OFFICE OF

      CH AND DEVELOP
  PROGRPfTl
     GUIDE
    FI/CPL YEPR1978

 October 1977 - September 1978

UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
     WASHINGTON, D.C. 20460

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                RESEARCH REPORTING SERIES

Research reports of the Office of Research and Development, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, have been grouped into nine series. These nine broad cate-
gories were established to facilitate further development and application of en-
vironmental technology.  Elimination of traditional grouping  was consciously
planned to foster technology transfer and a maximum interface in related fields.
The nine series are:
      1.  Environmental Health Effects Research
      2.  Environmental Protection Technology
      3.  Ecological  Research
      4.  Environmental Monitoring
      5.  Socioeconomic Environmental Studies
      6.  Scientific and Technical Assessment Reports (STAR)
      7.  Interagency Energy-Environment Research and Development
      8.  "Special" Reports
      9.  Miscellaneous Reports
 This document is available to the public through the National Technical Informa-
 tion Service, Springfield, Virginia 22161.

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INTRODUCTION



PART I


PART II
PART III
APPENDIX A
APPENDIX B
APPENDIX C
APPENDIX D
      TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                          Page No.

                                                              1

Office of Research and Development — Organization Chart  3

Office of Research and Development — Organizational
       Directory                                              4

Office of Research and Development — Fiscal  Year
       1978 Research Program                               15

Health  and Ecological Effects Program  Area                 16

     Health Effects Subprogram                                  16
     Ecological Processes and Effects Subprogram                    24
     Transport  and Fate of Pollutants Subprogram                   27

Energy/Environment Program Area                          28

     Extraction and Processing Technology Subprogram               28
     Conservation, Utilization and Technology
       Assessments Subprogram                                  31
     Health and Ecological Effects Subprogram                     34
     Energy Technical Support Subprogram                         38

Industrial Processes  Program  Area                           39

     Minerals Processing and Manufacturing                        39
       Industries  Subprogram
     Renewable Resources Subprogram                             42

Public Sector Activities Program Area                       46

     Waste Management Subprogram                              46
     Water Supply Subprogram                                   50
     Environmental Management Subprogram                       52

Monitoring and Technical Support Program Area            53

     Measurement Techniques and Equipment
       Standardization Subprogram                                53
     Characterization and Measurement Methods
       Development Subprogram                                  55
     Quality  Assurance Subprogram                               57
     Technical  Support Subprogram                               59

Office of Research and  Development's  Grant  and Contract
       Activities                                             62

     Program-Budget Structure and Codes                          66
     EPA Organization Chart                                    68
     EPA Officials and Regional Contacts                          69
     Mailing List Form                                         75

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                    OFFICE OF RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
                                      PROGRAM GUIDE
                                           Introduction
    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) was established in December of 1970 and was charged
with a single overall mission—the protection and enhancement of the environment. The Agency was created by
Presidential  Reorganization Order involving the transfer  and  integration of 15 separate units  of previously
existing agencies. A single organizational entity was thereby established for  the  control of environmental
pollution,  drinking water quality,  environmental radiation and noise, solid wastes, pesticides, and other toxic
substances. The purpose was to mount an integrated national attack on environmental pollution and to allow
progression toward a full understanding of the total environment as a single system consisting of separate but
interrelated parts.

    The Office of Research and Development (ORD) functions as the principal scientific component of EPA. Its
fundamental role is to produce scientific data and technical tools on which to base sound national policy in the
development of effective pollution control strategies and the promulgation of adequate and viable environmental
standards.

    ORD's  research is supplemented by general scientific and technical research  in other federal  agencies,
colleges and universities and elsewhere. ORD also supports the Agency's involvement in many international
organizations with mutual environmental research and development (R&D) concerns.

    More general functions of ORD include: (1) maintenance of in-house expertise capable of quickly responding
to emergencies and  giving expert consultation and testimony when necessary; (2) sharing the results of
environmental R&D with  a wide  range of individuals, groups,  and agencies in  ways that are meaningful and
practical; and (3) giving expert scientific  and technical assistance to other EPA  offices to help them formulate
environmental policy.

    Specific authority for the conduct of EPA's research and development programs, including research support
for environmental aspects of energy development, is included in the annual appropriation acts and the following
legislation.

          Clean Air Act, as  amended  (P.L. 95-95)
          Federal  Water  Pollution Control Act, as amended
               (P.L. 92-500)
          Safe Drinking Water Act (P.L.  93-523)
          Federal  Insecticide,  Fungicide  and  Rodenticide  Act,
               as amended (P.L. 92-516)
          Public Health  Service  Act, as  amended  (P.L. 78^10)
          Noise Control Act  (P.L. 92-574)
          Toxic Substances  Control Act (P.L.  94-469)
          National Environmental Policy Act  (P.L. 91-190)
          Marine Protection,  Research and Sanctuaries  Act
               (P.L. 92-532)
          Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (P.L. 94-580)
          Environmental  Research,  Development and  Demonstration
               Authorization Act (P.L. 94-475)

    The purpose of this Program Guide is three-fold: First, to acquaint the research and development community
with the organizational structure of the Office of Research and Development — PART I; second, to make public

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the Office of Research and Development's extramural research program objectives for fiscal year 1978 — PART
II; and third, to provide general guidelines necessary when developing grant or contract applications — PART
III.

    Hand out copies of this Program Guide are available from the EPA's ten regional offices (see Appendix D),
from ORD's fifteen  associated laboratories throughout the country, and from the Office of Research and
Development, Headquarters, Washington, DC. Mail requests should be sent to:

          Office of Financial & Administrative Services (RD-674)
          Office of Research and Development
          Environmental Protection Agency
          Washington, DC   20460

    Anyone wishing to receive future editions of this Program Guide should complete and  return the form
located at the back of this publication (Appendix D).

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                                                       U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
                                                        OFFICE  OF RESEARCH  AND DEVELOPMENT
                                                                        ASSISTANT ADMINISTRATOR
                                                                          ASSOCIATE ASST. ADM.
OFFICE OF MONITORING
         AND
 TECHNICAL SUPPORT
OFFICE OF ENERGY
  MINERALS AND
    INDUSTRY
 OFFICE OF AIR
LAND AND WATER
      USE
 OFFICE OF HEALTH
        AND
ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS
              ENVIRONMENTAL
              MONITORING & SUPPORT
              LABORATORY -
              RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK
            INDUSTRIAL
            ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
            LABORATORY -
            RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK
            ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
            RESEARCH LABORATORY •
            RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK
              HEALTH EFFECTS
              RESEARCH LABORATORY -
              RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK
               ENVIRONMENTAL
               MONITORING & SUPPORT
               LABORATORY -
               CINCINNATI
            INDUSTRIAL
            ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
            LABORATORY -
            CINCINNATI
           MUNICIPAL ENVIRONMENTAL
           RESEARCH LABORATORY -
           CINCINNATI
              HEALTH EFFECTS
              RESEARCH LABORATORY -
              CINCINNATI
               ENVIRONMENTAL
               MONITORING & SUPPORT
               LABORATORY -
               LAS VEGAS
                                                       ROBERT S. KERR
                                                       ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
                                                       LABORATORY -
                                                       ADA
                                                       ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
                                                       LABORATORY -
                                                       CORVALL1S
               ENVIRONMENTAL
               RESEARCH INFORMATION
               CENTER -
               CINCINNATI
                                                       ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
                                                       LABORATORY
                                                       ATHENS
                                                       ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
                                                       LABORATORY -
                                                       DULUTH
                                                                                                                                                ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
                                                                                                                                                LABORATORY -
                                                                                                                                                NARRAGANSETT
                                                                                                                                                ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
                                                                                                                                                LABORATORY -
                                                                                                                                                GULF BREEZE

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                                                PART  I
                           OFFICE OF RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
                                   ORGANIZATIONAL DIRECTORY
     The Office of Research and Development is responsible for the development, direction, and conduct of a national
research, development, and  demonstration program in  pollution sources,  fate,  and health  and welfare effects; waste
management and utilization technology; environmental sciences; and monitoring systems. The Assistant Administrator for
Research and Development also serves as principal science advisor to the Administrator and coordinator for the Agency's
policies and programs concerning carcinogenesis and related problems.
Assistant Administrator  for  Research and  Development
Stephen J. Gage,  Acting

    Associate Assistant Administrator
    Carl R.  Gerber

          Office of Financial and  Administrative Services
          Director,  Alan Neuschatz

          Office of Planning and  Review
          Director,  Samuel Rondberg,  Acting

          Office of the Principal Science Advisor
          Principal Physical Science Advisor, Herbert Wiser

          Principal Engineering Advisor, William Lacy

          Senior ORD  Official, Cincinnati
          David G.  Stephan

               Support Services Office  - Cincinnati
               Director,  Robert N. Carr

               Environmental  Protection Agency
               Cincinnati,  OH 45268

          Senior ORD  Official, Research Triangle Park
          John K.  Burchard

               Support Services Office  - RTF
               Director,  Paul  A. Kenline

               Environmental  Protection Agency
               Research Triangle  Park, NC 27711
Headquarters
Mail Code*

  RD-672
  RD-672
  RD-674
  RD-675
  RD-676
  RD-676
Telephone**

(202)   755-2600


(202)   755-0122


(202)   426-2355


(202)   755-2606


(202)   755-0477


(202)   755-0464

(513)   684-4402


(513)   684-7966
               CML(919)   541-2111
               FTS         629-2821

               CML(919)   541-2111
               FTS         629-2613

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                           OFFICE OF RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
                                   ORGANIZATIONAL DIRECTORY
                               Office of Monitoring and Technical Support

     The Office of Monitoring and Technical Support is responsible for the development and demonstration of monitoring
systems; quality control of pollutant measurement and monitoring techniques (quality  assurance); technical information
dissemination; and technical support services.
                                                                      Headquarters
                                                                      Mail Code*
Deputy Assistant Administrator
Albert C.  Trakowski, Jr.

    Associate  Deputy Assistant Administrator
    H. Matthew Bills

         Program Operations  Staff
         Director,  Ross K. Robeson

         Regional Services Staff
         Director,  Michael L. Mastracci

    Monitoring Technology Division
    Director,  Charles  Brunot

    Technical Support Division
    Director,  William A.  Cawley

    Technical Information Division
    Director,  W. Randall Shobe

    Environmental Research Information Center
    Director,  Robert Crowe

         Environmental Protection Agency
         Cincinnati,  OH   45268
RD-680
RD-680
RD-680
RD-680
RD-680
RD-680
RD-680
Telephone**

(202)   426-2202


(202)   426-4453


(202)   755-6403


(202)   755-9210


(202)   426-2026


(202)   426-2382


(202)   245-3018


(513)   684-7391
Environmental Monitoring and Support Laboratory
Director,  Thomas  Hauser

    Deputy Director, (Vacant)
          Environmental  Protection Agency
          Research  Triangle Park,  NC  27711
            CML(919)  541-2111
            FTS        629-2106

            CML(919)  541-2111
            FTS        629-2106

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                          OFFICE OF RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
                                  ORGANIZATIONAL DIRECTORY
                                                                                       Telephone**

Environmental  Monitoring and Support Laboratory
Director, Dwight G. Ballinger                                                            (513)  684-7301

    Deputy Director,  Robert L. Booth                                                    (513)  684—7301

         Environmental  Protection Agency
         Cincinnati,  OH  45268


Environmental  Monitoring and Support Laboratory                                    CML(702)  736-2969
Director, George B. Morgan                                                        p-p§        595-2969

    Deputy Director (Vacant)

         Environmental  Protection Agency
         P. O. Box 15027
         Las  Vegas,  NV  89114

              Vint Hill  Field Station                                                     (703)   347-6224
              P. O. Box 1587
              Building 166
              Warrenton,  VA  22186

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                           OFFICE OF  RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
                                  ORGANIZATIONAL DIRECTORY
                                Office of Energy, Minerals,  and Industry
    The Office of Energy, Minerals, and Industry is responsible for the assessment and the development of methods for
control of the environmental and socio-economic impacts of energy and mineral resource extraction, processing, conversion,
and utilization systems and of other industrial operations.
Deputy Assistant Administrator
Stephen J. Gage

    Associate Deputy Assistant Administrator
    Steven R.  Reznek

          Program Operations Staff
          Director,  Everett Lemley

          Energy  Coordination Staff
          Director,  Clinton W. Hall

    Energy Processes Division
    Director, Frank T.  Princiotta

    Industrial  and Extractive Processes Division
    Director, Kurt Jakobson (Acting)
Headquarters
Mail Code*

  RD-681
  RD-681
  RD-681
  RD-681
  RD-681
  RD-681
Telephone**

(202)   755-4857


(202)   755^857


(202)   426-2507


(202)   426-4567


(202)   755-0205


(202)   755-9014
Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory
Director,  John K. Burchard

    Deputy Director, Norbert Jaworski
          Environmental Protection Agency
          Research Triangle Park, NC   27711
              CML(919)   541-2111
              FTS        629-2821

              CML(919)   541-2111
              FTS        629-2821

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                          OFFICE  OF RESEARCH  AND DEVELOPMENT
                                  ORGANIZATIONAL DIRECTORY
Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory
Director, David G. Stephan

    Deputy Director, (Vacant)

         Environmental Protection Agency
         5555 Ridge Avenue
         Cincinnati,  OH  45268

              Oil and  Hazardous Materials Spills Branch, Edison, NJ
              Environmental  Protection Agency
              Edison,  NJ  08817

              Extraction Technology  Branch,  Rivesville,  WV
              P. O.  Box 5555
              Rivesville, WV  26588
     Telephone**


     (513)   684-4402

     (513)   684-4438
CML(201)   321-6600
FTS        340-6600
CML(304)   278-5376
FTS        923-7496
              Food and Wood Products Branch, Corvallis,  OR
              200 SW 35th  Street
              Corvallis, OR  97330
CML(503)   752-4211
FTS         420-4694

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                           OFFICE  OF RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
                                   ORGANIZATIONAL DIRECTORY
                                   Office  of Air,  Land, and  Water Use


    The Office of Air, Land, and Water Use is responsible for the development and demonstration of cost-effective methods
for the prevention or management of pollutant discharge or waste disposal  into the environment, except those related to
energy, minerals, or industrial processes.
Deputy Assistant Administrator
Thomas  A. Murphy

    Associate Deputy Assistant Administrator
    (Vacant)

         Program Operations Staff
         Director,  William  Frietsch

    Agriculture and  Non-Point  Source Management Division
    Director, Darwin R. Wright

    Waste  Management Division
    Director, William  Rosenkranz

    Media  Quality Management Division
    Director, Courtney Riordan
Headquarters
Mail Code*

  RD-682
  RD-682
  RD-682
  RD-682
  RD-682
  RD-682
Telephone**

(202)   426-0803


(202)   426-0803


(202)   426-4255


(202)   426-2407


(202)   426-2260


(202)   426-1532
Environmental Sciences Research Laboratory
Director,  A. Paul Altshuller

    Deputy Director, Alfred  Ellison
         Environmental Protection Agency
         Research Triangle  Park,  NC  27711

               Regional Air Pollution Study Field Office
               11640 Administration Drive
               St. Louis,  MO  63141
              CML(919)   541-2111
              FTS        629-2191

              CML(919)   541-8411
              FTS        629-2191
              CML(314)   425-7022
              FTS        279-7022

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                          OFFICE OF RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
                                  ORGANIZATIONAL  DIRECTORY
Municipal Environmental Research Laboratory
Director, Francis T. Mayo

    Deputy Director, Louis W.  Lefke

         Environmental Protection Agency
         Cincinnati,  OH   45268

              Lebanon Pilot Plant
              Route 2,  Box 7-A
              Glosser Road
              Lebanon,  OH  45036
     Telephone**


     (513)   684-7951

     (513)   684-7953
CML(513)   932^951
FTS        684-2000, ask for
     (513)   932^951
Robert S.  Kerr  Environmental Research Laboratory
Director, William C. Galegar

    Deputy Director, Marvin  L. Wood
         Environmental Protection Agency
         P.  O.  Box 1198
         Ada,  OK  74820
Environmental Research Laboratory
Director, David W.  Duttweiler

    Deputy Director, Henry F.  Enos
         Environmental Protection Agency
         College Station Road
         Athens,  GA  30601
CML (405)   332-8800
FTS        743-2224

CML (405)   332-8800
FTS        743-2226
CML (404)   546-3134
FTS        250-3134

CML (404)   546-3430
FTS        250-3430
10

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                           OFFICE OF RESEARCH  AND DEVELOPMENT
                                   ORGANIZATIONAL DIRECTORY
                                 Office  of Health and Ecological Effects
     The Office of Health and Ecological Effects is responsible for the development of health and ecological data needed for
the establishment of standards and criteria or guidelines for those components of the environment in which specific pollutants
or activities may require control.
Deputy  Assistant Administrator
Delbert  Barth

    Associate Deputy Assistant Administrator
    Andrew  McErlean

          Program Operations Staff
          Director, (Vacant)

          Stratospheric Modification Research Staff
          Director, Alphonse Forziati

    Health Effects Division
    Director, George G.  Armstrong, M.D.

    Ecological Effects Division
    Director, David A. Flemer

    Criteria  Development and Special Studies Division
    Director, Roger S.  Cortesi
Headquarters
Mail Code*

  RD-683
  RD-683


  RD-683



  RD-683

  RD-683


  RD-683


  RD-683
Telephone**

(202)   755-0820


(202)   755-0638


(202)   755-0611



(202)   245-3027

(202)   755-9723


(202)   755-0649


(202)   426-4637
Health Effects Research Laboratory
Director, John H.  Knelson,  M.D., Acting

     Deputy Director,  Robert E.  Lee,  Jr.
          Environmental Protection Agency
          Research Triangle Park, NC  27711

               Wenatchee  Research Station
               P. O. Box  73
               Wenatchee,  WA  98801
              CML(919)   549-8411
              FTS         629-2281

              CML(919)   549-8411
              FTS         629-2281
              CML(504)   663-0031
              FTS         446-0243
                                                                                                 11

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                          OFFICE OF  RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
                                  ORGANIZATIONAL DIRECTORY
Health Effects Research Laboratory
Director, John  Garner

    Deputy Director,  James Lucas,  M.D.

