in 2018, displaying a Bureau of Mines seal long after its closure :"We leave knowing that the proud accomplishments of this agency did make a difference in the quality of life we now enjoy, and they will continue to do so well into the 21st century." — USBM Director
Rhea Graham In September 1995,
Congress voted to close the Bureau of Mines and to transfer certain functions to other federal agencies. With USBM's closure, almost $100 million, or 66%, of its 1995 programs ceased, and approximately 1,000 of its employees were dismissed. Certain specific health, safety, and materials programs were transferred to the
Department of Energy, and certain minerals information activities moved to the
U.S. Geological Survey and the
Bureau of Land Management. The Bureau's archive of mining maps was transferred to the
National Mine Map Repository (NMMR), a part of the
Office of Surface Mining (OSM). Closure of the Bureau of Mines, and the accompanying transfers of functions and employee layoffs were essentially complete in March 1996. The Bureau's Minerals Information functions were transferred to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) in early 1996. The "Mineral Industry Surveys", "Mineral Commodity Summaries", and the "Minerals Yearbook" continued to be published. The Bureau's technical reports are archived by the
Technical Report Archive & Image Library. The Health and Safety Research Program at the
Pittsburgh and
Spokane Research Centers was assigned on an interim basis to DOE (Public Law 104-99). In fiscal year 1997, it was permanently transferred to the
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) (Public Law 104-134). NIOSH is part of the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention within the
Department of Health and Human Services. A total of 413 full-time equivalent employees were transferred to NIOSH on October 11, 1996: 336 in Pittsburgh and 77 in Spokane. A position of Associate Director for Mining in the NIOSH headquarters office was created. Under NIOSH, the Pittsburgh and Spokane Research "Centers" were renamed the
Pittsburgh Research Laboratory and Spokane Research Laboratory. Both labs currently reside under NIOSH's
Office of Mine Safety and Health Research. == Proposed re-establishment ==