Statement of Organization, Functions, and Delegations of Authority, 70617-70618 [05-23037]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 224 / Tuesday, November 22, 2005 / Notices
Street, 8th Floor, Philadelphia, PA
19107; Fax (215) 446–6153, email
Katrina.scarpato@gsa.gov.
Pursuant
to the Older Americans Act
Amendments of 2000 (Pub. L. 106–501,
November 2000), the Policy Committee
will have a meeting by conference call
to finalize on the resolutions that will be
mailed to the delegates for review prior
to the WHCoA that is scheduled from
December 11 to 14, 2005. The public is
invited to listen by dialing the
telephone number and using the
passcode listed above under the
ADDRESSES section.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Katrina M. Scarpato by phone at (215)
446–4651 or by email at
Katrina.scarpato@gsa.gov.
Public Scoping Meetings: A public
scoping meeting will provide the public
with an opportunity to present
comments, ask questions, and discuss
concerns regarding the scope of the EIS
with GSA representatives. GSA will
hold a public scoping meeting in
December 2005 in Winchester, VA.
Once established, the specific date for
this meeting will be published in the
local media.
Dated: November 17, 2005.
Edwin L. Walker,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy and
Programs.
[FR Doc. 05–23103 Filed 11–21–05; 8:45 am]
Dated: November 17, 2005
Linda Chero
Acting Regional Administrator,Mid-Atlantic
Region.
[FR Doc. 05–23112 Filed 11–21–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4154–01–P
BILLING CODE 6820–A6–S
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Statement of Organization, Functions,
and Delegations of Authority
Administration on Aging
Part C (Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention) of the Statement of
Organization, Functions, and
Delegations of Authority of the
Department of Health and Human
Services (45 F 67772–76, dated October
14, 1980, and corrected at 45 FR 69296,
October 20, 1980, as amended most
recently at 70 FR 65901–65902, dated
November 1, 2005) is amended to
reorganize the Pittsburgh Research
Laboratory, National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health.
Section C–B, Organization and
Functions, is hereby amended as
follows:
After the title for the Pittsburgh
Research Laboratory (CCB), delete the
functional statement and insert the
following:
Pittsburgh Research Laboratory (CCB).
(1) Provides national and international
leadership for prevention of workrelated illness, injury, and fatalities of
mine workers; (2) carries out the
surveillance of fatal and non-fatal
traumatic injuries, occupational
diseases, health and safety hazards, and
the use of control technology and
protective equipment for prevention of
injury and disease in mining; (3)
conducts research on the measurement,
monitoring, and control of dusts and
other respiratory hazards to which
miners may be exposed; (4) conducts
laboratory and field research to evaluate
and control hearing loss and
occupational noise exposure in mining;
(5) conducts field investigations and
2005 White House Conference on
Aging
Administration on Aging, HHS.
Notice of conference call.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: Pursuant to Section 10(a) of
the Federal Advisory Committee Act as
amended (5 U.S.C. Appendix 2), notice
is hereby given that the Policy
Committee of the 2005 White House
Conference on Aging (WHCoA) will
have a conference call to finalize the
resolutions and other items related to
the 2005 WHCoA. The conference call
will be open to the public to listen, with
call-ins limited to the number of
telephone lines available. Individuals
who plan to call in and need special
assistance, such as TTY, should inform
the contact person listed below in
advance of the conference call. This
notice is being published less than 15
days prior to the conference call due to
scheduling problems.
DATES: The conference call will be held
on Tuesday, November 22, 2005, at 4:30
p.m., eastern standard time.
