GPS 2012: just plain dumb

Well I have had the chance to read through the final version of the 2012 Government Policy Statement for land transport funding and two conclusions immediately leap into my head: It’s remarkably similar to the draft version. All that “consultation” seems to have been just for show.…
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Busting an annoying transport myth

One thing that perpetually annoys me is when Steven Joyce rolls out the “we’re spending $1.6 billion on rail in Auckland so please stop complaining about all the money we’re spending on roads.” We see this line being trotted in in some of the Questions and Answers section to the Government Policy Statement: It is also important to note that the majority of central government funding for public transport infrastructure is provided outside of the National Land Transport Fund and so not included in the GPS.…
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Gareth Hughes on the GPS

I’m still digging through the details of the Government Policy Statement myself, but here’s a good interview on TVNZ 7’s News at 8 programme with Green Party transport spokesman Gareth Hughes (click the image or here for the video): While it may seem like he said the word “balance” a heck of a lot of times, looking at the funding allocations in the GPS for various different parts of the transport sector, it really is the lack of balance that shines through:  Even really basic stuff like maintaining state highways (funding frozen for the next 6 years) and building & looking after local roads (funding effectively frozen for the next 6 years) are getting screwed over in order to splurge more and more money on new state highways.…
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Final 2012 GPS released

Just a quick post for now – more detail later. The final version of the 2012 Government Policy Statement has been released today – and yes, it’s unsurprisingly bad. Really bad. By my calculations, between 2012 and 2018 the policy will have the following spread of funding:  When public transport use is booming, state highway traffic volumes have stagnated for a number of years and oil prices are high and likely to go higher (imagine the price of petrol if the NZ dollar was at its usual 60 US cents) having such a huge focus of spending on state highways (and $8b of the state highways total goes to new ones) is just downright stupid.…
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Is a PT funding crisis around the corner?

An article in today’s Sunday Star Times looks at the possible repercussions of NZTA’s decision (forced upon them by the upcoming government policy statement) to cut the funding assistance rate for public transport around the country. The results are potentially pretty ugly: The government will cut up to $17 million from its public transport budget for the 2011-12 financial year.…
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Can transport be an election issue?

Auckland’s poor transport outcomes over the years are probably the result of one over-riding factor: that while we vote on transport matters in local elections, local governments don’t have much money, central government holds the purse strings. Yet when it comes to national elections, we tend to have much bigger issues on our mind (taxes, health, crime, education, the economy etc.)…
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Where did the four new RoNS come from?

The draft Government Policy Statement document, that was released for consultation a couple of months back, was a highly perplexing and depressing document. Focusing an even greater amount of money on building new motorways, slashing (already slashed) spending on public transport infrastructure and capping money for new local roads and even the maintenance of existing roads is just plain stupidity – and is completely ignorant of recent transport trends both here in New Zealand and overseas.…
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Auckland Transport’s take on the GPS

My opinions of the draft Government Policy Statement for transport funding were articulated in this recent post. Papers from Auckland Transport’s May board meeting outline the issues of concern to them in the document. Helpfully, Auckland Transport provide some useful tables that more clearly highlight areas of funding that are proposed to increase and decrease over the next 10 years.…
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