The Court found:
Because substantial evidence supports the board's findings and because the board's procedural decisions did not deprive AT&T of due process, we affirm the superior court's judgment that affirmed the board's ruling.
This decision opens the door for disability claims from millions of wireless industry or maintenance workers who experience occupational exposures to operating antenna arrays and have suffered similar cognitive and neurological symptoms. The FCC requires no on-site radiation measurements to document RF safety compliance. According to The EMR Policy Institute, millions of workers labor daily at worksites that host camouflaged operating antenna arrays where no RF safety program is carried out. As a result, these workers have no way of knowing whether they are exposed to RF radiation, what the level of their RF radiation exposure is, nor how to take measures to avoid harm from RF radiation exposure.
Complete text of OPINION No. 6139 - July 6, 2007 is found at: www.emrpolicy.org/litigation/case_law/index.htm