Farmers should be forced to retire at 65

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Written by Richard Halleron

The last year or so has seen the press filled with stories of elderly farmers killed by cattle and other livestock.

The reality is that farming is the most dangerous way-of-life that any person can follow in this country. And the older one gets, the greater the risk of being hurt by an animal or an item of machinery.

This should not come as a surprise to anyone. The reflexes that we had as young men and women become a fast fading memory as we pass through the 60 years-of-age barrier.
‘A young person’s job’


Farming is a young person’s occupation. And this should be reflected in the legislation that is enacted here in the UK on the matter – once Brexit becomes a reality.

It is now clear to me that farmers should be forced to retire, once they reach 65 years-of-age.

One way of making this possible is for Defra to declare that all support measures will not be paid out to people who are above this age threshold.

Such a move would also have the added benefit of forcing farmers to have a viable succession plan in place before they reach an agreed retirement age.

The industry has been talking for years about getting the average farmer age down. Surely, this would be one way of achieving such an objective.
A support scheme for retired farmers


In return for an agreement to retire at a certain age, the UK should also put in place a support scheme that would see regular pension payments made to those former producers who had implemented a feasible succession plan.

These could be bolted-on to the national pension payments, which they are already eligible for.

All the statistics point to the sad reality that older people are more liable to succumb to a farm accident than any other age group. Anything that can be done to reduce these figures should be – and must be – looked at.

It’s also time for the farming industry to realise that better education programmes and voluntary initiatives of different sorts are not getting the farm accident figures down quickly enough.

At this stage, it really is time to look at other options. Introducing a mandatory retirement age for farmers is one possible way of bringing a fresh perspective to the subject.

Farming is a way-of-life for many people. But on the other hand, it should not be allowed to become an all-consuming commitment for older people.

Everyone deserves a safe and enjoyable retirement, free from the stress associated with managing a business that really could cost them their lives.

Farm Safety Week 2018 starts today. So why don’t the ‘rule makers’ start to take real decisions that will genuinely make our farms safer places for everyone?

The post Farmers should be forced to retire at 65 appeared first on Agriland.co.uk.

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I’m not sure I agree with forcing anyone to do anything, how does the risk from farming compare to the risk from smoking? Probably far more die from smoking related illness each year, perhaps farming should come with a health warning.

A gang of us went go carting a while back and had to sign some sort of disclaimer that we were aware of the risks etc, perhaps that would be a better option for farmers over 65, no one forced us to do it, just like no one forces anyone to farm.
 

goodevans

Member
I don’t intend to still be farming at 65 but if I want to when I get there anyone who tells me I can’t can just Foxtrot Oscar.
I have always thought it would be good to retire when you are young and fit and do everything you want to and capable of and then work when you are older,mind you some might think I have
 
The reality is that farming is the most dangerous way-of-life that any person can follow in this country.

###

That's nonsense.

There are far more inherently dangerous occupations than farming.

Farming has a poor safety record because of farmers' attitudes.
 

honeyend

Member
Most of the people who are working who are over 60 are working for someone else, not themselves, and their employers have to comply with H&S, do risk management etc. When you are self employed or work for the family firm there is a tendency to cut corners and think you not need training. Someone delivered some cows to me and had no idea how to avoid risk, just by thinking things through and was old enough to know better.
The reason there are more deaths over 60 may be co-morbidities, if you are older you are more likely to have diabetes, and cardio vascular conditions. I think the total number of injuries broken down by type, where they happened, age and sex would be more interesting.
 

farmerm

Member
Location
Shropshire
The reality is that farming is the most dangerous way-of-life that any person can follow in this country.

###

That's nonsense.

There are far more inherently dangerous occupations than farming.

Farming has a poor safety record because of farmers' attitudes.
Attitudes that arise from the penny pinching mentality required by many farmers to get through the leaner years when return are inadequate.
 

manhill

Member
What a load of rubbish.
How about a medical every year for over 65's,
In fact what about an aptitude test for every farmer, involving things like danger recognition and countermeasures, reflex tests.
Bet there's less incidents caused by lack of concentration due to mobile phones stuck in ears among elderly farmers.

In fact lets test everybody over 65 in every job.

Ah I know you're just winding us up.
 
How do you define a farmer anyway, the person over 65 could quite easily be nothing more than a manager, giving out orders to workers, taking care of bills, paperwork etc and just keeping an overall eye on what is happening, they’re not necessarily driving tractors or handling livestock, this proposal as worded would mean they’d have to retire at 65 yet could carry on in a similar role in just about any other profession.
 

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