Wednesday, 13 January 2021

13 January 2021 - Lorraine James B.Sc. (Neuroscience) on the Coomera Connector

While we wait for the notes from yesterday's meeting (~36 people were present - thank you!), you may want to read this document, that among other things, brings up the impact of air pollution on health. It was written by Lorraine James B.Sc. (Neuroscience), a Helensvale resident. I am posting it here with her permission. 

Cheers,

Tom A. 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------

My point of view on the Coomera Connector 

1. More highways just cause induced/generated demand and congestion quickly returns

The Coomera Connector is so far predicted to cost approximately $2.4 billion, although given that the Business Case has not yet been developed, it is likely that this cost will more than double.  I can’t help but question why Government is so supportive of putting this sort of money into more roads and more cars, when there is a clear ‘black hole’ of highway construction. The bottomless pit of highway construction or the ‘black hole’ is an established academic principle in transport planning. The more highways we build, the more people flood to use them because it increases convenience. The more people flood to use them the more highways we need to build to maintain this convenience. There is no way to truly build our way out of congestion with more highways and this has been proven all around the world. This report below is about the ‘black hole of highway construction’ or ‘induced demand’ and is really interesting: https://www.vtpi.org/gentraf.pdf

Investments into public transport, efficient use of existing infrastructure, heavy and fast rail improvements and realignments and other attempts to address congestion should be sought prior to the commitment of billions of dollars for highway infrastructure that won’t actually solve the inherent problem. It’s also important to consider that technology changes including driverless vehicles, working from home options, ‘pay for service’ driver schemes and other disruptors may soon make this project redundant.

Although the Business Case for this project is proceeding, often these are simply a means to justify a benefit vs cost ratio (BCR) of more than 1. Whilst this is easy to demonstrate if you twist the numbers enough, the real cost of this highway cannot be captured by dollars. The real cost will be on the environment, the continued dependence on private car use, the Qld tax payers, the residents living nearby whose homes will be heavily impacted, increased pollution and the future generations who may have to handle both the debt and the deconstruction of it.

I understand the frustrations of driving on the M1 when it is congested, but this itself is a powerful disincentive for private vehicle use. We should instead be attempting to improve our rail, make it fast, affordable and more appealing than waiting in line on the M1. If we can do that, and make it more appealing people will choose the alternative. If however, we spend billions and make travel easy, even those who are currently using public transport may start to abandon it to instead use private motor vehicles. The net benefits of these projects are not what we often think they will be. We need to move forward to a better future, not rinse and repeat the mistakes of the past.

2. Worldwide highways are now being deconstructed this close to townships 

The world is moving away from highway construction and in fact, highway destruction is now happening. A number of American cities and states are investigating ‘highway deconstruction’,

seeking to remove highways which have turned communities into ‘troll country’ and are now instead reclaiming them and turn them into liveable locations.

The Coomera Connector corridor was gazetted more than 30 years ago, and what was appropriate then is not appropriate now. In Illinois, transportation agencies were sued for failing to consider generated traffic impacts in their planning.

 https://www.gizmodo.com.au/.../6-freeway-demolitions.../

 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freeway_removal

 https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5fd6n8hr

3. Where are the investigations into public transport alternatives? 

I believe TMR should be required to document and circulate proof of where they have considered public transport alternatives.  The Government pays lip service to public transport and the theory above shows that with another motorway, people will move from using public transport back to their cars – which is disastrous for the environment.

