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Melina Bath criticises Labor for leaving Gippsland commuters on outdated paper tickets, delaying Myki upgrades until 2028

Eastern Victoria MP Melina Bath criticises Labor for leaving Gippsland commuters on outdated paper tickets, with Myki upgrades delayed until 2028, causing frustration, inconvenience, and barriers for regional public transport users.

By news@gippsland - 24th March 2026 - Back to News

The Nationals Member for Eastern Victoria, Melina Bath, said Gippsland continues to be left behind by Labor, with many public transport commuters still on outdated paper tickets. Raising the issue again in state parliament, Ms Bath said the paper ticket situation is "unacceptable".

Melina Bath criticised Labor’s delayed Myki rollout, now finishing 2028, over budget $136.8M, leaving regional commuters without tap-and-go, unlike NSW’s completed upgrades

Melina Bath criticised Labor’s delayed Myki rollout, now finishing 2028, over budget $136.8M, leaving regional commuters without tap-and-go, unlike NSW’s completed upgrades

Regional Myki frustration

Ms Bath said, "Passengers in South Gippsland, Bass Coast, Wellington Shire and East Gippsland still cannot access Myki locally, despite it being introduced on metropolitan services in 2010 and some V/Line trains in 2014. Every year I’m asked the same question - when will country Victorians get Myki? Public transport users are increasingly frustrated by Labor’s ongoing failure to deliver upgraded ticketing in the regions."

"Even with its faults, Myki is far more modern than the 1960s paper tickets still being used in many regional areas. All Victorians deserve access to a modern tap and go ticketing system regardless of their postcode. Failing to phase out paper tickets creates a barrier for public transport users, inconveniences locals and confuses regional visitors," she said.

Myki upgrade delayed

Ms Bath said Labor signed a contract in 2023 to install new Myki readers so all commuters could tap and go using credit cards, smartphones and smartwatches by 2025, but it now won’t be finished until 2028 and regionals still won’t have readers installed.

"A Victorian Auditor General report shows the Myki modernising project  is significantly delayed and $136.8M over budget. The Allan government’s waste and mismanagement knows no bounds. In contrast to Victoria’s bungling, NSW introduced tap‑and‑go technology for seven years and completed additional upgrades to include Apple Pay integration by 2023.

"The Allan government promised Victorians a more efficient, user-friendly Myki system, but it refuses to acknowledge and support regional Victorians who still must purchase paper tickets for public transport," concluded Ms Bath.

Pictures from Melina Bath MP Facebook page.


Source: http://gippsland.com/

Published by: news@gippsland.com



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