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               "A
              few years ago, almost everybody spent time on a farm. Today there
              are many people living in rural areas who don’t farm and who may
              not know tractors go only 15 to 20 miles an hour," he said.
              "We’ve had incidents where motorists literally plowed into
              the back of farm vehicles because they didn’t understand how big
              they were and how slowly they were going." 
              For
              the safety of both farmers and motorists, all farm vehicles must
              display the orange triangular slow-moving vehicle emblem where it
              is clearly visible from the rear. A new high-visibility reflective
              tape being promoted by farm organizations can renovate older signs
              and make them more easily seen in low light conditions. 
              Logan
              County has 511 full-time farmers working more than 380,000 acres
              of ground, according to Fulton, and if the weather continues to be
              warm these farmers will be traveling rural roads with cultivators
              and plows to get fields ready for planting. Planting season
              normally runs from mid-April until the first of June. At harvest
              time in September and October, farmers will again be moving big,
              heavy machinery. Only this time they will be driving combines from
              field to field along rural roads. 
                
                
              [Farm
              equipment like this planter that will be traveling rural roads
              must display the triangular slow moving vehicle emblem to alert
              motorists to slow down.] 
                
              "Farm
              vehicles are legal on anything but controlled access
              highways," Fulton pointed out. "But farmers don’t
              usually like traveling busy roads, and I know some who go miles
              out of their way to avoid them. They will usually give motorists
              all the help they can by pulling over to the side and signaling
              when it is safe to pass." 
              Although
              it is motorists who are in the most danger in farm and non-farm
              vehicle collisions, heavy machinery has other hazards for farmers.
              Tractor tip-over is a common farm accident that can sometimes be
              fatal, as it was in the Jan. 13 death of farm worker Douglas W.
              Lahr of Lincoln. Lahr was working on a rural Emden farm when the
              accident occurred. 
              Tip-over
              occurs most often when tractors are used on uneven terrain, Fulton
              said. Cutting grass along roadside ditches is a particularly
              hazardous job, but if the grass is not kept mowed, motorists will
              not be able to see traffic approaching at rural intersections. 
              New
              tractors now have roll bars, called Roll Over Protectant
              Structures (ROPS) to keep the driver from being crushed if the
              tractor tips over, but many farmers are still using older tractors
              which do not have such equipment. 
              One
              of the worst mechanical hazards is a tractor’s power take-off
              shaft, according to Fulton. This shaft allows farmers to use the
              tractor motor to provide power to equipment such as grain augurs,
              manure spreaders and mowers. The shaft spins at 500 revolutions
              per minute and can catch a hand, a foot, a sleeve or a pant leg in
              its rotation, causing serious injury or even death. 
              Chemicals
              used in today’s agriculture can also cause health hazards, both
              for farmers and the environment around them. Today, farmers who
              want to apply certain restricted products must be must licensed by
              the Illinois Department of Agriculture. To receive the license,
              they must pass a test to prove they know how to handle the
              chemicals safely. This year the Logan County Extension Unit
              conducted two training courses in pesticide use. One hundred
              forty-five area farmers attended the session. 
                
                
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              Some
              insecticides, especially those used at planting time to control
              rootworm, are so toxic that inhaling too much dust can kill a
              mature man, Fulton said. Manufacturers have produced a "low
              dust" formulation to make the chemical safer. The latest
              safety precaution is a prepackaged "lock and load"
              product that can go right into planter boxes without having to be
              opened by the farmer. 
              Other
              pesticides, such as synthetic pyrethroids, are extremely toxic to
              fish if sprayed over open ponds and streams. 
              While
              most insecticides are insoluble and stay where they are put in the
              soil, some, such as atrazine, move from the soil into streams and
              rivers. This presents problems for communities, which get their
              water supply from surface water, rather than from deep wells.
              Springfield, which gets water from Lake Springfield, now has a big
              atrazine removal project underway to make the water supply meet
              environmental protection standards. 
              Education
              is the key to using these products safely, and Fulton urges
              farmers to read the labels on farm chemicals carefully and follow
              instructions exactly. This might mean wearing waterproof gloves
              and other protective clothing, not spraying on windy days when the
              chemical can drift, keeping the product away from pets and
              children, and knowing the symptoms of pesticide poisoning.
              "Applying these chemicals correctly is both for their
              protection and ours," he stated. 
              Farmers
              should take other safety precautions too, says Dayle Eldredge of
              the Healthy Communities Partnership (HCP). Through the Rural
              Health Partnership, one of three task forces under HCP, she gives
              presentations on farm safety. She urges farmers to get tetanus
              shots, to let someone else know where they will be at all times
              and to be sure they know the correct 911 designations of each
              location where they will be working so they can get help quickly
              if an accident occurs. 
              "Keep
              your cell phone on your body, not in your vehicle, when you are
              working in the fields," she tells them. "Otherwise it is
              no help if you are pinned under the tractor." She also
              recommends farmers carry a first aid kit, which should include
              antibiotic cream, tape, bandages, ice and plastic bags. If a hand
              or finger is severed by a tool such as the power take-off shaft,
              preserving the part can make it possible for surgeons to reattach
              it successfully. 
              For
              farmers who are unlucky enough to be disabled by a farm accident
              or illness, a program called Agrability Unlimited, sponsored by
              the University of Illinois Extension and Easter Seals, can help,
              Eldredge said. Farmers may receive rehabilitation services or may
              get help modifying equipment, such as putting a lift on a tractor,
              so they can continue to live productive lives. 
                
              [Joan
              Crabb]  |