United States
            Environmental Protection
            Agency
              Office of Research and
              Development
              Washington DC 20460
EPA/600/K-93/006
September 1993
&EPA
Technical Assistance
Directory (Revised)

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                                                EPA/600/K-93/006
                                                 September 1993
Technical Assistance Directory
               (Revised)
     Center for Environmental Research Information
         Office of Research and Development
         U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
              Cincinnati, Ohio 45268
                                       oS Printed on Recycled Paper

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USEPA Organization Chart	iv
ORD Organization Chart	v
Office of Research and Development	1
Directory Description	2
ORD Budget for Fiscal Year 1992	3
Risk Assessment Forum	4
Office of Science, Planning and Regulatory Evaluation	7
Center for Environmental Research Information	11
Office of Exploratory Research	14
Office of Research Program Management	17
Office of Health Research	19
Health Effects Research Laboratory	21
Office of Health and Environmental Assessment	24
Human Health Assessment Group	27
Exposure Assessment Group	30
Environmental Criteria and Assessment Office—RTF	33
Environmental Criteria and Assessment Office—Cincinnati	36
Office of Environmental Engineering and Technology Demonstration	40
Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory	43
Air and Energy Engineering Research Laboratory	47
Office of Environmental Processes and Effects Research	51
Robert S. Kerr Environmental Research Laboratory	54
Environmental Research Laboratory—Athens	58
Environmental Research Laboratory—Corvallis	62
Environmental Research Laboratory—Duluth	65
Environmental Research Laboratory—Gulf Breeze	69
Environmental Research Laboratory—Narragansett	72
Office of Modeling, Monitoring Systems and Quality Assurance	76
Atmospheric Research  and Exposure Assessment Laboratory	79
Environmental Monitoring Systems Laboratory—Cincinnati	84
Environmental Monitoring Systems Laboratory—Las Vegas	87
Index of Areas of Expertise	91

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                                   U.  S,  Environmental  Protection  Agency Organization  Chart
                    Siaff Offices:
                    Administrative Law Judges
                    Civ*! Rights
                    Small & Disadvanlaged Business Utilization
                    Science Advisory Board
                    Executive Support
                    Office of Cooperative Environmental Management
       Assistant
   Administrator for
  Administration and
Resources Management
      Office of the
      Comptroller
        Office of
      Admin isiration
   Office of Information
 Resources Management
     Office of Human
  Resources Management
  Office of Administration
 & Resource Management
        RTP. NC
  Office of Administration
 & Resource Management
      Cincinnati. OH
                 Assistant
              Administrator for
               Enforcement
               Office of Criminal
                 Enforcement
             Office of Compliance
             Analysis and Program
                  Operations
                 Office of Civil
                 Enforcement
               Office of Federal
                   Activities
             National Enforcement
              Investigations Center
               (NEC) Denver. CO
               Office of Federal
             Facilities Enforcement
                              General
                              Counsel
                           Air and Radiation
                               Division
                         Grants. Contracts and
                         General Law Division
                           inspector General
                               Division
                          Pesticides and Toxic
                          Substances Division
                            Solid Waste and
                         Emergency Response
                             Water Division
                                          Assistant
                                       Administrator for
                                       Policy, Planning
                                       and Evaluation
                                           Office of
                                         Policy Analysis
                                      Office o! Regulatory
                                       Management and
                                          Evaluation
                                        Office of Pollution
                                           Prevention
Ass slant
Administrator for
Internationa!
Activities

International
- Cooperation
Division

International
_ Issues
Division

Program
— Operations
Division


Inspector
Genera!
-

Office of
Audits

Office of
investigations

Office of Management
and Technical
Assessment
Assistant Administrator
lor Water
_

Office oi Wastewaier,
Enforcement and
Compliance

Office of
Science and
Technoiogy

Office of Wetlands.
Oceans and
Watersheds

Office of Ground
Water and
Drinking Water
                                         Assistant Administrator
                                           for Solid Waste and
                                          Emergency Response
                                             Office of Program
                                               Management
                                           Chemical Emergency
                                             Preparedness and
                                             Prevention Office
                                                Technology
                                                Innovation
                                                  Office
                                            Office of Emergency
                                               and Remedial
                                           Response (Superiund)
                                               Office oi Solsd
                                                  Waste
                                           Office of Underground
                                               Storage Tanks
                                              Otlice of Waste
                                           Programs Enforcement
                                                     Assistant Administrator
                                                      lor Air and Radiation
                                                          Office of Program
                                                            Management
                                                             Operations
                                                           Office o! Policy
                                                         Analysis and Review
                                                        Office of Atmospheric
                                                            and Indoor Air
                                                             Programs
                                                         Office of Air Quality
                                                       Planning and Standards
                                                              RTP, NC
                                                           Office of Mobile
                                                              Sources
                                                              Office of
                                                         Radiation Programs
Assistant Administrator
(or Pesticides and
Toxic Substances
	

Office of Program
Management
Operations

Office of
Toxic Substances

Office of Compliance
Monitoring

Office of
Pesticides Programs
                                                                                                                                              IL
                                                                                                    Assistant Administrator
                                                                                                      for Research and
                                                                                                        Development
                                                                                                       Office of Research
                                                                                                      Program Management
                                                                                                        Office of Science,
                                                                                                          Planning and
                                                                                                      Regulatory Evaluation
                                                                                                       Office of Exploratory
                                                                                                           Research
                                                                                                       Office of Environmental
                                                                                                     Engineering and Technology
                                                                                                          Demonstrabon
                                                                                                            Office of
                                                                                                        Health Research
                                                                                                      Office of Environmental
                                                                                                          Processes and
                                                                                                         Effects Research
                                                                                                                         Office of Health
                                                                                                                       and Environmental
                                                                                                                          Assessment
                                                                                                                                         Office of Modeling,
                                                                                                                                       Monitoring Systems and
                                                                                                                                         Quality Assurance
  Region f
  Boston
Region II
New York
 Region III
Philadelphia
Region IV
 Atlanta
Region V
Chicago
Regson V£
 Dallas
 Region VII
Kansas City
Region VIII
  Denver
  Region iX
San Francisco
Region X
 Seattle

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                            Office of Research and Development Organization Chart
     Office of Research
    Program Management
                                                 Assistant Administrator for
                                                Research and Development
  Office of Modeling,
 Monitoring Systems
        and
  Quality Assurance
      Program
     Operations
        Staff
  Quality Assurance
  Management Staff
    Modeling and
     Monitoring
    Systems Staff
   Environmental
   Monitoring and
   Assessment
     Program
Headquarters
Field
  Office of Environmental
Engineering and Technology
      Demonstration
                                                                              Office of Science,
                                                                                Planning and
                                                                             Regulatory Evaluation
   Atmospheric
   Research and
     Exposure
 Assessment Lab,
     RTF, NC
   Environmental
    Monitoring
     Systems
       Lab
  Las Vegas, NV
  Environmental
    Monitoring
     Systems
       Lab
  Cincinnati, OH
      Air and Energy
        Engineering
        Research
           Lab
         RTP, NC
       Risk Reduction
      Engineering Lab
       Cincinnati, OH
                              Office of Senior
                               ORD Official
                                 RTP.NC
                              Office of Senior
                               ORD Official
                               Cincinnati, OH
Health Effects
Research Lab
 RTP, N.C.
                                 Environmental
                                   Research
                                     Lab
                                Narragansett, Rl
                                                      Environmental
                                                       Research
                                                          Lab
                                                     Gulf Breeze, FL
   Exposure
  Assessment
    Group
Washington, DC
                       Human Health
                       Assessment
                          Group
                      Washington, DC
                                                                               Environmental
                                                                                  Criteria
                                                                               & Assessment
                                                                                  Office
                                                                                 RTP, NC
                                                                               Environmental
                                                                                  Criteria
                                                                               & Assessment
                                                                                  Office
                                                                               Cincinnati, OH

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                            Office of Research and Development
The Acting Assistant  Administrator
                                                        Gary J. Foley is the acting assistant administrator of
                                                     the Office of Research and Development. He is  also the
                                                     director of the Atmospheric Research and Exposure Assess-
                                                     ment Laboratory at Research Triangle Park, North Carolina.
                                                     He has served as staff director for ORD's Acid Deposition
                                                     Program and acting  division director,  Energy and Air, for
                                                     ORD's Office of Environmental Processes and Effects Re-
                                                     search. Dr. Foley began his career with EPA in 1973 as a
                                                     senior chemical engineer. Before joining the Agency, Dr.
                                                     Foley served  as a project  manager for  the American Oil
                                                     Company. He received  his Ph.D. in chemical engineering
                                                     from the University  of Wisconsin, Madison. Dr. Foley has
                                                     been awarded 4 Bronze Medals by EPA.
 The  Deputy Assistant Administrator
                                                        Vacant

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                                       Directory Description
                               Environmental Protection Agency
                             Office of Research and Development

                           Gary J. Foley, Acting Assistant; Administrator
                                           Mailcode:  RD-672
                              401 M St., S.W. Washington, B.C. 20460
                                  202-260-7676, FAX: 202-260-9761
                                         E-Mail FOLEY.GARY
    The Office of Research and Development conducts an
Agency-wide integrated program  of research and develop-
ment relevant to pollution sources and control, transport and
fate processes,  health and ecological effects, measurement
and monitoring, and risk assessment. The office rigorously
disseminates its scientific and technical knowledge and upon
request provides technical reviews, expert consultations, tech-
nical assistance, and advice to environmental decision mak-
ers  in federal, state, local, and foreign governments.
    The ORD implements  its activities through its Washing-
ton, D.C., headquarter's offices and associated laboratories
and field locations (see organizational chart). The programs,
areas of expertise, and primary contacts in each of the major
ORD operations are  conveyed in the following directory.
This information is made available in an effort to improve
communication and technology transfer with our clients.
    In addition, information may be  obtained  from the of-
fices in Washington,  D.C., that are listed below. ORD pub-
lications may be requested from the Center for Environmental
Research Information in Cincinnati, Ohio.
    Clients are urged to make direct contacts. If help or
coordination is needed  to properly access the  listed opera-
tions, directory assistance can be easily obtained by contact-
ing the Office of Science, Planning and Regulatory Evaluation
in  Washington, D.C., 202-260-7669.
                                        Office
                            Telephone
                Office of Health Research                                            202-260-5900

                Office of Environmental Processes and Effects Research                  202-260-5950

                Office of Modeling, Monitoring Systems and Quality Assurance           202-260-5767

                Office of Health and Environmental  Assessment                         202-260-7315

                Office of Research Program Management                              202-260-7500

                Office of Environmental Engineering and Technology Demonstration       202-260-2600

                Office of Exploratory Research                                        202-260-5750

                Office of Science, Planning and Regulatory Evaluation                   202-260-7669
                             For additional help in contacting ORD headquarters' offices,
                            call the EPA  HEADQUARTERS LOCATOR at 202-260-2090

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FY 92 Resources
  (in Millions)
     320

     300


     2TO

     260


     240


     220

     200

     180


     160

     140

     120

     100


      80

      60


      40

      20
                                      Budget for Fiscal Year 1993
                                 Office of Research and Development
                  PRO
                                   R&D
                                                   Oil Spills
                                                                     LUST
Superfund
  Program and Research Operations (PRO)
  Research and Development (R&D)
  Oil Spills
  Leaking Underground Storage Tanks (LUST)
  Superfund
      Total
   Full-Time Employees
      PRO
      Superfund
      LUST
      Reimbursables
          Total
     $112,622.0
      318,890.0
        2,089.8
          748.9
                                                                        All dollar amounts are as of 1 1/1/92.
         1,721.4
          136.9
            1.9
           61.0
         1,921.2

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                           Risk Assessment  Forum
                                                Dorothy E. Patton has been the executive director of
                                            the Risk Assessment Forum since 1985. Currently, she also
                                            chairs that group. From 1976 to 1985, she was an attorney in
                                            EPA's Office of General Counsel, where she worked with
                                            the pesticides,  toxics, and  air programs. She has  received
                                            three EPA Bronze Medals. Before coining to EPA, Dr. Patton
                                            was an assistant professor of biology in the City  University
                                            of New York (York College), and did post-doctoral work at
                                            Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York. Dr. Patton
                                            received her J.D. degree from Columbia University School
                                            of Law, a Ph.D. in developmental biology from the Univer-
                                            sity of Chicago, and a bachelor's degree in chemistry from
                                            the University  of Wisconsin.
                               EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

                                      202-260-6743
                                    Risk Assessment
                                        Council
                                    Risk Assessment
                                         Forum
 Guidelines
Workgroups
Technical
  Panels
    Special
Subcommittees

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                                          Risk Assessment Forum

                                        Dorothy E. Patton,  Director
                                             Mailcode:  RD-689
                                401 M St., S.W. Washington, D.C. 20460
                                    202-260-6743,  FAX: 202-260-3955
                                           E-Mail RISK.FORUM
Functions

    EPA's Risk Assessment Forum is responsible for scien-
tific and science policy analysis of selected precedent-setting
or controversial risk assessment issues of Agency-wide inter-
est. The primary objective is to promote Agency consensus
on risk assessment and to ensure that this consensus is incor-
porated into appropriate  guidance  for Agency scientists and
managers. The forum does not conduct chemical-specific risk
assessments.
Program Activities

    Forum activities include developing scientific analyses,
risk assessment guidance, and risk assessment methodology
for use  in ongoing and prospective Agency actions;  using
scientific and technical analysis to propose  risk assessment
positions for Agency programs; and fostering consensus on
these  issues. Generally, the forum focuses on generic issues
fundamental to  the risk assessment process,  analysis of data
used  in risk assessment,  and on developing consensus ap-
proaches.  Risk  Assessment  Forum reports  and  actions arc
referred to the Risk Assessment Council for consideration  of
policy and  procedural issues, and forum scientific analyses
become Agency policy upon recommendation by  the  Risk
Assessment Council.

    ORD's forum staff coordinates and implements the work
of the forum. Accordingly, the staff assists and contributes to
scientific analyses, coordinates all activities  involving the
forum and  its technical panels, and manages all interaction
between  the forum and senior EPA  management, peer re-
viewers, and the public. At any one time, the forum staff is
working  with a total  of  100-150 participants on  technical
panels, colloquia, and workshops from  all pails of the Agency.

    The leadership for forum projects comes from all Agency
offices, laboratories, and regions. Agency scientists  contrib-
ute scientific  expertise and Agency risk assessment experi-
ence  to help develop consensus Agencywidc.
Issues

    The  issues before the Risk Assessment Forum vary as
risk  assessment  issues become prominent or controversial
within the Agency or in the larger scientific community. Issues
currently before the forum fail into four general categories:
Carcinogen  Risk Assessment: Recently con-
cluded or ongoing forum analyses on carcino-
gen risk assessment  include

 -   the relevance of data on rat kidney tumors
    to human cancer risk assessment;

 -   guidance on the use of non-tumor end points
    for assessing cancer risk in tbllicular cells
    of the  thyroid gland;

 -   toxicity equivalency factors for dioxins other
    than 2,3,7,8-TCDD, and the possible use of
    such factors for  PCBs and PAHs;

 -   general topics under study for revisions of
    EPA's carcinogen risk assessment guidelines
    (classification system wcight-of-cvidcnce
    scheme, policy on use of benign and malig-
    nant tumors, etc.).

Health Effects Other  Than Cancer: Recent
projects include

 -   risk assessment guidelines  for male and
    female reproductive  effects;

    a report on cholincstcrasc inhibition;

 -   risk assessment guidelines for ncurotoxic ef-
    fects;

 -   amendments of EPA's 1986 guidelines for
    developmental toxicity (additional guidance
    on use of the data on maternal toxicity and
    on quantification for developmental effects);

    issues  on PCB  and developmental ncuro-
    toxicity;

 -   use of benchmark  dose methodology.

Exposure  Guidance: Ongoing projects include

 -   exposure measurement guidelines to supple-
    ment EPA's exposure  guidelines issued in
    1986;

 -   exposure  validation models;

 -   guidance  on standard factors for use in ex-
    posure assessment;

 -   exposure  scenarios.

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        Ecological Risk AssessmentlOngoing Risk As-
        sessment:  Projects include
        -  a Framework Report that outlines a flexible
           system for use  in developing ecological risk
           guidance;
        -  peer-reviewed case studies on ecological risk
           problems;
                              peer panel workshops on issues under study
                              For use in developing risk assessment guide-
                              lines.
                                              •ft   &
                                          Areas  of Expertise
Office of the Director
  Dorothy E. Patton
  William P. Wood
  William van der Schalie
  Harry Tcitclbaum
 Telephone

202-260-6743
202-260-1095
202-260-419!
202-260-2787
 Area of Expertise

Health risk assessment
Exposure assessment
Ecological risk assessment
Health risk assessment

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                 Office of Science, Planning and  Regulatory  Evaluation
                                                        Peter W. Preuss has been the director of the Office of
                                                    Science,  Planning and Regulatory Evaluation since 1988.
                                                    From 1985 to 1988. he was the director of the  Office of
                                                    Health and Environmental Assessment. Prior to joining EPA,
                                                    Dr. Preuss was associate executive director for Health Sci-
                                                    ences for the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission.
                                                    Dr. Preuss began  his career with the Boyce-Thompson Insti-
                                                    tute  for  Plant Research.  He received Ph.D. and master's
                                                    degrees in plant physiology and biochemistry from Columbia
                                                    University and a  bachelor's degree in chemistry and math-
                                                    ematics  from Brooklyn College.
                                               DIRECTOR

                                              202-260-7669
  Regulatory Support
         Staff
  Water
  Team
                                                   _L
                Planning and Science
                    Review Staff
             Air Team


Planning
Team

Science
Review
Team
Hazardous
  Waste
  Team
Toxics/Pest
  Team
   Regional Operations
          Staff
Technology Transfer
       Staff


Regional
Scientist


Team







Superfund
Technical
Liaison

Te

am
                                                                           Center for
                                                                         Environmental
                                                                       Research Information
   Research
Communication
    Branch
         Document
       Management
          Branch

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                        Office of Science, Planning and Regulatory Evaluation

                                         Peter  W. Preuss, Director
                                             MaiScode:  H-8105
                                401  M St., S.W. Washington, D.C. 20460
                                    202-260-7669,  FAX: 202-260-0106
Functions
    The Office of Science, Planning and Regulatory Evalu-
ation  (OSPRE) performs several functions  that link  ORD
science programs and the environmental policy and regula-
tory activities of EPA's program and regional offices:

     «  provide advice and analysis of the scientific and
        technological basis  for Agency policies, both
        regulatory and non-regulatory;

     •  manage ORD's issue-based  process for plan-
        ning the  research  program;

     «  lead Agency implementations of Safeguarding
        the Future:  Credible Science,  Credible Deci-
        sions, } I major recommendations of the expert
        panel on  the role of science at EPA for improv-
        ing EPA's science knowledge base;

     •  manage the  deliver,' of products and services
        from  ORD  laboratories through technology
        transfer and technical information exchanges;

     •  promote the  interests of EPA regional offices in
        Agency research activities.

    The responsibilities for these functions arc divided among
four Headquarters staffs and the Center for Environmental
Research Information.

Staff Responsibilities

Regulatory Support Staff
    The OSPRE regulatory support staff, working with labo-
ratory experts, ensures that all relevant scientific and tech-
nology  information  is considered in the development  of
Agency regulations,  decisions, and  policies.  To strengthen
the role of science at EPA,  the  staff also evaluates legisla-
tion, such as the Clean Air  Act Amendments, to align ORD's
research  program with  legislative requirements. The staff
represents ORD in Agency  initiatives thai require creative
scientific approaches, as in  the  case of EPA's Corrective
Action Risk Impact Analysis. Often the staff works with other
federal agencies,  like the Department of Agriculture, to  de-
sign joint research programs.

Planning  and Science Review Staff
    The planning and science review staff implements ORD's
new issue-based research  planning process and  the recom-
mendations  of the Expert  Panel  on  the Role of Science at
EPA. For research planning  purposes, ORD's research pro-
gram  is divided into about 40 issues, or areas  of research,
that correspond to high-risk, multimedia, regulatory, or stra-
tegic environmental problems. For each  issue, a comprehen-
sive three-to-five-ycar plan has been developed that includes
detailed descriptions of scientific questions needing research,
the specific areas in which  EPA will conduct research, prod-
ucts, and lechnology transfer  activities.  The planning team
facilitates  the  many steps  of  the  process  among the ORD
Headquarters offices and laboratories.

    The science review team is responsible for implementing
the  recommendations of the Expert Panel on  the Role of
Science, outlined in its March  1992 report, Safeguarding  the
Future: Credible Science, Credible Decisions. The report made
significant recommendations for improving the science knowl-
edge base of the Agency. Key recommendations being imple-
mented by the team include  improving the science for decision
making; establishing and coordinating the efforts  of the Coun-
cil of Science  Advisors, an intra-Agency group  of scientists
that advises  the Administrator on  science  policy issues that
have impacts across Agency programs;  and implementing a
World Class Scientist Program  for recruiting  outstanding
scientists in environmental disciplines  to work with EPA
scientists.

Technology Transfer  Staff
    As the regulatory support and planning staffs work within
the Agency to bring ORD into activities, the technology trans-
fer staff (and the Center for Environmental Research  Infor-
mation, see  separate section) promotes ORD  science and
technical information to the broadest possible audience out-
side  the Agency. The staff works to forge partnerships  be-
tween  EPA  laboratories and the private sector.  In addition,
the staff implements the Agency's Federal Technology Trans-
fer  Act program for establishing  cooperative  research and
development agreements with businesses and academic insti-
tutions to do joint research and  commercialize  the results.
The OSPRE lechnology transfer staff has taken the lead in
developing and advocating biotechnology initiatives, envi-
ronmental education resources  for all levels of students, small
community outreach, and electronic information services such
as the  ORD  bulletin board system.

Regional Operations Staff
    The regional operations staff (ROS) is ORD's primary
liaison to EPA's regional offices and the environmental  de-
cision makers  in state and local government. ROS advocates
regional needs in ORD's research program and promotes the
flow of information and technology to state and local govern-
ment clients through three  programs: 1)  the Regional Scien-
tist  Program, 2) the Supcrfund Technical  Liaison Program,
and 3) the Slate and  Local Program.

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    The regional scientist program  places an ORD scientist
in each region who aids the communication  between  ORD
and the  regions and promotes the  development of applied
research and technical  assistance support  for the regional
offices' programs. The  Stiperfund technical liaison program
places an ORD point of contact in each regional office who
facilitates  access to ORD laboratories and oversees ORD's
Superfund technical support programs. The state and local
program, through cooperative agreements, provides techni-
                  cal assistance to state and local government environmental
                  management professionals. The cooperatives also provide  a
                  conduit for state and local governments to communicate their
                  research needs to ORD. Three cooperative agreements arc in
                  effect with (1) the National Governors' Association, (2) Pub-
                  lic Technologies, Inc., (representing  the  League of Cities,
                  National  Associations of Counties, and  International City
                  Managers Association), and (3) the National Association of
                  Counties and Conference of Mayors.
                                            Areas  of Expertise
                                        Telephone
                                  Area of Expertise
Office of the Director
   Peter W. Prcuss, Ph.D., Director       202-260-7669
   Jay Bcnforado, Deputy Director       202-260-7669
   Shirley Hamilton                    202-260-7891

Regulatory Support Staff
   Jay Bcnforado, Director              202-260-7669

   Air Team
   Kevin Teichman, Chief              202-260-7669
   StanDurkce                        202-260-7891
   Stacey Katz                        202-260-7669
   BobFcglcy                         202-260-7891

   Hazardous Waste Team
                         Program operations
                          Indoor air
                          Mobile sources; municipal waste
                          NAAQS
                          Air toxics
   Toxic/Pesticide Team
   Elaine Francis, Chief

   David Cleverly
   Michael Trover

   Vivian Williams
202-260-7891

202-260-7891
513-569-7399

202-260-7891
Pesticide risk assessment; food safety; non-cancer
  health effects
Exposure assessment; toxic air pollutants; dioxin
Ecological risk assessment; endangered species;
  wetlands; migratory birds
Human health effects; toxicology
   Water Team

   Ronnie Levin, Chief
   Burnell Vincent
202-260-7891
202-260-7891
Lead; drinking water
Sewage sludge; nonpoint sources; waste water
                                                                                                     (continued)

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                                          Areas  of Expertise
                                                   (continued)
                                       Telephone
                                 Area of Expertise
Planning and Science Review Staff

  Joe DeSantis, Director               202-260-7891

  Planning Team

  Jerry Carman                       202-260-7891
  Gail Robarge                       202-260-7669
  Mary Wigginton                    202-260-7891

  Science Review

  Brian Lane                         202-260-7891

Technology Transfer Staff

  Michael Moore, Director             202-260-7671
  Ronald Slotkin                      202-260-7671
  Larry Fradkin                       513-569-7960

Regional Operations Staff

  David Khiudcr, Director              202-260-7667
  Lawrence Martin                    202-260-7667

  Regional Scientist Team

  Ron Landy, Chief                   202-260-7667
  Thomas Waddcll                    617-565-3397
  Patricia Lafornara                   908-906-6988
  David Smith                        303-293-1475
  Randal! J.F. Bruins                  206-553-2146

  Superfund Technical Liaison Team
                         Research plans development
                         Research committees; strategic planning
                         Research planning support
                         Council of Science Advisors
                         Environmental Technology Utilization
                         Environmental Science and Technology Education
                         Federal Technology Transfer Act
                         State and local coordinator
                         Region 1
                         Region il
                         Region VIII
                         Re «ion X
  Amy Mills, Acting Chief
  Magalie Breville
  Norm Kulujian
  Deborah Stockdale
  Steve Mangion,
  Robert E. Mournighan
  Robert L. Stone
  Joe Grccnblott
  John 8 a rich
202-260-7891
212-264-6788
215-597-1113
404-347-1586
312-886-3011
913-551-7913
303-294-7597
415-744-2307
206-553-8562
Region 1!
Region III
Region IV
Region V
Region VII
Region VIII
Region IX
Re »ion X
                                                      10

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                Center for  Environmental Research Information
                                                    Calvin 0. Lawrence has served as the director of the
                                                Center for Environmental Research Information since 1980.
                                                He  was  the deputy director of CER1 for three years. He
                                                became the Senior Official for Research and Development-
                                                Cincinnati in 1990. Mr. Lawrence worked for ORD in Wash-
                                                ington, D.C., from 1972 to 1977, ending his tenure there as
                                                technical  assistant to the Assistant Administrator for ORD.
                                                He  began his federal career in 1963 as mathematician and
                                                electrical engineer at the Naval Ordinance Laboratory, White
                                                Oak, Maryland. Mr. Lawrence was awarded an EPA Bronze
                                                Medal in  1973. He has a bachelor's degree in mathematics
                                                from Lamar University  and a master's degree in numerical
                                                science from John Hopkins University.
                                          niRKrroR

                                          513-569-7391
Technology Transfer
      Branch
Research Communication
        Branch
Document Management
       Branch
                                               11

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                           Center for  Environmental  Research Information

                                      Calvin O.  Lawrence, Director
                                              Mailcode: G-75
                              26 W.  ML  King Dr.,  Cincinnati, OH  45268
                                   513-569-7391, FAX: 513-569-7566
                                     E-Mail LAWRENCE.CALVIN
    The  Center  for Environmental  Research  Information
(CER1) is a focal point for the exchange of scientific and
technical  information  both  within the  federal  government
and to the  public.  CERI's Technology Transfer, Research
Communication,  and Document Management Branches co-
ordinate a comprehensive program in support of the activi-
ties of EPA's Office of Research and Development (ORD),
its laboratories, and associated programs nationwide.

    The Technology Transfer Branch works with the ORD
laboratories, program offices, regions, acaclernia, and the pri-
vate sector  to produce  technology transfer products (i.e., re-
ports,  summaries, journal articles, design manuals, handbooks,
capsule reports, seminars, workshops, and training courses)
that aid states, local governments, and the regulated commu-
nity in complying with EPA regulations. This information is
based  upon the latest  technology and is  in a  form  that is
easily understood as well as comprehensive  in  coverage.
Topics include groundwatcr remediation, pollution preven-
tion, solid and hazardous wastes,  sludge,  small community
water  treatment,  municipal wastewater treatment, air pollu-
tion, and EMAP.

