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				 Starting with the October FSA Newsletter, local county offices 
				will no longer issue monthly newsletters to their county 
				producers, instead the monthly Newsletter will be issued from 
				the Illinois State FSA office to all producers in Illinois. 
				County offices will continue to send out electronic messages in 
				shorter bulletin form to their respective county producers but 
				to reduce workload and free County Office Managers of time 
				better spent ensuring you receive the best possible assistance 
				and care, the FSA Newsletters will be created and sent from the 
				Illinois State FSA Office. 
 Thank you in advance for your patience and understanding as we 
				transition into a new, more efficient way of providing you with 
				the newest and most recent updates to FSA programs and 
				regulations.
 
 As always please contact your local county office with any 
				questions you may have regarding the information sent through 
				the Illinois State FSA Newsletters and for further details 
				regarding program rules and regulations.
 
 Wishing you a safe, successful harvest season. Scherrie V. 
				Giamanco - State Executive Director
 
 USDA Farm Service Agency Announces Key Dates for New 2014 
				Farm Bill Safety Net Programs
 
              
                USDA announced key dates for farm owners and producers to keep 
				in mind regarding the new 2014 Farm Bill established programs, 
				Agriculture Risk Coverage (ARC) and Price Loss Coverage (PLC). 
				The new programs, designed to help producers better manage risk, 
				usher in one of the most significant reforms to U.S. farm 
				programs in decades. 
              
                
              
              
				 
              
                Dates associated with ARC and PLC that farm owners and producers 
				need to know:
 
              
                Sept. 29, 2014 to Feb. 27, 2015: Land owners may visit 
				their local Farm Service Agency office to update yield history 
				and/or reallocate base acres. 
              
                Nov. 17, 2014 to March 31, 2015: Producers make a 
				one-time election of either ARC or PLC for the 2014 through 2018 
				crop years. 
              
                Mid-April 2015 through summer 2015: Producers sign 
				contracts for 2014 and 2015 crop years.
 October 2015: Payments for 2014 crop year, if needed.
 
 USDA leaders will visit with producers across the country to 
				share information and answer questions on the ARC and PLC 
				programs.
 
 USDA helped create online tools to assist in the decision 
				process, allowing farm owners and producers to enter information 
				about their operation and see projections that show what ARC 
				and/or PLC will mean for them under possible future scenarios. 
				The new tools are now available at www.fsa.usda.gov/arc-plc. 
				Farm owners and producers can access the online resources from 
				the convenience of their home computer or mobile device at any 
				time.
 
 Covered commodities include barley, canola, large and small 
				chickpeas, corn, crambe, flaxseed, grain sorghum, lentils, 
				mustard seed, oats, peanuts, dry peas, rapeseed, long grain 
				rice, medium grain rice (which includes short grain rice), 
				safflower seed, sesame, soybeans, sunflower seed and wheat. 
				Upland cotton is no longer a covered commodity.
 
 Producers can contact their local FSA office for more 
				information or to schedule an appointment.
 
 One-Time Opportunity of Update the Farm’s Payment Yield for 
				Covered Commodities
 
 The Agricultural Act of 2014 (2014 Farm Bill) authorizes owners 
				of a farm a one-time opportunity to update the farm’s payment 
				yield for covered commodities. Owners may retain the 
				counter-cyclical (CC) yield as of September 30, 2013, or update 
				the yield for each covered commodity with a base to 90 percent 
				of a simple average of the covered commodity’s yield per planted 
				acre on the farm for each of the 2008 through 2012 crop years, 
				excluding any year in which the covered commodity was not 
				planted.
 
 The retained or updated yield becomes the PLC yield, similar to 
				CC yields in previous years, for the farm for the 2014 through 
				2018 crop years. Direct payment yields will no longer be used. 
				The PLC yields are used in the payment calculation for the PLC 
				program only and are not used in the ARC calculations. However, 
				all updated PLC yields, including those for covered commodities 
				for which ARC was elected, will be maintained on the farm by 
				FSA.
 
