Lettre ouverte de défiance à l’Organisation Mondiale de la Santé (version française)

26 janvier 2017

Press release below

Nous, la «Coordination européenne des organisations pour une règlementation de l’exposition aux Champs Électromagnétiques (CEM) qui protège réellement la sante publique» (), exprimons notre soutien sans réserve à la lettre de défiance du Groupe de Travail BioInitiative adressée au Projet International CEM de l’OMS le 19 décembre 2016, intitulée “WHO RF EHC Core Group Membership is Unacceptable”, qui encourage l’OMS à apporter des changements nécessaires dans les membres du groupe de travail principal des critères d’hygiène de l’environnement concernant les radiofréquences (RF) «afin de refléter une composition et une expertise plus équitables que dans le Groupe de travail du Centre international de Recherche sur le Cancer (CIRC) sur RF de 2011» (voir l’Annexe 1).

«Les études des animaux, publiées récemment, et menées sur une période de 16 ans par le National Toxicology Program (NTP) de l’Institut national des sciences de la santé environnementale (NIEHS) des États-Unis, signalent désormais des effets cancérigènes évidents lors d’exposition chronique aux RF. En juin 2016, le NTP a produit des documents sur les risques statistiquement significatifs de cancers du cerveau et du cœur, ainsi que de lésions précancéreuses chez les animaux exposés aux RF, mais pas chez les animaux témoins. Nous avons déjà les résultats disponibles, tant chez l’homme que chez l’animal, à incorporer dans l’évaluation des EHC sur RF. Cet effort important ne peut être assuré qu’avec un meilleur équilibre dans la composition des principaux participants au processus. Il est aussi nécessaire d’inclure des membres des pays sousreprésentés tels que la Russie, la Chine, l’Inde, la Turquie et l’Iran, dont les communautés de recherche ont produit la plupart des études sur les effets non thermiques des RF au cours des dernières années».

La prédominance des membres de la Commission internationale sur les rayonnements non ionisants (ICNIRP) nous rappelle que cette organisation a toujours refusé d’accepter de nouvelles preuves des risques potentiels pour la santé des effets non thermiques du rayonnement de radiofréquence, de faible intensité, malgré les récentes avancées scientifiques dans les connaissances sur le sujet.

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Open letter of “No Confidence” to the World Health Organization (WHO)

From PECCEM – Plataforma Estatal Contra Contaminacion Electro-Magnetico
February 26, 2017

Press release link below

The “European coordination of organizations for an EMF exposure regulation which truly protects public health” () expresses its full support for the BioInitiative Working Group Letter to the WHO International EMF Project of 19 December 2016, entitled “WHO RF EHC Core Group Membership is Unacceptable”. In this “No Confidence” Letter, the WHO is urged “to make changes to the WHO RF EHC Core Group membership to more fairly reflect membership and expertise of the 2011 IARC RF Working Group” (see Annex 1).

“Newly released animal studies conducted over a 16-year period by the NIEHS National Toxicology Program now report clear carcinogenic effects of chronic exposure to RF. In June of 2016, the NTP documented statistically significant risks for cancers of the brain and heart, as well as pre-cancerous lesions in animals exposed to RF, but not in control animals. Both human and animal results are now available to incorporate in the RF EHC risk assessment. This important effort can only be assured with a more balanced composition of core participants in the process. As well, the membership needs to be inclusive of under-represented countries such as Russia, China, India, Turkey, and Iran whose research communities have produced the majority of studies on non-thermal effects of RF in recent years”.

The preponderant presence of members of the International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection (ICNIRP) reminds us that this organization has steadfastly refused to accept new scientific evidence of potential health risks from non-thermal, low-intensity radiofrequency radiation despite recent scientific advances in knowledge on the subject.

The ICNIRP not only does not guarantee transparency or independence but is known that there are conflicts of interest within it, undermining the impartiality that should govern the regulation of limits on non-ionizing radiation people. Although it is essential that industry be involved and cooperate in this process, industry should not be allowed to bias its processes or conclusions (see Annex 2, report prepared by AVAATE in June 2015 on these conflicts of interest of the ICNIRP).

