The age-old adage First Do No Harm should be the tempering goal of not only medicine, but government and industry, especially when they team up to deploy new technologies, set policies and serve the people.

This blog exists to reveal and analyze areas in which these powerful groups are failing to "first do no harm."

Friday, December 17, 2010

Owen Veterinarian Fights Xcel Energy Over Electrical Pollution

I interviewed Dr. Pamela Jaffke, a veterinarian in Owen, Wisconsin, who is suffering because of the bullheadedness of her utility company, Xcel Energy. They, along with the other state power companies and the Public Service Commission, refuse to take action to improve the safety of their product in spite of the continuous stream of health complaints like Dr. Jaffke's over the years.

It is time for the Wisconsin utilities to stop releasing their voltage trash - known as transients and harmonics - into the ground, and upgrade the system statewide to protect people, and not just cows, from exposure to biologically harmful ground currents.
.........................................................................
I'm not after money. I don't care if Xcel would give me a million dollars right today. That's not going to buy my cat's health. That's not going to buy my health. --Pamela Jaffke
.........................................................................
Since realizing she was electrically sensitive, Dr. Pamela Jaffke, a dairy veterinarian in Owen, has worked to make her house safe. Stetzerizer filters helped a bit, but were unable to bring the electrical pollution levels down far enough. "The only thing that made things truly livable, I just unhooked the neutral from the water main," she says.

Then her home's electrical pollution levels spiked November 1 following some work to the sewer pipes, which stopped them from carrying the ground currents, and she and her cat, Magic, were hit hard with debilitating symptoms. "It was an absolute disaster for both of us and it's continued that way," says Jaffke, who has Multiple Sclerosis, and gets painful tingling in her legs from this electrical exposure. Her cat has trouble walking and stops eating.

Xcel came out and ran circles around her without addressing the problem, she told me. "If I was a dairy farm, they would be forced to do something. Anything over 1/2 volt, they are forced to do something," says the veterinarian. The current readings in her home range from 1/2 to one volt.

Wisconsin law currently protects cows from high levels of stray voltage, which Jaffke says is not "stray." "Xcel put it there and it is Xcel's problem," she says. The term stray voltage only legally applies to cows. The currents are referred to as electrical pollution in relation to humans. "But there's no laws to protect people," says Jaffke.

Not a New Issue
The health menace of stray voltage/electrical pollution is not a new issue. Wisconsin journalists have blazed a fiery trail to try to expose it. Reporter Chris Hardie at the La Crosse Tribune had won five Wisconsin journalism awards and was nominated for a 2000 Pulitzer Prize for work covering the issue, including a special website dedicated to it, while journalist Kurt Gutknecht had been fired as editor of the Wisconsin Agriculturist for continuing to write about the health affects on animals and the farmers themselves.

State Representative Barb Gronemus, D-Whitehall, had proposed legislation in 2003 to force the utilities to clean up their act. The legislation died in committee despite huge support exhibited at a public hearing September 18, 2003. Supporters blame pressure from the big utilities on the lawmakers for its failure.

At a volt, I'm objecting.
Today, Dr. Jaffke insists she is covered by the National Electrical Safety Code (NESC) 92D, which states that there should be no objectionable flow of current over the earth. "At a volt, I'm objecting," she says.

It is likely to be an uphill battle. Xcel Energy has a history of fighting customers over health issues. They argued in a 2008 article that the cow deaths could be blamed on other factors than stray voltage. In an article in the La Crosse Tribune on December 11, 2006, Xcel and the Public Service Commission of Wisconsin claimed that no credible scientific evidence had been raised "that suggests the electrical system in Wisconsin is unsafe or causes any health problems in humans."

Such resistance to customers' needs and safety is deeply ingrained in the untouchable utilities and their unaccountable defender despite numerous studies showing harm, and the nonstop procession of people reporting illness over decades. (See Research and Technical sections at Electrical Pollution , and the Stetzer site for some of the studies and cases. Here is a case involving cancer.)

Owen Council Meeting
Dr. Jaffke is enlisting the help of her city to help deal with the powerful utility. She explained her case and read a list of lies Xcel told her during the Owen city council meeting on December 15. For example, the utility told her that the 5-wire system is unsafe. But, adding a fifth wire would easily correct the problem of electrical pollution for her - and for all residents statewide.

This acceptable, effective method appears in the 1995 report from the research arm of the utilities, the Electric Power Research Institute. It states: "A method that practically eliminates ground currents associated with primary distribution line and still maintains the advantage of a four-wire multi-grounded system is a five-wire system."

It would just cost pennies to do, says Jaffke. It is such a simple solution, she told Owen council members, who were alarmed to hear about the serious health effects the respected veterinarian and her cat were experiencing. The council meets in a building right behind her house, "which pretty much implies that they're getting fried, too," says the human "canary in the mine."

Jaffke hopes her city will have the will and the legal clout to get results. She says, "The city has an obligation to protect their citizens and make sure that any corporation doing business in town is up to code."

Owen mayor Tim Swiggum said during a telephone interview that they plan to go at this from both ends: They will talk to the guys who help them when they are extending power lines to see if that area of town is overloaded, and they also will meet with the higher-ups at the utility to see what they have to say about this problem.

"It's fairly new to me," says Mayor Swiggum, who has begun to educate himself on this controversial issue. "I don't want to burn any bridges. We need the electric company," he adds, though he agrees that Pam Jaffke definitely needs help with the problem in her house.

Jaffke told me she warned the city, "Xcel is going to try to tell you that everything's fine just like they told me. You'll have to be able to refute every one of their arguments. They're not just going to roll over and do whatever you say."

The Owen resident says she just wants a resolution to the problem, and hopes the city can help. But she would not mind if the utility ended up suing her because "in court they'll be exposed as a fraud."

"I'm not after money. I don't care if Xcel would give me a million dollars right today. That's not going to buy my cat's health. That's not going to buy my health," the Owen veterinarian says.

