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Massachusetts Boarding School Sued Over Wi-Fi Sickness

alphadogg writes: The parents of an anonymous student at the Fay School in Southborough, Mass., allege that the Wi-Fi at the institution is making their child sick, according to a lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court earlier this month (PDF). The child, identified only as "G" in court documents, is said to suffer from electromagnetic hypersensitivity syndrome. The radio waves emitted by the school's Wi-Fi routers cause G serious discomfort and physical harm, according to the suit. "After being continually denied access to the school in order to test their student's classroom, and having their request that all classrooms in which their child is present have the WiFi network replaced with a hard-wired Ethernet denied, the parents sued under the Americans with Disabilities Act."

43 of 588 comments (clear)

  1. What does Science have to say about this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I mean, they should have some kind of proof that the Wi-Fi is the reason, right?

    1. Re:What does Science have to say about this? by fredgiblet · · Score: 5, Informative

      As far as I've heard so far there's been no proof to back it up.

    2. Re:What does Science have to say about this? by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 5, Funny

      Well, if I stand outside in the hot texas sun for over half an hour, I do develop a bad skin rash that burns, itches and stings for a day or so. Sometimes it's also accompanied by nausea and lethargy. I suppose I have EHS!

      Of course doctors don't diagnose me properly, instead they ask me to apply this skin lotion before hand, and warn me if I keep going out without it I may get cancer. I have tried to sue the sun, and have asked it to turn itself down, but it never complies for more than 12 hours a time, frequently less.

    3. Re:What does Science have to say about this? by kheldan · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Bring in a portable faraday cage and have him sit in it. If he still develops symptoms then it's something else. I'll bet it's something environmental, like what they use to clean with, or something in the ventilation system. Or maybe the kid just doesn't want to go to school and has his parents totally foxed. Wouldn't be the first or last time that happened.

      --
      Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
    4. Re:What does Science have to say about this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Easy way to win the Amazing Randi's million dollar challenge for supernatural powers. If you get sick when they turn the wi-fi on and feel better when they turn it off, you have the ability to detect 2.4GHz radiation with your body.

    5. Re:What does Science have to say about this? by Greyfox · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's probably just asbestos.

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    6. Re:What does Science have to say about this? by Zalbik · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Unfortunately, they have the backing of this guy who is on some sort of crusade to protect humans and wildlife from those oh so dangerous invisible EMF rays.

      Even more unfortunately, he appears to be a bright guy with fairly well established credentials.

      The problem is (and this is sometimes overlooked by judges) smart people can be:
      a) wrong
      b) crazy
      c) lying

      In this case I think it's (a) with a healthy dose of (b) mixed in.

      Hopefully the judge takes stock of the numerous double blind studies where it has been shown that EMF "sufferers" symptoms disappeared when they were unaware of the presence of EMF radiation

    7. Re:What does Science have to say about this? by AK+Marc · · Score: 4, Informative

      A mental illness is still an illness. So the ADA would still apply.

    8. Re:What does Science have to say about this? by Firethorn · · Score: 5, Interesting

      There have been double-blind tests performed, but the subjects were quite upset when they learned that apparently it wasn't the wifi signals making them sick, but the blinking lights on the wireless devices.

      IE lights disabled, radios fully enabled, on highest power, transmitting data: No symptoms.
      Simulated status light activity, radios completely disabled and unpowered: symptoms.
      Lights & radio on : symptoms
      Lights & radio disabled: no symptoms.

      Conclusion: Clearly we need to investigate the status lights. ;)

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    9. Re:What does Science have to say about this? by flopsquad · · Score: 5, Funny

      Bring in a portable faraday cage and have him sit in it.

      Sounds like reasonable accomodation to me, problem solved.

      "Thus arose, in the early 20's, a small subculture of spherically encased children known as 'Faraday Hamsters.'

      Enabled by a 2017 Supreme Court interpretation of the Americans With Disabilities Act, these 'Faraday Hamsters' could frequently be seen running their electromagnetically impervious cages down school hallways along special troughs--evocative of the famous boulder chase scene in the 20th century classic, Raiders of the Lost Ark."

