Statement of Organization, Functions, and Delegations of Authority, 58396-58397 [06-8416]
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58396
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 191 / Tuesday, October 3, 2006 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Agency for Toxic Substances and
Disease Registry
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
Statement of Organization, Functions,
and Delegations of Authority
Part J (Agency for Toxic Substances
and Disease Registry) of the Statement
of Organization, Functions, and
Delegations of Authority of the
Department of Health and Human
Services (50 FR 25129–25130, dated
June 17, 1985, as amended most
recently at 71 FR 44297, dated August
4, 2006) is amended to reflect the
reorganization of the Division of Health
Assessment and Consultation, Agency
for Toxic Substances and Disease
Registry.
Section J–B, Organization and
Functions, is hereby amended as
follows:
Delete in its entirety the functional
statements for the Division of Health
Assessment and Consultation (JAAC),
Office of the Director (JAA), Office of the
Administrator (JA), and insert the
following:
Division of Health Assessment and
Consultation (JAAC). (1) Conducts
public health assessments, health
consultations, and other related public
health activities, to determine the health
implications of releases or threatened
releases of toxic substances into the
environment; in particular, such
activities are conducted for Superfund,
Resource Conservation and Recovery
Act (RCRA), petition requests, and other
sites or instances where communities
have been or may have been exposed to
toxic substances in the environment; (2)
conducts and evaluates exposure
pathways analyses and other exposure
screening analyses to identify impacted
communities, to include exposure
investigations (biologic sampling,
personal monitoring, etc.), exposuredose reconstruction, and related
environmental assessments, as
appropriate; (3) identifies appropriate
interventions for impacted communities
to prevent exposures and/or adverse
health effects; (4) issues public health
advisories when a release or threatened
release of a toxic substances pose an
imminent health hazard; (5) plans,
prepares, and executes appropriate
health communications and health
educational strategies/activities/
programs for communities affected or
potentially affected by toxic substances
released into the environment; (6)
manages the ATSDR-mandated program
for conducting site-specific activities at
petitioned sites; (7) manages and
VerDate Aug<31>2005
19:59 Oct 02, 2006
Jkt 211001
implements ATSDR’s Site-Specific
Cooperative Agreement Program and the
ATSDR tribal programs for external
partners; (8) coordinates the agency’s
environmental public health training
program; and (9) provides technical
support and resources for National
public health emergencies and disaster
response as appropriate.
Office of the Director (JAAC1). (1)
Provides overall leadership in directing,
coordinating, evaluating, and managing
all programmatic and administrative
operations of the Division of Health
Assessment and Consultation (DHAC);
(2) develops programmatic goals and
objectives and provides leadership,
policy formation, and guidance in
program planning and development; (3)
provides program management,
administrative, logistical support
services for the division; (4) coordinates
division activities with other
components of ATSDR and other
federal, state and local agencies and
tribal governments; (5) initiates specific
research and medical activities as
appropriate to further DHAC’s mission
and program needs; (6) provides overall
leadership and management of DHAC
resources for disaster response activities
to public health emergencies; and (7)
assesses the need and develops training
for public health professionals
conducting site-specific activities, and
coordinates the delivery of these courses
for the training of federal staff, tribal
members, and state partners.
