Thursday, April 30, 2026

Public Transport in the 2026 Victorian State Budget: Part 1 - Context


Next Tuesday we'll see the Victorian State Budget. It's the most important day in the calendar for public transport's future - more so than any individual modal plan that comes out from time to time. It reports on key performance measures, gives some forecasts for the future and details the infrastructure and service initiatives that will receive funding. 

I usually cover this in a budget day item each year. For example 2025, 2024, 2023 and older.  

This year I'm doing it differently. You may have already seen the pre-budget announcements on rail and bus services that I covered herehere and here.  Today's part will give the budget's political context - particularly important in a challenging election year for a long-term government. Then on Tuesday I'll cover some of the statistics that appear in the document and items that didn't get announced prior.   


Political context 

It's a bit of a pincer moment for the Allan Labor Government with conflicting pressures to restrain spending due to interest from rising debt while also opening the chequebook to induce voters to give it a fourth term in November's state election. Already we've heard announcements that would turn a Treasury official crimson, like the cuts to PT fares and car registration, though they could take solace from both being temporary (unless they become part of a campaign bidding war with our money).

This government can point to successes in transport infrastructure like level crossing removals, Metro Tunnel, and the West Gate Tunnel. But their novelty effect in garnering public goodwill towards a (now) long-term government may have dissipated. Especially amongst passengers on lines who have endured years of rolling shutdowns for few if any service upgrades (that were even sometimes possible with existing infrastructure). And many long distance V/Line passengers have latterly found they would rather pay a fare than stand for a trip or be herded onto buses.

Still State Labor seems more able to keep its differences in-house relative to the Liberal Party opposition. Just when you think the latter might have achieved unity and a lead in the polls under a new leader something happens to fracture them again. It remains to be seen whether Jess Wilson can break this cycle. 

The recent SA state election shows that rural Liberal voters switching to One Nation is not just something seen in opinion polls but also in actual votes, and to a lesser extent, seats gained. Adelaide urban Liberals also switched but this time to Labor. There was also movement from Labor to One Nation in low income deindustrialised outer suburban seats like Elizabeth but not enough to cost it seats. These results efficiently distributed votes so that Labor's support was in exactly the right places to give it an Assembly majority disproportionate to its primary vote

Daniel Andrews' Victorian result in 2022 was much like that. Labor lost votes compared to 2018 yet gained seats. There were big swings against Labor in diverse working class seats (including ones with infrequent trains and even sparser buses) but no seats were lost. The 2025 Werribee by-election continued this pattern.

This is because, up to a point, both major parties can lose support yet retain seats. But as soon as primary vote drops to around 35% there is a tipping point where preference flows become critical. A minor slip then becomes an avalanche in terms of seat results. Labor in Victoria has vulnerabilities due to it having been in office a long time, resentments over the pandemic, concerns over law and order and financial management issues. 

The last is relevant today. 1999's Bracks government was elected when people (especially in regional Victoria) were turned off by what was widely seen as the arrogance of the Kennett government but were unsure about Labor. Many still remembered the ignominious demise of the Cain-Kirner government, a recessionary time when businesses failed and many Victorians moved to Queensland.  

Bracks' new style of leadership sought to brush off the rough edges of Kennett's arrogance while listening to regional Victorians (especially) and retaining responsible budget management. Except for V/Line, which they took back, they were happy to retain transport's private operators. To keep  construction spending off the government's books they even effectively privatised the re-roofed Spencer Street Station on a long-term but unaccountable contract with Civic Nexus, a subsidiary of IFM, a union-linked superannuation fund manager.    

Bracks-Brumby versus Andrews-Allan on money and promises

More in hindsight than at the time, the Bracks and Brumby governments were generally regarded as financially prudent, with some social inclusion type measures that Labor likes to be known for. They presided over major upgrades to rail to regional cities and bus services across Melbourne and regional Victoria. However their relative financial rectitude led them to break many 1999 promises for train and tram extensions and respond too slowly to patronage-driven reliability falls that started trending as early as 2003-2004. Assisted by controversies over Myki ticketing and the desalination plant this led to Labor losing office in 2010.  
 
Labor, led by Daniel Andrews, returned to office in 2014 after a one-term Coalition government. Demographics had changed with fewer voters remembering the Cain-Kirner era. Managing the high growth through major infrastructure became the agenda, winning significant electoral backing in recent state elections. 

