| 
             
			Secretary Vilsack Announces Additional 800,000 Acres Dedicated to 
			Conservation Reserve Program for Wildlife Habitat and Wetlands 
			
   
            Send a link to a friend  
 
            
            
            [July 20, 2015]  
            Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack 
			announced today that an additional 800,000 acres of highly 
			environmentally sensitive land may be enrolled in Conservation 
			Reserve Program (CRP) under certain wetland and wildlife initiatives 
			that provide multiple benefits on the same land. 
             | 
        
        
            | 
				 
              
                
				 The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) will accept new offers 
				to participate in CRP under a general signup to be held Dec. 1, 
				2015, through Feb. 26, 2016. Eligible existing program 
				participants with contracts expiring Sept. 30, 2015, will be 
				granted an option for one-year extensions. Farmers and ranchers 
				interested in removing sensitive land from agricultural 
				production and planting grasses or trees to reduce soil erosion, 
				improve water quality and restore wildlife habitat are 
				encouraged to enroll. 
				 
				For 30 years, the Conservation Reserve Program has helped 
				farmers and ranchers prevent more than 8 billion tons of soil 
				from eroding, reduce nitrogen and phosphorous runoff relative to 
				cropland by 95 and 85 percent respectively, and even sequester 
				43 million tons of greenhouse gases annually, equal to taking 8 
				million cars off the road. 
              
                
				  
              
				The voluntary Conservation Reserve Program allows USDA to 
				contract with agricultural producers so that environmentally 
				sensitive land is conserved. Participants establish long-term, 
				resource-conserving plant species to control soil erosion, 
				improve water quality and develop wildlife habitat. In return, 
				USDA’s Farm Service Agency (FSA) provides participants with 
				rental payments and cost-share assistance. Contract duration is 
				between 10 and 15 years. 
				 
				CRP protects water quality and restores significant habitat for 
				ducks, pheasants, turkey, quail, deer and other important 
				wildlife which spurs economic development like hunting and 
				fishing, outdoor recreation and tourism across rural America. 
				Today’s announcement allows an additional 800,000 acres for duck 
				nesting habitat and other wetland and wildlife habitat 
				initiatives to be enrolled in the program. 
              
				[to top of second column]  | 
            
             
				   
			Farmers and ranchers should consider the various CRP continuous 
			sign-up initiatives that may help target specific resource concerns. 
			Financial assistance is offered for many practices including 
			conservation buffers and pollinator habitat plantings, and 
			initiatives such as the highly erodible lands, bottomland hardwood 
			tree and longleaf pine. 
			 
			Farmers and ranchers may visit their FSA county office for 
			additional information. The 2014 Farm Bill authorized the enrollment 
			of grasslands in CRP and information on grasslands enrollment will 
			be available after the regulation is published later this summer. 
			 
			For more information on CRP and other FSA programs, please visit 
			www.fsa.usda.gov. 
			[USDA FArm Service Agency] 
			  
			
			   |