House debates
Tuesday, 2 September 2014
Questions without Notice
Road Infrastructure
2:37 pm
Warren Truss (Wide Bay, National Party, Leader of the Nationals) Share this | Hansard source
May I thank the honourable member for the colourful way in which he asked the question! Certainly, this government promised that we would build the roads of the 21st century and one year on we are delivering on the job.
We have projects underway in every state. We are funding the road projects that Labor had promised to fund with revenue from the mining tax, which never arrived. We have made sure that we have the biggest program in Australian history but one that is fully funded and which will be delivered right across the nation.
We also wanted to deliver a higher standard of governance of our infrastructure projects. At the core of our election commitment was reform to Infrastructure Australia. We wanted Infrastructure Australia to be genuinely independent. We wanted it to have a CEO who was answerable to its own board rather than just simply having a relationship with the minister. We promised better infrastructure planning, we promised rigorous and transparent assessments of taxpayer funded projects and an assurance that what we were doing was going to make a real difference to the people of Australia.
I am pleased to report to the House that yesterday the new Infrastructure Australia officially commenced, with a new board under Mark Birrell—a board that will set about independently examining the infrastructure tasks before our country and prioritising those projects that are important. For us, the key priorities for the new Infrastructure Australia include an audit of nationally significant infrastructure. That project is already underway, developing a 15-year plan for infrastructure priorities and assessing projects receiving government funding of $100 million or more so that the public can be assured that value for money is the priority.
The 15-year plan will, for the first time, put Infrastructure Australia ahead of the government decision-making process. Under the previous government, the reality was that all Infrastructure Australia had to do was to tick and flick projects that the government had already announced and committed to. This new plan will have Infrastructure Australia developing the priorities—a 15-year plan in advance—
Mr Albanese interjecting—
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