Nominations to the FIFRA Scientific Advisory Panel; Request for Comments, 48306-48315 [2015-19828]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 155 / Wednesday, August 12, 2015 / Notices
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[FR Doc. 2015–19847 Filed 8–11–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000–01–P
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Environmental Management SiteSpecific Advisory Board Chairs; Open
Meeting
Department of Energy.
Notice of open meeting.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
This notice announces a
meeting of the Environmental
Management Site-Specific Advisory
SUMMARY:
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Board (EM SSAB) Chairs. The Federal
Advisory Committee Act (Pub. L. 92–
463, 86 Stat. 770) requires that public
notice of this meeting be announced in
the Federal Register.
DATES: Wednesday, September 2, 2015
8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.; Thursday,
September 3, 2015 8:00 a.m.–12:30
p.m.
ADDRESSES: La Fonda on the Plaza, 100
East San Francisco Street, Santa Fe, NM
87501.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
David Borak, Designated Federal
Officer, U.S. Department of Energy,
1000 Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20585; Phone: (202)
586–9928.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Purpose of
the Board: The purpose of the Board is
to make recommendations to DOE–EM
and site management in the areas of
environmental restoration, waste
management, and related activities.
Tentative Agenda Topics:
Wednesday, September 2, 2015
Æ EM Program Update
Æ Presentations:
• Office of Acquisition and Project
Management
• Office of Site Restoration
Æ EM SSAB Chairs’ Roundtable
Discussions
Æ Public Comment Period
Thursday, September 3, 2015
Æ Presentations:
• Office of Waste Disposition
• Office of External Affairs
Æ EM SSAB Chairs’ Roundtable
Discussions
Æ Public Comment Period
Public Participation: The EM SSAB
Chairs welcome the attendance of the
public at their advisory committee
meetings and will make every effort to
accommodate persons with physical
disabilities or special needs. If you
require special accommodations due to
a disability, please contact Catherine
Alexander at least seven days in
advance of the meeting at the phone
number listed above. Written statements
may be filed either before or after the
meeting with the Designated Federal
Officer, David Borak, at the address or
telephone listed above. Individuals who
wish to make oral statements pertaining
to agenda items should also contact
David Borak. Requests must be received
five days prior to the meeting and
reasonable provision will be made to
include the presentation in the agenda.
The Designated Federal Officer is
empowered to conduct the meeting in a
fashion that will facilitate the orderly
conduct of business. Individuals
wishing to make public comment will
be provided a maximum of five minutes
to present their comments.
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Minutes: Minutes will be available by
writing or calling David Borak at the
address or phone number listed above.
Minutes will also be available at the
following Web site: https://energy.gov/
em/services/communicationengagement/em-site-specific-advisoryboard-em-ssab/chairs-meetings.
Issued at Washington, DC on August 7,
2015.
LaTanya R. Butler,
Deputy Committee Management Officer.
[FR Doc. 2015–19809 Filed 8–11–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[EPA–HQ–OPP–2015–0423; FRL–9929–66]
Nominations to the FIFRA Scientific
Advisory Panel; Request for
Comments
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
This notice provides the
names, addresses, professional
affiliations, and selected biographical
data of persons recently nominated to
serve on the Scientific Advisory Panel
(SAP) established under section 25(d) of
the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and
Rodenticide Act (FIFRA). The Panel was
created on November 28, 1975, and
made a statutory Panel by amendment
to FIFRA, dated October 25, 1988. The
Agency, at this time, anticipates
selecting two new members to serve on
the panel as a result of membership
terms that will expire in 2015. Public
comments on the current nominations
are invited, as these comments will be
used to assist the Agency in selecting
the new chartered Panel members.
DATES: Comments, identified by docket
ID number EPA–HQ–OPP–2015–0423,
must be received on or before August
27, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by docket identification (ID)
number EPA–HQ–OPP–2015–0423, by
one of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
Do not submit electronically any
information you consider to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI)
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute.
• Mail: OPP Docket, Environmental
Protection Agency Docket Center (EPA/
DC), (28221T), 1200 Pennsylvania Ave.
NW., Washington, DC 20460–0001.
SUMMARY:
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• Hand Delivery: To make special
arrangements for hand delivery or
delivery of boxed information, please
follow the instructions at https://
www.epa.gov/dockets/contacts.html.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Steven M. Knott, DFO, Office of Science
Coordination and Policy (7201M),
Environmental Protection Agency, 1200
Pennsylvania Ave. NW., Washington,
DC 20460–0001; telephone number:
(202) 564–0103; fax number: (202) 564–
8382; email address: knott.steven@
epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
This action is directed to the public
in general. This action may, however, be
of interest to persons who are or may be
required to conduct testing of chemical
substances under the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FFDCA) and
FIFRA. Since other entities may also be
interested, the Agency has not
attempted to describe all the specific
entities that may be affected by this
action. If you have any questions
regarding the applicability of this action
to a particular entity, consult the DFO
listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT.
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B. What should I consider as I prepare
my comments for EPA?
When submitting comments,
remember to:
1. Identify the document by docket ID
number and other identifying
information (subject heading, Federal
Register date and page number).
2. Follow directions. The Agency may
ask you to respond to specific questions
or organize comments by referencing a
Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) part
or section number.
3. Explain why you agree or disagree;
suggest alternatives and substitute
language for your requested changes.
4. Describe any assumptions and
provide any technical information and/
or data that you used.
5. If you estimate potential costs or
burdens, explain how you arrived at
your estimate in sufficient detail to
allow for it to be reproduced.
6. Provide specific examples to
illustrate your concerns and suggest
alternatives.
7. Explain your views as clearly as
possible, avoiding the use of profanity
or personal threats.
8. Make sure to submit your
comments by the comment period
deadline identified.
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II. Background
The FIFRA SAP serves as the primary
scientific peer review mechanism of
EPA’s Office of Chemical Safety and
Pollution Prevention (OCSPP) and is
structured to provide scientific advice,
information and recommendations to
the EPA Administrator on pesticides
and pesticide-related issues as to the
impact of regulatory actions on health
and the environment. Established in
1975 under FIFRA, the FIFRA SAP is a
Federal advisory committee that
operates in accordance with
requirements of the Federal Advisory
Committee Act (FACA). The FIFRA SAP
is composed of a permanent panel
consisting of seven members who are
appointed by the EPA Administrator
from nominees provided by the National
Institutes of Health (NIH) and the
National Science Foundation (NSF).
FIFRA established a Science Review
Board consisting of at least 60 scientists
who are available to the SAP on an ad
hoc basis to assist in reviews conducted
by the FIFRA SAP. As a peer review
mechanism, the FIFRA SAP provides
comments, evaluations and
recommendations to improve the
effectiveness and quality of analyses
made by Agency scientists. Members of
the FIFRA SAP are scientists who have
sufficient professional qualifications,
including training and experience, to
provide expert advice and
recommendations to the Agency.
In accordance with the statute, the
SAP is composed of a permanent panel
of seven members, selected and
appointed by the Deputy Administrator
of EPA, as designated by the
Administrator from nominees submitted
by both the NSF and the NIH. The
Agency, at this time, anticipates
selecting two new members to serve on
the panel as a result of membership
terms that will expire this year. The
Agency requested nominations of
experts to be selected from the fields of
human toxicology, environmental
toxicology, pathology, risk assessment
and/or environmental biology with
demonstrated experience and expertise
in all phases of the risk assessment
process including: Planning, scoping,
and problem formulation; analysis; and
interpretation and risk characterization
(including the interpretation and
communication of uncertainty).
Nominees should be well published and
current in their field of expertise. The
statute further stipulates that we publish
the name, address and professional
affiliation in the Federal Register.
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III. Charter
A Charter for the FIFRA Scientific
Advisory Panel dated October 17, 2014
was issued in accordance with the
requirements of the Federal Advisory
Committee Act, Public Law 92–463, 86
Stat. 770 (5 U.S.C. App. I).
A. Qualifications of Members
Members are scientists who have
sufficient professional qualifications,
including training and experience, to
provide expert comments on the impact
of pesticides on health and the
environment. No persons shall be
ineligible to serve on the Panel by
reason of their membership on any other
advisory committee to a Federal
department or agency or their
employment by a Federal department or
agency (except the EPA). The Deputy
Administrator appoints individuals to
serve on the Panel for staggered terms of
3 years. Panel members are subject to
the provisions of 40 CFR part 3, subpart
F, Standards of Conduct for Special
Government Employees, which include
rules regarding conflicts of interest.
Each nominee selected by the Deputy
Administrator, before being formally
appointed, is required to submit a
confidential statement of employment
and financial interests, which shall fully
disclose, among other financial
interests, the nominee’s sources of
research support, if any.
In accordance with section 25(d)(1) of
FIFRA, the Deputy Administrator shall
require all nominees to the Panel to
furnish information concerning their
professional qualifications, educational
background, employment history, and
scientific publications.
B. Applicability of Existing Regulations
With respect to the requirements of
section 25(d) of FIFRA that the
Administrator promulgate regulations
regarding conflicts of interest, the
Charter provides that EPA’s existing
regulations applicable to Special
Government Employees, which include
advisory committee members, will
apply to the members of the Scientific
Advisory Panel. These regulations
appear in 40 CFR part 3, subpart F. In
addition, the Charter provides for open
meetings with opportunities for public
participation.
C. Process of Obtaining Nominees
In accordance with the provisions of
section 25(d) of FIFRA, EPA, on April
21, 2015, requested that the NIH and the
NSF nominate scientists to fill vacancies
occurring on the Panel. The Agency
requested nominations of experts in the
fields of human toxicology,
environmental toxicology, pathology,
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risk assessment, and/or environmental
biology with demonstrated experience
and expertise in all phases of the risk
assessment process including: Planning,
scoping, and problem formulation;
analysis; and interpretation and risk
characterization (including the
interpretation and communication of
uncertainty). NIH and NSF responded
by letter, providing the Agency with a
total of 34 nominees. Copies of these
letters, with the listed nominees, are
available in the public docket
referenced in unit I.B.1. of this notice.
Of the 34 nominees, 18 are interested
and available to actively participate in
SAP meetings (see Section IV.
Nominees). One nominee is currently
serving as member of the FIFRA SAP,
and is not listed. In addition to the
current nominees interested, at EPA’s
discretion, nominees who were
interested and available during the
previous nomination process in the
January 24, 2014 Federal Register (79
FR 4158) (FRL–9904–66), may also be
considered. Of the current 34
nominations, the following 15
individuals are not available:
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1. Asa Bradman, Ph.D., University of CA,
Berkeley, CA.
2. Mark G. Evans, DVM, Ph.D., ACVP,
Pfizer Global Research and Development
Drug Safety Research and Development, San
Diego, CA.
3. John Groopman, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins
University, Baltimore, MD.
4. Stephen S. Hecht, Ph.D., University of
Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN.
5. Marie Lyn Miranda, Ph.D., Rice
University, Houston, TX.
6. Frederica P. Perera, Ph.D., MPH,
Columbia University, New York, NY.
7. Irva Hertz-Picciotto, Ph.D., University of
California, Davis, CA.
8. Thomas A.E. Platts-Mills, M.D.,
University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA.
9. Michael Roe, Ph.D., North Carolina State
University, Raleigh, NC.
10. Ana Diez Roux, M.D, Ph.D., MPH,
Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA.
11. Jonathan M. Samet, MD, University of
Southern California, Los Angeles, CA.
12. David Siegel, MD, National Institute of
Health, Rockville, MD.
13. Allan H. Smith, MD, Ph.D., University
of California, Berkeley, CA.
14. Frank Speizer, SCD, MD, Harvard
Medical School, Boston, MA.
15. Robert Williams, MD, University of
New Mexico Health Sciences Center,
Albuquerque, NM.
IV. Nominees
Following are the names, addresses,
professional affiliations, and selected
biographical data of current nominees
being considered for membership on the
FIFRA SAP. The Agency anticipates
selecting two individuals to fill
vacancies occurring in 2015.
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1. Nicole L. Achee, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Epidemiology control of
arthropod-borne diseases including
evaluation of vector ecology, habitat
management, and adult control
strategies, disease risk modeling using
GIS and remote sensing technologies,
and evaluation of chemical actions
against mosquito vectors under both
laboratory and field conditions.
ii. Education: Ph.D. Medical
Entomology, Uniformed Services
University of the Health Sciences; MSc,
Zoology, Texas A&M University; BS,
Biology, St. Louis University.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. Achee
is a Medical Entomologist (Research
Associate Professor) within the
Department of Biological Sciences and
holds a joint Associate Professor
appointment in the Eck Institute for
Global Health at the University of Notre
Dame. She joined the University of
Notre Dame faculty in 2013, following a
2-year position as Assistant Professor at
the Uniformed Services University of
the Health Sciences in Bethesda, MD.
She has a combined 15 years of
experience in vector behavior research
related to the epidemiology and control
of arthropod-borne diseases, including
evaluation of vector ecology, habitat
management and adult control
strategies, disease risk modeling using
GIS and remote sensing technologies,
and evaluation of chemical actions
against mosquito vectors under both
laboratory and field conditions. She has
worked in the international settings of
Belize, Mexico, Peru, Suriname,
Indonesia, Nepal, South Korea,
Thailand, and Tanzania. Dr. Achee was
the principal investigator of a research
program funded by the Bill & Melinda
Gates Foundation focused on the
development of spatial repellents in
combination push-pull systems to
reduce human-vector contact for dengue
prevention. She is a Working Group
member of the World Health
Organization (WHO) Pesticide
Evaluation Scheme (WHOPES), the
Chair of the American Committee of
Medical Entomology (ACME) of the
American Society of Tropical Medicine
and Hygiene (ASTMH), a representative
of the WHO Global Collaboration for the
Development of Pesticides for Public
Health partnership (GCDPP), Vector
Control Working Group member of Roll
Back Malaria and served as the lead
scientist for the recent publication of the
WHO Guidelines for Efficacy Testing of
Spatial Repellents. She is currently the
lead Principal Investigator of a
multicenter intervention trial dedicated
to generating evidence of the protective
efficacy of spatial repellents for
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prevention of malaria and dengue
human infections for use towards full
WHO recommendations. Her latest
efforts have been dedicated to coDirecting the Belize Vector and Ecology
Center (BVEC) in Orange Walk Town,
Belize to serve as a regional platform of
excellence for research and education in
arthropod-borne diseases.