Health Promotion and Community
Involvement Branch (JAACB). (1) Plans,
coordinates, implements, and evaluates
ATSDR’s health promotion and
community involvement site-specific
programs; (2) communicates the
agency’s roles, responsibilities, and
public health information to public and
professional audiences to mitigate
health effects from potential and actual
exposures to toxic substances; (3)
monitors the progress of work plan
activities, and reviews and evaluates the
accuracy and clarity of community
outreach and health education
materials; (4) uses best practices and
evidence-based approaches from
community involvement and public
health promotion; (5) develops and
delivers environmental public health
information for public and professional
audiences including translating
scientific documents into plain
language; (6) advocates for the public
health needs of communities affected by
environmental hazards; links members
of the public in communities affected by
hazardous waste with technical and
scientific staff and resources, where
appropriate; (7) develops, manages, and
evaluates the health education and
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
promotion component of ATSDR’s statebased cooperative agreement program
with external partners to ensure that the
technical and administrative
requirements of the program are met; (8)
provides technical assistance and
leadership on community involvement
and environmental health promotion to
ATSDR and ATSDR partners; (9)
advocates for advances in
environmental public health promotion
to address community concerns and
support community needs; and, (10)
collaborates with other ATSDR program
areas and partners to ensure cultural
awareness and respect are observed and
practiced in all activities that involve
communities, tribes, tribal governments
and tribal organizations.
Exposure Investigations and Site
Assessment Branch (JAACC). (1)
Manages a wide range of public health
assessment requests, including privatesector petitions and regional-lead
activities, that are assigned based on
branch staff expertise; (2) monitors the
progress of work plan activities, and
reviews and evaluates the scientific
accuracy and clarity of public health
assessments, health consultations, and
related materials; (3) serves as the lead
branch for planning, directing,
coordinating, evaluating, conducting,
and managing DHAC’s operations and
activities for exposure investigations,
exposure-dose reconstruction, and
modeling; (4) serves as the lead branch
for processing intake of regional
requests for DHAC assistance; (5)
coordinates within and across branch
and divisional units to provide
technical expertise for a wide-range of
activities that support the division and
agency’s public health mandates and
priorities; (6) issues public health
assessments, health consultations,
public health advisories, and provides
technical assistance; and, (7) develops
programmatic goals and objectives, and
contributes to policy formation and
guidance in program planning and
development.
Site and Radiological Assessment
Branch (JAACD). (1) Manages a wide
range of public health assessment
requests, including private-sector
petitions and regional-lead activities,
that are assigned based on branch staff
expertise; (2) monitors the progress of
work plan activities, and reviews and
evaluates the scientific accuracy and
clarity of public health assessments,
health consultations, and related
materials; (3) serves as the lead branch
for planning, directing, coordinating,
evaluating, conducting, and managing
DHAC’s operations and activities at
national priorities list sites, federal sites,
and RCRA sites; (4) provides radiation
E:\FR\FM\03OCN1.SGM
03OCN1
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 191 / Tuesday, October 3, 2006 / Notices
physics expertise for all division public
health assessment activities, and serves
as the division’s liaison to radiation
disaster response teams; (5) coordinates
within and across branch and divisional
units to provide technical expertise for
a wide-range of activities that support
the division and agency’s public health
mandates and priorities; (6) issues
public health assessments, health
consultations, public health advisories,
and provides technical assistance; and
(7) develops programmatic goals and
objectives, and contributes to policy
formation and guidance in program
planning and development.
Cooperative Agreement and Program
Evaluation Branch (JAACE). (1) Plans,
directs, coordinates, and manages
ATSDR’s Site-Specific Cooperative
Agreement Program; (2) collaborates
with other program areas within ATSDR
to develop annual plans of work with
each of the cooperative agreement
partners; (3) monitors the progress of
work plan activities and reviews and
evaluates the scientific accuracy and
clarity of public health assessments,
health consultations, and community
outreach and health education
materials; (4) evaluates the integration
of health assessment, health education,
health study, and community
involvement activities, the performance
of cooperative agreement partners, and
the public health impact of partner
conducted activities; (5) advises
cooperative agreement partners on
scientific and procedural developments
in the area of environmental public
health; (6) directs and coordinates the
DHAC’s site-specific evaluation
activities to identify the short-term and
long-term benefit of site-specific public
health assessment, community health
education, and community involvement
activities; (7) develops and refines
performance measures for reporting
DHAC’s products and intervention
activities for Congressional Justification
Reports and to meet OMB Performance
Assessment and Rating Tool reporting
requirements; (8) directs and
coordinates the extraction of
information from the division’s
products and entry of this information
into ATSDR’s HAZDAT; (9) conducts
database queries to analyze and identify
trends in site-related public health
issues; and (10) develops programmatic
goals and objectives and contributes to
policy formation and guidance in
program planning and development.
