❓ Hon Ken Travers asks the Minister for Transport to table a Public Transport Authority publication defining areas with adequate public transport access. Hon Simon O'Brien responds that the requested publication doesn't exist but tables a map showing areas meeting a specific KPI for acceptable service levels.
AnsweredQoN 281Legislative Council
QuestionView source ↗
PUBLIC TRANSPORT AUTHORITY — ACCESS TO PUBLIC TRANSPORT SERVICES
Will the minister table the Public Transport Authority’s publication “Perth Public Transport Area Map”, which defines the areas that have adequate access to good public transport services? Hon SIMON O’BRIEN
Will the minister table the Public Transport Authority’s publication “Perth Public Transport Area Map”, which defines the areas that have adequate access to good public transport services? Hon SIMON O’BRIEN
AnswerView source ↗
No. A publication of that description does not exist but a map entitled “Perth Public Transport Area Acceptable Service Level KPI 2009” can be tabled. That identifies households within the PPTA that have acceptable levels of public transport. “Acceptable level of service” is defined as households that are within 500 metres of a Transperth stop that have an hourly service during the day with at least three trips an hour—that is, at 20-minute intervals—in the peak flow direction in the morning and afternoon peak hours. This measure is a key performance indicator that is shown in the Public Transport Authority’s annual report. I table a copy of that map. [See paper 2055.]
Hon SIMON O’BRIEN replied: No. A publication of that description does not exist but a map entitled “Perth Public Transport Area Acceptable Service Level KPI 2009” can be tabled. That identifies households within the PPTA that have acceptable levels of public transport. “Acceptable level of service” is defined as households that are within 500 metres of a Transperth stop that have an hourly service during the day with at least three trips an hour—that is, at 20-minute intervals—in the peak flow direction in the morning and afternoon peak hours. This measure is a key performance indicator that is shown in the Public Transport Authority’s annual report. I table a copy of that map. [See paper 2055.]
No. A publication of that description does not exist but a map entitled “Perth Public Transport Area Acceptable Service Level KPI 2009” can be tabled. That identifies households within the PPTA that have acceptable levels of public transport. “Acceptable level of service” is defined as households that are within 500 metres of a Transperth stop that have an hourly service during the day with at least three trips an hour—that is, at 20-minute intervals—in the peak flow direction in the morning and afternoon peak hours. This measure is a key performance indicator that is shown in the Public Transport Authority’s annual report. I table a copy of that map. [See paper 2055.]
[See paper 2055.]
Hon SIMON O’BRIEN replied: No. A publication of that description does not exist but a map entitled “Perth Public Transport Area Acceptable Service Level KPI 2009” can be tabled. That identifies households within the PPTA that have acceptable levels of public transport. “Acceptable level of service” is defined as households that are within 500 metres of a Transperth stop that have an hourly service during the day with at least three trips an hour—that is, at 20-minute intervals—in the peak flow direction in the morning and afternoon peak hours. This measure is a key performance indicator that is shown in the Public Transport Authority’s annual report. I table a copy of that map. [See paper 2055.]
No. A publication of that description does not exist but a map entitled “Perth Public Transport Area Acceptable Service Level KPI 2009” can be tabled. That identifies households within the PPTA that have acceptable levels of public transport. “Acceptable level of service” is defined as households that are within 500 metres of a Transperth stop that have an hourly service during the day with at least three trips an hour—that is, at 20-minute intervals—in the peak flow direction in the morning and afternoon peak hours. This measure is a key performance indicator that is shown in the Public Transport Authority’s annual report. I table a copy of that map. [See paper 2055.]
[See paper 2055.]
Explore WA Government Data
Search the full archive in the free dashboard, or query programmatically via API.
Explore more
Government Gazette
Appointments, regulatory notices, planning changes.
Hansard
Debates, questions, speeches and sentiment.
Tabled Papers
Reports and documents tabled in Parliament.
Committees
Committee profiles and recent reports.
Regulations
Subsidiary legislation with filters and summaries.
Bills
Proposed laws and parliamentary progress.
Acts
Current WA legislation and summaries.
Explanatory Memoranda
Bills with EMs (text/PDF) available.
Members
MP profiles, party breakdown and rankings.
Pollie Rankings
Data-driven rankings across 19 categories.
Amendment Chains
Track how schemes and regulations evolve over time.