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In a FOIA lawsuit against the Department of Homeland Security, EPIC has just obtained documents concerning the radiation risks of TSA's airport body scanner program. The documents include agency emails, radiation studies, memoranda of agreement concerning radiation testing programs, and results of some radiation tests. One document set reveals that even after TSA employees identified cancer clusters possibly linked to radiation exposure, the agency failed to issue employees dosimeters - safety devices that could assess the level of radiation exposure. Another document indicates that the DHS mischaracterized the findings of the National Institute of Standards and Technology, stating that NIST "affirmed the safety" of full body scanners. The documents obtained by EPIC reveal that NIST disputed that characterization and stated that the Institute did not, in fact, test the devices. ....
.....Also, a Johns Hopkins University study revealed that radiation zones around body scanners could exceed the "General Public Dose Limit." For more information, see EPIC: EPIC v. Department of Homeland Security - Full Body Scanner Radiation Risks and EPIC: EPIC v. DHS (Suspension of Body Scanner Program).
Unlike other x-ray machines, doctors say most of the radiation is concentrated on the skin and underlying tissue. It's a design that enables the machines to see what's hiding under clothing. It's a technique that some doctors say could increase the risk of skin cancer, particularly with frequent fliers....
...A spokesperson with Johns Hopkins University told WFTV Monday their report only states the facts and does not offer up conclusions on the threat of skin cancer. However, one Johns Hopkins doctor is quoted as saying, "Statistically, someone is going to get skin cancer from these x-rays."...
...Another researcher said a type of cancer called basal cell carcinoma is the most likely concern, but a Food and Drug Administration review found the scanners pose no health threat.
The internal emails between NIST and the DHS show how NIST was “a little concerned” by a USA Today article published November 15, 2010, in which Janet Napolitano, the head of DHS, claimed that NIST had “affirmed the safety” of the airport scanners.
Nist does not do product testing
Nist did not test AIT machines for product safety
Nist measured the dose from a single machine and compared it against the standard
He said he is not looking for corrections, just doesn't want any mischarachterization of the work continued. I attached a fact sheet that they cleared on from a while ago
Originally posted by Phage
Radiation induced cancer does not appear until years after exposure.
Radiation (and other agent) induced cancer always are associated with a latent period (2 --> 40 years or more)
www.uic.edu...
The body scanners have been in use for how long? Less than a year? If TSA workers are getting occupational cancer it's not from the body scanners.
The NIST did not say it did no testing. It said it did not test for "product safety". Product safety testing would involve testing for things like this: ulstandardsinfonet.ul.com...
The NIST did test the radiation dose of the machine and found it within standards.
Check Your Bags: CT Scanners
The first security check that your checked bags go through depends on the airport. In the United States, most major airports have a computer tomography (CT) scanner. A CT scanner is a hollow tube that surrounds your bag. The X-ray mechanism revolves slowly around it, bombarding it with X-rays and recording the resulting data. The CT scanner uses all of this data to create a very detailed tomogram (slice) of the bag. The scanner is able to calculate the mass and density of individual objects in your bag based on this tomogram. If an object's mass/density falls within the range of a dangerous material, the CT scanner warns the operator of a potential hazardous object.
Heimann Systems was founded in 1946 by Prof. Dr. Walter Heimann, one of television technology's early pioneers.
In the early 1970s Heimann diversified into markets for security technology. Completely new product lines were developed, among them X-ray inspection units for baggage screening which became an international requirement in the 70s & early 80s when aircraft hijacking became a global menace.
In response to the requirements of the 1990s, systems were developed for truck and container inspection and for the automatic detection of explosives in baggage.
Today more than 65,000 Smiths Heimann X-ray inspection systems have been supplied to more than 150 countries, screening mail, baggage, merchandise, containers and trucks. Heimann regularly exports around 80% of its products and earned a worldwide reputation for product quality, which has its roots in the in-house development department, with experienced scientists and engineers covering the entire R&D spectrum, from basic development through to the integration of complex systems.