How Can People Check Their Own Homes?
Jaffke says the way to check for voltage coming into your home is to borrow or buy a $50 volt meter. A trifield meter will show the microwave frequencies coming into the house. So, for about $200 people could get together and purchase both meters. "Between a trifield meter and a volt meter you have all the tools you need to figure out the garbage that's coming into your house," she says.
.........................................................................

And I say, if the utilities got up to speed and took care of the mess they have made, everyday people would not need to try to do this kind of detective work or have to battle the power companies for their health. What a racket.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Smart Meter and Wi-fi Radiation Kills Plant-life

Playing classical music and speaking kindly and gently to this plant would not be enough to revive it from the the damage caused by smart meter radiation.

And the harm done to these trees by wi-fi would be impossible to treat.

Obviously, what these plants need is a good shrink, since this is clearly a psychological problem. Right?

Friday, November 12, 2010

Wisconsin Utilities Bullying Customers Over Smart Meters - 2013 ACTION UPDATES


2013 UPDATE:

Stand up for
INDIVIDUAL PRIVACY, SECURITY & HEALTH CONTROL FREEDOM

Ask WI state lawmakers to support the proposed WI Smart Meter Opt Out bill
to let individuals choose to have mechanical analog meters that will not risk their privacy, security or health choices for their own families.

EXPLAIN to lawmakers how RAW USAGE utility data collected in various intervals creates a pattern that can be analyzed to reveal types of appliances, whether someone is home, etc. Analog meters instead keep a running total to pay as you go. They send no usage signals that can be hacked. They are 100% non-invasive, and last 40 years, unlike transmitting meters, which are supposed to last 20 years but have many failures and problems. Smart meters are a money drain for costs of software and hardware updates, ongoing security attempts, etc.

ALSO TELL FEDERAL senators and congressmen and women to stop H.R. 2685, the newly proposed Smart Grid Advancement bill, which will mandate smart meters for all utilities nationwide, and lead to rationing to meet mandated usage cuts.

2012 Update:

This video includes footage of WE-Energies smart meter readings:
 Reject Smart Meters in Wisconsin.

Remember, there is NO federal mandate to have a smart meter. The Santa Cruz, CA public health officer issued a report on health risks of smart meters. And the ACLU of Hawaii and Vermont said residents should have a choice to reject smart meters due to privacy concerns.

The FCC's current  1996 radiofrequency exposure standards are grossly outdated, based on a 6 minute exposure of high microwave heating levels on a large, healthy male. In 2012, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) called for the FCC to do a formal inquiry into their inadequate standards since children's size/density allows RF energy to penetrate deeper. AAP wrote in another letter, " It is essential that any new standard for cell phones or other wireless devices be based on protecting the youngest and most vulnerable populations to ensure they are safeguarded throughout their lifetime."

The new 2012 BioInitiative Report lists over 1800 recent studies showing biological harm from pulsed radiofrequency exposure at much lower levels than allowed. In 2011, the World Health Organization had added exposure to radiofrequency radiation to its list of 2b potential carcinogens  despite strong pressure from the industry not to.



Report from November 2010:

This is really, strictly speaking, illegal because your home is supposed to be your sanctuary. To put something on your home that involuntarily exposes you to a completely untested likely carcinogen, something that you know makes you sick, it’s unethical.--Catherine Kleiber, Waterloo


The nationwide roll-out of transmitting radio frequency utility meters, known as smart meters, has intensified since the federal push and funding for them came through the Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, which spent $4.5 billion of our tax dollars for Smart Grid development, deployment, and worker training. Wisconsin utilities got $21.5 million of the $3.4 billion awarded for smart grid projects, including meter installation. But people who are sensitive to the effects of microwave radiation and electrical fields cannot tolerate the new source of emissions. And some Wisconsin utility companies have been bullying their paying customers who have resisted the installation of smart meters, or requested their removal for health reasons.

In fact, the chronic bursts or pulsing of smart meters have not been proven to be biologically safe for anyone. Current federal standards are grossly out of date, not taking into account the growing levels of microwave radiation exposure people now get 24/7 from various sources. Furthermore, FDA/FCC standards are based solely on the heating effect of microwave radiation on a large, grown man, ignoring numerous studies that point to other effects, including irregular heartbeats, melatonin depletion, which affects sleep, and abnormal mast cell proliferation, which affects the immune system and inflammation levels.

In light of this information, it is an outrage the way utility companies are treating individuals with health problems and concerns who are simply trying to control their own home environments.


He said they sent him due to his size and being thuggish.Mardie Barbiere, Cascade

Take Mardie Barbiere (Hartenstein) from Cascade, for instance. When she got the notice that a transmitting electric meter would be installed on her home, she called We Energies and told them she did not want it. “I said, please don’t send anybody…They sent three people, and the last one was a large thug. He said they sent him due to his size and being thuggish. He was going to intimidate me, and I said, honey, no, no, no. You’re here to do a job, and I appreciate the effort, but I will not be getting the meter,” she reported.

Barbiere had been house-bound for years with debilitating MS. “MS never goes away. I have scarring in my brain and spinal column,” she said. But her MS symptoms quickly cleared up about nine years ago after she updated bad wiring in her home and filtered the remaining electrical pollution using David Stetzer’s electrical filters. Her neurologist, a nationally known M.D., was amazed at her recovery. “All I know is I don’t go to the doctor anymore,” she said.

Barbiere said her children’s health also improved when their home was filtered. So, the feisty 49-year-old was not about to jeopardize her family’s health with a smart meter. She confessed, “I padlocked my electric meter…and I put up a dog fence. Oh yes, I did, girlie. I’m just dead set against them. I did everything in my power to protect my family.”

But then came the disconnection threat from We Energies, with no cut-off date given.


