Workforce Guidelines for Home Energy Upgrades, 68781-68782 [2010-28289]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 9, 2010 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Office of Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy
Workforce Guidelines for Home Energy
Upgrades
Office of Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy, U.S. Department of
Energy.
ACTION: Notice of availability; request
for comments.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Department of
Energy Office of Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy (EERE) announces
the availability of a set of Standard
Work Specifications (SWSs), Job Task
Analyses (JTAs) and essential
Knowledge, Skills and Abilities (KSAs)
applicable to energy efficiency retrofits
of single family homes which together
constitute the Workforce Guidelines for
Home Energy Upgrades (‘‘Workforce
Guidelines’’). These Workforce
Guidelines are intended for voluntary
adoption by the Weatherization
Assistance Program, EPA Home
Performance with Energy Star program
partners, State, municipal and utility
ratepayer-funded energy efficiency
retrofit programs, and private sector
home performance contractors, as well
as any other organization, company, or
individual involved in energy efficiency
retrofits of residential homes. Through
this notice, DOE also requests public
comments on the Workforce Guidelines.
DATES: Comments on the Workforce
Guidelines for Home Energy Upgrades
must be received by 5 p.m. Eastern Time
on Friday, January 7, 2011.
ADDRESSES: A draft of the Workforce
Guidelines is available for review and
public comment online at: https://
www.weatherization.energy.gov/
retrofit_guidelines.
You may also submit comments by
any of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Via Internet: https://
www.weatherization.energy.gov/
retrofit_guidelines.
• By e-mail:
retrofit.guidelines@nrel.gov.
• By mail: Retrofit Guidelines,
National Renewable Energy Laboratory,
1617 Cole Blvd., Golden, CO 80401–
3305.
For further information on how to
submit comments, please see the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Benjamin Goldstein, Weatherization and
Intergovernmental Programs, Mailstop
EE–2K, Office of Energy Efficiency and
wwoods2 on DSK1DXX6B1PROD with NOTICES_PART 1
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:18 Nov 08, 2010
Jkt 223001
Renewable Energy, U.S. Department of
Energy, 1000 Independence Avenue
SW., Washington, DC 20585. Phone
number: (202) 287–1553. E-mail:
retrofit.guidelines@nrel.gov.
Kavita M. Patel, U.S. Department of
Energy, Office of the General Counsel,
Forrestal Building, GC–71, 1000
Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20585. Phone number:
(202) 586–0669. E-mail:
kavita.patel@hq.doe.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: EERE has
tasked the National Renewable Energy
Laboratory with developing a suite of
voluntary national guidelines for the
work and workforce involved in home
energy upgrades. The Workforce
Guidelines build upon the considerable
body of material already in circulation
and the cumulative knowledge gathered
throughout the 30-year history of the
energy efficiency retrofit industry.
The effort to develop the Workforce
Guidelines for Home Energy Upgrades
has its origins in and is supported by
the Weatherization Assistance Program
(WAP) Training and Technical
Assistance Plan (T&TA). The T&TA plan
seeks to ensure that Recovery Act
investments help lay a permanent
foundation for a stronger WAP. This
foundation could also provide WAP
workers hired to support Recovery Act
implementation with future
employment opportunities in the
rapidly expanding home performance
industry.
Concurrently, in May 2009, the Vice
President’s Middle Class Task Force
asked the White House Council on
Environmental Quality (CEQ) to develop
recommendations for Federal action to
lay the architecture for a self-sustaining
home energy efficiency retrofit industry.
In response, CEQ facilitated a broad
interagency process that resulted in the
development of six recommendations
described in detail in a report titled
Recovery Through Retrofit.1 These
recommendations were carefully crafted
to stimulate the growth of a vibrant,
private sector-led market for residential
energy efficiency retrofits.
The Recovery Through Retrofit
Workforce Working Group—which
includes DOE, the Department of Labor,
the Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA), the Department of Education, the
Small Business Administration, and
other agencies—identified the lack of a
skilled and credentialed workforce as a
key barrier to scaling up the residential
energy efficiency retrofit market. The
report recommended establishing a set
1 https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/
Recovery_Through_Retrofit_Final_Report.pdf (last
visited Oct. 7, 2010).
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
68781
of national guidelines to promote highquality energy efficiency retrofit work.
DOE developed the Workforce
Guidelines in response to this
recommendation.
The process of developing the
Workforce Guidelines has involved a
historic collaboration between WAP
practitioners and trainers, home
performance contractors, building
scientists, organized labor, healthy
homes and worker safety experts, and
other professionals in the building
trades and throughout the retrofit
industry.
