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				Under the provisions 
				of the 2014 Farm Bill, $10 million is available nationwide to 
				eligible CRP participants. Those selected will be encouraged to 
				thin, prescribe burn or otherwise manage their forests in order 
				to allow sunlight to reach the forest floor. This will encourage 
				the development of grasses, forbs and legumes, benefitting 
				numerous species including pollinators and grassland-dependent 
				birds such as the northern bobwhite.  
				Eligibility is 
				limited to landowners and agricultural producers already 
				enrolled in CRP with conservation covers primarily containing 
				trees. Incentive payments, not to exceed 150 percent of the cost 
				to implement a particular customary forestry activity as 
				described, have been established. CRP participants meeting 
				eligibility requirements and interested in making offers to 
				participate should visit their local FSA county office.  
				For more information 
				about FSA conservation programs, visit the FSA office at the 
				local USDA service center or go towww.fsa.usda.gov/conservation.   
				Payments and benefits 
				received under the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) are 
				subject to the following:   
					
					
					payment limitation by direct attribution       
				       ●  foreign 
				person rule 
					
					
					average adjusted gross income (AGI) limitation  The 2014 
					Farm Bill continued the $50,000 maximum CRP payment amount 
					that can be received annually, directly or indirectly, by 
					each person or legal entity.  This payment limitation 
					includes all annual rental payments and incentive payments 
					(Sign-up Incentive Payments and Practice Incentive 
					Payments).  Annual rental payments are attributed (earned) 
					in the fiscal year in which program performance occurs.  
					Sign-up Incentive Payments (SIP) are attributed (earned) 
					based on the fiscal year in which the contract is approved, 
					not the fiscal year the contract is effective.  Practice 
					Incentive Payments (PIP) are attributed (earned) based on 
					the fiscal year in which the cost-share documentation is 
					completed and the producer or technical service provider 
					certifies performance of practice completion to the county 
					office.  Such limitation on payments is controlled by direct 
					attribution. 
					
					Program payments made directly or indirectly to a person are 
					combined with the pro rata interest held in any legal entity 
					that received payment, unless the payments to the legal 
					entity have been reduced by the pro rata share of the 
					person.
					
					Program payments made directly to a legal entity are 
					attributed to those persons that have a direct and indirect 
					interest in the legal entity, unless the payments to the 
					legal entity have been reduced by the pro rata share of the 
					person.  
				Many Farm Service 
				Agency programs require all program participants, either 
				individuals or legal entities, to be “actively engaged in 
				farming”.  This means participants provide a significant 
				contribution to the farming operation, whether it is capital, 
				land, equipment, active personal labor and/or management.  For 
				entities, each partner, stockholder or member with an ownership 
				interest, must contribute active personal labor and/or 
				management to the operation on a regular basis.  
				The 2014 Farm Bill 
				established additional payment eligibility provisions relating 
				to the farm management component of meeting “actively engaged in 
				farming”. These new provisions apply to joint operations 
				comprised of non-family members or partners, stockholders or 
				persons with an ownership in the farming operation.  Effective 
				for 2016 and subsequent crop years, non-family joint operations 
				are afforded to one member that may use a significant 
				contribution of active personal management exclusively to meet 
				the requirements to be determined “actively engaged in 
				farming”.  The person or member will be defined as the Farm 
				Manager for the purposes of administering these new management 
				provisions.    
				In some instances, 
				additional persons or members of a non-family member joint 
				operation who meet the definition of Farm Manager may also be 
				allowed to use such a contribution of active personal management 
				to meet the eligibility requirements.  However, under no 
				circumstances may the number of Farm Managers in a non-family 
				joint operation exceed a total of three in any given crop and 
				program year.   
				Joint operations 
				composed of non-family members may be impacted by the new 
				provisions effective for the 2017 program year.  Joint 
				operations must complete any operational changes and report 
				those changes to FSA on or before June 
				1, 2017.  
				The 2014 Farm Bill 
				established a maximum dollar amount for each program that can be 
				received annually, directly or indirectly, by each person or 
				legal entity.  Payment limitations vary by program for 2014 
				through 2018. 
				Below is an overview 
				of payment limitations by program. 
				
				Commodity and Price Support ProgramsThe annual limitation for the Agriculture Risk Coverage (ARC) 
				and Price Loss Coverage (PLC) programs, Loan Deficiency Payments 
				(LDPs) and Market Loan Gains is $125,000 each.
 
				
				Conservation ProgramsThe Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) annual 
				rental payment and incentive payment is limited to $50,000.  CRP 
				contracts approved before Oct. 1, 2008, may exceed the 
				limitation, subject to payment limitation rules in effect on the 
				date of contract approval.
 
