Announcement of Requirements and Registration for the NIEHS Climate Change and Environmental Exposures Challenge, 55373-55376 [2015-23126]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 178 / Tuesday, September 15, 2015 / Notices
Justification: The State Planning
Grants for Improving Services for
Children and Youth with Autism
Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and Other
Developmental Disabilities (DDs) grant
program (hereafter referred to as State
Planning Grants) is authorized by the
Public Health Service Act, § 399BB (42
U.S.C. 280i–1) and the Combating
Autism Act of 2006 (Pub. L. 109–416),
as amended by the Combating Autism
Reauthorization Act of 2011 (Pub. L.
112–32) and the Autism Collaboration,
Accountability, Research, Education,
and Support (CARES) Act of 2014 (H.R.
4631; Pub. L. 113–157). The purpose of
the program is to support states in the
planning and development of activities
that are designed to improve state
systems of care for children and youth
with ASD and related DDs and increase
access to comprehensive coordinated
health care. Grantees develop
comprehensive, measurable state plans
in collaboration with a diverse group of
stakeholders that outline an approach to
improve access to comprehensive,
coordinated health care and related
services for children and youth with
ASD and other DDs.
State Planning Grants support state
efforts to improve infrastructure that
results in community and state systems
that are integrated across service sectors
and are collectively responsible for
achieving appropriate individual,
family, and community outcomes. To
ensure that the capacity and
infrastructure continue in these
important areas, the Maternal and Child
Health Bureau is requesting a one-time
extension for completion of activities
and an orderly phase-out of HRSA
support. The additional funds and time
will allow the grantees to complete their
planning and strengthen their
partnerships with the stakeholders who
Current project
end date
will be critical in implementing a
comprehensive, coordinated system of
health care for children and youth with
ASD and DD. The current State
Planning Grant awardees continue to
achieve the original goals required by
HRSA; however, the additional funding
and time will allow awardees to
complete their project activities. The
impact of not granting this one-time
extension would be to interrupt the
activities of the State Planning Grant
awardees and not allow them to
complete their state planning.
CDR
Deidre Washington-Jones, MPH, CHES,
Division of Services for Children with
Special Health Needs, Maternal and
Child Health Bureau, Health Resources
and Services Administration, 5600
Fishers Lane, Room 13–103, Rockville,
Maryland 20857; dwashington-jones@
hrsa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Revised
project end
date
FY 2014
Authorized
funding level
FY 2015
Estimated
funding level
Grantee/organization name
Grant No.
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS SYSTEM ..............
UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS .................
HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, NEW
HAMPSHIRE DEPT OF.
UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS HEALTH SCIENCE
CENTER AT HOUSTON.
H6MMC26243
H6MMC26244
H6MMC26245
AR
MA
NH
8/31/2015
8/31/2015
8/31/2015
8/31/2016
8/31/2016
8/31/2016
$75,000
75,000
75,000
$54,244
54,244
54,244
H6MMC26246
TX
5/31/2016
8/31/2016
75,000
54,244
Dated: September 4, 2015.
James Macrae,
Acting Administrator.
State
55373
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Dated: September 10, 2015.
Melanie J. Gray-Pantoja,
Program Analyst, Office of Federal Advisory
Committee Policy.
BILLING CODE 4165–15–P
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
National Institutes of Health
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Notice is hereby given of a change in
the meeting of the National Institute on
Aging Special Emphasis Panel, October
01, 2015, 03:00 p.m. to October 01,
2015, 03:30 p.m., Doubletree Hotel
Bethesda, (Formerly Holiday Inn
Select), 8120 Wisconsin Avenue,
Bethesda, MD, 20814 which was
published in the Federal Register on
September 09, 2015, 80 FR 54302.
The meeting notice is amended to
change the meeting title to National
Institute on Aging Special Emphasis
Panel—MIND Diet. The meeting is
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Announcement of Requirements and
Registration for the NIEHS Climate
Change and Environmental Exposures
Challenge
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 3719.
To assist the country in
preparing for the potential health risks
from climate change, the National
Institutes of Health (NIH) through the
National Institute on Environmental
Health Sciences (NIEHS) is sponsoring
the NIEHS Climate Change and
Environmental Exposures Challenge
(the ‘‘Challenge’’) under the America
COMPETES Reauthorization Act of
2010. This Challenge calls on talented
software developers, data scientists, and
other innovators from around the
SUMMARY:
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country to create data visualizations,
tools, and applications that use the best
available science on environmental
exposures and the relationship of these
exposures to increased temperature,
precipitation, flooding, and sea level
rise. The Challenge has two goals: To
raise awareness of how environmental
health risks may be exacerbated by
climate change in communities, and to
enable protective decision-making from
local to national levels.