    The  Research  Communication  Branch is responsible
for working  with the  ORD laboratories, program  offices,
and regions to produce information products that summarize
research, technical, regulatory, and enforcement information
that will assist non-technical audiences in understanding en-
vironmental  issues.  Additionally, research  communication
products  will allow a non-technical  audience to make in-
formed decisions necessary to respond to EPA's  regulatory
requirements and enforcement actions.

    The Document Management Branch is responsible for
the  production and distribution  of scientific and technical
reports, responding to requests for publications, and quality
control of information products  through the application of
standardized procedures for the production of documents. Our
personnel employ state-of-the-art electronic publishing sys-
tems to efficiently produce, edit, publish, and distribute docu-
ments in the most appropriate format.

    Electronic links with the offices, regions,  laboratories,
researchers, and the private sector afford CER1 the  immedi-
ate  ability to serve the needs of our clients. A noteworthy
component  of this  service is the ORD  Electronic  Bulletin
Board System (BBS). It facilitates the exchange of technical
information and ORD products among our clients in  the form
of electronic messages, brief bulletins about ORD  products
and activities, files for downloading,  participation in confer-
ences, and on-line  databases for identifying ORD  publica-
tions.
                                                       12

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                                        Areas  of Expertise
Ed Earth

Sue Schock
James F. Kreiss!

Fran Krcmer

Denis Lussicr

Justice Manning
Daniel J. Murray


Jose D. Perez
Randy Rcvetta
J. E. Smith
Telephone

513-569-7669

513-569-7362
513-569-7394

513-569-7346

513-569-7354

513-569-7349
513-569-7522
513-569-7502
513-569-7394
513-569-7355
Jack Tcuschlcr
 H. Douglas Williams
513-569-7314

513-569-7361
            Area of Expertise

Treatment of hazardous wastes (solidification;
  stabilization; vitrification)
Ground water
Small community wastewater, drinking water, and
  solid waste management
Treatment of hazardous wastes (bioremediation;
  oil spills)
Municipal wastewater treatment; ORD Electronic
  Bulletin Board System
Air pollution
Nonpoint source water pollution;  industrial wastewa-
  ter pretrcatmcnt; wastewater and water quality
  monitoring
Expert systems
Municipal wastewater treatment
Drinking water and wastewater treatment; residuals
  management; hazardous waste management;
  working with international organizations to
  solve developing country industrial and hazardous
  waste problems
Expert systems; computer systems development;
  software development
Hazardous materials risk reduction for waste minimi-
  zation; pollution prevention
                                                     13

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                           Office  of Exploratory Research
                                                    Robert E. Men/or was appointed acting director of the
                                                Office of Exploratory Research  in 1991. Concurrently,  he
                                                serves as director of the Gulf Breeze Environmental Research
                                                Laboratory. Before joining ORD in 1989 Dr. Menzer was a
                                                professor at the University of Maryland, where he also served
                                                in several research administration posts, including associate
                                                dean and acting dean  for Graduate Studies and Research. He
                                                received a Ph.D. in entomology from the University of Wis-
                                                consin, Madison, and a bachelor's degree in chemistry from
                                                the University of Pennsylvania.
                                         DIRECTOR

                                         202-260-5750
Research Grants Staff
    202-260-7473
   Senior Environmental
Employment and Workforce
     Development Staff
       202-260-2573
Centers and Special
  Programs Staff
   202-260-5750

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                                     Office of Exploratory Research

                                     Robert  Menzer, Acting Director
                                             Mailcode: RD-675
                               401  M St., S.W. Washington, B.C.  20460
                                    202-260-5750, FAX: 202-260-0450
                                       E-Mail MENZER.ROBERT
    The Office of Exploratory Research (OER) plans, ad-
ministers,  manages, and evaluates EPA's extramural  grant
research. It supports research  in developing a better under-
standing of the environment and  its problems. OER's main
goals are

     •   to support the academic community in environ-
        mental research;
     *   to maintain scientific and technical  personnel
        in environmental science and technology;
     «   to support research  for the identification  and
        solution of emerging environmental  problems.

    OER's goals are accomplished primarily through four
core programs:

    The Research Grants Program: Supports research initi-
ated by individual investigators in areas of  interest to the
Agency. Research proposals arc solicited by (1) the general
"Solicitation for Research Proposals," which  is published each
year and invites proposals in  six areas of environmental sci-
ence and engineering; and (2) the Request  for Applications
(RFA), which  is a more targeted solicitation mechanism that
requests proposals in well-defined areas of particular interest
to the Agency  such as global climate change  and hazardous
substances. All proposals are  subjected  to external peer re-
view. In an effort to provide more support to minority insti-
tutions for the  conduct of basic environmental research, the
Research  Grants  Program makes available pre-application
assistance  for minority faculty of Historically Black  Colleges
and Universities  (HBCUs) and members  of the  Hispanic-
Association  of Colleges and Universities (HACU)  through
its Minority Institutions Assistance Program.

    The Environmental Research  Centers Program: This
program has two components: the Academic  Research Cen-
ters Program (ARC) and the Hazardous  Substance Research
Centers Program (HSRC). Within ARC, a  competition was
held to select  tour new academic research  center consortia,
which  began operations in 1992. The lead institutions are
Massachusetts  Institute of Technology, University of Mary-
land, Michigan Technological University, and University of
California, Davis.

    The HSRC  program  started  with the  establishment of
live university-based consortia to conduct Supcrfuncl  research,
training, and technology transfer. The lead institution for each
consortium is  as follows:  the  New Jersey Institute  of Tech-
nology for Region Pair 1/2, the University  of Michigan for
Region Pair 3/5, Louisiana State University for Region Pair
4/6, Kansas State University for Region Pair  7/8, and Stanford
University for  Region Pair 9/10.
    The Smalt Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Pro-
gram: Mandated by Public Law 97-219, which requires EPA
to devote 1.5 percent of its extramural research and develop-
ment budget to small business innovation research, the SBIR
Program  supports, via contracts, small  businesses for  the
development of ideas  relevant  to EPA's mission. The pro-
gram focuses on projects in pollution control development. It
also receives 1.5 percent of the Agency's resources devoted
to extramural Superfund research.

    The  Visiting  Scientists Program: Components are  (1)
an Environmental  Science and Engineering Fellows Program
and (2) a Resident Research Associateship Program. Each
year, under summer fellowships, the Fellows Program sup-
ports ten  mid-career post-doctoral scientists and engineers at
EPA  headquarters  and  regional  offices. The  Research
Associateship Program attracts national and international sci-
entists and engineers to EPA research laboratories  for up to
three years to collaborate with Agency researchers on  impor-
tant environmental issues.

    In addition to the  above core programs, OER  adminis-
ters other programs which are also  important to the accom-
plishment of its goals. They include:

    A  Minority Fellowship Program: Awards fellowships
to college seniors and graduate students enrolled on  a full-
time basis at Historically Black Colleges  and  Universities
and member institutions of the  Hispanic Association of Col-
leges  and Universities who are majoring  in curricula  that
could be  applied to the solution of environmental problems.

    A  Minority Summer Intern Program: Gives recipients
of fellowships under the Minority Fellowship Program hands-
on experience in the area of their academic training through
a summer internship  at  EPA or some other  environmental
organization.

    The Agency's Senior Environmental Employment Pro-
gram (SEE): Uses the skills and talents of older Americans
to provide technical assistance  in environmental programs
throughout EPA.

    The Federal Workforce Training Program: Coordinates
ORD's participation in workforce training programs used by
state and local governments.

    An Experimental  Program to  Stimulate  Competitive
Research (EPSCoR): Dedicated to stimulating better research
and developing better researchers in those states which have
traditionally  been relatively unsuccessful in garnering  fed-
eral research support.
                                                        15

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                                          Areas of Expertise
                                       Telephone
        Area of Expertise
Office of the Director
   Robert E. Menzer, Acting Director    202-260-5750

Science Review Administration
   Clyde Bishop                       202-260-5727

   Deran Pashayan                    202-260-2606
   Louis Swaby                       202-260-7445


Program Analysis
   Virginia Broadway                  202-260-7664

   Alvin Edwards                     202-260-7663

   Ted Just                           202-260-2618
   Susan Street                        202-260-4331
Environmental biology research grants; environmen-
  tal healih research grants
Air chemistry and physics research grants; EPSCoR
Water chemistry and physics research grants;
  engineering research grants
Minority institution assistance; minority student
  fellowships
Program operations; minority summer internships;
  research associatcships
Workforce development
Workforce development
   Robert Papetti, Director              202-260-7473

   Karen Morehouse, Director           202-260-5750

   Dale Manly, Program Manager        202-260-7454

   Patricia Powers, Director             202-260-2573

   Donald Carey, Program Manager      202-260-7899
Exploratory research grants; socioeconomic research
  grants
Academic Research Centers; centers and special
  programs
Superfund research centers; Hazardous Substance
  Research Center Program
Senior Environmental Employment Program;
  workforce development
Small Business Innovation Research
                                                       16

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                      Office of Research Program Management
                                                      Clarence E. Mahan has been the director of the Office
                                                  of Research Program Management since April 1986. From
                                                  1983 to 1986. he was associate comptroller for EPA. Before
                                                  that, he spent a year as the director, Office of Fiscal and
                                                  Contracts Management. He held several positions with  the
                                                  Army, the Air Force, and the Department of Energy. Mr.
                                                  Mahan received an MBA degree from Syracuse University,
                                                  a master's  in  history from American University, and a
                                                  bachelor's from the University of Maryland. He has received
                                                  the Presidential Rank of Meritorious Executive Award.
                                            DIRECTOR

                                            202-260-7500
  Program
Coordination
    Staff
202-260-7468
 Evaluation
    and
Review Staff
202-260-7500
Resource Policy
     Staff
 202-260-2597
  Financial
 Operations
    Staff
202-260-1003
  Program
 Operations
    and
Management
    Staff
202-260-7462

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                               Office of Research Program Management

                                      Clarence E.  Mahan, Director
                                             Mailcode:  RD-674
                               401  M St.,  S.W.  Washington, D.C. 20460
                                    202-260-7500, FAX: 202-260-0552
                                      E-Mail MAHAN.CLARENCE
Functions
    The Office of Research Program Management (ORPM)
is the principal staff office to the Assistant Administrator on
matters of budgeting, accountability,  program planning,
analysis, review,  integration and coordination, resource man-
agement, organizational and manpower management, envi-
ronmental compliance, policy development and analysis, and
administrative management services.

    ORPM develops and implements the planning process in
ORD and assures that  the budget requests to the Agency,
OMB,  and Congress respond to the regulatory  and program
needs of EPA and anticipate future environmental research
necessary  to address emerging  issues.

    ORPM manages the overall budget execution of all ORD
resources, including  directing plan development  for headquar-
ters and field facilities; tracking,  monitoring, and analyzing
changes,  and expenditures; and similar budget management
and analysis functions. These activities operate simultaneously
and concurrently to cover three budget cycles, i.e.,  current
year, planning year, and budget year during any given fiscal
year.

    ORPM  is responsible for implementation and oversight
for ORD of the Agency's Integrated Financial  Management
Systems  (1FMS). These functions include ensuring proper
maintenance, accuracy, and adequacy  of (he system to meet
the various  and  complex requirements  of ORD entities in
fulfilling their budget, operating, financial, and management
needs.

    ORPM  conducts policy/program reviews at the  request
of ihe  Assistant  Administrator. It develops and implements
strategies  to promote integrity, effectiveness, and efficiency
in ORD's business  management practices.

    ORD-widc  accountability framework is maintained
through developing, monitoring, and analyzing internal and
external management reviews.

     Policy/program reviews requested by the laboratory di-
rectors and  office directors are conducted to enhance their
operations.

     ORPM has  national responsibility  for human  resource
management (HRM) programs  within ORD. The continuing
need and  validity of these programs is tested against  an  on-
going  strategic planning process. The ORD Comprehensive
Human Resource Plan provides  the basis for this process.
The plan  is to address long-term scientific and engineering
objectives in an  expanding environmental agenda. The stra-
tegic HRM plan, as defined by the Assistant Administrator
for ORD, is to develop options on how ORD  can better meet
its objectives to attract and retain highly qualified scientists
and engineers.

Infrastructure Management
    Responsibility  for keeping ORD's infrastructure  strong
to ensure  that ORD's science can be performed also rests
with ORPM. In this area, ORPM  provides  administrative
direction for all functions related to facilities planning and
engineering  needs  at ORD laboratories.  This includes the
collection of needs and the management of the analyses re-
quired  to determine priorities  of new construction  projects,
maintenance projects for facilities, compliance of ORD fa-
cilities  with environmental regulations, and ensuring that ORD
facilities have health/safety programs to ensure that employ-
ees are not exposed to harmful working conditions.

    ORPM also oversees the scientific equipment program.
This ensures that the need for new and replacement  equip-
ment is addressed during the budget process and the existing
inventory of scientific equipment is managed in a defensible
fashion so that  ORD's budget requests arc supportable.

Information Management
    ORPM is responsible for ensuring that activities carried
out by  ORD comply with federal and EPA policies and regu-
lations concerning  the maintenance, acquisition, and man-
agement of all hardware  and software  required  for data
processing. This responsibility includes directing and manag-
ing the planning and budgeting for all  ORD  information
systems and the technology needed to support these systems.
Information needs  are coordinated across ORD and  data  is
integrated where feasible to eliminate unnecessary duplica-
tion.
Administrative Management and Analysis
    ORPM also provides an ORD-wide oversight function in
the following areas: developing policy for contracts,  grants,
and cooperative agreements; developing and executing  the
budget for the Office of the Assistant Administrator and as-
sociated staff offices; managing the ORD policy and proce-
dures program; managing, coordinating, and staffing the ORD
Awards Committee activities; coordinating the review of GAO
and Inspector General  audits,  Agency's reorganization and
delegation proposals, Freedom of Information Act requests,
and overseeing the Federal Manager's Financial Integrity Act
responsibilities. In addition, ORPM  coordinates  ail interna-
tional travel  requests  and manages  the system  which pro-
vides reports on all activities.
                                                       18

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                  Office of Health  Research
                                        Ken Sexton  received his doctorate  in environmental
                                    health sciences from Harvard  University, where he was the
                                    recipient of both the Du Pont fellowship and a clinical epide-
                                    miology  training grant. Before coming to EPA, Dr. Sexton
                                    was director for scientific review at the Health  Effects Insti-
                                    tute in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and prior to that he was
                                    director of California's Indoor Air Program. Dr.  Sexton is
                                    currently co-chairman of the U.S./Canadian Binational Hu-
                                    man Health Issues Committee, chairman of the Federal Inter-
                                    agency Task Force on Air Pollution Research, chairman of
                                    the Federal Interagency  Working  Group on Environmental
                                    Cancer  and Heart and Lung Disease,  and  chairman  of the
                                    Federal  Interagency Task Force on Human Exposure Assess-
                                    ment. He has published extensively in the scientific literature
                                    on human exposures to environmental agents, research to
                                    improve  health risk assessment, and the role of science in
                                    environmental  policy and regulatory decisions.
                              DIRECTOR

                             202-260-5900
 Health Research
Management Staff
   202-260-5891
Health Effects Research
      Laboratory
   Research Triangle
       Park, NC
     919-541-2281
                                   19

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                                        Office of Health Research

                                           Ken Sexton, Director
                                             Mailcode: RD-683
                               401 M St.,  S.W. Washington, D.C. 20460
                                    202-260-5900, FAX: 202-260-0744
                                          E-Mail SEXTON.KEN
Program Activities
    The goals of the Office of Health Research (OHR) are

     (1) Hazard identification,

     (2) Dose response assessment,

     (3) Development of chemical-specific information.

These three goals serve as the core around which each of the
media-specific programs are  planned and implemented. Be-
low is a brief description of the health issues which are being
addressed in OHR's research program.

    Air:  In the air health research program major efforts are
being directed at providing  dose-response data for use  in
quantifying the health risk resulting from  exposure  to the
criteria pollutants.  This  research is being conducted using
animal toxicology studies and both human clinical and epi-
demiological studies and develops data describing the effects
of exposure to these pollutants on pulmonary function, changes
in host defense functions  (immunotoxicity), cardiovascular
disease, and neurological function. Research is also develop-
ing better methods to  determine the deposition of pollutants
in the lung in order to improve our risk assessment capabili-
ties. Research  on hazardous air pollutants is focused on de-
termining the potential mutagenic and carcinogenic hazard  of
VOCs and mixtures of air pollutants. The indoor air health
effects research program is focusing on developing method-
ology and data to evaluate the effects, both cancer and non-
cancer, from exposure to combustion emissions from kerosene
heaters, wood stoves, environmental tobacco smoke, and other
sources of indoor air pollution.

    Water: The primary focus of the drinking water health
effects research program is to determine the health effects
from the use of various drinking water disinfectants (chlo-
rine, chloramine, ozone). Epidemiology studies are being
planned and conducted to determine the relationship between
water disinfection and both cancer and reproductive effects.
These methods are used to identify and isolate the biologi-
cally active components or chemicals from drinking water
concentrates for further in-depth health characterization. Dose-
response studies are also being conducted on drinking water
disinfection byproducts to support the development of drink-
ing water standards.

    Pesticides and Toxics: The pesticides  and toxic sub-
stances research program develops test methods for deter-
mining the health  effects from pesticides and commercial
chemicals, developing both animal and human biomarkers to
improve our understanding of exposure-dose relationships and
to apply these methods in biochemical epidemiology studies,
research to determine the potential health effects from micro-
bial  pesticides  and genetically engineered  organisms and
research to develop structure activity relationship models to
support TSCA section 5.
                                                       20

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                Health  Effects  Research Laboratory
                                              Lawrence VV. Reiter has been the director of the Health
                                          Effects Research Laboratory since April 1988. Prior to being
                                          named director of the laboratory, Dr. Reiter was director of
                                          HERL's Neurotoxicology Division. Earlier in his career, lie
                                          v. as responsible for centralizing the ncurotoxicology research
                                          program for the Agency and received an EPA Bronze Medal
                                          in 1979 for his role in this effort. Dr.  Reiter also has received
                                          two Special Achievement Awards and the Agency's Scien-
                                          tific and Technological Achievement Award. Dr. Reiter serves
                                          on the editorial board of three professional journals and is an
                                          internationally recognized neurotoxicologist who has  been
                                          involved  in a variety of activities to define and implement
                                          national priorities for environmental health research in  this
                                          area.  He  earned  his Ph.D. in  neuropharmacology from  the
                                          University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City. Before
                                          joining EPA in  1973 as a research pharmacologist, he was a
                                          post-doctoral  fellow and  lecturer in environmental  toxicol-
                                          ogy at the University of California-Davis.
DIRECTOR

919-541-2281
                                         21

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                                  Health  Effects Research Laboratory
                                      Lawrence W. Reiter, Director
                                             Mailcode: MD-51
                                  Research Triangle Park, NC  27711
                                   919-541-2281, FAX: 919-541-4324
                                        E-Mail REITER.LARRY
    The Health Effects Research Laboratory formulates and
implements a comprehensive research program to investigate
the human health effects resulting from exposure fo environ-
mental pollutants. Staffed by health scientists  with  recog-
nized expertise in a variety of disciplines—environmental
medicine, physiology, epidemiology, statistics, biochemistry,
neurotoxicology, toxicology, teratology, perinatal toxicology,
geriatric toxicology, pulmonary toxicology, immunotoxicol-
ogy, cardiovascular  toxicology, genotoxicology, hepatotoxi-
cology, and microbiology—HERL is the focal point  for
lexicological, clinical, and epidemiological research  within
the Agency. HERL also establishes cooperative research
projects with academic and other scientific institutions which
facilitate the Agency efforts in understanding the health ef-
fects  of environmental pollutants. This research program
develops and applies state-of-the-science biological assays,
predictive models, and extrapolation methods which serve as
the basis for the Agency's health risk assessments.

    HERL consists  of six divisions. Most of the research
facilities are located in the Research Triangle  Park, North
Carolina. HERL has one of the nation's  few sophisticated
human inhalation exposure facilities, located on the campus
of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

    Research at HERL is being conducted in the following
areas:

     •  Oxidants: Develop a database for use in regu-
        latory decision making on  the health effects  of
        0., and N02 exposure  by conducting human
        clinical, epidemiologic, and  animal studies.
        Models are also being  developed to quantita-
        tively extrapolate animal data to  humans.

     •  Hazardous Air Pollutants (HAP): Develop and
        validate techniques to evaluate the toxic effects
        of HAPs,  produce dose-response data  on the
        toxic effects of HAPs and develop models which
        improve our ability to use toxicological data in
        risk assessments.

     •  Mobile Sources: Provide quality health data on
        the effects  of vehicle fuels and additives, in-
        cluding methanol and exposure to CO  and de-
        velop methods for obtaining dose-response data
        for use in risk assessments for regulatory pur-
        poses.

      *  Superfund: Develop and evaluate dose-response
        data, extrapolation models, and test methods on
        complex mixtures to reduce uncertainties in risk
        assessment.

      •  Gases and Particles: Develop a database for
        use in regulatory decision making on the health
effects of S02, particles and lead by conducting
human clinical, epidemiologic, and animal stud-
ies. Models are also being developed to extrapo-
late  animal data to humans and to provide
information on the relationship between particle
size  and  lung  deposition in man.

Water Quality: Evaluate methods  to  assess
health  hazards associated  with  complex mix-
tures arising as discharges from publicly owned
treatment works.

Municipal  Wastewater: Provide data and  ap-
praisal documents on  health aspects of land
application of municipal sludge and use of reno-
vated wastewater for a source of drinking wa-
ter.

Drinking Water: Provide  health effects infor-
mation for drinking water standards and health
advisories with special emphasis on hazards
posed by drinking water disinfectants (chlorine,
chloramine, chlorine dioxide, and ozone) utiliz-
ing state-of-the-art  toxicologic  and epidemio-
logic methodologies.

Hazardous Waste: Evaluate the health effects
of emissions and residues from hazardous waste
incineration (HWI)  and municipal waste com-
bustion (MWC).

Pesticides:  Develop methodologies and gener-
ate data for the assessment of health risks from
pesticides;  define environmental and  health
endpoints for  future test methods. Studies  are
also  being carried out on health effects of bio-
logical and bioengineered  pesticides.

indoor Air Research (with an emphasis on com-
bustion products, multiple  chemical sensitivity,
VOCs, and environmental tobacco smoke):
Apply  results  of the research to the  develop-
ment of health risk assessments.

Improved Health Risk Assessments: Develop
a systematic and integrated approach to improve
the health risk assessment process.

Toxic Chemical Testing and Assessment: De-
velop and validate test methods for identifying
health hazards  under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA). Study relationship between
chemical structure and toxicologic activity.
Carry  out human epidemiological studies on
hazardous  chemicals.  Also,  evaluate human
health  hazards of bioengineered materials.
                                                       22

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                                          Areas of Expertise
                                       Telephone
                                 Area of Expertise
Office of the Director
  Lawrence W. Rcitcr, Director
  Harold Zcnick. Deputy Director
  Michael D. Waters,
     Assoc. Lab Director
  Elaine C. Grose, Assoc. Lab Director
  Fred Hauchman, Assoc. Lab Director
  Ha L. Cote, Assoc. Lab Director
  Robert S. Dyer, Assoc. Lab Director
919-541-2281
919-541-2283
919-541-2537

919-541-3844
919-541-3893
919-541-3644
919-541-2760
  John J. Vandcnberg, RIHRA Director  919-541-4527
Developmental Toxicology Division
  Robert J. Kavlock
  Sally P. Darncy
  John M. Rogers

Environmental Toxicology Division
  Linda S. Birnbauin
  Daniel L. Costa
  James D. McKinncy
  Mary Jane Belgrade

Genetic Toxicology Division
  Larry D. Claxton, Acting Director
  Stephen Nesnow
  Joellen Lcwtas
  Martha M. Moore
919-541-2771
919-541-3826
919-541-5177
919-541-2655
919-541-2531
919-541-3585
919-541-2657
919-541-2329
919-541-3847
919-541-3849
919-541-3933
Health effects of environmental pollutants
Health effects of environmental pollutants
International programs

Health effects of pesticides/toxic substances
Health effects of water pollutants
Health effects of air pollutants
Health effects of hazardous waste and Superfund
  chemicals
Coordinator for RIHRA program
Reproductive toxicology
Reproductive physiology
Perinatal toxicology
Pliarmacokinetics and toxicology
Pulmonary toxicology
Chemistry and metabolism
Immunotoxicology
Genetic toxicology
Chemical carcinogcnesis
Genetic toxicology of complex mixtures
Mammalian mutaaencsis
Human Studies Division
   Hillcl Korcn
   Tim Gcrrity
   Jack Griffith, Acting Chief

Ncurotoxicology Division
   Hugh A. Tilson
   Robert C.  MacPhail
   William K. Boyc.s
   Joseph S.  AH

Research Support Division
   Ann Akland
   John Crcason
   Barry Howard
   Kenneth P. Laws
   Kathy Driver
9I9-966-62(X)
919-966-6206
919-966-7549
919-541-2671
919-541-7833
919-541-7538
919-541-2240
919-541-2883
919-541-2598
919-541-2729
919-541-5744
919-541-7932
Human inhalation toxicology
Inhalation dosimctry
Epidemiology
Ncurotoxicology
Behavioral toxicology & pharmacology
Ncurophysiological toxicology
Electrical engineering
Program operations and administration
Multivariate analysis
Special Studies/Technical Support
Management Information System
Program operations
                                                      23

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Office  of Health  and  Environmental  Assessment
                                    William H. Farland  is the  director of the  Office of
                                Health  and  Environmental Assessment.  He has been with
                                EPA since 1979 and served as deputy director. Health and
                                Environmental Review Division, Office of Toxic Substances,
                                before joining ORD in 19H6 as director of the Carcinogen
                                Assessment Group. He received a  Ph.D. and master's degree
                                from the University  of California, Los  Angeles,  and  a
                                bachelor's degree in biology from Loyola University. He was
                                a National Cancer Institute Postdoctoral Fellow  (National
                                Research Service Awardce), at the University of California,
                                Irvine,  California, and Brookhaven National  Laboratory,
                                Upton,  New York.

Technical
Information Staff

DIRECTOR
202-260-7315






Program Operations
Staff


Human Health
Assessment Croup

i
Exposure
Assessment Group

1
Environmental Criteria
and Assessment Office
Research Triangle Park,
NC



Environmental Criteria
and Assessment Office
Cincinnati, OH
                               24

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                           Office of Health  and Environmental Assessment

                                      William H. Farland, Director
                                             Mailcode:  RD-689
                               401 M  St.,  S.W.  Washington,  D.C. 20460
                                    202-260-7315, FAX: 202-260-0393
                                     E-Mail  FARLAND.WILLIAM
    The  Office of Health and Environmental Assessment
(OHEA)  is EPA's focal point for the scientific assessment of
the  degree of risks imposed by environmental pollutants on
human health  and ecological systems.  OHEA  occupies a
critical position in the Office of Research and Development
(ORD) between (1) the researchers in other  ORD compo-
nents who are generating new findings and data, and (2) the
regulators in the EPA program offices and regions who must
make regulatory, enforcement, and remedial action decisions.
In support of its mission to provide the Agency with assess-
ments of risk to human health and the environment, OHEA
carries out three functions:

     •  Prepare human health risk assessments that serve
        as  the  scientific  bases for  regulatory and en-
        forcement decisions within the Agency.

     «  Promote Agcncywide coordination and consis-
        tency  of risk  assessments by  preparing guide-
        lines, providing expert advice,  reviews, and data
        analyses, and participating  in regulatory deci-
        sion processes; be a spokesperson to the public,
        other  federal  agencies, and internationally for
        environmental risk  assessment.

