Further two teens charged after man allegedly knocked out on bus – Belmont

A further two teenage boys have been charged after a man was left seriously injured following an alleged assault on a bus in the Hunter last weekend.

Just after midday on Sunday 3 May 2026, emergency services were called to the Pacific Highway, Belmont, following reports of an assault on a bus.

Officers attached to Lake Macquarie Police District and Police Transport Command attended and were told a group of people entered the bus, before an argument ensued with a 49-year-old man.

As the group was getting off the bus, they allegedly repeatedly assaulted the man, knocking him unconscious.

The man was treated by NSW Ambulance paramedics for head and facial injuries before being taken to John Hunter Hospital for further treatment. The man has since been from hospital.

A short time later, nine youths were located and arrested at a fast-food restaurant in Belmont.

Following inquiries, seven were released pending further investigation.

Two boys – aged 16 – were charged and remain before the courts.

Following further investigations, another two 16-year-old boys were arrested at Toronto and Belmont Police stations, where they were each charged with assault occasioning actual bodily harm in company.

They are due to reappear separately before a childrens court on Monday 18 May 2026 and Monday 15 June 2026.

A 12-year-old boy was also dealt with under the Young Offenders Act.

Investigations are ongoing.

GAS RESERVE WILL PROLONG THE GREAT AUSTRALIAN RIP OFF: GREENS

Labor’s adoption of the Australian Energy Producers-supported gas reservation policy as Australian government policy is yet another capitulation to the gas lobby.

National momentum for a 25% tax on gas exports is surging, with rallies planned around the country this Friday to tax gas not beer.

Evidence presented to the select committee investigating a 25% gas export tax, including evidence from the Department of Treasury, comprehensively refuted the gas lobby’s claim that an export tax would threaten trade relationships.

Greens chair of the Gas Select Committee, Senator Steph Hodgins-May

“This policy was written to protect gas corporate profits and Labor has just adopted it as government policy. It will raise no revenue and prolong the great Australian rip off,” said Senator Steph Hodgins-May on Thursday.

“The gas corporations get to keep their obscene wartime profits while Australians will see services like the NDIS slashed in the budget when the government cries poor.

“Announcing this policy just before the gas export tax committee report is released, as if people aren’t smart enough to know a distraction tactic when they see one, proves Labor is running a protection racket for gas corporations.

“The campaign for a 25% tax on gas exports is just getting started, as support for this policy continues to grow. More than 60% of Australians support a tax on gas exports. The Prime Minister’s prevarication has nothing to do with protecting trade relationships and everything to do with protecting his fossil fuel donors’ profit margins.

“While Australians are getting smashed by interest rate rises and cuts to services in the budget, the Albanese government has made it clear that their priority is protecting corporate profits, not people. And they’ll have to explain that decision next week.

Labor’s fuel crisis budget will pick a side: ordinary people or corporate profits

As the illegal war in the Middle East fuels inflation and economic inequality, Labor’s budget must choose a side: deliver for people, or deliver for corporate profits and the wealthiest few.

This budget represents a tipping point for Labor. In the UK and the USA, we’ve seen what happens when people’s trust in Parliament is eroded by successive decisions that prioritise the profits of big corporations and the wealth of the 1% over the urgent needs of ordinary people. 

Labor’s decision to cut the NDIS, the largest cut to a government program this century, while continually refusing to tax the profits of gas corporations who are anticipating eye-watering profits in this fuel crisis, undermines the government’s narrative that they are looking to tackle inequality in this budget.

A 25% tax on gas exports would raise $17bn, and would also have the deflationary impact of incentivising the domestic sale of gas and pushing domestic gas prices down, rather than exporting it offshore and incurring the export levy.

The Greens have called for reform to the tax breaks for wealthy property investors in successive parliaments. Reforming negative gearing and the CGT discount was a Greens demand during the 2023 debate over Labor’s HAFF Bill. Former Greens Leader Adam Bandt delivered two NPC addresses on the topic, first in 2023 and again during the 2025 election campaign. In this parliament, Senator Nick McKim led a Senate inquiry that found the capital gains discount skews home ownership towards investors. This is a critical piece of reform and the test will be whether Labor’s plans are enough to stop the housing crisis getting worse.

