Submission for OMB Review: Comment Request, 15123-15124 [05-5802]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 56 / Thursday, March 24, 2005 / Notices
see Johnnie Melvin Turner, M.D., 67 FR
71203 (2002). The underlying
conviction forming the basis for a
registrant’s exclusion from participating
in federal health care programs need not
involve controlled substances for
revocation under 21 U.S.C. 824(a)(5).
See KK Pharmacy, 64 FR 49507 (1999);
Stanley Dubin, D.D.S., 61 FR 60727
(1996).
Accordingly, the Deputy
Administrator of the Drug Enforcement
Administration, pursuant to the
authority vested in her by 21 U.S.C. 823
and 824 and 28 CFR 0.100(b) and 0.104,
hereby orders that DEA Certificate of
Registration B07925766, issued to
Orlando Ortega-Ortiz, M.D., be, and it
hereby is, revoked. The Deputy
Administrator further orders that any
pending applications for renewal of
such registration be, and they hereby
are, denied. This order is effective April
25, 2005.
Dated: September 29, 2004.
Michele M. Leonhart,
Deputy Administrator.
Editorial Note: This document was received
at the Office of the Federal Register on March
21, 2005.
[FR Doc. 05–5815 Filed 3–23–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–09–M
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Office of the Secretary
Submission for OMB Review:
Comment Request
March 10, 2005.
The Department of Labor (DOL) has
submitted the following public
information collection request (ICR) to
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review and approval in
accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–13,
44 U.S.C. chapter 35). A copy of this
ICR, with applicable supporting
documentation, may be obtained by
contacting Darrin King on 202–693–
4129 (this is not a toll-free number) or
e-mail: king.darrin@dol.gov.
Comments should be sent to Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Attn: OMB Desk Officer for the
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA), Office of
Management and Budget, Room 10235,
Washington, DC 20503, 202–395–7316
(this is not a toll-free number), within
30 days from the date of this publication
in the Federal Register.
The OMB is particularly interested in
comments which:
• Evaluate whether the proposed
collection of information is necessary
VerDate jul<14>2003
15:04 Mar 23, 2005
Jkt 205001
for the proper performance of the
functions of the agency, including
whether the information will have
practical utility;
• Evaluate the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
• Enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and
• Minimize the burden of the
collection of information on those who
are to respond, including through the
use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology,
e.g., permitting electronic submission of
responses.
Agency: Occupational Safety and
Health Administration.
Type of Review: Extension of
currently approved collection.
Title: Commercial Diving Operations
(29 CFR part 1910, subpart T).
OMB Number: 1218–0069.
Frequency: On occasion and
Annually.
Type of Response: Recordkeeping;
Reporting; and Third party disclosure.
Affected Public: Business or other forprofit; Federal Government; and State,
local, or tribal government.
Number of Respondents: 3,000.
Number of Annual Responses:
4,002,966.
Estimated Time Per Response: Varies
from 3 minutes to replace the safe
practices manual to 1 hour to develop
a new manual.
Total Burden Hours: 205,397.
Total Annualized Capital/Startup
Costs: $0.
Total Annual Costs (operating/
maintaining systems or purchasing
services): $0.
Description: 29 CFR part 1910,
subpart T (‘‘the Subpart’’) contains a
number of paperwork requirements. The
following paragraphs describe these
requirements; specify who uses them,
and what purpose they serve.
Section 910.401(b). Description of the
requirement. Allows employers to
deviate from the requirements of the
subpart to the extent necessary to
prevent or minimize a situation that is
likely to cause death, serious physical
harm, or major environmental damage
(but not situations in which purely
economic or property damage is likely
to occur). Employers must notify the
OSHA Area Director within 48 hours of
taking such action; this notification
must describe the situation responsible
for the deviation and the extent of the
deviation from the requirements. On
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Frm 00059
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
15123
request of the Area Director, employers
must submit this information in writing.
Sections 1910.410(a)(3) and (a)(4).
Description of the requirements.
Paragraph (a)(3) requires employers to
train all dive-team members in
cardiopulmonary resuscitation and first
aid (i.e., the American Red Cross
standard course or equivalent), while
paragraph (a)(4) specifies that employers
train dive-team members exposed to
hyperbaric conditions, or who control
exposure of other employees to such
conditions, in diving-related physics
and physiology.