 
              
                
				 
              
				Certified yield data may be furnished by either the farm owner 
				or operator. The decision to retain or update the PLC yield is 
				solely the owner(s). A current owner who decides to update 1 or 
				more yields for covered commodities shall utilize a form CCC-859 
				to certify the yields produced on planted acres of the covered 
				commodity for each of the years the crop was planted, 2008-2012, 
				for those covered commodities that a yield update is requested. 
				The owner shall retain the yield records used to certify the 
				updated yields to provide to FSA for review, if requested. 
				County Offices do not have the resources to accept production 
				evidence for verification purposes as certifications are made.
 
 A current owner’s decision to update the yield can be made 
				through the end of the yield update period which ends on 
				February 27, 2015. A form CCC-859, Price Loss Coverage (PLC) 
				Yield Worksheet, may be obtained from the local County FSA 
				Office for owners or operators to utilize to report yields for a 
				farm and can include yield data from the current or previous 
				producer(s)
 
 USDA Announces Changes to Fruit, Vegetable and Wild Rice 
				Planting Rules
 
 Farm Service Agency (FSA) has announced fruit, vegetable and 
				wild rice provisions that affect producers who intend to 
				participate in certain programs authorized by the Agricultural 
				Act of 2014.
 
 Producers who intend to participate in the Agriculture Risk 
				Coverage (ARC) or Price Loss Coverage (PLC) programs are subject 
				to an acre-for-acre payment reduction when fruits and nuts, 
				vegetables or wild rice are planted on the payment acres of a 
				farm. Payment reductions do not apply to mung beans, dry peas, 
				lentils or chickpeas. Planting fruits, vegetables or wild rice 
				on acres that are not considered payment acres will not result 
				in a payment reduction. Farms that are eligible to participate 
				in ARC/PLC but are not enrolled for a particular year may plant 
				unlimited fruits, vegetables and wild rice for that year but 
				will not receive ARC/PLC payments for that year. Eligibility for 
				succeeding years is not affected.
 
 Planting and harvesting fruits, vegetables and wild rice on 
				ARC/PLC acreage is subject to the acre-for-acre payment 
				reduction when those crops are planted on either more than 15 
				percent of the base acres of a farm enrolled in ARC using the 
				county coverage or PLC, or more than 35 percent of the base 
				acres of a farm enrolled in ARC using the individual coverage.
 
 Fruits, vegetables and wild rice that are planted in a 
				double-cropping practice will not cause a payment reduction if 
				the farm is in a double-cropping region as designated by the 
				USDA’s Commodity Credit Corporation.
 
              
                
				 
              
                USDA Unveils Key New Programs to Help Farmers Manage Risk
 USDA just unveiled highly anticipated new programs to help 
				farmers better manage risk, ushering in one of the most 
				significant reforms to U.S. farm programs in decades.
 
 New tools are now available to help provide farmers the 
				information they need to choose the new safety net program that 
				is right for their business.
 
 The new programs, Agricultural Risk Coverage (ARC) and Price 
				Loss Coverage (PLC), are cornerstones of the commodity farm 
				safety net programs in the 2014 Farm Bill, legislation that 
				ended direct payments. Both programs offer farmers protection 
				when market forces cause substantial drops in crop prices and/or 
				revenues. Producers will have through early spring of 2015 to 
				select which program works best for their businesses.
 
 To help farmers choose between ARC and PLC, USDA helped create 
				online tools that allow farmers to enter information about their 
				operation and see projections about what each program will mean 
				for them under possible future scenarios. The new tools are now 
				available at 
				www.fsa.usda.gov/arc-plc.
 
 Starting Monday, Sept. 29, 2014, farm owners may begin visiting 
				their local Farm Service Agency (FSA) offices if they want to 
				update their yield history and/or reallocate base acres, the 
				first step before choosing which new program best serves their 
				risk management needs. Letters sent this summer enabled farm 
				owners and producers to analyze their crop planting history in 
				order to decide whether to keep their base acres or reallocate 
				them according to recent plantings.
 
