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OF_Via.
HAWAII COUNTY COUNCIL
County of Hawai`i COUNTY CLERK
West Hawai`i Civic Center, Bldg. A COUNTY OF HAWAI'I
74-5044 Ane Keohokalole Hwy. RECEIVED
I I.50a" '
Kailua-Kona, Hawaii 96740 TimeBy
Date AUG 1 3 2020
DATE: August 13, 2020
TO: Aaron S.Y. Chung, Council Chair
And Members of the Hawai`i County Council
FROM: Maile David, Council Member
et4 Council District 6 and
Matt Kaneali`i-Klienfelder, Council Member
Council District 5
SUBJECT: A Resolution in Support of Amici Curiae National Resources Defense Council, et
al.,'s Amicus Brief filed in Case No. 20-1025 (Lead) and Case No. 20-1138
(Consolidated), entitled: Environmental Health Trust, et al., and Children's
Health Defense, et al., Petitioners, vs. Federal Communictions Commission and
Unbited States of America, Respondents, in The United States Court of Appeals
For the District of Columbia Circuit
Attached please find the above referenced resolution being co-introduced by Councilmember
Mahe David (Council District 6), and Councilmember Matt Kaneali`i-Klienfelder (Council
District 5).
Also attached and made a part of this communication, is a copy of the "Amicus Brief of Natural
Resources Defense Council and Local Elected Officials in Support of Petitioners" in Case No.
20-1025 [Consolidated with Case No. 20-1138], excluding the Addendum of Statutes and
Regulations and Exhibits.
Given the time sensitive nature of the pending cases under consideration, we request that this
matter be waived and placed on the September 2, 2020 Council Agenda.
Mahalo a nui for your favorable consideration.
MD/dmm
Attachment O
N-2, Comm. No.
�' LO Ref.To: C,iu ne iI (.W Int laC1.
Ref. Dote AUG 1 4 2020
J
Serving the Interests of the People of Our Island
Hawai`i County Is an Equal Opportunity Provider And Employer
•�Y Ofi H,q ''..
AARON S.Y. CHUNG
ASHLEY L. KIERKIEWICZ = °', :' q�,'s MAILE MEDEIROS DAVID
Chairperson �' n ���'��' ' KAREN EOFF
*;1 ;i�..I ;* MATT KANEALI`I-KLEINFELDER
SUSAN L.K. LEE LOY VALERIE T.POINDEXTER
Vice Chair s�r�,., o .��� HERBERT M. "TIM"RICHARDS, III
REBECCA VILLEGAS
HAWAII COUNTY COUNCIL
County of Hawai`i
Hawai`i County Building
25 Aupuni Street
Hilo, Hawai`i 96720
August 14, 2020
Aaron S.Y. Chung, Council Chair
Hawai`i County Council
25 Aupuni Street
Hilo, Hawai`i 96720
RE: Resolution No. 714-20 : A RESOLUTION IN SUPPORT OF
AMICI CURIAE NATIONAL RESOURCES DEFENSE COUNCIL, ET AL.'s,
AMICUS BRIEF FILED IN CASE NO. 20-1025 (LEAD) AND CASE NO. 20-1138
(CONSOLIDATED) ENTITLED: ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH TRUST, ET AL.,
AND CHILDREN'S HEALTH DEFENSE, ET AL.,PETITIONERS, VS. FEDERAL
COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION AND UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
RESPONDENTS, IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT.
Pursuant to Section 2(g) of Rule 4 of the Rules of Procedure of the Council of the County of
Hawai`i, this written request is submitted with my approval that the above-referenced matter be
waived from the Committee on Governmental Relations and Economic Development to the full
Council for immediate action. In reviewing this matter, timely approval is crucial. It is therefore
advantageous that approval is granted and the matter be placed onto the next Council agenda for
review. However, in the event this request is denied, for whatever reason, I understand the
matter shall be referred to the Committee on Governmental Relations and Economic
Development for placement on its future agenda.
Si P" ,
- - ey L. Kierkiewicz, Chairperson
Committee on Governmental Relations and Economic Development
Approve Date/Waive to Council: Disapproved/Date/Refer to GREDC:
xipi Aaron S.Y. Chung, Council Ch Aaron S.Y. Chung, Council Chair
Hawai`i County CouncilAUG 1 4 2020 Hawai`i County Council
Hawai`i County is an Equal Opportunity Provider and Employer
[ORAL ARGUMENT NOT YET SCHEDULED1
No. 20-1025 [Consolidated with 20-11381
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH TRUST, et al.,
Petitioners,
V.
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION AND UNITED STATES of
AMERICA,
Respondents,
PETITION FOR REVIEW OF FINAL ORDER OF THE FEDERAL
COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
AMICUS BRIEF OF
NATURAL RESOURCES DEFENSE COUNCIL
AND LOCAL ELECTED OFFICIALS
IN SUPPORT OF PETITIONERS
Sharon Buccino
Natural Resources Defense Council
1152 15th Street, NW, Suite 300
202-289-6868
sbuccino@nrdc.org
Counsel for Amici Curiae,
Natural Resources Defense Council et al.
RULE 26.1 DISCLOSURE STATEMENT
Pursuant to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
Rule 26.1 and Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 26.1, Natural Resources
Defense Council respectfully states that it is a non-profit corporation with no
parent companies, subsidiaries or affiliates and has not issued shares to the
public. No other amid curiae are corporations.
Is/ Sharon Buccino
Counsel for Ainici Curiae,
Natural Resources Defense Council et al.
Dated: August 5, 2020
CERTIFICATE AS TO PARTIES, RULINGS, RELATED CASES,
AND FILING OF SEPARATE BRIEF
As required by Circuit Rules 28(a)(1) and 29(d), counsel for amici
curiae hereby certify as follows:
A. Parties
All parties are listed in Petitioners' Joint Opening Brief.
B. Rulings Under Review
The agency action under review is identified in Petitioners' Joint Opening
Brief for Petitioners.
C. Related Cases
None.
D. Separate Brief
Undersigned counsel is aware of one additional potential amicus, the
Building Biology Institute, in support of Petitioners. Counsel consulted to
determine if a single amicus brief was practical and determined that it was not.
Amici Natural Resources Defense Council et al. are focused on the adequacy of
environmental review for the construction of wireless infrastructure and the
relevance of the FCC's RF standards to that review. The Building Biology
i
Institute is focused on different issues including the relevance of the RF standards
to tort liability for individual harm.
Is/ Sharon Buccino
Counsel for Amici Curiae,
Natural Resources Defense Council et al.
Dated: August 5, 2020
STATEMENT REGARDING ORAL ARGUMENT
Given the impact the challenged FCC order will have on this court's
previous decision in.NRDC's favor related to environmental review, undersigned
counsel for amici respectfully requests the opportunity to participate in oral
argument. NRDC successfully challenged a 2018 order by the Federal
Communications Commission that had proposed to eliminate environmental and
historic review for certain cell towers and other wireless infrastructure. United
Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians v. FCC, 933 F.3d 728 (D.C. Cir. 2019).
The FCC's 2019 order challenged by Petitioners in this case renders such
environmental review meaningless. Under the challenged Order, environmental
review is tied to the RF limits set by the FCC. As long as a wireless service
provider certifies that the construction it proposes meets the FCC's RF standards,
no environmental analysis is required. The FCC's arbitrary determination that
the limits set in 1996 are still adequate today means that environmental review
will not occur where it would otherwise if the FCC had followed the mandates of
reasoned decision-making under the Administrative Procedure Act.
