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Thursday, January 22, 2015
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Opposition leader pledges cash
As reported by the Illawarra Mercury on 21 January2015
Half of the proceeds from the long-term lease of Port
Kembla port will be spent in the Illawarra under a NSW Labor government,
Opposition Leader Luke Foley promised on Wednesday.
Labor has pledged that $380 million would be returned
to the region if it is elected to government on March 28, compared with the
$100 million allocated by the Liberal government.
Mr Foley said a dedicated Illawarra Infrastructure
Investment Fund would be established to oversee the distribution of funds.
However, the government says the announcement lacks
substance because the money has already been allocated to projects and no
specific infrastructure commitments were made.
Mr Foley said the Illawarra had been ‘‘short-changed’’
when Port Kembla port was leased for $760 million in April 2013 and the region
only received $100 million.
WTC Comment
The $100 million committed
prior to the sale was shown later to be inadequate. Wollongong needs more, with
some of the proceeds of the long term port lease to be applied to improving
rail access to Port Kembla.
This includes completing the
Maldon Dombarton link, for which expressions of interest close soon.
Train services need improving
At a Neighbourhood Forum 3 Meeting held 20th January at
Thirroul, a call was made for every second fast train in morning and evening
peak hours to stop at Austinmer and/or Bulli. This would be to resolve a
chronic over-parking situation at Thirroul caused by the 2013 timetable. The
meeting also called for more trains, including one from Central to Wollongong
at about 3 pm on weekdays.
During weekday off peak times, there is a Newcastle to
Sydney train every half hour, whilst to and from Wollongong they tend to be
every half hour.
Infrastructure NSW in a 2012 report gave a target time
of one hour for Wollongong Sydney trains. This would require an average speed
of 83 km per hour, which has been achieved for Mandurah Perth trains for over 7
years now. Currently, Wollongong Sydney
trains average only about 55 km per hour. They need speeding up.
An open letter to Premier Mike Baird
WTC was pleased, with 520 other organizations and
people, to sign the following letter that appeared in the Newcastle Herald on
19 December 2014 from citizens of Newcastle, the Hunter and Beyond.
Since then, the Supreme Court of NSW has found that
the NSW Government indeed requires an Act of Parliament to remove the 2.5 km of
track between Wickham and Newcastle.
Your government is about to make a very big mistake!
The decision to cut Newcastle’s intercity rail
services has been made without a viable public transport plan, without due
process and consultation, and without due consideration of Indigenous culture,
relevant evidence, expert opinion and reasonable alternatives, and has
been unduly influenced by vested interests.
Please don’t impose this ill-conceived and expensive
mistake on our city.
Please consider the needs of the many thousands of
people, including families, school children, TAFE and university students,
people with disabilities, older people, shoppers, workers, tourists, surfers,
fishers, beach-goers, and the many other rail users, who rely on this fast, reliable
and seamless service to access the Newcastle CBD and our harbour Foreshore and
beaches.
Please listen to the ordinary residents and community
groups whose modest donations have funded this letter, and who are proud to
openly declare their support for retaining our rail services through to
Newcastle Station.
Please heed the recent call by Newcastle Council to
stop the plans for cutting the rail line, and to work collaboratively in an
open and transparent manner with the Newcastle community to find more effective
ways of using the funding from the Port proceeds to improve our public
transport services and revitalise our city.
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