User:Repace1

JAMES L. REPACE, MSC. BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH

In 1977, James Repace, MSc., performed controlled experiments to develop a form of the mass balance model that enabled relating fine particulate concentrations from cigarette smoking to the ratio of smoker density to building air exchange rates. He and a Naval Research Laboratory colleague conducted a field study of 56 smoking and nonsmoking microenvironments, indoors and outdoors, comparing real-time PM3.5 in buildings where smoking occurred to smoke-free spaces where there was none. The smoking buildings included restaurants, bars, bowling alleys, bingo games, weddings and waiting rooms, lodge halls and homes. The nonsmoking areas included libraries, churches, and homes, as well as in cars on Washington, DC commuter highways during rush hour. Fine particulate concentrations averaged six times higher in buildings where smoking was permitted than in nonsmoking buildings or outdoors. Repace and others used this new science to successfully lobby for non-smoking sections in restaurants in tobacco-growing Prince Georges County, Maryland in 1978, a first in the Washington, DC metropolitan area. He and Lowrey then wrote up their research and submitted it to the journal Science, where it was published in April of 1980, the first study of its kind. Repace and Lowrey (1980) had a major impact on the scientific community.

In 1979, Repace joined the US EPA in the Office of Policy Analysis, Office of Air, Noise, and Radiation on the policy staff of the Assistant Administrator. He successfully argued that indoor air pollution should be part and parcel of EPA’s concerns, and was instrumental in forming an ad-hoc interagency work group, co-chaired by EPA and DOE that soon incorporated 40 federal agencies. Congress soon formalized this, giving EPA explicit authority and funding to perform research and engage in public information dissemination on the mitigation of indoor air pollution under SARA Title IV. Repace became a spokesman on indoor air issues for the EPA, and helped initiate an EPA-funded National Academy of Sciences study on Indoor Air Pollution in 1981. In 1986, Repace helped form EPA’s indoor air staff, which eventually became incorporated as the Indoor Air Division, and working with ORD colleagues, helped start EPA’s indoor air research program.

In 1985, Repace and Lowrey published the first risk assessment of passive smoking and lung cancer, estimating 5000 U.S. lung cancer deaths annually, and developed an exposure-response relationship demonstrating that ventilation could not control secondhand smoke exposures to within an acceptable level of risk. This research was published in the journal Environment International. It had a major public impact around the world, and it became the subject of numerous radio, television, and newspaper interviews and commentaries. It also sparked EPA management to fund a 1986 NAS study on Environmental Tobacco Smoke, and by obtaining co-funding from the US Department of Health, inspired the 1986 Surgeon Generals’ Report on Involuntary Smoking. Both the NAS and Surgeon General’s Reports concluded that secondhand smoke caused lung cancer. In 1986, Repace instigated the Office of Air and Radiation to fund EPA’s Office of Research and Development (ORD) to conduct a formal ORD risk assessment of environmental tobacco smoke and lung cancer, and helped gain the approval of EPA’s senior management. In 1987, the tobacco industry, alarmed by Repace’s influence on indoor air policy, attempted to have him fired on spurious “conflict of interest” grounds. This was unsuccessful. In 1993, EPA’s risk assessment estimated that 3000 deaths per year (range 2500 to 7500) were caused by passive smoking. This in turn led to a massive increase in smoking restrictions in North American workplaces and public places. U.S. municipal smoke-free ordinances increased exponentially from 2 in 1993 to 487 in 2012. Repace retired from EPA in 1998, and has continued to publish many scientific papers of influence, and, as a consultant, to aid governments in North and South America, Europe, Asia, and the Pacific Rim in going smoke-free. In 2004, he published a peer-reviewed monitoring study in JOEM comparing particle levels before and after a statewide smoking ban in six bars, a casino, and a pool hall in Delaware. It showed that 90 to 95% of particulate levels were caused by secondhand smoke, and generated 650 million “media impressions” around the world, helping to persuade several countries to enact smoke-free workplace laws. Repace is the author of Enemy No.! - Waging The War on Secondhand Smoke, available on Amazon Books at: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07NLFBLGF.

EDUCATION Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, BSc., Physics, 1962; Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, MSc., Physics 1968 University of Maryland Post-masters study, Physics, 1969 Catholic University 1970-1972 Pre-Doctoral study, Physics, ABD.