Section 1910.420(a). Description of
the requirement. Under paragraph (a),
employers must develop and maintain a
safe-practices manual and make it
available to each dive-team member at
the dive location. In addition, for each
diving mode used at the dive location,
the manual must contain: safety
procedures and checklists for diving
operations; assignments and
responsibilities of the dive-team
members; equipment procedures and
checklists; and emergency procedures
for fire, equipment failures, adverse
environmental conditions, and medical
illness and injury.
Section 1910.421(b). Description of
the requirement. Under this provision,
employers are to keep at the dive
location a list of telephone or call
numbers for the following emergency
facilities and services: An operational
decompression chamber (when such a
chamber is not at the dive location);
accessible hospitals; available
physicians and means of emergency
transportation; and the nearest U.S.
Coast Guard Rescue Coordination
Center.
Section 1910.421(f). Description of the
requirement. Requires employers to
brief dive-team members on the divingrelated tasks they are to perform, safety
procedures for the diving mode used at
the dive location, any unusual hazards
or environmental conditions likely to
affect the safety of the diving operation,
and any modifications to operating
procedures necessitated by the specific
diving operation. Before assigning
diving-related tasks, employers must ask
each dive-team member about their
current state of physical fitness, and
inform the member about the procedure
for reporting physical problems or
adverse physiological effects during and
after the dive.
Section 1910.421(h). Description of
the requirement. When the diving
operation occurs in an area capable of
supporting marine traffic and occurs
from a surface other than a vessel,
employers are to display a rigid replica
of the international code flag ‘‘A’’ that
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15124
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 56 / Thursday, March 24, 2005 / Notices
is at least one meter in height so that it
is visible from any direction; the
employer must illuminate the flag
during night diving operations.
Section 1910.422(e). Description of
the requirement. Employers must
develop and maintain a depth-time
profile for each diver that includes, as
appropriate, any breathing gas changes
or decompression.
Sections 1910.423(b)(1)(ii) through
(b)(2). Description of the requirements.
Requires the employer to: instruct each
diver to report any physical symptoms
or adverse physiological effects,
including symptoms of DCS; advise
each diver of the location of a
decompression chamber that is ready for
use; and alert each diver to the potential
hazards of flying after diving. For any
dive outside the no-decompression
limits, deeper than 100 feet, or that uses
mixed gas in the breathing mixture, the
employer also must inform the diver to
remain awake and in the vicinity of the
decompression chamber that is at the
dive location for at least one hour after
a dive, or after any decompression or
treatment associated with a dive.
Section 1910.423(d). Description of
the requirement. Paragraph (d)(1)
specifies that employers are to record
and maintain the following information
for each diving operation: The names of
dive-team members; date, time, and
location; diving modes used; general
description of the tasks performed; an
estimate of the underwater and surface
conditions; and the maximum depth
and bottom time for each diver. In
addition, for each dive outside the nodecompression limits, deeper than 100
feet, or that uses mixed gas in the
breathing mixture, paragraph (d)(2)
requires the employer to record and
maintain the following information for
each diver: Depth-time and breathinggas profiles; decompression table
designation (including any
modifications); and elapsed time since
the last pressure exposure when it is
less than 24 hours or the repetitive dive
designation. Under paragraph (d)(3), if
the dive results in DCS symptoms, or
the employer suspects that a diver has
DCS, the employer must record and
maintain a description of the DCS
symptoms (including the depth and
time of symptom onset) and the results
of treatment.
Section 1910.423(e). Description of
the requirement. Requires employers to
assess each DCS incident by:
investigating and evaluating it based on
the recorded information, consideration
of the past performance of the
decompression profile used, and the
diver’s individual susceptibility to DCS;
taking appropriate corrective action to
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15:04 Mar 23, 2005
Jkt 205001
reduce the probability of a DCS
recurrence; and, within 45 days of the
DCS incident, preparing a written
evaluation of this assessment, including
any corrective action taken.
Sections 1910.430(a), (b)(4), (c)(1)(ii),
(c)(3)(i), (f)(3)(ii), and (g)(2). Description
of the requirements. Paragraph (a)
contains a general requirement that
employers must record by means of
tagging or a logging system any work
performed on equipment, including any
modifications, repairs, tests,
calibrations, or maintenance performed
on the equipment. This record is to
include a description of the work, the
name or initials of the individual who
performed the work, and the date they
completed the work. Paragraphs (b)(4)
and (c)(1)(iii) require employers to test
two specific types of equipment,
including, respectively: the output of air
compressor systems used to supply
breathing air to divers for air purity
every six months by means of samples
taken at the connection to the
distribution system; and breathing-gas
hoses at least annually at one and onehalf times their working pressure. Under
paragraph (c)(3)(i), employers must
mark each umbilical (i.e., separate lines
supplying air and communications to a
diver, as well as a safety line, tied
together in a bundle), beginning at the
diver’s end, in 10-foot increments for
100 feet, then in 50-foot increments.
