The Supervisory Industrial Hygienist serves as the technical authority and expert Industrial Hygiene Program Advisor in a complex, diverse, multidisciplinary, affiliated medical center that has in-depth and specialized teaching, patient care, and research functions within its operation. The incumbent provides leadership, guidance, policy and program management expertise to managers, supervisors, community organizations, and serves as liaison with numerous other agencies.
Duties
DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES
The Supervisory Industrial Hygienist performs on a routine and recurring basis a wide variety of program management and advisory functions including but not limited to the following tasks:
Provides technically expert advisory and policy direction on Industrial Hygiene matters such as:
Requirements
- You must be a U.S. citizen to apply for this job
- Subject to a background/suitability investigation
- May serve a probationary period
- Selective Service Registration is required for males born after 12/31/1959
- A complete application package; Resume, Transcripts, etc.
- Selected applicants will be required to complete an online onboarding process. Acceptable form(s) of identification will be required to complete pre-employment requirements (https://www.uscis.gov/i-9-central/form-i-9-acceptable-documents).
- Effective May 7, 2025, driver’s licenses or state-issued dentification cards that are not REAL ID compliant cannot be utilized as an acceptable form of identification for employment.
Qualifications
To qualify for this position, applicants must meet all requirements by the closing date of this announcement.
This occupational series has an Individual Occupational Requirement (IOR) which is a minimum qualification requirement. To be considered for the position, you must ensure that the experience is reflected in your resume and/or if applicable, transcripts must be uploaded to support education requirement or substitution.Basic Requirements:- A bachelor's or graduate/higher level degree in industrial hygiene, occupational health sciences, occupational and environmental health, toxicology, safety sciences, or related science; -OR-
- A bachelor's degree in a branch of engineering, physical science, or life science that included 12 semester hours in chemistry, including organic chemistry, and 18 additional semester hours of courses in any combination of chemistry, physics, engineering, health physics, environmental health, biostatistics, biology, physiology, toxicology, epidemiology, or industrial hygiene; -OR-
- Certification from the American Board of Industrial Hygiene (ABIH).
Evaluation of Education:All science or engineering courses offered in fulfillment of the above requirements must be acceptable for credit toward the completion of a standard 4-year professional curriculum leading to a bachelor's degree in science or engineering at an accredited college or university. For engineering degrees to be acceptable, the curriculum must be in a school of engineering with at least one curriculum accredited by the ABET (Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology) as a professional engineering curriculum. NOTE: Courses in the history or teaching of chemistry are not acceptable.
Evaluation of Experience:Qualifying experience involves the recognition, evaluation, corrective actions, and elimination of environmental conditions in the workplace that causes sickness, impaired health, or illness. This experience must demonstrate a professional knowledge of the theory and application of the principles of industrial hygiene and closely related sciences such as physics and engineering controls.
Such work must have involved experience in all of the following areas: the acquisition of quantitative and qualitative data, and the measurement of exposures for a variety of chemical, physical, and biological stresses; the analysis of the data acquired and the prediction of probable effects of exposures on the health and well-being of workers; and the selection and recommendation of appropriate controls, including management, medical, engineering, education or training, and personal protective equipment.
Time-In-Grade Requirement: Applicants who are current Federal employees and have held a GS grade any time in the past 52 weeks must also meet time-in-grade requirements by the closing date of this announcement.
For a GS-13 position you must have served 52 weeks at the GS-12. The grade may have been in any occupation, but must have been held in the Federal service. An SF-50 that shows your time-in-grade eligibility must be submitted with your application materials. If the most recent SF-50 has an effective date within the past year, it may not clearly demonstrate you possess one-year time-in-grade, as required by the announcement. In this instance, you must provide an additional SF-50 that clearly demonstrates one-year time-in-grade.
You may qualify based on your experience and/or education as described below:Specialized Experience: You must have one year of specialized experience equivalent to at least the next lower grade
GS-12 in the normal line of progression for the occupation in the organization.
Examples of specialized experience would typically include, but are not limited to:
- Professional knowledge of industrial health and industrial hygiene concepts, principles, practices, and theories that enables the employee to serve as technical authority and advisory expert in a broad range of industrial hygiene matters, including monitoring, policy development, and inspections of the most complex operations and processes.
- Broad operational knowledge of facility functions, reporting channels, levels of authority, resources for technical and operations information, etc. such that the most complex and detailed multi-disciplinary issues may be efficiently dealt with and managed.
- Current knowledge of industry advances, occupational health standards, and laboratory operations sufficient to define, conduct, analyze, and interpret the most complex, in-depth, and sensitive sampling and survey situations.
- The most current and up-to-date practical and theoretical knowledge related to testing processes, standard development, and compliance monitoring sufficient to maintain program integrity arid environmental (industrial hygiene) quality.
Experience refers to paid and unpaid experience, including volunteer work done through National Service programs (e.g., Peace Corps, AmeriCorps) and other organizations (e.g., professional; philanthropic; religions; spiritual; community; student; social). Volunteer work helps build critical competencies, knowledge, and skills and can provide valuable training and experience that translates directly to paid employment. You will receive credit for all qualifying experience, including volunteer experience.