EMPLOYMENT 1963 Sr. Laboratory Technician	 Radioisotope Laboratory, Grasslands Hospital, N.Y. 1964 Jr. Physicist	 Dept. of Physics, New York City Dept. of Hospitals, New York, NY 1965-1968 Research Associate	  Insulator Physics Group, RCA David Sarnoff Laboratory, Princeton, NJ 1969-1971 Research Physicist	  Ocean Science Division, Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC 1971-1979 Research Physicist	  Electronics Division, Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC 1979-1986 Policy Analyst	  Science Policy Staff; Office of Air & Radiation, U.S. EPA, Washington, DC 1986-1993  Policy Analyst	 Indoor Air Division, Office of Radiation & Indoor air; U.S. EPA, Washington, DC 1993-1994 Physicist	 Exposure Assessment Group, Office of Research & Development, U.S. EPA, Washington, DC 1994-1995 Policy Analyst (on detail)	 Health Standards Division, OSHA, U.S. Dept. of Labor, Washington, DC 1995-1997 Policy Analyst	 Indoor Air Division, Office of Radiation & Indoor Air; U.S. EPA, Washington, DC 1998- Scientific Consultant	 Repace Associates, Inc., Secondhand Smoke Consultants

RESEARCH AREAS •	RADIATION DOSIMETRY •	HIGH VACUUM TECHNOLOGY •	NUCLEAR ACTIVATION ANALYSIS •	RADIATION EFFECTS IN SOLID STATE DEVICES •	OUTDOOR AIR POLLUTION MODELING •	REAL TIME PARTICULATE MEASUREMENTS OF SECONDHAND SMOKE •	SECONDHAND SMOKE MODEL RESEARCH •	INDOOR AIR POLLUTION POLICY DEVELOPMENT •	RISK ASSESSMENT OF SECONDHAND SMOKE •	ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELD POLICY DEVELOPMENT •	OCCUPATIONAL EXPOSURES TO SECONDHAND SMOKE •	PHARMACOKINETIC MODELING OF SECONDHAND SMOKE COTININE •	OUTDOOR STUDIES OF SECONDHAND SMOKE •	FIELD STUDIES OF SECONDHAND SMOKE IN RESTAURANTS, BARS, & CASINOS •	FIELD STUDIES OF SECONDHAND SMOKE IN MULTI-UNIT HOUSING

PUBLICATIONS [PEER-REVIEWED*] 1.	Repace JL. Precision Measurements of the Half-Lives of 38K, 49Ca, and 27Mg. RADIOCHIMICA ACTA l4: 46-49 (l970).* 2.	Meijer PHE and Repace JL. Phase Shifts of the Three-Dimensional Spherically Symmetrical Square Well Potential. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICS 43: 428-433 (l975).* 3.	Repace JL. Radiation Induced Increase in Mobile Sodium in MOS Capacitors. IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON NUCLEAR SCIENCE NS-24: 2088-2092 (l977).* 4.	Repace JL. The Effect of Ionizing Radiation on Mobile Ion Current Peaks in MOS Capacitors. IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRON DEVICES ED-25: 492- (l978).* 5.	Repace JL and Goodman AM. The Effect of Process Variations on Interfacial and Radiation-Induced Charge in Silicon-on-Sapphire Capacitors. IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRON DEVICES ED-25: 978-982 (l978).* 6.	Repace JL. Radiation Effects in Ion-Implanted SOS Capacitors with Negative Charge. IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON NUCLEAR SCIENCE NS-25:l450-1453 (l978).* 7.	Tseng WF, Repace JL, Hughes HL, and Christou A. Silicon-on-Sapphire Films with Negative and Positive Interfacial Charges. THIN SOLID FILMS 82:2l3-216 (l98l).* 8.	Repace JL, and Lowrey AH. Indoor Air Pollution, Tobacco Smoke, and Public Health. SCIENCE 208: 464-474 (l980).*

9.	Repace JL, Ott WR, and Wallace LA. Total Human Exposure to Air Pollution. Proceedings of the 73rd Annual Meeting of the Air Pollution Control Association, June 22, 27, l980, Montreal.