4. Studies have shown absolute relationships between living close to motorways, dementia and other neurological diseases

Studies linking dementia to air pollution from motorways and major roads:

a. https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0228092 (2020)

Results: Reduced cortical thickness was observed in participants with high exposure relative to those with low exposure, primarily in sensorimotor regions of the brain including the pre- and post-central gyri and the paracentral lobule, but also within the frontal and limbic regions. These results suggest that significant childhood exposure to traffic related air pollution is associated with structural alterations in brain.

b. https://ehjournal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12940-020-0565-4 (2020)

Results: Road proximity was associated with all outcomes … for living < 50 m from a major road or < 150 m from a highway. Air pollutants were associated with incidence of Parkinson’s disease and non-Alzheimer’s dementia…

c. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/jcpp.13189 (2020)

Conclusions: Prenatal exposure to PAH, a common neurotoxicant in air pollution, may magnify or sustain the effects of early life psychosocial/socioeconomic stress on psychiatric outcomes later in child development. This work highlights the critical role of air pollution exposure on child mental health.

d. https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/8/9/e022404 (2018)

Conclusions: We have found evidence of a positive association between residential levels of air pollution across London and being diagnosed with dementia, which is unexplained by known confounding factors.

e. https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(16)32399-6/fulltext (2017)

Interpretation: In this large population-based cohort, living close to heavy traffic was associated with a higher incidence of dementia.

f. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28917207 (2017)

Discussion: In this large cohort, exposure to air pollution, even at the relative low levels, was associated with higher dementia incidence.

Here are also another couple of points on air pollution and general health: The World Health Organisation has said that air pollution is a major cause of death and disease globally¹.

 https://www.who.int/airpollution/ambient/health-impacts/en/

In light of this, Australia's peak health organisations have called on the government to bring our goals for clean air in line with the best possible health evidence²

 https://www.dea.org.au/expert-position-statement-on-health-based-standards-for-australian-regulated-thresholds-of-nitrogen-dioxide-sulfur-dioxide-and-ozone-in-ambient-air-august-2019/ (2019)

However, Australia is ranked 12th on the list of the top human-caused sulphur dioxide hotspots as tracked by NASA satellites. This matters immensely because air pollution can cause asthma, heart and lung disease, dementia and fertility problems. Even more disturbing, air pollution causes an estimated 4,880 deaths per year across Australia—that's around four times the national road toll.

5. Dementia is fast becoming Australians’ most leading cause of death (currently No. 1 in Australia women) and will costs the country billions within years 

Australian statistics

 Dementia is the second leading cause of death of Australians.

 In 2016 dementia became the leading cause of death of Australian women, surpassing heart disease which has been the leading cause of death for both men and women since the early 20th century. 

 In 2017, dementia remained the first leading cause of death of women, and the third leading cause of death of men, overall, accounting for 13,729 deaths.

 In 2019, there is an estimated 447,115 Australians living with dementia.  Without a medical breakthrough, the number of people with dementia is expected to increase to 589,807 by 2028 and 1,076,129 by 2058.

 Currently an estimated 250 people are joining the population with dementia each day. The number of new cases of dementia will increase to 318 people per day by 2025 and more than 650 people by 2056.

 In 2019, it is estimated that almost 1.5 million people in Australia are involved in the care of someone living with dementia.

The impact of dementia in Australia

 In 2018, dementia is estimated to cost Australia more than $15 billion. By 2025, the total cost of dementia is predicted to increase to more than $18.7 billion in today’s dollars, and by 2056, to more than $36.8 billion.

 Dementia is the single greatest cause of disability in older Australians (aged 65 years or older) and the third leading cause of disability burden overall.

...

Lorraine James B.Sc. (Neuroscience)

Saturday, 28 November 2020

28 November 2020 - Queensland State Elections and the Second M1

Labor won. The average swing to Labor in Queensland was +1.9% points on two-party-preferred. Across the state, Labor gained 5 seats, including 2 in Sunshine Coast and lost 1 - in Brisbane. The very good Labor result in Qld is most likely thanks to the stance on COVID-19. We want to be safe, and the Palaszczuk government kept us safe. The now former LNP leader Frecklington would have the borders open and we probably would have more people dead because of COVID-19.

However, in Gold Coast, Labor candidates making the Second M1 the centre of their campaign did not win with any LNP incumbents. Labor had and still has only 1 seat here despite supposedly the community wanting the Second M1 so badly. Is it possible that Labor got tricked by LNP claims about how important another motorway was to the residents?

