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Cell Phone ‘Towers Of Doom’
That Reportedly Cause Cancer In Britain Now Also Threaten Toronto Communities Toronto's Gardiner Expressway has recently seen a series of looming cell phone towers. These towers have been erected without warning to local downtown workers and nearby residents. There is also another tower at Finch and Victoria Park about 7 metres from apartment buildings windows that is virtually identical to the Orange Phone Company Tower that has become infamous for reports of accompanying cancer ailments by residents.
Backgrounder to the soaring cell phone
tower related cancers in Britain Three have died and another four have battled the disease since two masts were erected on the roof of the five-storey block which has become known locally in Britain as the Tower of Doom. The cancer rate on the top floor -- where residents of five of the eight flats have been affected and the three who died all lived - is 20%, ten times the national average. Residents of Berkeley House in Staple Hill, Bristol, also complain of terrible headaches and other ailments which they blame on radiation from the masts. Orange has agreed to remove its mast after a five-year campaign by residents and pressure from the local authority. But it has caused anger with plans to move it to a residential street nearby. The other mast belongs to Vodafone, which has no plans to move it. The most recent death was that of John Llewellin, 63, who lost his battle against bowel cancer two weeks ago. Two years ago, Barbara Wood died in her 70s from breast cancer. Two years earlier Joyce Davies died, also from breast cancer.
Danger Zone On the fourth floor Bernice Mitchell, 69, has battled womb cancer. On the second floor, 78-year-old Barbara Watts, who has lived in the block for 31 years, is in remission from breast cancer. Many of the 110 residents, including Doreen Sheppard, 74, have complained of headaches and other health problems. She said: "The masts are bound to be doing something. I get terrible headaches and I've started suffering from Meniere's disease, where I lose my balance. I'm worried about the children on the estate as there are so many of them now." Both masts were erected in 1994. South Gloucestershire Council served a notice asking for them to be removed when the ten-year contract expired three years ago. But because current guidelines say there is no risk from radiation the council does not have a legal right to force their removal. After a long legal battle Orange has submitted a planning application to put the mast on top of a shopping precinct in a street near homes, a primary school and a public library. Jeanette McCormack, 69, who has led a campaign against the mast, said a petition against the new location had gathered more than 200 names. She added: "People of all ages who live and work near the mast will be exposed to the radiation and so there's a lot of anger about it." |