The Chief Operating Officer, CDC, has
been delegated the authority to sign
general Federal Register notices for both
the CDC and ATSDR.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
19:59 Oct 02, 2006
Jkt 211001
Dated: September 25, 2006.
William H. Gimson,
Chief Operating Officer, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC).
[FR Doc. 06–8416 Filed 10–2–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160–70–M
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention
[60Day–06–05BP]
Proposed Data Collections Submitted
for Public Comment and
Recommendations
In compliance with the requirement
of Section 3506(c)(2)(A) of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 for
opportunity for public comment on
proposed data collection projects, the
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) will publish periodic
summaries of proposed projects. To
request more information on the
proposed projects or to obtain a copy of
the data collection plans and
instruments, call 404–639–5960 and
send comments to Seleda Perryman,
CDC Assistant Reports Clearance
Officer, 1600 Clifton Road, MS–D74,
Atlanta, GA 30333 or send an e-mail to
omb@cdc.gov.
Comments are invited on: (a) Whether
the proposed collection of information
is necessary for the proper performance
of the functions of the agency, including
whether the information shall have
practical utility; (b) the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information; (c)
ways to enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and (d) ways to minimize the
burden of the collection of information
on respondents, including through the
use of automated collection techniques
or other forms of information
technology. Written comments should
be received within 60 days of this
notice.
Proposed Project
Healthier Worksite Initiative—CDC
Employee Needs Assessment—New—
Division of Nutrition and Physical
Activity (DNPA), National Center for
Chronic Disease Prevention and Health
Promotion (NCCDPHP), Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Background and Brief Description
In October 2002, in line with HHS
initiatives, the CDC Director began a
Healthier Worksite Initiative (HWI) for
CDC, focusing on the four pillars of the
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58397
President’s Healthier U.S. Workforce
directive: Physical activity, healthy
eating, preventive screening, and
making healthy choices. The Division of
Nutrition and Physical Activity (DNPA)
was designated to lead the initiative
within CDC. Two entities were
established to support the planning and
evaluation of the Healthier Worksite
Initiative, the Healthier Worksite
Advisory Committee and the Healthier
Worksite Workgroup. The Advisory
Committee includes representatives
from all interested Centers, Institutes,
and Offices within CDC. The committee
meets monthly to review progress and
provide direction for the Healthier
Worksite Initiative. The Healthier
Worksite Workgroup develops
innovative worksite health program
ideas and tests them in demonstration
projects.
The purpose of the Healthier Worksite
Initiative at CDC is to: (1) Develop and
evaluate worksite health promotion
interventions for CDC employees,
culminating in a model worksite health
promotion program; (2) establish an
evidence base for worksite health
promotion interventions; and (3)
develop a web-based tool kit to share
information learned with other Federal
agencies, as they refine or develop their
own employee health promotion
programs.
This request for OMB approval is to
conduct a web-based CDC employee
needs assessment that includes a
baseline measurement of employee
health practices. The employee needs
assessment will be offered to permanent
employees, contractors, fellows, and
guest researchers, and will provide a
foundation of information to determine
the direction and requirements for
building a successful worksite health
promotion program. An additional
outcome of the HWI project will be a
Web site which will serve as a resource
for government agencies and the general
public for implementation of Healthier
U.S. pillars in work settings.
Tracking and evaluation of program
effectiveness are standard health
promotion tools. Monitoring methods
that may be used in the future to assess
and improve the effectiveness of the
HWI program include: e-mail surveys,
telephone surveys, telephone or inperson focus groups, web-based surveys,
or intercept interviews, which aim at
intercepting employees in their natural
environment and deliver a short
structured questionnaire on their habits,
preferences, perceptions or behavior.