The Challenge begins September
15, 2015.
(1) Submission period begins 9 a.m.
EDT September 28, 2015.
(2) Submission period ends 12 p.m.
EDT December 4, 2015.
(3) Judging Period: December 7, 2015
to January 6, 2016.
(4) Winners Announced: January 12,
2016.
DATES:
To register for this
Challenge, participants can access either
the https://www.challenge.gov Web site
(search for the Challenge’s title) or the
Climate and Health Innovation
Challenge Series Web site at https://
www.challenge.gov/agency/health-andhuman-services/climate-and-healthinnovation-challenge-series/.
ADDRESSES:
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 178 / Tuesday, September 15, 2015 / Notices
John
Balbus, M.D., M.P.H., Senior Advisor for
Public Health, National Institute of
Environmental Health Sciences, Phone
301.496.3511. [john.balbus@nih.gov]
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Communities currently face risks from
hazardous wastes and deposits of
industrial chemicals, air pollution,
harmful algal blooms and toxic
contaminants in food, and exposures to
pesticides. While the impacts of climate
change on many of these environmental
health risks are not well understood or
addressed at present, newly released
data and tools, in combination with
other publicly available datasets, allow
for innovative approaches to
identifying, demonstrating and
assessing those risks. Protective
decisions at the local level may include
siting of schools, day care centers, new
housing, or critical infrastructure such
as new water intakes for drinking water
systems; design or siting of urban waste
water drainage or green infrastructure;
placement of monitoring equipment or
other sensors; or other permits or
regulations. Nationally, protective
decisions about prioritizing remediation
efforts or other interventions, or setting
national standards or policies may be
informed by greater understanding of
the influence of climate change on the
magnitude and spatial distribution of
potential environmental exposures.
Statutory Authority: Pursuant to
Section 402 of the Public Health Service
Act, 42 U.S.C. 285, the general purpose
of the National Institute of
Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)
is the conduct and support of research,
training, health information
dissemination, and other programs with
respect to factors in the environment
that affect human health, directly or
indirectly. Supported by the NIEHS, the
Challenge furthers the Institute’s
statutory authority by advancing
research to understand the potential
health risks from climate change. This
Challenge aligns with both the mission
of NIEHS to ‘‘discover how the
environment affects people in order to
promote more healthier lives’’ as well as
elements of the Institute’s 2012–2017
Strategic plan, including:
Goal 5: Identify and respond to
emerging environmental threats to
human health, on both a local and
global scale (https://www.niehs.nih.gov/
about/strategicplan/).
Subject of the Challenge: The
Challenge calls on talented software
developers, data and exposure
scientists, public health students and
professionals, and other innovators to
produce a data visualization or
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visualization tool or application (each a
‘‘submission’’) to help convey potential
risks of environmental exposures in the
United States that may be exacerbated
by climate change. Submissions may be
produced using existing tools and
platforms or created with newly
developed applications. The geographic
scale can be as small as the
neighborhood or community level or as
large as the regional or national level.
Prizes will be made available in two
categories according to the scale of the
submission; one for state level or
smaller, one for multi-state or national.
Submissions should help identify
potential areas or zones of increased
exposure and/or the degree of changes
in exposure or health risk resulting from
climate change. Participants may
consider a short-term time scale (e.g., 0
to 20 years) for impacts associated with
extreme events, or a longer time scale
(e.g., 2050 or beyond) for impacts
associated with sea level rise or other
phenomena whose greatest impact will
clearly be decades from now. These
exposures may include:
(1) Toxic chemicals released from
hazardous waste, mining or other
industrial sites by rising sea level,
increased temperatures and permafrost
melting, changes in wind patterns, or
other climate-related ecological
processes;
(2) air pollutants, including ozone and
particulate matter, that may increase or
decrease in concentration in certain
regions because of increased
temperatures and changing weather
patterns;
(3) toxins created by molds or
waterborne bacteria or algae;
(4) pesticides, whose usage or
dispersion patterns may be influenced
by changes in climate.
Participants in the Challenge may also
propose environmental exposures not
listed here. If a participant wishes to
explore a different environmental
exposure, the submission should
include a statement explaining the
importance of the exposure to human
health and the relationship between
climate change and changes in that
exposure in the future.
This Challenge is most interested in
submissions that show the interaction
between these three data layers:
(1) Locations and concentrations of
harmful agents (i.e., exposures);
(2) locations of potentially exposed
populations; and
(3) geographic and climatologic
parameters conveying changing risks of
exposure.
