Governing Long-Term Cities in Short-Term Political Cycles | Interview with Prof. Michael Kennedy OAM
This episode is produced in partnership with the University of Sydney Institute of Transport and Logistics Studies (ITLS) Board of Advice.Prof. Michael Kennedy OAM is one of Victoria's most experienced and innovative private and public sector chief executive officers. He’s worked in a wide range of leadership roles in the transport sector for decades before joining Monash University as a Professor of Practice ten years ago. Michael is the Director of the Monash Institute of Transport Studies, who are partners with ITLS at University of Sydney as ARC Centre of Excellence in Transport Management.City planning is an interconnected system, not a single project. Transport, housing, taxation, political cycles, and human behaviour all shape outcomes and simplifying that complexity leads to impaired decisions.Long-term planning collides with short-term politics. Governments plan 30–50 years, but elections happen every 3–4 years, creating structural tension in reform.Does faster CBD access reinforce inequality? How improving connections that perpetuate the primacy of central business districts can undermine ‘multi-city’ infrastructure planning.
Turning Pilots into Policy: Lessons from Michigan on Delivering Transport Innovation | Interview with Michele Mueller
With over two decades of public service, Michele Mueller has been a pioneering leader in Michigan’s transition toward smarter, safer, and more sustainable transportation. As a manager for the State of Michigan’s Connected, Automated, and Electrification (CAVE) initiatives, she has played a pivotal role in planning, developing, and deploying advanced mobility technologies that position Michigan as a national and global hub for innovation.What you’ll learn:How Michigan decides which transport pilots are worth scalingWhat criteria are used to move a project from testbed to long-term deployment Why real roads expose problems test environments never willThe practical differences between controlled testing and live traffic, and why the “last 10%” of deployment is where most risk sits.How to build public trust Why transparency, relevance, and showing people the tech can be more than technical detail.How government and industry educate each other in a shared ecosystemWhere OEMs, tech providers, and infrastructure agencies routinely misunderstand each other and how Michigan bridges that gap.
eRUC: The Next Era of New Zealand Roads | Interview with Nick Leggett
Nick Leggett commenced in the role of Chief Executive of Infrastructure New Zealand in April 2023. Previously Chief Executive of the road transport industry peak body, Ia Ara Aotearoa Transporting New Zealand, Nick’s professional career has always centred around the need for quality and sustainable infrastructure. What you’ll learn:Why eRUC matters now: How fuel efficiency, EV adoption, and declining petrol tax revenues have made the old system unsustainable.How eRUC works: The shift from fuel excise to distance-based charging, and the role of GPS/odometer technology.Lessons from heavy vehicles: What New Zealand has already learned from decades of applying road user charges to trucks.The bigger picture: Why this reform isn’t just about roads, but about New Timestamps:01:05 – The Biggest Change in 50 YearsMinister Bishop’s announcement: moving away from fuel excise (petrol tax) to electronic road user charges (eRUC). Why this is a generational shift.02:25 – Why the Current Model is Breaking DownHow fuel efficiency, EVs, and hybrids are eroding petrol tax revenues while still using road assets, and how eRUC aligns with a 30-year infrastructure vision and why bipartisan support is critical for stability.06:12 – What is eRUC and How Does it Differ from Petrol Tax?Explaining distance-based charging, fairness, and the role of GPS/odometer technology.08:20 – Why Now?Trends driving the shift: electrification, efficiency gains, equity issues, and declining revenue.10:06 – Lessons from Heavy VehiclesWhat New Zealand has learned from applying road user charges to trucks and how that informs rollout to light vehicles.12:19 – Building Fairness into the SystemHow eRUC addresses regressiveness in petrol tax, with options for rebates, concessions, and dynamic pricing.14:19 – Defining SuccessWhat success looks like and how eRUC can build confidence that New Zealand can modernise and deliver infrastructure for the next generation.
Mobility Isn’t Enough, We Need Better Accessibility | Interview with David Levinson
This episode is produced in partnership with the Institute of Transport and Logistics Studies at the University of SydneyProf. David Levinson joined the University of Sydney from the University of Minnesota in 2017 as Foundation Professor in Transport Engineering. He conducts research on Accessibility, Transport Economics, Transport Network Evolution, and Transport and Land Use Interaction. He is the Founding Editor of the Journal of Transport and Land Use and of Findings.What you’ll learn:The meaning of accessibility. How it differs from mobility, how to measure it, and why it should be the core goal of transport planning.How land use and transport are inseparable. And why treating them as separate problems leads to inefficiencies and missed opportunities.The accessibility trade-offs of major projects and policy. How initiatives create winners and losers in access, and what that reveals about policy priorities.Why speed isn’t everything. Reaching more destinations versus moving faster, and how this shapes city design and property values.How small design choices shape behaviour. Traffic signal timings can encourage or discourage walking, cycling, or driving.
Transport Professionals: Are We Our Own Worst Enemy? | Interview with Russell King
Russell King is a seasoned transport policy strategist with over two decades of experience spanning the UK and Australia. His career offers a rare 360-degree perspective on transport policy, having served as an elected London Councillor, strategic Policy Advisor to both the NSW Minister for Transport and Infrastructure and Premier, senior public servant, and advocate within influential peak bodies. As the editor of the Transport Leader Newsletter and Blog, read by hundreds of transport decision-makers globally, Russell delivers actionable insights for leaders navigating transport's evolving landscape. What you'll learn:Why transport reform struggles to gain tractionThe biggest mistakes transport professionals make when pushing for changeHow to make transport conversations more inclusive and impactfulThe difference between outputs and outcomes—and why it matters