Deputy Secretary Merrigan Announces First National Sign-Up for New
Conservation Stewardship Program
8/8/2009
Continuous Enrollment for
Producers Begins Aug. 10
Agriculture Deputy Secretary Kathleen Merrigan today announced that the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) will begin continuous sign-up for the new
Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP) on August 10 with the first signup period
cutoff scheduled for September 30. CSP is a voluntary program that encourages
agricultural and forestry producers to maintain existing conservation activities
and adopt additional ones on their operations.
"This program will help the Nation's agricultural and forestry producers
reach greater levels of conservation performance, which will help protect our
land and water," Merrigan said. "The conservation benefits derived from
maintaining and enhancing natural resources will improve the quality of soil and
water, assist in addressing global climate change, and encourage environmentally
responsible energy production."
The Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008 (2008 Farm Bill) authorizes
CSP. Congress renamed and revamped the former Conservation Security Program
completely to improve its availability and appeal to agricultural and forestry
producers. USDA's Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) administers CSP.
Eligible lands include cropland, grassland, prairie, improved pastureland,
rangeland, non-industrial private forestland-a new land use for the program-and
agricultural land under the jurisdiction of an Indian tribe.
Eligible applicants may include individual landowners, legal entities, and
Indian tribes. The program will be offered to producers in all 50 states,
District of Columbia and the Pacific and Caribbean areas through continuous
sign-ups. Agricultural and forestry producers must submit applications by Sept.
30 to be considered for funding in the first ranking period. Congress capped the
annual acreage enrollment at 12,769,000 acres for each fiscal year nationwide.
To apply for the newly revamped CSP, potential participants will be
encouraged to use a self-screening checklist first to determine whether
the new program is suitable for them or their operation. It will be available on
NRCS Web sites and at NRCS field offices. After self-screening, the producer's
current and proposed conservation practices 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 activity. The
conservation performance estimated by the CMT will be used to rank applications.
States will determine their own priority resource concerns, one of the criteria
that will be used to rank applications. States will establish ranking pools to
rank applications with similar resource concerns.
NRCS field staff also will conduct on-site field verifications of applicants'
information obtained from the CMT. Once the potential participant has been field
verified and approved for funding, he or she must develop a conservation
stewardship plan.
For information about CSP, including eligibility requirements, producers can
visit www.nrcs.usda.gov/new_csp
or visit their local NRCS field office.
USDA is finalizing the program's policies and procedures. The CSP interim
final rule, published in the Federal Register, is open for public comment
through Sept. 28. |