After M2030 was introduced in August 2002, the State Government also set up a formal statutory committee to advise the government on its implementation. However, when Justin Madden took over from Rob Hulls as Planning Minister in 2007, one of his first actions was to unilaterally abolish this Implementation Reference Group.
The IRG consisted of representatives from a range of academic, community, industry and development organisations, including SOS. It was the government's only formal link to the wider community for feedback on rolling out the M2030 policy in practice.
However, the IRG was critical of the way the government had introduced the policy before most of the necessary council structure plans and upgraded public transport services had been put in place.
In particular, it was critical of the Metropolitan Transport Plan (launched November 2004) and the way M2030 seemed to be operating in an ad hoc way without the necessary inter-departmental support.
As the failings of the implementation of M2030 became increasingly apparent, all mention of the M2030 IRG and related documentation (reports and minutes) was quietly removed from the DPCD website with Stalinesque sleight of hand in February 2009. "Melbourne @ 5 Million" (introduced in December 2008) was now the order of the day and earlier policy failures were best forgotten or given a new slant.
The only critical online record left of the implementation of M2030 is Rob Moodie’s 2008 M2030 Audit Report – a little too important and significant to bury.
However, SOS managed to save most of the M2030 IRG documentation as an invaluable record of how badly the M2030 policy was implemented. The following IRG reports are still available below:
OVERVIEW OF THE I.R.G. (by DPCD)
PRIORITY IMPLEMENTATION ISSUES – February 2004
CHALLENGES TO IMPLEMENTING THE ACTIVITY CENTRE POLICY – July 2004
RESPONSE TO THE METROPOLITAN TRANSPORT PLAN – February 2005
An Activity Centre Thematic Working Group (ACTWG) was also set up as a sub-committee of the M2030 IRG and directed by the Minister to try and find "best practice" cases of development projects under M2030 in activity centres to try and promote the "benefits" of M2030.
EXAMPLES OF M2030 PROJECTS – WEBPAGE
This webpage of examples is missing. However, as part of the Working Group, SOS made a submission in June 2006 (see download links below) criticising many of the projects initially nominated. Significantly, none of those we critiqued were included in the final list which was compiled in September 2007, but too late to save M2030 from having to be "re-badged". This list included:
Pentridge Village, Coburg
Bayside Entertainment, Frankston
Maddern Square Redevelopment, Footscray
Residential Redevelopment, Newport
Pelican Park Precinct, Hastings
Apartment Building, Elsternwick
Mixed Use Development, Bentleigh
Carnegie Library & Community Centre
As well as the IRG background, its 3 reports and the SOS submission, for completeness the minutes of the 8 IRG meetings are also archived below in the list of attachments.
* For a detailed critique outlining the reasons for the failure of Melbourne 2030, see Paul Mees' account: "Who Killed M2030?"
Ian Wood
SOS President