This is a generalisation but I think it would be fair that one key difference between the Bracks-Brumby and the Andrews-Allan governments is this: 

* Bracks-Brumby would rather break a promise than incur high debt 
* Andrews-Allan would rather keep a promise even if it meant high debt  

The leaders themselves have said as much.

Brumby's The Long Haul: Lessons from Public Life and Joel Deane's Catch and Kill - The Politics of Power (especially the first) discuss the need for tight budget management to maintain control. Without control you might get pushed around by Canberra, are less able to do things you want and might be forced to implement desperate, unpleasant or socially costly measures later (like Joan Kirner did eg service cuts and pokies).   

Whereas in his 2018 victory speech premier Andrews said "We live our values, we keep our promises and we get things done". You "say what you do and do what you say". This April 2026 Royce Millar Age article describes how the current government started off fiscally cautious but got more ambitious later.  

But there are exceptions like the won and then cancelled Commonwealth Games (due to the government choosing a regional model that was never going to work). The promised Rowville tram sunk without trace, overshadowed by the Suburban Rail Loop announced weeks later. And, ambitious bus network reform in Melbourne's north, north-east and Mildura promised in 2022 did not proceed in 2024 with this replaced by some piecemeal northern suburbs bus upgrades in the 2025 and 2026 budgets. 

Nevertheless this government overall still has a better than average record at keeping its transport promises, with it doing everything it can to lock in projects like the Suburban Rail Loop. But at what cost? We'll know a bit more about that next week. 

Bracks-Brumby versus Andrews-Allan on policy

Then there's the matter of policy mix with similarities and differences between the governments. Regional rail boomed under both Labor governments, partly due to all four premiers having significant regional city connections. Including major strength for both infrastructure and service. 

Conversely both governments were weak on metropolitan train service levels. Bracks-Brumby were forced by overcrowding to belatedly act while Andrews-Allan failed to follow level crossing removals with better service and did the bare minimum on service levels to prevent the Metro Tunnel from becoming an embarrassment. I rated rail service availability as mediocre under both but for different reasons. Bracks-Brumby presided over major reliability falls while frequent shutdowns have been a by-product of Big Build projects under Andrews-Allan.   

There have also been weaknesses on trams, possibly due to (i) a view that the main  political battle is in tramless suburbs and regional cities against the Coalition and (ii) on professed equity grounds with priorities being outside already better served gentrifying inner suburbs. 

What about the differences? The biggest have been the Andrews-Allan government's strength on metropolitan rail infrastructure due to multiple Big Build projects, whereas metropolitan bus service levels were a major gain under Bracks-Brumby. 

As well as parsimony on metropolitan bus and rail services the otherwise big-spending Andrews-Allan government has been reluctant to electrify outer suburban rail, noting that to do so could be seen as effectively a privatisation if services transfer from V/Line to Metro. 

(Note: The table reflects the actual delivery record to date, ie it does not include yet to be delivered 2025 budget initiatives nor the 2026 pre-budget announcements on rail and bus services).

Pre-budget announcements

Governments are normally cagey about what's in the budget. An early unauthorised leaking is a major 'loss of control' event that is highly embarrassing. However governments may disclose parts beforehand if they think it advantages their position. Last year, for example, there were announcements on rail frequencies, the Sunshine precinct and seniors travel. 

The main announcements this year so far have been: 

$44m for 50 more station PSOs and what they call an 'intelligence-led deployment model', that is more PSO hours at busy stations and the replacement of PSOs at quiet stations with roving PSOs.  

* $432m for April's free travel continued into May with half-price fares for the rest of year

* More frequent evening and weekend trains for the Clifton Hill and Burnley groups and an order for 25 X'Trapolis trains (with more on the service uplifts here)

* 9 car trains to Wyndham Vale (following local MPs' surveys) 

* $100m over 4 years for improved bus services including new routes, longer hours and higher frequencies

* Some road and pedestrian crossing improvements

* A 20% rebate on car registration fees (available by application, which lowers its cost and gives MPs a chance to spruik help people claim it). 

What government MPs are saying

It has been said that the state election will be contested as 88 separate by-elections with no seat being safe. The thinking being that political conditions in each seat will vary radically due to fragmenting major party support and the rise of smaller parties and independents. 

Australian major parties are amongst the most disciplined in the world. That has limited what MPs might advocate, especially if their party is in government. Opposition, minor party and independent MPs tend to be a bit looser. But freedom comes with a cost as it is typically proportional to one's distance from power. And Australian voters punish major parties that appear disunited. 



