The Victorian Auditor-General appears to have quietly dumped a planned performance audit that would have told Melburnians whether their metropolitan bus services 'integrate with the wider transport network and meet expected service demand'.
Melbourne on Transit readers already know the answers are too often 'no' and 'no'. For instance we have convoluted bus routes every 22 to 25 minutes in areas where trains are every 20 minutes, making connections haphazard. Even many of our premium SmartBus routes are every 30 minutes on weekends, failing to frequently meet trains mostly every 20 minutes. Maps also show unproductive overlaps in places as new routes get layered over old without sufficient network reform.
On the demand side buses in areas like Brighton and Eltham carry fresh air while busy routes (often in high social needs areas like Dandenong's Route 814) still finish midday Saturdays and not run Sundays. And main road routes may run only hourly on Sundays despite serving major shopping centres that are busiest then. A 2020 splurge upgraded the little-used 704 bus while neglecting the nearby far busier Route 800.
State budget papers reveal a $1.4 billion annual spend on bus services (BP3, p333). It is in the public interest that we get maximum value from this. Such value can only be assured by delivering services efficiently (through appropriate contracting arrangements) AND delivering the right services (which depends on planning and monitoring with regards to routes, operating hours and frequencies).
An audit here would have answered many of these questions. Findings from the Auditor-General carry much more weight than blog posts here. Most notably it would have forced the Department of Transport to respond. And encourage accountability with regards to how we plan public transport services. That's important because it's often seen as a secret art with little oversight nor discernible rationale for bus routes and timetables being what they are.
Past VAGO bus audits
What's been the Victorian Auditor General's history in this area? In 2015 they looked at the tendering for Melbourne's Bus Franchise. This was the package of routes previously run by Melbourne Bus Link and National Bus in the Sunshine, Brighton, Heidelberg and Doncaster areas along with the three orbital SmartBuses. They were put out to franchise by the Baillieu government. The package included about 30% of Melbourne's bus routes including most of our busiest.
VAGO found that $33m cost savings were achieved in 2013-2014 but that the government hadn't got full value due to unreliable data and, related to this, their inability to withhold payments when performance was poor. The report was also critical of the (by then) Labor government for not extending the franchise model to more routes.
Maybe they were constrained by limited scope, but one cannot help thinking the auditors' insight would have broadened if they walked a few hundred metres from their office and boarded one of the Transdev buses passing by.
They would have likely found filthy buses that would have challenged whether the cost savings were real, ie not at the expense of quality. And apparently they missed looking at the conditions that gave rise to the biggest bus fleet safety crisis in recent memory when numerous Transdev buses were put off the road. While Transdev Melbourne lifted its game later, the government apparently remembered and awarded the franchise to Kinetic instead. More on that and better contracting here.
VAGO annual audit plans
Annual Plans tell us what investigations VAGO is planning in the next few years. You can browse 15 years' worth of annual plans here. They come out before 30 June each year and are tabled in state parliament.
Plans can be flexible and responsive, meaning that work might be shuffled around a bit. About 3 or 4 performance audits are on the go in the transport portfolio at any one time.
Bus audit first mooted in 2019-20
The 2019-20 Annual Plan is the first recent one that mentions planning bus services. It had an audit planned for 2020-21 called planning and management of metropolitan bus services.
2021-22 Annual Plan is here. The bus service audit this time appears as part of work proposed for 2022-23.
The 2022-23 annual plan, tabled in parliament earlier this month has the bus audit dropping off the 2022-23 program. That leaves a thin agenda with just two audits. It's not even deferred to 2023-24. And unlike some previous years we don't have indications of 2024-25 planned audits. Maybe they're waiting until the election in case there are major programs announced that could be worth auditing then.
1 comment:
Not holding my breath DoT would address systemic issues with buses found by the Auditor General, like incomplete rollout of 15-year old 'minimum standards' program
Where's accessible tram stop rollout strategy promised for July 2021, following 2020 AG report
https://melbourneontransit.blogspot.com/2020/10/building-melbournes-useful-network-part_16.html
And last two state budgets have focused on 100 tram G-class order but only given crumbs to platform stops, with basically nothing in works along Route 57
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