Archive for January, 2010

State Transport Ads Bill $5.5m

Clay Lucas of The Age writes (5 January, 2010):

A deluge of television, radio and print ads and outdoor billboards promoting the State Government’s recent transport announcements will have cost Victorians $5.5 million by June.

And a musician whose song was a key element of the Government’s TV campaign is concerned over how his music has been used.

Schedules for the Government’s It’s part of the plan ads, obtained by the Opposition, reveal the extent of the publicly funded campaign.

TV ads were screened on Melbourne’s commercial channels 2182 times over 10 months, from December 2008. Some 50 billboards were attached to the back of trucks for one month last year, and 24 large billboards are now on train stations around Melbourne promoting the arrival of new trains.

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Government Splurges on Ads $214m Cost in Dispute

Aaron Langmaid of the Herald Sun writes (4 Jan, 2010):

Selling John Brumby to Victorians does not come cheap.

The State Government will have splurged a staggering $214 million on advertising by the end of this financial year, according to Coalition calculations.

But the State Government has denied the expenses, saying its advertising budget had actually dropped by more than $1 million two years in a row.

And its says the money is spent on much needed public awareness campaigns aimed at saving lives.

But the Liberals claimed yesterday the Government had the dubious honour of having spent more money on self-promotion than any other state in Australia.

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New Figures Show Record Brumby Government Advertising Spend

Shadow Minister for Scrutiny of Government David Davis today released new figures revealing government advertising has reached record levels under John Brumby.

In 2002/03 the Brumby Government spent $125 million on advertising, according to the Victorian Auditor General.

In 2008/09 that figure had increased to $195 million and is projected to reach $214 million by the end of 2009/10, based on the Coalition’s analysis of the Auditor-General’s findings on the Brumby Government’s advertising expenditure.

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