				The Emergency 
				Conservation Program (ECP) has an annual limit of $200,000 per 
				disaster event.  The Emergency Forest Restoration Program (EFRP) 
				has an annual limit of $500,000 per disaster event. 
				Recently the Farm 
				Service Agency (FSA), Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) 
				and Risk Management Agency (RMA) worked together to develop 
				consistent, simple and a flexible policy for cover crop 
				practices.   
				The termination and 
				reporting guidelines were updated for cover crops. 
				
				Termination: 
				The cover crop 
				termination guidelines provide the timeline for terminating 
				cover crops, are based on zones and apply to non-irrigated 
				cropland. To view the zones and additional guidelines visithttps://www.nrcs.usda.gov/wps/portal/ 
				nrcs/main/national/landuse/crops/ and 
				click “Cover Crop Termination Guidelines.” 
				Reporting: 
				The intended use of 
				cover only will be used to report cover crops. This includes 
				crops that were terminated by tillage and reported with an 
				intended use code of green manure. An FSA policy change will 
				allow cover crops to be hayed and grazed.  Program eligibility 
				for the cover crop that is being hayed or grazed will be 
				determined by each specific program.  
				If the crop reported 
				as cover only is harvested for any use other than forage or 
				grazing and is not terminated properly, then that crop will no 
				longer be considered a cover crop.   
				Crops reported with 
				an intended use of cover only will not count toward the total 
				cropland on the farm. In these situations a subsequent crop will 
				be reported to account for all cropland on the farm.  
				Cover crops include 
				grasses, legumes, and forbs, for seasonal cover and other 
				conservation purposes.  Cover crops are primarily used for 
				erosion control, soil health Improvement, and water quality 
				improvement. The cover crop may be terminated by natural causes, 
				such as frost, or intentionally terminated through chemical 
				application, crimping, rolling, tillage or cutting.  A cover 
				crop managed and terminated according to NRCS Cover Crop 
				Termination Guidelines is notconsidered 
				a crop for crop insurance purposes.  
				Cover crops can be 
				planted: with no subsequent crop planted, before a subsequent 
				crop, after prevented planting acreage, after a planted crop, or 
				into a standing crop.  
				Starting March 20, 
				2017, organic producers and handlers will be able to visit over 
				2,100 USDA Farm Service Agency (FSA) offices to apply for 
				federal reimbursement to assist with the cost of receiving and 
				maintaining organic or transitional certification. 
				USDA reimburses 
				organic producers up to 75 percent of the cost of organic 
				certification, but only about half of the nation’s organic 
				operations currently participate in the program.  Starting March 
				20, USDA will provide a uniform, streamlined process for organic 
				producers and handlers to apply for organic cost share 
				assistance either by mail or in person. 
				USDA is making 
				changes to increase participation in the National Organic 
				Certification Cost Share Program (NOCCSP) and the Agricultural 
				Management Assistance Organic Certification Cost Share Program, 
				and at the same time provide more opportunities for organic 
				producers to access other USDA programs, such as disaster 
				protection and loans for farms, facilities and marketing.  
				Producers can also access information on nonfederal agricultural 
				resources, and get referrals to local experts, including organic 
				agriculture, through USDA’s Bridges to Opportunity service at 
				the local FSA office. 
				Historically, many 
				state departments of agriculture have obtained grants to 
				disburse reimbursements to those producers and handlers 
				qualifying for cost share assistance.  FSA will continue to 
				partner with states to administer the programs.  For states that 
				want to continue to directly administer the programs, 
				applications were due Feb. 17, 2017.    
				Eligible producers 
				include any certified producers or handlers who have paid 
				organic or transitional certification fees to a USDA-accredited 
				certifying agent.  
				Application fees, inspection costs, fees related to equivalency 
				agreement/ arrangement requirements, travel/per diem for 
				inspectors, user fees, sales assessments and postage are all 
				eligible for a cost share reimbursement from USDA. 
				Once certified, 
				producers and handlers are eligible to receive reimbursement for 
				up to 75 percent of certification costs each year up to a 
				maximum of $750 per certification scope—crops, livestock, wild 
				crops and handling.  This announcement also adds transitional 
				certification and state organic program fees as additional 
				scopes. 
				To learn more about 
				organic certification cost share, please visit www.fsa.usda.gov/organic or 
				contact a local FSA office by visiting http://offices.usda.gov. 
				If loan grain has 
				been disposed of through feeding, selling or any other form of 
				disposal without prior written authorization from the county 
				office staff, it is considered unauthorized disposition.  The 
				financial penalties for unauthorized dispositions are severe and 
				a producer’s name will be placed on a loan violation list for a 
				two-year period.   Always call before you haul any grain under 
				loan. 
				Producers who want to 
				use the Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program (NAP) 
				organic price and selected the "organic" option on their NAP 
				application must report their crops as organic.   
				When certifying 
				organic acres, the buffer zone acreage must be included in the 
				organic acreage. 
				Producers must also 
				provide a current organic plan, organic certificate or 
				documentation from a certifying agent indicating an organic plan 
				is in effect.  Documentation must include:  
					
					
					name of certified individuals
					
					address
					
					telephone number
					
					effective date of certification
					
					certificate number
					
					list of commodities certified
					
					name and address of certifying agent
					a 
					map showing the specific location of each field of certified 
					organic, including the buffer zone acreage  
              
