Brought to you as a public service of the Open Spectrum Foundation (Stichting Open Spectrum), Amsterdam - Prague

openspectrum.info logo

NEWS

Toronto reviews WiFi health risk

From "Why Wi-Fi may be injurious to your health," by Rosie Lombardi, Wireless IT World Canada, 20 July 2006:

"First, children living near power lines were believed to be at risk for leukemia. Then, cell phones were going to fry our brains. Now, should we worry about Wi-Fi hotzones?

"Prompted by citizen concerns, the Toronto Board of Health is conducting a study of the potential health risks posed by Toronto Hydro Telecom's plans to blanket the downtown core with Wi-Fi access points.

"A meta-study of the research done in this area is under way, but no field research is planned, says Ronald MacFarlane, supervisor of environmental health assessment and policy at Toronto Public Health (TPH), which delivers programs and services determined by the Toronto Board of Health. In 1999, TPH conducted a health assessment of human exposure to RF, and the objective of this second study is to provide an update...

"Based on the recommendations of the first study, the Toronto Board of Health adopted a policy of 'prudent avoidance' in 1999 and determined that the level of exposure to radio frequency (RF) electromagnetic fields should be set at 100 times below Safety Code 6, a guideline developed by Health Canada.

" 'At this point, we're trying to determine if there's a conflict between prudent avoidance policy and actual usage of Wi-Fi,' says MacFarlane. 'The initial indications are that Toronto Hydro's Wi-Fi RF would be below our recommended level, and there would be no need to alter plans to meet the standard.'

"He expects the study and its recommendations to be completed and presented to council in early 2007.

"To put the issue in perspective, MacFarlane explains that all manner of infrastructure and consumer devices -- power lines, radio towers, Wi-Fi routers, cell phones, radio and television, and so on -- emit electromagnetic radiation at different frequencies, with varying effects on biological systems.

"The electromagnetic spectrum is divided into two major categories, ionizing and non-ionizing radiation. High-frequency radiation with shorter waves at the ionizing end of the spectrum, such as X-rays and gamma rays, has undisputed detrimental effects on human health. At the borderline between ionizing and non-ionizing is ultraviolet radiation, emitted by the sun, which also has a clear link to skin cancer.

"Controversy rages at the non-ionizing, lower-frequency end of the spectrum. At the lowest end are electromagnetic fields (EMF) such as those created by power lines. 'The longer the wave, the fewer health effects we tend to find,' says MacFarlane. 'I know studies have looked at cancer caused by exposure to power lines, but the evidence is weak.'

"Radio waves, which are used in cell phones, Wi-Fi, radio, television and other consumer devices, operate at a higher frequency than power lines... For RF emissions, there are few studies showing a clear impact, says MacFarlane. However, he says he is reviewing research conducted in Switzerland that provides some fair evidence of a link between RF emissions from radio towers and sleep disturbances.

" 'This is something we see quite often in the literature -- the RF impact on sleep,' he says. 'The Swiss changed their laws regulating RF emissions based on that study.' But this is just one of a multitude of studies, some with conflicting findings, that the TPH is reviewing and considering to determine the patterns of risk.

"Considering the vast array of infrastructure and devices that produce RF emissions, how much more would a Wi-Fi hotzone add to the totality of emissions people are exposed to in downtown Toronto? 'It's like noise,' says David Dobbin, president of Toronto Hydro Telecom. 'We're already bombarded by radio waves. Our equipment operates in the same frequency and under the same licensing conditions as cordless phones, baby monitors and garage door openers. Cell phone towers operate at 10,000 times the power of our Wi-Fi units, and FM radio towers are 100,000 times.'

"Tony Muc, a physicist and professor at the University of Toronto's department of public health sciences, agrees with Dobbin's description. 'This particular application is yet another specific signal within this sea of electromagnetic fields we live in,' he says. 'People have exploited radio waves since Marconi's time. And historically, natural electromagnetic phenomena have occurred as well. Biological entities have been exposed to them forever.'

"Dobbin points out that Toronto Hydro Telecom's equipment is more than fully compliant with all regulations set by the Canadian government. "Our emissions are a fraction of levels recommended by Safety Code 6 and the Toronto Board of Health. We've even gone so far as to get technical compliance declarations from our vendors such as Siemens to guarantee their equipment puts out less.'

"But many environmentalists distrust the regulations setting levels of exposure to RF, pointing out that it took decades to establish clear links between the harmful effects of DDT and regulatory decisions to ban it outright, and that no longitudinal studies have been done for RF.

" 'My response to that is that long-term studies have been happening in society since the advent of electricity,' says Muc. 'The background level of electromagnetic radiation, or "electronic smog," has been increasing exponentially since about 1900...'

"But the spikes associated with human-generated RF are not easy to quantify or understand. 'Take the CBC [the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation], for example, the transmission associated with that radio station, at that specific frequency, if we compare the ratio of the level today to 1900, it would be about a million,' says Muc. 'But that's a narrow window of the spectrum. If you go 10 kilohertz on either side of that band, you would only see an increase of maybe 10 or 100 times.'