However the government appears to be giving its MPs more latitude this year. They may use techniques, including petitions and photos of themselves with placards, more associated with protestors and advocates than members of the government. This is in keeping with the emerging political sentiment including the use of outsider-type techniques by insiders scared at losing support.

Examples include:
* Advocacy for an upgraded 526 bus in Pascoe Vale (with the premier even meeting campaigners) 
* Rerouted 496 & 498 buses in Point Cook
* Stations at Mt Atkinson (Kororoit) and Altona North (Williamstown).
* A survey on the 408 bus through St Albans, Laverton and Footscray
* A survey on buses in Melton South (Melton)
* A survey on the 476 bus through Sydenham
* A survey on a bus between Carrum Downs and Karingal Hub (Carrum)
* A survey on V/Line coaches to Inverloch/Cowes (Bass) 

All of these have parliamentary petitions or at least online surveys (which could be used for data harvesting). Coincidentally all the bus initiatives got funded as per Tuesday's announcement, enabling government MP to claim success in listening and advocating.    

Tuesday 5 May is Budget day 

Much of the work for the budget will have been done last year. However, especially in an election year, it will still need to be seen as responsive to recent events such as high fuel prices. The department, ministers and treasury officials may haggle over the small stuff but then the premier might come in over the top with their overtly more political ideas (possibly drawing on contingency funds). 

Like with the pandemic, conventional processes are bypassed and money is suddenly spent (or revenue forgone) that was not envisaged in the budget. For example this month's free public transport will cost the budget approximately $70 million. The extension of this to May and half price fares for the rest of the year has an over $400 million cost. The premier may front these sorts of initiatives more prominently than the minister, and indeed they may have been led by her office. 

Events like the fuel crisis bring home the need to build transport system resilience so we become less dependent on private cars for our travel. I discussed some of these here. In some cases, such as service frequencies, they are things the government should have done in the past but for whatever reason did not.

While the best time to have done these was yesterday, the second best time to do it is today. Last week's pre-budget announcements on Clifton Hill and Burnley group Metro train frequencies and this week's on buses are encouraging and hopefully represent growing awareness on the value of public transport service. 

Come back here next Tuesday afternoon when I'll have more on what the budget delivers for public transport in Melbourne. 

Tuesday, April 28, 2026

TT 229: More Buses, More of the Week - 2026 state budget preview


"The biggest existing route bus service upgrade package in at least 10 years"

Last week it was trains, this week it's buses. Today the state government released early details of bus service upgrades to be included in next week's State Budget. The package, worth $100 million over 4 years, will see new routes, more 7 day service and higher weekend frequencies on buses across Melbourne. 

The media release is here

Recovering from lean years in 2023 and 2024, budget funding for better buses is back. 

Labor MPs who did surveys or sponsored petitions for improved bus services will be pleased the budget heeded their requests. Community campaigns will likewise be celebrating successes for route and service upgrades in areas like Melton, Coburg, Brunswick, Northcote and Dandenong.   

Let's whip around Melbourne, starting in the west, to see which areas will get improved bus services funded under this budget. Map first (click for better view) then summary descriptions. 

 

NOTE: Details are still limited - following will be updated when more come to hand.

West

Previous budgets have been quite good for Wyndham but parsimonious to Melton. This budget gives a bit more love to Melton. And it boosts service on some popular routes in established areas that had missed out in many previous budgets. Here's the key upgrades (higher patronage potential routes first). 

* Route 408 between St Albans and Highpoint boosted from every 60 to every 30 min on Sundays. The current 60 minute Sunday service is a poor match for the existing 20 minute Monday - Saturday service and sometimes leaves people behind at Highpoint in the afternoons. Operating hours will be extended to approximately midnight Monday - Saturday and 10pm Sunday. The 408 is the only bus that goes right past Sunshine Hospital so these hours and frequency upgrades will be very welcome. Indeed I wouldn't be surprised if the 30 minute service is so popular that it needs to go to every 20 minutes in due course.  A 408 service boost was foreshadowed in a survey done by MPs Natalie Suleyman, Sarah Connolly and Katie Hall (St Albans, Sunshine and Footscray respectively). 

* Extension of Route 454 to Woodgrove Shopping Centre and a frequency boost to every 20 minutes 7 days will make it Melton's first and only bus route to operate at this frequency. This upgrade will mean that the now under construction Melton Hospital will have a useful bus route from Day 1 of opening. 

