Statement of Organization, Functions, and Delegations of Authority, 30706-30708 [2020-10797]
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30706
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 98 / Wednesday, May 20, 2020 / Notices
EARLY TERMINATIONS GRANTED APRIL 1, 2020 THRU APRIL 30, 2020—Continued
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AIPCF VI Stone Cayman AIV, LP; GATX Corporation; AIPCF VI Stone Cayman AIV, LP.
GlaxoSmithKline plc; Vir Biotechnology, Inc.; GlaxoSmithKline plc.
Pfizer Inc.; ATHOS KG; Pfizer Inc.
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Charlesbank Equity Fund IX, Limited Partnership; News Corporation; Charlesbank Equity Fund IX, Limited Partnership.
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INTL FCStone Inc.; GAIN Capital Holdings, Inc.; INTL FCStone Inc.
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Leidos Holdings, Inc.; L3Harris Technologies, Inc.; Leidos Holdings, Inc.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Theresa Kingsberry (202–326–3100),
Program Support Specialist, Federal
Trade Commission Premerger
Notification Office, Bureau of
Competition, Room CC–5301,
Washington, DC 20024.
By direction of the Commission.
April J. Tabor,
Acting Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–10883 Filed 5–19–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6750–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention
Notice of Closed Meeting
Pursuant to section 10(d) of the
Federal Advisory Committee Act, as
amended, notice is hereby given of the
following meeting.
The meeting will be closed to the
public in accordance with the
provisions set forth in sections
552b(c)(4) and 552b(c)(6), Title 5 U.S.C.,
as amended, and the Determination of
the Director, Strategic Business
Initiatives Unit, Office of the Chief
Operating Officer, CDC, pursuant to
Public Law 92–463. The grant
applications and the discussions could
disclose confidential trade secrets or
commercial property such as patentable
material, and personal information
concerning individuals associated with
the grant applications, the disclosure of
which would constitute a clearly
unwarranted invasion of personal
privacy.
Name of Committee: Disease,
Disability, and Injury Prevention and
Control Special Emphasis Panel (SEP)—
RFA–CE–20–002, Grants to Support
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New Investigators in Conducting
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Interpersonal Violence Impacting
Children and Youth.
Date: June 10–11, 2020.
Time: 8:30 a.m.–5:30 p.m., EDT.
Place: Zoom Video Conference/
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Agenda:To review and evaluate grant
applications.
For Further Information Contact:
Mikel Walters, Ph.D., Scientific Review
Official, National Center for Injury
Prevention and Control, CDC, 4770
Buford Highway NE, Building 106, MS
S106–9, Atlanta, Georgia 30341,
Telephone (404) 639–0913, MWalters@
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both the Centers for Disease Control and
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Substances and Disease Registry.
Kalwant Smagh,
Director, Strategic Business Initiatives Unit,
Office of the Chief Operating Officer, Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention.
[FR Doc. 2020–10890 Filed 5–19–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4163–18–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention
Statement of Organization, Functions,
and Delegations of Authority
Part C (Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention) of the Statement of
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Organization, Functions, and
Delegations of Authority of the
Department of Health and Human
Services (45 FR 67772–76, dated
October 14, 1980, and corrected at 45 FR
69296, October 20, 1980, as amended
most recently at 84 FR 65981, dated
December 2, 2019) is amended to reflect
the reorganization of the National
Institute for Occupational Safety and
Health (NIOSH), Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention. The
reorganization is needed to become
more responsive to the changing mining
industry and stakeholder priorities, as
well as align and integrate regional
activities of the NIOSH mining
program’s core business and research
functions.