         Environmental Protection Agency
         Cincinnati, OH  45268
              Recreational Water Quality Criteria Group
              Environmental Protection Agency
              South Ferry Road
              Narragansett, RI  02882
     Telephone**


     (513)   684-7401

     (513)   684-7401
CML(401)   789-1071
FTS        838-4843
Environmental Research  Laboratory
Director, A.  F. Bartsch

    Deputy Director,  Earl Kari
CML (503)   757^601
FTS        420-4601

CML (503)   757^601
FTS        420-4601
         Environmental Protection Agency
         200 SW 35th Street
         Corvallis,  OR  97330

              Newport Field Station
              Marine  Science Center
              Newport,  OR  97365

              Ely Field  Station
              222 West  Conan Street
              Ely,  MN   55731

              Western Fish Toxicology Station
              1350 SE Goodnight Avenue
              Corvallis,  OR  97330

              Arctic Environmental Research Station
              College, AK  99701
CML (503)   867^031
FTS        423-4111, ask for
     (503)   867-W31

CML (218)   365-5280
FTS        725-4242, ask for
     (218)   365-5280

CML (503)   757-4735
FTS        420-4735
CML (907)   479-7728
FTS        399-0150, ask for
     (907)   479-7728
12

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                          OFFICE OF  RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
                                  ORGANIZATIONAL  DIRECTORY
Environmental Research Laboratory
Director, Donald I.  Mount

    Deputy Director, David Yount
     Telephone**

CML(218)   727-6692
FTS        783-9550

CML(218)   727-6692
FTS        783-9549
         Environmental Protection Agency
         6201 Congdon Boulevard
         Duluth, MN  55804

              Newtown Fish Toxicology Station
              3411 Church Street
              Cincinnati,  OH   45244

              Monticello Field Station
              Box 500
              Monticello,  MN  55362

              Large Lakes Research Station
              9311 Groh  Road
              Grosse He,  MI   48138

Environmental Research Laboratory
Director, Eric D. Schneider

    Deputy Director, Frank G.  Lowman
     (513)   684-8601
CML(513)   295-5145
FTS   None
CML(313)   675-5000
FTS         226-7811
CML(401)   789-1071
FTS         838^843

CML(401)   789-1071
FTS         838^843
         Environmental  Protection Agency
         South Ferry Road
         Narragansett, RI  02882
                                                                                            13

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                          OFFICE OF RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
                                 ORGANIZATIONAL DIRECTORY
Environmental Research Laboratory
Director, Thomas W. Duke

    Deputy Director, Tudor Davies
         Environmental Protection Agency
         Sabine Island
         Gulf Breeze, FL  32561

              Bears Bluff Field Station
              Box 368
              Johns Island,  SC  29455
     Telephone**

CML(904)   932-5311
FTS        None

CML(904)   932-5311
FTS        None
CML(803)   559-0371
FTS         577-4171,  ask for
     (803)   559-0371
*The Office  of Research and Development  Headquarters mailing  address is —  Environmental Protection Agency,
Washington, DC 20460. Headquarters mail should also include the Mail Code.

**Telephone numbers are both commercial and Federal Telecommunications System (FTS) unless otherwise indicated.
14

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                                           PART  II

               OFFICE  OF RESEARCH AND  DEVELOPMENT
                 FISCAL  YEAR  1978  RESEARCH  PROGRAM
    The Office of Research and Development (ORD) establishes its objectives and priorities in response to the
overall mission and priorities of EPA and is highly mission-oriented, concerned with solving specific priority
problems rather than only advancing scientific knowledge. Although the scope of ORD projects may vary from
quite fundamental research to the full-scale engineering demonstration of new pollution control processes, all
projects are directed at meeting specified objectives. While unsolicited proposals and grant applications may be
submitted on any subject at any time (see Part III), all these proposals will be evaluated in the context of these pre-
established research objectives.

    In ORD's planning process research objectives are grouped into five major program areas. These are: Health
and Ecological Effects, Energy/Environment, Industrial Processes, Public Sector Activities, and Monitoring and
Technical Support. Each program  area is  further divided into one  or more  subprogram areas  or  program
elements. The relationship between ORD's planning structure and EPA's budget structure is shown in Appendix
A.

    After research objectives have been defined and approved by ORD and other Agency components, they are
formally documented by  ORD in planning documents called "Accomplishment Plans." Each Accomplishment
Plan summarizes a specific research objective to be pursued by one or more of ORD's fifteen laboratories. While
these Accomplishment Plans describe the research objectives desired, they do not contain detailed information on
the individual mechanisms or projects required to  attain the desired results.  This detailed planning is the
responsibility of the Laboratory Director.

    The following pages  in Part II describe all fiscal year 1978 Accomplishment Plans which have funds reserved
that will be expended through the grant or contract process. The laboratory or laboratories responsible for each
Accomplishment Plan are shown. Contact  with ORD's laboratories concerning these plans and objectives is
encouraged.
                                                                                         15

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             HEALTH AND  ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS PROGRAM AREA
    The Health and Ecological Effects Program Area is fundamental to EPA's responsibility to set criteria,
standards and guidelines to protect and enhance environmental quality. Scientific information which delineates
the effects of pollutants on human health and ecosystem structure is essential to the development of environmental
quality standards  and effective pollution  control strategies. The link between the existence of a damaging
pollutant and the way it entered the environment must also be understood by policy-makers. Research on
pollutant transport and fate is essential in order to set control requirements for specific sources.

    The Health and Ecological Effects Program also provides information for establishment and reevaluation of
water quality criteria, air quality criteria, ocean disposal criteria, pesticide registration  guidelines, effluent
standards for toxic and hazardous materials and radiation standards. This program contains four subprograms:
Health  Effects, Ecological  Processes  and  Effects,  Transport  and  Fate  of Pollutants,  and Stratospheric
Modification.
                               HEALTH EFFECTS SUBPROGRAM

    Health effects research is directed toward the assessment of health hazards associated with environmental
pollution in a number of media and categories including air, water, pesticides, radiation, etc. Within this program,
research problems are classified on the basis of exposure, or the way in which pollutants reach man. In taking
environmental action to protect human health, exposure to specific contaminants, not effect, is regulated. Three
primary categories are used in the problem classification: "Air Exposures and Their Effects" which deals with
contaminants reaching man primarily in  air,  "Water  Exposures and Their Effects"  which  deals with
contaminants reaching man primarily in water, and "Multi-Route Exposures and Their Effects" which addresses
pollutants which commonly reach man by a variety of routes of exposure.


Air Exposures & Their Effects: Refinement of Public Health  Risk Assessment on Pollutants
Specifically Associated With Transportation — 601B

    Extramural Funds:    $1,356,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: This is a multidisciplinary research program begun in fiscal year 1975
focusing on the public health consequences of non-regulated pollutants from mobile sources. The program is
designed  to provide timely decision-making  input regarding sulfuric acid and other pollutants from mobile
sources as promised by the Administrator to the Congress in November 1973. The emphasis is on the evaluation of
unregulated emissions from advanced automotive control systems (principally, but not restricted to, catalysts) so
as to ensure protection of the public health and welfare.

    Four ORD laboratories perform research on automobile emissions. They are:

    (1)   Environmental Sciences Research Laboratory/Research Triangle Park—emissions characterization,
         measurement methods development for auto  exhaust emissions, measurement methods development
         for ambient air, and dispersion models development for auto emissions.

    (2)   Environmental  Monitoring  and  Support  Laboratory/Research  Triangle  Park—ambient  air
         measurement  for  catalyst  equipped  car  reduction   of  air pollution, measurement  methods
         standardization, quality assurance for entire catalyst program.

    (3)   Health  Effects  Research Laboratory/Cincinnati—animal toxicology using whole exhaust and pure
         components for acute, subacute and chronic studies.
 16

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             HEALTH  AND  ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS PROGRAM AREA
                               HEALTH EFFECTS SUBPROGRAM

    (4)   Health Effects Research Laboratory/Research  Triangle Park—animal  toxicology and controlled
          human exposure acute studies using pure components found in auto exhaust.


Laboratory Assignment:    Environmental Sciences Research  Laboratory,  Research Triangle Park
                          Environmental Monitoring and  Support Laboratory,  Research Triangle Park
                          Health  Effects Research Laboratory, Research Triangle Park
                          Health  Effects Research Laboratory, Cincinnati


Air Exposures and Their Effects: Refinement of Public Health Information on Pollutants for
Which Ambient Air Quality Standards Have Been Identified — 601C

    Extramural Funds:     $ 1,770,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: Research is conducted to evaluate the adequacy of existing Ambient Air
Quality Standards (AAQS)  and to  refine  existing health criteria. Emphasis is directed toward: evaluation of
exposure averaging times, adequacy of existing safety margins, determination of the health benefits of meeting and
the health risks of exceeding the AAQS's on a time-weighted basis.  Clinical studies will  focus on refining
dose/response characteristics of criteria pollutants and a minimal amount of indicator methodology development.
Preponderance of resources are addressed to ozone and other components of the photochemical oxidant complex.
Research  effort  on  CO  will plateau  and diminish, as dose/response effects for that  pollutant are refined.
Toxicological studies will concentrate on the acquisition of dose-rate data for NCh to assist in providing a
scientific foundation for  the Agency's pending short-term NO2  standard. A comparable effort will be directed
toward assessing the interaction effects from exposures to combinations of SO2, NO2, Oa, PAN and particulates.
Results from this research will be useful in the interpretation of epidemiologic data and in aiding the design of
future  chemical and epidemiological studies. Population and community studies are the most difficult to design
and conduct, but are the most persuasive when well executed. Enhanced attention must be given to clearly
targeted studies of this nature planned to answer specific questions. Of highest priority are studies addressing the
question of relative contribution to observed disease consequences of oxides of sulfur and nitrogen. Studies
utilizing more sophisticated health endpoints are being initiated. These community studies shall utilize the new
generation of CHAMP stations for improved environmental assessment.


Laboratory Assignment:    Health  Effects Research Laboratory, Research Triangle Park


Air Exposures and Their  Effects: Identification of the Health Implications of Exposure to
Non-Criteria Pollutants Reaching Man Primarily in Air — 601D

    Extramural Funds:     $ 1,968,400

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: One of the major objectives of the research to be undertaken in this plan is
to supply scientific data useful for determining whether exposure to presently unregulated air pollutants should be
restricted to protect health. Once an indication is available that exposure should be restricted, the next step is to
provide information useful  in determining the  degree of control which is warranted. There is  sufficient
information  available to  be  concerned about the health effects of exposure to sulfates, nitrates, and respirable
particulates. The essential questions, then,  concern the extent to which restricting exposure may be needed. The
toxicology program will continue to  evaluate specifically  the relative toxicity of sulfuric acid, ammonium sulfates
and sulfites which cannot be determined in either clinical or population studies. This portion of the program will
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             HEALTH AND ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS PROGRAM AREA
                               HEALTH  EFFECTS SUBPROGRAM

also develop more sensitive and relevant  health indicators and dose-response data for selected sulfur oxide
compounds.

    Increased efforts in fiscal years 1978 and 1979 will provide for the expansion of controlled human exposure
studies on various sulfates. The objective of these studies will be to determine the level of short-term exposure at
which biochemical, physiological, and behavioral responses are observed in human subjects. Studies will start on
healthy subjects who will be exposed to H2SO4, followed by studies exposing healthy subjects to ammonium
bisulfate and ammonium sulfate. Studies will continue by exposing susceptible groups (i.e., asthmatics). These
data will clarify  which bio-indicators of response are most appropriate for epidemiological studies and  will
provide human dose-response data for specific compounds.
Laboratory Assignment:    Health  Effects Research Laboratory, Research Triangle Park


Multi-Route  Exposures and  Their  Effects: Identification  of the  Health  Effects of Non-
Pesticide Substances Commonly Reaching Man by Multiple Routes of Exposure — 601E

    Extramural Funds:     $70,000

    Accomplishment  Plan  Summary: In order to adequately protect human health by a variety of legal
mechanisms available to EPA, research is needed which permits evaluation of the significance of individual route
of exposure to observed effects. Such research is necessary in determining the most effective area of control for
pollutants which are assulting humans through more than one environmental medium or reaching and adversely
affecting vital metabolic processes through more than one human  body  system. The research, in order to solve
these regulatory-related questions must evaluate total exposure, total body burden, and their associated health
effects. This objective is directed toward discerning exposure and effect relationships to health from certain non-
pesticide environmental contaminants which typically reach man by multiple routes of exposure. Relationships
will be determined by assessing human  body burden, performing studies of targeted populations, conducting
toxicity studies to examine specific endpoints of elected effects and conducting teratologic investigations.


Laboratory Assignment:    Health  Effects Research Laboratory, Cincinnati


Multi-Route  Exposures and  Their  Effects: Identification  of the  Health  Effects of Non-
Pesticide Substances Commonly Reaching Man by Multiple Routes of Exposure — 601E

    Extramural Funds:     $ 190,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: Appropriate control strategies for  pollutants reaching man through multi-
media exposure  must be based on information relating concentrations of pollutants in the total environment to
specific biological endpoints. Research is needed to determine absorption, kinetics and toxicology of the various
pollutants. Epidemiologic studies of high exposure populations are conducted both to determine relationships
between exposure to environmental media and body burdens, and to  identify  and quantify resultant health
implications. Current studies involve children in areas of high traffic density and persons of all ages residing in the
vicinity of primary non-ferrous  smelters. Studies of neuropsychologic performance in children with varying but
asymptomatic metal burdens are complimented by animal studies  of behavioral effects and the effects of age at
exposure or absorption and retention of ingested heavy metals. Studies in laboratory animals, principally rodents
and non-human  primates, obtain dose-response data for heavy metals and other non-pesticide substances which

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             HEALTH AND ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS PROGRAM  AREA
                               HEALTH EFFECTS SUBPROGRAM

have been identified by epidemiological and other means as potentially harmful to humans. Chronic low level
exposures and multigenerational studies are conducted to assess mutagenic, teratogenic, reproductive, enzymatic,
neurophysiological and behavioral effects of these substances as well as their absorption, distribution, retention
and excretion. Minimal in vitro investigations with cell cultures, microorganisms, mammalian ova, etc., evaluate
the cytotoxicity, mutagenicity, carcinogenicity, and co-carcinogenicity of specific substances as well as crude
environmental samples,  and  guide  further laboratory and epidemiological study.  Further  investigation of
carcinogenic activity, however, will be supported under the appropriate accomplishment plan.


Laboratory Assignment:   Health Effects  Research Laboratory, Research Triangle  Park


Air Exposures  and Their  Effects:  Assessment of the Contribution  of  Environmental
Carcinogens to Cancer Incidence in the General Population — 601F

    Extramural Funds:    $1,143,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: A long-term research program is proposed to provide information essential
to the mission of the Agency to identify and control chemical agents in the air and water environment which may
cause adverse public health and welfare effects. Chemical agents have been shown to be carcinogenic in animal
studies, and in occupational cases, at concentration levels much higher than those found in the general population
environment. It has been postualted that a large fraction of human cancer may be caused by chemical agents in the
environment. If this is  true, the human  health  benefit  from identifying  and controlling  the  responsible
environmental agents is obvious. The proposed program is designed to: (1) provide a profile of known or suspect
chemical carcinogens in the ambient air and drinking water, and (2) to assess the impact upon the frequency of
occurrence of cancer in the general population resulting from environmental exposure. This will be accomplished
through an integrated monitoring and health effects research program in areas where cancer  rates are known to be
abnormally higher than the National average, and in areas where current exposure levels to chemical agents are
shown to be high. Accomplishment of the program will require  a highly coordinated effort among a number of
Federal agencies, as well as State and Regional Agencies. Detailed planning will be accomplished by Interagency
Groups and formulated in Interagency Agreements. Categorical programs will be designed to cover areas of
research important to the mission of EPA but not currently included in the overall National effort.
Laboratory Assignment:   Environmental  Sciences Research Laboratory,  Research  Triangle Park
                         Environmental  Monitoring and Support Laboratory,  Las Vegas
                         Health Effects  Research  Laboratory, Research Triangle  Park
                         Environmental  Research  Laboratory, Gulf Breeze


Air  Exposure  and  Their  Effects:  Assessment  of  the  Contribution  of  Environmental
Carcinogens to Cancer Incidence in the General Population — 601F

     Extramural Funds:    $ 160,000

     Accomplishment Plan Summary: The basic objective of this effort is to provide EPA with a systematic
program which can provide an assessment of the contribution of environmental carcinogens to the incidence of
cancer in the general population. The thrust of this research activity is to assess the carcinogenic potential in
experimental animal models of environmental contaminants.
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             HEALTH AND ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS  PROGRAM  AREA
                               HEALTH EFFECTS SUBPROGRAM

Because of the low level of environmental contaminants and the consequent low levels of possible carcinogenic
responses, an approach must be utilized which will detect environmental carcinogens at an early stage of exposure
to human population. Such  an approach requires a strong foundation in molecular biology including the
metabolism of the genome, in comparative metabolism, and in the development and application of predictive
toxicologic models. Models for the prediction of chemical carcinogenesis in man are relatively poorly defined.
Problems exist in the extrapolation from species  to species as well as from high to  low dose levels. Extensive
research should continue on  validating various models from the point of view of comparative biochemistry,
physiology, anatomy, and pathology. Such endeavors must be integrated within a toxicologic framework in order
to ensure proper understanding and utilization of the information. Programs in this area should be aimed at not
only the identification of tumorous lesions but also at the understanding of dose-response phenomena, at the
functionality of hierarchical pathogenic lesions and at the understanding of the chemical/biological interactions
required to initiate and sustain such neoplastic lesions.


Laboratory Assignment:   Health Effects Research  Laboratory, Cincinnati


Preparation of Criteria Documents and Other Scientific and Technical Assessment Reports —
601G

     Extramural Funds:    $388,000

     Accomplishment Plan Summary: The objective of this Accomplishment Plan is the preparation and ultimate
publication of: Air Quality Criteria Documents, revised Air Quality Criteria Documents, Scientific and Technical
Assessment Reports, and Assessment Documents.  Criteria documents Other  documentation provides partial
bases for decisions on pollutant control, method(s) of control and the level of control.


Laboratory Assignment:  Health  Effects  Research Laboratory,  Research Triangle Park


Water Quality Health Effects: Health Effects Associated With the Treatment and Disposal of
Wastewater and Sludge — 607A

     Extramural Funds:    $1,340,000

     Accomplishment Plan Summary: This program is  designed to support the Agency's efforts in municipal
wastewater and  sludge control. This research program will  determine  the  health implications of existing
technology for treatment and disposal of wastewater and sludge, as well as foreseeing any health risks that may be
associated with innovative technology. The emphasis will be on the health effects associated with the application
of wastewater and sludge on agricultural  land. In  addition to determining the health effects associated with
passage of contaminants through the food chain and to the neighbors of treatment and disposal facilities, interim
criteria associated with the operations will be recommended. Current practice results in sixty percent of municipal
sludges being placed on land.
The Federal Water  Pollution Control Act (PL 92-500) and Agency policy require that  land application of
wastewater be considered as a viable alternative to municipal wastewater treatment plants. This emphasis on the
use of land places a responsibility on EPA to ensure that the methods used do not result in the creation of health
hazards.
 Laboratory Assignment:    Health  Effects Research Laboratory, Cincinnati


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             HEALTH  AND  ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS  PROGRAM  AREA
                               HEALTH  EFFECTS SUBPROGRAM

Characterization and Testing of Water and Hazardous  Substances — 607B

    Extramural  Funds:    $1,260,000

    Accomplishment Plan  Summary:  The purpose of this program  is to develop  rapid screening tests for
characterizing toxic pollutants. The  program will be supportive of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act (PL
92-500) and the development of protocols needed to implement the Toxic Substances Control Act (PL 94-469).
Specific objectives  will  be to: (1) Develop methods  and approaches  to identify and  characterize classes of
pollutants; (2) Develop  tests for the assessment of biological impact of substances in  living organisms; and (3)
Apply these tests to complex effluents.