2. George B. Corcoran, Ph.D., ATS
i. Expertise: Pharmacological and
toxicological adverse cellular outcomes,
and factors that govern drug and
chemical injuries including drug
metabolism and nutrition.
ii: Education: Ph.D., Pharmacology,
Department of Pharmacology, School of
Medicine, George Washington
University; MS, Chemistry, Bucknell
University; BA, Chemistry, Ithaca
College.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr.
Corcoran is Professor and Chairman of
the Department of Pharmaceutical
Sciences, College of Pharmacy & Health
Sciences, Wayne State University, and
Adjunct Professor of Pediatrics, Wayne
State University School of Medicine. Dr.
Corcoran earned his BA in Chemistry
(Ithaca College ‘70), MS in Chemistry
(Bucknell University ‘73), and Ph.D. in
Pharmacology/Toxicology (George
Washington University ‘80), before
completing Postdoctoral Fellow training
in Toxicology (Baylor College of
Medicine and Methodist Hospital ‘81).
Prior to his appointment at Wayne State,
Dr. Corcoran served as Assistant
Professor of Pharmaceutics at the State
University of New York at Buffalo,
followed by Associate Professor and
later Professor, and Director of the
Toxicology Graduate Program at the
University of New Mexico. Dr. Corcoran
has published over 200 original research
papers, abstracts and other reports, and
has received nearly $6 million in grants
and contracts as Principal Investigator,
Co-Principal Investigator, and CoInvestigator. He has chaired grant
review panels for the NIH, the National
Academies, and the Howard Hughes
Medical Institute, and has refereed
papers for more than 50 national and
international scientific journals. He has
contributed to the training of over 150
MS and Ph.D. graduates, 3200
pharmacists, and hundreds of
undergraduate research students. His
research interests are multidisciplinary
and translational. They focus on cellular
injury and cell death, and factors that
govern drug and chemical injuries,
including drug metabolism and
nutrition. Approaches to translate basic
discoveries to improve human health
involve retrospective and prospective
clinical investigation of human
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volunteers and patients, integrated in
vivo models, cellular and molecular
biology, pharmacokinetics, and
synthetic chemistry. Specific areas of
investigation include cell death by
necrosis and apoptosis, the role of DNA
damage in acute cell death, drug and
chemical injury to the liver, nutrition
and particularly obesity as overlooked
factors in drug and chemical injury,
drug biotransformation including by
CYPs, and toxicity of drugs such as
acetaminophen (paracetamol). Dr.
Corcoran is a Fellow of the Academy of
Toxicological Sciences, the top US
credentialing organization for
toxicologists. He was elected to its
Executive Board and appointed to the
National Toxicology Program Board of
Scientific Counselors in 2012. He has
been a Delegate to the International
Congress of Toxicology and member of
the International Union of Toxicology
Developing Countries Committee. He is
a former Member of the Science
Advisory Board of the US
Environmental Protection Agency, is
former Chair of the Executive Board of
the Council of Scientific Society
Presidents, and is a past member of the
Intergovernmental Scientific Advisory
Committee on Alternative Toxicological
Methods. He has contributed to the
scientific direction of the American
Society for Pharmacology and
Experimental Therapeutics as a member
of its Scientific Council, and served on
the Research and Graduate Affairs
Committee of the American Association
of Colleges of Pharmacy. Dr. Corcoran is
sought as an expert in toxic tort, product
liability and other legal matters. At the
University of New Mexico, Dr. Corcoran
advised Health Sciences Vice President
Jane Henney (FDA Commissioner 1998–
2000) as a member of her Health
Sciences Leadership Council. He is Past
President of the Society of Toxicology,
the largest toxicology organization in
the world with over 7,000 members
from academia, industry, government,
medicine, law and other fields
practicing in the USA and over 50
foreign countries. He has contributed to
Society positions having national and
international impact, from the best
science for evidence-based safety
legislation, to organization ethics and
governance. He serves as Associate
Editor of Toxicology and Applied
Pharmacology [2002-date], Editor of the
Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences and
Pharmacology [2014-date] and Editor of
the MO Online Journal of Toxicology
[2014-date]. He has been an Editorial
Board Member of the international
journals Pharmacology and Toxicology,
Basic and Clinical Pharmacology and
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Toxicology, Toxicology Letters, and the
Journal of Toxicology and
Environmental Health. During his
service on the National Institutes of
Health Alcohol-Toxicology 1 Study
Section, he evaluated over 1,000 NIH
grant applications.
3. Deborah A. Cory-Slechta, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Relationship between
brain neurotransmitter systems and
neurodevelopment associated with
alteration by exposures to
environmental toxicants.
ii: Education: Ph.D., Experimental
Psychology, University of Minnesota;
MA, Experimental Psychology, Western
Michigan University; BS, Psychology,
Western Michigan University.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr.
Deborah Cory-Slechta is a Professor in
the Department of Environmental
Medicine, Pediatrics and Public Health
Sciences at the University of Rochester
School of Medicine and Dentistry. Dr.
Deborah Cory-Slechta became Chair of
its Department of Environmental
Medicine and Director of the NIEHS
Environmental Health Sciences Center
in 1998, and served as Dean for
Research from 2000–2002. She then
became Director of the Environmental
and Occupational Health Sciences
Institute (EOHSI) and Chair of the
Department of Environmental and
Community Medicine at the UMDNJRobert Wood Johnson Medical School
from 2003–2007, before returning to
URMC as Professor in Environmental
Medicine, Pediatrics and Public Health
Sciences. Dr. Cory-Slechta has served on
national review and advisory panels of
the National Institutes of Health, the
National Institute of Environmental
Health Sciences, the Food and Drug
Administration, the National Center for
Toxicological Research, the
Environmental Protection Agency, the
National Academy of Sciences, the
Institute of Medicine, and the Agency
for Toxic Substances and Disease
Registry, Centers for Disease Control. In
addition, Dr. Cory-Slechta has served on
the editorial boards of the journals
Neurotoxicology, Toxicology,
Toxicological Sciences, Fundamental
and Applied Toxicology,
Neurotoxicology and Teratology, and
American Journal of Mental Retardation.
She has held the elected positions of
President of the Neurotoxicology
Specialty Section of the Society of
Toxicology, President of the Behavioral
Toxicology Society, and been named a
Fellow of the American Psychological
Association. Her research has focused
largely on the relationships between
brain neurotransmitter systems and
neurodevelopment, and how such
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relationships are altered by exposures to
environmental toxicants, including the
role played by environmental
neurotoxicant exposures in
developmental disabilities and
neurodegenerative diseases. This work
has included the effects of
developmental exposures to metals,
pesticides, and air pollutants as well as
combined exposures to metals and
stress in experimental animal models as
well as in human cohort studies. These
research efforts have resulted in over
155 papers and book chapters to date.
4. Victor G. De Gruttola, ScD
i. Expertise: Development of
innovative study designs and analytical
methods for evaluation of new therapies
for HIV-related disease.
ii. Education: ScD, Biostatistics,
Harvard School of Public Health; SM,
Bioengineering, Harvard University;
SM, Epidemiology, Harvard School of
Public Health; BS, Physics, Brown
University.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. De
Gruttola received his ScD in 1986 from
the Biostatistics Department at HSPH—
the department for which he served as
Chair from 2009–2014. His research
focuses on development of statistical
methods required for appropriate public
health response to the AIDS epidemic
both within the US and internationally.
The aspects of the epidemic on which
he has worked include transmission of,
and natural history of infection with,
the Human Immunodeficiency Virus
(HIV), as well as research on
antiretroviral treatments, including the
development and consequences of
resistance to treatments. The broad goals
of his research include developing
treatment strategies that provide durable
virologic suppression while preserving
treatment options after failure, and
evaluating the community-level impact
of packages of prevention interventions,
including antiviral treatment. He served
as the Director of the Statistics and Data
Analysis Center of the Adult Project of
the AIDS Clinical Trials Group from
1996 to 2003—the period in which
highly active antiretroviral treatment
was developed, and he was
instrumental in designing and analyzing
studies of the best means of providing
such therapy. He also served from 2011–
2015, as co-PI (with PI Max Essex) on a
community-randomized study of a
combination HIV prevention strategy in
Botswana.
5. David C. Dorman, DVM, Ph.D.,
DABVT, DABT, ATS
i. Expertise: Neurotoxicology, and risk
assessment.
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ii: Education: Ph.D., Veterinary
Biosciences/Toxicology, University of
Illinois; DVM Colorado State University;
B.A. Chemistry, University of San
Diego.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr.
Dorman is a professor of toxicology in
the Department of Molecular
Biosciences in the College of Veterinary
Medicine at North Carolina State
University. Dr. Dorman received his
undergraduate training in chemistry
from the University of San Diego, his
DVM from Colorado State University,
and he completed a combined Ph.D. and
residency program in toxicology at the
University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign. He is a diplomat of the
American Board of Veterinary
Toxicology and the American Board of
Toxicology. Dr. Dorman has chaired or
served on numerous NRC committees.
His recent NRC chairmanships include
the Committee on Predictive-Toxicology
Approaches for Military Assessments of
Acute Exposures and the Committee on
Design and Evaluation of Safer
Chemical Substitutions—A Framework
to Inform Government and Industry
Decisions. He has been recently named
as chair of the NRC’s Committee on
Toxicology and the Committee on
Unraveling Low Dose Toxicity: Case
Studies of Systematic Review of
Evidence. He has served on other
advisory boards for the US Navy, NASA,
and USDA, and is currently a member
of the National Toxicology Program’s
Board of Scientific Counselors. He is an
elected fellow of both the Academy of
Toxicological Sciences and the
American Association for the
Advancement of Sciences. The primary
objective of his research is to provide a
refined understanding of chemically
induced neurotoxicity in laboratory
animals that will lead to improved
assessment of potential neurotoxicity in
humans. Dr. Dorman’s other research
interests include clinical veterinary
toxicology, nasal toxicology,
pharmacokinetics, and cognition and
olfaction in animals. He has over 145
peer-reviewed research publications
including work with pesticides, metals,
hydrogen sulfide, and a variety of
industrial chemicals.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr.
Valery E. Forbes is Dean of the College
of Biological Sciences at University of
Minnesota. Dr. Forbes was Director of
the School of Biological Sciences at the
University of Nebraska-Lincoln from
2011–2015. From 1989–2010, she lived
and worked in Denmark, most recently
as the Founding Chair of the
Department of Environmental, Social
and Spatial Change and Professor of
Aquatic Ecology and Ecotoxicology at
Roskilde University. Dr. Forbes received
her Bachelor’s Degree (Biology &
Geology) from the State University of
New York at Binghamton in 1983, a
MSc (Marine Environmental Science)
from SUNY-Stony Brook in 1984, and a
Ph.D. (Coastal Oceanography), also from
SUNY- Stony Brook in 1988. Specific
research topics include population
ecology and modeling, fate and effects
of toxic chemicals in sediments, and
ecological risk assessment. Dr. Forbes
has graduated approximately 50 MSc
and Ph.D. students over her career and
established a Danish Graduate School in
Environmental Stress Studies (GESS)
based at Roskilde University. While
based in Europe, Dr. Forbes served as
work package leader on two major EU
7th Framework Projects: CREAM (a
Marie Curie Initial Training Network on
Mechanistic Effect Models for
Ecological Risk Assessment of
Chemicals) and NanoReTox (a multiinstitution research project on The
Reactivity and Toxicity of Engineered
Nanoparticles: Risks to the Environment
and Human Health). More recently, she
has received funding from the National
Institute of Mathematical and Biological
Synthesis (NIMBioS) for multi-partite
initiatives to develop predictive models
for the ecological risk assessment of
chemicals. Dr. Forbes has published
well over 100 internationally peerreviewed articles and two books on
these topics. She has served on the
Danish Natural Sciences Research
Council, the European Research Council
and as ad hoc reviewer for numerous
funding agencies from various
countries. She is on the editorial board
of several international journals and
provides scientific advice to the private
and public sectors.
6. Valery E. Forbes, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Population ecology and
modeling, fate and effects of toxic
chemicals in sediments, and ecological
risk assessment.
ii. Education: Ph.D., Coastal
Oceanography, State University of New
York; MSc Marine Environmental
Science, State University of New York;
BA Biology; BA Geology, State
University of New York.
7. John Grieco, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Epidemiology, ecology,
and transmission dynamics of vectorborne illness.
ii. Education: Ph.D., Medical Zoology,
Uniformed Services University; MS
Medical Entomology, Texas A&M
University; BS, Biology, University of
Notre Dame.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. John
Grieco is a Research Associate Professor
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of Medical Entomology and Associate
Director of the Eck Institute of Global
Health at the University of Notre Dame
in Notre Dame, Indiana. Dr. Grieco’s
work is multidisciplinary with a focus
on the biology, ecology and
transmission dynamics of vector-borne
illness. He has a long history of working
on vector borne disease throughout the
tropics and his research centers on
malaria, Japanese Encephalitis, Dengue,
Chagas, and rickettsial pathogens. Dr.
Grieco has an extensive history in the
design of novel repellents, irritants and
toxicants for disease vectors. He has
developed a number of field and
laboratory assays for identifying and
optimizing behavior modifying
compounds for use in the control of
mosquito, sandfly, and triatome vectors.
Dr. Grieco serves as an external advisor
to the Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation, the World Health
Organization (WHO), the US Centers for
Disease Control and the US Department
of Defense in the area of Spatial
Repellents and their advancement to
recommendation. Dr. Grieco has coauthored the WHO guidelines for the
evaluation of spatial repellents and he
currently holds two patents for novel
repellent compounds.
8. Byron Jones, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Toxicogenetics,
neurobehavioral, and developmental
toxicology.
ii. Education: BA, Psychology, Eastern
Washington University; MA,
Psychology, University of Arizona;
Ph.D. Physiological and Comparative
Psychology, Psychopharmacology,
University of Arizona.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. Byron
Jones is professor of Genetics,
Genomics, and Informatics at the
University of Tennessee Health Sciences
Center, Memphis. Dr. Jones received his
Ph.D. training in the Departments of
Psychology and Pharmacology and
Toxicology at the University of Arizona.
