USDA NATURAL RESOURCES
CONSERVATION SERVICE BEGINS STATEWIDE SIGN-UP FOR THE NEW CONSERVATION
STEWARDSHIP PROGRAM
Continuous Sign-Up Begins Aug. 10
Jackson, MS,
August 10, 2009—The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources
Conservation Service (NRCS) will begin continuous sign-up for the new
Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP) on August 10 in Mississippi. The
first cutoff for ranking purposes is scheduled for Sept. 30, State
Conservationist Dr. Homer Wilkes announced today.
“The
Conservation Stewardship Program changed dramatically in the 2008 Farm
Bill,” said Wilkes. “NRCS took the time to develop a program that would
appeal to our diverse customers and offer them an equal chance to
participate. We hope that agricultural and forestry producers in Mississippi
take full advantage of the benefits this newly revised program offers.”
The Food,
Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008 (2008 Farm Bill) authorized the
Conservation Stewardship Program. Congress renamed and revamped the former
Conservation Security Program completely to improve its availability and
appeal to agricultural and forestry producers. The Conservation Stewardship
Program will be offered in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and the
Pacific and Caribbean areas through continuous sign-ups with announced
cut-off application dates for ranking periods. The maximum annual enrollment
is capped at nearly 12.8 million acres nationwide.
NRCS
administers CSP, a voluntary conservation program designed to encourage
agricultural and forestry producers to adopt additional conservation
practices and improve, maintain and manage existing ones.
To apply for the
newly revamped CSP, individual producers, legal entities and Indian tribes
will be encouraged to use a self-screening checklist first to determine
whether the new program is suitable for them or their operation. The
checklist is available on NRCS Web sites and at NRCS field offices.
After the
self-screening, the producer’s current and proposed conservation activities
are entered in the conservation measurement tool (CMT). This tool estimates
the level of environmental performance to be achieved by a producer
implementing and maintaining conservation activities. The conservation
performance estimated by the CMT will be used to rank applications. NRCS
field staff will conduct on-site field verifications of pre-approved
applicants’ information provided for the CMT.
Another major
change in the program is the method of payments. CSP will offer two possible
types of payments—annual and supplemental. The annual payment will be
established using the conservation performance estimated by the CMT and
calculated by land use type for enrolled eligible land. A supplemental
payment is also available to participants who also adopt a
resource-conserving
crop rotation. The annual payment limitation for a person or
legal entity is $40,000. A person or legal entity cannot exceed $200,000 for
all contracts entered into during any five-year period.
Individual
producers, legal entities and Indian tribes must meet several requirements
to obtain a Conservation Stewardship Program contract. They must be listed
as the operator in the USDA farm records management system for the operation
being offered for enrollment. They must document that they control the land
for the term of the contract and include all eligible land in their entire
operation in that contract. They must comply with highly erodible land and
wetland conservation provisions and comply with Adjusted Gross Income
provisions.
Eligible lands
include cropland, grassland, improved pastureland, and non-industrial
private forestland—a new land use for the program—and agricultural land
under the jurisdiction of an Indian tribe. Land enrolled in the
Conservation Security Program, Conservation Reserve Program, Grasslands
Reserve Program and Wetlands Reserve Program are ineligible for the new
Conservation Stewardship Program.
For more
information about the new CSP, please visit
www.nrcs.usda.gov/new_csp/.
For more information about conservation programs in Mississippi, please
visit
www.nrcs.usda.gov.
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