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The Rural Voice, 1980-06, Page 16Farm accidents A safety campaign in the schools tries to make sure they don't happen BY ALICE GIBB One third of all victims of fatal farm accidents in Ontario each year are under 20 years of age. With this statistic in mind. the Ontario Farm Safety Association decided in recent years to start aiming its farm safcty message at elementary school students as well as adults working on the farm. Jim Ross. of the Farm Safety Association in Guelph, said the first trial program in getting this message intq the schools was tried in Grey County in 1978. The association subsidized a teacher who went into all the elementary schools in the county with films and teaching kits emphasizing the hazards in the agricultural workplace. When the Grey County program proved successful. the Farm Safety Association met with representatives of nine county boards of education to propose that the association would subsidize a similiar program in those counties. at the rate of 17 cents per student. Bruce, Huron and Pcrth counties were all represented at that meeting. However. Bruce County was the only county to adopt a variation of the FARM SAFETY DEMONSTRATION—Constable William Hassall of the Goderich OPP division demonstrates some of the safe techniques necessary in working with farm machinery at Huron Centennial School, Brucefield PG. 14 THE RURAL VOICE/JUNE 1980 association's recommended farm safety program. In April of this year, a teacher visited each elementary school in Bruce county to discuss safety on the farm. Ron Hill. principal of Hillcrest School in Teeswatcr and co-ordinator of the farm safcty program, said there has never been a concerted, county -wide effort to cover farm safety in Bruce County schools. although Ontario Provincial Police officers had often talked about topics like tractor handling in schools. Mr. Hill said the board decided to teach farm safety in both rural and urban schools, since safety on the farm involves town students who often visit relatives or friends on the farm. Mr. Hill said these students may need the farm safety program even more than rural students who actually live on the farm. Three teachers, Terry Kummer of Ripley Huron Central School, Douglas Wrightson of Port Elgin-Saugeen Central and Barry Vincent of Amabelle-Hepworth School. divided up the county. and spent April blitzing the Bruce County schools. TRACTOR SAFETY In the primary grades. much of the safety message dealt xvith hazards in the home, like cleaning fluids and pressurized cans. However. in the junior grades, Mr. Hill said the emphasis was on tractor safety since "we felt some (of the students) had already likely been driving tractors." The program started with the new film Why Did Tommy Die?, which graphically depicts the things adults shouldn't do when driving tractors. This film. used in a teaching situation for the first time in Bruce County. was prepared by the Farm Safety Association in co-operation with OMAF. Mr. Hill said the film was produced by Bill Connell, a Wingham native, now on the OMAF staff. One of the main points raised in the film was that children in the 10 to 12 year old age group, "shouldn't be driving tractors, period", the principal said. The Grade 7 and 8 students in the county were presented with a two-pronged safety message, centering both on dangerous silo and manure gases found on the farm, and