Team-building: JPJ personnel taking part in activities at the 2025 JPJ Family Day event at UKM’s sports centre. — Bernama
Over 34,000 outstanding summonses were paid
BANGI: Twenty-eight companies listed by the Road Transport Department (JPJ) as having the highest number of outstanding summonses have settled 34,371 summonses worth RM6.2mil, says director-general Datuk Aedy Fadly Ramli.
The companies, 11 commercial goods companies and 17 bus operators, had reached out to the department after Transport Minister Anthony Loke gave them a two-week grace period beginning June 25 to settle their outstanding summonses, he added.
“So for the JPJ, we assist by issuing the latest records and how to settle them immediately. We do see all companies wishing to settle their outstanding issues,” he told reporters at the 2025 JPJ Family Day event at Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia sports centre yesterday.
He said there were some others that have yet to settle their summonses but added that the department would give them a grace period of a month starting from July 9 for them to do so.
“If it remains unsettled, the JPJ will blacklist the vehicles under the companies. There are those that we have already blacklisted as they did not respond to us,” he said, Bernama reported.
He also said that commercial goods companies and bus operators were eligible for the RM150 compound rate that applies to all vehicles issued with Automated Awareness Safety System (Awas) summonses.
