Posts Tagged ‘Maine’

Maine bill looks to label cell phones as cancer dangers

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

Today in the hallowed halls of the state government in Augusta, Maine, legislators are holding hearings on a first-in-the-nation bill that proposes putting warning labels about potential brain cancer on all cell phones sold in the state. Labels that even contain pictures.

The bill in question is LD 1706, somewhat redundantly called “An Act to Create the Children’s Wireless Protection Act.” The Maine state legislature’s Health and Human Services Committee is holding the hearings today, on a bill that has already created national news for the Pine Tree State.

HP120701 An Act To Create the Children’s Wireless Protection Act

Sponsoring the bill is Rep. Andrea Boland, D-Sanford. The bill calls for these exact words on every cell phone and all related packaging: “Warning, this device emits electromagnetic radiation, exposure to which may cause brain cancer. Users, especially children and pregnant women, should keep this device away from the head and body.”

Even more astounding is that the bill would require the label to have art, after a fashion. Boland’s bill wants to put on every cell phone a “color graphic of ‘Brain of 5-year-old’” from a 1996 study published by the IEEE of the effect of cell phone microwave emissions on the neck and head.

The onus of the bill would land squarely on the shoulders of the phone manufacturers, as the bill contains this proviso: “The requirements of this subsection may not result in a cost to the retailer or distributor of cellular telephones.” And the summary states that “This bill provides that a manufacturer may not sell at retail in this State…” any cell phone not carrying the warning.

The technology industry trade group TechAmerica today released a statement about the bill, saying that it “substitutes political judgment for the collective scientific judgment of experts around the world.” The National Cancer Institute, on the other hand, is hedging its bets. That organization has said that while “research has not consistently demonstrated a link between cellular telephone use and cancer, scientists still caution that further surveillance is needed before conclusions can be drawn” on its website.

What do you think? Are we at risk of brain cancer from our cell phones and do we need to be warned about it? Or is Maine making a call to Big Brother government?

Maine: Hub of innovation?

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

Rodney BrownBy Rodney Brown

Who says you need to be on either side of the Charles River to be the home of true innovation? After all Maine has a long history of inventing things you probably thought came from somewhere else. Now the list has grown with the addition of the Slanket, the original sleeved blanket that competitor the Snuggie has so recently made famous.

Apparently Gary Clegg, a University of Maine student in 1998, found the winter nights in Orono too cold, so he came up with the idea of a blanket with sleeves and asked his mom to stitch one up. And that is just the latest in a string of Maine-born inventions that stretch all the way back to the toothpick.

Earmuffs, the power drill, the snow plow and the thermostat all got their start in Maine, as did the invention that helped drive Rhode Island-based Dunkin’ Donuts to its current heights, the donut hole machine.

The Slanket, however, is simply one example of an area where Maine continues to shine in innovation — materials sciences. Last year the Maine Composites Alliance was brought back into the public eye with the appointment of new executive director Stephen Von Vogt, the founder of several composite materials firms, including Maine Marine Composites Inc., along with new funding through the Maine Technology Institute.

As Jake Ward, assistant vice president of research, economic development and governmental relations at the University of Maine, put it in a report on the sector: “We have learned how to stick stuff together.”

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