REX Mar 2019

Page 22

NEWS

NSW

Early construction underway in Brisbane on the Cross River Rail project.

Labor turns screws over Cross River Rail funding WITH THE UNOFFICIAL FEDERAL election campaign focused on South East Queensland in mid-February, Opposition leader Bill Shorten criticised the Coalition Government for not contributing to Brisbane’s $5.4 billion Cross River Rail project. Bill Shorten has vowed to provide $2.24 billion to Cross River Rail if the Labor Party wins at the federal election. The Coalition has argued the project doesn’t need Commonwealth funding, as the Queensland Government – led by Labor premier Annastacia Palaszczuk – has said it will fully fund the venture. The Coalition has also justified its refusal to fund Cross River Rail with analysis from Infrastructure Australia. The independent advisor last year said the latest iteration of the project did not meet the necessary cost-benefit benchmark to warrant listing as a Priority Project – a listing which would more directly command Federal support.

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ISSUE 2 2019 | RAIL EXPRESS

But Labor has stuck to its guns at both state and federal levels, saying the project passed cost-benefit testing in the past, and deserved funding long ago. On Wednesday, Shorten renewed his support for the project, pledging to supply $2.24 billion in funding, and to ensure 770 Queensland apprentices work on its delivery. Labor’s federal MP for Rankin, Jim Chalmers, criticised the Morrison Government – also on tour in South East Queensland in February to unveil funding for other road and rail infrastructure – for missing the boat on a critical project. “Morrison is joking if he thinks he can front up to Queensland and ignore the fact he hasn’t put a dollar into our most important infrastructure project,” Chalmers was quoted by the Courier Mail. “Failure to build the Cross River Rail will put a handbrake on the region’s ability to grow, and will put more pressure on already congested roads.”

The Coalition’s minister for urban infrastructure, Alan Tudge, again dismissed any possibility of the party funding Cross River Rail a day after Shorten’s comments. “There won’t be [funding], and that’s because the Queensland Government has said it’s fully funded,” Tudge told 4BC Drive host Mark Braybrook. “Our focus has been elsewhere. If they’re fully funding [Cross River Rail], it enables us to be able to put money into other projects.” “The Premier would argue the reason they’re doing that is because they’re not getting any money from the Federal Government,” Braybrook posited. “Well, they’ve said that for a long time that it’s a fully funded project,” Tudge replied. “Now, you wouldn’t expect us – I mean, if someone says that something’s fully funded, then you don’t expect someone else to then put money in, because it’s already catered for.”

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Articles inside

Women in Industry

3min
pages 66-68

RISSB

2min
page 65

RTAA

3min
pages 60-63

ALC

2min
page 64

ARA

5min
pages 58-59

Infastech boss on rail’s fastening market

3min
pages 56-57

TTG helping make more efficient train drivers

3min
page 55

Manco’s rail-mounted elevated work platforms

4min
pages 50-51

Sonaray and Beacon Lighting team up for rail

5min
pages 52-54

Bombardier signalling for Melbourne’s Metro Tunnel

5min
pages 46-49

LINX making strides at Enfield

6min
pages 40-43

Pacific National’s St Marys Freight Hub

8min
pages 32-35

Thales embracing digitisation

6min
pages 44-45

Combilift servicing midsized intermodal sites

6min
pages 36-39

South Australia

2min
page 27

Queensland

10min
pages 22-26

New South Wales

9min
pages 14-19

New Zealand

4min
pages 30-31

Victoria

4min
pages 20-21

From the Editor

3min
pages 4-5

Western Australia

4min
pages 28-29

National

14min
pages 6-13
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