U.K. file on Entebbe contains claim that Israel behind hijacking
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State Department Admits: Detroit Christmas Bomber Was Deliberately Allowed to Keep US Entry Visa, Board His Flight
Transportation Security Administration workers in Boston, Puerto Rico, and Portland have reported elevated rates of cancer, strokes, and heart disease among employees whose job it is to ogle travelers' naked bodies as they pass through full-body scanners. Does that mean the universally loathed machines are actually causing the deadly diseases? And are frequent flyers equally at risk of getting sick? Perhaps, but the sad part is the TSA doesn't seem to care much either way.
News of the health concerns broke when the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), a public-interest research center headquartered in Washington, D.C., released a cache of documents they obtained in response to a records request under the Freedom of Information Act.
EPIC learned that TSA employees at Boston's Logan International Airport reported a suspected "cancer cluster" to their supervisors, only to have the higher-ups downplay the problem and refuse their request for dosimeters, badges that monitor radiation exposure and are routinely used in other industries where workers come in contact with X-rays and other potentially harmful forms of radiation.
"The Department, rather than acting on it or explaining its position, seems to have just dismissed it," EPIC's Marc Rotenburg told reporters earlier this week. "I don't think that's the way most other agencies would have acted in a similar situation if they were confronted with that question."
In response, TSA issued an official statement, saying they have "implemented stringent safety protocols to ensure that technology used at airports to screen people and property is safe for all passengers, as well as the TSA workforce." TSA also said the body scanners are "regularly tested to ensure the radiation emitted falls within the national safety standards."
But Milly Rodriguez, an occupational health and safety specialist for the American Federation of Government Employees (the TSA union), says that the government has been less than forthright when it comes to the potential health risks of the scanners.
"There's no independent studies right now that prove these things are safe," says Rodriguez, who testified before Congress last year on the same issue. "We've said to TSA, 'If there's all this info that you have that can show people than they're not at risk, that the levels are that low, why not share that information?' It has given employees the idea that if they're not given the information, there must be something to hide."
Locally, Ed Terry, the Pacific Northwest organizer for the TSA employee union, tells Seattle Weekly that workers at Portland International Airport have reported elevated rates of illness among people who spend their days in close proximity to the body scanners.
"They were concerned because of the high rate of employee cancer," Terry says. "But there's no data to back that up. Right now it's just employee concerns because so many of their co-workers had been going out with cancer."
Terry didn't know if TSA employees at SeaTac were similarly spooked. But, according to various experts who have analyzed the body scanners' radiation risks, they probably ought to at least be a little wary.
Reports from Johns Hopkins University and the National Institute of Standards and Technology--both of which were "publicly characterized" by TSA, according to EPIC--found that the radiation from the scanners could exceed the "general public dose limit." Dr Michael Love, who runs an X-ray lab at the department of biophysics and biophysical chemistry at the Johns Hopkins school of medicine went so far as to say that, "statistically someone is going to get skin cancer from these X-rays."
Another study, conducted last year by Dr David Brenner, head of Columbia University's center for radiological research, found that the scanners are likely to lead to an increase in a common type of skin cancer called basal cell carcinoma, which affects the head and neck, according to a report from the website Info Wars, which has doggedly covered the TSA scanner issue."
It took only a few years for the consequences of exposure to airport scanner radiation to come out. TSA airport scanner operators and other personnel discovered what are called clusters of cancer in their bodies after only a decade or so of working with these machines. The discovery of this information was done after the Electronic Privacy Information Center obtained documents that show how TSA workers got sick with cancer, heart disease and stroke
Big Sis Janet Napolitano Lies
News
Nuclear plant workers developed cancer despite lower radiation exposure than legal limit
...Of 10 nuclear power plant workers who have developed cancer and received workers' compensation in the past, nine had been exposed to less than 100 millisieverts of radiation, it has been learned.
Originally posted by Phage
Not all cancer is caused by radiation. There are other environmental as well as genetic causes.