MTR wades through floods of crises
Overtime shifts new 'norm'
Due to constant damage to railway facilities, a dwindling number of spare parts for repairs made the problem increasingly acute, according to Adi Lau Tin-shing, operations director of MTR.
Various facilities, including 1,200 turnstiles, 800 ticketing machines, 900 CCTV cameras, and 50 escalators, have been damaged, causing unbudgeted costs of up to HK$10 million ($1.47 million) for reparations.
Some spare parts have been exhausted and replacement parts have had to be ordered overseas. They will not arrive in Hong Kong until November, said Lau.
Before that, the company mobilized staff to deal with the crisis. For example, more employees were added to help recharge the metro card or sell tickets before the ticket machines were fixed.
- Doctor injects child with improperly stored drug at Chongqing hospital
- Xi's special envoy attends forum dedicated to Intl Year of Peace and Trust in Turkmenistan
- Memorial ceremony remembers victims of Nanjing Massacre
- Louvre's largest showcase in China goes on display at Museum of Art Pudong in Shanghai
- Indonesian foundation to fund students, school administrators to exchange and study in Tianjin
- Archives detailing crimes of Japanese unit released
