At a minimum, all submissions
should include a data layer related to
location of potential harmful agents and
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a data layer related to changes in levels
of exposure to those potential agents
cause by factors related to climate
change.
Potentially useful datasets can be
found at climate.data.gov and on the
Climate and Health Innovation
Challenge Series Web site (https://
www.challenge.gov/agency/health-andhuman-services/climate-and-healthinnovation-challenge-series/).
Participants are also encouraged to seek
out additional scientifically valid
datasets for their submissions.
Participants in the Challenge should
specify the target audience for their
submission. Potential target audiences
include local public health and
environmental officials, clinical health
professionals, urban planners,
emergency preparedness and response
officials, and the general public.
Rules for Participating in the Challenge
(1) To be eligible to win a prize under
this Challenge, an individual or entity—
a. Shall have registered to participate
in the Challenge under the rules
promulgated by the NIEHS as published
in this Notice;
b. Shall have complied with all the
requirements set forth in this Notice;
c. In the case of a private entity, shall
be incorporated in and maintain a
primary place of business in the United
States, and in the case of an individual,
whether participating singly or in a
group, shall be a citizen or permanent
resident of the United States 18 years of
age or older;
d. May not be a Federal entity;
e. May not be a Federal employee
acting within the scope of the
employee’s employment and further, in
the case of HHS employees, may not
work on their submission(s) during
assigned duty hours;
f. May not be an employee of the NIH,
a judge of the Challenge, or any other
party involved with the design,
production, execution, or distribution of
the Challenge or the immediate family
of such a party (i.e., spouse, parent,
step-parent, child, or step-child).
(2) Federal grantees may not use
Federal grant funds to develop their
Challenge submissions unless use of
such funds is consistent with the
purpose of their grant award and
specifically requested to do so due to
the Challenge design, and as announced
in the Federal Register.
(3) Federal contractors may not use
Federal funds from a contract to develop
their Challenge submissions or to fund
efforts in support of their Challenge
submission.
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(4) Submissions must not infringe
upon any copyright or any other rights
of any third party.
(5) By participating in this Challenge,
each individual (whether competing
singly or in a group) and entity agrees
to assume any and all risks and waive
claims against the Federal government
and its related entities (as defined in the
America COMPETES Act), except in the
case of willful misconduct, for any
injury, death, damage, or loss of
property, revenue, or profits, whether
direct, indirect, or consequential, arising
from participation in this Challenge,
whether the injury, death, damage, or
loss arises through negligence or
otherwise.
(6) Based on the subject matter of the
Challenge, the type of work that it will
possibly require, as well as an analysis
of the likelihood of any claims for death,
bodily injury, property damage, or loss
potentially resulting from Challenge
participation, no individual (whether
competing singly or in a group) or entity
participating in the Challenge is
required to obtain liability insurance or
demonstrate financial responsibility in
order to participate in this Challenge.
(7) By participating in this Challenge,
each individual (whether competing
singly or in a group) and entity agrees
to indemnify the Federal government
against third party claims for damages
arising from or related to Challenge
activities.
(8) An individual or entity shall not
be deemed ineligible because the
individual or entity used Federal
facilities or consulted with Federal
employees during the Challenge if the
facilities and employees are made
available to all individuals and entities
participating in the Challenge on an
equitable basis.
(9) By participating in this Challenge,
each individual (whether participating
singly or in a group) and entity grants
to the NIH an irrevocable, paid-up,
royalty-free nonexclusive worldwide
license to post, link to, share, and
display publicly on the Web the
submission. Each participant will retain
all other intellectual property rights in
their submissions, as applicable.
(10) NIH reserves the right, in its sole
discretion, to (a) cancel, suspend, or
modify the Challenge, and/or (b) not
award any prizes if no submissions are
deemed worthy.
(11) Each individual (whether
participating singly or in a group) or
entity agrees to follow all applicable
federal, state, and local laws,
regulations, and policies.
(12) Each individual (whether
participating singly or in a group) and
entity participating in this Challenge
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must comply with all terms and
conditions of these rules, and
participation in this Challenge
constitutes each such participant’s full
and unconditional agreement to abide
by these rules. Winning is contingent
upon fulfilling all requirements herein.