Laboratory Assignment:    Health  Effects Research Laboratory, Cincinnati


Water Quality  Health  Effects:  Development of  Criteria for  Recreational and  Shellfish-
Growing Waters — 607C

    Extramural Funds:     $360,000

    Accomplishment Plan  Summary: It is a mandated goal of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act (PL
92-500) that "wherever attainable,  the interim goal  of water quality which provides  for the protection and
propagation of fish, shellfish, and wildlife and provides for recreation in and on the water be achieved by July
1983." In support of this National goal,  this program will provide the health effects data and technology required
in setting guidelines on a plant by plant basis for the discharge of sewage effluents into the aquatic environment by:
(1) Developing health effects recreational water quality criteria for marine waters; (2)  Developing health effects
water quality criteria for fresh waters; and (3) Developing  health effects water quality criteria for shellfish-
growing areas.


Laboratory Assignment:    Health  Effects Research Laboratory, Cincinnati


Multi-Route  Exposures and  Their Effects:  Determination of the Health  Implication of
Substances Used as Pesticides — 615A

    Extramural Funds:     $964,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The pesticide health effects research  program is designed to support the
Agency's  activities with  respect  to meeting legally  mandated responsibilities for  pesticides  which include
registration, label reviews, hazard classification, and tolerance setting. Thus, objectives of the pesticide research
are: (1) to investigate the potential health effects (hazards) of the major classes of pesticides now registered by
EPA and in common use, (2) to evaluate the human safety of the "new generation" pest control agents, such as
insect viruses, pathogenic bacteria, chemosterilants, attractants, hormones, etc., (3) to  develop and validate new
toxicological methods which can  be used for registering and reregistering pesticides,  (4) to  develop and apply
analytical methods for detecting these agents in environmental samples and human tissue, (5) to provide
technical assistance to the Office of Pesticide Programs (OPP) in scientific review of toxicologic information, (6)
to provide health effects data on compounds under review in the Substitute Chemical Program, and (7) to provide
research and information to OPP on specific compounds for the Rebuttable Presumption against Registration
(RPAR) Process.
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             HEALTH  AND  ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS PROGRAM AREA
                               HEALTH EFFECTS SUBPROGRAM

    Output will be delivered in a form useful to: (1) assisting in the reregistration and RPAR process, (2)
formulating policies on registering new classes of pest control agents, (3) improving the protocols and guidelines
required in registering pesticides, (4) operating the Human Monitoring Program, and (5) providing health and
chemistry information for public hearings and to regional offices.
Laboratory Assignment:  Health  Effects Research Laboratory, Research Triangle Park


Multi-Route  Exposures and Their  Effects:  Determination of  the Health
Implications  of Substances  Used as  Pesticides  (Substitute  Chemicals)  —  615F

    Extramural Funds:    $959,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The Agriculture-Environment and Consumer Protection Appropriation
Act of 1974 (PL 93-135) gave the Agency a mandate to conduct a thorough review of the scientific and economic
implications of using alternate  (substitute) chemicals that replaced cancelled compounds  or compounds in
litigation to be cancelled including new and old registered pesticides. The review process as established under this
mandate provides for the development or scientific criteria for establsihing the hazard associated with the use of
each compound and finding suitable substitutes for those compounds found to be hazardous to human health.
Much of the data necessary to evaluate pesticide hazard are available in scientific literature; however, for many
compounds, new or old,  data relating to carcinogenicity, neurotoxicity, teratogenicity and other long-term
reproductive effects, mutagenicity, effects on immune responses, endocrine effects, toxicity following inhalation
exposure, and field worker reentry exposure hazards are generally lacking. Deficiencies in this data base are met
through toxicity studies conducted on selected alternate chemicals. An intergral part of these toxicity studies is
the development of improved analytical chemical methods for measurement  of  substitute pesticides,  their
biotransformation products, and impurities in experimental animals, in the environment, and in man.


Laboratory Assignment:    Health Effects Research Laboratory,  Research  Triangle Park


Assessment of the Health Effects of Exposure to Radiant Energy — 628A

    Extramural Funds:    $72,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The EPA has the responsibility to establsih guidelines for environmental
levels of non-ionizing radiation to which the public is exposed. Data from ongoing EPA research is beginning to
confirm existing international data of  harmful  effects of  chronic, low  level exposures.  If substantiated, these
findings would suggest the current United States occupational guide to be too high for use as a departure point for
providing environmental  guidance to protect public health. Effects are  to be studied  for acute and chronic
exposures to electromagnetic radiation  using animal models. Power densities used should emphasize levels  at or
below those equivalent to ten milliwatts  per square centimeter in man. Continuous and pulsed radio frequency and
microwave frequencies  as well as very  low  frequencies (e.g., high power transmission lines) are to be utilized.
Under these conditions  research is to be directed toward the identification of (1) the potential biological effects of
exposure to microwave and radio frequencies characteristic of those to which human populations are exposed, and

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             HEALTH  AND  ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS  PROGRAM AREA
                               HEALTH  EFFECTS SUBPROGRAM

(2)  the mechanisms of interaction of electromagnetic radiation with biological systems and  the frequency
dependence and power densities of the interactions.


Laboratory Assignment:    Health  Effects Research Laboratory, Research Triangle Park


Multi-Route Exposures and Their Effects: Identification of Adverse Health Effects  Due to
Exposure to Toxic Substances — 629A

    Extramural Funds:     $380,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The objectives of the toxic substances health effects research are: (1) to
delineate the potential hazards to human health of environmental pollutants; (2) to develop methods by which
various classes of toxic substances can be rapidly screened for specific biological activity potentially hazardous to
human health; (3) to provide rapid, sensitive, and unambiguous biochemical parameters by which a quantitative
assessment of exposure level can be made on human populations; (4) to develop methods by utilizing fundamental
physical constants and molecular structure by which persistence and disposition of toxic substances as well as
biological activity can be predicted by utilizing and (5) to provide estimate of hazard to man by extrapolation of
animal model studies. The passage of the Toxic Substances Control Act makes it imperative that these objectives
be initiated. This program will have a major responsibility in providing  health effects data to the Office of Toxic
Substances and is essential to provide information relative to  man's exposure to environmental hazardous
substances from multiple  areas of the environment.  The National  Academy  of Sciences has stressed the
significance of evaluating the cumulative health impact of total body burden rather than the burden acquired from
one or another part of the environment or only a single toxic material. Sound scientific information will be
increasingly needed to provide a basis for taking regulatory actions before  human or environmental exposure;
therefore, rearch outputs from this program are essential for the Office of Toxic Substances to meet their legally-
mandated regulatory responsibility.
Laboratory Assignment:    Health Effects Research Laboratory, Research Triangle Park


Criteria Development and Special Studies — 630C

     Extramural Funds:    $730,000

     Accomplishment Plan Summary: In order to set and determine whether to set pollution control regulations,
EPA requires detailed assessments of available scientific and technical information on specific pollutants, the best
possible standards. EPA is also facing increasing demands for economic analysis of its regulatory programs and
actions, particularly for cost-benefit analysis by Congress, industry, the academic community, and the Office of
Management and Budget. This program provides the direction for that portion of the criteria development
program carried out by Headquarters and for all of the economic analysis.


Laboratory Assignment:    Office of Health and  Ecological Effects, Headquarters
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             HEALTH  AND  ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS  PROGRAM AREA
                   ECOLOGICAL PROCESSES AND EFFECTS  SUBPROGRAM
    Ecological processes and effects research is directed toward determining the  effects of air, water and
terrestrial pollutants on the structure and function of the ecosystems and on biotic and abiotic subcomponents of
these ecosystems. The research effort is planned and organized along specific problem area lines; work is directed
toward target media and conducted according to the character of the problem. Media are divided into freshwater,
marine and terrestrial components.
"Systems Characterization and Impact Assessment," a sub-division within each medium, broadly covers projects
which  include field studies, theoretical or  mathematical  simulations, and the characterization of field and
laboratory  model  ecosystems  for  potential use in criteria development. In  contrast,  Ecological Criteria
Development deals mostly with carefully controlled laboratory greenhouse or field studies, the primary objective
of which is the establishment of legally defensible criteria.

Freshwater Ecological Processes and  Effects — 608A

    Extramural Funds:     $2,088,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The research program on the ecological effects of pollutants in freshwater
ecosystems is primarily designed to aid the Agency in the development of water quality criteria, as required under
Section 304(a) of the Federal Water Pollution  Control Act (PL 92-500), and to provide information for use in
developing legally defensible effluent standards, as required under Sections 307(a) and 316 ofthe PL 92-500. To
meet these objectives, research is being conducted in the following major areas: (1) Identification and evaluation of
the effects of non-pesticide  organic and inorganic pollutants on  the physiology, biochemistry, pathology and
behavior of freshwater organisms; (2) Development of screening and short-term tests and their application to the
analysis of the effects of complex municipal and industrial effluents on freshwater organisms; (3) Determination
and simulation of freshwater population, community  and  ecosystem responses to pollutant stress; and (4)
Determination  of  physical, chemical, and  biological  transformation and bioaccumulation of pollutants by
freshwater organisms and ecosystems. The freshwater effects program also includes  research to fulfill Agency
requirements under Sections 208 and 314 of PL  92-500. This research includes the determination ofthe ecological
effects of non-point source (NPS) pollution and evaluation of the  effectiveness of NPS management techniques;
and assessment of lake restoration techniques.  Research is being conducted on the characterization of pollution
problems and the development of predictive methods for describing fate and effects of pollutants in the Great
Lakes. Information derived  from this research effort is  integrated with other Great Lakes research through the
International Joint Commission. Research will  be conducted as required under Section 10 ofthe recently enacted
Toxic Substances Control Act (PL 94-469)  The anticipated  emphasis will be in the development of screening
methods for toxic substances.
 Laboratory  Assignment:   Environmental  Research Laboratory, Corvallis
                          Environmental  Research Laboratory, Duluth
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             HEALTH  AND  ECOLOGICAL  EFFECTS PROGRAM AREA
                   ECOLOGICAL  PROCESSES AND EFFECTS SUBPROGRAM
Marine and Estuarine Ecological Processes and Effects — 608C

    Extramural Funds:     $620,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: A major objective of the ecological effects research program in marine and
estuarine ecosystems is to provide information needed by the Agency in responding to Sections 304(a), 307 and
311 of the Federal  Water Pollution Control Act (PL 92-500). These sections require the Administrator to
establish water quality criteria and develop legally defensible effluent standards for environmental pollutants. To
provide an adequate information base for these determinations, research is being conducted in the following areas:
(1) Development of methods to yield improved and nfore rapid measurements of organism and ecosystem-level
effects of pollution  stress;  (2) Development and improvement of methods for culturing, holding and rearing
experimental organisms and expansion of the set of response parameters used to assess effects of ecological stress;
(3) Determination of the effects of complex wastes on estuarine and marine organisms and ecosystems; (4)
Determination of the fate and ecological  effects of oil and  derived  hydrocarbons in estuarine and marine
ecosystems, including arctic and subarctic ecosystems; (5) Determination of the effects of chlorine-substitute
disinfection processes on estuarine ecosystems; and (6) Assessment of the carcinogenicity of pollutants in the
marine environment.

    To meet Agency requirements under the Marine Protection, Research and Sanctuaries Act of 1972 (PL
92-532) and Sections 403  and 404 of PL 92-500 ecological research  is being conducted on the effects of the
dumping and discharge of pollutants into the ocean. Research is being conducted in the following major areas: (1)
Determination of the availability of trace metals in marine ecosystems; (2) Development and evaluation of
disposal site assessment methodologies; (3) Assessment of the recovery of marine ecosystems upon the relaxation
of stress; (4) Determination of the fate of ocean disposed wastes; (5) Determination of the ecological effects of
disposed dredge materials; (6) Determination of the effects of disposal methodologies developed as alternatives to
ocean disposal; and (7) Delineation of mixing zones in the marine environment.

    Research is also being conducted on ecosystem characteristics and processes to improve the capability of the
Agency in predicting ecological impacts and making management and regulatory decisions. In response to needs
of Section 404 of PL 92-500 research is being conducted to define wetland boundaries. To provide information
necessary for assessing pollutant impacts in marine and estuarine environments, research is being conducted on
physical factors influencing pollutant transport and retention; and on the response of estuarine ecosystems to a
decrease in pollution stress.


Laboratory Assignment:    Environmental Research  Laboratory,  Narragansett
                          Environmental Research  Laboratory,  Corvallis
                          Environmental Research  Laboratory,  Gulf  Breeze


Criteria  Development  and Special  Studies  —  616A

    Extramural Funds:    $125,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary:  This program is designed to develop criteria documents  and establish
appropriate review processes on specific pollutants in the environment. These documents represent the best up-to-
date compilation of scientific knowledge; they contain a thorough review of scientific literature and an assessment
of multimedia health and environmental effects of pollutants in order to provide continuing data base needs for
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             HEALTH AND ECOLOGICAL  EFFECTS PROGRAM AREA
                  ECOLOGICAL PROCESSES  AND EFFECTS SUBPROGRAM
EPA in setting standards. Additionally, they fulfill specific requirements of the Office of Water Planning and
Standards (OWPS), and serve other offices of the Agency.
Laboratory Assignment:   Health Effects Research Laboratory, Cincinnati


Ecological Effects of Substitute  Pesticide Chemicals — 714B

    Extramural Funds:    $365,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: To develop and validate for use suitable laboratory and/or field methods
and techniques for assessing deleterious and/or beneficial ecological effects of designated candidate substitute
pesticide chemicals when they may be used or transported to any or all of the following ecosystems: terrestrial,
estuarine/marine, freshwater. Transport of either the substitute pesticide or its degradation components within
the environment, its  bio-accumulation,  synergism with other  pesticides  or pollutants,  and other  pertinent
ecological properties will be appropriately evaluated within the context of its likely designated use. The pesticide
chemicals for this program will be those designated by the Office of Pesticide Programs.
Laboratory Assignment:   Environmental Research Laboratory, Gulf Breeze
                         Environmental Research Laboratory, Duluth
                         Environmental Research Laboratory, Corvallis
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             HEALTH AND ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS  PROGRAM AREA
                   TRANSPORT AND FATE OF POLLUTANTS SUBPROGRAM
    The transport and fate research subprogram is directed toward the development of empirical and analytical
techniques that relate air pollution source emissions to ambient exposures. This requires research in the area of (a)
atmospheric processes and  effects for the determination  of air  pollutant sources,  sinks, transport and
transformation of airborne gaseous  and particulate matter and the effects of air pollutants on visibility, rainfall,
and climate and (b) air pollutant characterization and measurement in support of the development of new and/or
improved  technology to  permit the  characterization and quantification of pollutants from stationary or mobile
emission sources either at the source or in the ambient air. A corresponding research effort exists for the transport
and fate of pollutants entering the aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems.


Atmospheric Processes and  Effects — 603A

    Extramural Funds:    $7,662,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: Studies on  the atmospheric processes and effects will be conducted to
qualitatively and quantitatively  determine  the  sources and sinks,  kinetics of  formation  and removal, and
chemical/physical interactions of airborne gaseous and particulate matter. This area of research covers: (1) The
development, evaluation, and validation of air quality simulation models for predicting and describing air quality
impacts anticipated from various control abatement strategies; (2) Determination of atmospheric chemical and
physical processes for describing the formation and decay of gaseous and  particulate air pollutants; and (3)
Quantification of the atmospheric effects of weather, visibility, climate, and materials due to air pollutant and
thermal emissions.
Laboratory  Assignment:   Environmental  Sciences Research Laboratory, Research Triangle Park


Sources,  Processes,  and  Systems — 609A

     Extramural Funds:    $1,011,000

     Accomplishment Plan Summary: The  overall objective of this Accomplishment Plan is to provide the
scientific understanding, methodologies, and  associated data bases required to: (1) evaluate and predict the
transport, transformations and fate of trace organics and inorganic pollutants entering freshwater ecosystems; (2)
predict water quality impacts resulting from the discharge of point and non-point source pollution into fresh
surface waters; and (3) evaluate the relative cost-effectiveness of alternative basin-wide point and non-point source
pollution control strategies. This technology will be used in the development of water quality criteria for toxic
pollutants of test protocols and  decision rationale for assessing the environmental exposure of toxic substances
and evaluating pesticides under consideration for registration, and in the identification of the necessary point and
non-point source control requirements under the Federal Water Pollution Control Act (PL 92-500) section 208
and similar water quality management planning efforts, and determination of appropriate effluent limitations to
be imposed through the permit program in water quality limited stream segments.


Laboratory  Assignment:       Environmental Research Laboratory,  Athens
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                      ENERGY/ENVIRONMENT  PROGRAM  AREA
    The Energy/Environment Program Area is fundamental to EPA's responsibility to protect the public health
and welfare from the adverse  effects of pollutants discharged  by or  associated with energy systems. Such
protection must be accomplished through a multimedia approach so that the control of one form of pollution does
not result in an unacceptable impact occurring in another medium. Because of the potentially acute health and
ecological effects associated with the traditional, as well as the new technologies for fuel extraction, processing,
and conversion, the EPA has a major responsibility in this area to ensure that environmental quality and human
health are protected. Further, since many of the problems are long-term, e.g., many technologies will not  be
available and in commercial use before early 1985, the EPA must have programs underway now to develop the
health and technical data base necessary to support future New Source Performance Standards and Ambient Air
Quality  Standards. The Energy/Environment Program Area is organized into four subprograms: Extraction and
Processing Technology; Conservation, Utilization  and Technology Assessment; Health and Ecological Effects;
and technical support.
               EXTRACTION AND  PROCESSING TECHNOLOGY  SUBPROGRAM

    The Extraction and  Processing Technology Subprogram  includes  the  assessment  of  problems and
development of control techniques to mitigate the environmental impact of the extraction of energy resources.
Solid, liquid and gaseous fuels as well as advanced energy sources, such as uranium and geothermal energy, are
considered. The objectives of the extraction program cover a wide spectrum of activities including  the
development of techniques to abate acid mine drainage, to the restoration of strip-mined land, the assessment of
the socio-economic impacts of mining a virgin area and the assessment of practices on off-shore oil rigs. Also
included is a program which provides environmental control technology applicable to, and  environmental
assessments of, important fuel processing schemes, including low- and high-BTU gasification, liquification, coal
cleaning, shale oil processing, and fluidized bed combustion.


