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The Rural Voice, 1978-10, Page 14Lambton deaths prompt farm safety education By Alice Gibb A rash of farm accidents in Lambton County this summer has led to the decision to offer farm safety instruction to students in the county's schools. The decision to discuss farm safety in any elementary school with more than a 20 per cent rural student population was made after farm accidents claimed the lives of seven people in the county this summer. - Five of the victims were under 13 years of age and six of the seven accidents involved tractors. On May 2 the first fatality was Donald Lee Alderman, 11 years of age, of R.R.1, Inwood killed after being thrown from a tractor on his father's Brooke Township farm. Daniel Lucien Bruno, 13 of Brigden was killed on May 24 when he was run over by a tractor he had been riding on. Emily Johnston, of R.R. 6, Alvinston, four years old, was killed on July 6 after falling 30 feet from a neighbor's hayloft. On July 11, Mark Fitzpatrick Vallieres, 11, of R.R. 3, Oil Springs, fell off a hay wagon pulled by a farm tractor driven by his father. The boy was crushed by the undercarriage. On July 13, Louis Crow, 39 of Mooretown, was killed when the tractor he was driving rolled down an embankment. Paul Allan Stephenson, 21 months old, died when he was caught underneath a tractor which was pulling a baler. The final fatal accident occurred when James R. Vivian of R.R.5, Forest, was killed after a tractor rolled over and pinned him underneath when he was cutting grass along a county road. In 1977, Lambton County had only two farm -related fatalities and this summer's rash of accidents caused concern not only among farm organizations, but also among the general public. Coroner Dr. Harold Shabsove of Petrolia, who investigated a number of the deaths, asked the Lambton County board of education to consider teaching farm safety formally in the public and high schools, "even to the point of making this course mandatory for farm children" to prevent further tragedies in the future. Campaign Also, the Lambton County Junior Farmers organization immediately launched a campaign among other farm or- ganizations to organize a Farm Safety Association in the county. The county had a farm safety organization at the time of the 1973 International Plowing Match, held in Lambton County, but the organization has since dissolved. The Farm Safety Association, which has 24 separate county associations promotes an awareness of the dangers of farm equipment, and other hazards around the farm workplace. The association is one of nine safety organizations in the province and operates in much the same way as the Construction Safety Association. The farm Safety Association is sponsored by the Workmen's Compensation Board of Ontario and compiles farm injury statistics for the 23,000 farm employers in the province who pay into the compensation board. Although Lambton County experienced an unusual number of PG. 14 THE RURAL VOICE/OCTOBER 1978 deaths involving farm equipment this summer, every year farm accidents claim a number of lives in Ontario. In 1977. there were 33 farm deaths in total across the province. Agriculture's injury frequency is exceeded only by the mining and forestry Industries in Ontario. Larry Swin, director of the Farm Safety Association of Guelph, said in 1977 there were two fatal farm accidents in Huron County, three fatal farm accidents in Perth County and four in Bruce County. This summer, two people . lost their lives in Huron County farm accidents, two in Perth County and one in Bruce County. Unlike Lambton County', the counties of Huron, Perth and Bruce have had established Farm Safety Associations for some time. Swin . Mr. Swin said one problem facing the farm population is that farm children are unique in that they are involved in the workplace, unlike urban children, who are usually far removed from the place where their parents are employed. Mr. Swin said the Farm Safety Association tris to emphasize that children do not have a place in the agricultural workplace. The director pointed out that two-thirds of Lambton County's farming fatalities this summer involved children who were in the farm workplace. This fall, Lambton County students will receive farm safety instruction either from an OPP constable who visits the schools annually to discuss safety or from Daryl Wells, Farm Safety Association consultant. Constable Paul Phillips, the community services officer who will be co-ordinating the farm safety lectures in the schools, said students from Kindergarten to Grade 8 will receive pointers on safety on the farm. He said one particular emphasis will be on "tractor safety. since one third of farm fatalities involve tractors. Constable Phillips said he will be pointing ouf tp the students that tractors have one seat and are designed to carry one person. Rviewing He said he will also be reviewing the dangers of implements like combines and hay balers and the dangers of silo gas and of other chemicals found around the farm. Although Constable Phillips will give his safety lecture to students in a school only once a year. he hopes teachers will follow up the talk with safety slogan competitions or other programs. The provincial government has also been concerned with safety in the agricultural workplace, and this fall. 13111 70, which deals with new legislation for health and safety , will be introduced in the legislature for the third and final reading. In the past, the agricultural community has escaped most of the rules and regulations that cover industry in regard to health and safety legislation. The farm safety and insurance committee of the Ontario Federation of Agriculture, which has been meeting for some time to consider dill 70, want farmers to be exempt from. all but