USDA
to Immediately Assist Producers for Qualifying Livestock, Honeybee
and Farm-raised Fish Program Losses
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[April 23, 2018]
USDA will issue $34 million to help
agricultural producers recover from 2017 natural disasters through
the Emergency Assistance for Livestock, Honeybees and Farm-raised
Fish Program (ELAP), which covers losses not covered by certain
other USDA disaster assistance programs. These payments are
being made available, and they are part of a broader USDA effort to
help producers recover from hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria,
wildfires and drought. A large portion of this assistance will be
made available in federally designated disaster areas.
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ELAP aims to help eligible producers of livestock, honeybees and
farm-raised fish for losses due to disease, certain adverse
weather events or loss conditions, including blizzards and
wildfires, as determined by the Secretary. ELAP assistance is
provided for losses not covered by other disaster assistance
programs such as the Livestock Forage Disaster Program (LFP) and
the Livestock Indemnity Program (LIP).
The increased amount of assistance through ELAP was made
possible by the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018, signed earlier
this year. The Act amended the 2014 Farm Bill to enable USDA’s
Farm Service Agency (FSA) to provide assistance to producers
without an annual funding cap and immediately for 2017. It also
enables FSA to pay ELAP applications as they are filed for 2018
and subsequent program years.
Other USDA Disaster Assistance Programs
The Act removed program year payment limitations and increased
the acreage cap for the Tree Assistance Program (TAP), a
nationwide program that provides owners of orchards, vineyards
and nurseries with cost share assistance to replant eligible
trees, bushes, and vines following a natural disaster. For
example, the program will help owners of citrus groves in
Florida, avocado trees in California, coffee plantations in
Puerto Rico and vineyards reduce the cost of replanting, and
speed recovery from the loss of fruit and nut trees, bushes, and
vines.
Prior to the Act, there was a combined program year payment
limitation of $125,000 for ELAP, LIP and LFP per person or legal
entity. The Tree Assistance Program (TAP) had its own $125,000
payment limitation. The Act removed the program year per person
and legal entity payment limitation for LIP and TAP. As a result
of the Act, a $125,000 per person and legal entity single
payment limitation applies to the total amount of program year
payments received under both ELAP and the Livestock Forage
Disaster Program (LFP) and program payments under LIP and TAP no
longer have payment limits.
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Under the updated program, as amended by the Act,
growers are eligible to be partly reimbursed for losses on up to
1,000 acres per program year, double the previous acreage limit of
500 acres.
In total, it is estimated that the Act will enable
USDA to provide more than $3 billion in disaster assistance,
including the $2.36 billion announced last week to be made available
through FSA’s new 2017 Wildfires and Hurricanes Indemnity Program.
This includes $400 million made available for the Emergency
Conservation Program, which helps farmers and ranchers repair damage
to farmlands caused by natural disasters. As signups across the
country are completed, additional applications will be funded.
According to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA), the United States was impacted by 16 separate
billion-dollar disaster events in 2017 including: three tropical
cyclones, eight severe storms, two inland floods, a crop freeze,
drought and wildfire. More than 25 million people – almost eight
percent of the population – were affected by major disasters. From
severe flooding in Puerto Rico and Texas to mudslides and wildfires
in California, major natural disasters caused catastrophic damages,
with an economic impact totaling more than $300 billion.
For Assistance
Producers with operations impacted by natural disasters and diseases
in 2018 are encouraged to contact their local USDA service center to
apply for assistance through ELAP, TAP, LIP and LFP. Producers with
2017 ELAP claims need to take no action as FSA will begin paying
those claims today.
[USDA Farm Service Agency]
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