The implementation of trams needs to be done as a holistic transport discussion.rubberman wrote:An ABC piece about Labor abandoning further tram extensions. With a bit about trackless trams thrown in.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-09-23/ ... /104377552
First thought. From a political perspective, voters had a choice in 2018. Either Labor with a solid plan, or the Liberal's 'promise to look at trams'. We voted Liberal, meaning that tram extensions were dead. No proposals were made at the 2022 election, so no promises were broken.
Politically, we made our choice. No trams.
Second thought. If trams were truly economic, as Labor stated in 2018, then they are even more so today, given traffic increases and residential buildup along proposed tram routes. So Labor should be doing something to address transport issues on those routes. OR, trams were just an election stunt by Labor in 2018, weren't economic, and Labor was lying about the economics.
The real problem is that neither party can really be trusted on this.
We have built the city around the car, so people see that as the preferred and dominant form of transport that all decisions need to consider first.
I think , especially given the increase in density Norwood should have a tram.
But the role out of the tram needs to be done in conjunction with telling people where all the cars are meant to go.(because Magill Rd and Kensington Rd are already very congested)
I understand the counter argument that the PT should theoretically decrease car usage, but until people see it, they aren't going to believe it.
Do that successfully, you'll then create a template for the future and an example of how PT can improve congestion.