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			Certification exemptions 
			are available for producers whose annual gross agricultural income 
			from organic sales totals $5,000 or less.  Although exempt growers 
			are not required to provide a written certificate, they are still 
			required to provide a map showing the specific location of each 
			field of certified organic, transitional and buffer zone acreage.  
			For questions about 
			reporting organic crops, contact your local FSA office.  To find 
			your local office, visit http://offices.usda.gov.  
			USDA’s Farm Service 
			Agency (FSA) will provide a new financing option to help farmers 
			purchase portable storage and handling equipment through the Farm 
			Storage Facility Loan (FSFL) program. The loans, which now include a 
			smaller microloan option with lower down payments, are designed to 
			help producers, including new, small and mid-sized producers, grow 
			their businesses and markets.  The FSFL program allows producers of 
			eligible commodities to obtain low-interest financing to build or 
			upgrade farm storage and handling facilities.   
			The program also offers a 
			new “microloan” option, which allows applicants seeking less than 
			$50,000 to qualify for a reduced down payment of five percent and no 
			requirement to provide three years of production history, with CCC 
			providing a loan for the remaining 95 percent of the net cost of the 
			eligible FSFL equipment. Farms and ranches of all sizes are 
			eligible.  The microloan option is expected to be of particular 
			benefit to smaller farms and ranches, and specialty crop producers 
			who may not have access to commercial storage or on-farm storage 
			after harvest. These producers can invest in equipment like 
			conveyers, scales or refrigeration units and trucks that can store 
			commodities before delivering them to markets.  FSFL microloans can 
			also be used to finance wash and pack equipment used post-harvest, 
			before a commodity is placed in cold storage.  Producers do not need 
			to demonstrate the lack of commercial credit availability to apply 
			for FSFL’s.  
			Larger farming and 
			ranching operations, that may not be able to participate in the new 
			“microloan” option, may apply for the traditional, larger FSFL’s 
			with the maximum principal amount for each loan through FSFL of 
			$500,000.00.  Participants are required to provide a down payment of 
			15 percent, with CCC providing a loan for the remaining 85 percent 
			of the net cost of the eligible storage facility and permanent 
			drying and handling equipment. Additional security is required for 
			poured-cement open-bunker silos, renewable biomass facilities, cold 
			storage facilities, hay barns and for all loans exceeding 
			$100,000.00.   FSFL loan terms of 3, 5, 7, 10 or 12 years are 
			available depending on the amount of the loan. Interest rates for 
			each term rate may be different and are based on the rate which CCC 
			borrows from the Treasury Department.   
			Earlier this year, FSA 
			significantly expanded the list of commodities eligible for FSFL.  
			Eligible commodities now include aquaculture; floriculture; fruits 
			(including nuts) and vegetables; corn, grain sorghum, rice, 
			oilseeds, oats, wheat, triticale, spelt, buckwheat, lentils, 
			chickpeas, dry peas, sugar, barley, rye, hay, honey, hops, maple 
			sap, unprocessed meat and poultry, eggs, milk, cheese, butter, 
			yogurt and renewable biomass.   
			Applications for FSFL 
			must be submitted to the FSA county office that maintains the farm's 
			records. The FSFL application must be approved before:  purchasing 
			the FSFL equipment, beginning any excavation or site preparation, 
			accepting delivery of FSFL equipment, beginning installation or 
			construction.   
			To learn more about Farm 
			Storage Facility Loans, visit www.fsa.usda.gov/pricesupport or 
			contact a local FSA county office.  To find your local FSA county 
			office, visit http://offices.usda.gov. 
			FSA guaranteed loans 
			allow lenders to provide agricultural credit to farmers who do not 
			meet the lender's normal underwriting criteria.  Farmers and 
			ranchers apply for a guaranteed loan through a lender, and the 
			lender arranges for the guarantee.  FSA can guarantee up to 95 
			percent of the loss of principal and interest on a loan.  Guaranteed 
			loans can be used for both farm ownership and operating purposes.    
			Guaranteed farm ownership 
			loans can be used to purchase farmland, construct or repair 
			buildings, develop farmland to promote soil and water conservation 
			or to refinance debt.   
			Guaranteed operating 
			loans can be used to purchase livestock, farm equipment, feed, seed, 
			fuel, farm chemicals, insurance and other operating expenses.   
			FSA can guarantee farm 
			ownership and operating loans up to $1,399,000.  Repayment terms 
			vary depending on the type of loan, collateral and the producer's 
			ability to repay the loan.  Operating loans are normally repaid within 
			seven years and 
			farm ownership loans are not to exceed 40 years.   
			Please contact your 
			lender or local FSA farm loan office for more information on 
			guaranteed loans. 
			The Agricultural Act of 
			2014 authorized 2014-2018 crop year Marketing Assistance Loans (MALs) 
			and Loan Deficiency Payments (LDPs), with a few minor policy 
			changes.   
			Among the changes, 
			farm-stored MAL collateral transferred to warehouse storage will 
			retain the original loan rate, be allowed to transfer only the 
			outstanding farm-stored quantity with no additional quantity allowed 
			and will no longer require producers to have a paid for measurement 
			service when moving or commingling loan collateral.   
			FSA is now accepting 
			requests for 2016 MALs and LDPs for all eligible commodities after 
			harvest. Requests for loans and LDP’s shall be made on or before the 
			final availability date for the respective commodities.  March 31 is 
			the final loan availability date for Barley, Canola, Crambe, 
			Flaxseed, Honey, Oats, Rapeseed, Wheat, and Sesame Seed.  May 
			31 is the 
			final loan availability date for Corn, Dry Peas, Grain Sorghum, 
			Lentils, Mustard Seed, Rice, Safflower Seed, Chickpeas, Soybeans, 
			Sunflower Seed, and cotton.  
			Before MAL repayments 
			with a market loan gain or LDP disbursements can be made, producers 
			must meet the requirements of actively engaged in farming, cash rent 
			tenant and member contribution.   
			The 2014 Farm Bill also 
			establishes payment limitations per individual or entity not to 
			exceed $125,000 annually on certain commodities for the following 
			program benefits: price loss coverage payments, agriculture risk 
			coverage payments, marketing loan gains (MLGs) and LDPs.  These 
			payment limitations do not apply to MAL loan disbursements or 
			redemptions using commodity certificate exchange.  
			Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) 
			provisions were modified by the 2014 Farm Bill, which states that a 
			producer whose total applicable three-year average AGI exceeds 
			$900,000 is not eligible to receive an MLG or LDP.  Producers must 
			have a valid CCC-941 on file to earn a market gain of LDP.  The AGI 
			does not apply to MALs redeemed with commodity certificate 
			exchange.  
			For more information and 
			additional eligibility requirements, please visit a nearby USDA 
			Service Center or FSA’s website www.fsa.usda.gov.  
			The Farm Service Agency 
			makes loans to youth to establish and operate agricultural 
			income-producing projects in connection with 4-H clubs, FFA and 
			other agricultural groups.  Projects must be planned and operated 
			with the help of the organization advisor, produce sufficient income 
			to repay the loan and provide the youth with practical business and 
			educational experience.  The maximum loan amount is $5000. 
			Youth Loan Eligibility 
			Requirements: 
				