ADDRESSES: The conference call may be
accessed by dialing, U.S. toll-free,
1–800–857–0419, passcode: 8932323, on
the date and time indicated above.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kim
Butcher, (301) 443–2887, or e-mail at
Kim.Butcher@whcoa.gov. Registration is
not required. Call in is on a first come,
first-served basis.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:22 Nov 21, 2005
Jkt 208001
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
PO 00000
Frm 00040
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
70617
laboratory studies on mining injuries
and the means for their prevention; (6)
conducts laboratory and field
investigations to better understand the
causes of catastrophic events that may
lead to fatalities, such as fires,
explosions, and structural or ground
failures; (7) develops sensors, predictive
models, engineering controls, and
improved practices to reduce miners’
risk for injury or death; (8) conducts
laboratory and field research to develop
interventions and methods to reduce
repetitive/cumulative musculoskeletal
injuries; (9) translates research findings,
new control technology concepts, and
newly identified approaches to health
and safety problems affecting miners
into usable effective interventions; (10)
assesses the effectiveness of
interventions to prevent occupational
injuries and illnesses; and (11) utilizes
the unique facilities and resources of the
laboratory, including its three mines:
the experimental coal mine, the safety
research coal mine, and the Lake Lynn
experimental hard rock mine, as a
national resource in collaboration with
other NIOSH units as well as other
departments and agencies of the
government to address problems in
heavy construction and other areas with
common links to mining problems.
Mining Respiratory Hazards Control
Branch (CCBC). (1) Develops, plans, and
implements a program of research to
develop or improve personal and area
direct reading instruments for
measuring mining contaminants
including, but not limited to, respirable
dust, silica, and diesel particulate; (2)
conducts field tests, experiments and
demonstrations of new technology for
monitoring and assessing mine air
quality; (3) designs, plans, and
implements laboratory and field
research to develop airborne hazard
reduction control technologies; (4)
carries out field surveys in mines to
identify work organization strategies
that could result in reduced dust and
diesel particulate exposure; (5)
evaluates the performance, economics,
and technical feasibility of engineering
control strategies, novel approaches,
and the application of new or emerging
technologies for underground and
surface mine dust and respiratory
hazard control systems; and (6)
develops and evaluates implementation
strategies for using newly developed
monitors and control technology for
exposure reduction or prevention.
Hearing Loss Prevention Branch
(CCBD). (1) Plans and conducts
laboratory and field research on noiseinduced hearing loss in miners; (2)
conducts field dosimetric and
audiometric surveys to asses the extent
E:\FR\FM\22NON1.SGM
22NON1
70618
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 224 / Tuesday, November 22, 2005 / Notices
and severity of the problem, to identify
those mining segments in greatest need
of attention, and to objectively track
progress in meeting hearing loss
prevention goals; (3) conducts field and
laboratory research to identify noise
generation sources and to identify those
areas most amenable to intervention
activities; (4) develops, tests, and
demonstrates new control technologies
for noise reduction; (5) evaluates the
technical and economic feasibility of
controls; (6) develops, evaluates,
recommends and empowers workers
with implementation strategies to
promote the adoption and use of noise
reduction technology; and (7) improves
the reliability of communication in
noise workplaces.
Mining Injury Prevention Branch
(CCBE). (1) Conducts laboratory, field,
and computer modeling research to
focus on human physiological
capabilities and limitations and their
interactions with mining jobs, tasks,
equipment, and the mine work
environment; (2) assesses the health and
safety relevance of mining equipment
design features using scientific and
engineering techniques, and analyses of
reported case-studies of mining
incidents that lead to traumatic injuries
or fatalities; (3) designs and conducts
epidemiological research studies to
identify and classify risk factors that
cause, or may cause, traumatic and
cumulative/repetitive injuries to miners;
(4) designs, builds, and tests proposed
interventions, including demonstrations
of proposed technologies using
laboratory mock-ups, full-scale
demonstrations at the laboratory’s
experimental mines, or through field
evaluation in operating mines; (5)
evaluates and recommends
implementation strategies for injury
prevention and control technologies
developed by the laboratory; (6)
conducts human factors research and
provides effective training and work
organization techniques for mining; and
(7) conducts laboratory and field
research on electrical safety issues in
mining.
