More jobs to help keep Melbourne moving

By Our Reporter
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NorthConnex, a 9-kilometre motorway tunnel connecting the M1 Pacific and M2 Hills motorways, features installations designed to enhance motorists' safety and their driving experience. The design includes a backlit silhouette of trees along the northbound tunnel. The motorway will bypass congested Pennant Hills Road and allows motorists to drive from Newcastle to Melbourne without encountering any traffic lights.

The Andrews Labor Government will deliver Melbourne its first-ever dedicated Congestion Management Team as traffic builds toward pre-pandemic levels.

Minister for Roads and Road Safety Ben Carroll said the team of six expert traffic managers will be in place from May to respond in real-time to bottlenecks, incidents, and breakdowns in three of Melbourne’s traffic hot spots, an official media release said.

Optimising the network performance, the new team will also identify small scale changes that can improve traffic flow, such as extending turn lanes, currently causing queues, and blocking through-lanes.

As part of the Labor Government’s $340 million package to keep people moving on our roads, the team joins 100 new jobs created to deal with increasing congestion as Melbourne emerges from the coronavirus pandemic.

The additional jobs include 12 new Incident Response Service Officers in six new response vans, bolstering the on-road fleet to clear incidents quickly and get traffic moving. Fourteen traffic signal engineer cadets will also begin a two-year training program.

The unprecedented investment in new transport jobs is on top of a significant increase in congestion-busting technology, including 500 extra traffic monitoring cameras and almost 200 wireless traffic sensors, with a further 200 cameras expected to be installed by the end of June.

The latest traffic volume data shows that as Melbourne emerges from the pandemic, travel patterns have shifted, with trips on the city’s arterial road network rapidly increasing compared with volumes on freeways.

With many continuing to work from home, freeway volumes remain below pre-COVID levels at around 94 per cent, compared to arterial roads like Hallam North Road in Melbourne’s south-east—eclipsing 100 per cent of its pre-pandemic levels on two occasions since March.

The Princes Highway in Werribee and Warrigal Road in Chadstone ran more than 95 per cent of pre-COVID levels in the last week.


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