Lazaro Alvarez, 39, was working in a barn at Flanagan Farms in Chenango County last September when a bull charged toward him, slamming Alvarez against metal bars that encircle the cows' sleeping area. "I went flying against the metal bars, face down" Alvarez recalled in Spanish. "The blow was really, really intense." When the owner fended off the bull and picked up Alvarez, his face was covered in blood. While bulls are notoriously dangerous there are many other ways to get injured or die on a dairy farm. Farmers and workers fall into manure […]
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New Safety Talks
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