Disaster Prevention and Response
Branch (CCBG). (1) Conducts laboratory
and field investigations of catastrophic
events such as mine fires, inundations,
and explosions to better understand
cause and effect relationships that
initiate such events; (2) develops new or
improved strategies and technologies for
mine fire prevention, detection, control,
and suppression; (3) investigates and
develops an understanding of the
critical parameters and their
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:22 Nov 21, 2005
Jkt 208001
interrelationships governing the
mitigation and propagation of
explosions, and develops and facilitates
the implementation of interventions to
prevent mine explosions; (4) evaluates
and recommends implementation
strategies for disaster prevention and
response; (5) develops technologies and
guidelines to mitigate or prevent mine
inundations; (6) works with the mining
industry and other government agencies
to ensure a network of well-trained
mine rescue teams exists; (7) develops
and/or evaluates new technology for
mine rescue teams; (8) develops training
curricula for mine rescue and
firefighting in coordination with other
health education, health
communication, and other information
and education activities of the institute;
and (9) identifies and evaluates
emerging health and safety issues as
mining operations move into more
challenging and dangerous geologic
conditions.
Surveillance and Research Support
Branch (CCBH). (1) Collects and
analyzes health and safety data related
to mining occupations in order to report
on the overall incidence, prevalence and
significance of occupational safety and
health problems in mining; (2) describes
trends in incidence of mining-related
fatalities, morbidity, and traumatic
injury; (3) conducts surveillance on the
use of new technology, the use of
engineering controls, and the use of
protective equipment in the mining
sector; (4) coordinates surveillance
activities with other NIOSH surveillance
initiatives; (5) provides statistical
support for surveillance and research
activities of the laboratory; (6) analyzes
and assists in the development of
research protocols for developing
studies; (7) coordinates planning,
analysis, and evaluation of the PRL
research program for achieving
organizational goals; (8) collaborates
with research staff to translate findings
from laboratory research to produce
compelling products that motivate the
mining sector to engage in improved
injury control and disease prevention
activities; and (9) coordinates with other
health communication, health
education, and information
dissemination activities within NIOSH
and CDC to ensure that mining research
information is effectively integrated into
the CDC dissemination and intervention
strategies.
Rock Safety Engineering Branch
(CCBJ). (1) Conducts laboratory and
field investigations of catastrophic
events such as catastrophic structural or
PO 00000
Frm 00041
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
ground failures to better understand
cause and effect relationships that
initiate such events; (2) designs,
evaluates, and implements appropriate
intervention strategies and engineering
controls to prevent ground failures; (3)
develops, tests, and promotes the use of
rock safety engineering prediction and
risk evaluation systems for control or
reduction of risk; and (4) addresses
health and safety issues resulting from
the use of explosives, and develops
criteria and tests to determine their
suitability for mine use and
transportation.
Delete in their entirety the title and
functional statement for the
Surveillance, Statistics and Research
Support Activity (CC22).
Dated: November 4, 2005.
William H. Gimson,
Chief Operating Officer, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC).
[FR Doc. 05–23037 Filed 11–21–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160–18–M
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Administration for Children and
Families
Submission for OMB Review;
Comment Request
Title: Developmental Disabilities State
Plan.
OMB No.: 0980–0162.
Description: A Plan developed by the
State Council on Developmental
Disabilities is required by federal
statute. Each State Council on
Developmental Disabilities must
develop the plan, provide for public
comments in the State, provide for
approval by the State’s Governor, and
finally submit the plan on a five-year
basis. On an annual basis, the Council
must review the plan and make any
amendments. The State Plan will be
used (1) by the Council as a planning
document; (2) by the citizenry of the
State as a mechanism for commenting
on the plans of the Council; and (3) by
the Department as a stewardship tool,
for ensuring compliance with the
Developmental Disabilities Assistance
and Bill of Rights Act, as one basis for
providing technical assistance (e.g.,
during site visits), and as a support for
management decision making.
