[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 91 (Friday, May 10, 2013)]
[Notices]
[Pages 27392-27396]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-11142]


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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention


Statement of Organization, Functions, and Delegations of 
Authority

    Part C (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) of the 
Statement of Organization, Functions, and Delegations of Authority of 
the Department of Health and Human Services (45 FR 67772-76, dated 
October 14, 1980, and corrected at 45 FR 69296, October 20, 1980, as 
amended most recently at 78 FR 25743-25746, dated May 2, 2013) is 
amended to establish the Office of Safety, Security, and Asset 
Management, Office of the Chief Operating Officer, Office of the 
Director, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    Section C-B, Organization and Functions, is hereby amended as 
follows:
    Delete in its entirety the titles and functional statements for the 
Buildings and Facilities Office (CAJC); the Logistics Management Branch 
(CAJHW), Procurement and Grants Office (CAJH); the Office of Security 
and Emergency Preparedness (CAJJ); Office of Safety, Health and 
Environment (CAJP); insert the following:
    Office of Safety, Security and Asset Management (CAJS). The Office 
of Safety, Security and Asset Management (OSSAM) serves as the lead 
organizational entity for providing a safe, secure, functional, and 
healthy workplace environment for Centers for Disease Control and 
Prevention (CDC) staff while ensuring environmental stewardship and 
appropriate management of agency assets.
    Office of the Director (CAJS1). (1) Directs, manages, coordinates 
and evaluates the programs and activities of OSSAM service offices; (2) 
develops goals and objectives and provides leadership, policy 
formulation and guidance in program planning and development; and (3) 
provides advice and counsel to the CDC Director, the Chief Operating 
Officer, and other senior Office of the Director (OD) and Centers/
Institute/Offices (CIO) officials on all OSSAM programs and activities.
    Office of Financial, Administrative, and Information Services 
(CJAS12). (1) Provides administrative guidance, advice, and support to 
OSSAM employees; (2) manages OSSAM information technology support, 
including system development, maintenance, design and implementation; 
(3) provides direction, strategy, analysis, and operational support in 
all aspects of OSSAM's human resources operations; (4) develops and 
implements internal policies and procedures, including developing 
related communications; (5) serves as the performance ombudsman for OS 
SAM; (6) provides office space allocation for all OSSAM programs; (7) 
serves as the point of contact between OSSAM OD and the Office of the 
Chief Financial Officer; (8) provides funding ceiling information to 
each OSSAM office; (9) manages all OSSAM salary and budget spending; 
(10) provides oversight, guidance and approval for the procurement 
process OS SAM-wide; (11) provides oversight of property 
accountability, including appointing an OSSAM property accountability 
officer; (12) provides guidance and oversight related to the records 
management requirements and process; and (13) establishes and enforces 
OSSAM-related travel policies.
    Office of Operations (CAJS13). (1) Implements, maintains, and 
updates CDC's Integrated Emergency Management Program, Emergency 
Response Plans (ERPs) and CDC Continuity Of Operations (COOP) 
communications vehicles; (2) conducts and evaluates annual tabletop, 
functional, and full-scale exercises for all CDC facilities with ERPs; 
(3) recommends future emergency management and emergency response-
related programs, policies, and/or procedures; (4) oversees technical 
programs to ensure a safe, secure and healthy workplace while ensuring 
all worksite issues are properly addressed and brought to closure; (5) 
oversees the Quarterly Performance Review process; and (6) provides 
oversight and guidance to OSSAM liaison officers who support programs 
as the key contact for matters related to safety, security, facilities, 
logistics and sustainability.
