Despite sometimes inefficient use of committee time, PAEC hearings provide a means for ministers and top bureaucrats (eg DTP secretary Paul Younis) to answer questions on their responsibilities. The committee comprises government and non-government MPs from both houses.
Those appearing at PAEC hearings may get their staff to prepare some form of presentation or briefing with answers to likely questions. These can often be anticipated from media reports, known community concerns and previous questions asked in parliament.
If those appearing don't know the answer to a question they can take it on notice, with a written response provided later. For example, here is DTP's written response to questions asked on the 20 November 2024 hearing. There's some interesting stuff there that I'll go through below.
Aiv Puglielli MLC asked a pretty simple question on the status of the promised Bus Reform Implementation Plan. Other MPs (eg Trung Luu) previously asked similar but haven't had a good response. So it was a good question to bring up in PAEC. Here's the transcript (from p26 of DTP written response).
The Department of Transport and Planning (DTP) is continuing to deliver bus network reform in line with Victoria’s Bus Plan.Since the release of the Bus Plan, DTP has delivered new bus routes, simplified existing routes, and upgraded timetables across approximately 218 public transport and school transport services across Melbourne and regional Victoria, making the network simpler, faster and more reliable. We have introduced, modified and extended school bus services across the state, with a focus on growth areas. This has seen Victorians benefit from about 4,600 additional services running on the network each week.The first Zero Emission Bus Franchises have been awarded, covering 131 public transport routes and more than 230 school bus services across Melbourne. Over time, these franchises will transition our bus fleet with more modern, zero emission buses, towards a cleaner, smarter fleet, and deliver better value for money from our bus network.DTP is continuing to improve the passenger experience with trials of Rapid Running on Route 246, removing the need for a timetable and moving towards a headway based turn up and go service. All door boarding is reducing dwell times at stops to improve performance and ensure passengers get to their destination on time. Route network changes to remove duplication and simplify routes is making the bus network easier to understand, making the network more accessible to more people.With over 4000 buses in the State’s bus fleet, progressive reform will take time, and ongoing reform will be required to respond to changes in technology, travel patterns and to integrate new communities, infrastructure and activity centres into the state’s bus network.
Priority bus lanes have been planned or implemented as part of a number of Big Build projects and major network change initiatives. These include Fitzsimons Lane, Mickleham Road, and Hoddle Street.
In the relevant period, the DTP Signal Network Optimisation Program, which reviews and optimises the metropolitan traffic signal network, has achieved the following related to buses:
• Bus improvements have been made to 731 traffic signals
• 148 traffic signal corridors (a route with multiple traffic signals) have been reviewed and 110 of those included bus improvements
Bus improvements typically consist of operational changes to the traffic signal system that reduce delays to buses.
The answer you get depends on the measurement method used. I've discussed this several times. Here's a summary: (skip this bit if you just want more PAEC analysis)
1. Counting annual service kilometres (and assessing trends, especially per-capita)
In March 2024 I discussed trends in public transport kilometres operated per year for each mode. I think this is a very good measure of service provision. Not accidentally it's also the one reported in budget papers so you can do long-term comparisons. It's a robust measure; if you do reforms like splitting routes the service kilometres does not change which is good. Dividing by the metropolitan or state population gets you per capita numbers. This gives insights like the per capita decline in metropolitan train and tram service and buses being about stagnant. Per-capita service trends can be compared between cities, as discussed here.
Kilometres per year is what the performance indicator wonks call an 'output measure'. It doesn't measure network effectiveness, though you could bring in patronage numbers to get a productivity measure like passenger boardings per kilometre and check trends on that. A great deal of bus network reform, especially when resources are tight, is considering how best to deploy existing service kilometres most efficiently. Reforms may involve things like flattening peaks, straightening routes but then adding more trips, reducing route overlaps where usage is low, making spacing more even on overlapping routes you do wish to retain and more.
