Extract on Wifi in
schools. Concerns voiced at Voice Annual Conference
2007.
The following extract is from a speech
toVoice Annual
Conference, by Philip Parkin, the General Secretary of Voice Teachers' Union, on Wednesday, 1 August
2007:
I now want to turn to our second health and safety matter and I do so with some trepidation.
This is the issue of Wi-Fi in schools.
The reason for my trepidation is that I have never before been involved in a debate which
provokes such polarisation of opinion and such venom in some
participants.
There are no shades of grey in this one. You either believe that there are health and safety concerns
resulting from the great increase in the installation of Wi-Fi networks in schools and other locations, or you
are quite dismissive of anyone who holds such views.
There is a view out there that you have no right to express concerns on such issues; and that if you
do, you are scaremongering or promoting so-called bad science.
In dealing with this issue the Association has deliberately kept to what middle ground we have been
able to carve out.
I have no intention of rehearsing the scientific arguments in this speech. I’m not qualified to do so
and wouldn’t have time anyway. I would just like to make clear to you, members of PAT, the position we took, the
reasons we took it and the responses that we have had.
In writing to the Secretary of State, I said that I had become increasingly concerned about the
possible health and safety implications of the installation of wireless networks in
schools.
I continue to assert that I am not a scientist and only have a layman’s grasp of the issues here. I
understand that there are arguments from scientists on both sides of the question. If the scientists can’t agree
– what chance have we got? And I think it very
much depends on what type of scientist you are as to how you see the question. Physicists seem to see
it very differently to biologists and neurologists and perhaps that’s why we need an enquiry – to examine
opposing views.
But I have heard and read enough to make me concerned and I had been made aware of an accumulation of
evidence which suggests that the non-thermal, pulsing effects of electromagnetic radiation could have a damaging
effect upon the developing nervous systems of children. The frequently-quoted current safety limits in operation
refer to the thermal effects of such radiation and not the non-thermal effects.
I pointed out to the Secretary of State that the issue was being taken more seriously in some other
European countries than here. I expressed the view that the BECTA advice which states that “Given our current
knowledge it is reasonable to assume that WLAN technology offers no appreciable risk to children or others in
schools” should be revisited and that a full scientific enquiry be commissioned in order to better understand
the issues. I also proposed that schools should be discouraged from installing further networks until the
results of such an inquiry are known.
The great number of responses that I have received has been overwhelmingly positive towards the
position we have taken. As you would expect, I have been contacted by lobby groups who are campaigning against
such technology. But I have also been contacted by PAT members, individual parents and grandparents, and by
independent research scientists, who all have concerns about the possible effects of the
technology.
I have also been contacted by those who consider that there is no issue here; at least one of whom,
quite properly, declared his involvement in the communications technology industry.
We have tried to reflect all shades of opinion by adding links to the page on our Website dealing with
this issue.
I have not said that there are health and safety implications from this technology – just that there
may be. I make no apologies for having said this.
Unfortunately, the Secretary of State, Alan Johnson, did not agree with me. In his reply to me he
directs my attention to the latest advice from the Health Protection Agency, which is that the agency does not
consider that there is a problem with the safety of Wi-Fi.
This, of course, is in contrast to the publicly expressed view of the Chairman of the HPA, Sir William
Stewart, a former Chief Scientific Adviser to the Government, who believes that such a review should take place.
I’m confused and I guess you are. The Agency says there’s no problem but the Chairman of the Agency thinks there
should be an inquiry!
Mr Johnson did not agree that BECTA should change its advice or that a precautionary approach should
be taken to the further roll-out of the technology until more was known. He said that BECTA would make sure that
schools and local authorities had access to the results of ongoing research.
My real concern is that until there is a full inquiry based on both existing evidence and on
newly-commissioned research work, the nation’s children are being treated as guinea pigs in a large-scale
experiment.
Subsequently I am interested to note that 3 weeks ago, councillors in Haringey, ignoring advice given
in the Council’s own Wi-Fi in Schools document – which was based on the Health Protection Agency advice – have
decided to make schools aware of their health and safety concerns and recommend suspension of the installation
of Wi-Fi networks until full consultation with parents, schools and health specialists has taken
place.
For those of you who may have a further interest in this issue,
we will make available at the back of the hall a paper giving advice to schools prepared by a PAT member,
Michael Bevington of Stowe School. This paper is not a PAT document, it is Michael’s own, and it summarises
the concerns on this issue and the reasons for those concerns.
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