    Public Health and Intelligence Office (CAJS14). (1) Provides 
leadership and operational and technical support for development and 
implementation of intelligence activities; (2) analyzes and 
disseminates intelligence related to public health, medical and 
scientific

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intelligence, counterintelligence, insider threat, and global security; 
(3) researches, compiles, produces, and provides classified and 
unclassified briefings; (4) performs prepublication review of 
classified and sensitive information; (5) serves as the CDC liaison 
with U.S. intelligence community agencies; (6) provides global security 
oversight in coordination with U.S. government agencies, international 
organizations, and non-governmental organizations; (7) identifies 
training needs and recommends specific training objectives to be met 
and the methods to achieve them (i.e. Security Awareness, 
Counterintelligence Awareness; Foreign Travel Safety Brief); (8) 
develops, implements, and presents sound and well-grounded training 
programs to prepare agency staff members pending deployments or travel 
abroad; (9) performs security assessments of and technical assistance 
to agency international facilities; (10) supports agency international 
operational goals through membership on the Department of State 
Overseas Security Policy Board; (11) provides oversight of the 
Defensive Counterintelligence and Insider Threat program; (12) 
processes non-United States citizen requests for physical or logical 
access; (13) provides guidance over all security issues related to 
foreign travel matters; (14) provides policy and implementation 
guidance on all standards and requirements related to the processing 
and storing of controlled unclassified information; (15) manages and 
operates the agency's Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility 
(SCIF) and its secure communications systems; (16) maintains 
accreditation of the agency's SCIF; (17) manages and operates 
collateral-level secure facilities nationally; (18) provides policy and 
implementation guidance on the standards for using classified document 
control for CDC; (19) provides policy and implementation guidance on 
all standards and requirements related to the processing and storing of 
classified information by the agency; (20) develops and administers a 
physical protection plan for all national security information and 
material held or processed by the agency in accordance with established 
laws, mandates, and government-wide policies; (21) acts as 
Communications Security Custodian for all classified matters involving 
the National Security Agency; (22) maintains CDC's emergency 
destruction plan for classified material and equipment; (23) conducts 
preliminary investigations of security violations relative to the loss 
or compromise/suspected compromise of sensitive, classified or crypto-
logic materials or devices throughout CDC; (24) ensures proper 
destruction of classified documents that are no longer required; (25) 
conducts security inspections and audits of all national security 
information storage and processing areas; (26) responsible for 
implementing, maintaining, and updating of CDC Continuity Of Operations 
(COOP) communications vehicles; and (27) provides deployable 
unclassified and classified communication platforms to support high-
level deploying staff to natural or manmade disaster areas in support 
of COOP plans.
    Quality and Sustainability Office (CAJS15). (1) Provides quality 
assurance and continuous improvement by establishing a framework for 
process improvement associated with all OSSAM functions; (2) ensures 
accountability and environmental stewardship of agency assets in order 
to protect CDC's ability to carry out its health mission today and in 
the future; (3) conducts quality improvement audits on all OSSAM 
program areas of responsibility; (4) assembles technical advisory 
teams, as needed, to conduct audits/reviews of OSSAM program areas; and 
(5) provides oversight of CDC's sustainability programs.
    Asset Management Services Office (CAJSB). The Asset Management 
Services Office (AMSO) provides a safe, secure, healthy, and functional 
workplace environment for CDC staff by ensuring that assets are managed 
effectively while maintaining efficient operations and logistical 
support, customer satisfaction, and environmental stewardship.
    Office of the Director (CAJSB1). (1) Plans, directs, and 
coordinates the functions and activities of AMSO; (2) provides 
management and administrative direction for budget planning and 
execution, property management, and personnel management within AMSO; 
(3) provides leadership and strategic support to senior managers in the 
determination of CDC's long-term facility needs; (4) coordinates the 
operations of AMSO staff involved in the planning, evaluation, design, 
construction, and management of facilities and acquisition of property; 
(5) provides centralized value engineering services, policy development 
and coordination, and global acquisition planning for AMSO; (6) assists 
and advises senior CDC officials in the development, coordination, 
direction, and assessment of facilities and real property activities 
throughout CDC's facilities and operations, and assures consideration 
of facilities management implications in program decisions; (7) 
provides collaboration and centralized consolidation of division 
reporting requirements and other deliverables to the Department of 
Health and Human Services (DHHS), the Office of the Chief Financial 
Officer, and other internal and external entities; (8) oversees 
functions of the campus portfolio managers who prepare the capital and 
repair and improvements (R&D, CDC and HHS-level Facility Project 
Approval Agreements (FPAA), asset business plans, campus master plans, 
special studies, monitors performance indicators to identify/address 
portfolio deficiencies, serve on project core teams and administer the 
National Environmental Policy Act, Historic Preservation, Green 
Building, International Facilities, Real Property Acquisition, Asset 
Management Team and Security Liaison Activities.
