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Public transport should drive our future

By Bob Muntz - posted Thursday, 3 March 2005


We could design areas for living that would allow us to do all the things we want to do over shorter distances. We could nurture local activities. Less space for traffic equates to more space for people. Look at pedestrian malls … obviously people enjoy them.

The European Union has capitulated to public pressure and initiated car free zones. More public transport, walkways and bicycle ways mean more high quality living areas close to where people want to live, less time spent in cars and more time for use of local facilities, which also means more local jobs. We need to redesign our environment from one that has brought mobility, status and the isolation of individuals, back to one of cohesion and unity. Never mind loving your neighbour. Just knowing who they are would be a good start.

Consecutive governments in this country have refused to acknowledge that climate change is occurring helped along by CO2 emissions exacerbated by poor public transport. Once again, it is the poor both here and internationally who will pay the price. More and more extreme weather events send our insurance premiums skyrocketing. Yet there is still no recognition of the reason why. (Maybe when Florida is ripped off the map the US will instruct Howard to sign the Kyoto Protocol.)

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It is possible to have a strong economy with less reliability on oil, but corrupt politics will have to be dealt with first, and by people like us. The move away from fossil fuel dependency must be led by public utilities. The debacle of privatising them has been well documented - examples such as Enron, British Rail and more show they simply do not work. But they are good for shareholders, particularly when the taxpayer continues to subsidise them, as has happened with British Rail, which now receives more of the taxpayers’ money than it did before it was privatised.

Better systems do exist. My own experience on German rail was of trains that run regularly to almost everywhere. They are comfortable, always on time and are well patronised. The Germans take pride in their railways. Here, we are subtly discouraged from using them. The Germans have other public transport solutions, too. Small German villages are able to acquire a mini-bus to run as a community as a form of public transport, integrating into bigger feeder services, thereby solving the dilemma of rural transport.

Could Australia emulate them, with a socially inclusive, community-driven transport plan?

Our governments have perpetuated the problem of private transport and our dependence on it by subsidising roads and the tunnels that are so much in vogue. I see on TV each night views of Sydney traffic from a helicopter, graphically demonstrating the waste of it all. The selfishness of individuals all trying to go somewhere in their little tin boxes … no wonder road rage happens. An alternative practiced in Germany is the pooling of car ownership. It reduces the desire to own a car and alleviates the problem of vehicles standing idle for long periods.

Would Henry Ford have envisaged the resulting catastrophe of his mass production genius or Ben Chifley at the Holden launch here in 1948, where he expressed his desire ”I hope every Australian family will be able to own a motor car”. We have exceeded their wildest dreams. Our society revolves around the car and every year we pay more out of our household budget to sustain the habit. General Motors is spending $3 billion, gearing up to provide the Chinese with cars. Yet we are told that the world’s oil supply is finite.

Nonsensically, the price of new cars in Australia has come down, while the GST has increased public transport fares. Most European nations now recognise the benefits of public transport and attempt to keep taxes to a minimum. Tax incentives such as re-modelling the fringe benefit tax on company cars for using public transport should be initiated. Parking expenses could be exchanged for public transport vouchers. Car pooling expenses could be reimbursed. This has happened successfully in the US and Canada.

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According to Newspoll 80 per cent of the public support improvement to public transport, yet the overwhelming majority of funds go to roads. We should forgo tax cuts for better public transport infrastructure. A transparent government would place these monies into a specific purpose fund.

In the 1970s political courage was exhibited with the farsighted purchase of the swing wing F111 aircraft for the RAAF, which is still in service. That foresight is again required for our transport system. We are told we can’t afford it. Really? We can afford war and $6 billion of new warships and I imagine we will find the money to participate in the US Starwars project.

The more energy we produce, the more we will use. Education to conserve is paramount. Would the reason for perpetuating unsustainable oil driven transport be to make some very rich people, very much richer?

Every dollar spent on our current primitive and third class rail systems is a dollar denied to a modern viable system that is competitive compared with air transport and that people will want to use. If the people lead, the leaders will follow. Public pressure is needed so that the most suitable options are selected in all public transport.

The question is: Can we afford not to have public transport?

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Article edited by Margaret-Ann Williams.
If you'd like to be a volunteer editor too, click here.

This article was first presented as a long term planning and future thinking paper to the Macquarie University Ecopolitics Conference VX on November 12, 2004.



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About the Author

Bob Muntz is a member of the NSW Green’s Political Party and stood at Burrinjuck in the 2003 state election.

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