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The Rural Voice, 1978-10, Page 3Inside this month SPECIAL FEATURES Art on Barns P. 5 Absentee Owners P 9 Erosion Solutions P.11 Lambton farm deaths P.14 REGULAR FEATURES A Matter of Principle P.13 Up & Coming P.18 Voice of a Farmer P.20 Rural News in Brief P,21 Advice on FArming P.3O The Young Farmer P.37 The Rural Family P.39 Perth Federation News P.45 Necessity is the Mother of Invention .. P.47 Mailbox of the Month P.48 Farming Around The World P.49 Classified Ads P.51 Bruce Federation News P.53 Huron Federation News P.56 Cover Photo by Sheila Gunby the rural Voice Published monthly by McLean Bros. Publishers Ltd., Box 10, Blyth, Ontario, NOM 1H0. Telephone 523-9646 or 527-0240. Subscription rates: Canada S3; Singe copy, 25c. Editorial board: Bev Brown, Sheila Gunby, Alice Gibb, Rhea Hamilton, Adrian Vos and Susan White. Advertising representative: Barbara Consitt, Telephone 527-0240. Staff reporter: Debbie Ranney. Authorized as secondclass mail by Canada Post Office. Registration number 3560. To the editor: City reader likes Rural Voice The "Rural Voice" has been coning into our home for our son Ralph Neeb. Enclosed is $2. for a subscription for me. I love this paper and am enclosing some apple recipes. Mrs. Henry E. Neeb Stratfora Opinion Farm safety is more than a slogan One third of all farm accident death victims in Ontario annually are under 20. Although any farm fatality or any farm accident involving the loss of a limb or other permanent injury is a tragedy, it is particularly heartbreaking when it involves a child. In industry, safety precautions are of major concern. Industries have found that devoting extra time and money to educating their workers on safe practices around the plant pays dividends in reducing the time employees lose from the job through injury. Unfortunately, the agricultural community has tended to take a more fatalistic attitude to farm accidents - if it happens, it happens. Yet only too often, the accident could have been avoided with a little more care and co?nmon sense. Although the provincial government is contemplating a number of measures in Bill 70 to make the agricultural workplace safer, legislation alone won't solve the problem. Farmers themselves, and farm children, must be made more conscious of safety. Preventative measures beforehand surely in the long run save time which can be lost through injury. For example, installing a roll bar on a tractor doesn't seem so expensive when you realize that two-thirds of the fatalities involving farm machinery happen on a tractor. Also, one doesn't see children employed in the industrial workplace. We don't see children driving motor vehicles until they are 16 years of age and have passed a driving examination which tests their skill at the wheel. In the past, the farming community has been exempt from these rules. and children are often used as supplementary labor, working with machinery they aren't mature enough or big enough to handle. The father of an 11 year old boy recently killed in a tractor accident said his son had been driving the tractor since he was nine. The father apparently thought his son had enough experience to operate the machine, despite the fact that a spokesman from Massey Ferguson, the company who manufactured the vehicle, said he was skeptical that anyone the size and weight of the child could safely manoeuvre a tractor of that size. Other farm accidents involving children who have just hopped on to a tractor or hay wagon for a ride are almost as common. Children are excluded from the industrial workplace, and although it is more difficult to do, parents should give serious thought to excluding them from the farm workplace, at least until they are mature enough to know how to react around dangerous farm machinery. Today, agriculture trails only mining and forestry as the third highest frequency -of -injury occupation in Ontario. That fact should alarm all of us. It's time the farming community started taking more responsibility to educate themselves about safety and to educate their children. THE RURAL VOICE/OCTOBER 1978 PG. 3