Fife Farmers Urged To Sign Up For Safety Event, UK
Main Category: Water - Air Quality / AgricultureArticle Date: 11 Nov 2009 - 13:00 PDT
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Farmers from across Fife are being encouraged to attend an event that will arm them with the advice they need to make their farms safe places to work and help reduce accidents.
The Health and Safety Executive is running a free Agriculture Safety and Health Awareness Day (SHAD) next week (19 November) as a way for those working on farms get practical advice from LANTRA instructors with an industry background.
Farming is still one of the most dangerous occupations in Great Britain with 26 deaths in agriculture in 2008/09 alone.
The Fife SHAD is on Thursday 19 November at Cluny Clays activity centre, Cluny, Kirkcaldy and will be split into two half-day sessions.
The sessions will have demonstrations covering the daily hazards that workers in the farming industry face, such as tractor and power take-off shaft safety, handling livestock, using quad bikes safely, manual handling, working at height and the potential risks of handling grain or pesticides.
Free information and guidance will also be available to take home.
HSE health and safety awareness officer, Nikki Jack said: "Any farmer receiving an invitation to this event should make every effort to attend and treat it as a welcome opportunity to improve health and safety in their business.
"HSE is working in partnership with very experienced, well-qualified trainers from LANTRA in running this event and together we aim to provide practical solutions to the health and safety challenges that farmers face."
Registration times for the morning and afternoon sessions are 09.00 - 09.30am and 12.45 - 1.15pm. Invitations have been sent out, but should you have not received one and still wish to attend, please contact Nikki Jack on 07770 822 099.
Notes
1. The Health and Safety Executive is Britain's national regulator for workplace health and safety. It aims to prevent death, injury and ill health. It does so through research, information and advice, promoting training, new or revised regulations and codes of practice, and working with local authority partners by inspection, investigation and enforcement.
2. Similar events focussing on agricultural, arboriculture and the woodworking industries have been run by the HSE over the last few years. They have been particularly successful in attracting small businesses to learn of the health and safety risks they face every day at work.
3. Information on health and safety and the agricultural sector is available on the HSE website.[1]
4. For further details of latest HSE statistics in the East of England, see the Summary of statistics of occupational ill health, safety and enforcement 2006/07 at http://www.hse.gov.uk/statistics/regions/east/index.htm[2]
Source
HSE
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