10.	Repace JL, and Lowrey AH. Tobacco Smoke, Ventilation, and Indoor Air Quality. ASHRAE TRANSACTIONS 88: Part I, 895-914 (l982).*

11.	Repace JL, and Lowrey AH. Nonsmokers and Cigarette Smoke: A Modified Perception of Risk. SCIENCE 2l5: l97 (l982).

12.	Repace JL. Indoor Air Pollution. ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL 8:21-36 (l982).* 13.	Repace JL, and Lowrey AH. Modeling Exposure of Nonsmokers To Ambient Tobacco Smoke", Proceedings of the 76th Annual Meeting of the Air Pollution Control Association, Atlanta, June 20-24, l983.

14.	Repace JL. Tobacco Smoke and the Nonsmoker. Proceedings of The 5th World Conference on Smoking & Health, Winnipeg, Canada, July 10-15, l983. 15.	Repace JL, Seba DB, Lowrey AH, and Gregory TW. Effect of Negative Ion Generators on Ambient Tobacco Smoke. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ECOLOGY 2:90 (1984).* 16.	Repace JL. Consistency of Research Data on Passive Smoking and Lung Cancer. THE LANCET (ii): 3 March l984, p. 506.*

17.	Repace JL. Effect of Ventilation on Passive Smoking in a model Workplace", Proceedings of an Engineering Foundation Conference on Management of Atmospheres in Tightly Enclosed Spaces, Santa Barbara, Oct. 17-21, 1983, American Society of Heating, Refrigerating, and Air Conditioning Engineers, Atlanta, 1984. 18.	Repace JL, and Lowrey AH.  A Quantitative Estimate of Nonsmokers' Lung Cancer Risk From Passive Smoking.  ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL 11: 3-22 (1985).* 19.	Repace JL, and Lowrey AH.  An Indoor Air Quality Standard For Ambient Tobacco Smoke based on Carcinogenic risk.  N.Y. STATE JOURNAL OF MEDICINE 85: 381-383 (1985).*

20.	Repace JL. Passive Smoking has no place in the workplace (Editorial) CANADIAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION JOURNAL, 133: 737-738, Oct 15, 1985. 21.	Repace JL. Indoor Concentrations of Environmental Tobacco smoke: Models Dealing with Effects of Ventilation and Room Size. Ch. 3, IARC SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATIONS NO.81, ENVIRONMENTAL CARCINOGENS--SELECTED METHODS OF ANALYSIS--VOLUME 9 PASSIVE SMOKING; I.K. O'Neill, K.D. Brunnemann, B. Dodet & D. Hoffmann, Eds. International Agency for Research on Cancer, World Health Organization, United Nations Environment Programme, Lyon, France (1987).* 22.	Repace JL. Indoor Concentrations of Environmental Tobacco Smoke: Field Surveys. Ch. 10, IARC SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATIONS NO.81, ENVIRONMENTAL CARCINOGENS--SELECTED METHODS OF ANALYSIS--VOLUME 9 PASSIVE SMOKING; I.K. O'Neill, K.D. Brunnemann, B. Dodet & D. Hoffman, Eds. International Agency for Research on Cancer, World, Health Organization, United Nations Environment Programme, Lyon, France (1987).*

23.	Repace JL, and Lowrey AH. Environmental Tobacco Smoke and Indoor Air Quality in Modern Office Work Environments," (Editorial) JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL MEDICINE, 29: 628-629 (1987).

24.	Repace JL, and Lowrey AH. Comment on 'Estimation of Effect of Environmental Tobacco Smoke on Air Quality within Passenger Cabins of Commercial Aircraft'". (letter) ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 22: 1238 (1988).

25.	Repace JL, Lowrey AH. Modeling and measurement of aerosol and nicotine from environmental tobacco smoke", Proceedings of the Annual meeting of the American Association for Aerosol Research, Chapel Hill, NC, October 10-13, 1988.

26.	Repace JL, and Lowrey AH. Environmental tobacco smoke in the cabins of commercial aircraft." (Letter) JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE 81: 1425-1426 (1989). 27.	Repace JL, and Lowrey AH. Risk Assessment Methodologies in Passive Smoking-induced Lung Cancer.  RISK ANALYSIS 10: 27-37 (1990).*

28.	Repace JL, and Lowrey AH. Observational vs extrapolative models in estimating mortality from passive smoking. (Letter) J.L. Repace and A.H. Lowrey, ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL 17: 386-387 (1991).

