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Unannounced farm inspections to take place over vehicle deaths

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Farmer on tractorImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

HSENI inspections will be unannounced

Unannounced workplace inspections on farms are set to take place to reduce fatal accidents.

The Health and Safety Executive for Northern Ireland (HSENI) will carry out the work from August.

Seventeen people lost their lives over the past 10 years due to incidents on farms involving vehicles and machinery, the organisation said.

HSENI stressed that every fatal incident on a farm in Northern Ireland was preventable.

Camilla Mackey, principal inspector for agriculture and food, said the organisation needed to keep farmers and their families safe.

"Workplace transport is one of the key causes of incidents in any workplace across Northern Ireland," she said.

"We already visit farms on a daily basis - but during this period, on our visits we will be focusing on vehicle safety.

"We will arrive on people's farms unannounced. We will not be making appointments - we don't need to.

"We will be doing spot checks on vehicles and we will be asking about things like training and general farm inspections."

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Camilla Mackey said the inspections would keep people safe

Ms Mackey said the campaign was as much about education as enforcement.

"We do try to go down the route of advice and educating farmers about their legal responsibilities - but where we see high risk we will have to take enforcement action, and I don't apologise for that," she said.

She added that often older farmers or young people were are involved in vehicle incidents.

"This scheme is focused on workplace transport in three specific risk areas of safe site, safe vehicle, and safe driver," she said.

HSENI farm inspections programme will continue until March 2024.

The announcement comes days after the HSENI began a separate investigation into the circumstances of a fatal quad bike crash on a farm in County Tyrone.

It happened on the Blackhill Road in Dromore on the afternoon of Thursday 27 July.

The victim has been named locally as David Vance, a farmer in his 60s from Trillick.

The father-of-three's funeral took place in Dromore on Sunday.