Victoria to get $8b for new roads and rail
Victoria will get almost $8 billion for new roads and railway lines from Tuesday's federal budget, with nearly a third of the nation's infrastructure pie to be spent on addressing the state's escalating congestion problems.
Given Melbourne's dramatic population growth and the burden that's placing on the city’s transport network, nearly a third of the government's $24.5 billion infrastructure budget will be handed to Victoria.
About $1.75 billion will be set aside to help build North East Link and for new tunnels and extra lanes on the Eastern Freeway.
The deal, which comes after years of stagnation, details two new railway lines for the south-east, including $475 million to link Monash University’s Caulfield and Clayton campuses and $225 million to electrify the Frankston line to Baxter.
In the past, the state government has expressed a desire for Caulfield and Clayton to be linked by a tram, rather than a new rail line.
Other details of the $75 billion infrastructure package over the next 10 years includes $5 billion for an Airport Rail Link.
Under the budget package, $140 million will also be set aside to ease suburban bottlenecks.
It also includes completion of the Princes Highway East duplication between Traralgon and Sale, with $132 million to be be set aside for separation from Melbourne.
About $50 million will go to duplicating the railway line between South Geelong and Waurn Ponds.
''We've never seen so much work going on,'' Premier Daniel Andrews told 3AW radio on Monday morning.
''Which is great for jobs, it is really important in terms of managing growth and setting us up for the future, if you have the federal government as a partner ... well, you can get more done.''