As far as we were concerned they were not being accommodating in the least.Catherine Kleiber, Waterloo

Meanwhile, Waterloo farmers Catherine and Dan Kleiber had also padlocked their We Energies meter (photo at top.) “We got truck lettering and we made a sign on there,” thirty-seven-year-old Catherine said. She had finally recovered from chronic fatigue syndrome only by diminishing her exposure to electrical pollution on home wiring. Her 36-year-old husband is a Type-1 Diabetic, and his blood sugar levels go crazy upon microwave radiation exposure. Their children also get sick from microwave emissions. This family could not tolerate a transmitting meter on their property.

The Kleibers volunteered to call in meter readings from the existing meter to be able to keep it. But when We Energies offered them three options that was not one of them. They could get the new meter installed where the old one is, have the new meter moved to anywhere on their property at their expense, or get off the grid.

Catherine responded, “As far as we were concerned, they were not being accommodating in the least because we couldn’t have the meter for health reasons. Having it on the property didn’t really help. Excuse me, but saying ‘get off the grid’ is not an accommodation. “ Nevertheless, she and her husband have been exploring how to get off the grid and still keep their farm viable. “We’re working on making sure that we’ll be okay when they cut us off,” she said.


I went chasing the guy, saying please give me back my meter. --Dawn Jones, Milwaukee

“Dawn Jones,” a 58-year-old disabled woman in the Milwaukee area, who wished to remain anonymous, also padlocked her meter and worries they will cut off her power. At her previous house in Brookfield, We Energies had ignored her sign on the meter that said not to change it. One morning, she heard some pounding, and ran outside to find the installation complete and the man just leaving. “I went chasing the guy, saying please give me back my meter. I literally went chasing they guy down,” she said.

The worker gave her a number to call at We Energies. Jones reported, “The guy there said the meter’s not making you sick. And I said, yes, it is making me sick. He said you’re one in a million. I said did you test a million people to see if they’d be sick? You know, they haven’t done any long-term testing."

Another utility representative had told Jones that if she got a letter either from her doctor or the Wisconsin Public Service Commission, she could have the old meter back. But when she returned with her doctor’s letter, they said, forget it. And the Public Service Commission would not write her a letter either, she said.

So, when Jones moved to her current house, she promptly padlocked the old-style meter to prevent another sneaky installation. The disabled woman soon received a disconnection threat from We Energies.


So, you can let them keep their old meters. What you’re saying is you won’t.Rep. Andy Jorgensen, D-Fort Atkinson

Jones, Barbiere and the Kleibers got together and rallied their legislators from both sides of the aisle last spring to avoid disconnection. "This crosses all party lines. This isn't a party issue. This is just human health," explained Barbiere. Senator Glenn Grothman, R-West Bend, initiated a May 24, 2010 meeting to include himself, Representative Andy Jorgensen, D-River Hills, Connie Schlulze from Senator Alberta Darling’s (R-River Hills) office, Phillip Cornona of Independence First, a Milwaukee agency that helps the disabled, and two We Energies representatives.

Catherine Kleiber said that Grothman's office set up the meeting “because I think that they couldn’t quite believe that We Energies…absolutely wouldn’t accommodate us.” Barbiere praised the senator: “Glenn Grothman went to bat for us. Glenn Grothman stuck his neck out for us. He went to that meeting.” But when Grothman told the utility men they must have a contingency plan for people who cannot tolerate the new meters, the men replied, absolutely not, everybody will be getting them, according to Barbiere.

Kleiber said the utility reps insisted that the meters were absolutely safe for 100% of people even as Jorgenson, Corona and Grothman were shaking their heads and saying 100% of people? 100% of people can’t eat peanut butter or seafood. Corona demanded to know, even if the meters are safe for 98% of people, what was the utility going to do for the 2% who were getting sick?

Jones asked the We Energies men if they did any tests to show the meters are okay for human beings, and they said, yeah, and everything was okay. When she pressed them to say how long the subjects were exposed to the meters, she reported, “They just talk over you real loud. They started talking about people not paying their bills. We said, we are customers in good standing.”

"They said for every doctor’s letter we had, they would have six more against what (ours) were saying, and they were laughing. We’re looking at pure evil,” Barbiere added.

Jones said that Rep. Jorgensen challenged the two men: “So, you can let them keep their old meters. What you’re saying is you won’t.” After hemming and hawing about liability, the guys said, well, yeah.

None of the parties who attended the meeting ever heard a word from We Energies about either getting an exemption or being disconnected. They are protected by law from being disconnected during winter. But how long must these citizens have a disconnection threat hanging over their heads?


You're just kind of out of luck.Excel Energy to Jayne Shirky, West Salem

We Energies is not the only utility bully in the state. When 28-year-old Jayne Shirky appealed to Excel Energy for help, they sent her on a pointless quest. The young teacher had already been through a test of her personal resilience and did not need to be toyed with by the power company.

After living most of her life out in the country, Shirky bought a house in the Sparta area with her new husband. “I got sicker and sicker in that house. Every cold and flu the kids had at school I started to get. Pretty soon, my body wasn’t staying in line and I was going to a chiropractor. Pretty soon, I was aching and not sleeping and not able to finish sentences. And it was just compounding to the point where I was becoming dysfunctional,” Shirky said.

Rheumatology told her she had an auto-immune disease, but could not tell her which one. Neural Science told her, “You’re twenty-four and we think you have fibromyalgia.” But the determined young woman rejected that label. “There’s something else going on,” she insisted.

After a tip from one of her colleagues, Shirky installed Stetzer’s filters, and she was able to get off all the sleep aids, anti-depressants and neurological pain killers within two or three days. “It was very dramatic,” she said.

But as she healed, the teacher discovered she got worse when exposed to various microwave sources, like her cordless phone and microwave oven. Her house still was a problem, too, she found after being away for a week. After she returned, Shirky said, "Within two days I felt crappy again."

Stetzer pinpointed the problems: transmitting utility meter signals were getting picked up by the ductwork, which acted like an antenna, and strong cell tower emissions were coming in from a tower that was barely visible behind some trees. Stetzer's filters could not fix these problems, so the Shirkys put the house up for sale. They lived with her parents out in the country for ten months until they finally found another house with a cleaner electrical environment.