Paragraph (f)(3)(ii) mandates that
employers regularly inspect and
maintain mufflers located in intake and
exhaust lines on decompression
chambers. According to paragraph
(g)(2), employers are to test depth
gauges using dead-weight testing, or
calibrate the gauges against a master
reference gauge; such testing or
calibration is to occur every six months
and when the employer finds a
discrepancy larger than two percent of
the full scale between any two
equivalent gauges. Employers must
make a record of the tests, calibrations,
inspections, and maintenance
performed on the equipment specified
by these paragraphs in accordance with
§ 1910.430(a).
Sections 1910.440(a)(2) and (b).
Description of the requirements. Under
paragraph (a)(2) of this provision,
employers must record any divingrelated injuries and illnesses that result
in a dive-team member remaining in
hospital for at least 24 hours. This
record is to describe the circumstances
of the incident and the extent of any
injuries or illnesses.
Paragraph (b) of this provision
regulates the availability of the records
required by the Subpart, including who
has access to these records, the retention
PO 00000
Frm 00060
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
periods for various records, and, in
some cases, the final disposition of the
records. Under paragraph (b)(1),
employers must make any record
required by the Subpart available, on
request, for inspection and copying by
an OSHA compliance officer or to a
representative of the National Institute
for Occupational Safety and Health
(NIOSH). Paragraph (b)(2) specifies that
employers are to provide employees,
their designated representatives, and
OSHA compliance officers with
exposure and medical records generated
under the Subpart in accordance with
§ 1910.1020 (‘‘Access to employee
exposure and medical records’’); these
records include safe-practices manuals,
depth-time profiles, diving records, DCS
incident assessments, and
hospitalization records. This paragraph
also mandates that employers make
equipment inspection and testing
records available to employees and their
designated representative on request.
According to paragraph (b)(3),
employers must retain these records for
the following periods: Safe-practices
manuals, current document only; depthtime profiles, until completing the
diving record or the DCS incident
assessment; diving records, one year,
except five years when a DCS incident
occurred during the dive; DCS incident
assessments, five years; hospitalization
records, five years; and equipment
inspections and testing records (i.e.,
current tag or log entry), until the
employer removes the equipment from
service. Paragraphs (b)(4) and (b)(5)
specify the requirements for disposing
of these records. Under paragraph (b)(4),
employers are to forward to NIOSH any
record with an expired five-year
retention period. Paragraph (b)(5) states
that employers who cease to do business
must transfer records without unexpired
retention dates to the successor
employer who will retain them for the
required period; however, when
employers cease to do business without
a successor employer, they must transfer
the records to NIOSH.
Ira L. Mills,
Departmental Clearance Officer.
[FR Doc. 05–5802 Filed 3–23–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–26–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Office of the Secretary
Submission for OMB Review;
Comment Request
March 17, 2005.
The Department of Labor (DOL) has
submitted the following public
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 56 (Thursday, March 24, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 15123-15124]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-5802]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Office of the Secretary
Submission for OMB Review: Comment Request
March 10, 2005.
The Department of Labor (DOL) has submitted the following public
information collection request (ICR) to the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) for review and approval in accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-13, 44 U.S.C. chapter 35). A copy of
this ICR, with applicable supporting documentation, may be obtained by
contacting Darrin King on 202-693-4129 (this is not a toll-free number)
or e-mail: king.darrin@dol.gov.
Comments should be sent to Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Attn: OMB Desk Officer for the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA), Office of Management and Budget, Room 10235,
Washington, DC 20503, 202-395-7316 (this is not a toll-free number),
within 30 days from the date of this publication in the Federal
Register.
The OMB is particularly interested in comments which:
Evaluate whether the proposed collection of information is
necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the agency,
including whether the information will have practical utility;
Evaluate the accuracy of the agency's estimate of the
burden of the proposed collection of information, including the
validity of the methodology and assumptions used;
Enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected; and
Minimize the burden of the collection of information on
those who are to respond, including through the use of appropriate
automated, electronic, mechanical, or other technological collection
techniques or other forms of information technology, e.g., permitting
electronic submission of responses.
Agency: Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
Type of Review: Extension of currently approved collection.