Respondents: State and Tribal
Govenments.
E:\FR\FM\22NON1.SGM
22NON1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 224 (Tuesday, November 22, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 70617-70618]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-23037]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Statement of Organization, Functions, and Delegations of
Authority
Part C (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) of the
Statement of Organization, Functions, and Delegations of Authority of
the Department of Health and Human Services (45 F 67772-76, dated
October 14, 1980, and corrected at 45 FR 69296, October 20, 1980, as
amended most recently at 70 FR 65901-65902, dated November 1, 2005) is
amended to reorganize the Pittsburgh Research Laboratory, National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.
Section C-B, Organization and Functions, is hereby amended as
follows:
After the title for the Pittsburgh Research Laboratory (CCB),
delete the functional statement and insert the following:
Pittsburgh Research Laboratory (CCB). (1) Provides national and
international leadership for prevention of work-related illness,
injury, and fatalities of mine workers; (2) carries out the
surveillance of fatal and non-fatal traumatic injuries, occupational
diseases, health and safety hazards, and the use of control technology
and protective equipment for prevention of injury and disease in
mining; (3) conducts research on the measurement, monitoring, and
control of dusts and other respiratory hazards to which miners may be
exposed; (4) conducts laboratory and field research to evaluate and
control hearing loss and occupational noise exposure in mining; (5)
conducts field investigations and laboratory studies on mining injuries
and the means for their prevention; (6) conducts laboratory and field
investigations to better understand the causes of catastrophic events
that may lead to fatalities, such as fires, explosions, and structural
or ground failures; (7) develops sensors, predictive models,
engineering controls, and improved practices to reduce miners' risk for
injury or death; (8) conducts laboratory and field research to develop
interventions and methods to reduce repetitive/cumulative
musculoskeletal injuries; (9) translates research findings, new control
technology concepts, and newly identified approaches to health and
safety problems affecting miners into usable effective interventions;
(10) assesses the effectiveness of interventions to prevent
occupational injuries and illnesses; and (11) utilizes the unique
facilities and resources of the laboratory, including its three mines:
the experimental coal mine, the safety research coal mine, and the Lake
Lynn experimental hard rock mine, as a national resource in
collaboration with other NIOSH units as well as other departments and
agencies of the government to address problems in heavy construction
and other areas with common links to mining problems.
Mining Respiratory Hazards Control Branch (CCBC). (1) Develops,
plans, and implements a program of research to develop or improve
personal and area direct reading instruments for measuring mining
contaminants including, but not limited to, respirable dust, silica,
and diesel particulate; (2) conducts field tests, experiments and
demonstrations of new technology for monitoring and assessing mine air
quality; (3) designs, plans, and implements laboratory and field
research to develop airborne hazard reduction control technologies; (4)
carries out field surveys in mines to identify work organization
strategies that could result in reduced dust and diesel particulate
exposure; (5) evaluates the performance, economics, and technical
feasibility of engineering control strategies, novel approaches, and
the application of new or emerging technologies for underground and
surface mine dust and respiratory hazard control systems; and (6)
develops and evaluates implementation strategies for using newly
developed monitors and control technology for exposure reduction or
prevention.
Hearing Loss Prevention Branch (CCBD). (1) Plans and conducts
laboratory and field research on noise-induced hearing loss in miners;
(2) conducts field dosimetric and audiometric surveys to asses the
extent
[[Page 70618]]
and severity of the problem, to identify those mining segments in
greatest need of attention, and to objectively track progress in
meeting hearing loss prevention goals; (3) conducts field and
laboratory research to identify noise generation sources and to
identify those areas most amenable to intervention activities; (4)
develops, tests, and demonstrates new control technologies for noise
reduction; (5) evaluates the technical and economic feasibility of
controls; (6) develops, evaluates, recommends and empowers workers with
implementation strategies to promote the adoption and use of noise
reduction technology; and (7) improves the reliability of communication
in noise workplaces.