The Greens are calling on Labor to:

  • Stop the NDIS cuts
  • Tax the exports of gas corporations, and reinvest the $17 billion in cost of living support we all need
  • Rein in the massive tax handouts for wealthy property investors
  • Stop the billions of dollars going to AUKUS for submarines that Australia may never receive
  • Dedicate new money to electrification, with a focus on renters and people who live in apartments

Senator Larissa Waters, Leader of the Australian Greens:

“This budget will determine this Labor government’s legacy: will they continue to deliver for the corporations driving inflation and ripping us all off?

“Will they continue to let gas exporters and big corporations pay no tax, to funnel billions into defence, while cutting services for disabled people, hurting renters and abandoning people who need it most?

“If the government works with the Greens to tax corporations making obscene windfall profits, and then invests in the things we all need to live a good life, it will show millions of people that Parliament can improve their lives.

“But if Labor continues their moral failure of kicking people off the NDIS to balance the budget, saying there’s no money for essential services while committing $53 billion for war and weapons to appease Trump, it will just fuel people’s anger at a system that doesn’t work for them.

“This will be the defining budget of Anthony Albanese and Jim Chalmer’s careers. The moment calls for courage, not cowardice, and for Labor to stand up to their corporate donors.

“The Greens would work with Labor to tax the corporations making obscene windfall profits and use that money to pay for the things we all need to live a good life.”

Senator Nick McKim, Greens spokesperson for Economic Justice:

“The Greens have consistently called for  property investor tax breaks to be reined in, and Labor now has a once in a generation opportunity for genuine progressive tax reform.”

“Labor should have reformed negative gearing and the CGT discount years ago, but thanks to their refusal to listen to sense, we’ve seen runaway house prices continue during both terms of the Albanese government.

“Everyday people are not responsible for the war, but Labor supported it, and now people are footing the bill with higher prices and successive interest rate rises.

“The 1% aren’t paying more because they don’t have mortgages, but they are certainly enjoying the extra interest on their investments.”

Senator Barbara Pocock, Greens spokesperson for Finance, Housing & Homelessness:

“Renters and mortgage holders are on the front line to fight inflation while Labor delivers massive profits to the banks,” said Senator Pocock.

“People know when the system is working for the 1% and big corporations and not for the rest of us.

“For decades the major banks have made enormous profits price-gouging on people’s mortgages, contributing to the pain of inflation. Labor needs to tax the banks, not hardworking people.

“Labor needs to deliver bold, ambitious tax reform that puts home buyers and renters first. It must do away with tax incentives for those who need it least and build more public housing.”

Inquiry calls for gas tax review after Middle East conflict

The Greens-led Select Committee into the taxation of Australia’s gas resources has tabled its final report, agreeing that the gas export tax regime should be revisited in light of recent global instability following conflict in the Middle East.

However, the committee did not reach agreement on whether changes to the current regime are required, including the proposed introduction of a 25 per cent export tax. Any such recommendation required the support of Labor or Liberal members to be included in the final report.

As a result, the report does not include a majority position on reform to the gas tax system.

Despite this, evidence to the inquiry directly contradicts claims from the gas industry and the Prime Minister that an export tax would increase prices for overseas buyers. Submissions and testimony from Treasury, economists, and gas companies themselves indicate that the cost of such a tax would largely be borne by Australian producers rather than overseas customers, given the structure of long-term contracts and global pricing arrangements.

The committee report omits these key findings as well as any detail of evidence provided by witnesses and submissions. This material has instead been set out in the Chair’s additional comments, which highlight the significant body of expert and community evidence supporting a minimum 25 per cent export tax.

The report is tabled just days ahead of the May Budget. 

Chair of the select committee, Senator Steph Hodgins-May: 

“This inquiry shows Labor knows this issue isn’t going away, but still refuses to address the problem that Australians are not getting a fair share of our resources.

“Labor is desperate to kick the can down the road, but the massive national momentum for a gas tax is clearly making them nervous.

“Labor has a choice in this budget: tax the gas corporations to pay for things we all rely on like the NDIS, or forge ahead with brutal cuts while the gas corporations get Australian gas for free and make obscene war time profits.

“If Labor fails to tax the gas corporations in this budget, it will be clear who they’re really working for.

