Dakota Farmer

Slideshow: Tractor safety school teaches teens farm safety principles.

Sarah McNaughton, Editor, Dakota Farmer

June 10, 2021

12 Slides

Youth attended a three-day tractor safety school put on by North Dakota State University Extension to prepare them for working on the farm.

This camp offers 12- to 15-year-olds a better understanding of farm machinery. It also allows youth ages 14 to 15 to be properly certified through the U.S. Department of Labor and the National Safe Tractor and Machinery Operation Program. This certification allows them to find work outside of their immediate family.

NDSU Extension agent Angie Johnson says that while youth can sometimes be expected to just know what to do, oftentimes learning from an outside source helps youth ask questions and understand safety basics.

“On a farm, it’s not fair to expect a 14-year-old to operate a quarter-million-dollar tractor, that’s not fair to the youth or the employer. This school gives students that opportunity to get behind the wheel with hands-on learning,” she explains.

The camp, held at the North Dakota 4-H Camp, is one of few ways youth can achieve the required 100 hours of instruction for this certification. Four NDSU Extension agents led the course: Angie Johnson, Rick Schmidt, Dan Folske and Jill Lagein.

 

 

About the Author(s)

Sarah McNaughton

Editor, Dakota Farmer, Farm Progress

Sarah McNaughton of Bismarck, N.D., has been editor of Dakota Farmer since 2021. Before working at Farm Progress, she was an NDSU 4-H Extension agent in Cass County, N.D. Prior to that, she was a farm and ranch reporter at KFGO Radio in Fargo.

McNaughton is a graduate of North Dakota State University, with a bachelor’s degree in ag communications and a master’s in Extension education and youth development.

She is involved in agriculture in both her professional and personal life, as a member of North Dakota Agri-Women, Agriculture Communicators Network Sigma Alpha Professional Agriculture Sorority Alumni and Professional Women in Agri-business. As a life-long 4-H’er, she is a regular volunteer for North Dakota 4-H programs and events.

In her free time, she is an avid backpacker and hiker, and can be found most summer weekends at rodeos around the Midwest.

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