CountryLink

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Second CountryLink logo
Agency overview
Formed16 January 1989
Preceding agency
Dissolved30 June 2013
Superseding agency
JurisdictionNew South Wales
HeadquartersSydney
Parent agencyState Rail Authority (1989–2003)
RailCorp (2004–2013)
Key document
  • Transport Administration Act, 1988 (NSW)
Websitewww.countrylink.info

CountryLink was a passenger rail and road service brand that operated in regional areas of New South Wales, and to and from Canberra, Brisbane and Melbourne.[1] Originally created as a business unit (or sub-brand) of the State Rail Authority of New South Wales, it later became a subsidiary of RailCorp.[2] CountryLink operated rail services using XPT and Xplorer rolling stock, with connecting coach services operated under contract by private operators.

Its services were taken over by NSW TrainLink.

History[edit]

CountryLink branded station sign

CountryLink was established in January 1989 under the Transport Administration Act 1988 as a business unit of what was then the State Rail Authority to operate all non-metropolitan long distance passenger services.[3][4] It inherited a fleet of XPT and locomotive-hauled passenger trains. Following the election of the Greiner State Government in March 1988, consultants Booz Allen Hamilton were commissioned to prepare a report into NSW rail services. On purely economic grounds, the report recommended closing all country passenger services as they were judged unviable, however this was not politically acceptable.[5] If services were to be maintained, the report recommended an 'all XPT' option with an expanded network of coach services replacing many other services.

In November 1989, the Silver City Comet was withdrawn,[6] while in February 1990 the Brisbane Limited and Pacific Coast Motorail were withdrawn and replaced by XPT services, the Canberra XPT was withdrawn and replaced by locomotive-hauled stock and the Northern Tablelands Express was truncated to Tamworth with road coaches introduced from Sydney to Armidale.[7] The Intercapital Daylight ceased in August 1991[8] and the Sydney/Melbourne Express in November 1993 was replaced by an XPT in November 1993 following the delivery of additional stock.[9]

In a June 1990 policy reversal, the government announced that it would purchase 17 Xplorer carriages to reintroduce services to Armidale and Moree and replace locomotive-hauled stock and coaches on services to Canberra. This would release an XPT to operate a daily service to operate the Grafton Express replacing a weekly locomotive-hauled service that was reintroduced at the same time.[10] The Xplorers entered service on the North Western service in October 1993[11] and on the Canberra service in December 1993.[12] In November 1994 the government ordered a further four Xplorer carriages.[13]

In October 1990, the government announced that eight sleeper carriages would be ordered for use on overnight services to Brisbane, Murwillumbah and Melbourne.[14] These were included in an order placed with ABB, Dandenong in 1991 for four power cars and 13 trailers that was jointly funded by the New South Wales and Victorian Governments.[15][16]

In December 1994, a daylight service to Melbourne resumed by extending the Riverina XPT from Albury.[17]

In 1995, CountryLink trialled three Swedish Railways X2000 tilting train carriages. After conducting a statewide tour in March, they were used on Canberra services from April until June with two modified XPT power cars.[18]

In March 1996, services were reintroduced to Broken Hill and Griffith using refurbished locomotive-hauled rolling stock honouring an election commitment by the Carr State Government.[19] Following the electrification of the Illawarra line from Dapto to Kiama, CityRail was able to release one of its mechanically identical Endeavours and this was converted to an Xplorer to replace the locomotive-hauled stock.

With the formation of RailCorp, responsibility for CountryLink transferred to the new corporation in January 2004.[20][21] With the closure of the Muwillumbah branch, services were cut back to Casino from May 2004.[22][23]

CountryLink was merged with the intercity services of CityRail to form NSW TrainLink on 1 July 2013.

Patronage[edit]

The following table lists patronage figures for the network during the corresponding financial year. Australia's financial years start on 1 July and end on 30 June.

CountryLink patronage by financial year from 1992–93
1990s
Year 1992–93 1993–94 1994–95 1995–96 1996–97 1997–98 1998–99 1999-00
Patronage
(millions)
2.2 2.1 2.2 2.4 2.5 2.5 2.4 2.4
Reference [24]
2000s
Year 2000–01 2001–02 2002–03 2003–04 2004–05 2005–06 2006–07 2007–08 2008–09 2009–10
Patronage
(millions)
2.1 2.2 2.0 1.8 1.8 1.7 1.6 1.6 1.7 1.8
Reference [24] [25] [26] [27]
2010s
Year 2010–11 2011–12 2012–13
Patronage
(millions)
1.9 2.0 1.9
Reference [27]

Network[edit]

CountryLink rail network as of 2007

CountryLink operated its own rolling stock over track managed by RailCorp in Sydney and the Australian Rail Track Corporation and Rail Infrastructure Corporation outside of Sydney. The hub of its operation was Sydney Central railway station.

