There are few, if any, major surprises or unexpected sweeteners in the first budget of the Baillieu Government handed down this afternoon.
He said the budget had focused on spending $5.1 billion to deliver the government's election promises and making $2 billion in government cuts.
Included in the cuts was a slashing of the School Start Bonus, which will now be means tested.
The School Start Bonus is a one-off $300 payment to all parents of Prep or Year 7 students to help pay for costs such as school uniforms and books.
It will now only be paid to low-income families entitled to the Education Maintenance Allowance.
Health attracted $13 billion in spending with major upgrades at hospitals in Frankston, Ballarat and Bendigo as the government begins to deliver on a promised 800 new hospital beds.
In a nut-sack ...
PUBLIC TRANSPORT
● 940 PSOs on trains by 2014, one year ahead of the Government's election promise
● $100 million on rail maintenance
● Seven new trains, the first of 40 promised by the government
● $64 million for upgrade to level crossings
HEALTH
● 340 new ambulance staff
● Halving of ambulance membership fees
● $735 million on hospitals in Frankston, Ballarat and Bendigo
● 800 new hospital beds
● $88 million mental health package
EDUCATION
● $100 million school maintenance fund
● $208 million school capital works
● Cuts to the School starts program
● 100 maths and science primary school specialists
● Extra 150 new primary school welfare officers
● Eleven schools for students with special needs or disabilities will be built or upgraded
● School Start Bonus to be means tested
LAW AND ORDER
● $602 million to fund 1700 extra front-line police by 2014, one year ahead of the government's election promise
● Nine new brawler vans to target violent hot spots
● New police stations ain Forest Hill and Heywood and planning for a station at Paynesville and upgrades to five existing stations
● 108 new prison beds
Other announcements included a widening of power bill concessions, providing a 17.5 per cent cut for 815,000 pensioners, more than $675 million for flood-affected communities and a $73 million boost to the arts.
The budget papers failed to divulge the fate of myki.
Mr Wells said a $30 million increase in the estimated cost of providing Protective Service Officers on trains was because the Government would now deliver all 940 a year early, by 2014 instead of 2015.
But he admitted the government's plan to install Protective Service Officers in hospital emergency wards needed more work and was not detailed in the budget.
The government had spent $5.1 billion to deliver its election promises, Mr Wells said.
Government debt has increased under the budget from 2.6 per cent of gross state product to 5.9 per cent.
Cuts worth $2.2 billion were announced including
$27 million slashed from education
, including deep cuts to the School Start Bonus and
$38 million cut from health