10 December 2025

'They've sacrificed West Belconnen': Belco anger at bus network changes

| By Ian Bushnell
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man in a hi-vis vest at a bus stop

Transport Minister Chris Steel has not been a friend of Belconnen, says the Belconnen Community Council. Photo: Ian Bushnell.

The new bus network is a raw deal for Belconnen that seals a year of transport betrayal from the ACT Government, the local community council says.

It is calling on the government to reverse network changes that disadvantage Belconnen residents and meet its other transport election promises.

The new network was announced on Friday (5 December) to cope with the impacts of the Commonwealth Avenue Bridge renewal project, which will put a span out of action for a year at a time.

The changes to frequencies and routes hit Belconnen residents particularly hard, with the R2 and R3 rapid services no longer running beyond Belconnen Interchange.

Residents of Belconnen’s outer suburbs will lose their direct rapid connections to the city, and local routes will run less often.

Belconnen Community Council chair Lachlan Butler said that for these residents, catching a bus would become harder, slower, and less convenient.

Mr Butler said Belconnen residents would disproportionately bear the brunt of the bridge project disruption.

He said that rather than strengthening public transport to help people through this period, the government had chosen to weaken it for Belconnen and hit some of its most vulnerable residents hardest.

“These cuts won’t just inconvenience people, they will penalise those who have the fewest alternatives living on the edges of the network,” Mr Butler said.

Woman speaking into microphone

Greens MLA Jo Clay is also on board with a petition calling for the cuts to the R2 and R3 routes to be reversed. Photo: Michelle Kroll.

He said that for Canberrans who could use private transport, a less frequent and less direct bus network was a barrier to participating in daily life.

“It doesn’t really pass the pub test,” Mr Butler said.

“They could have put more effort into rethinking routes. If you want to get to Woden from Belconnen or vice versa, you don’t need to go over Commonwealth Avenue Bridge.

“You don’t need to go over Commonwealth Avenue Bridge to get to Fishwick from the city.

“It does look like they’ve sacrificed West Belconnen to beef up the rest of the network.”

He said one in four Canberrans lived in Belconnen, with 50,000 people residing in the West Belconnen 2615 postcode.

“West Belconnen doesn’t just face the impacts from the Commonwealth Avenue Bridge upgrades, the William Hovell Drive duplication starts next year too,” Mr Butler said.

Greens Ginninderra MLA Jo Clay has also sponsored a petition calling on the government to reverse the cuts to the R2 and R3 routes.

“Belconnen resident Dani Hunterford started the community petition because there are so many people who really rely on the R2 and R3,” she said.

“West Belconnen has very poor public and active travel connections. Cutting the few options we have is a bad decision.”

READ ALSO Berry fails ACT public school language students

Mr Butler said these changes and recent statements on Stage 1 of the Belconnen Bus Transitway amounted to list of broken promises from the Barr Government that Belconnen voters would remember in 2028.

He said the government made clear promises to Belconnen before the last election — more bus services, a new rapid route to Ginninderry, and Stage 1 of the Belconnen Transitway.

“These commitments reflected years of advocacy and acknowledged what residents already knew: the ACT’s largest district needed better public transport, not less,” Mr Butler said.

The Belconnen Transitway was a 2024 election promise, but doubts are growing about whether it would be delivered in this term.

Mr Butler said the Transitway remained unfunded, and responding to the feasibility study appeared to have slipped from 2025 to 2026.

He said that despite the election promise, Transport Minister Chris Steel had refused to commit to delivering it this term.

Mr Steel had not been a friend of Belconnen, Mr Butler said.

“The government was elected on these commitments,” he said.

“A year later, the gap between promise and delivery of improved public transport options is widening and Belconnen residents have every right to be asking why.”

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Sparrow Percival12:37 pm 11 Dec 25

I’m glad I’m not the only one upset about this
I’m a university student and the R2 going from Kippax to ANU was so great and makes school mornings a little easier
As well, I usually end up going home late, either because of classes that end at 6pm or club events and taking one bus when going home at 10pm makes things great for my exhausted brain.

The threat of the bridge closures has been around for years, giving Transport Canberra and the Minister a golden opportunity to plan ahead, be innovative, and enhance the services along with Transport Canberra’s reputation. Logically, with forecast traffic congestion and the present parking congestion, relief by enhanced services should have been the response.
But the opposite has occurred. Patronage and reputation will be lost and probably much of it lost for a very long time indeed.

Logic? Canberra? Sadly missing in action.

R2 does cross Commonwealth Ave bridge.

There are a lot of anomalies in the TC bus timetables, and being a government owned transport entity, it’s always been subject to the whim of the Minister.

There are very good argument for services from Belco to Woden (or Tuggers) that bypass the City (and avoid Commonwealth Ave bridge altogether. These direct services previously existed (in peak hours).
Yes, they were removed by the government!

Don’t however expect them to be reinstated any time soon. The Government’s pre-election Free Travel period and subsequent MyWay+ data collection problems, and no validators at all being installed in the soon to be retired Natural Gas buses, there is no data to support the demand!

It’s the same issue with Woden or Tuggers to Fyshwick or Madura. There is no logical reason why commuters need to cross Commonwealth Ave bridge into the City. Yet, once again, no supporting data!

With both the ACT and Commonwealth Governments initiatiating major disruptions (LR 2a & Commonwealth Ave bridge) in the CBD and crossing LBG, wouldn’t it make a lot of sense for TC to bypass the City, wherever possible?

Of course the new 2026 network has already been planned and released to the public. Despite petitions and protests, there wouldn’t be sufficient time to restructure the bus network before the start of the 1st School Term in 2026.

Just maybe, that’s why new networks are released so close to implementation; to avoid demands for changes?

Hey Minister, for the next network, can you instruct TC to bypasses the City, wherever possible?

Chris Steel did not change any R routes affecting his electorate I wonder why not. We hear today 16,000 hours in the network needed to be found because of the bridge works and R routes make up the largest portion of bus network hours 666 mornings with Ross Solly. But Belconnen residents in the outer suburbs are being asked to bare the burden of others from the Southside and these routes R2&3 do not cross the bridge. Cheyne and Berry need to explain how their constituents have been royally shafted by Steel.

they downgraded us before when the light rail was introduced, now this. why stop the R2 and R3 at Belconnen, makes no sense. thanks for including the petition link!

I’ll certainly be changing my vote. The apathy towards Belconnen residents lately is shocking. Talks of watermarks in Commonwealth Park while one is in dire need of attention in Maquarie. Trams to Woden, while cutting transport options to Belconnen. Funding for renewal projects in the city centre, and little investment to town centres in the districts. Neighbourhood parks are in disrepair, while inner city parks are getting upgrades.
Time for a change.

As Mr Bushnell should be aware, Dani Hunterford was a Greens candidate in the 2024 ACT election, and is their default Belconnen area petition-starter (she also started the Big Splash petition). That’s not a problem in any way, but it’s something that should be mentioned.

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