World Trade Center Health Program; Petition 009-Autoimmune Diseases; Finding of Insufficient Evidence, 65980-65982 [2015-27435]
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Dated: October 22, 2015.
Mary E. Henigin,
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[FR Doc. 2015–27367 Filed 10–27–15; 8:45 am]
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 131
[EPA–HQ–OW–2015–0174; FRL–9936–29–
OW]
Extension of Public Comment Period
for the Revision of Certain Federal
Water Quality Criteria Applicable to
Washington
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice; extension of comment
period.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is extending the comment
period for the proposed rule, ‘‘Revision
of Certain Federal Water Quality Criteria
Applicable to Washington.’’ In response
to stakeholder requests, EPA is
extending the comment period for an
additional 45 days, from November 13,
2015, to December 28, 2015. EPA will
offer virtual public hearings on the
proposed rule via the Internet in
December 2015.
DATES: The comment period for the
proposed rule published September 14,
2015 (80 FR 55063) is extended.
Comments must be received on or
before December 28, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
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SUMMARY:
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OW–2015–0174, at https://
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not consider comments or comment
contents located outside of the primary
submission (i.e., on the web, cloud, or
other file sharing system). For
additional submission methods, the full
EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia
submissions, and general guidance on
making effective comments, please visit
https://www2.epa.gov/dockets/
commenting-epa-dockets.
Erica Fleisig, Office of Water, Standards
and Health Protection Division (4305T),
Environmental Protection Agency, 1200
Pennsylvania Avenue NW., Washington,
DC 20460; telephone number: (202)
566–1057; email address: fleisig.erica@
epa.gov.
On
September 14, 2015, EPA published the
proposed rule, ‘‘Revision of Certain
Federal Water Quality Criteria
Applicable to Washington’’ in the
Federal Register (80 FR 55063). EPA
proposes to revise the current federal
Clean Water Act human health criteria
applicable to waters under the state of
Washington’s jurisdiction to ensure that
the criteria are set at levels that will
adequately protect Washington
residents, including tribes with treatyprotected rights, from exposure to toxic
pollutants.
The original deadline to submit
comments on the proposed rule was
November 13, 2015. This action extends
the comment period for 45 days. Written
comments must now be received by
December 28, 2015.
Additionally, EPA will offer virtual
public hearings on the proposed rule via
the Internet in December 2015. For
details on these public hearings, such as
the date and time as well as registration
information, please visit https://
www2.epa.gov/wqs-tech/water-qualitystandards-regulations-washington.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Dated: October 20, 2015.
Kenneth J. Kopocis,
Deputy Assistant Administrator, Office of
Water.
[FR Doc. 2015–27474 Filed 10–27–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
42 CFR Part 88
[NIOSH Docket 094]
World Trade Center Health Program;
Petition 009—Autoimmune Diseases;
Finding of Insufficient Evidence
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, HHS.
ACTION: Denial of petition for addition of
a health condition.
AGENCY:
On September 14, 2015, the
Administrator of the World Trade
Center (WTC) Health Program received
a petition (Petition 009) to add the
autoimmune disease multiple sclerosis
to the List of WTC-Related Health
Conditions (List). Upon reviewing the
information provided by the petitioner,
the Administrator has determined that
Petition 009 is not substantially
different from Petitions 007 and 008,
which also requested the addition of
autoimmune diseases. The
Administrator recently published
responses to both Petition 007 and
Petition 008 in the Federal Register and
has determined that Petition 009 does
not provide additional evidence of a
causal relationship between 9/11
exposures and autoimmune diseases.
Accordingly, the Administrator finds
that insufficient evidence exists to
request a recommendation of the WTC
Health Program Scientific/Technical
Advisory Committee (STAC), to publish
a proposed rule, or to publish a
determination not to publish a proposed
rule.
