New parents hold keys to public transport future

  • First-time parents are ditching public transport and buying cars in order to accommodate their child’s needs as well as their own.
  • The number of survey respondents rarely or never using a car decreased from nearly one-third to less than 1 per cent.
  • While car use increased for most groups, others displayed more sustainable travel patterns following parenthood. Some parents were open to using public transport networks, and policy interventions should be prioritised.
  • Increased off-peak service frequency and dedicated “caregiver” parking at stations could make public transport more attractive to new parents and curb traffic congestion in Melbourne, new research by Monash University shows.

    The survey of 758 new parents showed that while not all adults’ car use increased following parenthood, it continues to be a key point during people’s lives when public transport use declines dramatically.

    In the year prior to becoming parents, 30 per cent of respondents said they used public transport frequently. This decreased to just 14 per cent after childbirth. The number of respondents rarely or never using a car decreased from nearly one-third to less than 1 per cent.

    Accommodating their child’s needs as well as their own, complexity of travel arrangements, time and budget, lack of “caregiver” parking at bus and train stations, and perceptions of public transport being un-child-friendly are some of the reasons likely to explain why new parents avoid Melbourne’s transit network.

    The lack of public transport reach into Melbourne’s outer suburban regions was another reason behind increasing car ownership.

    The study, published in Transport Policy, found Melbourne’s new parents fell into five distinct transport categories: Transit Leavers, Consistent Drivers, Committed Multimodals, Transit Faithfuls, and Devoted Cyclists.

    “A number of studies have shown that households with children are more car-dependent than other households groups,” said Laura McCarthy, a PhD researcher from the Public Transport Research Group at Monash University.

    “Our study identifies different groups of transport users. By doing this, we found that, while car use did increase for most groups, other groups displayed more sustainable travel patterns following parenthood.”

    Despite having positive attitudes towards public transport, the largest group (39 per cent of total respondents), Transit Leavers, had the most pronounced decline in transit use. Frequent public transit use declined from 50 per cent pre-parenthood to 10 per cent post-parenthood. This group was mostly likely to include females and primary caregivers.

    Alarmingly, 46 per cent of the smallest group, the Devoted Cyclists, were carless prior to the study, but this dropped to just 1 per cent following parenthood. This group tended to hold strong pro-environmental attitudes, and coupled with low pre-parenthood car ownership levels, it suggests that members of this group became car owners with some reluctance.

    The remaining three groups also experienced changes to their mode use, although these were more modest.

    “Each of the five groups shared different characteristics and attitudes towards travel modes. This suggests a one-size-fits-all policymaking approach may need to be abandoned in favour of a more nuanced consideration of the public transport needs of new parents,” Ms McCarthy said.

    The good news is that these potential policy changes don’t necessarily need to be extensive or expensive to get new parents using public transport.

    “Even though some parents stop using public transport, they continue to hold positive attitudes towards this mode. Modest changes could be made to better accommodate families with young children using public transport, and potentially retain these users,” Ms McCarthy added.

    The research – ‘Transit Faithfuls’ or ‘Transit Leavers’? Understanding mobility trajectories of new parents’ – was led by Ms McCarthy with support from Dr Alexa Delbosc and Professor Graham Currie (Monash University), as well as Andrew Molloy from the Department of Transport, Victoria.

    /Public Release.