The following article was published in The Age newspaper in 2006 in relation to the cancer fears related to the RMIT University building in Melbourne Australia.
A SPATE of brain tumours among staff has forced RMIT University
to close part of its business school and test for radiation
emissions from rooftop phone towers.
As staff reacted with shock, the university yesterday shut the
top two floors of the Bourke Street building and ordered more than
100 employees to work from home for the next fortnight.
The closure follows the discovery of five brain tumours in the
past month and two others in 1999 and 2001. Two were malignant and
five were benign.
WorkCover has launched an investigation and RMIT has promised
its own inquiry.
The academics' union last night expressed concern that the
tumours were caused by the communications towers on the roof of the
former Tivoli Theatre site.
National Tertiary Education Union state secretary Matthew
McGowan warned that anecdotal reports from hastily arranged staff
meetings yesterday suggested the number of people affected would
grow.
"You have to ask some pretty serious questions and we're
obviously concerned that it could be linked to the tower," he
said.
"This would appear to be much more than coincidence and RMIT has
a responsibility to leave no stone unturned in seeking the
truth."
Five of the seven affected work on the top floor of the
17-storey building. All except one have worked in the building for
at least a decade.
An RMIT academic who did not want to be named said staff —
the 16th and 17th floors are home to offices of senior management
and lecturers — were "in disbelief, concerned and upset" as
they attended meetings and left the building late yesterday.
Medical experts contacted by The Age said no definitive
link had been proved between mobile phone tower radiation and
cancer.
Australian Medical Association president Mukesh Haikerwal said
there was no proof of a connection but "if you get clusters of
disease it's sensible to investigate."
Dr John Gall, from private health company Southern Medical
Services, which has been called in to assess the sick, said last
night three of those affected had tumours showing symptoms
consistent with radiation.
But he said there was no causal link with the building based on
preliminary observations.
A spokesman for state Health Minister Bronwyn Pike said
WorkCover would investigate the matter and the Department of Human
Services would provide any expertise needed.
RMIT chief operating officer Steve Somogyi said testing was
carried out on the building after the first two of the seven
tumours were reported in 1999 and 2001. It found radiation and air
quality levels within recommended guidelines.