/s/ Sharon Buccino
Counsel for Amid Curiae,
Naturcll Resources Defense Council et al.
Dated: August 5, 2020
TABLE OF CONTENTS
RULE 26.1 DISCLOSURE STATEMENT i
CERTIFICATE AS TO PARTIES, RULINGS, RELATED CASES,
AND OF SEPARATE BRIEF ii
STATEMENT REGARDING ORAL ARGUMENT iv
TABLE OF AUTHORITIES vii
GLOSSARY xii
STATEMENT OF AUTHORITY TO FILE AND AUTHORSHIP
AND FINANCIAL CONTRIBUTIONS 3
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS 3
I. National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) 3
II. Telecommunications Act of 1996 (TCA) 5
SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT 6
ARGUMENT 9
I. Exposure to Radiofrequency Radiation Has Increased with
Proliferation of Wireless Services 9
II. FCC Has Not Satisfied its Obligations under NEPA. 15
A. FCC Has Recognized Since 1985 that It Has Obligations
under NEPA 15
B. 2019 Order Fails to Fulfill the FCC's NEPA Obligations16
III. FCC Misunderstands its Obligations under the TCA 19
A. Congress Gave the FCC the Responsibility to Protect the
Public from RF Hazards 19
B. 2019 Order Fails to Fulfill the FCC's Responsibility to
Protect the Public 22
1. FCC Failed to Justify Its RF Standards 22
2. FCC Failed to Respond to Evidence of Environmental
Harm 26
CONCLUSION 28
CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
ADDENDUM
TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
Cases
Am. Bird Conservancy, Inc. v. FCC, 516 F.3d 1027 (D.C. Cir. 2008) 16
Balt. Gas and Electric Co. v. NRDC, 462 U.S. 87 (1983) 4
Dep 't of Transp. v. Public Citizen, 541 U.S. 752, 757 (2004) 4
Marsh v. Or. Nat. Res. Council, 490 U.S. 360, 371 (1989) 3
Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass'n of US., Inc. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463
U.S. 29 (1983) 15
Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. v. S.E.C., 432 F.Supp. 1190 (D.D.C.
1977), rer'd on other grounds 606 F.2c1 1031 (D.C. Cir. i 979) 12
New York v. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, 681 F.3d 471 (D.C. Cir. 2012) 4
Ne. Pennsylvania SMSA LP v. Smithfield Twp. Bd. of Supervisors, 433 F. Supp.
3d 703, 717 (M.D. Pa. 2020) 25
Oglala Sioux Tribe v. Nuclear Regulatory Comm'n, 896 F.3d 520 (D.C. Cir.
2018) 4
United Keetoovvah Band of Cherokee Indians v. FCC, 933 F.3d 728 (D.C. Cir.
2019) iv, 2,15, 18
Washington Utilities and Trans"). Comm '17 v. FCC, 513 F.2d 1142 ((9th Cir.
1975), abrogated on other grounds by Booth v. Churner, 532 U.S. 731
(2001) 16
Statutes
PL 104-104, February 8, 1996, 110 Stat 56, §704(b) 5, 20
5 U.S.C. §706(2)(A) 11
42 U.S.C. §2021(h) 11
42 U.S.C. §4332(2)(C) 13
47 U.S.C. §§301, 307, 309 5, 16
47 L S.C. §319
vii
47 U.S.C. §332(c)(7) 6, 24
Regulations
40 C.F.R. §1500.1(b). . 4
40 C.F.R. §1502 4
40 C.F.R. §1502.24 4
47 C.F.R. §1 .903 5, 16
47 C.F.R. §1.1307(13) 5, 17
47 C.F.R. §1.1310 5, 17
47 C.F.R. §1 .1312(a) 19
Other Authorities
B. Blake Levitt, ed., Cell Towers, Wireless Convenience? Or Environmental
Hazard? (Safe Goods/New Century Publishing 2000) 13
Biolnitiative Working Group, Biolnitiative 2012: A Rationale for Biologically-
based Exposure Standards for Low-Intensity Electromagnetic Radiation
26
Carol R. Goforth, ".A Bad Call: Preemption of State and Local Authority to
Regulate Wireless Communication Facilities on the Basis of
Radiofrequency Emissions," 44 N.Y.L. Sch. L. Rev. 311 (2001) 20
Christian Kallen, "Sonoma's Planning Commission Approves Verizon
Application for 3 New Cell Towers," Sonoma Index-Tribune (Jan. 27,
2020)... 25
Christopher Ketchum, Is 5G Going to Kill Us?, New Republic (May 8, 2020) ... 15
Comments of B. Blake Levitt and Henry C. Lai, In Matter of Reassessment of
Federal Communications Commission Radiofrequency Exposure Limits
and Policies (E.T. Docket No. 13-84)(A.ug. 25, 2013) 26
EPA, Federal Radicition Protection CJiiidcrrict for Public E vposurc t
l[c`adio/rcclucric i Radiation, 47 Fed. Reg. 57338 (December 23, 1982) 11
viii
FCC, In the Matter of Responsibility of the Fed. C0111171C111S Comm'n to Consider
Biological Effects of Radiofrequency Radiation When Authorizing the
Use of Radiofrequency Devices. Potential Effects of A Reduction in the
Allowable Level of Radiofrequency Radiation on FCC Authorized
Commercial Services and Equipment, General Docket No. 79-144, Report
and Order, 100 FCC 2d 543 (1985) 7, 12, 16
FCC, In the Matter of Guidelines for Evaluating the Envtl. Effects of
Radiofrequency Radiation, ET Docket No. 93-62, Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking, 8 FCC Rcd 2849 (1993) 23
