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Re[2]: EPA report and court ruling
- To: radsafe@romulus.ehs.uiuc.edu (IPM Return requested) (Receipt notification requested), Steven.Rima@DOEGJPO.COM (IPM Return requested) (Receipt notification requested)
- Subject: Re[2]: EPA report and court ruling
- From: Ruth Weiner <rfweine@sandia.gov>
- Date: 22 Jul 1998 08:24:03 -0600
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When I used to do occasional expert witness work, I found that the judges were
(a) thoughtful but (b) depended on their (the judges') perceived credibility of
the expert witnesses. I think we should have in the U. S. a system of "science
courts" analogous to the water courts in the western states. The judges that
preside over water courts have genuine and thorough expertise in water rights,
water quantity, water allocation, and related matters, and that's all they
adjudicate on. What do others think?
Clearly only my own opinion.
Ruth Weiner
rfweine@sandia.gov
______________________________ Reply Separator _________________________________
Subject: Re: EPA report and court ruling
Author: Steven.Rima@DOEGJPO.COM at hubsmtp
Date: 7/22/98 7:35 AM
Maybe since we HPs can't seem to prove or disprove the LNT we could
get a federal judge to do it for us. They seem to think they know more
than scientists... While we're at it, maybe the judge can also
"decide" whether EMF causes cancer. Heck, why do science at all when
judges can make these decisions for us. :-)
Steven D. Rima, CHP
Manager, Health Physics and Industrial Hygiene
MACTEC-ERS, LLC
steven.rima@doegjpo.com
______________________________ Reply Separator _________________________________
Subject: EPA report and court ruling
Author: "Skierkowski; Paul" <skie2928@msmailhub.oulan.ou.edu> at Internet
Date: 7/21/98 1:57 PM
thought since it deals with EPA extrapolated data conclusions, the
following might be of interest to RADSAFErs and epidemiologists.
EPA Smoking Report Defended
WASHINGTON -- The Environmental Protection Agency is standing by its
finding that secondhand tobacco smoke causes cancer despite a federal
judge's decision striking down its 1993 report that made the link.
Although lawyers were still reviewing the ruling handed down by U.S.
District Judge William Osteen in North Carolina, officials said Sunday
an appeal is certain. Osteen acted on a lawsuit that the tobacco
industry had filed. He ruled the environmental agency based its 1993
report on inadequate science and failed to demonstrate a statistically
significant relationship between secondhand smoke and lung cancer. The
agency's controversial 1993 report on environmental tobacco smoke
concluded that secondhand tobacco smoke was responsible for more than
3,000 lung cancer deaths a year.
Paul Skierkowski
Univ. of Oklahoma