North Coast[edit]

The North Coast region covers the North Coast, Northern Rivers and South East Queensland regions. Accordingly, the Government of Queensland made a contribution to the provision of these services. North Coast region services appeared on the network map in red. Services ran along the Main North and North Coast lines from Sydney Central station to Roma Street station in Brisbane.[28]

Principal stations served by XPT trains were:

Cities and towns served by CountryLink coaches connecting off North Coast services included: Tea Gardens, Forster, Port Macquarie, Yamba, Moree, Lismore, Alstonville, Ballina, Byron Bay, Murwillumbah, Tweed Heads and Surfers Paradise.

North Western[edit]

The North Western region covers the state's Hunter, Northern Tablelands and North West regions. North Western region services appeared on the network map in orange. Services ran along the Main North line from Sydney Central station to Werris Creek where the service divided for Armidale and Moree.[29]

Principal stations served by Xplorer trains were:

Cities and towns served by CountryLink coaches connecting off North Western services included: Wee Waa, Inverell, Grafton, Glen Innes and Tenterfield.

Western[edit]

The Western region covers the Central Tablelands and Western regions. Western region services appeared on the network map in yellow. Services ran along the Main Western Line from Sydney Central station to Dubbo and the Broken Hill line to Broken Hill.[30]

Principal stations served by XPT trains were:

Principal stations served by Xplorer trains were:

Cities and towns served by CountryLink coaches connecting off Southern services included: Oberon, Mudgee, Baradine, Cowra, Grenfell, Forbes, Parkes, Condobolin, Lightning Ridge Brewarrina, Bourke, Warren and Broken Hill.

Southern[edit]

Makeham's Coaches BCI 6125 (ISM) coach departing Wagga Wagga station in April 2009

The Southern region covers the state's Illawarra, South Coast, Snowy Mountains, South West Slopes, Southern Tablelands, Riverina and Sunraysia regions plus the Australian Capital Territory and parts of Victoria. Accordingly, the Government of Victoria (though not the ACT Government) made a contribution to the provision of these services. Southern region services appeared on the network map in green. Services ran along the Main South line from Sydney Central station to Albury before continuing on the North East line to Southern Cross station in Melbourne, with the line to Canberra branching off south of Goulburn and the line to Griffith at Junee.[31]

Principal stations served by XPT trains were:

Principal stations served by Xplorer trains were:

Cities and towns served by CountryLink coaches connecting off Southern services included: Wollongong, Bombala, Eden, Tumbarumba, Bathurst, Dubbo, Condobolin, Griffith, Mildura and Echuca.

Rolling stock[edit]

The final CountryLink fleet consisted of two train types, XPT (19 power cars and 60 carriages) and Xplorers (23 carriages).[32] The XPT fleet was maintained at the purpose built XPT Service Centre. The Xplorer fleet was maintained at the Xplorer-Endeavour Service Centre.

Fleet (italics = in service today under TfNSW)
Class Image Top Speed (km/h) In Service (under Countrylink)
XPT Diesel Multiple Units
An XPT in its original livery at Bathurst for a Dubbo service.
XPT in the final CountryLink livery at Sydney Central
193 1989–present
Xplorer Diesel Multiple Units
Xplorer in the late livery crossing the Queanbeyan River railway bridge.
Xplorer in original CountryLink livery at Sydney Central
145 1993–present
XP2000/2009 (Tilt Train mod) 193 April 1995 – June 1995
X2000 Tilt Train (non powered cars only) n/a April 1995 – June 1995
HUB coaches
RDH 2220, same location as below image
n/a 1989–1994

1996 – April 2000

RUB coaches
NDS 2268 at Broadmeadow Locomotive Depot
n/a 1989–1994

1996 – April 2000

Stainless Steel coaches n/a 1989–1993
73 Class Locomotive 64 1989–2013

Road coaches[edit]

