1,000 calls a day By Zhang Nan (chinadaily.com.cn) Updated: 2006-08-03 18:45
Li Yang, a dispatcher from the Qinghai-Tibet Railway Dispatch and Command
Center, spends at least 12 hours a day at work.
"After the Qinghai-Tibet Railway launched July 1, I've gotten used to such a
busy life," he told chinadaily.com.cn in an interview conducted on August 2. "I
receive about 1,000 dispatch telephone calls from train drivers every day."
 Qinghai-Tibet Railway
dispatchers are receiving calls from train drivers. From left to right: Li
Yang, Yang Baizong and Xia Shengyan.
[chinadaily.com.cn] | As the Qinghai-Tibet
Railway opens to traffic, the Dispatch and Command Center located in Xining
City, Qinghai Province, has become the heart of the railway, and work there is
calm but tense, busy but orderly.
Li Yang, Xia Shengyan and Yang Baizong are on the same dispatch team. They
say after the Golmud-Lhasa section of the Qinghai-Tibet Railway opened on July
1, the dispatch office has been extremely busy. They work in three shifts, 12
hours per shift. During the course of interview, they would receive one call
every few minutes from train conductors on the Qinghai-Tibet line. According to
Li, every day they field at least 1,000 calls asking for information on station
entry, leaving, parking, departing and a host of other things.
Six passenger trains and two cargo trains run the new railway daily. Since
there has been no labor increase in the command and dispatch office, the current
employees have to work hard under a great deal of pressure to ensure that
everything goes well. "This work requires a great sense of responsibility, and
that's my job," said Li.
"I have not had the chance to take the train on the Qinghai-Tibet Railway
yet, but the opportunity will definitely come," he added.
 The Dispatching and
Commanding Board of Qinghai-Tibet Railway. [chinadaily.com.cn/Xiao
Huaiyuan] | The Qinghai-Tibet Railway is 1,956
kilometers long, with 960 km of the track located 4,000 meters above sea level
and the highest point at 5,072 meters. It stretches from Xining, the capital of
Qinghai Province, to Lhasa, in the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR).
The railway is the world's highest and longest plateau railroad and also the
first railway connecting the (TAR) with the rest of China.
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