Privacy Act of 1974; System of Records, 34706-34711 [2011-14807]
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34706
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 114 / Tuesday, June 14, 2011 / Notices
Many of the acquired risks such as
obesity, advanced age, air travel,
chronic diseases, cancer, and
hospitalization are increasing in the
United States, and we can expect to see
increasing numbers of people affected
by DVT/PE.
The CDC’s Division of Blood
Disorders will conduct focus groups to
develop messaging concepts that will be
used in a public awareness campaign to
build knowledge and awareness of DVT/
PE, increase recognition of the
symptoms and risk factors for DVT/PE,
and empower people to take action.
The project will address these
objectives in two stages: in the first stage
the Contractor selected will conduct
eight (8) formative focus groups with
nine (9) participants in each focus group
to explore consumer knowledge,
attitudes, and beliefs (KABs) toward
DVT. Message concepts will be
developed from insights emerging from
this exploratory research phase. The
Contractor will conduct eight (8) focus
groups with nine (9) participants in
each focus group during the second
stage to test the message concepts and
identify possible ways to present the
messages.
The Contractor selected will work
with CDC to identify and recruit focus
group participants. Formative research
participants will include adults (aged
25–64) who have been hospitalized in
the last year and seniors (aged 65–80).
Message testing participants will
include adults (aged 25–64) who have
been hospitalized in the last year and
seniors (aged 65–80). Participants will
be recruited to participate in one of
sixteen in-person focus groups that will
be conducted in the following cities:
• Atlanta, Baltimore, Pittsburgh, and
Tampa (formative research task), and
• Atlanta, Baltimore, Pittsburgh, and
Tampa (message testing task).
It is estimated that a total of 144
respondents will have to be screened in
order to recruit 36 focus group
participants for each year. There are no
costs to the respondents other than their
time. The estimated annualized burden
hours are 125.
ESTIMATED ANNUALIZED BURDEN HOURS
Number of
respondents
Average
burden per
response
(in hours)
Number responses per
respondent
Type of respondent
Form name
Seniors (65–80) ..............................................
Adults (25–64) recently hospitalized
Seniors (65–80) ..............................................
Adults (25–64) recently hospitalized
Seniors (65–80) ..............................................
Participant Screener .......................................
144
1
5/60
Participant Re-screener .................................
36
1
9/60
Moderator’s Guide:
Focus Groups.
Research
36
1
1.5
Moderator’s Guide: Message Testing Focus
Groups.
36
1
1.5
Informed Consent Form .................................
36
1
6/60
Adults (25–64) recently hospitalized
Seniors (65–80) ..............................................
Adults (25–64) recently hospitalized
Seniors (65–80) ..............................................
Adults (25–64) recently hospitalized
Dated: June 3, 2011.
Daniel L. Holcomb,
Reports Clearance Officer, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
[FR Doc. 2011–14422 Filed 6–13–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4163–18–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention
[Docket Number CDC–2011–0006]
[RIN 0920–ZA03]
Privacy Act of 1974; System of
Records
Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS), Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC),
National Institute for Occupational
Safety and Health (NIOSH).
ACTION: Notification of proposed altered
system of records; clarification.
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AGENCY:
On May 27, 2011, the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention
SUMMARY:
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Formative
(CDC), located within the Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS),
published a Notification of Proposed
Altered System of Records for its system
of records, 09–20–0147, ‘‘Occupational
Health Epidemiological Studies and
EEOICPA Program Records, HHS/CDC/
NIOSH.’’ This document offers
clarifications to the May publication.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before June 27, 2011.
ADDRESSES: You may submit written
comments, identified by the Privacy Act
System of Records Number 09–20–0147,
to the following address: HHS/CDC
Senior Official for Privacy (SOP), Office
of the Chief Information Security Officer
(OCISO), 4770 Buford Highway—M/S:
F–35, Atlanta, GA 30341.
You may also submit written
comments electronically to https://
www.regulations.gov. Comments must
be identified by Docket No. CDC–2011–
0006. Please follow directions at
https://www.regulations.gov to submit
comments.
All relevant comments received will
be posted publicly to https://
www.regulations.gov without change,
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including any personal or proprietary
information provided. An electronic
version of the draft is available to
download at https://
www.regulations.gov.
Written comments, identified by
Docket No. CDC–2011–0006, and/or
Privacy Act System of Records Number
09–20–0147, will be available for public
inspection Monday through Friday,
except for legal holidays, from 9 a.m.
until 3 p.m., Eastern Daylight Time, at
4770 Buford Highway—M/S: F–35,
Atlanta, GA 30341. Please call ahead to
(770) 488–8660, and ask for a
representative from Office of the Chief
Information Security Officer (OCISO) to
schedule your visit. Comments may also
be viewed at https://
www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Beverly E. Walker, Chief Privacy Officer,
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, 4770 Buford Highway—M/
S: F–35, Atlanta, Georgia 30341, (770)
488–8660. This is not a toll-free number.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In the May
27, 2011, notice (76 FR 31212), CDC
provided information regarding the
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amendment of the categories of
individuals covered by the system of
records; the categories of records; the
authorities; and the purposes for
maintenance of the system of records. In
addition, we proposed to add new
routine uses. The purpose of these
modifications was to provide notice as
to how the National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health
(NIOSH), a component of CDC, is
complying with the Privacy Act in
executing its responsibilities under the
James Zadroga 9/11 Health and
Compensation Act of 2010 found at
Title XXXIII of the Public Health
Service Act, 42 U.S.C. 300mm—
300mm–61 (Title XXXIII). CDC offers
the following clarifications.
1. We are adding a clause to the first
sentence of the section entitled
‘‘Categories of records in the system’’ to
address the information that is in the
record system for individuals presumed
to be enrolled in the World Trade Center
(WTC) Health Program as of July 1,
2011. We are also adding a sentence at
the end of the section to notify
individuals that information that is
provided to HHS that is from a system
of records under the control of the
Terrorist Screening Center (TSC),
Federal Bureau of Investigation,
Department of Justice, remains law
enforcement information and retains the
exemptions listed in Justice/FBI–019, 72
FR 47073 (Aug. 22, 2007) and
promulgated under 28 CFR 16.96(r).
Accordingly, that section now reads,
in relevant part:
Categories of records in the system:
* * * Also included are applications
for enrollment in the World Trade
Center (WTC) Health Program and,
information on individual enrolled or
otherwise claiming eligibility and
qualification for enrollment; once
enrolled, information on these
individuals may include screening and
medical records, and financial records
related to payment and reimbursements
for care under the WTC program.
Information that is provided to HHS that
is from a system of records under the
control of the Terrorist Screening Center
(TSC), Federal Bureau of Investigation,
Department of Justice, remains law
enforcement information and retains the
exemptions listed in Justice/FBI–019, 72
FR 47073 (Aug. 22, 2007) and
promulgated under 28 CFR 16.96(r).
2. Provisions of the Zadroga Act
mandate that no individual on the
terrorist watchlist may be qualified as
eligible to receive the benefits under
this Act. In order to implement this
provision, NIOSH published a routine
use that would permit disclosure of
certain personal identifying information
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to the Department of Justice and its
contractors to provide terrorist
screening support in accordance with
this statutory obligation to qualify
individuals under this program. We are
retaining the language that describes the
information released to the Department
of Justice and that this disclosure is for
the purpose of permitting the
Department of Justice to perform the
terrorist screening required by Title
XXXIII of the Public Service Act. We
have added a sentence at the end of the
description of the routine uses for the
WTC Health Program records affirming
that NIOSH will comply with applicable
Federal law with respect to the records
in this system. We have also added
language to provide a more complete
explanation of the information the
Department of Justice will retain
consistent with Justice/FBI–019,
Terrorist Screening Center Records
System. That routine use has been
clarified, as follows:
Disclosure to the Department of Justice and
its contractors to provide terrorist screening
support in accordance with NIOSH’s
statutory obligation to determine whether an
individual is on the ‘‘terrorist watch list’’ as
specified in Section 3311 and Section 3321
of the Zadroga Act and is eligible and
qualified to be enrolled or certified in the
WTC Health Program as specified by statute.
