CM Conrad Sangma Lauds OTS Scheme for Commercial Vehicles
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Meghalaya Chief Minister Conrad Sangma on Wednesday, July 1, 2026, acknowledged a felicitation from the Joint Action Committee for the Government's One-Time Settlement (OTS) Scheme for commercial vehicles, calling the decision to waive nearly ₹926 crore in long-pending dues a difficult but necessary act of governance.
Context
Posting on X, CM Sangma said he was 'humbled by the felicitation' and described the scale of the challenge: 'When nearly 16,000 commercial vehicle owners and their families were impacted, the choice became clear.' The Chief Minister framed the decision as a people-first governance call, even when it came at a significant fiscal cost to the state exchequer.
The scheme offers an 80% waiver on Motor Vehicle Tax and Goods and Passenger Tax dues, and a 90% waiver on Fitness Certificate penalties. Approximately 65,000 vehicles are covered under its ambit, with the government absorbing ₹926 crore in outstanding dues.
Policy Backdrop
One-time settlement schemes for motor vehicle taxes are a recurring instrument across Indian states, used to regularise vehicles with long-pending dues while offering relief to owners who have struggled to clear accumulated liabilities. In Meghalaya and the broader Northeast, road transport is the economic lifeline of communities spread across hilly, remote terrain with limited rail or waterway connectivity.
The National People's Party (NPP)-led government in Shillong has positioned the OTS Scheme as a measure that balances revenue recovery with livelihood support — a particularly delicate act in a state with constrained own-tax revenues and high dependence on central transfers. The scheme was launched in June 2026.
Stakeholders and Impact
The primary beneficiaries are commercial vehicle operators — truck owners, goods carriers, and passenger transport operators — who had accumulated Motor Vehicle Tax and Goods and Passenger Tax arrears over years. For many small operators in Meghalaya, these dues had rendered their vehicles non-compliant, affecting their livelihoods directly.
The Joint Action Committee that felicitated CM Sangma represents a segment of this constituency, signalling organised support from the transport sector for the scheme. Since its launch, the scheme has recorded ₹4.48 crore in collections, indicating early uptake among eligible vehicle owners who are settling the reduced dues.
What's Next
The pace of collections — ₹4.48 crore so far against a covered universe of 65,000 vehicles — suggests the scheme is in its early stages of implementation. The government will be watched for outreach efforts to maximise enrolment before any deadline, and for whether the regularisation of vehicles translates into improved compliance and revenue buoyancy in subsequent years.
Broader transport sector reforms in the Meghalaya assembly, including any follow-up policy on fitness certification and tax rationalisation, may be shaped by the reception this scheme receives. The OTS model, if successful, could also inform similar interventions in other Northeast states facing comparable transport-sector fiscal challenges.