The pre-election Courier Mail survey of over 8000 people showed that the fast rail network was by a long shot deemed the most critical to southeast Queensland
:


If Labor campaigned on building the fast rail network, or at least extending the heavy rail to Coolangatta, which is long overdue, they would probably win more seats in Gold Coast.

In Coomera, where both Labor and LNP candidates were strongly pro-motorway, the swing to Labor was +2.4% after preferences, which is close to the state average.

In Bonney, where residents of The Surrounds and Arundel Springs would be most affected by the motorway, the local LNP member Sam O’Connor decided to go against the party policy and proposed that the motorway should NOT go through his electorate. The Labor Transport Minister Mark Bailey argued on Twitter against this shorter route - from Coomera to Helensvale, inadvertently exposing a problem of trying to fix car congestion in a city by building more roads: gridlock from day 1:


Yep, more roads = more congestion, if not here, then somewhere else. If the full Second M1 is built, it will send 120,000 more cars every day onto Gold Coast and Brisbane streets.

The "honourable" Transport Minister even tried to ridicule Sam O’Connor for listening to the residents:



Well, guess who the voters liked better:


---

What does the election result mean for us? The ball seems to be with the Federal Liberal/National Government. They could remove funding on the environmental grounds. They could perhaps remove funding because Qld Labor hid the options analysis, manipulated the public consultation and then reported the results in a misleading way. This would be the right thing to do.

Qld Labor could also mend their ways. The on-going stage 1 business case could include the true costs of a motorway to the society and the environment: impact of the air and noise pollution on the health of the people, the economic costs of road deaths and injuries, the loss of wildlife habitat, the increased traffic in Gold Coast and Brisbane, etc. The Labor party members should ask: why is the options analysis document kept hidden from the public? Is a motorway the best use of this state land? Would a western bypass of Gold Coast be a better solution for the interstate traffic? Would light rail from Helensvale to Pimpama be a better solution for the local traffic? Qld Labor now knows that pushing for Second M1 did not get them any more seats. Time to invest in something good for the people and the environment.

---

So what can we do?

Writing to the federal LNP representative, state Labor representative, National Audit Office, Australian Senate Estimates Committee, or Queensland Crime and Corruption Commission might help.

If we could get an investigative journalist interested in this story, it might help.

Some of the members of the No Second M1 group are thinking of hiring a law firm. Please join the group and post if you want to get in touch.

---
Sources and references:

Election results:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_Queensland_state_election

Courier Mail survey:
https://www.couriermail.com.au/news/queensland/state-election-2020/sentiment-survey-queenslanders-have-their-say/news-story/b47110a7e6cdf2dc1f28c92da2660b5f

Light rail to Pimpama:
https://www.facebook.com/LightRailToPimpama/posts/2803057249977405

Public consultation:
https://nosecondm1.blogspot.com/2020/09/24-september-2020-tmr-consultation.html

Australian National Audit Office (ANAO):
https://www.anao.gov.au/

Australian Senate Estimates Committees:
https://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Senate_Estimates

Queensland Crime and Corruption Commission:
https://www.ccc.qld.gov.au/

No Second M1 group:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/637517416777136

Impact of air pollution on health:
https://www.who.int/teams/environment-climate-change-and-health/air-quality-and-health/ambient-air-pollution

Saturday, 3 October 2020

4 October 2020 - Video from Coomera with Tom and Stew

Happy Sunday everyone!

Some of you have seen the Nine News Gold Coast story a few days ago. I said a lot more than was aired, but that's the nature of commercial TV News nowadays: lots of short stories, you blink and it's gone.

If you wanted to hear a bit more from me, and other residents living close to where the motorway is planned to go, now you can.