Disclosure by NIOSH, under this routine use,
will be limited to only the information that
is necessary to determine eligibility and
qualification under the statute. The
Department of Justice will only retain
information provided by HHS that relates to
(1) Individuals known or appropriately
suspected to be or have been engaged in
conduct constituting, in preparation for, in
aid of, or related to terrorism (‘‘known or
suspected terrorists’’); (2) individuals
identified during the terrorism screening
process as a possible identity match to a
known or suspected terrorist; (3) individuals
who are misidentified as a possible identity
match to a known or suspected terrorist in
order to expedite future screening of those
individuals and to support the appeals
process; and/or (4) individuals about whom
a terrorist watchlist-related appeal inquiry
has been made. Information that does not fall
into one of the above listed categories will
not be retained by the Department of Justice.
3. We are modifying the Retention
and disposal section to delete any
reference to the Department of Justice
which adheres to its own records
retention schedule. This section will
now read as follows:
Retention and disposal: Records are
retained and disposed of according to
the provisions of the CDC Electronic
Records Control Schedule for NIOSH
records. Research records are
maintained in the agency for three years
after the close of the study. Records
transferred to the Federal Records
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Center when no longer needed for
evaluation and analysis are destroyed
after 75 years for epidemiologic studies,
unless needed for further study. Records
from health hazard evaluations will be
retained at least 20 years. Energy
Employees Occupational Illness
Compensation Program Act (EEOICPA)
program records are transferred to the
Federal Records Center 15 years after
the case file becomes inactive and are
destroyed after 75 years. WTC Health
Program records are transferred to the
Federal Records Center 15 years after
the case file becomes inactive and are
destroyed after 75 years.
In our May 27, 2011, notice, we
provided opportunity to comment until
June 27, 2011, on the new routine uses
in the altered system of records as is
required under the Privacy Act, 5 U.S.C.
552a(e)(11). By publishing in the
Federal Register, the agency provides
individuals with notice of the
information that the agency will be
disclosing and the purpose of that
disclosure. Britt v. Naval Investigative
Service, 886 F.2d 544, 548 (3rd Cir.
1989). ‘‘A new ‘routine use’ is one
which involves disclosure of records for
a new purpose * * * or to a new
recipient or category of recipients.’’ 40
FR 28948, 28966 (July 9, 1975). In the
May 27, 2011, notice, we specified we
would be providing information to the
Department of Justice for the purpose of
that agency conducting the terrorist
screening under specified provisions of
Title XXXIII of the Public Health
Service Act and that the information
disclosed would be limited to that
information needed for this screening
purpose. The clarifications provided in
this notice do not establish a new
purpose, new recipient or category of
recipients, notwithstanding additional
information provided as to the retention
by the Department of Justice of certain
information identified in the May 27,
2011, notice. Since the additional
information does not create a new
routine use or substantively alter the
language pertaining to the information
that NIOSH will disclose or why it is
disclosing it, the comment period will
remain the same and comments must be
received on or before June 27, 2011 as
specified in the May 27, 2011 notice
specified above. The entire resulting
system of records notice, as amended
and clarified, appears below.
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Dated: June 7, 2011.
James D. Seligman,
Chief Information Officer, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
SYSTEM NAME:
Occupational Health Epidemiological
Studies and EEOICPA Program Records
and WTC Health Program Records,
HHS/CDC/NIOSH
SECURITY CLASSIFICATION:
None.
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SYSTEM LOCATION:
WTC Health Program, NIOSH,
Century Center Boulevard, Building
2400, Mail Stop E–74, Atlanta, GA
30329.
Division of Surveillance, Hazard
Evaluation, and Field Studies
(DSHEFS), National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health
(NIOSH), Robert A. Taft Laboratories,
4676 Columbia Parkway, Cincinnati, OH
45226.
Division of Respiratory Disease
Studies (DRDS), National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health
(NIOSH), 1095 Willowdale Road,
Morgantown, WV 20505–2888.
Pittsburgh Research Laboratory,
NIOSH, 626 Cochrans Mill Road,
Pittsburgh, PA 15156.
Spokane Research Laboratory, NIOSH,
315 E. Montgomery Avenue, Spokane,
WA 99207.
Office of Compensation Analysis and
Support (OCAS), NIOSH, Robert A. Taft
Laboratories, 4676 Columbia Parkway,
Cincinnati, Ohio 45226, and Federal
Records Center, 3150 Bertwynn Drive,
Dayton, OH 45439.
Data are also occasionally located at
contractor sites as studies are
developed, data collected, and reports
written. A list of contractor sites where
individually identifiable data are
currently located is available upon
request to the system manager.
Also, occasionally data may be
located at the facilities of collaborating
researchers where analyses are
performed, data collected and reports
written. A list of these facilities is
available upon request to the system
manager. Data may be located only at
those facilities that have an adequate
data security program and the
collaborating researcher must return the
data to NIOSH or destroy individual
identifiers at the conclusion of the
project.
CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS COVERED BY THE
SYSTEM:
That segment of the population
exposed to physical and/or chemical
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agents or other workplace hazards that
may damage the human body in any
way. Some examples are: (1) Organic
carcinogens; (2) inorganic carcinogens;
(3) mucosal or dermal irritants; (4)
fibrogenic materials; (5) acute toxic
agents including sensitizing agents; (6)
neurotoxic agents; (7) mutagenic (male
and female) and teratogenic agents; (8)
bio-accumulating non-carcinogen
agents; (9) chronic vascular diseasecausing agents; and (10) ionizing
radiation. Also included are those
individuals in the general population
who have been selected as control
groups. Workers employed by the
Department of Energy and its
predecessor agencies and their
contractors are also included, as are
cancer-related claimants under the
Energy Employees Occupational Illness
Compensation Program Act of 2000
(EEOICPA). Individuals enrolled in or
otherwise claiming eligibility and
qualification for enrollment in the WTC
Health Program created under Title
XXXIII of the Public Health Service Act.
CATEGORIES OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM:
Physical exams, sputum cytology
results, questionnaires, urine test
records, X-rays, medical history,
pulmonary function test records,
medical disability forms, blood test
records, hearing test results, smoking
history, occupational histories, previous
and current employment records, union
membership records, driver’s license
data, demographic information,
exposure history information and test
results are examples of the records in
this system. The specific types of
records collected and maintained are
determined by the needs of the
individual study. Also included are
records of cancer-related claimants
under EEOICPA.’’ Also included are
applications for enrollment in the World
Trade Center (WTC) Health Program and
information on individuals enrolled in
or otherwise claiming eligibility and
qualification for enrollment; once
enrolled, information on these
individuals may include screening and
medical records, and financial records
related to payment and reimbursements
for care under the WTC program.
Information that is provided to HHS that
is from a system of records under the
control of the Terrorist Screening Center
(TSC), Federal Bureau of Investigation,
Department of Justice remains law
enforcement information and retains the
exemptions listed in Justice/FBI–019, 72
FR 47,073 (Aug. 22, 2007) and
promulgated under 28 CFR 16.96 (r).
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AUTHORITY FOR MAINTENANCE OF THE SYSTEM:
Public Health Service Act, Section
301, ‘‘Research and Investigation’’ (42
U.S.C. 241); Occupational Safety and
Health Act, Section 20, ‘‘Research and
Related Activities’’ (29 U.S.C. 669); the
Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of
1977, Section 501, ‘‘Research’’ (30
U.S.C. 951) and the Energy Employees
Occupational Illness Compensation
Program Act of 2000 (EEOICPA) (42
U.S.C.S. 7384, et seq.); and the Public
Health Service Act, Title XXXIII,
‘‘World Trade Center Health Program’’
(42 U.S.C. 300mm–300mm–61).