     •  Advance the science of risk assessment through
        research planning with the scientific commu-
        nity. OHEA  plans research projects that are
        carried out by its own programs and other ORD
        organizations.

    OHEA's four laboratory-level field components imple-
ment the  health science program; three support units provide
administrative, planning, and information management  sup-
port.

Program Activities

Air
     •  Develop air quality criteria documents that pro-
        vide the scientific bases for setting and revising
        National  Ambient Air Quality  Standards
        (NAAQS).

     •  Develop health risk assessments for hazardous
        air pollutants from stationary and mobile sources
        to  provide  the scientific  foundations  of
        rulemakings  under  the  1990 Clean Air Act
        Amendments  (CAAA), Titles 11 and III.

     •  Provide expert scientific consultation to  (a) the
        Office of Air and  Radiation  for CAA  imple-
        mentation, and (b)  federal interagency groups
        and international organizations  on health and
        ecological effects of air pollutants and  global
        climate change.

        Develop research for criteria air pollutants and
        mobile sources.

        Assess risks from indoor air pollutants.
Water
    *   Assess the health effects of exposure to drinking
        water contaminants.
        Assess the  risk of human exposure to toxic
        chemicals,  and evaluate  site-specific  health
        hazards for ambient waters.
    *   Provide risk  assessment methodologies  for
        chemicals and pathogens in the use and disposal
        of municipal sludge.

Hazardous Waste
        Provide documents  to support  RCRA 3001
        listing decisions and the land disposal restriction
        program in  the  form  of reference dose
        documentation.
        Develop  methods for assessing risks from
        hazardous and municipal waste treatment and
        disposal techniques  and waste  minimization
        options.
     •  Develop PC-based systems that will permit risk
        assessors  to conduct  risk  assessments.

Pesticides and  Toxic Chemicals
        Assist the Office of Pesticide Programs in health
        risk  assessments  for cancer,  mutagenicity,
        reproductive and developmental  effects, and
        exposure assessment.
        Assist the  Office of Pollution  Prevention and
        Toxics in health risk  assessments and exposure
        assessment.
     •  Develop risk assessment methods for effects in
        humans caused by exposure to environmental
        chemicals.

Multimedia
     •  Support exposure and risk assessment regula-
        tory dccisionmaking  by EPA.
                                                      25

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        Plan and fund research to reduce uncertainty in
        risk assessments.

        Provide consensus  information on  reference
        doses  (RlTDs),  inhalation reference  concentra-
        tions (Rf'Cs), or Agency agrccd-upon quantita-
        tive risk estimates of carcinogcnicity for IRIS.

        Provide leadership in reassessing dioxin.
Superfund
     •  Assist  EPA  offices  and regions in evaluating
        Superfund alternative courses of action.

     •  Operate a Technical Support Center for health
        risk assessments.

     «  Provide health assessments to support needs for
        the remedial planning and cost recovery efforts.

     •  Provide data on carcinogenicity and  chronic
        effects to support activities necessary to adjust
        the reportablc quantities  for hazardous sub-
        stances.

     •  Conduct research to fill information and assess-
        ment gaps in the Superfund public health evalu-
        ation process.

Issues
    OHEA assures consistency and high scientific quality in
the risk and exposure assessments conducted in other parts of
I lie Agency.

Issues Related  to Conducting Risk Assessments
    OHEA's work on the  lead criteria  document  brought
about its involvement in several other areas such as:

      •  the development of the Maximum Contaminant
        Level  in drinking water,

      •  the development of comparative risk assessment
        methods and techniques for assessing potential
        impacts to human and ecological health,

      •  the development of the lead biokinctic model,

      •  involvement in the Congrcssionally mandated
        study  of effects  of  lead in children and in  its
        removal from soils  in urban areas,

      •  participation in the Intcragency Lead Task Force
        activities,

      •  the lead role in developing  the  ORD research
        plan and budget for lead and other heavy met-
        als, and

      •  a  role  in evaluating whether the critical health
        effect  of lead is its carcinogenic potential or its
        neurological effects.
    As a result of the CAAA of 1990, OHEA assesses risks
from acid aerosols. OHEA's assessment of healih hazards
associated with exposure to environmental tobacco smoke is
an example of the  indoor air issue.

Issues Related  to  Risk Assessment Research
    OHEA provides direction to research efforts in risk as-
sessment. ORD is pursuing research efforts in understanding
ecological risk and in improving exposure assessment. Phar-
macokinetics, model validation, and reducing the uncertainty
in exposure assessment are areas of future research.

    OHEA assesses environmental risk and develops tech-
niques for comparing  risks of different remedial  strategies
and risk reduction  techniques.

    OHEA is an important client for research conducted  by
the other ORD offices and helps plan research to be con-
ducted by ORD. The result of such  enhanced planning will
be research findings that are better targeted to  the needs of
the risk assessors.

Issues  Related to Providing Guidance and
Consistency   to   Agency  Risk  Assessment
Activities
    OHEA develops risk  assessment guidelines under the
Risk Assessment Forum. Five  guidelines were  published in
1986. During the past year, the guidelines for  exposure as-
sessment and developmental toxicity  risk  assessment were
revised and reissued. Revised guidelines are under develop-
ment  for carcinogen risk assessment,  reproductive toxicity,
and quantitative  approaches for chronic toxicity.  OHEA is
involved in  preparing the  first-ever ecological  risk assess-
ment  guidelines.

    In managing the  flow of  risk assessment  information,
OHEA

     •  Leads discussions of how to coordinate  risk
        analysis activities.

     *  Demonstrates new approaches for characteriz-
        ing health risk through its guidelines develop-
        ment, IRIS activities, and risk assessment work.

     •  Develops non-cancer health effects risk assess-
        ments.

     •  Manages  the  Integrated Risk Information Sys-
        tem.

     •  Works with OAQPS in managing the Air Risk
        Information Support Center.

      •  Has provided the  lead support for  the Develop-
        mental and Reproductive Toxicology Database.

     •  Has established a  Technical Support Center for
        Health and Risk Assessment for Superfund to
        provide a contact point  for  dissemination of
        health risk assessment information to  regional
        and state  officials  and private  organizations
        involved  in Superfund.
                                                        26

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                         Human Health Assessment Group
                                                    Since February 1990, Hugh W.  McKinnon has been
                                                the director of the Human Health  Assessment Group. He
                                                received his medical degree from the University of Virginia
                                                in  1977. He completed the General  Preventive  Medicine
                                                Residency in the School of Hygiene and Public Health at the
                                                Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore in June  1989 and
                                                received a master of public health degree from that univer-
                                                sity in  1988. He  was appointed as medical officer in the
                                                Office of Health  Research in  1978 and served as the acting
                                                director of that office from November 1985 to May 1987.
                                                He has professional memberships in  the American  Public
                                                Health Association and the Federal Physicians Association.
                                        DIRECTOR

                                        202-260-5898
 Carcinogen
 Assessment
Statistics and
Epidemiology
   Branch
Carcinogen
Assessment
Toxicology
  Branch
Molecular and
   Genetic
  Toxicology
   Branch
Reproductive and
 Developmental
   Toxicology
     Branch

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                                   Human Health  Assessment Group

                                       Hugh McKinnon, Director
                                            Mailcode: RD-689
                               401  M St., S.W. Washington, D.C. 20460
                                   202-260-5898, FAX: 202-260-3803
                                      E-Mail MCKINNON.HUGH
    The Human Health Assessment Group develops human
health risk assessments and reviews assessments developed
elsewhere in EPA; participates in the development and imple-
mentation  of  EPA's  risk assessment guidelines, including
guidelines training courses; and performs research to im-
prove health risk assessments. The group also provides ad-
vice on  the  health  risks  associated with  suspected
cancer-causing agents and the risks associated with chemi-
cals  suspected of causing mutagcnic and adverse  develop-
mental and reproductive  effects. The  group  plans and
implements its own program and provides extensive consul-
tation and technical  assistance to others.

    The group is composed of four branches:

     •  The  Carcinogen Assessment Toxicology
        Branch  advises the Agency on the health-haz-
        ard potential from suspected  cancer-causing
        agents as interpreted from animal  toxicology
        and pathology data.

     •  The Carcinogen A ssessment Statistics and Epi-
        demiology Branch advises the Agency  on the
        health-hazard potential from suspected cancer-
        causing  agents as interpreted from epidemiol-
        ogy   data   and  defines  and  interprets
        dose-response relationships  from both  epidc-
        miologic and animal data.

     •  The  Reproductive and Developmental Toxi-
        cology Branch is responsible for advising the
        Agency  on  the health  risks associated  with
        suspected reproductive and developmental  toxi-
        cants as interpreted from in vitro, experimental
        animal,  and human data.

     •  The Molecular  and  Genetic Toxicology
        Branch  advises the Agency on the health  risks
        associated with suspected genotoxins and pro-
        vides assessments of the mechanism of action
        for other branches.
Expertise is provided in the following areas:

 •   Carcinogen Assessment Statistics and Epide-
    miology: Health risks associated with suspected
    cancer-causing agents as interpreted from epi-
    demiology data and the statistical  analysis of
    both human and animal data.
    Carcinogen  Assessment  Toxicology:  Health
    risks associated with suspected cancer-causing
    agents  as  interpreted  from animal toxicology
    and pathology  data.
    Molecular  and Genetic  Toxicology;  Health
    risks associated with suspected genotoxins as
    inteipretcd from in vitro, experimental animal,
    and human data; provides a focus on health risk
    issues related to the molecular and cellular de-
    terminants of environmentally induced diseases.
    Reproductive and Developmental Toxicology:
    Health risks associated with suspected  repro-
    ductive and  developmental  toxicants as inter-
    preted from in vitro, experimental animal, and
    human data.
    Technical Assistance: Technical  assistance to
    state and  local health  and pollution control
    agencies, regional offices,  other U.S. Govern-
    mental agencies, and the international commu-
    nity  on matters pertaining to health and  risk
    assessments,  including  assistance  to  the
    Agency's  Air RISC  Support  Center  and
    Supcrfund Technical Support Center; revisions
    to proposed and final  regulations and guidance
    documents for various agency and regional of-
    fices; and risk assessments for EPA program
    and regional offices and state agencies.
                                                       28

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                                           Areas of Expertise
                                       Telephone
                                 Area of Expertise
Office of the Director

  Hush McKinnon, Director            202-260-5898
  Charles Ris, Deputy Director          202-260-7338
  Robert McGaughy, Senior Scientist     202-260-5889
   Carole Kimmel, Senior Scientist       202-260-7331
Carcinogen Assessment
Statistics and Epidemiology Branch

   V. James Cogliano, Chief             202-260-3814
   Steven Bayard
   David Bayliss
   Cliao Chen
   Jennifer Jinot
   Aparna Koppikar
   Lorenz  Rhomberg
   Cheryl Sicgel Scott

Carcinogen Assessment Toxicology Branch

   Jean Parker, Chief                   703-308-8597
   Robert Bellies
   Arthur Chin
   Charalingayya Hircmath
   William Pcpclko
   Dharm Singh

Molecular and Genetic Toxicology Assessment Branch

   Vicki Dellarco, Chief                 202-260-7336
   Margaret Chu
   James Holder
   David Reese
   Sheila Ro.scnthal
   Larry Valcovic

Reproductive  and
Developmental Toxicology Branch
   Babasaheb Sonawanc, Chief
   Eric CIcgg
   Tom Crisp
   Carole Kimmel
   Gary Kimmel
   Sherry Sclcvan
202-260-1495
                         Preventive medicine, including environmental and
                           occupational medicine; public health practice;
                           environmental health policy and management

                         Risk assessment methods; cancer risk assessment;
                           risk assessment/management policy

                         Risk assessment (all phases) for chemical carcino-
                           gens; toxicology; basic physics; spectroscopy;
                           modelling epidemiology;  radiation; electromag-
                           netic fields; risk assessment policy
                         Reproductive and developmental toxicology, neuro-
                           toxicity and other noncancer health effects, risk
                           assessment, and modeling; science policy of risk
                           assessment; biomarkcrs; mechanisms;
                           hyperthennia
                         Cancer risk estimation; biostatistics; epidemiology;
                           pharmacokinelics; mathematical modelling;
                           computer simulation; PCBs
                         Toxicologic and carcinogenic effects of agents; risk
                           assessment methodology; pharmacology; metabo-
                           lism pathology; biochemistry; human physiology
                         Mechanisms of mutagenesis and carcinogcncsis;
                           genetic risk assessment; genetics; biochemistry;
                           molecular and cellular biology; biotechnology
Reproductive and developmental toxicology; neuro-
  developmcntal toxicology; experimental design
  and test methodology issues; qualitative and
  quantitative approaches to risk assessment
                                                      29

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          Exposure  Assessment Group
                                 Michael A. Callahan has been the director of the Expo-
                             sure Assessment Group since 1986. His prior experience at
                             EPA includes positions in the Office of Toxic Substances
                             and the Office of Water. He began his career  as a chemist
                             with the U.S. Army Research and Development Center. He
                             has been awarded the EPA Gold Medal for Exceptional Ser-
                             vice and three EPA Bronze Medals for  Commendable Ser-
                             vice. He received a master's degree  in  organic chemistry
                             from George Washington University and a bachelor's degree
                             in chemistry from Northwestern  University. He was  a pri-
                             mary author of EPA's "Guidelines for Exposure Assessment"
                             in 1992 and has professional membership in both the Inter-
                             national Society for Exposure Analysis and the Society for
                             Risk Analysis.
                       DIRECTOR

                      202-260-8909
Exposure Assessment
Applications Branch
Exposure Assessment
  Methods Branch
                            30

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                                      Exposure Assessment Group

                                     Michael A. Callahan, Director
                                            Mailcode: RD-689
                               401 M  St., S.W.  Washington,  D.C.  20460
                                    202-260-8909, FAX: 202-260-1722
                                    E-Mail CALLAHAN.MICHAEL
    The major responsibilities of the Exposure Assessment
Group (EAG) are:

     •  to provide state-of-the-art methodology, guid-
        ance, and procedures for assessing human and
        ecological exposure to environmental contami-
        nants;

     •  to ensure  quality  and consistency  in  the
        Agency's scientific exposure/risk assessments;

        to provide  independent assessments of expo-
        sure and recommendations to the appropriate
        regulatory offices concerning the exposure po-
        tential of specific agents.

    Included in  the first  responsibility are both a research
component and a strong tech transfer component. The second
responsibility has resulted not only in EAG's development of
exposure assessment guidelines, but also in the establishment
of a risk  assessment review capability that has been used by
program  offices, regions,  and states. The  third responsibility
requires EAG to put the methods developed into use by ac-
tually performing exposure and  risk assessments.

    The  mandate to develop and  apply  methods to see  if
they work in "real life" situations has led to a broad diversity
of the work in EAG. EAG is divided into two branches, the
Exposure Assessment Methods Branch (EAMB) and the Ex-
posure Assessment Applications Branch  (EAAB). Although
the focus of EAMB  is on methods development, and the
focus of EAAB is on applications, personnel from  both
branches routinely work together in groups to take advantage
of the  wide expertise and backgrounds of the personnel in
both branches.

    All of the research EAG does  is directed toward advanc-
ing the state of the art in exposure  assessment and translating
these advances into useable tools for exposure/risk assessors.
The research is categorized into three general areas: research
into "exposure  factors," that is,  the values for parameters
which  characterize human or ecological behavior and are
needed  as input into  exposure assessments;  research into
methods for estimating  and evaluating  exposure, and the
research related  to tools, such as software systems, that will
allow assessors  to use the research  in their work.

    Just as it is  important to do the research into developing
methods and tools for doing exposure assessment, it is im-
portant to make  these  results available to end users, in a form
they can easily  apply to their own work. In this area, EAG
has established  a wide-ranging program  including conduct-
ing exposure assessments, providing consultation, reviewing
risks  assessments for other organizations,  and  conducting
training workshops.
                                                       31

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                                           Areas  of Expertise
Office of the Director                    Telephone

   Michael A. Callahan, Director         202-260-8909

Exposure Assessment
Applications Branch
   Kevin Garrahan                     202-260-2588

   Jacqueline Moya                    202-260-2385


   Karen Hammerstrom                 202-260-8919

   Malcolm Field                      202-260-8921

   Sue Norton                         202-260-6955

   Anne Sergeant                      202-260-9376

   Amy Long                          202-260-8918

 Exposure Assessment
 Methods Branch
   John Schaum                       202-260-5988

   Matthew Lorber                    202-260-8924

   Paul While                          202-260-2589

   Rich Walcntowicz                   202-260-8922

   Kim Chi Hoang                     202-260-2059
        Area of Expertise

Chemistry; exposure assessment
Environmental engineering; civil engineering;
  landfill design; water treatment; hydrology
Chemical engineering; fish ingcstion; exposure
  scenarios; reviewing risk assessments; showering
  exposures
Chemical engineering; dermal exposure; chemical
  fate and transport
Hydrogcology; karst geology; groundwatcr investiga-
  tion and remediation
Environmental science; ecological risk assessment;
  wildlife factors
Environmental science; soil science; ecological
  assessments; wetlands; ecological indicators of risk
Environmental science; dermal absorption
 Environmental engineering; exposure assessment;
   dermal exposure; dioxin
 Agricultural engineering; pesticide exposure; fate
   modeling; PCB; dioxin
 Statistics; food ingestion; soil ingcstion; uncertainty
   analysis
 Biomedical engineering; exposure software; model
   selection; model validation; pharmacokinetics
 Chemical engineering; pharmacokinetics; dermal
   exposure
                                                         32

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Environmental  Criteria and Assessment  Office—Research Triangle Park
                                                     Lester D. Grant has been director of the Environmental
                                                 Criteria and Assessment Office  in Research Triangle Park,
                                                 North Carolina (ECAO-RTP), since 1978. While with EPA,
                                                 he has received two EPA Gold Medals, one Silver and one
                                                 Bronze Medal. Dr. Grant is on  the governing board of the
                                                 Society of Occupational and Environmental Health, and the
                                                 Scientific Advisory Committee of the Pan American Health
                                                 Organization's Center for Human Ecology and Environmen-
                                                 tal Health. He often serves as an  invited expert consultant on
                                                 health effects of air pollution, global climate change, lead.
                                                 and other heavy metals to various U.S. federal, state, and
                                                 local agencies and, internationally, to numerous multinational
                                                 organizations and national governments. From 1970 to 1980,
                                                 Dr. Grant rose from  instructor to associate  professor at the
                                                 University of North Carolina School of Medicine,  where he
                                                 also  served  as associate director of the Neurobiology  Pro-
                                                 gram and as co-director of a major environmental toxicology
                                                 research program. He  received a bachelor's  degree from the
                                                 University of Pittsburgh and masters and Ph.D. degrees from
                                                 Carnegie-Mellon University. As  a postdoctoral fellow (Pub-
                                                 lic Health Service Awardce) at  the University of Chicago,
                                                 Dr. Grant also received specialty  training  in ncurobiology
                                                 before joining  the University of North  Carolina faculty.
                                            DIRECTOR

                                            919-541-4173
      Environmental Media
       Assessment Branch
Hazardous Pollutant
Assessment Branch
Technical Services
      Staff
                                               33

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             Environmental Criteria and Assessment Office—Research Triangle  Park

                                         Lester I).  Grant, Director
                                              Mailcode: MD-52
                                   Research Triangle Park, NC  27711
                                    919-541-4173, FAX: 919-541-5078
                                         E-Mail GRANT.LESTER
Functions
    The mission of the Environmental Criteria and Assess-
ment  Office  in  Research Triangle Park, North  Carolina
(ECAO-RTP), is the scientific assessment of health and eco-
logical effects of air pollutants, conducted in support of EPA
implementation of the  Clean Air Act (CAA) and its  1990
Amendments (CAAA). ECAO-RTP also  coordinates risk
assessments aimed at preventing environmental contamina-
tion. ECAO-RTP coordinates preparation of special assess-
ments mandated by Congress or requested by other federal,
state, and local agencies, or in support of international  coop-
erative activities.  ECAO-RTP: (a) is an Agency focal point
for technical  information on air pollution sources and  expo-
sures  and non-cancer health risk assessment methods and
results; (b)  provides technical transfer assistance to a variety
of clients", and (c) identifies knowledge gaps  in assessed da-
tabases and coordinates development and implementation of
research strategies to address such data gaps.

    ECAO-RTP is organized into the Environmental Media
Assessment Branch (EMAB), the Hazardous Pollutant As-
sessment Branch  (HPAB), and the Technical Services Staff
(TSS). ECAO-RTP staff efforts are  concentrated in the fol-
lowing areas:

    NAAQS  Criteria Review: Includes development  of  air
quality criteria documents (AQCDs) that provide the  scien-
tific bases for decisions by the EPA Administrator on setting
or  revising the  National  Ambient  Air Quality Standards
(NAAQS) for criteria air pollutants. Preparation of AQCDs,
coordinated by EMAB, includes evaluations of health, eco-
logical, and other welfare effects of such pollutants and ex-
tensive peer-review.

    Air Toxics Assessments!Support: Includes (a) develop-
ment of health risk assessments to provide  scientific founda-
tion for Agency rulemaking under CAAA Titles II and III;
(b) development of non-cancer health assessment methodolo-
gies for acute and chronic air toxics exposures; (c) consulta-
tion to OAR for implementation of CAAA Titles  II and  111
provisions; and (d) operation of the Air RISC Center,  which
provides hotline  response  and  assistance  to EPA regions,
states, and local agencies regarding air toxics problems.

    Mobile Sources/Alternative Fuels: Includes (a) prepar-
ing diescl and other mobile source-related health risk assess-
ments; (b) coordinating development of ORD research strat-
egy and planning documents;  and  (c) consulting with OMS
on rulemaking issues for conventional  and  alternative fuels.

    Indoor Air: Coordinates OHEA inputs  to research plan-
ning and budgeting activities, prepares Agency risk  assess-
ments  for indoor air  pollutants, maintains the  Indoor  Air
Reference Database and disseminates  information to client
users, and participates  in research on population exposures to
indoor air pollutants.

    Lead Assessment/Research: Assesses sources and path-
ways  of lead exposure, models lead uptake and biokinctics,
evaluates  lead health  effects and  risks, and develops tech-
nologies for abatement  of lead in paint, soil, water, etc. ECAO-
RTP provides consultation on lead  issues to  all  EPA program
offices, other federal agencies, states, and local governments,
and multinational organizations  and national governments.

    Research Planning/Coordination: Coordinates  (1)  de-
velopment, revision, and Agency representation of long-range
plans and budgeting for criteria air pollutants, mobile sources/
alternative fuels, lead and other heavy metals and (2) ECAO-
RTP  representation of OHEA in  research  planning  for air
toxics, indoor air, and  other issues. Coordinates development
of ORD research  strategics for national and  international
research  programs for alternative fuels and for tropospheric
ozone NAAQS revision and attainment.

    International Activities: Serves as the  ORD focal point
for cooperative interactions with the Pan American  Health
Organization. ECAO-RTP contributes  to cooperative activi-
ties with several international  organizations regarding devel-
opment and revision of international air quality criteria  and
guidelines. ECAO-RTP provides technical transfer and other
types of assistance as  part of  bilateral  interactions with sev-
eral countries.

    Educational Outreach: Participates in (a) developing
agreements for cooperative activities with EPA programs and
ORD laboratories; (b)  recruiting qualified graduates for EPA
staff, and (c) identifying  research  opportunities for Univer-
sity  faculty  members.  ECAO-RTP staff helps develop  and
teach courses on environmentally-related topics at UNC and
other local universities.
                                                        34

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                                           Areas  of Expertise
                                       Telephone
                                 Area of Expertise
Office of the Director

   Lester D. Grant, Director             919-541-4173

   Michael A. Berry, Deputy Dir.        919-541-4172
   Judith A. Graham, Assoc. Dir.        919-541-0349

   SiDukLec                          919-541-4477
Environmental Media Assessment Branch
   Norman E. Childs, Chief
   Beverly M. Com tort
   Robert W. Elias
   William G.Ewald
   Jasper H.B. Garner
   Dennis J. Kotchmar

   James A. Raub

   Beverly E. Tilton
919-541-2229
919-541-4165
919-541-4167
919-541-4164
919-541-4153
919-541-4158

919-541-4157

919-541-4161
Hazardous Pollutant Assessment Branch
   Chon R. Shoal', Chief
   J. Michael Davis

   Gary J. Foureman

   Jeff S. Gift

   Mark M. Grecnberg
   Dan J. Guth
   John Hinz
   Annie M. Jarabck

   Marsha Marsh
919-541-4155
919-541-4162

919-541-1183

919-541-4828

919-541-4156
919.54 S-4930
919-541-4154
919-541-4847

919-541-1314
                         Health effects of criteria air pollutants, heavy metals,
                           climate change
                         Environmental legislation; indoor air pollution
                         Health assessment of toxic air pollutants; criteria air
                           pollutants; mobile sources/alternative fuels
                         International collaboration; health risk assessment
Criteria air pollutants, indoor air pollution
Pesticides; indoor air pollution
Heavy metals; exposure modeling
Toxicology; radiation biology
Ecosystem and vegetation effects
Epidemiology and respiratory effects; Nox, PM
  health effects
Respiratory physiology/toxicology; Health effects of
  carbon monoxide, ozone
Air chemistry; effects of VOCs, Nox, ozone
Inhalation toxicology; risk assessment
Developmental neurotoxicology; lead; alternative
  fuels & fuel additives, (nicthanol, etc.)
General metabolism; biological chemistry; general
  toxicology
Biologic markers for non-cancer and cancer end-
  points; health risk assessment
Organic chemicals; toxicology
Pulmonary toxicology; inhalation risk assessment
Inhalation toxicology; health risk assessment
Inhalation toxicology and risk assessment; physi-
  ologically based pharmacokinetic modeling
Environmental health risk assessment, communica-
  tion
                                                        35

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Environmental  Criteria and  Assessment Office—Cincinnati
                                            Terry Harvey received his doctorate in veterinary medi-
                                        cine at the University ot" Illinois and subsequently obtained
                                        professional, academy recognition in both pharmacology and
                                        toxicology. He is licensed to practice in Illinois, Missouri,
                                        and Ohio  and spent 15 years at the  U.S. Food and Drug
                                        Administration in Washington where his highest position was
                                        deputy director of the  Bureau of Veterinary Medicine. Dr.
                                        Harvey spent 7 years in the private sector at the Monsanto
                                        Company, St. Louis, as  an  executive in charge of global,
                                        biotechnology development of commercial products for health
                                        and agricultural applications. In May 1991 he joined the U.S.
                                        EPA as the director of the  Environmental Criteria  and As-
                                        sessment Office in Cincinnati, Ohio,  where one of his re-
                                        sponsibilities is  the  Agency's research  planner for federal
                                        drinkinp water research and assessments.
                                 DIRECTOR

                                 513-569-7531




information
Management







Associate
Director for
Scit'

nee




Administrative
Management









1
Systemic
Toxicants
Assessment


Branch
Chemical
Mixtures
Assessment

Branch

Methods
Evaluation &
Development


Branch
                                       36

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                     Environmental Criteria and Assessment Office—Cincinnati

                                          Terry Harvey, Director
                                               Mailcode: 114
                              26 W. ML King Dr., Cincinnati, OH 45268
                                    513-569-7531, FAX: 513-569-7475
                                      E-Mail HARVEY.TERENCE
    The  Environmental  Crilcria and Assessment  Office in
Cincinnati, OH (ECAO-CIN), in partnership with the Office
of Health and Environmental Assessment, provides scientific
leadership for risk assessment research and  methods devel-
opment. Specific risk assessments  are developed to validate
these methods and test hypotheses in new areas. The office
performs key risk assessments for chemicals  or exposures
that further scientific credibility and foster a creative atmo-
sphere for additional  research and methods development.
Technical assistance and support is provided to enhance the
use and effectiveness of the methods and assessments gener-
ated within ECAO-CIN.  Areas of concentration for the
nearterm include:  1) develop risk assessment methods, which
provide guidance for evaluating potential risks to human health
from exposure to environmental pollutants;  2) evaluate re-
search data which may lead to reducing uncertainties in risk
assessment, aid  in predicting risk, and enhance our capabili-
ties for comparing one risk with another; 3) prepare scientific
assessment documents/health risk assessment reports which
provide a defensible basis for setting environmental  stan-
dards;  4) actively participate in Agcncywide workgroups in
the planning, development, and implementation of future re-
search strategies for  the Agency;  and 5)  conduct outreach
technical initiatives with other federal agencies and the World
Health Organization.

