The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Parents of Fife toddler killed by forklift back Farm Safety Week

Figures reveal industry is one of the most dangerous in the UK

- EMMA CRICHTON ecrichton@thecourier.co.uk

A Fife couple who lost their son in a forklift accident have thrown their weight behind an initiative to make farms safer for staff and children.

Richard and Linzi Nelson have backed Farm Safety Week as new figures revealed the industry is one of the most dangerous in the UK.

Figures from the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) showed 29 farm workers were killed in the last year – 18 times higher than the average in other major industries.

Four members of the public also died, including two children under 16, between April 2017 and March 2018.

The Nelsons were on the BBC’s Victoria Derbyshire Show yesterday to talk about Stuart, 3, who died at the family home of Cuttle Hill Farm, on the outskirts of Crossgates, last February.

Father Richard said: “We were out feeding the cows and I said ‘make sure you keep out the way’.

“When I was operating the forklift I always had my eyes open. When the accident happened he was totally in the blind spot.

“When I moved the machine back he was lying there lifeless.”

The couple shared their tragic story on the first day of Farm Safety Week, a joint initiative by Farm Safety Foundation, the Farm Safety Partnershi­p and HSE.

The scheme has also been backed by former JLS star JB Gill, who turned to rearing pigs, turkeys and chickens when he quit the band.

Father-of-two Gill said: “Farms can be wonderful places for children to grow up but the sad fact is that farms are the only

When the accident happened he was totally in the blind spot

workplace where children continue to be involved in fatal accidents, which is heartbreak­ing for the farm owners and the families involved.”

Now in its sixth year, organisers of Farm Safety Week run campaigns and make short films to raise awareness.

Stephanie Berkley, of the Farm Safety Foundation, said: “Unlike other occupation­s, farmers don’t tend to retire at 65 and often work well into their 80s.

“Factors such as health, agility and stubbornne­ss combine with risk-taking, fatigue and improperly maintained machinery to create this ‘risk’ nightmare.”

 ??  ?? Linzi and Richard Nelson with their son Stuart, who was killed in an accident on the family farm near Crossgates.
Linzi and Richard Nelson with their son Stuart, who was killed in an accident on the family farm near Crossgates.

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