      --Collected Histories of the Twenty-First Century

      --
      Nothing posted to /. has ever been legal advice, including this.
    10. Re:What does Science have to say about this? by Khyber · · Score: 4, Insightful

      " If he still develops symptoms then it's something else."

      Yea, the student is full of shit and trying to get out of school.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    11. Re:What does Science have to say about this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      LMGTFY: http://www.who.int/peh-emf/publications/facts/fs296/en/

    12. Re:What does Science have to say about this? by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 4, Interesting

      In this case, it isn't even a school board, it's a private school's admin, so it is likely to be even less their problem. A public school district is legally obligated to deal with basically whatever the residents of the area spawn; either in-house or by paying for an appropriate specialist placement(I think that kiddo going to jail makes him not their problem anymore; but if so that's about it).

      A private school has no particular obligation to deal with anyone in particular; so long as they don't explicitly step on some protected class or (as is being argued in this case) fail to make reasonable accommodation per the ADA.

      If it were a public school, it would be the school's problem, just as they have to make provision for the education of any other sickie(mental or physical); but for the private school to be obligated; it has to be demonstrated that kiddo has a 'disability' for ADA purposes, that they are capable of performing if provided with 'reasonable accommodation', and that the 'reasonable accommodation' would not cause 'undue hardship' for the entity being asked to provide it.

      I'd be interested to know how the meaning of those terms would be decided in this case. Fay is a pretty fancy school, east coast private boarding school with history dating back before 1900 and its own endowment and all; but even if that mitigates any argument about the financial impact of having to hardwire everything, it might well be argued that, say, making it impossible for anyone in this kid's class to do an ipad-related curriculum activity would impose excessive limitations on their ability to learn, and the school to teach, as it usually does. If the school were purely doing wireless because it was cheaper, they might have issues; but today wireless devices are used routinely in situations where hardwired stuff would never have been considered practical; plus(unlike an accommodation that requires adding something, like a braille copy of the textbook or the like, the accomodation here demanded requires depriving everyone in the student's proximity of any use of wifi devices, or segregating the student, neither of which are likely to go over all that well.)

    13. Re:What does Science have to say about this? by Firethorn · · Score: 5, Informative

      I disagree. There is no reason at all to show lights if what you are really testing is sensitivity to radio signals.

      As the famous 'experiment' down in South Africa showed, where the cell phone tower operators shut the tower off six weeks before a meeting about turning the tower off, where people were STILL expressing the same symptoms, how getting away from the tower decreased them, how it was the radiation from the tower giving them rashes and such, perception is a thing.

      By having the lights be visible, it allowed the study to not just test radio sensitivity, it allowed them to test perception of radio sensitivity.

      The test essentially showed that the people were getting sick when they thought they were being bombarded with radio waves, not when they were actually being bombarded.

      A real test would not provide any misleading clues.

      They tested that as well. They had 4 different tests - Radio & lights, Radio & dark, No Radio &lights, No Radio & dark. Symptoms tracked with the status lights on the test device, not the radio waves.

      If people were sensitive, but also fooling themselves with the lights, more people would have shown something when the lights were dark but the radio was on.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    14. Re:What does Science have to say about this? by chihowa · · Score: 4, Informative

      You've described a "blind" study. "Double blind" means that the testers don't know which subject is in which group until after the study.

      --
      If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
    15. Re:What does Science have to say about this? by Smidge204 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I disagree. There is no reason at all to show lights if what you are really testing is sensitivity to radio signals.

      There's no parlor tricks here. The lights are the placebo in a placebo-controlled study.

      If you want to determine if a medicine is really the cause of the effect on patient's health - positive or negative - then you use a placebo to rule out the possibility that swallowing a huge pill or getting an injection itself is causing some psychological effect. You have the real medicine (lights+signal), fake medicine (lights + no signal), control group (no lights + no signal), and sometimes an alternative treatment (no lights + signal).

