The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Family use hi-vis jackets in bid to improve safety

FIGURES: Most common causes of fatalities involve vehicles

- Nancy nicolson farming ediTor nnicolson@thecourier.co.uk

Farm safety could be improved on all farms with the introducti­on of hi-vis jackets, according to a farming family in Aberdeensh­ire.

Figures released by HSE in Farm Safety Week reveal the most common cause of fatalities on farms involves vehicles overturnin­g or people being struck by a vehicle.

Peter Robertson of Ednie Farms near Peterhead has introduced a hi-vis policy across his family’s extensive livestock, arable, renewables and forestry enterprise. The business employs two people full-time and others part-time when required as well as welcoming schoolchil­dren to the farm.

Mr Robertson took the decision last year after reading about the industry’s safety statistics.

“I was shocked to see that 37% of accidents on Scotland’s farms were caused by people being hurt by vehicles or machinery,” he said.

“I know in this area of at least two incidents recently where family members have been seriously injured by vehicles.

“I decided that to reduce the risk of that happening on our farms we needed to take action, and we put in place a hi-vis policy, where anyone, no matter their age or purpose, who comes on to the farm must wear a hi-vis jacket or hi-vis boiler suit.

“This policy is widespread in nearly every other manual labour industry, such as the buildings and constructi­on sector, so why should agricultur­e be any different?”

The team on the farm said it has made workers across the whole business much more aware of those working around them and made the farm a safer place to live and work.

“You can get hi-vis for so little these days,” Mr Robertson said.

“It really is a very simple, costeffect­ive, but yet highly useful way of making our farms and working environmen­t safer and I certainly think others should be considerin­g implementi­ng this policy on their farms.”

Martin Malone of the Farm Safety Partnershi­p Scotland said 40% of all accidents in which farm workers have lost their lives in agricultur­e over the past decade were workplace machinery-transport related.

He added: “Whilst this year we have seen an improvemen­t in the numbers of farmers losing their lives as a result of machinery and transport, the fact is that one death is one too many.”

 ??  ?? Peter Robertson with daughter Georgina, foreman Graham Milne and tractorman Martin Turriff.
Peter Robertson with daughter Georgina, foreman Graham Milne and tractorman Martin Turriff.

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