The first iteration of the development
process involved 60 technical experts
and resulted in a first draft of 270 pages
of SWSs. A second group of 80 technical
experts thoroughly reviewed and edited
the draft SWSs, including a WAP
programmatic review, 6 climate-specific
reviews, a healthy homes review
coordinated by the EPA, and a worker
health and safety review coordinated by
Department of Labor. While
development of the SWSs was moving
forward, 50 retrofit technicians and
trainers from around the country
conducted a professionally-facilitated
workshop to develop the Job Task
Analyses and Essential KSAs for the
four most common home energy retrofit
job classifications: Energy Auditor,
Installer/Technician, Crew Chief, and
Quality Assurance Professional/
Inspector.
• The Workforce Guidelines consist
of four components: Standard Work
Specifications, a Technical Standards
Reference Guide, Job Task Analyses and
Knowledge, Skills, and Abilities.
• Standard Work Specifications
define the minimum requirements for
high quality energy efficiency retrofit
work and the conditions necessary to
achieve the desired outcomes of a given
retrofit measure.
• Technical Standards are standards,
regulations and codes developed by
government, industry or third-party
standards development organizations—
such as OSHA, EPA, the American
Society of Heating, Refrigerating and
Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE),
ASTM International, and the Building
Performance Institute—that define the
safety, materials, installation, and
application standards relevant to
residential building energy efficiency
retrofits.
• Job Task Analyses identify and
catalog all of the tasks a given worker
typically performs when completing a
suite of energy efficiency improvements
in a home.
• Essential KSAs identify the
minimum knowledge, skills, and
abilities that a skilled worker should
E:\FR\FM\09NON1.SGM
09NON1
wwoods2 on DSK1DXX6B1PROD with NOTICES_PART 1
68782
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 216 / Tuesday, November 9, 2010 / Notices
possess to perform high quality energy
efficiency retrofit work for the given
occupation or job level.
The Standard Work Specifications are
organized by section, corresponding to
the different systems found in
residential buildings. Within each
section are subtopics and details that
contain the critical specification that
must be achieved to ensure quality
work. Throughout the Standard Work
Specifications document are footnotes
referring to the relevant Technical
Standards, which are then summarized
in Appendix D.
The Job Task Analyses and Essential
Knowledge Skills and Abilities are made
up of ‘‘Content Outlines’’ for the four
common energy efficiency retrofit job
classifications. They were developed by
professional psychometricians working
with experienced technicians from
WAP, the residential energy efficiency
retrofit contractor community, and
organized labor. The Content Outlines
provide a detailed inventory of the
minimum knowledge, skills and
abilities (both cognitive and
psychomotor) that a worker should
possess to perform high quality energy
efficiency retrofit work.
Once finalized, the Workforce
Guidelines will:
1. Enable State and local WAP
officials and other residential retrofit
program administrators to strengthen
their field guides and other work
manuals by incorporating the high
quality SWSs contained in the
Workforce Guidelines.
2. Assist training providers in
developing course content and curricula
consistent with an industry-recognized
suite of Job Task Analyses.
3. Increase workforce mobility up
career ladders and across career lattices
by establishing a clear set of essential
KSAs upon which worker credentials
should be based.
4. Build confidence among consumers
and the energy efficiency finance
community that retrofit work will be
completed in a quality manner and
produce the expected energy savings
and health benefits.
5. Lay the foundation for a more
robust worker certification and training
program accreditation architecture.
In coordination with the DOE-led
effort, the EPA has developed a
keystone document pertaining to health
considerations in residential energy
efficiency upgrades. These EPA Healthy
Indoor Environment Protocols for Home
Energy Upgrades and the DOE
Workforce Guidelines were developed
in conjunction with one another and are
complementary. Both are intended to
provide a set of voluntary measures that
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:18 Nov 08, 2010
Jkt 223001
the WAP and other energy efficiency
retrofit efforts can adopt to increase the
quality of the retrofit work performed
while maintaining or improving the
health and safety of the occupant(s).
Together, the DOE and EPA
documents will: provide a robust and
practical set of resources for retrofit
contractors, trainers, and program
administrators; help improve the quality
of the work performed in this expanding
industry; promote occupant health and
safety; and drive consumer demand for
energy efficiency retrofit services. DOE
encourages reviewers of the Workforce
Guidelines with a specific interest in
healthy indoor environments to also
review and comment on the EPA
document, available at: https://
www.epa.gov/iaq/homes/retrofits.html.