In 2015, more than 220 scientists from 41 nations that have published peer-reviewed papers on the biological or health effects of non-ionizing radiation, requested the WHO and the UN to protect human and wildlife exposure to such fields:

“Numerous recent scientific publications have shown that EMF affects living organisms at levels well below most international and national guidelines. Effects include increased cancer risk, cellular stress, increase in harmful free radicals, genetic damages, structural and functional changes of the reproductive system, learning and memory deficits, neurological disorders, and negative impacts on general well-being in humans. Damage goes well beyond the human race, as there is growing evidence of harmful effects to both plant and animal life. These findings justify our appeal to the United Nations (UN) and, all member States in the world, to encourage the World Health Organization (WHO) to exert strong leadership in fostering the development of more protective EMF guidelines, encouraging precautionary measures, and educating the public about health risks, particularly risk to children and fetal development. By not taking action, the WHO is failing to fulfill its role as the preeminent international public health agency” (see Annex 3, International EMF Scientist appeal, and Annex 4, list of organizations that support it).

We emphasize the need to ensure a high level of transparency, impartiality and plural criterion to expert assessments on health risks of non-ionizing electromagnetic fields (EMF), at all levels of decision, on basis of the WHO rules (point 4.2 of the Regulations for Expert Advisory Panels and Committees, points 2.6 and 4.6 of the Regulations for Study and Scientific Groups, Collaborating Institutions and Other Mechanisms of Collaboration, and articles 44-47 and 67 of the Rules of Procedure of the World Health Assembly), and in line with points 8.5.7 and 8.5.8 of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, Resolution 1815 (2011) on the potential dangers of electromagnetic fields and their effect on the environment, as well as with the Aarhus Convention (1998) on Access to Information, Public Participation in Decisionmaking and Access to Justice in Environmental Matters. The implementation of these principles would guarantee not only a pluralistic WHO RF EHC Core Group membership, but also the presentation of alternative scientific interpretations, the “views” of citizens and the presence of relevant groups involved with this issue.

Letter with annex documents, translations in Spanish, Catalan, French and Italian:

Click to access Letter.to.WHO.26.01.2017-final.pdf

Press release, multi-languages:

Click to access European.coordination.press.release-february-2017.pdf

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New Mexico: PNM Smart Meter proposal meets resistance from Attorney General and residents

“[A]n expert for the Attorney General’s Office found the proposal could cost customers $12 million, not the savings projected by PNM.”

And that’s the initial cost.

From the Santa Fe New Mexican

Public Service Company of New Mexico says its proposed new remote metering system will save customers $20 million over the next two decades and give consumers an ability to monitor their power use online.

Hearings began Monday before the state Public Regulation Commission on PNM’s plan to install the “smart” meters on more than 500,000 homes in New Mexico. The meters transmit power usage data over mobile networks.

The state Attorney General’s Office and others expressed concerns about the cost of the proposal and whether customers would financially benefit.

James Hallinan, spokesman for Attorney General Hector Balderas, said after the PRC hearing that the office supports modernization but it “should not be paid for on the backs of hardworking New Mexicans, especially where it means fewer jobs in our economy. We are concerned about the cost to consumers that may come along with this modernization.”

An estimated 125 jobs will be affected, PNM said.

Twenty residents from around New Mexico also unanimously objected to the proposal at the PRC hearing. Many raised concerns about the health implications of installing wireless technology in homes, which they say adds significant electromagnetic radiation to the environment and can cause ailments such as headaches, insomnia, rashes and cancer.

Customers could decline to have their meters replaced, but they would be charged a one-time fee and about $47 monthly. In other states, opt-out of such systems has been free.

Many of those who spoke against the proposal said the opt-out option would create an unfair economic penalty.

“My motto has always been, if it is not broken, don’t fix it and we have a system that works,” said Santa Fe resident Mary Ellen Underwood. “I have seen nothing that would suggest that this is in our favor.”

In February 2016, PNM proposed installing advanced metering infrastructure, or smart meters, which allow the company to remotely monitor and track energy usage, rather than sending out meter readers.

The company said it would complete the project by 2019 at a cost of $87.2 million and would recover the money in part by laying off meter readers and charging customers $5 a year for five years for the service. The company said it anticipated spending $5 million for severance packages for laid-off workers.

John McPhee a representative for the Santa Fe Alliance for Public Health and Safety, told a PRC hearing officer, “Wireless technology is the most dangerous technology I have seen for the environment and public since the invention of pesticides.”

Many at the hearing discussed how electromagnetic radiation used for smart meters and cellphones can harm people on the cellular level and spoke about personal experiences with electromagnetic sensitivity. They said the meters operate 24 hours a day, seven days a week, creating intrusive surveillance of personal behavior and making utility systems more vulnerable to hacking.

Julia Whitfield, a radon inspector with Safe Living Spaces in Santa Fe, said PNM “should be made to prove that it is safe before they put it onto our homes.”

