Two Sterling teens electrocuted, 8 others hurt in detasseling accident

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Hannah Kendall (left) and Jade Garza, both 14, were electrocuted Monday morning in rural Tampico while they were detasseling. (Photo courtesy of Facebook)
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TAMPICO – Two 14-year-old girls were electrocuted Monday morning in rural Tampico, and eight others were hurt in the accident that happened while they were detasseling.

Dead are Hannah Kendall and Jade Garza, best friends who would have been freshmen at Sterling High School this fall.

Authorities wouldn’t reveal the names, ages or sexes of the other workers, who likely also were younger than 18. They worked for Monsanto Corp.

The accident happened in a cornfield on Luther Road south of Starr Road shortly before 9 a.m. At the time, 72 detasselers were assigned to the farm.The girls and two other crew members came in contact with a field irrigator, and they received an electrical shock as a result, according to the Whiteside County Sheriff’s Department. Several others also reported feeling the shock.

The four were immediately taken to CGH Medical Center in Sterling, where the girls were pronounced dead, the Sheriff’s Department and Whiteside County Coroner Joe McDonald said.The third crew member was in critical condition and was taken by helicopter to OSF St. Anthony Medical Center in Rockford. The fourth was admitted to CGH for observation, a sheriff’s news release said.

Video: Watch the full press conference

Monsanto has shut down its local detasseling operations in the Sterling-Rock Falls area for the time being. More than 1,000 have been working for the company this summer, said Mark Cavenaile, a company official.

“It’s cautionary. We’ve never had an incident like this before,” he said during a 4 p.m. news conference with area law enforcement officials.

Cavenaile said detasselers receive training and are advised to walk around the pivot irrigation systems, not go across them.

The accident has been reported to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, he said.

‘Best buddies’

Barb Lauff is an orchestra teacher and track coach at Challand Middle School. She said both girls were on the track team “during their Challand years.”

“They were best buddies,” Lauff said. “They were polite, very well-mannered, had extremely bubbly personalities.

“Everybody wanted to be around them.”

The girls have “been close for a long time,” Lauff said.

“I don’t think devastated comes close,” to her reaction upon hearing the news, she said. “It was like a powerful punch.”

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