He received postdoctoral training in
neuropharmacology at the University of
Arizona and in pharmacogenetics at the
University of Colorado. In 1991, he was
a founding member of the Department of
Biobehavioral Health at The
Pennsylvania State University and
developed a program in
pharmacogenetics and toxicogenetics at
that institution. He has trained 10 Ph.D.
and 8 MS students and supervised
numerous undergraduate honors theses
at PSU. In 1998–1999, he was awarded
a Poste Orange senior visiting research
position at Institute Francois Magendie,
¸
Bordeaux, France to study the genetics
of alcohol consumption. In 2000, he was
awarded a Harry Dozor visiting
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professorship at the Ben Gurion
University of the Negev, Beersheba,
Israel. In 2001 and again in 2004, he was
awarded invited professorships at the
University of Strasbourg and University
of Bordeaux in France. Together with
`
his colleague, Dr. Pierre Mormede and
others, he has helped to organize and
deliver 15 1–2 week workshops on
neural and behavioral genetics in
France, the USA, Brazil, Russia, and
`
Sweden. He and Dr. Mormede co-edited
two volumes of a book on neuro and
behavioral genetics. Dr. Jones has
published more than 130 papers in peerreviewed journals. In 2013, Dr. Jones
was invited to help develop research
infrastructure to study the effects of
mercury and pesticide exposure on
neurocognitive development in
Ecuador. In 2014, he was awarded two
grants from the National Institutes of
Health. One is focused on the role of
genetics in the impact of chronic stress
on neuroendocrine adaptation and
alcohol consumption and the other to
study the effects of genetics on paraquat
neurotoxicity. In that year, he was
recruited to help found a new
department in Genetics, Genomics, and
Informatics in the College of Medicine
at UTHSC. He has served on several NIH
and NSF review panels. He is on the
editorial board of Frontiers in Genetics
and Pharmacology, Biochemistry and
Behavior and is Editor-in-Chief,
Nutritional Neuroscience. His current
research interests include: (1) The
toxicogenetics of paraquat and other
pesticides; (2) the impact of chronic
stress on neurobehavioral adaptation,
including alcohol consumption; (3) the
role of iron status on accumulation of
heavy metals; and (4) iron status and the
exposure in pregnant women and in
early childhood development.
9. Paul D. Juarez, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Development of
methodologies for creating and
analyzing data on the effects of the
natural, built, social, and policy
environments on health disparities.
ii. Education: Ph.D., Public Policy and
Social Research, Brandeis University,
Waltham; MEd Psychology, Western
Washington University; BA, Western
Washington University.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. Paul
D. Juarez is Professor, Preventive
Medicine and founding co-director of
the Research Center on Health
Disparities, Equity, and the Exposome at
the University of Tennessee Health
Science Center. He received his Ph.D. in
social policy from the Heller School,
Brandeis University in 1983. Dr. Juarez
currently is serving appointments on the
Federal Advisory Committee on
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Minority Health for the US Department
of Health and Human Services (2014–
2018) and the Community-Level Health
Promotion Study Section, Center for
Scientific Review of the NIH (2013–
2016). Dr. Juarez previously served as
the Vice Chair, Division of Community
Health, Family & Community Medicine,
Meharry Medical College. While at
Meharry, Dr. Juarez was PI for the
Meharry Health Disparities Research
Center of Excellence and directed its
community engagement core. As PI, Dr.
Juarez led Center activities in
developing a systems approach to health
disparities research. In 2011, Dr. Juarez
received a grant from the EPA to
increase our understanding of the
environmental context of health
disparities. In pursuit of this effort, he
led efforts to apply an exposome
framework that considers the
cumulative effects of environmental
exposures on human health and
development at critical life stages and
from conception to death. He has been
at the forefront nationally in developing
a methodology for creating and
analyzing data on the effects of the
natural, built, social, and policy
environments on health disparities. To
achieve this, he has established a
transdisciplinary team of investigators
to conduct focused studies of the
environmental effects on population
level health disparities that apply
mathematical, spatial-temporal,
statistical and computational methods,
models and analytics. His recent work
has focused on analyzing the effects of
the exposome on black white disparities
in pre-term births and lung cancer
mortality.
10. Rebecca D. Klaper, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Ecological toxicology,
chemical environment fate and effects,
examining technologies (including
genomics and green chemistry designs)
to minimize environmental impacts
from chemical contamination.
ii. Education: BS, Honors Biology,
University of Illinois; MS, Entomology,
University of Georgia; Ph.D., Ecology,
University of Georgia.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr.
Rebecca D. Klaper is a Professor at the
School of Freshwater Sciences,
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and
the Director of the Great Lakes
Genomics Center. Dr. Klaper received
her MS in Entomology in 1995 and her
Ph.D. in Ecology in 2000 from the
Institute of Ecology University of
Georgia examining the impacts of
chemicals on the population dynamics
of insects. Dr. Klaper currently studies
the potential impact of emerging
contaminants, such as nanoparticles,
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pharmaceuticals, personal care products
and pesticides on aquatic life and how
we may design these chemicals to be
sustainable and have the least
environmental impact. She published
some of the first studies on the impacts
of nanomaterials on aquatic organisms,
describing differences in toxicity among
nanomaterials, discussing the possible
impacts of surfactants on nanomaterial
toxicology. Dr. Klaper is now one of the
lead PI’s for the Center for Sustainable
Nanotechnology, a distributed Center of
eight universities to evaluate the
mechanisms by which nanomaterials
may cause toxicity and investigate the
potential for principles to use in the
design process of these chemicals. Dr.
Klaper received a AAAS-Science and
Technology Policy Fellowship where
she worked in the National Center for
Environmental Assessment at the US
Environmental Protection Agency
evaluating the potential use of genomic
technologies in risk assessment. She
currently serves on the Board of
Scientific Counselors for the US
Environmental Protection Agency’s
Chemical Safety for Sustainability/
Human Health Risk Assessment
Subcommittee. She has served as a
technical expert to the Alliance for the
Great Lakes and the International Joint
Commission regarding the potential
impacts of pharmaceuticals, personal
care products and other emerging
contaminants on the Great Lakes. She
has also served as an invited scientific
expert to both the US National
Nanotechnology Initiative and the
International Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development panel on
nanotechnology where she has testified
on the potential impact of nanoparticles
on the environment and the utility of
current testing strategies. She served on
the National Academy of Sciences Panel
to Develop a Research Strategy for
Environmental, Health, and Safety
Aspects of Engineered Nanomaterials.
She is also on the editorial board of the
SETAC journal Environmental
Toxicology and Chemistry as well as the
ACS journal Chemical Research in
Toxicology. Her current research
focuses on (1) determining the presence
of contaminants in freshwater systems;
(2) the impacts of low level chronic
exposures of these chemicals to fish and
invertebrates in freshwater systems; (3)
evaluating the ability of contaminant
removal technologies to remove
biological impacts of chemicals; (4)
methods to quickly assess the potential
impacts of a chemical, including
genomic technologies; and (5)
alternative options for minimizing the
impacts of emerging contaminants
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including chemical redesign and Green
Chemistry, altering use and distribution,
and evaluating prescription levels for
pharmaceuticals. Dr. Klaper’s goal is to
conduct basic and applied research to
inform policy decisions involving
freshwater resources.
11. Polly A. Newcomb, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Evaluating environmental
exposures, such as metals, alcohol,
tobacco, and medications, and lifestyle
or physical factors, such as physical
activity, body mass, genetics, and tumor
characteristics.
ii. Education: Ph.D., University of
Washington, Seattle, Epidemiology;
MPH, Epidemiology, University of
Washington; BS, Molecular Biology, The
Evergreen State College.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. Polly
Newcomb is Head of the Cancer
Prevention Program of the Public Health
Sciences Division at the Fred
Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
(Fred Hutch), a Professor in the
Department of Epidemiology at the
University of Washington’s School of
Public Health, and a Senior Scientist at
the University of Wisconsin
Comprehensive Cancer Center. She
received her doctorate in Epidemiology
at the University of Washington in 1986
and completed her Post-doctoral
Fellowship in the Department of Human
Oncology at the University of Wisconsin
in 1987. She has more than 25 years of
extramurally funded research on cancer
genetics, etiology, screening, and
survival, demonstrating her broad
expertise in the field. Her current
research in relation to health and cancer
includes environmental exposures such
as metals, alcohol, tobacco, and
medications; lifestyle factors, such as
physical activity and body mass; as well
as genetics and tumor characteristics.
Her research has been funded by nearly
a score of foundation and NIH-grants for
these studies of colorectal neoplasia,
breast and other cancers, and their
precursors. She also participates in
several international consortia. Dr.
Newcomb has over 360 peer-reviewed
publications, has served as a mentor for
over 40 pre-doctoral, post-doctoral, and
junior investigators and is on the
Executive Committees of four University
of Washington/Fred Hutch T32/R25
training programs. She is active in
training new researchers through a
National Cancer Institute ‘‘Established
Investigator’’ award focused on
colorectal cancer survival. She has
served as a member of numerous NIH
Study Sections, a consultant to national
and international organizations, and is
an Editor/Associate Editor for top tier
journals such as American Journal of
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Epidemiology and Cancer,
Epidemiology, and Biomarkers &
Prevention. She has recently been
awarded mentoring awards from the
University of Washington and the Fred
Hutchinson Cancer Research Center,
and is a Fulbright Scholar (2015). She is
also the President of the American
Society for Preventive Oncology.
12. Melissa Perry, ScD, MHS
i. Expertise: Epidemiologic research
in public health.
ii. Education: BA, Psychology,
University of Vermont; MHS, Public
Health, The Johns Hopkins University
School of Hygiene and Public Health;
ScD, Public Health, The Johns Hopkins
University School of Hygiene and
Public Health.
iii. Professional Experience: Professor
Melissa Perry is the elected President of
the American College of Epidemiology.
Dr. Melissa Perry received Master of
Health Science and Doctor of Science
degrees from the Johns Hopkins School
of Hygiene and Public Health. She has
spent more than two decades
conducting epidemiologic research and
educating over 50 graduate students in
public health. Prior to coming to George
Washington University in 2010, Dr.
Perry spent 13 years on the Harvard
School of Public Health’s Department of
Environmental Health faculty. She is
currently Chair on the Board of
Scientific Counselors for the National
Center for Environmental Health/
Agency for Toxic Substances and
Disease Registry (NCEH/ATSDR) of the
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC). She is also President
of the American College of
Epidemiology. She is an associate editor
of the Journal Reproductive Toxicology,
and she serves as a standing member of
the National Institute for Occupational
Safety and Health research grant study
section. In 2014, Dr. Perry was elected
to the prestigious international
Collegium Ramazzini in recognition of
her contributions to advancing
occupational and environmental health
and her professional integrity. From
2009–2011, she was a member of the
CDC’s Scientific Understanding Work
Group, National Conversation on Public
Health and Chemical Exposures, Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention.
From 2003–2007, she was a coinvestigator with the Tropical Pesticides
Research Institute of Arusha, Tanzania,
and the University of Cape Town, South
Africa. Her laboratory at the Milken
Institute School of Public Health focuses
on reproductive epidemiology and
hormone disruptors, and her group has
developed new techniques for highvolume identification of chromosomal
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abnormalities in sperm cells. Her
research group was the first to use semiautomated imaging methods to show
how pesticides are associated with
sperm abnormalities. In addition to
numerous book chapters and published
abstracts, she has over 110 peerreviewed publications in areas
including DNA damage linked to
pesticides and other chemical
exposures, managing hazardous
substances in the workplace, and
occupational issues related to
agricultural, meat-packing, and
construction work. Current research on
pesticides, biomarkers and hormonal
effects in her laboratory focuses on
identifying the mutagenic and hormonal
effects of herbicide and insecticide
exposure in vivo. Her interests focus on
pre-disease exposure markers signaled
by early mutational damage or hormone
disruption, across the spectrum of
pesticide exposure levels. She has been
the principal investigator on research
grants from the National Cancer
Institute, the National Institute of
Environmental Health Sciences, and the
National Institute for Occupational
Safety and Health.
13. Patricia V. Pietrantonio, Ph.D., MS
i. Expertise: Applied insect
toxicology, insect endocrinology, and
insect biochemistry and physiology.
ii. Education: Ph.D., Entomology,
University of California; MS,
Entomology, Insect Toxicology track,
University of California; BS Agronomy,
Plant Breeding Track, University of
Buenos Aires.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr.
Patricia Pietrantonio is a tenured
Professor and AgriLife Research Fellow
in the Department of Entomology at
Texas A&M University in College
Station, TX. She is an associate member
of the interdisciplinary programs in
Toxicology and a member of the Faculty
of Neuroscience at the same university.
She received her BS in Agronomy from
the University of Buenos Aires in
Argentina, after which she was a
permanent technical staff member at
INTA (National Institute of Agriculture
and Cattle Technology) in Castelar,
Buenos Aires (1982–1987). She obtained
both her MS (1990) and Ph.D. (1995) in
Entomology from the University of
California at Riverside (both under Prof.
Sarjeet S. Gill), with emphasis in insect
toxicology, biochemistry, and
physiology. As a Ph.D. student, she
received the Henry Comstock Award
from the Entomological Society of
America (ESA) for outstanding graduate
student achievement. Since 1996, she
has advanced through the ranks at Texas
A&M University, receiving the title of
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‘‘AgriLife Research Fellow’’ for
Outstanding Research Leadership and
Grantsmanship in 2006. She has
received funding from the NIH–NIAID
(RO1), NIFA–AFRI, EPA Section 6 and
the NSF–IOS, as well as from the Texas
Department of Agriculture and USDASouthern Region IPM program. She has
served three times as a member on
national proposal review panels for
USDA–NIFA Insects and Nematodes
(organismal and sub-organismal panels)
and twice for NSF–IOS panels. She
reviews research proposals for European
Organizations such as the FWO
(Belgium), the ANR (French Natl.
