EPA Science Advisory Board; Notification of Public Advisory Committee Meetings
Note: EPA no longer updates this information, but it may be useful as a reference or resource.
[Federal Register: July 2, 2001 (Volume 66, Number 127)]
[Notices]
[Page 34924-34928]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr02jy01-63]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
[FRL-7005-7]
EPA Science Advisory Board; Notification of Public Advisory
Committee Meetings
Pursuant to the Federal Advisory Committee Act, Public Law 92-463,
notice is hereby given that several committees (Executive Committee
(EC), Ecological Processes and Effects Committee (EPEC), Clean Air
Scientific Advisory Committee (CASAC), Environmental Health Committee
[[Page 34925]]
(EHC)/Integrated Human Exposure Committee (IHEC) joint meeting, and
Arsenic Rule Benefits Review Panel) of the EPA Science Advisory Board
(SAB) will meet on the dates and times noted below. All times noted are
Eastern Standard Time. The meetings are open to the public, however,
seating is limited and available on a first come basis.
1. Executive Committee--July 17-18, 2001
The US EPA Science Advisory Board's (SAB's) Executive Committee
will meet on Tuesday and Wednesday, July 17-18, 2001 from 8:30 am to
5:00 pm on July 17 and 8:30 to 12:00 noon on July 18. The meeting will
be held in the USEPA, National Risk Management Research Laboratory
(NRMRL), 26 West Martin Luther King Drive, Cincinnati, Ohio 45268.
Telephone: (513) 569-7418.
Purpose of the Meeting--At this meeting, the Executive Committee
expects to review the following draft reports prepared by its
Committees or subcommittees. Please check with SAB Staff (see below)
prior to the meeting to determine the final list of review issues.
(a) Executive Committee (EC) of the EPA Science Advisory Board
(SAB) ``Improving Science-Based Environmental Stakeholder Processes; an
SAB Commentary''
(b) Scientific and Technological Achievement Awards Subcommittee
(STAA) of the EPA Science Advisory Board (SAB) ``Recommendations on the
FY2000 Scientific and Technological Achievement Award Nominations''
(see 66 Federal Register 19933, dated April 18, 2001 for details).
(c) Scientific and Technological Achievement Awards Subcommittee
(STAA) of the EPA Science Advisory Board (SAB) ``The Process of the
Scientific and Technological Achievement Awards; An SAB Commentary''
(see 66 Federal Register 19933, dated April 18, 2001 for details).
The SAB may review other reports if they are available in time.
Additional issues on the agenda include: (a) activities of the various
SAB committees; (b) consideration of Cumulative Risk issues; (c)
addressing concerns raised about activities during the course of
preparing reports; (d) the role of social science in SAB activities;
and (e) project planning for FY2002.
Charge to the Executive Committee--The focus of the Executive
Committee review of draft reports prepared by its Committees or
subcommittees is normally limited to the following issues: (a) Does the
draft report adequately responded to the questions posed in the Charge?
(b) Are the statements and/or responses in the draft report clear? (c)
Are there any errors of fact in the draft report?
In accord with the Federal Advisory Committee Act (FACA), the
public and the Agency are invited to submit written comments on these
three questions. Submissions should be received by July 13, 2001 by Ms.
Diana Pozun, EPA Science Advisory Board, Mail Code 1400A, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave., NW.,
Washington, DC 20460. (Telephone (202) 564-4544, FAX (202) 501-0582; or
via e-mail at pozun.diana@epa.gov). Submission by e-mail to Ms. Pozun
will maximize the time available for review by the Executive Committee.
The SAB will have a brief period available for applicable public
comment. Anyone wishing to make oral comments on the three focus
questions above, and that are not duplicative of previously submitted
written comments, should contact the Designated Federal Officer for the
Executive Committee, Dr. Donald G. Barnes (Tel: 202-564-4533; Fax: 202-
501-0323; USEPA Science Advisory Board, Mail Code 1400A, USEPA, 1200
Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20460; barnes.don@epa.gov) by July
10, 2001. See below for more information on providing comments.
Availability of Materials--The draft meeting agenda and drafts of
any reports that will be reviewed at the meeting will be available to
the public on the SAB website (http://www.epa.gov/sab) by close-of-
business on July 6, 2001.