Ray Sandoval, a spokesman for PNM, said, “Smart meters do not produce any negative health impacts.” He said the type of low-level radio frequency has not been linked to health impacts and would only be on for a few minutes a day.

[Editor: If Sandoval lies about this, what else is he lying about? Also: How many pulses per day do those “few minutes” represent? How often do their meters transmit total — data transmission and network “checking in”?]

On Monday, Gerald Ortiz, vice president of regulatory affairs for PNM, faced questions from the New Mexico Attorney General’s Office, the New Mexico Industrial Energy Consumers, the New Mexico Coalition for Clean Affordable Energy and others on how the new meters might raise utility bills.

Ortiz was asked if the company could promise that any unexpected costs would not fall on customers — such as a need to update the smart meter technology if it quickly becomes obsolete [or the meters fail].

He said PNM would have to do a new cost-benefit analysis at that point, but couldn’t say how it might impact customers.

[Despite industry knowledge that these meters can fail frequently and last only 5 or so years (versus less expensive analog meters lasting several decades), he couldn’t or rather wouldn’t say how the frequent and expensive replacement of these plastic meters would impact customers.]

In an earlier hearing, an expert for the Attorney General’s Office found the proposal could cost customers $12 million, not the savings projected by PNM.

Contact Rebecca Moss at 505-986-3011 or rmoss@sfnewmexican.com.

This story has been amended to reflect the following corrections: It originally gave an incorrect name for PNM’s expert witness. The expert’s name is Gerald Ortiz, vice president of regulatory affairs for PNM, not Pat Ortiz, as reported. The story also incorrectly reported that 125 employees would be laid off as a result of the smart meter program. PNM says that while 125 jobs will be affected by the meter installations, some positions will be lost through attrition and workers may have the chance to apply for vacant positions or be retrained for smart meter-specific tasks.

http://www.santafenewmexican.com/news/local_news/pnm-s-smart-meter-proposal-meets-resistance/article_3b349588-528c-5d58-b108-8a5b95ccdadc.html

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EFF: An Illinois court just didn’t get it: we are entitled to expect privacy; Smart Meter data reveals what’s going on inside our homes

From Electronic Frontier Foundation

MARCH 1, 2017
BY Karen Gullo and Jamie Williams

Cities across the country are switching to wireless smart meters. You may even have one in your home. Utility companies say the new technology helps consumers monitor their energy use and potentially save money. But smart meters also reveals intimate details about what’s going on inside the home. By collecting energy use data at high frequencies—typically every 5, 15, or 30 minutes—smart meters know exactly how much electricity is being used, and when. Patterns in your smart meter data can reveal when you are home, when you are sleeping, when you take a shower, and even whether you cook dinner on the stove or in the microwave. These are all private details about what’s going on inside your home—details that should be clearly within the bounds of Fourth Amendment protection.

But a federal district court in Illinois has held—in a lawsuit alleging that smart meters installed in Naperville, Illinois, put the privacy of the city’s citizens at risk—that Americans can’t reasonably expect any privacy in the data collected by these devices. According to the court, smart meter data is completely beyond the protection of the Fourth Amendment.

The case is currently on appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, which should throw out the district court’s sweeping, dangerous decision because it threatens the privacy of Americans across the country. Roughly 65 million smart meters have been installed in the United States in recent years, with 88% of them, over 57 million, in homes of American consumers. More than 40 percent of American households currently have a smart meter, and experts predict that number will reach about 80% by 2020. This case has far-reaching implications.

The lower court’s decision was based on flawed assumptions about smart meter technology. The court was convinced that data collected from smart meters is no different from data collected from analog meters, in terms of what it reveals about what’s going on inside the home. But that’s simply not the case. Smart meters not only produce far more data than analog meters—those set at collecting data in 15-minute intervals produce 2,880 meter readings per month compared to just one monthly reading for analog meters—but the data is also far more intimate. A single monthly read of cumulative household energy use does not reveal how energy is being used throughout the course of a day. But smart meter data does. And its time granularity tells a story about what is going on inside the home for anyone who wishes to read it.

The case law is clear: details of the home are entitled to the utmost Fourth Amendment protection. And this should include smart meter data.

EFF and Privacy International asked the Seventh Circuit if we could weigh in on this important case. We’ve requested to file a brief to help the court understand the broader impact of the lower court’s decision—and specifically, where the lower court went wrong. We hope the federal appeals court accepts our brief and throws out the lower court’s dangerous and out-of-touch ruing.

