Showing posts with label labor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label labor. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Labor state dominoes set to fall

LABOR is terminal in NSW and on the skids in Victoria as the national political pendulum swings back to the Coalition in the states and territories.

The party would be massacred in NSW if an election were held now, and would struggle to retain power in Victoria, according to the latest Newspolls, conducted exclusively for The Australian during September and last month.

While NSW Premier Nathan Rees would not have expected a major bounce just two months into his term of office, Victorian Premier John Brumby will be shaken by the result.

The Victorian Government has traditionally been state Labor's beach-head, as it has avoided the kind of lurid scandal that has struck some of its interstate counterparts, and the state's economy has remained sound...

Read the whole article at TheAustralian.news.com.au

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Labor muscle ready to take on the Greens

BATTLE lines in the Melbourne City Council election are being drawn to shut out the Greens and replace Lord Mayor John So with a new, compliant leader, commentators say.

Labor candidates spread across several tickets have combined with councillors from Cr So's team and his chief of staff, in what some predict will become a bloc designed to keep crucial preferences locked among the incumbents.

Concern about the Greens is warranted: in 2004 they came second to Cr So, who is not running this time.

Cr So's five-member team is renowned for voting as a bloc at council and committee meetings, and has been accused by rivals of being too subservient to the State Government.

Nominations for all 79 Victorian councils close on Tuesday.

Cr So's departure blows the mayoral and council contests wide open.

Independent mayoral candidate Gary Morgan says there are three groups in the field, his team included. There is a strong chance he will give his preferences to the Greens in an effort to get around what he says is a Labor bloc. "I think Labor will spend a lot of money," he said. "I think they're desperate."

ALP insiders admit the Government does not want a Green lord mayor.

Political commentator Nick Economou said a Greens victory would add to the "sense of momentum the party has in the inner city".

"If a Green mayor were to be elected that would be quite an extraordinary achievement and it would probably cause some nervousness in the ALP, because it would be certain indication of decline in support," Dr Economou said.

Monash University's David Dunstan said the election held danger for the Government.

"An articulate and progressive lord mayoral opponent of Brumby's ALP right centrism, prepared to endorse New Age urban and inner-city quality of life ideas, such as Copenhagen bike paths and a voice at the table on the transport and infrastructure debates, could cause him discomfort," he said.

He said the Government had had "a dream run" with the effervescent Cr So and would be looking for another non-political, pro-business lord mayor.

Greens mayoral candidate Adam Bandt believes there is a strategy to keep him out.

"I think there's a concerted effort by the John So and John Brumby forces to field a range of candidates that appear to be independent but in fact are all cut from the same cloth," he said. "What better way to avoid scrutiny of your record than to have the old guard split up before the election, pretend they're all different candidates, hide their affiliations and then regroup afterwards?

No one in Cr So's team is running on the same ticket, but some have teamed up with ALP candidates....

Read the rest of the article, which includes comments about some of the other current candidates, at TheAge.com.au

I, for one, try to not have an overt political bias on this site (apart from opposing the digging up of the park, of course), but keep in mind that currently the City of Melbourne oppose the digging of a tunnel through our park, and that the Labor State Government have brought about that prospect in the first place. If a labor-aligned candidate became Lord Mayor... well... I don't like to think about that. See you tomorrow where we can show them all how passionate we are!

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Labor split over new tollway plans - TheAge.com.au

Jason Dowling and Paul Austin

A NEW tollway proposal in Sir Rod Eddington's transport plan for Melbourne has split the Victorian Labor Party's transport policy committee.

The committee's secretary has resigned in disgust at a decision to endorse all 20 recommendations in Sir Rod's report to the State Government, including a new multibillion-dollar road tunnel linking the city's east and west.

The committee's response to the Eddington proposals will be presented to the ALP state conference today, and Premier John Brumby will release his transport plan for Melbourne next month.

The secretary, Pat Love, has written to his committee colleagues, along with Roads Minister Tim Pallas and Public Transport Minister Lynne Kosky saying he would bring forward the end of his term because of the committee's support for more freeways.

"Recent decisions of the committee, most importantly the decisions to support all 20 recommendations from the (Eddington) study, prompted me to bring this forward prior to the state conference. I handed my resignation to Kevin Bracken last Monday," he wrote in an email sent on Thursday night and obtained by The Age.

"As you know, I have argued both internally on the committee and externally in public forums that now is not the time to build another road tunnel."