PURPOSE(S):
Studies carried out under this system
are to evaluate mortality and morbidity
of occupationally related diseases and
injuries, to determine their causes, and
to lead toward prevention of
occupationally related diseases and
injuries in the future. EEOICPA records
are maintained to enable NIOSH to
fulfill its dose reconstruction
responsibilities under the Act. WTC
Health Program records in this system
are maintained and used to enable
NIOSH to fulfill WTC Program
Administrator responsibilities make
determinations about eligibility and
qualification, provide for medical care,
pay for that care, and coordinate with
other health benefit programs under
Title XXXIII of the Public Health
Service Act, 42 U.S.C. 300mm–300mm–
61.
ROUTINE USES OF RECORDS MAINTAINED IN THE
SYSTEM, INCLUDING CATEGORIES OF USERS AND
THE PURPOSES OF SUCH USES:
In the event of litigation where the
defendant is: (a) The Department, any
component of the Department, or any
employee of the Department in his or
her official capacity; (b) the United
States where the Department determines
that the claim, if successful, is likely to
directly affect the operations of the
Department or any of its components; or
(c) any Department employee in his or
her individual capacity where the
Department of Justice has agreed to
represent such employee, for example,
in defending a claim against the Public
Health Service based upon an
individual’s mental or physical
condition and alleged to have arisen
because of activities of the Public Health
Service in connection with such
individual, disclosure may be made to
the Department of Justice to enable that
Department to present an effective
defense, provided that such disclosure
is compatible with the purpose for
which the records were collected.
Records may be disclosed to the
Department of Justice when (1) HHS, or
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any component thereof; or (2) any
employee of HHS in his or her official
capacity; or (3) any employee of HHS in
his or her individual capacity where the
Department of Justice or HHS has agreed
to represent the employee; or (4) the
United States, is a party to litigation or
has an interest in such litigation, and
the use of such records by the
Department of Justice is deemed by HHS
to be relevant and necessary to the
litigation; provided, however, that in
each case it has been determined that
the disclosure is compatible with the
purpose for which the records were
collected.
Records may be disclosed to a
contractor performing or working on a
contract for HHS and who has a need to
have access to the information in the
performance of its duties or activities for
the HHS in accordance with law and
with the contract. The contractor is
required to comply with the applicable
provisions of the Privacy Act.
Records subject to the Privacy Act are
disclosed to private firms for data entry,
scientific support services, nosology
coding, computer systems analysis and
computer programming services. The
contractors promptly return data entry
records after the contracted work is
completed. The contractors are required
to maintain Privacy Act safeguards.
Certain diseases or exposures may be
reported to State and/or local health
departments where the State has a
legally constituted reporting program for
communicable diseases and which
provides for the confidentiality of the
information.
Disclosure of records or portions of
records may be made to a Member of
Congress or a Congressional staff
member submitting a verified request
involving an individual who is entitled
to the information and has requested
assistance from the Member or staff
member. The Member of Congress or
Congressional staff member must
provide a copy of the individual’s
written request for assistance.
Disclosure may be made to NIOSH
collaborating researchers (e.g., NIOSH
contractors, grantees, cooperative
agreement holders, or other Federal or
State scientists) in order to accomplish
the research purpose for which the
records are collected. The collaborating
researchers must agree in writing to
comply with the confidentiality
provisions of the Privacy Act and
NIOSH must have determined that the
researchers’ data security procedures
will protect confidentiality.
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THE FOLLOWING ROUTINE USES APPLY ONLY TO
EPIDEMIOLOGICAL STUDIES:
In the event of litigation initiated at
the request of NIOSH, the Institute may
disclose such records as it deems
desirable or necessary to the Department
of Justice and to the Department of
Labor, Office of the Solicitor, where
appropriate, to enable the Departments
to effectively represent the Institute,
provided such disclosure is compatible
with the purpose for which the records
were collected. The only types of
litigation proceedings that NIOSH is
authorized to request are: (1)
Enforcement of a subpoena issued to an
employer to provide relevant
information; and (2) administrative
search warrants to obtain access to
places of employment and relevant
information therein and related
contempt citations against an employer
for failure to comply with a warrant
obtained by the Institute; and (3)
injunctive relief against employers or
mine operators to obtain access to
relevant information.
Portions of records (name, Social
Security number if known, date of birth,
and last known address) may be
disclosed to one or more of the sources
selected from those listed in Appendix
I, as applicable. This may be done for
obtaining a determination regarding an
individual’s health status and last
known address. If the sources determine
that the individual is dead, NIOSH may
obtain death certificates, which state the
cause of death, from the appropriate
Federal, State or local agency. If the
individual is alive, NIOSH may obtain
information on health status from
disease registries or on last known
address in order to contact the
individual for a health study or to
inform him or her of health findings.
This information on health status
enables NIOSH to evaluate whether
excess occupationally related mortality
or morbidity is occurring.
Disclosure of epidemiologic study
records pertaining to uranium workers
may be made to the Department of
Justice to be used in determining
eligibility for compensation payments to
the uranium workers or their survivors.
Records may be disclosed by CDC in
connection with public health activities
to the Social Security Administration
for sources of locating information to
accomplish the research or program
purposes for which the records were
collected.
THE FOLLOWING ROUTINE USES APPLY ONLY TO
EEOICPA PROGRAM RECORDS:
Disclosure of dose reconstructions,
epidemiologic study records and
employment and medical information
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34709
pertaining to Department of Energy
employees and other cancer-related
claimants covered under the Energy
Employees Occupational Illness
Compensation Program Act may be
made to the Department of Labor to be
used in determining eligibility for
compensation payments to such
claimants and in defending its
determinations under the Act.
Disclosure of personal identifying
information associated with cancerrelated claims under the Energy
Employees Occupational Illness
Compensation Program Act may be
made to the Department of Energy, other
Federal agencies, other government or
private entities and to private-sector
employers to permit these entities to
retrieve records required to reconstruct
radiation doses and to enable NIOSH to
evaluate petitions for inclusion in the
Special Exposure Cohort.
Completed dose reconstruction
reports for cancer-related claims under
the Energy Employees Occupational
Illness Compensation Program Act may
be released to the Department of Energy
and the Department of Labor to permit
these entities to fulfill EEOICPA and
HHS dose reconstruction regulation
requirements to notify claimants of their
dose reconstruction results.
Disclosure of personal identifying
information associated with cancerrelated claims under the Energy
Employees Occupational Illness
Compensation Program Act may be
made to identified witnesses as
designated by the Office of
Compensation Analysis and Support to
assist NIOSH in obtaining information
required to complete the dose
reconstruction process and to enable
NIOSH to evaluate petitions for
inclusion in the Special Exposure
Cohort.
Records may also be disclosed when
deemed desirable or necessary, to the
Department of Justice, and/or the
Department of Labor, to enable those
Departments to effectively represent the
Department of Health and Human
Services and/or the Department of Labor
in litigation involving the Energy
Employees Occupational Illness
Compensation Program Act of 2000
(EEOICPA).
THE FOLLOWING ROUTINE USES APPLY ONLY TO
WTC HEALTH PROGRAM RECORDS:
Disclosure to the Department of
Justice and its contractors to provide
terrorist screening support in
accordance with NIOSH’s statutory
obligation to determine whether an
individual is on the ‘‘terrorist watch
list’’ as specified in Section 3311 and
Section 3321 of the Zadroga Act and is
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eligible and qualified to be enrolled or
certified in the WTC Health Program as
specified by statute. Disclosure by
NIOSH, under this routine use, will be
limited to only the information that is
necessary to determine eligibility and
qualification under the statute. The
Department of Justice will only retain
information provided by HHS that
relates to (1) Individuals known or
suspected to be or have been engaged in
conduct constituting, in preparation for,
in aid of, or related to terrorism
(‘‘known or suspected terrorists’’); (2)
individuals identified during the
terrorism screening process as a possible
identity match to a known or suspected
terrorist; (3) individuals who are
misidentified as a possible identity
match to a known or suspected terrorist
in order to expedite future screening of
those individuals and to support the
appeals process; and/or (4) individuals
about whom a terrorist watchlist-related
appeal inquiry has been made.