Mining Injury Prevention Branch (CCBE). (1) Conducts laboratory,
field, and computer modeling research to focus on human physiological
capabilities and limitations and their interactions with mining jobs,
tasks, equipment, and the mine work environment; (2) assesses the
health and safety relevance of mining equipment design features using
scientific and engineering techniques, and analyses of reported case-
studies of mining incidents that lead to traumatic injuries or
fatalities; (3) designs and conducts epidemiological research studies
to identify and classify risk factors that cause, or may cause,
traumatic and cumulative/repetitive injuries to miners; (4) designs,
builds, and tests proposed interventions, including demonstrations of
proposed technologies using laboratory mock-ups, full-scale
demonstrations at the laboratory's experimental mines, or through field
evaluation in operating mines; (5) evaluates and recommends
implementation strategies for injury prevention and control
technologies developed by the laboratory; (6) conducts human factors
research and provides effective training and work organization
techniques for mining; and (7) conducts laboratory and field research
on electrical safety issues in mining.
Disaster Prevention and Response Branch (CCBG). (1) Conducts
laboratory and field investigations of catastrophic events such as mine
fires, inundations, and explosions to better understand cause and
effect relationships that initiate such events; (2) develops new or
improved strategies and technologies for mine fire prevention,
detection, control, and suppression; (3) investigates and develops an
understanding of the critical parameters and their interrelationships
governing the mitigation and propagation of explosions, and develops
and facilitates the implementation of interventions to prevent mine
explosions; (4) evaluates and recommends implementation strategies for
disaster prevention and response; (5) develops technologies and
guidelines to mitigate or prevent mine inundations; (6) works with the
mining industry and other government agencies to ensure a network of
well-trained mine rescue teams exists; (7) develops and/or evaluates
new technology for mine rescue teams; (8) develops training curricula
for mine rescue and firefighting in coordination with other health
education, health communication, and other information and education
activities of the institute; and (9) identifies and evaluates emerging
health and safety issues as mining operations move into more
challenging and dangerous geologic conditions.
Surveillance and Research Support Branch (CCBH). (1) Collects and
analyzes health and safety data related to mining occupations in order
to report on the overall incidence, prevalence and significance of
occupational safety and health problems in mining; (2) describes trends
in incidence of mining-related fatalities, morbidity, and traumatic
injury; (3) conducts surveillance on the use of new technology, the use
of engineering controls, and the use of protective equipment in the
mining sector; (4) coordinates surveillance activities with other NIOSH
surveillance initiatives; (5) provides statistical support for
surveillance and research activities of the laboratory; (6) analyzes
and assists in the development of research protocols for developing
studies; (7) coordinates planning, analysis, and evaluation of the PRL
research program for achieving organizational goals; (8) collaborates
with research staff to translate findings from laboratory research to
produce compelling products that motivate the mining sector to engage
in improved injury control and disease prevention activities; and (9)
coordinates with other health communication, health education, and
information dissemination activities within NIOSH and CDC to ensure
that mining research information is effectively integrated into the CDC
dissemination and intervention strategies.
Rock Safety Engineering Branch (CCBJ). (1) Conducts laboratory and
field investigations of catastrophic events such as catastrophic
structural or ground failures to better understand cause and effect
relationships that initiate such events; (2) designs, evaluates, and
implements appropriate intervention strategies and engineering controls
to prevent ground failures; (3) develops, tests, and promotes the use
of rock safety engineering prediction and risk evaluation systems for
control or reduction of risk; and (4) addresses health and safety
issues resulting from the use of explosives, and develops criteria and
tests to determine their suitability for mine use and transportation.
Delete in their entirety the title and functional statement for the
Surveillance, Statistics and Research Support Activity (CC22).
Dated: November 4, 2005.
William H. Gimson,
Chief Operating Officer, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC).
[FR Doc. 05-23037 Filed 11-21-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160-18-M