    These  theme  areas are addressed by three branches:

     •  Chemical Mixtures Assessment Branch: Pro-
        vides scientific support for the development of
        background documentation and technical sup-
        port necessary to formulate human health risk
        assessment activities for Agency program of-
        fices as mandated by the Comprehensive Envi-
        ronmental Response, Compensation, and
        Liability  Act (CERCLA) of 1980,  the Super-
        fund Amendment and  Rcauthorization  Act
        (SARA), the  Resource Conservation  and  Re-
        covery Act (RCRA), and  the Hazardous  and
        Solid Waste Amendment (HSWA). These as-
        sessments establish  the basis for regulatory
activities in the Office  of Solid  Waste and
Emergency Response (OSWER) associated with
the potential human exposure to environmental
pollutants, particularly chemical mixtures. Op-
erates the Superfund Technical Support Center.

Systemic Toxicants Assessment Branch: Pro-
vides scientific support for the development of
background documentation and technical sup-
port necessary to formulate human health risk
assessment  activities  for Agency Program Of-
fices as  mandated by  the Clean  Water Act
(CWA), the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA),
and the Clean Air Act (CAA). These assess-
ments establish the basis for  regulatory activi-
ties and  advisories associated with  potential
human exposure to  environmental pollutants,
particularly systemic toxicants. Additionally, the
evaluation of risks associated with municipal
solid wastes is undertaken. Specific areas of
research include risks associated with munici-
pal solid waste recycling, municipal waste com-
bustion (including the assessment of indirect
exposures), and comparative risk assessment of
municipal waste disposal alternatives and water
disinfection.

Methods Evaluation and Development Branch:
Initiates and coordinates the development of risk
assessment methods and Agency guidelines for
chemical mixtures and noncancer health effects,
and reviews new methods in  response to iden-
tified Agency needs. The staff also coordinates
input  to the Agency's Reference  Dose  (RfD)
and Carcinogen Risk Assessment Verification
Endeavor (CRAVE) workgroups, and manages
the integrated Risk Information System (IRIS).
These activities help  ensure that the  Agency's
risk assessments remain credible and that state-
of-the-art methods are continually evaluated, de-
veloped, and implemented.
                                                       37

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                                           Areas of Expertise
Office of the Director

  Terry Harvey, Director

  Steve Lutkenhoff, Deputy Director

  Rita Schoeny,
  Associate Dir. for Science
  Dcbdas Mukerjce,
  Kate Mahaffcy
  Telephone



513-569-7531

513-569-7615

513-569-7544

513-569-7572
513-569-7957
Chemical Mixtures Assessment Branch

   Cynthia Sonich-Mullin, Chief         513-569-7523
   Bob Bruce
   Harlal Choudhury

   Chris Cubbison

   Joan Dollarhide

   Linda Knauf

   Becky Madison

   Bruce Peirano

   Kenneth Poirier



   Adib Tabri
513-569-7569
513-569-7536

513-569-7599

513-569-7539

513-569-7573

513-569-7257

513-569-7540

513-569-7462



513-569-7505
   Super/and Technical Support Hotline 513-569-7300
                                                                       Area of Expertise
Risk assessment; veterinary medicine;
  phannacodynamics
Resource management; information management;
  environmental education
Carcinogen Risk Assessment Endeavor (CRAVE);
  polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs)
Cancer assessments; dioxin; dibenzofurans; PCBs
Lead toxicity; toxicity of heavy metals and essential
  elements; characterization of populations highly
  susceptible to metal toxicity; food as a source of
  toxic chemical exposure
Superfund/Hazardous Waste Program; applied
  epidemiology; carbon tetrachloride; asbestos
PAHs; nickel chromium; HEEDs; RQs
Reproductive/developmental toxicity; lead; heavy
  metals
Lcss-lhan-lifetime risk assessments; risk assessment
  ecology; biostatistics; RQTOX
RfD; incineration; Supcrfund risk assessment;
  Superfund Technical Support Center
HEAST; statistics; mathematical modeling; hypoth-
  esis testing
Hazardous waste regulations; risk charaterization;
  regulatory policy
Mercury; asphalt; pharmakokinetics; quantitative risk
  assessment
Metals; trace elements; manganese; glycol ethers;
  selenium; RfD/RfC methodology; ammonia;
  DIMP; essentiality/toxicity; Superfund Technical
  Support Center
Organic chemistry; pesticides; chlorinated hydrocar-
  bons; carbamates; organophosphates; quality
  assurance


                                     (continued)
                                                       38

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                                           Areas of Expertise
                                                   (continued)

                                       Telephone
                                 Area of Expertise
Systemic Toxicants Assessment Branch
  Michael Dourson, Chief              513-569-7533
  Elctha Brady-Roberts
  John Cicmancc


  Charlotte Cottrill


  Michael Dubowe

  Norman Kowal

  Carolyn Smallwood
  Sue Velazquez
513-569-7662
513-569-7481


513-569-7221


513-569-7579

513-569-7584

513-569-7425
513-569-7571
Methods Evaluation and Development Branch
   Lynn Papa, Chief                    513-569-7587


   Pat Daunt                           513-569-7596
   Richard Hertzbcrg                   513-569-7582


   Patricia Murphy                      513-569-7226
  Jacqueline Patterson                  513-569-7574
  David Reisman                      513-569-7588

  Glenn Rice                          513-569-7813
  JeffSwartout                        513-569-7811

  IRIS User Support: 513-569-7254
General toxicology; human health risk assessment;
  noncancer methods (RfD)
Municipal solid waste recycling; stable strontium
Veterinary medicine; dichloro-, hexachloro-, and
  trichlorobenzenes; ethylene thiourea; PCBs;
  arsenic; methyl mercury
Risk communication; technology transfer; incinera-
  tion

Industrial hygiene; AirRISC; solid waste recycling;
  incineration; MDA; PERC; methylene chloride
Sludge/pathogens risk assessment; ecologic risk
  assessment
Endrin; chloramines
Nickel; silver; manganese; aluminum; boron;
  inorganics
                         Drinking water disinfectants; beryllium; cyanides;
                           site-specific risk assessments; cardiovascular
                           physiology; RfD methodology
                         IRIS database
                         Mathematical modeling; biostatistics; chemical
                           mixtures guidelines; dosimetry; noncancer risk
                           assessment; computer programming
                         Epidemiology; biostatistical techniques; design
                           analysis; interpretation; fluoride; ionizing/non-
                           ionizing radiation; indoor air; drinking water
                           disinfectants; watcrbomc disease microbes
                         IRIS database
                         Hcxachlorocyclopentadicnc; copper; acetone;
                           database development
                         Incineration;  CRAVE; fish consumption
                         RfD methodology; database development; IRIS;
                           computer science; LAN technology; toxicology
                                                       39

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      Office of Environmental Engineering and Technology Demonstration
                                                      Alfred W. Lindsey is the director of the Office of En-
                                                  vironmental Engineering and Technology Demonstration. He
                                                  has been the deputy director of the Office of Environmental
                                                  Engineering and Technology Demonstration and the Hazard-
                                                  ous and Industrial Waste Division, Office of Solid Waste. He
                                                  has held various hazardous waste management positions in
                                                  EPA. Before coming to EPA, he held positions dealing with
                                                  pollution  control, quality control, process engineering, and
                                                  product development. He received a bachelor's degree in pulp
                                                  and paper technology from North Carolina State University
                                                  and did graduate work at Drexel University in environmental
                                                  engineering and at George Washington University in envi-
                                                  ronmental management.
                                            DIRECTOR

                                            202-260-2600
Program Development
        Staff
    202-260-5747
Program Management
        Staff
    202-260-2583
    Risk Reduction
Engineering Laboratory
    Cincinnati, OH
     513-569-7418
  Air and Energy
    Engineering
Research Laboratory
 Research Triangle
     Park, NC
    919-541-2821
                                                   40

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                Office of Environmental Engineering and Technology Demonstration

                                       Alfred  W. Lindsey, Director
                                            Mailcode: RD-68!
                               401 M St., S.W. Washington, D.C. 20460
                                    202-260-2600,  FAX: 202-260-3861
                                       E-Mail  LINDSEY.ALFRED
    The Office of Environmental Engineering and Technol-
ogy Demonstration (OEETD) is responsible for planning, man-
aging, and evaluating a comprehensive program of research,
development, and demonstration of cost-effective methods
and technologies to:

        Control and manage hazardous waste generation,
        storage,  treatment, and disposal;
        Provide  innovative technologies for response
        actions under Superfund and technologies for
        control of hazardous waste spills;
        Control environmental impacts of public  sector
        activities including publicly-owned wastcwater
        and solid waste facilities;
        Improve drinking  water  supply and system
        operations, including improved understanding of
        water supply  technology and water supply
        criteria;
    •   Characterize, reduce, and mitigate  indoor air
        pollutants, including asbestos and radon; and
        Characterize, reduce,  and mitigate acid rain
        precursors  and other air pollutants  from
        stationary sources,
    OEETD is also responsible for the development of engi-
neering data needed by the Agency in reviewing  pre-manu-
facturing notices relative to assessing potential release and
exposure to chemicals, treatability by waste treatment sys-
tems, containment and control of genetically engineered or-
ganisms, and the development of alternatives to mitigate the
likelihood of release and exposure to existing chemicals.

    In  carrying out  these responsibilities, the office:
        Develops program plans and  manages the
        resources assigned  to it;
        Implements the  approved  programs and
        activities;
    •   Assigns objectives and resources to the OEETD
        laboratories;
        Conducts  appropriate reviews to ensure the
        quality,  timeliness, and responsiveness  of
        outputs; and
        Conducts analyses of the relative environmental
        impacts of engineering methods and control
        technologies and strategies.
    The Office of Environmental Engineering and Technol-
ogy  Demonstration  is the focal point within the Office  of
Research and  Development for providing liaison with  the
Department of Energy on issues associated with  clean coal
and energy development. It is also the focal point within the
Office of Research and Development for liaison with the rest
of the Agency on issues relating to engineering research and
development, and control of pollution discharges.

Program Activities
Air
        SO^ and  NO^ control  technologies (LIMB,
        ADVACATE,*REBURNING).
        Hazardous air pollutant control technologies.
        Indoor air source characterization and control
        technologies
        Ozone  attainment—control  of VOC emissions
        from products.
        Global Climate—Stratospheric Modification.

Water Quality
    •   Municipal sewage  innovative and  alternative
        wastcwater and sludge technologies.
        Toxicity treatability protocols  for  wastcwater
        treatment processes.
    •   Storm  and  combined sewer overflow control
        technologies.

Drinking Water
        Disinfection technologies, including evaluation
        of byproducts.
        Water quality problems in distribution systems,
        e.g., lead solder.
    •   VOCs, pesticides, and radionuclidcs treatment
        technologies.

Hazardous  Wastes/Superfund
        Pretreatment technologies for land disposal.
        Waste  minimization  technologies   and
        clearinghouse.
        Land  disposal technology,  including  air
        emissions.
        Incineration of hazardous wastes and municipal
        solid wastes.
    •   Cleanup technologies for leaking underground
        storage tanks.
    •   Superfund Innovative Technology  Evaluation
        program (SITE).
                                                         41

-------
        Evaluate cleanup technologies  for Superfund
        sites.

        Municipal solid waste and sludge innovative
        technology evaluations (MITE).

        Evaluate technologies for sludge and municipal
        solid waste disposal.
Pesticides
        Persona! protection  technology for applicators.
                   Radiation
                       •    Radon mitigation technologies for schools and
                           homes.

                   Toxic Substances
                           Toxicity  assessment  methodology for pre-
                           manufacturing notices.
                           Asbestos abatement technologies for schools and
                           tall buildings.
                       •    Risk  management for genetically engineered
                           microorganism manufacturers.
                                                     *   *
                                            Areas  of Expertise
   Marshall Dick


   Bala Krishnan
   Richard Nalcsnik



   Don Tang


   Michael L. Mastracci
  Telephone

202-260-2583


202-260-2583
202-260-2583



202-260-2583


202-260-5748
   Kurt Jakobson
   Paul Shapiro
   Mylcs Morse


   Curtis Harlin
202-260-5748
202-260-5748
202-260-5748


202-260-5748
             Area of Expertise

Radon; indoor air; global climate; stratospheric
  ozone; air toxics; air pollution; energy; toxics;
  asbestos; pesticides; municipal solid waste
Hazardous waste
Superfund alternative treatment technologies;
  innovative technology evaluation; technical assis-
  tance response team; underground storage tanks;
  medical waste
Municipal wastcwatcr; industrial wastewater; storm-
  water and combined sewer overflow; constructed
  wetlands; drinking water
Commercialization of environmental technologies:
      National Environmental Technology Applica-
      tions Corporation
      Alternative procurement and investment
      incentive mechanism
      Intcragcncy coordination
Oil spills; biorcmcdiation
Pollution prevention
Pollution prevention;  international cleaner produc-
  tion; alternative treatment technologies; technical
  information transfer; data networking
Alternative treatment technology information center;
  Superfund; drinking water treatment; municipal
  wastewater treatment
                                                        42

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                     Risk  Reduction Engineering  Laboratory
                                                    E. Timothy Oppelt is the director of the Risk Reduction
                                                Engineering Laboratory. Mr. Oppelt has held  managerial
                                                positions in EPA in such diverse components as the Munici-
                                                pal  Environmental Research Laboratory, Hazardous Waste
                                                Engineering Research Laboratory, and the Waste Manage-
                                                ment Division of Region  V, EPA. Mr. Oppelt's academic
                                                degrees are: bachelor's in  civil engineering and  master's in
                                                sanitary engineering from  Cornell University; and an MBA
                                                from Xavier University, Cincinnati, Ohio. He holds EPA's
                                                Bronze and Silver Medals.
                                          DIRECTOR

                                          513-569-7418
      _L
Drinking Water
    Research
  Superfund
  Technology
Demonstration
                                           Office of Program
                                             Operations
Water and Hazardous
  Waste Treatment
      Research
Waste Minimization,
  Destruction and
 Disposal Research
                                                 43

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                                Risk  Reduction Engineering  Laboratory

                                      E.  Timothy Oppelt, Director
                                               Mailcode:  235
                              26 W.  ML King Dr., Cincinnati, OH  45268
                                   513-569-7418, FAX:  513-569-7680
                                     E-Mail OPPELT.E.TIMOTHY
    The mission of the Risk Reduction Engineering Labora-
tory (RREL) is to advance the understanding, development,
and application of engineering solutions for the prevention or
reduction of risks from  environmental contamination. This
mission is accomplished through basic and applied research
studies, engineering technology evaluations, new process de-
velopment, and demonstration studies designed to:

    «    Enhance our understanding  of environmental
        engineering technology design, performance, and
        operation.
    •    Anticipate engineering control and  prevention
        measures for environmental problems not of
        immediate regulatory or enforcement concern.
        Provide a sound scientific basis for development
        and enforcement of environmental regulations,
        standards,  guidelines, and  policy decisions in
        areas  for which EPA is responsible.
    *    Foster  the  development,  evaluation,  and
        commercialization of improved and  innovative
        environmental  engineering technology in
        collaboration with industry.
    •    Provide a basis for  technical assistance and
        engineering  support to EPA, other government
        organizations, and private industry regarding the
        implementation of environmental regulations,
        standards, and guidelines.
    Research development and technical support are provided
in the following specific areas of concern:

        Treatment, distribution, and preservation of safe
        public drinking water supplies.
        Treatment, disposal, recycling, and minimization
        alternatives for hazardous wastes,  municipal
        solid  wastes, and medical wastes.
    •    Technologies for remedial action at uncontrolled
        hazardous  waste sites and for corrective action
        at existing hazardous waste facilities.
        Detection  and  remedial action  for leaking
        underground storage tank facilities.
    •    Alternatives for controlling the release  of
        asbestos,  existing and  new chemicals  in
        manufacturing,   and   emissions    from
        biotechnology operations.
        Alternatives for remediation  of oil spills.
        Engineering alternatives for disposal of cancel-
        led and suspended pesticides and for minimizing
        worker exposure to pesticides,
        Prevention, treatment, and control of municipal
        and industrial wastcwater discharges, sludges,
        and urban  runoff pollution.
        Pollution prevention through industrial process
        change, product substitution, development  of
        clean products, and clean technology.
                                      *
          *   *
                                          Areas of Expertise
                                       Telephone
Office of the Director

  E. Timothy Oppelt, Director          513-569-7418
  John J. Convery, Deputy Director     513-569-7896
  Aldcn G. Christianson,               513-569-7997
     Special Assistant to the Director

Drinking Water Research Division

  Robert M. Clark, Director            513-569-7201
  Walter Fcigc                        513-569-7496
  Thomas J. Sorg                     513-569-7370
  Donald Rcasoner                    513-569-7234
  H. Paul Ringhand                   513-569-7450
  Benjamin W. Lykins                 513-569-7460
                 Area of Expertise


       Hazardous waste management
       Municipal wastewuter treatment
       Pollution control research administration
      Drinking water treatment
      Drinking water management
      Drinking water inorganics control; radionuclidcs
      Drinking water microbiological treatment
      Organics control; disinfection byproducts
      Drinking water field evaluations; costs
                                           (continued)
                                                         44

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                                          Areas of Expertise
                                       Telephone
                                   Area of Expertise
  Richard J. Miltner

  Michael R. Schock
  Kim R. Fox
  Lewis Rossman
  Jeffrey Adams
  James Goodrich

Superfund Technology
Demonstration Division
  Robert A. Olexsey, Director
  John S. Farlow*
  Benjamin L. Blancy
  Donald E. Sanning
  Frank Freestone*
   John F. Martin
   Laurel J. Stalcy
   Paul dcPercin
   Gordon M. Evans
   Jackson S. Hubbard
   Norma M. Lewis
   Naomi P. Barklcy
   Ronald F. Lewis
   Randy A. Parker

Water and Hazardous Waste
Treatment Research Division
   Subhas K. Sikdar, Director
   Jonathan G. Herrmann,
     Assistant Director
   Carl A. Brunner
   Roger C.Wilmoth
   DollotYF. Bishop
   Richard A. Dobbs
   Richard C. Brenner
   Teresa M. Hartcn

   James A. Hcidman
   Glenn M, Shaul
   Bruce A. Hollctt
   Albert D. Vcnosa
   John O. Burckle
   Richard Field*
     * Edison, NJ, location
513-569-7403

513-569-7412
513-569-7820
513-569-7603
513-569-7835
513-569-7605
513-569-7861
908-321-6635
513-569-7406
513-569-7875
908-321-6632
513-569-7758
513-569-7863
513-569-7797
513-569-7684
513-569-7507
513-569-7665
513-569-7854
513-569-7856
513-569-7271
513-569-7528
513-569-7839

513-569-7655
513-569-7509
513-569-7629
513-569-7649
513-569-7657
513-569-7565

513-569-7632
513-569-7408
513-569-7654
513-569-7668
513-569-7506
908-321-6674
Disinfection byproducts; disinfectant applications;
  GHC adsorption
Corrosion; lead/copper
Inorganics control; small systems
Distribution systems and modeling
Membrane technology
Small systems; field applications
Superfund engineering technology, division activities
Superfund releases control
Superfund technical assistance
International remedial technology
Technical support program management for vacuum
  extraction; soil vapor extraction; national/interna-
  tional land reclamation
SITE demonstration and evaluation activities
innovative thermal treatment
Vacuum extraction, soil  vapor extraction
Superfund cost estimation
Mining sites
Chemical oxidation; UV/ozone
Redevelopment of land;  debris washing
Bioremediation
Electrokinetics
Water and hazardous waste research
Mining waste management; large
  volume waste treatment; inorganic wastes
Urban runoff; wastcwater sludge
Asbestos; industrial wastewater treatment
Air biofillcr treatment
Fate and  trcatability of toxics
Engineered biosystcms
Metal finishing; pollution prevention; separations
  technology
Biological wastcwater treatment
TR1 improvement estimations; industrial wastcwater
Asbestos
Oil spills
Biotechnology
Urban runoff

                                     (continued)
                                                         45

-------
                                           Areas  of Expertise
                                                    (continued)
                                        Telephone
Waste Minimization, Destruction
and Disposal Research Division
   Clyde R. Dempscy, Acting Director    513-569-7504
   Albert J.Klce                       513-569-7493
   Harry M, Freeman                   513-569-7529
   Robert C. Thurnau                   513-569-7692
   James S. Bridges                    513-569-7683
   Robert E. Landrcth                  513-569-7881
   Carlton C. Wiles                    513-569-7795
   George L. Huffman                  513-569-7431
   Michael H.Roulier                  513-569-7796
   Donald A. Oberacker                 513-569-7510
   IvarsJ.Licis                        513-569-7718
                                 Area of Expertise
                         Thermal treatment/destruction
                         Decision scientist; statistics; operations research
                         Pollution prevention; waste minimization
                         Thermal destruction; trcatability studies
                         Waste minimization in federal facilities
                         Landfill design and operation
                         Stabilization; municipal solid waste
                         Thermal destruction; combustion
                         In-situ treatment of soils
                         Thermal destruction of hazardous materials
                         Industrial pollution prevention
Federal Technology Transfer
Act Cooperative
Research Agreement
   Michael Borst*
   Bruce A. Hollett


   John O. Burcklc

   James Goodrich


   Richard C. Brenner



   DolloffF. Bishop



   Robert M. Clark


   Daniel Sullivan*

   Thomas J. Sorg


   Chi-Yuan Fan*

   John F. Martin



    *Edison, NJ, location
908-321-6631


513-569-7654


513-569-7506

513-569-7605


513-569-7657



513-569-7629



513-569-7201


908-321-6677

513-569-7370


908-906-6924

513-569-7758
Chapman, Inc.—Use of EPA's mobile in-situ soil
  containment technology for treating hazardous
  wastes
Chemical Specialties Manufacturers Association—
  Study of asbestos fiber release while performing
  various normal wet floor maintenance procedures
Cold Jet, Inc.—Evauatc dry ice particle blasting and
  other abatement processes to remove lead paint
Drysdale and Associates, Inc.—Develop and evaluate
  automatic sensors and data acquisition equipment
  for drinking water treatment plants
James Graham Brown Foundation, Inc., and Reme-
  diation Technologies, Inc., and U.S. Forest
  Service—Use of fungal technology to biotreat soil
  contaminated with PCP and PAHs
Levine-Fricke, Inc.—Lab and pilot scale study of
  biodctoxification waste treatment technology for
  degraded solid, liquid, or gaseous RCRA and
  CERCLA waste
Lewis Publishers, Inc./CRC Press, Inc.—Develop
  cost and performance model for safe drinking
  water clean-up technologies
Vulcan Iron Works, Inc.—Use of EPA's mobile
  incinerator for destruction of hazardous wastes
Water Quality Association—Evaulate effect of ion
  exchange softening on corrosion products in
  household plumbing  system
Shell Oil Company—Evaluation of vacuum extrac-
  tion technology for USTs
Clean Sites, Inc., and USAF—Commercializing
  innovative treatment technologies for contaminated
  soils and ground water  at McClellan AFB, Sacra-
  mento, CA
                                                          46

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                 Air and  Energy Engineering  Research Laboratory

               \
                                                      Frank T. Princiotta is the director of the Air and En-
                                                  ergy Engineering Research Laboratory (AEERL), Research
                                                  Triangle Park, North Carolina. He has served as a division
                                                  director of ORD's Office of Environmental Engineering and
                                                  Technology Demonstration. Prior to going to EPA headquar-
                                                  ters in 1975, he  was chief of AEERL's Engineering Test
                                                  Section. Mr. Princiotta'S career  includes  engineering posi-
                                                  tions with Hittman Associates and the U.S. Atomic Energy
                                                  Commission's New York Operations. EPA has awarded him
                                                  a Gold Medal, three Bronze Medals, and the President's Rank
                                                  of Meritorious Executive. Mr.  Princiotta has a bachelor's
                                                  degree in chemical engineering from City College of New
                                                  York.
            Global Emissions and
              Control  Division
Global Warming
 Control Branch
Organics Control
     Branch
                                             DIRECTOR

                                             919-541-2821
                                                                       Program Operations
                                                                              Office
                                             Pollution Control
                                                  Division
  Emissions and
 Modeling Branch
Combustion Research
       Branch
Stratospheric Ozone
 Protection Branch
     Indoor Air
      Branch
   Gas Cleaning
Technology Branch
 Radon Mitigation
      Branch
                                                    •-; 7

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                          Air and Energy Engineering Research Laboratory

                                       Frank  T. Princiotta, Director
                                             Mailcode:  MD-60
                                   Research  Triangle Park,  NC 27711
                                    919-541-2821, FAX: 919-541-5227
                                      E-Mail  PRINCIOTTA.FRANK
    The mission of the Air and Energy Engineering Research
Laboratory (AEERL) is to research, develop,  and demon-
strate pollution prevention approaches and control technolo-
gies  for air pollutants emitted from stationary sources and to
provide methods to estimate emissions from these  sources.
Among these stationary sources are electric power plants,
manufacturing and  processing industries, and  incinerators.
The  laboratory  does not deal with  pollution from nuclear
power plants or controls for mobile sources.

    Staffed primarily by engineers, the laboratory creates and
improves  air pollution control equipment, seeks means  of
preventing or reducing pollution through product substitution
or changes in industrial processes, develops predictive mod-
els and emissions estimation methodologies, identifies and
assesses the importance of air pollution sources,  and  con-
ducts fundamental research to define the mechanisms by which
processes, equipment, and fuel combustion produce air pol-
lution.

    Currently, AEERL is concentrating its  efforts in eight
main program areas:

    Acid Rain: This program focuses on developing innova-
tive controls for acid rain precursors, SO2 and NOx,  including
innovative sorbent injection approaches such as the Lime-
stone Injection Multistage Burner (LIMB) and ADVACATE
(advanced silicate);  developing models that will identify the
best  possible control alternatives for various scenarios; and
emissions projection modeling.

    Air Toxics: Emphasis is placed on developing technolo-
gies  and pollution prevention approaches to reduce emissions
of air toxics regulated under Title 111 of the  1990 Clean Air
Act Amendments; identifying sources and developing urban
inventories of air toxics;  developing improved designs that
will achieve belter control of toxic woodstove emissions; and
providing direct technical assistance to state and local agen-
cies  through  the Control  Technology Center (CTC), which
has extensive information on existing technologies applicable
to a  variety of air pollution sources.

    Hazardous Wastes: The primary goal of this program is
to study the fundamental combustion mechanisms that influ-
ence thermal destruction  of hazardous wastes.  Included are
studies of metal aerosols from waste  incineration, failure
modes in a small pilot-scale rotary kiln, and small pilot-scale
studies of fluidized-bed  incineration.

    Indoor Air Quality/Radon: Research is currently con-
centrating on (1) developing and demonstrating technologies
for reducing the entry of naturally-occurring radon into houses,
schools, and other public buildings; (2) fundamental studies
of processes that influence radon entry; (3) studying building
materials  and consumer products as  sources  of indoor air
pollution;  and (4) evaluating approaches to prevent or control
indoor air pollutants including biocontaminants.

    Municipal Waste  Combustion: Work focuses on evalu-
ating techniques to minimize pollutant  formation during com-
bustion and determining  the effectiveness of various devices
in controlling air pollution  from municipal  waste  incinera-
tors.

    Ozone Non-Attainment: This program supports ORD's
overall ozone nonattainment strategy by developing innova-
tive NOk  and Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC) control
technologies, improving existing technologies, enhancing and
developing emissions  estimation  methodologies, and devel-
oping pollution prevention approaches for VOC's and other
ozone precursors.