Let's start with a 1 minute intro from Stewart Brooker who lives in Coomera:
https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=2810343112623466

Below is a link to, hopefully, the first of a series of videos taken at different locations along the Second M1. Ultimately, political parties can be influenced by election results. If they get fewer votes, or lose a seat, they try to find out why. That's our (voters, citizens) ultimate weapon, the only one guaranteed to work. Hundreds of us have been trying since September 2019 to convince the Labor government to cancel the Coomera Connector / Second M1 project. We failed. They are pushing through with it, and while initially there was ambiguity about what it would be, now it seems they are fixed on a 6-lane, 100 km/h, 45 km long motorway from Nerang to Loganholme. I am not a member of any political party. A decision how to vote is a personal choice. Many things can be considered. In this case, I know that Qld Greens and Animal Justice Party are against the Second M1. LNP describe the Second M1 in their Roads Plan as "a 4-lane arterial road". For me, arterial does not mean a motorway, but then why call it a "Second M1"? Qld Labor could still change their mind, if they wanted, but knowing what they did with the 2019 public consultation, I doubt it. If they don't, I will put Labor last - a government that manipulates the public like that, and is deaf to properly considering alternatives and full costs to the society of an infrastructure project, does not get my vote. Sorry.

Recorded 3 Oct 2020, near Coomera Waters, 15 minutes long:
https://youtu.be/Wu8vsU4nUwo

Nine News Gold Coast story aired 1 Oct 2020 at 5:30pm:
https://www.facebook.com/96933606722/posts/10157538862271723/

Cheers,
Tom A.

Thursday, 24 September 2020

24 September 2020 - TMR Consultation Summary Report

Originally written 24 September, last updated 27 September 2020.

Today, I realised that in my initial shock at the published Consultation Summary, I skipped one important thing. 

First, why was I shocked? Because, suddenly, the whole consultation we knew about: the web survey, the web feedback form, the face to face sessions, the emails, the phone calls, was disregarded by the TMR, and pushed to the back of their report as non-scientific, anecdotal, non-representative, and skewed by people with vested interest.

Instead, they publicised and everyone - the newspapers, the environmental organisations, and even the Gold Coast Greens as I’ve learned a few days ago - picked up and accepted their statements:
"An independent survey of Gold Coast residents and businesses has shown overwhelming support for the Coomera Connector"
"Research has told us that the vast majority (80%) of the community support the Coomera Connector being built as soon as possible to provide an alternative to the Pacific Motorway (M1)."
TMR do not want to make public the details of the community consultation, only providing us with a Summary Report, but even that is telling if you read it carefully. Here it is:

https://www.tmr.qld.gov.au/_/media/projects/c/coomera-connector/coomera-connector-community-consultation-summary.pdf

It shows that the consultation had two parts: part one done by TMR, which was delayed multiple times and finally started 8 November 2019. It was widely publicised well before that. Our petition to the Qld Parliament against the Coomera Connector was published on facebook already on 4 September and posted to the Parliament on 20 September 2019:

https://www.parliament.qld.gov.au/work-of-assembly/petitions/petition-details?id=3203


TMR sent out newsletters, ran radio, newspaper and facebook ads.




Was it representative? 3,200 visits to the website, 593 online surveys and feedback forms, 2086 people attended community sessions, 700+ pieces of feedback received. 

Eagleby and Coomera residents would be most affected by Stage 2.

Helensvale residents would be most affected by Stage 1 - they would be sandwiched between the 8-lane 110 km/h M1 and the 6-lane 100 km/h Second M1.

What was the answer to the most important question: 
“Do you support the Coomera Connector as a transport solution?”


47.1% said "No". 14.2% were unsure. 38.7% said "Yes".

The opinion of people most knowledgeable about the project and most affected by it. Disregarded. Thrown into the bin. 

....