FCC, Guidelines for Evaluating the Environmental Effects of Radiofrequency
Radiation, ET Docket No. 93-62, Report and Order, 11 FCC Rcd 15123
(1996) 23
FCC, In the Matter of Accelerating Wireless Broadband Deployment by
Removing Barriers to Infrastructure inv., WT Docket No. 17-79,
Declaratory Ruling and Third Report and Order, 33 FCC Rcd 9088
(2018) 14, 22
FCC, In the Matter of Proposed Changes in the Commission's Rules Regarding
Malian Exposure to Radiofrequency Electromagnetic Fields
Reassessment of Fed. Commc'ns C0171111`11 Radiofrequency Exposure
Limits & Policies Targeted Changes to the Commission's Rules
Regarding Human Exposure to Radiofrequency Electromagnetic Fields,
Docket Nos. ET 03-137, 13-84, 19-226, FCC Rcd 2019 WL
6681944 (Dec. 4, 2019) 6, 9, 17
GAO, Efforts by the Environmental Protection Agency to Protect the Public from
Environmental Nonionizing Radiation (CED 78-79) (March 29, 1978).. 11
International Appeal, Scientists Call for Protection from Non-ionizing
Electromagnetic Field Exposure 26
J. Elder, RADIOFREQUENCY RADIATION: ACTIVITIES AND ISSUES.
U.S. En\ ironmental Protection A2ency, Washington. D.C.. EPA'600'D-
86:135 (NTIS P1386217155). 1986 13
Kenneth A. Jacobsen„4 Tale of Two Circuits: Curbs on Legal Remedies for
Exposure to Potentially Harmful Cell Phone Radiation Emissions, 10
Seton Hall Circuit Review 1 , 2-3 (2013) 13
ix
Letter from E. Ramona Trovata, EPA, Office of Radiation and Indoor Air, to
Richard M. Smith, Chief, FCC, Office of Engineering and Technology
(June 19, 1995) 21
Letter from FCC Chairman Mark S. Fowler to Anne Burford, EPA Administrator
re Docket 81-43 (February 22, 1983) 11
Letter from Willie R. Taylor, Director, Office of Environmental Policy and
Compliance, Dept. of Interior, to Eli Veenendaal, National
Telecommunications and Information Administration, Dept. of
Commerce (Feb. 7, 2014)
Letter from Lee Ann B. Veal, Director of the Radiation Protection Division, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency to Theodora Scarato, Executive
Director, Environmental Health Trust, (July 8, 2020) 21
Martin Blank, Overpowered: What Science Tells Us About the Dangers of Cell
Phones and Other WM-Age Devices (2013) 10
Memorandum from Robert F. Cleveland, Office of Engineering and Technology
to FCC Secretary, Ex Parte Presentation by U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (March 22, 1995) 21
Norbert M. Rankin, EPA, Office of Air and Radiation, The Radiofrequency
Radiation Environment: Environmental Exposure Levels and RF
Radiation Emitting Sources (July 1986)(EPA-520/1-85-014) 11
Peter Thalam Dennis Gehring, Christine Nief3ner, Thorsten Ritz & Wolfgang
Wiltschko, Magnetoreception in birds: the effect of radiofrequency fields,
12 J. R. Soc. INTERFACE, (Dec. 2, 2014) 27
Pew Research Center, Mobile Fact Sheet (June 12, 2019) 14
RFIAWG Letter to Richard Tell, Chair, IEEE SCC28 (SC4), Risk Assessment
Group (June 17, 1999) 23
Sen. Report 104-140, Department of Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban
Development, and Independent Agencies Appropriations Bill, 1996,
(Sept. 13, 1995)(to accompany El R 2099) 6, 8, 20
S. Cucurachi, W.L.M. Tamis, M.G. Vijver, W.J.G.M. Peijnenburg, J.F.B. Bolte
& G.R. de Snoo, A review of the ecological effects ofradiofrequency
electromagneticfields (RF-EMF), Si ENVTL. INT'L, 116 — 140
(2013) 27
Senavirathna Mudalige, Don Hiranya Jayasanka and Takashi Asaeda, The
significance of microwaves in the environment and its effect on plants,
Environmental Reviews, 2014, 22(3): 220-228 27
United Nations, International Telecommunication Union, Global ICT
Developments 13
U.S. Government Accountability Office, GAO 12-771, Telecommunications:
Exposure and Testing Requirements for Mobile Phones Should be
Reassessed (2012) 10
xi
GLOSSARY
ANSI American National Standards Institute
APA Administrative Procedure Act
CEQ Council on Environmental Quality
EPA U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
EMF Electro-magnetic Fields
FCC Federal Communications Commission
IEEE Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
ITU International Telecommunications Union
NCRP National Council on Radiation Protection
NEPA National Environmental Policy Act
RF Radiofrequency
RFIAWG Radiofrequency Interagency Work Group
TCA Telecommunications Act of 1996
INTEREST OF AMICI CURIAE
Amici are a national environmental organization and elected officials who
support environmental and public health protections for all and seek inclusive
decision-making processes. They rely on the National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) to ensure that federal government decisions — such as the licensing of use
of the spectrum to provide wireless services — are informed by the best available
science and input from citizens affected by those decisions.
The FCC's December 4, 2019 order compromises interests of amici in three
critical ways: (1) The FCC failed to complete an Environmental Impact Statement
under NEPA before terminating its inquiry into the adequacy of its radiofrequency
(RF) standards. (2) The FCC's inadequate health standards excuse wireless service
providers from conducting environmental review even though these services may
expose humans and the environment in which they live to harmful radiation. (3)
The FCC's order renders any environment review that is done inadequate because
it is based on inadequate health standards. Rather than conduct new analysis of the
potential environmental harm its actions may cause, the FCC will simply point to
its decision in its December 4 order that its RF standards are adequate to satisfy
NEPA. This might be fine if the FCC supported its decision with sufficient
evidence. As explained by Petitioners, the Commission did not.
Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) is a national non-profit
environmental advocacy organization that seeks effective environmental and
public health policies for all communities. NRDC successfully challenged a 2018
order by the Federal Communications Commission that proposed to eliminate
environmental and historic review for certain cell towers and other wireless
infrastructure. United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians v. FCC, 933 F.3d 728
(D.C. Cir. 2019). The FCC's 2019 order challenged by Petitioners in this case
would render such environmental review practically meaningless. When
reviewing actions wireless service providers take to use the spectrum as the FCC
has authorized, the Commission is unlikely to conduct new environmental analysis.
Instead, the FCC will point to its determination in the challenged 2019 order that
its health standards are adequate as satisfaction of its duty to look at potential
harm. This might be fine if the FCC analyzed recent science and changed its
standards to reflect this science. The FCC, however, failed to do so.
Local elected officials' are and have been directly affected by the FCC's
failure to set RF standards adequate to protect public health and the environment.
Verizon and other telecom companies are rapidly constructing enhanced 4G LTE
and SG networks in communities across the country. Elected officials in these
communities are accountable to their constituents to protect their health and the
See Addendum, Exh. A, for list of individual elected officials.
environment. The Telecommunications Act of 1996 limits local and state
regulation of wireless services based on environmental effects. Congress
concentrated authority to set RF standards applicable to construction of wireless
infrastructure in the FCC. The FCC's failure to set adequate standards prevents
local elected amici from delivering the protection they owe those who have elected
them.
STATEMENT OF AUTHORITY TO FILE AND AUTHORSHIP AND
FINANCIAL CONTRIBUTIONS
All parties have consented to the filing of this brief. This brief was not
authored in whole or part by counsel for a party. No party or counsel for a party,
and no person other than the amici curiae or their counsel, contributed money
intended to fund its preparation or submission.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS
I. National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
Signed into law in 1970 by President Nixon, NEPA is an action-forcing
statute applicable to all federal agencies. Its commitment is to "prevent or
eliminate damage to the environment . . . by focusing government and public
attention on the environmental effects of proposed agency action." Marsh v. Or.
Nat. Res. Council, 490 U.S. 360, 371 (1989) (internal quotations omitted). The
statute requires "that the agency will inform the public that it has indeed
considered environmental concerns in its decision-making process." Balt. Gas and
Electric Co. v. NRDC, 462 U.S. 87, 97 (1983).
NEPA is designed to ensure that agencies look before they leap. NEPA
established the Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) "with the authority to
issue regulations interpreting it." New York v. Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
681 F.3d 471, 476 (D.C. Cir. 2012), quoting Dep't of Transp. v. Public Citizen,
541 U.S. 752, 757 (2004). CEQ regulations require that "environmental
information is available to public officials and citizens before decisions are made
and before actions are taken." 40 C.F.R. §1500.1(b). See Oglala Sioux Tribe v.
Nuclear Regulatory Comm 'n, 896 F.3d 520 (D.C. Cir. 2018).