Energy Control Technology—Fuel Processing — 623A

    Extramural Funds:     $ 12,950,000

    Accomplishment  Plan Summary:  The fuel  processing program will promote and participate  in  the
development of advanced technologies for fuel processing by providing environmental technology development
and environmental assessment.  Processes  for physical/chemical  coal cleaning  are being developed with  the
support of the  Bureau of Mines and the fluidized  bed program is  being aided by Energy Research and
Development Agency - ARGONNE  (ERDA-ARGONNE). Environmental  support is being given  to  the
National fluidized bed combustion program. In the  area  of synthetic fuels; the program  is  identifying and
quantifying the discharges from processes under development and evaluating and developing control technology.
This program is being conducted in close cooperation with ERDA. The chemically active fluidized bed process for
residual oil cleaning is being demonstrated at a utility. Physical coal cleaning to meet sulfur standards is being
demonstrated at an electrical utility.


Laboratory Assignment:    Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory, Research  Triangle Park
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                      ENERGY/ENVIRONMENT PROGRAM AREA
               EXTRACTION  AND PROCESSING  TECHNOLOGY SUBPROGRAM
Energy Control Technology—Fuel Processing — 623A

    Extramural Funds:     $1,552,300

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The fuel processing program will determine the environmental aspects
associated with the development of advanced technologies for the production of synthetic fuels from non-coal
sources  including oil shale.  The program  will identify and quantify the  discharges from processes  under
development and evaluate existing control technology. As a result of this FY-78 initiative, improved pollution
control technology will begin to be developed. Characterization of the multi-media pollution problems associated
with syntheitc fuel production and utilization will be accomplished. This program is being coordinated closely
with the oil shale extraction and handling program and with the synthetic fuels (from coal) program.


Laboratory Assignment:    Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory,  Cincinnati


Energy Resource Extraction and Handling—Solid Fuels — 623B

    Extramural Funds:     $2,627,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: As mandated under the Air, Water, and Solid Waste Acts, this program is
designed to develop and demonstrate new control technology for the non-point source pollution problems and
treatment of point  source discharges associated with  the extraction and  handling of solid fuels. Work is
progressing to: (1) Assess the potential environmental damages (air, water, noise, etc., from active and abandoned
mining, transportation and benefication processes; (2) Develop methods to control, treat and abate environmental
pollutants from these operations; (3) Demonstrate and document the technical/operational  feasibility and
cost/effectiveness of environmental control options; (4) Provide, on a timely basis environmental control criteria;
and (5) Prepare standardized user manuals which encompass all environmental pollution control aspects in a form
that meets the operational needs of regulatory and control agencies and the mining industry. Major emphasis will
be placed on active mining, especially on  newly emerging extractive efforts, while continuing minimum efforts on
abandoned mines to keep abreast of the latest reclamation and restoration techniques.


Laboratory Assignment:    Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory,  Cincinnati


Energy Resource Extraction and Handling—Oil and Gas Production — 623C

    Extramural Funds:     $1,667,200

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: In accordance with the water and solid waste acts, the objectives of the oil
and  gas  production environmental  research program  are: (1) Assess the existing  and potential adverse
environmental impacts (air, water,  land)  from active and planned oil  and gas production,  storage and
transportation facilities; (2) develop methods,  technology and  equipment to prevent,  control  and  abate
environmental pollutants from these operations; (3) demonstrate  and document  the technical  operational
feasibility and cost/effectiveness of environmental control options; (4) provide on a timely basis environmental
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                     ENERGY/ENVIRONMENT PROGRAM AREA
               EXTRACTION AND PROCESSING TECHNOLOGY SUBPROGRAM
control guidelines; (5) provide standardized users manuals which encompass all environmental pollution control
aspects in a form that meets the operational needs of both regulatory/control agencies and industry.


Laboratory Assignment:   Industrial Environmental Research  Laboratory,  Cincinnati


Environmental Assessment Interface —  623D

    Extramural  Funds:    $120,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The goal of the environmental assessment program is to determine, in the
case where a single system or process is being assessed, whether the system/process is environmentally acceptable
or whether further or more economical control of waste streams is necessary. If further control is considered
necessary, the assessment estimates how much control is needed and what waste stream components are especially
important to  control. In cases  where comparative assessments  are being made  of two or more systems or
processes, an additional goal may be to determine which one(s) are environmentally preferable.

    The overall objective of this program is to  provide the Office of Energy,  Minerals and  Industry
Environmental Assessment Program necessary consultation, data, and research information in the development,
use and interpretation of: (1) decision criteria, (2) impact factors, and (3) bioassays.
Laboratory Assignment:   Environmental Research Laboratory, Narragansett
                         Environmental Research Laboratory, Corvallis
                         Environmental Research Laboratory, Gulf Breeze
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                      ENERGY/ENVIRONMENT PROGRAM AREA
    CONSERVATION, UTILIZATION AND TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENTS SUBPROGRAM

    The Conservation, Utilization and Technology Assessments Subprogram includes three distinct parts —
conservation, utilization (electrical energy production) and technology assessments.

    The conservation portion of the Subprogram will provide environmental assessments and contribute to the
development of environmentally compatible advanced technologies. It also provides control technologies, waste
recovery, indoor air quality enhancement  and second generation energy systems, e.g., solar and  geothermal
energy.

    The utilization portion of this subprogram includes the identification, characterization, assessment  and
development, where appropriate, of control  technology for pollutants associated  with electric  utility  and
industrial combustion  sources.  A multi-media  approach is  planned with gaseous,  liquid  and solid  wastes
considered. Both primary pollutants (effluents from uncontrolled combustion systems) and secondary residuals
(effluents from control technology) must be carefully considered. Emphasis is focused on generating information
which can be used to help set environmental standards and guidelines and develop economical control technology
so that such standards can be achieved.

    The  objective  of  the integrated  assessment  portion  of  this subprogram  is  the   identification  of
environmentally, socially and economically acceptable alternatives for meeting National energy supply objectives,
and assistance in the selection of optimum policies for the attainment of associated environmental quality goals.

Utility and Industrial Power - 624A

    Extramural Funds:    $ 18,220,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The overall objective of this activity is the identification, characterization,
assessment and development, where appropriate, of control technology for pollutants associated with electric
utility and industrial stationary combustion sources. It  is important that a multi-media approach be taken with
gaseous, liquid, and solid wastes carefully investigated  in terms of a balanced and comprehensive control plan.
Both primary pollutants (effluents from uncontrolled combustion systems) and secondary residuals (effluents
from controlled technology) will be carefully considered. Emphasis will be focused on (1) generating information
which will be useful in the preparation of environmental standards and guidelines, and (2) developing economical
control technology so that such standards can be achieved.
Laboratory  Assignment:   Industrial Environmental  Research Laboratory, Research Triangle Park


Flue Gas Cleaning Waste Disposal — 624A

     Extramural Funds:    $ 100,000

     Accomplishment Plan Summary: Conduct specific projects as part of the EPA program to control waste and
water pollution from utility and industrial flue gas cleaning systems. The objectives of this activity are as follows:
(1) Determine the extent to which the migration of chemicals from flue gas cleaning wastes can be attenuated by
soils in land disposal sites and develop an empirical method to describe the migration potential;
(2) Determine the compatibility of various liner materials when exposed to flue gas cleaning wastes; (3) Determine
the leachability and  durability of products from first generation flue gas cleaning  waste treatment processes,
conduct  a field evaluation of current flue gas  cleaning waste disposal  technology, and assess, screen, and
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                     ENERGY/ENVIRONMENT PROGRAM AREA
    CONSERVATION,  UTILIZATION ANT) TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENTS  SUBPROGRAM


demonstrate (on a pilot scale) second generator fue s;as cleaning waste treatment processes; and (4) Establish the
data base for the future development of standards for the disposal of flue gas cleaning wastes and identify research
and development needs for standards development.


Laboratory Assignment:    Municipal  Environmental Research Laboratory, Cincinnati


Wastes-As-Fuel — 624B

    Extramural Funds:     $925,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: Activities in this program include technical, environmental, and economic
evaluations of waste disposal  including wastes co-incineration; fuel and feedstock preparation; biological
conversion energy recovery technologies, including advanced processes; surveys of the organic and mixed waste
streams except industrial; development of pollutant assessment criteria, sampling and analysis techniques and the
performance  of  pollutant characterizations  for processes; pollution controls development; and technical
assistance.

    Assess, develop and evaluate equipment and systems for preparing fuels and feedstocks for energy recovery
via all conversion processes (in conjunction with materials recovery) and for  converting wastes to fuels via
biological conversion processes. Analyses will determine  the optimal composition of waste inputs, energy
balances, material balances, emissions and residuals, effectiveness of emission controls and residues handling
systems, needs for new types of pollutant control equipment, life-cycle costs, economic viability, theory, and other
aspects.


Laboratory Assignment:    Municipal  Environmental Research Laboratory, Cincinnati


Environmental Aspects of Energy Conservation Methods  and Advanced Energy Systems —
624B

    Extramural Funds:     $4,046,900

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The objective of this program is to develop information on the probable
environmental impacts of waste-as-fuel technologies, energy conservation  activities, and  advanced energy
systems.  In  addition,  the purpose is  to assure the development of environmentally  compatible advanced
technologies and pollution  control technologies for waste-as-fuel processes, for indoor air quality, energy
conservation, advanced energy conversion cycles, and advanced energy systems (solar and geothermal energy).
Techniques and technolgoies are under development by the Energy Research and Development Administration,
Federal Energy Administration, Housing and Urban Development, and other agencies in these latter areas, and
by the EPA in the waste-as-fuel area. Outputs will support EPA's regulatory responsibilities, by assuring the
environmental compatibility of techniques and technologies in each energy area. Outputs will also support EPA's
role on two interagency working groups—the Interagency Task Force on  Energy Conservation in Buildings and
the Interagency Task Force on Energy Conservation in Industry.


Laboratory Assignment:    Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory, Cincinnati

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                      ENERGY/ENVIRONMENT PROGRAM AREA
    CONSERVATION, UTILIZATION  AND TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENTS SUBPROGRAM


Geothermal Environmental Impact  Assessment — 624B

    Extramural  Funds:    $110,000

    Accomplishment  Plan Summary:  The objective of this  effort is to  assess the actual  and potential
environmental impacts of existing and potential geothermal energy resource exploitation. Program emphasis is on
groundwater  contamination. Coordination  with the Energy Research and Development Administration  is
essential. Studies should identify pollutants, pathways into the underground  water  environment, ecological
hazards associated with long term  operating facilities  and design  a monitoring system applicable  to any
geothermal resource development and conversion facility. Initial focus should be on Geysers, Imperial Valley and
Klamath Rio Grande  Rift Zone and Roosevelt Hot Springs. Topics studied should include: produced fluids,
disposal  methods,  subsidence  possibilities, seismic  effects, thermal losses,  groundwater pollution, fluids
radioactivity, non-condensates requiring monitoring and food chain uptake of geothermally associated pollutants.
Projects should be coordinated closely with the Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory, Cincinnati, and
data produced should  support the development of effluent guidelines and other environmental regulations for
geothermal systems.


Laboratory Assignment:   Environmental  Monitoring and Support Laboratory,  Las Vegas


Energy-Integrated Assessment — 624C

    Extramural Funds:     $2,356,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The overall objective of this Accomplishment Plan is the identification of
environmentally, socially, and economically acceptable alternatives for meeting National energy supply objectives
and to assist in the selection of "optimum" policies for the attainment of associated environmental quality goals.
This objective will be met by: (1) Integrating the results of the environmental research program with the
remainder of the Energy Research Program; (2) Evaluating the cost/risk/benefit trade-offs of energy production
and pollution control  alternatives; (3) Conducting technology assessments which  evaluate alternative energy
technologies and approaches for implementing energy development,  preventing environmental damage, and
securing related benefits; and (4) Identifying gaps in present research programs and indicating new priority
research topics which must be addressed in order to support direct Agency responsibilities.


Laboratory Assignment:   Office of Energy, Minerals and Industry,  Headquarters
                          Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory, Cincinnati
                          Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory, Research Triangle Park
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                      ENERGY/ENVIRONMENT  PROGRAM  AREA
                     HEALTH AND ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS SUBPROGRAM

    The Health and Ecological Effects Subprogram encompasses a program to determine the environmental
effects associated with energy extraction, transmission, conversion and use so that measures can be taken in a
timely manner to protect human health and the ecosystem. Identification of the pollutants released by energy-
related industrial operations and determination of their impact on the human and natural environment will define
the mission control requirements for the polluting operations. Included are studies to characterize the risks, costs
and benefits to human health and welfare and environmental quality of development and utilization of energy
technology.


Effects of Energy  Related Pollutants on  Organisms and Ecosystems — 625A

    Extramural Funds:    $3,815,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary:  Increased reliance on domestic energy sources is  resulting in increased
exploration and production of offshore oil, and gas increased mining and combustion of coal; and the potential for
development of geothermal and oil shale industries. Nearly every phase of these fuel cycles may result in local or
regional environmental degradation. This activity  is  designed to provide the ecological information required in
making  management and policy decisions concerning coal, oil, oil shale,  geothermal development and  facility
siting decisions. Specific areas of research include: (1) Determine the acute and chronic toxicological effects on
freshwater, and terrestrial organisms and resultant ecosystem impacts from single pollutants and combination of
pollutants released from energy extraction, conversion, transmission and use. (2) Study the dynamics of energy-
related pollutants in marine systems; thermal effects of energy utilization in combination with other pollutant
stress, and the impacts of pollutants from petroleum extraction, refineries and fossil fuel utilization. (3)Study the
ecological effects of halogen and biocide usage in power plant pass-through  cooling water treatment,  and of
offshore petroleum development in the Gulf of Mexico, dealing specifically with  drilling muds. Studies directed
toward  predicting  the  potential for accumulation and  depuration of carginogens  in seafood organisms are
underway and continuing analytical methods, carcinogen assay methods and cultivation  of marine animals are
underway. (4) Development of a mathematical model for the prediction of plume behavior from mechanical draft
cooling levers, with major emphasis on the effects of wind and atmospheric stability conditions on the plume, is
ongoing. (5)Assessment of potential ecological changes  in cold climate salt-marshes resulting from crude oil
contaminations.  (6) Evaluation of current standards for petroleum discharges relative to impacts on effects on
planktonic, benthic and intertidal organisms on the West Coast is another phase of study in the next five-year
plan.
Laboratory Assignment:    Environmental Research  Laboratory,  Gulf Breeze
                          Environmental Research  Laboratory,  Corvallis
                          Environmental Research  Laboratory,  Duluth
                          Environmental Research  Laboratory,  Narragansett


Transport and Fate of Energy-Related Pollutants in  Ecosystems  — 625B

     Extramural Funds:    $2,999,000

     Accomplishment Plan  Summary: Increased reliance on domestic energy sources is resulting in increased
extraction and combustion of coal, the development of advanced combustion technologies, and the potential for
development of geothermal, oil shale, and synthetic fuel industries. Nearly every phase of these fuel cycles may
result in the release of pollutants to the environment. As pollutants move through the environment, their physical,
chemical and biological interactions often result in their transformation to new compounds which may be either a
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                      ENERGY/ENVIRONMENT  PROGRAM  AREA
                     HEALTH AND ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS SUBPROGRAM
greater or lesser environmental threat than the parent compound. The purpose of this activitiy is to determine the
origins, loads, transport pathways, transfer rates, and fates for single pollutants and combinations of pollutants
released to the aquatic environment primarily from the coal, oil shale, and geothermal fuel cycles. Knowledge of
the environmental transport and transformation of pollutants is essential to relating ecological effects to their
cause, and  for establishing monitoring  and surveillance programs. This information is also basic to setting
standards for  point  source control,  and for development  of treatment methods and evaluation  of their
effectiveness.

Laboratory Assignment:   Environmental Sciences Research Laboratory, Research  Triangle Park
                         Robert S. Kerr Environmental  Research Laboratory,  Ada
                         Environmental Research Laboratory, Athens


Energy Related Pollutant and Effects Monitoring  and Associated Methods and Techniques
Development — 625C

    Extramural Funds:    $1,706,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: This effort is aimed at  developing the broad scale monitoring techniques
and specific monitoring methods for determining the significant levels and cause/effect relationships between
energy-related pollution and media quality on a regional basis. The overall objective of this effort is to provide
validated environmental quality baseline data in those geographical areas where the impact of new energy
development is or is projected to be of major magnitude on the environment. The output is to be a geographically
broad environmental overview which focuses on both the regional and local impact of major energy developments.
The purpose of this program is to provide an accurate scientifically valid reference point from which future
environmental degradation may be measured and upon which rational policy decisions  may be made. These
decisions will concern both future environmental standards and the direction and magnitude of specific energy
development. This objective includes the development of new and advanced monitoring methods and techniques
needed to provide data and information of broad scope in support of the main purpose of the energy program.

    While  initial efforts  are aimed at scoping the extent  of regional air and water pollution  due to energy
developments, outyear efforts will focus  on the higher priority scientific problems such as the levels, dispersion
and eventual distribution of specific energy related pollutants from geographically specific sources and groups of
sources. These outyear efforts  will benefit from the development of more sophisticated research monitoring
techniques in defining more accurately the precise nature of regional pollution.


Laboratory Assignment:   Environmental Monitoring and  Support Laboratory,  Cincinnati
                         Environmental Monitoring and  Support Laboratory,  Las Vegas
                         Environmental Monitoring and  Support Laboratory,  Research Triangle Park
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                     ENERGY/ENVIRONMENT PROGRAM AREA
                    HEALTH  AND  ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS  SUBPROGRAM
Energy Related Pollutant Measurement and Instrumentation Development — 625D

    Extramural Funds:    $705,000

    Accomplishment  Plan  Summary: The  purpose of this effort is to provide adequate, comprehensive
measurement methods and analytical techniques  for known and anticipated pollutants  injected into  the
environment from expanding and emerging energy technologies. The objective of this program is the development
of methods and instrumentation for the measurement of energy-related pollutants and the performance of special
field studies and analyses related to characterizing the levels of certain pollutants injected into the environment by
new technologies and energy developments at specific geographical sites. Initially emphasis is  on elemental and
inorganic pollutants from existing, expanding energy technologies for which adequate measurement methods do
not exist as well as ambient pollutant levels. Later emphasis will be on sampling, measurement and analysis of
organic and metallorganic compounds which give indication of being hazardous, with special attention to the
emerging fossil fuel technologies. Eventual products are comprehensive pollutant measurement methodologies for
air, water and solid waste pollutants on a technology by technology basis.

