Ferry firms face month wait on life jackets after Lamma crash
Ferry firms face month's wait for deliveries, as operators try to boost safety after Lamma crash
Ferry companies have experienced difficulties in securing new life jackets due to rising demand after a fatal collision at sea last month, operators say.
There is a wait of at least a month before suppliers can fulfil orders placed after the National Day crash. Before the accident, deliveries could be made in half the time, they said.
"Life jackets have become a hot item after October 1," a spokesman for New World First Ferry said.
First Ferry said it had rejected a batch of life jackets ordered after the crash, because of unsatisfactory quality, and was waiting for a new lot to be delivered.
The ferry firm said it had also increased the proportion of life jackets for children from the legally required 5 per cent to 8 per cent.
Extra carts of life jackets would be placed on standby at the Central piers by next month, so more vests could easily be loaded on board if staff members observed a larger-than-usual number of children taking a particular vessel, it said.