The Cadmium in General Industry Standard; Extension of the Office of Management and Budget's (OMB) Approval of Information Collection (Paperwork) Requirements, 62005-62006 [05-21481]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 207 / Thursday, October 27, 2005 / Notices
preparation of this notice. The authority
for this notice is the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3506
et seq.), and Secretary of Labor’s Order
no. 5–2002 (67 FR 65008).
Dated: Signed at Washington, DC, on
October 21, 2005.
Jonathan L. Snare,
Acting Assistant Secretary of Labor.
[FR Doc. 05–21480 Filed 10–26–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–26–M
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration
[Docket No. ICR–1218–0185 (2006)]
The Cadmium in General Industry
Standard; Extension of the Office of
Management and Budget’s (OMB)
Approval of Information Collection
(Paperwork) Requirements
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA), Labor.
ACTION: Request for public comment.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: OSHA solicits public
comment concerning its request for an
extension of the information collection
requirements contained in the Cadmium
in General Industry Standard (29 CFR
1910.1027). This standard controls
occupational exposure to cadmium,
thereby preventing serious disease (e.g.,
lung cancer, prostate cancer, kidney
disease) and death among exposed
employees.
DATES: Comments must be submitted by
the following dates:
Hard copy: Your comments must be
submitted (postmarked or received) by
December 27, 2005.
Facsimile and electronic
transmission: Your comments must be
received by December 27, 2005.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by OSHA Docket No. ICR–
1218–0185 (2006), by any of the
following methods:
Regular mail, express delivery, hand
delivery, and messenger service: Submit
your comments and attachments to the
OSHA Docket Office, Room N–2625,
U.S. Department of Labor, 200
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20210; telephone (202) 693–2350
(OSHA’s TTY number is (877) 889–
5627). OSHA Docket Office and
Department of Labor hours are 8:15 a.m.
to 4:45 p.m., ET.
Facsimile: If your comments are 10
pages or fewer in length, including
attachments, you may fax them to the
OSHA Docket Office at (202) 693–1648.
Electronic: You may submit
comments through the Internet at https://
VerDate Aug<31>2005
15:23 Oct 26, 2005
Jkt 208001
ecomments.osha.gov. Follow
instructions on the OSHA Web page for
submitting comments.
Docket: For access to the docket to
read or download comments or
background materials, such as the
complete Information Collection
Request (ICR) (containing the
Supporting Statement, OMB–83–I Form,
and attachments), go to OSHA’s Web
page at https://www.OSHA.gov. In
addition, the ICR, comments and
submissions are available for inspection
and copying at the OSHA Docket Office
at the address above. You may also
contact Todd Owen at the address
below to obtain a copy of the ICR. For
additional information on submitting
comments, please see the ‘‘Public
Participation’’ heading in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Todd Owen, Directorate of Standards
and Guidance, OSHA, Room N–3609,
200 Constitution Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20210, telephone: (202)
693–2222.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The Department of Labor, as part of its
continuing effort to reduce paperwork
and respondent (i.e., employer) burden,
conducts a preclearance consultation
program to provide the public with an
opportunity to comment on proposed
and continuing information collection
requirements in accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA–95) (44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A)). This
program ensures that information is in
the desired format, reporting burden
(time and costs) is minimal, collection
instruments are clearly understood, and
OSHA’s estimate of the information
collection burden is accurate. The
Occupational Safety and Health Act of
1970 (the Act) (29 U.S.C. 651 et seq.)
authorizes information collection by
employers as necessary or appropriate
for enforcement of the Act or for
developing information regarding the
causes and prevention of occupational
injuries, illnesses, and accidents (29
U.S.C. 657).
On January 5, 2005, OSHA published
the final rule for the Standards
Improvement Project—Phase II (70 FR
1112). The final rule removed and
revised provisions of standards that
were outdated, duplicative,
unnecessary, or inconsistent, and
clarified or simplified regulatory
language. The final rule contained
several revisions to collections of
information contained in the Cadmium
Standard. These revisions included:
PO 00000
Frm 00071
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
62005
removing the word ‘‘signed’’ that
appears in the introductory sentence in
paragraph (1)(10)(1) of the Standard;
and allowing employers the option of
posting employee-monitoring results, or
individually informing each employee
of these results. Those changes reduced
paperwork burden hours while
maintaining worker protection and
improving consistency among
standards.
The information collection
requirements specified in the Cadmium
in General Industry Standard protect
employees from the adverse health
effects that may result from
occupational exposure to cadmium. The
major information collection
reuqirements in the Standard include
conducting employee exposure
monitoring, notifying employees of their
cadmium exposures, implementing a
written compliance program,
implementing medical-surveillance of
employees, providing examining
physicians with specific information,
ensuring that employees receive a copy
of their medical-surveillance results,
maintaining employees’ exposuremonitoring and medical-surveillance
records for specific periods, and
providing access to these records by
OSHA, the National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health, the
employee who is the subject of the
records, the employee’s representative,
and other designated parties.
