Closure proposals A criticism of the line has been that it cuts Newcastle off from its own harbour foreshore with a number of proposals to close or at least pare it back. In November 1972,
Minister for Transport Milton Morris announced the line would be cut back to Civic. In 1990,
CityRail proposed closing the line beyond Civic in response to a study on Newcastle's transport and development. As a proposed solution to this, since 2003 there had been studies to close the line and have
Broadmeadow station become the major
rail transport hub for the Newcastle region. In 2005, there was a move pushed by business and property development interests to close the line with the proposal to redevelop the foreshore. This was widely criticised by among others Upper
Hunter Region users, and former
Deputy Prime Minister and rail enthusiast
Tim Fischer. Originally the
State Government had decided to close the line but later in 2006 and after a huge public outcry,
Premier Morris Iemma announced that the line would stay open although in 2007 tenders were placed for a study into the line's future, including possible removal of the
overhead wires and dieselisation of services.
Partial closure implementation In December 2012, the New South Wales government announced the line east of
Wickham would close to better connect the older CBD to the water front precinct of Honeysuckle. This resulted in the closure of
Wickham,
Civic and
Newcastle stations. The line closed between Hamilton and Newcastle stations on 25 December 2014, with the Hamilton to Wickham section reopened on 15 October 2017 when
Newcastle Interchange was opened as the line's new terminus. A short section of the corridor east of Wickham was incorporated into the
Newcastle Light Rail, which generally follows a parallel route to the railway line along
Hunter and Scott Streets and serves as its replacement.
Nile inquiry into Newcastle planning The resignations in August 2014 of
Tim Owen and
Andrew Cornwell from the NSW Legislative Assembly and of
Jeff McCloy from his post as Lord Mayor of Newcastle, came at a time of growing public concern that the decision to truncate the Newcastle railway had not been made properly. On 16 September 2014, the opposition and crossbench parties in the NSW Legislative Council successfully moved for a select committee to inquire into the planning process in Newcastle and the broader Hunter region. The inquiry took over 370 submissions from official bodies and the public. A substantial majority of the submissions opposed the Government's decision to close the railway. The inquiry held three public hearings in November 2014; some evidence was given of dealings with owners of land parcels near the railway who did not disclose their interests. The chairman of the committee requested the NSW government to defer the railway's closure, scheduled for 25 December 2014, until his inquiry had considered the submissions and evidence and made its report. This request was denied. On 18 December 2014, the inquiry released an interim report containing eight recommendations, including that no steps be taken to remove existing rail infrastructure until more planning work had been undertaken.
Court action On 24 December 2014, the Save Our Rail (NSW) Inc group were granted an injunction by the
Supreme Court of New South Wales preventing
RailCorp from removing any part of line infrastructure after the closure of the line. RailCorp lodged an appeal. This did not affect the closure of the line, but if the appeal is unsuccessful, will require an
Act of Parliament to formally close the line before work to remove infrastructure can commence.
Legislation On 9 September 2015, the 'Transport Administration Amendment (Closure of Railway Line at Newcastle) Bill 2015' was introduced into the NSW parliament lower house by Transport Minister
Andrew Constance. The bill was passed by the lower house on 16 September 2015 on party lines, and introduced to the upper house the same day by Roads Minister
Duncan Gay. The numbers in the upper house were not as certain, with the balance of power held by the
Shooters and Fishers Party (two members), the
Animal Justice Party (one member), the
Christian Democratic Party (Australia) (two members), and the
Greens New South Wales (five members). The government needed just two votes of these members for the bill to pass, and on 14 October the final votes were taken, achieving the support of the two
Shooters,
Robert Borsak and
Rob Brown. The bill was assented to by the
Governor of New South Wales on 22 October 2015, and so became an Act. The Act did not seek to amend the Transport Administration Act itself, merely to provide enabling legislation for the railway line from Railway Street, Wickham to the former Newcastle station to be removed. It did however contain retrospective legislation declaring that all work previously carried out was deemed authorised by the Act. The legislation essentially made the Save Our Rail injunction moot, as the injunction was granted on the basis that rail infrastructure could not be removed without an
Act of Parliament. The track and associated overhead wiring and stanchions were removed in early 2016, except within Newcastle station. ==References==