      There is a known (or at least claimed) correlation between WiFi signals and reported illness. The test is designed to isolate the effects of perceivable stimulus (lights on the device) with the supposed cause of the illness (the invisible WiFi signals). Intuitively we all "know" that WiFi signals do not cause any physiological effects. But something is apparently effecting these people, and the test is aimed at figuring out what that something is.
      =Smidge=

    16. Re:What does Science have to say about this? by MrL0G1C · · Score: 4, Informative

      Are you not aware of the many orders of magnitude difference between WiFi and Microwave ovens.

      Microwave Oven typically 600+ Watts or 600,000mW

      Wifi Typically 5mW or 0.005 Watts

      --
      Waterfox - a Firefox fork with legacy extension support, security updates and better privacy by default.
  2. ADA act? What's their disability by barc0001 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Chronic stupidity? Overactive placebo gland?

  3. Oh dear by viperidaenz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I hope they don't have any cell phones in their house.
    I hope they don't use a microwave.
    I hope they don't live near any cell towers.
    I hope they don't live near any TV or radio transmitters

    What would be funny is if they had turned off WiFi in his classes and not told them, and they continued to complain.

    1. Re:Oh dear by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's actually an immune response to 802.11 frames, not microwaves per se. The best way to confirm the diagnosis is to obtain some of the old pre-802.11b era gear, from when the spec still defined an IR physical layer. Then you can completely remove RF from the test environment; but still expose the subject to 802.11 frames.

      Alas, finding Spectrix Inc. networking gear is pretty damn tricky these days, so it's a difficult test to perform.

  4. I suffer from Bullshit-Intolerance Syndrome by xeno · · Score: 5, Funny

    My condition causes me significant discomfort around people who say aggressively stupid things, internalize and repeat strange diagnoses they read on the internet, and causes me to have thoughts of self-harm when listening to security software vendor presentations. I have repeatedly asked my employer to accommodate my needs stemming from Bullshit-intolerance Syndrome (BS), but they all just say, "that's bullshit, we won't tolerate that" to which I say "yes, that's my problem too." Perhaps I also suffer from Jackass Impulsive Recursive Comment (JIRC) disorder, but they don't want to hear about that either. I'm gonna sue.

    --
    I think not...(*poof*)
  5. Re:ADA act? What's their disability by aaron4801 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Cyberchondria

  6. Too be fair by nedlohs · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The parents are apparently mentally disabled.

  7. Re:yes by timrod · · Score: 5, Funny

    Of course Wifi only exists near hotspots, which is why I plan to sell the parents behind this lawsuit my own unique brand of Wifi that won't trigger their son's sensitivity. As everyone knows, only Wifi routers put out harmful radiation that can trigger such totally real disorders as electromagnetic hypersensitivity syndrome. Microwaves, on the other hand, contain all their radiation entirely within the steel box using the powers of science.

    By putting their Wifi router in the microwave, along with any devices they wish to receive wifi, and turning the microwave on for 12 hours, young G's parents can bake the Wifi right into their devices without any risk of electromagnetic radiation triggering their son's disorder. I like to call it Mi-Fi.

  8. Needs to move to Green Bank, WV by hawguy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How can he be sensitive to Wifi, but not to the rest of the ubiquitous RF emissions that surround us all? Cellular signals, commercial radio+TV, microwave ovens, radar, etc.

    Sounds like he needs to move to The Town Without Wifi

  9. Re:Blind test. by Nutria · · Score: 4, Informative
    --
    "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
  10. Blind studies fail by silas_moeckel · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Blind studies with control groups fail. It's not a fscking anything it's a flavor of hypochondriac, he needs counseling and possibly some psych meds.

    --
    No sir I dont like it.
  11. Re:yes by Adriax · · Score: 5, Funny

    Shouldn't it be called Wi-Fri?

    --
    I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it!
  12. Upgrade the child by Nkwe · · Score: 5, Funny

    The child, identified only as "G" in court documents

    Well there is the problem. If the child identified himself as "N", there wouldn't be a conflict and the kid would learn faster.

  13. Tinfoil hats by mveloso · · Score: 4, Funny

    This is why you make a tinfoil hat: to keep the radio waves out of your head. It's simple to do, and as a bonus the voices stop.

  14. Re:ADA act? What's their disability by msauve · · Score: 4, Funny

    Actually, a large dosage of heavy metal solutions administered IV will help block the RF, and is guaranteed to solve the root cause.

