Greater Western Sydney is home to more than 2.7 million people and is the fastest-growing region in the state. Yet year after year, our communities continue to carry the heaviest load of housing stress, the longest commutes, and some of the highest preventable health burdens in NSW.
This month, the Greater Western Sydney Advocacy Network (GWSAN) formally lodged our 2026–27 NSW Pre-Budget Submission to Treasury and the NSW Government. Our message is clear:
Western Sydney’s future prosperity depends on fair, preventative and well-sequenced public investment — not reactive crisis spending.
This submission is grounded in GWSAN’s 2025–2030 Strategic Plan and Fair Share Framework, which calls for systems-level reform in how housing, transport, health and infrastructure funding is allocated across NSW.
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Western Sydney’s challenges are not the result of individual disadvantage — they are the outcome of decades of structural under-investment relative to growth. Today, this shows up as:
Persistent rental stress, overcrowding and hidden homelessness
The longest commute times in Greater Sydney
High exposure to heat and poor walkability in many suburbs
Rising rates of chronic disease linked to urban form
New housing delivered without early transport or community infrastructure
These are not just social issues. They are now major budget and productivity risks for NSW.
1. A Dedicated Western Sydney Social & Affordable Housing Pipeline
We are calling for a long-term, guaranteed housing delivery pipeline that provides:
Secure, well-located social and affordable homes
Use of public land for mixed-tenure housing
Integrated planning for transport, schools and health services
Stable housing reduces pressure on emergency accommodation, hospitals and the welfare system — and strengthens workforce participation.
2. Transport Equity & Cross-Regional Mobility Reform
Western Sydney workers are locked into long, complex and costly commutes because cross-regional public transport remains limited. We are advocating for:
Faster delivery of orbital and cross-regional transport
Growth-linked bus network reform
Guaranteed last-mile connections to hospitals, TAFEs and major employment precincts
Transport access is one of the most powerful levers for economic participation and social inclusion.
3. Preventative, Climate-Ready Built Environments
Heat exposure, low tree canopy and poor walkability are now driving avoidable health costs across Western Sydney. We are seeking:
Investment in cool streets, shade and walkable neighbourhoods
Green and blue infrastructure
Community health hubs co-located with housing and transport
This is infrastructure-led health prevention — not discretionary urban amenity.
Fast Facts:
Fact 1: Western Sydney is absorbing most of NSW’s population growth, but housing and infrastructure delivery continue to lag behind demand.
Fact 2: Working families face rising rental stress and displacement despite being in steady employment.
Fact 3: Western Sydney workers experience the longest commute times in the state, limiting job access and productivity.
Fact 4: Heat exposure and poor walkability are driving preventable health costs across the region.
Beyond individual projects, GWSAN is calling for a Western Sydney Fair Share Budget Test to be adopted by NSW Treasury. This would require agencies to publicly demonstrate:
Per-capita fairness in capital investment
Alignment between population growth and spending
Regional equity in long-term infrastructure planning
In short, equity must become a rule of the budget system — not a hope at the end of it.
Without structural reform in:
Housing delivery
Transport access
Preventative built-environment investment
Western Sydney will continue to generate predictable and escalating costs across hospitals, emergency accommodation, welfare and justice systems. The 2026–27 Budget is a critical opportunity to shift from reactive spending to long-term prevention and productivity.
Join the conversation: Share your views on our LinkedIn page.
Contact decision-makers: Send this article to your local councillor or MP to highlight importance of regional equity in national tax and housing settings.
Stay informed: Sign up for our updates to get the latest on housing policy changes, community forums, and advocacy campaigns across Greater Western Sydney.
Our submission has been lodged through the NSW Treasury consultation process and shared with relevant agencies and decision-makers. We will continue to:
Brief government and MPs
Advocate for a fair share of public investment
Work with local councils, researchers and community partners to strengthen the evidence base
This is not a one-off submission — it is part of GWSAN’s long-term mission to ensure that the one in ten Australians who live in Greater Western Sydney receive their fair share of opportunity, infrastructure and wellbeing.
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GWSAN works across disciplines, sectors, and lived realities. We believe lasting change happens when community knowledge, academic insight, and policy influence are brought together with purpose and respect.
We collaborate with:
Community members and lived experience advocates, particularly young people, women, and culturally diverse residents who have firsthand knowledge of the barriers Western Sydney faces
Local councils and government agencies committed to planning reform, housing justice, and community wellbeing
Researchers and academic institutions working at the intersection of urban policy, health equity, and systems thinking
Community housing providers, health organisations, and frontline services who understand how policy failures show up in everyday lives
Urban planners, valuers, and infrastructure professionals who are ready to embed prevention and equity into how cities grow
Advocacy organisations and networks aligned with our values of justice, collaboration, and regional empowerment
Our approach is not to duplicate what others are doing, but to connect, amplify, and align. We look for partners who are ready to move beyond talk and help rewire the systems that shape housing, health, and opportunity in Greater Western Sydney.