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Australia: New fare hikes and job cuts in NSW public transport
By Terry Cook
29 December 2003
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The Labor government in Australias most populous state,
New South Wales, has exploited a report on the parlous condition
of the states public train, bus and ferry services to drive
up fares and initiate a new round of job cuts.
Transport Minister Michael Costa announced on December 9 the
governments response to an inquiry he commissioned earlier
this year by Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal chairman
Tom Parry. The Parry review followed a series of damning reports
revealing that prolonged government cost cutting and deliberate
neglect of maintenance and upgrading programs had left large areas
of the transport system in a state of decay.
In April it was estimated that the states rail infrastructure
alone required an emergency injection of $1.5 billion. As of November,
the governments Rail Infrastructure Corporation was still
sitting on a $479 million backlog of maintenance work.
Parrys interim report in September indicated that maintaining
bus, rail and ferry services in Sydney and Newcastle would cost
$2.7 billion annually, but the present revenue return left a $400
million shortfall. The report concluded that even the current
level of services, let alone vital upgrades or expansion, were
not sustainable at the present levels of funding.
The response of Premier Bob Carrs government was predictable.
Rather than providing the desperately needed funds from the state
budget, it adopted recommendations in the report that are designed
to shift the burden for the crisis in transport, created by the
government itself, onto the backs of the travelling public and
public transport workers.
Retired pensioners will be hit with a substantial increase
in the cost of their subsidised all-day fares from $1.10 to $2.50.
Parry had originally recommended that pensioners be banned from
travelling on trains and buses during peak hours. The government
backed away from this highly discriminatory proposal only because
it was seeking to minimise public opposition to the overall package.
Costa announced that all public transport fares would rise
in line with cost of living increases over the next five years,
with the first rise likely in September. The minister pledged
that these fare increases would depend upon service improvements.
Such assurances are meaningless, however, particularly when there
is no objective measure of performance.
In November the NSW deputy auditor general Tony Whitfield revealed
that StateRail lacked any reliable means of monitoring on-time
running or other service and safety levels, including the number
of times trains ran red signals at dangerous speeds. Travellers
were advised to ignore the StateRail websites information
on train reliability.
In addition, the government will be authorised to impose fare
hikes to fund specific projects aimed at improving services. The
arrangement amounts to little more than an open-ended means for
levying working people to pay for the governments rundown
of the rail system.
Facing opposition from parents and school organisations, the
government dropped, for now, a controversial recommendation for
the introduction of a $30 annual fee for students who use subsidised
privately-owned school buses. Instead, it will introduce smart
card technology to monitor how many students actually use the
service. The statistics collected may well be used to justify
future cuts to the subsidy.
The government has also put on temporary hold a recommendation
to scrap a number of CountryLink train services to regional centres
and replace them with road coaches. The backdown followed a series
of protests by people in rural and regional communities and a
flood of angry submissions to the Parry review.
In the meantime, however, the government aims to slash jobs
at country stations and CountryLink booking offices to save at
least $20 million. Booking arrangements will be farmed out to
private retail outlets, or passengers will be forced to use the
Internet to make reservations.
Even if the saving is achieved, the government has not abandoned
its plan to axe the targetted country services. Speaking to the
media, Costa warned: The heat is not off CountryLink. We
reserve our right to revisit the situation. He announced
plans for a review of all CountryLink patronage, costs and
revenue in 12 months time.
Under conditions where it is facing a substantial outlay to
maintain, and soon replace, the CountryLink train fleet, the government
is anxious to rid itself of the responsibility of providing rural
and regional train services. According to a recent report, many
of the XPT trains in the 79-strong fleet will have to be replaced
by 2006, four years ahead of their original used-by date because
they are being pushed to the limit.
Replacing country trains with buses would pave the way for
services being handed over to private operators. Other privatisation
moves are already underway. The government pushed legislation
through state parliament earlier this year allowing for the corporatisation
of Sydney Ferries by next July.
According to Costa, as a corporate entity Sydney Ferries will
be better placed to deal with traditional problems of low
patronage, poor fleet availability and declining revenue and mounting
debt. This is ministerial speak for a ruthless cost-cutting
exercise that will see less profitable ferry services dumped and
numerous jobs axed.
The level of cuts intended at Sydney Ferries can be gauged
by Costas recent claims that the average daily patronage
of Sydney Ferries is about 19 percent of capacity, and that more
than one-third of daily peak services operate at less than 10
percent. Ferry workers have already been informed that the jobs
of gate hands and revenue staff are to be axed and work rosters
are under review.
Wider job cuts are looming. Sydney rail workers held a four-hour
stoppage on December 23 because 13,000 of the states 17,000
rail employees are still unsure of their status when the Carr
government merges the State Rail Authority and the Rail Infrastructure
Corporation on January 1. About 200 injured workers have been
told already that there is no place for them in the new structure.
See Also:
Australia: Rail crash inquiry
reveals serious mechanical flaws left uncorrected
[2 July 2003]
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