Information that does not fall into one
of the above listed categories will not be
retained by the Department of Justice.
Disclosure of personally identifying
information to applicable entities for the
purpose of reducing or recouping WTC
Health Program payments made to
individuals under a workers’
compensation law or plan of the United
States, a State, or locality, or other workrelated injury or illness benefit plan of
the employer of such worker or public
or private health plan as required under
Title XXXIII of the Public Health
Service Act. NIOSH will maintain, use,
and disclose the information in the
System of Records in accordance with
applicable Federal law.
2. PHYSICAL SAFEGUARDS:
Hard copy records are kept in locked
cabinets in locked rooms. Guard service
in buildings provides screening of
visitors. The limited access, secured
computer room contains fire
extinguishers and an overhead sprinkler
system. Computer workstations and
automated records are located in
secured areas. Electronic anti-intrusion
devices are in operation at the Federal
Records Center.
3. PROCEDURAL SAFEGUARDS:
Manager files, card files, electronic
computer tapes, disks, files and
printouts, microfilm, microfiche, and
other files as appropriate.
Data sets are password protected and/
or encrypted. Protection for
computerized records both on the
mainframe and the NIOSH Local Area
Network (LAN) includes programmed
verification of valid user identification
code and password prior to logging on
to the system, mandatory password
changes, limited log-ins, virus
protection, and user rights/file attribute
restrictions. Password protection
imposes user name and password log-in
requirements to prevent unauthorized
access. Each user name is assigned
limited access rights to files and
directories at varying levels to control
file sharing. There are routine daily
backup procedures and secure off-site
storage is available for backup tapes.
Additional safeguards may be built into
the program by the system analyst as
warranted by the sensitivity of the data.
Employees and contractor staff who
maintain records are instructed to check
with the system manager prior to
making disclosures of data. When
individually identified data are being
used in a room, admittance at either
government or contractor sites is
restricted to specifically authorized
personnel. Privacy Act provisions are
included in contracts, and the Project
Director, contract officers and project
officers oversee compliance with these
requirements. Upon completion of the
contract, all data will be either returned
to CDC or destroyed, as specified by the
contract.
RETRIEVABILITY:
4. IMPLEMENTATION GUIDELINES:
Name, assigned identification
number, or social security number.
The safeguards outlined above are in
accordance with the HHS Information
Security Program Policy and FIPS Pub
200, ‘‘Minimum Security Requirements
for Federal Information and Information
Systems.’’ Data maintained on CDC’s
Mainframe and the NIOSH LAN are in
compliance with OMB Circular A–130,
Appendix III. Security is provided for
information collection, processing,
transmission, storage, and
dissemination in general support
systems and major applications. The
CDC LAN currently operates under a
Microsoft Windows Server and is in
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR STORING,
RETRIEVING, ACCESSING, RETAINING, AND
DISPOSING OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM:
STORAGE:
SAFEGUARDS:
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
1. AUTHORIZED USERS:
A database software security package
is utilized to control unauthorized
access to the system. Access is granted
to only a limited number of physicians,
scientists, statisticians, and designated
support staff or contractors, as
authorized by the system manager to
accomplish the stated purposes for
which the data in this system have been
collected.
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Frm 00072
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compliance with applicable security
standards.
RETENTION AND DISPOSAL:
Records are retained and disposed of
according to the provisions of the CDC
Electronic Records Control Schedule for
NIOSH records. Research records are
maintained in the agency for three years
after the close of the study. Records
transferred to the Federal Records
Center when no longer needed for
evaluation and analysis are destroyed
after 75 years for epidemiologic studies,
unless needed for further study. Records
from health hazard evaluations will be
retained at least 20 years. EEOICPA
program records are transferred to the
Federal Records Center 15 years after
the case file becomes inactive and are
destroyed after 75 years. WTC Health
Program records are transferred to the
Federal Records Center 15 years after
the case file becomes inactive and are
destroyed after 75 years.
Paper files that have been scanned to
create electronic copies are disposed of
after the copies are verified. Disposal
methods include erasing computer tapes
and burning or shredding paper
materials.
SYSTEM MANAGER(S) AND ADDRESS:
Director, WTC Health Program,
NIOSH, Century Center Boulevard,
Building 2400, Mail Stop E–74, Atlanta,
GA 30329.
Program Management Officer,
Division of Surveillance, Hazard
valuations, and Field Studies (DSHEFS),
National Institute for Occupational
Safety and Health (NIOSH), Robert A.
Taft Laboratories, Rm. 40A, 4676
Columbia Parkway, Cincinnati, OH
45226.
Director, Division of Respiratory
Disease Studies (DRDS), National
Institute for Occupational Safety and
Health (NIOSH), Bldg. ALOSH, Rm.
H2920, 1095 Willowdale Road,
Morgantown, WV 26505–2888.
Director, Pittsburgh Research
Laboratory, NIOSH, 626 Cochrans Mill
Road, Pittsburgh, PA 15156.
Director, Spokane Research
Laboratory, NIOSH, 315 E. Montgomery
Avenue, Spokane, WA 99207.
Director, Office of Compensation and
Support (OCAS), NIOSH, Robert A. Taft
Laboratories, 4676 Columbia Parkway,
Cincinnati, OH 45226
Policy coordination is provided by:
Director, National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health
(NIOSH), Bldg. HHH, Rm. 715H, 200
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20201.
E:\FR\FM\14JNN1.SGM
14JNN1
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 114 / Tuesday, June 14, 2011 / Notices
NOTIFICATION PROCEDURE:
An individual may learn if a record
exists about himself or herself by
contacting the system manager at the
above address. Requesters in person
must provide driver’s license or other
positive identification. Individuals who
do not appear in person must either: (1)
Submit a notarized request to verify
their identity; or (2) certify that they are
the individuals they claim to be and that
they understand that the knowing and
willful request for or acquisition of a
record pertaining to an individual under
false pretenses is a criminal offense
under the Privacy Act subject to a
$5,000 fine.
An individual who requests
notification of or access to medical
records shall, at the time the request is
made, designate in writing a responsible
representative who is willing to review
the record and inform the subject
individual of its contents at the
representative’s discretion. A subject
individual will be granted direct access
to a medical record if the system
manager determines direct access is not
likely to have adverse effect on the
subject individual.
The following information must be
provided when requesting notification:
(1) Full name; (2) the approximate date
and place of the study, if known; and (3)
nature of the questionnaire or study in
which the requester participated.
RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES:
Same as notification procedures.
Requesters should also reasonably
specify the record contents being
sought. An accounting of disclosures
that have been made of the record, if
any, may be requested.
CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES:
Contact the official at the address
specified under System Manager above,
reasonably identify the record and
specify the information being contested,
the corrective action sought, and the
reasons for requesting the correction,
along with supporting information to
show how the record is inaccurate,
incomplete, untimely, or irrelevant.
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
RECORD SOURCE CATEGORIES:
For research studies, vital status
information is obtained from Federal,
State and local governments and other
available sources selected from those
listed in Appendix I, but information is
obtained directly from the individual
and employer records, whenever
possible. EEOICPA records are obtained
from the individual subject and the
employer’s records. WTC Health
Program Records are obtained from
individual applicants and enrollees,
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from medical providers who have
treated eligible individuals, and from
data centers that are repositories of
demographic and clinical information
about WTC responders and survivors.
SYSTEMS EXEMPTED FROM CERTAIN PROVISIONS
OF THE ACT:
None.
