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Home/Jobs/INDUSTRIAL HYGIENIST -Title 32
Announcement #873928500

INDUSTRIAL HYGIENIST -Title 32

Air National Guard Units · Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Federal employeesNational GuardTelework eligible

What you'd do

This National Guard position is for a INDUSTRIAL HYGIENIST -Title 32, Position Description Number D1719P01 and is part of the WI 128 MDG, Wisconsin Air National Guard.

Major duties

As a INDUSTRIAL HYGIENIST -Title 32, GS-0690-11, you will plan, schedule, execute, manage, and administer the installation-wide Industrial Hygiene/Bioenvironmental Engineering Program (IHH/BEE), which includes occupational health/industrial hygiene, radiation safety, and environmental monitoring to maintain and promote the health and well-being of military and technician personnel. ***Indefinite positions are not permanent and have no guarantee to continued employment. Indefinite employees may be subject to separation from employment at any time with a 30 day written notification. If the position becomes permanent, employee may be converted to a permanent appointment without further competition at management's discretion.***

What you need to qualify

GENERAL EXPERIENCE: Experience, education, or training involving the planning, scheduling, executing, managing, and administering of Industrial Hygiene/Bioenvironmental Engineering programs. SPECIALIZED EXPERIENCE: To qualify for the GS-0690-11 level, applicant must have at least 1 year of experience equivalent to GS-10 level. Qualifying experience may have been obtained in field, laboratory, engineering, or other environment if the work provided a means of obtaining 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.

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