Event highlights risks of lead-sheathed telecom cables
md传媒国产剧 College Professor of Biology Philip J. Landrigan, M.D., founding director of the Program for Global Public Health and the Common Good, joined a roundtable discussion on February 5 that sought to raise awareness of health risks from lead contamination in degrading telecommunications cables.
The event was hosted by United States Senator Edward J. Markey 鈥68, J.D. 鈥72 (D-Mass.) as part of a site visit to Chicopee, Mass. Testing revealed that unsafe levels of lead in soil under hanging lead-covered phone lines that telecommunications companies installed across the U.S. in the 19th and 20th centuries鈥攎any of which still remain in communities such as Chicopee.聽
During the last six months, investigations by The Wall Street Journal, Environmental Protection Agency, and independent researchers have found detectable levels of lead contamination in water and soil samples collected near lead-sheathed cables in sites across the country. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has stated that lead exposure can affect聽children鈥檚聽development and neurological, renal, and reproductive health in聽adults.聽聽
Speaking at the roundtable, Landrigan said, 鈥淟ead in telephone cables is a hazard for workers who come into direct contact with leaded cables in their jobs and for children who live, play, and go to school in communities underneath lead cables. In adult workers, lead from telephone cables increases risk for hypertension, kidney disease, heart disease, and stroke. In children, lead causes brain damage with loss of IQ, shortened attention, span, and lifelong disruption of behavior.
鈥淧revention of exposure is the key to preventing lead toxicity. To effectively prevent exposure to lead from telephone cables in both workers and children, we urgently need to develop detailed maps showing the location of all lead-containing telecommunications cables across the United States.鈥
Appearing at the event with Landrigan and Markey were James Contentas and Lawrence Graham, retired members of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, as well as researcher聽Jack Caravanos, a professor of environmental health at New York University鈥檚 School of Global Public Health. Also present were聽EPA Regional Administrator David Cash, Massachusetts State Senator Paul Mark, Occupational Health and Safety Administration Area Director Mary Hoye, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health Deputy Branch Chief for Emerging Technology Lilia Chen, and Sarita Hudson of the Public Health Institute of Western Massachusetts.
鈥淲e need to protect the families in the 21st century from corporate decisions made in the 19th and 20th centuries,鈥澛爏aid Markey.聽鈥淲e need more information on where these lead-covered cables are and if they pose a threat to workers and communities in Massachusetts and across the country. Telecommunications companies own these cables, and now they must own the solutions. It鈥檚 time they give us answers.鈥澛犅
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