Laboratory Assignment:   Environmental Sciences Research Laboratory, Research Triangle  Park
                         Environmental Research Laboratory,  Athens


Health Effects Research—Energy-Related Air, Water and Multi-Route Exposures — 625F

    Extramural Funds:    $2,860,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: Attainment of the natural goal of energy independence  in the time frame
desired will result in a modification in the magnitude and spectrum of chemical and physical agents which are
introduced into the biosphere by the various energy industries. Although some  of the agents are known to be
deleterious to human  health, the quantitative  aspects of the toxicity of many of the agents have yet to be
determined either on an individual basis or in conjunction with  other environmental agents, not all  of which arise
solely from the energy industries.

    The primary objectives of this program  of research in the area of energy-related health  effects  are: (1) to
determine the qualitative and quantitative effects of energy-related agents on human health; (2) to assess risks
(health) to human populations associated with  all aspects of energy production  and utilization for the various
energy technologies; (3) to provide guidance for energy systems related control and abatement programs to the
extent that such programs are dependent upon health effects data, and (4) to provide that data base necessary for
the establishment of standards of exposure to energy-related hazardous agents on a schedule consistent with the
attainment of the national goal of self-sufficiency.
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                      ENERGY/ENVIRONMENT PROGRAM AREA
                     HEALTH AND ECOLOGICAL EFFECTS SUBPROGRAM
    The ultimate objective is to understand how the physical and chemical character of the total exposure of
various  population groups  (occupational, general,  susceptible,  etc.) is modified by the increase in energy
production and utilization and to improve the estimates (reduce uncertainty) of the adverse impacts upon human
health that may ensue as a consequence of implementing a particular energy policy. Of major concern are those
adverse effects which may result from long term low level exposures or that can manifest themselves only after a
long period of time. The emphasis to date has been on the identification of hazardous agents, development of more
rapid and sensitive biological screening methods and the evaluation of hazards to man through epidemiological
and clinical studies and animal toxicology studies. Studies of mechanisms of metabolism and fate of energy related
agents and mechanisms of damage and repair, both of which are required in order to more accurately estimate risk
to man by extrapolation of data from animal experiments, will receive greater emphasis in the following years.


Laboratory Assignment:    Health Effects  Research Laboratory, Cincinnati
                          Health Effects  Research Laboratory, Research Triangle Park


Environmental Assessment Interface  —  625G

    Extramural Funds:    $90,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The goal of this program is to determine, in the case where a single system
or process is being assessed, whether the system/ process is environmentally acceptable or whether further or
more economical control of waste streams is necessary. If further control is considered necessary, the assessment
estimates how much control is needed and what waste stream components are especially important to control. In
cases where comparative assessments are being made of two or more systems or processes, an additional goal may
be to determine which one(s) are environmentally preferable.

    The overall  objective  of  the program is to provide the  Office of Energy,  Minerals and Industry's
Environmental Assessment Program necessary consultation, data, and research information in the development,
use, and interpretation of: (1) decision criteria; (2) impact factors; and (3) bio-assays.


Laboratory Assignment:    Environmental  Research Laboratory, Gulf  Breeze
                          Health Effects  Research Laboratory, Cincinnati
                          Health Effects  Research Laboratory, Research Triangle Park
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                      ENERGY/ENVIRONMENT PROGRAM AREA
                        ENERGY TECHNICAL  SUPPORT SUBPROGRAM
    Technical Support is the assistance in all fields of environmental science that the Office of Research and
Development (ORD) provides to other components of the Agency and in many cases to elements outside of EPA.
ORD provides assistance for the immediate technical needs of the Agency whenever possible by drawing on the
expertise of its research personnel.


Technical  Support—Energy — 626A

    Extramural Funds:    $1,959,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: There are three objectives of the Energy Technical Support program. First,
it  provides  both the  ORD industrial research program and  the  entire 17-agency  Interagency Energy/
Environment research and development program with the type of management information systems and support
necessary for effective operation. Second, it produces quick-response studies under extreme time constraints as
input into major program plan and policy activities. Third, it provides an extensive information transfer function
to assure that the technical information and expertise generated by both the industrial and energy programs are
available in usable form to industrial and energy decision makers and to the interested public.

    Major decisions affecting the future  course of the nation's energy development and industrial pollution
control  efforts are  now, and will continue to be, made by  a wide variety of private, local, state and Federal
organizations. The technical support activity helps to assure that the technical expertise and information the
Office of Energy, Minerals and Industry (OEMI) generates is relevant to these decision makers and is available to
them  in a form which they can use. In addition, the activities sponsored by this program help to bring information
on the status of energy and industrial programs and policies to environmental researchers and research planners
both within  OEMI and in outside organizations. Many of these major energy  and industrial decisions will be
technology-based. Hence, a viable understanding of the various technologies, as they are developing, is necessary
for both the OEMI program manager and the outside decision maker.
Laboratory Assignment:    Office of Energy,  Minerals  and Industry,  Headquarters
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                     INDUSTRIAL PROCESSES  PROGRAM  AREA
    A research program in the Industrial Processes Area is essential for the Agency to meet the requirements of
the Clean Air Act, Water Pollution Control Act and the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act. Through
research in this area, systems are developed and made available to assist industries in achieving compliance with
these  legislative requirements. Information is developed to  assist in the detection, control and  abatement of
pollution from industrial and extractive processes, and land use. Another part of the program is concerned with
identification and economic evaluation of alternate pollution control systems. This research program is comprised
of two subprograms—Minerals Processing and Manufacturing; and Renewable Resources.
       MINERALS PROCESSING AND MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES  SUBPROGRAM

    The Minerals Processing and Manufacturing Industries Subprogram address point sources of pollution
arising from the industrial sector of the economy and is focused on those mining, manufacturing, service and trade
industries which are involved in the extraction, production and processing of materials into consumer products.
In addition, methods to rectify environmental insults resulting from the accidental spill of selected materials are
also included. It is the objective of this research activity to support the technology requirements of the Clean Air
and Water  Pollution Control Acts through the development and demonstration of new or improved technology
having industry-wide applicability, short-term achievability and long-term viability.


Hazardous Material Incidents: (Air) 604A — (Water) 610A

    Extramural Funds:     $1,191,700

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: Hazardous material spills such as pesticides, heavy metals and chlorine are
a recurring problem. Spills can severely impact public water supplies and other water uses through contamination
of surface and groundwaters. Further, spilled volatile and  reactive materials can cause significant public health
and safety  hazards. The objectives of this program are to  develop,  evaluate and demonstrate new or improved
equipment, devices and systems for the prevention,  detection, identification,  containment, control, removal,
cleanup, recovery and disposal of spills or acute releases of hazardous polluting substances. The development of
this hardware is to be carried out beyond the prototype stage to the point where it is ready for field implementation
by the commercial community. Techniques are to be defined for the redevelopment and restoration of ecosystems
that have been biologically damaged as a result of spills. To assess these damages,  the ecological effects and
persistency of high concentration, short duration slugs (non-continuous discharges) of hazardous substances on
the environment are to be determined.
Laboratory  Assignment:    Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory, Cincinnati


Materials Processing: (Air) 604B — (Water) 610B

     Extramural Funds:     $4,425,000

     Accomplishment Plan Summary: The problem area is discrete point sources of air, water and residue
pollution arising from manufacturing and service industries primarily devoted to the processing of chemicals and
other raw materials into intermediate and final products (e.g., petrochemicals, agrichemicals, to include pesticides
and  fertlizers, electroplating and fabricated metal products, textiles, inorganics chemicals, pulp and paper and
food products). Of special concern are toxic chemicals and hazardous pollutant control.
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                      INDUSTRIAL PROCESSES  PROGRAM  AREA
       MINERALS PROCESSING AND MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES  SUBPROGRAM
     The objective of the program is to develop technology necessary to eliminate the discharge/emission of all
pollutants (primarily toxic pollutants) from materials processing industry point sources through the conduct of a
technology research program dedicated to a spectrum of research activities culminating in the demonstration or
assessment of engineering scale technologies. Deliverables are research and development findings which will be
immediately translated into public/private sector use through reports, seminars, and Agency standards.

     All research and development activities  must have industry-wide applicability,  technical and economic
achievability for implementation,  long-term viability, and must serve as a basis for establishing, improving or
implementing required standards. The research can be classified as Open Cycle, Closed Cycle, Toxics Control
Technology and Total Environmental Control. The decision  as to which broad technology option has the highest
priority for ORD focus is unique to each point source category and must (a) result from an assessment of the state-
of-the-art control technology, (b) fit within the framework of the Agency's discharge/emission standards, and (c)
include an evaluation of implementation achievability and viability.
 Laboratory Assignment:   Industrial Environmental  Research Laboratory, Cincinnati
                          Industrial Environmental  Research Laboratory, Research Triangle Park
                          Robert  S. Kerr Environmental Research Laboratory,  Ada


 Materials Production: (Air) 604C — (Water) 610C

     Extramural Funds:    $3,671,400

     Accomplishment Plan Summary: Activities under this program address environmental problems related to
 the iron and  steel, non-ferrous, petroleum refining and general mining (other than fuel  sources) industrial
 segments. These include discrete point sources of air, water and residue pollution resulting from the extraction
 and processing  of raw materials into intermediate products for consumption by the materials processing
 industries. Of special concern are toxic chemicals and hazardous residuals control. The objective of this program
 is to develop technology necessary to eliminate the discharge/emission of all pollutants primarily toxic pollutants
 from materials production industry point  sources through the conduct of a technology research  program
 dedicated to a spectrum of research activities culminating in the demonstration or assessment of engineering scale
 technologies. Deliveriables are research and development findings which will be immediately translated into
 public/private sector use  through reports,  seminars, and  Agency standards. All research and development
 activities must have industry-wide applicability, technical and economic achievability for implementation, long-
 term viability, and must serve as a basis for establishing, improving or implementing required standards. The
 research can be classified as Open Cycle, Closed Cycle, Toxicant Control Technology and Total Environmental
 Control Technology. The decision as to which broad technology option has the highest priority for ORD focus is
 unique to each  point source  category and must result from  an assessment  of  the  anticipated  health and
 environmental impact, as well as state-of-the-art control technology.
 Laboratory Assignment;   Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory, Cincinnati
                          Industrial Environmental Research Laboratory, Research  Triangle Park
                          Robert  S. Kerr Environmental Research  Laboratory,  Ada
40

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                     INDUSTRIAL PROCESSES PROGRAM AREA
       MINERALS PROCESSING AND MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES SUBPROGRAM
Areawide-Combined Industrial Point Sources — 610F

    Extramural Funds:    $ 110,000

    Accomplishment  Plan Summary: The  area of concern includes  all industrial  point sources,  such  as
manufacturing, mining, electric and water service establishments, which seek to manage their pollution on  an
areawide or combined basis with other point sources. The major objective is the development of the means
necessary to eliminate the discharge or emission of pollutants for the areawide or combined point source where
industrial sources are the predominate contributor. Outputs are to include integrated research, development, and
pilot demonstration activities culminating in full scale demonstrations or assessments of engineering scale
technologies. The results of the activities will be ma"de available for public and private sector use by means of
technical reports, seminars, design guidelines, and Agency discharge  regulations and standards. The research
shall be classified as Open Cycle, Closed Cycle, and Total  Environmental Control depending upon whether  an
interim discharge of pollutants is characteristic and whether point source control of air and solid waste problems
are addressed. The research activities must have industry-wide applicability, technical and economic achievability
for implementation, long-term viability, and serve as a basis for establishing, improving, and/or implementing the
required discharge standards of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act (PL 92-500). The water standards
sought, levels of control desired, and implied leadtime requirements for PL 92-500 are: (1) Best available control
technology economically achievable by January 1979; (2) Elimination of the discharge of pollutants by 1984; (3)
Elimination of multi-media pollution discharges—by 1984.
Laboratory Assignment:    Robert S. Kerr Environmental Research Laboratory,  Ada
                                                                                         41

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                     INDUSTRIAL PROCESSES PROGRAM AREA
                           RENEWABLE RESOURCES SUBPROGRAM
    The Renewable Resources Subprogram encompasses the development and evaluation of total management
systems, including Best Management Practices (BMP's) and pollution control predictive  methodologies, to
control pollution from the production and harvesting of food and fiber, and from  their related residual wastes. It
also includes the assessment of probable trends in the production of renewable resources to determine their
resulting environmental and socio-economic impacts, including  crop production on both  irrigated  and
nonirrigated lands, forest management practices and animal production.

    The Pesticides  Renewable Resources Subprogram encompasses the development  and demonstration of
integrated pest management strategies based upon sound biological, environmental and  economic information.
Combinations of nonchemical and chemical controls will  be  optimized to reduce the usage and runoff of
agricultural chemical pesticides.


Irrigated Crop Production — 770A

    Extramural Funds:     $ 1,061,000

    Accomplishment  Plan Summary: The  control of environmental degradation caused  by irrigated crop
production is a multifaceted problem involving technical, legal, economic, and institutional considerations. The
objective of this program is to develop and demonstrate the fundamental technology needed for full scale pollution
control  programs in irrigated areas. This technology includes: canal and  lateral lining and  other structural
controls for  water delivery systems; methods to minimize water use; increased water use efficiency; control of
nutrient losses; salinity  control; sediment control; reduced leaching losses; control of pesticide transport in
irrigated systems; and consideration of treatment systems. The evaluation of the legal, economic,  and institutional
constraints to water management reform and technology changes is required. Development and confirmation of
mathematical  techniques for simulating and predicting pollutant movement, based  on physical chemical-
biological  processes occurring in  irrigated soil systems are required to assess the effects  of on-farm water
management practices on the water quality of receiving streams. The mathematical models will be useful in
developing technically  sound alternative pollution control management schemes for  irrigated  systems.  The
outputs will  be used by Federal, state and local planning and pollution control agencies  for the assessment and
control of pollutants resulting from irrigated crop production activities.
Laboratory Assignment:    Robert S.  Kerr Environmental  Research Laboratory, Ada


Non-Irrigated Crop Production — 770B

    Extramural Funds:     $804,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: Emphasis in the non-irrigated crop production area is to be directed to: (1)
providing tools, including appropriate predictive methods and models, for State  and local planner/decision
makers to determine  the probable environmental  loadings of the major agricultural pollutants,  including
pesticides, sediment, and  plant nutrients; (2) techniques for identification,  evaluation, ranking and selection of
candidate best management practices (BMPs) that minimize agricultural pollution; and (3) developing, evaluating
and demonstrating implementation strategies for candidate BMPs. These tools are to be compiled in appropriate
format, e.g.,  as guidance material and user manuals  for  the  environmental  planner/decision maker,  for
distribution as soon as possible after they have been  prepared. Expertise of the U.S. Department of Agriculture
(USDA) and other agencies, where appropriate, is to be used in developing and evaluating the tools and they
should be encouraged to use and distribute the tools at the local levels.
 42

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                     INDUSTRIAL PROCESSES  PROGRAM  AREA
                           RENEWABLE RESOURCES SUBPROGRAM
Also,  we should collaborate with USDA on ;^;«.:L i---.!-•- -,   -iere ^propriate, to take advantage of their
research on cropping practices and conservation methods so that EPA can better determine the optimal means to
achieve environmental quality goals.
Laboratory Assignment:    Environmental Research Laboratory, Athens


Forest Management — 770C

    Extramural Funds:    $315,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The focus in this area is on the assessment, development and evaluation of
management methods and  planning tools that can be used to mitigate adverse environmental impacts of forest
management activities. Assessment methodologies include predictive modeling and decision protocols that relate
forest management practices to environmental quality, and non-point source control strategies to total forest and
watershed resource management, including, desirably, the socio-economic aspects. Pollution control management
methods include  cost-effective structural (i.e., engineering technologies)  and non-structural (e.g., land use
practices) approaches that are demonstrative of the "best management practices" needed to satisfy the 1983 water
quality goals. This information is needed by state and local planners/decision makers to carry out the areawide
waste management responsibilities under Section 208 of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act (PL 92-500).

    This program will continue developing guidelines and assessment tools for evaluating candidate forestry best
management practices. In the outyears the program will be oriented toward validating, and in conjunction with
the U.S. Forest Service (USFS), demonstrating the application of pollutant loading and watershed scale models.
Later emphasis will be on the transfer of technologies to land managers and planning agencies. Because of its dual
role as user and  producer of research, the USFS will be relied on to conduct relevant research,  including
evaluation and/or demonstration of candidate best management practices.


Laboratory Assignment:    Environmental Research Laboratory, Athens


Animal Production — 770D

    Extramural Funds:     $600,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary:  Animal  wastes  originating  from  livestock and  poultry production
operations continue to be a major environmental problem confronting the Agency. It is necessary to provide the
management methods and technology to handle manures in the most environmentally safe manner. Currently the
most economically feasible  way of managing the wastes from the majority of animal production units is by means
of land application, i.e., using the manures as fertilizer for crop production. Application of agronomic rates may
not be feasible in areas with limited land availability where there are large concentrations of animals or where
restricted by climate or hydrologic conditions.
Therefore, a wide range of application  techniques must be  evaluated and guidelines suggested for all animal
production regions of the Nation. Continued animal production in areas where land application is not feasible
                                                                                          43

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                     INDUSTRIAL PROCESSES  PROGRAM AREA
                           RENEWABLE RESOURCES SUBPROGRAM
may be  dependent upon alternative reuse/recycle/treatment methods. These systems will be evaluated, their
residual waste streams characterized, and ultimate disposal schemes proposed. The majority of animals in the
Nation are produced under non-feedlot conditions and therefore represent a distinctive nonpoint pollution source.
Pollution potentials of these operations must be evaluated and control/management systems must be developed.


Laboratory Assignment:   Robert  S. Kerr  Environmental Research Laboratory, Ada


Environmental Impact Assessment of Renewable Resource Production Trends — 770F

     Extramural Funds:    $235,000

     Accomplishment Plan Summary: The Agency  and ORD's overall goal  is to determine and assess the
environmental implications and impacts of the efforts in this country to increase production of food and fiber
created  by a growing  world  population  and food  crisis  and  evaluate alternate methods to minimize the
environmental impact of these efforts. In the near term increased production will  probably be achieved using
current  farming and forestry practices on existing and additional land areas, much of it marginal and sub-
marginal,  through greater application of  plant nutrients,  pesticides and water. In future years unique  and
innovated cultural practices are likely to emerge. The research objectives, then, are (1) to develop the capacity to
identify, assess and predict the short  term and long range environmental implications and impacts of existing and
emerging techniques for increasing production of renewable resources at the local, regional and national levels,
and  (2)  to develop methods to identify and investigate alternate cost-effective technology,  management  and
institutional approaches,  including  socio-economic aspects, needed to minimize  the environmental impacts
resulting from increased food and fiber  production.  The trend assessment methodology must  incorporate the
impliactions of natural resources utilization and conservation, particularly energy sources, and be able to react to
national and international political decisions impacting the changes in food and fiber production. The information
generated  will be used to permit timely  and cost-effective response to environmental threats and identify
environmental policy issues for EPA.