29.	Repace JL. Are Indoor Air Quality Standards Needed? p. 153-159. In: Healthy Buildings '88, vol 4. Conclusions and recommendations for healthier buildings. B. Berglund, T. Lindvall, Eds. Swedish Council for Building Research, Stockholm, Sweden, June 1991.

30.	Repace JL. "Workshop Comments on Benefits and drawbacks of natural and mechanical ventilation systems," p. 72. "Workshop Comments on How to design low energy buildings and avoid health and comfort problems, p. 66-67. "Workshop Comments on The dramatic changes in recommended outdoor air rates - what are the rational motives and consequences,"  p. 132-133.   In:  Healthy Buildings '88, vol 4. Conclusions and recommendations for healthier buildings.  B. Berglund, T. Lindvall, Eds. Swedish Council for Building Research, Stockholm, Sweden, June 1991.

31.	Repace JL, and Lowrey AH. Does ventilation really control tobacco smoke in offices? (letter) ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL 18: 311-314 (1992).Repace JL. Is the dose -response curve between tobacco smoke exposure and lung cancer really linear from active smoking to passive smoking?" (letter) ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL 18: 427-429 (1992). 32.	Repace JL, and Lowrey AH.  Issues and Answers on Passive Smoking in the Workplace: Rebutting Tobacco Industry Arguments.  TOBACCO CONTROL 1: 208-219 (1992).*

33.	Repace JL, and Lowrey AH. Passive Smoking and the Tobacco Industry." (Letter) TOBACCO CONTROL, 2: 56 (1993).

34.	Repace JL. Tobacco Smoke Pollution." J.L. Repace, Chapter 7 in Nicotine Addiction, Principles and Management, T. Orleans and J. Slade, Ed.s, Oxford University Press, New York, 1993. 35.	Repace JL, and Lowrey AH.  An Enforceable Indoor Air quality Standard for Environmental Tobacco Smoke in the Workplace.  RISK ANALYSIS 13:463-475 (1993).* 36.	Repace JL.  Dietary Nicotine Won't Mislead on Passive Smoking.  BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 308/6920 (1 Jan) 61-62 (1994).*

37.	Repace JL. Risk management of passive smoking at home and at work. ST. LOUIS UNIVERSITY PUBLIC LAW REVIEW, XIII (2) 763-785 (1994). 38.	Shopland DR, Hartman AM, Repace JL, and Lynn WR. Smoking Behavior, Workplace Policies, and Public Opinion Regarding Smoking Restrictions in Maryland. MARYLAND MEDICAL JOURNAL 44: 977-982 (1995).*

39.	Repace JL. The Clean Air Case Against Smoking. In: Round Table:  “Smokers:  why do they start and continue?” WORLD HEALTH FORUM, 16, # 1: 13-16,   January 1995.

40.	Repace JL. Tobacco, history, and the AMA. (Letter) THE LANCET, 19 August 1995.

41.	Repace JL. Indoor air pollution and multiple chemical sensitivity. Proc. Occupational Safety & Health ‘95 Conference and Trade Show, Toronto, Ontario, Oct. 2-4, 1995.

42.	Repace JL, and Lowrey AH. Environmental Tobacco Smoke: Allegations of Scientific Misconduct. ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL (Letter) Environment International 22:268-270 (1996). 43.	Repace JL, Jinot J, Bayard S, Emmons K, and Hammond SK. Air Nicotine and Saliva Cotinine as Indicators of Passive Smoking Exposure and Risk. RISK ANALYSIS 18: 71-83 (1998).* 44.	Repace JL, Ott WR, and Klepeis NE. Indoor Air Pollution from Cigar Smoke. Ch. 5, SMOKING AND TOBACCO CONTROL MONOGRAPH 9, CIGARS - HEALTH EFFECTS AND TRENDS. National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD (1998).* 45.	Klepeis NE, Ott WR, and Repace JL. The Effect of Cigar Smoking on Indoor Levels of Carbon Monoxide and Particles. JOURNAL OF EXPOSURE ANALYSIS AND ENVIRONMENTAL EPIDEMIOLOGY 9:1-14 (1999).* 46.	Baker F, Dye JT, Stuart R, Ainsworth MA, Crammer C, Thun M, Hoffmann D, Repace J, Henningfield J, Slade J, Pinney J, Shanks T, Burns B, Connally G, Shopland D. Cigar Smoking Health risks:  State of the Science. JAMA 284:735-740 (2000).*