Appendix I—Potential Sources for
Determination of Health Status, Vital
Status and/or Last Known Address
Military records
Appropriate State Motor Vehicle Registration
Departments
Appropriate State Driver’s License
Departments
Appropriate State Government Division of:
Assistance Payments (Welfare), Social
Services, Medical Services, Food Stamp
Program, Child Support, Board of
Corrections, Aging, Indian Affairs,
Worker’s Compensation, Disability
Insurance
Retail Credit Association follow-up
Veterans Administration files
Appropriate employee union or association
records
Appropriate company pension or
employment records
Company group insurance records
Appropriate State Vital Statistics Offices
Life insurance companies
Railroad Retirement Board
Area nursing homes
Area Indian Trading Posts
Mailing List Correction Cards (U.S. Postal
Service)
Letters and telephone conversations with
former employees of the same
establishment as cohort member
Appropriate local newspaper (obituaries)
Social Security Administration
Internal Revenue Service
National Death Index
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation
State Disease Registries
Commercial Telephone Directories
[FR Doc. 2011–14807 Filed 6–10–11; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4163–18–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES (HHS)
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
Notice of Hearing; Reconsideration of
Disapproval of Colorado State Plan
Amendments (SPA) 10–034
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Notice of hearing.
AGENCY:
This notice announces an
administrative hearing to be held on
August 4, 2011, at the CMS Denver
Regional Office, Colorado State Bank
Building, 1600 Broadway, Suite 700,
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00073
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
34711
Denver, Colorado 80202–4367 to
reconsider CMS’ decision to disapprove
Colorado SPA 10–034.
DATES: Requests to participate in the
hearing as a party must be received by
the presiding officer by June 29, 2011.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Benjamin Cohen, Presiding Officer,
CMS, 2520 Lord Baltimore Drive,
Suite L, Baltimore, Maryland 21244,
Telephone: (410) 786–3169.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
notice announces an administrative
hearing to reconsider CMS’ decision to
disapprove Colorado SPA 10–034 which
was submitted on September 30, 2010,
and disapproved on March 10, 2011.
The SPA proposed to revise the
methods and standards for establishing
payment rates for non-brokered and
brokered non-emergency medical
transportation.
The disapproval was based on a
finding that the State had not complied
with the requirements of section
1902(a)(73)(A) of the Social Security Act
to solicit advice from designees of
Indian Health Programs and Urban
Indian Organizations prior to
submission of a SPA likely to have a
direct effect on Indians, Indian Health
Programs, or Urban Indian
Organizations.
The issues to be considered at the
hearing are:
• Applicability: Whether the statutory
requirement in section 1902(a)(73)(A) of
the Social Security Act (the Act) for
solicitation of advice prior to the
submission of a SPA that is likely to
have a direct effect on Indians, Indian
Health Programs, or Urban Indian
Organizations is applicable to this SPA
when there are significant numbers of
Indian beneficiaries who receive
transportation services, and Indian
Health Programs and Urban Indian
Organizations that are transportation
providers in the State.
• Solicitation of Advice: Whether
Colorado met the statutory requirement
at section 1902(a)(73)(A) to solicit
advice when it did not include in any
issuance to Indian health programs and
Urban Indian Organizations prior to the
submission of the SPA any specific
solicitation of advice or comment on the
SPA (or any description of a process for
the submission of comments or
initiation of a dialogue with the State).
• Timing: Whether Colorado met the
statutory requirement at section
1902(a)(73)(A) to solicit advice when it
issued general public notice on June 25,
2010, of the rate reductions that were to
go into effect July 1, 2010, but did not
issue notice to the Indian health
programs or Urban Indian Organizations
E:\FR\FM\14JNN1.SGM
14JNN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 114 (Tuesday, June 14, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 34706-34711]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-14807]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
[Docket Number CDC-2011-0006]
[RIN 0920-ZA03]
Privacy Act of 1974; System of Records
AGENCY: Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH).
ACTION: Notification of proposed altered system of records;
clarification.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: On May 27, 2011, the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC), located within the Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS), published a Notification of Proposed Altered System of
Records for its system of records, 09-20-0147, ``Occupational Health
Epidemiological Studies and EEOICPA Program Records, HHS/CDC/NIOSH.''
This document offers clarifications to the May publication.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before June 27, 2011.
ADDRESSES: You may submit written comments, identified by the Privacy
Act System of Records Number 09-20-0147, to the following address: HHS/
CDC Senior Official for Privacy (SOP), Office of the Chief Information
Security Officer (OCISO), 4770 Buford Highway--M/S: F-35, Atlanta, GA
30341.
You may also submit written comments electronically to https://www.regulations.gov. Comments must be identified by Docket No. CDC-
2011-0006. Please follow directions at https://www.regulations.gov to
submit comments.
All relevant comments received will be posted publicly to https://www.regulations.gov without change, including any personal or
proprietary information provided. An electronic version of the draft is
available to download at https://www.regulations.gov.
Written comments, identified by Docket No. CDC-2011-0006, and/or
Privacy Act System of Records Number 09-20-0147, will be available for
public inspection Monday through Friday, except for legal holidays,
from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m., Eastern Daylight Time, at 4770 Buford
Highway--M/S: F-35, Atlanta, GA 30341. Please call ahead to (770) 488-
8660, and ask for a representative from Office of the Chief Information
Security Officer (OCISO) to schedule your visit. Comments may also be
viewed at https://www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Beverly E. Walker, Chief Privacy
Officer, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 4770 Buford
Highway--M/S: F-35, Atlanta, Georgia 30341, (770) 488-8660. This is not
a toll-free number.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In the May 27, 2011, notice (76 FR 31212),
CDC provided information regarding the
[[Page 34707]]
amendment of the categories of individuals covered by the system of
records; the categories of records; the authorities; and the purposes
for maintenance of the system of records. In addition, we proposed to
add new routine uses. The purpose of these modifications was to provide
notice as to how the National Institute for Occupational Safety and
Health (NIOSH), a component of CDC, is complying with the Privacy Act
in executing its responsibilities under the James Zadroga 9/11 Health
and Compensation Act of 2010 found at Title XXXIII of the Public Health
Service Act, 42 U.S.C. 300mm--300mm-61 (Title XXXIII). CDC offers the
following clarifications.
1. We are adding a clause to the first sentence of the section
entitled ``Categories of records in the system'' to address the
information that is in the record system for individuals presumed to be
enrolled in the World Trade Center (WTC) Health Program as of July 1,
2011. We are also adding a sentence at the end of the section to notify
individuals that information that is provided to HHS that is from a
system of records under the control of the Terrorist Screening Center
(TSC), Federal Bureau of Investigation, Department of Justice, remains
law enforcement information and retains the exemptions listed in
Justice/FBI-019, 72 FR 47073 (Aug. 22, 2007) and promulgated under 28
CFR 16.96(r).
Accordingly, that section now reads, in relevant part:
Categories of records in the system: * * * Also included are
applications for enrollment in the World Trade Center (WTC) Health
Program and, information on individual enrolled or otherwise claiming
eligibility and qualification for enrollment; once enrolled,
information on these individuals may include screening and medical
records, and financial records related to payment and reimbursements
for care under the WTC program. Information that is provided to HHS
that is from a system of records under the control of the Terrorist
Screening Center (TSC), Federal Bureau of Investigation, Department of
Justice, remains law enforcement information and retains the exemptions
listed in Justice/FBI-019, 72 FR 47073 (Aug. 22, 2007) and promulgated
under 28 CFR 16.96(r).