Issues on Which DOE Seeks Comment
DOE is particularly interested in
receiving comments and views of
interested parties on the following
issues:
• The appropriateness of each of the
Standard Work Specifications, both at
the chapter level and at the individual
task level.
• The citations of technical standards
referenced in the Standard Work
Specifications.
• The tasks, knowledge skills and
abilities identified for the four (4) job
descriptions.
Submission of Comments
DOE will accept comments, data, and
information regarding the proposed
guidelines no later than January 7, 2011.
If submitting comments via the DOE
Web page, please follow all instructions
on the Web page: https://
www.weatherization.energy.gov/
retrofit_guidelines. This Web site is
specifically designed for ease of use to
facilitate the public comment process.
DOE will transfer comments received on
our Web site to Regulations.gov for
public review.
Comments, data, and information
uploaded to Regulations.gov, or
submitted via DOE’s e-mail address or
regular mail should be provided in
WordPerfect, Microsoft Word, PDF, or
text (ASCII) file format. Interested
parties should avoid the use of special
characters or any form of encryption,
and wherever possible, comments
should include the electronic signature
of the author. Comments, data, and
information submitted to DOE via
regular mail may include one signed
paper original.
According to 10 CFR 1004.11, any
person submitting information that he
or she believes to be confidential and
exempt by law from public disclosure
PO 00000
Frm 00035
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
should submit two copies: One copy of
the document including all the
information believed to be confidential,
and one copy of the document that does
not include the information believed to
be confidential. DOE will make its own
determination as to the confidential
status of the information and treat it
according to its determination.
Factors of interest to DOE when
evaluating requests to treat submitted
information as confidential include:
(1) A description of the items;
(2) Whether and why such items are
customarily treated as confidential
within the industry;
(3) Whether the information is
generally known by or available from
other sources;
(4) Whether the information has
previously been made available to
others without obligation concerning its
confidentiality;
(5) An explanation of the competitive
injury to the submitting person which
would result from public disclosure;
(6) A date upon which such
information might lose its confidential
nature due to the passage of time; and
(7) Why disclosure of the information
would be contrary to the public interest.
Issued in Washington, DC, on November 4,
2010.
Cathy Zoi,
Acting Under Secretary of Energy, Assistant
Secretary for Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy.
[FR Doc. 2010–28289 Filed 11–8–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[EPA–HQ–OAR–2007–0563; FRL- 9224–1;
EPA ICR No. 1764.04; OMB Control No.
2060–0348]
Agency Information Collection
Activities: Submission to OMB for
Review and Approval; Comment
Request; National Volatile Organic
Compound Emission Standards for
Consumer Products (Renewal)
Environmental Protection
Agency.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
In compliance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)(44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.), this document
announces that EPA is planning to
submit a request to renew an existing
approved Information Collection
Request (ICR) to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB). This is
a request to renew an existing approved
collection. This ICR is scheduled to
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\09NON1.SGM
09NON1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 216 (Tuesday, November 9, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 68781-68782]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-28289]
[[Page 68781]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
Workforce Guidelines for Home Energy Upgrades
AGENCY: Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, U.S.
Department of Energy.
ACTION: Notice of availability; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Department of Energy Office of Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy (EERE) announces the availability of a set of Standard
Work Specifications (SWSs), Job Task Analyses (JTAs) and essential
Knowledge, Skills and Abilities (KSAs) applicable to energy efficiency
retrofits of single family homes which together constitute the
Workforce Guidelines for Home Energy Upgrades (``Workforce
Guidelines''). These Workforce Guidelines are intended for voluntary
adoption by the Weatherization Assistance Program, EPA Home Performance
with Energy Star program partners, State, municipal and utility
ratepayer-funded energy efficiency retrofit programs, and private
sector home performance contractors, as well as any other organization,
company, or individual involved in energy efficiency retrofits of
residential homes. Through this notice, DOE also requests public
comments on the Workforce Guidelines.
DATES: Comments on the Workforce Guidelines for Home Energy Upgrades
must be received by 5 p.m. Eastern Time on Friday, January 7, 2011.
ADDRESSES: A draft of the Workforce Guidelines is available for review
and public comment online at: https://www.weatherization.energy.gov/retrofit_guidelines.
You may also submit comments by any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Via Internet: https://www.weatherization.energy.gov/retrofit_guidelines.
By e-mail: retrofit.guidelines@nrel.gov.
