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It is in the news again, the missing train link between MEL AP and the city.
And the reason why there will be a huge fight to ever get a rail line.
The follow up in today's paper:
I cannot see Doyle ever doing anything but talking loudly, he was a member of the Kennett state government which tried to close and rip up most rail lines.
Next Thursday marks 40 years since Melbourne Airport opened, ushering in a modern age of international jet travel to an increasingly cosmopolitan city.
But thanks to decades of buck-passing and pandering to vested interests by successive state and federal governments, Melbourne - unlike so many other cities of its size and wealth - does not have a railway line to its airport.
And the reason why there will be a huge fight to ever get a rail line.
SkyBus managing director Simon Cowen expects patronage to double to 4 million by 2013. His family-controlled company made a $5 million profit last financial year, and paid $1.1. million to the government (payments escalate with earnings).
''A lot of people don't care if they get a bus or a train, and that's a reason a bus is a great solution,'' says Cowen, who believes a rail line is not inevitable. ''There has to be more and more capacity in public transport service. It can be a six-carriage train or a monorail.'' Or, he says, it can be a bus line.
The follow up in today's paper:
MELBOURNE would fall behind other international cities unless planning began now on an airport rail link, lord mayor Robert Doyle said yesterday.
His comment comes as the head of Melbourne Airport says the state government is considering widening the Tullamarine Freeway again, from four to six lanes between the Western Ring Road and the airport.
I cannot see Doyle ever doing anything but talking loudly, he was a member of the Kennett state government which tried to close and rip up most rail lines.