Gippsland › Latest news › Melina Bath MP
Public input denied by Andrews Labor government rejecting inquiry into deteriorating roads in rural and regional Victoria
The Andrews Labor government, with crossbench support, rejected an inquiry into the poor state of roads in rural and regional Victoria, drawing criticism from Melina Bath for neglecting road safety and maintenance.
The Andrews government with the help of the cross bench blocked an Inquiry investigating the poor state of roads, particularly in rural and regional Victoria. The Nationals Member for Eastern Victoria Regional, Melina Bath who strongly endorsed the motion said with Labor voting against an Inquiry into road construction, repair, maintenance and road safety, Victorians missed an opportunity to have their say on our vital road networks.
In state parliament today, Labor, with crossbench support, halted the establishment of an inquiry into the deteriorating roads, especially in rural and regional Victoria
Deteriorating roads
Ms Bath said, "Since 2020 - the Andrews government has cut 45 per cent from the roads maintenance budget, ripping $380 million from the budget. State government funding is lower today than it was in 2014 despite inflation rising and CPI increasing 27.2 points during this time. Under Labor, Victoria is broke, and our roads are going backwards as a result."
"The Andrews government's legacy on roads is a hazardous mess of cuts to road safety and less funding for maintenance to ensure drivers are driving on safe roads in regional Victoria. Our roads are crumbling, a mess of dangerous potholes and hazards, risking the lives of country Victorian drivers every single day. Across eastern Victoria region there is a plethora of unsafe state owned roads that locals regularly raise with my office," said Ms Bath.
Road improvement importance
Ms Bath said an Inquiry was needed to review the state of our roads and chart a way forward to improve road surface quality and lifespan. "This is a real issue that needed investigating especially when the government's own Transport Department found "significantly accelerated deterioration" across the network after a study of 8400 km of road."
"Tragically 134 lives have been lost on Victorian roads this year to date - a rise of 38.1 percent last year. Unsurprisingly a disproportionate 58 per cent of all road deaths occurred on our regional roads in 2023 - this statistic alone lends itself to further investigation of roads and road safety."
"Improving the quality and durability of our regional roads is essential to creating safer and more efficient networks for primary producers, businesses, families, and communities. We know safer roads save lives, but instead of allowing the facts to be examined, Labor chose to shut down debate and block the establishment of an Inquiry into Victorian roads," she said.
Pictures from Melina Bath MP Facebook page.
Source: http://gippsland.com/
Published by: news@gippsland.com
Latest News
David Littleproud urges independent review of Labor's decision on US beef imports
All-abilities pontoon underway at Blue Rock Lake to boost safe, inclusive boating and fishing access

Melina Bath says regional Victoria missed out while Glasgow benefits, with Victorians paying for Labor's failure

Venus Bay SLSC gets gold and bronze for the Open Female category at Victorian IRB National Championships

Darren Chester says Ministers have 'blood on their hands' for ignoring repeated crash warnings on Princes Highway

Darren Chester showed support for 'Everything Disability and Ageing Expo' held at Club Eastwood on 18 July 2025

Darren Chester visits George Grey Centre as they celebrate 60 years of empowering people with disabilities

East Gippsland Council to cease insurance for Crown assets, saving $57K and support to committees will continue

Lakes Entrance intersection upgrade stalled as questions mount over delays, costs and government silence

Martin Cameron along with the Nationals vow to fight Labor bill allowing forced access to private farmland for transmission projects