Title: Commercial Diving Operations (29 CFR part 1910, subpart T).
OMB Number: 1218-0069.
Frequency: On occasion and Annually.
Type of Response: Recordkeeping; Reporting; and Third party
disclosure.
Affected Public: Business or other for-profit; Federal Government;
and State, local, or tribal government.
Number of Respondents: 3,000.
Number of Annual Responses: 4,002,966.
Estimated Time Per Response: Varies from 3 minutes to replace the
safe practices manual to 1 hour to develop a new manual.
Total Burden Hours: 205,397.
Total Annualized Capital/Startup Costs: $0.
Total Annual Costs (operating/maintaining systems or purchasing
services): $0.
Description: 29 CFR part 1910, subpart T (``the Subpart'') contains
a number of paperwork requirements. The following paragraphs describe
these requirements; specify who uses them, and what purpose they serve.
Section 910.401(b). Description of the requirement. Allows
employers to deviate from the requirements of the subpart to the extent
necessary to prevent or minimize a situation that is likely to cause
death, serious physical harm, or major environmental damage (but not
situations in which purely economic or property damage is likely to
occur). Employers must notify the OSHA Area Director within 48 hours of
taking such action; this notification must describe the situation
responsible for the deviation and the extent of the deviation from the
requirements. On request of the Area Director, employers must submit
this information in writing.
Sections 1910.410(a)(3) and (a)(4). Description of the
requirements. Paragraph (a)(3) requires employers to train all dive-
team members in cardiopulmonary resuscitation and first aid (i.e., the
American Red Cross standard course or equivalent), while paragraph
(a)(4) specifies that employers train dive-team members exposed to
hyperbaric conditions, or who control exposure of other employees to
such conditions, in diving-related physics and physiology.
Section 1910.420(a). Description of the requirement. Under
paragraph (a), employers must develop and maintain a safe-practices
manual and make it available to each dive-team member at the dive
location. In addition, for each diving mode used at the dive location,
the manual must contain: safety procedures and checklists for diving
operations; assignments and responsibilities of the dive-team members;
equipment procedures and checklists; and emergency procedures for fire,
equipment failures, adverse environmental conditions, and medical
illness and injury.
Section 1910.421(b). Description of the requirement. Under this
provision, employers are to keep at the dive location a list of
telephone or call numbers for the following emergency facilities and
services: An operational decompression chamber (when such a chamber is
not at the dive location); accessible hospitals; available physicians
and means of emergency transportation; and the nearest U.S. Coast Guard
Rescue Coordination Center.
Section 1910.421(f). Description of the requirement. Requires
employers to brief dive-team members on the diving-related tasks they
are to perform, safety procedures for the diving mode used at the dive
location, any unusual hazards or environmental conditions likely to
affect the safety of the diving operation, and any modifications to
operating procedures necessitated by the specific diving operation.
Before assigning diving-related tasks, employers must ask each dive-
team member about their current state of physical fitness, and inform
the member about the procedure for reporting physical problems or
adverse physiological effects during and after the dive.
Section 1910.421(h). Description of the requirement. When the
diving operation occurs in an area capable of supporting marine traffic
and occurs from a surface other than a vessel, employers are to display
a rigid replica of the international code flag ``A'' that
[[Page 15124]]
is at least one meter in height so that it is visible from any
direction; the employer must illuminate the flag during night diving
operations.
Section 1910.422(e). Description of the requirement. Employers must
develop and maintain a depth-time profile for each diver that includes,
as appropriate, any breathing gas changes or decompression.
Sections 1910.423(b)(1)(ii) through (b)(2). Description of the
requirements. Requires the employer to: instruct each diver to report
any physical symptoms or adverse physiological effects, including
symptoms of DCS; advise each diver of the location of a decompression
chamber that is ready for use; and alert each diver to the potential
hazards of flying after diving. For any dive outside the no-
decompression limits, deeper than 100 feet, or that uses mixed gas in
the breathing mixture, the employer also must inform the diver to
remain awake and in the vicinity of the decompression chamber that is
at the dive location for at least one hour after a dive, or after any
decompression or treatment associated with a dive.