And part two, which started 10 days after the TMR web survey opened. I didn’t know about that part. I don’t remember the TMR website mentioning it. Why was a private company (colmar brunton) hired instead of TMR doing it themselves? Was it a quick decision on the part of the Labor party to get the result they wanted? Did TMR not want to do it, or could not do it given the short time frame? We know the Premier announced the start of work ($20m business case) two weeks before the consultation officially started:


The same thing is happening again. The business case is to be completed in July 2021, but the Labor party already announced $755m for the works to be started in the middle of next year. Why did we bother with public consultation at all? Why do we bother with the business case now? The politicians already know the result.

If the business case was to be done honestly, it should show the environmental, health, and lost productivity costs of different uses of the public land reserved currently for the Coomera Connector.

………


Going back to part two of the public consultations. There are a few additional things that are fishy about it:

We don’t know the script of these 18 minute phone conversations. Why is the script secret? Were the participants steered into answering questions in a certain way? What were they told about the project? We know that 29% of the people who provided answers were not even aware of the project. They did not see the maps. They did not know how close to homes it would go. 

Were they told that the road was always there and whoever bought the house next to it should have known? This is not true. The Newman government removed the IRTC (Intra-Regional Transport Corridor) from the maps in early 2014. The light rail extension to Helensvale was built in that corridor. Alternative developments were planned in the northern section. People buying homes in Arundel, Helensvale and Coomera did not know about a road next to their homes, because it was not on the maps. It started being gazetted again in March 2016 by the Palaszczuk government as Coomera Connector. Some sections of this road have never been gazetted before. 

Were people told about the health effects of living close to a major road? About the conservation areas that would be destroyed? Were people told that any congestion reduction on M1 might not materialise or might disappear quickly, because of induced demand - because people who try to not use M1 now, will start using it more. 

Were they told that if Coomera Connector is built as a motorway, it will enable further car-oriented population growth in northern Gold Coast and Logan (600,000 new residents by 2041), and therefore it will become as busy as the M1?

So, what have I skipped?


Can you see it? Apart from measuring perceptions only about road infrastructure projects - not giving people an option of fast rail, which according to a recent Courier Mail sentiment survey was identified as the most critical southeast Queensland project by 50% of the respondents, while Coomera Connector got only 15%... 

Colmar Brunton only asked people who use the major motorways at least 2 times a week!

Was the "Use SEQ major freeways/motorways 2+ times a week" parameter given by the TMR or something that Colmar Brunton introduced to get the result expected by the TMR? How many people/businesses did Colmar Brunton call to get the 1000 they wanted? How would the results look like if it was 1+ times a week, or if that parameter was removed? 

What is the rationale of assigning 10% of the sample to businesses and 90% to residents? These two groups are not the same. A business often has multiple people/cars. What are the percentages of businesses and residents that use a major motorway at least twice a week? Many businesses don't mind being located next to a motorway, because they have windowless walls on that side. Most residents care.  

Even if they called me, they wouldn't include my opinion, because I use public transport. If they called my wife, they would also not include her opinion, because she does not drive on the M1 at least 2 times a week. We both live in Coomera and the Coomera Connector, if built as a 6 lane motorway (easily capable of moving 120,000 cars per day), will have a huge negative impact on us. What is a major motorway anyway? Did they also exclude people who only use the Smith Street Motorway? They excluded people who live in Surfers or Broadbeach or Labrador and do not use the M1 at all. They will be impacted too, because Coomera Connector will be bringing thousands more cars to their suburbs. They excluded people who walk, bike or use public transport for work or school. They excluded many retirees, students, and people who work from home. How is that "broadly representative" as the TMR claims? How much of the community was excluded? My guess would be that about a half. Now re-read how the consultation results were reported:
"Research has told us that the vast majority (80%) of the community support the Coomera Connector being built as soon as possible to provide an alternative to the Pacific Motorway (M1)."
A closer to truth summary of the quantitative information from the public consultation is this:

1. "Of the people who filled our web survey, more are against the Coomera Connector, than for it."

2. "We hired a private firm who got most people who use M1 at least twice a week, to say they support building a Second M1."

