Chapter 1
Conduct of the inquiry
1.1
The Senate referred the inquiry to the committee on 4 December 2008. The
terms of reference are:
The investment of Commonwealth and State funds in public
passenger transport infrastructure and services, with reference to the August
2005 report of the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Environment
and Heritage, Sustainable Cities, and the February 2007 report of the Senate
Standing Committee on Rural and Regional Affairs and Transport Committee,
Australia's future oil supply and alternative transport fuels, including:
-
an audit of the state of public passenger transport in
Australia;
-
current and historical levels of public investment in
private vehicle and public passenger transport services and infrastructure;
-
an assessment of the benefits of public passenger
transport, including integration with bicycle and pedestrian initiatives;
-
measures by which the Commonwealth Government could
facilitate improvement in public passenger transport services and infrastructure;
-
the role of Commonwealth Government legislation, taxation,
subsidies, policies and other mechanisms that either discourage or encourage
public passenger transport; and
-
best practice international examples of public passenger
transport services and infrastructure.
1.2
The Committee advertised the inquiry in The Australian and wrote
to many peak bodies inviting submissions. The Committee received 194
submissions (see APPENDIX 1) and held 12 hearings (see APPENDIX 2). The
committee thanks submitters and witnesses for their contribution.
1.3
In the Committee's view the inquiry is timely because:
-
significant increases in urban public transport patronage in the
last few years have focussed attention on the need for improvement;
-
recent commitments to reduce Australia's greenhouse emissions
have obvious implications for transport policy: public transport is more energy
efficient than car transport and should be involved in reducing cities'
greenhouse footprint;
-
problems of urban traffic congestion and transport disadvantage,
though not new, have had renewed attention in recent years - for example,
because of greater awareness of the likely increase in traffic congestion
(which cannot be solved only by building roads) under business as usual
assumptions;[1]
-
the detrimental health effects of inactive, car-dependent
lifestyles have had increased attention in recent years as part of the
discussion of the 'obesity epidemic'. Public transport and active transport
have an obvious place in encouraging more active lifestyles.[2]
-
oil supply concerns and the associated rising fuel costs mean
there is an increasing need for public transport services in the medium to long
term, particularly in outer metropolitan and regional areas where travel
distances are greater and transport costs are a higher proportion of income.
Structure of the report
1.4
Chapter 2 provides basic contextual information about public transport
in Australia, as relevant to the issues discussed later (terms of reference a)
and b)).
1.5
Chapter 3 discusses the benefits of public transport and active
transport (terms of reference c)). The Committee agrees that public transport and
active transport create community benefits which justify supporting them with
public subsidies.
1.6
Chapter 4 discusses a number of issues to do with providing better
public transport service (relevant to terms of reference c) and d)). Key issues
are:
-
the need for stable strategic transport plans, with goals,
actions and performance criteria detailed enough to be a basis for monitoring
performance;
-
the need for best practice institutional arrangements so that the
city's public transport service is planned and delivered as a fully integrated
network;
-
the need to properly integrate transport planning with urban
planning more generally. This need is now widely agreed in official plans and
policies, but must be continually emphasised.
1.7
Chapter 5 discusses possible Commonwealth actions to improve public
transport, and related matters of Commonwealth responsibility, such as
infrastructure funding, the fringe benefits taxation of employer-provided cars,
and funding of behavoir change programs like 'Travelsmart' (terms of reference
d) and e).
Scope of the report
1.8
The interest of most submissions was 'train, tram and bus services in
cities'. Public transport in rural and regional areas raises somewhat different
issues, considered from paragraph 4.62. Elsewhere most of the discussion,
following the submissions, is implicitly about public transport in cities,
since that is where the traffic congestion problems are greatest, and that is
where the research on transport disadvantage focusses. That is not intended to
downplay the significance of rural and regional transport issues.
1.9
Rural and regional public transport by air was mentioned in a few
submissions.[3]
It raises different issues which the committee was not able to investigate in
appropriate detail and will not try to deal with in this report.