CEQ's NEPA regulations require agencies to "insure the professional
integrity, including scientific integrity, of the [agency's] discussions and
analyses...." 40 C.F.R. §1502.24. Where data is not presented in the NEPA
document, the agency must justify not obtaining that data. 40 C.F.R. §1502.22. In
addition, the regulations provide that the "[h]uman environment shall be
interpreted comprehensively to include the natural and physical environment and
the relationship of people with that environment.'
2 CEQ amended its NEPA regulations on July 16, 2020. 85 Fed. Reg. 43304. The
language quoted herein refers to the version of CEQ's rules that were in effect at
the time the FCC issued its challenged order.
4
IL Telecommunications Act of 1996 (TCA)
Pursuant to the TCA, the FCC regulates use of spectrum that makes wireless
communication possible. Providers of personal wireless services must obtain an
FCC license. 47 U.S.C. §§301, 307, 309; 47 C.F.R. §1.903. in addition, a
construction permit is required before certain wireless infrastructure can be built.
47 U.S.C. §319. The FCC's regulations require that "[s]tations in Wireless Radio
Services . . . be used and operated . . . with a valid authorization granted by the
Commission under the provisions of this part. . . ." 47 C.F.R. §1 .903.
The FCC's responsibilities include setting standards to protect the public
from the environmental effects of radiofrequency (RF) radiation. While several
agencies had engaged in research regarding the health and other environmental
impacts of RF radiation, Congress in 1996 concentrated regulatory authority over
human exposure to RF radiation from communication services and facilities in the
FCC. The TCA required the FCC to "prescribe and make effective rules regarding
the environmental effects of radio frequency emissions" within 180 days of the.
Act's enactment.3 The Act also prohibited state and local regulation of wireless
PL 104-104, Februaiy 8, 1996, 110 Stat 56, §704(b) (-RADIO 1:R.I.A.)1JENCY
I'MISSIONc, 1 () di' alter the erv,..icunit 01 this .V.A. the Commi,,,ioll
haliL:omplete action in H Docket 93 62 to prescribe and make ellecti\c rules
regarding the environmental effects of radio frequency emissions:), The FCC's
re.ailations governing exposure to RF radiation are found at 47 C.F.R.
1 . 1307(h). 1 .1310.
5
facilities based on environmental effects of RF emissions so long as those facilities
complied with relevant FCC regulations. 47 U.S.C. §332(c)(7)(B)(iv). That same
year, Congress eliminated funding for Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
activities related to RF radiation.4
SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT
The Federal Communications Commission has failed to protect the public
from radiofrequency emissions. The Commission's legal obligations flow from
two statutes —the National Environmental Policy Act and the Telecommunications
Act. NEPA requires the Commission to analyze the environmental impacts —
including those of radiofrequency radiation — of its authorization of wireless
service providers. The Telecommunications Act goes further and imposes an
affirmative duty on the FCC to protect the public from environmental effects of
radiofrequency radiation. The FCC's December 4, 2019,5 order misinterprets the
4 Sen. Report 104-140, Department of Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban
Development, and Independent Agencies Appropriations Bill, 1996, (Sept. 13,
1995)(to accompany H.R. 2099)(hereafter "Senate Report 104-140"), at 91 .
FCC, In the Matter of Proposed Changes in the Commission'S Rules Regarding
Human Exposure to Radiofrequency Electromagnetic Fields Reassessment of'Fed.
C0111171C111s Commit'n Radiofrequency Exposure Limits & Policies Targeted Changes
to the C0171171iSSiOn'S Rules Regarding Human Exposure to Radiofrequencv
Electromagnetic Fields, Docket Nos. ET 03-137, 13-84, 19-226, FCC Rcd
2019 WL 6681944 (Dec. 4, 2019)(hereafter "2019 Order" or "Order")
6
Commission's responsibilities. The FCC fails to support its decision to rely on its
1996 standards.
When the FCC first addressed RF exposure standards, it did so in response
to the Commission's obligations under NEPA. In 1985, the FCC recognized that it
was "required to make a threshold determination as to whether the facilities it
approves are 'major Federal actions significantly affecting the quality of the human
environment,' thus triggering environmental review, regardless of whether federal
guidelines or standards currently exist for general public exposure to RF
radiation.' 6 The Commission's duty under NEPA is to inform] As the FCC itself
recognized, it could not authorize the use of the electromagnetic spectrum for
wireless services without analyzing the environmental impacts.
Congress gave the FCC additional duties in the TCA, including the
responsibility to set standards adequate to protect the environment (including
humans) from. radiofrequency emissions. The TCA limits state and local
regulation of wireless service facilities to the extent they comply with FCC
6 FCC, In the Matter of Responsibility of the Fed. Commc'ns Comm'n to Consider
Biological Effects of Radiofrequency Radiation When Authorizing the Use of
Radiofrequency Devices. Potential Effects of A Reduction in the Allowable Level of
Radiofrequency Radiation on FCC Authorized Commercial Services and
Equipment, General Docket No. 79-144, Report and Order, 100 FCC 2d 543, 546
( 8) ( 1985)(hereafter "1985 Order").
7 As Petitioners explain, this duty to inform includes the responsibility to complete
an Environmental Impact Statement to inform its rulemaking to set health
standards for RF radiation. Pet. Br. at 76-78.
7
emission regulations. In restricting state and local authority to protect the public
from radiofrequency emissions, Congress placed the responsibility to protect on
the FCC. Congress further concentrated responsibility in the FCC by eliminating
funding for EPA activities related to electro-magnetic fields (EMF).8 The Senate
Report on EPA appropriations declares that "EPA should not engage in EMF
activities."'
Once entrusted with the authority to protect the public from RF emissions,
the FCC had the responsibility to exercise that authority. The Commission has
failed to do so. The FCC's December 4, 2019, order terminates the Commission's
inquiry into the adequacy of its RF standards without making any change to limits
that were set over twenty years ago. This action lacks the support in the record that
the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) requires. Without meaningful RF limits
and an effective way to ensure that they are met, the FCC leaves the public without
the protection or even the information that Congress required the FCC to provide.
s Electromagnetic fields (EMF) refer to the complete electromagnetic spectrum,
which includes radiofrequencies (RF) — a large band of EMF. See Figure 1, at 17.
The EPA researched EMF effects in many ranges, including RF.
9 See Senate Report 104-140, supra at note 4 at 91 .
8
ARGUMENT
As Petitioners explain, the FCC's 2019 Order violates fundamental
principles of the APA. The FCC finalized several actions in the December 4,
2019, order. Most important, it resolved the inquiry it had initiated in 2013
regarding the adequacy of its RF radiation limits. Despite numerous scientific
studies of potential harm from exposure below the limits set by the FCC in 1996,
the Commission chose not to change them.'° The FCC misunderstands its
responsibilities under NEPA and the TCA. As a result, the record lacks the
support for the FCC's decision to continue to rely upon its 1996 limits for RF
exposure.
I. Exposure to Radiofrequency Radiation Has Increased with
Proliferation of Wireless Services.
Wireless services such as cell phones operate by using a form of
electromagnetic radiation — energy moving through space as a series of electric and
magnetic waves. The spectrum of electromagnetic radiation ranges from very low
frequencies, such as electrical power from power lines to extremely high
frequencies such as gamma rays. The portion of the spectrum used by mobile
1° 2019 Order, supra note 5, at ;2 ("we find no appropriate basis for and thus
decline to propose amendments to our existing limits at this time").