For Further Information--Any member of the public wishing further
information concerning this meeting should contact Dr. Donald G.
Barnes, Designated Federal Officer (DFO) for the Executive Committee at
US EPA Science Advisory Board (1400A), 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue NW,
Washington, DC 20460; phone (202) 564-4533; fax (202) 501-0323; or via
e-mail at barnes.don@epa.gov.
2. Ecological Processes and Effects Committee (EPEC)--July 18-20,
2001
The Ecological Processes and Effects Committee of the US EPA
Science Advisory Board (SAB), will meet on Wednesday through Friday,
July 18-20, 2001 at The Westin Cincinnati, 21 East 5th Street,
Cincinnati, OH, telephone 513-621-7700. The meeting will begin at 12:30
p.m. on July 18 and adjourn no later than noon on July 20.
Purpose of the Meeting--(a) Review the draft Agency document,
Planning for Ecological Risk Assessment: Developing Management
Objectives: The draft document, developed by a technical panel of the
EPA Risk Assessment Forum, is designed to help decision-makers work
with risk assessors, stakeholders, and other analysts to plan for
ecological risk assessments that will effectively inform the decisions
they need to make. The document presents the three steps of Planning:
Identify Decision Context, Develop Objectives, and Identify Information
Needs. It also describes how planning fits into the overall risk-
assessment process and provides several case examples showing how the
process might be applied in EPA programs.
Charge to the Panel: The Agency has asked the SAB to respond to the
following questions:
(1) The primary audience for the guidance document is EPA risk
managers, but also should be useful to managers and decisionmakers
outside the Agency. Overall, does the SAB think this guidance may be
useful and help decisionmakers improve the planning of ecological risk
assessments? What additional principles should be included or excluded
in the document?
(2) Are the steps in setting management objectives clear and is the
overall process logical? Are the key concepts well defined?
(3) Is the depth of discussion and level of technical detail
appropriate? If not, how would the SAB change it?
(4) Discuss the flexibility afforded by the guidance and its
applicability to different situations (e.g., site-specific, national
level, etc. )?
(5) Comment on the effectiveness of the examples, figures, tables,
and text boxes.
(b) Review the Southeastern Ecological Framework (SEF): EPA Region
4, working with the University of Florida, has developed the
Southeastern Ecological Framework, a Geographic Information System
(GIS)-based approach for identifying a network of important regional
ecological hubs and ``greenways'' corridors that connect them
throughout the 8-state region. The SEF builds on the approach developed
in Florida for identification of a network of greenways (the Florida
Ecological Network). The hubs of the framework are typically land areas
with high habitat diversity, little forest fragmentation, and greater
than 5,000 acres in size. The corridors of the framework connect the
hubs and typically follow natural land forms and water features,
allowing ecosystem processes to operate at a larger scale. The model
depicts a functioning whole system that integrates ecosystem processes
across many scales by maintaining connectivity among the parts. The SEF
is designed to be a planning tool that can be used by
[[Page 34926]]
anyone interested in protecting water quality, species habitat,
important ecological areas, quality of life and other important natural
features by preserving connectivity between those natural areas.
Charge to the Panel: The Agency has asked the SAB to respond to the
following questions:
(1) Is the Florida Ecological Network approach consistent with
modeling an ecological framework for a region?
(2) Are the data layers used in developing the Southeastern
Ecological Framework sufficient to indicate ecological integrity?
(3) Would a similar model or approach be applicable for developing
a framework for the U.S.?
(4) Would additional or alternate data layers be needed for a
national framework?
(5) What modification might be made to increase the utility of the
approach as a decision support tool in meeting EPA's program activities
and Government Performance and Results Act (GPRA) goals?
(6) Discuss what linkages between various indicators and EPA
programs or control authorities may help to elevate the use of SEF as a
decision support tool?
Availability of Review Materials: A copy of the draft document,
Planning for Ecological Risk Assessment: Developing Management
Objectives is available from Ms. Marilyn Brower, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Risk Assessment Forum Staff (8601D), 1200
Pennsylvania Ave, NW., Washington, DC 20460, telephone (202) 564-3363,
or e-mail at brower.marilyn@epa.gov. Review materials describing the
Southeastern Ecological Framework are available from Dr. Cory Berish,
Chief of the Planning and Analysis Branch, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Region 4, Atlanta Federal Center, 61 Forsyth Street,
SW., Atlanta, GA 30303-8960, telephone (404) 562-8276, or e-mail at
berish.cory@epa.gov.
