Proposed private western Metro slammed

September 9, 2016
Issue 
The NSW Greens have slammed reports of a private train from the city to Parramatta.

The NSW Greens have slammed reported plans by the state government to build a new privatised western Metro train line from the city centre to Parramatta.

Commenting on a September 1 Sydney Morning Herald report that planning is under way for a new rail line between the CBD, the Bays Precinct around Rozelle and Parramatta, with possible future extensions to Maroubra in the south-east and Badgerys Creek airport in the west, Greens NSW transport spokesperson Dr Mehreen Faruqi asked, β€œWill this government ever understand what good integrated transport planning looks like?”

She continued: β€œThis privatisation agenda is evident in the haphazard line by line and disjointed planning of their signature infrastructure project β€” the Sydney Metro. First it was the North-West rail link, then the plan to build over the Bankstown line and now a new line on the map.

β€œThe New South Wales Liberal/National government has announced yet another metro project, which could mean up to three different private companies running different lines, all at the public's expense.

β€œNo one denies that we urgently need investment in upgrading and expanding a network that the vast majority of [Sydney's] people currently use and will continue to use into the future. But this should be publicly owned and operated."

The experience of Britain, which sold off its railway network to a number of private corporations, and suffered transport chaos and rising fares afterwards, should be a salutary lesson not to go down that path.

The example of Melbourne, which sold off its urban train system to a single business operator, and has experienced a disastrous decline in service as a result, should also be a warning to the public to refuse to allow the sell-off of the state's railways to big corporations.

Reports also suggest that the new western Metro heavy rail line may come at the expense of ΒιΆΉΣ³»­ of the proposed light rail network, construction of which was due to start in 2018.

Commentators from Sydney's western suburbs have rejected any plan to replace light rail with a Metro line, saying the region urgently needs both, because of the heavy congestion on existing public transport infrastructure.

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