Labor's Homesafe pledge was for "trains, trams and buses" to run all weekend. Trains will operate on every line, it said. But how often the trains will run? The $50 million trial of all night Friday and Saturday public transport will be up and running by New Year's Eve 2015. Flagstaff station will also be opened on weekends and $400 to $600 million will be spent extending the rail line to Mernda. Oh, the new government has also promised to order 30 new trains for Melbourne and 20 new V/line carriages. And don't forget about the new "Bendigo Metro Rail - a dedicated commuter rail service for Bendigo" with regular rail services will run from Epsom, Eaglehawk and Kangaroo Flat to Bendigo. A few coins may need to be thrown at the $2 million promised. More holidays No longer will office workers have to take a very long lunch on grand final eve to watch the parade. They can now have the whole day off. Even Melbourne and St Kilda supporters can be excited about next year's finals, with Labor promising a public holiday on grand final Friday.

Doctors at schools and money for school camps Some primary school students will receive $125 year and secondary school students $225 for camps and excursions. Payments will go directly to the school and families with concession cards will be eligible. Will sick children be urged to go to school to see the doctor, particularly from parents scratching for the few dollars to pay the proposed federal government $7 doctor tax? Labor has promised GPs for students at 100 secondary schools in disadvantaged postcodes across Victoria. Labor will also enrol every Year 10 student in a free defensive driving course. The $24.4 million plan will give every student a spot in a half-day course by 2018. Completing the course will become a manadatory requirement of a probationary licence.

Music St Kilda's Palais Theatre can look forward to a coat of paint with Labor promising "$13.4 million to upgrade the heritage listed building and give it a future" as part of a $26.7 million five-year restoration in partnership with the City of Port Phillip. Labor has also promised a $22.2 million music package to boost development of the local rock music industry and support local jobs. There will be grants and assistance to artists, venues and managers, including to artists embarking on interstate and international tours. There will also be support for music festivals and community programming. New Number plates and new schools

Labor will direct VicRoads to print 'Victoria - The Education State' on number plates. Labor has committed to 11 new schools, including eight in outer suburban, high growth areas. Hospital midwives Private midwives will be allowed to access public hospitals to provide birthing services.

Wind farms easier Planning controls for wind farms will be eased with the exclusion zone around dwellings reduced from two to one kilometre. Tourism upgrades The Sovereign Hill By Night experience will get an $8 million upgrade with new investment in the Blood on the Southern Cross sound and light show. There has also been $1 million pledged to boost cellar door visits to Victoria's wineries.

Cleaner government (watch this one) Pledge to end taxpayer funding of political advertising. "Under Labor, television advertising will be limited to health and safety, community wellbeing and behavioural change". Behavioural change? Labor has also pledged to overhaul freedom of information and convert the role of the FOI Commissioner into the Office of the Public Access Counsellor (OPAC). 'Dorothy Dixers' will be abolished in parliament - "a stage-managed practice whereby Ministers pre-prepare questions and rehearse answers for the purposes of grandstanding". Parliament's Speaker and the President of the Upper House will also be given the power to determine that a Minister's answer is 'non-responsive' or irrelevant to the question that was asked, requiring the minister to provide a written response.