Win a Grain Rescue Tube and Training for Your Local Fire Department
By Jim Carrabba
Agricultural Safety Specialist
Northeast Center for Occupational Health and Safety: Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing
Win a grain rescue tube and training for your fire department!
When someone becomes helplessly engulfed in grain, rural firefighters are often the first and only line of defense. Unfortunately, many fire departments lack the specialized techniques and equipment necessary for a successful grain bin rescue. Nationwide Insurance once again is teaming up with the National Education Center for Agricultural Safety (NECAS), Peosta, Iowa, to award emergency first responders with grain rescue tubes and hands-on rescue training to help save lives.
Winning Fire Departments will receive:
- One (1) grain rescue tube, valued between $3,000 and $5,000
- One (1) six-hour grain entrapment rescue training session, at winner's location, valued at up to $5,000. Training includes proper rescue procedures and use of the grain rescue tube, rescue auger, body harness/lifelines, and lockout/tagout.
The contest begins on January 1, 2025 at 8:00 a.m. CT and extends through April 30, 2025 at 11:59 p.m. CT. Only entries submitted during this time will be considered for the contest.
To enter, describe how your local fire department or emergency rescue team and community would benefit from grain entrapment training and a rescue tube, as well as how the tube and training could be shared with nearby departments. Please include:
- Your name
- Occupation
- Phone number
- Mailing address
- Email address
- Name, address and phone number of the fire department or rescue team being nominated
Contest entries are accepted from the public as well as from firefighters who wish to nominate their own fire department. Employees and agents of Nationwide are not eligible to submit nominations for the contest.
Nominations can be submitted in one of three ways:
- Online: https://www.mynsightonline.com/grain-bin-safety/participate-partner/nominate/
- Via email: gbswinfo@nationwide.com
- Mail to: NECAS, Grain Bin Safety Ag Contest, 8342 NICC Dr., Peosta, IA 52068
Since 2014, the contest has received over 11,000 nominations and has awarded grain rescue tubes and hands-on rescue training to 390 fire departments in 32 states with thirteen lives saved. Dan Neenan, Director of NECAS, travels with a state-of-the-art grain entrapment simulator on a 20 foot trailer to deliver the rescue tube and training to the winning fire departments. In 2024, a total of 58 rescue tubes were awarded across the nation. Since the program's inception, 84 grain rescue tubes have been awarded to fire departments in Northeastern states:

Figure 1 - Grain Rescue Tubes Awarded in the Northeast
For more information on this topic, e-mail jim.carrabba@bassett.org or call (800) 343-7527 ext. 2216. The mission of the Northeast Center is to enhance the health of agriculture, forestry and fishery workers by identifying priority health and safety issues and collaborating with those workers and stakeholders to develop prevention solutions. Funding for the Northeast Center is provided by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.
Upcoming Events
MILKING IT: Moving Milk Quality Forward
April 14, 2026
Springville, NY
April 14th from 11am-1pm
Education sessions by:
- CCE SWNY Dairy, Livestock and Field Crops
- Springville Veterinary Services, P.C.
- Quality Milk Production Services
New York Application for Dairy of Distinction
April 15, 2026
Purpose of Program
Attractive dairy farms give the consumer greater confidence in the wholesomeness of milk and stimulate milk sales which encourages public support of the dairy industry. The award gives recognition to the dairy farmer for maintaining a well-kept farmstead.
Virtual Egg Count Training for Sheep and Goats
April 23, 2026 : Virtual Fecal Egg Count Training for Sheep and Goats
Amy Barkley and Rachel Moody, Livestock Specialists with Cornell Cooperative Extension, will take attendees through the why, how, and interpretation of fecal egg count testing for sheep and goats using the McMaster method.
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