I. Under Part C, Section C–B,
Organization and Functions, the
following organizational units are
deleted in their entirety:
• Health Communication, Surveillance
and Research Support Branch (CCRB)
• Ground Control Branch (CCRC)
• Dust, Ventilation and Toxic
Substances Branch (CCRD)
• Human Factors Branch (CCRE)
• Electrical and Mechanical Systems
Safety Branch (CCRF)
• Fires and Explosions Branch (CCRG)
• Workplace Health Branch (CCRH)
II. Under Part C, Section C–B,
Organization and Functions, make the
following changes:
• Update functional statement for the
Pittsburgh Mining Research Division
(CCR)
• Create the Health Hazards Prevention
Branch (CCRJ)
• Create the Mining Systems Safety
Branch (CCRK)
• Create the Human Systems Integration
Branch (CCRL)
• Update the functional statement for
the Spokane Research Division (CCS)
E:\FR\FM\20MYN1.SGM
20MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 98 / Wednesday, May 20, 2020 / Notices
• Create the Miner Health Branch
(CCSB)
• Create the Miner Safety Branch
(CCSC)
III. Under Part C, Section C–B,
Organization and Functions, insert the
following:
• Pittsburgh Mining Research
Division (CCR). Provides leadership and
guidance for the prevention of workrelated illness, injury, and fatalities of
mine workers through research and
prevention activities of the Pittsburgh
Mining Research Division through three
subordinate Branches. Specifically: (1)
Conducts field studies to identify
emerging hazards, to understand the
underlying causes of mine safety and
health problems, and to evaluate the
effectiveness of interventions; (2)
develops engineering and behavioralbased interventions, including training
programs, to improve safety and health
in the mines; (3) performs research,
development, and testing of new
technologies, equipment, and practices
to enhance mine safety and health; (4)
develops best practices guidance for
interventions; (5) transfers mining
research and prevention products into
practice; and (6) collaborates with the
Spokane Mining Research Division and
other NIOSH divisions engaged in
research and prevention activities
relevant to mine worker health and
safety.
• Health Hazards Prevention Branch
(CCRJ). The Health Hazards Prevention
Branch function is to reduce illnesses
and injuries to mine workers through
assessment and control of respiratory
and physical hazards. The branch: (1)
Assesses mine worker exposure to
respiratory hazards, through a
comprehensive characterization of the
exposures and the evaluation and
development of monitoring methods
and technologies; (2) conducts research
on and evaluates the performance and
technical feasibility of engineering
control strategies, novel approaches,
and the application of new or emerging
technologies for underground and
surface mine dust and respiratory
hazard control systems; (3) conducts
research related to occupational hearing
loss in the mining sector, including
causative effects, noise controls, hearing
protection devices and impulse noise;
(4) demonstrates and evaluates the
technical and economic feasibility of
noise reduction controls; (5) conducts
research related to ergonomic hazards,
including developing engineering
controls in the laboratory and evaluating
their effectiveness in the workplace to
prevent workplace musculoskeletal
disorders, slips-trips-falls accidents, and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:51 May 19, 2020
Jkt 250001
materials handling injuries; and (6)
conducts research related to the
assessment and control of diesel
particulate matter (DPM) in both surface
and underground mines.
• Mining Systems Safety Branch
(CCRK). The Mining Systems Safety
Branch function is to reduce accidents
and injuries arising from changing
geological conditions and mine system
technologies and to prevent mine
explosions, mine fires, and gas and
water inundations, particularly in
underground coal mines. The branch:
(1) Conducts experiments through
laboratory and field investigations to
prevent catastrophic events such as
cataclysmic structural or ground
failures, mine explosions, mine fires,
and gas and water inundations to better
understand cause and effect
relationships that initiate such events;
(2) utilizes monitoring and advanced
numerical modeling techniques to better
understand and visualize ground
behavior and support response, leading
to improved design criteria for mine
layouts and support design to mitigate
ground control failures; (3) develops,
tests, and demonstrates sensors,
predictive models, and engineering
control technologies to reduce miners’
risk for injury or death; (4) conducts
laboratory and field research on
communication systems, tracking
systems, lighting systems, sensor
technologies, refuge alternatives, and
monitoring systems to ensure their
viability and safety during routine
mining operations as well as postdisaster conditions; (5) assesses and
develops new or improved strategies
and technologies to reduce the risks
associated with fires and explosions in
mining operations to mitigate the
impact of mine disasters; (6) assesses
methodologies and designs to enhance
and improve underground mine
ventilation system design and
application to prevent disasters and
ensure safe and healthy conditions for
underground miners; and (7) identifies
and evaluates emerging health and
safety issues as mining operations move
into more challenging and dangerous
geologic conditions.
• Human Systems Integration Branch
(CCRL). The Human Systems Integration
Branch function is to reduce fatalities
and injuries through interventions and
engineering controls solutions
developed through a human systems
integration framework. The branch: (1)
Conducts research with an overarching
focus on the human component in the
mining workplace system and in the
mine emergency response system; (2)
conducts human factors research related
to worker perceptions, judgment and
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
30707
decision-making, hazard recognition,
and human behavior; (3) provides
effective training and workplace
organization techniques and strategies
for mining; (4) conducts intervention
and evaluation effectiveness research for
integration and use of technologies and
interventions including engineering
controls, organizational administrative
and process changes and individual
leadership and worker practices in
mining; (5) systematically studies risk at
the intersections of technical, human
and environmental elements which
occur at the levels of the individual,
tasks, tools and technology, physical
environment and organizational process
and design in order to improve risk
management systems; and (6) conducts
research on effective training methods
that develops organizational techniques
and strategies to promote a positive
safety culture in mining.