9
phones and other telecommunications such as radio and television broadcasting is
referred to as the radiofrequency (or RF) spectrum as shown below)
Figure 1.The Electromagnetic Spectrum
��. ..� _..._....w
it, 4 i
r.� p {,
II 4
4' ,! s rE'.�c .`. ?_., .`lam,,. ;?, k {} .:f�'F e,
Scientific studies have raised concern about the health and environmental
effects of non-ionizing radiation from wireless communication services. Ionizing
radiation from x-rays and nuclear power plants, which vibrates at high frequencies
and produces large amounts of energy, has long been regarded as extremely
dangerous to humans and other living creatures.!2 With enough energy to knock
electrons free from their orbit around the nucleus of an atom, ionizing radiation
creates unstable atoms with positive and negative charges. Scientists are now
l' U.S. Government Accountability Office, GAO 12-771, Telecommunications:
Exposure and Testing Requirements for Mobile Phones Should be Reassessed
(2012), at 5.
12 Martin Blank, Overpowered: What Science Tells Us About the Dangers oieCell
Phones and Other WIPI-Tae Devices (2013), at 29-30.
10
realizing that non-ionizing radiation also can cause biological effects in all systems
of the body and in wildlife, including changes in DNA.'3
From its earliest days, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)'
investigated adverse health and environmental effects of non-ionizing radiation.
Pursuant to authority under 42 U.S.C. §2021(h), EPA published notice of its intent
to develop guidance for federal agencies to limit public exposure to radiofrequency
radiation in 1982.15 FCC Chairman Mark Fowler wrote to EPA encouraging the
agency to complete guidance "as expeditiously as possible so that a uniform
federal standard will be available for use by the FCC and other affected
agencies."' In 1986, EPA published a report discussing the sources and levels of
radiofrequency radiation to which the public was exposed and other analysis
relevant to the development of exposure guidelines.'7
13 See, e.,g., Id. at 58("EMF can damage DNA even at low EMF-exposure levels");
58("exposure not only causes immediate danger, but also unleashes a chain of
processes that continue to produce damage well after the exposure itself');
63("The type of cellular damage caused by EMF is similar to that caused by aging.
The residual errors and genetic mutations accumulate, leading to malfunction and
disease.").
14 GAO, Efforts by the Environmental Protection Agency to Protect the Public
from Environmental Nonionizing Radiation (CED 78-79) (March 29, 1978), at 4-5.
15 EPA, Federal Radiotioll Protection Guidancc tbr Public Exposure to
Radiolrequenci- Radiatiou, 47 Fed. Reg. 57338 (December 23, 1982).
16 Letter from FCC Chairman Mark S. Fowler to Anne Burford, EPA
Administrator re Docket 81-43 (February 22, 1983), see Addendum Exh. B.
17 Norbert M. Hankin, EPA, Office of Air and Radiation, The Radiofrequency
Radiation Environment. Environmental Exposure Levels and RF Radiation
Emitting Sources (July 1986)(EPA-520/1-85-014).
Even as the EPA investigation was underway, the :FCC recognized that it
had its own legal obligation under NEPA to determine whether the facilities it
approves are major federal actions triggering an environmental review. The
Commission issued its first regulations addressing 1117 radiation in 1985.18 The
Commission's obligation to assess the environmental impacts of the actions it
authorized did not depend on whether federal guidelines or standards otherwise
existed for general public exposure to R.F radiation.19 In the Commission's words,
"an agency *cannot refuse to give serious consideration to environmental factors
merely because it thinks that another agency should assume the responsibility for
promoting the policies of NEPA.'"2°
The Commission based its 1985 action on privately promulgated health and
safety guidelines for RF radiation established by the American National Standards
Institute (ANSI) in 1982,21 which were based on short-term, acute thermal effects
18 1985 Order, supra note 6.
19 Id. at 546 (118).
201d., quoting Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. v. S.E.C., 432 F.Supp.
1190, 1207-1208 (D.D.C. 1977), rer'd on other grounds, 606 F.2d 1031 (D.C. Cir.
1979).
21 Id. at 551 (1124). ANSI is an organization comprised mainly of industries that set
voluntary national standards for numerous industrial applications and processes.
The industry subcommittee for radiofrequency radiation is the Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). The subcommittee title is C-95.1 for
the microwave bands. The standards they recommend are titled ANSI/IEEE C.95.1
with the last revision year then added. The FCC uses ANSI/IEEE
recommendations for "controlled" environments comparable to professional
of exposure to RF radiation. The assumption underlying these standards was that
electromagnetic fields were harmful to humans only at levels powerful enough to
increase the temperature of human tissue.22
At the time, the FCC did not impose specific radiation limits on all the
industries it regulated. Rather than prohibiting services that exceeded the
voluntary ANSI/IEEE guidelines, the FCC used the guidelines as a trigger to
require an analysis of environmental impacts by wireless service providers.23
The worldwide explosion of wireless services has dramatically increased
exposure of humans and wildlife to radiofrequency radiation. The International
Telecommunications Union (ITU) reported an increase in global cellular
subscriptions from 15.5% of the population in 2001 to an estimated 96.2% in
2013.24
exposures. For "uncontrolled" environments where civilians are likely to be
exposed, the FCC uses standards developed by the National Council on Radiation
Protection (NCRP). B. Blake Levitt, ed., Cell Towers, Wireless Convenience? Or
Environmental Hazard? (Safe Goods/New Century Publishing 2000), at 35-36.
22 J. Elder, RADIOFREQUENCY RADIATION: ACTIVITIES AND ISSUES.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C., EPA/600/D-86/135
(NTIS PB86217155), 1986,
https://cfpub.epa.govisi/sirecord_Report.cfm?Lab=NHEERL&dirEntrylD
=47568.
23 Id., at 251011 84Xciting 42 U.S.C. §4332(2)(C)).
24 United Nations, International Telecommunication Union, Global ICT
Developments, available at http://www.itu.intien/ITU-
D/Statistics/PaRes/stat/defaultaspx. See generally, Kenneth A. Jacobsen, A Tale of
Two Circuits: Curbs on Legal Remedies for Exposure to Potentiallv Harmful Cell
Phone Radiation Emissions, 10 Seton Hall Circuit Review 1, 2-3 (2013).
13
Global ICT developments, 2001-2013
f 1
Source nternational Telecommunications Union
Ninety-six percent of Americans own a cell phone, over three-quarters of
which are smartphones. In contrast to the largely stationary internet of the early
2000s, Americans today are connected to the world of digital information while
"on the go" via these smartphones and other mobile devices.25 According to the
FCC's recent wireless competition report, "American demand for wireless services
continues to grow exponentially.”26
So-called 5G —the fifth generation of wireless service technology
dramatically increases human exposure to RF radiation. Previous generations of
macro towers could be built several miles apart, but the 5G -millimeter wave
25 Pew Research Center, Mobile Fact Sheet (June 12, 2019), available at
https: .pewresearch org/internetifact-sheet mobile
26 FCC, In the Matter' of ccelerating Wireless Broadband Deployment by
Removing Barriers to Infrastructure I •'
nv WT Docket No. 17-79, Declaratory
Ruling and Third Report and Order, 33 FCC Red 9088, 9096 ( P3)
(2018)(hereafter "2018 Declaratory Order").