For Further Information--Any member of the public wishing further
information concerning this meeting or wishing to submit brief oral
comments (10 minutes or less) must contact Ms. Stephanie Sanzone,
Designated Federal Officer, EPA Science Advisory Board (1400A), U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20460; telephone (202) 564-4561; FAX (202) 501-0582; or
via e-mail at sanzone.stephanie@epa.gov. Requests for oral comments
must be in writing (e-mail, fax or mail) and received by Ms. Sanzone no
later than noon Eastern Standard Time on July 11, 2001.
3. Environmental Health Committee and the Integrated Human Exposure
Committee (EHC/IHEC)--Joint Meeting--July 19-20, 2001
The Environmental Health Committee and the Integrated Human
Exposure Committee (EHC/IHEC) of the US EPA Science Advisory Board
(SAB), will meet jointly on Thursday and Friday, July 19-20, 2001 at
The Westin Cincinnati, 21 East 5th Street, Cincinnati, OH, telephone
513-621-7700. The meeting will begin 9 am Eastern Standard Time on July
19, and adjourn no later than 5 pm on July 20.
Purpose of the Meeting--EPA is currently developing an indoor air
toxics strategy to reduce risks from toxic air pollutants indoors,
using non-regulatory, voluntary actions. To help focus Agency efforts
on the most substantial risks, the Office of Radiation and Indoor Air
(ORIA) developed a draft strategy presenting an ``order-of-magnitude,''
screening-level ranking and selection of key air toxics indoors. The
ranking analysis used a methodology similar to that used to select key
pollutants for the National Air Toxics Program/Urban Air Toxics
Strategy, as presented in the Technical Support Document for that
program (for more details, please see http://www.epa.gov/ttn/uatw/
urban/urbanpg.html).
Charge to the Committee--The Charge asks the EHC/IHEC to respond to
the following four primary questions:
(a) Is the overall methodology suitable for the purposes of the
ranking analysis (i.e., development of an ``order-of-magnitude,''
screening-level ranking and selection of key air toxics indoors)?
(b) Are the criteria used to select the monitoring studies for the
analysis appropriate? Are the studies chosen for the ranking analysis
suitable, and are there other studies that you believe should be
included in this analysis? Were the methods used to select and
statistically analyze the data within the studies useful to the
analysis?
(c) Is the methodology for selection of the ``risk-based
concentrations'' (based on that presented in the Technical Support
Document for the National Air Toxics Program/Urban Air Toxics Strategy)
useful in the context of this analysis?
(d) How well are adequacy, limitations, and uncertainties of the
analysis described and addressed, including:
(1) Incomplete data on indoor concentrations and hazard/risk
indices.
(2) Difficulties in determining the representativeness/accuracy of
the ``typical'' levels indoors.
(3) The use of short-term monitoring data to represent chronic
exposure periods.
(4) Issues related to the age of the data.
(5) Variations in the methods used by the various agencies to
arrive at the health indices, which are the basis for the ``risk-based
concentrations?''
Availability of Review Materials: The principal review document is
available via request to Ms. Mary Clark, phone (202) 564-9348, or by
email to clark.marye@epa.gov.
For Further Information--Any member of the public wishing further
information concerning this meeting or wishing to submit brief oral
comments (10 minutes or less) must contact Samuel Rondberg, Designated
Federal Officer, EPA Science Advisory Board (1400A), U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20460;
telephone (301) 812-2560, FAX (410) 286-2689; or via e-mail at
samuelr717@aol.com. Requests for oral comments must be in writing (e-
mail, fax or mail) and received by Mr. Rondberg no later than noon
(EDT) on July 13, 2001.
4. The Arsenic Rule Benefits Review Panel (ARBRP)--July 19-20, 2001
The Arsenic Rule Benefits Review Panel (ARBRP) of the US EPA
Science Advisory Board, will meet in the Ronald Reagan Building/
International Trade Center Conference Center (Polaris Suite), 1300
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20005. The meeting will begin
by 8:30 a.m. and adjourn no later than 5 p.m. Eastern Standard Time on
both days. The meeting is open to the public, however, seating is
limited and available on a first come basis.