Agency), BBSRC from the UK, the DFG
(German Research Foundation), and
national universities. She has served 19
years at Texas A&M University
conducting entomological research
ranging from applied insect toxicology
to basic aspects insect endocrinology
and insect biochemistry and physiology
(G protein-coupled receptors: GPCRs)
focusing on target validation. In applied
toxicology her laboratory elucidated
mechanisms of insecticide resistance to
pyrethroids, neonicotinoids, and
organophosphates in various pests such
as mosquitoes, cotton bollworm (H. zea),
boll weevil, and whiteflies. Some of this
work was in collaboration with
Extension Entomologists. She has
conducted international research on
insecticide resistance in Cyprus funded
by the Cyprus Research Promotion
Foundation. She has served as major
professor of 7 Ph.D. students and 4
masters students in her laboratory and
served as committee member for 11
graduate students (all completed). She
has served as co-major professor or
committee member for students enrolled
in Universities in Mexico and Europe
(UK Leuven, Belgium). Scholarly
accomplishments include 49 published
peer-reviewed journal articles, 7 book
chapters, and 18 papers in conference
proceedings, as well as published
abstracts of 75 invited presentations (21
international) and 116 volunteered
presentations. She teaches yearly
Graduate Courses in Insect Toxicology
(ENTO619) and Insect Physiology
(ENTO615). She has served as Subject
Editor for ‘‘Environmental Entomology,’’
for which she received an Outstanding
Service Award from the ESA. She is
currently an associate editorial member
in the Archives of Insect Biochemistry
and Physiology and member of the
Editorial board of Open Access Insect
Physiology (Ed. Guy Smagghe). Other
honors include the Paul A. Dahm
Memorial Lecture in Insect Toxicology
(Iowa State University) and the 2013
College of Agriculture and Life Sciences
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Dean’s Outstanding Achievement
Award for Faculty Mentoring. She was
appointed to the University (TAMU)
ADVANCE–NSF funded project as
mentor for minority women. Current
research funded by the NSF–IOS
focuses on insect neurobiology and
neuroendocrinology, and research
funded by Cotton Incorporated focuses
on Bt toxin and other receptors in the
cotton bollworm, H. zea. Other projects
focus on target validation in ticks. Dr.
Pietrantonio is also a member of the tick
genome Ix. scapularis expert group.
14. Kenneth Ramos, MD, Ph.D., PharmB
i. Expertise: Genomics and
computational biology, molecular
medicine, environmental health, and
toxicology.
ii. Education: BS, Pharmaceutical
Sciences and Chemistry, University of
Puerto Rico, Ph.D., Biochemical
Pharmacology, The University of Texas;
MD, University of Louisville Health
Sciences Center.
iii. Professional Experience: Kenneth
Ramos, MD, Ph.D., PharmB, works
across numerous organizational units at
the University of Arizona (UA) to
develop precision-health strategies and
approaches to health outcomes and
health-care delivery. He provides senior
leadership in the development of
personal diagnostics and therapeutics
for complex diseases, including cancer,
cardiopulmonary disorders, and
diabetes. Dr. Ramos also is a professor
of medicine at the UA College of
Medicine–Tucson in the Department of
Medicine, Division of Pulmonary, Sleep,
and Critical Care Medicine, where he
directs a highly competitive and
innovative research program in
translational and clinical genetics and
genomics. Dr. Ramos’ research
integrates approaches ranging from
molecular genetics to population-based
studies to understand the genomic basis
of human disease. He is regarded as a
leading expert in the study of geneenvironment interactions and directs a
competitive research program in
translational and clinical genomics with
a focus on genetic and epigenetic
determinants of toxicity and disease,
computational biology and molecular
signaling. Dr. Ramos has mentored over
100 doctoral, medical, veterinary
medicine, undergraduate and high
school students, many of whom have
gone on to successful careers in
academia, medicine, government and
industry. He is committed to initiatives
that attract and retain minorities in
science and medicine. Dr. Ramos served
as SOT President from 2008–2009, and
is a current member of the Continuing
Medical Education Task Force, Hispanic
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Organization of Toxicologists Specialty
Interest Group, and the Molecular and
Systems Biology Specialty Section. He
has been a member of SOT since 1982.
15. Gary S. Sayler, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Microbial biodegradation,
molecular microbiology,
bioluminescence sensing and
ecotoxicology.
ii. Education: Ph.D., Bacteriology and
Biochemistry, University of Idaho; BS,
Bacteriology, North Dakota State
University; AA, Liberal Arts, Bismarck
Junior College.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. Sayler
is Distinguished University Professor,
and Alvin and Sally Beaman Endowed
Professor of Microbiology and Ecology
and Evolutionary Biology at The
University of Tennessee. Dr. Sayler
received his Ph.D. in Bacteriology and
Biochemistry, University of Idaho, 1974;
BS, Bacteriology, North Dakota State
University, 1971; AA, Bismarck Junior
College, Liberal Arts, 1969. He was
Postdoctoral researcher in Marine
Microbiology at the University of
Maryland (1974–1975). He is the
founding Director, Center for
Environmental Biotechnology at the
University of Tennessee (1986-present)
and was the first Director of the UT–
ORNL Joint Institute for Biological
Sciences (2006–2014). As Director for
the Waste Management Research and
Education Institute Tennessee Center of
Excellence (1991–2005) he conducted a
consolidation and reorganization to
create the Institute for a Secure and
Sustainable Environment serving as
interim director (2005–2006).
Specializing in microbial
biodegradation, molecular microbiology,
bioluminescence sensing and
ecotoxicology, he has directed the
research of over 100 Ph.D. and MS
students and postdocs during his 40
year career, with approximately 400
peer reviewed publications, 16 patents,
and over 500 lectures and seminars
worldwide. He serves on the Sciences
Advisory Board for the US Defense
Department, Strategic Environmental
Research Defense Program (2011present); and was a member of the US
Department of Energy, Biological and
Environmental Research Advisory
Committee (2008–2013). He was an
Executive member and Chair of the
Board of Scientific Counselors for the
EPA Office of Research and
Development (2002–2010) and served
on the EPA’s Science Advisory Board
drinking water committee (2002–2009),
the Water Environment Research
Foundation Research Council (1995–
2001) and was Peer Review Chair for the
EPA Exploratory Biology Program
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(1990–1993). He has served on National
Academy/NRC Committees evaluating
the US EPA Laboratory Enterprise
(2013–14), DOE NRSB-Environmental
Management Roadmap (2007–2008)
Stand-Off Explosives Detection (2003)
and DOE Site Decontamination and
Decommissioning (2002). He is Cofounder China-US Joint Research Center
For Ecosystem and Environmental
Change, Beijing, (2006-present) and US
State Department Eco partnership (2010present) and has held honorary
Professorships at China Agricultural
University, Beijing (2012), Northeast
Normal University, Changchun (2012),
East China University of Science and
Technology, Shanghai (2008–2011),
Institute for Water Research
Distinguished Researcher, Xi’an (2008);
and Adjunct Professorship, Gwanju
Institute of Science and Technology,
Korea (2005–2010). Dr. Sayler is an
Associate Editor of Environmental
Science and Technology and is an active
member in ACS, AAAS, ASM and
SETAC. Elected to AAAS Fellowship in
2012. He received the DOW Foundation
Support for Public Health
Environmental Research and Education
(SPHERE) Award (1998–2000); and was
elected to the Fellow American
Academy for Microbiology (1995present). He received the Distinguished
Alumni Award, University of Idaho and
the UT Senior Researcher Award from
the College of Arts and Sciences (1995)
and received the Procter and Gamble
Prize, American Society for
Microbiology (1994). He was designated
Chancellor’s Research Scholar, UTK
(1988), and received the NIH Research
Career Development Award (NIEHS),
(1980–1985).
16. Joseph Shaw, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Discovery of molecular
toxicological and disease pathways
resulting from complex environmental
exposures including techniques in new
high-throughput molecular techniques
and evolutionary theory, statistical
analysis, and bioinformatics.
ii. Education: Ph.D., University of
Kentucky; BS, Virginia Polytechnic
Institute and State University.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr.
Joseph R. Shaw is an Associate
Professor in the School of Public and
Environmental Affairs at Indiana
University and holds adjunct
appointments in their School of Public
Health and Center for Genomics and
Bioinformatics. He also holds a partial
appointment as a Senior Lecturer of
Environmental Genomics in the School
of Biosciences at the University of
Birmingham, UK. Dr. Shaw earned his
doctoral degree in environmental
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toxicology from the Graduate Center for
Toxicology at the University of
Kentucky in 2001. He then moved to
Dartmouth College where he received an
NIEHS post-doctoral fellowship to apply
emerging Omics technologies to
characterize mechanisms of toxicant
actions. He joined the faculty of the
School of Public and Environmental
Affairs at Indiana University,
Bloomington in 2007. Dr. Shaw was
named an Outstanding New
Environmental Scientist (ONES) by the
NIEHS in 2010, and recognized as an
exceptional talent in the environmental
sciences by the Royal Society, UK in
2013 for his work investigating toxicant
exposure, genome structure, and toxic
effects on individuals and populations.
Contributing to these efforts he is a
founding member of the Daphnia and
Fundulus Genomics Consortia where he
helps lead over 600 scientists around
the world working to develop new
models for environmental genomics. He
also helped establish the Consortium for
Environmental Omics and Toxicology
that seeks to apply twenty-first century
technologies to predictive toxicology.
Dr. Shaw has trained over 150 students
in environmental genomics through the
Mount Desert Island Bio Lab Workshop
in environmental genomics that he codeveloped in 2011. The workshop is
now held annually in the US and UK.
Dr. Shaw’s research program has
received over $6.4M in research funding
from NIH, NSF, and DOD since 2002,
producing over 38 publications in the
area of environmental genomics and
toxicology. He has served on the
editorial board and in 2013, was
promoted to editor for the journal
‘‘Environmental Toxicology and
Chemistry.’’ His research group seeks to
discover critical, specific, and causative
molecular toxicological and disease
pathways resulting from complex
environmental exposures. His work
embraces new high-throughput
molecular techniques and couples these
with evolutionary theory, statistical
analysis, and bioinformatics to integrate
toxic-response across levels of biological
organization. Current research in his
laboratory focuses on (i) associating
variation in genome structure with
disease and toxicant response within
and between populations; (ii)
identifying the mechanisms of actions of
chemical stress, especially metals, and
(iii) elucidating the genetic and
epigenetic underpinnings of mutations
and establishing their role in evolved
tolerance.
17. Sonya K. Sobrian, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Behavioral,
immunological and neurotoxicological
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consequences of prenatal and neonatal
drug administration and drug and
environmental stress.
ii. Education: Ph.D. Physiological
Psychology, from Carleton University;
BA and MA (Experimental) in
Psychology from St. John’s University;
MA equivalent in Pharmacology from
Ottawa University.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. Sonya
K. Sobrian is an Associate Professor of
Pharmacology at the Howard University
College of Medicine, Director of the
Developmental Neurobehavioral
Pharmacology Laboratory, and
Immediate Past Chair of the University’s
IACUC. Dr. Sobrian received her
doctorate in Physiological Psychology
from Carleton University, Ottawa
Canada, and served a postdoctoral
fellowship at Princeton University in
Developmental Neurobiology; she also
added pharmacology and immunology
to her graduate (MA,
Neuropharmacology: Ottawa University)
and post graduate (Fulbright Fellow:
Immunology Research Center, Belgrade,
Yugoslavia) training. During her tenure
at the College of Medicine, Dr. Sobrian
successfully mentored medical,
graduate, and undergraduate students.
She has served as President of the
Neurobehavioral Teratology Society, is
currently on the Editorial Advisory
Board of the journal, ‘‘Neurotoxicology
and Teratology’’, and is Guest Editor of
a special issue of the journal on
‘‘Developmental Cannabinoid Exposure:
New Perspectives on Mechanisms,
Outcomes, and Implications for Public
Health.’’ Dr. Sobrian is currently on the
Board of Scientific Counselors for the
Department of Health & Human Services
National Toxicology Program. She also
served as a member of the Scientific
Advisory Panel for the US EPA Office of
Chemical Safety and Pollution
Prevention, and previously served on
the EPA Toxic Substance Control Act
Advisory Committee. As a visiting
scientist at the National Center for
Toxicological Research, Dr. Sobrian was
instrumental in establishing a prenatal
model of cocaine toxicity. She served on
the ILSI Risk Science Institute’s Expert
Panel on the evaluation and
interpretation of neurodevelopmental
endpoints for human risk. Dr. Sobrian
served as Director of the Behavioral
Neuroscience Program at the National
Science Foundation, where she directed
and managed funding of research on the
neural mechanisms underlying behavior
and learning. In addition, she has served
as Chair of the Board of Trustees of
AAALAC International, as well as Chair
of the Board of Directors of the National
Capital Area Chapter of the Fulbright
Association. During her tenure as an
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 155 / Wednesday, August 12, 2015 / Notices
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
AAAS Congressional Science and
Technology Fellow, her scientific
expertise was utilized to inform public
policy on Fetal Alcohol Syndrome,
aging, and NIH research funding. The
major focus of Dr. Sobrian’s research
involves the behavioral, immunological,
and neurotoxicological consequences of
prenatal and neonatal drug
administration and drug and
environmental stress-induced
alterations in behavioral and
immunological development. She has a
longstanding interest in sex differences,
and her lab was the first to show that
prenatal environmental and
psychological stress differentially
altered immune parameters in rat male
and female offspring, research that she
continued as a Fulbright Scholar at the
Immunological Research Institute in
Belgrade, Yugoslavia. Her current
research involves the life-span
consequences of prenatal exposure to
cocaine and nicotine, alone and in
combination, with an emphasis on drug
addiction in the aging organism. In
developing animal models for
neuropsychiatric diseases, Dr. Sobrian is
currently exploring the role of prenatal
environmental noise stress [PENS] in
the etiology of autism and depression.
For her work in establishing an
environmentally-mediated
neurodevelopmental animal model of
depression, Dr. Sobrian was designated
a L. Vernon Maddox NARSAD
investigator.