• Spokane Mining Research Division
(CCS). Provides leadership and
guidance in the prevention of workrelated illness, injury, and fatalities in
the mining industries through research
and prevention activities of the Spokane
Mining Research Division, with an
emphasis on the special needs of surface
and underground mines in the western
United States. Specifically: (1)
Developing numerical models and
conducting laboratory and field research
and investigations to better understand
the causes of catastrophic failures that
may lead to multiple injuries and
fatalities; (2) developing new design
practices and tools, control
technologies, and work practices to
reduce the risk of global and local
ground failures in mines; (3) assessing
and mitigating risks associated with
emerging technologies such as
automated mining equipment and new
sensor technologies, and through
researching, identifying or developing
new technologies that have potential
benefits to mining health and safety; (4)
developing improved design
approaches, monitoring devices, and
engineering controls to reduce the
concentration of toxic substances in the
mine air; (5) developing and promoting
health and safety strategies through
research that protect mine workers from
occupational hazards and advance lifetime worker wellbeing through the
implementation of a miner health
program; (6) conducting laboratory and
field studies to leverage and support the
Institute’s mining research program; and
(7) collaborates with the Pittsburgh
Mining Research Division and other
NIOSH divisions engaged in research
and prevention activities relevant to
mine worker health and safety.
E:\FR\FM\20MYN1.SGM
20MYN1
30708
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 98 / Wednesday, May 20, 2020 / Notices
• Miner Safety Branch (CCSB). The
Miner Safety Branch function is to
identify and eliminate safety issues
arising from changing mine conditions
and technologies. State-of-the-art
technologies are used to conduct
fundamental and applied research
aimed at eliminating injuries and
fatalities in mining with a particular
focus on geomechanical instabilities,
localized ground falls, machine safety,
and worker interaction with automated
systems and other emerging
technologies. Researchers specialized in
the fields of geology, geophysics,
seismology, electronic instrumentation,
numerical modeling, geotechnical
engineering, safety engineering, data
science, and mining engineering utilize
state-of-the-art, emerging, and novel
technologies to identify and solve mine
safety challenges. The branch: (1)
Develops, implements, and improves
geophysical methods, geotechnical
instrumentation, and laboratory
techniques through applied research to
quantify rock mass properties and
characterize mining-induced ground
response; (2) utilizes advanced
numerical modeling techniques to better
understand and visualize ground
behavior and support response; (3)
identifies new technologies to monitor
and improve ground support; (4)
conducts research through laboratory
and field assessments of the
performance of engineered support
systems to provide quantifiable design
criteria; (5) develops recommendations
for the design of equipment and
techniques to reduce risks associated
with the installation of ground support;
(6) utilizes experimental and empirical
methods developed through research to
quantify the reliability of alternative
mining methods and design practices;
(7) applies advanced informatics, data
analyses, and visualization techniques
to automated and semi-automated
mining systems to provide increased
situational awareness for mine workers;
(8) assesses, develops and deploys
research-based mine-wide seismic
systems for quantifying and evaluating
seismic hazards and mitigation
strategies for underground and surface
mines; and (9) addresses health and
safety issues that may develop after the
introduction of automated mining
systems and other emerging
technologies in mining.
• Miner Health Branch (CCSC). The
Miner Health Branch function is to
assess and track miner health and
hazard exposures; and develop and
promote health solutions that maximize
worker protection, minimize exposures
and prevent disease, while improving
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:51 May 19, 2020
Jkt 250001
functional health for the entire mining
population. Research is pursued
through an interdisciplinary approach
involving the fields of epidemiology,
industrial hygiene, occupational
medicine, organizational psychology,
chemistry, as well as mechanical,
electrical, and industrial engineering.