1.10
Information of a statistical nature is brought in from examples
mentioned in submissions. A thorough 'audit' was not possible, as that is a research
task, assembling mostly state-based information from primary sources, which is
far beyond the normal Senate committee secretariat resources. It is a role for
the national research agency which the committee recommends (see paragraph 5.28ff).
1.11
The mention of a city in relation to some item of information, in the
absence of full comparative information, is not meant to imply anything about
whether that city is typical of Australia. The mention of a submission
criticising a particular city or state is not meant to imply that that city or
state is any worse than other cities or states.
Related recent reports
1.12
The committee notes the recent related parliamentary committee reports
mentioned in the terms of reference:
1.13
The House of Representatives Sustainable Cities report (2005)
recommended:
-
the Australian Government should significantly boost its funding
commitment for public transport systems, particularly light and heavy rail, in
the major cities;
-
the provision of Australian Government transport infrastructure
funds should include provision of funding specifically for sustainable public
transport infrastructure for suburbs and developments on the outer fringes of
our cities;
-
the Australian Government should review the current fringe
benefits tax concessions for car use with a view to removing incentives for
greater car use and extending incentives to other modes of transport.[4]
1.14
The Government has not responded to the committee's report.
1.15
This committee's 2007 report on Australia's future oil supply discussed
public transport in context of energy efficiency measures to reduce dependence
on important oil. The committee recognised the need for more investment in mass
transit and urge the Council of Australian Governments (COAG) to take this up
as a national infrastructure priority. The committee acknowledged the concept
of peak oil and recommended:
-
Australian Government support for 'Travelsmart' behavioural
change initiatives should be continued beyond the planned termination date;
-
the Government should review the statutory formula in relation to
the fringe benefits taxation of cars to address perverse incentives for more
car use.[5]
1.16
The Government has not responded to the committee's report.[6]
1.17
The committee draws attention to some other recent related reports:
1.18
The Victorian Competition and Efficiency Commission (VCEC) in 2006 reported
on managing urban congestion. VCEC recommended a mix of supply and demand
measures including 'suitably targeted road and public transport projects.'[7]
1.19
COAG during 2006 reviewed urban congestion. The report recommended a
number of supply and demand measures including more use of public transport.
The report noted that the high cost of infrastructure such as new major roads,
and environmental concerns, 'has increased the attractiveness of other
congestion management measures to augment the efficiency of existing
infrastructure.' It noted that the benefits of public transport improvements
are greatest 'when part of an integrated package which includes measures such
as - supportive land use policies; restraints on car use; traffic management
measures; simplified fares and integrated ticketing; and high levels of
reliability.'[8]
1.20
The 2008 Garnaut Climate Change Review considered the role of public
transport to mitigate transport greenhouse emissions. It said:
Governments have a major role to play in lowering the
economic costs of adjustment to higher oil prices, an emissions price and
population growth, through planning for more compact urban forms and rail and
public transport. [9]
1.21
Infrastructure Australia, in a 2008 report to COAG, identified as one of
its themes: 'increasing public transport capacity in our cities and making
better use of existing transport infrastructure'. It also said:
It is clear that government at all levels, including the
Australian Government, needs to provide much greater investment in new public
transport infrastructure, in order to expand current transport systems and
ensure that existing infrastructure and public transport is utilised effectively
and efficiently to mitigate effects on climate change.[10]
A note on terminology
1.22
'Public transport' is mostly used to refer to scheduled services open to
the public (as in the aviation term 'regular public transport').[11]
Service providers may be publicly or privately owned. In an urban context it is
called 'transit' in America.
1.23
Some submitters suggested 'passenger transport', presumably to remove a
possible misunderstanding that 'public transport' refers only to publicly owned
service providers. However that creates a different possible misunderstanding,
since 'passenger transport' could be taken as referring to all transport that
is not freight transport. This report will keep 'public transport'.
1.24
'Active transport' refers to walking and cycling. This is not meant to
imply that 'active transport' and 'public transport' are opposites. As
discussed in chapter 3, the public health goals of supporting active transport
are also promoted by supporting public transport, since almost all public
transport trips have a walking component. Thus public transport is inherently
more 'active' (health promoting) than car transport.
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