[caption id="attachment_5525" align="aligncenter" width="1024"] FUW teams up with HSE (l-r) FUW landuse policy officer Bernard Griffiths, FUW finance and organisation committee members Dewi Owen and Brian Bowen, HSE head of agriculture Rick Brunt, HSE head of agricultural safety section Andrew Turner and HSE head of agricultural health, education and employment, Sarah Jardine[/caption]
[caption id="attachment_5526" align="aligncenter" width="300"] St John Cymru Wales Cadet of the Year 2015, 16-year-old Rhiannon Bartlett[/caption]
The Farmers’ Union of Wales – one of 13 organisations part of the On-Farm Health & Safety Charter for Wales – joined forces with the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) and St John Cymru Wales to get the health and safety message across to farmers, at the second day of the Royal Welsh Show (Tuesday, July 21).
“Agriculture represents about 1.4 percent of the workforce across the UK but astonishingly accounts for up to 20 percent of all reported work-related fatalities in Great Britain. And even though we still have one of the lowest rates of workplace deaths in Europe, one death is still one too many and we don’t want to see our farmers become a farming fatality statistic,” said FUW education and training committee chairman Alun Edwards
Joining the FUW at its pavilion was HSE's head of agriculture, Rick Brunt, who said: "The work of the Wales Farm Safety Partnership is a vital component in helping the farming industry improve its poor safety record.
“The risks on farms are all well-known and readily managed, but all too often farmers and farm workers put themselves in situations where one slip can have life changing or even fatal consequences.
“We are pleased to support the partnership, and the member organisations, in their activities to raise awareness of these issues."
Throughout the day visitors to the pavilion were able to chat with St John Cymru Wales Cadet of the Year 2015, 16-year-old Rhiannon Bartlett, who shares the organisations vision of there being a First Aider on Every Street in the future.
“We as an organisation recognise the dangers associated with the industries and communities in which we work. Agriculture is a major industry in Wales and St John understand the dangers involved and the fact that it is statistically the most dangerous work place in the UK,” said Miss Bartlett.
Rhiannon is a farmer’s daughter living on a hill farm in Machen where she is part of the third generation working the land and looking after the livestock there. This makes her ideally placed to take a leading role in publicising in the First Aid for Farmers campaign.
“I am passionate about improving the safety for farmers as they work and am looking to raise first aid awareness of famers and in particular young farmers. First aid training will give farming families the skills they need to cope with potentially life threatening situations,” added Miss Bartlett.