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Pre-registration urged for safe tractor, machinery operation classes

Nebraska

Safe tractor and machinery operation classes begin soon in Harrisburg, Sidney, Alliance and Bridgeport.

The most common cause of death in agriculture accidents in Nebraska is tractor overturn. But lately ATVs (all-terrain vehicles) have replaced tractors as the type of vehicle most often involved in overturn fatalities, according to statistics quoted by UNL Extension Educator Bill Booker.

UNL Extension will offer National Safe Tractor and Machinery Operation Program safety trainings in an effort to reduce the number of agricultural deaths and injuries.

Following is a revised list of class dates. Some of the classes originally planned were canceled or rescheduled:

--May 30 and 31 at Banner County School in Harrisburg;

--June 3 and 4 at 21st Century Equipment at Sidney;

--June 10 and 11 at 21st Century Equipment at Alliance;

--June 30 and July 1 at 21st Century Equipment at Bridgeport.

Pre-registration is strongly encouraged. Classes may be canceled if advance registration is not sufficient.

The trainings begin at 8 a.m., each day and will end by 5 p.m. Information and pre-registration are available at Extension offices in Alliance (308-762-5616), Scottsbluff (308-632-1480), Bridgeport (308-262-1022), Sidney (308-254-4455), Rushville (308-327-2312) or Chadron (308-432-3373). There is a $35 fee for materials, registration and the first day meal. Pre-registration is preferred to help in planning.

The safety training is for 14- to 15-year-olds who want to work on farms other than their parents', or who just wish to have the safety training.

Booker said fatalities have been tracked since 1969. There have been 1,229 fatalities through March of this year--an average of almost 32 per year, many of them children. Last year 19 fatalities were recorded. Overturns are still the major cause of death, with all-terrain vehicles replacing tractors as the main cause. Five of the 19 fatalities in 2007 occurred while on an ATV. ATV overturn safety will be covered in the training.

The U.S. Department of Labor's Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 was amended in 1968 to include the Hazardous Occupation Order in Agriculture. The order identified many agricultural tasks as hazardous for youth. Employment of youth under 16 to perform these tasks is illegal except for those working on their parents' or guardians' farm and/or 14- to 15-year-olds who have completed exemption training. Producers who violate this law can be fined up to $10,000 the first time. A second offense can have the fine plus imprisonment up to six months.

The National Safe Tractor and Machinery Operation Program was developed to offer this exemption training. The training completion permits 14- and 15-year-olds to drive a tractor after 10 hours of training, and to do field work with mechanized equipment after 20 hours.

Course completion also fulfills the driving and testing requirement to operate machinery on public roads. This also means that youth younger than age 14 cannot be hired to operate tractors or machinery.

6/2/08
4 Star NE\9-B

Date: 5/27/08


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