The Public Transport Commission had first introduced coaches in September 1975 when six Dennings were introduced to replace all train services out of Dubbo. Coaches replaced many branch line rail services over the next few years and by 1987 the State Rail Authority had 36 Denning, Hino and Scania coaches operating throughout the state.[33]

CountryLink adopted the model used by V/Line in Victoria and contracted out the provision of these services to private operators, with services transferring to the successful bidders between November 1989 and June 1990.[34]

Coaches were originally painted in CountryLink's grey, white and blue livery. Following the transfer of the administration of coach services to the Department of Transport in July 1992, operators were not required to repaint coaches dedicated to CountryLink duties, thus most operated in the livery of their owners.[35] This policy was later reversed and coaches once again were painted in CountryLink livery.

The full list of coach operators providing services at the time CountryLink ceased in June 2013 were:

Operator Services
Australia Wide Coaches Lithgow to Bathurst, Orange & Parkes
Busways Wauchope to Port Macquarie
Edwards Coaches Armidale to Tenterfield
Greyhound Australia Lithgow to Gulgong, Coonabarabran & Baradine
Loader's Coaches Lithgow to Grenfell
Makehams Coaches Wagga Wagga to Griffith
Wagga Wagga/Cootamundra to Tumbarumba
Cootamundra to Queanbeyan
Cootamundra to Mildura
Oberon Bus Company Mount Victoria to Oberon
Ogden's Coaches Lithgow to Dubbo & Nyngan
Bathurst/Dubbo to Cootamundra
Dubbo to Lightning Ridge, Bourke & Broken Hill
Port Stephens Coaches Broadmeadow to Taree
G&J Purtill, Moama Wagga Wagga/Albury to Echuca
Roadcoach Wollongong to Moss Vale
Moss Vale to Goulburn
Sunstate Coaches Grafton to Byron Bay
Casino to Tweed Heads
Casino to Surfers Paradise
Casino to Brisbane
Symes Coaches Tamworth/Armidale to Inverell
Moree to Grafton
Transborder Express Canberra to Bombala & Eden
Western Road Liners Parkes to Condobolin
Wolters Bus & Coach Service Narrabri to Wee Waa & Burren Junction

Parry Report 2005[edit]

Ministerial Inquiry[edit]

On 9 December 2003, the Minister for Transport Services released Professor Tom Parry's Final Report of the Ministerial Inquiry into Sustainable Transport. Known as the "Parry Report" it recommended refocusing CountryLink, and to adjust fare structures.[36][37]

"CountryLink currently operates a number of train services that move relatively small numbers of passengers," the inquiry has concluded, noting that the high cost of maintenance and the need to replace rolling stock "makes these services very expensive ... they are expected to become even more expensive in the future." At the time of the report operating expenditure is around five times as much as revenue gained through ticket sales.[38]

The Inquiry also noted that in the year ended June 2003, CountryLink incurred $29.9 million in costs associated with advertising, booking and selling tickets, against $43.5 million in fare revenue. "This is more than two-thirds of the revenue received from passengers and is excessive," the Inquiry report stated.

The Inquiry made eight specific recommendations for "refocusing CountryLink":[36]

  • review the allocation of costs to CountryLink to improve the transparency of government railway accounts
  • seek efficiencies in the marketing of tickets
  • align subsidies to CountryLink with the benefits to the community
  • seek to have the ACT Government contribute to the cost of the Sydney-Canberra service
  • explore alternatives to rail on a case-by-case basis for all rural and regional routes
  • include CountryLink in integrated regional transport planning
  • establish "Solutions Teams" to assess various areas of CountryLink's operations
  • review fare structures and discounting

Government response[edit]

In 2005 the State Government announced a rationalisation of ticket offices across the CountryLink network, but ruled out the closure of further rail services in the immediate future.[38][39] Ticket prices increased on 1 November.