Mr Love, who has been secretary of the committee for three years, said: "If it is implemented by State Government, I firmly believe that it will lead to more long-term problems than solutions for people in Melbourne, and especially the people living in the west."

It was wrong to argue that the "massive expenditure of an 18-kilometre tunnel, whether funded by government or private or both, will solve our congestion problems in the inner west, north and inner east".

"I don't believe it will improve transport options for many people in the west, but will further entrench them in car dependence," Mr Love wrote.

"Overall, it will lead to more greenhouse gas emissions from transport in Melbourne, not less."

Transport is expected to be the subject of passionate debate at today's conference, with one draft resolution accusing the Government of failing "to establish an effective process for the development of transport policy for Melbourne in the wake of the Eddington review".

It says the Government manipulated its consultations with the community about transport policy to prevent many ALP members being involved. The process had degenerated into an exercise "in which people were asked little more than to pick their favourite problem and project".

Other draft resolutions seen by The Age call on the Government to:

  • Urgently implement a manufacturing strategy for Victoria "to ensure the ongoing viability of the industry".
  • Immediately ban logging in all water catchments.

The keynote speakers at today's conference will be Mr Brumby and Deputy Prime Minister Julia Gillard.

Read the original article in TheAge.com.au

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Waiting, waiting, waiting...

If you only read one newspaper article this year about Melbourne's transport woes, read this one from The Age today.

A failure by successive Victorian governments to invest in public transport has left commuters stranded and roads congested. Plan after plan promised improvement, but did not deliver - and time is running out.

LIKE so many Melburnians, Candy Spender wants to do the right thing for the environment. But the system isn't making it easy for her.

In May, the South Melbourne fashion designer and her partner sold their second car, deciding to rely on public transport for short trips. "We were trying to be part of the solution," Spender says.

On Thursday morning, she rose early for a crucial business meeting in St Kilda Road and went to the tram stop, where she was greeted by a string of trams — choked with angry-looking commuters — that didn't stop, because there was no room for more passengers. Spender shivered in the cold, waiting with a growing number of other angry travellers. "Every single tram was just chock-a-block, people squeezed in."

A tram with space arrived 25 minutes later. "Why don't we have more trams? It's so obvious," she says. "This Government, they spout all this rhetoric. But it's just a lot of grandstanding — nothing is happening."

She is by no means alone in her frustrations — Melbourne's commuters have been complaining for years — but now, in the face of rising fuel costs, continuing population growth, ageing transport infrastructure and the looming spectre of global warming, state and federal governments are finally being forced to confront the mess wrought by years of neglect.

Many argue Melbourne's transport woes can be attributed to poor planning, which has led to under-investment in transport. One senior Melbourne public transport official told The Age Melbourne is paying for 30 years of inadequate funding — particularly in public transport.

Recent transport plans have not been a cause for hope. The Kennett government largely neglected public transport infrastructure upgrades in the 1990s, and in 1999 Melbourne transport was not a priority for Labor's Steve Bracks.

By 2004 transport minister Peter Batchelor had a 10-year transport plan; two years later he had a new 25-year plan. And, later this year, Premier John Brumby will likely announce a 30-year transport plan.

All the while transport services in Melbourne have gone backwards. Reams of paper have been wasted printing plans while Melbourne's public transport system has swelled to bursting point and the city's roads have ground to a halt — leaving talk-back host Neil Mitchell to demand of the Premier on Tuesday: "When will you put a shovel in the dirt? When are we going to stop talking about the traffic mess and fix it?"

Planning and investment in Melbourne's public transport system has been woeful for decades. Metlink chief executive Bernie Carolan says patronage is already at record levels. "And there is no sign that any of the many factors contributing to growth are going to diminish," he says.

Massive growth in train patronage — up 30% in three years — has caught planners by surprise. Connex says some train lines will hit capacity this year, while Brumby says some lines are already at capacity.

His own Government's estimates show 28% more passengers will squeeze onto Melbourne's trains by 2011, up from 198 million passengers a year in 2008 to 253 million in 2012. Melbourne's trains are now carrying the passenger numbers not forecast until 2016. It is clear Government got the planning horribly wrong.

