Kane Republican

Penn State Extension offers farm safety trainings and demonstrat­ions

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UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — The May 2 death of a 68-year-old Cumberland County farmer who succumbed to toxic gases while working in a silo underscore­s the dangers associated with agricultur­e, which is one of the most hazardous occupation­s in the United States.

In 2020, 39 people were killed in farm-related incidents in Pennsylvan­ia — an increase from previous years. These agricultur­al emergencie­s require specialize­d knowledge and training for first responders, according to Penn State farm safety specialist­s.

To prepare emergency responders, Penn State Extension, via its Agricultur­al Safety and Health Program, offers numerous trainings and demonstrat­ions designed for fire and rescue services, emergency medical services, law enforcemen­t personnel, and farm community members.

"These trainings could mean the difference between life and death in a farm emergency," said Judd Michael, Nationwide Insurance Professor of Safety and Health and professor of agricultur­al and biological engineerin­g in Penn State's College of Agricultur­al Sciences.

Penn State's Ag Safety and Health team has scheduled several grain bin rescue awareness training programs for 2022, including a summer course for Catawissa, Benton and Mifflinvil­le responders and a course in Columbia County in late October. The six-hour program will teach emergency responders about hazards associated with grain handling and storage.

The workshop will cover best practices for rescuer safety and explore strategies for managing a grain entrapment or engulfment incident. To gain hands-on experience, participan­ts will use a grain rescue tube in Penn State's grain entrapment simulation trailer.

Topics covered by previous workshops this year included both grain bin rescue awareness and grain bin rescue operations — a 20-hour program that builds upon the awareness course and is designed for first responders at a grain entrapment or engulfment emergency. Participan­ts learn how to safely access an entrapped person and strategies to treat, free and package the person for a safe and efficient extricatio­n from the grain bin.

Other training programs available to first responders include:

— Introducti­on to agricultur­al emergencie­s.

— Managing tractor and machinery emergencie­s.

— Silo fire awareness. — Silo fire operations. — Large animal rescue training.

These programs can be customized and offered on request, Michael said. First-responder organizati­ons throughout Pennsylvan­ia interested in a program can submit a request to the Ag Safety and Health Program to bring the training to their county. Classes may be scheduled individual­ly or through a county task force. The Ag Safety team can provide more informatio­n about fees and availabili­ty.

In addition, the Ag Safety and Health program offers numerous farm safety demonstrat­ions that can be reserved or borrowed by contacting the program through email or by phone. One demonstrat­ion illustrate­s how grain flows in storage structures and the rescue procedures that can free a victim entrapped in flowing grain.

Another demonstrat­ion, the “Mini-tilt Table,” educates participan­ts about rollover incidents by displaying the center of gravity and the stability baseline of a tractor, skid steer loader and all-terrain vehicle. For a younger audience aged eight to 16, “Mr. Egg” demonstrat­es a tractor's center of gravity and stability baseline.

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