Disaster Assistance Available for Illinois Farmers and Livestock
Producers Impacted by Recent Winter Storms
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[March 01, 2021]
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)
provides technical and financial assistance to help State farmers
and livestock producers recover from damages brought on by winter
storms Uri and Viola. Agricultural producers are encouraged to
contact their local USDA Service Center to learn about the programs
available to help them recover from crop, land, infrastructure, and
livestock losses.
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Disaster Assistance
USDA encourages farmers and ranchers to contact the FSA county
office at the local USDA Service Center to apply for eligible
programs and to learn which documents, such as farm records,
herd inventory, receipts and pictures of damages or losses
should be provided to help expedite assistance.
Producers who experience livestock deaths due to the winter
storms may be eligible for the Livestock Indemnity Program.
Meanwhile, the Emergency Assistance for Livestock, Honeybees,
and Farm-Raised Fish Program provides eligible producers with
compensation for feed and grazing losses. For LIP and ELAP,
producers will need to file a notice of loss for livestock and
grazing or feed losses within 30 days and honeybee losses within
15 days.
Additionally, eligible orchardists and nursery tree growers may
be eligible for cost-share assistance through the Tree
Assistance Program (TAP) to replant or rehabilitate eligible
trees, bushes or vines lost during the winter storms. This
complements Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program (NAP) or
crop insurance coverage, which covers the crop but not the
plants or trees in all cases. For TAP, a program application
must be filed within 90 days.
FSA also offers a variety of direct and guaranteed loans,
including operating and emergency loans, to producers unable to
secure commercial financing. Producers in counties with a
primary or contiguous disaster designation may be eligible for
low-interest emergency loans to help them recover from
production and physical losses. Loans can help producers replace
essential property, purchase inputs like livestock, equipment,
feed and seed, cover family living expenses or refinance
farm-related debts and other needs.
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Risk Management
Producers who have risk protection through Federal Crop Insurance or
FSA’s NAP should report crop damage to their crop insurance agent or
FSA office. If they have crop insurance, producers should report
crop damage to their agent within 72 hours of damage discovery and
follow up in writing within 15 days. For NAP covered crops, a Notice
of Loss (CCC-576) must be filed within 15 days of the loss becoming
apparent, except for hand-harvested crops, which should be reported
within 72 hours.
More Information
On farmers.gov, the Disaster Assistance Discovery Tool,
Disaster-at-a-Glance fact sheet, and Farm Loan Discovery Tool can
help producers and landowners determine program or loan options. For
assistance with a crop insurance claim, producers and landowners
should contact their crop insurance agent. For FSA and NRCS
programs, they should contact their local USDA Service Center.
[USDA Farm Service Agency] |