DATES: The Administrator of the WTC
Health Program is denying this petition
for the addition of a health condition as
of October 28, 2015.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Rachel Weiss, Program Analyst, 1090
Tusculum Avenue, MS: C–46,
Cincinnati, OH 45226; telephone (855)
818–1629 (this is a toll-free number);
email NIOSHregs@cdc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Table of Contents
A. WTC Health Program Statutory Authority
B. Petition 009
C. Administrator’s Determination on Petition
009
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B. Petition 009
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A. WTC Health Program Statutory
Authority
Title I of the James Zadroga 9/11
Health and Compensation Act of 2010
(Pub. L. 111–347), amended the Public
Health Service Act (PHS Act) to add
Title XXXIII 1 establishing the WTC
Health Program within the Department
of Health and Human Services (HHS).
The WTC Health Program provides
medical monitoring and treatment
benefits to eligible firefighters and
related personnel, law enforcement
officers, and rescue, recovery, and
cleanup workers who responded to the
September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in
New York City, at the Pentagon, and in
Shanksville, Pennsylvania (responders),
and to eligible persons who were
present in the dust or dust cloud on
September 11, 2001 or who worked,
resided, or attended school, childcare,
or adult daycare in the New York City
disaster area (survivors).
All references to the Administrator of
the WTC Health Program
(Administrator) in this notice mean the
Director of the National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health
(NIOSH) or his or her designee.
Pursuant to section 3312(a)(6)(B) of
the PHS Act, interested parties may
petition the Administrator to add a
health condition to the List in 42 CFR
88.1. Within 60 calendar days after
receipt of a petition to add a condition
to the List, the Administrator must take
one of the following four actions
described in section 3312(a)(6)(B) and
42 CFR 88.17: (i) Request a
recommendation of the STAC; (ii)
publish a proposed rule in the Federal
Register to add such health condition;
(iii) publish in the Federal Register the
Administrator’s determination not to
publish such a proposed rule and the
basis for such determination; or (iv)
publish in the Federal Register a
determination that insufficient evidence
exists to take action under (i) through
(iii) above. However, in accordance with
42 CFR 88.17(a)(4), the Administrator is
required to consider a new petition for
a previously-evaluated health condition
determined not to qualify for addition to
the List only if the new petition presents
a new medical basis—evidence not
previously reviewed by the
Administrator—for the association
between 9/11 exposures and the
condition to be added.
1 Title XXXIII of the PHS Act is codified at 42
U.S.C. 300mm to 300mm–61. Those portions of the
Zadroga Act found in Titles II and III of Public Law
111–347 do not pertain to the WTC Health Program
and are codified elsewhere.
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On September 14, 2015, the
Administrator received a petition to add
the autoimmune disease multiple
sclerosis to the List (Petition 009).2 This
is the third petition to the Administrator
requesting the addition of autoimmune
diseases to the List; the first
autoimmune disease petition, Petition
007, was denied due to insufficient
evidence as described in a Federal
Register notice published on June 8,
2015 (80 FR 32333); the second, Petition
008, was also denied due to insufficient
evidence as described in a separate
Federal Register notice published on
July 10, 2015 (80 FR 39720). This
petition, Petition 009, presented as
evidence a newspaper article
referencing a study recently published
in the Journal of Arthritis and
Rheumatology by Webber et al. [2015],3
as well as the journal article itself,
which was designed to test the
hypothesis that acute and chronic 9/11
work-related exposures were associated
with the risk of certain new-onset
systemic autoimmune diseases.
Although Petition 009 specifically
requested the addition of multiple
sclerosis, an autoimmune condition, the
Administrator determined that the
scope of the petition properly includes
only the autoimmune diseases
identified in Webber et al., cited as
evidence in Petitions 007, 008, and
009.4 Multiple sclerosis is not among
the autoimmune diseases studied by
Webber et al. No other evidence was
provided in Petition 009 to support the
addition of multiple sclerosis to the List;
therefore, multiple sclerosis is not
addressed in this action.
C. Administrator’s Determination on
Petition 009
The Administrator has established a
methodology for evaluating whether to
add non-cancer health conditions to the
List of WTC-Related Health Conditions,
published online in the Policies and
Procedures section of the WTC Health
Program Web site.5 However, the
2 See Petition 009. WTC Health Program: Petitions
Received. https://www.cdc.gov/wtc/received.html.
