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Article: Commuters ditch cars over petrol high

Started by ozbob, June 19, 2008, 18:29:58 PM

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ozbob

From News.com.au click here!

Commuters ditch cars over petrol high

Quote
Commuters ditch cars over petrol high

June 19, 2008 06:45am
Article from: NEWS.com.au

MORE commuters are ditching their cars and turning to public transport as petrol hits almost $1.72 a litre in Sydney and Melbourne.

Sydneysiders are leading the push away from roads, with a 6 per cent increase in public transport use over the past year and a corresponding 6 per cent decrease in drivers.

But problems with the reliability and safety of public transport are still stopping other drivers who want to switch from leaving the car at home.
Have you ditched the car because of rising petrol prices? Tell us below Nationally three in five commuters drive to get to work or school, while one in five use public transport. Only one in 10 ride a bike or walk to work.

Research, to be released today, shows Sydney commuters are the highest users of public transport nationally, with 26 per cent catching the train or a bus to work or school.

Battered by soaring petrol prices and peak-hour congestion, only 57 per cent of commuters now drive to work - the lowest proportion of any capital city. 

But even so, more than one-third of Sydney commuters (35 per cent) refuse to use public transport because it takes too long, almost four in 10 say it is unreliable (38 per cent) and one-quarter (25 per cent) say it is not available where they live, work or go to school.

About 7 per cent of Sydney commuters say they are worried about their safety on public transport.

In Melbourne, only one in five braves the stretched public transport system, according to the survey by insurer AAMI.

But more than two-thirds of them said they would be happy to use public transport if services were more reliable, more frequent, and safer.

In Darwin, nearly 75 per cent of Darwin commuters drive to and from work or school - with the lack of availability and reliability cited as key reasons for not using public transport.

AAMI corporate affairs manager Mike Sopinski said high fuel prices, consecutive interest rate rises and sinking consumer confidence were contributing to a rethink in how people travelled in our cities.

He said there was also a growing concern for the environment among commuters.

"Forcing people's hands are fuel prices and the availability of fuel so governments will need to plan for that," he said.

"Over the next two to three years the use of motor vehicles will change and their attitude to daily commuting will change.

"Reports say the price of petrol is heading towards $2 a litre by the end of the year. This will force people into car pooling and into lighter vehicles." 

Pump fiction

At the same time, the Liberal Party has sent out posters ridiculing Kevin Rudd over petrol prices. The parody posters (above right), a play on the 1994 cult movie Pulp Fiction, were sent to more than 200 electorate offices and outlets.

With just 11 days left of its Senate majority, the Coalition has taken full advantage, ordering 11 bills be scrutinised by committees. The move means the bills won't be passed before the Parliament's long winter break, and the Government will have to wait until September before they can enshrine them in law.

Committees will examine the controversial moves to jack up the luxury car tax and introduce a national FuelWatch scheme, while the decision to increase the Medicare levy surcharge also will be delayed.
Half baked projects, have long term consequences ...
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