The "most" is also not 80%, because not all people who supported the Coomera Connector, wanted it to be a motorway i.e. "Second M1". 84% did, and 84% of 80% is 67%. 

There is confusion about what Second M1 and Coomera Connector actually mean.

The term Second M1 was introduced by LNP and currently is defined at https://www.lnp.org.au/roads-plan/ as "a 4-lane arterial road from Nerang-Broadbeach Road to Stapylton-Jacobs Well Road." - note that an arterial road does not need to be a motorway. In Australia it means just a state road as opposed to a local road. Most arterial roads in Australia are not motorways. In North America, "arterial road" is not a motorway. Typically arterial roads have speed limits between 50 and 80 km/h. 

The term Coomera Connector was introduced by Labor. During consultation the public was asked if it should be a 4-lane or 6-lane, a motorway or a lower speed road with intersections. Now it means a motorway, but is also called Second M1 on the TMR page, and is 45 km long: from the Logan Motorway and Pacific Motorway interchange at Loganholme to Nerang–Broadbeach Road in Nerang.

There is also confusion about what the predecessor of the Coomera Connector, the IRTC was and how long it was supposed to be. For example, Andrew Potts wrote in the Gold Coast Bulletin on 22 April 2016:
"Nearly two years after being scrapped by the former Newman government, the Inter-Regional Transport Corridor (IRTC), an 18.5km arterial corridor from Carrara to Coomera, has been restored as a future project. [...] The re-gazetting of the project means no development can be carried out along the corridor which will one day carry a two-way, four-lane road between Nerang-Broadbeach Rd and Foxwell Rd."
----------------------------------------------------------------------

The original media statement ending the public consultation is very misleading: 

I marked red statements that omit critical information. I put explanations in [square brackets]: 

Survey shows strong support for Coomera Connector [The web survey shows the opposite]

Published Friday, 05 June, 2020 at 08:33 AM

Minister for Transport and Main Roads
The Honourable Mark Bailey

An independent survey of Gold Coast residents and businesses has shown overwhelming support for the Coomera Connector. [The phone survey was not independent - TMR hired a company to do it. The script is secret. The detailed results are secret. It would be independent if it was done transparently and paid for by an independent body. It omitted residents and businesses who do not use major motorways at least twice a week. It would be fair if it told the surveyed people about the history of this transport corridor, including the fact that it was un-gazetted by the Newman government, exactly how close to homes it is, health impacts of living next to a major road, destruction of conservation areas, costs, impact of induced demand on traffic congestion, public and active transport alternatives.]

[...]

Federal Minister for Population, Cities and Urban Infrastructure Alan Tudge said Gold Coast residents had backed the plan to get the Coomera Connector underway. [Neither survey was restricted to Gold Coast residents only. The web survey showed the opposite of what is claimed here. The known phone survey results are only from people who use the major motorways at least twice a week.]

[...]

Queensland Minister for Transport and Main Roads Mark Bailey said four out of five people who answered the independent survey last November backed the M1 alternative.

“This was an independent survey of 1,000 residents and businesses spread out between Loganholme and Coolangatta,” Mr Bailey said. [see above]

[...]

State Member for Gaven Meaghan Scanlon said more than 2,000 people attended a series of community drop-in sessions run in late 2019 and more than 700 individual pieces of feedback were also received.

“Eighty per cent of those surveyed supported the Coomera Connector overall and 76 per cent supported the priority Stage 1 section between Coomera and Nerang,” Ms Scanlon said. [Putting these two paragraphs one after another may mislead readers to think that the 80% and 76% numbers are connected to the 2000 and 700 numbers. The web survey results are omitted.]

---------------------------------------------------------------------
I've decided to look again at the TMR project page:
https://www.tmr.qld.gov.au/projects/Coomera-Connector

...and what am I finding there?

Community consultation on the Coomera Connector was held between 8 November and 8 December 2019.

