Environmental Health Assessment of Tribal Child Care Centers in the Pacific Northwest

OMB 0917-0038

OMB 0917-0038

Environmental health issues associated with children are present in schools, head start, and daycare facilities on tribal lands, and present an ever increasing set of complex challenges to be addressed. The Environmental Health Assessment of Tribal Child Care Centers in the Pacific Northwest will measure existing levels of environmental contaminants in tribal child care centers located in the Pacific Northwest. In particular, lead levels in dust and soil, allergy-inducing constituent (allergen) levels in floor samples, pesticide levels in soil, floor and play/work surfaces, and PCB levels in dust, soil, and play/work surfaces will be measured. The survey will estimate the number and percentage of child care centers with lead, allergen, and PCB levels above selected thresholds; collect data to identify sources of lead, allergens, PCBs, and pesticides in child care centers; collect data to permit future analysis of hazard control strategies and costs, e.g., contaminated surface areas; and collect data to permit future analysis for regulation, policy and guidance that minimize regulatory burden. IHS and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will also incorporate follow-up outreach and education with facilities to explain results and suggest corrective actions to remediate or reduce exposures from lead, allergens, pesticides, and PCBs that are detected in the facilities. Collaboration between the EPA and IHS serves to reduce survey costs and burden to survey participants.

The latest form for Environmental Health Assessment of Tribal Child Care Centers in the Pacific Northwest expires 2020-08-31 and can be found here.

OMB Details

Child Care Center Director Environmental Health Assessment

Federal Enterprise Architecture: Health - Consumer Health and Safety

Form 0917-021017Child Care Center Director QuestionnaireFillable FileableForm and instruction

Review document collections for all forms, instructions, and supporting documents - including paper/printable forms.


© 2024 OMB.report | Privacy Policy