14
spectrum simply cannot propagate long distances over a few thousand feet let
alone a few hundred."27 As a result, the FCC anticipates "hundreds of thousands of
wireless facilities" will be deployed in the next few years, "equal to or more than
the number providers have deployed in total over the last few decades."'`' As the
5G buildout continues, Americans are forced to "live with involuntary 24/7
radiation."29
As Petitioners explain, the FCC's December 4, 2019, action ignores this new
technology and its impacts. Pet. Br. at 34-36. Such failure to "consider an
important aspect of the problem" is exactly the kind of arbitrary and capricious
decision-making the Administrative Procedure Act prohibits. United Keetoowah
Band of Cherokee Indians, 933 F.3d at 738, citing Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass 'ii of
US., Inc. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 43 (1983).
H. FCC Has Not Satisfied its Obligations under NEPA
A. FCC Has Recognized Since 1985 that It Has Obligations under
NEPA
As the FCC itself acknowledged, the Commission is "required to make a
threshold determination as to whether the facilities it approves are `major Federal
actions significantly affecting the quality of the human environment,' thus
2 Id., at 9133 (1191), note 250.
28 Id., at 9112 (1147), citing comments by Verizon, AT&T and Sprint.
29 Christopher Ketchum, Is 50 Going to Kill Us?, New Republic (May 8, 2020),
Addendum at Exh. C.
15
triggering environmental review."' Providers of personal wireless services must
obtain an FCC license. 47 U.S.C. §§301, 307, 309; 47 C.F.R. §1.903. In addition,
a construction of certain wireless infrastructure such as a cell tower sometimes
requires an FCC permit. 47 U.S.C. §319. Courts have confirmed the application
of NEPA to FCC actions. See, e.g., Am. Bird Conservancy, Inc. v. FCC, 516 F.3d
1027 (D.C. Cir. 2008)(failure to consider potential impacts of cell towers on
migratory birds violated NEPA); Washington Utilities and Transp. Comm 'n v.
FCC, 513 F.2d 1142, 1167 (9th Cir. 1975)(The Commission is required "to
consider environmental values at every distinctive and comprehensive stage of the
(agency's) process.'"), abrogated on other grounds by Booth v. Churner, 532 U.S.
731, 741 n. 6 (2001).
B. 2019 Order Fails to Fulfill the FCC's NEPA Obligations
The FCC's Order fails to satisfy its duties to inform the public as well as to
inform its own decision. First, the FCC failed to complete any NEPA analysis to
support its order or explain why the order did not trigger the FCC's NEPA
obligations. Pet. Br. at 78-79. Numerous scientific studies were available to the
FCC if it had taken its environmental review responsibilities seriously.' Instead,
30 1985 Order, supra note 6, at 546 MO.
3 1 See infra notes 52-58 and accompanying text.
16
the FCC stuck its head in the sand and did not even mention many of these studies
of potential environmental harm in its 2019 order.
Second, the 2019 order limits the environmental review that occurs when
companies construct facilities to provide the services that the FCC has licensed.
As amended by the December 4 order, the FCC's rules excuse companies from
submitting an environmental assessment of the impacts of proposed wireless
services and facilities as long as such actions meet the FCC's RF limits.32 Whether
environmental review occurs rests upon whether the FCC has done its job in
setting adequate RF radiation limits. As explained in Petitioners' brief, the FCC
has failed to complete the job Congress gave it. Pet. Br. at 62-68.
If allowed to stand, the FCC's 2019 order eviscerates the environmental
review this court recently ruled that the Commission must provide. On August 9,
2019, this court held that the FCC had failed to justify its elimination of review
32 2019. Order, supra note 5, at App A, amending 47 C.F.R. §1 .1307 ("with
respect to the limits on human exposure to RF provided in Section 1.1310 of this
chapter, applicants to the Commission for the grant or modification of construction
permits, licenses or renewals thereof, temporary authorities, equipment
authorizations, or any other authorizations of radiofrequency sources must either:
(i) determine that they qualify for an exemption pursuant to Section 1 .1307(b)(3);
(ii) prepare an evaluation of the human exposure to RF radiation pursuant to
Section 1.1310; or (iii) prepare an Environmental Assessment if those RF sources
would cause human exposure to levels of RF radiation in excess of the limits in
Section 1 .1310.").
17
under NEPA and the National Historic Preservation Act. United Keetoowah Band
of Cherokee Indians, 933 F.3d 728. The FCC did not appeal that decision.
Instead, the FCC tries to circumvent the court's prior decision with the
challenged order. The Commission ended its inquiry into the adequacy of its 1996
limits on RF radiation without changing them or providing sufficient evidence to
justify them. Pet. Br. 67-68. Moreover, the Commission offered no meaningful
response to the numerous peer-reviewed scientific studies received as part of the
inquiry that raised concerns about the environmental effects from exposure to
radiation below the FCC's limits. Pet. Br. 65. The FCC's inadequate RF standards
preclude adequate environmental review.
As a result of its 2019 order, the FCC avoids providing the information that
NEPA requires. As wireless service providers propose to construct hundreds of
new towers and other infrastructure across the country to use the spectrum
pursuant to FCC licenses, the FCC is unlikely to conduct new environmental
analysis. Instead, the Commission will invoke the determination that its health
standards are adequate as satisfaction of its duty to look at potential harm. This
might be fine had the FCC analyzed recent science and changed its standards to
reflect this science. Instead, the Commission chose to stick its head in the sand
exactly the kind of government action that NEPA is designed to prevent.
Under the FCC's Order, no environmental review under NEPA is required if
proposed wireless services fall below the FCC's RF standards. And the wireless
service provider determines on its own whether it has met the standards. A
wireless service provider's determination that its facilities are exempt excuses
completion of an environmental assessment under NEPA. 47 C.F.R. § 1.1312(a).
As a result of the provider's determination that it is exempt, the FCC receives no
information from the company about the environmental effects of RF radiation
from those facilities and the devices they support. The public does not get any
information either.
ILL FCC Misunderstands Its Obligations under the TCA
A. Congress Gave the FCC the Responsibility to Protect the Public from
RF Hazards
As wireless communication expanded, Congress fundamentally changed the
legal framework governing telecommunications. The Telecommunications Act of
1996 was the first major revision to federal telecommunications law since 1934. In
deregulating the radio, television, cable and telephone industries, the Act touched
off an explosion of wireless communication services. One way the Act facilitated
rapid deployment of new technologies was by concentrating regulatory authority
over the environmental effects of RF radiation in the FCC.
Congress prohibited state and local regulation of wireless facilities based on
environmental (J'Ibcts of raliofrequencv emiy,jons so long as the facilities
19
complied with FCC regulations concerning such emissions.' The Act required the
FCC to "prescribe and make effective rules regarding the environmental effects of
radio frequency emissions" within 180 days.34
Seeking to avoid a patchwork of standards across the country, Congress
gave the FCC the authority and responsibility to establish exposure limits to
address the environmental effects of RF radiation.35 Wireless service providers did
not want the difficulty and expense of complying with different local and state
regulations.' The regulatory responsibility that Congress gave the FCC in 1996 to
limit the environmental impacts differed from its previous responsibility under
NEPA to understand the impacts.
