Do cell phones cause brain tumors? Scientific evidence on the matter
is considered inconclusive, but residents of San Francisco are saying
they’d nonetheless like to be able to make more informed, and
potentially safer, cell phone shopping decisions.
On June 16, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors voted in
favor of a bill that would require cell phone retailers to display — in
11-point type or larger — the amount of radiation that’s emitted by
each phone they sell.
The radiation measure, called SAR, or specific absorption rate, is a
figure that the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) requires
cell phone makers to disclose — where and how they currently disclose
the figures, however, is essentially the matter under contention.
According to the SF Gate,
the new law would require cell phone operators to provide the city with
a list of the retailers selling their phones in the city, and to
provide those retailers with a list of SAR values. Stores would then
receive explicit instructions about how to display SAR values and
explain what they mean to consumers.
Failure to do so, however, would come with relatively lax consequences.
While retailers will have until Feb. 1, 2011, to begin displaying SAR
values, penalties for not doing so won’t be issued until May 1, 2011;
independent retailers will have until February 2012 and evade penalties
until August 2012. Even then, retailers will be forgiven their first
failure to do so, and afterward they’ll receive a $100 fine; caught
again and the fine rises to $250, and then $500 for each violation
afterward.
Not surprisingly, CTIA, an organization that represents the wireless communications industry, came out against the bill.
"Rather than inform, the ordinance will potentially mislead consumers
with point-of-sale requirements suggesting that some phones are 'safer'
than others, based on radio frequency emissions," John Walls, a
spokesman for the CTIA, said in a statement to the SF Gate. Walls added
that all phones legally sold in the United States already comply with
FCC safety standards for radio frequency emissions and so are
considered safe.
In August 2009, a
group calling itself the International Electromagnetic Field (EMF)
Collaborative came out against a well-known Interphone study on the
correlation between brain tumors and cell phone use. While
Interphone found no conclusive evidence, the EMF Collaborative alleged
that the Interphone study was funded by the telecom industry and so was
biased in its methods and findings.
Further, in a 44-page report of its own, the collaborative sought to
“raise red flags” on the issue, pointing to additional studies, such as
one conducted in Sweden that found a 280 percent increase in the risk
of brain cancer after 10 or more years of cell phone use.
A member of the collaborative told PC World at the time of the report’s
publication, “Cell phones can be used appropriately and have a certain
usefulness, but I fear we will see a tsunami of brain tumors, although
it is too early to see that now since the tumors have a 30-year
latency. I pray I’m wrong, but brace yourself.”
CTIA’s Wall responded then as well, saying that “the peer-reviewed
scientific evidence has overwhelmingly indicated that wireless devices
do not pose a public health risk.”
In November 2006, a
study by the Cleveland Clinic additionally suggested that men who use a
cell phone for more than four hours a day could be damaging their sperm.
Dr. Ashok Agarwal, author of the report, said at the time that his
study was consistent with earlier findings regarding fertility and
exposure to electromagnetic radiation.
In January, Maine state Rep. Andrea Boland proposed a bill to put warning labels on cell phone packaging,
noting the possible link between brain cancer risk and electromagnetic
radiation. In March, the bill — which may have been especially damaging
for Research In Motion, whose BlackBerry Bold 9700 handset is said to
emit the highest SAR level in the industry — was defeated.
According to a February ranking by the Environmental Working Group,
the BlackBerry Bold 9700’s SAR value was followed by that of the
Motorola Droid, the LG Chocolate and the Google-branded HTC Nexus One.
The week of June 21, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors is
scheduled to cast a final vote on the decision, which, according the SF
Gate, is expected to pass.
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