Purpose of the Meeting--The Panel will meet to review the Agency's
report Arsenic in Drinking Water Rule Economic Analysis (EPA 815-R-00-
026; December 2000). A report will be prepared and delivered to the EPA
Administrator as a result of the review.
Background--Studies have linked long-term exposure to arsenic in
drinking water to cancer of the bladder, lungs, skin, kidney, nasal
passages, liver, and prostate. Non-cancer effects associated with
arsenic ingestion include effects to the cardiovascular, pulmonary,
immunological, neurological, and endocrine (e.g., diabetes) systems.
The current standard of 50 ppb was set by EPA in 1975, based on a
Public Health Service standard originally established in 1942. A March
1999 report by the National Academy of Sciences concluded that the
current standard does not achieve EPA's goal of
[[Page 34927]]
protecting public health and should be lowered as soon as possible.
The Safe Drinking Water Act, as amended, 1996, (SDWA) requires EPA
to revise the existing 50 parts per billion (ppb) arsenic standard. In
response to this mandate, the Agency published a standard of 10 ppb to
protect consumers against the effects of long-term, chronic exposure to
arsenic in drinking water on January 22, 2001. The rule is significant
in that it is the second drinking water regulation for which EPA has
used the discretionary authority under section 1412(b)(6) of the SDWA
to set the Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) higher than the technically
feasible level, which is 3 ppb for arsenic--based on a determination
that the costs would not justify the benefits at this level. The
January 22, 2001 arsenic rule is based on the conclusion that a 10 ppb
MCL maximizes health risk reduction at a cost justified by the
benefits.
The January 22, 2001 rule will apply to all 54,000 community water
systems and requires compliance by 2006. A community water system is a
system that serves 15 locations or 25 residents year-round, and
includes most cities and towns, apartments, and mobile home parks with
their own water supplies. EPA estimates that roughly five percent, or
3000, of the community water systems, serving 11 million people, will
have to take corrective action to lower the current levels of arsenic
in their drinking water. The new standard will also apply to 20,000
``non-community'' water systems that serve at least 25 of the same
people more than six months of the year, such as schools, churches,
nursing homes, and factories. EPA estimates that five percent, or
1,100, of these water systems, serving approximately 2 million people,
will need to take measures to comply with the January 22, 2001 rule. Of
all of the affected systems, 97 percent are small systems that serve
fewer than 10,000 people each.
Following the January 22, 2001 Federal Register promulgation of the
arsenic rule, a number of issues were raised to EPA by States, public
water systems, and others regarding the adequacy of science and the
basis for national economic analyses informing decisions about the
rule. Because of the importance of the arsenic rule and the national
debate surrounding it related to the science and economic analyses that
inform the decision, EPA's Administrator publicly announced on March
20, 2001, that the Agency would take additional steps to reassess the
scientific and economic issues associated with this rule, to gather
more information, and to seek further public input on each of these
important issues.
Key stakeholder concerns on the benefits component of the economic
analysis include the following issues: (1) The timing of health
benefits accrual (latency); (2) the use of the Value of Statistical
Life as a measure of health benefits; (3) the use of alternative
methodologies for benefits estimation; (4) how the Agency considered
non-quantifiable benefits in its regulatory decision-making process;
(5) the analysis of incremental costs and benefits; and (6) the
Agency's assumption that health risk reduction benefits will begin to
accrue at the same time costs begin to accrue.
Charge to the Committee--The EPA Science Advisory Board (SAB) will
convene a panel of nationally recognized technical experts to review
the methods for estimating the benefits associated with the final
arsenic in drinking water rule. The Panel has been asked to review the
Agency's analysis of quantified and unquantified benefits associated
with the arsenic drinking water rule (see 66 FR 6976-7066, dated
January 22, 2001, www.epa.gov/safewater/ars/arsenic_finalrule.htm),
specifically, the Agency asks the SAB to evaluate whether the
components, methodology, criteria and estimates reflected in EPA's
economic analysis (Arsenic in Drinking Water Rule Economic Analysis;
EPA 815-R-00-26, 2001), are reasonable and appropriate in light of: (1)
The EPA Science Advisory Board's (SAB) benefits transfer report (EPA-
SAB-EEAC-00-013, July 2000, entitled An SAB Report on EPA's White Paper
Valuing the Benefits of Fatal Cancer Risk Reductions--available on the
SAB Website at www.epa.gov/sab/eeacf013.pdf), (2) EPA's Guidelines for
Preparing Economic Analyses (EPA 240-R-00-003; September 2000;
www.epa.gov/economics), (3) relevant requirements of the Safe Drinking
Water Act (SDWA--www.epa.gov/safewater/sdwa/sdwa.htm), (4) the National
Drinking Water Advisory Council recommendations to EPA on benefits
(Benefits Working Group Report to the National Drinking Water Advisory
Council; unpublished, October 29, 1998), and (5) recent literature. As
part of a general review, consideration should be given to the
following issues:
(a) How should total benefits and costs and incremental benefits
and costs be addressed in analyzing regulatory alternatives to ensure
appropriate consideration by decision makers and the public?