* Also in Melton there will be two new routes for Weir Views, Strathtulloh and Thornhill Park. Again it was foreshadowed in MP Steve McGhie's bus survey. It is not yet known whether these will replace the areas's FlexiRide (which was never a good idea to put in).  

Route 476 frequency boosted to run every 15 minutes peak and 20 minutes off-peak weekdays. This is a major improvement from every 40 minutes off-peak as current. This route serves many schools. Natalie Hutchins MP did a bus survey on this. 

* Routes 411 and 412 to be merged in a single route, though this has implications for Altona North where the routes split. 

* Routes 496 and 498 will be more direct to enable people to change to trains at Aircraft Station. This takes those routes off Central Avenue but will need some network reform to retain a bus service along it. Mathew Hilakari MP (Point Cook) has been championing this. 

North 

* The Moonee Ponds - Brunswick - Alphington Route 508 will get a major boost as is deserved for such an important route across the inner north. On weekdays it will run every 15 minutes midday instead of just in the peaks. And weekend service will improve from every 30-40 to every 20 minutes. There may also be some longer operating hours too. This serves Northcote held by Kat Theophanous and Danny Pearson's Moonee Ponds with Tim Read's Green Brunswick in the middle. 

* A LaTrobe University bus package. Later trips on the Route 301 shuttle, new weekend service for the currently limited service Route 551 from Heidelberg and, most exciting of all Route 561 upgraded to run every 20 minutes on weekends with operating hours extended to later at night. 

* Route 526 to Coburg North will get Sunday service plus a frequency boost to every 20 min. It will also be straightened. This has been the subject of strong local advocacy including not just a survey but a petition sponsored by Anthony Cianflone MP and a visit from the premier last week. 

* The Route 386/387 corridor in the South Morang area has late Night Network trips but an early finish on other evenings. A new timetable will extend evening service on other nights of the week. This route is effectively an extension of the 86 tram. 

* Route 542 unusually runs 7 day for its northern half only. The budgeted upgrade brings Sunday service to the entire route with frequencies lifted to Saturday levels. 

East 

* Route 273 in the Nunawading/Donvale area will gain Sunday service and longer operating hours. Hopefully its huge mid-route kink, which makes travel on it slow, will be straightened. 

* Route 766 will get an extra school trip. 

South-East 

* Routes 802 and 804 will finally get a revamp, understood to include 7 day service. But not immediately. This is because there will be a review of the Dandenong North network in conjunction with Route 862 with the result not just Sunday service but also higher weekday frequencies in the area. This will mean that major destinations like Chadstone, Monash University, Oasis Leisure Centre, Dandenong Hospital and Dandenong Market will finally get 7 day service on all their bus routes. 

* An even larger network review will take place in the Casey area. This will incorporate areas such as Cranbourne, Clyde, Botanic Ridge, Casey Fields, Junction Village, Devon Meadows and Warneet (where bus routes are very convoluted). This will be funded by GAIC (developer charges) and will require public consultation. 

* Route 885 between Glen Waverley and Springvale via Mulgrave will run 7 days. This is another high usage but limited service City of Greater Dandenong bus route and the subject of a Bus Advocacy Mentorship. 828 (also in Dandenong) did not get upgrade funding but, cutting across several state seats, is the sort of route that would be attractive for parties to promise in the coming election campaign. 

* Route 928 between Pakenham and Berwick will gain longer operating hours. 

* Those in a pocket south of Dandenong will gain bus coverage with the 890 being rerouted through a residential area. Currently this area has just the twice per weekday 857 deviation. 

South

Route 833 will be straightened in the Carrum Downs area, removing an unnecessary back-tracking. This reduced run time will speed travel from Carrum and enable weekend service to be boosted from 60 to 40 minutes. This is a very popular route especially in the Frankston North area. 

* There will be a new connection from Carrum Downs to Karingal Hub Shopping Centre. This appears to be by merging the limited service 778 with the even more limited 777. Again the topic of an MP survey by the Finance Minister no less. Likely to run 7 days. 

* Route 236 in Port Melbourne will gain Sunday service. Oddly the busier and frequent on weekdays 237 does not. Neither has local council advocacy for an upgraded 606 succeeded. 

Regional Victoria

* Better Inverloch and Cowes - Dandenong connections (also advocated by the local MP)

* Castlemaine - Harcourt

* A Drysdale - Ocean Grove route will be added

Note again the above represents what I've gleaned - will be updated as more details come to hand

What doesn't gain 

Some popular routes that one would have thought would be in the front row for Sunday service missed out. Examples include the popular 404, 503 and 506 in the Moonee Ponds/Essendon/Brunswick area, 281 in Box Hill plus 814 and 844 in Dandenong. 

