![]() Over several months, Orsi went from curious, to concerned, to convinced, first, that radio-frequency emissions from Verizon’s 115-foot 4G tower were to blame for the problems in Pittsfield, and second, that growing evidence of harm from cellphones - everything from effects on fertility and fetal development to associations with cancer - has been downplayed in the United States. She grilled a dozen scientists and doctors. She combed through a stack of research studies. But after becoming the chair of Pittsfield’s Board of Health as the complaints emerged, Orsi, a 66-year-old registered nurse who had spent much of her career in public health, decided to educate herself. She mostly viewed it as an issue that had long ago been put to rest. Like many people, Bobbie Orsi had never paid close attention to questions about the health effects of cellphone technology. A few children had to sleep with “vomit buckets” by their beds. ![]() Seventeen residents reported headaches, dizziness, insomnia or confusion. The health complaints started rolling in within weeks of the activation of a new cellphone tower in August 2020 in Pittsfield, an old factory town in Massachusetts’ Berkshire Mountains.
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