A U.S. congressman is set to propose a federal law that would put warning labels on cell phones, just as San Francisco nears enacting an ordinance that would require retailers to post information about cell phone radiation.
On Wednesday, Ohio Congressman Dennis Kucinich said he plans to introduce a bill that would require warning labels about the potential risk of cell phone use on the devices. The bill would also create a national research project to study cell phones and health.
In a statement, Kucinich acknowledged that some studies find links between cell phone use and health issues like brain tumors while others don’t. “But studies funded by the telecommunications industry are significantly less likely to find a link between cell phones and health effects,” he said. “Until we know for sure, a labeling law will ensure that cell phone users can decide for themselves the level of risk that they will accept. Obviously, cell phone companies should not be the ones making that decision for us.”
Kucinich’s proposal would also call for an update to the Specific Absorption Rate, a measure of cell phone radiation that the U.S. Federal Communications Commission requires all cell phone makers to disclose. That standard was set decades ago and deserves an update, he said.
The San Francisco bill, which has been passed by the city council and is awaiting signature by the mayor, would require retailers to include the SAR on display materials for phones. The stores would also have to explain what SAR means and direct consumers to further information about it provided by the city.
The CTIA cellular trade association said that the San Francisco ordinance could mislead customers into thinking that some phones are safer than others, while the FCC has already approved all phones found in retail shops as safe.
To protest the ordinance, the CTIA recently said it would stop holding one of its annual conferences in San Francisco after this year. It did not reply to a request for comment about the Kucinich proposal.