				Be a 
				citizen of the United States (which includes Puerto Rico, the 
				Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the 
				Northern Mariana Islands) or a legal resident alien
				Be 10 
				years to 20 years of age
				Comply 
				with FSA’s general eligibility requirements
				Be 
				unable to get a loan from other sources
				
				Conduct a modest income-producing project in a supervised 
				program of work as outlined above
				
				Demonstrate capability of planning, managing and operating the 
				project under guidance and assistance from a project advisor. 
				The project supervisor must recommend the youth loan applicant, 
				along with providing adequate supervision. 
			Stop by the county office 
			for help preparing and processing the application forms. 
			
			 
			
			 
			  Illinois Farm Service Agency3500 Wabash Ave.
 Springfield, IL 62711
 Phone: 217-241-6600
 Fax: 855-800-1760
 
 www.fsa.usda.gov/il
 
 Acting State Executive Director:
 Rick Graden
 
 Acting State Committee:
 Jill Appell-Chairperson
 Brenda Hill-Member
 Jerry Jimenez-Member
 Joyce Matthews-Member
 Gordon Stine-Member
 
 Administrative Officer:
 Dan Puccetti
 
 Division Chiefs:
 Doug Bailey
 Jeff Koch
 Randy Tillman
 
 To find contact information for your local office go to 
			www.fsa.usda.gov/il
 USDA is an equal opportunity 
			provider, employer and lender. 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). |