The branch: (1) Incorporates novel and
relevant health surveillance methods for
the systematic assessment of health and
exposure potential of the miner as it
pertains to dynamic mining
environments; (2) conducts research on
the identification and prioritization of
adverse health outcomes and exposures,
and their associated risk factors; (3)
quantitatively and qualitatively
measures risk through research,
experimental, and real-world data
collection; (4) conducts research on the
development and evaluation of
workplace practices and technologies
aimed at preventing injury and illness
that improve long-term functionality for
all miners and benefit employers,
families, and communities; (5) develops
technologies and methods to monitor
and eliminate exposures; and (6)
engages and collaborates across NIOSH
and with industry to effectively
communicate tangible health solutions
and control strategies.
IV. Delegations of Authority: All
delegations and redelegations of
authority made to officials and
employees of affected organizational
components will continue with them or
their successors pending further
redelegation, provided they are
consistent with this reorganization.
(Authority: 44 U.S.C. 3101)
Dated: April 29, 2020.
Alex M. Azar, II,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–10797 Filed 5–19–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4163–18–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention
[Docket No. CDC–2020–0052; NIOSH–337]
Advisory Board on Radiation and
Worker Health, Subcommittee on Dose
Reconstruction Review (SDRR)
Meeting
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC), Department of Health
and Human Services (HHS).
ACTION: Notice of meeting and request
for comment.
AGENCY:
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
In accordance with the
Federal Advisory Committee Act, the
CDC announces the following meeting
for the Subcommittee for Dose
Reconstruction Reviews (SDRR) of the
Advisory Board on Radiation and
Worker Health (ABRWH). This meeting
is open to the public, but without an
oral public comment period. The public
is welcome to submit written comments
in advance of the meeting, per the
instructions provided in the address
section below. Written comments
received in advance of the meeting will
be included in the official record of the
meeting. The public is also welcome to
listen to the meeting by joining the
audio conference (information below).
The audio conference line has 150 ports
for callers.
DATES: The meeting will be held on July
29, 2020, 10:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., EDT.
Written comments must be received
on or before July 24, 2020.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by Docket No. CDC–2020–
0052; NIOSH–337; NIOSH by any of the
following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal:
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail: National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health, NIOSH
Docket Office, 1090 Tusculum Avenue,
MS C–34, Cincinnati, Ohio 45226–1998.
Instructions: All information received
in response to this notice must include
the agency name and docket number
[CDC–2020–0052; NIOSH–337]. All
relevant comments received will be
posted without change to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided.
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the Agency name and
Docket Number. All relevant comments
received in conformance with the
https://www.regulations.gov suitability
policy will be posted without change to
https://www.regulations.gov, including
any personal information provided. For
access to the docket to read background
documents or comments received, go to
https://www.regulations.gov.
Meeting Information: Audio
Conference Call via FTS Conferencing.
The USA toll-free dial-in number is 1–
866–659–0537; the pass code is
9933701.
SUMMARY:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Rashaun Roberts, Ph.D., Designated
Federal Officer, NIOSH, CDC, 1090
Tusculum Avenue, Mailstop C–24,
Cincinnati, Ohio 45226, Telephone
(513) 533–6800, Toll Free 1(800)CDC–
INFO, Email ocas@cdc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
E:\FR\FM\20MYN1.SGM
20MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 98 (Wednesday, May 20, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 30706-30708]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-10797]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Statement of Organization, Functions, and Delegations of
Authority
Part C (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) of the
Statement of Organization, Functions, and Delegations of Authority of
the Department of Health and Human Services (45 FR 67772-76, dated
October 14, 1980, and corrected at 45 FR 69296, October 20, 1980, as
amended most recently at 84 FR 65981, dated December 2, 2019) is
amended to reflect the reorganization of the National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention. The reorganization is needed to become more responsive to
the changing mining industry and stakeholder priorities, as well as
align and integrate regional activities of the NIOSH mining program's
core business and research functions.