    Stratospheric  Ozone:  In cooperation  with industry,
AEERL evaluates,  identifies, and demonstrates the viability
of substitute compounds  and technologies which will replace
ozone depleting substances  that are now in use. The current
emphasis of the program is  to  evaluate alternatives for exist-
ing refrigeration (commercial and  residential) and space cool-
ing  systems  (heat pumps, chillers); to identify replacements
for halons used in fire suppression systems and evaluate re-
placements for insulation systems. In addition, research is
underway  to evaluate destruction approaches for CFC's and
other ozone  depletion  substances.

    Global  Climate Change: This program  is evaluating
mitigation and prevention options for greenhouse gases (car-
bon dioxide, methane,  nitrous  oxide).  Emphasis is on reduc-
ing  methane emissions by using them  as a fccdgas to power
fuel cell and innovative biomass utilization approaches.  In
addition, emission factors for key  greenhouse gas sources are
being enhanced and software (GloED) is under development
to serve as the international repository  for  greenhouse gas
emissions  data.

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                                            Areas of Expertise
                                         Telephone
         Area of Expertise
Office of the Director

   Frank T. Princiotta, Director          919-541-2821

   G. Blair Martin, Deputy Director       919-541-7504

Pollution Control Division

   Everett L. Pyler, Director             919-541-2918
   W. Gene Tucker, Deputy Director      919-541-2746
   Combustion Research Branch
   Robert E. Hall, Chief                 919-541-2477
   Indoor Air Branch
   Michael C. Osbornc, Chief            919-541-4113
   Radon Mitigation Branch
   Timothy M. Dyess, Chief             919-541-2802
   Gas Cleaning Technology Branch
   Charles B. Scdman     '            919-541-7700
Global Emissions and Control Division

   Dennis C. Drehmat, Director          919-541-7505
   Robert P. Hanaebrauck               919-541-4184
Air and energy environmental assessment and control
  technology development
Combustion; incineration; furnace injection for S0x
  control
Combustion modification control technology;
  fundamental hazardous waste incineration re-
  search; municipal waste combustion; radon control;
  indoor air quality
Fundamental hazardous waste incineration research;
  municipal waste combustion; radon control; indoor
  air quality

Combustion modification control technology
  including rcbuming; fundamental hazardous waste
  incineration research; municipal waste combustion;
  combustion toxics control

Indoor air pollutant source/emissions characteriza-
  tion; air cleaners and other indoor air quality (1AQ)
  mitigation approaches; IAQ modeling
Radon mitigation techniques for new and existing
  houses, schools and other structures; fundamental
  studies of radon source potentials, entry, accumula-
  tion and removal  mechanisms

LIMB development; low NO4 burners; fundamental
  sorbent reactivity/kinetics studies; flue gas cleaning
  technologies; NOx selective catalytic reduction;
  LIMB demonstrations (wall-fired and tangentially-
  fircd); toxic particulate
Control technologies/pollution prevention approaches
  for volatile organic compounds (VOCs), green-
  house gases, and ozone depleting compounds;
  emissions models and estimation methodologies
   Global Warming Control Branch
   Michael A. Maxwell                 919-541-3091
   Emissions and Modeling Branch
   Larry G. Jones, Chief                919-541-7716
Emissions characterization and mitigation for
  greenhouse gases (methane, CO,, etc.)
Emission estimation methodologies and projection
  models; field validation of improved methods

                                     (continued)
                                                          49

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                                          Areas of Expertise
                                                   (continued)
                                       Telephone
                                 Area of Expertise
   Organics Control Branch
   Wade H. Ponder
919-541-2818
VOC controls; organic toxics control; Control
  Technology Center (CTC Hotline: 919-541-0800);
  pollution prevention approaches for VOC area
  sources; woodstovcs; coke oven controls
  Stratospheric Ozone
  Protection Branch
  William J. Rhodes
Federal Technology
Transfer Act Cooperative
Research Agreement

   Charles B, Scdman
   Brian K. Gullett
Control Technology Center Hotline
919-541-2853
919-541-7700

919-541-1534
                                     919-541-0800
Substitutes for CFCs, HCFCs and other ozone-
  depleting compounds; CFC/Halon recycling and
  destruction approaches; alternative refrigerants and
  modified refrigerator designs
Flakt, Inc.—Development of absorbents for air
  pollution control technology
Nalco Fuel Tech—Selective catalytic reduction of
  nitrogen oxide emissions in combustion exhaust
  streams
                         Extensive information on existing control technolo-
                           gies applicable to a variety of air pollution sources
                                                         50

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                 Office  of Environmental Processes and Effects Research
                                                          Courtney Riordan is the director of the Office of En-
                                                      vironmental Processes and Effects Research. His prior expe-
                                                      rience with EPA includes director, Office of Acid Deposition,
                                                      Environmental Monitoring and  Quality Assurance;  Acting
                                                      Assistant Administrator, Office  of Research and  Develop-
                                                      ment; director, Office  of  Monitoring Systems and Quality
                                                      Assurance; associate director, Office of Air, Land, and Water
                                                      Use. Dr. Riordan received a bachelor's degree in civil engi-
                                                      neering from  Northeastern University in Boston, a Ph.D. in
                                                      regional planning and systems analysis from Cornell Univer-
                                                      sity, in Ithaca, New York,  and a  J.D. from George  Washing-
                                                      ton University.
                                                DIRECTOR

                                                202-260-5950
                Marine, Freshwater
                 & Modeling Staff
                   202-260-8930
                      I
                                                                      Program Operations Staff
                                                                            202-260-5961
                                     Terrestrial & Groundwater
                                            Effects Staff
                                            202-260-5940
                      ERL
                 Narragansett,
                       RI
    ERL
Gulf Breeze,
    FL
ERL
Duluth, MN

ERL
Athens, GA
                   Newport. OR
                   Held Station
                                                               Grossc Isle, Ml
                                                                Field Station
KRL = Environmental Research Lahoraiory
                                                        51

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                      Office of Environmental Processes and Effects Research

                                      Courtney Riordan, Director
                                           Mailcode: RD-682
                              401 M St., S.W. Washington, D.C. 20460
                                   202-260-5950, FAX: 202-260-6370
                                   E-Mail RIORDAN.COURTNEY
    The Office of Environmental Processes and Effects Re-
search (OEPER) is responsible for administering a broad range
of ecological research programs. These programs are struc-
tured to provide the scientific data and technological methods
necessary to understand, predict, and control the entry and
movement of pollutants into the environment and to deter-
mine the effects of such substances on organisms and ecosys-
tems. The information and research products resulting from
these programs are directly applicable to fulfilling the Agency's
regulatory responsibilities.

    Research is conducted within  the full realm of environ-
mental media—atmosphere, soil, ground water,  surface wa-
ter, and coastal and marine waters.  The development and
implementation of our research programs are coordinated and
managed by the  Headquarters staff with contributions and
guidance provided by  our six field laboratories and the
Agency's program offices. These offices have the responsibil-
ity to comply and implement legislative mandates; and much
of their effort  to establish rules, regulations, criteria, and
standards relies on the research findings  we provide. Our
research focuses on meeting their needs.

    Our major research activities will focus  on global cli-
mate change, estuaries and near coastal systems, environ-
mental sustainability (biodiversity, habitat, etc.), freshwater
systems, wetlands, Great Lakes, biotechnology (recombinant
DNA), ground water, Arctic systems, oil spills, contaminated
land sites, contaminated sediments, new chemicals, and ex-
isting chemicals.

    The office also actively provides technical support  in
environmental science and technology to regions and states
in order to assist in problem solving and to transfer informa-
tion and technology to local users.
                                                        52

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                                           Areas of Expertise
                                        Telephone

Office of the Director

   Courtney RJordan. Director           202-260-5950
   Michael W. Slimak, Deputy Director   202-260-5950
Program Operations Staff
   Patricia Ncuschatz, Director
202-260-5961
                                 Area of Expertise
                         Global climate change
                         Wildlife ecology; ecological risk assessment;
                           ccotoxicology; biodiversity
Administrative and budget processes
Marine, Freshwater and
Modeling Staff
   Jack Durham, Director
   Robert Frederick
   Paul Ringold


   Lowell Smith

   Dennis Trout

   Barbara Lcvinson

Terrestrial and Groundwater
Effects Stall
   Steve  Cordle, Director

   Ken Hood

   Will LaVcillc

   Chich Wu


   Peter Jutro
202-260-8930

202-260-5967
202-260-5609


202-260-5717

202-260-5991

202-260-5983
202-260-5940

202-260-5976

202-260-5990

202-260-5977


202-260-5600
Atmospheric chemistry; aerosols; global climate
  change
Biotechnology; pesticides and toxics
Global climate change; aquatic and terrestrial effects;
  marine ecology; arctic ecology;  stratospheric
  ozone depletion
Global climate biogcochemical cycles; emissions
  inventory and modeling
Atmospheric transport and dispersion; global climate
  change
Agricultural; nonpoint source; biodiversity; habitat
Ground water; wetlands; water quality; hazardous
  waste; biorcmcdiation; habitat
Ocean pollution; agricultural ecology; plant physiol-
  ogy; estuaries
Hazardous waste and Supcrfund; ecorisk;
  biorcmcdiation; ground water
Water quality management; water quality criteria;
  wetlands; water treatment; environmental engi-
  neering; sediment quality
Environmental sustainability; biodiversity; ecology;
  conservation biology
                                                          53

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              Robert S. Kerr Environmental Research Laboratory

           1

                                                     Clinton  W. Hall is the director of the Environmental
                                                 Research Laboratory, Ada, Oklahoma, in which capacity he
                                                 has served since 1980. From 1971 to 1979, Mr. Hall served
                                                 in many Agency  programs. Before joining EPA, he was a
                                                 hydrologist for the Defense Intelligence Agency. He received
                                                 a bachelor's  degree from  the University of Delaware and a
                                                 master's degree in groundwatcr geology from ihe University
                                                 of Connecticut. He participated in advanced graduate study
                                                 in geophysics/geochemistry at Florida State University. He
                                                 was awarded the  EPA Bronze Medal in I97X.
                                           DIRECTOR

                                           405-436-8511
                                                                 Administrative
                                                                  Support Staff
           Processes and Systems
             Research Division
                                      Extramural Activities
                                     and Assistance Division
   Subsurface
Processes Branch
  Subsurface
Systems Branch
 Extramural Activities
and Evaluation Branch
 Applications and
Assistance Branch

-------
                         Robert S. Kerr  Environmental Research Laboratory

                                        Clinton W. Hall, Director
                                        919 Kerr Research Drive
                                 P.O.  Box 1198,  Ada, Oklahoma 74820
                                   405-436-8511, FAX:  405-436-8529
                                           E-Mail HALL.CLINT
    The Robert S. Ken" Environmental Research Laboratory
(RSKERL) serves as U.S. EPA's center for ground-water re-
search, focusing its efforts on studies of the transport and
fate of contaminants in the subsurface, development of meth-
odologies for  protection and restoration of ground-water
quality, and evaluation of the  applicability and limitations of
using natural soil and subsurface processes for the treatment
of hazardous  wastes.  The laboratory has a  long history of
research responsibilities related to the use of soils  and sub-
surface for waste treatment and to the protection of the soil,
ground water, and surface water. These responsibilities have
included  the development and demonstration of cost-effec-
tive  methods  for land treatment of municipal wastewaters,
animal production wastes, and petroleum refining and petro-
chemical wastes, as well as the development of technologies
for the protection of ground-water quality.

    RSKERL carries  out research through in-house projects
and cooperative and intcragcncy agreements with  universi-
ties,  national laboratories, and other research centers:

    •   Drinking Water:  Determines contaminant
        transport and transformation mechanisms and
        rates  in the subsurface  as they relate to
        assimilative  capacities  and drinking water
        protection strategics of the Wellhead Protection
        Program and Underground Injection  Control
        Program.
    •   Hazardous  Wastes: Develops  and  tests
        mathematical models that describe  and predict
        the hydrologic, biotic, and abiotic processes that
        define site-characterization parameters for
        RCRA facility  closure and corrective action
        decisions.
    •   Stiperfund:  Develops  and   demonstrates
        subsurface remediation technologies, especially
        //! situ bioremediation, vacuum  extraction and
        pump-and-treat.  Maintains  the  RSKERL
        Superfund  Technology Support Center which
        provides state-of-thc-science assistance to EPA/
        state   decision-makers   responsible  for
        implementation of the Superfund Amendments
        and Reauthorization Act of 1986.
    Associated activities  operated and/or supported  by
RSKERL to provide research and technology transfer:

    *    Injection Well Research and Training Facility:
        Field site consisting of three research injection
        wells and four monitoring wells used to develop,
        test, and demonstrate emerging technologies for
        determining the environmental integrity of
        injection wells and to train state and  federal
        regulatory  personnel.
        RSKERL Technology Support Center: Consists
        of 13 EPA scientists and engineers supported
        by  RSKERL  in-house  and extramural
        researchers, and a technology support contractor
        with subcontractors and consultants.
    «    Center for Subsurface Modeling Support
        (CSMoS): Comprised of RSKERL scientists, the
        International Ground Water Modeling Center at
        Colorado School of Mines, and a  number of
        ground-water modeling consultants.
        Ground-Water Remediation   Technologies
        Research  and Analysis Center: Operated in
        cooperation  with OSWER's  Technology
        Innovation Office to track ongoing research and
        development of ground-water remediation
        technologies.
    •    Subsurface Remediation Information  Center:
        Develops,  collects, evaluates, coordinates and
        disseminates information related to remediation
        of contaminated soils  and  "round water.
                                                         55

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                                          Areas of Expertise
                                       Telephone

Processes and Systems Research Division
  Stephen G. Schmelling, Acting Chief  405-436-8540
  John Wilson                        405-436-8532
  Carl G. Enfield                     405-436-8530

  Subsurface Processes Branch
  Michael D. Jawson, Chief            405-436-8560
  Don Clark                         405-436-8562
  Roger Cosby                       405-436-8533
  Steve Hutchins                     405-436-8563
  Don Kampbell                      405-436-8564
  Dennis Miller                      405-436-8567
  Guy Seweli                        405-436-8566
  Garmon Smith                      405-436-8565
                                 Area of Expertise


                         Contaminant transport modeling; fractured media
                         Bioremediation
                         Contaminant transport modeling


                         Soil microbiology; agricultural chemicals
                         Inorganic analytical chemistry
                         Organic analytical  chemistry
                         Subsurface biotransformations
                         Soil chemistry; vapor transport
                         Immiscible flow; vapor transport
                         Subsurface biotransformations
                         Organic analytical  chemistry
  Subsurface Systems Branch
  Stephen G. Schmelling, Chief        405-436-8540
  Frank Beck                        405-436-8546
  Jong Clio                          405-436-8547
  Eva Davis                          405-436-8548
  Steve Kracmer                      405-436-8549
  Bob Lien                          405-436-8555
  Fred Pfeffer                        405-436-8542
  Susan Mravik                       405-436-8577
  Robert Puls                        405-436-8543
  Thomas Short                       405-436-8544
  Dave Wallers                       405-436-8550
  James Weaver                      405-436-8545
  Candida  West                       405-436-8551
  Lynn Wood                        405-436-8552
                         Contaminant transport modeling; fractured media
                         Soil science
                         Contaminant transport modeling; vapor transport
                         Nonaqueous phase liquid transport (NAPLs)
                         Contaminant transport modeling; fractured media
                         Soil science
                         Analytical chemistry
                         Soil science
                         Geochemistry; metals transport
                         Contaminant transport modeling; unsaturatcd
                         Soils; modeling
                         Contaminant transport modeling; NAPLs
                         Subsurface abiotic processes; NAPLs
                         Subsurface abiolic processes; mixed solvents
Extramural Activities and
Assistance Division
   M. Richard Seal)', Director
405-436-8580
Ground-water monitoring
  Extramural Activities and
  Evaluation Branch
  James F. McNabb, Chief
  Jerry N. Jones
  R. Douglas Krcis
405-436-8590
405-436-8593
405-436-8594
Microbiology; wellhead protection
Analytical chemistry; aquifer restoration
Ecological effects
                                                                                                   (continued)
                                                         56

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                                       Areas  of Expertise
                                                (continued)
Applications and Assistance Branch
John Matthews, Chief
Don Draper (TSC Director)
Steve Acree
Bert Blcdsoc
Dave Burden
Dom DiGiulio
Scott Ruling
Mary Randolph
Randall Ross
Hugh Russell
Jerry Thornhill
Joe Williams
  Telephone


405-436-8600
405-436-8603
405-436-8609
405-436-8605
405-436-8606
405-436-8607
405-436-8610
405-436-8616
405-436-8611
405-436-8612
405-436-8604
405-436-8608
        Area of Expertise


Hazardous wastes biological processes
Hydrogeology; underground injection (UIC)
Hydrogeology; geophysics
Analytical chemistry; metals transport
Hydrology; wellhead protection
Hydrology; modeling; soil venting
Land treatment; RCRA; modeling; NAPLs
Microbiology; bioremediation
Hydrogeology; modeling; NAPLs
Bioremediation
Hydrogeology; underground injection (UIC)
Soil science; modeling
                                                      57

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         Environmental Research  Laboratory-—Athens
                                            Rosemarie C. Russo is the director of the Environmen-
                                        tal Research Laboratory at Athens, Georgia. She started with
                                        the Agency in 1983 as associate director for Research Opera-
                                        tions at Duluth.  Her career includes: Adjunct professor of
                                        chemistry and associate director of Fisheries Bioassay Labo-
                                        ratory at Montana State University; senior research chemist,
                                        Colorado  State University: assistant professor,  Gettysburg
                                        College; and instructor. University of Minncsota-Duluth. She
                                        received her bachelor's degree in chemistry from  the Univer-
                                        sity of Minncsota-Duluth and her Ph.D. in inorganic chem-
                                        istry from the  University of New Hampshire.
Office of Research
   Operations
   706-546-3128
DIRECTOR

706-546-3134
Office of Program
   Operations
  706-546-3430
                                                 Measurements
                                                    Branch

-------
                                  Environmental Research Laboratory

                                      Rosemarie C.  Russo, Director
                          960 College Station  Road, Athens,  GA  30605-2720
                                    706-546-3134, FAX:  706-546-2018
                                          E-Mail RUSSO.ROSE
    ERL-Athens conducts and manages basic and  applied
research to predict, assess, and reduce the human and envi-
ronmental exposures and  risks associated with  release of
organics and heavy  metals into freshwater marine, and ter-
restrial ecosystems, and of greenhouse gases  to  the atmo-
sphere. This research identifies and characterizes  the natural
biological and chemical processes that affect the environ-
mental fate and effects of toxic substances, such as solvents,
pesticides, or metals, and the  net exchange of greenhouse
gases between the troposphere  and terrestrial biosphere tak-
ing into account cycling  and sequestration. Results are ap-
plied in mathematical models developed to assess and manage
multimedia  pollution problems at the  watershed  and larger
geographical scales.

    Strategic Research Issues emphasized include Global
Climate Change, Ecological Risk Assessment,  Nonpoint
Sources, Biorcmediation, Human Exposure, and Environmen-
tal Review of New Chemicals. Unique laboratory capabilities
include computational chemistry, chemical remediation pro-
cesses, watershed response, multimedia pollutant exposure
assessment and multispcctral identification of unusual organic
pollutants. Research themes arc

     •  Environmental  Chemistry:  Characterize  the
        mechanisms by which chemicals are transformed
        in the environment and  develop  mathematical
        expressions that describe these mechanisms for
        prediction  of environmental  concentrations;
        develop  and apply computational chemistry
        methods (including fundamental  perturbation
        theory and molecular spcctroscopic  relation-
        ships) to predict equilibrium constants, reaction
        rates, and reaction products;  apply theoretical
        considerations and laboratory experimentation
        to determine the  efficacy of chemical processes
        (alone and in concert with biological techniques)
        for remediation  of soils and  sediments; and
        develop and apply multispcctral  identification
        techniques to identify organic-source chemicals
        and transformation products  in soils, wastes,
        leachates, and the  ambient environment.

     •   Predictive Exposure Assessment:   Establish
        the kinetics of abiotic and microbial degrada-
        tion of hazardous chemicals in the environment;
        develop computerized mathematical models,
        with appropriate expert systems, to predict en-
        vironmental fate and effects of chemicals; de-
        scribe and predict the multimedia transport and
        fate of pollutants incorporating state of the sci-
        ence chemical  and  biological  fate  and
        bioaccumulation processes;  and develop  and
        apply methodologies for estimating uncertainty
        in model  predictions.

     •   Predictive Ecological Risk Assessment and
        Eco-Resource   Management:   Develop
        multi-level  (from  species-population through
        landscape-regional) risk assessment frameworks,
        methodologies, and decision support systems for
        aquatic and  terrestrial environments; develop
        quantitative  uncertainty analysis  methods for
        assessment  and reduction  of ecological  risk
        factors; develop frameworks  for interpreting
        watershed, regional and  landscape  ecosystem
        monitoring  data; develop biospheric feedback
        models for greenhouse gases emitted from the
        terrestrial biosphere  and couple  to  earth sys-
        tems models for global damage assessment.

    EPA's  Center for Exposure Assessment  Modeling, lo-
cated at ERL-Athens, distributes developed and supported
models to environmental managers throughout the world. The
center  assists the Agency and  states in  environmental
risk-based decision-making concerning remediation and pol-
lution prevention strategies for the protection of water, soil,
"roundwatcr, and  air.
                                                          59

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                                          Areas of Expertise
                                       Telephone

Office of the Director
  Rosemarie C. Russo, Director         706-546-3134
  Robert R. Swank, Jr.                 706-546-3128

  Lee A. Mulkey                      706-546-3358

  Chemistry Branch
  Arthur W. Garrison                  706-546-3145
  Leo V. Azarraga                     706-546-3453
  George W. Bailey                    706-546-3307
  Roger A. Burke                      706-546-3503
  Samuel W. Karickhoff               706-546-3149
  Eric J. Wcbcr                        706-546-3198
  N. Lee Wolfe                        706-546-3429
  Richard G. Zcpp                     706-546-3428
                                   Area of Expertise
                         Ammonia/nitrite toxicity to aquatic organisms
                         Multimedia models; industrial sources; control
                           technology
                         Landfill permitting/site selection; hazardous waste
                           management; climate change

                         Organic chemical analysis
                         Molecular spcctroscopy; mctal-humic interactions
                         Metal sorption; soil chemistry
                         Global climate change; biogeochcmistry
                         Structure-activity relationships (chemical)
                         Fate of organic pollutants
                         Hydrolysis/rcdox reactions in water
                         Environmental photochemistry; global climate
                           change
   Biology Branch
   William C. Steen
   Rochcllc Araujo
   M. Craig Barber

   George L. Baughman
   Donald L. Brock way
   Lawrence A. Burns
   W. Jack Jones
   Ray R. Lassitcr
   David L, Lewis
   John E. Rogers

   Luis A. Suarcz

   Measurements Branch
   William T. Donaldson
   Timothy W. Collcite
   J. Jackson Ellington
   Heinz P. Kollig
   J. Mac Arthur Long
   John M. McGuirc
   Susan D. Richardson
706-546-3103
706-546-3468
706-546-3147

706-546-3103
706-546-3422
706-546-351 !
706-546-3228
706-546-3208
706-546-3358
706-546-3128

706-546-2301


706-546-3183
706-546-3525
706-546-3197
706-546-3770
706-546-3184
706-546-3185
706-546-3199
Microbial kinetic constant measurement
Microbial ecology; bioremediatson
Chemical bioaccumtilation modeling; Environmental
  Monitoring & Assessment Program
Dye chemistry
Aquatic biology; fish toxicology
Exposure-effects modeling; ecology
Anaerobic microbiology
Exposure-effects modeling; ecology
Microbial biotransformation processes
Microbial kinetics; biochemistry; ecology;
  bioremediation
Phannacokinetics of biological systems


Multispcctral analysis; transformation rate constants
Molecular spcctroscopy; organic ID
Chemical kinetic constant measurement
Fate constant database; reliability evaluation
Molecular spcctroscopy
Mass spcctrometry; organic ID
Mass spcctrometry; organic ID
                                     (continued)
                                                         60

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                                         Areas of Expertise

                                                 (continued)

                                      Telephone
                                  Area of Expertise
Assessment Branch
David S. Brown
Robert B. Ambrose, Jr.
Thomas O. Barmvell, Jr.

Sandra L. Bird
Robert F. Carsel
Nicholas T. Loux
Steve C. McCutchcon

Charles N. Smith
William W. Sutton
706-546-3546
706-546-3130
706-546-3210

706-546-3372
706-546-3476
706-546-3174
706-546-3301

706-546-3175
706-546-3370
Metals speciation; terrestrial exposure
Exposure and risk assessment modeling
Water quality modeling; decision support/expert
  systems
Pesticide spray drift; terrestrial exposure modeling
Pesticide and groundwater leachate modeling
Inorganic analysis; metal adsorption/speciation
Sediment transport; hydrodynamics; sorption
  modeling
Pesticide dynamics; field sampling methods
Environmental monitoring; exposure assessment;
  physiology
Regional/State Contact
Robert C. Ryans

Center for Exposure
Assessment Modeling
Dcrmont Bouchard
706-546-3306
706-546-3130
                                                       61

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                  Environmental  Research  Laboratory—Corvallis
                                                     Thomas A. Murphy is the director of the Environmen-
                                                 tal Research Laboratory at Corvallis, Oregon. He has been in
                                                 Agency  programs  since 1970, including Nonpoint Source
                                                 Division and Air, Land, Water Use. From  1967-1970 he was
                                                 with the Federal Water Quality Administration. He received
                                                 a master's degree  in zoology  and a Ph.D. degree in biology
                                                 from Yale. He received a bachelor's degree in biology and
                                                 chemistry from Knox  College, and a  certificate  in animal
                                                 physiology from Glasgow University.
                                            DIRECTOR

                                            503-754-4601
Watershed Branch
Terrestrial Branch
    Wetlands Program
     Regional Effects
        Program
   Watershed Response
         Program
   Aquatic Monitoring
         Program
    Ecotoxicology Branch
                                            Global Processes and
                                             Effects Program
                                  Wildlife Ecology Program
   Global Mitigation/
   Adaptation Program
                                                                           Biotechnology Program
     Ozone Program
   Ecological Site
Assessment Program
   Ecological Statistics
         Program
                                                  6?

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                                  Environmental Research  Laboratory

                                      Thomas  A. Murphy, Director
                               200 S.W. 35th St., Corvallis,  Oregon 97333
                                    503-754-4601,  FAX: 503-754-4799
                                          E-Mail  MURPHY.TOM
    The Environmental Research Laboratory-Corvallis (ERL-
C) is  the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's national
center for research on plant and wildlife ecology and on the
regional and  landscape scale functions and response of in-
land ecosystems.  Current research  includes ecological pro-
cesses and effects of climate  change,  stratospheric ozone
depletion, atmospheric pollution (such as troposphcric ozone
and acidic deposition), habitat loss and alteration, and terres-
trial release of toxic chemicals and biological agents includ-
ing genetically engineered plants and microbes); methods for
assessing the condition and response of wetland, surface water
and forest ecosystems; loss of biodiversity; sustainability of
terrestrial ecosystems; and restoration of damaged or degraded
ecosystems.

