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Before You Enter the Grain Bin Review these Safety Best Practices

“Do I really need to go inside this grain bin?”

That’s the first question Dan Neenan, Director of the National Education Center for Agricultural Safety (NECAS), recommends farmers ask before taking the risk of working inside a grain bin.

If entering a bin is absolutely necessary, implementing grain bin entry safety practices will reduce the risk of injury or death.

“Entrapment happens for a couple of different reasons,” Neenan says. “If the auger is running when you enter the bin, you can be pulled into that grain up to your waist within 15 seconds. In just 30 seconds you can be completely submerged.”

Grain Bin Entry Safety Best Practices

“I encourage parents to never allow their children to play in grain,” Neenan says. “Even though grain play-boxes are often part of an event like an open house at a business, it can give children the idea that playing in grain is fun, when it’s actually a deadly activity.”

One of the deadliest practices farmers may adopt is taking a risk and avoiding a tragedy. The complacency that follows such an experience can lead to disastrous consequences.

“It only takes one time to get caught in a risky situation,” Neenan says. “We are especially focused on working with youth in agriculture to overcome that mindset so they can enjoy years of safe farming.”

Additional information about safely entering grain bins can be found at http://www.necasag.org/safetytraining/.


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