 The next step in USDA’s safety net implementation is scheduled 
				for this winter when all producers on a farm begin making their 
				election, which will remain in effect for 2014-2018 crop years 
				between the options offered by ARC and PLC.
 
 Producers can contact their local FSA Office for more 
				information on ARC and PLC or to schedule an appointment to 
				update their yield history and/or reallocate base acres.
 
              
                
				 
              
                  
              
                USDA Reminds Farmers of 2014 Farm Bill Conservation 
				Compliance Changes
 The 2014 Farm Bill implements a change that requires farmers to 
				have a Highly Erodible Land Conservation and Wetland 
				Conservation Certification (AD-1026) on file for farmers to be 
				eligible for premium support on their federal crop insurance. 
				The Risk Management Agency (RMA), through the Federal Crop 
				Insurance Corporation (FCIC), manages the federal crop insurance 
				program that provides the modern farm safety net for American 
				farmers and ranchers.
 
 Since enactment of the 1985 Farm Bill, eligibility for most 
				commodity, disaster, and conservation programs has been linked 
				to compliance with the highly erodible land conservation and 
				wetland conservation provisions. The 2014 Farm Bill continues 
				the requirement that producers adhere to conservation compliance 
				guidelines to be eligible for most programs administered by FSA 
				and NRCS. This includes most financial assistance, such as, the 
				new price and revenue protection programs, the Conservation 
				Reserve Program, the Livestock Disaster Assistance programs, 
				Marketing Assistance Loans, the Noninsured Crop Disaster 
				Assistance Program, and most other programs implemented by FSA. 
				It also includes the Environmental Quality Incentives Program, 
				the Conservation Stewardship Program, and other conservation 
				programs implemented by NRCS.
 
              
                Many FSA and Natural Resource Conservation (NRCS) programs 
				already have implemented this requirement, and therefore, most 
				producers should already have an AD-1026 from on file for their 
				associated lands. If, however, an AD-1026 form has not been 
				filed, or is incomplete, then farmers are reminded of the 
				deadline of June 1, 2015. 
 When a farmer completes and submits the AD-1026 certification 
				form, FSA and NRCS staff will review the associated farm records 
				and outline any additional actions that may be required to meet 
				the required compliance with the conservation compliance 
				provisions.
 
              
                FSA recently released a revised form AD-1026, which is available 
				at USDA Service Centers and online at: www.fsa.usda.gov . USDA 
				will publish a rule later this year that will provide details 
				outlining the connection of conservation compliance with crop 
				insurance premium support. Producers can also contact their 
				local USDA Service Center for information. A listing of service 
				center locations is available at
				
				www.nrcs.usda.gov/wps/portal/nrcs/main/national/contact/local/.
 
              
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               Breaking Out New Ground 
 Agricultural producers are reminded to consult with FSA and NRCS 
			before breaking out new ground for production purposes as doing so 
			without prior authorization may put a producer’s federal farm 
			program benefits in jeopardy. This is especially true for land that 
			must meet Highly Erodible Land (HEL) and Wetland Conservation (WC) 
			provisions.
 
 Producers with HEL determined soils are required to apply tillage, 
			crop residue and rotational requirements as specified in their 
			conservation plan or an approved conservation system.
 
 Producers should notify FSA as a first point of contact prior to 
			conducting land clearing or drainage type projects to ensure the 
			proposed actions meet compliance criteria such as clearing any trees 
			to create new cropland, then these areas will need to be reviewed to 
			ensure such work will not risk your eligibility for benefits. This 
			would include any cropland previously enrolled in a CRP contract, 
			which expired on September 30, 2014.
 
 Landowners and operators must complete form AD-1026 - Highly 
			Erodible Land Conservation (HELC) and Wetland Conservation (WC) 
			Certification to identify the proposed action and allow FSA to 
			determine whether a referral to Natural Resources Conservation 
			Service (NRCS) for further review is necessary.
 
 2014 Important Deadline Dates to Remember for COC Elections
 
 November 3, 2014 Ballots mailed to eligible voters
 
 December 1, 2014 Last day to return voted ballots to the USDA 
			Service Center
 
 January 1, 2015 Newly elected county committee members take 
			office.
 
