Want action, not noise? Start here: Section 704 explains why local communities are gagged on health in tower siting. FCC shows how 1996 RF limits landed back in court and what to demand next. HHS tracks days of noncompliance with Public Law 90‑602 and gives quick links to contact officials. A Li‑Fi‑first plan to cut indoor RF while boosting speed. Read, share, and act.
⚖️ Section 704 — Why Your Town Can’t Say “No”
Section 704 of the Telecom Act gags cities and schools from weighing health when siting antennas—so long as FCC limits are met. This page explains how that preemption works, why it collides with local control, and what residents can do to restore decision‑making where families live and learn.
Link: https://rfsafe.com/704
📡 FCC — 1996 Limits, 2021 Court Remand, What’s Next
The D.C. Circuit ruled the FCC’s choice to keep 1996 RF limits was “arbitrary and capricious.” Our FCC page breaks down what the remand means, why non‑thermal and child‑specific risks matter, and how to push the agency to finish the job with modern science.
Link: https://rfsafe.com/fcc
🏛️ HHS — Public Law 90‑602 Accountability
Public Law 90‑602 requires HHS to run an electronic‑product radiation program, do the research, and publish results. This page tracks days since RFK Jr. took office without restarting the NTP RF program and gives you tools to contact HHS and your representatives—fast.
Link: https://rfsafe.com/hhs
💡 BELL — Broadband Exposure Lowered by Light (Li‑Fi‑First)
A practical blueprint to shift high‑bandwidth indoor traffic from RF to Li‑Fi (IEEE 802.11bb)—safer, room‑bounded, and fast. We outline procurement specs for schools/hospitals, how Li‑Fi coexists with Wi‑Fi, and why a tiny “light antenna” in the camera bump makes this ready for phones.
Link: https://rfsafe.com/bell