Hitachi SINGLE-BAND PCS PHONE SH-P300 User Manual

Page 210

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Section 4: Safety Guidelines and Warranty Information

201

4A: Safety

the licensee is not required to provide the FCC with specific location and
operating parameters of these facilities.

Information on site specific licensed facilities can be found the “General
Menu Reports” (GenMen) at

http://gullfoss2.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/ws.exe/genmen/index.hts

.

The various FCC Bureaus also publish on at least a weekly basis, bulk
extracts of their licensing databases. Each licensing database has its own
unique file structure. These extracts consist of multiple, very large files.
The FCC’s Office of Engineering and Technology (OET) maintains an
index to these databases at

http://www.fcc.gov/oet/info/database/fadb.html

. Entry points into the

various databases include frequency, state/county, latitude/longitude,
call-sign and licensee name. For further information on the
Commission’s existing databases, you can contact Donald Campbell at

[email protected]

or 202-418-2405.

15. Can local and state governmental bodies establish limits for RF

exposure?

Although some local and state governments have enacted rules and
regulations about human exposure to RF energy in the past, the
Telecommunications Act of 1996 requires the Federal Government to
control human exposure to RF emissions. In particular, Section 704 of
the Act states that, “No State or local government or instrumentality
thereof may regulate the placement, construction, and modification of
personal wireless service facilities on the basis of the environmental
effects of radio frequency emissions to the extent that such facilities
comply with the Commission’s regulations concerning such emissions.”
Further information on federal authority and FCC policy is available in a
fact sheet from the FCC’s Wireless Telecommunications Bureau at

www.fcc.gov/wtb

.

16. Do wireless phones pose a health hazard?

The available scientific evidence does not show that any health problems
are associated with using wireless phones. There is no proof, however,
that wireless phones are absolutely safe. Wireless phones emit low levels
of radiofrequency energy (RF) in the microwave range while being used.
They also emit very low levels of RF when in the stand-by mode. Whereas

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