The USDA is issuing approximately $8 billion in payments under
the ARC and PLC programs for the 2016 crop year, and $1.6
billion under CRP for 2017.
The ARC and PLC programs were authorized by the 2014 Farm Bill
and offer a safety net to agricultural producers when there is a
substantial drop in revenue or prices for covered commodities.
Over half a million producers will receive ARC payments and over
a quarter million producers will receive PLC payments for 2016
crops, starting the first week of October and continuing over
the next several months.
Payments are being made to producers who enrolled base acres of
barley, corn, grain sorghum, lentils, oats, peanuts, dry peas,
soybeans, wheat and canola. In the upcoming months, payments
will be announced after marketing year average prices are
published by USDA's National Agricultural Statistics Service for
the remaining covered commodities. Those include long and medium
grain rice (except for temperate Japonica rice), which will be
announced in November; remaining oilseeds and chickpeas, which
will be announced in December; and temperate Japonica rice,
which will be announced in early February 2017. The estimated
payments are before application of sequestration and other
reductions and limits, including adjusted gross income limits
and payment limitations.
Also, as part of an ongoing effort to protect sensitive lands
and improve water quality and wildlife habitat, USDA will begin
issuing 2017 CRP payments in October to over 375,000 Americans.
[to top of second column] |
Signed into law by President Reagan in 1985, CRP is
one of the largest private-lands conservation program in the United
States. Thanks to voluntary participation by farmers and landowners,
CRP has improved water quality, reduced soil erosion and increased
habitat for endangered and threatened species. In return for
enrolling in CRP, USDA, through the Farm Service Agency (FSA) on
behalf of the Commodity Credit Corporation, provides participants
with rental payments and cost-share assistance. Participants enter
into contracts that last between 10 and 15 years. CRP payments are
made to participants who remove sensitive lands from production and
plant certain grasses, shrubs and trees that improve water quality,
prevent soil erosion and increase wildlife habitat.
For more details regarding ARC and PLC programs, go to
www.fsa.usda.gov/arc-plc.
For more information about CRP, contact your local FSA office or
visit www.fsa.usda.gov/crp.
[USDA Farm Service Agency] |