Weekend overcrowding on the Geelong line

Since 31 March 2023 fares for V/Line services have been cut in price, with a maximum daily fare of $9.20 now applying for any journey no matter how far in Victoria you travel. There have been fears that this might lead to overcrowded trains – but this was happening before the fare cut, as my experience last month showed.

Off to Geelong

On Saturday 25 March 2023 I decided to jump on a train from Melbourne down to Geelong, and the trip was mostly uneventful.

VLocity VL15 departs Southern Cross platform 8 south

Other than a toilet temporarily out of service.

'This toilet is temporarily out of service' notice onboard a VLocity carriage

And rock hard seating in what was a ‘short distance’ VLocity carriage.

New style seating and wider aisle onboard 'short distance' VLocity carriage 1276

The first oddity was the ‘No trains departing from platform 1 for the next hour’ message on the next train display at Tarneit station.

'No trains departing from platform 1 for the next hour' message on the PIDS at Tarneit station

Trains to and from Geelong normally run every 40 minutes on the weekend, so that was a confusing sight.

Another odd sight as the large crowd awaiting at North Geelong station, but given their Collingwood and Bulldogs scarves, I assumed it was just a busy day for footy fans headed to the game.

Big crowd of intending passengers at North Geelong station\

But on my arrival at Geelong I saw that wasn’t the only crowd.

Standing room only on this Melbourne-bound train departing Geelong

The next Melbourne-bound train was about to depart, and it had standees all the way down the train.

It turns out the previous service – the 10:38 Waurn Ponds to- Southern Cross – had been cancelled.

And thanks to the 40 minute weekend service frequency, two services worth of passengers had to try and board a normally rather full service.

Admittedly V/Line put some effort into moving the passengers left behind – 15 minutes later a coach from usual rail replacement operator Endeavour Coach Company arrived at Geelong station.

Endeavour Coach Company 3888AO arrives at Geelong station on a V/Line rail overflow service

But for my trip home, the same inadequate timetable struck again – Geelong station was full of intending passengers.

Passengers waiting at Geelong platform 3 to board the next service towards Melbourne

With the next service to Melbourne being an already full long-distance service from Warrnambool.

N473 leads carriage set VN6 into Geelong with an up Warrnambool service

This train had standees on leaving Geelong, and at stations along the way the train had long delays as intending passengers tried to find a doorway not already filled with standing passengers.

Melbourne-bound passengers at Lara try to find a space onboard the up Warrnambool service

I hate to see what these services look after the fare cuts!

Spare trains ahoy

The reason V/Line doesn’t run any more services isn’t a lack of trains – on my way past Wyndham Vale all four sidings were filled with VLocity trains awaiting their next run on Monday morning.

VLocity VL43, VL64, VL83 and VL06 stabled for the weekend at Wyndham Vale

There were more VLocity carriages in the sidings next to the turntable at Geelong.

VLocity VL03 and VL08 stabled for the weekend at Geelong Loco

Three complete 6-car trains worth.

VLocity VL04 and VL31 stabled for the weekend at Geelong Loco

Another 6-car train parked beside the train wash.

VLocity VL22 and VL81 stabled for the weekend at Geelong station

And two older locomotive hauled trains stabled beside Geelong station.

N475 and a H set stabled at Geelong station for the weekend

And these trains aren’t ‘awaiting maintenance’ – the only work that gets done at these sidings is overnight refuelling and toilet decanting.

They build a new Vlocity fuel point at the Geelong locomotive depot, but they still use road tankers?

The big shed outside Southern Cross Station is the main maintenance facility.

VLocity VL80 shunts out at Dudley Street

Alongside the Alstom facility at Ballarat East.

VLocity VL35 and VL05 stabled outside the shed at Ballarat East

The blame lies at the feet of the State Government.

They’ve allocated $207 million over four years to increase the frequency of weekend services in regional Victoria – but the changes won’t occur until July 2024 for the Geelong line, and July 2025 for the rest of the network.

Just a little late!

Footnote: getting pedantic

Trains might be sitting empty in sidings, but if you decided to utilise them more intensively, then maintenance requirements also increase – something that Connex struggled to do in 2009 on the Melbourne suburban network – and which V/Line ignored following the opening of Regional Rail Link in 2015, which resulted in the mass withdrawal of the VLocity train fleet with wheel wear issues.

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8 Responses to “Weekend overcrowding on the Geelong line”

  1. Paul Webb says:

    Am I right in thinking that little maintenance is done on trains over the weekends, so the impact of change to weekend timetables is purely the additional cost of operations staff? Or am I missing something?

    • Marcus Wong says:

      In a way yes, but by increasing the number of kilometres travelled trains will hit their maintenance milestones quicker, which means either more maintenance staff, or more time with trains out of service.

  2. Andrew says:

    My sister and her daughter travelled from Geelong to Spencer Street on Monday at about noon…12.06 as I remember. They sensibly boarded the train at South Geelong and had seats but the seats soon filled up as the train progressed, and then there were standees. Many were coming to Melbourne to see an afternoon football match.

    Now I did not know that they could run twelve car VLocity but she said it was. I suspect it was maybe 9 car and as a maybe monthly user, she just recognised that it was longer. The train was part express. I noticed on the timetable there was another train from Geelong maybe 10 minutes later, stopping all stations I think, and yet another beginning a Wyndham Vale.

    Anyway, you were talking about the adequacy of normal services.

  3. jw says:

    Metro trains are just the same whenever there’s footy on, and made worse when we have both footy on at the MCG and soccer on across the road at AAMI Park. On Easter Monday I was at the City vs Wellington match at AAMI, stupidly timed to start at 4.00 pm meaning that spectators at the City match and Geelong vs. Hawthorn at the MCG were streaming on to Richmond station to go home at the same time. The Sandringham-bound train on the Sandy line that we were on was dangerously overloaded. It beggars belief that we cannot run trains more frequently than once every 20 minutes when passenger numbers warrant it. It’s not rocket science.
    Part of the problem is that we, the travelling public, put up with inadequate and poor service, year after year. And we have no recourse – politicians and transport management simply don’t care.

  4. Ok says:

    “The blame lies at the feet of the State Government”
    Never the fact that extra trains = extra crew

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