Readers Write: LED critics using dubious science

1
Readers Write: LED critics using dubious science

Recently a resident of the Village of Great Neck, Dr. Carl J. Abraham, who has scientific credentials and operates a scientific and safety consulting firm, wrote a letter in which he explained why he believes that Great Neck Village’s LED street lighting program does not present a significant threat to the health of Great Neck residents.

Dr. Abraham states that the light-emitting diodes that produce blue light are coated with phosphors that convert the light into white light of varying shades depending on the thickness of the coating.

Dr. Abraham concludes that the LEDs being used in the Great Neck project contain only a small amount of light that is in the blue spectrum and emit far less blue light than other light sources in the environment. He also notes that sleep patterns can be influenced by all types of lighting.   I happen to agree with Dr. Abraham’s conclusions.  

Subsequently, another Village resident, Ms. Amy Glass published a rebuttal in which Ms. Glass argues that “blue-rich light is dangerous in two ways: It disrupts the sleep cycle and damages the retina,”

Ms. Glass reportedly has worked as a copy editor for the American Institute of Physics and as a research consultant in statistics and computer technology. Ms. Glass raises many red flags regarding LED lighting, but in my opinion her arguments rest on shaky footing. Here’s why.    

At the outset, Ms. Glass focuses on a French Government report issued in 2011 which states “ we cannot rule out a yet undiscovered risk posed by chronic, daylong, lifetime exposure (to LED lights) since this exposure may not induce any visible changes but may cumulatively induce photo receptor (retinal) loss”. Another quoted report (published in 2014) from a medical professional states: “Blue-light damage to the retina has research support from studies with both acute and chronic exposure”. 

I ask: Does it make sense to suggest that the Village’s LED lighting program will expose residents to chronic, daylong, acute, lifetime exposure? I don’t think so. Moreover, according to Dr. Abraham, the planned Great Neck LEDs are not particularly “blue-rich” in regard to light wavelength.

I believe it is important to recognize that residents’ exposure to the LED street lights being installed in the Village of Great Neck will be intermittent, indirect and could not be characterized as intense.

The new lights will be installed high on the sail, far above street level and play downward in a precisely controlled, predetermined arc or circle. 

As I see it, this differential picture simply does not  match up with the exposure described by the experts quoted by Ms. Glass in her  own article. It seems to me that this discrepancy by itself is sufficient to undercut her entire case that the new LED lighting involves some sort of health risk. 

But there is more.

The research that Ms. Glass relies on does not describe the equipment that was used, does not define “blue-rich” lighting, does not describe the intensity of the lights used (in terms of lumens emitted) and arises from investigations that are outdated in a fast moving world of technological change.

It is worth noting that at a recent Village Board meeting an outside medical professional called in by Ms. Glass and her friends testified that the problem with LED street lights is that they can’t be dimmed (paraphrased).

This person was unaware that the new lighting system will be dimmable by Village authorities, broadly and selectively as well as shaded — a hugely important factor that Ms. Glass has  ignored.

Ms. Glass also ignores the LED lighting experience we have had in Great Neck, for example at the Parkwood Sports Facility and with the elaborate stage lighting equipment employed in many Park District shows.

In a community where eye examinations are frequent and widespread, no adverse medical effects traceable to LED lighting have surfaced, just as Dr. Abraham has pointed out more broadly and Ms. Glass dismisses summarily.

Ms. Glass states that the new LEDs are designed to mimic sunlight. Seems not true since the shade of white can be controlled. Further, LED light does not emit ultraviolet light, a hazard contained in sunlight.

To conclude, it seems to me that the Village’s LED street lighting project represents a major leap forwards toward improving pedestrian and vehicular safety, which is badly needed.

It has the added benefits of producing highly consistent and efficiently controlled lighting at greatly reduced energy usage and, therefore, greatly reduced cost both to the Village and the environment.

In my opinion, the case advanced by Ms. Glass is too ambiguous and flawed to take seriously at this time.  

Leon Korobow

Great Neck

No posts to display

1 COMMENT

  1. Everyone except City Councils are recognizing the harm of blue light at night which suppresses melatonin production including computer and cell phone makers and interior light makers who now have provisions for warming a backlight or even the very same light bulb at night.

    Meanwhile, cancer researchers have shown that even the small amount of light that can sneak around a blackout shades can disrupt melatonin production. Certain tumors such as colon, breast and prostate grow more slowly in the presence of melatonin.

    You can turn off a computer but you can’t turn off a streetlight.

    Aesthetically, white LED light casts the same ghoulish light on the ground used by Hollywood in color versions of The Addams Family, The Munsters, The Exorcist and even the “Upside Down” in Netflix’s hit “Stranger Things.”

    Much safer is soft LED lighting with no glare that fosters a warm inviting neighborhood and it costs less because you can see well with lower wattage when glare is reduced.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here