Medicine Hat News

Bolster Alberta farm safety, report says

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EDMONTON Alberta should require farm safety training in agricultur­al schools and mandatory farm equipment checks following the death of a worker who was pulled into a grain machine, a report says.

Provincial court Judge Anne Brown makes the recommenda­tions in her fatality inquiry report into the 2014 death of Stephen Gibson, 46, a man known as a cowboy who had worked on farms and ranches for much of his life.

Gibson was on a farm owned by Robert Hamilton northwest of Calgary moving grain from a silo to a cattle feed area using an auger and a drive shaft machine called a power take off.

“Before Mr. Hamilton’s horrified gaze, part of Mr. Gibson’s clothing caught on the unshielded PTO and drew Mr. Gibson into the machinery, killing him instantly,” reads the report released Thursday.

Brown said farm safety training should be a compulsory part of post-secondary agricultur­e education, ideally in every year of the program.

She also recommends compulsory safety checks of farm equipment every year.

Brown noted that farming is hazardous work. She cited a federal report that said 92 per cent of farm deaths are work-related while 70 per cent of those deaths involved machinery.

She cited other reports that said PTOs are particular­ly dangerous, accounting for three out of every 10 farm machinery entangleme­nt deaths between 1990 and 2008.

“Alberta Agricultur­e has considerab­le educationa­l and training resources for promoting safety on farms and ranches, but use of such resources is still largely elective,” her report says.

Last year, Alberta passed a law to improve safety for farm and ranch workers, but some details of the new legislatio­n that went into effect in January are still being worked on.

Labour Minister Christina Gray said her department and the ministries of Agricultur­e and Advanced Education will review the recommenda­tions over the coming months.

“Our government is committed to working with the farm and ranch community to make improvemen­ts to the safety of agricultur­e operations, and we’ll continue that work in the light of this inquiry,” she said.

“One of the ways that we‚Äôll do this is by listening to the technical working groups, which include representa­tives from the agricultur­al sector, labour groups, and technical experts, on ways to apply occupation­al health and safety standards to Alberta’s farms and ranches.”

Fatality inquiries do not assign blame but make recommenda­tions to prevent similar deaths in the future.

Brown’s recommenda­tions are to be tracked under a new system that was developed after judges noted in previous reports that the province was not following up on all fatality inquiry findings.

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