Transport minister John Watkins told the Sydney Morning Herald that "To protect commuters who want a continued rail option, the Government has made a number of changes to booking options in an effort to secure CountryLink's future and boost patronage." Mr Watkins also said in front of news crew that the refurbishment of the XPTs would also encourage more people to use the trains. However the Opposition questioned how price increases would increase patronage.[40]

Restructure[edit]

In May 2012, the newly elected O'Farrell State Government announced RailCorp would be restructured, with CountryLink and the regional services of CityRail incorporated into NSW TrainLink in July 2013.[41]

Publication[edit]

CountryLink published an in-house journal, Freight Rail & Countrylink Xpress, in conjunction with Freight Rail.[42]

References[edit]

  1. ^ CountryLink train and coach network Archived 6 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine CountryLink
  2. ^ Rail Corporation of New South Wales Archived 29 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine NSW Government State Records
  3. ^ Transport Administration Act 1988 Archived 22 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Government of New South Wales
  4. ^ CityRail Archived 5 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine State Records NSW Government
  5. ^ "CountryLink 2000" Railway Digest August 1989
  6. ^ "The Official Last Comet" Railway Digest February 1990
  7. ^ "The New Timetable" Railway Digest March 1990
  8. ^ "Intercapital Daylight scrapped" Railway Digest September 1991
  9. ^ "Major Passenger Train Changes Commence this Month" Railway Digest November 1993
  10. ^ New "Explorer" trains for NSW Railway Digest July 1990
  11. ^ "Xplorer Enters Service" Railway Digest November 1993
  12. ^ "No Big Bang for Canberra Xplorers" Railway Digest December 1993
  13. ^ More Xplorer & Endeavour Cars Ordered" Railway Digest December 1994
  14. ^ "XPT sleepers for North Coast trains" Railway Digest November 1990
  15. ^ "NSW/Vic to share XPTs" Railway Digest January 1991
  16. ^ "XPT trailer cars to be built in Victoria" Railway Digest August 1991
  17. ^ "Sydney-Melbourne Daylight XPT Commences This Month" Railway Digest December 1994
  18. ^ "So why do you call it a tilt train?" Railway Digest July 1995
  19. ^ "First Broken Hill Passenger Blocked by Freight Derailment" Railway Digest May 1996
  20. ^ Transport Administration Amendment (Rail Agencies) Bill Archived 27 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine NSW Parliament Hansard 2 December 2003
  21. ^ "News" Railway Gazette International February 2004 page 63
  22. ^ "Murwillumbah XPT to end – line faces closure" Railway Digest June 2004 page 6
  23. ^ Closure of the Casino to Murwillumbah rail service Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine NSW Parliament 24 November 2004
  24. ^ a b "State Rail Authority Annual Report 2001–02" (PDF). State Rail Authority of New South Wales. pp. 10–11. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 June 2014. Retrieved 3 January 2018.
  25. ^ "State Rail Authority Annual Report 2003–04" (PDF). State Rail Authority of New South Wales. p. 12. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 June 2014. Retrieved 3 January 2018.
  26. ^ "Rail Corporation NSW Annual Report 2007–08" (PDF). Rail Corporation NSW. p. 15. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 June 2014. Retrieved 3 January 2018.
  27. ^ a b "Rail Corporation NSW Annual Report 2012–13" (PDF). Rail Corporation NSW. p. 17. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 June 2014. Retrieved 3 January 2018.
  28. ^ CountryLink North Coast timetable CountryLink 11 October 2009
  29. ^ North Western timetable CountryLink 23 October 2011
  30. ^ CountryLink Western timetable CountryLink 23 October 2011
  31. ^ CountryLink Southern timetable CountryLink 11 October 2009
  32. ^ Our fleet CountryLink
  33. ^ State Rail Coach Services – The Vehicles Australian Bus Panorama issue 9/3 October 1993
  34. ^ Coach Services of the New South Wales State Rail Authority Australian Bus Panorama issue 9/2 September 1993
  35. ^ "DoT to run CountryLink buses" Railway Digest June 1992
  36. ^ a b NSW Ministry of Transport – Ministerial Inquiry into Sustainable Transport (Parry Report) Ministry of Transport 27 January 2004
  37. ^ NSW Ministry of Transport: NSW Government's Response to the Final Report of the Parry Inquiry Ministry of Transport
  38. ^ a b CountryLink: Reform program offers significant improvements CountryLink 27 September 2005
  39. ^ CountryLink' review angers pensioners Archived 4 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine ABC News 30 April 2004
  40. ^ Final push to get rail users back on track Archived 3 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine The Sydney Morning Herald 28 September 2005
  41. ^ Fixing the Trains Minister for Transport 15 May 2012
  42. ^ Welcome to Your Xpress Freight Rail & Countrylink Xpress issue 1 December 1989 page 1

External links[edit]