I have run my VOM thru the mounting screws and thru the metal shield and get no reading. I believe the aluminum part of the cartridge is anodized, which is very resistant to current flow (and what also keeps aluminum from oxidizing).
I'll let you onto a little secret. The largest cause of hum in a Grado is proximity of cartridge to power amplifier. All power amplifiers or receivers have large core and coil or toroidal transformers that have a rather large magnetic field. Even toroidal transformers that are shielded (and they aren't really) have a powerful field.
To prove to yourself that this is the problem, the steps are easy, but you need to have a pair of headphones. First, turn your system on except the turntable. Do you have hum with the volume at high levels? Now, if you have a seperate amp and preamp, plug your headphones in and turn the power amp off. Did the hum go away, or get greatly reduced? Then the answer is to further remote your power amplifier from the table, like at least 42 to 48 inches minimum.
If you have no hum with the system on (including amplifier) and when you turn your turntable on, and hum begins, then the source of hum is your table. Very difficult to deal with.
I have used my Grado Longhorn on both of my Technics DD tables and there is simply no hum, not at turn on (of the table) or turn off. My amplifiers are at least 4 feet away.
Try this experiment and you may be able to turn that frown upside down.
Wayner aa