After eight smart meter failures (minor fires with little damage and no injuries), an immediate independent investigation of the Saskatchewan smart meter program was demanded.
Installations ceased, and smart meters were ordered removedfrom homes.
In a highly critical report released on Oct. 27, Sask Power was found to have implemented the program without considering public safety a priority.
Upon release of the report, the CEO of Sask Power, Mr. Robert Watson, resigned immediately, without severance.
Now the problem is WiFi and related radio frequency radiation
“Schoolgirls exposed to low-level microwave radiation (Wi-fi) are at risk of suffering stillbirth, foetal abnormalities or genetically damaged children, when they give birth.”
“Any genetic damage may pass to successive generations.”
Wi-Fi – A Thalidomide in the Making. Who Cares? by Barrie Trower Report – September 2013:
On July 3, 2014, an international team of doctors, scientific experts, and non-profit organizations called for pregnant women to limit exposure to wireless radiation from cell phones and other devices, by taking simple steps to protect themselves and their unborn children, writes Associate Professor Olle Johansson — whose article SvD (Svenska Dagbladet) and DN (Dagens Nyheter) refused to publish.
I expect that this mix happens a lot when electricians do not pay strict attention to what they are doing because the the pressures of time. PG&E admitted in 2010 that 23 thousand Smart Meters had been installed incorrectly.
Nokia’s former Technology Chief, Matti Niemelä, was involved in the development the world’s first mobile phones, but fell seriously ill himself from mobile-phone microwave radiation.
In addition, he was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis (MS). Some studies suggest that radiation may increase the risk of even MS.
For Tampere-based Matti Niemelä, age 44, life was like in the movies when he as a young man was recruited to work for Nokia in 1997. The brilliant young man quickly advanced to become Nokia’s Chief Technology Officer for ten years, and was involved in developing the world’s first mobile phones, memory sticks and WLAN [Wi-Fi] connections.