    The laboratory conducts research and assessments on the
effects of pollutants and other human stresses on land-domi-
nated ecological systems that include forests, wetlands, wild
animal and planl populations, agricultural systems, soils and
microbial communities, watersheds and  regional landscapes.
It also develops and evaluates methods for mitigating effects
on and restoring ecological systems. The laboratory provides
the Agency's primary scientific expertise in  terrestrial, water-
shed  and  landscape  ecology, and  terrestrial  ecotoxicology.
Research is conducted in six major areas:

        Air  Pollution Effects:  Assess  the  effects  of
        atmospheric  pollutants  including acidic
        deposition on forests,  crops, watersheds, and
        surface waters.
        Climate Change: Assess the effects of changing
        climate, including temperature, precipitation, and
        solar radiation, on ecological systems. Determine
                          the role of ecological systems, such as forests,
                          in controlling climate  or moderating climate
                          change.  Develop  and  evaluate methods for
                          managing the terrestrial biosphere to mitigate
                          or reduce the effects of climate change.
                          Environmentally Applied Chemicals and
                          Bialogicals: Develop and test methods to  assess
                          the effects on terrestrial ecological systems of
                          chemicals, such as pesticides,  and biological
                          agents,  such  as genetically  engineering
                          microorganisms, that are intentionally introduced
                          into the environment.
                          Landscape Modification: Assess the regional
                          scale  effects  of physical changes to the
                          landscape, such as habitat loss or hydrologic
                          modification, on the ability of ecological systems
                          to maintain desired levels of biodiversity and
                          sustainable ecological functioning.
                          Wetlands: Develop the  scientific basis for
                          assessing and managing risks  for the nation's
                          freshwater  wetlands,  including criteria for
                          preventing wetland  loss  or degradation and
                          guidelines for wetland restoration  and creation.
                          Develop guidelines for using created or natural
                          wetlands  for water quality improvement in a
                          manner that is compatible with other ecological
                          functions of wetlands.
                          Regional Ecological Assessment: Develop and
                          test methods for assessing the regional  scale
                          "health" of ecological systems, through the use
                          of ecological  indicators and  environmental
                          statistics.
                                           *******
                                            Areas  of Expertise
 Watershed Branch

   Roger Blair
   Joan Baker

   Mary E. Kcntula
   Dixon H. Landers
                                        Telephone
503-754-4662
503-754-4517

503-754-4478
503.754-4427
                                 Area of Expertise
Forest ecology
Fisheries biology; ecological processes; acidic
  deposition
Wetlands ecology
Limnology
                                                                                                      (continued)
                                                          63

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                                          Areas of Expertise
Watershed Branch (continued)
  D. Phillip Larsen
  Scott Lcibowitz
  Anthony R. Olscn

  James ML Omernik
  Spencer A. Peterson

  Eric Preston
  Richard R. Sumner
  Parker J. Wigington
                                                   (continued)
  Telephone
503-754-4362
503-754-4508
503-754-4790

503-754-4458
503-754-4457

503-754-4459
503-754-4444
503-754-4341
                                                                      Area of Expertise
Lake/stream ecology
Landscape ecology
Environmental statistics; Environmental Monitoring
  & Assessment Program
Geography/cartography
Limnology/lake restoration; Environmental Monitor-
  ing & Assessment Program
Wetlands ecology
Wetlands ecology
Hydrology/stream chemical dynamics
Terrestrial Branch
   Peter A. Beedlow
   Christian P. Andersen
   M. Robbins Church
   Robert K. Dixon
   William E. Hogsett III
   Jeffrey  Lee
   1. Craig McFarlane
   David M.Olszyk
   Donald L. Phillips
   Allen Solomon
   David T. Tingey
   James A. Weber
   Carlos Wickliff
503-754-4634
503-754-4791
503-754-4424
503-754-4777
503-754-4632
503-754-4578
503-754-4670
503-754-4397
503-754-4485
503-754-4772
503-754-4621
503-754-4503
503-575-4841
Global climate change; landscape ecology
Air pollution effects on vegetation
Limnology; watershed ecology
Plant physiology; climate change
Air pollution effects on vegetation
Ecology; soils
Plant physiology; UVB effects
Plant physiology
Ecology; spatial statistics
Global climate change; forest ecology
Plant physiology; climate change
Air pollution effects on vegetation
Botany; pesticide effects
 Ecotoxicology Branch
   Richard S. Bennett, Jr.
   Clarence A. Callahan
   Anne Fairbrother
   Charles W. Hendricks
   Bruce Lighthart
   Alan V. Ncbcker
   Christine A. Ribic
   Paul T. Rygiewicz
   Gerald S. Schuytcma
   Ramon J. Seidler
   Mostafa A, Shirazi
   Lidia Watrud
 503-754-4638
 503-754-4764
 503-754-4606
 503-754-4718
 503-754-4879
 503-754-4350
 503-754-4717
 503-754-4702
 503-754-4833
 503-754-4708
 503-754-4656
 503-754-4874
Wildlife ecology/toxicology
Soil invertebrate ecology
Wildlife ecology/toxicology
Microbiology
Microbiology
Aquatic and wildlife toxicology
Wildlife ecology
Plant and soil ecology
Invertebrate taxonomy/toxicology
Microbial ecology/biotechnology
Systems ecology
Plant and microbial biotechnology;
  soil microbiology; fungal genetics
 Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program
   Harold V. Kibby                    503-754-4679
   Daniel H. McKcnzic
   Steve Paul sen
 503-754-4625
 503-754-4428
 Ecology
 Ecological modeling
 Aquatic ecology
                                                          64

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Environmental Research Laboratory—Duluth
                                   Steven F. Hedtke is currently serving as acting director
                               of the Environmental Research Laboratory at Duluth (ERL-
                               D). He has been associate director for research operations
                               since  1990; chief, Monticello Ecological Research Station,
                               1987-90; and research aquatic biologist at Monticello, 1982-
                               1987, at New town Fish Toxicology Station, 1977-82, and at
                               Duluth,  1972-75. He began his career in ORD headquarters
                               in 1971. He received his bachelor's degree in zoology  from
                               the University of Kansas, and his doctorate degree in envi-
                               ronmental science and engineering from the University of
                               North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He has published numerous
                               scientific articles and served on a variety of EPA commit-
                               tees.
                        DIRECTOR

                        218-720-5550
Predictive
Toxicology
Research
Ecosystem
Response
Research
Regulatory
Ecotoxicology
Research
Landscape
Ecology
Research
Large Lakes and
Rivers Research
Risk
Characterization
Research

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                                   Environmental Research Laboratory

                                    Steven  F. Hedtke, Acting Director
                             6201 Congdon  Blvd., Duluth, Minnesota 55804
                                    218-720-5550, FAX:  218-720-5539
                                        E-Mail HEDTKE.STEVEN
    The Environmental Research Laboratory at Duluth (ERL-
D) conducts research to advance our fundamental understand-
ing of aquatic toxicology and freshwater ecology. Its mission
is to develop a scientific basis for EPA to create environmen-
tal policies concerning the  use of freshwater resources. To
accomplish this, ERL-D conducts the research development,
and technical assistance programs described  below.


    The Regulatory Ecotoxicology Branch develops  and
evaluates methods for  identifying hazardous xcnobiotics in
freshwater effluents, surface waters, and sediments, defining
toxicity and other adverse effects, and developing protocols
that can be used as regulatory tools to help identify environ-
mental hazards from separate industrial chemicals and their
mixtures to specific freshwater aquatic  life and ecosystems.
Our regulatory ecotoxicologists are active in the  design of
sediment quality criteria

    The Ecosystem Response Branch seeks to quantify dose
response relationships and indirect effects of stresses on fresh-
waters.  Specialized  methods involving  microcosms,
mesocosms, streams, ponds, wetlands,  and small lakes are
used to provide the basis  for models and extrapolation tech-
niques. The knowledge has been  incorporated into testing
protocols for pesticides registration. Members of this branch
are active in the research and implementation of EMAP in
the Great  Lakes.

    The Landscape Ecology Branch specializes in the diag-
nosis  of ecosystem dysfunction and developing indicators of
ecosystem health. As EPA moves closer to programs for better
management practices from a watershed perspective, we
expect to provide much of the guidance to protect and im-
prove  water quality. This branch also  leads  the ORD effort
to understand  the impact of nonindigenous species on fresh-
water  systems.

    The Large Lakes and Rivers Branch  is focused prima-
rily on the Great  Lakes and the science necessary for lake-
wide  management planning. This research  uses the mass
balance framework to integrate large-system impacts  and
responses to changes in pollutant loadings. The development
of mass balance models for Green  Bay, Michigan, the inte-
gration with air modeling efforts, the  impact of exotic  spe-
cies,  and  the  process studies to reduce  the  uncertainties of
model predictions arc  important ongoing studies.
    The ability to understand and predict the effect of chemi-
cals on aquatic life remains the focus of the Predictive Toxi-
cology Branch. A complete array of computerized  models
for structurc-toxicity relationships, toxicokinctic extrapola-
tions, and dynamic toxic effects  are being developed based
on fundamental research. Studies  to determine the ecological
significance and  adequacy of existing laboratory-derived
hazard assessments for protecting aquatic life are being con-
ducted. A new thrust seeks to validate low-cost  fish  models
in the classification of chemical  carcinogens.

    The Risk Characterization Branch develops and applies
procedures for integrating information  on  toxicology, ecol-
ogy, and  environmental chemistry into statements  of  risk
concerning anthropogenic stresses on  aquatic  ecosystems.
Specific  research  is directed  at identifying  and  reducing
important uncertainties, especially regarding linkages among
the various  components of a risk characterization.  Efforts
include risk characterizations for specific chemicals,  such as
2,3,7,8-TCDD, and  development of  guidelines for water
quality criteria.

    ERL-Duluth  research is concentrated in  the following
areas:

     •  Develop a sound understanding  of the effects
        of chemical, physical, and biological  insults to
        aquatic  ecosystems; determine levels that will
        not harm aquatic life and consumers of aquatic
        organisms; share the expertise  and data resource
        with EPA regional and  program offices, other
        agencies and scientists,  and the public.

     •  Develop common denominators, quantitative
        structure-activity relationships, and models that
        can be used to  predict or assess the impact of
        chemical and physical pollutants on aquatic and
        aquatic-related  organisms.

     *  Evaluate the ability of laboratory' test methods
        and  models to  predict the fate and effects of
        contaminants under field conditions through use
        of ecological studies.

     •  Identify biological indicators of ecological con-
        ditions  of the Great Lakes and determine  (he
        role of  nonindigenous species on  the  sustain-
        ability of these ecosystems.
                                                           66

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                                          Areas  of Expertise
Office of the Director
  Steven F. Hcdtke, Acting Director
  Robert A. Drummond
  Nelson A. Thomas
                                       Telephone
218-720-5550
218-720-5733
218-720-5702
                                 Area of Expertise
Scientific outreach; behavioral toxicology
National programs; complex effluents; technology
  transfer
Predictive Toxicology
Research Branch
   Steven P. Bradbury
   Douglas W. Kuehi
   James M. McKim
   Christine L. Russom
   Patricia K.  Schmieder
218-720-5527
218-720-5511
218-720-5567
218-720-5709
218-720-5537
Mechanisms of toxic actions; metabolism; QSAR
Molecular dosimetry; biomarkers; ultra-trace analysis
Toxicokinetics; comparative toxicology
QSAR; toxic effect models and databases
Mechanisms of toxic action; (oxicokinetics
Ecosystem Response
Research Branch
   Richard E. Sicfert
   Richard L. Anderson

   Frank S. Stay
   Steven Lozano
218-720-5552
218-720-5616

218-720-5542
218-720-5610
Pesticide bioassays; fish and fish food taxonomy
Invertebrates; toxicity testing chemical/microbiai
  pesticides
Experimental ecosystems
Environmental Monitoring & Assessment Program;
  freshwater ecology
Regulatory Ecotoxicology
Research Branch
   Steven J. Brodcrius
   Gerald T. Ankley
   Lawrence P. Burkhard
   Rodney D. Johnson
   Teresa J. Norbcrg-King
218-720-5574
218-720-5603
2(8-720-5554
218-720-5731
218-720-5529
Toxic mechanisms; mixture toxicity
Toxicology; sediment toxicity; bioassays
Effluent assessment; chemistry
Cell biology; pathology; carcinogen assay; Medaka
Toxicity identification evaluation

                                     (continued)
                                                         67

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                                          Areas of Expertise
                                                   (continued)
                                       Telephone
                                 Area of Expertise
Landscape Ecology
Research Branch
  John G. Eaton
  John W. Arthur
  Anthony R(on) Carlson

  William D. Sanvillc
  J. David Younl
218-720-5557
218-720-5565
21 8-720-5523

218-720-5723
218-720-5752
Global climate change; lake ecology
Watersheds; ecological effects
Site-specific water quality; toxicity testing field
  response
Wetlands; ecological effects
Exotic species; stream classification
Large Lakes and Rivers
Research Branch,
Grosse Isle, MI
   William  L. Richardson
   Douglas D. Endicott
   Russell G. Krcis
   Ronald Rossman

Risk Characterization
Research Branch
   Nelson A. Thomas, Acting
   Philip M. Cook
   Russell J. Erickson
   Robert L. Spehar
   Charles E. Stcphan
313-378-7611

313-378-7613
313-378-7615
313-692-7612
218-720-5702
218-720-5553
218-720-5534
218-720-5564
218-720-5510
Great Lakes; ecosystem modeling waste load
  allocation; cutrophication
Modeling theory; ecosystem modeling
Ecosystem-chemical effects; effects assessment
Inorganic chemical analysis and transport
Ecological risk of dioxin
Relationship of toxicity to exposure conditions
Water quality criteria development
Water quality criteria guidelines
                                                          68

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     Environmental Research Laboratory—Gulf Breeze
                                           Robert Everett Menzer was named director of the En-
                                       vironmental Research Laboratory at Gulf Breeze in Novem-
                                       ber 1989. Before this appointment he had served as professor
                                       and director of the  graduate program in Marine-Estuarine-
                                       Environmental Sciences and director of the Water Resources
                                       Research Center at the University of Maryland, College Park.
                                       Dr. Menzer's research has focused on the metabolism  and
                                       environmental fate of pesticides, particularly organophospho-
                                       rus compounds. He  received his bachelor's degree in  chem-
                                       istry from the University of Pennsylvania, master's degree in
                                       entomology from the University  of Maryland, and  Ph.D. in
                                       entomology and biochemistry from the University of Wis-
                                       consin.
                                DIRECTOR

                                904-934-9208
Ecotoxicology
Microbial Ecology
and Biotechnology
Pathobiology
                                        69

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                                   Environmental Research Laboratory

                                        Robert E. Menzer, Director
                          1 Sabine Island Drive, Gulf Breeze, FL 32561-5299
                                    904-934-9208, FAX: 904-934-9201
                                        E-Mail MENZER.ROBERT
    The Environmental Research Laboratory at Gulf Breeze
develops and analyzes scientific data on the impact of haz-
ardous materials released in marine and estuarine  environ-
ments. Scientific  investigations primarily involve chemical
compounds and biological products regulated by  EPA's Of-
fice of Prevention, Pesticides and Toxic Substances, the Office
of Water Programs, and  the  Office of Solid Waste  and
Emergency Response.

    Laboratory scientists develop scientific methods and data
to (1) evaluate and define  mechanisms  that  affect biodegra-
clation and accumulation of toxicants in aquatic food webs;
(2) develop and evaluate protocols for biological treatment of
hazardous wastes; (3) determine effects of carcinogens, mu-
tagcn.s, and tcratogcns in aquatic  species; (4) develop prin-
ciples and applications  of ecotoxicology,  including
measurement and prediction of fate and effect  of chemicals
and synthetics on estuarine species and  environments, moni-
tor and  assess the biological health and chemistry  of near-
coastal systems. Methods also are under development to apply
laboratory  observations  to  field situations  and to  evaluate
potential risks from the release of biotcchnological  products
in the marine environment.

    Information  from laboratory research is  used to  establish
guidelines, standards, and strategics for managing hazardous
materials  in the  near-coastal marine environment, to define
and predict its ecological health, and describe causes of ab-
errant conditions or changes in its ecological status.

    The Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program,
Estuaries  Resource Group, is  based  at the laboratory.  The
Estuaries  Resource Group (EMAP-E) is responsible for de-
velopment of a  national estuarine monitoring program to
assess ecological conditions of the estuarine resources of the
U.S. Scientists monitor health of bays and estuaries through
measurements of biological communities, chemistry of sedi-
ments, toxicity,  water quality, and the  bioaccumulation of
contaminants.

    Research at Gulf Breeze is organized into these branches:

      •  Ecotoxicology Branch:  (I)  Develop  and  test
        methods to determine acute and chronic effects
        (including bioaccumulation) of contaminants on
        estuarine  and  marine plants and animals; (2)
        develop  culture techniques for test organisms;
        (3) develop and verify biological indicators for
        laboratory and field  investigations to  detect
contaminant exposure and effects at the popu-
lation, community,  and ecosystem levels; (4)
develop and validate model systems to predict
resiliency (impact and recovery) of populations,
communities, and ecosystems exposed  to con-
taminants; (5) determine effects of contaminants
on ecological structure and function and delin-
eate endpoints that describe structure and func-
tion; (6) conduct field studies (i.e., verification
of laboratory methodologies and results) to pre-
dict environmental response to pesticide use in
potential impact areas; (7) develop and improve
methods to analyze seawater and marine matri-
ces (plants, animals,  sediments) for contami-
nants prior to  laboratory  and field studies; (8)
assess risks of chemicals and other contami-
nants by integration  and  interpretation of bio-
logical, chemical, and physical data in aquatic-
environments, (9) monitor and assess the bio-
logical health and  chemistry  of bays and
cstuarincs of the Gulf of Mexico to classify
health statuses over time  and determine causes
of deterioration.

Microbial Ecology and Biotechnology Branch:
(1) Monitor biodegradation  processes carried
out by microbial communities and assess their
ability to  transform organic chemicals and
heavy metals into nontoxic products; (2) evalu-
ate potential risks associated with release  of
genetically  engineered microorganisms  (bio-
technology) in the environment;  (3) quantita-
tively define environmental factors that control
biodegradation and  describe the potential ma-
nipulation  of ecosystems and microbial  com-
munities  to  enhance extent  and  rate  of
biodegradation of specified  single compounds
and  complex  mixtures; (4)  develop  methods
for bioremediation  using microbial systems.

Pathobiology  Branch: (1) Develop scientific
methods and data to evaluate risks of biological
pesticidal  agents  to  nontarget, aquatic species
and  systems, including natural and genetically
altered microbial pest control agents  and bio-
chemical control agents; (2) develop aquatic spe-
cies as indicators and models to assess hazards
of gcnotoxic  agents to  aquatic  animals and
humans; and (3) elucidate mechanisms in toxi-
cants that impair development or cause disease
in aquatic species.
                                                           70

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                                          Areas  of Expertise
                                      Telephone
                           Areas of Expertise
Office of the Director

  Robert E. Mcnzcr
  Raymond G. Wilhour,
    Deputy Director
  John A. Couch
  Andrew J. McErlean
  Frank G. Wilkc.s

Ecotoxicology Branch

  Michael A. Lewis
  Geraldinc Cripc
  Carol Daniels
  William P.  Davis
  David Flcmcr
  Lcroy Folmar
  Larry Goodman
  John Macaulcy
  David Wcbcr
  Foster L. Mayer
  James C. Moore
  Kevin Summers

Microbial Ecology and
Biotechnology Branch
  Panncly H. Pritchard
  Tamar Barkay
  Peter Chapman
  Richard Coffin
  Richard Devercux
  Richard Eaton
  Fred Genthner
  Jan Kurtz
  Len Mueller
Pathobiology Branch
  William Fisher
  Lee Courtney
  John Fournie
  Dorclha Foushec
  Charles L.  McKcnncy
   Douglas P. Middaugh
  Wilhclm Peter Sclioor

Federal Technology  Transfer
 Act Cooperative Research
 Agreements
  Panncly H. Pritchard
904-934-9208
904-934-9213

904-934-9271
904-934-9231
904-934-9223
904-934-9382
904-934-9233
904-934-9329
904-934-9312
904-934-9253
904-934-9207
904-934-9205
904-934-9353
904-934-9245
904-934-9380
904-934-9236
904-934-9244
904-934-
904-934-
904-934-
904-934-
904-934-
904-934-
904-934-
904-934.
904-934
9260
9295
9261
-9255
9346
9268
9342
9286
921 1
904-934-9394
904-934-9313
904-934-9272
904-934-93X4
904-934-9311
904-934-9310
904-934-9276
904-934-9260
                 Pesticide toxicology
                 Plant pathology; terrestrial ecology

                 Pathology; loxic mechanisms
                 Pollution ecology
                 Aquatic ecology
                 Phytotoxicity/aquatic ecology
                 Crustacean culture/toxicology
                 Genetic toxicology
                 Ichthyology; marine ecology
                 Aquatic ecology
                 Physiology; toxicology
                 Aquatic toxicology
                 Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program
                 Plant pathology
                 Toxicology; aquatic ecology
                 Analytical chemistry
                 Systems ecology; Environmental Monitoring &
                    Assessment Program
Microbial ecology; biodegradation
Microbial ecology
Biochemistry; biodegradation
Marine microbial ecology
Microbial ecology
Microbial genetics; biodegradation
Microorganism; invertebrates interactions
Microbial ecology
Analytical chemistry
                  Invertebrate pathology
                  Electron microscopy
                  Fish Pathology
                  Molecular biology
                  Physiology
                  Fish culture; toxicology
                  Biochemistry
                  Southern Bioproducts, Inc.—Biorcmediation of wood
                    treatment waste sites.
                  Electric Power Research Institute—Development of
                    remedial treatments for the removal of mercury
                    from contaminated waters.
                                                         71

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Environmental Research Laboratory—Narragansett
                                       Norbert A. Jaworski has been the director of the Envi-
                                   ronmental  Research Laboratory in  Narragansett, Rhode Is-
                                   land, since 1986. From 1970 to 1985, he was the director of
                                   several Agency research laboratories, including Corvallis,
                                   Oregon, and Duluth, Minnesota; director of the  Larger Lakes
                                   Research  Laboratory at Grosse Isle, Michigan; and deputy
                                   director of the Industrial Environmental  Research Labora-
                                   tory, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina. Before joining
                                   the Agency, he was a sanitary engineer in the Department of
                                   Interior and the U.S. Public Health Service. He received a
                                   Ph.D. degree in water resources management from the Uni-
                                   versity of Michigan and bachelor's and master's degrees in
                                   civil engineering from  the University of Wisconsin (Madi-
                                   son). He has written over 50 publications and  technical re-
                                   ports.  He has  received an EPA Gold Medal  and the
                                   Presidential Rank of Meritorious Executive.


1
Exposure
Branch


Effects
Branch

DIRECTOR
401-782-3001




Research and
Administrative
Services Staff







Ecosystems
Branch




Pacific
Ecosystems
Branch
                                     72

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                                 Environmental Research Laboratory

                                     Norbert  A. Jaworski, Director
                          27 Tarzwel! Drive,  Narragansett, RI  02882-1154
                                   401-782-3001, FAX: 401-782-3030
                                    E-Maii JAWORSKI.NORBERT

                                 Pacific Ecosystems  Branch-Newport

                                    Hatfield Marine Science Center
                                        Newport, OR  97365-5296
                                   503-867-4040, FAX: 503-867-4049
                                            E-Mail EPA8428
    The mission of the Environmental Research Laboratory-
Narragansett and Newport (ERL-N) is to develop and evalu-
ate  theory, methods,  and data needed  to quantify risks to
marine and estuarine  ecosystems  posed by  the disposal of
complex wastes, estuarine municipal and industrial wastewa-
ter effluents, dredge materials, ocean discharges, and other
anthropogenic stresses. This research emphasizes the devel-
opment, evaluation, and  application of techniques and test
systems for measuring, monitoring, and  predicting the trans-
port, fate and effects of complex wastes  in marine and estua-
rine  systems with  special focus  on nutrients and  organic
over-enrichment. ERL-N also serves as lead laboratory for
the Coastal and Marine Issue and for the Contaminated Sedi-
ment Issue.

Research Areas
     •  Develop indicators of nutrient pollution, organic
        matter over-enrichment, and toxic  contamina-
        tion for coastal and marine ecosystems.

     *  Understand fundamental marine ecological pro-
        cesses that mitigate or exacerbate the effects of
        nutrient/organic  matter  pollution  in  coastal
        marine environments.
        Develop population, community, and  ecosys-
        tem dose-response  relationships for nutrients,
        organic matter, and toxic loading rates.
        Develop  toxicity  testing  methodologies and
        guidelines for deriving site-specific and national
        water and sediment quality criteria.

        Develop biomonitoring methods for on-site labo-
        ratory and in xitii field assessments of biologi-
        cal effects of single or combined point source
        discharges.
Quantify and mathematically  model the trans-
port, transformation, trophic transfer, and fate
of pollutants  in hydrodynamically complex
marine and estuarine environments.

Quantify the effectiveness of Agency pollution
control and prevention programs by monitoring
the status and trends of our nation's near-coastal
environment through EMAP for the Virginian
and Acadian Provinces.

Evaluate the effects of stratospheric ozone loss
and subsequent increase in ultraviolet-B radia-
tion on marine life cycles and chemistry.

Determine  the importance  of oceanic carbon
cycling in  global climate change and the envi-
ronmental  consequences of efforts to mitigate
global warming  by enhancing oceanic sinks of
atmospheric CO,.

Develop microcosm-based approaches for de-
termining the fate and effects of pollutants from
multiple sources in complex coastal ecosystems
and the time-to-rccovery of these systems after
the  removal of pollutant stress.

Develop and evaluate biomarkers and chemical
markers to identify, diagnose, and  predict eco-
logical risks in marine and estuarine environ-
ments posed by  disposal of complex wastes.