For a few weeks, Shirky felt good there. “Then all of a sudden it was like, I don’t feel very good any more. What’s going on?” she said. She learned that when the utility bill changed hands, Excel Energy changed the meter.

Excel Energy told Shirky that if she got a doctor’s excuse they would remove the smart meter. At the time, she was using midwifery, so her midwife, who had seen her sick, wrote a letter. The letter went to Ray Grover, Director of the Project for Automation, who rejected it because it was not from a doctor. Shirky asked him, “So, you really mean that if I find a doctor to write a note for me, you’ll take it off?” He answered, “No, really we won’t. You’re just kind of out of luck.”


The PSC has interpreted that (law) to mean that they can put whatever equipment they want, no matter what, under any circumstances – you don’t have a choice. --Catherine Kleiber

Public health should not require "luck." However, it is unfortunate that no federal or state agency is listening to consumer feedback about smart meters. The FDA and FCC do not respond to complaints about the meters. And the Wisconsin Public Service Commission does nothing.

Wisconsin law allows the utilities to choose their equipment and have it in place if you want the service. “The PSC has interpreted that to mean that they can put whatever equipment they want, no matter what, under any circumstances – you don’t have a choice," said Kleiber. "They could give two choices of equipment. I think that legally they could do that. (But) they have not been noted in the past for caring about customers. One of their reps slipped up years ago and called it the Utility Service Commission. That really would be a much more accurate name,” she said.

This is not just a Wisconsin issue, said Kleiber, who has heard from people in California, Colorado, New York, New Mexico, Ohio, and places around the world through her website, Electrical Pollution. Kleiber offers some solutions there, research updates, and suggestions on how to kindle public awareness and legislative action.

David Stetzer, the electrician from Blair, who has military experience in radio communications and Crypto, said he gets ten or more calls every day from desperate folks. People are getting creative to deal with smart meters in order to survive, he said. For example, one woman in the Chicago area finally covered the smart meter in her basement with aluminum foil to protect her family. When the city threatened to sue her, she said, go ahead, since it would get them into court a lot faster than if she sued them for installing a dangerous device in her home. The city has not sued because it would bring too much publicity. For now, they come to remove the foil and get their reading when they need to. As soon as they leave, the foil goes back on.


Some people just hearing about this health issue might think it sounds strange, and could never affect them. But whether a person experiences immediate problems or not, everyone within range of the emissions gets the same dose. The radiation can be measured, said Stetzer. He compared microwave radiation exposure to people sitting out in the sun. Some quickly get sun-burned and some don't. But everyone is at risk for the potential bad effects of exposure, whether they are aware of it or not, he said.

The potential costs of using this dubious technology are staggering, including:
-the costs of sheer human suffering as people and their loved ones, who are all guinea pigs for this technology, become ill or die.
-costs of unnecessary illnesses on a strained healthcare system
-costs to replace the risky smart grid system
-and costs of the inevitable litigation that will come as public awareness rises

Those who will suffer the most are the people already sick, the weak, and the poor, who cannot not afford litigation, filtration, relocation or going off grid. People living in apartments and condos also have the magnified effects from whole clusters of transmitting meters dithering through their walls and on wiring.


To avoid the devastating toll, we should demand the halt of the smart meter roll-out, and push for legislation regarding this technology that prioritizes public health and safety. Effective immediately, customers, especially those with health issues, should have the right to refuse installation or to have the dangerous devices replaced without being bullied or threatened with disconnection.


Additional Reports of Harm:
The following feedback on the health effects of smart meters bled over into the public comments for the FDA/FCC Converged Communications and Health Care Devices Impact on Regulation:

Berkeley, CA: Elderly mother gets worse
Golden, CO: Person with medical implant's concerns at www.regulations.gov, FDA-2010-N-0291-0029.1
Hastings on Hudson, NY: Otherwise healthy person gets sick
Green Bank, WV: No place to escape wireless = a death sentence for some
Waterloo, WI: Type-1 diabetic's reaction (Dan Kleiber)
Waterloo, WI: Affects whole family (Catherine Kleiber)
West Bend, WI: The human body and fields

Charleston, WV: M.D. letter at www.regulations.gov, FDA-2010-N-0291-0028
M.D. letter reports patients' symptoms, including children
Sage Associates letter provides detailed analysis of FDA/FCC stance and failures
EMR Policy Institute letter at www.regulations.gov, FDA-2010-N-0291-0041.1,lays out adverse affects on Americans with Implanted Medical Devices (IMDs) and people who are electrically hypersensitive, population subgroups that should be covered by Department of Justice Americans with Disabilities provisions.

Note: Complaints about smart meters should be sent to the FDA Medwatch program, the Consumer Product Safety Commission and the EMR Policy Institute, as well as legislators at all levels.

Links:
Bioinitiative report
Electrical Pollution (Kleiber's site)
EMF Safety Network (California based, includes Action Alert)
EMR Policy Institute
Life Energies
Stetzer Electric

Books/films:
Dirty Electricity: Electrification and the Diseases of Civilization by Samuel Milham
Disconnect: The Truth About Cell Phone Radiation, What the Industry Has Done to Hide It, and How to Protect Your Family by Devra Davis
Full Signal (DVD)
Public Health SOS: The Shadow Side Of The Wireless Revolution by Camilla Rees
Zapped by Dr. Ann Louise Gittleman

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Compact Fluorescent Light Bulbs revisited

The very first blog column I ever posted explored the health problems and impact of compact flourescent bulbs in light of the U.S. government's mandate to phase out incandescent light bulbs. Agencies like Focus on Energy in Wisconsin continue to push the dubious devices. Here are my early posts showing the darker side of these bulbs:

The Glaring Truth about Compact Fluorescent Light Bulbs

Spotlighting Six More Problems with Compact Fluorescent Light Bulbs

An additional downside of CFLs is that some of them give off high frequencies that can get on home wiring and broadcast in living spaces, which can affect people's health.

