A still from Peter Dutton's 2018 ad campaign (Image: Facebook)

The car park at Ferny Grove station, in Brisbane’s outer suburbs, had been overflowing for years. For residents in the growing mortgage-belt suburbs in the Samford Valley and surrounds, hopping on a train is the quickest way into Brisbane. But it’s impossible to get a park after 7.30am.

In early 2019, the federal member for Dickson, Peter Dutton, came to the rescue. Facing a real chance of losing his seat, Dutton promised $11 million to redevelop the car park, the funds allocated under the Morrison government’s Urban Construction Fund. He also managed to get in a crack at the state Labor government. 

“If Annastacia Palaszczuk isn’t prepared to put in any money, her government can plan and build extra parking with this federal funding,” he said in a pre-budget media release.

“The money is on the table. All the Palaszczuk government has to do is get cracking and provide new parking spaces as quickly as possible.”

Billboards started appearing around the suburbs spruiking Dutton’s gift to the electorate.

But there were a few problems. The Labor government was already funding the development. Two years earlier, Mark Furner, the ALP state member for Ferny Grove, had secured $9.1 million from the Palaszczuk government for a redeveloped car park. Dutton’s opportunistic pre-election cash splash was the first he’d heard of the federal MP taking an interest in an issue that had long plagued his constituents.

“You’d think someone worth their salt would know the needs of their constituents,” Furner told Crikey. 

Furner also recalls telling Dutton the site he proposed was in an area most locals know as flood-prone. 

“It’s frequently underwater,” long-term resident Hugh Childers told Crikey. 

Of course, no local MP is going to reject extra federal infrastructure, no matter who it comes from. Dutton eventually backed down from his initially proposed location. But his intervention meant the development application to refurbish the existing car park had to be resubmitted — delaying the planned start date from late 2018. 

It took more than two years for other problems with the proposal to arise. The Ferny Grove redevelopment was listed in a bombshell Australian National Audit Office report as among the 47 projects where the Coalition had ignored department recommendations and funnelled money towards Coalition-held seats or targets. Most of the money under the scheme went to Victoria. But marginal Dickson was one of the few areas in Queensland to have a win.

The auditor-general also found the $11 million allocated to the Ferny Grove redevelopment was a whopping 104% above the project’s benchmark cost. It added up to a total of $80,972 for each parking space, making the project one of the most over-funded in the country. 

Meanwhile, thanks to the pandemic and the overlap between the state and federal governments, no work has yet been done on extending the car park. 

“There was supposed to be something happening by the end of June,” Childers said. “It’s gone off the boil with COVID.”

Locals aren’t really sure what’s happening and when, but the project is expected to complete … in mid-2023.