 The election of agricultural producers to Farm Service Agency (FSA) 
			county committees is important to farmers and ranchers. It is 
			crucial that every eligible producer participate in these elections 
			because FSA county committees are a link between the agricultural 
			community and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA).
 
 County committee members are a critical component of the operations 
			of FSA. They help deliver FSA farm programs at the local level. 
			Farmers and ranchers who serve on county committees help with the 
			decisions necessary to administer the programs in their counties. 
			They work to ensure FSA agricultural programs serve the needs of 
			local producers.
 
 FSA county committees operate within official regulations designed 
			to carry out federal laws. County committee members apply their 
			judgment and knowledge to make local decisions.
 
              
              
				 
              
				Foreign Buyers Notification
 
 The Agricultural Foreign Investment Disclosure Act (AFIDA) requires 
			all foreign owners of U.S. agricultural land to report their 
			holdings to the Secretary of Agriculture. The Farm Service Agency 
			administers this program for USDA.
 
 All individuals who are not U.S. citizens, and have purchased or 
			sold agricultural land in the county are required to report the 
			transaction to FSA with 90 days of the closing. Failure to submit 
			the AFIDA form (FSA-153) could result in civil penalties of up to 25 
			percent of the fair market value of the property. County government 
			offices, Realtors, attorneys and others involved in real estate 
			transactions are reminded to notify foreign investors of these 
			reporting requirements.
 
 Land Contract (LC) Guarantees
 
 The Land Contract (LC) Guarantee Program is a valuable tool to 
			transfer farm real estate to the next generation of farmers and 
			ranchers. Guarantees will be offered to the owner of a farm who 
			wishes to sell real estate through a land contract to a beginning or 
			socially disadvantaged farmer or rancher. The guarantee reduces the 
			financial risk to the seller.
 
 FSA offers two types of guarantees:
 
 Prompt Payment Guarantee - A guarantee up to the amount of 
			three amortized annual installments plus the cost of any related 
			real estate taxes and insurance.
 
 Standard Guarantee - A guarantee of 90 percent of the 
			outstanding principal balance under the land contract.
 
 The guarantee period is 10 years and the contract payments must be 
			amortized for a minimum of 20 years. The purchase price of the farm 
			cannot exceed the lesser of $500,000 or the market value of the 
			property.
 
 For additional information you can read the Land Contract Guarantee 
			Program Fact Sheet.
 
 Filing for NAP Losses
 
 The CCC-576, Notice of Loss, is used to report failed acreage and 
			prevented planting and may be completed by any producer with an 
			interest in the crop. Timely filing a Notice of Loss is required for 
			all crops. For losses on crops covered by the Non-Insured Crop 
			Disaster Assistance Program (NAP), you must file a CCC-576, Notice 
			of Loss, in the FSA County Office within 15 days of the occurrence 
			of the disaster or when losses become apparent.
 
 If filing for prevented planting, an acreage report and CCC-576 must 
			be filed within 15 calendar days of the final planting date for the 
			crop
 
              
               
              
			Margin Protection Program for Dairy Producers
 
 The 2014 Farm Bill authorized the Margin Protection Program (MPP-Dairy) 
			for dairy producers. The new, voluntary risk management program 
			replaces the Milk Income Loss Contract (MILC) program which expires 
			on Sept. 1, 2014.
 
 MPP-Dairy offers protection to dairy producers when the difference 
			(the margin) between the all-milk price and national average feed 
			cost falls below a certain producer selected amount.
 
 Eligible producers may purchase coverage for their dairy operation 
			by paying an annual administrative fee of $100 and a premium, as 
			applicable, for higher levels of coverage. Producers in the dairy 
			operation will have to select a desired coverage level ranging from 
			$4.00 to $8.00, in $0.50 increments and a desired coverage 
			percentage level ranging from 25 to 90 percent, in 5 percent 
			increments. Producers will also have to decide whether or not to 
			participate in the MPP-Dairy Program or the Livestock Gross Margin 
			program administered by the Risk Management Agency (RMA), but they 
			will not be allowed to participate in both.
 
