11 minute read
Wireless radiation: Hide your kids, hide your wildlife
By Miranda de Moraes
Dozens, if not hundreds, of satellite antennas and towers loom across Teton County.
When asked if there are any health problems with the wireless radiation emitted by those facilities, many local officials were silent.
“We don’t have anything really to say on that subject,” said Jodie Pond, the director of the Teton County Health Department.
“This would not fall under the DEQ’s authority or expertise,” said Keith Guille, outreach officer of the Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality.
“I haven’t given this much thought,” said Carl Pelletier, the former public information officer for the town of Jackson.
There’s a reason for this. The federal government bars local governments from denying applications for wireless communications facilities “based on health considerations.”
The Federal Communications Commission — an independent government agency that regulates TV, cable, radio, satellite and wire communications — holds all of the power when it comes to determining the safety and distribution of consumer media devices.
“As a town and county we have very restricted lanes in which we need to stay when we review [cell tower proposals],” Jackson Town Councilor Arne Jorgenson said. “Otherwise, we would be in violation with federal law.”
The problem is that the FCC is concerned with “promoting competition,” “supporting the nation’s economy” and encouraging the “highest and best use of spectrum.” Consumer health is not highlighted as a priority on the commission’s site. The Telecommunications Act of 1996 hasn’t been updated since the days of 2G and flip phones, and that act is what governs the FCC’s current radio frequency regulations.
But in the past few decades scientists have found that over-the-counter wireless devices may be far more dangerous than the FCC says, especially for children.
One of the loudest voices of caution about wireless radiation is a resident of Teton Village: Devra Davis.
Davis is a founder of the National Toxicology Program and formerly an advisor for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, a com- mittee member of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and a team member of a climate change panel that was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2007. Davis is a big name in the scientific community. She’s also hard to reach, as she’s an advocate for stationary computers, landlines and Luddite means of communicating.
“Phones are not tested in the way they’re used,” Davis said. “They’re tested 5 millimeters from the body.”
She cited studies that demonstrate the dangers of unrepresentative testing, such as how the director of research at the Cleveland Clinic’s American Center for Reproductive Medicine, Ashok Agarwal, and his team found that men who keep their phone in their back pocket had lower sperm count and poorer sperm quality.
Davis has devoted the past 16 years to investigating and broadcasting the risks of wireless radiation on consumers and fighting the federal government. She founded the Environmental Health Trust over a decade ago, a nonprofit think tank that believes mobile devices, Wi-Fi, 5G and other radio-frequency systems are a risk to the health of humans and the environment.
The trust sued the FCC in 2021 for failing to update its health and safety radio frequency radiation guidelines from 1996 — and won.
The U.S. Court of Appeals of Washington, D.C. called the FCC’s policies “arbitrary and capricious” in regard to the commission’s testing procedures, “particularly as they relate to children,” its conclusions about “longterm exposure” and its “complete failure” to respond to the environmental damages of radio frequency.
The court ordered the FCC to make “a reasoned determination” as to whether the 447 exhibits in 27 volumes that the Environmental Health Trust submitted to the court suggesting biological effects — brain damage, headaches, memory problems, reproduction damage, synergistic effects, nervous system impacts, brain cancer, genetic damage, as well as harm to trees, birds, bees, and other wildlife — warrant a change to its decades-old regulatory guidelines.
Critics say the order is unspecific and lacks a deadline.
Since that ruling, Wyoming Gov. Mark Gordon wrote a letter to FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel, urging “immediate action” be taken to review current research and update policies on “wireless radio frequency radiation.” He worried about the “well-being of all citizens, including the most vulnerable, our children.”
Researchers say that babies and children are the most at risk to the health effects of electromagnetic radiation. Here’s why:
Young brains contain more fluid, and young skulls are thinner.
Neurons in the brains of kids under 6 are not fully myelinated, meaning the fatty, protective sheath that insulates nerves from damage is not yet developed.
Babies have more fat, which facilitates the penetration of toxic agents.
Kids have faster-growing tissues, which can sustain lifelong damage.
Joel Moskowitz, the director of the Center for Family and Community Health at the University of California, Berkeley, is at the forefront of research on the adverse health effects of wireless radiation. He has found that the frequencies of microwaves, which wireless communication devices radiate, interfere with normal cell functioning.
“The brain largely functions on electric signals,” Moskowitz said, “so when people hold phones directly to their head, they’re exposed to a lot of radiation.”
Microwaves can break open ion channels and prompt the production of stress proteins. If a cell can’t eliminate the stress, DNA damage can occur, which skyrockets the risk of cancer. Microwaves can also penetrate deep into organs — like the liver, lungs, brain and bladder — which is where the real trouble can start.