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2017/03/illinois-court-just-didnt-get-it-we-are-entitled-expect-privacy-our-smart

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Privacy advocacy groups file amicus brief, raise privacy implications of Smart Meter data

“Smart meter data reveals intimate details about what is going on inside the home. The lower court made false assumptions about how smart meter technology works, and its decision is a threat to the privacy of the 57 million and counting American homes with this new technology.”
Electronic Frontier Foundation attorney Jamie Williams

February 28, 2017

PRESS RELEASE: Privacy International & the Electronic Frontier Foundation Raise Concerns About Privacy Implications of Smart Meter Data In Newly Filed Brief

  • Today, Privacy International (“PI”) and the Electronic Frontier Foundation (“EFF”) are planning to file an amicus brief in the case of Naperville Smart Meter Awareness v. City of Naperville before the United States Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit.
  • PI and EFF argue that usage data from smart electricity meters differs quantitatively and qualitatively from analog electricity meters, revealing intimate details regarding a person’s private in-home activities.
  • PI and EFF argue that an Illinois District Court’s decision that there is no reasonable expectation of privacy in aggregate electrical usage data, regardless of whether the data is collected by a smart meter or analog meter, is flawed and that the Court’s decision should be reversed.
  • The European Union aims to deploy smart meters in 80% of households by 2020, raising many of the same privacy concerns implicated in this case.

Overview

Today, Privacy International, alongside the Electronic Frontier Foundation, is planning to file an amicus brief in the case of Naperville Smart Meter Awareness v. City of Naperville before the United States Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit. The brief argues that usage data from smart electricity meters differs quantitatively and qualitatively from analog electricity meters. While analog meters provide a single monthly read of cumulative household energy use (a single data point), smart meters typically collect data in 5, 15, 30 or 60-minute intervals. This level of granularity provides detailed information regarding how much energy is actually being used within a house at any given time. Thus, even in aggregate, raw form, smart meter data reveals intimate information regarding a person or family’s in-home activities.

Patterns generated by smart meter data can be used to infer how many individuals reside in a home as well as their activities, habits, and rhythms of movement, including when they leave their home and when they go to sleep. Smart meter data can even reveal which appliances are functioning at a given time, allowing one to infer, for example, when residents consume meals, take showers, watch TV, and use exercise equipment.

PI and EFF argue that an Illinois District Court’s decision, which held there is no reasonable expectation of privacy in aggregate electrical usage data, regardless of whether the data is collected from a smart meter or analog meter, is flawed and should be reversed.

Privacy International recently produced a 3-minute video which provides an overview of privacy risks with regards to smart devices, including smart meters. https://privacyinternational.org/node/1037

Smart meters in USA

In 2015, roughly 65 million smart meters were installed across the United States, with 88% of them, over 57 million, in homes of American consumers. More than 40 percent of American households currently have a smart meter, and experts predict that number will reach 80% by 2020. Recent studies show that Americans are particularly sensitive about data tied to their homes and expect privacy in the details of their day-to-day activities.

Smart meters in Europe

In the EU, a Directive mandates that 80% of household shall have smart meters by 2020. It is estimated that a total of 200 million smart electricity meters will be deployed by 2020, bringing the EU’s smart meter population to approximately 240 million. The European Data Protection Supervisor has warned that smart meters may “enable massive collection of personal data” and recommends that Member States provide adequate safeguards.

Privacy International Legal Officer Scarlet Kim said:

“The transition from analog meters to smart meters — from a single monthly reading of energy usage to thousands of data points per month — transforms a blunt record of kilowatts consumed into a deeply personal snapshot of a person’s life. The data protection and privacy implications of collecting this data are not confined to Illinois but resonate around the world. Smart meter deployments are shifting from North America to Europe with Asia and Latin America not far behind. The legal regimes in each country may be different, but as with the rapid adoption of most technology, existing safeguards may be inadequate to protect against these new intrusions into our private lives. Governments seeking to roll out smart meters must therefore ensure that the privacy of energy consumers is correspondingly protected.”

Electronic Frontier Foundation Staff Attorney Jamie Williams said:

“Smart meter data reveals intimate details about what is going on inside the home. The lower court made false assumptions about how smart meter technology works, and its decision is a threat to the privacy of the 57 million and counting American homes with this new technology.”

-END-

View at Medium.com

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BREAKING: Maryland State Advisory Council to Dept of Education — recommend school districts reduce school Wi-Fi

From Environmental Health  Trust
February 27, 2017

First State in the Nation: Maryland State Advisory Council Recommends Reducing School WiFi

Children’s environmental health experts respond to new US study linking wireless radiofrequency radiation to cancer after the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends reducing radiofrequency exposures.

