EPA Science Advisory Board (SAB) Staff Office Request for Nominations for Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee (CASAC) Particular Matter (PM Review Panel), 10527-10528 [E7-4168]
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 45 / Thursday, March 8, 2007 / Notices
By the commission.
Magalie R. Salas,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E7–4074 Filed 3–7–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[FRL–8285–6]
EPA Science Advisory Board (SAB)
Staff Office Request for Nominations
for Clean Air Scientific Advisory
Committee (CASAC) Particular Matter
(PM Review Panel)
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA or Agency)
Science Advisory Board (SAB) Staff
Office is announcing the formation of
the Clean Air Scientific Advisory
Committee (CASAC) review panel for
Particulate Matter (PM). The SAB Staff
Office is soliciting public nominations
for this Panel.
DATES: New nominations should be
submitted by March 29, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Any
member of the public wishing further
information regarding this Request for
Nominations may contact Mr. Fred
Butterfield, Designated Federal Officer
(DFO), EPA Science Advisory Board
(1400F), U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue,
NW., Washington, DC 20460; via
telephone/voice mail: (202) 343–9994;
fax: (202) 233–0643; or e-mail at:
butterfield.fred@epa.gov. General
information concerning the CASAC or
the EPA Science Advisory Board can be
found on the EPA Web site at: https://
www.epa.gov/sab.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background: The Clean Air Scientific
Advisory Committee (CASAC) was
established under section 109(d)(2) of
the Clean Air Act (CAA or Act) (42
U.S.C. 7409) as an independent
scientific advisory committee. CASAC
provides advice, information and
recommendations on the scientific and
technical aspects of air quality criteria
and national ambient air quality
standards (NAAQS) under sections 108
and 109 of the Act. The CASAC is a
Federal advisory committee chartered
under the Federal Advisory Committee
Act (FACA), as amended, 5 U.S.C., App.
Section 109(d)(1) of the Clean Air Act
(CAA) requires that EPA carry out a
periodic review and revision, as
appropriate, of the air quality criteria
VerDate Aug<31>2005
18:53 Mar 07, 2007
Jkt 211001
and the NAAQS for the six ‘‘criteria’’ air
pollutants, including PM. This Federal
Register notice solicitation is seeking
nominations for additional, subjectmatter experts to augment the chartered
CASAC. This CASAC Panel will review
EPA’s technical and policy assessments
that form the basis for updating the
NAAQS for PM. The CASAC PM
Review Panel will comply with the
provisions of FACA and all appropriate
SAB Staff Office procedural policies.
Nominator’s Assessment of Expertise.
The SAB Staff Office requests nominees
for the CASAC PM Review Panel who
are nationally-recognized experts in one
or more of the following disciplines:
(a) Atmospheric Science. Expertise in
evaluating the physical/chemical
properties of particulate matter
including transport of PM on urban to
global scales, transformation of primary
particles in the atmosphere to secondary
particles, and movement of PM between
media through deposition and other
such mechanisms. Expertise in
evaluating natural and anthropogenic
sources and emissions of PM and
resulting ambient levels, pertinent
monitoring or measurement methods for
PM, and spatial and temporal trends in
PM atmospheric concentrations.
(b) Human Exposure and Risk
Assessment/Modeling. Expertise in
measuring general population exposure
to PM and/or in modeling exposure to
PM emitted from ambient and indoor
sources. Expertise in human health risk
analysis modeling for PM related to
respiratory, cardiovascular, and other
non-cancer health effects as well as
cancer. Expertise in characterizing
uncertainty in exposure and risk
analyses.
(c) Dosimetry. Expertise in evaluating
the dosimetry of animal and human
subjects, including identifying factors
associated with differential patterns of
inhalation and/or deposition/uptake in
various respiratory tract regions that
may contribute to differential
susceptibility of sensitive
subpopulations and animal-to-human
dosimetry extrapolations.
(d) Toxicology. Expertise in
evaluating and interpreting
experimental laboratory animal studies,
including animal models simulating
sensitive subpopulations (e.g., children,
older adults, individuals with
preexisting respiratory or cardiac
disease), and in vitro studies of the
effects of PM on pulmonary and
extrapulmonary (e.g., cardiovascular,
immunological) endpoints and cancer.
(e) Controlled Human Exposure.
Expertise in evaluating and interpreting
controlled human exposure studies of
the effects of PM on the general
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
10527
population and sensitive
subpopulations (e.g., children, older
adults, individuals with preexisting
respiratory or cardiac disease). Experts
would include physicians with
experience in the clinical treatment of
cardiopulmonary diseases, including
asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease (COPD), and diabetes.