“Energy fields can further diminish organs’ abilities to fight off other chemical toxins,” Moskowitz said. “Any chemical toxins in the circulatory system then have an easier time penetrating brain tissue.”
The youngest members of our population remain especially at risk, with lab research finding that even fetuses exposed to cellphone radiation can suffer.
“The evidence is really, really strong now that there is a causal relationship between cellphone radiation exposure and behavior issues in children,” said Dr. Hugh Taylor, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the Yale School of Medicine, in a similar article on wireless radiation that was published by ProPublica in November.
A peril for pollinators
Harm to wildlife is also a worry, especially for pollinators and airborne animals.
Davis cited a study of six colonies of honeybees. A phone was placed inside three colonies’ hives, and the other three were left alone. After 10 days the bees in the hives with the phone did not return, and the queens in these hives produced substantially fewer eggs. The bees in the phonefree hives continued with business as usual.
Pollinators are essential to the functioning of ecosystems and human food systems. Bees in particular are responsible for pollinating around 90 commercially produced crops, according to the Food and Drug Administration. They are also a rapidly declining population: U.S. beekeepers lost over 45% of their honey bee colonies from April 2020 to 2021, according to the Bee Informed Partnership’s national survey.
“A fair number of studies suggest that bees are at risk of suffering problems of fertility and death,” Moskowitz said, “which are contributing to the demise of the bee population.”
Nonetheless, Grand Teton National Park is at the mercy of the FCC as well.
“We followed FCC regulations when we installed cell towers,” said Valerie Gohlke, public affairs specialist for the park. “We have not done studies on wireless radiation and animals.”
Despite the federal government’s preemption of local governments in the regulation of cell towers, people have the power to limit their own ra-
Dark skies forum coming up
The Environmental Health Trust and Wyoming Stargazing will host a public forum next month, “Why Dark Skies are Good for You and the Planet.”
Sleeping habits, cyptochromes and wireless device radiation will be among the discussions at the event. Email Dr. Devra Davis at info@ehtrust.org for information.
When: 5:30-7 p.m. March 6 dio frequency radiation exposure.
Where: St. John’s Episcopal Church, 170 Glenwood St.
While the FCC states on its website that “no scientific evidence currently establishes a definitive link between wireless device use and cancer or other illnesses,” the commission also concedes information on steps “to reduce your exposure to RF energy from cellphones.”
Protect yourself
Some recommendations, noted by the FCC and wireless radiation researchers, include:
– Use phones only when the signal is strong.
– Turn off phones or set them to airplane-mode while sleeping.
– Avoid holding a cellphone to ears. Instead, use wired headphones or the speakerphone.
– Stay away from Bluetooth devices, including AirPods.
– Keep phones and laptops away from vital organs, by storing phones in bags or distant pockets and using laptops on tables.
– Text instead of cellphone call whenever possible and avoid consuming videos. Yes, that means TikTok.
– Use wired-connection computers and landlines.
– Simply limit the amount of time on wireless devices. Try setting app timers.
Population density is directly correlated with radio frequency radiation exposure. Lucky for Jacksonites, exposure in Teton County is far lower than in, say, New York City.
Nonetheless, exposure from personal devices can be the most dangerous, as they are used close to the body. Following the above recommendations can reduce risk for a number of radiation-associated illnesses.
“It’s unrealistic to give up devices,” Moskowitz said, “but the technology could be made a lot safer.”
He named a few simple design changes phone manufacturers should consider — like placing an iron bead on the cord of a wired headset to limit the transfer of electromagnetic waves and orienting internal satellite connections in cellphones away from the body, rather than keeping their design omnidirectional.
Really, regulation rests in research and research relies on funding.
The FCC, on its website, states that “more and longer-term studies” are important for determining whether there is a “better basis for RF safety standards than is currently used.”
“There’s hardly any research on 4G and essentially no studies on 5G,” said Moskowitz, of the Center for Family and Community Health. “Health research lags way behind technology, but that’s how the industry and government wants it to be.”
Contact Miranda de Moraes at 732-7063 or mdm@jhnewsandguide.com.
Head Games
Teton Physical Therapy.
“The hours that those two spent developing this program and pouring into this was remarkable,” Love said, sitting in her office at Teton Physical Therapy in East Jackson.
Love and Hilke did a lot of work together, too, trying to get a communitybased concussion plan off the ground.
“Our real goal was to have everybody have these baseline screens, everybody who was involved in club or any organized sports in town, so they had just something to give us a measure to look back at. We did a lot of research.”
The thinking was, “Let’s get in on this at the forefront, and let’s be one of these models for a community-based concussion program,” Love said. “And I am 90% sure that we would have gotten to a place that was really good and useful and well received with some tweaking and changes and we were on that path if we hadn’t had that [pandemic] shutdown.”