By mail: Retrofit Guidelines, National Renewable Energy
Laboratory, 1617 Cole Blvd., Golden, CO 80401-3305.
For further information on how to submit comments, please see the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Benjamin Goldstein, Weatherization and
Intergovernmental Programs, Mailstop EE-2K, Office of Energy Efficiency
and Renewable Energy, U.S. Department of Energy, 1000 Independence
Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20585. Phone number: (202) 287-1553. E-mail:
retrofit.guidelines@nrel.gov.
Kavita M. Patel, U.S. Department of Energy, Office of the General
Counsel, Forrestal Building, GC-71, 1000 Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20585. Phone number: (202) 586-0669. E-mail:
kavita.patel@hq.doe.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: EERE has tasked the National Renewable
Energy Laboratory with developing a suite of voluntary national
guidelines for the work and workforce involved in home energy upgrades.
The Workforce Guidelines build upon the considerable body of material
already in circulation and the cumulative knowledge gathered throughout
the 30-year history of the energy efficiency retrofit industry.
The effort to develop the Workforce Guidelines for Home Energy
Upgrades has its origins in and is supported by the Weatherization
Assistance Program (WAP) Training and Technical Assistance Plan (T&TA).
The T&TA plan seeks to ensure that Recovery Act investments help lay a
permanent foundation for a stronger WAP. This foundation could also
provide WAP workers hired to support Recovery Act implementation with
future employment opportunities in the rapidly expanding home
performance industry.
Concurrently, in May 2009, the Vice President's Middle Class Task
Force asked the White House Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) to
develop recommendations for Federal action to lay the architecture for
a self-sustaining home energy efficiency retrofit industry. In
response, CEQ facilitated a broad interagency process that resulted in
the development of six recommendations described in detail in a report
titled Recovery Through Retrofit.\1\ These recommendations were
carefully crafted to stimulate the growth of a vibrant, private sector-
led market for residential energy efficiency retrofits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/Recovery_Through_Retrofit_Final_Report.pdf (last visited Oct. 7, 2010).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Recovery Through Retrofit Workforce Working Group--which
includes DOE, the Department of Labor, the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA), the Department of Education, the Small Business
Administration, and other agencies--identified the lack of a skilled
and credentialed workforce as a key barrier to scaling up the
residential energy efficiency retrofit market. The report recommended
establishing a set of national guidelines to promote high-quality
energy efficiency retrofit work. DOE developed the Workforce Guidelines
in response to this recommendation.
The process of developing the Workforce Guidelines has involved a
historic collaboration between WAP practitioners and trainers, home
performance contractors, building scientists, organized labor, healthy
homes and worker safety experts, and other professionals in the
building trades and throughout the retrofit industry.
The first iteration of the development process involved 60
technical experts and resulted in a first draft of 270 pages of SWSs. A
second group of 80 technical experts thoroughly reviewed and edited the
draft SWSs, including a WAP programmatic review, 6 climate-specific
reviews, a healthy homes review coordinated by the EPA, and a worker
health and safety review coordinated by Department of Labor. While
development of the SWSs was moving forward, 50 retrofit technicians and
trainers from around the country conducted a professionally-facilitated
workshop to develop the Job Task Analyses and Essential KSAs for the
four most common home energy retrofit job classifications: Energy
Auditor, Installer/Technician, Crew Chief, and Quality Assurance
Professional/Inspector.
The Workforce Guidelines consist of four components:
Standard Work Specifications, a Technical Standards Reference Guide,
Job Task Analyses and Knowledge, Skills, and Abilities.
Standard Work Specifications define the minimum
requirements for high quality energy efficiency retrofit work and the
conditions necessary to achieve the desired outcomes of a given
retrofit measure.
Technical Standards are standards, regulations and codes
developed by government, industry or third-party standards development
organizations-- such as OSHA, EPA, the American Society of Heating,
Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE), ASTM
International, and the Building Performance Institute--that define the
safety, materials, installation, and application standards relevant to
residential building energy efficiency retrofits.
Job Task Analyses identify and catalog all of the tasks a
given worker typically performs when completing a suite of energy
efficiency improvements in a home.
Essential KSAs identify the minimum knowledge, skills, and
abilities that a skilled worker should
[[Page 68782]]
possess to perform high quality energy efficiency retrofit work for the
given occupation or job level.
The Standard Work Specifications are organized by section,
corresponding to the different systems found in residential buildings.