Teton Village, WY — (SBWIRE) — 02/27/2017 — After reviewing new and growing evidence on health risks of wireless radiation, the Maryland State Children’s Environmental Health and Protection Advisory Council (CEHPAC) issued a Report advising the Department of Education to recommend local school districts reduce classroom wireless radiation exposures by providing wired—rather than wireless—internet connections. CEHPAC’s health experts include Governor appointed pediatricians, Maryland State House/Senate appointees and representatives of the Department of Education and Department of Health. The Council cited the recent US National Toxicology Program (NTP) findings of increased rates of rare malignant cancers in animals, as well as children’s unique vulnerability to the radiation. While several countries, such as France, Israel and Cyprus, already have such protective measures in place, this action to issue recommendations to reduce classroom wireless exposures is the first by an expert state body in the United States.

The Children’s Environmental Health and Protection Advisory Council recommends:

1. “The Maryland State Department of Education should recommend that local school systems consider using wired devices,” “WiFi can be turned off” and instead “a wired local area network (LAN) can provide a reliable and secure form of networking…without any microwave electromagnetic field exposure.”

2. New construction and renovations: “If a new classroom is to be built, or electrical work is to be carried out in an existing classroom, network cables can be added at the same time, providing wired (not wireless) network access with minimal extra cost and time.”

3. The Maryland State Department of Education should recommend that local school systems use strategies to minimize exposures: “Have children place devices on desks to serve as barrier between the device and children’s bodies; Locate laptops in the classroom in a way that keeps pupil heads as far away from the laptop screens (where the antennas are) as practicable; Consider using screens designed to reduce eyestrain; Consider using a switch to shut down the router when it is not in use”.

4. “The Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene should provide suggestions to the public on ways to reduce exposure: Sit away from WiFi routers, especially when people are using it to access the internet. Turn off the wireless on your laptop when you are not using it. Turn off WiFi on smartphones and tablets when not surfing the web. Switch tablets to airplane mode to play games or watch videos stored on the device.”

5. “The General Assembly should consider funding education and research on electromagnetic radiation and health as schools add WiFi to classrooms.”

6. The Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene should “ask the United States Department of Health and Human Services to formally petition the FCC to revisit the exposure limit to ensure it is protective of children’s health and that it relies on current science.”

7. The Report should be shared with the United States Department of Health and Human Services, Federal Communications Commission, Maryland State Department of Education and Maryland General Assembly

“While this report focused on WiFi radiation in schools, there are additional concerns about mobile phones and cell phone towers. CEHPAC plans to take a look at these broader issues over the next year,” the Report states.

Referring to the fact that US wireless public exposure limits were set in 1996, without testing for long term safety, the CEHPAC Council Report also stated that “decades-old standards need updating in light of new science.” Such statements are in line with the American Academy of Pediatrics, which has also called for a regulatory review and states that children’s brains are less mature and can absorb proportionately twice the wireless radiation as an adult because of children’s thinner skulls that contain more fluid.

“If you plan to watch a movie on your device, download it first, then switch to airplane mode while you watch in order to avoid unnecessary radiation exposure,” recommends the American Academy of Pediatrics.

In response to the 2016 NTP study findings of a cancer link, the American Academy of Pediatrics, Consumer Reports, Obstetricians and several Medical Associations have issued recommendations to reduce cell phone and wireless exposures to children. The American Academy of Pediatrics has also called on the United States government to strengthen wireless exposure regulations to protect children and pregnant women.

“Our children’s healthy future rests on the responsible actions of today,” stated Theodora Scarato MSW, of Environmental Health Trust, who brought the issue to the Council in Spring of 2014. “21st century learning should include 21st century science,” Scarato points out about research showing wireless alters brain development in addition to cancer. “Corded non-wireless connections in school are an important part of a safe and healthy school environment, respecting not only our children but also the teachers and staff.”

The Council heard testimony from health organizations and from parents who reside in multiple counties in the State of Maryland, including Montgomery County, Prince Georges County, Anne Arundel County, Baltimore County and Howard County. The Council also received hundreds of pages of expert scientific material and comments prior to the final Report, which the Council has posted on their website.

“Parents have a right to know if there is an environmental hazard in the classroom and actions that can be taken to reduce exposure. The stakes are so high for our children, yet we are way behind what has been happening around the world. Over 20 countries have taken steps and in some cases passed legislation to protect their youngest and most vulnerable citizens and it is time we do the same for ours,” stated Montgomery County parent Laura Simon, pointing to countries like France, Cyprus and Israel.