II. Special Issues for Comment
OSHA has a particular interest in
comments on the following issues:
• Whether the proposed information
collection requirements are necessary
for the proper performance of the
Agency’s functions, including whether
the information is useful;
• The accuracy of OSHA’s estimate of
the burden (time and costs) of the
information collection requirements,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
• The quality, utility, and clarity of
the information collected; and
• Ways to minimize the burden on
employers who must comply; for
example, by using automated or other
technological information collection
and transmission techniques.
III. Proposed Actions
OSHA is requesting that OMB extend
the approval of the collection of
information (paperwork) requirements
necessitated by the Cadmium in General
Industry Standard (29 CFR 1910.1027).
As part of this proposal, the Agency is
requesting a 167-hour burden reduction
(adjustment) resulting from not
identifying any new employers who will
E:\FR\FM\27OCN1.SGM
27OCN1
62006
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 207 / Thursday, October 27, 2005 / Notices
gather information necessary to meet the
objective data requirements required
specified by paragraph
§ 1910.1027(d)(2)(iii) of the Standard.
The Agency will summarize the
comments submitted in response to this
notice, and will include this summary
in its request to OMB to extend its
approval of these information collection
requirements.
Type of Review: Extension of
currently approved information
collection requirements.
Title: Cadmium in General Industry
Standard.
OMB Number: 1218–0185.
Affected Public: Business or other forprofits; Federal government; State, local,
or tribal government.
Number of Respondents: 53,161.
Frequency: On occasion; quarterly;
semi-annually; annually.
Average Time Per Response: Varies
from five minutes (.08 hour) for several
provisions (e.g., maintaining an
employee’s exposure-monitoring or
medical-surveillance record, providing
information about an employee to the
physician) to 1.5 hours to review and
update a compliance program or
administer an employee medical
examination.
Estimated Total Burden Hours:
121,177.
Estimated Cost (Operation and
Maintenance): $6,190,817.
IV. Public Participation—Submission of
Comments on This Notice and Internet
Access to Comments and Submissions
You may submit comments and
supporting materials in response to this
notice by (1) hard copy, (2) FAX
transmission (facsimile), or (3)
electronically through the OSHA Web
page. Because of security-related
problems, there may be a significant
delay in the receipt of comments by
regular mail. Please contact the OSHA
Docket Office at (202) 693–2350 (TTY
(887) 889–5627) for information about
security procedures concerning the
delivery of submissions by express
delivery, hand delivery, and courier
service.
All comments, submissions and
background documents are available for
inspection and copying at the OSHA
Docket Office at the above address.
Comments and submissions posted on
OSHA’s Web page are available at
https://www.OSHA.gov. Contact the
OSHA Docket Office for information
about materials not available through
the OSHA Web page and for assistance
using the Web page to locate docket
submissions.
Electronic copies of this Federal
Register notice as well as other relevant
VerDate Aug<31>2005
14:12 Oct 26, 2005
Jkt 208001
documents are available on OSHA’s
Web page. Since all submissions
become public, private information such
as social security numbers should not be
submitted.
V. Authority and Signature
Jonathan L. Snare, Acting Assistant
Secretary of Labor for Occupational
Safety and Health, directed the
preparation of this notice. The authority
for this notice is the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3506
et seq.), and Secretary of Labor’s Order
No. 5–2002 (67 FR 65008).
Signed at Washington, DC, on October 21,
2005.
Jonathan L. Snare,
Acting Assistant Secretary of Labor.
[FR Doc. 05–21481 Filed 10–26–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–26–M
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration
[Docket No. ICR–1218–0186 (2006)]
The Cadmium in Construction
Standard; Extension of the Office of
Management and Budget’s (OMB)
Approval of Information Collection
(Paperwork) Requirements
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA), Labor.
ACTION: Request for public comment.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: OSHA solicits public
comment concerning its request for an
extension of the information collection
requirements contained in the Cadmium
in Construction Standard (29 CFR
1926.1127). This standard controls
occupational exposure to cadmium,
thereby preventing serious disease (e.g.,
lung cancer, prostate cancer, kidney
disease) and death among exposed
employees.
Comments must be submitted by
the following dates:
Hard copy: Your comments must be
submitted (postmarked or received) by
December 27, 2005.
Facsimile and electronic
transmission: Your comments must be
received by December 27, 2005.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by OSHA Docket No. ICR–
1218–0186 (2006), by any of the
following methods:
Regular mail, express delivery, hand
delivery, and messenger service: Submit
your comments and attachments to the
OSHA Docket Office, Room N–2625,
U.S. Department of Labor, 200
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DATES:
PO 00000
Frm 00072
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
DC 20210; telephone (202) 693–2350
(OSHA’s TTY number is (877) 889–
5627). OSHA Docket Office and
Department of Labor hours are 8:15 a.m.
to 4:45 p.m., ET.