47.	Repace JL. Banning outdoor smoking is scientifically justifiable. (Invited review) Tobacco Control 9:98 (2000). 48.	Mannino DM, Moorman JE, Kingsley B, Rose D, and Repace J. Health Effects Related to Environmental Tobacco Smoke Exposure in Children in the United States. Data from the Third National Health & Nutrition Examination Survey. ARCHIVES OF PEDIATRIC & ADOLESCENT MEDICINE 155:36-41 (2001).* 49.	Muggli ME, Forster JL, Hurt RD, and Repace JL. The Smoke You Don’t See: Uncovering Tobacco Industry Scientific Strategies Aimed Against Environmental Tobacco Smoke Policies. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH 91: 1419-1423 (2001).* 50.	Mannino DM, Caraballo R, Benowitz N, and Repace J. Predictors of Cotinine Levels in US Children -- Data From the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. CHEST 120:718-724 (2001).* 51.	Repace JL. Effects of Passive Smoking on Coronary Circulation. (letter) JAMA. 287:316-317, 2002.* 52.	Mannino DM, Albalak R, Grosse S, Repace J. Second-hand Smoke Exposure and Blood Lead Levels in U.S. Children. EPIDEMIOLOGY 14:719-727 (2003).* 53.	Repace JL. Flying the Smoky Skies: Secondhand Smoke Exposure of Flight Attendants. TOBACCO CONTROL 13(Suppl 1):i8-i19 (2004).* 54.	Muggli ME, Forster JL, Hurt RD, and Repace JL. The Tobacco Industry’s Political Efforts to Derail the EPA Report on ETS. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PREVENTIVE MEDICINE 26:167–177 (2004).*

55.	Repace JL. Respirable Particles and Carcinogens in the Air of Delaware Hospitality Venues Before and After a Smoking Ban. JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL MEDICINE 46:887-905 (2004).* 56.	Travers MJ, KM Cummings, A Hyland, J Repace, S Babb, T Pechacek, PhD, R Caraballo. Indoor Air Quality in Hospitality Venues Before and After Implementation of a Clean Indoor Air Law — Western New York, 2003. MMWR 53:1038-104 (2004).*

57.	Hyde JN, Brugge D, Repace J, Rand W. Assessment of Sources of Secondhand Smoke Exposure in a Putatively Non-exposed Population. ARCHIVES OF ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH, 59:553-557 (2004).*

58.	Mulcahy M, Evans DS, Hammond SK, Repace JL and Byrne M.  Secondhand Smoke Exposure and Risk Following the Irish Smoking ban:  an Assessment of Salivary Cotinine Concentrations in Hotel Workers and Air Nicotine Levels in Bars. TOBACCO CONTROL 14: 384-388 (2005).

59.	Repace JL. Controlling Tobacco Smoke Pollution. Technical Feature, ASHRAE IAQ Applications: 6, #3, 11-15 (2005).*

60.	Repace JL, Al-Delaimy WK, Bernert JT. Correlating Atmospheric and Biological Markers in Studies of Secondhand Tobacco Smoke Exposure and Dose in Children and Adults. JOEM 48:181-194 (2006).*

61.	Leavell NR, Muggli ME, Hurt RD, and Repace JL. Blowing Smoke – British American Tobacco's Air Filtration Scheme and the UK Public Places Charter on Smoking. BMJ 332:227-229 (2006).*

62.	Hedley AJ, McGhee SM, Repace JL, Wong L-C, Yu YSM, Wong T-W, Lam T-H. Risks for Heart Disease and Lung Cancer from Passive Smoking by Workers in the Catering Industry. TOXICOLOGICAL SCIENCES 90:539–548 (2006).*

63.	 Repace JL. and Johnson KC. Can Displacement Ventilation Control Secondhand ETS? Technical Feature. ASHRAE IAQ APPLICATIONS 7:1-6 (2006).*

64.	Repace J, Hughes E, and Benowitz N.  Exposure to Secondhand Smoke Air Pollution Assessed from Bar Patrons’ Urine Cotinine. NICOTINE AND TOBACCO RESEARCH 8:701-711 (2006).*

65.	Repace JL, Hyde JN, Brugge D. Air Pollution in Boston Bars Before and After a Smoking Ban. BMC PUBLIC HEALTH 6:266 (2006).*

66.	Hyde J, Brugge D, Repace J, Hamlett J, Rand W, and Haley N. Worker Exposure to Environmental Tobacco Smoke in Smoking-Restricted Restaurants and Bars. Ch. 14, In: Passive Smoking and Health Research. ISBN: 1-60021-382-0, Editor: N.A. Jeorgensen, pp. - © 2006 Nova Science Publishers, Inc.