(f) Epidemiology and Biostatistics.
Expertise in evaluating epidemiological
evidence of the effects of exposures to
ambient PM and other major air
pollutants (e.g., ozone, SO2, NO2, carbon
monoxide) on the general population
and sensitive subpopulations (e.g.,
children, older adults, individuals with
preexisting respiratory or cardiac
disease). Expertise in evaluating a broad
range of health endpoints, including
mortality and morbidity effects (e.g.,
respiratory symptoms, lung function
decrements, asthma medication use,
physiological changes or biomarkers for
cardiac changes, cardiopulmonaryrelated emergency department visits,
cardiopulmonary-related hospital
admissions, cancer). Expertise in using
biostatistical models to interpret
epidemiological evidence.
(g) Effects on Visibility Impairment.
Expertise in evaluating and interpreting
studies of the effects of PM on local
visibility impairment as well as regional
haze. Expertise would include
evaluating visibility trends and
conditions in Class I, urban, and nonurban areas, studies of economic value
of improving visual air quality, and
approaches to assessing public
perceptions of visibility impairment and
judgments about the acceptability of
varying degrees of visibility impairment.
(h) Ecological Effects. Expertise in
evaluating the effects of exposure to PM
on agricultural crops and natural
ecosystems and their components, both
flora and fauna, ranging from
biochemical/sub-cellular effects on
organisms to increasingly more complex
levels of ecosystem organization.
Appropriate expertise disciplines
include: Aquatic chemistry; aquatic
ecology/biology; limnology; terrestrial
ecology; forest ecology; grassland
ecology; rangeland ecology; terrestrial/
aquatic biogeochemistry; terrestrial/
aquatic nutrient cycling; and terrestrial/
aquatic wildlife biology and soil
chemistry.
(i) Other Welfare Effects. Expertise in
evaluating the effects of PM on other
public welfare effects, including damage
to materials, and also the atmospheric
interactions of PM as related to global
climate conditions.
(j) Ecosystem Exposure and Risk
Assessment/Modeling. Expertise in
deposition modeling across a range of
E:\FR\FM\08MRN1.SGM
08MRN1
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
10528
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 45 / Thursday, March 8, 2007 / Notices
scales from local watershed to
landscape to continental; static and
dynamic ecosystem response models;
integrated assessment models;
identification of bioindicators useful for
tracking ecosystem change; and
methods and approaches for estimating
damage to ecosystems.
(k) Resource Valuation. Expertise in
ecological resource and other welfare
effects valuation and/or economic
benefits assessment approaches and
models.
Process and Deadline for Submitting
Nominations: Any interested person or
organization may nominate qualified
individuals to add expertise to the
CASAC PM Review Panel in the areas
of expertise described above.
Nominations should be submitted in
electronic format through the SAB Web
site at the following URL: https://
www.epa.gov/sab; or directly via the
Form for Nominating Individuals to
Panels of the EPA Science Advisory
Board link found at URL: https://
www.epa.gov/sab/panels/
paneltopics.html. Please follow the
instructions for submitting nominations
carefully. To be considered,
nominations should include all of the
information required on the associated
forms. Anyone unable to submit
nominations using the electronic form
and who has any questions concerning
the nomination process may contact Mr.
Fred Butterfield, DFO, as indicated
above in this notice. Nominations
should be submitted in time to arrive no
later than March 29, 2007.
For nominees to be considered, please
include: Contact information; a
curriculum vitae; a biosketch of no more
than two paragraphs (containing
information on the nominee’s current
position, educational background, areas
of expertise and research activities,
service on other advisory committees
and professional societies; the
candidate’s special expertise related to
the panel being formed; and sources of
recent grant and/or contract support).
The EPA SAB Staff Office will
acknowledge receipt of nominations.
The names and biosketchs of qualified
nominees identified by respondents to
the Federal Register notice and
additional experts identified by the SAB
Staff will be posted on the SAB Web site
at: https://www.epa.gov/sab. Public
comments on this ‘‘Short List’’ of
candidates will be accepted for 21
calendar days. The public will be
requested to provide relevant
information or other documentation on
nominees that the SAB Staff Office
should consider in evaluating
candidates.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
18:53 Mar 07, 2007
Jkt 211001
For the EPA SAB Staff Office, a
balanced subcommittee or review panel
includes candidates who possess the
necessary domains of knowledge, the
relevant scientific perspectives (which,
among other factors, can be influenced
by work history and affiliation), and the
collective breadth of experience to
adequately address the charge. In
establishing the final CASAC PM
Review Panel, the SAB Staff Office will
consider public comments on the ‘‘Short
List’’ of candidates, information
provided by the candidates themselves,
and background information
independently gathered by the SAB
Staff Office. Specific criteria to be used
for Panel membership include: (a)
Scientific and/or technical expertise,
knowledge, and experience (primary
factors); (b) availability and willingness
to serve; (c) absence of financial
conflicts of interest; (d) absence of an
appearance of a lack of impartiality; and
(e) skills working in committees,
subcommittees and advisory panels;
and, for the Panel as a whole, (f)
diversity of, and balance among,
scientific expertise, viewpoints, etc.