18. Kristina Thayer, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Understanding the role of
environmental exposures in diabetes
and obesity, evaluating the predictive
utility of high throughput screening
data, and methods of exposure
assessment.
ii. Education: BS, Psychology,
Pennsylvania State University; Ph.D.,
Biological Sciences, University of
Missouri.
iii. Professional Experience: Kristina
Thayer, Ph.D. is Deputy Director of
Analysis at the National Toxicology
Program (NTP) and Director of the NTP
Office of Health Assessment and
Translation (OHAT) at the National
Institute for Environmental Health
Sciences (NIEHS) located on the campus
of the National Institute for
Environmental Health Sciences
(NIEHS). OHAT conducts evaluations to
assess the evidence that environmental
chemicals, physical substances, or
mixtures (collectively referred to as
‘‘substances’’) may cause adverse health
effects and provides opinions on
whether these substances may be of
concern given what is known about
current human exposure levels. As
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Deputy Director of Analysis, she
oversees OHAT and the NTP Office of
the Report on Carcinogens. Before
becoming director of OHAT, she held
positions in the NTP Office of Liaison,
Policy, and Review, the NIEHS Office of
Risk Assessment Research and the NTP
Center for the Evaluation of Risks to
Human Reproduction (CERHR). Prior to
joining the NTP/NIEHS, she was a
senior scientist at the World Wildlife
Fund and then at the Environmental
Working Group. In addition to
overseeing the development of OHAT
and ORoC monographs, she has research
interests in the areas of understanding
the role of environmental exposures in
diabetes and obesity, evaluating the
predictive utility of high throughput
screening data, and methods of
exposure assessment. She is considered
an expert on the application of
systematic review methods to
environmental health topics.
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 136 et. seq.; 21 U.S.C.
301 et seq.
Dated: August 5, 2015.
David Dix,
Director, Office of Science Coordination and
Policy.
[FR Doc. 2015–19828 Filed 8–11–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[EPA–HQ–OPP–2015–0086; FRL–9931–20]
Environmental Quality Issues and
Pesticides Operations and
Management State FIFRA Issues
Research and Evaluation Group;
Notice of Public Meeting
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
The Association of American
Pesticide Control Officials (AAPCO)/
State FIFRA Issues Research and
Evaluation Group (SFIREG), the
Environmental Quality Issues (EQI) and
the Pesticides Operations and
Management (POM) committees will
hold a joint 2-day meeting, beginning on
September 21, 2015 and ending
September 22, 2015. This notice
announces the location and times for
the meeting and sets forth the tentative
agenda topics.
DATES: The meeting will be held on
Monday, September 21, 2015, from 8
a.m. to 5 p.m. and 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.
on Tuesday, September 22, 2015.
To request accommodation of a
disability, please contact the person
listed in this notice under FOR FURTHER
SUMMARY:
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48315
INFORMATION CONTACT. Please contact
EPA at least 10 days prior to the
meeting, to give EPA as much time as
possible to process your request.
ADDRESSES: The meeting will be held at
EPA, One Potomac Yard (South Bldg.)
2777 Crystal Dr., Arlington, Virginia, 1st
Floor, South Conference Room.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ron
Kendall, Field and External Affairs
Division (7506P), Office of Pesticide
Programs, Environmental Protection
Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW.,
Washington, DC 20460–0001; telephone
number: (703) 305–5561; fax number:
(703) 305–5884; email address:
kendall.ron@epa.gov or Amy Bamber,
SFIREG Executive Secretary, at aapcosfireg@comcast.net.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
You may be potentially affected by
this action if you are interested in
pesticide regulation issues affecting
states and any discussion between EPA
and SFIREG on field implementation
issues related to human health,
environmental exposure to pesticides,
and insight into EPA’s decision-making
process. You are invited and encouraged
to attend the meetings and participate as
appropriate. Potentially affected entities
may include (but are not limited to)
persons who are or may be required to
conduct testing of chemical substances
under the Federal Food, Drug and
Cosmetics Act (FFDCA), or the Federal
Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide
Act (FIFRA) and those who sell,
distribute or use pesticides, as well as
any non-government organization. If
you have any questions regarding the
applicability of this action to a
particular entity, please consult the
person in this notice listed under FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
B. How can I get copies of this document
and other related information?
The docket for this action, identified
by docket identification (ID) number
EPA–HQ–OPP–2015–0086, is available
at https://www.regulations.gov or at the
Office of Pesticide Programs Regulatory
Public Docket (OPP Docket) in the
Environmental Protection Agency
Docket Center (EPA/DC), West William
Jefferson Clinton Bldg., Rm. 3334, 1301
Constitution Ave. NW., Washington, DC
20460–0001. The Public Reading Room
is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, excluding legal
holidays. The telephone number for the
Public Reading Room is (202) 566–1744
and the telephone number for the OPP
Docket is (703) 305–5805. Please review
E:\FR\FM\12AUN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 155 (Wednesday, August 12, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 48306-48315]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-19828]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
[EPA-HQ-OPP-2015-0423; FRL-9929-66]
Nominations to the FIFRA Scientific Advisory Panel; Request for
Comments
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notice provides the names, addresses, professional
affiliations, and selected biographical data of persons recently
nominated to serve on the Scientific Advisory Panel (SAP) established
under section 25(d) of the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and
Rodenticide Act (FIFRA). The Panel was created on November 28, 1975,
and made a statutory Panel by amendment to FIFRA, dated October 25,
1988. The Agency, at this time, anticipates selecting two new members
to serve on the panel as a result of membership terms that will expire
in 2015. Public comments on the current nominations are invited, as
these comments will be used to assist the Agency in selecting the new
chartered Panel members.
DATES: Comments, identified by docket ID number EPA-HQ-OPP-2015-0423,
must be received on or before August 27, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by docket identification
(ID) number EPA-HQ-OPP-2015-0423, by one of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the online instructions for submitting comments. Do not submit
electronically any information you consider to be Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information whose disclosure is restricted
by statute.
Mail: OPP Docket, Environmental Protection Agency Docket
Center (EPA/DC), (28221T), 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW., Washington, DC
20460-0001.
[[Page 48307]]
Hand Delivery: To make special arrangements for hand
delivery or delivery of boxed information, please follow the
instructions at https://www.epa.gov/dockets/contacts.html.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Steven M. Knott, DFO, Office of
Science Coordination and Policy (7201M), Environmental Protection
Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20460-0001;
telephone number: (202) 564-0103; fax number: (202) 564-8382; email
address: knott.steven@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
This action is directed to the public in general. This action may,
however, be of interest to persons who are or may be required to
conduct testing of chemical substances under the Federal Food, Drug,
and Cosmetic Act (FFDCA) and FIFRA. Since other entities may also be
interested, the Agency has not attempted to describe all the specific
entities that may be affected by this action. If you have any questions
regarding the applicability of this action to a particular entity,
consult the DFO listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
B. What should I consider as I prepare my comments for EPA?
When submitting comments, remember to:
1. Identify the document by docket ID number and other identifying
information (subject heading, Federal Register date and page number).
2. Follow directions. The Agency may ask you to respond to specific
questions or organize comments by referencing a Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR) part or section number.
3. Explain why you agree or disagree; suggest alternatives and
substitute language for your requested changes.
4. Describe any assumptions and provide any technical information
and/or data that you used.
5. If you estimate potential costs or burdens, explain how you
arrived at your estimate in sufficient detail to allow for it to be
reproduced.
6. Provide specific examples to illustrate your concerns and
suggest alternatives.
7. Explain your views as clearly as possible, avoiding the use of
profanity or personal threats.
8. Make sure to submit your comments by the comment period deadline
identified.
II. Background
The FIFRA SAP serves as the primary scientific peer review
mechanism of EPA's Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention
(OCSPP) and is structured to provide scientific advice, information and
recommendations to the EPA Administrator on pesticides and pesticide-
related issues as to the impact of regulatory actions on health and the
environment. Established in 1975 under FIFRA, the FIFRA SAP is a
Federal advisory committee that operates in accordance with
requirements of the Federal Advisory Committee Act (FACA). The FIFRA
SAP is composed of a permanent panel consisting of seven members who
are appointed by the EPA Administrator from nominees provided by the
National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the National Science Foundation
(NSF). FIFRA established a Science Review Board consisting of at least
60 scientists who are available to the SAP on an ad hoc basis to assist
in reviews conducted by the FIFRA SAP. As a peer review mechanism, the
FIFRA SAP provides comments, evaluations and recommendations to improve
the effectiveness and quality of analyses made by Agency scientists.
Members of the FIFRA SAP are scientists who have sufficient
professional qualifications, including training and experience, to
provide expert advice and recommendations to the Agency.
In accordance with the statute, the SAP is composed of a permanent
panel of seven members, selected and appointed by the Deputy
Administrator of EPA, as designated by the Administrator from nominees
submitted by both the NSF and the NIH. The Agency, at this time,
anticipates selecting two new members to serve on the panel as a result
of membership terms that will expire this year. The Agency requested
nominations of experts to be selected from the fields of human
toxicology, environmental toxicology, pathology, risk assessment and/or
environmental biology with demonstrated experience and expertise in all
phases of the risk assessment process including: Planning, scoping, and
problem formulation; analysis; and interpretation and risk
characterization (including the interpretation and communication of
uncertainty). Nominees should be well published and current in their
field of expertise. The statute further stipulates that we publish the
name, address and professional affiliation in the Federal Register.
III. Charter
A Charter for the FIFRA Scientific Advisory Panel dated October 17,
2014 was issued in accordance with the requirements of the Federal
Advisory Committee Act, Public Law 92-463, 86 Stat. 770 (5 U.S.C. App.
I).
A. Qualifications of Members
Members are scientists who have sufficient professional
qualifications, including training and experience, to provide expert
comments on the impact of pesticides on health and the environment. No
persons shall be ineligible to serve on the Panel by reason of their
membership on any other advisory committee to a Federal department or
agency or their employment by a Federal department or agency (except
the EPA). The Deputy Administrator appoints individuals to serve on the
Panel for staggered terms of 3 years. Panel members are subject to the
provisions of 40 CFR part 3, subpart F, Standards of Conduct for
Special Government Employees, which include rules regarding conflicts
of interest. Each nominee selected by the Deputy Administrator, before
being formally appointed, is required to submit a confidential
statement of employment and financial interests, which shall fully
disclose, among other financial interests, the nominee's sources of
research support, if any.
In accordance with section 25(d)(1) of FIFRA, the Deputy
Administrator shall require all nominees to the Panel to furnish
information concerning their professional qualifications, educational
background, employment history, and scientific publications.
B. Applicability of Existing Regulations
With respect to the requirements of section 25(d) of FIFRA that the
Administrator promulgate regulations regarding conflicts of interest,
the Charter provides that EPA's existing regulations applicable to
Special Government Employees, which include advisory committee members,
will apply to the members of the Scientific Advisory Panel. These
regulations appear in 40 CFR part 3, subpart F. In addition, the
Charter provides for open meetings with opportunities for public
participation.
C. Process of Obtaining Nominees
In accordance with the provisions of section 25(d) of FIFRA, EPA,
on April 21, 2015, requested that the NIH and the NSF nominate
scientists to fill vacancies occurring on the Panel. The Agency
requested nominations of experts in the fields of human toxicology,
environmental toxicology, pathology,
[[Page 48308]]
risk assessment, and/or environmental biology with demonstrated
experience and expertise in all phases of the risk assessment process
including: Planning, scoping, and problem formulation; analysis; and
interpretation and risk characterization (including the interpretation
and communication of uncertainty). NIH and NSF responded by letter,
providing the Agency with a total of 34 nominees. Copies of these
letters, with the listed nominees, are available in the public docket
referenced in unit I.B.1. of this notice. Of the 34 nominees, 18 are
interested and available to actively participate in SAP meetings (see
Section IV. Nominees). One nominee is currently serving as member of
the FIFRA SAP, and is not listed. In addition to the current nominees
interested, at EPA's discretion, nominees who were interested and
available during the previous nomination process in the January 24,
2014 Federal Register (79 FR 4158) (FRL-9904-66), may also be
considered. Of the current 34 nominations, the following 15 individuals
are not available:
1. Asa Bradman, Ph.D., University of CA, Berkeley, CA.
2. Mark G. Evans, DVM, Ph.D., ACVP, Pfizer Global Research and
Development Drug Safety Research and Development, San Diego, CA.
3. John Groopman, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore,
MD.
4. Stephen S. Hecht, Ph.D., University of Minnesota,
Minneapolis, MN.
5. Marie Lyn Miranda, Ph.D., Rice University, Houston, TX.
6. Frederica P. Perera, Ph.D., MPH, Columbia University, New
York, NY.
7. Irva Hertz-Picciotto, Ph.D., University of California, Davis,
CA.
8. Thomas A.E. Platts-Mills, M.D., University of Virginia,
Charlottesville, VA.
9. Michael Roe, Ph.D., North Carolina State University, Raleigh,
NC.
10. Ana Diez Roux, M.D, Ph.D., MPH, Drexel University,
Philadelphia, PA.
11. Jonathan M. Samet, MD, University of Southern California,
Los Angeles, CA.
12. David Siegel, MD, National Institute of Health, Rockville,
MD.
13. Allan H. Smith, MD, Ph.D., University of California,
Berkeley, CA.
14. Frank Speizer, SCD, MD, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
15. Robert Williams, MD, University of New Mexico Health
Sciences Center, Albuquerque, NM.
IV. Nominees
Following are the names, addresses, professional affiliations, and
selected biographical data of current nominees being considered for
membership on the FIFRA SAP. The Agency anticipates selecting two
individuals to fill vacancies occurring in 2015.
1. Nicole L. Achee, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Epidemiology control of arthropod-borne diseases
including evaluation of vector ecology, habitat management, and adult
control strategies, disease risk modeling using GIS and remote sensing
technologies, and evaluation of chemical actions against mosquito
vectors under both laboratory and field conditions.
ii. Education: Ph.D. Medical Entomology, Uniformed Services
University of the Health Sciences; MSc, Zoology, Texas A&M University;
BS, Biology, St. Louis University.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. Achee is a Medical Entomologist
(Research Associate Professor) within the Department of Biological
Sciences and holds a joint Associate Professor appointment in the Eck
Institute for Global Health at the University of Notre Dame. She joined
the University of Notre Dame faculty in 2013, following a 2-year
position as Assistant Professor at the Uniformed Services University of
the Health Sciences in Bethesda, MD. She has a combined 15 years of
experience in vector behavior research related to the epidemiology and
control of arthropod-borne diseases, including evaluation of vector
ecology, habitat management and adult control strategies, disease risk
modeling using GIS and remote sensing technologies, and evaluation of
chemical actions against mosquito vectors under both laboratory and
field conditions. She has worked in the international settings of
Belize, Mexico, Peru, Suriname, Indonesia, Nepal, South Korea,
Thailand, and Tanzania. Dr. Achee was the principal investigator of a
research program funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation focused
on the development of spatial repellents in combination push-pull
systems to reduce human-vector contact for dengue prevention. She is a
Working Group member of the World Health Organization (WHO) Pesticide
Evaluation Scheme (WHOPES), the Chair of the American Committee of
Medical Entomology (ACME) of the American Society of Tropical Medicine
and Hygiene (ASTMH), a representative of the WHO Global Collaboration
for the Development of Pesticides for Public Health partnership
(GCDPP), Vector Control Working Group member of Roll Back Malaria and
served as the lead scientist for the recent publication of the WHO
Guidelines for Efficacy Testing of Spatial Repellents. She is currently
the lead Principal Investigator of a multicenter intervention trial
dedicated to generating evidence of the protective efficacy of spatial
repellents for prevention of malaria and dengue human infections for
use towards full WHO recommendations. Her latest efforts have been
dedicated to co-Directing the Belize Vector and Ecology Center (BVEC)
in Orange Walk Town, Belize to serve as a regional platform of
excellence for research and education in arthropod-borne diseases.