Registration Process for Participants:
To register for this Challenge,
participants can access either the https://
www.challenge.gov Web site (search for
the Challenge’s title) or the Climate and
Health Innovation Challenge Series Web
site at https://www.challenge.gov/
agency/health-and-human-services/
climate-and-health-innovationchallenge-series/
Amount of the Prize: There will be
two prize categories, one for data
visualizations, tools or applications at
the regional (multi-state) or national
level, and one for data visualizations,
tools or applications at the local or
municipal level, with a grand prize,
second prize, and third prize available
for each category. Each category may
award up to $17,500 in prizes (total
prize amount available is $35,000) to the
best overall projects in that category,
based on the established judging
criteria. For each category:
Grand Prize—$10,000
Second Prize—$5,000
Third Prize—$2,500
The Award Approving Official will be
Linda S. Birnbaum, Ph.D., D.A.B.T.,
A.T.S, Director, National Institute of
Environmental Health Sciences.
Payment of the Prizes: Prizes awarded
under this Challenge will be paid by
NIEHS by electronic funds transfer and
may be subject to Federal income taxes.
HHS/NIH/NIEHS will comply with the
Internal Revenue Service withholding
and reporting requirements, where
applicable.
Basis upon Which Winners Will Be
Selected: The judges will evaluate
submissions based upon the following
criteria: scientific validity, innovative
use of data and visualization tools or
applications, and clarity of presentation.
In order for submissions to be evaluated,
they must include clear, detailed
processes on how they were produced,
including any code if applicable. The
processes can be submitted in a text
document. More details on the specific
judging criteria and the judging panel
can be found on the Challenge Web site.
• 34% Scientific validity—
associations between exposures and
climate change phenomena must be
scientifically credible.
• 33% Innovative use of data and
visualization tools or applications—
creative selection of datasets and ways
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to display data overlays; inclusion of
new ideas and types of data.
• 33% Clarity—depiction of
vulnerability and risk easily understood
to a general public audience.
In order for a submission to be eligible
to win this Challenge, it must meet the
following requirements:
1. Submission: The following items
constitute a complete submission for
this Challenge: A short (less than 250
words) description of the visualization
and its value in improving our
understanding of the relationship
between environmental exposures and
climate change; a detailed description of
the visualization, tool, or application,
including the technical basis for
combining data layers and references to
the scientific literature supporting the
relationships between climate change,
altered exposures, and human health
outcomes where relevant (limited to
1000 words, not including figures or
references); the visualization tool and
any application or code needed to run
the tool; instructions on how to install
and operate any application behind a
visualization tool; system requirements
required to run the application; and a
description of, rationale for selecting,
and complete copy of the data set. For
data sets contained within
climate.data.gov or otherwise easily
obtainable from federal sources, the
URLs for the datasets are sufficient.
Alternatively, instead of providing the
tool or application itself, participants
may provide either a link to a
visualization generated by the tool or
application; a video demonstrating the
tool or application; or one or more pdfs
of example visualizations.
2. Participants must provide
continuous access to any submissions
that include web postings through the
Challenge period until January 12, 2016.
3. Challenge submissions must be
submitted via the Challenge’s homepage
on challenge.gov.
4. Submissions must be in English.
5. The tool or application must not
use HHS’s or NIH’s logos or official
seals in the submission, and must not
claim or imply endorsement by the
Federal government.
6. The data visualization tool or
application must be designed for use
with existing web, mobile, voice, or
other platform for supporting
interactions of the content provided
with other capabilities.
7. A submission may be disqualified
if the visualization tool or application
fails to function as expressed in the
description provided by the participant,
or if the tool or application provides
inaccurate or incomplete information.
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8. Submissions must be free of
malware. Participant agrees that NIH
may conduct testing on the visualization
tool or application to determine whether
malware or other security threats may
be present. NIEHS may disqualify the
submission if, in NIEHS’ judgment, the
visualization tool or application or any
other part of the submission may
damage government or others’
equipment or operating environment.
Additional Information: To help the
public understand the health
implications of climate change and
improve the nation’s ability to be
resilient to negative impacts, HHS has
organized the Climate and Health
Innovation Challenge Series. This
Challenge Series spotlights the over 150
climate and health data sets that have
become available via the Climate Data
Initiative, while also identifying and
promoting additional relevant data sets.
The Challenge Series will include
challenges aimed at one or more of the
following goals:
1. Create appealing applications that
empower the public to take action by
providing information about climate
change’s impacts on health or about the
potential health benefits of personal
actions to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions.
2. Create climate change and health
decision support tools for health
professionals and, potentially, other
professionals (e.g. urban planners).
3. Empower the academic and
technology communities to analyze data
in innovative ways, moving research
forward in key areas (products may
range from data visualizations to useful
indices/metrics to adopt).
4. Challenge the private sector to
combine government data with their
own data to develop innovative decision
support tools or address research
questions.