The SAB Staff Office’s evaluation of
an absence of financial conflicts of
interest will include a review of the
‘‘Confidential Financial Disclosure
Form for Special Government
Employees Serving on Federal Advisory
Committees at the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency’’ (EPA Form 3110–
48). This confidential form allows
Government officials to determine
whether there is a statutory conflict
between that person’s public
responsibilities (which includes
membership on an EPA Federal
advisory committee) and private
interests and activities, or the
appearance of a lack of impartiality, as
defined by Federal regulation. The form
may be viewed and downloaded from
the following URL address: https://
www.epa.gov/sab/pdf/epaform311048.pdf.
The approved policy under which the
EPA SAB Office selects subcommittees
and review panels is described in the
following document: Overview of the
Panel Formation Process at the
Environmental Protection Agency
Science Advisory Board (EPA–SAB–EC–
02–010), which is posted on the SAB
Web site at: https://www.epa.gov/sab/
pdf/ec02010.pdf.
Dated: March 2, 2007.
Anthony F. Maciorowski,
Deputy Director, EPA Science Advisory Board
Staff Office.
[FR Doc. E7–4168 Filed 3–7–07; 8:45 am]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[FRL–8284–4]
Notice of a Second Workshop on the
Development of Regulations for
Aircraft Public Water Systems
Environmental Protection
Agency.
ACTION: Notice of a public meeting.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is holding a second
workshop on the development of
regulations for aircraft public water
systems. This workshop will provide
information about recent activities and
an overview of approaches for the
proposed Aircraft Drinking Water Rule.
This is the second workshop in a series
designed to gain perspectives from
representatives from industry,
government, public interest groups, and
the general public.
DATES: The workshop will be held from
9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Eastern time (ET), on
Wednesday, March 28, 2007 and from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. ET, Thursday, March 29,
2007, with one and a half hour lunch
breaks each day.
ADDRESSES: The meeting will be held at
the Sheraton Crystal City Hotel, 1800
Jefferson Davis Highway, Arlington, VA
in Ballroom A. The hotel is located
adjacent to the Crystal City Metro
Station on the blue and yellow lines.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
general information about this
workshop or to pre-register, please
contact Kathryn Aegis, RESOLVE, 1255
23rd St., NW., Washington, DC 20037,
telephone number 202–965–6393, or email at kaegis@resolv.org. For technical
inquiries regarding the development of
an aircraft drinking water rule, contact
Rick Naylor at (202) 564–3847, or by email: naylor.richard@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: There is
no charge for attending this workshop as
an observer, but seats are limited, so
register as soon as possible. We suggest
attendees book their hotel room as soon
as possible because the workshop is
being held during a peak time of the
tourist season for Washington, DC.
Special Accommodations
Any person needing special
accommodations at this meeting,
including wheelchair access, should
contact Kathryn Aegis at the phone
number or e-mail address listed in the
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
section of this notice. Requests for
special accommodations should be
made at least five business days in
advance of the public meeting.
E:\FR\FM\08MRN1.SGM
08MRN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 45 (Thursday, March 8, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 10527-10528]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-4168]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
[FRL-8285-6]
EPA Science Advisory Board (SAB) Staff Office Request for
Nominations for Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee (CASAC)
Particular Matter (PM Review Panel)
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA or Agency)
Science Advisory Board (SAB) Staff Office is announcing the formation
of the Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee (CASAC) review panel for
Particulate Matter (PM). The SAB Staff Office is soliciting public
nominations for this Panel.