“Labor clearly knows something needs to change, but they’re not brave enough to do it now, and not in a way that challenges gas company profits.

“The cowards in Labor will not even agree that we need a way to get our fair share back from these gas companies. That tells you everything about the grip the gas lobby has over this government.

“The Prime Minister is out of step with his own backbench, Labor’s own members, he is out of step with the public, and repeating arguments that come straight from the gas industry playbook. 

“Pointing to conflict overseas is a convenient excuse to delay action while billions in gas profits continue to flow offshore, but we heard from Treasury, economists and even gas companies: the cost of an export tax would come out of gas company profits, not from our trading partners.

“The experience in high-taxing jurisdictions like Norway is not that gas companies and trading partners flee.  Those companies stay, but the public actually gets a fair share for their resources.

“The Prime Minister is echoing the gas industry’s scare campaign on trade and stability, despite the evidence saying otherwise.

“Gas companies talk about protecting investment but what they mean is protecting their profits. A gas export tax would do exactly what they fear, cut into those profits and deliver a fair return to the public.

“While households and businesses are under huge pressure, gas companies and their U.S shareholders are laughing all the way to the bank and cashing in on free gas that should be owned by all Australians. 

“The longer this government delays, the longer Australians miss out. Australians expect and deserve a fair return and this fight is far from over.”

Links: 

Australian Greens Additional Comments 

Committee report

Excerpts from Hansard and answers to Questions on Notice:  

Dr Ken Henry: overwhelmingly the incidence falls on those who are the shareholders, really, of multinational companies. That’s where the incidence would fall. Australia is a major gas exporter but is not a big influencer of the world price of gas.

Origin Energy: In general, we would have to absorb those costs, and our customers, both domestic customers and international customers, purchase the gas under long-term arrangements 

INPEX: INPEX’s long-term LNG sale and purchase agreements do not allow us to renegotiate due to a tax or royalty change. 

Treasury: I think a lot of the exports are underpinned by either long term contracts where prices are relatively well established or spot sales to markets where essentially it’s a global market price which has been set so both of those factors would seem to suggest that the economic burden of any tax change would be more likely to fall on the producers. 

Labor finally adopts Greens-driven early childhood commission proposal but stalls on real reform

The Greens have welcomed the government finally moving to “consult” on a national early childhood education and care commission, but say families will be let down yet again if next week’s budget fails to deliver meaningful investment to establish it. 

Australian Greens spokesperson for early childhood education and care, Senator Steph Hodgins-May, announced a plan for an early childhood commission more than a year ago ahead of the 2025 federal election, backed by experts across the sector. The proposal was again recommended by the Greens in their dissenting report to the Senate inquiry into the quality and safety of ECEC.

Labor has now announced it will begin “consultation” on a commission, but has not committed funding in next week’s budget to establish it. Reporting also suggests the Treasurer has poured cold water on progress toward universal childcare.

Senator Steph Hodgins-May:

“Once again, Labor is all talk and no action. The Prime Minister cannot keep calling early learning his legacy while offering crumbs when families are crying out for real reform.

“Consultation is fine, but families and educators already know what’s needed. The Greens have put forward a serious plan for an independent national regulator with teeth to crack down on unsafe centres, lift standards, and drive the transition to universal early education. 

“Families are struggling right now with skyrocketing childcare fees, concerns about quality, and an increasingly privatised system that treats children like profit margins, and this is if they can even find a place in a centre at all.

“I’ve spent more than a year pushing the Minister to act on a national commission, only to hear the same excuses over and over: not now, maybe later.

“Now we’ve got another vague, non-committal announcement that kicks the can further down the road.

“When is the right time? Parents are at breaking point. They cannot wait any longer for a properly funded, affordable, high-quality universal early learning system that works just like primary and secondary school.

“If Labor was willing to stand up to the gas cartel and introduce a minimum 25 per cent tax on gas exports, we’d have the revenue not just to consult on reform, but to actually build the universal early learning system families deserve.

“If next week’s budget fails to deliver that investment, Labor will have let families down once again.” 

RBA forced rate rise hits households because of Chalmers active inflation agenda

“The Reserve Bank was forced to increase interest rates again today because the Treasurer keeps pouring debt petrol on the inflation fire”, said Shadow Treasurer, Tim Wilson.