I. Under Part C, Section C-B, Organization and Functions, the
following organizational units are deleted in their entirety:
Health Communication, Surveillance and Research Support Branch
(CCRB)
Ground Control Branch (CCRC)
Dust, Ventilation and Toxic Substances Branch (CCRD)
Human Factors Branch (CCRE)
Electrical and Mechanical Systems Safety Branch (CCRF)
Fires and Explosions Branch (CCRG)
Workplace Health Branch (CCRH)
II. Under Part C, Section C-B, Organization and Functions, make the
following changes:
Update functional statement for the Pittsburgh Mining Research
Division (CCR)
Create the Health Hazards Prevention Branch (CCRJ)
Create the Mining Systems Safety Branch (CCRK)
Create the Human Systems Integration Branch (CCRL)
Update the functional statement for the Spokane Research
Division (CCS)
[[Page 30707]]
Create the Miner Health Branch (CCSB)
Create the Miner Safety Branch (CCSC)
III. Under Part C, Section C-B, Organization and Functions, insert
the following:
Pittsburgh Mining Research Division (CCR). Provides
leadership and guidance for the prevention of work-related illness,
injury, and fatalities of mine workers through research and prevention
activities of the Pittsburgh Mining Research Division through three
subordinate Branches. Specifically: (1) Conducts field studies to
identify emerging hazards, to understand the underlying causes of mine
safety and health problems, and to evaluate the effectiveness of
interventions; (2) develops engineering and behavioral-based
interventions, including training programs, to improve safety and
health in the mines; (3) performs research, development, and testing of
new technologies, equipment, and practices to enhance mine safety and
health; (4) develops best practices guidance for interventions; (5)
transfers mining research and prevention products into practice; and
(6) collaborates with the Spokane Mining Research Division and other
NIOSH divisions engaged in research and prevention activities relevant
to mine worker health and safety.
Health Hazards Prevention Branch (CCRJ). The Health
Hazards Prevention Branch function is to reduce illnesses and injuries
to mine workers through assessment and control of respiratory and
physical hazards. The branch: (1) Assesses mine worker exposure to
respiratory hazards, through a comprehensive characterization of the
exposures and the evaluation and development of monitoring methods and
technologies; (2) conducts research on and evaluates the performance
and technical feasibility of engineering control strategies, novel
approaches, and the application of new or emerging technologies for
underground and surface mine dust and respiratory hazard control
systems; (3) conducts research related to occupational hearing loss in
the mining sector, including causative effects, noise controls, hearing
protection devices and impulse noise; (4) demonstrates and evaluates
the technical and economic feasibility of noise reduction controls; (5)
conducts research related to ergonomic hazards, including developing
engineering controls in the laboratory and evaluating their
effectiveness in the workplace to prevent workplace musculoskeletal
disorders, slips-trips-falls accidents, and materials handling
injuries; and (6) conducts research related to the assessment and
control of diesel particulate matter (DPM) in both surface and
underground mines.
Mining Systems Safety Branch (CCRK). The Mining Systems
Safety Branch function is to reduce accidents and injuries arising from
changing geological conditions and mine system technologies and to
prevent mine explosions, mine fires, and gas and water inundations,
particularly in underground coal mines. The branch: (1) Conducts
experiments through laboratory and field investigations to prevent
catastrophic events such as cataclysmic structural or ground failures,
mine explosions, mine fires, and gas and water inundations to better
understand cause and effect relationships that initiate such events;
(2) utilizes monitoring and advanced numerical modeling techniques to
better understand and visualize ground behavior and support response,
leading to improved design criteria for mine layouts and support design
to mitigate ground control failures; (3) develops, tests, and
demonstrates sensors, predictive models, and engineering control
technologies to reduce miners' risk for injury or death; (4) conducts
laboratory and field research on communication systems, tracking
systems, lighting systems, sensor technologies, refuge alternatives,
and monitoring systems to ensure their viability and safety during
routine mining operations as well as post-disaster conditions; (5)
assesses and develops new or improved strategies and technologies to
reduce the risks associated with fires and explosions in mining
operations to mitigate the impact of mine disasters; (6) assesses
methodologies and designs to enhance and improve underground mine
ventilation system design and application to prevent disasters and
ensure safe and healthy conditions for underground miners; and (7)
identifies and evaluates emerging health and safety issues as mining
operations move into more challenging and dangerous geologic
conditions.
Human Systems Integration Branch (CCRL). The Human Systems
Integration Branch function is to reduce fatalities and injuries
through interventions and engineering controls solutions developed
through a human systems integration framework. The branch: (1) Conducts
research with an overarching focus on the human component in the mining
workplace system and in the mine emergency response system; (2)
conducts human factors research related to worker perceptions, judgment
and decision-making, hazard recognition, and human behavior; (3)
provides effective training and workplace organization techniques and
strategies for mining; (4) conducts intervention and evaluation
effectiveness research for integration and use of technologies and
interventions including engineering controls, organizational
administrative and process changes and individual leadership and worker
practices in mining; (5) systematically studies risk at the
intersections of technical, human and environmental elements which
occur at the levels of the individual, tasks, tools and technology,
physical environment and organizational process and design in order to
improve risk management systems; and (6) conducts research on effective
training methods that develops organizational techniques and strategies
to promote a positive safety culture in mining.
