Missouri Workplace Fatalities Plummet in 2010

click to enlarge Watch out for that tractor, Homer! - Wendy Hollands lefrancophoney.comWatch out for that tractor, Homer!
Wendy Hollands lefrancophoney.comWatch out for that tractor, Homer!
Watch out for that tractor, Homer!
So here's the good news: Workplace fatalities in Missouri are down significantly in 2010, even as the national number holds steady, according to the Missouri Department of Labor.

But here's the bad news: You might want to think twice about becoming a farmer.

Across the state, agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting jobs actually held the lead for the most deaths in 2010, beating out what we might have assumed was an obvious winner: construction.

And, of the 25 deaths recorded in agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting, a surprising number -- 23 -- were in seemingly innocuous "crop production." It turns out it's not your hunting buddy who's likely to kill you on the job -- it's that guy driving the tractor!
The hard-and-fast numbers, per the Missouri Department of Labor:

Fatal workplace injuries in Missouri in 2008: 148
Fatal workplace injuries in Missouri in 2009: 142
Fatal workplace injuries in Missouri in 2010: 107
Percentage change from 2009 to 2010: 25 percent

Number of male victims in 2010: 100
Number of white, non-Hispanic victims in 2010: 96
Sector hit the hardest: agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting (25 deaths)
Incidents that proved most deadly: transportation (60 deaths, with 18 of them in agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting)

About The Author

Sarah Fenske

Sarah Fenske is the executive editor of the RFT and its sister papers. She is the former host of St. Louis on the Air and continues to host its Legal Roundtable, as well participating as an occasional panelist on Nine PBS' Donnybrook. She lives in St. Louis.
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