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Governance and Engagement: A Bus Industry Perspective

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... school bus/community transport services/taxis operate in isolation, rather than ... e.g. route bus, school bus, 'community transport', taxi. 13 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Governance and Engagement: A Bus Industry Perspective


1
Governance and Engagement A Bus Industry
Perspective
  • John Stanley
  • Transport, Social Disadvantage and Wellbeing
    Forum
  • July 2007

2
Scope
  • Goals for sustainable personal transport
  • Governance and engagement
  • At the State level
  • At regional/local level

3
Goals for sustainable personal transport
  • Access - ensure transport services meet peoples
    travel needs effectively
  • Equity - ensure that a reasonable level of
    mobility is available to all, irrespective of
    personal circumstance
  • Safety - improve transport-related safety
  • Environment - reduce the environmental impact of
    transport systems and their use
  • Efficiency - ensure transport goals are pursued
    efficiently
  • Governance ensure people have the opportunity
    to have a say on travel needs and solutions that
    might affect them

4
Governance and engagement at State level for
route bus services
Strategic policy level Tactical system
design level Operational delivery (contracts)
5
MOTC as an outcome of an engagement process
  • Bus industry research and advocacy, with
    partners, relating to PTs role in
  • congestion reduction, environmental improvement
    and social inclusion
  • States own research
  • Shared tactical level concepts of (e.g.)
  • minimum service level for local services (social
    transit)
  • Orbital trunk routes (commuter transit)
  • Contracts will deliver on the operational side
  • in an on-going partnership relationship (trust
    crucial)

6
Social equity in transport
  • Many people have poor access to services and/or
    are having to spend large income shares on
    transport
  • especially people in fast growing outer suburbs
  • where bus is the most realistic PT option
  • similar issues arise in regional areas

7
Warrnambool case study
8
Warrnambool public transport limitations
(examples)
  • Limited weekend services
  • Short span of weekday service hours
  • Lack of service information
  • Marketing weak

9
Community transport
  • Plays an important role
  • Numerous providers
  • Some problems in service provision (e.g.)
  • limited operating times
  • narrow eligibility criteria
  • low vehicle utilisation
  • lack of integration with other public transport
    and school services

10
Key issue accessibility planning
  • Personal transport is about meeting accessibility
    needs and fostering social inclusion
  • Service delivery is typically structured around
    modes (functions) rather than around meeting
    peoples needs for access (place/people)
  • PT/school bus/community transport services/taxis
    operate in isolation, rather than as a single
    service delivery system
  • Someone needs to own accessibility!!!

11
Warrnambool main proposals
  • PT service enhancements (span of hours days of
    week hourly frequency OK in Warrnambool)
  • Concept of a Minimum Service Level
  • Best way to benefit most transport disadvantaged
    people
  • Improve PT marketing
  • Regulatory reform (e.g. wider use of school buses
    by other travellers/groups)
  • Establish a Regional Accessibility Planning
    Council

12
RAPC Roles
  • Identify and prioritise regional access needs
  • Regional stakeholder involvement
  • Bottom up, not top down!
  • Be the regional advocate for services and service
    improvements
  • Facilitate greater regional integration in
    service provision
  • e.g. route bus, school bus, community
    transport, taxi

13
Warrnambool Regional Accessibility Committee
  • Now formed
  • Locally owned (range of regional stakeholder
    participants)
  • Not dependent on higher government funding
  • Focus more on bottom up outcomes (better services
    for those who need them more efficient resource
    use better marketing)
  • Higher Government support is best directed at
    supporting improved services, and encouraging the
    environment for this, rather than employing
    brokers

14
What Now?
  • State-level governance and engagement in PT is
    working well for route bus services at present
  • Public/community transport works best when it is
    locally/regionally owned
  • Time for local government to show leadership in
    accessibility planning
  • linked to enhanced social inclusion and
    well-being (e.g. TC)
  • Higher governments should provide a supportive
    co-ordinating framework
  • Some funding pots should be pooled to widen
    solution opportunities
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