    Leased Property Management Services (CAJSB12). (1) Conducts real 
estate activities throughout CDC, including the acquisition of leased 
space, the purchase and disposal of real property for CDC nationwide 
(with emphasis on current and long-range planning for the utilization 
of existing and future real property resources); (2) performs space 
management (assignment and utilization) of all CDC space, both owned 
and leased, nationwide; (3) provides technical assistance in space 
planning to meet programmatic needs; (4) executes all easements for 
owned--in coordination with campus liaison officers--property; (5) 
administers day-to-day management of leased facilities and ensures 
contract compliance by lessors; (6) provides technical assistance and 
prepares contract specifications for all repair and improvement 
projects in leased space; (7) maintains liaison with the General 
Services Administration regional offices; (8) performs all functions 
relating to leasing and/or acquisition of real property under CDC 
delegation of authority for leasing, including direct lease actions; 
and (9) coordinates the relocation of CDC personnel within owned and 
leased space.
    Engineering, Maintenance, and Operations Services Office (CAJSBB). 
The Engineering, Maintenance, and Operations Services Office (EMOSO) 
manages facilities engineering, engineering controls, security systems 
engineering, fire alarm and life safety, and monitors, operates, and 
maintains owned buildings, central utility plants, systems, equipment, 
and perform systems/building commissioning. Specifically, EMOSO: (1) 
Operates, maintains, repairs, and modifies CDC's

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Atlanta-area office buildings, laboratories, and plant facilities and 
other designated CDC facilities throughout the United States (U.S.) and 
other geographic areas, and conducts a maintenance and repair program 
for CDC's program support equipment; (2) develops services for new, 
improved, and modified equipment to meet program needs; (3) provides 
technical assistance, reviews maintenance and operation programs, and 
recommends appropriate action for all Atlanta area facilities and other 
designated CDC facilities throughout the U.S. and other geographic 
areas; (4) provides recommendations, priorities, and services for new, 
improved, or modified equipment to meet program needs; (5) provides 
maintenance and operation of the central energy plant including 
structures, utilities production and distribution systems, and 
equipment; (6) conducts a program of custodial services, waste 
disposal, incinerations, disposal of biological waste, and other 
building services at all CDC Atlanta area facilities and other 
designated CDC facilities throughout the U.S. and other geographic 
areas; (7) provides landscape development, repair, and maintenance at 
all Atlanta area facilities and other designated CDC facilities 
throughout the U.S. and other geographic areas; (8) provides hauling 
and moving services for CDC in the Atlanta area; (9) provides an 
Integrated Pest Management Program to control insect and rodents for 
CDC in Atlanta area facilities; (10) develops required contractual 
services and provides supervision for work performed in these areas; 
(11) establishes and maintains a computerized system for maintenance 
services, for stocking and ordering supplies, and replacement parts; 
(12) provides for pick-up and delivery of supplies and replacement 
parts to work sites; (13) maintains adequate stock levels of supplies 
and replacement parts; (14) prepares design and contract 
specifications, and coordinates completion of contract maintenance 
projects; (15) manages CDC's Energy Conservation Program for all CDC 
facilities; (16) reviews all construction documents for energy 
conservation goals and compliance with applicable CDC construction 
standards; (17) participates on all core teams and value engineering 
teams; (18) provides maintenance and inspection for fire extinguishers 
and fire sprinkler systems; (19) provides services for the procurement 
of natural gas; (20) develops and maintains a standard equipment list 
for all CDC facilities; (21) assists the other AMSO offices with 
facility-related issues, as needed; (22) provides building coordinators 
to interface with program personnel to keep the building and equipment 
functioning; and (23) coordinates the commissioning of new buildings, 
structures, systems and components, as necessary.
    Projects and Construction Management Services Office (CAJSBC). The 
Projects and Construction Management Services Office (PCMSO) manages 
capital improvement projects, repair and improvement projects, and 
construction services. Specifically, PCMSO: (1) Provides professional 
architectural/engineering capabilities, and technical and 
administrative project support to CDC and CIOs for renovations and 
improvements to CDC-owned facilities and construction of new 
facilities; (2) develops project management requirements (including 
determination of methods, means of project completion, and selection of 
resources); (3) provides critical path method scheduling support for 
all large capital construction projects and all R&I projects; and (4) 
provides central cost estimating support for all large capital 
construction projects, all R&I projects, special projects, feasibility 
studies, as requested, and certain work orders, as requested.
