Richard Court

Opinion Articles

State’s long rail tale of woe

WA has a long and bipartisan talent for pretending it is in charge when it plainly is not. Nowhere is that more obvious than on the 5500km of the old Westrail network — an asset sold at the turn of the century and then quietly abandoned by every government since. This is not a story about ideology. It is not even a story about privatisation. It is a story about a State that sold a

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Opinion Articles

The Countryman: State must act to get freight rail on track

The WA Labor Government has a curious habit when it comes to big decisions. When it wants something badly enough, it moves at speed. When it doesn’t, it buries the issue under consultants, reviews and “process”. Right now, freight rail sits firmly in the second category. In the lead-up to the last State election, Labor committed to “investigate and progress the potential buyback of the below-rail freight lease”. Translated into plain English, that means regaining

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News Clippings

ABC radio interview with Trevor Whittington regarding Gov’t buy-back of rail freight network

WAFarmers’ CEO Trevor Whittington was interviewed by ABC Mornings host Nadia Mitsopoulos this morning about the issues behind our campaign to hold the WA State Government to its promise to “buy back” WA’s rail freight network. Also, read Trevor’s excellent Opinion article on the issue here: Time for action: WA’s rail Buy-Back promise cannot wait Listen to the informative interview on the audio player or via the URL below: Click here if the player above doesn’t

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Opinion Articles

Time for action: WA’s rail Buy-Back promise cannot wait

When the State Government committed during the last election to “investigate and progress the potential buy-back of the below-rail freight lease”—to restore public control of freight rail, improve supply chain efficiency and support agriculture and resources—many across agriculture, transport and regional Western Australia hoped it marked a long-overdue recognition that the old Westrail network had become the poor cousin of the lavishly funded metropolitan rail system. It was, at least implicitly, an admission that something

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