96-5829. Mine Shift Atmospheric Conditions; Respirable Dust Sample  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 49 (Tuesday, March 12, 1996)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 10012-10014]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-5829]
    
    
    
    =======================================================================
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
    
    Mine Safety and Health Administration
    
    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
    
    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
    
    
    Mine Shift Atmospheric Conditions; Respirable Dust Sample
    
    AGENCIES: Mine Safety and Health Administration, Labor; National 
    Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Centers for Disease 
    Control and Prevention, Public Health Service, HHS.
    
    ACTION: Notice; reopening of the record; extension of comment period.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: The Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) and the 
    National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) are 
    reopening the record for their joint notice proposing a finding that 
    the average concentration of respirable dust to which each miner in the 
    active workings of a coal mine is exposed can be measured accurately 
    over a single shift. This finding is being made in accordance with 
    section 202(f) of the Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977 (Mine 
    Act). The Agencies are reopening the record to submit a definition of 
    accuracy, to supply new data and statistical analyses on the precision 
    of coal mine respirable dust measurements obtained using approved 
    sampling equipment, and to allow the public time to review and submit 
    comments on this supplemental information.
    
    DATES: Submit written comments on or before April 11, 1996.
    
    ADDRESSES: Send written comments to the Mine Safety and Health 
    Administration, Office of Standards, Regulations, and Variances; 4015 
    Wilson Boulevard, Room 631; Arlington, Virginia 22203. Commenters
    
    [[Page 10013]]
    are requested to submit their comments on a computer disk along with an 
    original hard copy.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ronald J. Schell, Chief, Division of 
    Health, Coal Mine Safety and Health, 703-235-1358.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Background
    
        On February 18, 1994, the Secretaries of Labor and Health and Human 
    Services published a notice in the Federal Register (59 FR 8357) 
    proposing a new finding in accordance with section 202(f) of the 
    Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977 (Mine Act) that the average 
    concentration of respirable dust to which each miner in the active 
    workings of a coal mine is exposed can be accurately measured over a 
    single shift. This proposed finding would supersede the finding issued 
    by the Secretaries on July 17, 1971, and affirmed on February 23, 1972, 
    (37 FR 3833), that a measurement of respirable dust over a single shift 
    only does not accurately represent the atmospheric conditions to which 
    a miner is continuously exposed.
        MSHA published a notice in the Federal Register (59 FR 8356) 
    concurrent with publication of the joint notice, announcing its 
    intention to use both single, full-shift respirable dust measurements 
    and the average of multiple, full-shift respirable dust samples to 
    determine noncompliance and to issue citations for violations of the 
    respirable dust standard.
        The comment periods for these notices were scheduled to close on 
    April 19, 1994; but, in response to requests from the mining community 
    for additional time in which to prepare their comments, the Agencies 
    extended the comment period to May 29, 1994 (59 FR 16958).
        After the comment period closed, MSHA and NIOSH scheduled two 
    public hearings. The first public hearing was held on July 6, 1994, in 
    Morgantown, West Virginia. The second was held on July 19, 1994, in 
    Salt Lake City, Utah. Both public hearings were well attended by the 
    mining community.
        Based on remarks made at the public hearings and in response to 
    specific requests from commenters, MSHA supplemented the record with 
    additional data on September 9, 1994. The record, which had been 
    scheduled to close on August 5, 1994 (59 FR 38988), was held open for 
    further comments until September 30, 1994. Subsequently, the mining 
    community requested additional time beyond the September 30 deadline to 
    review the supplemental information and prepare comments. In response, 
    the Agencies published a notice on September 30, 1994, in the Federal 
    Register (59 FR 50007) extending the comment period until November 30, 
    1994.
    