3 Webber MP, Moir W, Zeig-Owens R, Glaser MS,
Jaber N, Hall C, Berman J, Qayyum B, Loupasakis
K, Kelly K, and Prezant DJ [20015]. Nested casecontrol study of selected systemic autoimmune
diseases in World Trade Center rescue/recovery
workers. Journal of Arthritis & Rheumatology
67(5):1369–1376.
4 This determination is consistent with the
Administrator’s reasoning in the Petition 007
finding of insufficient evidence. 80 FR 32333, June
8, 2015.
5 ‘‘Policy and Procedures for Adding Non-Cancer
Conditions to the List of WTC-Related Health
Conditions,’’ John Howard MD, Administrator of
the WTC Health Program, October 21, 2014.
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65981
Administrator has determined that the
methodology is not triggered in this case
because Petition 009 requested the
addition of the autoimmune diseases
identified in Webber et al. previously
reviewed by the Program, and presented
no new evidence of a causal association
between 9/11 exposures and
autoimmune diseases. In response to
Petition 007, which also requested the
addition of autoimmune diseases, the
Administrator reviewed the findings
presented in the Webber study and
determined that insufficient evidence
exists to take any of the following
actions: Propose the addition of
autoimmune diseases to the List
(pursuant to PHS Act, section
3312(a)(6)(B)(ii) and 42 CFR
88.17(a)(2)(ii)); publish a determination
not to publish a proposed rule in the
Federal Register (pursuant to PHS Act,
section 3312(a)(6)(B)(iii) and 42 CFR
88.17(a)(2)(iii)); or request a
recommendation from the STAC
(pursuant to PHS Act, section
3312(a)(6)(B)(i) and 42 CFR
88.17(a)(2)(i)). The Webber study was
also presented as evidence to support
Petition 008 regarding autoimmune
disorders, specifically encephalitis of
the brain. Because the Administrator
recently evaluated the Webber study in
responding to Petitions 007 and 008,
there is no need to reevaluate the same
evidence again in response to the
request to add autoimmune diseases in
Petition 009, which also presented the
Webber study as evidence of a causal
association between 9/11 exposures and
autoimmune diseases.
Accordingly, with regard to Petition
009, the Administrator has determined
that insufficient evidence exists to take
further action, including either
proposing the addition of autoimmune
diseases to the List (pursuant to PHS
Act, section 3312(a)(6)(B)(ii) and 42 CFR
88.17(a)(2)(ii)) or publishing a
determination not to publish a proposed
rule in the Federal Register (pursuant to
PHS Act, section 3312(a)(6)(B)(iii) and
42 CFR 88.17(a)(2)(iii)). The
Administrator has also determined that
requesting a recommendation from the
STAC (pursuant to PHS Act, section
3312(a)(6)(B)(i) and 42 CFR
88.17(a)(2)(i)) is unwarranted.
For the reasons discussed above, the
request made in Petition 009 to add the
autoimmune disease multiple sclerosis
to the List of WTC-Related Health
Conditions is denied.
The Administrator is aware that
another study of autoimmune diseases
among WTC Health Program members is
https://www.cdc.gov/wtc/pdfs/WTCHP_PP_Adding_
NonCancers_21_Oct_2014.pdf.
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being conducted by the WTC Health
Registry; however, results from this
study are not yet available in the
scientific literature. The Administrator
will monitor the scientific literature for
publication of the results of this study
and any other studies that address
autoimmune diseases among 9/11exposed populations.
Dated: October 22, 2015.
John Howard,
Administrator, World Trade Center Health
Program and Director, National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health, Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, Department
of Health and Human Services.
[FR Doc. 2015–27435 Filed 10–27–15; 8:45 am]
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 208 (Wednesday, October 28, 2015)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 65980-65982]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-27435]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
42 CFR Part 88
[NIOSH Docket 094]
World Trade Center Health Program; Petition 009--Autoimmune
Diseases; Finding of Insufficient Evidence
AGENCY: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, HHS.