2. Provisions of the Zadroga Act mandate that no individual on the
terrorist watchlist may be qualified as eligible to receive the
benefits under this Act. In order to implement this provision, NIOSH
published a routine use that would permit disclosure of certain
personal identifying information to the Department of Justice and its
contractors to provide terrorist screening support in accordance with
this statutory obligation to qualify individuals under this program. We
are retaining the language that describes the information released to
the Department of Justice and that this disclosure is for the purpose
of permitting the Department of Justice to perform the terrorist
screening required by Title XXXIII of the Public Service Act. We have
added a sentence at the end of the description of the routine uses for
the WTC Health Program records affirming that NIOSH will comply with
applicable Federal law with respect to the records in this system. We
have also added language to provide a more complete explanation of the
information the Department of Justice will retain consistent with
Justice/FBI-019, Terrorist Screening Center Records System. That
routine use has been clarified, as follows:
Disclosure to the Department of Justice and its contractors to
provide terrorist screening support in accordance with NIOSH's
statutory obligation to determine whether an individual is on the
``terrorist watch list'' as specified in Section 3311 and Section
3321 of the Zadroga Act and is eligible and qualified to be enrolled
or certified in the WTC Health Program as specified by statute.
Disclosure by NIOSH, under this routine use, will be limited to only
the information that is necessary to determine eligibility and
qualification under the statute. The Department of Justice will only
retain information provided by HHS that relates to (1) Individuals
known or appropriately suspected to be or have been engaged in
conduct constituting, in preparation for, in aid of, or related to
terrorism (``known or suspected terrorists''); (2) individuals
identified during the terrorism screening process as a possible
identity match to a known or suspected terrorist; (3) individuals
who are misidentified as a possible identity match to a known or
suspected terrorist in order to expedite future screening of those
individuals and to support the appeals process; and/or (4)
individuals about whom a terrorist watchlist-related appeal inquiry
has been made. Information that does not fall into one of the above
listed categories will not be retained by the Department of Justice.
3. We are modifying the Retention and disposal section to delete
any reference to the Department of Justice which adheres to its own
records retention schedule. This section will now read as follows:
Retention and disposal: Records are retained and disposed of
according to the provisions of the CDC Electronic Records Control
Schedule for NIOSH records. Research records are maintained in the
agency for three years after the close of the study. Records
transferred to the Federal Records Center when no longer needed for
evaluation and analysis are destroyed after 75 years for epidemiologic
studies, unless needed for further study. Records from health hazard
evaluations will be retained at least 20 years. Energy Employees
Occupational Illness Compensation Program Act (EEOICPA) program records
are transferred to the Federal Records Center 15 years after the case
file becomes inactive and are destroyed after 75 years. WTC Health
Program records are transferred to the Federal Records Center 15 years
after the case file becomes inactive and are destroyed after 75 years.
In our May 27, 2011, notice, we provided opportunity to comment
until June 27, 2011, on the new routine uses in the altered system of
records as is required under the Privacy Act, 5 U.S.C. 552a(e)(11). By
publishing in the Federal Register, the agency provides individuals
with notice of the information that the agency will be disclosing and
the purpose of that disclosure. Britt v. Naval Investigative Service,
886 F.2d 544, 548 (3rd Cir. 1989). ``A new `routine use' is one which
involves disclosure of records for a new purpose * * * or to a new
recipient or category of recipients.'' 40 FR 28948, 28966 (July 9,
1975). In the May 27, 2011, notice, we specified we would be providing
information to the Department of Justice for the purpose of that agency
conducting the terrorist screening under specified provisions of Title
XXXIII of the Public Health Service Act and that the information
disclosed would be limited to that information needed for this
screening purpose. The clarifications provided in this notice do not
establish a new purpose, new recipient or category of recipients,
notwithstanding additional information provided as to the retention by
the Department of Justice of certain information identified in the May
27, 2011, notice. Since the additional information does not create a
new routine use or substantively alter the language pertaining to the
information that NIOSH will disclose or why it is disclosing it, the
comment period will remain the same and comments must be received on or
before June 27, 2011 as specified in the May 27, 2011 notice specified
above. The entire resulting system of records notice, as amended and
clarified, appears below.
[[Page 34708]]
Dated: June 7, 2011.
James D. Seligman,
Chief Information Officer, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
System name:
Occupational Health Epidemiological Studies and EEOICPA Program
Records and WTC Health Program Records, HHS/CDC/NIOSH
Security classification:
None.
System location:
WTC Health Program, NIOSH, Century Center Boulevard, Building 2400,
Mail Stop E-74, Atlanta, GA 30329.
Division of Surveillance, Hazard Evaluation, and Field Studies
(DSHEFS), National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health
(NIOSH), Robert A. Taft Laboratories, 4676 Columbia Parkway,
Cincinnati, OH 45226.
Division of Respiratory Disease Studies (DRDS), National Institute
for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1095 Willowdale Road,
Morgantown, WV 20505-2888.
Pittsburgh Research Laboratory, NIOSH, 626 Cochrans Mill Road,
Pittsburgh, PA 15156.
Spokane Research Laboratory, NIOSH, 315 E. Montgomery Avenue,
Spokane, WA 99207.
Office of Compensation Analysis and Support (OCAS), NIOSH, Robert
A. Taft Laboratories, 4676 Columbia Parkway, Cincinnati, Ohio 45226,
and Federal Records Center, 3150 Bertwynn Drive, Dayton, OH 45439.
Data are also occasionally located at contractor sites as studies
are developed, data collected, and reports written. A list of
contractor sites where individually identifiable data are currently
located is available upon request to the system manager.
Also, occasionally data may be located at the facilities of
collaborating researchers where analyses are performed, data collected
and reports written. A list of these facilities is available upon
request to the system manager. Data may be located only at those
facilities that have an adequate data security program and the
collaborating researcher must return the data to NIOSH or destroy
individual identifiers at the conclusion of the project.
Categories of individuals covered by the system:
That segment of the population exposed to physical and/or chemical
agents or other workplace hazards that may damage the human body in any
way. Some examples are: (1) Organic carcinogens; (2) inorganic
carcinogens; (3) mucosal or dermal irritants; (4) fibrogenic materials;
(5) acute toxic agents including sensitizing agents; (6) neurotoxic
agents; (7) mutagenic (male and female) and teratogenic agents; (8)
bio-accumulating non-carcinogen agents; (9) chronic vascular disease-
causing agents; and (10) ionizing radiation. Also included are those
individuals in the general population who have been selected as control
groups. Workers employed by the Department of Energy and its
predecessor agencies and their contractors are also included, as are
cancer-related claimants under the Energy Employees Occupational
Illness Compensation Program Act of 2000 (EEOICPA). Individuals
enrolled in or otherwise claiming eligibility and qualification for
enrollment in the WTC Health Program created under Title XXXIII of the
Public Health Service Act.
Categories of records in the system:
Physical exams, sputum cytology results, questionnaires, urine test
records, X-rays, medical history, pulmonary function test records,
medical disability forms, blood test records, hearing test results,
smoking history, occupational histories, previous and current
employment records, union membership records, driver's license data,
demographic information, exposure history information and test results
are examples of the records in this system. The specific types of
records collected and maintained are determined by the needs of the
individual study. Also included are records of cancer-related claimants
under EEOICPA.'' Also included are applications for enrollment in the
World Trade Center (WTC) Health Program and information on individuals
enrolled in or otherwise claiming eligibility and qualification for
enrollment; once enrolled, information on these individuals may include
screening and medical records, and financial records related to payment
and reimbursements for care under the WTC program. Information that is
provided to HHS that is from a system of records under the control of
the Terrorist Screening Center (TSC), Federal Bureau of Investigation,
Department of Justice remains law enforcement information and retains
the exemptions listed in Justice/FBI-019, 72 FR 47,073 (Aug. 22, 2007)
and promulgated under 28 CFR 16.96 (r).