    II. Issues
    
    A. Application of the NIOSH Accuracy Criterion
    
        After the close of the comment period, the Agencies reviewed all of 
    the comments, data, and other information which had been submitted into 
    the record. Some of the commenters raised questions regarding the 
    accuracy of single, full-shift measurements, and challenged the 
    Agencies' estimate of measurement imprecision inherent in the current 
    sampling and analytical process. In reviewing these issues, the 
    Agencies concluded that the term ``accurately represent,'' as used in 
    section 202(f), was not defined in the Mine Act, nor had the Agencies 
    supplied an adequate definition to apply to the language of the 
    finding.
        Therefore, for purposes of section 202(f), the Secretaries are 
    proposing to apply an accuracy criterion developed and adopted by NIOSH 
    in judging whether a single, full-shift measurement will ``accurately 
    represent'' the full-shift average atmospheric dust concentration. 
    (Guidelines for Air Sampling and Analytical Method Development and 
    Evaluation. DHEW (NIOSH) Publication No. 95-117 (1995)).
        The NIOSH Accuracy Criterion requires that a sampling and 
    analytical method be sufficiently accurate so that measurements by the 
    method will come within 25 percent of the corresponding true dust 
    concentration at least 95 percent of the time. Adopting this criterion 
    provides a basis for determining whether a single, full-shift sample by 
    MSHA's sampling and analytical method accurately measures the 
    respirable coal mine dust concentration to which a miner is exposed 
    during the shift in which the sample is collected.
        For nearly 20 years, the NIOSH Accuracy Criterion has been used by 
    NIOSH and others in the occupational health professions to validate 
    sampling and analytical methods. This accuracy criterion was devised as 
    a goal for the development and acceptance of sampling and analytical 
    methods capable of generating reliable exposure data for contaminants 
    at or near the Occupational Safety and Health Administration's (OSHA) 
    permissible exposure limits. The Secretaries believe that the NIOSH 
    Accuracy Criterion is relevant for this proposed finding.
        Accordingly, for purposes of section 202(f) of the Mine Act, the 
    Secretaries would consider a single, full-shift measurement to 
    ``accurately represent'' a specified mine atmosphere if the sampling 
    and analytical method used meets the NIOSH Accuracy Criterion. MSHA and 
    NIOSH specifically solicit comments on the use of the NIOSH Accuracy 
    Criterion to evaluate measurement accuracy.
    
    B. Sampling and Analytical Accuracy
    
        To address commenters' concerns that the Agencies had 
    underestimated measurement imprecision inherent in the currently used 
    sampling and analytical method, MSHA conducted a field study to 
    directly estimate the overall measurement precision attainable when 
    dust samples are collected with currently approved coal mine dust 
    sampling equipment and analyzed using state-of-the-art analytical 
    techniques. The study involved simultaneous field measurements of the 
    same coal mine dust cloud using sampling pumps incorporating constant 
    flow control technology. An automated weighing system, capable of 
    weighing the sample collection filters to the nearest microgram 
    (g) (0.001 milligram (mg)), was used for determining the pre- 
    and post-exposure weights.
        Using a specially designed, portable dust chamber, 22 tests were 
    conducted at various locations in an underground coal mine. Each test 
    consisted of collecting 16 dust samples simultaneously and at the same 
    location. No adjustments in the flow rate were made beyond what would 
    routinely have been done by an MSHA inspector. The filter capsules were 
    weighed to the nearest g in MSHA's Respirable Dust Weighing 
    Laboratory in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, before and after exposure.
        Based on the results of this study, MSHA estimates that, for dust 
    samples collected over a 480-minute period, overall measurement 
    imprecision (as measured by the coefficient of variation) decreases 
    from 7.8 percent at dust concentrations of 0.2 mg/m\3\ to about 4.3 
    percent at concentrations greater than 2.0 mg/m\3\. These results apply 
    to dust samples collected using pumps with flow control technology and 
    filter capsules weighed to the nearest g, both before and 
    after exposure, on a balance calibrated according to the established 
    procedure within MSHA's Respirable Dust Weighing Laboratory.
         NIOSH evaluated the accuracy of the sampling and analytical method 
    used by MSHA, using both a direct and indirect
    
    [[Page 10014]]
    approach. Under the direct approach, NIOSH independently analyzed the 
    results of MSHA's field study and obtained estimates of measurement 
    imprecision consistent with those calculated by MSHA. The NIOSH 
    evaluation demonstrates that the sampling and analytical method, as 
    employed during the field study, meets NIOSH's Accuracy Criterion at 
    concentrations greater than or equal to 0.13 mg/m\3\. The indirect 
    approach involved combining independently derived estimates, previously 
    placed into the public record, of intra-laboratory weighing 
    imprecision, pump-related variability, and variability associated with 
    physical differences between individual sampler units. This indirect 
    approach indicated that the NIOSH Accuracy Criterion can be met at 
    concentrations greater than or equal to 0.11 mg/m\3\.
    
    C. Refinements in MSHA's Measurement Process
    
        To ensure that the NIOSH Accuracy Criterion is met over a wide 
    range of dust concentrations, NIOSH has recommended two modifications 
    to MSHA's sampling and analytical method, which have now been adopted. 
    These modifications involve (1) measuring both the pre- and post-
    exposure weights to the nearest g on a balance calibrated 
    using the established procedure within MSHA's laboratory; and (2) 
    discontinuing the practice of truncating the recorded weights used in 
    calculating dust concentration. This means that MSHA will no longer 
    ignore digits representing hundredths and thousandths of a milligram. 
    NIOSH's independent analysis of the study data confirmed that, with the 
    two recommended modifications, MSHA's sampling and analytical method 
    for collecting and processing single, full-shift samples would meet the 
    NIOSH Accuracy Criterion at all respirable dust standards greater than 
    or equal to 0.2 mg/m\3\.
        Accordingly, MSHA's existing inspector sample processing and data 
    entry procedures have been changed, and the Agency is now reporting the 
    pre- and post-exposure weights of inspector samples to the nearest 
    g. In addition, MSHA is now using only constant flow control 
    pumps in the inspector sampling program. MSHA believes that exclusive 
    use of constant-flow pumps, as in the field study, will further enhance 
    the quality of the Agency's sampling program.
    