In addition to barring state and local regulation of the environmental effects
of RE radiation, Congress limited EPA oversight by eliminating EPA's funding for
activities related to RF radiation.' At the time, EPA was poised to issue new
standards for RF radiation. It had briefed both the FCC and the National
.33 47 U.S.C. § 332(c)(7)(B)(iv).
34 PL 104-104, supra note 3.
35 Report by. Rep. Bliley, Committee on Commerce, H.R. Rep. No. 204(1),
104th Cong., Sess. 1995.
36 See, e.g., Carol R. Goforth, "A Bad Call: Preemption of State and Local
Authority to Regulate Wireless Communication Facilities on the Basis of
Radiofrequency Emission's," 44 Sch. L. Rev. 311 , 364 (2001 ) ("compliance
[with different state and local regulations] would be difficult and time-consuming
for the telecommunications industry").
37 See Senate Report 104-140, supra note 4, at 91("EPA shall not engage in EMF
activities.").
20
Telecommunications and Information Administration regarding its work to
develop RF exposure guidelines. In Phase 1, EPA recommended moving forward
immediately to address thermal impacts of RF radiation. In Phase 2,
acknowledging potential non-thermal effects, EPA proposed convening a group of
national experts to address "modulated and nonthermal exposures."38 Three
months later, EPA informed the FCC that it would have final guidelines by early
199639 based on technical input from the Radiofrequency Interagency Work Group
(RFIAWG)4° in which the FCC participated.
EPA never completed this work.41 By eliminating EPA's funding for it,
Congress gave the FCC the authority to control limits on RF radiation from
wireless services. With that authority came responsibility.
38 Memorandum from Robert F. Cleveland, Office of Engineering and Technology
to FCC Secretary, Ex Pante Presentation by U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(March 22, 1995), at 6-7, see Addendum Exh. D.
39 Letter from E. Ramona Trovata, EPA, Office of Radiation and Indoor Air, to
Richard M. Smith, Chief, FCC, Office of Engineering and Technology (June 19,
1995), see Addendum Exh. E.
4° The RFIAWG was established in 1995 by the EPA which chaired the group. It
is made up of representatives from federal agencies with a stake in RF issues. Its
purpose is to coordinate/exchange information related to RF exposures and advise
federal agencies accordingly. The RFIAWG has not met in the last two years.
41 In a July 8, 2020, letter to Theodora Scarato, Executive Director, Environmental
Health Trust, EPA's Director of the Radiation Protection Division, Lee Ann B.
Veal, confirms that EPA's "last review [of the research on damage to memory by
cell phone radiation] was in the 1984 document Biological Effects of
Radiofrequency Radiation (EPA 600/8-83-026F). The EPA does not currently have
a funded mandate for radiofrequency matters." See Addendum Exh. F.
B. 2019 Order Fails to Fulfill the FCC's Responsibility to Protect the
Public
The FCC fails in the 2019 order to recognize its regulatory responsibility to
protect the public from RF radiation. Although the FCC has aggressively limited
state and local authority to protect the public from the environmental effects of RF
radiation,' it has failed to collect and review the information it needs to support its
own RF radiation standards, which were last updated in 1996.
1. FCC Failed to Justify its RF Standards
In its 2019 order, the FCC resolved the inquiry it had initiated in 2013
regarding the adequacy of its RF radiation limits. Despite numerous scientific
studies of potential harm from exposure below the limits set by the FCC in 1996,
the Commission made the decision not to change them.'
The Commission had not updated its RF standards since 1996. Following
issuance of the FCC's original standards in 1985, ANSI/IEEE adopted new
guidelines in 1992 for RF radiation exposure that applied to additional categories,
including cell phones. 'The FCC proposed updating its NEPA regulations to reflect
42 See, e.g., 2018 Declaratory Ruling, supra note 26 at 9096 ( J24)(Commission has
acknowledged "an urgent need to remove any unnecessary barriers to such
deployment").
2019 Order, supra note 5, at ¶2.
ANSUIEEE's new findings.' While the FCC's proposal was pending, Congress
passed the Telecommunications Act, which directed the FCC to "prescribe and
make effective rules regarding the environmental effects of radio frequency
emissions.' Recognizing the importance of these standards, Congress dictated
that the FCC complete its pending rulemaking within 180 days of enactment of the
TCA. The Commission finalized its rules on August 1 , 1996."
The FCC's responsibility did not end with its 1.996 rulemaking. Just like
EPA must ensure that its public-health protections reflect current science, the FCC
must ensure its RF standards are up-to-date based on current knowledge. The
Commission has failed to do so. As early as 1999, the RFIAWG, which included
scientists and officials from across the government, criticized the FCC's standards
for failing to be based on biological factors.47 Based instead on dosimetric factors,
the standards were designed to make the technology work rather than to protect
life. over ten years later, the FCC still has not changed the limits to address the
R WG's criticism. The Commission ignored the critical issues raised by the
44 FCC, In the Matter of Guidelines for Evaluating the Envtl. Effects of
Radiofrequency Radiation, ET Docket No. 93-62, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking,
8 FCC Red 2849 ( f1) (1993).
45 PL 104-104, supra note 3.
FCC, Guidelines for Evaluating the Enri1017111ellial Effects of Radigfrequency
Radiation, ET Docket No. 93-62, Report and Order, 11 FCC Red 15123 (1996).
RFIAWG Letter to Richard Tell, Chair, IEEE SCC28 (SC4), Risk Assessment
Group (June 17, 1999). See Addendum Exh. G. This letter is included in the FCC
docket at haps: ieefsapi.fec.gov 7520941598.pdf.
RFIAWG even though the group included the FCC's own Senior Scientist in the
Office of Engineering & Technology, Robert Cleveland.'
The FCC's obligation to "prescribe and make effective rules" is especially
critical given the limit on the ability of state and local governments to set their own
health standards applicable to radiofrequency emissions.' The TCA prohibits
state and local regulation of"the placement, construction and modification of
personal wireless service facilities on the basis of the environmental effects of RI
emissions to the extent that such facilities comply with the [FCC's] RF standard."'
Adding more force to this prohibition, the Act gives companies the right to sue a
state or local government challenging "any final action or failure to act"
inconsistent with the TCA's limitations on state and local authority.' The Act
requires courts to resolve such lawsuits on an expedited basis.'
Such large limitations on state and local authority have left elected officials
across the country reluctant to restrict industry proposals for new wireless services
and towers and other infrastructure necessary to provide them. In approving use
permits for three Verizon wireless telecommunications towers in Sonoma, for
example, the Sonoma County Commission felt -there was no other option that
Id. (attached list of members).
49 47 U.S.C. §332(c)(7)(B)(iv).
5() 47 U.S.C. 032(0(7)(B)04
47 U.S.C. §332(c)(7)(B)(v).
52 m.
wouldn't invite a lawsuit from Verizon."'' In fact, Verizon had previously filed
suit against multiple jurisdictions in California that refused their applications,
including Monterey, Danville, Piedmont, Hillsborough, Seaside and Los Altos.'
