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WSWS : News
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National Express withdraws from Australian showpiece of privatised
transport
By Margaret Rees
27 February 2003
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When the Victorian government privatised the states entire
public transport system in 1999 it lauded the move as the consummate
answer to the persistent problems of conveying people and goods
in one of Australias most populated states. The public was
assured that private enterprise would deliver what the public
sector could notan efficient, safe and vastly improved service.
The promised benefits of privatisation have proven to be a
myth. Victorias privatised transport system continued to
be plagued by problems related to service provision, on-time running
and safety. In December, the myth was delivered another decisive
body blow. After only three years, the British-based National
Express, the largest private transport provider in Australia,
suddenly pulled out of its long-term contract to manage Victorias
train system and part of its tram service, forfeiting a $130 million
performance bond.
With the collapse of National Express, responsibility for Victorias
metropolitan M>Train, M>trams and its V-Line country passenger
trains was unceremoniously dumped in the lap of the state Labor
government. As well as the immediate problem of keeping the transport
system running, it undermined Labors ability to justify
its Partnerships Victoria program, which involves a series of
joint government-private sector projects. These include a plan
to pay $300 million to the Civic Nexus consortium to build a Melbourne
country rail terminal and to award the company a 30-year contract
to run the station.
Despite the ignominious collapse of National Express, the Labor
government immediately rushed to reassure the market that it had
no intention of operating public trains and trams. It plans to
reintegrate the tram and train networks and put the entire system
up for tender within 12 months. The three transport areas operated
by National Express have been placed in the hands of receivers
KPMG.
Another round of downsizing and attacks on working conditions
is being prepared order to cut costs and to attract a new private
investor. An editorial in the Australian Financial Review gave
a glimpse of what is on the cards. It called on the government
to introduce greater flexibility in working conditions, including
the introduction of split shifts and an increased use of casual
labour.
In January, Transport Minister Peter Batchelor announced he
would add firepower to the Office of the Director
of Public Transport by employing heavy hitters in the commercial
sense to senior positions to work with the receivers to
oversee the restructuring. He appointed three former directors
of National Express, the very men who oversaw the transport debacle,
to work with KPMG. They are Alan Chaplin, now the managing director
of M>Train, Bernie Carolan from M>Tram and Andrew Neal from
V-line Passenger.
Far from defending the conditions of its own members, the Rail,
Tram and Bus Union (RTBU) is doing all in its power to assist
the Labor government find a new buyer. In the wake of the National
Express collapse, the union has made no call for the government
to take control of the transport system and provide the money
for a much-needed upgrade of services.
Pledging a non-strike period during the transition to full
privatisation, RTBU assistant secretary Lou Di Gregorio declared:
Its a pity the company (National Express) has gone
under. The problem, he claimed, was simply that National
Express never got to know the business of public transport
here in Victoria.
The unions offer to assist the government is completely
in line with its past practices. It defused the struggle by transport
workers against privatisation and allowed the sell-off to go ahead
in exchange for union coverage in the newly privatised operations.
Private companies demand government subsidies
In 1999, three companies won 12- to 15-year franchises to run
Victorias transport systems. They were Australian-French
consortium Transfield-Transdev; CGEA Connex, a subsidiary of French
transnational Vivendi; and National Express.
The companies gained the contracts by promising to lower operating
costs and increase service usage thereby lessening any claim on
the government for continuing subsidies. National Express, for
example, projected that patronage of its train and tram services
it would increase by 70 percent in the period to 2009. Instead
patronage increased only at a rate of between 2 and 4 percent
annually.
The private companies, especially National Express, have milked
the government for millions of dollars in subsidies since taking
control of the transport system. In the first year of operations,
National Express received a subsidy of $204 million, Connex $82
million and Yarra Trams $38 million. All three companies continued
to demand extra subsidies and underwriting. In February 2002,
the government, fearing a collapse of sections of the metropolitan
transport system, handed the companies an emergency subsidy of
$110 millionof which National Express received $46.2 million.
There have been other forms of subsidisation. According to
their franchise arrangements, the private companies were expected
to meet the full cost of infrastructure improvements. Instead,
since 2000, the government has handed over $22 million for cost
overruns on extensions to busy tram and train lines and forked
out another $100 million to electrify an outer rail line and to
add two new stations. A similar extension in 1995, when the system
was under public ownership, cost only $27 million.
When National Express complained that it was suffering large
revenue losses because of fare evasion, the government employed
100 more station staff and 100 roving ticket sellers at a cost
of over $33 million over the next three years. It also introduced
legal powers to allow the private operators companies to convert
the extra employees into their own transit police.
Despite these measures, National Express declared that one
of the reasons for abandoning its franchise was the loss of $50
million per annum in fare evasion. The revenue losses were, however,
the result of drastic changes to the ticketing arrangements introduced
by the previous Liberal government in the lead up to privatisation.
Hundreds of barrier assistants and ticket-sellers were replaced
by a complex ticketing system requiring passengers to purchase
tickets through machines and validate them at stations or after
boarding trams. The difficult and impersonal system was much resented
by a travelling public already inconvenienced by the lack of service
resulting from years of downsizing under both Labor and Liberal.
In the decade to 1998, the number of public transport jobs were
slashed from 33,000 to less than 9,000.
National Express was always in the business to make a profit
not run a service. It took over a transport system that had been
run down and starved of funds. Unable to milk more money out of
the users, the company continually turned to the government for
handouts, using the threat of imminent collapse and transport
chaos as a lever.
Just prior to abandoning its operations last year, National
Express demanded that the government bail it out to the tune of
$130 million and give a guarantee to underwrite all future losses.
When the government refused and offered only $90 million, National
Express decided to walk away. The company told the London stock
exchange it was unable to reach a revised financial arrangement
with the government without incurring an unacceptable level of
operational and financial risk from next year onwards.
The remaining companies continue to demand subsidies until
the system is put up for tender. Connex and Yarra Trams have been
given an extra $47 million to run their services for the next
12 months and are looking for more if they successfully tender
to take over the transport system after December 2003. To make
the point crystal clear, Connex director Bob Annells declared:
Significant subsidies are paid to every public transport
operator in the world and will continue to be.
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