Friday, December 17, 2010

Owen Veterinarian Fights Xcel Energy Over Electrical Pollution

I interviewed Dr. Pamela Jaffke, a veterinarian in Owen, Wisconsin, who is suffering because of the bullheadedness of her utility company, Xcel Energy. They, along with the other state power companies and the Public Service Commission, refuse to take action to improve the safety of their product in spite of the continuous stream of health complaints like Dr. Jaffke's over the years.

It is time for the Wisconsin utilities to stop releasing their voltage trash - known as transients and harmonics - into the ground, and upgrade the system statewide to protect people, and not just cows, from exposure to biologically harmful ground currents.
.........................................................................
I'm not after money. I don't care if Xcel would give me a million dollars right today. That's not going to buy my cat's health. That's not going to buy my health. --Pamela Jaffke
.........................................................................
Since realizing she was electrically sensitive, Dr. Pamela Jaffke, a dairy veterinarian in Owen, has worked to make her house safe. Stetzerizer filters helped a bit, but were unable to bring the electrical pollution levels down far enough. "The only thing that made things truly livable, I just unhooked the neutral from the water main," she says.

Then her home's electrical pollution levels spiked November 1 following some work to the sewer pipes, which stopped them from carrying the ground currents, and she and her cat, Magic, were hit hard with debilitating symptoms. "It was an absolute disaster for both of us and it's continued that way," says Jaffke, who has Multiple Sclerosis, and gets painful tingling in her legs from this electrical exposure. Her cat has trouble walking and stops eating.

Xcel came out and ran circles around her without addressing the problem, she told me. "If I was a dairy farm, they would be forced to do something. Anything over 1/2 volt, they are forced to do something," says the veterinarian. The current readings in her home range from 1/2 to one volt.

Wisconsin law currently protects cows from high levels of stray voltage, which Jaffke says is not "stray." "Xcel put it there and it is Xcel's problem," she says. The term stray voltage only legally applies to cows. The currents are referred to as electrical pollution in relation to humans. "But there's no laws to protect people," says Jaffke.

Not a New Issue
The health menace of stray voltage/electrical pollution is not a new issue. Wisconsin journalists have blazed a fiery trail to try to expose it. Reporter Chris Hardie at the La Crosse Tribune had won five Wisconsin journalism awards and was nominated for a 2000 Pulitzer Prize for work covering the issue, including a special website dedicated to it, while journalist Kurt Gutknecht had been fired as editor of the Wisconsin Agriculturist for continuing to write about the health affects on animals and the farmers themselves.

State Representative Barb Gronemus, D-Whitehall, had proposed legislation in 2003 to force the utilities to clean up their act. The legislation died in committee despite huge support exhibited at a public hearing September 18, 2003. Supporters blame pressure from the big utilities on the lawmakers for its failure.

At a volt, I'm objecting.
Today, Dr. Jaffke insists she is covered by the National Electrical Safety Code (NESC) 92D, which states that there should be no objectionable flow of current over the earth. "At a volt, I'm objecting," she says.

It is likely to be an uphill battle. Xcel Energy has a history of fighting customers over health issues. They argued in a 2008 article that the cow deaths could be blamed on other factors than stray voltage. In an article in the La Crosse Tribune on December 11, 2006, Xcel and the Public Service Commission of Wisconsin claimed that no credible scientific evidence had been raised "that suggests the electrical system in Wisconsin is unsafe or causes any health problems in humans."

Such resistance to customers' needs and safety is deeply ingrained in the untouchable utilities and their unaccountable defender despite numerous studies showing harm, and the nonstop procession of people reporting illness over decades. (See Research and Technical sections at Electrical Pollution , and the Stetzer site for some of the studies and cases. Here is a case involving cancer.)

Owen Council Meeting
Dr. Jaffke is enlisting the help of her city to help deal with the powerful utility. She explained her case and read a list of lies Xcel told her during the Owen city council meeting on December 15. For example, the utility told her that the 5-wire system is unsafe. But, adding a fifth wire would easily correct the problem of electrical pollution for her - and for all residents statewide.

This acceptable, effective method appears in the 1995 report from the research arm of the utilities, the Electric Power Research Institute. It states: "A method that practically eliminates ground currents associated with primary distribution line and still maintains the advantage of a four-wire multi-grounded system is a five-wire system."

It would just cost pennies to do, says Jaffke. It is such a simple solution, she told Owen council members, who were alarmed to hear about the serious health effects the respected veterinarian and her cat were experiencing. The council meets in a building right behind her house, "which pretty much implies that they're getting fried, too," says the human "canary in the mine."

Jaffke hopes her city will have the will and the legal clout to get results. She says, "The city has an obligation to protect their citizens and make sure that any corporation doing business in town is up to code."

Owen mayor Tim Swiggum said during a telephone interview that they plan to go at this from both ends: They will talk to the guys who help them when they are extending power lines to see if that area of town is overloaded, and they also will meet with the higher-ups at the utility to see what they have to say about this problem.

"It's fairly new to me," says Mayor Swiggum, who has begun to educate himself on this controversial issue. "I don't want to burn any bridges. We need the electric company," he adds, though he agrees that Pam Jaffke definitely needs help with the problem in her house.

Jaffke told me she warned the city, "Xcel is going to try to tell you that everything's fine just like they told me. You'll have to be able to refute every one of their arguments. They're not just going to roll over and do whatever you say."

The Owen resident says she just wants a resolution to the problem, and hopes the city can help. But she would not mind if the utility ended up suing her because "in court they'll be exposed as a fraud."

"I'm not after money. I don't care if Xcel would give me a million dollars right today. That's not going to buy my cat's health. That's not going to buy my health," the Owen veterinarian says.