Mr Wilson’s comments follow the Reserve Bank’s decision today to increase interest rates by a quarter of a per cent from 4.1% to 4.35%, and inflation data last week that showed persistent underlying domestic inflation compounded by the Iran conflict.

In its decision, the RBA noted “Inflation picked up materially in the second half of 2025, and information since the beginning of this year confirms that some of this increase reflected greater capacity pressures”.

“The Treasurer said this time last year that Australia had turned the corner on inflation and interest rates – and he is right that it was upward, again. This is now the highest interest rates have been under this Labor government”, Mr Wilson said.

“The Treasurer hasn’t taken inflation seriously, and that’s why Mums and Dads are paying higher interest rates”.

“This is the 15th interest rate rise under Labor. A family with an average mortgage is now paying $29,000 a year more in interest than when Labor was elected”.

“Yesterday the Opposition released data showing an average couple with an average mortgage had $30,000 less in purchasing power under the Albanese government, and the pressure keeps mounting”.

“While Australian households are being told to pull their belt in, the Albanese government seems disinterested and unwilling, and now they’re introducing a new suite of family savings taxes on homes, rentals and trusts to feed it”.

“The Treasurer’s idea you need to break trust, to build trust, to target trusts is absurd”.

“Mums and Dads will be able to sniff out the Treasurer’s family savings tax agenda, and they should tell us their stories at www.notthetax.com.au”, Mr Wilson said.

Accessibility through art broadening experiences at expanded Gallery

Art lovers are being invited to celebrate two groundbreaking commissions that are creating a more accessible and inclusive Newcastle Art Gallery for thousands of visitors.  

A panel talk and Auslan-interpreted tour on Saturday will highlight the development of the Gallery’s first access-focused digital guide, Nancy, and provide insights into the world-leading sculptural solution to the Gallery’s original floating staircases.  

Newcastle Art Gallery Director Lauretta Morton OAM said the commissions were having a significant impact on how people are interacting with the reimagined Gallery space. 

A woman with glasses, medium-length, wavy brown hair, and wearing a striped blue and white shirt is reaching out with both hands to touch a large metal panel. This is artist Fayen d’Evie interacting with her commissioned sculpture ( reflecting air )Artist Fayen d’Evie engaging with a tactile interpretation of a work of art by Brian Robinson which forms part of her sculpture, ( reflecting air ) “…Touch enabled her to discern minute details… which often pass unnoticed…”, 2025. Design and fabrication: Feather Edge. Newcastle Art Gallery, Australia, commissioned with assistance from the Australian Government through Creative Australia, its principal arts investment and advisory body, and proudly funded by the NSW Government 2025. © the artist. Photo: Roni Bintang

“The expansion of the Newcastle Art Gallery provided the ideal opportunity to ensure access and inclusion were at the heart of how our community can experience our reimagined facility,” Ms Morton said. 

“From using an artistic and access-led solution to the physical challenge created by the space under the staircases for visitors who are blind or have low vision, to developing our first digital guide, which has already been accessed by more than 8,000 visitors, we are committed to collaborating with community members with lived experience to deliver better outcomes for everybody.” 

Saturday’s event will feature internationally acclaimed artist Fayen d’Evie and Central Coast-based Auslan trainer and interpreter Thomas Doe, who will give visitors a chance to learn more about how access-led solutions are being embedded permanently in the new Gallery. 

Digital guide Nancy takes visitors on a 24-stop tour around the ground floor collection exhibition with audio, Auslan-interpreted video and written descriptions, which can be accessed using a visitor’s personal device via the Newcastle Art Gallery website or QR codes throughout the space.  

The guide was developed using a ‘by community, for community’ model, with contributions and expertise from local d/Deaf consultants and community members, Auslan interpreters, artists, accessibility advocates and First Nations consultants.  

It was named in recognition of Nancy Tapp, a much-loved volunteer of 36 years at Newcastle Art Gallery, to celebrate the role that Gallery guides play in shaping the unique experience of every visitor. 

Thomas Doe said being involved with Newcastle Art Gallery to develop Nancy was a meaningful experience. 

“The Art Gallery team approach the project with open minds and a genuine commitment to inclusion,” Mr Doe said.  