Our roads are little better. The Age reveals today declining travel speeds, increased congestion and more delays to come. Congestion on the roads is only expected to worsen if nothing is done, with car travel estimated to increase by 30% by 2031. But despite the woes on the city's road network, motorists are still ahead of neglected public transport commuters. Money spent on new roads in Melbourne by state and federal governments since 1999 has been five times that spent on new public transport connections. Since Labor was elected in Victoria in 1999, $1.7 billion has been spent on new road projects. Meanwhile, just $322 million has been spent on new public transport connections, according to the Public Transport Users Association.

Again, the problems seem to come down to planning. When Batchelor announced the Linking Melbourne: Metropolitan Transport Plan in 2004, he promised a 10-year outline for the development of the transport network. Batchelor said the focus of the plan was to improve the capacity of the existing rail network, and was a "blueprint for funding priorities over the next five years".

Just 18 months later, when it was clear the plan had failed, Bracks announced a new $10.5 billion transport plan: Meeting Our Transport Challenges. It was hailed as the "biggest single investment in the transport system ever undertaken by a Victorian Government" — a 25-year vision. "This major new investment in the state's transport network will connect our growing communities, cut congestion, and deliver a modern and safe system for all Victorians," Bracks boasted.

Two years on Bracks is gone and the transport plan is in tatters. Brumby is so concerned that he is meeting twice weekly with the six-member transport sub-committee of cabinet. The committee includes Roads Minister Tim Pallas, Public Transport Minister Lynne Kosky, Treasurer John Lenders, Planning Minister Justin Madden and Regional and Rural Development Minister Jacinta Allan.

In response to the transport mess, the Government initially looked to Sir Rod Eddington's $20 billion transport plan for improving travel between Melbourne's east and west suburbs. Yet in shades of past transport fiascos, the Government's reply to Eddington's study has morphed into a whole-of-Victoria transport plan. While such a plan is desperately needed, it is looking very much like policy on the run.

The Government says it will now release a "comprehensive transport plan for Victoria" by the end of the year. But this has surprised some Government insiders, who describe the broad transport plan as "plan B". Another labelled the transport policy development "a mess".

Some MPs were surprised last week to learn that a push by transport groups to "complete" the Metropolitan Ring Road with a new freeway connection between Greensborough and Ringwood, and of plans for an "outer ring road" from Werribee to Craigieburn.

The Government has received more than 500 submissions to Eddington's proposals, but no one was asked to respond to a transport plan for the whole of Victoria — which the Government says it will release in November.

It is public knowledge that Eddington was frustrated with the limited scope of his report, and now the Government is holding secret briefings from transport experts sounding out advice on a wider transport plan.

Despite the deficiencies in the process, some monumental transport options are now on the horizon for Melbourne: a $9 billion road tunnel linking the Eastern Freeway to the Western Ring Road, a $7 billion rail tunnel from Footscray to Caulfield, and a $1.5 billion rail link from Werribee to Deer Park, as well as the "missing link" and "outer ring road". There will be major regional transport proposals as well.

The public's reaction to many of the proposals remains largely unknown because the Government has refused to release the public submissions until after the closing date on Tuesday. What is clear is a big investment in public transport infrastructure is almost certain. Business, transport groups and the public are unified in their call for a big increase in public transport capability — the question is how to fund the $8.5 billion worth of rail projects.

The Federal Government has announced a $20 billion Building Australia Fund, with the new Infrastructure Australia Advisory Council to advise the Rudd Government on how to spend the money. The council is chaired by Sir Rod Eddington and will release a list of priority funding projects in March — four months after Brumby is expected to release his Victorian transport plan.

Brumby has already said he expects $5-$6 billion from the fund — which realistically could mean Victoria receiving $3-$4 billion, judging by the allocation of federal road funding in Victoria.

The Federal Government has already committed $12 million for feasibility studies into transport options identified in Eddington report — including the proposed Footscray to Caulfield rail tunnel and new western rail line from Werribee to Deer Park. Federal Transport Minister Anthony Albanese told The Age that the feasibility studies were a "statement of intent, not about specific projects necessarily, but about the direction of the Government".

"It is a national tragedy that many working parents spend more time commuting to work in their cars than they do at home with their kids," he says.

The last federal minister to make significant investment in public transport, former deputy prime minister Brian Howe, has welcomed the move. And Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has said the Federal Government had to do more on public transport to help tackle climate change. "How much do they (cars) put into the environment in greenhouse gas emissions? Because we have yet to evolve a large, long-term investment into urban public transport systems, with the national government playing its role as well," Rudd said earlier this month.