Develop and evaluate theory, protocols, meth-
ods, and data  needed to quantify  and monitor
ecological  risks  in marine and estuarine envi-
ronments as the result of the  disposal of com-
plex wastes from multiple  discharges and
sources.
                                                        73

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                                        Areas of Expertise
B. Brown
S.M. Baksi
W. Boothman
G.A. Chapman*
E.H. Detlmann
J.H. Garbcr
G.R. Gardner
J.H. Gentile
RJ. Hacblcr
D.J. Hansen
K. Ho
E.H.Jackim
N.A. Jaworski
D.J. Keith
J.L. Lake
R.W. Latimer

H. Lee*
A.R. Malcolm
D.C. Miller
G.E. Morrison
W.G. Nelson
J.F. Paul
K.T. Perez
G.G. Pesch
O.K. Phclps
R.J.Prucll
N.I. Rubinstein
A. Sigleo*
S.C. Schimmcl
R.L. Sieelc*
R.C. Swartz*
H.A. Walker
D.R. Young*
G.E. Zaroogian
 Telephone

401-782-3188
401-782-3162
401-782-3161
503-867-4027
401-782-3039
401-782-3154
401-782-3036
401-782-3015
401-782-3095
401-782-3027
401-782-3196
401-782-3042
401-782-3001
401-782-3135
401-782-3173
401-782-3077

503-867-4042
401-782-3055
401-782-3090
401-782-3016
401-782-3053
401-782-3037
401 -782-3052
401-782-3007
401-782-3004
401-782-3091
401-782-3002
503-867-5022
401-782-3078
503-867-5023
503-867-403 1
401-782-3134
503-867-4038
401-782-3079
          Area of Expertise

Sediment Transport
Biomarkcrs; physiological response
Inorganic chemistry
Water quality critcria/toxicity methods
Exposure assessment; water quality modeling
Eutrophication;  nutrient biogeochcmistry
Marine pathology; histological  responses
Risk characterization; ecological toxicity
Marine mammalian pathology;  histological responses
Marine water and sediment quality criteria
Sediment toxicity
Biomarkcrs; DNA adducts
Water quality modeling
Dredged material disposal
Environmental chemistry: bioaccumulation
Environmental engineering; Environmental Monitor-
  ing & Assessment Program
Bioaccumulation processes; stratospheric ozone
Biomarkcrs; physiological responses
Dissolved oxygen; environmental criteria
Complex effluent; toxicity testing
Biomonitoring;  NPDES and near coastal; Supcrfund
Environmental Monitoring & Assessment Program
Ecological risk assessment; ecosystem analysis
Genetic toxicology; biological  oceanography
Biomoniioring
Environmental and analytical chemistry
Dredging; bioaccumulation
UVB effects
EMAP near coastal, Virginian  Province
Biological effects; algae
Benthic toxicity testing; sediment criteria
Global climate change; ocean disposal
Trophic transfer; ocean  outfalls
Biochemistry
Pacific Ecosysiems Branch-Newport
                                                        74

-------
           Membership on National Estuaries and Near Coastal Program Projects
                                    of OMEP and Regions
  zzards Bay
Casco Bay (Maine)

Chesapeake Bay


Delaware Bay

Delaware Inland Bays

Long Island Sound



Lower Columbia River

Massachusetts Bay

Narragansett Bay
NYINJ Harbor Estuary



Puget Sonnet

San Francisco Bay

Santa Monica Bay
Management Committee
TAG Co-chair
TAG

TAG Member

STAC Staff Support
Toxics Subcommittee

STAC Member

STAC Member

Management Committee
TAG D.O. Study Subcommittee
TAG Modeling Subcommittee

TAG Member

TAC Member

Management Committee
TAC Chairman
TAC Water Quality Subcommittee
TAC Monitoring Subcommittee

Management Member
TAC Member
 TAC Member

 TAC Member

 TAC Member
Don Phelps
Don Phelps
William Nelson

James Lake

Suzanne Lussier
Suzanne Lussier

Suzanne Lussier

Suzanne Lussier

Jonathan Garber
Don Miller
Ed Dettmann

Rick Swartz

Jack Gentile

Norbert Jaworski
Norbert Jaworski
Ed Dettmann
Don Phelps

Norbert Jaworski
Norm Rubinstein
Wayne Davis

Rick Swartz

Dave Young

Dave Youne
                                                 75

-------
          Office of Modeling, Monitoring  Systems  and Quality Assurance
                                                       H. Matthew Bills is the director of the Office of Mod-
                                                   cling, Monitoring Systems and Quality Assurance. Mr. Bills
                                                   joined the Agency in 1971 as the director of Data and Infor-
                                                   mation Research. Prior to joining the Agency, he was man-
                                                   ager of Systems and Project Support  for A!L Information
                                                   Systems, a division of Cutlcr-Hatncr, Inc. Mr.  Bills did his
                                                   undergraduate work at William Jewell  College  and the Uni-
                                                   versity of Kansas. He holds a J.D. degree from the Univer-
                                                   sity of Missouri at Kansas City. He  is a member  of the
                                                   Missouri Bar Association.
                                            DIRECTOR

                                            202-260-5767
           Program Operations Staff
                 202-260-5761
                    Quality Assurance
                    Management Staff
                       202-260-5763
                                  Modeling and Monitoring
                                        Systems Staff
                                        202-260-5777
  Environmental
    Monitoring
Systems Laboratory
  Cincinnati, OH
   513-569-7301
 Environmental
  Monitoring
and Assessment
   Program
 202-260-5776
  Environmental
    Monitoring
Systems Laboratory
  Las Vegas, NV
   702-798-2525
Atmospheric Research
        and
 Exposure Assessment
     Laboratory
      RTF, NC
    919-541-2106
    EMAP Center Staff
  Research Triangle Park,
            NC
       919-541-4731
                       EMAP UQ Staff
                        Washington,
                            D.C.
                        202-260-5776
                                                  /6

-------
                  Office of Modeling, Monitoring Systems and Quality  Assurance
                                       H. Matthew Bills, Director
                                            Mailcode: RD-680
                               401 M St., S.W. Washington, D.C. 20460
                                   202-260-5767,  FAX: 202-260-0929
                                       E-Mail OMMSQA.GROUP
Program Activities
     Research of monitoring systems arc ongoing in the
        following areas:

Air
     *  Clean Air Act  Initiatives
     •  National Ambient Air Quality Standards
     •  New Source Performance Standards (NSPS) and
        State Implementation Plans (SIPs)
     •  Hazardous Air Pollutant Regulation
     •  Mobile Source Pollutant Regulation
     •  Indoor Air Quality
     •  Stratospheric Ozone
     •  Global Warming
     •  Acid Deposition

Water Quality
        Water Quality-Based Approach—Permitting:
        Provide  assurance that  ambient  water  quality
        monitoring data for regulation setting, enforce-
        ment, or compliance purposes are scientifically
        valid and legally defensible.

     «  Waste Water Treatment Technology: Provide
        quality control  materials and calibration  stan-
        dards for regulated CWA  analytes.

Drinking Water
     •  Drinking Water Technology: Provide contami-
        nant monitoring procedures to assure compli-
        ance with the Safe  Drinking Water Act and
        provide  quality assurance/quality control pro-
        grams for on-site evaluation and certification of
        drinking water monitoring laboratories. Develop
        methods, analytical  procedures,  and training
        courses  to produce  measurement systems for
        chemical, radiochcmical,  and microbiological
        analysis.  Develop and  distribute QC and PE
        samples for drinking water laboratory certifica-
        tion program.

     •  Groundwater: Develop measurement systems,
        methods for locating abandoned wells, geophysi-
        cal methods to detect and evaluate underground
        movement of fluids from injection welis, qual-
        ity control procedures and guidelines to support
        Agency-wide QA program,  and methods for
        well head protection.
Hazardous Waste
        Waste Identification: Develop and evaluate ana-
        lytical techniques for hazardous waste charac-
        terization. Develop and evaluate  subsurface
        monitoring  methods for use at RCRA waste
        sites.

        Quality Assurance: Support quality assurance
        of the RCRA data generated by the EPA re-
        gional offices, contractors, and state and local
        agencies.

        Releases: Provide aerial photography, satellite
        imagery,  and multispectral  scanner support to
        assist  regional  offices.  Develop  and evaluate
        procedures for external monitoring and correc-
        tive action around underground storage tanks.
Pesticides
     *  Health Markers, Dosimetry, and Extrapolation:
        Evaluate  the use of biomarkcrs in monitoring
        of pesticide exposure and support the operation
        of the pesticides and industrial chemical reposi-
        tory.

     •  Exposure Monitoring:  Monitor dietary,  non-
        dietary, and residential  exposure  scenarios to
        investigate  human exposure to pesticides.

Radiation
     •  Measure  ionizing radiation contaminants in air,
        water, milk and food.

Quality Assurance Management  Program
     •  Develop and provide Agency guidance on man-
        agement of quality assurance systems. Conduct
        management systems reviews.

Toxic Substances
     •  Analytical  Methods Development for Toxic
        Substances: Develop immunoassays  for mea-
        surement  of organic compounds. Investigate new
        separation procedures for analysis.

     •  Health Markers, Dosimetry, and Extrapolation:
        Evaluate  DNA and  protein adducts for use in
        human exposure monitoring studies.

     •  Exposure Monitoring  Systems Development:
        Develop predictive  models for human exposure
        and characterize human activity patterns.
                                                       77

-------
     •   Biotechnology/Microbial and Biochemical Pes-
        ticides Control Agents: Develop guidelines and
        processes for monitoring the release of geneti-
        cally engineered microorganisms in  the envi-
        ronment.

Superfund
     •   Provide technical support of historical and cur-
        rent data  for site-specific investigations.
     •   Provide monitoring techniques and procedures
        for  site assessment, geophysical methods, re-
        mote sensing, soil sampling methods, and sur-
        vey designs.
     •   Technical support to regions, program offices,
        and enforcement in monitoring (air, water,
        ground-water, soils).
     •   Field screening  technology.
     •   Improve/develop analytical methods.
     •   Provide quality  assurance/quality control sup-
        port for  the Superfund Contract  Laboratory
        Program; provide assessment and improvement
        of methods to evaluate  Superfund sites.
                  Environmental  Monitoring  and  Assessment
                  Program (EMAP)
                       •  EMAP  is designed to determine  the status,
                          trends, and  changes in  the  condition of the
                          nation's ecological resources, on regional scales,
                          with known levels of statistical  confidence.  It
                          represents the first national program to adopt a
                          holistic perspective of ecological condition, and
                          to develop and implement consistent method-
                          ologies across regions and ecological resources
                       •  EMAP monitors selected indicators  of ecologi-
                          cal condition in near-coastal  waters, the Great
                          Lakes, inland surface waters, wetlands, forests,
                          arid ecosystems, agricultural ecosystems, and
                          integrated landscapes. Program  objectives in-
                          clude associating  observed condition with se-
                          lected indicators of natural and  human-caused
                          stresses. EMAP results will help identify  envi-
                          ronmental risks from  widespread phenomena
                          such as habitat modification, atmospheric depo-
                          sition, and global  climate change.
                                           Areas  of Expertise

                                        Telephone                      Area of Expertise
   William Keith
   Michael Dellarco

   Carol Finch
   William Stclz
   Ken Sala
   Chris Saint
   David Friedman
   Edward Martinko
   Thomas Baugh
   Nancy Wentworth
   Tom Dixon
   John Warren
   Fred Haeberer
   Gary Johnson
   Jim Stcmmle
202-260-5716
202-260-5789

202-260-5798
202-260-8934
202-260-4346
202-260-5772
202-260-3535
202-260-5776
202-260-5776
202-260-5763
202-260-5780
202-260-9464
202-260-5785
919-541-7612
202-260-7353
Modeling and monitoring systems
Air; radiation; atmospheric ozone; global wanning;
  acid deposition
Water; drinking water
Superfund
Hazardous waste
Exposure research
Monitoring methods
Environmental Monitoring & Assessment Program
Environmental Monitoring & Assessment Program
Quality assurance program
Quality assurance training
Data quality objectives
Quality control—technical systems
Quality assurance management systems reviews
Quality assurance program plans
                                                       78

-------
            Atmospheric Research  and Exposure Assessment Laboratory
                                                        Gary J. Foley is the director of the Atmospheric Re-
                                                    search and  Exposure  Assessment Laboratory  at Research
                                                    Triangle Park, North Carolina. He is also the acting assistant
                                                    administrator of the Office of Research and Development.
                                                    He has served as staff director for ORD's Acid Deposition
                                                    Program and acting division director. Energy and Air, for
                                                    ORD's Office of Environmental Processes and Effects Re-
                                                    search. Dr.  Foley began his career with EPA in 1973 as a
                                                    senior chemical engineer. Before  joining the Agency, Dr.
                                                    Foley served as a  project manager for the American Oil
                                                    Company. He received his Ph.D. in chemical engineering
                                                    from the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Dr. Foley has
                                                    been awarded 4 Bronze Medals by EPA.
                                              DIRECTOR

                                             919-541-2106
                                                                           Program Operations Staff
   Atmospheric
Characterization &
 Modeling Division
Methods Research &
    Development
      Division
Human Exposure
&  Field Research
    Division
 Quality Assurance
& Technical Support
      Division
   Ecosystem
    Exposure
Research Division
                                                   ,'9

-------
                    Atmospheric  Research and Exposure Assessment  Laboratory

                                          Gary J. Foley, Director
                                             Mailcode: MD-75
                                   Research Triangle Park, NC 27711
                                    919-541-2106, FAX:  919-541-7588
                                          E-Mail FOLEY.GARY
    The  Atmospheric Research and Exposure  Assessment
Laboratory (AREAL), Research Triangle Park, North Caro-
lina, conducts intramural and extramural research programs,
through laboratory and field research, in the chemical, physi-
cal, and biological  sciences.

    The laboratory is composed of the following major com-
ponents:  Office of the Director, Program Operations Staff,
Atmospheric Characterization and Modeling Division, Meth-
ods Research and Development Division, Human Exposure
and Field Research Division, Quality Assurance  and Techni-
cal Support Division, and the Ecosystem Exposure Research
Division.

AREAL Major Research Areas
     •  Air Toxics:
        Develop methods to measure  toxic air pollut-
        ants  in ambient  air and use them to monitor
        emissions  at toxic waste sites. Conduct moni-
        toring studies to assess emission sources, ambi-
        ent  pollutant   concentrations, transport,
        transformation of pollutants, and removal of
        pollutants  from  the atmosphere.

     *  Add Deposition:
         Model atmospheric processes  to evaluate acid
        rain, acid  deposition, and transport and trans-
         formation of acid pollutants  over  urban  and
        regional scales. Develop  methods and  quality
        assurance  materials to measure  dry and  wet
        deposition. Operate acid deposition monitoring
         networks,  and maintain a  repository of  data on
         acid  deposition.

     •   Visibility Degradation:
         Devise approaches to measure visibility changes,
        and conduct studies to determine how the com-
         position and morphology affects light  scatter-
         ing.

     •  Mobile Sources:
         Identify and measure  pollutants emitted from
        mobile  sources. Develop methods to  assess
         population exposures to pollutants from mobile
         sources.

     •   Global Climate Change:
         Determine how increases in atmospheric con-
         centrations of trace gases affect earth's climate.
         Investigate the sources, transport and transfor-
mation of greenhouse gases and their  precur-
sors.

Human Exposure Assessment:
Develop methods to measure and estimate the
frequency of human exposure to pollutants.
Methods include use of  personal exposure
monitors,  questionnaires,  and  protocols that
relate exposure  to sources.

Indoor Air:
Develop and test indoor air monitoring devices.
Design and implement field studies to identify
and quantify indoor air pollutants.  Use the re-
sults to produce information regarding proper
use and performance limitations of these de-
vices.

Ozone Non-attainment:
Develop models to predict ozone concentrations,
which can be verified with ambient data to in-
dicate pollution  controls needed to attain the
Clean Air Act's ozone standard.

Air Pollution Model Application Studies:
Develop mathematical models to describe and
predict relationships  between emitted air pol-
lutants and resulting  air quality.

Methods Development:
Develop  methods and monitoring  systems  to
measure air pollutants in ambient air and those
emitted by stationary or mobile sources. Imple-
ment ambient air monitoring equivalency regu-
lations.

Quality Assurance:
Develop  methods to assure the quality of air
pollution measurements, particularly  measure-
ments made in compliance with regulatory' stan-
dards. Develop procedures and reference
materials to audit air pollution measurements—
both data collection and  data analysis.

Stratospheric Ozone Research:
Determine the lifetime and fate of  HCFCs and
other chemicals that may deplete the protective
stratospheric ozone layer; operate a network to
monitor fluxes of ultraviolet (UV-B) radiation
penetrating to the earth's surface, and publish a
public information  index of potential exposure
to UV-B.
                                                       80

-------
                                          Areas  of Expertise
                                       Telephone
                                 Area of Expertise
Office of the Director
  Gary J. Folcy, Director
  Jay J. Messer, Deputy Director
  John B. Clements,
  Gerald G. Akland
  Rick A. Linthurst
  Jack H. Shreffler
  William E. Wilson
  Lawrence Cox
Atmospheric Characterization
and Modeling Division
  Frank A.  Schiernicicr
  H. Michael Barnes
  Joseph J. Bufalini
  Jason K.S. Ching
  Robin L.  Dennis
  Basil  Dimitriadcs
  Bruce W. Gay, Jr.*
  Joan Novak
  William B. Pctcrsen
  William H. Snyder

Methods Research and
Development Division
  Larry T. Cupiti
  Jerry  L. Yarns
  Kenneth T. Knapp
  Joseph E. Knoll
  Thomas J, Logan
  William A. McClenny*
  M. Rodney Midget)
  Russell W. Wiener

Human  Exposure and
 Field Research Division
  Dale Pah I
  V. Ross Highsmith
  David O. Hinton
  Alan H. Huber
   "Acting
919-541.
919-541-
919-541
919-54L
919-541
919-541
919-541
919-541
 2106
 2107
 2188
 4885
 4909
 2194
 2551
 2648
919-541
919-541
919-541
919-541
919-541
919-541
919-541
919-541
919-541
919-541
919-541
919-541
919-541
919-541
919-541
919-541
919-541
919-541
-4542
-3086
-2422
-4801
-2870
-2706
-2830
-4545
-1376
-1198
-2454
-5797
-1352
-2952
-2580
-3158
-2196
-1910
919-541-1851
919-541-7828
919-541-3075
919-541-1338
Ecological studies
Quality assurance
Human exposure
Ecological studies
Atmospheric processes
Visibility; aerosol chemistry
Statistics
Meteorological monitoring
Heterogeneous chemistry
Gas kinetics
Dispersion model development
Regional model evaluation
Photochemistry; ozone
FTJR analysis
Model evaluation/applications
Toxics air quality modeling
Fluid modeling,
Air toxics
Analytical chemistry
Mobile sources
Source methods
Continuous emission monitoring
Monitoring methods development
Source methods
Aerosol methods
                  Exposure assessment
                  Indoor air
                  Exposure assessment
                  Wake effects studies
                                                                                                  (continued)
                                                      81

-------
  Jimmy C. Pan*
  Robcrl K. Stevens
  Nancy K. Wilson
  Andrew E. Bond
                                          Areas of Expertise
                                                  (continued)
  Telephone

919-541-5579
919-541-3156
919-541-4723
919-541-4329
                                                                     Area of Expertise
                 Dioxins, stack measurement for organics
                 Source apportionment
                 Scmivohitilc organics; analytical chemistry
                 Pesticides monitoring
Quality Assurance and
Technical Support Division
  Ronald C. Evans
  Ronald K. Patterson
  Joseph E. Bumgarncr
  Thomas C. Lawless
  Warren A. Loseke
  William J.Mitchell
  Joseph J, Walling

Ecosystem Exposure
Research Division
  James  S. Vickery
  Peler L. Finkelstein
  Sharon K. LeDuc
  Joseph E. Sickles
  Johnnie L. Pearson
  Daniel A. Vallero
919-541
919-541
919-541
919-541
919-541
919-541
919-541
-5488
-3779
-2430
-2291
-2173
-2769
-2430
919-541-2184
919-541-4553
919-541-1335
919-541-2446
919-541-0572
919-541-0150
Quality assurance
Quality assurance management
Organic analysis
Computer systems
Inorganic analysis
QA material development and application
Chemical analysis
                  Acid deposition
                  Global climate change
                  Statistical meteorology
                  Tropospheric chemistry and global change
                  CASNET; acid deposition monitoring
                  Physical geography and epidemiology
   *Acting
                                                      82

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         Federal Technology Transfer Act  Cooperative R&D  Agreements
Ronald K. Patterson

William H. Snyder



Edward 0. Edncy



William A. MeClenny
John W. Spcnce


Edward O. Edncy



Sharon L. Harper


Joseph E. Bumgarncr



Joachim D. Plcil
 Telephone


919-541-3779

919-541-1198



919-541-3905



919-541-3158
919-541-3905


919-541-3905



919-541-2443


919-541-2430



919-541-4680
                                                                       Project
FTTA Coordinator, AREAL

Georgia Institute of Technology—Perform hydraulic
  model study for improved ocean outfall design at
  Boston harbor

Ford Motor Company—Use of EPA's Environmental
  Chamber Facility to evaluate effects of environ-
  mental fallout on automotive products

Perkin-Elmer—Develop and improve physical and
  chemical methods for trace contaminant analysis,
  automated canister sampling technologies for
  gaseous  air contaminants and diffusion monitoring
  technologies

Rohm & Haas—Paint substrate exposure study using
  covering-spray devices

Dow Corning Corporation—Investigate the effects of
  the environment on damage to Dow Corning
  coatings and sealants

Frandon Enterprises, Inc.—Develop a trace metal
  screening technique

CDS Analytical, Inc.—Design a system that utilizes
  an integrated combination of commercially
  available instruments

Grascby/Nutech—Produce a valveless injection
  system for the gas chromatographic analysis of
  VOCs
                                                   83

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        Environmental Monitoring Systems Laboratory—Cincinnati
                                                  Thomas A. Clark is the director of the Environmental
                                               Monitoring Systems Laboratory. He previously served as its
                                               deputy director from 1985 to 1988. From 1973 to 1981, Mr.
                                               Clark worked in the Quality Assurance Division of EMSL-
                                               RTP in various supervisory positions and also served as deputy
                                               director of that laboratory from 1981 to 1985 before moving
                                               to Cincinnati. He was awarded a Bronze Medal in 1982 and
                                               1986. Mr. Clark began his career as an analytical chemist at
                                               the Matheson Company in  Norwood,  Ohio. He has a
                                               bachelor's degree in chemistry from Xavier University.
                                         DIRECTOR

                                         513-569-7301
        Senior Science
           Advisors
         513-569-7306
         513-569-7492
Chemistry Research
     Division
   513-569-7309
                   Research
              Containment Facility
                 513-569-7398
                    Program Operations
                           Staff
                        513-569-7330
Ecological Monitoring
  Research Division
    513-569-7401
Microbiology Research
       Division
    513-569-7218
Quality Assurance
Research Division
  513-569-7325
                                                84

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                            Environmental Monitoring Systems Laboratory

                                        Thomas A. Clark,  Director
                                               Mailcode:  591
                              26 W. ML  King Dr.,  Cincinnati, OH 45268
                                    513-569-7301, FAX: 513-569-7424
                                       E-Mail   CLARK.THOMASA
    The Environmental  Monitoring  Systems Laboratory'  in
Cincinnati, Ohio (EMSL-Cincinnati), develops tools to evalu-
ate the health of the environment. The laboratory has exper-
tise  in chemistry,  molecular biology,  microbiology,
biochemistry, cellular biology,  ecology, and statistics.

    EMSL-Cincinnati scientists develop methods  to deter-
mine  physical parameters  and  to identify and  measure or-
ganic and  inorganic chemical pollutants in water and wastes.
To minimize laboratory svaste and prevent pollution, empha-
sis is placed on analytical methods that minimize the use of
organic solvents and hazardous reagents.

    Research is conducted to enhance microbiological tech-
niques to detect, identify, enumerate, and evaluate effects of
bacteria, fungi, viruses, protozoa, and parasites. Biotechnol-
ogy  is used to develop methods for determining the occur-
rence, distribution, transport, and fate of human pathogenic
parasites in the environment. Methods arc applicable to drink-
ing water, ambient water, raw  and treated wastewater, sedi-
ment, sludge, and biological samples.

    Biochemical, cellular biological, and ecological methods
are developed to detect and quantify responses of aquatic and
terrestrial organisms and communities !o environmental stres-
sors.  The  diagnostic capabilities of these bioindicators are
correlated with community impacts and xcnobiotic  stressors,
including  individual  chemicals, mixtures of chemicals, and
environmental samples. Biochemical and molecular markers
                   are being developed in ecologically relevant species that can
                   be used to  document exposures, elucidate strcssor-induced
                   effects, and establish causality in ecosystems. The sensitivity
                   and reliability of potential  bioindicators  of exposures are
                   evaluated both in a controlled laboratory environment and  in
                   various ecosystems. Methods are evaluated to demonstrate
                   their usefulness for improving ecological risk assessment in-
                   cluding: monitoring toxicant exposure levels, identifying dose
                   to aquatic and terrestrial species, and quantifying the general
                   ecosystem health using ecological monitoring techniques.

                       To ensure that data of known and adequate quality are
                   obtained through the Agency's monitoring programs, a qual-
                   ity assurance  (QA) program  is maintained for both  biology
                   and chemistry. The QA program involves method evaluation
                   studies to establish the precision and bias of the  Agency's
                   selected analytical methods. QA  manuals and guidelines,
                   quality control samples, and  calibration standards are made
                   available  to support water and waste regulations. To ensure
                   that laboratories using Agency methods are providing data  of
                   acceptable quality, performance evaluation studies  are de-
                   signed  and  conducted.

                       The laboratory has chemical and biological laboratories,
                   including a self-contained, freestanding building especially
                   designed  for research involving hazardous materials, a suite
                   of laboratories designed for safe handling of pathogens, and
                   numerous laboratories especially equipped to conduct research
                   with aquatic and terrestrial organisms.
                                           *
                                           Areas of Expertise
Office of the Director

   Thomas A. Clark, Director
   Gerald  McKcc, Deputy Director
   Ann Alford-Stcvens
   James Lichtenbcrs
                                        Telephone
513-569-7301
513-569-7303
513-569-7492
513-569-7306
                                  Area of Expertise
Methods and quality assurance
Methods and quality assurance
Methods and quality assurance
Standardization, certification, and compliance
  monitoring
Microbiology Research Division

   Alfred Dufour, Director
513-569-7218
Microbiology
(continued)
                                                          85

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                                         Areas of Expertise
                                                  (continued)

                                      Telephone
        Area of Expertise
  Virology Branch
  Robert Saffennan                   513-569-7334

  Bacteriology Branch
  Gerard Stelina                     513-569-7384

  Parasitology and Immunology
  Branch
  Walter Jakubowski                 513-569-7385

Chemistry Research Division

  William Budde, Director            513-569-7309

  Organic Chemistry Branch
  James Eichclberger                 5 \ 3-569-7278

  Inorganic Chemistry Branch
  Vacant

Quality Assurance
Research Division

  John Winter, Director               513-569-7325

  Development and
  Evaluation Branch
  Robert Graves                     513-569-7197

  Project Management Branch
  Raymond Wesselman               513-569-7325

Ecological Monitoring
Research  Division

  F. Bernard Daniel, Director          513-569-7401

  Cellular and Biochemical
  Markers Branch
  Maryrose  Kate Smith               513-569-7577

  Physiological and
  Clinical Indicators Branch
  Susan Cormier                     513-569-7995

  Bioassessment and Ecotoxicology
  Branch
  James Lazorchak*                  513-533-8114

Federal Technology Transfer Act
Cooperative Research and
Development Agreements

   Raymond Wesselman                513-569-7325
     Ncwtown facility
Virology


Bacteriology



Parasitology



Chemical methods


Organic methods


Chemical methods




Quality assurance issues



Quality control/performance evaluation samples


Methods standardization



Ecological monitoring



Ecological biomarkcrs



Ecological biomarkcrs



Ecological biomarkcrs
Development, preparation, verification, and distribu-
  tion of quality control and reference materials (five
  existing agreements)
                                                        86

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Environmental Monitoring Systems Laboratory—Las Vegas
                                           Wayne N. Marchant was named director of the Envi-
                                        ronmental Monitoring Systems Laboratory in  Las Vegas,
                                        Nevada, in July 1992. Dr. Marchant was formerly the chief
                                        of Research and Laboratory Services in the Bureau of Rec-
                                        lamation, U.S. Department of the Interior, a position he had
                                        held since 1988. He holds a Ph.D. degree in chemistry from
                                        the University of California at Santa Barbara, and a bachelor
                                        of science degree from the University of Nevada at Reno. He
                                        has won numerous awards for service and technical achieve-
                                        ments, including three patents. Before his assignment with
                                        the Bureau of Reclamation, he served as the deputy assistant
                                        secretary for water and science  in the Department  of the
                                        Interior and as program manager and scientist for the U.S.
                                        Bureau of Mines in both Salt Lake City, Utah, and in  Wash-
                                        ington, D.C.
Technology Transfer &
Technical Support
Center 702-798-2202



DIRECTOR
702-798-2525
1


Senior Science Advisor
702-798-2138

Exposure Assessment
Research Division
702-798-2203
Quality Assurance &
Methods Development
Division 702-798-2103
Advanced Monitoring
Systems Division
702-798-2237
Nuclear Radiation
Assessment Division
702-798-2305
Office of Program
Management &
Support 702-798-2627
                                        87

-------
                           Environmental Monitoring Systems Laboratory

                                     Wayne N. Marchant,  Director
                              P.O. Box 93478, Las Vegas,  NV 89193-3478
                                   702-798-2525, FAX: 702-798-2233
                                     E-Mail MARCHANT.WAYNE
    The Environmental Monitoring Systems Laboratory-Las
Vegas develops methods, systems, and strategies for moni-
toring the environment with the primary purposes of assess-
ing the exposure of man and other receptors in the environment
to polluting substances, characterizing the status of environ-
mental quality,  and  identifying the trends in environmental
quality.

    The laboratory develops and applies field monitoring tech-
niques, analytical methods, and  remote sensing systems for
monitoring  environmental pollutants.  It field tests, demon-
strates and  applies these systems, and initiates transfers of
operational  systems to Agency user organizations. It provides
technical support to Agency, regional, and program offices in
response to their requests  for pollutant monitoring, testing
and surveillance assistance.

    The laboratory develops and operates quality assurance
programs for radiation, hazardous wastes, and toxic/pesticide
monitoring. This includes the development and maintenance
of reference standards, preparation of performance evaluation
materials, and the conduct of performance audits  for EPA
laboratories as well  as other federal, state, and local labora-
tories.