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
  15. Re:Doctor's diagnosis by DarkSkiez · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From that physicians website

    She treats cancer with homeopathy. "Supportive Care for Cancer: Possible treatments include: Complex homeopathy"

    This makes me sad.

  16. Re:commentsubjectsaredumb by konohitowa · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You know what they call the person that graduates from med school at the very bottom of their class? Doctor.

  17. The real reason by rossz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You precious snowflake is sick because you put him on a strick vegan diet.

    --
    -- Will program for bandwidth
  18. Re:Where to even start? by jtownatpunk.net · · Score: 4, Funny

    Why would the kid want to live with the people who sent them to boarding school?

  19. Chronically Stupid Parents by redshirt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I occasionally read about parents in affluent Marin, CA whining about this. In fact, there was a movement to prevent PG&E (the local power company) from installing real-time meters that transmit usage over radio because they were afraid it could hurt them. I remember seeing a parent interviewed on the evening news, with her kid in the background playing on an iPad. Did I mention that Marin also has one of the lowest child immunization rates in the country? Yeah. These are people that get all their "facts" from Pintrest and Jenny McCarthy.

  20. Re:commentsubjectsaredumb by Nutria · · Score: 5, Informative

    Even "better":
    http://drhubbuch.com/

    Her interest in health and assisting her patients take control of their own health began with her work in the Womenâ(TM)s Self Help Health Movement.

    Even more better than better...

    Dr. Hubbuch is a member of the American Academy of Environmental Medicine

    But the AAEM is not recognized by the American Board of Medical Specialties, and is mentioned in Quackwatch.
    http://www.abms.org/member-boa...
    http://www.quackwatch.org/04Co...

    --
    "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
  21. Re:ADA act? What's their disability by alannon · · Score: 5, Funny

    I propose a novel treatment:
    Seal pure water into a container and place it into a microwave oven for 1 millisecond (or a microsecond for extreme cases). Sell it as a homopathic treatment for $50/ounce.

  22. Re:No medical evidence... by Darinbob · · Score: 5, Funny

    I work in a building full of equipment broadcasting on several different bands all day long, not just the few piddly wi-fi routers. It seems that every day I come to work I spend the day completely depressed, but I cheer up again when I go home at night. My only conclusion is that RF causes depression.

  23. So, send the kid ... by PPH · · Score: 4, Funny

    ... to a boarding school in the NRQZ in West Virginia. Where the curriculum includes moonshine, banjo, musket marksmanship and making sissy outsiders squeal like a pig.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  24. Re:Blind test. by tsotha · · Score: 4, Funny

    I once had an HVAC guy tell me it's pretty common for people in that business to install unconnected thermostats in buildings where people complain about the temperature. Then the complaints stop.

  25. Re:Blind test. by Technician · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Some cell tower companies and ham radio operators moving into elite neighbourhoods with high lawyer representation often will pre build the expansion and not install the equipment to collect baseline data and use the new complaints and lawsuits as baseline of the pre existing conditions. It's hard to make a case against the new cell tower or ham radio operator when the court case reveals to the plaintiffs the only operating device is the obstruction beacon.

    Later when the equipment arrives and is installed, the community is not informed. Only then can the real cases be identified. Most of the time, the numbers are in the 0's.

    If you put up a tower in a nice neighbourhood, make it look nice. Leave it unpowered for a few months. Reduce power on nearby towers to make marginal areas worse. Offer better signal by upgrades to nearby towers. Switch on the new tower to cover the poor coverage areas. Result, more even signal coverage with fewer towers running high power to reach into dead zones.

    --
    The truth shall set you free!
  26. Re:I have always been curious.... by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's the harsh, unnatural, digital modulation that causes the trouble. Good old analog transmitters, carrying Human voices, are naturally in sympathetic harmony with the body's own vital energy; and promote wellness.

    Once arrogant technocrats imposed a 'binary' worldview that rejects the wholistic wisdom of the body, the transmissions became intensely disruptive to our health, and corrosive to the spirit.

    Isn't it obvious?