2. Counting number of trips added
As explained above, the minister has used this method, for instance "adding 20 000 new bus services in 9 years". Unfortunately without knowing the number of trips that already operate we don't know if that's big or small.
The wildly varying length of bus routes also causes problems, making comparisons meaningless. You can add very short shuttle routes with many trips. That disproportionately increases trip numbers even though it doesn't actually need many buses to run. Conversely adding long routes doesn't increase trip numbers very much, despite them being resource hungry to run. For these reasons I don't recommend this measure unless you are dealing with a simple upgrade to an unchanged route.
Changes were not weighted by their significance. That wasn't a problem in the Melbourne versus Perth comparison as I was satisfied that the mix wasn't wildly different, or if it was it was in Perth's favour. But otherwise not weighing is a limitation since different changes are differently important to the network. For example a minor rerouting or addition of a couple of trips on a quiet local route is less significant than a big frequency upgrade, a large extension or adding a new route, which typically requires new bus purchases unless there is substantial network reform.
But a new school route is typically one return trip per school day. Whereas even a basic public route may have 20 return trips per day and about 30 times the annual service kilometres per week counting weekends. The lesson is that if the government claims they've added, reviewed or reformed X new bus routes always ask how many are school routes as you may find it's a majority with much less effect on overall service kilometres than the impression conveyed. And you might uncover poor asset utilisation with many buses sitting idle most of the week when they could be carrying people on a public route.
DTP isn't very good at making what analysis it does here public. Plus the PPTN (which should guide any Bus Reform Implementation Plan) is in a poor state. But maps done by people like the Climate Council, SNAMUTS and Philip Mallis have filled this gap. Add the change in this map to the health check and per capita service kilometres and you start to get a good picture of the rate of network improvement and if it's keeping up with population growth.
Getting back to PAEC, Page 22 has a request for the number of bus routes that have been simplified. The secretary said the number of routes was 'in the hundreds that we have viewed (sic)' and 'that there are still quite a few to do'.
I did note what could be omissions like the 279/293/907 upgrades & 603/604 downgrades of 2021, quantifying the Night Network reform of late 2021 and simplification splits like 380 and 834/835. Personally I'd have included them as they are some of the best (and certainly most cost-effective) bus network reforms DTP has done. However I've just gone with DTP numbers in the above pie chart, though the classifications between major and minor changes (which can be routes and/or timetables) are my own.
Wearing our metropolitan route bus hat, this analysis cuts the number of reforms from DTP's claimed 218 to 57. Or 43 if we only count the more substantial timetable or route reforms. The more significant of this 43 include a large Craigieburn upgrade package (which saw most routes boosted to every 20 min weekday interpeak), some new routes including the 202 university shuttle and 475 and 501 in northern suburbs, 235, 237 and 605 Fishermans Bend enhancements, and more recently the 603, 604 and 605 reforms. Purists may say that basically just adding trips, like the 800 weekend upgrade, isn't real network reform but I've counted it since service uplifts like it (and even smaller ones) can still transform the network's usefulness.
To test significance we need to know that Melbourne has about 350 regular bus routes. And that 43 that got done was over three and a bit years. So we're talking about reforms to about 14 public routes per year. When considered in the context of the abovementioned health check that still found issues with 66% or about 230 Melbourne bus routes, the pace of reform of the regular bus network is slow. Especially relative to the school bus network which has seen much more activity.
This is a different impression to what DTP would want us (and PAEC) to believe. You could reasonably argue the toss regarding school and regional routes but the Secretary's counting of routes that are only changed to enter a new interchange as being 'upgraded and reviewed' is pure spin. Tieppo's 'nearly 200' is nearer the mark. However most work has been in the school route sector, with hardly a dent made into fixing the multi-decade reform backlog that continues to plague much of the regular metropolitan bus network or adding 7 day service kilometres in high-needs working-class areas like parts of Dandenong North, Thomastown and Campbellfield.
Conclusion
Other Building Melbourne's Useful Network items are here