    Logistics Management Services Office (CAJSBD). (1) Develops and 
implements CDC-wide policies, procedures, and criteria necessary to 
comply with federal and departmental regulations governing inventory 
management; property administration; property reutilization and 
disposal including chemical hazardous waste; supply management; and 
receiving and distribution; (2) determines, recommends, and implements 
procedural changes needed to maintain effective management of CDC 
property including but not limited to: inventory control; property 
records; and property reutilization and disposal; (3) provides audits, 
training and technical assistance to CDC CIOs on inventory management; 
property administration; property reutilization and disposal including 
chemical hazardous waste; supply management; and property receiving; 
(4) determines the requirement for and serves as the functional 
proponent for the design, test, and implementation of logistics 
management systems; (5) represents CDC on inter- and intra-departmental 
committees relevant to logistical functions; (6) serves as the CDC 
liaison to HHS and other federal agencies on logistical matters such as 
inventory management, property administration, property reutilization 
and disposal including chemical hazardous waste, supply management, and 
receiving and distribution; (7) functions as the CDC waste and 
recycling services manager; (8) provides medical maintenance management 
support for CDC's personal property; (9) provides logistics and 
movement planning support for CDC CIOs; and (10) establishes branch 
goals, objectives, priorities, and assures consistency and coordination 
with overall OSSAM logistical goals and objectives.
    Design, Engineering and Management Services Office (CAJSBE). The 
Design, Engineering and Management Services Office (DEMSO) provides 
architectural, engineering design, project management services, and 
interior design services; and manages facility plans, drawings and 
technical documents and ensures proper configuration control. 
Specifically, DEMSO: (1) Prepares architectural and engineering 
designs, and specifications for construction of modifications and 
renovations to CDC-owned facilities; (2) provides architectural and 
engineering technical expertise and is the technical authority on new 
facilities, and modifications and renovations on facility project 
designs; (3) provides furniture, fixture, and equipment designs, and 
project management services for all CDC facilities; (4) provides record 
and guideline document support services to all AMSO offices; and (5) 
maintains CDC Design Standards and Guidelines for use as basis of 
design for construction of new facilities, and modifications and 
renovations in CDC-owned facilities.
    Environment, Safety, and Health Compliance Office (CAJSC). The 
Environment, Safety, and Health Compliance Office (ESHCO) ensures 
compliance with applicable environment, safety and health regulations, 
empowers workers, and provides the tools needed for workers to be safe, 
work in a healthy environment, and ensures environmental stewardship. 
Specifically, ESHCO: (1) Provides leadership and service for the CDC 
Health and Safety Program to proactively ensure safe and healthy 
workplaces at CDC worksites for CDC employees, contractors, and 
visitors (including deployed personnel), and to protect the environment 
and communities adjacent to Atlanta area CDC-owned and leased 
facilities; (2) provides occupational health services to CDC staff 
through occupational health clinics at Atlanta area and Fort Collins 
and via contracts at other sites; (3) promotes healthy and safe work 
practices to prevent injury and illness; (4) provides advice and 
counsel to senior OD and CIO staff on health,

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safety, and environment-related matters, and to individuals and 
organizations nationally and internationally; (5) provides advice, 
counsel, and direct support services to supervisors and employees on 
health, safety, and environment-related matters; (6) assures compliance 
with applicable federal, state, and local health, safety, and 
environmental (HSE) laws and regulations; (7) provides liaison with 
both CDC safety officers and staff, and other partners such as DHHS 
health and safety officials, Occupational Safety and Health 
Administration, Environmental Protection Agency, Nuclear Regulatory 
Commission, and other governmental and non-governmental organizations 
on HSE issues; (8) coproduces the CDC/National Institutes of Health 
publication, Biosafety in Microbiological and Biomedical Laboratories; 
(9) serves as a World Health Organization Collaborating Center for 
Applied Biosafety Programs and Training; (10) serves as a significant 
resource of subject matter expertise for the national and international 
community in the field of biosafety; and, (11) works with key partners, 
such as the World Health Organization, on critical health and safety 
issues around the globe.
