Farm death prompts health and safety call

A fatal accident at a pig farming business has sparked a campaign from experts for mandatory health and safety training to protect to staff and employers working in the UK’s agriculture industry.

JMW Farms was fined ’187,500 for safety failings which led to the death of its employee, Robert Wilson, in an accident caused by ill-fitting equipment.

Business advisors on health and safety are lobbying for more regulation within agriculture by introducing a card scheme as proof of competence.

Wayne Dunning at ELAS, said "this was a tragic yet preventable accident. The farming and agricultural industries have high rates of major injury and fatality but at present very little is being done to tackle the issue.

"At present, anyone who employs staff to work in agriculture has a duty of care and must provide the relevant training.

"However, there isn’t any clear-cut official guidance for agricultural businesses on how to provide a ’duty of care’ to their workers, so most are at serious financial risk if the worst happens.

"What is needed is a period of mandatory training - which could be as little as half a day - covering topics such as working with animals, manual handling, emergency procedures, dealing with chemicals/hazardous substances and operating farm equipment."

Under ELAS’s proposals, once a member of staff had been given the health and safety training course they would be given a proof of competence card which would be valid for twelve months and give the person a nationally recognised and transferrable qualification.

Dunning said that it was difficult and costly to provide training to cover every area of risk - from handling pesticides to operating machinery.

"In the event of an incident, employers need to be able to prove that the relevant training has actually been given and unfortunately, without a clear record of this taking place, it’s very difficult to prove that it has, leaving them liable to legal action.

"We believe that a proof of competence card system - which has been in use in other high risk industries like construction for years and is valid for a number of years - would offer a cost-effective solution.

"Training would be provided on-site and could be delivered to groups of up to 15 people at once, enabling neighbouring businesses to share the cost of delivering the training."

Agriculture currently has one of the highest rates of fatal and major injury in the workplace, with a rate of 242 major injuries per 100 000 employees.


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