How Can People Check Their Own Homes?
Jaffke says the way to check for voltage coming into your home is to borrow or buy a $50 volt meter. A trifield meter will show the microwave frequencies coming into the house. So, for about $200 people could get together and purchase both meters. "Between a trifield meter and a volt meter you have all the tools you need to figure out the garbage that's coming into your house," she says.
.........................................................................

And I say, if the utilities got up to speed and took care of the mess they have made, everyday people would not need to try to do this kind of detective work or have to battle the power companies for their health. What a racket.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Smart Meter and Wi-fi Radiation Kills Plant-life

Playing classical music and speaking kindly and gently to this plant would not be enough to revive it from the the damage caused by smart meter radiation.

And the harm done to these trees by wi-fi would be impossible to treat.

Obviously, what these plants need is a good shrink, since this is clearly a psychological problem. Right?

Friday, November 12, 2010

Wisconsin Utilities Bullying Customers Over Smart Meters - 2013 ACTION UPDATES


2013 UPDATE:

Stand up for
INDIVIDUAL PRIVACY, SECURITY & HEALTH CONTROL FREEDOM

Ask WI state lawmakers to support the proposed WI Smart Meter Opt Out bill
to let individuals choose to have mechanical analog meters that will not risk their privacy, security or health choices for their own families.

EXPLAIN to lawmakers how RAW USAGE utility data collected in various intervals creates a pattern that can be analyzed to reveal types of appliances, whether someone is home, etc. Analog meters instead keep a running total to pay as you go. They send no usage signals that can be hacked. They are 100% non-invasive, and last 40 years, unlike transmitting meters, which are supposed to last 20 years but have many failures and problems. Smart meters are a money drain for costs of software and hardware updates, ongoing security attempts, etc.

ALSO TELL FEDERAL senators and congressmen and women to stop H.R. 2685, the newly proposed Smart Grid Advancement bill, which will mandate smart meters for all utilities nationwide, and lead to rationing to meet mandated usage cuts.

2012 Update:

This video includes footage of WE-Energies smart meter readings:
 Reject Smart Meters in Wisconsin.

Remember, there is NO federal mandate to have a smart meter. The Santa Cruz, CA public health officer issued a report on health risks of smart meters. And the ACLU of Hawaii and Vermont said residents should have a choice to reject smart meters due to privacy concerns.

The FCC's current  1996 radiofrequency exposure standards are grossly outdated, based on a 6 minute exposure of high microwave heating levels on a large, healthy male. In 2012, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) called for the FCC to do a formal inquiry into their inadequate standards since children's size/density allows RF energy to penetrate deeper. AAP wrote in another letter, " It is essential that any new standard for cell phones or other wireless devices be based on protecting the youngest and most vulnerable populations to ensure they are safeguarded throughout their lifetime."

The new 2012 BioInitiative Report lists over 1800 recent studies showing biological harm from pulsed radiofrequency exposure at much lower levels than allowed. In 2011, the World Health Organization had added exposure to radiofrequency radiation to its list of 2b potential carcinogens  despite strong pressure from the industry not to.



Report from November 2010:

This is really, strictly speaking, illegal because your home is supposed to be your sanctuary. To put something on your home that involuntarily exposes you to a completely untested likely carcinogen, something that you know makes you sick, it’s unethical.--Catherine Kleiber, Waterloo


The nationwide roll-out of transmitting radio frequency utility meters, known as smart meters, has intensified since the federal push and funding for them came through the Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, which spent $4.5 billion of our tax dollars for Smart Grid development, deployment, and worker training. Wisconsin utilities got $21.5 million of the $3.4 billion awarded for smart grid projects, including meter installation. But people who are sensitive to the effects of microwave radiation and electrical fields cannot tolerate the new source of emissions. And some Wisconsin utility companies have been bullying their paying customers who have resisted the installation of smart meters, or requested their removal for health reasons.

In fact, the chronic bursts or pulsing of smart meters have not been proven to be biologically safe for anyone. Current federal standards are grossly out of date, not taking into account the growing levels of microwave radiation exposure people now get 24/7 from various sources. Furthermore, FDA/FCC standards are based solely on the heating effect of microwave radiation on a large, grown man, ignoring numerous studies that point to other effects, including irregular heartbeats, melatonin depletion, which affects sleep, and abnormal mast cell proliferation, which affects the immune system and inflammation levels.

In light of this information, it is an outrage the way utility companies are treating individuals with health problems and concerns who are simply trying to control their own home environments.


He said they sent him due to his size and being thuggish.Mardie Barbiere, Cascade

Take Mardie Barbiere (Hartenstein) from Cascade, for instance. When she got the notice that a transmitting electric meter would be installed on her home, she called We Energies and told them she did not want it. “I said, please don’t send anybody…They sent three people, and the last one was a large thug. He said they sent him due to his size and being thuggish. He was going to intimidate me, and I said, honey, no, no, no. You’re here to do a job, and I appreciate the effort, but I will not be getting the meter,” she reported.

Barbiere had been house-bound for years with debilitating MS. “MS never goes away. I have scarring in my brain and spinal column,” she said. But her MS symptoms quickly cleared up about nine years ago after she updated bad wiring in her home and filtered the remaining electrical pollution using David Stetzer’s electrical filters. Her neurologist, a nationally known M.D., was amazed at her recovery. “All I know is I don’t go to the doctor anymore,” she said.

Barbiere said her children’s health also improved when their home was filtered. So, the feisty 49-year-old was not about to jeopardize her family’s health with a smart meter. She confessed, “I padlocked my electric meter…and I put up a dog fence. Oh yes, I did, girlie. I’m just dead set against them. I did everything in my power to protect my family.”

But then came the disconnection threat from We Energies, with no cut-off date given.


As far as we were concerned they were not being accommodating in the least.Catherine Kleiber, Waterloo

Meanwhile, Waterloo farmers Catherine and Dan Kleiber had also padlocked their We Energies meter (photo at top.) “We got truck lettering and we made a sign on there,” thirty-seven-year-old Catherine said. She had finally recovered from chronic fatigue syndrome only by diminishing her exposure to electrical pollution on home wiring. Her 36-year-old husband is a Type-1 Diabetic, and his blood sugar levels go crazy upon microwave radiation exposure. Their children also get sick from microwave emissions. This family could not tolerate a transmitting meter on their property.