2. George B. Corcoran, Ph.D., ATS
i. Expertise: Pharmacological and toxicological adverse cellular
outcomes, and factors that govern drug and chemical injuries including
drug metabolism and nutrition.
ii: Education: Ph.D., Pharmacology, Department of Pharmacology,
School of Medicine, George Washington University; MS, Chemistry,
Bucknell University; BA, Chemistry, Ithaca College.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. Corcoran is Professor and
Chairman of the Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, College of
Pharmacy & Health Sciences, Wayne State University, and Adjunct
Professor of Pediatrics, Wayne State University School of Medicine. Dr.
Corcoran earned his BA in Chemistry (Ithaca College `70), MS in
Chemistry (Bucknell University `73), and Ph.D. in Pharmacology/
Toxicology (George Washington University `80), before completing
Postdoctoral Fellow training in Toxicology (Baylor College of Medicine
and Methodist Hospital `81). Prior to his appointment at Wayne State,
Dr. Corcoran served as Assistant Professor of Pharmaceutics at the
State University of New York at Buffalo, followed by Associate
Professor and later Professor, and Director of the Toxicology Graduate
Program at the University of New Mexico. Dr. Corcoran has published
over 200 original research papers, abstracts and other reports, and has
received nearly $6 million in grants and contracts as Principal
Investigator, Co-Principal Investigator, and Co-Investigator. He has
chaired grant review panels for the NIH, the National Academies, and
the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and has refereed papers for more
than 50 national and international scientific journals. He has
contributed to the training of over 150 MS and Ph.D. graduates, 3200
pharmacists, and hundreds of undergraduate research students. His
research interests are multidisciplinary and translational. They focus
on cellular injury and cell death, and factors that govern drug and
chemical injuries, including drug metabolism and nutrition. Approaches
to translate basic discoveries to improve human health involve
retrospective and prospective clinical investigation of human
[[Page 48309]]
volunteers and patients, integrated in vivo models, cellular and
molecular biology, pharmacokinetics, and synthetic chemistry. Specific
areas of investigation include cell death by necrosis and apoptosis,
the role of DNA damage in acute cell death, drug and chemical injury to
the liver, nutrition and particularly obesity as overlooked factors in
drug and chemical injury, drug biotransformation including by CYPs, and
toxicity of drugs such as acetaminophen (paracetamol). Dr. Corcoran is
a Fellow of the Academy of Toxicological Sciences, the top US
credentialing organization for toxicologists. He was elected to its
Executive Board and appointed to the National Toxicology Program Board
of Scientific Counselors in 2012. He has been a Delegate to the
International Congress of Toxicology and member of the International
Union of Toxicology Developing Countries Committee. He is a former
Member of the Science Advisory Board of the US Environmental Protection
Agency, is former Chair of the Executive Board of the Council of
Scientific Society Presidents, and is a past member of the
Intergovernmental Scientific Advisory Committee on Alternative
Toxicological Methods. He has contributed to the scientific direction
of the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
as a member of its Scientific Council, and served on the Research and
Graduate Affairs Committee of the American Association of Colleges of
Pharmacy. Dr. Corcoran is sought as an expert in toxic tort, product
liability and other legal matters. At the University of New Mexico, Dr.
Corcoran advised Health Sciences Vice President Jane Henney (FDA
Commissioner 1998-2000) as a member of her Health Sciences Leadership
Council. He is Past President of the Society of Toxicology, the largest
toxicology organization in the world with over 7,000 members from
academia, industry, government, medicine, law and other fields
practicing in the USA and over 50 foreign countries. He has contributed
to Society positions having national and international impact, from the
best science for evidence-based safety legislation, to organization
ethics and governance. He serves as Associate Editor of Toxicology and
Applied Pharmacology [2002-date], Editor of the Journal of
Pharmaceutical Sciences and Pharmacology [2014-date] and Editor of the
MO Online Journal of Toxicology [2014-date]. He has been an Editorial
Board Member of the international journals Pharmacology and Toxicology,
Basic and Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology, Toxicology Letters, and
the Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health. During his service
on the National Institutes of Health Alcohol-Toxicology 1 Study
Section, he evaluated over 1,000 NIH grant applications.
3. Deborah A. Cory-Slechta, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Relationship between brain neurotransmitter systems
and neurodevelopment associated with alteration by exposures to
environmental toxicants.
ii: Education: Ph.D., Experimental Psychology, University of
Minnesota; MA, Experimental Psychology, Western Michigan University;
BS, Psychology, Western Michigan University.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. Deborah Cory-Slechta is a
Professor in the Department of Environmental Medicine, Pediatrics and
Public Health Sciences at the University of Rochester School of
Medicine and Dentistry. Dr. Deborah Cory-Slechta became Chair of its
Department of Environmental Medicine and Director of the NIEHS
Environmental Health Sciences Center in 1998, and served as Dean for
Research from 2000-2002. She then became Director of the Environmental
and Occupational Health Sciences Institute (EOHSI) and Chair of the
Department of Environmental and Community Medicine at the UMDNJ-Robert
Wood Johnson Medical School from 2003-2007, before returning to URMC as
Professor in Environmental Medicine, Pediatrics and Public Health
Sciences. Dr. Cory-Slechta has served on national review and advisory
panels of the National Institutes of Health, the National Institute of
Environmental Health Sciences, the Food and Drug Administration, the
National Center for Toxicological Research, the Environmental
Protection Agency, the National Academy of Sciences, the Institute of
Medicine, and the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry,
Centers for Disease Control. In addition, Dr. Cory-Slechta has served
on the editorial boards of the journals Neurotoxicology, Toxicology,
Toxicological Sciences, Fundamental and Applied Toxicology,
Neurotoxicology and Teratology, and American Journal of Mental
Retardation. She has held the elected positions of President of the
Neurotoxicology Specialty Section of the Society of Toxicology,
President of the Behavioral Toxicology Society, and been named a Fellow
of the American Psychological Association. Her research has focused
largely on the relationships between brain neurotransmitter systems and
neurodevelopment, and how such relationships are altered by exposures
to environmental toxicants, including the role played by environmental
neurotoxicant exposures in developmental disabilities and
neurodegenerative diseases. This work has included the effects of
developmental exposures to metals, pesticides, and air pollutants as
well as combined exposures to metals and stress in experimental animal
models as well as in human cohort studies. These research efforts have
resulted in over 155 papers and book chapters to date.
4. Victor G. De Gruttola, ScD
i. Expertise: Development of innovative study designs and
analytical methods for evaluation of new therapies for HIV-related
disease.
ii. Education: ScD, Biostatistics, Harvard School of Public Health;
SM, Bioengineering, Harvard University; SM, Epidemiology, Harvard
School of Public Health; BS, Physics, Brown University.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. De Gruttola received his ScD in
1986 from the Biostatistics Department at HSPH--the department for
which he served as Chair from 2009-2014. His research focuses on
development of statistical methods required for appropriate public
health response to the AIDS epidemic both within the US and
internationally. The aspects of the epidemic on which he has worked
include transmission of, and natural history of infection with, the
Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), as well as research on
antiretroviral treatments, including the development and consequences
of resistance to treatments. The broad goals of his research include
developing treatment strategies that provide durable virologic
suppression while preserving treatment options after failure, and
evaluating the community-level impact of packages of prevention
interventions, including antiviral treatment. He served as the Director
of the Statistics and Data Analysis Center of the Adult Project of the
AIDS Clinical Trials Group from 1996 to 2003--the period in which
highly active antiretroviral treatment was developed, and he was
instrumental in designing and analyzing studies of the best means of
providing such therapy. He also served from 2011-2015, as co-PI (with
PI Max Essex) on a community-randomized study of a combination HIV
prevention strategy in Botswana.
5. David C. Dorman, DVM, Ph.D., DABVT, DABT, ATS
i. Expertise: Neurotoxicology, and risk assessment.
[[Page 48310]]
ii: Education: Ph.D., Veterinary Biosciences/Toxicology, University
of Illinois; DVM Colorado State University; B.A. Chemistry, University
of San Diego.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. Dorman is a professor of
toxicology in the Department of Molecular Biosciences in the College of
Veterinary Medicine at North Carolina State University. Dr. Dorman
received his undergraduate training in chemistry from the University of
San Diego, his DVM from Colorado State University, and he completed a
combined Ph.D. and residency program in toxicology at the University of
Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. He is a diplomat of the American Board of
Veterinary Toxicology and the American Board of Toxicology. Dr. Dorman
has chaired or served on numerous NRC committees. His recent NRC
chairmanships include the Committee on Predictive-Toxicology Approaches
for Military Assessments of Acute Exposures and the Committee on Design
and Evaluation of Safer Chemical Substitutions--A Framework to Inform
Government and Industry Decisions. He has been recently named as chair
of the NRC's Committee on Toxicology and the Committee on Unraveling
Low Dose Toxicity: Case Studies of Systematic Review of Evidence. He
has served on other advisory boards for the US Navy, NASA, and USDA,
and is currently a member of the National Toxicology Program's Board of
Scientific Counselors. He is an elected fellow of both the Academy of
Toxicological Sciences and the American Association for the Advancement
of Sciences. The primary objective of his research is to provide a
refined understanding of chemically induced neurotoxicity in laboratory
animals that will lead to improved assessment of potential
neurotoxicity in humans. Dr. Dorman's other research interests include
clinical veterinary toxicology, nasal toxicology, pharmacokinetics, and
cognition and olfaction in animals. He has over 145 peer-reviewed
research publications including work with pesticides, metals, hydrogen
sulfide, and a variety of industrial chemicals.
6. Valery E. Forbes, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Population ecology and modeling, fate and effects of
toxic chemicals in sediments, and ecological risk assessment.
ii. Education: Ph.D., Coastal Oceanography, State University of New
York; MSc Marine Environmental Science, State University of New York;
BA Biology; BA Geology, State University of New York.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. Valery E. Forbes is Dean of the
College of Biological Sciences at University of Minnesota. Dr. Forbes
was Director of the School of Biological Sciences at the University of
Nebraska-Lincoln from 2011-2015. From 1989-2010, she lived and worked
in Denmark, most recently as the Founding Chair of the Department of
Environmental, Social and Spatial Change and Professor of Aquatic
Ecology and Ecotoxicology at Roskilde University. Dr. Forbes received
her Bachelor's Degree (Biology & Geology) from the State University of
New York at Binghamton in 1983, a MSc (Marine Environmental Science)
from SUNY-Stony Brook in 1984, and a Ph.D. (Coastal Oceanography), also
from SUNY- Stony Brook in 1988. Specific research topics include
population ecology and modeling, fate and effects of toxic chemicals in
sediments, and ecological risk assessment. Dr. Forbes has graduated
approximately 50 MSc and Ph.D. students over her career and established
a Danish Graduate School in Environmental Stress Studies (GESS) based
at Roskilde University. While based in Europe, Dr. Forbes served as
work package leader on two major EU 7th Framework Projects: CREAM (a
Marie Curie Initial Training Network on Mechanistic Effect Models for
Ecological Risk Assessment of Chemicals) and NanoReTox (a multi-
institution research project on The Reactivity and Toxicity of
Engineered Nanoparticles: Risks to the Environment and Human Health).
More recently, she has received funding from the National Institute of
Mathematical and Biological Synthesis (NIMBioS) for multi-partite
initiatives to develop predictive models for the ecological risk
assessment of chemicals. Dr. Forbes has published well over 100
internationally peer-reviewed articles and two books on these topics.
She has served on the Danish Natural Sciences Research Council, the
European Research Council and as ad hoc reviewer for numerous funding
agencies from various countries. She is on the editorial board of
several international journals and provides scientific advice to the
private and public sectors.
7. John Grieco, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Epidemiology, ecology, and transmission dynamics of
vector-borne illness.
ii. Education: Ph.D., Medical Zoology, Uniformed Services
University; MS Medical Entomology, Texas A&M University; BS, Biology,
University of Notre Dame.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. John Grieco is a Research
Associate Professor of Medical Entomology and Associate Director of the
Eck Institute of Global Health at the University of Notre Dame in Notre
Dame, Indiana. Dr. Grieco's work is multidisciplinary with a focus on
the biology, ecology and transmission dynamics of vector-borne illness.
He has a long history of working on vector borne disease throughout the
tropics and his research centers on malaria, Japanese Encephalitis,
Dengue, Chagas, and rickettsial pathogens. Dr. Grieco has an extensive
history in the design of novel repellents, irritants and toxicants for
disease vectors. He has developed a number of field and laboratory
assays for identifying and optimizing behavior modifying compounds for
use in the control of mosquito, sandfly, and triatome vectors. Dr.
Grieco serves as an external advisor to the Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation, the World Health Organization (WHO), the US Centers for
Disease Control and the US Department of Defense in the area of Spatial
Repellents and their advancement to recommendation. Dr. Grieco has co-
authored the WHO guidelines for the evaluation of spatial repellents
and he currently holds two patents for novel repellent compounds.
