Conference on Federal-State Implementation of Public Law 90-602
H. W. Hiller, T. M. Gerusky · 1969
This 1969 conference established the federal regulatory framework that still governs EMF safety standards today.
Plain English Summary
This 1969 conference paper documented federal and state efforts to implement Public Law 90-602, which established radiation safety standards and regulatory frameworks. The Montgomery conference brought together officials to coordinate radiological health protection programs across government levels. This represents early foundational work in electromagnetic radiation regulation that influences today's EMF safety standards.
Why This Matters
This 1969 conference paper represents a pivotal moment in American radiation safety regulation. Public Law 90-602, enacted in 1968, was groundbreaking legislation that established federal authority over electronic product radiation safety and created the framework we still use today for EMF regulation. The Montgomery conference documented how federal and state agencies coordinated to implement these new protections.
What makes this historically significant is how it shaped the regulatory approach we live with now. The standards and bureaucratic structures established through this law directly influence how agencies like the FCC evaluate cell phone radiation and how the FDA regulates medical devices. Understanding this regulatory foundation helps explain why current EMF safety standards often lag behind emerging science - they're built on a framework designed over 50 years ago, when our electromagnetic environment was vastly different.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{conference_on_federal_state_implementation_of_public_law_90_602_g7145,
author = {H. W. Hiller and T. M. Gerusky},
title = {Conference on Federal-State Implementation of Public Law 90-602},
year = {1969},
}