Laboratory Assignment:  Robert S.  Kerr Environmental Research Laboratory,  Ada


Integrated Pest Management — 77 IE

     Extramural Funds:   $1,200,000

     Accomplishment Plan Summary: The  objective of this program is  to develop optimized pest control
strategies based upon detailed biological knowledge of the  interactions between pests and crops which  can be
demonstrated to be economically acceptable  to the agricultural community. The research will identify optimal
combinations of non-chemical and chemical pest controls to reduce the environmental loading of undesirable
chemicals. The program provides for the development of applicable pest control strategies and tactics for major
pesticides using  crop ecosystems which may permit marked reduction in dependence on use of pesticide chemcials
as a regular agricultural  pest management practice.
44

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                     INDUSTRIAL PROCESSES  PROGRAM AREA
                           RENEWABLE RESOURCES SUBPROGRAM
    The major near term control strategy development effort will continue through interagency agreements or
through regional grants let to a major grantee with several other subgrantees. After fiscal year 1978, program
emphasis will shift toward integrated plant/insect pest control. Urban pest integrated pest management strategies
research will be continued to meet the increasing Office of Pesticide Programs emphasis on the need. Research on
insect pathogen controls and insect growth regulators will be reduced from present levels. Utility of research
results by the user community will receive additional attention. The program will continue to be coordinated with
other agencies. Operation of the research will continue to be on an extramural basis. This effort will comply with
Section 20(a) and Section 4 (c) of the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act (PL 92-516).
Laboratory Assignment:   Office of Health and Ecological Effects, Headquarters
                                                                                          45

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                   PUBLIC  SECTOR  ACTIVITIES  PROGRAM AREA
    This area contains many subprograms that are fundamental to EPA's responsibilities. These subprograms
have been combined inio a single program area, Public Sector Activities, because they are inter-related and
therefore require similar personnel skills and equipment development. This research program focuses on pollution
problems  resulting  from  community,  residential or  other  non-industrial  activities;  health effects  from
contaminated drinking water supplies; water treatment systems management; ground water management; and
land use management studies. This program has three components — Waste Management, Water Supply, and
Environmental Management.

                                     WASTE  MANAGEMENT

    The Waste Management Subprogram provides technical information to support the Agency's operating
programs  in construction  grants, comprehensive  planning and solid and  hazardous  waste  management. It
includes research, development and demonstration in the areas of municipal and other non-industrial wastewater,
land surface runoff and municipal solid waste.


Urban Runoff Pollution Control — 611A

     Extramural Funds:     $ 1,241,000

     Accomplishment Plan Summary:  The immediate technical approach will continue to concentrate on
completing and reporting on ongoing projects as quickly as possible. Of particular note is taking advantage of the
opportunity to  reevaluate  some of  the "historical" projects and impose current program direction on  them
resulting in a more practical project output than would otherwise have been obtained. That is, some of these
projects have had a head start on the technology and can accordingly satisfy current program objectives in a more
timely and less costly manner than would otherwise be accomplished through new starts. Overall, the program
will concentrate on a more accurate assessment  of  the pollution impact of combined sewer overflows and
stormwater discharges. Along with  this will be a more concerted effort toward development of non-structural
technology to enable the  establishment of cost and  performance standards and specifications relating to specific
best management practices.
Laboratory Assignment:    Municipal Environmental Research Laboratory, Cincinnati


Wastewater Treatment Technology Program — 61 IB

     Extramural Funds:     $4,375,000

     Accomplishment Plan Summary: Goals of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act (PL 92-500) require
conventional and innovative processes to meet municipal effluent limitations of increasing efficiency as the 1985
no discharge goal  is approached.  To ease the socio-economic burden of implementing these goals, existing
equipment must be upgraded, new cost effective technologies developed and energy and capital outlays reduced.
Where possible, nonstructural types of treatment enhancement will be evaluated. A major and increasing area of
concern is the environmental pollution by toxic metals and synthetic organic chemicals. One of the goals of this
program is to produce information on the source of toxic pollutants, on the treatability by conventional and/or
innovative technology and to provide cost analyses to enable the selection of the most cost-effective approach to
preventing their dispersion. The goal of research in the sludge processing area is to develop and demonstrate the
most cost effective technology for processing wastewater sludge in an ecologically satisfactory manner so that the
 46

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                   PUBLIC SECTOR ACTIVITIES  PROGRAM AREA
                             WASTE MANAGEMENT SUBPROGRAM
developed technology can impact design of plants being designed by 1980. The current energy situation makes it
imperative that fuel consumption in sludge disposal be reduced and technologies developed for utilizing sludge for
fuel and other beneficial purposes. The major goal of the reuse program is to verify and demonstrate  the
practicability of reusing municipal  wastewater. Emphasis at this time is on direct and indirect reuse for domestic
purposes.  The goals to improve efficiency, reliability, cost effectiveness  and to reduce energy sensitivity in
municipal wastewater treatment are supported by research to improve operations and maintenance practices, to
develop novel  methods and materials for cost effective construction,  to develop novel methods  for energy
conservation, and to develop instrumentation and central strategies for automation of wastewater treatment
systems. Developments in these areas provide the cost-effectiveness and effluent quality assurance needed for
effective water pollution control. In accordance with Section 104(q)(l) of PL 92-500, the research activities in
small flows seek to conceive, study and demonstrate new and  improved methods for abating pollution in rural
areas. The overall approach is subdivided into four  categories, i.e., onsite systems, collection methods, septage
management, and rural treatment systems. The final result of these efforts will be practical handbooks or manuals
addressing the  costs,  performance,  operation  and  maintenance requirement, design  considerations  and
environmental impact of alternative technologies studies.
Laboratory  Assignment:   Municipal Environmental Research Laboratory, Cincinnati


Application of Wastewater to Land (Soil Treatment Systems) — 611C

     Extramural Funds:     $596,000

     Accomplishment Plan Summary: The scope of this program includes the development and field evaluation of
new or improved control technology for the effective and economical treatment of municipal wastewater effluents
through the use of the soil as a treatment medium and the application of aquaculture techniques utilizing fish and
plant culture. Primary effort are to be directed to develop technologies for removal of nutrients, organic materials,
and microorganisms. The potential for beneficial uses such as crop irrigation, animal grazing, fish production, soil
conditioning, etc., and their compatibility with the basic treatment systems are to be evaluated. Definition of the
technological factors for design, construction and operation of land application and agriculture systems must be
produced.  Treatment  capability, health  factors,  groundwater  protection,  loading  factors,  potential for
instrumentation and automation must be defined. Development  and evaluation of alternative cost-effective
processes with firmly established dependability must be considered as alternatives for a broad spectrum of plant
sizes, flow rates, feed characteristics, and climatic zones.

     In this program the soil treatment area is considered divided into two technology subprogram areas: (1) Soil
treatment systems—effluent treatment, and (2) Aquaculture application to wastewater treatment. The ultimate
objective of this soil treatment program is the publication  and wide distribution of useful planning and design
manuals with adequate operation and maintenance backup taking into consideration all of the interacting factors,
e.g., soils, groundwater, chemical/biological systems, climate, facility design, cropping, socio-political-economic-
legal, and health effects, as a total treatment system.
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                   PUBLIC  SECTOR ACTIVITIES PROGRAM  AREA
                            WASTE MANAGEMENT SUBPROGRAM
    Periodically, interim planning and design manuals should be published. The timing will be a function of the
generation of new design data which will prove useful to the designer. As definitive specialized projects are
completed,  e.g., phosphorus model, effect of climate on  design, etc., these projects should be published for
distribution as technical reports. Concise design sections should then be melded into the planning and design
manual.
Laboratory Assignment:   Robert S. Kerr Environmental Research Laboratory, Ada


Alaska  Village Demonstration Projects — 61 ID

    Extramural Funds:    $222,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The objective of this program is to demonstrate methods to provide central
community facilities for safe water and elimination or control of pollution in those native villages of Alaska
lacking such facilities. The primary objective during fiscal year 1978 will be to complete the evaluation of the
project at Wainwright with a final report fully documenting the results to be completed by October 1978. This
report is to be prepared as a formal EPA Report to Congress.


Laboratory Assignment:   Environmental Research Laboratory,  Corvallis


Health Effects Interpretive Studies Associated With Land Application of Sludges — 61 IE

    Extramural Funds:    $200,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: Conduct projects which will interpret the existing data base to provide
guidance to Agency policy  makers in support of the Municipal Sludge Management Program.


Laboratory Assignment:   Health Effects Research Laboratory,  Cincinnati


Land Application Site  Monitoring — 611F

    Extramural Funds:    $150,000

    Accomplishemnt Plan Summary: Conduct an assessment of literature to provide interim guidance to
administrative (Federal, State and local) personnel on sludge-disposal-site-monitoring practices in accordance
with the  requirements of  the "Proposed Technical Bulletin: Municipal Sludge  Management: Environmental
Factors," MCD-23.


Laboratory Assignment:   Municipal Environmental Research Laboratory,  Cincinnati
48

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                   PUBLIC  SECTOR ACTIVITIES PROGRAM AREA
                            WASTE MANAGEMENT SUBPROGRAM
Technology Transfer Support of Municipal Sludge Management — 611G

    Extramural Funds:    $60,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: In support of research and development in municipal sludge management,
disseminate state-of-the-art reports of innovative technology in at least the areas of processing, stabilization, and
land spreading concentrating especially on those technological  advances (foreign and domestic) that have not
been evaluated in the Municipal Environmental Research Laboratory program.

                                                *
Laboratory Assignment:   Environmental Research Information Center, Cincinnati


Solid and Hazardous Waste Management — 618A

    Extramural Funds:    $6,705,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: Develop, through studies, research and demonstrations, the technologies
necessary  to  achieve  environmentally acceptable  cost  effective solid and hazardous waste  management
(generation through disposal) in which conservation and recovery of resources are prime considerations. Included
in the objectives are: (1) development of new and improved methodology and/or equipment to identify and/or
eliminate effects from waste disposal due to the release into the environment of materials present in solid and
hazardous waste which would be adverse  to the public health and welfare; (2) to evaluate, develop,  and
demonstrate new or improved methods for the reduction, separation, processing and recovery of resources,
including energy; and (3) to establish a technical basis to support the Agency's efforts in developing guidelines and
regulations for solid and hazardous waste  management and  the implementation  of these guidelines  and
regulations by state and local governments and to the private sector.

    The fiscal year  1978  program will focus efforts to: (1) improve methods for landfilling of solid waste, (2)
alternative methods  of waste disposal; (3) remedial  action for minimizing the environmental impact  of land
disposal sites; (4) methods for processing or treating  hazardous materials, and (5) recovery and reuse of waste
materials.


Laboratory Assignment:   Municipal  Environmental Research Laboratory, Cincinnati
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                   PUBLIC SECTOR ACTIVITIES  PROGRAM  AREA
                                 WATER SUPPLY  SUBPROGRAM
    The Water Supply Subprogram includes research, development and demonstration activities relating to the
provision of a dependably safe supply of drinking water and to the health effects resulting directly or indirectly
from contaminants in drinking water. The research activities provide the technical information for the Agency's
Water Supply Program which is conducted under the Safe Drinking Water Act (PL 92-523). 92-523).


Water Supply—Water Treatment and Systems — 614A

    Extramural Funds:     $4,901,000

    Accomplishment  Plan Summary: The ultimate objective of this program is to develop new or improved
technology for the effective and economical control of drinking water contaminants during storage, treatment and
distribution. Program efforts will be directed  toward evaluating  technologies for limiting  potentially  toxic
contaminants and infectious agents so that the municipal sector will be able to achieve compliance with present
and future primary drinking water standards. Improved  methods of operating water supply facilities will be
developed and evaluated, including development of indicator parameters for monitoring the efficacy of treatment.
Specific attention will be given to the need of small water systems for innovative treatment methods.


Laboratory Assignment:    Municipal Environmental Research Laboratory,  Cincinnati


Water Supply  Health Effects Research  — 614B

    Extramural Funds:    $4,475,000

    Accomplishment  Plan Summary: Determine the nature and  concentrations of organic, inorganic, and
microbiological contaminants in water supplies. Evaluate through literature searches and short and long-term
toxicological and epidemiological studies, the health effects of drinking water contaminants. Derive concentration
limits necessary for the protection of the public health. Specific  objectives will be to: (1) Develop the scientific
basis for establishing, evaluating, and revising drinking water standards for organics. The most important work is
on trihalomethanes, other disinfectant by-products, and concentrates from finished water. Other compounds are
low priority, and work on any other individual organic compounds should be limited; (2) Develop the scientific
bases for  establishing, evaluating, and  revising drinking water standards for inorganics;  (3) Determine the
occurrence and effects  of microbiological contaminants in water supplies. These studies should include surveys for
the occurrence of viruses and other pathogenic  organisms, determinations of what diseases are  or  may be
transmitted by drinking water and conditions which allow this to occur. The emphasis should begin reorienting
from viruses toward other pathogens. Giardia is high priority; (4) Evaluate the potential health hazards associated
with water reuse  for domestic  purposes. Determine  the organic, inorganic and  microbiological contaminants
present in the  effluent of an advanced waste treatment plant;  and (5) Determine through toxicological  and
epidemiological studies the health effects of asbestos fibers of the type found in water supplies.

Laboratory Assignment:    Health Effects Research Laboratory,  Cincinnati
 50

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                   PUBLIC SECTOR ACTIVITIES  PROGRAM  AREA
                                WATER SUPPLY SUBPROGRAM
Water Supply—Ground Water Management — 614C

    Extramural Funds:    $1,030,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: Although there  is a need for a comprehensive national groundwater
research program, to carry out one effectively would require significantly more resources both within EPA and
elsewhere than are currently available or likely to be available in the near future. Therefore, this program should,
as soon as possible, shift away from attempting to carry out a comprehensive groundwater research program.
Rather, the program should concentrate on developing an overall groundwater strategy,  which identifies the
research which is of most significance to the Agency and which can be carried out with current and anticipated
resources. At this time, we believe this means the program should direct its efforts towards providing a core of
knowledge and expertise on groundwater quality which  can provide technical advice and assistance to Agency
programs through: (1) activities, including research, which assure a balanced staff capability which is continually
abreast of all significant advances and on-going research on groundwater quality, (2) maintenance of continual
assessment of current groundwater knowledge and technology, (3) dissemination of current technical information
on a timely basis to Agency operating staff and other appropriate users, (4) identification of gaps in groundwater
research and (4) selected short-term applied research studies to fill the gaps of most significance to the Agency.
Laboratory Assignment:   Robert S. Kerr Environmental Research Laboratory,  Ada


Water Supply Identification and Measurement — 614D

    Extramural Funds:    $770,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: This Accomplishment Plan is part of an integrated program to develop
techniques for identification and measurement of chemical constituents in water and soil.


Laboratory Assignment:   Environmental Research Laboratory, Athens


Water Supply—Identification and Measurement — 614E

    Extramural Funds:    $200,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The Safe Drinking Water Act (PL 93-523), part 141, requires validation
and standardization of measurement methodology to determine compliance with maximum contaminant levels.
In the area of water supply, chlorination for purposes of disinfection has been shown to be capable of producing
toxic  chlorinated hydrocarbons during the treatment process. Thus other means of disinfection, i.e., ozonation,
have  been  suggested as alternate methods. Such  techniques  require the development and application of
instrumentation for the accurate measurement of these materials.


Laboratory Assignment:   Environmental Monitoring and Support Laboratory,  Cincinnati
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                   PUBLIC  SECTOR ACTIVITIES  PROGRAM AREA
                      ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT SUBPROGRAM
    The Environmental Management Subprogram focuses on the development of improved procedures for
planning, implementing, enforcing, and assessing cost-effective environmental protection strategies for particular
problem areas (air, water, etc.)- One current objective is the development of a comprehensive planning procedure
to permit integration of all environmental programs in an efficient manner, utilizing land use management as the
basic integrating mechanism.


Environmental Management — 619A

    Extramural Funds:    $ 1,230,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The objective of this program is the development of a set of procedures and
methods that can be used by environmental planning and management organizations to  determine least-cost
strategies and to evaluate their effects (physical, economic, administrative, social) when implemented. The intent
of this objective  is  to develop a capability to evaluate a wide range of technological options (including  non-
structural methods) for environmental quality management, as well as consideration of alterntive incentives,  both
positive  and negative, for  implementation.  Emphasis  is on  comprehensive and integrated  (intermedia)
management. The focus of the research program is on the region (metropolitan area, river basin, air shed,
economic region), the level at which most environmental strategies are applied. Since the research products are
intended primarily  for decision-making by  users in the field (state, regional, local agencies), many are  in a
handbook format.

    In  fiscal year  1978 two major initiatives will be  undertaken. As  a  logical  extension of the Regional
Environmental Management Handbook and  the Areawide Assessment  Prcedures  Manual, research will be
initiated to develop an Environmental Systems Analysis Program. A companion effort to determine the feasibility
of evaluating these previous environmental  management program outputs  among other  methods,  will be
undertaken in an Environmental Systems Analysis Region. The other new initiative will be a program, jointly
funded by the Council on Environmental Quality, to operationally develop new  incentives (concentrating initially
on economic incentives) for environmental management.
Laboratory Assignment:   Municipal Environmental  Research Laboratory,  Cincinnati
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          MONITORING AND TECHNICAL SUPPORT PROGRAM AREA
    This program includes both direct research activities and direct assistance and support to the rest of the
Agency. It focuses on the development of reference or standardized environmental measurement and monitoring
equipment, techniques and systems; quality assurance programs including validation of analytical procedures,
sampling techniques, and  methods to improve the quality of environmental  monitoring  data; provision of
technical services to the Agency involving specialized expertise and facilities available in the Office of Research
and Development; and a technical information dissemination program. The components of this program are the
Measurement  Techniques  and  Equipment  Standardization,  Characterization and  Measurement Methods
Development, Quality Assurance, and Technical Support.
   MEASUREMENT  TECHNIQUES AND EQUIPMENT STANDARDIZATION SUBPROGRAM

    Measurement  Techniques  and  Equipment  Standardization involves  development,  evaluation  and
demonstration of field and laboratory measurement and monitoring methods and instrumentation. The objective
of the program is to develop, test and evaluate equipment and methods that are applicable to measuring pollutants
at the lowest environmentally significant ambient concentration as well as measuring the higher concentrations
that occur at pollutant sources. Highest priority is given to developing methods to measure those pollutants that
are presently regulated as well as those where regulations are anticipated. Over the long term, this program will
develop, test and evaluate comprehensive methods and techniques for measuring pollutants in air and water as
well as multi-media systems employing remote environmental monitoring techniques.


