Water and Effluent
Water and Effluent safety
Water and effluent are significant hazards on farms. On average, five children drown on Australian farms each year. Most are under the age of five and a third are visitors.
Drownings of adults also occur especially when they are working with machinery near dams, ponds and channels or when maintaining infrastructure that is under or above water.
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Water use and effluent infrastructure can also present risks other than drowning such as:
- Slips, trips and falls especially in yards and on edges of ponds
and channels
- Entanglement & manual handling injuries associated with pumps
and agitators
- Falls from heights on travelling irrigators
- Physical injury from pressure washers & flexible hydrants when
cleaning
- Water contact with exposed power in the dairy or overhead
power by irrigators
- Contact with harmful gases produced by effluent
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As an employer or person conducting a business on the farm, you have a legal responsibility to manage all the risks to health and safety associated with water and effluent.
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By law, you are responsible for all the people who come to the farm, including workers, contractors, tenants, visitors and children.
Use the resources below to ensure that you are managing a safe workplace and fulfilling your legal obligations.
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Resources
The Farm Safety Manual aims to make it straightforward for dairy farmers to build and improve a comprehensive farm safety system.
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