The Moolampilly Package Monitoring Committee (MPMC) has not met even once in six months. Officials now say monthly meetings were never officially decided, despite multiple meeting minutes suggesting otherwise. Families evicted for the Vallarpadam International Container Transshipment Terminal’s rail and road work are frustrated. Minutes from as recent as July 21, 2025, mentioned monthly meetings. Even a 2011 meeting chaired by former Chief Minister Oommen Chandy recommended regular reviews. A senior official told reporters, “We have received no response from the State government on major demands raised at the last meeting, including the issuance of evictee cards and jobs for one member of each displaced family. These are matters beyond our authority, and without clarity from the government, monthly meetings are meaningless.” The Moolampilly Coordination Committee (MCC), which fights for evictee rights, called this claim "baseless." They said the last meeting on August 22, 2025, was exactly a month after the previous one. The Deputy Collector (Land Revenue) was to represent the District Collector due to the latter’s busy schedule. MCC general convener Francis Kalathungal said, “Official apathy is due to the absence of political will. The failure to share even the minutes of the last meeting held in August exemplifies official indifference.” Eighteen years after eviction, 316 families from seven villages remain without rehabilitation. Sadly, 41 have died waiting for justice. Promised photo-affixed evictee cards since 2018 are still not issued, despite MCC submitting beneficiary lists. A proposal to use dredged soil from Cochin Port to strengthen rehabilitation plots was ignored; the soil was used elsewhere. The Kerala High Court ordered filling and fortifying a rehabilitation plot at Thuthiyoor for 56 families. While the retaining wall is built, land filling has not started, so only three families have built homes. The High Court’s 2008 order to make plots suitable for two-storey houses and pay ₹5,000 monthly rent until then has been ignored. Most families can't build houses due to marshy land, confirmed by the Public Works department. Rent payments stopped years ago.