67.	Repace JL. Exposure to Secondhand Smoke. Chapter 9, In: EXPOSURE ANALYSIS, W Ott, A Steinemann, and L Wallace, Eds. CRC Press (2007).*

68.	Bauer U, Juster H, Hyland A, Farrelly M, Engelen M, Weitzenkamp D, Repace J, Babb, S.  Reduced Secondhand Smoke Exposure After Implementation of a Comprehensive Statewide Smoking Ban — New York, June 26, 2003–June 30, 2004, MMWR 56:705-706 (2007).* 69.	Repace JL. How Social Policy Can Foster Advances in Addiction Treatment: Tobacco Smoke Pollution and the Hospitality Industry as an Example. In: Drug Addiction Treatment in the 21st Century: Science and Policy Issues. JE Henningfield, PB Santora, and WK Bickel, Eds. Johns Hopkins University Press. (2007).

70.	Repace JL. Benefits of smoke-free regulations in outdoor settings: beaches, golf courses, parks, patios, and in motor vehicles. William Mitchell Law Review 34(4):1621-1638 (2008).

71.	Lee, K., Hahn, E.J., Okoli, C.T.C., Repace, J., Troutman, A. Differential Impact of Smoke-free Laws on Indoor Air Quality. JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH 70:24-70 (2008).*

72.	Repace JL. Secondhand Smoke in Pennsylvania Casinos: A Study of Nonsmokers’ Exposure, Dose, and Risk. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH 99: 1478–1485 (2009).*

73.	Jiang RT, Cheng K-C, Acevedo-Bolton V, Klepeis NE, Repace JL, Ott WR, and Hildemann LM. Measurement of Fine Particles and Smoking Activity in a Statewide Survey of 36 California Indian Casinos. JOURNAL OF EXPOSURE SCIENCE & ENVIRONMENTAL EPIDEMIOLOGY: 21, 31-41 (2010).*

74.	Repace JL, Jiang RT, Cheng K-C, Acevedo-Bolton V, Klepeis NE, Ott WR, and Hildemann LM. Fine Particle and Secondhand Smoke Air Pollution Exposures and Risks Inside 66 US Casinos. ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH 111 (2011) 473–484.*

75.	Lu SQ, Fielding R, Hedley AJ, Wong L-C, Lai HK, Wong CM, Repace JL, McGhee SM. Secondhand Smoke (SHS) Exposures: Workplace Exposures, Related Perceptions of SHS Risk, and Reactions to Smoking in Catering Workers in Smoking and Non-smoking Premises. NICOTINE & TOBACCO RESEARCH 13:344-352 (2011).*

76.	Lai HK, Hedley AJ, Repace JL, So C, Lu QY, McGhee SM, Fielding R. Lung Function and Exposure to Workplace Secondhand Smoke During Exemptions from Smoking Ban Legislation - An Exposure Response Relationship Based on Indoor PM2.5 and Urinary Cotinine Levels. THORAX 66:615-623 (2011).*

77.	Apelberg BJ, Hepp LM, Avila-Tang E, Gundel L, Hammond SK, Hovell MF Hyland A, Klepeis NE, Madsen CC, Navas-Acien A, Repace J, Samet JM, Breysse PN. Environmental Monitoring of Secondhand Smoke Exposure. TOBACCO CONTROL 22:147-55 (2012).*

78.	Repace J, Zhang B, Bondy SJ, Benowitz N, Ferrence F. Air Quality, Mortality, and Economic Benefits of a Smoke-Free Workplace Law for Non-Smoking Ontario Bar Workers. INDOOR AIR 23:93–104 (2013).