Dated: September 4, 2015.
Linda S. Birnbaum,
Director, National Institute of Environmental
Health Sciences.
Bethesda, (Formerly Holiday Inn
Select), 8120 Wisconsin Avenue,
Bethesda, MD, 20814 which was
published in the Federal Register on
September 09, 2015, 80 FR 54302.
The meeting notice is amended to
change the meeting title to National
Institute on Aging Special Emphasis
Panel—Agitation in Alzheimer’s. The
meeting is closed to the public.
Dated: September 10, 2015.
Melanie J. Gray,
Program Analyst, Office of Federal Advisory
Committee Policy.
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
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Office of the Director; Amended Notice
of Meeting
Notice is hereby given of a change in
the meeting of the Advisory Committee
to the Director, National Institutes of
Health, September 17, 2015, 3:00 p.m. to
5:00 p.m., that was published in the
Federal Register on Monday, August 20,
2015, 80 FR 50642.
The time of the meeting is changed
from 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. to 1:00 to
3:00 p.m. The agenda will also include
an update from the HeLa Working
Group.
This meeting is open to the public but
is being held by teleconference only. No
physical meeting location is provided
for any interested individuals to listen
to committee discussions. Any
individual interested in listening to the
meeting discussions must call: 877–
917–9486 and use Passcode: 8027865,
for access to the meeting.
Dated: September 9, 2015.
Anna Snouffer,
Deputy Director, Office of Federal Advisory
Committee Policy.
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DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
[Docket No. DHS–2015–0043]
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National Institutes of Health
National Institute on Aging Amended;
Notice of Meeting
Notice is hereby given of a change in
the meeting of the National Institute on
Aging Special Emphasis Panel, October
01, 2015, 03:30 p.m. to October 01,
2015, 04:00 p.m., Doubletree Hotel
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Meeting: Homeland Security Advisory
Council
The Office of
Intergovernmental Affairs, DHS.
ACTION: Notice of partially closed
Federal Advisory Committee meeting.
AGENCY:
The Homeland Security
Advisory Council (HSAC) will meet in
SUMMARY:
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person on September 29, 2015. Members
of the public may participate in person.
The meeting will be partially closed to
the public.
DATES: The HSAC will meet Tuesday,
September 29, 2015 from 10:05 a.m. to
5:00 p.m. EDT. The meeting will be
open to the public from 11:15 a.m. to
2:05 p.m. EDT and 4:00 p.m. to 5:00
p.m. Please note the meeting may close
early if the Council has completed its
business. The meeting will be closed to
the public from 10:05 a.m. to 11:05 a.m.
EDT and 2:15 p.m. to 3:55 p.m. EDT.
ADDRESSES: The meeting will be held be
held at the Woodrow Wilson
International Center for Scholars
(‘‘Wilson Center’’), located at 1300
Pennsylvania Avenue NW., Washington,
DC 20004. All visitors will be processed
through the lobby of the Wilson Center.
Written public comments prior to the
meeting must be received by 5:00 p.m.
EDT on September 23, 2015, and must
by identified by Docket No. DHS–2015–
0043. Written public comments after the
meeting must be identified by Docket
No. DHS–2015–0043 and may be
submitted by one of the following
methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Email: HSAC@hq.dhs.gov. Include
Docket No. DHS–2015–0043 in the
subject line of the message.
• Fax: (202) 282–9207.
• Mail: Homeland Security Advisory
Council, Department of Homeland
Security, Mailstop 0445, 245 Murray
Lane SW., Washington, DC 20528.
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the words ‘‘Department of
Homeland Security’’ and ‘‘DHS–2015–
0043,’’ the docket number for this
action. Comments received will be
posted without alteration at https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided.
Docket: For access to the docket to
read comments received by the DHS
Homeland Security Advisory Council,
go to https://www.regulations.gov, search
‘‘DHS–2015–0043,’’ ‘‘Open Docket
Folder’’ and provide your comments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mike Miron at HSAC@hq.dhs.gov or at
(202) 447–3135.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Notice of
this meeting is given under Section
10(a) of the Federal Advisory Committee
Act (FACA), Public Law 92–463 (5
U.S.C. Appendix) requires each FACA
committee meeting to be open to the
public.
The HSAC provides organizationally
independent, strategic, timely, specific,
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[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 178 (Tuesday, September 15, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 55373-55376]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-23126]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
Announcement of Requirements and Registration for the NIEHS
Climate Change and Environmental Exposures Challenge
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 3719.