ACTION: Denial of petition for addition of a health condition.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: On September 14, 2015, the Administrator of the World Trade
Center (WTC) Health Program received a petition (Petition 009) to add
the autoimmune disease multiple sclerosis to the List of WTC-Related
Health Conditions (List). Upon reviewing the information provided by
the petitioner, the Administrator has determined that Petition 009 is
not substantially different from Petitions 007 and 008, which also
requested the addition of autoimmune diseases. The Administrator
recently published responses to both Petition 007 and Petition 008 in
the Federal Register and has determined that Petition 009 does not
provide additional evidence of a causal relationship between 9/11
exposures and autoimmune diseases. Accordingly, the Administrator finds
that insufficient evidence exists to request a recommendation of the
WTC Health Program Scientific/Technical Advisory Committee (STAC), to
publish a proposed rule, or to publish a determination not to publish a
proposed rule.
DATES: The Administrator of the WTC Health Program is denying this
petition for the addition of a health condition as of October 28, 2015.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Rachel Weiss, Program Analyst, 1090
Tusculum Avenue, MS: C-46, Cincinnati, OH 45226; telephone (855) 818-
1629 (this is a toll-free number); email NIOSHregs@cdc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
A. WTC Health Program Statutory Authority
B. Petition 009
C. Administrator's Determination on Petition 009
[[Page 65981]]
A. WTC Health Program Statutory Authority
Title I of the James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act of
2010 (Pub. L. 111-347), amended the Public Health Service Act (PHS Act)
to add Title XXXIII \1\ establishing the WTC Health Program within the
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). The WTC Health Program
provides medical monitoring and treatment benefits to eligible
firefighters and related personnel, law enforcement officers, and
rescue, recovery, and cleanup workers who responded to the September
11, 2001, terrorist attacks in New York City, at the Pentagon, and in
Shanksville, Pennsylvania (responders), and to eligible persons who
were present in the dust or dust cloud on September 11, 2001 or who
worked, resided, or attended school, childcare, or adult daycare in the
New York City disaster area (survivors).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Title XXXIII of the PHS Act is codified at 42 U.S.C. 300mm
to 300mm-61. Those portions of the Zadroga Act found in Titles II
and III of Public Law 111-347 do not pertain to the WTC Health
Program and are codified elsewhere.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
All references to the Administrator of the WTC Health Program
(Administrator) in this notice mean the Director of the National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) or his or her
designee.
Pursuant to section 3312(a)(6)(B) of the PHS Act, interested
parties may petition the Administrator to add a health condition to the
List in 42 CFR 88.1. Within 60 calendar days after receipt of a
petition to add a condition to the List, the Administrator must take
one of the following four actions described in section 3312(a)(6)(B)
and 42 CFR 88.17: (i) Request a recommendation of the STAC; (ii)
publish a proposed rule in the Federal Register to add such health
condition; (iii) publish in the Federal Register the Administrator's
determination not to publish such a proposed rule and the basis for
such determination; or (iv) publish in the Federal Register a
determination that insufficient evidence exists to take action under
(i) through (iii) above. However, in accordance with 42 CFR
88.17(a)(4), the Administrator is required to consider a new petition
for a previously-evaluated health condition determined not to qualify
for addition to the List only if the new petition presents a new
medical basis--evidence not previously reviewed by the Administrator--
for the association between 9/11 exposures and the condition to be
added.
B. Petition 009
On September 14, 2015, the Administrator received a petition to add
the autoimmune disease multiple sclerosis to the List (Petition
009).\2\ This is the third petition to the Administrator requesting the
addition of autoimmune diseases to the List; the first autoimmune
disease petition, Petition 007, was denied due to insufficient evidence
as described in a Federal Register notice published on June 8, 2015 (80
FR 32333); the second, Petition 008, was also denied due to
insufficient evidence as described in a separate Federal Register
notice published on July 10, 2015 (80 FR 39720). This petition,
Petition 009, presented as evidence a newspaper article referencing a
study recently published in the Journal of Arthritis and Rheumatology
by Webber et al. [2015],\3\ as well as the journal article itself,
which was designed to test the hypothesis that acute and chronic 9/11
work-related exposures were associated with the risk of certain new-
onset systemic autoimmune diseases.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ See Petition 009. WTC Health Program: Petitions Received.
https://www.cdc.gov/wtc/received.html.
\3\ Webber MP, Moir W, Zeig-Owens R, Glaser MS, Jaber N, Hall C,
Berman J, Qayyum B, Loupasakis K, Kelly K, and Prezant DJ [20015].
