Today’s Age (https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/car-park-requirements-set-to-be-scrapped-in-planning-shake-up-20251202-p5nkak.html) carries a story on the government’s intention to remove the need for ANY onsite car parking spots in developments close to train stations and transport modes. To ‘compensate’, developers will have to pay $11,000 per dwelling for infrastructure of which council will receive 75% of the charge and the government the rest.

Insanity is one word to describe this latest action. Late in 2024 we published a post that analysed the state of car ownership in Glen Eira – particularly how residents living in both single bedroom and two bedroom homes owned cars. Our data came from the 2021 ABS census results. Here is the table produced at that time. We can only assume that car ownership has increased since then given the population increase.

We also wrote at the time the following:

If we do a simple calculation based on the above data, we can see that:

  • Only one quarter of residents in single bedroom homes do not own a car (ie 26%)
  • In two bedroom homes only 12.9% do not own a car

Thus if we have 75% of residents living in single bedroom homes owning cars, and 87% who reside in two bedroom dwellings also owning cars, what does this say about the requirements for adequate onsite parking? What does it say about off street parking becoming impossible for the majority of residents if onsite car parking waivers are the norm as illustrated with the recent Halstead Street application? And let’s not forget that council has already mooted that it intends to REDUCE the requirement for onsite parking in our major activity centres in the very near future.

The Age article also makes note of the government’s claim that 40% of onsite car spots remain empty. Really? How was this data collected and by whom? Did the analysis take place in the morning, afternoon, evenings, weekends? Put simply, the myth that living near public transport means that residents will not have cars is nonsense as proven by the ABS census.

Ad hoc planning, and virtue signalling is the hallmark of this government, as well as allocating 25% of any development contribution paid into its coffers instead of to councils.