DATES: New nominations should be submitted by March 29, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Any member of the public wishing
further information regarding this Request for Nominations may contact
Mr. Fred Butterfield, Designated Federal Officer (DFO), EPA Science
Advisory Board (1400F), U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1200
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20460; via telephone/voice
mail: (202) 343-9994; fax: (202) 233-0643; or e-mail at:
butterfield.fred@epa.gov. General information concerning the CASAC or
the EPA Science Advisory Board can be found on the EPA Web site at:
https://www.epa.gov/sab.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background: The Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee (CASAC) was
established under section 109(d)(2) of the Clean Air Act (CAA or Act)
(42 U.S.C. 7409) as an independent scientific advisory committee. CASAC
provides advice, information and recommendations on the scientific and
technical aspects of air quality criteria and national ambient air
quality standards (NAAQS) under sections 108 and 109 of the Act. The
CASAC is a Federal advisory committee chartered under the Federal
Advisory Committee Act (FACA), as amended, 5 U.S.C., App. Section
109(d)(1) of the Clean Air Act (CAA) requires that EPA carry out a
periodic review and revision, as appropriate, of the air quality
criteria and the NAAQS for the six ``criteria'' air pollutants,
including PM. This Federal Register notice solicitation is seeking
nominations for additional, subject-matter experts to augment the
chartered CASAC. This CASAC Panel will review EPA's technical and
policy assessments that form the basis for updating the NAAQS for PM.
The CASAC PM Review Panel will comply with the provisions of FACA and
all appropriate SAB Staff Office procedural policies.
Nominator's Assessment of Expertise. The SAB Staff Office requests
nominees for the CASAC PM Review Panel who are nationally-recognized
experts in one or more of the following disciplines:
(a) Atmospheric Science. Expertise in evaluating the physical/
chemical properties of particulate matter including transport of PM on
urban to global scales, transformation of primary particles in the
atmosphere to secondary particles, and movement of PM between media
through deposition and other such mechanisms. Expertise in evaluating
natural and anthropogenic sources and emissions of PM and resulting
ambient levels, pertinent monitoring or measurement methods for PM, and
spatial and temporal trends in PM atmospheric concentrations.
(b) Human Exposure and Risk Assessment/Modeling. Expertise in
measuring general population exposure to PM and/or in modeling exposure
to PM emitted from ambient and indoor sources. Expertise in human
health risk analysis modeling for PM related to respiratory,
cardiovascular, and other non-cancer health effects as well as cancer.
Expertise in characterizing uncertainty in exposure and risk analyses.
(c) Dosimetry. Expertise in evaluating the dosimetry of animal and
human subjects, including identifying factors associated with
differential patterns of inhalation and/or deposition/uptake in various
respiratory tract regions that may contribute to differential
susceptibility of sensitive subpopulations and animal-to-human
dosimetry extrapolations.
(d) Toxicology. Expertise in evaluating and interpreting
experimental laboratory animal studies, including animal models
simulating sensitive subpopulations (e.g., children, older adults,
individuals with preexisting respiratory or cardiac disease), and in
vitro studies of the effects of PM on pulmonary and extrapulmonary
(e.g., cardiovascular, immunological) endpoints and cancer.
(e) Controlled Human Exposure. Expertise in evaluating and
interpreting controlled human exposure studies of the effects of PM on
the general population and sensitive subpopulations (e.g., children,
older adults, individuals with preexisting respiratory or cardiac
disease). Experts would include physicians with experience in the
clinical treatment of cardiopulmonary diseases, including asthma,
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and diabetes.
(f) Epidemiology and Biostatistics. Expertise in evaluating
epidemiological evidence of the effects of exposures to ambient PM and
other major air pollutants (e.g., ozone, SO2,
NO2, carbon monoxide) on the general population and
sensitive subpopulations (e.g., children, older adults, individuals
with preexisting respiratory or cardiac disease). Expertise in
evaluating a broad range of health endpoints, including mortality and
morbidity effects (e.g., respiratory symptoms, lung function
decrements, asthma medication use, physiological changes or biomarkers
for cardiac changes, cardiopulmonary-related emergency department
visits, cardiopulmonary-related hospital admissions, cancer). Expertise
in using biostatistical models to interpret epidemiological evidence.
(g) Effects on Visibility Impairment. Expertise in evaluating and
interpreting studies of the effects of PM on local visibility
impairment as well as regional haze. Expertise would include evaluating
visibility trends and conditions in Class I, urban, and non-urban
areas, studies of economic value of improving visual air quality, and
approaches to assessing public perceptions of visibility impairment and
judgments about the acceptability of varying degrees of visibility
impairment.