    Under  a Memorandum of Understanding with  the U.S.
Department of Energy (DOE), the laboratory conducts a com-
prehensive  off-site radiological safety program for the U.S.
Nuclear Weapons Testing Program, which includes pathways
research to  determine actual and potential radiation exposure
to humans and the environment from past and present nuclear
testing. The laboratory also provides quality assurance over-
sight for DOE's mixed  waste management activities.

    The laboratory's major programs  arc

        Advanced Analytical Methods: Development
        and evaluation of innovative  techniques  for
        sample extraction and analysis of organic and
        inorganic  contaminants  in  complex  en-
        vironmental matrices. Advanced methods using
        liquid  chromatography, mass  spectrometry,
        Fourier transform infra-red spectroscopy, gas
        chromatography,  inductively coupled plasma
        spectroscopy, and immunoassay are developed
        and evaluated.
        Advanced  Monitoring Methods:  Research
        directed at  providing monitoring methods that
        arc simpler, more  reliable, or more rapid to use
        than existing methods. Overhead remote sensing,
        aerial  photography,  multispectral scanner, and
        laser fluorosensins technologies, airborne laser
systems, and geophysical techniques are tools
used to detect waste discharge,  locate waste
disposal  sites, identify  erosion, assess  air
paniculate problems, and monitor pollutants in
soils and in ground water.
Monitoring Network Design: The laboratory has
long been in the forefront of monitoring
design—using a concept  that  advocates a
multimedia  approach  to  environmental
monitoring emphasizing proper selection of
critical receptors, optimum siting, and  number
of  samples,  through  planning  and  an
understanding of how pollutants are transported
from the source  to the receptor. Geostatistics
play a  major  role  by using  data  from a
preliminary  study  to  establish  the  optimum
distance between sampling points.
Quality Assurance: In an effort  to support  the
Agency's commitment to the quality  assurance
aspects of environmental sampling and analysis,
test methods arc validated  and  performance
criteria are established. The precision, accuracy,
and ruggedness of the analytical  protocols  arc
then evaluated for  use in  Agency monitoring
programs. Quality assurance support,  as well as
laboratory and data audits, are provided for the
Superfund Contract Laboratory Program.
Exposure Assessment:  Human  exposure
assessment provides critical information required
to make  risk estimates for environmental
pollutants.  A comprehensive  approach is
required to develop simultaneous information
on sources, exposure, dose, effect, and  control.
Projects related to this topic include examination
of consumer products as sources  of pollutants,
evaluation/validation  of indoor air models,
evaluation of indoor air sinks, development of
a benzene exposure model, human  activity
patterns,  development/evaluation  of im-
munoassays  for  environmental pollutants,
monitoring of microorganisms  in residential
settings, and the examination of biomarkers as
indicators of exposure.
Radiological Monitoring and Analysis: The
laboratory maintains extensive radioanalytical,
field radiological monitoring and health physics
capability  to conduct  an integrated program of
environmental monitoring, sampling, analysis,
exposure assessment  and quality assurance in
support of the United States  Nuclear Weapons

-------
       Testing  Program.  The  group responds to
       radiation accidents and potential emergencies
       such as the Three Mile Island incident and the
       launches of Galileo  and  Ulysses  deep space
       probes  carrying radioisotope thermoelectric
       generators. They play a major role in the Federal
       Radiological Monitoring and Assessment Center.
       A whole body-counting facility is operated at
       the laboratory  for  determining radionuclide
       identification and distribution in people. Also,
       the  laboratory  conducts  an  EPA-wide
       occupational radiation monitoring exposure
       program. This group  supports the  National
       Interim Primary Drinking  Water Regulations by
       conducting  the  Drinking Water  Laboratory
       Certification Program, which  includes providing
       radioactive  reference  standards,  conducting
       intercomparison  studies and  performing audits
       of state drinking water laboratories.
       Ecological  Monitoring:  The   laboratory
       participates in the  Agency's Environmental
       Monitoring and Assessment  Program  (EMAP),
       a national research program  to determine the
       condition of the nation's  ecological resources.
       Research classifies, characterizes, and monitors
       status and trends of major ecosystems and their
       subclasses. The monitoring efforts  specifically
       focus on conditions over periods  of years to
       decades. Advanced  monitoring methods are
       being  used  to determine status and  trends in
       forest, agricultural and arid lands. The laboratory
       is responsible  for conducting initial ecosystem
       characterization,  providing remote  sensing
       support, providing guidance and support for field
       logistics and quality  assurance,  and for
       developing and  implementing a  distributed
       database management system.
                                     &   *   *
                          Monitoring and Measurement Technologies:
                          Under  the aegis of the  Supcrfund Innovative
                          Technology  Evaluation  (SITE) Program,  the
                          laboratory is responsible  for  identifying,
                          evaluating, demonstrating,  and  transferring
                          alternative or innovative technologies used for
                          site characterization and for monitoring  the
                          progress of remedial activities. Technologies that
                          have participated in the program include portable
                          gas chromatographs, ion mobility spectrometers,
                          long-path-length infrared  spectrometers,
                          immunochemical test kits, fiber optic and other
                          chemical  sensors, x-ray fluorescence  spec-
                          trometers, and mass spectrometers, among
                          others. The  Monitoring  and Measurement
                          Technologies  Program  also  focuses  on
                          technologies used  to characterize  the physical
                          characteristics of  sites. The  Monitoring and
                          Measurement Technologies Program  is  matrix
                          managed,  involving  the expertise  residing in
                          EMSL-LV's sister  laboratories— EMSL-C1 and
                          AREAL-RTP.
                          Technical  Assistance:  The  laboratory's
                          Technical Support Center provides regional
                          personnel  with monitoring and site assessment
                          expertise.  Areas of assistance  include sampling
                          and monitoring  design assistance; remote
                          sensing, mapping  and geostatistics; analytical
                          methods and quality assurance; bore-hole  and
                          surface  geophysics; field  portable  x-ray
                          florescence  field  methods; mixed waste  and
                          radiological analysis. Technical assistance is
                          provided in a variety of ways, including reviews,
                          information  research and retrieval, technology
                          transfer, teleconferencing, on-site measurements,
                          training programs, seminars and  workshops.
                             *
                                           Areas of Expertise
Office of the Director

   Wayne N. Marchant
   J. Garcth Pearson
   Llewellyn R. Williams

Office of Program Management
and Support

   Walter B. Galloway

   Douglas C. Sharp
                                      Telephone
702-798-2525
702-798-2522
702-798-2138
702-798-2568

702-798-2627
                                   Area of Expertise
Director
Environmental monitoring; quality assurance
Chemical/biological testing; water quality; quality
  assurance
Marine environmental chemistry; program manage-
  ment; total quality management
Safety, health, and environmental management
Quality Assurance and
Methods Development Division

   Richard L. Garnas
   Stephen N. Billets
702-798-2101
702-798-2232
Agricultural chemistry
Organic analytical chemistry; mass spectroscopy
                                     (continued)
                                                          89

-------
                                          Areas of Expertise
                                                  (continued)
  Methods Research Branch
  Christian G. Daughton
                                       Telephone
702-798-2207
  Quality Assurance Research Branch
  Michael H. Hiatt                    702-798-2383
Exposure Assessment Research Division

  Robert D. Schonbrod                702-798-2229
  Charles H. Nauhan                 702-798-2258

  Ecosystems Monitoring Program
  Ann M. Pitchford                   702-798-2217
  Exposure Monitoring Program
  Stephen C. Hern
                                 Area of Expertise
702-798-2594
Analytical chemistry; microbia! degradation; biore-
  mcdiation; environmental toxicology
                         Organic analytical chemistry; trace level environmen-
                           tal contanimant analysis; vacuum distillation; mass
                           spcctronictry; contract laboratory program (CLP);
                           quality assurance
                         Chemistry; field monitoring; quality assurance
                         Environmental toxicology
Ecosystems monitoring; environmental monitoring
  quality assurance

Microbiology; exposure monitoring
Advanced Monitoring Systems Division

  Eugene P. Meier                    702-798-2237
  John M. Moore

  Aquatic and Subsurface
  Monitoring Branch
  Jane E. Denne
702-798-2237
702-798-2368
  Remote and Air Monitoring Branch
  Bill J. Forte                         702-798-2260

  Environmental Photographic
  Interpretation Center (Warrenton, Va)
  Donald Garofalo                    703-341-7503
Ground-water monitoring; analytical environmental
  chemistry
Systems engineering; systems analysis
Ground-water monitoring
                         Remote sensing; Geographic Information Systems
                         Remote sensing
Nuclear Radiation Assessment Division
   PaulJ.Weedcn                     702-798-231:
   George G. (Jerry) Martin
702-798-2374
  Monitoring and Assessment Branch
  Anita A. Mullen                     702-798-2597
   Radioanalysis Branch
   Terence M. Grady
702-798-2136
Radiation safety; environmental monitoring; radio-
  chemistry
Environmental monitoring; health physics
                         Health physics; dose assessment
Radiochemistry
Environmental Monitoring Assessment Program
   K. Bruce Jones                      702-798-2671
   William Kepncr                     702-798-2193
   DeniceShaw                       919-541-2698
   Lee Campbell                      919-515-3311
   Sam Alexander                      919-549-4020
                         EMAP (landscape ecology)
                         EMAP (arid ecosystems)
                         EMAP (landscape characterization)
                         EMAP (agro-ecosystems)
                         EMAP (forests)
                                                        90

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                                 Index of Areas of Expertise
Academic Research Centers   16
Acetone  39
Acid deposition   63, 78,  82
Administrative and budget processes 53
Aerosol chemistry  81
    methods  81
Aerosols  53
Agricultural 53
    chemistry  89
    ecology 53
    engineering  32
Air   78
Air & energy environ,  assessment and control  49
Air biofilter treatment  45
Air chemistry  16, 35
Air pollution  13,42
    control technologies  50
    effects on vegetation  64
Air toxics  9, 42, 81
AirRISC  39
Algae  74
Alternative
    fuels   35
    procurement and  investment incentive  42
    refrigerants and modified refrigerator 50
    treatment technologies 42
    treatment technology information center 42
Aluminum  39
Ammonia 38
    /nitrite toxicity to aquatic organisms   60
Anaerobic microbiology  60
Analytical
    chemistry  56, 57, 71, 81,  82, 90
    environmental chemistry  90
Applied epidemiology  38
Aquatic
    and wildlife toxicology  64
    biology  60
    ecology  64, 71
    toxicology   71
Aquifer restoration  56
Arctic ecology 53
Arsenic  39
Asbestos 38, 45
    fiber  release 46
Asphalt  38
Atmospheric
    chemistry 53
    ozone  78
    processes  81
    transport and dispersion 53


B
Bacteriology  86
Behavioral toxicology  23,  67
Benthic toxicity testing  74
Benzenes  39
Beryllium  39
Bioaccumulation 74
Bioassays  67
Biochemistry  29, 60,71, 74
Biodegradation  71
Biodiversity 53
Biogeochemistry 60
Biologic
    markers  35
    effects  74
    oceanography  74
    wastewater treatment  45
Biomarkers  29, 67,  74
Biomedical engineering  32
Biomonitoring  74
Bioremediation  13, 45, 53, 56, 57, 60,  71, 90
Biostatistics   29, 38,  39
Biotechnology  29, 45, 53, 64
Boron  39
Botany  64
Cancer
    assessments  38
    risk assessment  29
    risk estimation  29
Carbamates  38
Carbon
    monoxide  35
    tetrachloride  38
Carcinogen assay  67
Cardiovascular physiology  39
CASNET  82
Cell biology  67
Center for Exposure Assessment Modeling  61
                                                  91

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Certification, and compliance monitoring   85
CFC/Halon recycling and destruction approaches  50
Chemical
    analysis  82
    bioaccumulation modeling   60
    /biological testing  89
    carcinogens  29
    carcinogenesis   23
    engineering  32
    fate and transport  32
    kinetic constant measurement  60
    methods  86
    mixtures guidelines  39
    oxidation 45
Chemistry  32,  35,  67, 90
    and metabolism  23
Chloramines  39
Chlorinated hydrocarbons  38
Civil engineering 32
Climate change  35, 60, 64
Coke oven controls 50
Combustion 46
    incineration, furnace injection for SOx  49
    modification control technology 49
    toxics control 49
Commercialization of environmental technologies  42
Comparative toxicology  67
Complex effluent  67,  74
Computer
    programming   39
    science  39
    simulation   29
    systems  82
    systems development  13
Conservation biology 53
Constructed wetlands  42
Contaminant transport modeling 56
Contaminated
    soils and ground water 46
    waters  71
Continuous emission monitoring  81
Contract laboratory program  90
Control technology   60
    /pollution prevention approach 49
    Control Technology Center Hotline  50
Copper  39
Corrosion 45
Council of Science  Advisors  10
CRAVE  38, 39
Criteria air pollutants  35
Crustacean culture   71
Cyanides  39
 D
 Data
    networking  42
   quality objectives   78
Database development   39
Debris washing  45
Decision
   scientist 46
   support/expert systems  61
Dermal
   absorption  32
   exposure 32
Design analysis   39
Developmental neurotoxicoiogy  35
Dibenzofurans  38
DIMP  38
Dioxin  9, 32, 38, 82
Disinfectant applications  45
Disinfection byproducts  45
Dispersion model development  81
Dissolved oxygen 74
Distribution systems and modeling  45
DNA adducts 74
Dose assessment  90
Dosimetry  39
Dredged material disposal  74
Dredging  74
Drinking water  9, 39, 46, 78
   and wastewater treatment   13
   disinfectants  39
   field evaluations  44
   inorganics control 44
   management 44
   microbiological treatment  44
   treatment 42, 44
   treatment plants  46
Dye chemistry  60
Ecological
    assessments  32
    biomarkers  86
    effects  56, 68
    indicators of risk  32
    modeling   64
    monitoring  86
    processes  63
    risk assessment  32, 39, 53, 74
    risk of dtoxin  68
    studies   81
    toxicity  74
Ecology  53,  60, 64
Ecorisk 53
Ecosystem
    analysis  74
    and vegetation effects  35
    modeling   68
    modeling  waste load allocation  68
    chemical  effects  68
                                                  92

-------
    monitoring  90
Ecotoxicology  53
Effects
    assessment  68
    of VOCs  35
Effluent assessment  67
Electrical engineering  23
Electrokinetics 45
Electromagnetic fields  29
Electron microscopy  71
EMAP  60, 64, 67, 71, 74, 78, 90
    near coastal, Virginian  Province  74
Emissions
    estimation 49
    inventory and modeling 53
    models 49
    characterization and mitigation 49
Endangered species  9
Endrin  39
Energy 42
Engineered biosystems 45
Engineering research grants  16
Environmental
    and analytical chemistry  74
    and occupational medicine  29
    biology research grants  16
    chemistry  74
    criteria  74
    education  10,  38
    engineering  32, 53, 74
    health policy  29
    health research grants  16
    legislation  35
    monitoring   61, 89, 90
    photochemistry  60
    science  32
    statistics  64
    sustainability 53
    technology utilization   10
    toxicology  90
 Epidemiology  23, 29,  35, 39
 EPSCoR   16
 Essentiality/toxicity   38
 Estuaries 53
 Ethylene thiourea  39
 Eutrophication   68, 74
 Exotic species  68
 Experimental
    design   29
    ecosystems  67
 Expert systems  13
 Exploratory research grants  16
 Exposure
    and risk  assessment modeling  61
    assessment  6, 9,  32, 61, 74,  81
    effects modeling  60
    modeling  35, 61
                               10
   monitoring  90
   research   78
   scenarios   32
   software   32
Fate
    and treatability of toxics  45
    constant database  60
    modeling  32
    of organic pollutants   60
Federal Technology Transfer Act
Field
    applications 45
    monitoring  90
    sampling methods  61
    validation of improved methods  49
Fish
    and fish food taxonomy  67
    consumption  39
    culture  71
    ingestion  32
    pathology  71
    toxicology  60
Fisheries biology  63
Flue gas cleaning technologies 49
Fluid modeling  81
Fluoride   39
Food
    ingestion  32
    safety  9
Forest ecology 63,
Fractured media  56
Freshwater ecology
FTIR analysis  81
Fuel additives  35
Fungal genetics  64
Furnace  injection for SO^ control  49
                   64
                   67
G
             81
Gas kinetics
Genetic
    risk assessment  29
    toxicology  23,  71, 74
    toxicology of complex mixtures   23
Genetics  29
Geochemistry 56
Geographic Information Systems  90
Geography/cartography   64
Geophysics 57
GHC adsorption 45
Global
    climate biogeochemical cycles 53
    climate change   42, 53, 60, 64, 68, 74,  82
    warming  78
                                                   93

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Glycol ethers  38
Great Lakes  68
Greenhouse gases 49
Ground water  13,53
    investigation and  remediation  32
    monitoring  56, 90


H
Habitat 53
Hazardous
    materials  13
    Substance Research Center Program  16
    waste  13, 42, 46, 53, 78
       biological processes  57
       Hazardous Waste Program  38
       incineration research 49
       regulations  38
       management  44, 60
       research 45
Health assessment of toxic air pollutants  35
Health
    effects  9
       of air pollutants   23
       of environmental pollutants  23
       of hazardous  waste and Superfund  23
       of pesticides/toxic substances  23
       of water pollutants  23
    physics  90
    risk assessment  35
HEAST   38
Heavy metals  35, 38
HEEDs   38
Heterogeneous chemistry  81
Hexachlorocyclopentadiene   39
Histological responses  74
Human
    exposure  81
    health effects   9
    health risk assessment  39
    inhalation toxicology   23
    physiology  29
Hydrodynamics  61
Hydrogeology  32, 57
Hydrology  32, 57
    /stream chemical dynamics  64
Hydrolysis/redox  reactions in water  60
Hyperthermia  29
Hypothesis testing  38


I
IAQ modeling  49
Ichthyology  71
Immiscible flow 56
Immunotoxicology  23
Incineration  38, 39, 49,
Indoor air  9, 39, 42, 81
    pollutant source/emissions characterization  49
    pollution  35
    quality 49
industrial
    and hazardous waste   13
    hygiene   39
    pollution prevention 46
    sources   60
    wastewater 13, 42, 45
Information management  38
Inhalation
    dosimetry  23
    risk assessment  35
    toxicology   35
Innovative
    technology evaluation  42
    thermal treatment  45
Inorganic
    analysis   61, 82
    chemical analysis and transport  68
    chemistry  56, 74
    wastes 45
Inorganics  39
    control  45
In-situ treatment of soils 46
Interagency coordination 42
International
    cleaner production 42
    collaboration 35
    programs  23
    remedial technology 45
Invertebrate  67
    interactions  71
    pathology  71
    taxonomy/toxicology  64
Ion exchange softening 46
IRIS  39
K
Karst geology  32
L
Lake
    ecology  68
    restoration  64
    /stream ecology  64
LAN  39
Land treatment 57
Landfill
    design  32, 46
    permitting/site selection  60
Landscape ecology  64
                                                  94

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Lead  9, 35, 38
   /copper  45
   paint removal  46
   toxicity   38
Less-than-lifetime risk assessments  38
LIMB
   demonstrations 49
   development 49
Limnology   63
Low NO  burners 49
M
Mammalian mutagenesis  23
Management Information Systems  23
Manganese  38, 39
Marine
    ecology  53, 71
    environmenta! chemistry  89
    mammalian pathology  74
    microbial ecology  71
    pathology  74
    water and sediment quality criteria  74
Mass
    spectromeiry  60, 90
    spectroscopy   89
Mathematical modeling   29, 38,  39
MDA  39
Mechanisms of toxic action  67
Medaka  67
Medical waste  42
Membrane technology 45
Mercury  38, 71
Metabolism  35, 67
    pathology  29
Metals 38
    adsorption/speciation 61
    finishing 45
    humic interactions  60
    sorption;  60
    speciation   61
    transport 57
Meteorological monitoring  81
Methods
    and quality assurance  85
    standardization   86
Methyl mercury  39
Methylene chloride  39
Microbial
    biotransformation processes   60
    degradation  90
    ecology  60, 71
    ecology/biotechnology   64
    genetics  71
    kinetic constant measurement  60
    kinetics  60
Microbiology  56, 57, 64, 85, 90
Microorganism  71
Migratory birds  9
Mining
    sites  45
    waste management 45
Minority
    institution assistance  16
    student fellowships  16
    summer internships  16
Mixed solvents 56
Mixture toxicity  67
Mobile
    sources  9, 81
    sources/alternative fuels  35
Model
    evaluation/applications  81
    selection  32
Modeling 57
    and monitoring systems   78
    epidemiology  29
    theory  68
Molecular
    and cellular biology 29
    biology  71
    dosimetry  67
    spectroscopy  60
Monitoring
    methods  78
    methods development  81
Multimedia  models   60
Multispectral analysis  60
Multivariate analysis  23
Municipal
    solid  waste  42, 46
       recycling  39
    waste  9
       combustion  49
    wastewater 42
       treatment  13,42, 44
Mutagenesis and carcinogenesis  29


N
NAAQS  9
NAPLs 56, 57
National
    Environmental Technology Applications 42
    /international land reclamation 45
Neurodevelopmental toxicology  29
Neurophysiological toxicology  23
Neurotoxicity   29
Neurotoxicology  23
Nickel chromium  38
Nickel 39
Nonaqueous phase liquid transport (NAPLs) 56
Nonpoint
    source  water pollution  13
                                                  95

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    sources   9, 53
N0x  35
   XPM health effects  35
    selective catalytic reduction 49
NPDES and near coastal  74
Nutrient biogeochemistry  74


O
Ocean
    disposal   74
    outfalls  74
    pollution  53
Oil spills   13, 42, 45
Operations research 46
ORD Electronic Bulletin Board System  13
Organic
    analysis   82
    analytical chemistry  56, 89, 90
    chemical  analysis  60
    chemicals 35
    chemistry  38
    ID  60
    methods  86
    toxics control 50
Organics control  44
Organophosphates  38
Ozone  35,  45, 53, 74, 78, 81
    -depleting compounds 49
PAH  38
Parasitology  86
Pathology  67,  71
PCB  29, 32, 38, 39
PCP and PAH soil contamination  46
PERC  39
Perinatal toxicology  23
Pesticide  35, 38, 42, 53
    and groundwater leachate modeling   61
    bioassays  67
    dynamics  61
    effects  64
    exposure  32
    monitoring  82
    risk assessment  9
    spray drift  61
    toxicology  71
Pharmacodynamics  38
Pharmacokinetics  23, 29,  32, 38
    of biological systems  60
Pharmacology  29
Photochemistry  81
Physical geography  and epidemiology  82
Physics   29
    research grants   16
Physiological response  74
Physiologically based pharmacokinetic modeling  35
Physiology  61, 71
Phytotoxicity  71
Plant
    and microbial biotechnology  64
    and soil ecology  64
    pathology  71
    physiology  53, 64
Pollution
    control research 44
    ecology  71
    prevention  13,42,45,46
    prevention for VOC area sources 50
Preventive medicine  29
Program
    management  89
    operations  16, 23
    operations and administration  23
Public health practice  29
Pulmonary toxicology  23, 35


Q
QSAR   67
Quality assurance  38,  78, 81, 82, 86, 89, 90
    training  78
Quality control
    and reference materials   86
    performance evaluation   86
    technical systems  78
R
Radiation  29, 39,  78
    biology  35
    safety  90
Radiochemistry  90
Radionuclides  44
Radon 42
    control  49
    mitigation  49
RCRA 57
Reburning 49
Redevelopment of land  45
Reference doses  38, 39
Regional model evaluation  81
Regulatory policy  38
Relationship of toxicity to exposure conditions   68
Reliability evaluation  60
Remote sensing 90
Reproductive
    and developmental toxicology  29
    physiology  23
    toxicology   23
    /developmental toxicity  38
                                                  96

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Research
   associateships   16
   planning support   10
   plans development  10
Residuals management  13
Resource management  38
Respiratory
   effects   35
   physiology/toxicology  35
RfD/RfC methodology  38
RIHRA program  23
Risk  assessment  6, 9, 29, 32, 35,  38, 39
   ecology  38
   /management policy  29
   methods  29
Risk  characterization  38, 74
Risk  communication  39
RQ  38
RQTOX  38
Safety, health, and environmental management  89
Scientific outreach  67
Sediment
    criteria  74
    quality 53
    toxicity  67,  74
    transport  61, 74
Selenium  38
Semivolatile organics  82
Senior Environmental Employment Program  16
Separations technology 45
Sewage sludge  9
Showering exposures  32
Silver  39
SITE demonstration and evaluation  45
Site-specific water quality   68
Sludge/pathogens risk assessment  39
Small Business Innovation Research  16
Small community
    drinking water  13
    solid waste management  13
    wastewater  13
Small systems 45
Socioeconomic research grants  16
Software development  13
Soil 56,  64
    chemistry 56, 60
    ingestion  32
    invertebrate  ecology   64
    microbiology  64
    science  32, 56, 57
    vapor extraction 45
    venting 57
Solid waste recycling  39
Solidification  13
Sorbent reactivity/kinetics 49
Sorption modeling  61
Source
    apportionment  82
    methods  81
Spatial statistics  64
Spectrascopy  29
Stabilization  13, 46
Standardization  85
State and local coordinator  10
Statistics  32,  38, 46, 81
    meteorology  82
Storm-water and combined sewer overflow  42
Strategic planning  10
Stratospheric ozone  42, 53, 74
Stream classification  68
Strontium  39
Structure-activity relationships (chemical)  60
Substitutes for CFCs,  HCFCs  50
Subsurface
    abiotic processes  56
    biotransformations 56
Superfund  38, 42, 53, 74, 78
    alternative  treatment technologies 42
    cost estimation  45
    engineering technology 45
    releases control 45
    research centers   16
    technical assistance 45
    Technical Support Center  38
Systems
    analysis  90
    ecology  64, 71
    engineering  90
Technical
    assistance response team 42
    information transfer 42
    support  23
    support program for vacuum extraction 45
Technology transfer  39, 67
Terrestrial
    ecology  71
    exposure  61
Thermal
    destruction 46
    destruction of hazardous materials 46
    treatment/destruction 46
Total quality management  89
Toxic
    air pollutants  9
    effect models and databases  67
    mechanisms  67, 71
    particulate 49
                                                  97

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Toxicity  38
    identification evaluation  67
    methods  74
    of heavy metals  38
    testing  74
    testing chemical/microbial pesticides  67
    testing field response  68
Toxicokinetics  67
Toxicology  9,  23, 29, 35, 39, 64, 67, 71
Toxics 53
    air quality modeling  81
Trace
    elements  38
    level environmental contaminant analysis
Transformation  rate constants  60
Treatability studies 46
TRI improvement estimations  45
Trophic transfer 74
Tropospheric chemistry and global change   82


U
Ultra-trace analysis   67
Uncertainty analysis  32
Underground
    injection 57
    storage tanks 42
Urban runoff 45
UV 45
UVB effects  64, 74

V

Vacuum
    distillation   90
    extraction 45
    extraction technology  46
Vapor transport 56
Veterinary medicine  38, 39
         Virology  86
         Visibility  81
         Vitrification  13
         Volatile organic compounds  49, 50
         Volume waste treatment  45
         W
         Wake effects studies  81
         Waste minimization 46
            in federal facilities 46
         Waste treatment technology  46
90       Wastewater  9
            and water quality monitoring   13
            sludge 45
         Water   78
            chemistry   16
            quality  53, 89
               criteria   53, 74
               criteria development   68
               criteria guidelines  68
               management 53
               modeling  61, 74
            research 45
            treatment  32, 53
         Waterborne disease microbes  39
         Watershed ecology  64
         Watersheds  68
         Wellhead protection 56,  57
         Wetlands   9, 32, 53, 68
            ecology  63
         Wildlife
            ecology  53, 64
            factors  32
            toxicology   64
         Woodstoves 50
        Wood treatment waste  71
        Workforce development  16
                                                 98

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United States
Environmental Protection Agency
Center for Environmental Research Information
Cincinnati, OH 45268

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