IG and OOC name: Buzz Wylde / [PH] St.Wylde
Play Time: 1 month 16 days
Talents: Being a sneeki Breeki when evading cops, Rooty Tooty Point and shooty when defending and raiding, Play guitar and I can do funny voices and be cancer on a microphone.
Why do you want to join the org?: I miss seeing purple messages saying "KOS Cops" Or "Being raided help" on my chat log.
Cash: 25k
Rifle Marksmanship: 33 or something but 56 for shotties and 41 for pistols.
Crafting Levels: 8/8, woodwork 5/8, firearms 35
Car: Jeep Grand Cherokee (Better than your mini tom)
Additional Comments:
Grain entrapment, or
grain engulfment, occurs when a person becomes submerged in
grain and cannot get out without assistance. This more frequently occurs at storage facilities such as
silos or
grain elevators, but has been known to occur around any large quantity of grain, even freestanding piles outdoors. Usually, unstable grain collapses suddenly, wholly or partially burying workers who may be within it. Entrapment occurs when victims are partially submerged but cannot remove themselves; engulfment occurs when they are completely buried within the grain.
[1] Engulfment has a very high fatality rate.
[2]
While the death rate from workplace accidents on American farms has declined in the first decade of the 21st century, grain-entrapment deaths have not, reaching an all-time annual high of 26 in 2010. Many of those victims have been minors.
[3]Agricultural organizations have worked to protect them and improve rescue techniques, as well as spread awareness among farmers of prevention methods. Primary among these is a federal regulation that forbids opening an
auger or other opening at the bottom of a grain storage facility while someone is known to be "walking down the grain" within.
Smaller family farms, however, are exempt from most federal labor regulation specific to agriculture, and no safety regulations govern children working for their parents. In 2011 the
US Department of Labor proposed sweeping new regulations that would have changed this, prohibiting underage workers from being allowed to enter silos, among other provisions. They were withdrawn after protests from farmers and politicians of both U.S. parties.