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<DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2><FONT size=4><STRONG>On your bikes, says
Brumby</STRONG></FONT></HEADLINE><!-- Insert Article Content --><!-- Article Details -->
<UL class=articleDetails>
<LI><STRONG>Melissa Fyfe and Reid Sexton </STRONG>
<LI>December 7, 2008 </LI></UL>
<P>COMMUTERS will be asked to leave their cars at home, share the drive to work,
get on motorcycles and scooters or take to their bikes in a sweeping package of
reforms to be unveiled as part of the State Government's transport blueprint
this week.</P>
<P>But the Brumby Government's plan to upgrade bike paths — believed to amount
to $100 million over 12 years — is likely to disappoint cyclists, adding only
$800,000 to existing annual funding statewide.</P>
<P>"They have made the time scale very long," Bicycle Victoria chief executive
Harry Barber said. "With this commitment, they are clearly not moving quickly
enough to turn car trips into bike trips to relieve congestion."</P>
<P>Premier John Brumby yesterday confirmed that his much-anticipated transport
plan will be released this week, possibly as early as tomorrow.</P>
<P><I>The Sunday Age</I> believes the plan's road-building focus, which
reportedly includes the Frankston bypass, a port to CityLink freeway and
possibly an outer ring road, will be offset by a large campaign to convince
people to stop driving their cars to work.</P>
<P>Part of the campaign will be a push to make motorcycles and scooters safer,
increasing their appeal to commuters as low-emission alternatives to cars.</P>
<P><I>The Sunday Age</I> believes the Government will also aim to set a carbon
emission target for its vehicle fleet. This is likely to mean state bureaucrats
will in future be driving more hybrid Camrys and locally made small cars, such
as the Ford Focus, instead of the traditional six-cylinder Holden Commodores and
Ford Falcons that dominate the fleet now.</P>
<P>It is understood the transport plan will closely match the Government's
ambitions to create newly designated business centres at Broadmeadows, Box Hill,
Dandenong, Frankston, Footscray and Ringwood. Significant transport projects are
likely to be focused around these areas in a "decentralisation" of Melbourne's
transport strategy.</P>
<P>In his recommendations to the Government, Sir Rod Eddington said $60 million
worth of new east-west bike tracks should be built in Melbourne. The transport
plan's bike funding will commit $100 million over 12 years across Victoria,
replacing the previous commitment of $75 million from 2006 to 2016. Cycling
advocates were hoping for a much bigger investment. A new statewide bike
strategy is expected next year, with upgrades to existing bike paths, new and
extended paths, priority traffic signals for cyclists and better separation of
cyclists and cars.</P>
<P>Meanwhile, the Government will signal to industry and the research sector
that it is willing to pay for trials of low-emission car technology so that
Victoria becomes the headquarters for green vehicle innovation.</P>
<P>Other parts of the package are expected to include the Caulfield-to-Footscray
rail tunnel, the Tarneit rail link and possibly the "missing link" in the
Metropolitan Ring Road through green belts in Melbourne's north-east and
east.</P>
<P>Yesterday it was reported that three northern suburbs MPs had confirmed the
blueprint would cost $38 billion to implement.</P>
<P>MPs Peter Batchelor, Lily D'Ambrosio and Danielle Green also confirmed the
South Morang rail extension would be completed by 2013 for $650 million,
according to a local newspaper website.</P>
<P>The MPs could not be reached for comment last night.</P>
<P>Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said the Federal Government was committed to
helping Victoria fix its transport woes. "When you have massive growth, when you
have massive pressure … because of growing population, the conclusion we've
reached is there's only one path for the future."</P>
<P>Mr Rudd and Mr Brumby yesterday turned the first sod on the $2.25 billion
upgrade of the Western Ring Road in Sunshine. The project has been rushed
forward by six months to cope with Melbourne's booming population and to
stimulate the slowing national economy.</P></FONT></DIV></BODY></HTML>