Spokane Mining Research Division (CCS). Provides
leadership and guidance in the prevention of work-related illness,
injury, and fatalities in the mining industries through research and
prevention activities of the Spokane Mining Research Division, with an
emphasis on the special needs of surface and underground mines in the
western United States. Specifically: (1) Developing numerical models
and conducting laboratory and field research and investigations to
better understand the causes of catastrophic failures that may lead to
multiple injuries and fatalities; (2) developing new design practices
and tools, control technologies, and work practices to reduce the risk
of global and local ground failures in mines; (3) assessing and
mitigating risks associated with emerging technologies such as
automated mining equipment and new sensor technologies, and through
researching, identifying or developing new technologies that have
potential benefits to mining health and safety; (4) developing improved
design approaches, monitoring devices, and engineering controls to
reduce the concentration of toxic substances in the mine air; (5)
developing and promoting health and safety strategies through research
that protect mine workers from occupational hazards and advance life-
time worker wellbeing through the implementation of a miner health
program; (6) conducting laboratory and field studies to leverage and
support the Institute's mining research program; and (7) collaborates
with the Pittsburgh Mining Research Division and other NIOSH divisions
engaged in research and prevention activities relevant to mine worker
health and safety.
[[Page 30708]]
Miner Safety Branch (CCSB). The Miner Safety Branch
function is to identify and eliminate safety issues arising from
changing mine conditions and technologies. State-of-the-art
technologies are used to conduct fundamental and applied research aimed
at eliminating injuries and fatalities in mining with a particular
focus on geomechanical instabilities, localized ground falls, machine
safety, and worker interaction with automated systems and other
emerging technologies. Researchers specialized in the fields of
geology, geophysics, seismology, electronic instrumentation, numerical
modeling, geotechnical engineering, safety engineering, data science,
and mining engineering utilize state-of-the-art, emerging, and novel
technologies to identify and solve mine safety challenges. The branch:
(1) Develops, implements, and improves geophysical methods,
geotechnical instrumentation, and laboratory techniques through applied
research to quantify rock mass properties and characterize mining-
induced ground response; (2) utilizes advanced numerical modeling
techniques to better understand and visualize ground behavior and
support response; (3) identifies new technologies to monitor and
improve ground support; (4) conducts research through laboratory and
field assessments of the performance of engineered support systems to
provide quantifiable design criteria; (5) develops recommendations for
the design of equipment and techniques to reduce risks associated with
the installation of ground support; (6) utilizes experimental and
empirical methods developed through research to quantify the
reliability of alternative mining methods and design practices; (7)
applies advanced informatics, data analyses, and visualization
techniques to automated and semi-automated mining systems to provide
increased situational awareness for mine workers; (8) assesses,
develops and deploys research-based mine-wide seismic systems for
quantifying and evaluating seismic hazards and mitigation strategies
for underground and surface mines; and (9) addresses health and safety
issues that may develop after the introduction of automated mining
systems and other emerging technologies in mining.
Miner Health Branch (CCSC). The Miner Health Branch
function is to assess and track miner health and hazard exposures; and
develop and promote health solutions that maximize worker protection,
minimize exposures and prevent disease, while improving functional
health for the entire mining population. Research is pursued through an
interdisciplinary approach involving the fields of epidemiology,
industrial hygiene, occupational medicine, organizational psychology,
chemistry, as well as mechanical, electrical, and industrial
engineering. The branch: (1) Incorporates novel and relevant health
surveillance methods for the systematic assessment of health and
exposure potential of the miner as it pertains to dynamic mining
environments; (2) conducts research on the identification and
prioritization of adverse health outcomes and exposures, and their
associated risk factors; (3) quantitatively and qualitatively measures
risk through research, experimental, and real-world data collection;
(4) conducts research on the development and evaluation of workplace
practices and technologies aimed at preventing injury and illness that
improve long-term functionality for all miners and benefit employers,
families, and communities; (5) develops technologies and methods to
monitor and eliminate exposures; and (6) engages and collaborates
across NIOSH and with industry to effectively communicate tangible
health solutions and control strategies.
IV. Delegations of Authority: All delegations and redelegations of
authority made to officials and employees of affected organizational
components will continue with them or their successors pending further
redelegation, provided they are consistent with this reorganization.
(Authority: 44 U.S.C. 3101)
Dated: April 29, 2020.
Alex M. Azar, II,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020-10797 Filed 5-19-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4163-18-P