Australia’s peak motoring body is encouraging voters to review their local MP’s view on road safety and data transparency via the campaign website: datasaveslives.org.au
read moreAustralia’s peak motoring body says the 2023-24 Federal Budget will cut road safety programs and give motorists a poorer return on the $65.92 billion they will pay in fuel excise over the next four years.
read moreIt’s high time that road funding was leveraged to improve road safety.
read moreThe “My Money. My Transport” campaign seeks to enlist voters to hold all political candidates to account and ensure road and public transport users secure a fair deal on funding, road safety and policies to keep costs down for motorists.
read moreWith only about 100 days to go before the next federal election, the AAA’s Federal Budget submission calls on government to address the nation’s worsening road safety, affordability and congestion issues.
read moreLack of published data means policy experts and the Australian community have no basis to understand why cyclist deaths surged by nearly a third in the past year.
read moreMotorists have been shortchanged by around $3 billion in the past year as the Federal Government fails to deliver its own target for reinvesting fuel excise into land transport infrastructure.
read moreThe Keys2drive program has operated since 2008 and the AAA has greatly appreciated the Commonwealth Government’s significant funding support over the past 14 years.
read moreThe Commonwealth Budget delivers good news for car-buyers and the environment, thanks to the inclusion of $14 million funding for the establishment of a Real-World Testing Program.
read moreThe Budget’s inclusion of funding for a real world vehicle emissions test is a significant initiative that will make Australian motoring cleaner and more affordable.
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