Other funding options are also being considered for the public transport projects, including increased debt-borrowing by the State Government and private financing. While it is widely expected that new major road projects in Melbourne will attract a toll, private funding for public transport would take many by surprise.

Superannuation funds are particularly interested in making long-term, low-risk investments in transport infrastructure. David Atkin, chief executive of superannuation fund Cbus, said major new rail projects could be attractive investment opportunities.

"It is certainly true that it is quite possible that we could become an investor in something like that, but it depends on how it is structured," he says.

And how financially attractive the State Government makes the investment.

Others are less concerned about the funding model and more interested in the outcome. Daniel Bowen from the Public Transport Users Association says it is time a lasting, effective transport plan is delivered.

"Every couple of years, this Government comes out with a new plan that they say will be the be-all-and-end-all," he says. "Inevitably, people realise it's not going to work, and so work begins on another plan."

The Government has boasted of its target to have 20% of all motorised trips on public transport by 2020. But many public transport commuters are now just hoping their train or tram arrives, and when it does, that they can squeeze on. Victoria's 2008 transport plan will need to improve on those before it or the next may be delivered by a new government.

For Candy Spender, just getting to work on time is all she is after.

"How can it be that when, nearly every headline is about climate change and the price of fuel, the public transport system in Melbourne cannot be relied upon?"

Jason Dowling is city editor.

Clay Lucas is transport reporter.

By 2011, Melbourne trains will carry 28% more passengers, up from 198 million passengers to 253 million.

■30% increase in car travel by 2031.

■Since 1999, $1.7 billion has been spent on new road projects and $322 million on new public transport connections.

SOURCES: STATE GOVERNMENT; PUBLIC TRANSPORT USERS ASSOCIATION

Original article at http://www.theage.com.au/national/waiting-waiting-waiting--20080711-3dsn.html?page=-1

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Email from Kensington Association

As you can see, many of our fears have been confirmed by two key ministers of the Victorian Government. You need to get involved, and get as many of your friends/relatives/workmates involved as you can...

Kensington Association executive members invited to meet Ministers

On 25 June our local member Bronwyn Pike invited executive members Richard Reilly (Chair), David Ettershank (Secretary) and Tony Dare (Treasurer) to a meeting at Parliament House to discuss the Eddington Report and the potential impact of its recommendations.

The meeting was also attended by the Minister for Roads, Tim Pallas who is probably the Minister most responsible for the carriage of the Eddington recommendations.

The discussion extended for over an hour and a half and followed extensive public criticism of Bronwyn for her decision to not publicly comment on the adverse impacts of the Eddington proposals.

This email is to provide members and friends of the Kensington Association with a summary of the discussions at the meeting and is consistent with Bronwyn's request that the meeting be reported back to members.

Bronwyn made a number of points to the Association representatives including that:

* She is aware of the concern within the community.

* She regretted having been unable to attend the 21 June rally, and had included comments about her position in her apology (which is posted on the Association website at http://www.kensingtonassociation.org.au/site/index.php?option=content&task=view&id=153 )

* She was working assiduously with her Government colleagues to alert them to possible impacts of such a proposal on Kensington and other parts of her constituency.

* It was not possible or practicable for her, as a Government Minister, to rule out any specific aspects of the Eddington proposals, (although people would be able to read her own submission when it was lodged). Rather, she believed that she was best able to serve her constituents by working 'from within', rather than by excluding herself from the process by prematurely condemning the proposal.

Tim Pallas advised that

* The Government retains an open mind on the Eddington Report and that in fact "things have moved on" in many areas (such as petrol prices and public transport utilisation) since the Report was commissioned.

* That Bronwyn has expressed her concerns strongly within government but that for her to do so publicly would be a breach of Cabinet solidarity and reduce her capacity for advocacy.

* That after submissions on the Report close (15 July) an Issues Paper will be produced for public discussion and representatives of business and the community will be invited to a "roundtable" meeting to discuss the paper in August.

* Concurrently, the Government is commissioning a number of wider studies to assist in an overall traffic and transport plan for Melbourne (however these will not be subject to release to the public).

* That he personally believed the current dependence on the Westgate Bridge is unsustainable and that an alternate road route had to be developed.

* That it was not possible to construct major infrastructure without impacts, and that some had to be tolerated for the wider good. However, he also indicated that if the tollway did extend through JJ Holland Park, the Government would be vigilant to minimise any negative impact.