"As a consequence, Muc has strong views on regulatory decisions setting RF levels below Safety Code 6. He says it is an international standard developed by scientists who've done extensive studies to find substantive connections between emissions and risks to human health. 'I think it's terribly misguided, under the rubric of "prudent avoidance", to undercut standards. I think it's scientific nonsense, it's political, and it's socially short-sighted,' says Muc. 'So what is the point of the standards in the first place? It's trying to say, "Because I'm ignorant, I want the number to be this." '

"He says this tactic creates even more public distrust of RF standards. 'They're contributing to that distrust and that's why I'm against it. It's not all motivated by the military-industrial complex. I believe these standards are the result of good science.'

"But some disagree with that view. 'My retort to that is that you have to question all authority,' says Dr. Fred Gilbert, president of Lakehead University in Thunder Bay, Ontario, which created an international stir and a precedent cited by critics of Toronto Hydro's Wi-Fi plans by banning Wi-Fi on campus. 'Every person viewed as an authority operates from a perspective that is limited. A physicist is not a biologist, nor is a biologist in a position to determine the effects caused by physical forces,' says Gilbert, who believes in a precautionary policy in the face of evidence that is suggestive if not irrefutable.

"He points out that the cause and effect relationship of smoking and cancer was not teased out for decades. 'What we have is a set of standards that might be ill-based at this point in time.'

"No particular study swayed Gilbert, whose own background is in zoology, rather it is the preponderance of evidence suggesting behavioral, cellular and other impacts that were seen decades ago to be precursors to cancer in other scenarios. And some emerging evidence on new issues also played a role. 'Some of the evidence provided to me has been shocking from individuals who have electrosensitivity, who've been able to demonstrate their case and who've suffered abuse in trying to indicate to health professionals what they're dealing with is real,' he says.

"Muc has reviewed studies of in this area and says he is perplexed by the findings. 'What I'm skeptical of is the demonstrable link between what they claim to observe or feel and actual electromagnetic fields. I remain baffled by that but I can't deny that people experience these things. It's like the issue of clairvoyance or predicting cards -- it's hard to determine if they're random occurrences'...

"Toronto Hydro Telecom's Dobbin is aware that emotions run high on the issue of RF exposure. 'It's an emotional issue. I understand that people have concerns and that some people believe they've been negatively affected by RF. I sympathize with their position,' he says. 'But wireless services are a benchmark for modern living, and they are proliferating everywhere.' "

[: 20 July 2006]

Click here for the LATEST HEADLINES

Recent News...

British Telecom's "Wireless Cities" combine WiFi, VoIP and surveillance support (16 July)

Spectrum Sharing Test Beds to help "cognitive" radio (15 July)

Nike+iPod wireless kit for runners goes on sale (14 July)

Ofcom proposes to deregulate CB and allow unlicensed low-power FM (14 July)

"Smart" fitting room uses RFID to suggest matching apparel (13 July)

Study finds WiFi more valued than iPods or home phones (13 July)

South Korea allocates large blocks of "Flexible Access Common Spectrum" above 3 GHz (12 July)

Railroads respond to strong demand for WiFi/WiMax on trains (12 July)

Bahrain proposes "light licensing" of WiFi (10 July)

First wireless wrist-worn PC due this month (6 July)

First Bluetooth watches released (6 July)

UWB firms giving up on spectrum below 6GHz? (6 July)

European Commission's online consultation for RFID (5 July)

New Zealand proposes wireless "managed parks" (5 July)

"RFID Hits a Bump" (1 July)

New CEPT workgroup on sharing "flexible" bands (29 June)

Replace 25 national regulators with one European spectrum agency?? (27 June)

Study shows in-building wireless a great investment (27 June)

Gigabit wireless everywhere - sooner than you think (27 June)

Wi-Fi Alliance sees China as the next hotspot (27 June)

Journal of Communications - debut issue on dynamic spectrum sharing and cognitive radio (27 June)

Visa and Mastercard plan RFID/NFC payment tests in the UK (27 June)

New report says license-exempt WiMAX and mesh boost urban nets (26 June)

One Wireless Laptop per Child (26 June)

"Cell phone signals excite brain, study finds" (26 June)

Canadian RFID privacy guidelines issued (23 June)

First pilot project in Europe for NFC mobile payments (17 June)

New radio plan adopted in Ukraine (13 June)

New Latin American thinking on spectrum (13 June)

Wisconsin law bans forced RFID impants (13 June)

"Bluecasing": how to find Bluetooth devices - and how to hide them (13 June)

IEEE starts work on low-frequency "RuBee" standard (9 June)

Ambitious new History of Wireless published (8 June)

"Expect an Explosion of Connectivity" (8 June)

RFID to be woven into Euro notes? (8 June)

New WiFi protocol to counter interference from microwave ovens (8 June)

Consultation on US test-bed for spectrum sharing (7 June)

GNU Radio - unlocking the potential of wireless (7 June)

New York Times endorses city WiFi (7 June)

China to publish RFID development plan this month (5 June)

Lasers improve UWB (5 June)

"The quiet wireless revolution" (4 June)

WiFi distance record inspires rural Venezuelans (2 June)

WLAN equipment sales expected to top $2.5 billion this year (2 June)

Abuse of licensing in Zimbabwe (1 June)

Zing's WiFi MP3 player (1 June)

Visit our News Archive for additional stories.

To receive the openspectrum.info newsfeed by email, enter your email address:

(Email subscriptions managed by FeedBurner)