 A decision tool will be made available in the fall of 2014 to help 
			producers make coverage level decisions. Enrollment will also begin 
			this fall. Dairy operators will establish their production history 
			during signup. Verification of the production records will be 
			required. The regulations for MPP-dairy are still being developed. 
			Additional information will be provided as it becomes available.
 
 USDA Announces New Support for Beginning Farmers and Ranchers
 
 Department Implementing New Farm Bill Programs, Unveiling New 
			Centralized Online Resource to Support Next Generation of Farmers
 
 USDA has announced the implementation of new Farm Bill measures and 
			other policy changes to improve the financial security of new and 
			beginning farmers and ranchers. USDA also unveiled www.USDA.gov/newfarmers, 
			a new website that will provide a centralized, one-stop resource 
			where beginning farmers and ranchers can explore the variety of USDA 
			initiatives designed to help them succeed.
 
 USDA’s www.usda.gov/newfarmers has in depth information for new 
			farmers and ranchers, including: how to increase access to land and 
			capital; build new market opportunities; participate in conservation 
			opportunities; select and use the right risk management tools; and 
			access USDA education, and technical support programs. These issues 
			have been identified as top priorities by new farmers. The website 
			will also feature instructive case studies about beginning farmers 
			who have successfully utilized USDA resources to start or expand 
			their business operations.
 
              
              
				 
              
			Today’s policy announcements in support of beginning farmers and 
			ranchers include:
 
 Waiving service fees for new and beginning farmers or ranchers to 
			enroll in the Non-Insured Crop Disaster Assistance Program (NAP) for 
			the 2014 crop year. NAP provides risk management tools to 
			farmers who grow crops for which there is no crop insurance product. 
			Under this waiver, announced via an official notice to Farm Service 
			Agency offices, farmers and ranchers whom already enrolled in NAP 
			for the 2014 crop year and certified to being a beginning farmer or 
			social disadvantaged farmer are eligible for a service fee refund.
 
 Eliminating payment reductions under the Conservation Reserve 
			Program (CRP) for new and beginning farmers which will allow 
			routine, prescribed, and emergency grazing outside the primary 
			nesting season on enrolled land consistent with approved 
			conservation plans. Previously, farmers and ranchers grazing on 
			CRP land were subject to a reduction in CRP payments of up to 25 
			percent. Waiving these reductions for new and beginning farmers will 
			provide extra financial support during times of emergency like 
			drought and other natural disasters.
 
 Increasing payment rates to beginning farmers and ranchers under 
			Emergency Assistance for Livestock, Honeybees and Farm-Raised Fish 
			Program (ELAP). Under this provision, beginning farmers can claim up 
			90 percent of losses for lost livestock, such as bees, under ELAP.
			This is a fifty percent increase over previously available 
			payment amounts to new and beginning farmers.
 
 In the near future, USDA will also announce additional crop 
			insurance program changes for beginning farmers and ranchers – 
			including discounted premiums, waiver of administrative fees, and 
			other benefits.
 
 Additional information about USDA actions in support of beginning 
			farmers and ranchers is available here.
 
              
               
              
              USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer. To file a 
			complaint of discrimination, write: USDA, Office of the Assistant 
			Secretary for Civil Rights, Office of Adjudication, 1400 
			Independence Ave., SW, Washington, DC 20250-9410 or call (866) 
			632-9992 (Toll-free Customer Service), (800) 877-8339 (Local or 
			Federal relay), (866) 377-8642 (Relay voice users).
 
			[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
			reserved.] Illinois 
			Farm Service Agency3500 Wabash Ave.
 Springfield, IL 62711
 www.fsa.usda.gov/il
 
 State Committee:
 Jill Appel - Jerry Jimenez - Joyce Matthews -Gordon Stine
 
 Executive Director:
 Scherrie V. Giamanco
 
 Executive Officer:
 Rick Graden
 
 Public Affairs Specialist Mary S. Kirby
 
 Please contact your local FSA Office for questions specific to your 
			operation or county.
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