The Kleibers volunteered to call in meter readings from the existing meter to be able to keep it. But when We Energies offered them three options that was not one of them. They could get the new meter installed where the old one is, have the new meter moved to anywhere on their property at their expense, or get off the grid.

Catherine responded, “As far as we were concerned, they were not being accommodating in the least because we couldn’t have the meter for health reasons. Having it on the property didn’t really help. Excuse me, but saying ‘get off the grid’ is not an accommodation. “ Nevertheless, she and her husband have been exploring how to get off the grid and still keep their farm viable. “We’re working on making sure that we’ll be okay when they cut us off,” she said.


I went chasing the guy, saying please give me back my meter. --Dawn Jones, Milwaukee

“Dawn Jones,” a 58-year-old disabled woman in the Milwaukee area, who wished to remain anonymous, also padlocked her meter and worries they will cut off her power. At her previous house in Brookfield, We Energies had ignored her sign on the meter that said not to change it. One morning, she heard some pounding, and ran outside to find the installation complete and the man just leaving. “I went chasing the guy, saying please give me back my meter. I literally went chasing they guy down,” she said.

The worker gave her a number to call at We Energies. Jones reported, “The guy there said the meter’s not making you sick. And I said, yes, it is making me sick. He said you’re one in a million. I said did you test a million people to see if they’d be sick? You know, they haven’t done any long-term testing."

Another utility representative had told Jones that if she got a letter either from her doctor or the Wisconsin Public Service Commission, she could have the old meter back. But when she returned with her doctor’s letter, they said, forget it. And the Public Service Commission would not write her a letter either, she said.

So, when Jones moved to her current house, she promptly padlocked the old-style meter to prevent another sneaky installation. The disabled woman soon received a disconnection threat from We Energies.


So, you can let them keep their old meters. What you’re saying is you won’t.Rep. Andy Jorgensen, D-Fort Atkinson

Jones, Barbiere and the Kleibers got together and rallied their legislators from both sides of the aisle last spring to avoid disconnection. "This crosses all party lines. This isn't a party issue. This is just human health," explained Barbiere. Senator Glenn Grothman, R-West Bend, initiated a May 24, 2010 meeting to include himself, Representative Andy Jorgensen, D-River Hills, Connie Schlulze from Senator Alberta Darling’s (R-River Hills) office, Phillip Cornona of Independence First, a Milwaukee agency that helps the disabled, and two We Energies representatives.

Catherine Kleiber said that Grothman's office set up the meeting “because I think that they couldn’t quite believe that We Energies…absolutely wouldn’t accommodate us.” Barbiere praised the senator: “Glenn Grothman went to bat for us. Glenn Grothman stuck his neck out for us. He went to that meeting.” But when Grothman told the utility men they must have a contingency plan for people who cannot tolerate the new meters, the men replied, absolutely not, everybody will be getting them, according to Barbiere.

Kleiber said the utility reps insisted that the meters were absolutely safe for 100% of people even as Jorgenson, Corona and Grothman were shaking their heads and saying 100% of people? 100% of people can’t eat peanut butter or seafood. Corona demanded to know, even if the meters are safe for 98% of people, what was the utility going to do for the 2% who were getting sick?

Jones asked the We Energies men if they did any tests to show the meters are okay for human beings, and they said, yeah, and everything was okay. When she pressed them to say how long the subjects were exposed to the meters, she reported, “They just talk over you real loud. They started talking about people not paying their bills. We said, we are customers in good standing.”

"They said for every doctor’s letter we had, they would have six more against what (ours) were saying, and they were laughing. We’re looking at pure evil,” Barbiere added.

Jones said that Rep. Jorgensen challenged the two men: “So, you can let them keep their old meters. What you’re saying is you won’t.” After hemming and hawing about liability, the guys said, well, yeah.

None of the parties who attended the meeting ever heard a word from We Energies about either getting an exemption or being disconnected. They are protected by law from being disconnected during winter. But how long must these citizens have a disconnection threat hanging over their heads?


You're just kind of out of luck.Excel Energy to Jayne Shirky, West Salem

We Energies is not the only utility bully in the state. When 28-year-old Jayne Shirky appealed to Excel Energy for help, they sent her on a pointless quest. The young teacher had already been through a test of her personal resilience and did not need to be toyed with by the power company.

After living most of her life out in the country, Shirky bought a house in the Sparta area with her new husband. “I got sicker and sicker in that house. Every cold and flu the kids had at school I started to get. Pretty soon, my body wasn’t staying in line and I was going to a chiropractor. Pretty soon, I was aching and not sleeping and not able to finish sentences. And it was just compounding to the point where I was becoming dysfunctional,” Shirky said.

Rheumatology told her she had an auto-immune disease, but could not tell her which one. Neural Science told her, “You’re twenty-four and we think you have fibromyalgia.” But the determined young woman rejected that label. “There’s something else going on,” she insisted.

After a tip from one of her colleagues, Shirky installed Stetzer’s filters, and she was able to get off all the sleep aids, anti-depressants and neurological pain killers within two or three days. “It was very dramatic,” she said.

But as she healed, the teacher discovered she got worse when exposed to various microwave sources, like her cordless phone and microwave oven. Her house still was a problem, too, she found after being away for a week. After she returned, Shirky said, "Within two days I felt crappy again."

Stetzer pinpointed the problems: transmitting utility meter signals were getting picked up by the ductwork, which acted like an antenna, and strong cell tower emissions were coming in from a tower that was barely visible behind some trees. Stetzer's filters could not fix these problems, so the Shirkys put the house up for sale. They lived with her parents out in the country for ten months until they finally found another house with a cleaner electrical environment.