Scarato described the process of how she brought the health issue of children’s exposures to wireless in schools to Maryland State agencies almost three years ago, by first writing letters of concern about the school radiation exposures. “I was shocked to learn no government health agency had reviewed the issue from a health and safety standpoint considering how fast WiFi was being installed in schools across the State.” Dr. Sharfstein, Secretary of the Maryland Department of Health, initially responded to Scarato’s concern, “It is fair to say there are legitimate questions about the long-term health implications of microwave radiation” and that the Department of Health “would be interested in the advice and counsel of groups such as the Children’s Environmental Health and Protection Advisory Council.”

Scarato pointed out that the Education Department representative on the Council voted in favor of the CEHPAC recommendations to reduce wireless exposures.” The Maryland State Department of Education (MSDE) also had responded to Scarato’s initial concerns by referring her to CEHPAC which “exists for the purpose of identifying environmental hazards that may affect children’s health and recommending solutions to those hazards.”

In 2017, Maryland lawmakers will consider a bill to to create uniform screen safety guidelines for public schools “to protect children from the documented health hazards posed by daily use of digital devices.” Medical researchers are pointing to an array of psychological, emotional, and physiological psychological, emotional, and she see a logical health issues screens pose to children at the same time that schools are integrating wireless networks and one to one device initiatives into classrooms. In response to these health concerns, many schools worldwide are replacing wireless systems with wired systems, limiting time children spend on screens and developing policy to address health concerns posed by school wireless networks.

Wifi Radiation in Schools in Maryland Final Report of the Maryland Children’s Environmental Health and Protection Advisory Council
http://phpa.dhmh.maryland.gov/OEHFP/EH/Shared%20Documents/CEHPAC/MD_CEHPAC_SchoolWiFi_022017_final.pdf

Letters from Physicians CEHPAC’s Public Comments
http://phpa.dhmh.maryland.gov/OEHFP/EH/Shared%20Documents/CEHPAC/Doctor%20Letters%20on%20Wi-Fi%20In%20School%20%20Full%20Compilation%20.pdf

Maryland State Children’s Environmental Health and Protection Advisory Council Website
http://msa.maryland.gov/msa/mdmanual/26excom/html/08childe.html

Local/State/National and International Policy action on Wireless and Children
http://ehtrust.org/wp-content/uploads/International-Policy-Precautionary-Actions-on-Wireless-Radiation.pdf

American Academy of Pediatrics
Letter to FCC and FDA Commissioners
Letter to US Representative Dennis Kucinich in Support of the Cell Phone Right to Know Act
The AAP responds to study showing link between cell phone radiation, tumors in rats May 27, 2016
American Academy of Pediatrics Website: Healthy Children.org Cell Phone Radiation & Children’s Health: What Parents Need to Know

Testimony to the Maryland State Children’s Environmental Health and Protection Advisory Council, https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL2TxgdaZ0lgCbxVEVe30_BOe1v1Klu1w0
Testimony to Maryland State Board of Education https://youtu.be/XGhhtuvnqCs
Testimony of a High Schooler in Montgomery County about this issue to the State Board of Education https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wnRGRnboXBg

http://www.sbwire.com/press-releases/first-state-in-the-nation-maryland-state-advisory-council-recommends-reducing-school-wifi-775854.htm

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Transcript, news coverage of California Department of Public Health lawsuit

From CBS San Francisco Bay Area
February 24, 2017

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6akSJBtItvw

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xsuxpXruURM

http://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2017/02/24/judge-orders-california-to-release-papers-discussing-risk-of-cell-phone-use/

TRANSCRIPT:

Phil Matier: Welcome back. California could have to hand over some documents they’ve been trying to keep under wraps.

Maria Medina: It’s interesting. A Superior Court judge ruled the state must release the papers discussing the risk of cell phone use. Julie has more on the battle for public information in this weekend’s Consumer Watch.

Julie Watts: Yes, the documents were written by the state’s Environmental Health Investigations branch, believed to contain cell phone radiation warnings and recommendations for public use.

But the state refused to hand them over when requested by the director, by a director at UC Berkeley’s School of Public Health.

So he sued the state under the [California] Public Records Act, and Friday, we asked Joel Moskowitz why.

M: It will inform the public that there is indeed concern among the health professionals within the California Department of Public Health that cell phone radiation is a risk, and it will provide them with some information about how to reduce those risks.

J: And why do you think the state is trying to suppress this document?