Authority for maintenance of the system:
Public Health Service Act, Section 301, ``Research and
Investigation'' (42 U.S.C. 241); Occupational Safety and Health Act,
Section 20, ``Research and Related Activities'' (29 U.S.C. 669); the
Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977, Section 501, ``Research''
(30 U.S.C. 951) and the Energy Employees Occupational Illness
Compensation Program Act of 2000 (EEOICPA) (42 U.S.C.S. 7384, et seq.);
and the Public Health Service Act, Title XXXIII, ``World Trade Center
Health Program'' (42 U.S.C. 300mm-300mm-61).
Purpose(s):
Studies carried out under this system are to evaluate mortality and
morbidity of occupationally related diseases and injuries, to determine
their causes, and to lead toward prevention of occupationally related
diseases and injuries in the future. EEOICPA records are maintained to
enable NIOSH to fulfill its dose reconstruction responsibilities under
the Act. WTC Health Program records in this system are maintained and
used to enable NIOSH to fulfill WTC Program Administrator
responsibilities make determinations about eligibility and
qualification, provide for medical care, pay for that care, and
coordinate with other health benefit programs under Title XXXIII of the
Public Health Service Act, 42 U.S.C. 300mm-300mm-61.
Routine uses of records maintained in the system, including categories
of users and the purposes of such uses:
In the event of litigation where the defendant is: (a) The
Department, any component of the Department, or any employee of the
Department in his or her official capacity; (b) the United States where
the Department determines that the claim, if successful, is likely to
directly affect the operations of the Department or any of its
components; or (c) any Department employee in his or her individual
capacity where the Department of Justice has agreed to represent such
employee, for example, in defending a claim against the Public Health
Service based upon an individual's mental or physical condition and
alleged to have arisen because of activities of the Public Health
Service in connection with such individual, disclosure may be made to
the Department of Justice to enable that Department to present an
effective defense, provided that such disclosure is compatible with the
purpose for which the records were collected.
Records may be disclosed to the Department of Justice when (1) HHS,
or
[[Page 34709]]
any component thereof; or (2) any employee of HHS in his or her
official capacity; or (3) any employee of HHS in his or her individual
capacity where the Department of Justice or HHS has agreed to represent
the employee; or (4) the United States, is a party to litigation or has
an interest in such litigation, and the use of such records by the
Department of Justice is deemed by HHS to be relevant and necessary to
the litigation; provided, however, that in each case it has been
determined that the disclosure is compatible with the purpose for which
the records were collected.
Records may be disclosed to a contractor performing or working on a
contract for HHS and who has a need to have access to the information
in the performance of its duties or activities for the HHS in
accordance with law and with the contract. The contractor is required
to comply with the applicable provisions of the Privacy Act.
Records subject to the Privacy Act are disclosed to private firms
for data entry, scientific support services, nosology coding, computer
systems analysis and computer programming services. The contractors
promptly return data entry records after the contracted work is
completed. The contractors are required to maintain Privacy Act
safeguards.
Certain diseases or exposures may be reported to State and/or local
health departments where the State has a legally constituted reporting
program for communicable diseases and which provides for the
confidentiality of the information.
Disclosure of records or portions of records may be made to a
Member of Congress or a Congressional staff member submitting a
verified request involving an individual who is entitled to the
information and has requested assistance from the Member or staff
member. The Member of Congress or Congressional staff member must
provide a copy of the individual's written request for assistance.
Disclosure may be made to NIOSH collaborating researchers (e.g.,
NIOSH contractors, grantees, cooperative agreement holders, or other
Federal or State scientists) in order to accomplish the research
purpose for which the records are collected. The collaborating
researchers must agree in writing to comply with the confidentiality
provisions of the Privacy Act and NIOSH must have determined that the
researchers' data security procedures will protect confidentiality.
THE FOLLOWING ROUTINE USES APPLY ONLY TO EPIDEMIOLOGICAL STUDIES:
In the event of litigation initiated at the request of NIOSH, the
Institute may disclose such records as it deems desirable or necessary
to the Department of Justice and to the Department of Labor, Office of
the Solicitor, where appropriate, to enable the Departments to
effectively represent the Institute, provided such disclosure is
compatible with the purpose for which the records were collected. The
only types of litigation proceedings that NIOSH is authorized to
request are: (1) Enforcement of a subpoena issued to an employer to
provide relevant information; and (2) administrative search warrants to
obtain access to places of employment and relevant information therein
and related contempt citations against an employer for failure to
comply with a warrant obtained by the Institute; and (3) injunctive
relief against employers or mine operators to obtain access to relevant
information.
Portions of records (name, Social Security number if known, date of
birth, and last known address) may be disclosed to one or more of the
sources selected from those listed in Appendix I, as applicable. This
may be done for obtaining a determination regarding an individual's
health status and last known address. If the sources determine that the
individual is dead, NIOSH may obtain death certificates, which state
the cause of death, from the appropriate Federal, State or local
agency. If the individual is alive, NIOSH may obtain information on
health status from disease registries or on last known address in order
to contact the individual for a health study or to inform him or her of
health findings. This information on health status enables NIOSH to
evaluate whether excess occupationally related mortality or morbidity
is occurring.
Disclosure of epidemiologic study records pertaining to uranium
workers may be made to the Department of Justice to be used in
determining eligibility for compensation payments to the uranium
workers or their survivors.
Records may be disclosed by CDC in connection with public health
activities to the Social Security Administration for sources of
locating information to accomplish the research or program purposes for
which the records were collected.
THE FOLLOWING ROUTINE USES APPLY ONLY TO EEOICPA PROGRAM RECORDS:
Disclosure of dose reconstructions, epidemiologic study records and
employment and medical information pertaining to Department of Energy
employees and other cancer-related claimants covered under the Energy
Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program Act may be made to
the Department of Labor to be used in determining eligibility for
compensation payments to such claimants and in defending its
determinations under the Act.
Disclosure of personal identifying information associated with
cancer-related claims under the Energy Employees Occupational Illness
Compensation Program Act may be made to the Department of Energy, other
Federal agencies, other government or private entities and to private-
sector employers to permit these entities to retrieve records required
to reconstruct radiation doses and to enable NIOSH to evaluate
petitions for inclusion in the Special Exposure Cohort.
Completed dose reconstruction reports for cancer-related claims
under the Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program
Act may be released to the Department of Energy and the Department of
Labor to permit these entities to fulfill EEOICPA and HHS dose
reconstruction regulation requirements to notify claimants of their
dose reconstruction results.
Disclosure of personal identifying information associated with
cancer-related claims under the Energy Employees Occupational Illness
Compensation Program Act may be made to identified witnesses as
designated by the Office of Compensation Analysis and Support to assist
NIOSH in obtaining information required to complete the dose
reconstruction process and to enable NIOSH to evaluate petitions for
inclusion in the Special Exposure Cohort.
Records may also be disclosed when deemed desirable or necessary,
to the Department of Justice, and/or the Department of Labor, to enable
those Departments to effectively represent the Department of Health and
Human Services and/or the Department of Labor in litigation involving
the Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program Act of
2000 (EEOICPA).
THE FOLLOWING ROUTINE USES APPLY ONLY TO WTC HEALTH PROGRAM RECORDS:
Disclosure to the Department of Justice and its contractors to
provide terrorist screening support in accordance with NIOSH's
statutory obligation to determine whether an individual is on the
``terrorist watch list'' as specified in Section 3311 and Section 3321
of the Zadroga Act and is
[[Page 34710]]
eligible and qualified to be enrolled or certified in the WTC Health
Program as specified by statute. Disclosure by NIOSH, under this
routine use, will be limited to only the information that is necessary
to determine eligibility and qualification under the statute. The
Department of Justice will only retain information provided by HHS that
relates to (1) Individuals known or suspected to be or have been
engaged in conduct constituting, in preparation for, in aid of, or
related to terrorism (``known or suspected terrorists''); (2)
individuals identified during the terrorism screening process as a
possible identity match to a known or suspected terrorist; (3)
individuals who are misidentified as a possible identity match to a
known or suspected terrorist in order to expedite future screening of
those individuals and to support the appeals process; and/or (4)
individuals about whom a terrorist watchlist-related appeal inquiry has
been made. Information that does not fall into one of the above listed
categories will not be retained by the Department of Justice.