There is no cost to the respondents
other than their time to participate in
the survey.
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03OCN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 191 (Tuesday, October 3, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 58396-58397]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 06]
[[Page 58396]]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
Statement of Organization, Functions, and Delegations of
Authority
Part J (Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry) of the
Statement of Organization, Functions, and Delegations of Authority of
the Department of Health and Human Services (50 FR 25129-25130, dated
June 17, 1985, as amended most recently at 71 FR 44297, dated August 4,
2006) is amended to reflect the reorganization of the Division of
Health Assessment and Consultation, Agency for Toxic Substances and
Disease Registry.
Section J-B, Organization and Functions, is hereby amended as
follows:
Delete in its entirety the functional statements for the Division
of Health Assessment and Consultation (JAAC), Office of the Director
(JAA), Office of the Administrator (JA), and insert the following:
Division of Health Assessment and Consultation (JAAC). (1) Conducts
public health assessments, health consultations, and other related
public health activities, to determine the health implications of
releases or threatened releases of toxic substances into the
environment; in particular, such activities are conducted for
Superfund, Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), petition
requests, and other sites or instances where communities have been or
may have been exposed to toxic substances in the environment; (2)
conducts and evaluates exposure pathways analyses and other exposure
screening analyses to identify impacted communities, to include
exposure investigations (biologic sampling, personal monitoring, etc.),
exposure-dose reconstruction, and related environmental assessments, as
appropriate; (3) identifies appropriate interventions for impacted
communities to prevent exposures and/or adverse health effects; (4)
issues public health advisories when a release or threatened release of
a toxic substances pose an imminent health hazard; (5) plans, prepares,
and executes appropriate health communications and health educational
strategies/activities/programs for communities affected or potentially
affected by toxic substances released into the environment; (6) manages
the ATSDR-mandated program for conducting site-specific activities at
petitioned sites; (7) manages and implements ATSDR's Site-Specific
Cooperative Agreement Program and the ATSDR tribal programs for
external partners; (8) coordinates the agency's environmental public
health training program; and (9) provides technical support and
resources for National public health emergencies and disaster response
as appropriate.
Office of the Director (JAAC1). (1) Provides overall leadership in
directing, coordinating, evaluating, and managing all programmatic and
administrative operations of the Division of Health Assessment and
Consultation (DHAC); (2) develops programmatic goals and objectives and
provides leadership, policy formation, and guidance in program planning
and development; (3) provides program management, administrative,
logistical support services for the division; (4) coordinates division
activities with other components of ATSDR and other federal, state and
local agencies and tribal governments; (5) initiates specific research
and medical activities as appropriate to further DHAC's mission and
program needs; (6) provides overall leadership and management of DHAC
resources for disaster response activities to public health
emergencies; and (7) assesses the need and develops training for public
health professionals conducting site-specific activities, and
coordinates the delivery of these courses for the training of federal
staff, tribal members, and state partners.
Health Promotion and Community Involvement Branch (JAACB). (1)
Plans, coordinates, implements, and evaluates ATSDR's health promotion
and community involvement site-specific programs; (2) communicates the
agency's roles, responsibilities, and public health information to
public and professional audiences to mitigate health effects from
potential and actual exposures to toxic substances; (3) monitors the
progress of work plan activities, and reviews and evaluates the
accuracy and clarity of community outreach and health education
materials; (4) uses best practices and evidence-based approaches from
community involvement and public health promotion; (5) develops and
delivers environmental public health information for public and
professional audiences including translating scientific documents into
plain language; (6) advocates for the public health needs of
communities affected by environmental hazards; links members of the
public in communities affected by hazardous waste with technical and
scientific staff and resources, where appropriate; (7) develops,
manages, and evaluates the health education and promotion component of
ATSDR's state-based cooperative agreement program with external
partners to ensure that the technical and administrative requirements
of the program are met; (8) provides technical assistance and
leadership on community involvement and environmental health promotion
to ATSDR and ATSDR partners; (9) advocates for advances in
environmental public health promotion to address community concerns and
support community needs; and, (10) collaborates with other ATSDR
program areas and partners to ensure cultural awareness and respect are
observed and practiced in all activities that involve communities,
tribes, tribal governments and tribal organizations.