    Office of the Director (CAJSC1). (1) Serves as the principal 
advisor to the Director, OSSAM, with responsibility for the CDC Health 
and Safety Program; (2) plans, identifies, and requests required 
resources; directs, manages, and evaluates the operations and programs 
of ESHCO; (3) assures coordination and cooperation among ESHCO staff; 
(4) collaborates in the development and review of draft CDC policies to 
ensure compliance with applicable federal, state, and local HSE laws, 
regulations, and policies; (5) develops and implements new HSE injury/
illness prevention programs indicated by surveys, incident 
investigations, reports of unsafe/unhealthful working conditions and 
other means; (6) assures cross-cutting, collaborative team 
functionality in building and maintaining a successful HSE program; (7) 
consults with individuals and organizations nationally and 
internationally on issues such as laboratory safety, biosafety, 
occupational health issues in the biomedical laboratory and animal care 
setting, and deployment health and safety; (8) maintains oversight and 
support for the CDC HSE committees in operational components with 
representation, attendance, interaction and collaboration, and 
collaboration with non-Atlanta health and safety officers and staff; 
and (9) provides an annual report on the CDC HSE and other reports 
required or requested by CDC management officials, HHS, and regulatory 
agencies.
    WorkLife Wellness Office (CAJSD). The WorkLife Wellness Office 
(W2O) provides an environment that promotes a culture that improves the 
health and resilience of workers by integrating effective policies, 
programs, and processes accessible to all staff to sustain and improve 
performance, increase readiness, and support healthy choices and 
behaviors. Specifically, W2O: (1) Provides a core set of services and 
resources related to resilience and readiness including preventive 
screenings, wellness-enhancing activities, health education, counseling 
and follow-up care/referrals; (2) engages in holistic organizational 
wellness efforts such as benchmarking best practices, implementing or 
maintaining proper policy, systems, linkages, physical environment, 
social environment, and external partners/coalitions outreach; (3) 
oversees the lifestyle fitness centers; (4) directs the employee 
assistance program; and (5) manages the vending/cafeteria services.
    Security Services Office (CAJSE). The Security Services Office 
(SSO) serves as the lead organizational entity for providing the 
overall framework, direction, coordination, implementation, oversight 
and accountability for CDC's infrastructure protection, and personnel 
security program. SSO serves as the primary liaison for homeland 
security activities; provides a secure work environment for CDC/ATSDR 
personnel, visitors and contractors; and plans and implements the 
agency's crisis management activities which ensure a continued public 
health response to the nation.
    Office of the Director (CAJSE1). (1) Directs, manages, coordinates 
and evaluates the programs and activities of the SSO; (2) develops 
goals and objectives and provides leadership, policy formulation and 
guidance in program planning and development; (3) prepares, reviews, 
and coordinates budgetary, informational, and programmatic documents; 
(4) provides oversight and comprehensive security services to CDC's 
Strategic National Stockpile program; and (5) serves as a liaison to 
local, state, and federal law enforcement entities and security 
personnel within other HHS Operating Divisions.
    Physical Security Laboratory and Technical Branch (CAJSEB). (1) 
Provides coordination, guidance, and security operations to all 
facilities CDC-wide including all owned and leased sites; (2) provides 
campus-wide access control for all the Atlanta leased sites; the 
Chamblee and Lawrenceville campuses; Anchorage, Alaska; and Fort 
Collins, Colorado; and all other CDC laboratories; (3) provides 
management and oversight of contract guard force and local police; (4) 
responsible for physical security during emergency operations; (5) 
promotes theft prevention, provides training and conducts 
investigations; (6) conducts site surveys to assess all physical 
security activities and correct deficiencies and implement improvement 
as necessary; (7) provides leadership and coordination in planning and 
implementation for internal emergency; (8) manages and maintains the 
emergency alert system; (9) maintains 24-hour emergency notification 
procedures for Fort Collins, Colorado; San Juan, Puerto Rico; and 
Anchorage, Alaska; and (10) manages and operates CDC's Security 
Operations Centers (SOC) 24 hours a day, seven days a week at the 
Roybal campus, Fort Collins, and other sites as constructed; (11) 
manages the Locksmith Office; (12) maintains inventory controls and 
measures and implements, installs, repairs, and re-keys all locks with 
emphasis on the overall physical security of CDC and its owned and 
leased facilities; (13) provides security recommendations to CDC 
programs regarding capabilities and limitations of locking devices; 
(14) provides combination change services to organizations equipped 
with cipher locking devices; (15) coordinates with engineers and 
architects on CDC lock and keying requirements for new construction 
(16) improves and expands video monitoring to ensure the security of 
all employees, visitors, contractors and the general public while at 
the CDC; (17) manages and coordinates Select Agent security and the CDC 
Safety and Security Plan; (18) manages and maintains the Intrusion 
Detection Automated system, including P2000, and; (19) provides 
coordination, guidance, and security operations for all CDC 
laboratories nationwide.