Facsimile: If your comments are 10
pages or fewer in length, including
attachments, you may fax them to the
OSHA Docket Office at (202) 693–1648.
Electronic: You may submit
comments through the Internet at
https://ecomments.osha.gov. Follow
instructions on the OSHA Web page for
submitting comments.
Docket: For access to the docket to
read or download comments or
background materials, such as the
complete Information Collection
Request (ICR) (containing the
Supporting Statement, OMB–83–I Form,
and attachments), go to OSHA’s Web
page at https://www.OSHA.gov. In
addition, the ICR, comments and
submissions are available for inspection
and copying at the OSHA Docket Office
at the address above. You may also
contact Todd Owen at the address
below to obtain a copy of the ICR. For
additional information on submitting
comments, please see the ‘‘Public
Participation’’ heading in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Todd Owen, Directorate of Standards
and Guidance, OSHA, Room N–3609,
200 Constitution Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20210, telephone: (202)
693–2222.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The Department of Labor, as part of its
continuing effort to reduce paperwork
and respondent (i.e., employer) burden,
conducts a preclearance consultation
program to provide the public with an
opportunity to comment on proposed
and continuing information collection
requirements in accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA–95) (44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A)). This
program ensures that information is in
the desired format, reporting burden
(time and costs) is minimal, collection
instruments are clearly understood, and
OSHA’s estimate of the information
collection burden is accurate. The
Occupational Safety and Health Act of
1970 (the Act) (29 U.S.C. 651 et seq.)
authorizes information collection by
employers as necessary or appropriate
for enforcement of the Act or for
developing information regarding the
causes and prevention of occupational
injuries, illnesses, and accidents (29
U.S.C. 657).
On January 5, 2005, OSHA published
the final rule for the Standards
E:\FR\FM\27OCN1.SGM
27OCN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 207 (Thursday, October 27, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 62005-62006]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-21481]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Occupational Safety and Health Administration
[Docket No. ICR-1218-0185 (2006)]
The Cadmium in General Industry Standard; Extension of the Office
of Management and Budget's (OMB) Approval of Information Collection
(Paperwork) Requirements
AGENCY: Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), Labor.
ACTION: Request for public comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: OSHA solicits public comment concerning its request for an
extension of the information collection requirements contained in the
Cadmium in General Industry Standard (29 CFR 1910.1027). This standard
controls occupational exposure to cadmium, thereby preventing serious
disease (e.g., lung cancer, prostate cancer, kidney disease) and death
among exposed employees.
DATES: Comments must be submitted by the following dates:
Hard copy: Your comments must be submitted (postmarked or received)
by December 27, 2005.
Facsimile and electronic transmission: Your comments must be
received by December 27, 2005.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by OSHA Docket No. ICR-
1218-0185 (2006), by any of the following methods:
Regular mail, express delivery, hand delivery, and messenger
service: Submit your comments and attachments to the OSHA Docket
Office, Room N-2625, U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue,
NW., Washington, DC 20210; telephone (202) 693-2350 (OSHA's TTY number
is (877) 889-5627). OSHA Docket Office and Department of Labor hours
are 8:15 a.m. to 4:45 p.m., ET.
Facsimile: If your comments are 10 pages or fewer in length,
including attachments, you may fax them to the OSHA Docket Office at
(202) 693-1648.
Electronic: You may submit comments through the Internet at https://
ecomments.osha.gov. Follow instructions on the OSHA Web page for
submitting comments.
Docket: For access to the docket to read or download comments or
background materials, such as the complete Information Collection
Request (ICR) (containing the Supporting Statement, OMB-83-I Form, and
attachments), go to OSHA's Web page at https://www.OSHA.gov. In
addition, the ICR, comments and submissions are available for
inspection and copying at the OSHA Docket Office at the address above.
You may also contact Todd Owen at the address below to obtain a copy of
the ICR. For additional information on submitting comments, please see
the ``Public Participation'' heading in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section of this document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Todd Owen, Directorate of Standards
and Guidance, OSHA, Room N-3609, 200 Constitution Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20210, telephone: (202) 693-2222.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The Department of Labor, as part of its continuing effort to reduce
paperwork and respondent (i.e., employer) burden, conducts a
preclearance consultation program to provide the public with an
opportunity to comment on proposed and continuing information
collection requirements in accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 (PRA-95) (44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A)). This program ensures that
information is in the desired format, reporting burden (time and costs)
is minimal, collection instruments are clearly understood, and OSHA's
estimate of the information collection burden is accurate. The
Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (the Act) (29 U.S.C. 651 et
seq.) authorizes information collection by employers as necessary or
appropriate for enforcement of the Act or for developing information
regarding the causes and prevention of occupational injuries,
illnesses, and accidents (29 U.S.C. 657).