(b) How should latency be addressed in the benefits estimates when
existing literature does not provide specific quantitative estimates of
latency periods associated with exposure to arsenic in drinking water?
(c) Should reduction/elimination of exposure be evaluated as a
separate benefits category, in addition to or in conjunction with
mortality and morbidity reduction?
(d) How should health endpoints (other than bladder and lung
cancer) be addressed in the analysis, when [existing]
literature does
not provide specific quantification, to ensure appropriate
consideration by decision makers and the public?
(e) How should uncertainties be addressed in the analysis to ensure
appropriate consideration by decision makers and the public?
In order to ensure that the SAB's recommendations are fully
considered in decision making, the Agency has asked for a report to be
made available to the Administrator in August 2001 to coincide with the
findings and recommendations from independent reviews of the health
effects by the National Academy of Sciences and costs by the National
Drinking Water Advisory Council.
For Further Information--Any member of the public wishing further
information concerning this meeting should contact Mr. Thomas O.
Miller, Designated Federal Officer, EPA Science Advisory Board, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (1400A), 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20460, telephone (202) 564-4558; FAX (202) 501-0582; or
via e-mail at miller.tom@epa.gov. For a copy of the draft meeting
agenda, please contact (primary) Ms. Wanda Fields, Management Assistant
at (202) 564-4539, or by FAX at (202) 501-0582; or (alternate) Ms.
Rhonda Fortson, Management Assistant at (202) 564-4563 or by FAX at
(202) 501-0582 or via e-mail at fortson.rhonda@epa.gov.
Materials that are the subject of this review are available on the
EPA Website as noted in the section on ``Charge to the Committee''
above or from Ms. Rebecca K Allen, US EPA, Office of Water (OW)(MS
4607), 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20460, Phone: (202)
260-6667 or via e-mail at allen.rebeccak@epa.gov.
Public Oral or Written Comments--Members of the public who wish to
make a brief oral presentation (5 minutes or less per person or
organization, depending on the number of requests) to the Panel must
contact Mr. Miller in writing (by letter or by fax--see contact
information above) no later than 12 noon Eastern Standard Time, Monday,
July 16, 2001 in order to be included on the Agenda. The request
[[Page 34928]]
should identify the name of the individual who will make the
presentation, the organization (if any) they will represent, any
requirements for audio visual equipment (e.g., overhead projector, 35mm
projector, chalkboard, etc), and at least 35 copies of an outline of
the issues to be addressed or the presentation itself. See below for
more information on providing written or oral comments.
5. Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee (CASAC)--July 23-24,
2001
The Particulate Matter Review Panel of the Clean Air Scientific
Advisory Committee (CASAC) of the EPA Science Advisory Board (SAB) will
meet on Monday and Tuesday, July 23-24, 2001 in the Main Auditorium, US
Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Research Center, Route 54
and Alexander Drive, Research Triangle Park, NC. The meeting will begin
at 8:30 am and end no later than 5:30 pm on each day.
Purpose of the Meeting: (a) The CASAC PM Review Panel will conduct
a peer review of the EPA Air Quality Criteria for Particulate Matter
(Second External Review Draft) prepared by EPA's National Center for
Environmental Assessment (NCEA); and (b) The CASAC PM Review Panel will
also conduct a Consultation with the EPA's Office of Air Quality
Planning and Standards (OAQPS) on the preliminary draft of OAQPS's
Staff Paper for particulate matter, Review of the National Ambient Air
Quality Standards for Particulate Matter: Policy Assessment of
Scientific and Technical Information, and the draft Particulate Matter
NAAQS Risk Analysis Scoping Plan.