Section 1910.423(d). Description of the requirement. Paragraph
(d)(1) specifies that employers are to record and maintain the
following information for each diving operation: The names of dive-team
members; date, time, and location; diving modes used; general
description of the tasks performed; an estimate of the underwater and
surface conditions; and the maximum depth and bottom time for each
diver. In addition, for each dive outside the no-decompression limits,
deeper than 100 feet, or that uses mixed gas in the breathing mixture,
paragraph (d)(2) requires the employer to record and maintain the
following information for each diver: Depth-time and breathing-gas
profiles; decompression table designation (including any
modifications); and elapsed time since the last pressure exposure when
it is less than 24 hours or the repetitive dive designation. Under
paragraph (d)(3), if the dive results in DCS symptoms, or the employer
suspects that a diver has DCS, the employer must record and maintain a
description of the DCS symptoms (including the depth and time of
symptom onset) and the results of treatment.
Section 1910.423(e). Description of the requirement. Requires
employers to assess each DCS incident by: investigating and evaluating
it based on the recorded information, consideration of the past
performance of the decompression profile used, and the diver's
individual susceptibility to DCS; taking appropriate corrective action
to reduce the probability of a DCS recurrence; and, within 45 days of
the DCS incident, preparing a written evaluation of this assessment,
including any corrective action taken.
Sections 1910.430(a), (b)(4), (c)(1)(ii), (c)(3)(i), (f)(3)(ii),
and (g)(2). Description of the requirements. Paragraph (a) contains a
general requirement that employers must record by means of tagging or a
logging system any work performed on equipment, including any
modifications, repairs, tests, calibrations, or maintenance performed
on the equipment. This record is to include a description of the work,
the name or initials of the individual who performed the work, and the
date they completed the work. Paragraphs (b)(4) and (c)(1)(iii) require
employers to test two specific types of equipment, including,
respectively: the output of air compressor systems used to supply
breathing air to divers for air purity every six months by means of
samples taken at the connection to the distribution system; and
breathing-gas hoses at least annually at one and one-half times their
working pressure. Under paragraph (c)(3)(i), employers must mark each
umbilical (i.e., separate lines supplying air and communications to a
diver, as well as a safety line, tied together in a bundle), beginning
at the diver's end, in 10-foot increments for 100 feet, then in 50-foot
increments. Paragraph (f)(3)(ii) mandates that employers regularly
inspect and maintain mufflers located in intake and exhaust lines on
decompression chambers. According to paragraph (g)(2), employers are to
test depth gauges using dead-weight testing, or calibrate the gauges
against a master reference gauge; such testing or calibration is to
occur every six months and when the employer finds a discrepancy larger
than two percent of the full scale between any two equivalent gauges.
Employers must make a record of the tests, calibrations, inspections,
and maintenance performed on the equipment specified by these
paragraphs in accordance with Sec. 1910.430(a).
Sections 1910.440(a)(2) and (b). Description of the requirements.
Under paragraph (a)(2) of this provision, employers must record any
diving-related injuries and illnesses that result in a dive-team member
remaining in hospital for at least 24 hours. This record is to describe
the circumstances of the incident and the extent of any injuries or
illnesses.
Paragraph (b) of this provision regulates the availability of the
records required by the Subpart, including who has access to these
records, the retention periods for various records, and, in some cases,
the final disposition of the records. Under paragraph (b)(1), employers
must make any record required by the Subpart available, on request, for
inspection and copying by an OSHA compliance officer or to a
representative of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and
Health (NIOSH). Paragraph (b)(2) specifies that employers are to
provide employees, their designated representatives, and OSHA
compliance officers with exposure and medical records generated under
the Subpart in accordance with Sec. 1910.1020 (``Access to employee
exposure and medical records''); these records include safe-practices
manuals, depth-time profiles, diving records, DCS incident assessments,
and hospitalization records. This paragraph also mandates that
employers make equipment inspection and testing records available to
employees and their designated representative on request.
According to paragraph (b)(3), employers must retain these records
for the following periods: Safe-practices manuals, current document
only; depth-time profiles, until completing the diving record or the
DCS incident assessment; diving records, one year, except five years
when a DCS incident occurred during the dive; DCS incident assessments,
five years; hospitalization records, five years; and equipment
inspections and testing records (i.e., current tag or log entry), until
the employer removes the equipment from service. Paragraphs (b)(4) and
(b)(5) specify the requirements for disposing of these records. Under
paragraph (b)(4), employers are to forward to NIOSH any record with an
expired five-year retention period. Paragraph (b)(5) states that
employers who cease to do business must transfer records without
unexpired retention dates to the successor employer who will retain
them for the required period; however, when employers cease to do
business without a successor employer, they must transfer the records
to NIOSH.
Ira L. Mills,
Departmental Clearance Officer.
[FR Doc. 05-5802 Filed 3-23-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-26-P