(h) Ecological Effects. Expertise in evaluating the effects of
exposure to PM on agricultural crops and natural ecosystems and their
components, both flora and fauna, ranging from biochemical/sub-cellular
effects on organisms to increasingly more complex levels of ecosystem
organization. Appropriate expertise disciplines include: Aquatic
chemistry; aquatic ecology/biology; limnology; terrestrial ecology;
forest ecology; grassland ecology; rangeland ecology; terrestrial/
aquatic biogeochemistry; terrestrial/aquatic nutrient cycling; and
terrestrial/aquatic wildlife biology and soil chemistry.
(i) Other Welfare Effects. Expertise in evaluating the effects of
PM on other public welfare effects, including damage to materials, and
also the atmospheric interactions of PM as related to global climate
conditions.
(j) Ecosystem Exposure and Risk Assessment/Modeling. Expertise in
deposition modeling across a range of
[[Page 10528]]
scales from local watershed to landscape to continental; static and
dynamic ecosystem response models; integrated assessment models;
identification of bioindicators useful for tracking ecosystem change;
and methods and approaches for estimating damage to ecosystems.
(k) Resource Valuation. Expertise in ecological resource and other
welfare effects valuation and/or economic benefits assessment
approaches and models.
Process and Deadline for Submitting Nominations: Any interested
person or organization may nominate qualified individuals to add
expertise to the CASAC PM Review Panel in the areas of expertise
described above. Nominations should be submitted in electronic format
through the SAB Web site at the following URL: https://www.epa.gov/sab;
or directly via the Form for Nominating Individuals to Panels of the
EPA Science Advisory Board link found at URL: https://www.epa.gov/sab/
panels/paneltopics.html. Please follow the instructions for submitting
nominations carefully. To be considered, nominations should include all
of the information required on the associated forms. Anyone unable to
submit nominations using the electronic form and who has any questions
concerning the nomination process may contact Mr. Fred Butterfield,
DFO, as indicated above in this notice. Nominations should be submitted
in time to arrive no later than March 29, 2007.
For nominees to be considered, please include: Contact information;
a curriculum vitae; a biosketch of no more than two paragraphs
(containing information on the nominee's current position, educational
background, areas of expertise and research activities, service on
other advisory committees and professional societies; the candidate's
special expertise related to the panel being formed; and sources of
recent grant and/or contract support).
The EPA SAB Staff Office will acknowledge receipt of nominations.
The names and biosketchs of qualified nominees identified by
respondents to the Federal Register notice and additional experts
identified by the SAB Staff will be posted on the SAB Web site at:
https://www.epa.gov/sab. Public comments on this ``Short List'' of
candidates will be accepted for 21 calendar days. The public will be
requested to provide relevant information or other documentation on
nominees that the SAB Staff Office should consider in evaluating
candidates.
For the EPA SAB Staff Office, a balanced subcommittee or review
panel includes candidates who possess the necessary domains of
knowledge, the relevant scientific perspectives (which, among other
factors, can be influenced by work history and affiliation), and the
collective breadth of experience to adequately address the charge. In
establishing the final CASAC PM Review Panel, the SAB Staff Office will
consider public comments on the ``Short List'' of candidates,
information provided by the candidates themselves, and background
information independently gathered by the SAB Staff Office. Specific
criteria to be used for Panel membership include: (a) Scientific and/or
technical expertise, knowledge, and experience (primary factors); (b)
availability and willingness to serve; (c) absence of financial
conflicts of interest; (d) absence of an appearance of a lack of
impartiality; and (e) skills working in committees, subcommittees and
advisory panels; and, for the Panel as a whole, (f) diversity of, and
balance among, scientific expertise, viewpoints, etc.
The SAB Staff Office's evaluation of an absence of financial
conflicts of interest will include a review of the ``Confidential
Financial Disclosure Form for Special Government Employees Serving on
Federal Advisory Committees at the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency'' (EPA Form 3110-48). This confidential form allows Government
officials to determine whether there is a statutory conflict between
that person's public responsibilities (which includes membership on an
EPA Federal advisory committee) and private interests and activities,
or the appearance of a lack of impartiality, as defined by Federal
regulation. The form may be viewed and downloaded from the following
URL address: https://www.epa.gov/sab/pdf/epaform3110-48.pdf.
The approved policy under which the EPA SAB Office selects
subcommittees and review panels is described in the following document:
Overview of the Panel Formation Process at the Environmental Protection
Agency Science Advisory Board (EPA-SAB-EC-02-010), which is posted on
the SAB Web site at: https://www.epa.gov/sab/pdf/ec02010.pdf.
Dated: March 2, 2007.
Anthony F. Maciorowski,
Deputy Director, EPA Science Advisory Board Staff Office.
[FR Doc. E7-4168 Filed 3-7-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P