Availability of Review Materials: (a) EPA Air Quality Criteria for
Particulate Matter (Second External Review Draft)--This document
assesses the latest available scientific information on the effects of
airborne particulate matter (PM) on human health and welfare. To obtain
a copy of the EPA Air Quality Criteria for Particulate Matter (Second
External Review Draft), or to obtain further information concerning
this document, please refer to 66 FR 18929, April 12, 2001. (b) Review
of the National Ambient Air Quality Standards for Particulate Matter:
Policy Assessment of Scientific and Technical Information and the Draft
Particulate Matter NAAQS Risk Analysis Scoping Plan--These documents
have both been released for comment. To obtain copies or further
information, please refer to 66 FR 32621, dated June 15, 2001.
For Further Information--Members of the public desiring additional
information about the meeting should contact Mr. Robert Flaak,
Designated Federal Officer, Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee, US
EPA Science Advisory Board (1400A), U.S. EPA, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue,
NW., Washington, DC 20460 (FedEx address: US EPA SAB, Suite 6450, 1200
Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20004); telephone/voice mail at
(202) 564-4546; fax at (202) 501-0582; or via e-mail at
flaak.robert@epa.gov. The draft agenda will be available approximately
two weeks prior to the meetings on the SAB website (http://www.epa.gov/
sab) or from Ms. Rhonda Fortson, Management Assistant, at (202) 564-
4563; FAX: (202) 501-0582; or e-mail at: fortson.rhonda@epa.gov.
Public Oral or Written Comments--Members of the public who wish to
make a brief oral presentation at the meeting must contact Mr. Flaak in
writing (by letter, fax, or e-mail--see previously stated information)
no later than 12 noon Eastern Standard Time, Friday, July 13, 2001 in
order to be included on the Agenda. For this meeting, we have allocated
a total of 2.5 hours for public comments to be divided equally among
those requesting speaking time, with a maximum of ten minutes per
speaker or organization. See below for more information on providing
written or oral comments. Written comments of any length will be
accepted up until the date of the meeting.
Providing Oral or Written Comments at SAB Meetings
It is the policy of the EPA Science Advisory Board to accept
written public comments of any length, and to accommodate oral public
comments whenever possible (unless otherwise stated). The EPA Science
Advisory Board expects that public statements presented at its meetings
will not be repetitive of previously submitted oral or written
statements.
Oral Comments: In general, each individual or group requesting an
oral presentation at a face-to-face meeting will be limited to a total
time of ten minutes (unless otherwise stated above). For teleconference
meetings, opportunities for oral comment will usually be limited to no
more than three minutes per speaker and no more than fifteen minutes
total. Deadlines for getting on the public speaker list for a meeting
are given above. Speakers should bring at least 35 copies of their
comments and presentation slides for distribution to the reviewers and
public at the meeting.
Written Comments: Although the SAB accepts written comments until
the date of the meeting (unless otherwise stated), written comments
should be received in the SAB Staff Office at least one week prior to
the meeting date so that the comments may be made available to the
committee for their consideration. Comments should be supplied to the
appropriate DFO at the address/contact information noted above in the
following formats: One hard copy with original signature, and one
electronic copy via e-mail (acceptable file format: WordPerfect, Word,
or Rich Text files (in IBM-PC/Windows 95/98 format). Those providing
written comments and who attend the meeting are also asked to bring 25
copies of their comments for public distribution.
General Information--Additional information concerning the EPA
Science Advisory Board, its structure, function, and composition, may
be found on the SAB Website (http://www.epa.gov/sab) and in The FY2000
Annual Report of the Staff Director which is available from the SAB
Publications Staff at (202) 564-4533 or via fax at (202) 501-0256.
Committee rosters, draft Agendas and meeting calendars are also located
on our website.
Meeting Access--Individuals requiring special accommodation at this
meeting, including wheelchair access to the conference room, should
contact the appropriate DFO at least five business days prior to the
meeting so that appropriate arrangements can be made.
Dated: June 27, 2001.
Donald G. Barnes,
Staff Director, EPA Science Advisory Board.
[FR Doc. 01-16569 Filed 6-29-01; 8:45 am]
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