On January 5, 2005, OSHA published the final rule for the Standards
Improvement Project--Phase II (70 FR 1112). The final rule removed and
revised provisions of standards that were outdated, duplicative,
unnecessary, or inconsistent, and clarified or simplified regulatory
language. The final rule contained several revisions to collections of
information contained in the Cadmium Standard. These revisions
included: removing the word ``signed'' that appears in the introductory
sentence in paragraph (1)(10)(1) of the Standard; and allowing
employers the option of posting employee-monitoring results, or
individually informing each employee of these results. Those changes
reduced paperwork burden hours while maintaining worker protection and
improving consistency among standards.
The information collection requirements specified in the Cadmium in
General Industry Standard protect employees from the adverse health
effects that may result from occupational exposure to cadmium. The
major information collection reuqirements in the Standard include
conducting employee exposure monitoring, notifying employees of their
cadmium exposures, implementing a written compliance program,
implementing medical-surveillance of employees, providing examining
physicians with specific information, ensuring that employees receive a
copy of their medical-surveillance results, maintaining employees'
exposure-monitoring and medical-surveillance records for specific
periods, and providing access to these records by OSHA, the National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, the employee who is the
subject of the records, the employee's representative, and other
designated parties.
II. Special Issues for Comment
OSHA has a particular interest in comments on the following issues:
Whether the proposed information collection requirements
are necessary for the proper performance of the Agency's functions,
including whether the information is useful;
The accuracy of OSHA's estimate of the burden (time and
costs) of the information collection requirements, including the
validity of the methodology and assumptions used;
The quality, utility, and clarity of the information
collected; and
Ways to minimize the burden on employers who must comply;
for example, by using automated or other technological information
collection and transmission techniques.
III. Proposed Actions
OSHA is requesting that OMB extend the approval of the collection
of information (paperwork) requirements necessitated by the Cadmium in
General Industry Standard (29 CFR 1910.1027). As part of this proposal,
the Agency is requesting a 167-hour burden reduction (adjustment)
resulting from not identifying any new employers who will
[[Page 62006]]
gather information necessary to meet the objective data requirements
required specified by paragraph Sec. 1910.1027(d)(2)(iii) of the
Standard. The Agency will summarize the comments submitted in response
to this notice, and will include this summary in its request to OMB to
extend its approval of these information collection requirements.
Type of Review: Extension of currently approved information
collection requirements.
Title: Cadmium in General Industry Standard.
OMB Number: 1218-0185.
Affected Public: Business or other for-profits; Federal government;
State, local, or tribal government.
Number of Respondents: 53,161.
Frequency: On occasion; quarterly; semi-annually; annually.
Average Time Per Response: Varies from five minutes (.08 hour) for
several provisions (e.g., maintaining an employee's exposure-monitoring
or medical-surveillance record, providing information about an employee
to the physician) to 1.5 hours to review and update a compliance
program or administer an employee medical examination.
Estimated Total Burden Hours: 121,177.
Estimated Cost (Operation and Maintenance): $6,190,817.
IV. Public Participation--Submission of Comments on This Notice and
Internet Access to Comments and Submissions
You may submit comments and supporting materials in response to
this notice by (1) hard copy, (2) FAX transmission (facsimile), or (3)
electronically through the OSHA Web page. Because of security-related
problems, there may be a significant delay in the receipt of comments
by regular mail. Please contact the OSHA Docket Office at (202) 693-
2350 (TTY (887) 889-5627) for information about security procedures
concerning the delivery of submissions by express delivery, hand
delivery, and courier service.
All comments, submissions and background documents are available
for inspection and copying at the OSHA Docket Office at the above
address. Comments and submissions posted on OSHA's Web page are
available at https://www.OSHA.gov. Contact the OSHA Docket Office for
information about materials not available through the OSHA Web page and
for assistance using the Web page to locate docket submissions.
Electronic copies of this Federal Register notice as well as other
relevant documents are available on OSHA's Web page. Since all
submissions become public, private information such as social security
numbers should not be submitted.
V. Authority and Signature
Jonathan L. Snare, Acting Assistant Secretary of Labor for
Occupational Safety and Health, directed the preparation of this
notice. The authority for this notice is the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (44 U.S.C. 3506 et seq.), and Secretary of Labor's Order No. 5-
2002 (67 FR 65008).
Signed at Washington, DC, on October 21, 2005.
Jonathan L. Snare,
Acting Assistant Secretary of Labor.
[FR Doc. 05-21481 Filed 10-26-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-26-M