8. Byron Jones, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Toxicogenetics, neurobehavioral, and developmental
toxicology.
ii. Education: BA, Psychology, Eastern Washington University; MA,
Psychology, University of Arizona; Ph.D. Physiological and Comparative
Psychology, Psychopharmacology, University of Arizona.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. Byron Jones is professor of
Genetics, Genomics, and Informatics at the University of Tennessee
Health Sciences Center, Memphis. Dr. Jones received his Ph.D. training
in the Departments of Psychology and Pharmacology and Toxicology at the
University of Arizona. He received postdoctoral training in
neuropharmacology at the University of Arizona and in pharmacogenetics
at the University of Colorado. In 1991, he was a founding member of the
Department of Biobehavioral Health at The Pennsylvania State University
and developed a program in pharmacogenetics and toxicogenetics at that
institution. He has trained 10 Ph.D. and 8 MS students and supervised
numerous undergraduate honors theses at PSU. In 1998-1999, he was
awarded a Poste Orange senior visiting research position at Institute
Fran[ccedil]ois Magendie, Bordeaux, France to study the genetics of
alcohol consumption. In 2000, he was awarded a Harry Dozor visiting
[[Page 48311]]
professorship at the Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Beersheba,
Israel. In 2001 and again in 2004, he was awarded invited
professorships at the University of Strasbourg and University of
Bordeaux in France. Together with his colleague, Dr. Pierre
Morm[egrave]de and others, he has helped to organize and deliver 15 1-2
week workshops on neural and behavioral genetics in France, the USA,
Brazil, Russia, and Sweden. He and Dr. Morm[egrave]de co-edited two
volumes of a book on neuro and behavioral genetics. Dr. Jones has
published more than 130 papers in peer-reviewed journals. In 2013, Dr.
Jones was invited to help develop research infrastructure to study the
effects of mercury and pesticide exposure on neurocognitive development
in Ecuador. In 2014, he was awarded two grants from the National
Institutes of Health. One is focused on the role of genetics in the
impact of chronic stress on neuroendocrine adaptation and alcohol
consumption and the other to study the effects of genetics on paraquat
neurotoxicity. In that year, he was recruited to help found a new
department in Genetics, Genomics, and Informatics in the College of
Medicine at UTHSC. He has served on several NIH and NSF review panels.
He is on the editorial board of Frontiers in Genetics and Pharmacology,
Biochemistry and Behavior and is Editor-in-Chief, Nutritional
Neuroscience. His current research interests include: (1) The
toxicogenetics of paraquat and other pesticides; (2) the impact of
chronic stress on neurobehavioral adaptation, including alcohol
consumption; (3) the role of iron status on accumulation of heavy
metals; and (4) iron status and the exposure in pregnant women and in
early childhood development.
9. Paul D. Juarez, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Development of methodologies for creating and
analyzing data on the effects of the natural, built, social, and policy
environments on health disparities.
ii. Education: Ph.D., Public Policy and Social Research, Brandeis
University, Waltham; MEd Psychology, Western Washington University; BA,
Western Washington University.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. Paul D. Juarez is Professor,
Preventive Medicine and founding co-director of the Research Center on
Health Disparities, Equity, and the Exposome at the University of
Tennessee Health Science Center. He received his Ph.D. in social policy
from the Heller School, Brandeis University in 1983. Dr. Juarez
currently is serving appointments on the Federal Advisory Committee on
Minority Health for the US Department of Health and Human Services
(2014-2018) and the Community-Level Health Promotion Study Section,
Center for Scientific Review of the NIH (2013-2016). Dr. Juarez
previously served as the Vice Chair, Division of Community Health,
Family & Community Medicine, Meharry Medical College. While at Meharry,
Dr. Juarez was PI for the Meharry Health Disparities Research Center of
Excellence and directed its community engagement core. As PI, Dr.
Juarez led Center activities in developing a systems approach to health
disparities research. In 2011, Dr. Juarez received a grant from the EPA
to increase our understanding of the environmental context of health
disparities. In pursuit of this effort, he led efforts to apply an
exposome framework that considers the cumulative effects of
environmental exposures on human health and development at critical
life stages and from conception to death. He has been at the forefront
nationally in developing a methodology for creating and analyzing data
on the effects of the natural, built, social, and policy environments
on health disparities. To achieve this, he has established a
transdisciplinary team of investigators to conduct focused studies of
the environmental effects on population level health disparities that
apply mathematical, spatial-temporal, statistical and computational
methods, models and analytics. His recent work has focused on analyzing
the effects of the exposome on black white disparities in pre-term
births and lung cancer mortality.
10. Rebecca D. Klaper, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Ecological toxicology, chemical environment fate and
effects, examining technologies (including genomics and green chemistry
designs) to minimize environmental impacts from chemical contamination.
ii. Education: BS, Honors Biology, University of Illinois; MS,
Entomology, University of Georgia; Ph.D., Ecology, University of
Georgia.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. Rebecca D. Klaper is a Professor
at the School of Freshwater Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
and the Director of the Great Lakes Genomics Center. Dr. Klaper
received her MS in Entomology in 1995 and her Ph.D. in Ecology in 2000
from the Institute of Ecology University of Georgia examining the
impacts of chemicals on the population dynamics of insects. Dr. Klaper
currently studies the potential impact of emerging contaminants, such
as nanoparticles, pharmaceuticals, personal care products and
pesticides on aquatic life and how we may design these chemicals to be
sustainable and have the least environmental impact. She published some
of the first studies on the impacts of nanomaterials on aquatic
organisms, describing differences in toxicity among nanomaterials,
discussing the possible impacts of surfactants on nanomaterial
toxicology. Dr. Klaper is now one of the lead PI's for the Center for
Sustainable Nanotechnology, a distributed Center of eight universities
to evaluate the mechanisms by which nanomaterials may cause toxicity
and investigate the potential for principles to use in the design
process of these chemicals. Dr. Klaper received a AAAS-Science and
Technology Policy Fellowship where she worked in the National Center
for Environmental Assessment at the US Environmental Protection Agency
evaluating the potential use of genomic technologies in risk
assessment. She currently serves on the Board of Scientific Counselors
for the US Environmental Protection Agency's Chemical Safety for
Sustainability/Human Health Risk Assessment Subcommittee. She has
served as a technical expert to the Alliance for the Great Lakes and
the International Joint Commission regarding the potential impacts of
pharmaceuticals, personal care products and other emerging contaminants
on the Great Lakes. She has also served as an invited scientific expert
to both the US National Nanotechnology Initiative and the International
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development panel on
nanotechnology where she has testified on the potential impact of
nanoparticles on the environment and the utility of current testing
strategies. She served on the National Academy of Sciences Panel to
Develop a Research Strategy for Environmental, Health, and Safety
Aspects of Engineered Nanomaterials. She is also on the editorial board
of the SETAC journal Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry as well as
the ACS journal Chemical Research in Toxicology. Her current research
focuses on (1) determining the presence of contaminants in freshwater
systems; (2) the impacts of low level chronic exposures of these
chemicals to fish and invertebrates in freshwater systems; (3)
evaluating the ability of contaminant removal technologies to remove
biological impacts of chemicals; (4) methods to quickly assess the
potential impacts of a chemical, including genomic technologies; and
(5) alternative options for minimizing the impacts of emerging
contaminants
[[Page 48312]]
including chemical redesign and Green Chemistry, altering use and
distribution, and evaluating prescription levels for pharmaceuticals.
Dr. Klaper's goal is to conduct basic and applied research to inform
policy decisions involving freshwater resources.
11. Polly A. Newcomb, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Evaluating environmental exposures, such as metals,
alcohol, tobacco, and medications, and lifestyle or physical factors,
such as physical activity, body mass, genetics, and tumor
characteristics.
ii. Education: Ph.D., University of Washington, Seattle,
Epidemiology; MPH, Epidemiology, University of Washington; BS,
Molecular Biology, The Evergreen State College.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. Polly Newcomb is Head of the
Cancer Prevention Program of the Public Health Sciences Division at the
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center (Fred Hutch), a Professor in the
Department of Epidemiology at the University of Washington's School of
Public Health, and a Senior Scientist at the University of Wisconsin
Comprehensive Cancer Center. She received her doctorate in Epidemiology
at the University of Washington in 1986 and completed her Post-doctoral
Fellowship in the Department of Human Oncology at the University of
Wisconsin in 1987. She has more than 25 years of extramurally funded
research on cancer genetics, etiology, screening, and survival,
demonstrating her broad expertise in the field. Her current research in
relation to health and cancer includes environmental exposures such as
metals, alcohol, tobacco, and medications; lifestyle factors, such as
physical activity and body mass; as well as genetics and tumor
characteristics. Her research has been funded by nearly a score of
foundation and NIH-grants for these studies of colorectal neoplasia,
breast and other cancers, and their precursors. She also participates
in several international consortia. Dr. Newcomb has over 360 peer-
reviewed publications, has served as a mentor for over 40 pre-doctoral,
post-doctoral, and junior investigators and is on the Executive
Committees of four University of Washington/Fred Hutch T32/R25 training
programs. She is active in training new researchers through a National
Cancer Institute ``Established Investigator'' award focused on
colorectal cancer survival. She has served as a member of numerous NIH
Study Sections, a consultant to national and international
organizations, and is an Editor/Associate Editor for top tier journals
such as American Journal of Epidemiology and Cancer, Epidemiology, and
Biomarkers & Prevention. She has recently been awarded mentoring awards
from the University of Washington and the Fred Hutchinson Cancer
Research Center, and is a Fulbright Scholar (2015). She is also the
President of the American Society for Preventive Oncology.
12. Melissa Perry, ScD, MHS
i. Expertise: Epidemiologic research in public health.
ii. Education: BA, Psychology, University of Vermont; MHS, Public
Health, The Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public
Health; ScD, Public Health, The Johns Hopkins University School of
Hygiene and Public Health.
iii. Professional Experience: Professor Melissa Perry is the
elected President of the American College of Epidemiology. Dr. Melissa
Perry received Master of Health Science and Doctor of Science degrees
from the Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health. She has
spent more than two decades conducting epidemiologic research and
educating over 50 graduate students in public health. Prior to coming
to George Washington University in 2010, Dr. Perry spent 13 years on
the Harvard School of Public Health's Department of Environmental
Health faculty. She is currently Chair on the Board of Scientific
Counselors for the National Center for Environmental Health/Agency for
Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (NCEH/ATSDR) of the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). She is also President of the
American College of Epidemiology. She is an associate editor of the
Journal Reproductive Toxicology, and she serves as a standing member of
the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health research
grant study section. In 2014, Dr. Perry was elected to the prestigious
international Collegium Ramazzini in recognition of her contributions
to advancing occupational and environmental health and her professional
integrity. From 2009-2011, she was a member of the CDC's Scientific
Understanding Work Group, National Conversation on Public Health and
Chemical Exposures, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. From
2003-2007, she was a co-investigator with the Tropical Pesticides
Research Institute of Arusha, Tanzania, and the University of Cape
Town, South Africa. Her laboratory at the Milken Institute School of
Public Health focuses on reproductive epidemiology and hormone
disruptors, and her group has developed new techniques for high-volume
identification of chromosomal abnormalities in sperm cells. Her
research group was the first to use semi-automated imaging methods to
show how pesticides are associated with sperm abnormalities. In
addition to numerous book chapters and published abstracts, she has
over 110 peer-reviewed publications in areas including DNA damage
linked to pesticides and other chemical exposures, managing hazardous
substances in the workplace, and occupational issues related to
agricultural, meat-packing, and construction work. Current research on
pesticides, biomarkers and hormonal effects in her laboratory focuses
on identifying the mutagenic and hormonal effects of herbicide and
insecticide exposure in vivo. Her interests focus on pre-disease
exposure markers signaled by early mutational damage or hormone
disruption, across the spectrum of pesticide exposure levels. She has
been the principal investigator on research grants from the National
Cancer Institute, the National Institute of Environmental Health
Sciences, and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and
Health.
13. Patricia V. Pietrantonio, Ph.D., MS
i. Expertise: Applied insect toxicology, insect endocrinology, and
insect biochemistry and physiology.
ii. Education: Ph.D., Entomology, University of California; MS,
Entomology, Insect Toxicology track, University of California; BS
Agronomy, Plant Breeding Track, University of Buenos Aires.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. Patricia Pietrantonio is a
tenured Professor and AgriLife Research Fellow in the Department of
Entomology at Texas A&M University in College Station, TX. She is an
associate member of the interdisciplinary programs in Toxicology and a
member of the Faculty of Neuroscience at the same university. She
received her BS in Agronomy from the University of Buenos Aires in
Argentina, after which she was a permanent technical staff member at
INTA (National Institute of Agriculture and Cattle Technology) in
Castelar, Buenos Aires (1982-1987). She obtained both her MS (1990) and
Ph.D. (1995) in Entomology from the University of California at
Riverside (both under Prof. Sarjeet S. Gill), with emphasis in insect
toxicology, biochemistry, and physiology. As a Ph.D. student, she
received the Henry Comstock Award from the Entomological Society of
America (ESA) for outstanding graduate student achievement. Since 1996,
she has advanced through the ranks at Texas A&M University, receiving
the title of
[[Page 48313]]
``AgriLife Research Fellow'' for Outstanding Research Leadership and
Grantsmanship in 2006. She has received funding from the NIH-NIAID
(RO1), NIFA-AFRI, EPA Section 6 and the NSF-IOS, as well as from the
Texas Department of Agriculture and USDA-Southern Region IPM program.
She has served three times as a member on national proposal review
panels for USDA-NIFA Insects and Nematodes (organismal and sub-
organismal panels) and twice for NSF-IOS panels. She reviews research
proposals for European Organizations such as the FWO (Belgium), the ANR
(French Natl. Agency), BBSRC from the UK, the DFG (German Research
Foundation), and national universities. She has served 19 years at
Texas A&M University conducting entomological research ranging from
applied insect toxicology to basic aspects insect endocrinology and
insect biochemistry and physiology (G protein-coupled receptors: GPCRs)
focusing on target validation. In applied toxicology her laboratory
elucidated mechanisms of insecticide resistance to pyrethroids,
neonicotinoids, and organophosphates in various pests such as
mosquitoes, cotton bollworm (H. zea), boll weevil, and whiteflies. Some
of this work was in collaboration with Extension Entomologists. She has
conducted international research on insecticide resistance in Cyprus
funded by the Cyprus Research Promotion Foundation. She has served as
major professor of 7 Ph.D. students and 4 masters students in her
laboratory and served as committee member for 11 graduate students (all
completed). She has served as co-major professor or committee member
for students enrolled in Universities in Mexico and Europe (UK Leuven,
Belgium). Scholarly accomplishments include 49 published peer-reviewed
journal articles, 7 book chapters, and 18 papers in conference
proceedings, as well as published abstracts of 75 invited presentations
(21 international) and 116 volunteered presentations. She teaches
yearly Graduate Courses in Insect Toxicology (ENTO619) and Insect
Physiology (ENTO615). She has served as Subject Editor for
``Environmental Entomology,'' for which she received an Outstanding
Service Award from the ESA. She is currently an associate editorial
member in the Archives of Insect Biochemistry and Physiology and member
of the Editorial board of Open Access Insect Physiology (Ed. Guy
Smagghe). Other honors include the Paul A. Dahm Memorial Lecture in
Insect Toxicology (Iowa State University) and the 2013 College of
Agriculture and Life Sciences Dean's Outstanding Achievement Award for
Faculty Mentoring. She was appointed to the University (TAMU) ADVANCE-
NSF funded project as mentor for minority women. Current research
funded by the NSF-IOS focuses on insect neurobiology and
neuroendocrinology, and research funded by Cotton Incorporated focuses
on Bt toxin and other receptors in the cotton bollworm, H. zea. Other
projects focus on target validation in ticks. Dr. Pietrantonio is also
a member of the tick genome Ix. scapularis expert group.