Nested case-control study of selected systemic autoimmune diseases
in World Trade Center rescue/recovery workers. Journal of Arthritis
& Rheumatology 67(5):1369-1376.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Although Petition 009 specifically requested the addition of
multiple sclerosis, an autoimmune condition, the Administrator
determined that the scope of the petition properly includes only the
autoimmune diseases identified in Webber et al., cited as evidence in
Petitions 007, 008, and 009.\4\ Multiple sclerosis is not among the
autoimmune diseases studied by Webber et al. No other evidence was
provided in Petition 009 to support the addition of multiple sclerosis
to the List; therefore, multiple sclerosis is not addressed in this
action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ This determination is consistent with the Administrator's
reasoning in the Petition 007 finding of insufficient evidence. 80
FR 32333, June 8, 2015.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Administrator's Determination on Petition 009
The Administrator has established a methodology for evaluating
whether to add non-cancer health conditions to the List of WTC-Related
Health Conditions, published online in the Policies and Procedures
section of the WTC Health Program Web site.\5\ However, the
Administrator has determined that the methodology is not triggered in
this case because Petition 009 requested the addition of the autoimmune
diseases identified in Webber et al. previously reviewed by the
Program, and presented no new evidence of a causal association between
9/11 exposures and autoimmune diseases. In response to Petition 007,
which also requested the addition of autoimmune diseases, the
Administrator reviewed the findings presented in the Webber study and
determined that insufficient evidence exists to take any of the
following actions: Propose the addition of autoimmune diseases to the
List (pursuant to PHS Act, section 3312(a)(6)(B)(ii) and 42 CFR
88.17(a)(2)(ii)); publish a determination not to publish a proposed
rule in the Federal Register (pursuant to PHS Act, section
3312(a)(6)(B)(iii) and 42 CFR 88.17(a)(2)(iii)); or request a
recommendation from the STAC (pursuant to PHS Act, section
3312(a)(6)(B)(i) and 42 CFR 88.17(a)(2)(i)). The Webber study was also
presented as evidence to support Petition 008 regarding autoimmune
disorders, specifically encephalitis of the brain. Because the
Administrator recently evaluated the Webber study in responding to
Petitions 007 and 008, there is no need to reevaluate the same evidence
again in response to the request to add autoimmune diseases in Petition
009, which also presented the Webber study as evidence of a causal
association between 9/11 exposures and autoimmune diseases.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ ``Policy and Procedures for Adding Non-Cancer Conditions to
the List of WTC-Related Health Conditions,'' John Howard MD,
Administrator of the WTC Health Program, October 21, 2014. https://www.cdc.gov/wtc/pdfs/WTCHP_PP_Adding_NonCancers_21_Oct_2014.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accordingly, with regard to Petition 009, the Administrator has
determined that insufficient evidence exists to take further action,
including either proposing the addition of autoimmune diseases to the
List (pursuant to PHS Act, section 3312(a)(6)(B)(ii) and 42 CFR
88.17(a)(2)(ii)) or publishing a determination not to publish a
proposed rule in the Federal Register (pursuant to PHS Act, section
3312(a)(6)(B)(iii) and 42 CFR 88.17(a)(2)(iii)). The Administrator has
also determined that requesting a recommendation from the STAC
(pursuant to PHS Act, section 3312(a)(6)(B)(i) and 42 CFR
88.17(a)(2)(i)) is unwarranted.
For the reasons discussed above, the request made in Petition 009
to add the autoimmune disease multiple sclerosis to the List of WTC-
Related Health Conditions is denied.
The Administrator is aware that another study of autoimmune
diseases among WTC Health Program members is
[[Page 65982]]
being conducted by the WTC Health Registry; however, results from this
study are not yet available in the scientific literature. The
Administrator will monitor the scientific literature for publication of
the results of this study and any other studies that address autoimmune
diseases among 9/11-exposed populations.
Dated: October 22, 2015.
John Howard,
Administrator, World Trade Center Health Program and Director, National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, Department of Health and Human Services.
[FR Doc. 2015-27435 Filed 10-27-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4163-18-P