79.	Dacunto PJ, Cheng K-C, Acevedo-Bolton V, Klepeis NE, Repace JL, Ott WR, Hildemann LM. Identifying and Quantifying Secondhand Smoke in Multiunit Homes with Tobacco Smoke Odor Complaints. ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT 71:399-407 (2013).*

80.	Dacunto PJ, Cheng KC, Acevedo-Bolton V, Jiang RT, Klepeis NE, Repace JL, Ott WR, Hildemann LM. Real-time Particle Monitor Calibration Factors and PM2.5 Emission Factors for Multiple Indoor Sources. ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE PROCESS IMPACTS 24:1511-1519 (2013).* 81.	Dacunto PJ, Cheng K-C, Acevedo-Bolton V, Jiang R-T, Klepeis NE, Repace JL, Ott WR, Hildemann LM. Identifying and Quantifying Secondhand Smoke in Source and Receptor Rooms: Logistic Regression and Chemical Mass Balance Approaches. INDOOR AIR 24: 59-70 (2014).*

82.	Shamo F, Wilson T, Kiley J, Repace J. Assessing the effect of Michigan's smoke-free law on air quality inside restaurants and casinos: a before-and-after observational study. BMJ OPEN 2015 5:e007530 doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2014-007530.

83.	Klepeis, Neil E, · Narinder Dhaliwal · Gary Hayward · Viviana Acevedo-Bolton · Wayne R Ott · Nathan Read · Steve Layton · Ruoting Jiang · Kai-Chung Cheng · Lynn M Hildemann · James L Repace · Stephanie Taylor · Seow-Ling Ong · Francisco O Buchting · Juliet P Lee · Roland S Moore. Measuring Indoor Air Quality and Engaging California Indian Stakeholders at the Win-River Resort and Casino: Collaborative Smoke-Free Policy Development. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH: 13, 143- 2016.*

AWARDS 1984 U.S. EPA Award for Exceptional Performance ($) 1988 Dr. Luther L. Terry Award, U.S. Public Health Professional Association 1989 Surgeon General’s Medallion, U.S. Public Health Service 1990 Certificate of Appreciation, U.S. Department of Transportation 1991 Certificate of Appreciation, U.S. Dept of Health & Human Services 1994 OSHA IMPACT Award, U.S. Dept. of Labor (IAQ Team Award) 1994 U.S. Dept. of Labor Secretary’s Excellence Award (IAQ Team Award) 1995 U.S. OSHA Outstanding Performance Rating 1998		Action on Smoking and Health Certificate of Appreciation 1998		Americans for Nonsmokers’ Rights Plaque of Appreciation 1998 Prince Georges’ County Civic Federation President’s Award 1998 American Public Health Association, Lifetime Achievement Award 2002 Flight Attendant Medical Research Institute Distinguished Professor Award ($) 2002 Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Innovator Award ($) 2003 American Lung Association of Maryland Distinguished Service Award 2003 Natl. Cancer Institute of Milan (Italy), Recognition for Excellence in Smoke Studies 2015 Constance Mehlman Award, International Society of Exposure Science ($)

MEMBERSHIPS American Physical Society 1964 - 1979 Air Pollution Control Association 1979 - 1986 American Association for the Advancement of Science 1976 – 1990 American Public Health Association 1996 – International Society for Exposure Science 1997 - International Society of Indoor Air Quality and Climate 2002 - American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air Conditioning Engineers 2003 – 2015.

POLICY OUTREACH From 1980 to 2014, James Repace gave 48 scientific conference presentations, presented 58 invited talks before medical and scientific groups, gave 121 television, radio, newspaper and magazine interviews, and presented 155 pieces of testimony at the international, federal, state, and local level that contributed to policies for reducing exposure secondhand smoke in the US and abroad. These presentations included four invited appearances before Congressional committees to testify on secondhand smoke risks and control, including testimony before the House Aviation Subcommittee in 1989 that helped increase the federal smoking ban on aircraft from flights less than two hours to flights less than six hours. In addition, he testified before the legislatures of Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong, Canada, Ireland, The United Kingdom, and many US States and Canadian Provinces. Among the TV appearances on the lung cancer risks to the US nonsmoking population were CBS Evening News, ABC’s Good Morning America, 60 Minutes, NOVA, and CNN. This outreach helped change public policy that reduced exposure to secondhand smoke, and much of it was vigorously opposed by the tobacco industry, which made a major sustained effort to attempt to discredit his work.* CITATIONS: As of March 23, 2016. ..
 * Tobacco Memos Detail Passive-Smoke Attack, The Wall Street Journal, B1, Monday, April 28, 1998.