Within each section are subtopics and details that contain the critical
specification that must be achieved to ensure quality work. Throughout
the Standard Work Specifications document are footnotes referring to
the relevant Technical Standards, which are then summarized in Appendix
D.
The Job Task Analyses and Essential Knowledge Skills and Abilities
are made up of ``Content Outlines'' for the four common energy
efficiency retrofit job classifications. They were developed by
professional psychometricians working with experienced technicians from
WAP, the residential energy efficiency retrofit contractor community,
and organized labor. The Content Outlines provide a detailed inventory
of the minimum knowledge, skills and abilities (both cognitive and
psychomotor) that a worker should possess to perform high quality
energy efficiency retrofit work.
Once finalized, the Workforce Guidelines will:
1. Enable State and local WAP officials and other residential
retrofit program administrators to strengthen their field guides and
other work manuals by incorporating the high quality SWSs contained in
the Workforce Guidelines.
2. Assist training providers in developing course content and
curricula consistent with an industry-recognized suite of Job Task
Analyses.
3. Increase workforce mobility up career ladders and across career
lattices by establishing a clear set of essential KSAs upon which
worker credentials should be based.
4. Build confidence among consumers and the energy efficiency
finance community that retrofit work will be completed in a quality
manner and produce the expected energy savings and health benefits.
5. Lay the foundation for a more robust worker certification and
training program accreditation architecture.
In coordination with the DOE-led effort, the EPA has developed a
keystone document pertaining to health considerations in residential
energy efficiency upgrades. These EPA Healthy Indoor Environment
Protocols for Home Energy Upgrades and the DOE Workforce Guidelines
were developed in conjunction with one another and are complementary.
Both are intended to provide a set of voluntary measures that the WAP
and other energy efficiency retrofit efforts can adopt to increase the
quality of the retrofit work performed while maintaining or improving
the health and safety of the occupant(s).
Together, the DOE and EPA documents will: provide a robust and
practical set of resources for retrofit contractors, trainers, and
program administrators; help improve the quality of the work performed
in this expanding industry; promote occupant health and safety; and
drive consumer demand for energy efficiency retrofit services. DOE
encourages reviewers of the Workforce Guidelines with a specific
interest in healthy indoor environments to also review and comment on
the EPA document, available at: https://www.epa.gov/iaq/homes/retrofits.html.
Issues on Which DOE Seeks Comment
DOE is particularly interested in receiving comments and views of
interested parties on the following issues:
The appropriateness of each of the Standard Work
Specifications, both at the chapter level and at the individual task
level.
The citations of technical standards referenced in the
Standard Work Specifications.
The tasks, knowledge skills and abilities identified for
the four (4) job descriptions.
Submission of Comments
DOE will accept comments, data, and information regarding the
proposed guidelines no later than January 7, 2011. If submitting
comments via the DOE Web page, please follow all instructions on the
Web page: https://www.weatherization.energy.gov/retrofit_guidelines.
This Web site is specifically designed for ease of use to facilitate
the public comment process. DOE will transfer comments received on our
Web site to Regulations.gov for public review.
Comments, data, and information uploaded to Regulations.gov, or
submitted via DOE's e-mail address or regular mail should be provided
in WordPerfect, Microsoft Word, PDF, or text (ASCII) file format.
Interested parties should avoid the use of special characters or any
form of encryption, and wherever possible, comments should include the
electronic signature of the author. Comments, data, and information
submitted to DOE via regular mail may include one signed paper
original.
According to 10 CFR 1004.11, any person submitting information that
he or she believes to be confidential and exempt by law from public
disclosure should submit two copies: One copy of the document including
all the information believed to be confidential, and one copy of the
document that does not include the information believed to be
confidential. DOE will make its own determination as to the
confidential status of the information and treat it according to its
determination.
Factors of interest to DOE when evaluating requests to treat
submitted information as confidential include:
(1) A description of the items;
(2) Whether and why such items are customarily treated as
confidential within the industry;
(3) Whether the information is generally known by or available from
other sources;
(4) Whether the information has previously been made available to
others without obligation concerning its confidentiality;
(5) An explanation of the competitive injury to the submitting
person which would result from public disclosure;
(6) A date upon which such information might lose its confidential
nature due to the passage of time; and
(7) Why disclosure of the information would be contrary to the
public interest.
Issued in Washington, DC, on November 4, 2010.
Cathy Zoi,
Acting Under Secretary of Energy, Assistant Secretary for Energy
Efficiency and Renewable Energy.
[FR Doc. 2010-28289 Filed 11-8-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P