ROADS PROMISES REMAIN UNFULFILLED

23 June 2021

Blue Mountains Federal, State and Local Government representatives have banded together to demand years of broken Liberal promises on the region's roads be fulfilled after this year’s NSW Budget failed to deliver for Mountains roads.

Federal Member for Macquarie, Susan Templeman, State Member for Blue Mountains, Trish Doyle, and Mayor Mark Greenhill, joined with Ward One Labor candidate Suzie Opdorp before the Budget’s delivery to call on the government to come good on years of promises to fix congestion hotspots.

 

But not one cent of funding for projects promised by the Liberals over the past six years has been delivered in the 2021/22 Budget.

"In 2015, the Liberal Member for Blue Mountains promised to fix Yeomans Bridge in Katoomba and the Hawkesbury Road intersection in Springwood, and what's happening in 2021? Nothing," Ms Doyle said.

"As anyone who sat in that traffic over the June public holiday weekend knows, Yeomans Bridge in particular is a horrendous pinch point on public holidays and weekends.

"The State Government had the opportunity in this Budget to fulfill these years-old promises and do something to fix our roads and rail, rather than make the people of the Blue Mountains wait a decade for a supposed magic tunnel solution - and foot the $10 billion bill that goes with it to save 10 minutes."

Mayor Mark Greenhill said he had been in public office for nearly two decades, and had watched Liberal promises come and go.

"Since this government came into office, I have had the Blue Mountains "super tunnel" promise, the Bells Line of Road expressway promise, and the promise of upgrades for Hawkesbury Road," Clr Greenhill said.
 

"Council was in talks with the State Government over Yeomans Bridge and improvements at Springwood in 2016. It's now 2021, and all we've had is years of delays and frustration.

"It's good to talk about the future, but the problems exist right now - and they have for a long time. These ultimately meaningless meetings are delaying or avoiding delivering on promises that were made years ago."

Ms Templeman said the situation had been frustrating for many years.

"As someone who lives in Winmalee and uses Hawkesbury Road nearly every day, it's at the point of being dangerous," Ms Templeman said.

"Like so many other issues, it seems the Liberals are very big announcements, but when the cameras stop flashing there is simply no delivery."

 

Ms Doyle said she had raised the issue every year since coming to office.

"Every year I have stood at the roundabout at Hawkesbury Road or at Yeomans Bridge, constantly asking 'where is the money to deal with th

ntly asking 'where is the money to deal with th