    Physical Security Operations Branch (CAJSEC). The Physical Security 
Operations Branch (PSOB) coordinates and implements security 
operations, including access control and crisis management, for the CDC 
Headquarters campus and directs and oversees the security guard 
contract for Atlanta facilities. Specifically, PSOB: (1) Provides 
coordination, guidance, and security operations; (2) provides campus-
wide access control; (3) provides management and oversight of

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contract guard force and local police; (4) conducts physical security 
during emergency operations; (5) promotes theft prevention, provides 
training and conducts investigations; (6) conducts site surveys to 
assess all physical security activities and correct deficiencies and 
implement improvement as necessary; (7) manages and operates CDC's 
Security Operations Centers (SOC) 24 hours a day, seven days a week at 
the Roybal campus, and other sites as constructed; (8) coordinates 
nationwide security operations through the Roybal campus SOC (9) 
maintains 24-hour emergency notification procedures; (10) manages and 
maintains the emergency alert system; (11) provides leadership and 
coordination in planning and implementation for internal emergency 
incidents affecting the Roybal campus, including incident response and 
incident support; (12) improves and expands video monitoring to ensure 
the security of all employees, visitors, contractors and the general 
public while at the CDC; (13) provides coordination, guidance, and 
security operations for all Global Communication Center events and 
visits; (14) manages and coordinates the security of all visitors and 
guests to all Atlanta-area CDC campuses.
    Personnel Security Branch (CAJSED). (1) Conducts background 
investigations and personnel suitability adjudications for employment 
with CDC in accordance with 5 CFR part 731, Executive Order 12968 and 
Executive Order 10450; (2) submits documentation for security 
clearances, and maintains an access roster in a security clearance 
database; (3) implements high risk investigations such as Public Trust 
Investigations for employees GS-13s and above who meet Department of 
Health and Human Services criteria standards for employees working in 
Public Trust positions; (4) conducts adjudications for National Agency 
Check with Inquiries (NACI) cases and assists DHHS in adjudicating 
security clearance cases; (5) provides personnel security services for 
full time employees, guest researchers, visiting scientists, students, 
contract employees, fellows, and the commissioned corps; (6) conducts 
initial ``Security Education Briefing'' and annual Operational Security 
Training; (7) coordinates employee drug testing; (8) provides 
identification badges and cardkey access for personnel within all CDC 
metro Atlanta area facilities as well as some out-of-state CDC 
campuses; (9) enrolls individuals with a security clearance or approval 
in the biometric encoding system; (10) maintains hard copy records of 
all individuals' requests and authorizations for access control 
readers; and (11) manages and operates cardkey systems.
    Transportation Services Office (CAJSG). The Transportation Services 
Office (TSO) develops and provides CDC-wide transportation policies, 
procedures and services ensuring a safe, secure and healthy workplace 
is established and maintained in accordance with federal and 
departmental regulations. Specifically, TSO: (1) Provides oversight, 
expertise, guidance, and program support for transportation related 
activities; (2) provides subject matter expertise on transit 
initiatives, facility master planning, and liaise with the community 
regarding transportation planning; (3) provides fleet management and 
shipping operations; (4) performs parking administration, commuter 
assistance, manages the Transportation Choices Program, employee 
housing and relocation services, and coordinates transportation 
services; (5) develops and implements CDC-wide policies, procedures, 
and criteria necessary to comply with federal and departmental 
regulations governing transportation and fleet management; (6) 
determines, recommends, and implements procedural changes needed to 
maintain effective management of CDC transportation services including 
but not limited to: shipping and return of CDC materiel; transportation 
of freight; and CDC's vehicle fleet; (7) represents CDC on inter- and 
intra-departmental committees relevant to transportation and traffic 
management; and (8) establishes branch goals, objectives, and 
priorities, and assures consistency and coordination with overall OS 
SAM goals and objectives.

    Dated: April 26, 2013.
Sherri A. Berger,
Chief Operating Officer, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
[FR Doc. 2013-11142 Filed 5-9-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160-18-M