There are only a few days left to make your submission to the government's disastrous transport plan. Don't know where to start? We can help!
📑 We've developed a guide with 5, 15 and 30+min options
🎉 We're hosting online 'Submission parties' this week
Everything is here: bit.ly/transport-gps
#nzpol
Posts by The Future Is Rail
RNZ points out that each kilometre of the Waikato Expressway cost nearly as much to build as Te Huia's entire whole FIVE YEAR operational budget. #nzpol #kikorangi
www.rnz.co.nz/news/nationa...
We’ve teamed up with climate & transport advocates around the motu to help NZers have a say on the government’s disastrous draft transport plan (GPS 2024). On our new #transport4all site, you'll find lots of actions you can take, even if you can only spare 5 min transport4all.org.nz
If you're in Wellington and care about the future of transport in Aotearoa, please come to Parliament TOMORROW (Tues 19 Mar) at 5pm.
The draft plan is a disaster for everyone - including motorists. We need to do everything we can to stop it becoming reality transport4all.org.nz/rally #nzpol
Working with orgs like Climate Club NZ & Women in Urbanism, we @thefutureisrail.bsky.social have developed resources like a submission guide, with actions you can take in 5-min, 15-min & 30+min. Please use your voice before 2 April (Tuesday after Easter)! #nzpol transport4all.org.nz/submission-g...
a collection of icons showing issues with roads (e.g. orange road cones, pollution etc) vs icons highlighting public transport (e.g. trains, bikes, buses). The overlaid text reads "There'd be less of this if there was more of this"
Team. If you're one of the millions of NZers who use public transport, cycleways or footpaths (or you care about those who do), PLEASE consider supporting our new campaign #transport4all. It's in response to the govt's disastrous land transport draft that is currently open to submissions #nzpol
"Our findings show that for many who live in public housing, access to reduced fares on public transport reduces their financial stress, gives them the ability to get to places they need, removes anxiety, and improves their wellbeing and social contact."
$46 billion for roads, while trains, buses, and ferries face cuts and underfunding. That is not a balanced transport policy. It's ideology, not policy. Our economy, environment, and social cohesion will pay the price. #nz www.newshub.co.nz/home/politic...
Great to see our very own Dave Macpherson quoted in this article 👏👏👏 #nzpol www.rnz.co.nz/news/nationa...
Statement in response to the Interislander ferries debacle from @thefutureisrail.bsky.social www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PO23...
It goes without saying that we can’t have passenger trains if the rail network is gone
Pulling on the Interislander thread could unravel our national rail network. So, new ferries must be rail enabled. Otherwise the implications for employment, economic growth, and climate action are unfathomable. www.stuff.co.nz/travel/trave...
Our friends at GenZero are fighting to keep Auckland's light rail on the agenda of the new incoming government. To show your support, please consider signing their petition petitions.parliament.nz/5cff9d85-b36...
The 'Golden Triangle' of Auckland, Waikato & the Bay of Plenty (BOP) is home to over 50% of NZ's population, and that's expected to rise in the coming decades. Calls for passenger rail connections between the regions are getting louder. Read Lindsey's report from the BOP regional transport committee
Roads, rail, cycleways, bus lanes, footpaths... they're all important infrastructure that connect people and help the economy. And yet, here in Aotearoa New Zealand, the needs of the private car get priority.
An empty suburban street in nz
An empty rural road on a misty day in nz
Imagine hearing:
- We just don't have the population density to make roads work.
- We are too hilly and our roads are too narrow.
- No one wants to travel by road.
Those statements are clearly ridiculous, and yet, they are regularly applied to trains.
And empty road stretches off into the distance under a cloudy sky
Another example of an empty NZ road. This one in a hilly area
A photo of a new, empty expressway, taken from inside a train
It's annoying when people say they once saw a bus/train/cycleway with only a few people on it & use that as an excuse not to invest in them. Do they say the same about roads?
It's easy to work on a train if you need to, or just relax and enjoy the landscapes you are passing through. 50-54 Female, Otago
The train meant we could travel as a family with young babies (at the time). Walk up and down. Look out windows etc., without some air hostess telling us to sit down or to stop loitering around the toilets. So much easier to feed the children too. 45-49 Female, Auckland
Living in Germany, I had the pleasure of being able to travel easily, comfortably and affordably around the country and around Europe on trains. It's so much nicer than flying and often just as fast or even faster, as you can arrive at the station just before the train leaves, and most train stations are in the centers of the cities and towns. And it's much more environmentally friendly than flying or driving. I have enjoyed night trains as well. 50-54 Female, Otago
Here are three more of the responses we received. From safety to stress free; affordable, productive and sustainable, trains are a great way to get around.
Why do you like to be able to travel by train in Aotearoa New Zealand? What train route would you like to see?
When I was a child in the 1990s the family would regularly take the train from Kapiti to Hawkes' Bay, where we had a holiday property. We would meet my Dad who had driven up by himself at Waipukurau station for the final drive. I always enjoyed the train much more than the car journey, which was often nauseating and scary. 30-34 Female, Wellington
I went from Christchurch to Greymouth on the Trans Alpine on my first ever solo bike packing journey. It allowed me to solo travel and feel safe. I also felt like I would have never visited the West Coast because I'm not a confident driver crossing the Pass. 35-39 Female, Wellington
We took our daughter on the TranzAlpine, who was 8yo at the time. For her it was a wonderful trip, somewhere she could move between carriages and enjoy the open-air viewing area. Having recently made the same journey by car, I gazed jealously at the train as it glided by. This car is a squeeze, with carefully planned rest stops and frequent arguments. 45-49 Female, Canterbury
New Zealanders want trains!
Along with Women in Urbanism we asked NZers to share their stories of what long distance trains meant to them and we got hundreds of responses. Here's just a small sample