TRANSPORT SERVICES.
CONTROL AND REGULATION.
SINGLE AUTHORITY NEEDED.
COMMISSIONER'S REVIEW.
Two main directions in which the present transport situation in New Zealand might be met were suggested by Mr. J. S. Hunter, Commissioner of Transport, toward the end of a, paper, entitled "The Solution of New Zealand's Transport Problem," delivered before the technological section of the Wellington Philosophical Society. The chairman was Dr. E. Kidson, and among those present were prominent officers of the Main Highways Board and the Government Departments of Railways, Public Works, Forestry, and Scientific and Industrial Research.
After an elaborate treatment of railway history, the development of motor transport, and its economic effects, roads and road classification, motor taxation and road maintenance, the problems of road and rail competition, and a comparison of the external economy of road and rail services, Mr. Hunter went on to summarise under seven heads the position in the country to-day. The summary was as follows: —
(1) Extensive developments have taken place in the provision of road and rail transport facilities.
(2) These developments appear on the whole to have been launched without the principle of co-ordination having been taken into account.
(3) On account of rapid developments in the motor vehicle, the field of motor transport has been quickly extended.
(4) Competition has already seriously affected railway revenue, and indications point to a further drift to the road in the future.
Co) There is evidence of uneconomic conditions in the organised motor transport industry, due to internal competition.
(0) Statistics show that the share of national production required to provide transportation facilities has grown fairly rapidly during recent years, and suggest that the Dominion is over-sup-lied with transport facilities. The burden of maintaining these facilities has been rapidly accentuated by the falling level of prices.
(7) The on the operations of the New Zealand Government Railways has been as follows during the last four years (ended in each case March 31): 1927, £99,059; 1928, £291,452; 1929, £432,743: 1930, £1,211,269.
Co-ordinating Construction. "There are two main directions," said Mr. Hunter, "in which action might be taken to meet the situation in New Zealand to-day. These are firstly, co-ordina-tion in construction of road, rail and harbour facilities, and secondly, regulation of the motor transport industry, with the object of eliminating uneconomic conditions within the industry, and bringing about co-ordination between motor transport and rail and coastaj shipping services.
"With regard to the first, broadly speaking, rail, road and harbour facilities have been developed from the individual rather than the national point of view. The theory of indirect returns has, in'the past, been relied upon, and in view of the relatively rapid progress of the Dominion, it has not always been xinsuccessful. Experience both here and abroad points, however, to the undesirability and danger of a continuation of the policy of devoloping or providing either road, rail or sea transport facilities, on an un-co-ordinated basis. Such a policy can only result in capital being sunk in competing services with economic loss in two directions —firstly, by lowering the earning capacity of the capital in the competing services, and secondly, by causing a misapplication of capital, that is, the capital diverted from a more productive channel.
"Capital supplies in a borrowing country such as New Zealand have very definite limits, and misapplication of capital on a substantial scale will result in retarding production.
"The basis of a scheme for co-ordinat-ing the construction of facilities lies in a policy of initiating all developments through a single supreme transport authority," said Mr. Hunter. "This authority should in the first place be in possession of a complete knowledge regarding the capital required, and the real costs of all forms of transportation. It should also have available to it comprehensive data relating to industry and trade,' for the purpose of ascertaining the transport requirements necessary to maintain production at the most efficient level. 'Development's could then be guided in the direction of securing the best and most efficient means of transport available, all services being considered, at the lowest cost to the country-
Regulation of Motor Transport. "With regard to the second main proposal, the regulation of motor transport, in view of the developments that have already taken place in motor transport, and the absence of any scheme for correlating and co-ordinating the services, if would be too much to expect any scheme propounded now to correct the errors of the past and prevent their recurrence in the future. The best that can be hoped for is that the situation may gradually be taken in hand, and future developments guided in the right direction.
"In view of the conditions -in New Zealand," Mr. Hunter continued, "it would appear that regulation could best be secured through a system of licensing all motor transport services running to time-table on defined routes, the licenses to be under the control of special licensing authorities set up for the purpose, on the lines of those provided for in the English Road Traffic Act, 1930.
"The licensing authorities would, as in Britain, constitute the chief link in the necessary administrative machinery," he said. "The following principal factors, should be taken into account in connection with each license: —(a) The financial ability of the applicant; (b) the transport requirements of the area; and (c) the existing transport facilities already provided."
In addition to these two main steps, Mr. Hunter suggested for the co-ordina-tion of road, rail and shipping facilities the establishment of a supreme transport authority to keep in touch with developments and report and make recommendations to Parliament. With regard to the cost of roads, he suggested a national scheme of road classification with the additional requirement that traffic regulations should be strictly enforced. °
Dr. E. L. Button, F.R.C.S. (Edin.), of Wellington, has completed his English F.R.C.S. Dr. Button was educated at Wellington College and Otago University and served as surgeon on the Wellington Hospital staff for two ypars. He to return to New Zealand at the end of this year.
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Bibliographic details
Auckland Star, Volume LXII, Issue 123, 27 May 1931, Page 8
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997TRANSPORT SERVICES. Auckland Star, Volume LXII, Issue 123, 27 May 1931, Page 8
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