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Safe conduct for the grain handling industry is crucial.
Insight

Safety Tips for Grain Handling

By Alliant

The grain handling industry is dangerous due to the numerous serious and life-threatening hazards workers are exposed to every day. These include grain fires and explosions from grain dust accumulation, suffocation from engulfment and entrapment in grain bins, falls from heights, gas or flammable liquid leaks, chemical releases, structural failures, power failures or natural disasters.

Because of all the possible hazards, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) adopted the Grain Handling Standard in 1987, which is still used today to protect these agricultural producers from disaster.

What Types of Facilities Does Grain Handling Standard Apply to?


The Grain Handling Standard covers more facilities within the grain handling industry than many people realize. In addition to flour and other grain milling productions, the standard applies to facilities involved in the following:

  • Rice milling
  • Feed milling
  • Farm production warehousing and storage
  • Crop preparation services for market (except cotton ginning)
  • Oil seed processing
  • Grain processing
  • Any facility with a grain elevator
  • Any facility engaged in the receipt, handling, storage or shipment of bulk raw agricultural commodities

 

5 Tips for Grain Handling Safety

It is important to follow OSHA’s regulations for the grain handling industry not only to ensure the safety and wellbeing of your employees and your business, but also to avoid hefty fines. OSHA cited a Georgia farm with two willful and five serious violations after a worker became entrapped inside a grain handling storage bin while attempting to clear soybeans from a jammed auger. The proposed fines totaled $127,400. OSHA inspects more than 4 percent of facilities falling under the standard each year at both the federal and state level, but you are especially vulnerable to an inspection if you recently had an on-site accident, you are a large facility or you are in the grain processing or feed milling industries, which are historically inspected more often. To reduce your likelihood of being inspected, receiving fines and exposing your employees to potentially deadly hazards, follow the guidelines outlined by the Standard. All facilities in the grain handling industry should take these five actions to help you reduce costs from facility damage and from workers’ compensation claims.

1. Develop an Emergency Response Plan

  • While it is important to think about fires and explosions since they are the most common type of disaster in the grain handling industry, also be sure to address issues like flood, confined space rescue and weather conditions (i.e., tornado threats if you are in a vulnerable area).
  • If your facility has more than 10 employees – including office personnel and seasonal workers — then your emergency response plan must be written.
  • Your emergency response plan should address the employee alarm systems, the response duties of each employee, evacuation procedures, designated safe areas outside the facility and emergency escape routes, which should be clearly marked on floor plans and on workplace maps.
  • It is not enough that an emergency response plan exists in your facility; it is also important that your employees are aware of the procedures.


2. Develop a Training Program

 

  • OSHA requires new-hire training, annual training to refresh old employees and job specific training for anyone that is shifting responsibilities and is thus exposed to new hazards.
  • Employees should be properly trained on requirements for cleaning procedures for choked legs, housekeeping requirements, procedures for performing hot work, preventative maintenance and lockout/tag out procedures.


3. Require Hot Work Permits

  • You must issue a permit for all hot work being done in or near a grain handling structure, unless you as the employer are standing by to witness the hot work being done.
  • The permit serves as a sort of checklist, confirming that the employee was properly trained to do the work and that he or she is aware of the emergency response plan in place should something go wrong.
  • The permit must be kept on file until the hot work is completely finished, though it is recommended that you keep it in your records after the work is finished.

4. Follow Grain Handling Industry Regulations for Entry into Bins, Silos and Tanks

  • You must issue a permit for an employee to enter any bin, silo or tank unless you, the employer, are present to supervise.
  • The bin, silo or tank must be tested for the presence of harmful gas, vapor or other toxic agents if there is reason to believe they might be present.
  • The bin, silo or tank must be tested for oxygen content before the employee enters and while the employee is inside to ensure proper ventilation.
  • “Walking down grain” and entering in bridging or buildup conditions are strictly prohibited.
  • Employees entering the storage structure must be given a body harness, lifeline or boatswains chair.
  • There must be an observer present outside the storage structure that could provide assistance in case of emergency and that maintains communication with the employee inside the structure.


Other Important Requirements for the Grain Handling Industry

  • As the employer, you must inform contractors who are performing work at your facility of known potential fire or explosion hazards related to their work or work area.
  • You must remove any grain dust accumulation that is in excess of 1/8 inch.
  • The use of compressed air to blow away accumulated dust is only allowed when machinery presenting an ignition source is shut down.
  • Receiving pit openings must be covered by grates.


This list is not meant to be an exhaustive collection of all OSHA requirements for the grain handling industry; however, it does cover some of the most important regulations that could prevent a workplace fatality. There are several other provisions of the standard that apply more specifically to certain situations, so talk to your Alliant representative about what else you can do, or what else you should be doing, to lower the hazardous situations at your facility.

For More Information, Contact: 

Lee Tilleman
Vice President
Alliant Agribusiness
Email

 

Alliant note and disclaimer: This document is designed to provide general information and guidance. Please note that prior to implementation your legal counsel should review all details or policy information. Alliant Insurance Services does not provide legal advice or legal opinions. If a legal opinion is needed, please seek the services of your own legal advisor or ask Alliant Insurance Services for a referral. This document is provided on an “as is” basis without any warranty of any kind. Alliant Insurance Services disclaims any liability for any loss or damage from reliance on this document.