SUMMARY: To assist the country in preparing for the potential health
risks from climate change, the National Institutes of Health (NIH)
through the National Institute on Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)
is sponsoring the NIEHS Climate Change and Environmental Exposures
Challenge (the ``Challenge'') under the America COMPETES
Reauthorization Act of 2010. This Challenge calls on talented software
developers, data scientists, and other innovators from around the
country to create data visualizations, tools, and applications that use
the best available science on environmental exposures and the
relationship of these exposures to increased temperature,
precipitation, flooding, and sea level rise. The Challenge has two
goals: To raise awareness of how environmental health risks may be
exacerbated by climate change in communities, and to enable protective
decision-making from local to national levels.
DATES: The Challenge begins September 15, 2015.
(1) Submission period begins 9 a.m. EDT September 28, 2015.
(2) Submission period ends 12 p.m. EDT December 4, 2015.
(3) Judging Period: December 7, 2015 to January 6, 2016.
(4) Winners Announced: January 12, 2016.
ADDRESSES: To register for this Challenge, participants can access
either the https://www.challenge.gov Web site (search for the
Challenge's title) or the Climate and Health Innovation Challenge
Series Web site at https://www.challenge.gov/agency/health-and-human-services/climate-and-health-innovation-challenge-series/.
[[Page 55374]]
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John Balbus, M.D., M.P.H., Senior
Advisor for Public Health, National Institute of Environmental Health
Sciences, Phone 301.496.3511. [john.balbus@nih.gov]
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Communities currently face risks from
hazardous wastes and deposits of industrial chemicals, air pollution,
harmful algal blooms and toxic contaminants in food, and exposures to
pesticides. While the impacts of climate change on many of these
environmental health risks are not well understood or addressed at
present, newly released data and tools, in combination with other
publicly available datasets, allow for innovative approaches to
identifying, demonstrating and assessing those risks. Protective
decisions at the local level may include siting of schools, day care
centers, new housing, or critical infrastructure such as new water
intakes for drinking water systems; design or siting of urban waste
water drainage or green infrastructure; placement of monitoring
equipment or other sensors; or other permits or regulations.
Nationally, protective decisions about prioritizing remediation efforts
or other interventions, or setting national standards or policies may
be informed by greater understanding of the influence of climate change
on the magnitude and spatial distribution of potential environmental
exposures.
Statutory Authority: Pursuant to Section 402 of the Public Health
Service Act, 42 U.S.C. 285, the general purpose of the National
Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) is the conduct and
support of research, training, health information dissemination, and
other programs with respect to factors in the environment that affect
human health, directly or indirectly. Supported by the NIEHS, the
Challenge furthers the Institute's statutory authority by advancing
research to understand the potential health risks from climate change.
This Challenge aligns with both the mission of NIEHS to ``discover how
the environment affects people in order to promote more healthier
lives'' as well as elements of the Institute's 2012-2017 Strategic
plan, including:
Goal 5: Identify and respond to emerging environmental threats to
human health, on both a local and global scale (https://www.niehs.nih.gov/about/strategicplan/).
Subject of the Challenge: The Challenge calls on talented software
developers, data and exposure scientists, public health students and
professionals, and other innovators to produce a data visualization or
visualization tool or application (each a ``submission'') to help
convey potential risks of environmental exposures in the United States
that may be exacerbated by climate change. Submissions may be produced
using existing tools and platforms or created with newly developed
applications. The geographic scale can be as small as the neighborhood
or community level or as large as the regional or national level.
Prizes will be made available in two categories according to the scale
of the submission; one for state level or smaller, one for multi-state
or national.
Submissions should help identify potential areas or zones of
increased exposure and/or the degree of changes in exposure or health
risk resulting from climate change. Participants may consider a short-
term time scale (e.g., 0 to 20 years) for impacts associated with
extreme events, or a longer time scale (e.g., 2050 or beyond) for
impacts associated with sea level rise or other phenomena whose
greatest impact will clearly be decades from now. These exposures may
include:
(1) Toxic chemicals released from hazardous waste, mining or other
industrial sites by rising sea level, increased temperatures and
permafrost melting, changes in wind patterns, or other climate-related
ecological processes;
(2) air pollutants, including ozone and particulate matter, that
may increase or decrease in concentration in certain regions because of
increased temperatures and changing weather patterns;
(3) toxins created by molds or waterborne bacteria or algae;
(4) pesticides, whose usage or dispersion patterns may be
influenced by changes in climate.
Participants in the Challenge may also propose environmental
exposures not listed here. If a participant wishes to explore a
different environmental exposure, the submission should include a
statement explaining the importance of the exposure to human health and
the relationship between climate change and changes in that exposure in
the future.
