TRANSPORT (COMPLIANCE AND MISCELLANEOUS) AMENDMENT (ON-THE-SPOT PENALTY FARES) BILL 2013 – Delivered in Parliament 26 Nov 2013
Mr Pallas (Tarneit) — I rise to speak on the Transport (Compliance and Miscellaneous) Amendment (On-the-Spot Penalty Fares) Bill 2013 and to reinforce the comments made by the member for Richmond indicating that — with a reservation relating to an amendment to be moved by the opposition, which we believe should be supported, as it is both reasonable and practicable — we will not be opposing this bill, regardless of the government’s willingness or otherwise to support the amendment we will propose. I want to spend just a moment reinforcing the point that it is important for the government to take the contributions and the suggestions of this side of the chamber, albeit that this side does not have the numbers to control the legislative flow, and to value the contributions made on this side and consider whether there is value in them.
I understand the basic proposition underpinning this bill, and it is quite apparent that there is an issue in terms of erosion of a revenue base involving revenues the state cannot reasonably be expected to forgo and that therefore appropriate measures need to be put in place. This government has proven to be both imaginative and quite innovative when it comes to finding new ways to gain fine revenue. Since the budget of 2010-11 the state’s fine revenue has risen by 26 per cent, from slightly over $500 million to in excess of $700 million, which you would have to say is a gold medal effort when it comes to collecting gold. The government has been able to increase the revenue from fines from about $553.6 million in 2010-11 to $714.9 million in 2013-14. That has increased the proportion of state revenue coming from fines by almost a quarter. In the 2010-11 budget period fines constituted about 3.6 per cent of state revenue; under this government, in the 2013-14 budget, fines sit at 4.3 per cent of state revenue. There has therefore been a very dramatic increase in fines.
We need go no further than to remember the outrage that the previous opposition and now government — and indeed the previous Treasurer and now Minister for Police and Emergency Services — expressed on 3 May 2007 in this place about the state being heavily dependent for its revenue on, among a variety of other things, fines.
There is absolutely no doubt that a properly constructed system of public transport depends upon the confidence of the community in the system and its continuing commitment to support that system, which will ensure that those services are run in an effective and cost-effective way. The member for Richmond took us through the report of the Auditor-General of August 2012 regarding fare evasion on the public transport system. He also made some telling points about the nature of fare evasion, being either accidental or part of a more contrived, well-thought-through and continuing approach. We know that there are a substantial proportion of commuters — at the moment we do not know how many — who continue not to pay.
As a result of that, we understand that in terms of the public transport system a very substantial number of infringements were identified last year, 150 000 infringement notices having been issued, and there is a reduced capacity to fix up what is effectively not a slow leak but a very substantial erosion of the revenue base — an entitlement that the state has every right to expect to receive as a consequence of providing a service that does not come free.
Indeed the Auditor-General made it very clear that there is a very substantial contribution from the state of Victoria towards the provision of public transport. Subsidies from the state, as he states on page 1 of his report entitled Fare Evasion on Public Transport, grew by 65 per cent between 2005-06 and 2010-11, or from $950 million to $1.56 billion. In 2010-11 the cost of operating public transport services was $2.2 billion. Thirty per cent of that amount came from fares but 70 per cent of it came from government subsidies.
The fact is that the community is getting a very substantial investment from the state in terms of the provision of public transport, and quite often that is not acknowledged. In recurrent terms that commitment is very appreciable. It demonstrates that the community cannot afford a situation where essentially there are some who see it as their privilege or their entitlement to choose whether to pay.
I have heard it stated many times that justice delayed is justice denied. A quick, efficient and equitable process that allows fare evaders to be dealt with on the spot has much to commend it. I am concerned — and I restate the concerns of the member for Richmond — about the idea that the transacting of cash payments opens up not only the prospect of risk to the individuals involved but the perception and the opportunity for misapplication of those funds.
That is not to suggest anything nefarious or institutional in the behaviour of authorised officers who seek to get that money, but it opens them up to this criticism. We need to ensure that authorised officers are beyond any suggestion of impropriety, and the best way to do that is to frame the legislative scheme to ensure that that is the case.
There is also much to commend about a process with a mechanism that we all apply in our lives and in our engagement in the community that goes specifically to risk and reward. Bad behaviour is basically weighed up by those who lack a belief that they have an obligation to pay fares. They weigh up the likelihood that they may be caught behaving in this poor and inappropriate fashion. Effectively, as the member for Richmond has indicated, they chance their arm. If there is a risk that they will be caught, and if that risk increases, that is a good thing.
Of course the reward for being able to successfully evade paying is that consistently, perhaps as a matter of a long-established course of conduct, these individuals are effectively able to steal money from the state of Victoria. The state is entitled to that money for providing a service but does not receive it when people do not pay. Quite frankly that is inappropriate, and the state has every right to put in place mechanisms to increase the likelihood of the apprehension of such people.
The increased capacity to fine is a good thing. My concern remains that perhaps the increased capacity to fine may be offset by the reduction in the level of the fine from the $212 fine to the $75 on-the-spot fine. My concern continues to be that that level of penalty may well persuade those who have a risk-reward assessment of their poor conduct that it is cheaper and that the risk is less to them and to the community and that they should therefore continue that conduct, which costs us all substantially.
Nonetheless I can indicate that the opposition does not oppose this bill.