Monitoring Systems Development for Operation Applications — 620A

    Extramural Funds:     $317,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The basic objective of this effort is to develop cost-effective and efficient
monitoring systems and techniques which will provide the information required by EPA in meeting its regulatory
and enforcement roles under present and anticipated legislative mandates. This information will be obtained by
application of improved and rapid monitoring techniques and approaches which will permit accurate assessments
of the state of the environment so that timely decisions can be made regarding the presence and effects of regulated
and nonregulated pollutants in  the environment including toxic substances, carcinogens, and trace  metals.
Program emphasis will  be on developing and demonstrating air and water quality measurement methodologies
and systems, remote sensing techniques and instrumentation, monitoring network optimization guidelines and a
system approach to environmental monitoring. Development of monitoring systems  will include the design,
fabrication and evaluation of advanced air and water contact remote monitoring instrumentation for detecting
and quantifying environmental  pollutants in  these media. Emphasis  will be on  water  quality monitoring
procedures and systems for determining the contribution of various nonpoint pollutant sources to surface waters
including agriculture, feedlots, silviculture and energy development related activities. The development of remote
sensing techniques and systems will include developing,  adapting, and evaluating remote sensing instrumentation
for monitoring specific pollutants by their unique interaction with ambient or pulsed light.
                                                                                          53

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         MONITORING AND  TECHNICAL SUPPORT PROGRAM AREA
   MEASUREMENT TECHNIQUES AND EQUIPMENT STANDARDIZATION SUBPROGRAM
    The development of optimization techniques and systematic approaches will permit clear identification and
quantitative definition of the relationships between pollutant sources, their environmental pathways, and
exposure to dose-response relationships of the critical receptor(s), i.e., population(s) at risk. These approaches
include adaptation and refinement of available and state-of-the-art monitoring instrumentation and technology
such as modeling concepts, biological methods, and the development of integrated (multimedia) monitoring
concepts.


Laboratory Assignment:    Environmental Monitoring  and Support Laboratory,  Las Vegas
  54

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          MONITORING AND TECHNICAL SUPPORT PROGRAM AREA
  CHARACTERIZATION AND MEASUREMENT METHODS  DEVELOPMENT SUBPROGRAM
    This subprogram focuses on providing approaches and measurement instrumentation for all pollutants
(pesticides, toxic substances, industrial chemicals, petrochemicals, combustion products, etc.) in the air and in
groundwater and surface waters. This program includes basic physical and chemical parameters of pollutants and
the development and/or adaptation of instruments for detecting and quantifying pollutants.


Characterization and Measurement Methods Development — 712B

    Extramural Funds:    $3,306,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The air pollutant characterization and measurement effort is designed to
respond to the needs associated with the detailed description of the composition and level of air contaminants.
This level of detail is necessary to elucidate parameters such as: chemical and physical interference, environmental
constraints, and end-use requirements. The output of this program is new and/of improved methodology and
instrumentation  technology which  will be utilized for stationary source, mobile source, and  ambient air
requirements that will support the development and maintenance of Agency air quality goals.

    The outputs of this activity are requisite to the achievement of sub-objectives associated with the generation
of air contaminants, their transport, transformation, decay, and ultimatic sinks. This technology is basic for the
determination of atmospheric effects, atmospheric chemical and physical  processes and the development and
evaluation of air quality simulation modeling.

Laboratory Assignment:   Environmental  Sciences Research Laboratory, Research Triangle Park


New and Improved Techniques for Identification and Measurement of Chemical Constituents
of Water and Soils — 713B

    Extramural Funds:    $50,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: This Accomplishment Plan responds  to the major need for development of
techniques  for identification and measurement of chemical constituents in water and soil. Techniques should
identify and measure chemicals representative of all classes of organic and inorganic substances, determining the
elemental species of inorganic substances as well as identifying the  elements. Standardized methodology is not
developed; rather the fundamental techniques that ultimately go into standardized methods are evaluated for their
applicability to the analysis of water, soils and commercial chemicals. Practically all outputs from this research
will be used by Regional and State laboratories in compliance monitoring, enforcing regulations and investigating
pollution incidents; by researchers in studying health and ecological effects, developing treatment technology,
determining mechanisms of fate and transport and further developing the techniques for standardization; by
industrial laboratories in self-monitoring and in new-product analysis for trace impurities and by Headquarters
Offices who use the distribution of pollutants identified in setting priorities for regulation.


Laboratory Assignment:   Environmental  Research Laboratory,  Athens
                                                                                         55

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         MONITORING AND TECHNICAL SUPPORT PROGRAM  AREA
  CHARACTERIZATION AND MEASUREMENT METHODS DEVELOPMENT SUBPROGRAM
Methodology for Concentration, Recovery, and Associated Solids — 713C

    Extramural Funds:    $200,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The objective of this program is to develop procedures for the detection
and quantification of  viruses in water and  associated media.  Rapid efficient field methods are sought for
recovering viruses in a concentrated form ready for shipment to a central laboratory for assay.  Identification
procedures and more sensitive cell lines will also be sought. The methods and procedures developed should allow
studies in health effects and transport and fate and monitoring activities to be conducted rapidly and effectively.


Laboratory Assignment:   Environmental Monitoring and Support Laboratory,  Cincinnati
56

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          MONITORING AND TECHNICAL SUPPORT  PROGRAM  AREA
                             QUALITY ASSURANCE SUBPROGRAM
    Quality Assurance serves  all environmental  monitoring requirements of the  Agency. Regulations  and
standards promulgated by the Agency require frequent and/or routine monitoring of ambient air, ambient water,
marine waters, waste water discharges, public water supplies, emissions from stationary and mobile air pollution
sources, lead and phosphorus in  gasoline and special categories of toxic and hazardous materials. With few
exceptions, monitoring of pollutants in these categories require use of standardized measurement methodology, as
well as quality control procedures to assure  the validity of the resulting data. This subprogram focuses on
standardizing methods, providing standard reference materials and samples, developing quality control guidelines
and manuals, conducting on-site evaluatio of analytical laboratories and inter-laboratory performance checks to
assure that legally defensible data is produced by EPA laboratories. Additionally, this work includes studies of
methods for laboratory accreditation, studies on automating laboratory instruments and data reduction  and
participation in regional quality control activities.


Quality Assurance — 621A

    Extramural Funds:     $65,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The objective of an air monitoring quality assurance research program is to
develop and deliver tools and services to the air pollution monitoring community  which will  assure that air
pollution monitoring data, both from the ambient air and from source emissions, are of known quality. Emphasis
in the program shall be given to: (1) The development, validation, and standardization  of reference and equivalent
methods required for supporting regulatory standards, e.g., National Primary and Secondary Ambient  Air
Quality Standards, Standards of Performance for New Stationary Sources, and National Emission Standards for
Hazardous Air Pollutants and methods needed to obtain data to  develop new standards under these regulations.
(2)  The determination  of the performance  of agencies  and programs collecting air monitoring data used in
determining compliance with the above standards, or data  having the potential to  be used in the regulatory
process. (3) Provision of technical assistance.


Laboratory  Assignment:    Environmental  Monitoring and Support Laboratory,   Research Triangle Park


Quality Assurance — 621A

    Extramural Funds:     $1,336,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The objective of the  water quality and water supply quality assurance
program is to develop and deliver to the customer programs those quality assurance tools and services which are
necessary  for making measurements under  conditions  which document the  validity of the data generated.
Documented validity of the data is of highest priority to customer programs in making reliable, unchallengeable
decisions.
                                                                                          57

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          MONITORING AND  TECHNICAL  SUPPORT PROGRAM AREA
                             QUALITY ASSURANCE SUBPROGRAM
    Emphasis shall be given to develop and deliver those reference methods, reference materials, and quality
control procedures and guidelines which are required to support the Office of Water and Hazardous Materials,
Office of Water Supply, Office of Water Planning and Standards, Office of Pesticides Programs, and the Office of
Toxic Substances  in developing or amending priority  regulations such as the imminent regulations for toxic
substances included in the list of substances included in the list of 65 categories of pollutants in the  1976 toxic
water pollutant consent decree settlement agreement.
Laboratory Assignment:    Environmental Monitoring and  Support Laboratory,  Cincinnati


Development and Operation of a Total Quality Assurance  Program for Pesticide Residue
Measurements — 621B

    Extramural Funds:     $95,000

    Accomplishment Plan  Summary: The objective of this  program is to provide a total quality assurance
program for pesticide residue measurements in biological materials such as blood, urine, adipose tissue, milk, soils
and other substrates as required for the implementation of the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide
Act (PL 92-56) and in human health effects studies related to toxic chemicals. It is of vital importance that all
EPA pesticide laboratories in any given network maintain a rigid analytical quality control program to guarantee
accurate and precise sample analyses.  The reputation and testimony of laboratory  personnel involved with
pesticide analyses may  be evaluated on the strength of the  quality  assurance program. To maintain  such  a
program requires: (1) periodic interlab check samples; (2) provision of bulk samples  of appropriate substrates
suitable for use in intra  quality  control programs; (3) distribution of standardized materials important to
successful analysis of pesticide residues; (4) provision of methodology which has been standardized through
collaborative studies; (5)  provision of consultation and instrumental analytical backup for unusually difficult
problems; and (6) provision of training for laboratory personnel.


Laboratory Assignment:   Health  Effects  Research Laboratory,  Research Triangle Park
 58

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          MONITORING AND TECHNICAL SUPPORT  PROGRAM AREA
                             TECHNICAL  SUPPORT SUBPROGRAM
    Technical  Support covers the scientific  and technical  services provided to  the  Agency and  other
organizations to solve immediate environmental problems through the use of the expertise of ORD personnel and
specialized ORD  facilities. Our effort in this area assures coordinated response to emergency or short  term
requirements as well as provision, on a more routine basis, of services for which ORD has a unique or particularly
cost effective capability. Examples of these services include conducting trace element analyses of National Air
Sampling  Network samples, analyses of the Fuels Surveillance Network samples, and the maintenance of a
capability to conduct aerial surveillance and monitoring as well as capability to assess point and non-point sources
of pollution from aerial photographs.

    Also included in the Technical Support Subprogram is the Minority Institutions Research Support program
(MIRS). This activitiy stimulates  minority institutions to develop the  capability to  conduct environmental
research. Minority institutions that have or can develop the capability to conduct effective environmental research
are actively sought, advised on preparation of grant applications and encouraged to submit them.

    This  subprogram was established in fiscal year 1976 and is responsible for managing and coordinating the
effective dissemination and transfer of the findings and products of the research and development program to a
variety of dependent users both within the Agency and throughout the public and private sectors. The program
involves the entire range of general scientific and technical information dissemination activities including such
normal  activities as the publication and general distribution of scientific and technical reports and responding to
requests for specific information or publications. Primary emphasis, however, is placed on an aggressive program
of active information dissemination. This aspect of the program utilizes proven marketing techniques in matching
available information or technology with the expressed needs of particular user groups such as local community
decision officials who frequently do not possess technical or scientific backgrounds. Appropriate information
transfer products  are then developed in a form designed to be most  useful and readily understandable to the
targeted user.


Technical Support  (Water  Quality)  — 613A
Technical Support  (Interdisciplinary) — 622A

    Extramural Funds:    $608,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The  objective of the Water  Quality and Interdisciplinary Technical
Support Programs is to provide support to Agency operating programs to enable them to fulfill the objectives of
the Agency's mandates. Technical support is defined as the application of knowledge in  the current state-of-the-
art or knowledge derivable from  it to solve, or to assist  in solving,  the immediate problems of the Agency.
Technical Support services typically fall into the following categories: (1) Responding to scheduled, unscheduled
and emergency requirements for field, analytical, and data analysis support to produce data of known quality
through specialized field and analytical studies, organizing this data into summaries and providing interpretive
reports;  (2)  Adapting  and modifying basic  state-of-the-art  techniques  to  gather  empirical  evidence  of
environmental levels of specified or suspected pollutants; (3) Performing complex chemical and physical analyses;
(4) Testifying as expert witnesses at administrative and judicial procedings; and (5) Consultations.
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          MONITORING  AND  TECHNICAL  SUPPORT  PROGRAM  AREA
                             TECHNICAL  SUPPORT SUBPROGRAM
    Although ORD is only one of many organizations providing technical support service to operating programs,
it is unique in that it has the broadest spectrum of technical expertise and scientific equipment readily available
within the Agency. Since ORD's technical support capability is basically derived from its research activities, it is a
management objective that  the ORD personnel dedicated to technical support services and those engaged in
research  activities work side-by-side in ORD  laboratories to  ensure awareness of the latest state-of-the-art
knowledge among all technical personnel.
Laboratory Assignment:    Environmental Monitoring and Support Laboratory,  Las Vegas
                          Environmental Monitoring and Support Laboratory,  Cincinnati


Minority Institutions Research Support Program — 622B

    Extramural Funds:     $530,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The objectives of the Minority Institutions Research Support Program are:
(1) To identify existing and potential environmental research capability within minority institutions and assist
these  institutions  in  utilizing this capability  to  participate in  EPA research  activities; (2) To help minority
institutions become more competitive with other institutions for research funds; (3) To award research grants or
contracts to minority institutions in a manner that will support the research objectives of the Agency; and (4) To
promote good working relationships between the Agency and participating institutions.


Laboratory Assignment:    Office  of Monitoring and Technical Support,  Headquarters


Technical Information Program — 622C

    Extramural Funds:     $1,990,000

    Accomplishment Plan Summary: The principal objective of the Environmental Research Information Center
(ERIC) is to implement  a comprehensive national  program for the  effective dissemination and transfer of
environmentally related scientific/technical information and technology. The basic mission of the program is to
assure that all scientific and technical personnel have ready access to essential information and data required to
support the conduct of ORD programs and that the findings, conclusions and products which are developed as  a
result of these programs  are appropriately documented, packaged, disseminated and transferred in a timely
manner and in a form most useful to environmental decision officials and other important user groups both within
and external to the Agency. In discharging these responsibilities, the Center shall provide leadership, guidance,
coordination and technical expertise to ORD  and other Agency components as well as direct implementation of
technical/scientific information dissemination and technology transfer activities.

    In  fiscal year 1978, the scope  of the  Technical Information Program will be expanded to encompass  the
dissemination and transfer of an entire spectrum of ORD developed technology  and technical information.  Work
initiated during fiscal year 1977 in the areas of land treatment, municiapl  waste treatment, industrial pollution
control technology, non-point sources, water supply, monitoring technology and energy R&D will be continued
on a priority basis. New effort will include the dissemination and transfer of ORD outputs in the areas of health
effects,  ecological effects and toxic  substances. Specific support services tobe provided by ERIC for ORD and
other Agency components will include but not  be  limited to:  processing,  publication and distribution of
technical/scientific  publications, information booklets, newsletters, etc., graphic arts  and technical editing


 60

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         MONITORING AND TECHNICAL SUPPORT PROGRAM AREA
                           TECHNICAL SUPPORT SUBPROGRAM
services; planning, implementation, coordination and maintenance of special information systems and data bases;
and response to both internal and external requests for technical information.
Laboratory Assignment:   Environmental Research Information Center, Cincinnati
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                                           PART III
         Office of Research and Development's Grant and Contract Activities*/

    While some of the research required by these Accomplishment Plans will be done in-house by ORD's staff,
much of the research is planned  for  accomplishment by  grant, contract, or interagency  agreement.  The
Laboratory Director decides how the goals of the Accomplishment Plan can best be achieved. This project level
planning is documented in Work Plans. The Work Plans describe each project or task required to accomplish the
research objective, indicate how the task will be implemented (i.e., grant, contract, in-house),  and estimate the
amount of dollars required to complete the task.

    All planned contracting is carried out competitively with notices of the availability of Request for Proposal
(RFP) documents publicly advertised. Unsolicited contract proposals should not be submitted for such projects.
The review/selection procedures followed may vary slightly from project to project, but all pertinent information
regarding  both  the project objectives and criteria  for evaluation  of proposals will be  included in each RFP
package. The Laboratory Director should not be contacted for information on contracts that have been advertised
since such communication may conflict with  Federal Procurement Regulations and could serve to disqualify a
prospective contractor from further consideration.

    With regard to all grant  projects, contact  with the cognizant Laboratory  Director is encouraged.  The
Laboratory Director will generally be the individual responsible for making the award/reject recommendation on
individual proposals.
VNote: Information on other EPA grant programs is presented in the publication "Grant Assistance Programs of
the Environmental Protection Agency", available from EPA's Grants Administration Division, Washington, DC
20460. Information on contracting procedures and policies is presented in the booklet, "Contracting with EPA —
A Guide for Prospective Contractors", available from EPA's Contracts Management Division, Washington, DC
20460.
62

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                             Guidelines For Submission Of Grant
                              Applications Or Contract Proposals

A.  Solicited contract proposals -

    Requests for Proposals (RFP's) for all planned contracts will be advertised in the Commerce Business Daily
    issued by the U.S. Department of Commerce. A subscription to this publication may be obtained from the
    Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C. 20402. These advertisements
    will provide instructions for obtaining RFP packages from EPA's Contracts Management Division. Each
    RFP package will include detailed information describing the form and context of proposals to be submitted
    as well as the required time and place of submission.

    EPA's Contracts Management Division publishes "Contracting With EPA - A Guide for  Prospective
    Contractors" to assist the business community in its efforts to find  new markets in the Environmental
    Protection Agency. This publication includes the names and addresses of contracting offices in EPA and the
    Office of Research  and Development laboratories, the types of products and services procured, general
    information about the Agency, and hints to aid businessmen in selling to EPA.

B.  Unsolicited contract proposals -

    While most of ORD's contract research and demonstration is conducted through the use of RFP's to solicit
    proposals (item A above), contracts can also be awarded on the basis of unsolicited proposals which meet the
    sole-source requirements of the Federal Procurement Regulations. Unsolicited contract proposals should be
    addressed  to  the  Grants  Administration  Division (PM-216),  Environmental   Protection  Agency,
    Washington, DC 20460. While no specific format is required, such proposals should generally contain:

     1.    Name, address and telephone number of the organization or individual submitting the proposal.

    2.    Date of preparation or  submission.

    3.    Type of organization (profit, non-profit, educational, individual, other).

    4.    Concise title.

    5.    Project objective.

    6.    Need, utility and significance of project.

    7.    Scope of work, i.e., an  outline and discussion of the purpose of proposed effort of activity, the method
          of attacking the problem, and nature and extent of anticipated results.

    8.    Experimental data developed by feasibility studies previously completed.

    9.    Estimated duration of the project, proposed starting and completion dates.

    10.    Scientific or technical references.

    11.    Names of key personnel to be involved, brief biographical information, including principal publications
          and relevant experience.

    12.    Equipment, facilities and personnel requirements.
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   13.    Proposed budget, including separate cost estimates for salaries and wages, equipment, expendable
          supplies, services, travel, subcontracts, other direct costs and overhead.


    EPA's Appropriation Act specifically provides that cost sharing must be included in contracts resulting from
    proposals for projects not specifically solicited. The extent of the cost sharing by the recipient will be decided
    after the proposal has been reviewed and determined to be of mutual interest to the grantee or contractor and
    the government.