Courts have frequently struck down local government attempts to regulate
siting of wireless facilities. In Pennsylvania, for example, a court held the
Smithfield Township Board of Supervisors unlawfully denied a permit application
because the proposed use was "detrimental to the health, safety and general welfare
of the present or future residents of Smithfield Township." The court granted the
application. According to the court, the permit applicant Verizon Wireless did not
bear the burden to establish that its proposed activity did not have detrimental
effects to health, safety and welfare. Ne. Pennsylvania SMSA LP v. Smithfield
Twp. Bd. of Supervisors, 433 F. Supp. 3d 703, 717 (M.D. Pa. 2020).
Given the cost of litigation, local governments are reluctant to spend
taxpayer dollars to defend efforts to regulate wireless infrastructure even when
they might prevail in the end. The result is local governments feel powerless to
respond to citizen concerns about the wireless infrastructure including the potential
impacts to constituents' health.
'' Christian Kallen, "Sonoma's Planning Commission Approves Verizon
Application for 3 New Cell Towers," Sonoma Index-Tribune (Jan. 27, 2020),
available at httes:i/l.e zac; .sonolnanews.cominews/l 0640120-181-sonomas-
_lanninu-comnimission-a 2 troves-verizon?sba-=-AAS.
54 Id.
25
Congress gave the FCC responsibility to protect the public from RF hazards.
The Commission has the burden to justify that its standards are effective. Rather
than provide such justification, the Commission's 2019 order decides that its 1996
limits are adequate despite significant evidence suggesting that they are not.
2. FCC Failed to Respond to Evidence of Environmental Harm
As Petitioners explain, radiofrequency radiation generated by wireless
service has biological effects that can harm human health as well as other living
creatures in the environment. Pet. Br. at 18-20, 23, 26, 34-35. In 2012, in twenty-
four technical chapters, the Biolnitiative Working Group authors discussed the
content and implications of about 1,800 peer-reviewed scientific studies conducted
since 2007.55 These studies indicate, among other things, DNA damage,
carcinogenicity and reproductive effects. Over 250 scientists from over 44 nations
have signed an International Appeal calling for protection from non-ionizing
electromagnetic field exposure.56 Such information was in the record before the
FCC, but the Commission failed to address it. Pet. Br. 19, 23-24, 36.
55
Biolnitiative Working Group, A Rationale for Biologically-based Exposure
Standards for Low-Intensity Electromagnetic Radiation (2012),
https://bioinitiative.orgl. The Biolnitiative Working Group Report is cited to
numerous times in the record before the FCC in this matter.
56 International Appeal, Scientists Call for Protection from Non-ionizing
Electromagnetic Field Exposure, https://emfscientist.orgiindex.php/emf-scientist-
appeal. The International Appeal is cited to numerous times in the record before
the FCC in this matter. See also, Comments of B. Blake Levitt and Henry C. Lai,
In Matter of Reassessment of Federal Communications Commission
In addition to its impact on humans, radiofrequency radiation poses harmful
effects to flora and fauna. In a review of 113 studies from peer-reviewed
publications, seventy percent of the studies concluded that radiofrequency
electromagnetic fields had a significant effect on birds, insects and plants.' In a
2013 literature review, the authors concluded that even for short exposure periods
(<15 mins to a few hours), non-thermal effects were seen that can persist for long
periods.58
Scientific research also indicates that electromagnetic fields can disrupt
navigation abilities of migratory birds.' In five field studies analyzing the impact
of RF-EMF exposure on bird populations living near cell phone towers or base-
stations, a significant effect was observed in breeding density, reproduction, or
Radiofrequency Exposure Limits and Policies (E.T. Docket No. 13-84)(Aug. 25,
2013). The comments can be found in the FCC docket at
https://ecfsapi.fcc.govifile/7520939733.pdf.
57 S. Cucurachi, W.L.M. Tamis, M.G. Vijver, W.J.G.M. Peijnenburg, J.F.B. Bolte
& G.R. de Snoo, A review of the ecological effects ofradigfrequency
electromagneticfields (RF-EMF), Si ENVTL. INT'L, 116 — 140 (2013),
https://doi.orgi10.1016/j.envint.2012.10.009.
58 Senavirathna Mudalige, Don Hiranya Jayasanka and Takashi Asaeda, The
significance of microwaves in the environment and its effect on plants,
=
59 Peter Thalau Dennis Gehring Christine Nief3ner Thorsten Rit Wolfgang
Wiltschko Magnetoreception in birds: the effect of radiofrequency fields. 12 J. R.
SOC. INTERFACE, (Dec. 2, 2014),
haps: royalsocietypublishing.org doi 10.1098•rsif.2014.1103 .
27
species composition." The Department of the Interior raised concerns regarding
the harm that non-ionizing electromagnetic radiation may cause to migratory
birds.6' These are just a few of the many scientific studies that were available to
the FCC if it had chosen to take its duty to protect the public from enviromnental
harm seriously. As Petitioners explain, such failure to consider and respond to the
studies addressing the potential of environmental harm violated fundamental
principles of the Administrative Procedures Act as well as the responsibility that
Congress gave the FCC in the TCA. Pet. Br. at 50-51, 62-68.
CONCLUSION
With authority comes responsibility. When Congress concentrated authority
over radiofrequency radiation in the FCC, it imposed a duty to protect as well as
inform. The Telecommunications Act of 1996 required the FCC to "prescribe and
make effective rules regarding the environmental effects of radio frequency
emissions." As a result, the record supporting the FCC's December 4, 2019, action
must show that its RF standards are safe and reliable. The environmental review
Cucurachi et al., supra, note 60, at 122.
()[ Letter from Willie R. Taylor, Director, Office of Environmental Policy and
Compliance, Dept. of Interior, to Eli Veenendaal, National Telecommunications
and Information Administration, Dept. of Commerce (Feb. 7, 2014),
lett)s:`.ecfsa_Ti.fcc.uov:`f file 10618237899075/De)artment-of-Interior-Feb-2014-
letter-on-Birds-and-RFS}.20(1 ).pdf.
28
required by NEPA is indispensable to such determination. The burden is on the
FCC to justify its RF standards. It is a burden the Commission has failed to meet.
For the reasons stated herein, as well as in Petitioners' Brief, the Court should
vacate the challenged order.
2
CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
1. This brief complies with the type-volume limitation of Fed. R. App.
P.29(a)(5) because this brief contains 6,356 words, excluding the parts of the brief
exempted by Fed. R. App. P. 32(f). This statement is based on the word count
function of Microsoft Office Word 2016.
2. This brief complies with the typeface requirements of Fed. R. App. P.
32(a)(5) and the type style requirements of Fed. R. App. P. 32(a)(6) because this
brief has been prepared in a proportionally spaced typeface using Microsoft Office
Word 2016 in 14-point Times New Roman font for the main text and 14-point
Times New Roman font for footnotes.
Is/ Sharon Buccino
Counsel for Amici Curiae,
Natural Resources Defense Council et al.
Dated: August 5, 2020
30
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that on this 5th day of August, 2020, I electronically filed the
foregoing Amicus Brief in Support of Petitioners on behalf of the Natural
Resources Defense Council and Local Elected Officials as listed in Addendum,
with the Clerk of the Court for the United States Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia by using the Court's CM/ECF system. I further certify that service
was accomplished on all participants in the case via the Court's CM/ECF system.
Required hard copies of the briefs are being delivered to the Court and counsel of
record via first-class mail.
/s/ Sharon Buccino
Attorney for Amici,
Natural Resources Defense Council et al.
Dated: August 5, 2020
3l