For a few weeks, Shirky felt good there. “Then all of a sudden it was like, I don’t feel very good any more. What’s going on?” she said. She learned that when the utility bill changed hands, Excel Energy changed the meter.

Excel Energy told Shirky that if she got a doctor’s excuse they would remove the smart meter. At the time, she was using midwifery, so her midwife, who had seen her sick, wrote a letter. The letter went to Ray Grover, Director of the Project for Automation, who rejected it because it was not from a doctor. Shirky asked him, “So, you really mean that if I find a doctor to write a note for me, you’ll take it off?” He answered, “No, really we won’t. You’re just kind of out of luck.”


The PSC has interpreted that (law) to mean that they can put whatever equipment they want, no matter what, under any circumstances – you don’t have a choice. --Catherine Kleiber

Public health should not require "luck." However, it is unfortunate that no federal or state agency is listening to consumer feedback about smart meters. The FDA and FCC do not respond to complaints about the meters. And the Wisconsin Public Service Commission does nothing.

Wisconsin law allows the utilities to choose their equipment and have it in place if you want the service. “The PSC has interpreted that to mean that they can put whatever equipment they want, no matter what, under any circumstances – you don’t have a choice," said Kleiber. "They could give two choices of equipment. I think that legally they could do that. (But) they have not been noted in the past for caring about customers. One of their reps slipped up years ago and called it the Utility Service Commission. That really would be a much more accurate name,” she said.

This is not just a Wisconsin issue, said Kleiber, who has heard from people in California, Colorado, New York, New Mexico, Ohio, and places around the world through her website, Electrical Pollution. Kleiber offers some solutions there, research updates, and suggestions on how to kindle public awareness and legislative action.

David Stetzer, the electrician from Blair, who has military experience in radio communications and Crypto, said he gets ten or more calls every day from desperate folks. People are getting creative to deal with smart meters in order to survive, he said. For example, one woman in the Chicago area finally covered the smart meter in her basement with aluminum foil to protect her family. When the city threatened to sue her, she said, go ahead, since it would get them into court a lot faster than if she sued them for installing a dangerous device in her home. The city has not sued because it would bring too much publicity. For now, they come to remove the foil and get their reading when they need to. As soon as they leave, the foil goes back on.


Some people just hearing about this health issue might think it sounds strange, and could never affect them. But whether a person experiences immediate problems or not, everyone within range of the emissions gets the same dose. The radiation can be measured, said Stetzer. He compared microwave radiation exposure to people sitting out in the sun. Some quickly get sun-burned and some don't. But everyone is at risk for the potential bad effects of exposure, whether they are aware of it or not, he said.

The potential costs of using this dubious technology are staggering, including:
-the costs of sheer human suffering as people and their loved ones, who are all guinea pigs for this technology, become ill or die.
-costs of unnecessary illnesses on a strained healthcare system
-costs to replace the risky smart grid system
-and costs of the inevitable litigation that will come as public awareness rises

Those who will suffer the most are the people already sick, the weak, and the poor, who cannot not afford litigation, filtration, relocation or going off grid. People living in apartments and condos also have the magnified effects from whole clusters of transmitting meters dithering through their walls and on wiring.


To avoid the devastating toll, we should demand the halt of the smart meter roll-out, and push for legislation regarding this technology that prioritizes public health and safety. Effective immediately, customers, especially those with health issues, should have the right to refuse installation or to have the dangerous devices replaced without being bullied or threatened with disconnection.


Additional Reports of Harm:
The following feedback on the health effects of smart meters bled over into the public comments for the FDA/FCC Converged Communications and Health Care Devices Impact on Regulation:

Berkeley, CA: Elderly mother gets worse
Golden, CO: Person with medical implant's concerns at www.regulations.gov, FDA-2010-N-0291-0029.1
Hastings on Hudson, NY: Otherwise healthy person gets sick
Green Bank, WV: No place to escape wireless = a death sentence for some
Waterloo, WI: Type-1 diabetic's reaction (Dan Kleiber)
Waterloo, WI: Affects whole family (Catherine Kleiber)
West Bend, WI: The human body and fields

Charleston, WV: M.D. letter at www.regulations.gov, FDA-2010-N-0291-0028
M.D. letter reports patients' symptoms, including children
Sage Associates letter provides detailed analysis of FDA/FCC stance and failures
EMR Policy Institute letter at www.regulations.gov, FDA-2010-N-0291-0041.1,lays out adverse affects on Americans with Implanted Medical Devices (IMDs) and people who are electrically hypersensitive, population subgroups that should be covered by Department of Justice Americans with Disabilities provisions.

Note: Complaints about smart meters should be sent to the FDA Medwatch program, the Consumer Product Safety Commission and the EMR Policy Institute, as well as legislators at all levels.

Links:
Bioinitiative report
Electrical Pollution (Kleiber's site)
EMF Safety Network (California based, includes Action Alert)
EMR Policy Institute
Life Energies
Stetzer Electric

Books/films:
Dirty Electricity: Electrification and the Diseases of Civilization by Samuel Milham
Disconnect: The Truth About Cell Phone Radiation, What the Industry Has Done to Hide It, and How to Protect Your Family by Devra Davis
Full Signal (DVD)
Public Health SOS: The Shadow Side Of The Wireless Revolution by Camilla Rees
Zapped by Dr. Ann Louise Gittleman

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Compact Fluorescent Light Bulbs revisited

The very first blog column I ever posted explored the health problems and impact of compact flourescent bulbs in light of the U.S. government's mandate to phase out incandescent light bulbs. Agencies like Focus on Energy in Wisconsin continue to push the dubious devices. Here are my early posts showing the darker side of these bulbs:

The Glaring Truth about Compact Fluorescent Light Bulbs

Spotlighting Six More Problems with Compact Fluorescent Light Bulbs

An additional downside of CFLs is that some of them give off high frequencies that can get on home wiring and broadcast in living spaces, which can affect people's health.