The consultation program included a series of 10 community drop in sessions along the 45km project corridor, plus online engagement activities.

There was significant interest from the community with 3,200 visits to the website, more than 2,000 people visiting the community drop in sessions to talk to the project team, and 700 pieces of feedback received.

A telephone survey of 1,000 residents and businesses revealed 4 out of 5 people in the project corridor area support the introduction of the Coomera Connector.

That's simply a lie. That's not what the phone survey revealed. If the term Coomera Connector now means only a motorway, then the survey revealed that 4 out of 6 of the people who use M1 (or some other major motorway) at least twice a week, supported it, and we still don't know what they were told about it by the interviewers. 

Saturday, 11 January 2020

11 January 2020 - Minister's Response

The response from the Minister for Transport and Main Roads to the Petition.
You can click on the image and then right-click and select 'Open image in new tab' and then click on it again to zoom in, which should make it readable. Comments?



Saturday, 21 December 2019

21 December 2019 - 100 Homes Affected

100 homes affected? Ah, that's not so bad then, is it? Further on in that Gold Coast Bulletin article we learn that the "100 homes" are mentioned in the context of only one small section of the Coomera Connector, a sparsely populated area (Gold Coast Division 1) where the road would go mostly through cane fields. The real number for the whole 45 km of that corridor is many times higher. How high? That depends on how affected. Air pollution can have observable negative effects on health up to 1.5 km from the road. That's tens of thousands of people affected (* see below for calculation). Could the TMR Department and the Labor and Liberal/National parties look into that before building a 6-lane motorway through populated areas? https://sandiego.urbdezine.com/2015/05/28/what-is-a-safe-distance-to-live-or-work-near-high-auto-emission-roads/ https://newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/a-quarter-of-angelenos-breathe-244224
* The potential area of highly elevated traffic-related pollution: 45km * 1.5km * 2 = 135 km2. Current population density along the corridor varies greatly. In Coomera, the density was 612 people per 1 km2 in 2017: https://population.com.au/sa2/309071251  Assuming that eventually all land around the Coomera Connector would be built up with similar density, the number of people living within 1.5km from it would be about 83 thousand. 

Thursday, 5 December 2019

5 December 2019 - Public Consultation Ends on 8 December

The public consultation on the Coomera Connector project (Second M1) closes on 8 December. It looks like there are two places to provide feedback:

On stage 1: https://coomeraconnector.tmr.qld.gov.au/coomera-connector-stage-1
On stage 2: https://coomeraconnector.tmr.qld.gov.au/stage-2 

You need to register and then sign-in.
If you haven't had your say yet, or only provided feedback on one of the stages, please complete it by Sunday.

Please distribute this message to as many people and groups as possible. Thank you.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Here is my feedback on stage 2:

It is unacceptable to have a motorway so close to homes in Coomera: The homes in The Foreshore, parts of Coomera Waters, Lura, and Camelot are going to be 10-20m from that road? Why do we have residential zoning if the government can put a 24x7 polluting and loud motorway in the middle of it?

Your options, as I see them, are:

1. Ignore politics and look at other options of de-congesting M1 that include improving public transport. More people would use trains, for example, if they could get to and from the train station by bus and if they could get cheap monthly passes. Leave Coomera Connector as a wildlife reserve, maybe with walking and biking trails. Walking and biking along a motorway is not an option. Try walking along M1, or get on the pedestrian bridge in Helensvale to experience how loud and foul a motorway is for somebody not in a car.

2. If you get pushed into continuing this project, go with a 4-lane, not 6-lane, ground-level, quiet surface, and a maximum 60km/h road. The lower the speed, the lower the noise. In places where it is closest to homes, install the best sound barriers possible. An earth wall and a sound barrier on top might be best. Leaving a few trees here and there will not fix the noise. Trees are a poor sound barrier: http://ta-inc.com/focus-on-acoustics-trees-as-sound-barriers/

Kind regards,
Tom Andraszek