“Providing Auslan access means d/Deaf and hard of hearing people can do more than just view the artwork – they can connect with the stories, understand the artist’s intention, and fully experience the exhibition.” 

As well as contributing to the development of Nancy, Fayen D’Evie was commissioned to create  the architectural-scale sculptures that enable visitors to move safely around the two floating staircases on the ground level of the original 1977-built Gallery, which no longer adhere to modern building code standards for people who are blind or visually impaired.  

Tactile versions of key works of art and braille incorporated into the sculptures also allow people to engage through touch with the stories of the Gallery, which d’Evie said was important for her when developing the sculptures.  

“I wanted these sculptures to be invitations not barriers, and architectural prompts for conversation between visitors, sighted and blind alike,” d’Evie said. 

“They honour the original staircase structure, while creating a tactile veil around it.” 

Fayen d’Evie’s sculpture was supported by a $50,000 grant from Creative Australia and a $50,000 grant from the NSW Government Arts and Culture Infrastructure Grants program, while Nancy was supported by City of Newcastle and a $10,000 Museums & Galleries of NSW grant. 

Co-chair of City of Newcastle’s Access Inclusion Standing Committee, Councillor Elizabeth Adamczyk, said designing spaces with accessibility as priority means better outcomes for everyone.  

“Art should always be for everyone, and the Newcastle Art Gallery team should be commended for their work to ensure one of our city’s key cultural landmarks can be better enjoyed by all,” Cr Adamczyk said. 

“Making those improvements is a key outcome from our Disability Inclusion Action Plan (DIAP) which is up for renewal in 2027. 

“It’s currently undergoing early engagement, and I encourage the community to get involved and share their experiences with us to make sure we continue building a Newcastle that works better for everybody.”  

Community members can find out more and make a submission on the DIAP via the Have Your Say page on City of Newcastle’s website, before Monday 15 June. 

Saturday’s Intersensorial Conversations event starts from 11am, with more information and limited bookings still available on the Newcastle Art Gallery website.  

Legislation to shut down illegal places of worship passes parliament

The Minns Labor Government’s legislation to strengthen councils’ powers to shut down unlawful places of public worship has passed the NSW Parliament despite attempts by the Liberals and Nationals to delay the bill in the Legislative Council.

The Local Government and Other Legislation Amendment (Places of Public Worship) Bill 2026 delivers on measures announced in response to the antisemitic terror attack in Bondi on 14 December and provides councils with stronger enforcement tools to protect community safety.

The reforms bolster existing powers by significantly increasing fines for illegal places of public worship and enabling councils, in serious cases, to seek orders to cut off water, electricity and gas where venues breach planning laws and ignore directions to cease operating.

The legislation:

  • Allows councils to issue development control orders to stop unlawful activities that breach planning laws or pose risks to public health and safety.
  • Doubles penalty notice fines from $3,000 to $6,000 for individuals and from $6,000 to $12,000 for corporations.
  • Enables councils to apply to the Land and Environment Court for orders directing utility providers to cut off services to non-compliant venues.
  • Increases maximum penalties for failure to comply from $11,000 to $110,000 for individuals and from $22,000 to $220,000 for corporations.

The changes have been complemented by amendments to the Planning System SEPP which came into effect at the end of April requiring councils to consult with NSW Police Commissioner on community safety matters and the prevention of crime before approving development applications for new places of public worship, or changes to the use of existing ones.

These reforms build on previous legislation passed by the Minns Labor Government to combat hate, including new offences for inciting racial hatred, banning the display of Nazi symbols at Jewish places, and strengthening protections for people attending their place of worship.

Minister for Planning and Public Spaces Paul Scully said:

“There is no place for hate in NSW. If a place of worship is operating outside the law and dividing the community, councils now have the tools to shut it down.

“Recent planning changes have also put public safety first, mandating consultation with NSW police before approving development applications for new places of public worship.

“These strengthened enforcement powers and mandatory consultation with NSW Police are practical steps to keep communities safe.”

Minister for Local Government Ron Hoenig said:

“Freedom of religion is a fundamental part of life in New South Wales, and it must always be protected. But it doesn’t provide a licence for hate speech, unlawful conduct, or behaviour that puts the community at risk.