    The material  submitted should contain both a technical and a business proposal. The  technical proposal
    should clearly define the unique concept involved (as required for sole-source procurements) and include a
    plan for turning the concept into reality.  It is suggested that the technical proposal identify any proprietary
    aspects of the proposed ideas or process. The business proposal should include a detailed cost proposal,
    information concerning past Government contracts, and any special terms and conditions desired.

C.  Research or demonstration grant applications -

    Pre-application activity —

    Although grant applications may be submitted at any time and on any subject, potential grantees should take
    the following  actions prior to submission of a formal grant application in order to save time and effort both
    for the applicant and EPA.
     1.    Review OR&D's current research program, as described in Part II, to determine if funds are available
          in the specific area of interest; and

     2.    Contact the appropriate research and development personnel cited in this document to ascertain if a
          grant project is planned prior to submission of an official grant application.

     Submission of a preproposal is also strongly encouraged. The  preproposal should be  sent directly to the
     cognizant Laboratory Director listed in Part II of this document for review. A preproposal should normally
     consist of a three or four-page  narrative outlining the project concept and  containing  the following
     information:

     1.    Objective - a clear statement of the specific objective is necessary. If the objective is designed to fulfill a
          specific project (as identified in Step 1 above), the project should be identified. If the objective cannot be
          associated with any specific project,  some statement  of the presumed value to  EPA of attaining the
          research objective should be made.

     2.    Project Plan - a brief description of the research/development/demonstration concept and the plan
          for execution of the proposed project, including a projected time-schedule for accomplishments  of
          intermediate outputs or key occurrences indicating progress (milestones) and the final objective.

     3.    Budget - a preliminary estimate of total costs which will be incurred in order to complete the project.
          Also, the share of the costs which will be provided by the applicant should be indicated.

     4.    Staff and Facilities  - a brief listing of key project staff and capabilities and a brief description of any
          special facilities or other factors which would contribute to the  success of the project. A single person
          who will have responsibility for planning, coordinating, and supervising the project should be identified
          along with the fraction of his time to be devoted to the project.
  64

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Following review and evaluation of the preproposal by the cognizant Laboratory Director, the prospective
applicant will be advised whether (a) an application should be submitted for formal review, (b) submission of
a modified  preproposal is suggested, (c) possible submission  of  the  preproposal  to another  Agency,
Department, or source of funds is suggested, or (d) further pursuit of the particular topic is discouraged.
Formal applications —

All formal grant applications are to be submitted to the Grants Administration Division, Environmental
Protection Agency, Washington, DC  20460.  After  formal "logging  in"  and  acknowledgement, those
applications falling within the Office of Research and Development's purview are referred to the appropriate
ORD program office  for program relevance review by the cognizant  Laboratory Director. This review
quickly screens out those applications for which EPA has no authority or interest or those for which no funds
are available. For those proposals in which ORD has an interest, scientific/technical merit reviews are then
conducted by both in-house and extramural experts. Extramural reviews are obtained in the National Science
Foundation fashion — individual written reviews submitted by mail. Comments are also obtained from the
Regional Office in the Region where the applicant is located and where the project would be conducted to
determine the relationship of the proposed project to Regional programs and policies.

The individual coordinating  the scientific/technical  merit  review (normally the cognizant  Laboratory
Director)  assembles  and evaluates both  intramural  and extramural review comments and prepares  a
recommendation for action on each application. The recommendation may be to award a grant, to reject the
application, or to attempt to negotiate with the applicant to modify the scope of work. In those cases where
the proposed scope of work could be modified in order to  relate more directly to EPA's objectives and
thereby qualify for funding, direct contact is made with the applicant to determine whether or not acceptable
adjustments in the scope of work can be made.
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                                      APPENDIX A
                       OFFICE OF RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
                       PROGRAM-BUDGET STRUCTURE AND  CODES
Program
 Code
Component Title
                                            AIR
1AA
1AA601
1AA602
1AA603
1AA751
1AB
1AB604
IAD
1AD605
1AD712
1AD606
1BA
1BA607
1BA608
1BA609
IBB
1BB610
1BB770
1BC
1BC611
1BD
1BD612
1BD713
1BD613
 ICC
 1CC614
 IDC
 1DC618
    Health and Ecological Effects
        Health Effects
        Ecological  Processes and Effects
        Transport and Fate of Pollutants
        Stratospheric Modification
    Industrial Processes
        Minerals Processing and Manufacturing  Industries
    Monitoring and Technical  Support
        Measurement Techniques and Equipment Standardization
        Characterization and Measurement Methods Development
        Technical Support

             WATER QUALITY

    Health and Ecological Effects
        Health Effects
        Ecological  Processes and Effects
        Transport and Fate of Pollutants
    Industrial Processes
        Minerals Processing and Manufacturing  Industries
        Renewable Resources
    Public Sector Activities
        Waste Management
    Monitoring and Technical  Support
        Measurement Techniques and Equipment Standardization
        Characterization and Measurement Methods Development
        Technical Support

              WATER SUPPLY

    Public Sector Activities
        Water Supply

               SOLID WASTE

    Public Sector Activities
        Waste Management
66

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Program
 Code
Component Title
1EA
1EA615
1EA714
1EB
1EB771
1FA
1FA628
1HA
1HA630
1HA616
1HC
1HC619
1HD
1HD620
1HD621
1HD622
1LA
1LA629
1LA715
1LA760
1LB
1LB764
1LD
1LD761
1LD762
1LD763
                PESTICIDES

    Health and Ecological  Effects
        Health Effects
        Ecological  Processes  and Effects
    Industrial Processes
        Renewable Resources

                RADIATION

    Health and Ecological  Effects
        Health Effects

           INTERDISCIPLINARY

    Health and Ecological  Effects
        Health Effects
        Ecological  Processes  and Effects
    Public Sector Activities
        Environmental Management
    Monitoring and Technical Support
        Measurement Techniques  and Equipment Standardization
        Quality Assurance
        Technical Support

           TOXIC SUBSTANCES

    Health and Ecological  Effects
        Health Effects
        Ecological  Processes  and Effects
        Transport and Fate of Pollutants
    Industrial  Processes
        Minerals Processing and Manufacturing Industries
    Monitoring and Technical Support
        Measurement Techniques  and Equipment Standardization
        Characterization and Measurement Methods Development
        Technical Support

                   ENERGY
1NE
1NE623
1NE624
1NE625
1NE626
    Energy
        Extraction and Processing Technology
        Conservation and Utilization Technology Assessment
        Health and Ecological  Effects
        Technical Support
                                                                                    67

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                                                          APPENDIX  B

                                   U.  S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
                                                                 ADMINISTRATOR
                                                                 DOUGLAS COSTUE
                                                             DEPUTY ADMINISTRATOR
                                                                  BARBARA BLUM
 ASST. ADMINISTRATOR
    FOR PLANNING
  AND MANAGEMENT

  WILLIAM DRAYTON
               OFFICE OF
             ADMINISTRATION
             EDWARD RHODES
               OFFICE OF
              PLANNING AND
               EVALUATION
               ROY GAMSE
               OFFICE OF
               RESOURCES
              MANAGEMENT
             MATTHEWPILZYS
                 IActln«l
               OFFICE OF
                 AUDIT
            MALCOLM STRINGER
ASST. ADMINISTRATOR
       FOR
  ENFORCEMENT
MARVIN OURNING (Dl
                                                   REGIONAL
OFFICE OF
INTERNATIONAL
ACTIVITIES
ALICE B. POPKIN
OFFICE OF
LEGISLATION
CHARLES WARREN

OFFICE OF
PUBLIC AFFAIRS
JOAN M. NICHOLSON

OFFICE OF
REGIONAL AND
INTERGOVERNMENTAL
OPERATIONS
J. EDWARD ROUSH
 ASST. ADMINISTRATOR
   FOR WATER AND
HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
  THOMAS C.JORLING
                                               OFFICE OF
                                            WATER PLANNING
                                            AND STANDARDS
                                            ALBERT ERICKSON
                                               (Acting)
                                              OFFICE OF
                                              PESTICIDE
                                              PROGRAMS
                                              OFFICE OF
                                            WATER PROGRAMS
                                              OPERATIONS

                                              JOHN RHETT
                                               OFFICE OF
                                             WATER SUPPLY

                                             VICTOR KIMM
                                                                             OFFICE OF
                                                                            SOLID WASTE
                                                                           JOHN P. LEHMAN
                                                                              (Acting!
                                                             OFFICES
ASST. ADMINISTRATOR
    FOR AIR AND
WASTE MANAGEMENT

  DAVID HAWKINS (D)
                                               OFFICE OF
                                              AIR QUALITY
                                              PLANNING AND
                                               STANDARDS
                                             WALTER BARBER
                                               OFFICE OF
                                             MOBILE SOURCE
                                             AIR POLLUTION
                                                CONTROL
                                               ERIC STORK
                                               OFFICE OF
                                             NOISE ABATEMENT
                                              AND CONTROL

                                             CHARLES ELKINS
                                               OFFICE OF
                                               RADIATION
                                               PROGRAMS

                                              WILLIAM ROWE
ASST. ADMINISTRATOR
FOR RESEARCH
AND DEVELOPMENT
STEPHEN GAGE
(Acting)








-

OFF
MONITO
TECHNIC/
ALBERT 1

OFF
ENERGY
AND 1
STEPH

OFF
AIR, Lt
WAT
THOMA

OFF
HEAL
ECOLOGIC
                                                                                                                                        DELBERT BARTH
 ASST. ADMINISTRATOR
FOR TOXIC SUBSTANCES
                                                                                                                                                            STEVEN JELLINEK (01
REGION 1
BOSTON
WILLIAM R.ADAMS

REGION II
NEW YORK
ECKARDTC. BECK

REGION Ml
PHILADELPHIA
JACK J. SCHRAMM

REGION IV
ATLANTA
JOHN C. WHITE

REGION V
CHICAGO
GEORGE
ALEXANDER

REGION VI
DALLAS
ADLENE HARRISON

REGION VII
KANSAS CITY
CATHLEEN Q. CAM IN

REGION VIII
DENVER
ALAN MERSON

REGION IX
SAN FRANCISCO
PAUL DeFALCO

REGION X
SEATTLE
DONALD OuBOIS
D - DESIGNATED BUT NOT YET CONFIRMED

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                                     APPENDIX  C
                   EPA OFFICIALS AND  REGIONAL  CONTACTS
Administrator
Douglas Costle
    Environmental Protection Agency
    A -  100
    Washington,  DC 20460
                                                 Telephone*
(202) 755-2700
                      States Served
Deputy  Administrator
Barbara Blum
    Environmental Protection Agency
    A -  100
    Washington, DC 20460
(202) 755-2711
Office of Regional and Intergovernmental  Operations
J.  Edward Rousch
    Environmental Protection Agency                (202) 755-0444
    A -  101
    Washington,  DC 20460
Region I
    Environmental Protection Agency
    Room 2203
    John F.  Kennedy Federal Building
    Boston,  Massachusetts   02203

         Regional Administrator
         William R. Adams, Jr.

         Deputy Regional Administrator
         Kenneth Johnson

         Public Affairs Director
         Paul  G.  Keough

         R&D Contact
         Richard  Keppler
(617) 223-7210


(617) 223-7210


(617) 223-4704


(617) 223-3477
                      Connecticut
                      Maine
                      Massachusetts
                      New Hampshire
                      Rhode  Island
                      Vermont
                                                                                   69

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                                                    Telephone*
                        States  Served
Region II
    Environmental Protection  Agency
    Room 1009
    26 Federal Plaza
    New  York, New York  10007

          Regional Administrator
          Eckardt C.  Beck

          Deputy Regional Administrator
          Eric B. Cutwater

          Public Affairs Director
          James Marshall

          R&D Contact
          Robert W. Mason
(212)  264-2525


(212)  264-0396


(212)  264-2515


(212)  340-6782
                        Delaware
                        New Jersey
                        New York
                        Puerto Rico
Region III
    Environmental Protection Agency
    Curtis Building
    6th & Walnut Streets
    Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  19106

          Regional Administrator
          Jack J. Schrann

          Deputy Regional Administrator
          Alvin  R. Morris

          Congressional and Public Affairs Director
          Diane  Margenau

          R&D  Contact
          Albert Montague
(215)  597-9814


(215)  597-9814


(215)  597-9370


(215)  597-9856
                        District of Columbia
                        Maryland
                        Pennsylvania
                        West  Virginia
                        Virginia
70

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                                                    Telephone*
                        States Served
Region IV
    Environmental Protection  Agency
    345 Courtland Street,  N.E.
    Atlanta, Georgia  30308

         Regional Administrator
         John C. White
          Deputy Regional Administrator
          John A. Little

          Public Affairs Director
          Charles D.  Pou

          R&D Contact
          Edmond Lomasney
(404)  881^727 CML
      257-4727  FTS
(404)  881-4727 CML
      257-4727  FTS

(404)  881-3004 CML
      257-3004  FTS

(404)  881-5458 CML
      257-3012  FTS
Alabama
Florida
Georgia
Kentucky
Mississippi
South Carolina
Tennessee
Region V
    Environmental  Protection Agency
    230  S. Dearborn
    Chicago,  Illinois  60604

          Regional  Administrator
          George R. Alexander, Jr.

          Deputy Regional Administrator
          Valdas V. Adamkus

          Public Affairs Director
          Frank M. Corrado

          R&D  Contact
          Clifford Risley, Jr.
(312)  353-2000


(312)  353-2000


(312)  353-2072


(312)  353-2200
Illinois
Indiana
Michigan
Minnesota
Ohio
Wisconsin
                                                                                        71

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                                                    Telephone*
                        States Served
Region VI
    Environmental Protection Agency
    1201 Elm Street
    First International Building
    Dallas,  Texas  75270

         Regional Administrator
         Adlene  Harrison

         Deputy  Regional  Administrator
         (Vacant)

         Public Affairs Director
         Betty Williamson

         R&D Contact
         Mildred Smith
(214)  749-1962
(214)  749-1151
(214)  749-3971
                        Arkansas
                        Louisiana
                        New Mexico
                        Oklahoma
                        Texas
Region VII
    Environmental Protection Agency
    1735 Baltimore Avenue
    Kansas  City,  Missouri  64108

         Regional Administrator
         Kathleen Camin
(816)  374-5493  CML
      758-5493 FTS
                        Iowa
                        Kansas
                        Missouri
                        Nebraska
         Deputy Regional Administrator
         Charles V  Wright

         Public Affairs Director
         Rowena  Michaels
(816)  374-5493 CML
      758-5493  FTS

(816)  374-5894 CML
      758-5894  FTS
         R&D Contact
         Aleck Alexander
(816)  374-2921  CML
      758-2921  FTS
Region VIII

    Environmental Protection Agency
    Suite  900
    1860  Lincoln Street
    Denver,  Colorado  80203

          Regional Administrator
          Alan Merson

          Deputy Regional Administrator
          Roger L.  Williams
(303)  837-3895 CML
      327-3895  FTS

(303)  837-3895 CML
      327-3895  FTS
Colorado
Montana
North Dakota
South Dakota
Utah
Wyoming
72

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                                                    Telephone*
                        States Served
         Public Affairs Director
         Howard  W. Kayner

         R&D Contact
         John  E.  Hardaway
(303)  837-4904 CML
      327-4904  FTS

(303)  837-3849 CML
      327-5914  FTS
Region IX
    Environmental Protection Agency
    100 California Street
    San Francisco,  California  94111

         Regional Administrator
         Paul DeFalco,  Jr.

         Deputy Regional Administrator
         (Vacant)

         Chief,  Office of External Relations
         David  L.  Calkins

         R&D Contact
         William Bishop
(415)  556-2320


(415)  556-2320


(415)  556-6266


(415)  556-6925
                        Arizona
                        California
                        Hawaii
                        Nevada
Region X
    Environmental Protection Agency
    1200 6th Avenue
    Seattle, Washington   98101

         Regional Administrator
         Donald P.  DuBois

         Deputy Regional Administrator
         L. Edwin Coate

         Office  of Public Awarness
         Donald Bliss

         R&D Contact
         Robert Courson
(206)  442-1220 CML
      399-1220 FTS

(206)  442-1220 CML
      399-1220 FTS

(206)  442-1203 CML
      399-1203 FTS

(206)  442-1296 CML
      399-1296 FTS
                        Alaska
                        Idaho
                        Washington
                        Oregon
*Telephone numbers  are both commercial and FTS unless otherwise indicated.
                                                                                       73

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                                         APPENDIX D
                                     MAILING LIST FORM
    Complete this form and return it to the address listed below if you wish your name added to the FY-79
Program Guide mailing list.
Individual Contact and Title
Name of Organization
Street Address
City                                     State            Zip
Complete  the above information and mail to:

    Office of Financial  and Administrative Services (RD-674)
    Office of Research  and Development
    Environmental Protection  Agency
    Washington,  DC  20460
                                                                                       75

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TECHNICAL REPORT DATA
(Please read Instructions on the reverse before completing)
1. REPORT NO. 2.
EPA-600/9-77-035
4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE
Office of Research and Development
Program Guide
7. AUTHOR(S)
9. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAME AND ADDRESS
Office of Financial and Administrative Services (R
Office of Research and Development
Environmental Protection Agency
Washington, DC 20460
12. SPONSORING AGENCY NAME AND ADDRESS
Same as above
15. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES
3. RECIPIENT'S ACCESSI ON- NO.
5. REPORT DATE
October 1977
6. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION CODE
8. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION REPORT NO.
10. PROGRAM ELEMENT NO.
D-674) 1RW103
11. CONTRACT/GRANT NO.
13. TYPE OF REPORT AND PERIQD COVERED
Fiscal Year 1978
14. SPONSORING AGENCY CODE
EPA-ORD

16. ABSTRACT
The Program Guide provides the public with information on the Office of Research
and Development's current extramural research program and serves as a guide
to Office of Research and Development's key personnel. This publication will be
updated each fiscal year.
17. KEY WORDS AND DOCUMENT ANALYSIS
a. DESCRIPTORS b.lDENTIFI
Guides (instructions) , Organization Research
charts, Grants, Contracts, Financial and eco]
management, Research management Energy 5
processe
Monitors
support
13 DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT 19. SECURI
Uncl
Release to Public 20.sEcum
Uncl
ERS/OPEN ENDED TERMS C. COSATI Field/Group
i programs, Health
.ogical effects, 5A
)rogram, Indus tria]
;s, Public sector,
.ng and technical
TY CLASS (This Report) 21. NO. OF PAGES
assified yg
TY CLASS (Thispage) 22. PRICE
assified
EPA  Form 2220-1  (9-73)
                                                                  * U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1977— 757-140 / 6 58 7
                                                                                                                                                        77

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