M: They claim that they are concerned that this would lead to chaos and confusion among the public. I suspect that they were afraid of the reaction of the telecommunications industry should they publish this document; in fact, they even argued that in their brief.

J: Now in a tentative ruling Friday, a judge said the documents are in fact public record, stating in part there is significant public interest in DPH’s investigation into risks associated with cellular use and advising the public about those risks.

Moskowitz cites new research that finds that quote a significant relationship between cell phone of 10 or more years and increased brain tumor risk. However, the FCC officially says there is no evidence of a quote definite link between wireless devices and cancer.

Now the Department of Public Health wouldn’t comment on the ruling or if it intends to release the document. They could appeal. Joining us today is Claudia Polsky who represented Dr. Moskowitz in this case against the state.

So, Claudia, I have to start with why do you believe that these documents are public records? Did public funds, did taxpayer dollars pay for this research?

C: Absolutely, Julie. This is your money, my money, viewers’ money, Taxpayer- funded scientific research over a period of years resulted in a review of the scientific literature about cell phone risk and the production of a document that was supposed to reach the public informing people about how to reduce risks from cell phone use.

J: And we aren’t exactly sure why it never did reach the public. The state’s primary argument was that the document is a draft and therefore exempt from the public records act.

Now the court ruled that. In order to use that exemption, the state would have to prove three things:

1) that it is in fact a preliminary draft, not its final form

2) that the document would not normally have been retained by the agency so we couldn’t request it, and then

3) that the harm in releasing it outweighs the public interest. On that point, the state argued releasing it would cause panic.

So what did the court find on all three of these points? Again, when I say we, I mean we as the public like have a right to public information.

C: Absolutely, Julie. So the first thing the court found was that this document is not a draft. This document is a final document that the Department of Public Health is simply choosing not to release. And the judge actually looked at the document in her private chambers before making that ruling and she looked at versions of the document going back to 2010. And she said that in seven years of waiting for release, basically all that’s happened is some word-smithing in the department. There’s been no change to the scientific portion.

J: So, not a lot of re-writing. And again, this is based on research that began in 2010 but the agency chose not to release the document that it’s been revising.

C: That’s right. And since 2010, a number of department managers have acknowledged that they have kept copies of the document, and that’s another part of the legal test. If something is just a rough draft, you don’t keep it in your agency for several years. So, the judge also said this is not a draft because you’ve retained it in your normal course of business.

And the final and most important thing the judge said is that the public interest in releasing this absolutely outweighs the interest in continuing to withhold it. She said that the view that the Department of Public Health should keep information about possible risk from the public, because the public just couldn’t act responsibly with that information, was quote paternalistic.

J: Right. The guidance, she’s noted similar guidance has not caused quote public hysteria. And there has been similar guidance The state of Connecticut actually issued similar guidance which I believe, what can you tell us what they recommend in terms of public use.

C: Yeah, the Connecticut guidance is thorough and very responsible. It doesn’t say all the scientific data we’d like is in. But it says there is some preliminary cause for concern in peer-reviewed literature, and if you want to do everything you can to use your cell phone in the most health-protective manner while we wait for more definitive science, you can do everything possible to minimize the amount of time that your cell phone is close to your body.

J: And they talk specifically about sleeping with your cell phone or touching the cellphone to your body.

C: Yeah, They talk about not only using things like wireless devices or texting when the phone is in active use, but when the phone is on and you are not actively using it, there are many hours a day that people typically have it pressed against their body, in a front pocket, in a bra. Or, for example children sleeping with their cellphone right by their head. None of those are advised practices.

J: Many people use it as their, I use it as my alarm clock so it’s right by my head.

C: And CT Department of Health would implicitly say if you read its guidance, make the alarm louder and put it a few feet from your bed. Don’t put it right next to your head. And put your cell phone in your bag, not in your bra, not in your pocket. Those are precautions.

J: And I don’t know if this helps, but I always put it in airplane mode when it is right next to my head.

So we should note that the court argues, or rather DPH has not responded, we did ask to speak to DPH and they said they are not going to comment on this pending litigation. But if you’re concerned, the FCC does have some guidelines and they don’t, basically what you just said, simply don’t touch the phone to your body Every cell phone user manual does come with a recommended distance that it was tested for safety, somewhere between about a quarter of an inch and half an inch.

Thank you so much for being here today. We appreciate your insight into this case and of course we’ll continue to cover it and wait for those documents to be released, if they are in fact released.

Posted under Fair Use Rules.