“No one is above the law. Places of worship, like any other premises, must operate within the planning rules that exist to keep communities safe.

“These changes give councils clear authority to act where those rules are ignored, particularly where there are risks to safety or community cohesion.

“This is about upholding the law in a measured and practical way, and making sure local communities are protected.”

Final plan for Moore Park South delivers new park and 12-hole golf course for Sydney

Mums, dads and young people from across Sydney are a step closer to being able to enjoy a brand-new park with sports fields, courts, outdoor fitness equipment, a nature playground, shaded picnic spaces with barbecues and more.

The Minns Labor Government has today released the final plan for the new 20-hectare park and 12‑hole public golf course at Moore Park South, based on extensive feedback from the local community, sporting groups and councils.

The plan, which is supported by a $50 million investment from the Minns Labor Government, will deliver a great new public open space for one of the most densely populated areas in Australia, with the population within 5km of the new parkland projected to rise to almost 790,000 by 2041.

The community surrounding Sydney’s newest park will be able to enjoy new sporting and community facilities, including:

  • new pathways for running, walking and cycling
  • a fenced off-leash dog area
  • a full-size community sports field, multi-purpose sports courts and outdoor fitness equipment
  • large areas of parkland for people to picnic and relax
  • new amenities such as toilets, park furniture, space for food kiosks and lighting
  • a reimagined golf offering designed in consultation with Sydney’s golf community.

The final design responds to feedback received during extensive community consultation and site analysis, including:

  • increasing the golf offering from 9 holes to a 45 par 12-hole golf course, without reducing the area for the new park
  • improving connectivity and recreation by delivering more entry points and pathways which link to the park’s perimeter loop
  • minimising tree loss by relocating the sports field
  • relocating the nature playground to a more centralised area of the park.

Golf which caters to all ages and abilities will remain an important part of Moore Park South.

The reconfigured 12-hole golf course will be delivered as part of the new golf offer at Moore Park South. This change reflects valuable feedback from golfers and the broader community on the draft Establishment Plan, with the length of the reconfigured course increased from 9 to 12 holes.

Working closely with a respected golf architect and stakeholders, the new 45-par course has been designed to be challenging and utilise existing fairways, while retaining a finish at the Golf House.

The course will also be supported by:

  • an expanded driving range with up to 90 bays
  • an 18‑hole mini‑golf course
  • putting and chipping greens.

Works to establish the new park will commence from July 2026, with access for the community available immediately. For the most substantial upgrades and additions to the park, construction is expected to be completed by 2028.

Throughout the transition the public will be kept updated on changes to parkland access and the phased opening of parkland recreation facilities.

Importantly, a minimum of nine holes will be available to play until the 12-hole course is opened in 2027.

Public consultation on the draft Establishment Plan was completed between 28 October and 24 November 2025.

The final plan was also informed by the results of soil testing which found common contaminants deep underground which will not impact Moore Park South’s future use as a parkland. The findings are to the results of testing at the now popular Sydney Park in Alexandria.

This is part of the Minns Labor Government’s plan to build a better NSW, supporting families, young people and downsizers with the great public spaces and community facilities to exercise, gather and relax.

To see the final plan or read the ‘What we heard’ report visit centennialparklands.com.au/mooreparksouth

Minister for Planning and Public Spaces Paul Scully said:

“This plan delivers quality open space which will act as a backyard for thousands of people in one of Australia’s most densely populated communities.

“We’re re-imagining Moore Park South and delivering a new 20-hectare park with everything from a new community sporting field, walking, running and cycling paths and trails and relaxation and picnic areas.

“Alongside the great new open spaces we’ve worked with Golf NSW and a golf architect to increase the golf offering from 9 holes to a 12-hole golf course.

“Moore Park South will have something from everyone whether people want to play sport, enjoy time outdoors, walk the dog or play a round of golf.”

Greater Sydney Parklands Chief Executive Joshua French said:

“Community and stakeholder feedback has been central to decision-making; ensuring the new public park and golf offer provides for a range of activities and users.”

“Over the next three years, we’ll be focused on delivering a park that is welcoming, accessible and well-managed, with facilities that respond community needs, now and into the future.”

