Laserfiche WebLink
02/15/2001 THU 10:14 FAX 612 241 1399 RIVERSIDE Z002/003 <br /> • <br /> • <br /> 4Ca <br /> O <br /> CONNEXUS <br /> ENERGY <br /> Memo <br /> February 13,2001 <br /> To: Riverside Development <br /> Attention: Daryl Thompson <br /> From Leo Offerman <br /> Regarding: EMF <br /> I know that the transmission lines have been brought up regarding the siting of the park <br /> area in your new development I thought that the following might be of interest to you. <br /> • Counterpoint: There is no conclusive evidence that power-line EMF harms health <br /> The Feb.3 Counterpoint"Evidence suggests transmission lines indeed dangerous" <br /> misled readers by suggesting electric and magnetic fields(EMF),specifically those from <br /> transmission lines, pose a health risk. EMF exists wherever electricity is present,whether near <br /> appliances or other household equipment, or near transmission and distribution lines that <br /> transport electricity from power plants to homes and businesses. It is impossible to generate and <br /> use electrical energy without creating such fields;they are an inevitable consequence of our <br /> reliance on electricity. <br /> After more than 30 years of extensive research on power lines and EMF, and a recent <br /> examination of that body of research by our country's most prestigious government research <br /> organizations,there is no conclusive evidence that EMF exposure from power lines, even at high <br /> levels, causes adverse health effects. During the past five years, more than 30 major <br /> epidemiological studies of power-frequency fields and cancer support this conclusion. <br /> In June 1999,the National Research Council established a committee of scientists and <br /> engineers to review the activities conducted under the EMF-Research and Public Information <br /> Program. In its report,the council concluded that"the results of the EMF-RAPID program do not <br /> support the contention that the use of electricity poses a major unrecognized public-health <br /> danger." <br /> The National Institutes of Environmental Health Sciences in its June 1999 report states, <br /> "The scientific evidence suggesting that EMF exposures pose any health risk is weak." It further <br /> states, "Virtually all of the laboratory evidence in animals and humans, and most of the <br /> mechanistic work done in cells,fails to support a causal relationship between exposure to EMF at <br /> environmental levels and changes in biological function or disease status." <br /> In January 2000,the Minnesota Department of Health completed an assessment of EMF <br /> health effects research.The department conducted this assessment because of public concerns <br /> the potential of EMF to cause cancer and other adverse health effects.The <br /> • regarding assessment included an evaluation of the peer-reviewed literature and the conclusions of the <br /> scientific committees convened by federal agencies and the U.S. Congress.The Health <br /> Department's assessment concluded that the current body of evidence does not show that <br />