14. Kenneth Ramos, MD, Ph.D., PharmB
i. Expertise: Genomics and computational biology, molecular
medicine, environmental health, and toxicology.
ii. Education: BS, Pharmaceutical Sciences and Chemistry,
University of Puerto Rico, Ph.D., Biochemical Pharmacology, The
University of Texas; MD, University of Louisville Health Sciences
Center.
iii. Professional Experience: Kenneth Ramos, MD, Ph.D., PharmB,
works across numerous organizational units at the University of Arizona
(UA) to develop precision-health strategies and approaches to health
outcomes and health-care delivery. He provides senior leadership in the
development of personal diagnostics and therapeutics for complex
diseases, including cancer, cardiopulmonary disorders, and diabetes.
Dr. Ramos also is a professor of medicine at the UA College of
Medicine-Tucson in the Department of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary,
Sleep, and Critical Care Medicine, where he directs a highly
competitive and innovative research program in translational and
clinical genetics and genomics. Dr. Ramos' research integrates
approaches ranging from molecular genetics to population-based studies
to understand the genomic basis of human disease. He is regarded as a
leading expert in the study of gene-environment interactions and
directs a competitive research program in translational and clinical
genomics with a focus on genetic and epigenetic determinants of
toxicity and disease, computational biology and molecular signaling.
Dr. Ramos has mentored over 100 doctoral, medical, veterinary medicine,
undergraduate and high school students, many of whom have gone on to
successful careers in academia, medicine, government and industry. He
is committed to initiatives that attract and retain minorities in
science and medicine. Dr. Ramos served as SOT President from 2008-2009,
and is a current member of the Continuing Medical Education Task Force,
Hispanic Organization of Toxicologists Specialty Interest Group, and
the Molecular and Systems Biology Specialty Section. He has been a
member of SOT since 1982.
15. Gary S. Sayler, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Microbial biodegradation, molecular microbiology,
bioluminescence sensing and ecotoxicology.
ii. Education: Ph.D., Bacteriology and Biochemistry, University of
Idaho; BS, Bacteriology, North Dakota State University; AA, Liberal
Arts, Bismarck Junior College.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. Sayler is Distinguished
University Professor, and Alvin and Sally Beaman Endowed Professor of
Microbiology and Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at The University of
Tennessee. Dr. Sayler received his Ph.D. in Bacteriology and
Biochemistry, University of Idaho, 1974; BS, Bacteriology, North Dakota
State University, 1971; AA, Bismarck Junior College, Liberal Arts,
1969. He was Postdoctoral researcher in Marine Microbiology at the
University of Maryland (1974-1975). He is the founding Director, Center
for Environmental Biotechnology at the University of Tennessee (1986-
present) and was the first Director of the UT-ORNL Joint Institute for
Biological Sciences (2006-2014). As Director for the Waste Management
Research and Education Institute Tennessee Center of Excellence (1991-
2005) he conducted a consolidation and reorganization to create the
Institute for a Secure and Sustainable Environment serving as interim
director (2005-2006). Specializing in microbial biodegradation,
molecular microbiology, bioluminescence sensing and ecotoxicology, he
has directed the research of over 100 Ph.D. and MS students and
postdocs during his 40 year career, with approximately 400 peer
reviewed publications, 16 patents, and over 500 lectures and seminars
worldwide. He serves on the Sciences Advisory Board for the US Defense
Department, Strategic Environmental Research Defense Program (2011-
present); and was a member of the US Department of Energy, Biological
and Environmental Research Advisory Committee (2008-2013). He was an
Executive member and Chair of the Board of Scientific Counselors for
the EPA Office of Research and Development (2002-2010) and served on
the EPA's Science Advisory Board drinking water committee (2002-2009),
the Water Environment Research Foundation Research Council (1995-2001)
and was Peer Review Chair for the EPA Exploratory Biology Program
[[Page 48314]]
(1990-1993). He has served on National Academy/NRC Committees
evaluating the US EPA Laboratory Enterprise (2013-14), DOE NRSB-
Environmental Management Roadmap (2007-2008) Stand-Off Explosives
Detection (2003) and DOE Site Decontamination and Decommissioning
(2002). He is Co-founder China-US Joint Research Center For Ecosystem
and Environmental Change, Beijing, (2006-present) and US State
Department Eco partnership (2010-present) and has held honorary
Professorships at China Agricultural University, Beijing (2012),
Northeast Normal University, Changchun (2012), East China University of
Science and Technology, Shanghai (2008-2011), Institute for Water
Research Distinguished Researcher, Xi'an (2008); and Adjunct
Professorship, Gwanju Institute of Science and Technology, Korea (2005-
2010). Dr. Sayler is an Associate Editor of Environmental Science and
Technology and is an active member in ACS, AAAS, ASM and SETAC. Elected
to AAAS Fellowship in 2012. He received the DOW Foundation Support for
Public Health Environmental Research and Education (SPHERE) Award
(1998-2000); and was elected to the Fellow American Academy for
Microbiology (1995-present). He received the Distinguished Alumni
Award, University of Idaho and the UT Senior Researcher Award from the
College of Arts and Sciences (1995) and received the Procter and Gamble
Prize, American Society for Microbiology (1994). He was designated
Chancellor's Research Scholar, UTK (1988), and received the NIH
Research Career Development Award (NIEHS), (1980-1985).
16. Joseph Shaw, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Discovery of molecular toxicological and disease
pathways resulting from complex environmental exposures including
techniques in new high-throughput molecular techniques and evolutionary
theory, statistical analysis, and bioinformatics.
ii. Education: Ph.D., University of Kentucky; BS, Virginia
Polytechnic Institute and State University.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. Joseph R. Shaw is an Associate
Professor in the School of Public and Environmental Affairs at Indiana
University and holds adjunct appointments in their School of Public
Health and Center for Genomics and Bioinformatics. He also holds a
partial appointment as a Senior Lecturer of Environmental Genomics in
the School of Biosciences at the University of Birmingham, UK. Dr. Shaw
earned his doctoral degree in environmental toxicology from the
Graduate Center for Toxicology at the University of Kentucky in 2001.
He then moved to Dartmouth College where he received an NIEHS post-
doctoral fellowship to apply emerging Omics technologies to
characterize mechanisms of toxicant actions. He joined the faculty of
the School of Public and Environmental Affairs at Indiana University,
Bloomington in 2007. Dr. Shaw was named an Outstanding New
Environmental Scientist (ONES) by the NIEHS in 2010, and recognized as
an exceptional talent in the environmental sciences by the Royal
Society, UK in 2013 for his work investigating toxicant exposure,
genome structure, and toxic effects on individuals and populations.
Contributing to these efforts he is a founding member of the Daphnia
and Fundulus Genomics Consortia where he helps lead over 600 scientists
around the world working to develop new models for environmental
genomics. He also helped establish the Consortium for Environmental
Omics and Toxicology that seeks to apply twenty-first century
technologies to predictive toxicology. Dr. Shaw has trained over 150
students in environmental genomics through the Mount Desert Island Bio
Lab Workshop in environmental genomics that he co-developed in 2011.
The workshop is now held annually in the US and UK. Dr. Shaw's research
program has received over $6.4M in research funding from NIH, NSF, and
DOD since 2002, producing over 38 publications in the area of
environmental genomics and toxicology. He has served on the editorial
board and in 2013, was promoted to editor for the journal
``Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry.'' His research group seeks to
discover critical, specific, and causative molecular toxicological and
disease pathways resulting from complex environmental exposures. His
work embraces new high-throughput molecular techniques and couples
these with evolutionary theory, statistical analysis, and
bioinformatics to integrate toxic-response across levels of biological
organization. Current research in his laboratory focuses on (i)
associating variation in genome structure with disease and toxicant
response within and between populations; (ii) identifying the
mechanisms of actions of chemical stress, especially metals, and (iii)
elucidating the genetic and epigenetic underpinnings of mutations and
establishing their role in evolved tolerance.
17. Sonya K. Sobrian, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Behavioral, immunological and neurotoxicological
consequences of prenatal and neonatal drug administration and drug and
environmental stress.
ii. Education: Ph.D. Physiological Psychology, from Carleton
University; BA and MA (Experimental) in Psychology from St. John's
University; MA equivalent in Pharmacology from Ottawa University.
iii. Professional Experience: Dr. Sonya K. Sobrian is an Associate
Professor of Pharmacology at the Howard University College of Medicine,
Director of the Developmental Neurobehavioral Pharmacology Laboratory,
and Immediate Past Chair of the University's IACUC. Dr. Sobrian
received her doctorate in Physiological Psychology from Carleton
University, Ottawa Canada, and served a postdoctoral fellowship at
Princeton University in Developmental Neurobiology; she also added
pharmacology and immunology to her graduate (MA, Neuropharmacology:
Ottawa University) and post graduate (Fulbright Fellow: Immunology
Research Center, Belgrade, Yugoslavia) training. During her tenure at
the College of Medicine, Dr. Sobrian successfully mentored medical,
graduate, and undergraduate students. She has served as President of
the Neurobehavioral Teratology Society, is currently on the Editorial
Advisory Board of the journal, ``Neurotoxicology and Teratology'', and
is Guest Editor of a special issue of the journal on ``Developmental
Cannabinoid Exposure: New Perspectives on Mechanisms, Outcomes, and
Implications for Public Health.'' Dr. Sobrian is currently on the Board
of Scientific Counselors for the Department of Health & Human Services
National Toxicology Program. She also served as a member of the
Scientific Advisory Panel for the US EPA Office of Chemical Safety and
Pollution Prevention, and previously served on the EPA Toxic Substance
Control Act Advisory Committee. As a visiting scientist at the National
Center for Toxicological Research, Dr. Sobrian was instrumental in
establishing a prenatal model of cocaine toxicity. She served on the
ILSI Risk Science Institute's Expert Panel on the evaluation and
interpretation of neurodevelopmental endpoints for human risk. Dr.
Sobrian served as Director of the Behavioral Neuroscience Program at
the National Science Foundation, where she directed and managed funding
of research on the neural mechanisms underlying behavior and learning.
In addition, she has served as Chair of the Board of Trustees of AAALAC
International, as well as Chair of the Board of Directors of the
National Capital Area Chapter of the Fulbright Association. During her
tenure as an
[[Page 48315]]
AAAS Congressional Science and Technology Fellow, her scientific
expertise was utilized to inform public policy on Fetal Alcohol
Syndrome, aging, and NIH research funding. The major focus of Dr.
Sobrian's research involves the behavioral, immunological, and
neurotoxicological consequences of prenatal and neonatal drug
administration and drug and environmental stress-induced alterations in
behavioral and immunological development. She has a longstanding
interest in sex differences, and her lab was the first to show that
prenatal environmental and psychological stress differentially altered
immune parameters in rat male and female offspring, research that she
continued as a Fulbright Scholar at the Immunological Research
Institute in Belgrade, Yugoslavia. Her current research involves the
life-span consequences of prenatal exposure to cocaine and nicotine,
alone and in combination, with an emphasis on drug addiction in the
aging organism. In developing animal models for neuropsychiatric
diseases, Dr. Sobrian is currently exploring the role of prenatal
environmental noise stress [PENS] in the etiology of autism and
depression. For her work in establishing an environmentally-mediated
neurodevelopmental animal model of depression, Dr. Sobrian was
designated a L. Vernon Maddox NARSAD investigator.
18. Kristina Thayer, Ph.D.
i. Expertise: Understanding the role of environmental exposures in
diabetes and obesity, evaluating the predictive utility of high
throughput screening data, and methods of exposure assessment.
ii. Education: BS, Psychology, Pennsylvania State University;
Ph.D., Biological Sciences, University of Missouri.
iii. Professional Experience: Kristina Thayer, Ph.D. is Deputy
Director of Analysis at the National Toxicology Program (NTP) and
Director of the NTP Office of Health Assessment and Translation (OHAT)
at the National Institute for Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)
located on the campus of the National Institute for Environmental
Health Sciences (NIEHS). OHAT conducts evaluations to assess the
evidence that environmental chemicals, physical substances, or mixtures
(collectively referred to as ``substances'') may cause adverse health
effects and provides opinions on whether these substances may be of
concern given what is known about current human exposure levels. As
Deputy Director of Analysis, she oversees OHAT and the NTP Office of
the Report on Carcinogens. Before becoming director of OHAT, she held
positions in the NTP Office of Liaison, Policy, and Review, the NIEHS
Office of Risk Assessment Research and the NTP Center for the
Evaluation of Risks to Human Reproduction (CERHR). Prior to joining the
NTP/NIEHS, she was a senior scientist at the World Wildlife Fund and
then at the Environmental Working Group. In addition to overseeing the
development of OHAT and ORoC monographs, she has research interests in
the areas of understanding the role of environmental exposures in
diabetes and obesity, evaluating the predictive utility of high
throughput screening data, and methods of exposure assessment. She is
considered an expert on the application of systematic review methods to
environmental health topics.
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 136 et. seq.; 21 U.S.C. 301 et seq.
Dated: August 5, 2015.
David Dix,
Director, Office of Science Coordination and Policy.
[FR Doc. 2015-19828 Filed 8-11-15; 8:45 am]
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