CEO Golf NSW Stuart Fraser said:

“Golf NSW acknowledges it has been consulted by the NSW Government in determining the future of Moore Park Golf Club and more specifically the course layout.

“The preference has always been to retain 18 holes however this was physically not possible.

“Internationally recognised Golf Course Architect, Harley Kruse, has however configured a 12-hole layout that would be practical and still offer a challenge for golfers of all abilities.”

More journeys, more often: Minns Government unveils revitalised regional coach network

The Minns Labor Government is delivering a major uplift in NSW TrainLink coach services, with new and improved routes and modern coaches designed to better serve rural and regional communities. 

A 36 percent funding increase across the NSW TrainLink coach network will lift total funding to $290 million over the next nine years, delivering smoother, more reliable journeys for passengers across the state.

From 1 July, 14 coach operators will run 49 routes across the NSW TrainLink coach network, delivering 638 long-distance services each week, up from the current 592 services across 45 routes.

This increases the total coverage of the NSW TrainLink coach network by almost 200,000 kilometres, bringing it to more than 7.15 million kilometres.

The funding will improve existing routes and the introduction of new services, with safety, comfort and accessibility at the centre of the upgraded coach network. On some routes, the uplift will save passengers over two hours in travel time.

Additionally, the majority of services will be operated by modern coaches featuring wheelchair accessibility, improved seating and seatbelts, mobile phone charging points, onboard defibrillators and toilets.

The new services have been informed by extensive community feedback including from regular customers and operators, as well as input from the NSW Bus Taskforce, delivering on the outcomes of an in-depth network review. This includes ensuring better connections between coach services and other modes of transport.

The new routes will service over 360 destinations across NSW and into Queensland, South Australia, Victoria and the ACT.

Key improvements include:

  • A new Armidale–Port Macquarie return route creating an Armidale–North Coast connection for the first time, with a train connection at Wauchope to Coffs Harbour, Grafton, the Northern Rivers, the Gold Coast and Brisbane
  • An enhanced Port Macquarie – Wauchope service enabling travel to Grafton, Coffs Harbour, the Northern Rivers, the Gold Coast and Brisbane (for the first time). Enhanced service between Port Macquarie and Wauchope, providing both northbound and southbound connections. This enables journeys from North Coast and Queensland centres such as Grafton, Coffs Harbour, the northern rivers, Gold Coast and Brisbane to and from Port Macquarie for the first time.
  • A new Yass–Young coach route connecting with rail at Yass (saving up to two hours on a Young–Sydney trip), plus a two-hour journey time saving for Griffith and Temora passengers travelling to and from Sydney and Canberra. Services will include Yass Junction to Young on Wednesdays and Saturdays, and Young to Yass Junction on Thursdays and Sundays. These will connect with rail services to provide a faster, more direct service between Young and Sydney.
  • The Goulburn-Canberra-Goulburn day return service will run seven days a week, providing a weekend service for the first time.
  • A new Dubbo Airport stop for routes to and from Nyngan, Bourke and Broken Hill.
  • The popular route between Tamworth and Dubbo and return will increase to three times per week.

For more information, click here.

Minister for Regional Transport, Jenny Aitchison said:

“The Minns Labor Government is delivering better connections for regional communities.

“The former Liberal National Government gutted transport across the regions. This additional funding is essential in restoring our regional public transport links and ensuring our regional communities are able to access the services they need and deserve.

“When we came to government, we committed to improve public transport for people in rural, regional and remote areas. This initiative, based on direct feedback from local communities is filling in the gaps in our regional coach network.

“We know that our NSW TrainLink coach services are crucial, connecting our rural and regional communities to health, education, family and friends.

“These changes deliver savings of up to two-and-a-half hours, we’re making it easier for regional communities to choose public transport and leave the car behind.

“With around 500,000 passenger journeys every year, It’s important that we take our passengers where they need to go, when they need to get there.”

Chief Executive of NSW TrainLink, Roger Weeks said:

“After listening to passengers, local operators and the NSW Bus Taskforce, we’ve reshaped the network to make services more reliable, better connected and easier to use, matching service provision to community need.

“Alongside the network review, we’ve overhauled our coach contracts, making wheelchair accessible coaches standard with better passenger amenities like improved air conditioning and toilets standard.”