Exposure Investigations and Site Assessment Branch (JAACC). (1)
Manages a wide range of public health assessment requests, including
private-sector petitions and regional-lead activities, that are
assigned based on branch staff expertise; (2) monitors the progress of
work plan activities, and reviews and evaluates the scientific accuracy
and clarity of public health assessments, health consultations, and
related materials; (3) serves as the lead branch for planning,
directing, coordinating, evaluating, conducting, and managing DHAC's
operations and activities for exposure investigations, exposure-dose
reconstruction, and modeling; (4) serves as the lead branch for
processing intake of regional requests for DHAC assistance; (5)
coordinates within and across branch and divisional units to provide
technical expertise for a wide-range of activities that support the
division and agency's public health mandates and priorities; (6) issues
public health assessments, health consultations, public health
advisories, and provides technical assistance; and, (7) develops
programmatic goals and objectives, and contributes to policy formation
and guidance in program planning and development.
Site and Radiological Assessment Branch (JAACD). (1) Manages a wide
range of public health assessment requests, including private-sector
petitions and regional-lead activities, that are assigned based on
branch staff expertise; (2) monitors the progress of work plan
activities, and reviews and evaluates the scientific accuracy and
clarity of public health assessments, health consultations, and related
materials; (3) serves as the lead branch for planning, directing,
coordinating, evaluating, conducting, and managing DHAC's operations
and activities at national priorities list sites, federal sites, and
RCRA sites; (4) provides radiation
[[Page 58397]]
physics expertise for all division public health assessment activities,
and serves as the division's liaison to radiation disaster response
teams; (5) coordinates within and across branch and divisional units to
provide technical expertise for a wide-range of activities that support
the division and agency's public health mandates and priorities; (6)
issues public health assessments, health consultations, public health
advisories, and provides technical assistance; and (7) develops
programmatic goals and objectives, and contributes to policy formation
and guidance in program planning and development.
Cooperative Agreement and Program Evaluation Branch (JAACE). (1)
Plans, directs, coordinates, and manages ATSDR's Site-Specific
Cooperative Agreement Program; (2) collaborates with other program
areas within ATSDR to develop annual plans of work with each of the
cooperative agreement partners; (3) monitors the progress of work plan
activities and reviews and evaluates the scientific accuracy and
clarity of public health assessments, health consultations, and
community outreach and health education materials; (4) evaluates the
integration of health assessment, health education, health study, and
community involvement activities, the performance of cooperative
agreement partners, and the public health impact of partner conducted
activities; (5) advises cooperative agreement partners on scientific
and procedural developments in the area of environmental public health;
(6) directs and coordinates the DHAC's site-specific evaluation
activities to identify the short-term and long-term benefit of site-
specific public health assessment, community health education, and
community involvement activities; (7) develops and refines performance
measures for reporting DHAC's products and intervention activities for
Congressional Justification Reports and to meet OMB Performance
Assessment and Rating Tool reporting requirements; (8) directs and
coordinates the extraction of information from the division's products
and entry of this information into ATSDR's HAZDAT; (9) conducts
database queries to analyze and identify trends in site-related public
health issues; and (10) develops programmatic goals and objectives and
contributes to policy formation and guidance in program planning and
development.
The Chief Operating Officer, CDC, has been delegated the authority
to sign general Federal Register notices for both the CDC and ATSDR.
Dated: September 25, 2006.
William H. Gimson,
Chief Operating Officer, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC).
[FR Doc. 06-8416 Filed 10-2-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160-70-M