Their omission seems to be due to a desire to spread these upgrades around and not concentrate them in one area, despite these routes above average patronage performance or high social needs catchments. Maybe this explains why high bus-using Craigieburn, which by rights should have got at least three and probably six routes upgraded from every 40 to every 20 minutes on weekends, missed out.  

Also some isolated and low income areas like Campbellfield got no extra trips on their limited service routes 531 and 538. Though truth be told this area and Broadmeadows would be a prime location for a small bus network review as routes haven't substantially changed for decades. 

Does this budget replace the promised northern and north-eastern suburbs bus review that the government dumped just two budgets ago? Last year's and this do quite a lot for buses (and for that matter trains) in the north but shy away from established area reform such as is required to untangle hideously confusing routes like 552, 553, 556, 558 and 566. Neither do they tidy up newer sins like the recently created 513/514 mess on Bell Street (which leaves parts of this busy road with weekend service only every 40 minutes, like the back streets of Moe).  

The 408, 454. 508, 561 and other upgrades demonstrate an appetite for routes that run a more consistent frequency across the week. There's a large number of other routes that justify similar upgrades like 390, 472, 513/514, 527, 670, 737, 828, 841, 900 etc, not to mention much-overdue overhauls of the SmartBus orbitals and new connections like SRL SmartBus and a Sunshine - Melbourne Airport link. A continued future emphasis on these types of routes would make the most of the bus network's still large untapped potential.   


Conclusion

This budget's package of bus (and Metro rail) service upgrades is very welcome. 

They will make hundreds of thousands of journeys per year better or possible. That's important because, as I've often said, the most expensive trips are those that cannot reasonably be made by public transport. With limited bus coverage, operating hours and frequencies that's a lot of trips for too much of the week. Unlike free or reduced fares (which this budget will put ~$400m towards), these service upgrades make public transport a practical option for more trips.  

In contrast to many previous budgets this one recognises that investments in public transport service is no less important than infrastructure to make the network useful. This 'shift to service' is much needed and well overdue. Especially since there remains multi decade-long backlogs in bus  network development across wide belts of established suburbs including Broadmeadows, Campbellfield, Reservoir, Epping, Croydon, Rowville, Noble Park, Frankston and more and even main road routes may only run every 30 to 60 minutes on weekends. 

The routes selected for upgrade set a good balance between inner, middle and outer suburbs. Government MPs in maybe half Melbourne's metropolitan seats will have a good news story to tell their constituents. That's the beauty of bus upgrades - a lot of announceables for little money. 

Be prepared for messaging from politicians on improved bus services, just like we saw last week with the Clifton Hill and Burnley group rail upgrades. Which I don't begrudge them for as some have genuinely worked hard to get improved services funded. Especially as these measures are budget funded rather than promised (as was the case with the previous northern area bus reviews which didn't end up happening).

In summary, this is the best state budget for metropolitan bus services in about 10 years. But it's also important to note that decades of fragmented planning and years of underinvestment in public transport service cannot be fixed in a single budget. 

This is why this budget should be regarded as a start rather than an end. And that we should still be seeking more investment in service from all sides in the upcoming election campaign.  

See other Timetable Tuesday items here


A flash back to the 2005 State Budget

A week today is the 2026 Victorian State Budget. 

Here's what I'll do. 

On Thursday I'll have an item on the state's general political and financial context. 

Then on Tuesday afternoon I'll discuss the budget's contents. Especially what we don't yet know about.

Some details were released last week including welcome rail service uplifts discussed here and here

Today though I want to draw you attention to the 2005 state budget. It set in train many bus service boosts including more than 100 bus routes getting Sunday service and later trips at night. Plus new coverage in growth areas and a SmartBus network installed by 2010 (not extended since).

All-up 8000 weekly bus services were added in just 18 months, setting a record of bus service uplifts that has never been exceeded since.  

Learn more about this momentous state budget in this retrospective from last year:

https://melbourneontransit.blogspot.com/2025/09/tt-213-how-melbourne-added-8000-weekly.html

As noted before this year's budget has funded higher train frequencies for the Burnley and Clifton Hill groups. We'll know this day next week how close this year's budget comes close to 2005's achievement in funding much-needed improvements for buses.