    D. Precision of Respirable Coal Mine Dust Weighings
    
        As part of MSHA's ongoing measurement assurance program, MSHA also 
    investigated the precision of weighings made to a g with 
    MSHA's automatic weighing system on a group of filter capsules. This 
    involved weighing the same unexposed filter capsules 139 times over a 
    218-day period. Statistical imprecision in the difference between two 
    consecutive weighings of the same capsule was calculated in accordance 
    with procedures developed by the National Bureau of Standards (NBS) for 
    the MSHA weighing laboratory in 1981 (`Measurement Assurance Program 
    for Weighings of Respirable Coal Mine Dust Samples''; Journal of 
    Quality Technology, 13(3):157-165, (July 1981)). Using the NBS 
    procedure, imprecision in the measured difference between two weighings 
    on different days was estimated to be 6.5 g. Since this value 
    includes a component of day-to-day variability, it is statistically 
    consistent with the 5.8 g estimate used by NIOSH in its 
    ``indirect'' evaluation. (The 5.8 g estimate, which applies to 
    the standard deviation of the difference between two weighings within 
    the same laboratory on the same day, was derived from an analysis of 
    comparative weighings made on 300 unexposed cassettes. The results of 
    the analysis along with the data on comparative weighings were placed 
    into the public record on September 9, 1994.)
        Moreover, the estimate of imprecision in measured weight gain 
    derived from the new field study discussed earlier (9.1 g), 
    falls only slightly above the 6.5 g laboratory estimate. This 
    suggests that the process of handling and actually exposing the dust 
    cassette in a mine environment does not add appreciably to the 
    imprecision in measured weight gain.
        While investigating the precision of weighings made to a 
    g, MSHA observed that a gain in the weight of the unexposed 
    filter capsules had occurred over the course of the 218-day period. 
    Analysis of the weighing data showed that the filter capsules increased 
    in weight at the average rate of approximately 0.8 g per day, 
    beginning after approximately 30 days of unprotected exposure to the 
    laboratory environment. An investigation into possible causes failed to 
    establish the reason for the observed weight gain.
        This weight gain was observed only for filter capsules that were 
    left completely exposed and unprotected in the laboratory environment 
    over an extended period of time, a situation never encountered in 
    actual practice. MSHA also weighed filters that were more than three 
    years old, which had been kept in their original cassettes with both 
    the inlet and outlet ports capped. These showed no evidence of weight 
    gain. Both MSHA and NIOSH conclude that the weight gains observed in 
    the 218-day laboratory investigation are irrelevant to the accuracy of 
    the sampling and analytical process used in MSHA's respirable coal mine 
    dust sampling program. This is because, in conjunction with the MSHA 
    respirable coal mine dust program, all dust samples analyzed by the 
    Pittsburgh Weighing Laboratory are processed within 24 hours after 
    arriving in the laboratory.
    
    E. Documentation
    
        Documentation of the analyses conducted by MSHA and NIOSH, as well 
    as the field data used to derive the new estimates of measurement 
    imprecision, are available from the MSHA Office of Standards, 
    Regulations, and Variances. The Agencies are publishing this notice to 
    re-open the record and to seek public comment on this new information.
    
    III. Request for Comments
    
        The Agencies specifically request comments on the following:
         1. The use of the NIOSH Accuracy Criterion as the basis for 
    finding that a single, full-shift measurement will accurately represent 
    the respirable dust concentration to which a miner is exposed during 
    such shift; and
        2. The experimental field data, which NIOSH has concluded 
    demonstrate that MSHA's sampling and analytical method meets the NIOSH 
    Accuracy Criterion at dust concentrations of 0.2 mg/m\3\ and above.
    
        Dated: March 6, 1996.
    
    J. Davitt McAteer,
    Assistant Secretary for Mine Safety and Health.
        Dated: March 6, 1996.
    
    Linda Rosenstock,
    Director, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.
    [FR Doc. 96-5829 Filed 3-7-96; 4:12 pm]
    BILLING CODE 4510-43-P
    
    

Document Information

Published:
03/12/1996
Department:
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice; reopening of the record; extension of comment period.
Document Number:
96-5829
Dates:
Submit written comments on or before April 11, 1996.
Pages:
10012-10014 (3 pages)
PDF File:
96-5829.pdf