This Challenge is most interested in submissions that show the
interaction between these three data layers:
(1) Locations and concentrations of harmful agents (i.e.,
exposures);
(2) locations of potentially exposed populations; and
(3) geographic and climatologic parameters conveying changing risks
of exposure.
At a minimum, all submissions should include a data layer related
to location of potential harmful agents and a data layer related to
changes in levels of exposure to those potential agents cause by
factors related to climate change.
Potentially useful datasets can be found at climate.data.gov and on
the Climate and Health Innovation Challenge Series Web site (https://www.challenge.gov/agency/health-and-human-services/climate-and-health-innovation-challenge-series/). Participants are also encouraged to seek
out additional scientifically valid datasets for their submissions.
Participants in the Challenge should specify the target audience
for their submission. Potential target audiences include local public
health and environmental officials, clinical health professionals,
urban planners, emergency preparedness and response officials, and the
general public.
Rules for Participating in the Challenge
(1) To be eligible to win a prize under this Challenge, an
individual or entity--
a. Shall have registered to participate in the Challenge under the
rules promulgated by the NIEHS as published in this Notice;
b. Shall have complied with all the requirements set forth in this
Notice;
c. In the case of a private entity, shall be incorporated in and
maintain a primary place of business in the United States, and in the
case of an individual, whether participating singly or in a group,
shall be a citizen or permanent resident of the United States 18 years
of age or older;
d. May not be a Federal entity;
e. May not be a Federal employee acting within the scope of the
employee's employment and further, in the case of HHS employees, may
not work on their submission(s) during assigned duty hours;
f. May not be an employee of the NIH, a judge of the Challenge, or
any other party involved with the design, production, execution, or
distribution of the Challenge or the immediate family of such a party
(i.e., spouse, parent, step-parent, child, or step-child).
(2) Federal grantees may not use Federal grant funds to develop
their Challenge submissions unless use of such funds is consistent with
the purpose of their grant award and specifically requested to do so
due to the Challenge design, and as announced in the Federal Register.
(3) Federal contractors may not use Federal funds from a contract
to develop their Challenge submissions or to fund efforts in support of
their Challenge submission.
[[Page 55375]]
(4) Submissions must not infringe upon any copyright or any other
rights of any third party.
(5) By participating in this Challenge, each individual (whether
competing singly or in a group) and entity agrees to assume any and all
risks and waive claims against the Federal government and its related
entities (as defined in the America COMPETES Act), except in the case
of willful misconduct, for any injury, death, damage, or loss of
property, revenue, or profits, whether direct, indirect, or
consequential, arising from participation in this Challenge, whether
the injury, death, damage, or loss arises through negligence or
otherwise.
(6) Based on the subject matter of the Challenge, the type of work
that it will possibly require, as well as an analysis of the likelihood
of any claims for death, bodily injury, property damage, or loss
potentially resulting from Challenge participation, no individual
(whether competing singly or in a group) or entity participating in the
Challenge is required to obtain liability insurance or demonstrate
financial responsibility in order to participate in this Challenge.
(7) By participating in this Challenge, each individual (whether
competing singly or in a group) and entity agrees to indemnify the
Federal government against third party claims for damages arising from
or related to Challenge activities.
(8) An individual or entity shall not be deemed ineligible because
the individual or entity used Federal facilities or consulted with
Federal employees during the Challenge if the facilities and employees
are made available to all individuals and entities participating in the
Challenge on an equitable basis.
(9) By participating in this Challenge, each individual (whether
participating singly or in a group) and entity grants to the NIH an
irrevocable, paid-up, royalty-free nonexclusive worldwide license to
post, link to, share, and display publicly on the Web the submission.
Each participant will retain all other intellectual property rights in
their submissions, as applicable.
(10) NIH reserves the right, in its sole discretion, to (a) cancel,
suspend, or modify the Challenge, and/or (b) not award any prizes if no
submissions are deemed worthy.
(11) Each individual (whether participating singly or in a group)
or entity agrees to follow all applicable federal, state, and local
laws, regulations, and policies.
(12) Each individual (whether participating singly or in a group)
and entity participating in this Challenge must comply with all terms
and conditions of these rules, and participation in this Challenge
constitutes each such participant's full and unconditional agreement to
abide by these rules. Winning is contingent upon fulfilling all
requirements herein.
