pipeline, said Palanivel.

There were plans to set up Indian Malaysian-owned palm oil plantations for which the MIC had requested for 20,000 hectares of land and funding, he said.

‘Soft loans rather than grants’

He reiterated that the MIC preferred requesting for soft loans from the government rather than grants to operationalise plans to uplift the economic status of the Indian community.

As to the economic standing of the community, he said more than 30 percent of Indian Malaysians could be categorised as low-income economy.

And many do not even have any income and some earn below RM500 per month, doing menial jobs like washing plates.

This was evident from the thousands of Indian Malaysians who turned up at the party’s Sunday service centres nationwide, be they from rural or urban areas.

“They look impoverished,” he said.

“The poor have to be mainstreamed, we have to empower, mentor and counsel them and in the process build up their capacity. We need a 10-year plan to bring the community out of its present rot,” he said.

Palanivel said that a good percentage of Indian Malaysians have been deprived and this “deprivation has led to violence, robbery and murders”.

“The community has lost its empowerment and capacity,” he said, adding that the time has come for deliverance out of poverty and low income.

source: http://www.malaysiakini.com/news/179059