The shutdown, of course, affected staffing and resources.
“It was all professional staff volunteering time to provide these [baseline] screens, which is difficult to sustain,” Love said. “We needed a lot of volunteers for each team.”
As they began running out of volunteers to staff the effort, the goal shifted to organizing a baseline testing day for the Teton County School District student-athletes.
“And we had it pretty dialed at that point, how it worked,” Love said. But, again, then came COVID in 2020. And then came the staffing shortages.
“Even if we reinvented how we were going to do things, health care was in a different place, so we were dealing with COVID and not dealing with concus- sion or a lot of other things. ... at that time,” she said.
But a lot of parents still want their children baseline-tested before playing contact sports, Love said. So Teton Physical Therapy still provides that, but it’s not free.
Cumulative impact
Hilke said the No. 1 sport she receives calls about is hockey.
“I get four or five calls a season,” she said, from parents whose children sustained a concussion or are suspected of sustaining one.
But not all youth hockey teams baseline-test, she said. It depends on the team and the parents, Hilke said.
“I definitely see it vary from program to program,” said Dr. Travis Riddell, a Jackson pediatrician and Teton County’s health officer. “It seems like the schools are more on top of it than the club sports, and definitely more driven by parents.”
Riddell doesn’t see a need to mandate public baseline scoring for student-athletes because it’s “not a public health threat.” But if baseline testing allows for a better diagnosis of concussions and for better management of head injuries, “then why not do it, from a parent perspective?” he said.
“I worry about the cumulative impacts of these [concussions],” Riddell said. “Even sub-concussive,” a bump or blow to head that doesn’t cause symptoms, “blows can have an effect over time.”
That’s why baseline testing is so important, experts say.
“I think that’s sort of what we would like to see happen, where it’s just normal to see the kid’s base-lined,” Hilke said. “But I don’t know of any community that’s been able to sustain it.”
A sustaining concussion management program — where student-ath- letes are regularly given baseline tests, where coaches and trainers regularly give sideline tests that compare scores to those baseline tests, where there is a flow chart of treatment protocol around head injuries — St. John’s Health needs to be a major player, Hilke said.
“I’d love to see it be in place again,” Dr. Jim Little Jr., chief of staff at St. John’s Health, of the concussion program that was gaining momentum. “But we can’t do it by ourselves. We can’t take care of all the baseline testing.” The hospital would need volunteers in the form of therapists, trainers, parents, etc., Little said.
‘I have a story’
Whatever happens, McLeod, who endured a face-shattering concussion on the slopes of Targhee, wants to be involved.
“Just so people can have support,” said McLeod, who today has only a small scar on his chin to remind him of what happened.
But the head injury you don’t see. The damage to the frontal lobe of his brain, you don’t see.
He had trouble with multitasking and impulsivity for months, he said. He did physical therapy and occupational therapy and speech therapy at a neuro outpatient program in Idaho. He was eventually OK’d to drive a car again. He has three metal plates in his face from the surgery.
“I learned a lot,” said McLeod, who was able to go stay with his parents in Boise for months and slowly recover and who recently returned to the slopes. “And I have a story, and I think there’s value in that story.”
McLeod said he was able to recover and is doing well today “because I had the tools and resources, but I realize that a lot of people who get brain injuries don’t have that.”
He was insured under the Affordable Care Act and he was able to sleep whenever he needed to at his parents’ home in Boise.
“It has changed my life in general,” McLeod said.
He recently reached out to both Hilke and Smithwick and is taking the lead on reestablishing a concussion/TBI support group.
“There’s definitely interest in it,” Smithwick said.
Smithwick and Riddell both mentioned research in the last decade that disputes the ages-old theory that all concussion sufferers need to sit in a dark room and remain inactive for weeks.
“One of the hardest things that people experience with concussion is that it can be really confusing, the balance between doing too little or too much,” Smithwick said. “What is the balance?”
Do too much too soon and it can be overwhelming, he said. But do too little and then symptoms might not improve.
“Graded exposure” is the answer, Smithwick said. That means a gradual return to school or work or athletics.
It’s a “big myth” that all concussion sufferers should retreat and avoid activity, he said.“If you can tolerate mild symptoms, that’s a good sign.”
Hilke is hoping momentum to the concussion debate in Jackson can be restored before a real tragedy happens.
“I think it’s the best community in the entire universe, and we could do anything together,” Hilke said. “It just takes a lot of factors to get the ball back rolling. We lost a lot of momentum.”
“Unfortunately, it takes something happening before everyone says, ‘Oh wait a minute, did we have a plan?’”
Contact Mark Baker at 732-7065 or sports@jhnewsandguide.com