Registration Process for Participants: To register for this
Challenge, participants can access either the https://www.challenge.gov
Web site (search for the Challenge's title) or the Climate and Health
Innovation Challenge Series Web site at https://www.challenge.gov/agency/health-and-human-services/climate-and-health-innovation-challenge-series/
Amount of the Prize: There will be two prize categories, one for
data visualizations, tools or applications at the regional (multi-
state) or national level, and one for data visualizations, tools or
applications at the local or municipal level, with a grand prize,
second prize, and third prize available for each category. Each
category may award up to $17,500 in prizes (total prize amount
available is $35,000) to the best overall projects in that category,
based on the established judging criteria. For each category:
Grand Prize--$10,000
Second Prize--$5,000
Third Prize--$2,500
The Award Approving Official will be Linda S. Birnbaum, Ph.D.,
D.A.B.T., A.T.S, Director, National Institute of Environmental Health
Sciences.
Payment of the Prizes: Prizes awarded under this Challenge will be
paid by NIEHS by electronic funds transfer and may be subject to
Federal income taxes. HHS/NIH/NIEHS will comply with the Internal
Revenue Service withholding and reporting requirements, where
applicable.
Basis upon Which Winners Will Be Selected: The judges will evaluate
submissions based upon the following criteria: scientific validity,
innovative use of data and visualization tools or applications, and
clarity of presentation. In order for submissions to be evaluated, they
must include clear, detailed processes on how they were produced,
including any code if applicable. The processes can be submitted in a
text document. More details on the specific judging criteria and the
judging panel can be found on the Challenge Web site.
34% Scientific validity--associations between exposures
and climate change phenomena must be scientifically credible.
33% Innovative use of data and visualization tools or
applications--creative selection of datasets and ways to display data
overlays; inclusion of new ideas and types of data.
33% Clarity--depiction of vulnerability and risk easily
understood to a general public audience.
In order for a submission to be eligible to win this Challenge, it
must meet the following requirements:
1. Submission: The following items constitute a complete submission
for this Challenge: A short (less than 250 words) description of the
visualization and its value in improving our understanding of the
relationship between environmental exposures and climate change; a
detailed description of the visualization, tool, or application,
including the technical basis for combining data layers and references
to the scientific literature supporting the relationships between
climate change, altered exposures, and human health outcomes where
relevant (limited to 1000 words, not including figures or references);
the visualization tool and any application or code needed to run the
tool; instructions on how to install and operate any application behind
a visualization tool; system requirements required to run the
application; and a description of, rationale for selecting, and
complete copy of the data set. For data sets contained within
climate.data.gov or otherwise easily obtainable from federal sources,
the URLs for the datasets are sufficient. Alternatively, instead of
providing the tool or application itself, participants may provide
either a link to a visualization generated by the tool or application;
a video demonstrating the tool or application; or one or more pdfs of
example visualizations.
2. Participants must provide continuous access to any submissions
that include web postings through the Challenge period until January
12, 2016.
3. Challenge submissions must be submitted via the Challenge's
homepage on challenge.gov.
4. Submissions must be in English.
5. The tool or application must not use HHS's or NIH's logos or
official seals in the submission, and must not claim or imply
endorsement by the Federal government.
6. The data visualization tool or application must be designed for
use with existing web, mobile, voice, or other platform for supporting
interactions of the content provided with other capabilities.
7. A submission may be disqualified if the visualization tool or
application fails to function as expressed in the description provided
by the participant, or if the tool or application provides inaccurate
or incomplete information.
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8. Submissions must be free of malware. Participant agrees that NIH
may conduct testing on the visualization tool or application to
determine whether malware or other security threats may be present.
NIEHS may disqualify the submission if, in NIEHS' judgment, the
visualization tool or application or any other part of the submission
may damage government or others' equipment or operating environment.
Additional Information: To help the public understand the health
implications of climate change and improve the nation's ability to be
resilient to negative impacts, HHS has organized the Climate and Health
Innovation Challenge Series. This Challenge Series spotlights the over
150 climate and health data sets that have become available via the
Climate Data Initiative, while also identifying and promoting
additional relevant data sets. The Challenge Series will include
challenges aimed at one or more of the following goals:
1. Create appealing applications that empower the public to take
action by providing information about climate change's impacts on
health or about the potential health benefits of personal actions to
reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
2. Create climate change and health decision support tools for
health professionals and, potentially, other professionals (e.g. urban
planners).
3. Empower the academic and technology communities to analyze data
in innovative ways, moving research forward in key areas (products may
range from data visualizations to useful indices/metrics to adopt).
4. Challenge the private sector to combine government data with
their own data to develop innovative decision support tools or address
research questions.
Dated: September 4, 2015.
Linda S. Birnbaum,
Director, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.
[FR Doc. 2015-23126 Filed 9-14-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4140-01-P