Evidence suggests transmission lines indeed
dangerous
Date: Sat, 03 Feb 2001 09:20:03 -0600
From: Stacy Volk <cen21697@centuryinter.net>
Star Tribune Editorial
Published Saturday, February 3, 2001
Counterpoint: Evidence suggests transmission lines indeed dangerous
Roger R. Conant
I used to be a NIMBY. Now I am a BANANA, and apparently I will soon
become a NOPE, all because I am
a member of a group of homeowners that is resisting a proposal to build
a new power transmission
line through the south Metro area.
According to a front-page story in the Jan. 28 Star Tribune, we stand
for "Not in My Back Yard";
"Build Absolutely Nothing Anywhere Near Anyone," and we soon will be
urging "Not On Planet Earth."
According to the article, we risk condemning Minnesota to a future
of energy insufficiency.
Here is a better term for us: PATER, for 'Pay Attention to Electromagnetic
Research.'
Transmission power lines and substations emit electromagnetic fields,
or EMF. Moderately high levels
of EMF induce cancer. Indeed, epidemiological research demonstrates
that those exposed to elevated
EMF levels are as likely to experience an increased risk of cancer
as those who smoke cigarettes.
Obviously, you will not accept the word of us PATERs. So, here are a
few quotes from recent
scientific literature:
"You wouldn't know it from the mass media, but the evidence for an association
between magnetic
field exposure and childhood leukemia is now stronger than ever ....
Parents in high-exposure homes
have reason to be anxious about their children's health" (Microwave
News, September/October 2000).
"The level of statistical significance that we see for the excess risk
at high EMF exposure makes
chance an unlikely explanation" (British Journal of Cancer, September
2000).
"I have become increasingly convinced that electric and magnetic fields
do affect living systems,
... that these effects ... can occur at low frequencies and low intensities,
... and that we are
very close to understanding several of the mechanisms involved" (Magda
Havas, Canadian Research
Council's Environmental Reviews, September 2000).
"NIEHS suggests that the power industry continue its current practice
of siting power lines to
reduce exposures" (National Institute for Environmental Health Sciences'
EMFRapid Report on Health
Effects from Exposure to Power-Line Frequency Electric and Magnetic
Fields, June 1999).
We PATERs know what you are thinking. You are saying to yourself we
must be cherry picking obscure
studies, as you have read or heard about research that found no relationship
between EMF and serious
disease. You are correct. You did indeed hear about such research.
The power utilities and their
defenders point to the 1997 National Research Council Study, the 1999
UKCCS study and the 1999
Canadian Childhood Leukemia study. Each of these studies found no significant
relationship between
EMF and cancer. However, recently the prime authors of these studies
reworked their research and, in
the British Journal article cited above, determined their data and
the data of many other comparable
studies did demonstrate a relationship between EMF and cancer. They
admit their original conclusions
were incorrect. As a result, even the utilities are no longer asserting
that EMF is safe.
We PATERs have good news for you, though. None of these studies found
a relationship between EMF and
disease at the levels of EMF found in the average house. EMF is dose
responsive. At low levels it is
safe; at high levels it is dangerous. That news does not help us PATERS,
however, as our utility
estimates we receive up to 160 times the average EMF, way over the
intensity where EMF becomes
dangerous. Cancer is not the only danger. EMF is associated in valid
scientific research with a host
of other serious diseases. Furthermore, utilities have admitted in
court that electric fields of the
intensity found near power lines can disrupt pacemakers and defibrillators.
In a Jan. 27 editorial the Star Tribune expressed concern over biotech
food, while admitting these
foods appear to pose no known health threat. It suggested a program
to ensure that no biotech food
is sold without corporations certifying it is safe.
Those of us who live near transmission lines rightfully ask for more.
EMF is proven to be dangerous,
and therefore transmission power line standards must be more rigorous
than mere certification.
Before any line is built near a home, the utility must demonstrate
beyond all doubt that it is safe.
Everybody wants a robust power system. That does not provide an excuse
for sacrificing the health of
those innocents who happen to live near transmission power lines. There
exist effective ways to
eliminate EMF and still deliver power to Minnesotans, and there is
no excuse for failing to employ
them.
-- Roger R. Conant, Sunfish Lake. Spokesperson, Power Line Task Force.
© Copyright 2001 Star Tribune. All rights reserved.
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