Disclosure of personally identifying information to applicable entities
for the purpose of reducing or recouping WTC Health Program payments
made to individuals under a workers' compensation law or plan of the
United States, a State, or locality, or other work-related injury or
illness benefit plan of the employer of such worker or public or
private health plan as required under Title XXXIII of the Public Health
Service Act. NIOSH will maintain, use, and disclose the information in
the System of Records in accordance with applicable Federal law.
Policies and practices for storing, retrieving, accessing, retaining,
and disposing of records in the system:
Storage:
Manager files, card files, electronic computer tapes, disks, files
and printouts, microfilm, microfiche, and other files as appropriate.
Retrievability:
Name, assigned identification number, or social security number.
Safeguards:
1. Authorized Users:
A database software security package is utilized to control
unauthorized access to the system. Access is granted to only a limited
number of physicians, scientists, statisticians, and designated support
staff or contractors, as authorized by the system manager to accomplish
the stated purposes for which the data in this system have been
collected.
2. Physical Safeguards:
Hard copy records are kept in locked cabinets in locked rooms.
Guard service in buildings provides screening of visitors. The limited
access, secured computer room contains fire extinguishers and an
overhead sprinkler system. Computer workstations and automated records
are located in secured areas. Electronic anti-intrusion devices are in
operation at the Federal Records Center.
3. Procedural Safeguards:
Data sets are password protected and/or encrypted. Protection for
computerized records both on the mainframe and the NIOSH Local Area
Network (LAN) includes programmed verification of valid user
identification code and password prior to logging on to the system,
mandatory password changes, limited log-ins, virus protection, and user
rights/file attribute restrictions. Password protection imposes user
name and password log-in requirements to prevent unauthorized access.
Each user name is assigned limited access rights to files and
directories at varying levels to control file sharing. There are
routine daily backup procedures and secure off-site storage is
available for backup tapes. Additional safeguards may be built into the
program by the system analyst as warranted by the sensitivity of the
data.
Employees and contractor staff who maintain records are instructed
to check with the system manager prior to making disclosures of data.
When individually identified data are being used in a room, admittance
at either government or contractor sites is restricted to specifically
authorized personnel. Privacy Act provisions are included in contracts,
and the Project Director, contract officers and project officers
oversee compliance with these requirements. Upon completion of the
contract, all data will be either returned to CDC or destroyed, as
specified by the contract.
4. Implementation Guidelines:
The safeguards outlined above are in accordance with the HHS
Information Security Program Policy and FIPS Pub 200, ``Minimum
Security Requirements for Federal Information and Information
Systems.'' Data maintained on CDC's Mainframe and the NIOSH LAN are in
compliance with OMB Circular A-130, Appendix III. Security is provided
for information collection, processing, transmission, storage, and
dissemination in general support systems and major applications. The
CDC LAN currently operates under a Microsoft Windows Server and is in
compliance with applicable security standards.
Retention and disposal:
Records are retained and disposed of according to the provisions of
the CDC Electronic Records Control Schedule for NIOSH records. Research
records are maintained in the agency for three years after the close of
the study. Records transferred to the Federal Records Center when no
longer needed for evaluation and analysis are destroyed after 75 years
for epidemiologic studies, unless needed for further study. Records
from health hazard evaluations will be retained at least 20 years.
EEOICPA program records are transferred to the Federal Records Center
15 years after the case file becomes inactive and are destroyed after
75 years. WTC Health Program records are transferred to the Federal
Records Center 15 years after the case file becomes inactive and are
destroyed after 75 years.
Paper files that have been scanned to create electronic copies are
disposed of after the copies are verified. Disposal methods include
erasing computer tapes and burning or shredding paper materials.
System manager(s) and address:
Director, WTC Health Program, NIOSH, Century Center Boulevard,
Building 2400, Mail Stop E-74, Atlanta, GA 30329.
Program Management Officer, Division of Surveillance, Hazard
valuations, and Field Studies (DSHEFS), National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), Robert A. Taft Laboratories,
Rm. 40A, 4676 Columbia Parkway, Cincinnati, OH 45226.
Director, Division of Respiratory Disease Studies (DRDS), National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), Bldg. ALOSH, Rm.
H2920, 1095 Willowdale Road, Morgantown, WV 26505-2888.
Director, Pittsburgh Research Laboratory, NIOSH, 626 Cochrans Mill
Road, Pittsburgh, PA 15156.
Director, Spokane Research Laboratory, NIOSH, 315 E. Montgomery
Avenue, Spokane, WA 99207.
Director, Office of Compensation and Support (OCAS), NIOSH, Robert
A. Taft Laboratories, 4676 Columbia Parkway, Cincinnati, OH 45226
Policy coordination is provided by: Director, National Institute
for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), Bldg. HHH, Rm. 715H, 200
Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20201.
[[Page 34711]]
Notification procedure:
An individual may learn if a record exists about himself or herself
by contacting the system manager at the above address. Requesters in
person must provide driver's license or other positive identification.
Individuals who do not appear in person must either: (1) Submit a
notarized request to verify their identity; or (2) certify that they
are the individuals they claim to be and that they understand that the
knowing and willful request for or acquisition of a record pertaining
to an individual under false pretenses is a criminal offense under the
Privacy Act subject to a $5,000 fine.
An individual who requests notification of or access to medical
records shall, at the time the request is made, designate in writing a
responsible representative who is willing to review the record and
inform the subject individual of its contents at the representative's
discretion. A subject individual will be granted direct access to a
medical record if the system manager determines direct access is not
likely to have adverse effect on the subject individual.
The following information must be provided when requesting
notification: (1) Full name; (2) the approximate date and place of the
study, if known; and (3) nature of the questionnaire or study in which
the requester participated.
Record access procedures:
Same as notification procedures. Requesters should also reasonably
specify the record contents being sought. An accounting of disclosures
that have been made of the record, if any, may be requested.
Contesting record procedures:
Contact the official at the address specified under System Manager
above, reasonably identify the record and specify the information being
contested, the corrective action sought, and the reasons for requesting
the correction, along with supporting information to show how the
record is inaccurate, incomplete, untimely, or irrelevant.
Record source categories:
For research studies, vital status information is obtained from
Federal, State and local governments and other available sources
selected from those listed in Appendix I, but information is obtained
directly from the individual and employer records, whenever possible.
EEOICPA records are obtained from the individual subject and the
employer's records. WTC Health Program Records are obtained from
individual applicants and enrollees, from medical providers who have
treated eligible individuals, and from data centers that are
repositories of demographic and clinical information about WTC
responders and survivors.
Systems exempted from certain provisions of the act:
None.
Appendix I--Potential Sources for Determination of Health Status, Vital
Status and/or Last Known Address
Military records
Appropriate State Motor Vehicle Registration Departments
Appropriate State Driver's License Departments
Appropriate State Government Division of: Assistance Payments
(Welfare), Social Services, Medical Services, Food Stamp Program,
Child Support, Board of Corrections, Aging, Indian Affairs, Worker's
Compensation, Disability Insurance
Retail Credit Association follow-up
Veterans Administration files
Appropriate employee union or association records
Appropriate company pension or employment records
Company group insurance records
Appropriate State Vital Statistics Offices
Life insurance companies
Railroad Retirement Board
Area nursing homes
Area Indian Trading Posts
Mailing List Correction Cards (U.S. Postal Service)
Letters and telephone conversations with former employees of the
same establishment as cohort member
Appropriate local newspaper (obituaries)
Social Security Administration
Internal Revenue Service
National Death Index
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation
State Disease Registries
Commercial Telephone Directories
[FR Doc. 2011-14807 Filed 6-10-11; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4163-18-P