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BREAKING: Judge rules California Dept of Public Health must release 2010 report on cell phone risks; CDPH says it would cause panic

The CDPH report was written in 2010, before the WHO cancer assessment and extensive additional research including the NTP study results showing carcinogenic effect, DNA damage and lower birth weights.  The FCC says no evidence of a “definite” link — smoke and mirrors language to hide the thousands of studies finding widespread biological impacts. This position only benefits the wireless industry.

From CBS SF Bay Area,  Consumer Watch
February 24, 2017

ConsumerWatch: State Continues To Refuse To Release Records On Cell Phone Radiation

Julie Watts follows up on investigation into the state Department of Public Health not releasing documentation on cell phone radiation 

BERKELEY (KPIX 5) — California could have to hand-over some documents it tried to keep under wraps.

On Friday, a Superior Court judge ordered the state to release papers discussing the risk of cell phone use.

The documents were written by the state’s Environmental Health Investigations branch and are believed to contain cell phone radiation warnings and recommendations for public use.

But the state refused to hand them over when requested by a director at University of California at Berkeley’s School of Public Health.

So Joel Moskowitz Phd sued the state under the California Public Records Act.

Moskowitz, the UC Berkeley School of Public Health’s director at the Center for Family and Community Health, told to KPIX 5 why he sued, saying, “I would like this document to see the light of day because it will inform the public that there is concern within the California Department of Public Health that cell phone radiation is a risk and it will provide them with some information about how to reduce those risks.”

And when asked why he thinks the state is trying to suppress this document, he said, “They claim that this would lead to chaos and confusion among the public, I suspect that they were afraid of the reaction from the telecommunications industry should they publish this document. In fact, they even argued that in their brief.”

And in a tentative ruling Friday, a judge found the documents are, in fact, public record and the public should have a right to see it.

The judge stated that there is significant public interest in DPH’s investigation into risks associated with cellular phone use and advising the public as to those risks.

Moskowitz cites new research that finds a significant relationship between cell phone use of 10 or more years and increased brain tumor risk.

The Department of Public Health would not comment on the ruling or if it intends to release the documents.

Lawyers note they could appeal.

The FCC says there is no evidence of a “definite link between wireless devices and cancer or other illnesses.”

But, Moskowitz, who believes cell phones do pose health risks and urges users to limit their contact with them, hopes the ruling will at least help call attention to the issue.

http://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2017/02/24/judge-orders-california-to-release-papers-discussing-risk-of-cell-phone-use/

Posted under Fair Use Rules.

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Lawsuit in Illinois: Consumer group appeals Smart Meter 4th Amendment violations to 7th Circuit Court of Appeals

From Smart Grid Awareness

By K.T. Weaver, SkyVision Solutions
February 22, 2017

Key Points Made in Appeal Brief

  • As a matter of law, NSMA members have a reasonable expectation of privacy for data acquired from inside their homes.  The Kyllo case, as precedent, held that because of the special sanctity of the home, residents automatically have a reasonable expectation of privacy in all material and data inside their home.  Yet the district court ignored this fundamental Fourth Amendment principle.
  • Utility “smart meters” collect detailed electricity usage data that can reveal intimate information about residents’ personal lives within their homes.
  • Warrantless collection of smart meter data (beyond that necessary for the basic delivery of electric service) without consent is an illegal “search,” regardless of whether or how that data is later analyzed or used.
  • The court erred in concluding that residents “are deemed to have consented” to collection and use of their data by a government-run electricity provider merely “through their usage of electricity services knowingly supplied by the City.”
  • Consent to a government search must not be the result of duress or coercion.

For full article with details:

Naperville Smart Meter Awareness Group Appeals to Higher Court on Fourth Amendment Violations

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Industry scientist paid $14,681 for one day of testimony promoting Smart Meters

Dr. Leeka Kheifets, lately of UCLA, but also connected to the utility industry’s Electric Power Research Institute and the World Health Organization conflict-of-interest filled EMF Project, has frequently appeared for PG&E, APS, and other utility companies to vouch for Smart Meter and wireless safety.

What does an industry “expert” like Leeka Kheifets get paid for her testimony?

Arizona Public Service, an investor-owned utility company, used Kheifets in 2011 for a Smart Meter workshop on radio frequency “concerns”. In its current rate case, APS was asked what she was paid for that one-day appearance.

APS refused to say, but was ordered by the Administrative Law Judge to answer. This is what APS finally said:

APS retained Dr. Kheifets to present on behalf of the Company at the Commission’s September 8, 2011 workshop regarding radio frequency concerns for a total remuneration of $14,681.14.

That’s quite profitable.

Is that a conflict of interest? Yes, it is.

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