* That the private sector "had no appetite" for investment in public transport and that this would have to be done by Government. The private sector would invest in roads and would have a strong influence over road alignment and access.

* That the Government would decide its position on implementation by the end of the year.

So what does this all mean?

At the end of the meeting we formed a number of views about the meeting and the way forward:

* Our fears about

The use of JJ Holland Park as a 'staging point' and construction site.

A possible permanent 'open cut' through the Park.

An interchange at Kensington-Dynon Road allowing traffic into Kensington.

An elevated truck link across Newell Wetlands.

Vent stacks and related environmental degradation.

are entirely well founded.

* Formal public consultation will end on July 15th. After that there is only the "roundtable discussion" in August and we will not see a preferred government proposal (including route) until December.

* Once Government announces its preferred position there will be an extended period while they line up constructors, financiers and the like. This is the first opportunity the community will have to enter the debate in the context of a concrete proposal and no consultation with the community is proposed.

This could be long battle so we need to be prepared.

Actions to take

Please get your submissions in to eastwestyoursay@doi.vic.gov.au by 15 July.

Also, to your local Member of State Parliament: bronwyn.pike@parliament.vic.gov.au

And to your local Member of Federal Parliament: Lindsay.Tanner.MP@aph.gov.au

If you wish to respond to this email, feel free to contact us at info@kensingtonassociation.org.au or better still, attend our regular general meetings of members on the first Monday of every month, 7.30 pm at the Holy Rosary Primary School in Gower Street. (Next meeting July 7)

Report by

David Ettershank, Secretary and

Richard Reilly Chairperson

Kensington Association

Monday, June 30, 2008

Memo to Mr Brumby: take Kororoit's lesson to heart

...The state seat of Kororoit, in Melbourne's west, presents a more complex picture. It, too, was regarded as a safe seat — in this case, for the ALP — and did not change hands. But a high-profile independent candidate, youth worker Les Twentyman, gained more than 20% of the primary vote, forcing Labor's Marlene Kairouz to rely on his preferences to secure her election. The swing against the ALP — almost 13% of the primary vote, in a seat that a year ago it would have taken for granted — must discomfit the Brumby Government.

Mr Twentyman has said that the result means Kororoit is now a marginal seat. That is not quite true, because it is not obvious that a Liberal candidate could repeat his achievement. What Mr Twentyman has done, however, is demonstrate that in a seat like Kororoit a left-leaning independent, campaigning strongly on community issues, can knock a hefty dent in Labor's majority and might win the seat on a future occasion. This outcome should warn all parties that the era of rusted-on voter loyalties is past...

Read the whole article here - http://www.theage.com.au/opinion/memo-to-mr-brumby-take-kororoits-lesson-to-heart-20080629-2ytp.html?page=-1

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Bronwyn Pike's response to the Kensington Association

This is the bit where she talks about Holland Park. Read the whole letter here...

...I know that the issue of a road tunnel is a key concern of Kensington residents, particularly as to how it relates to Holland Park. But I also urge you to make your views heard on the other facets of the Eddington Report. I am working hard to ensure that improvements to public transport, bike paths, and removing trucks from residential streets remain the focus of the Government's response to the Report.

I, along with many local residents, have strong views about retaining sites which are environmentally significant or which are important to local communities. I will continue to represent those views at the highest levels of Government.

I will be making a formal submission as part of my contribution to this process, which i will make available to the Kensington Association, and to any individual residents who request a copy.

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Heat, not light, at the end of the tunnel

DIVISIONS within the Victorian Labor Party over Sir Rod Eddington's east-west tunnel proposals have put pressure on the State Government to delay its response.

Some elements of the party want instead a bigger review of Melbourne's wider transport woes.

Party members at yesterday's state conference endorsed a motion that called on the Government to ban "any new major transport projects" — such as the road and rail tunnels that Sir Rod has proposed — until the preparation of a "metropolitan transport action plan".

The motion sparked passionate debate among senior federal Labor MPs, with Kelvin Thomson, whose electorate includes Brunswick and Coburg, saying the plan would increase greenhouse gases, reduce the liveability of Melbourne and suck money out of infrastructure projects for the next 20 years.


Read the whole article at http://www.theage.com.au/news/national/heat-at-the-end-of-the-tunnel/2008/05/24/1211183189540.html