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				 ARC and PLC provide income support to farmers from substantial 
				drops in crop prices or revenues and are vital economic safety 
				nets for most American farms. 
 Although 1,033,310 contracts have been completed to date, this 
				represents less than 59% of the more than 1.7 million contracts 
				anticipated by the Agency. By enrolling soon, producers can beat 
				the rush as the deadline nears.
 
 Producers who do not complete enrollment by close of business 
				local time on Monday, March 15 will not be enrolled in ARC or 
				PLC for the 2021 crop year and will be ineligible to receive a 
				payment should one trigger for an eligible crop.
 
 ARC and PLC contracts can be emailed, faxed or physically signed 
				and mailed back to FSA. Producers with level 2 eauthentication 
				access can electronically sign contracts. Service Center staff 
				can also work with producers to sign and securely transmit 
				contracts electronically through two commercially available 
				tools: Box and OneSpan. You can learn more about these solutions 
				at farmers.gov/mydocs. Producers may also make arrangements to 
				drop off signed contracts at the FSA county office. Please call 
				ahead for local mailing or drop off information and options for 
				submitting signed contracts electronically.
 
              
                
				 
              
                
 Producers are eligible to enroll on farms with base acres for 
				the following commodities: barley, canola, large and small 
				chickpeas, corn, crambe, flaxseed, grain sorghum, lentils, 
				mustard seed, oats, peanuts, dry peas, rapeseed, long grain 
				rice, medium- and short-grain rice, safflower seed, seed cotton, 
				sesame, soybeans, sunflower seed and wheat.
 
 Yield Data and Web-Based Decision Tools Available
 
 FSA recently updated the annual and benchmark yields for ARC/PLC 
				program years 2019, 2020 and 2021. This data is useful to 
				producer in choosing to participate in either ARC or PLC.
 
              
                For added assistance with ARC and PLC decisions, 
				USDA partnered with the University of Illinois and Texas A&M 
				University to offer web-based decision tools to assist producers 
				in making informed, educated decisions using crop data specific 
				to their respective farming operations. 
				 
              
                Tools include:
 Gardner-farmdoc Payment Calculator, the University of 
				Illinois tool that offers farmers the ability to run payment 
				estimate modeling for their farms and counties for ARC-County 
				and PLC.
 
              
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			ARC and PLC Decision Tool, the Texas A&M tool 
			that allow producers to analyze payment yield updates and expected 
			payments for 2019 and 2020. Producers who have used the tool in the 
			past should see their username and much of their farm data will 
			already be available in the system. 
 Crop Insurance Considerations
 
 Producers are reminded that enrolling in ARC or PLC programs can 
			impact eligibility for some crop insurance products. Producers who 
			elect and enroll in PLC also have the option of purchasing 
			Supplemental Coverage Option (SCO) through their Approved Insurance 
			Provider. Producers of covered commodities who elect ARC are 
			ineligible for SCO on their planted acres.
 
 Unlike SCO, RMA’s Enhanced Coverage Option (ECO) is unaffected by 
			participating in ARC for the same crop, on the same acres. You may 
			elect ECO regardless of your farm program election.
 
 Upland cotton farmers who choose to enroll seed cotton base acres in 
			ARC or PLC are ineligible for the stacked income protection plan (STAX) 
			on their planted cotton acres.
 
 More Information
 
 For more information on ARC and PLC including web-based decision 
			tools, visit farmers.gov/arc-plc.
 
 All USDA Service Centers are open for business, including those that 
			restrict in-person visits or require appointments. All Service 
			Center visitors wishing to conduct business with NRCS, Farm Service 
			Agency, or any other Service Center agency should call ahead and 
			schedule an appointment. Service Centers that are open for 
			appointments will pre-screen visitors based on health concerns or 
			recent travel, and visitors must adhere to social distancing 
			guidelines. Visitors are also required to wear a face covering 
			during their appointment. Our program delivery staff will continue 
			to work with our producers by phone, email, and using online tools. 
			More information can be found at farmers.gov/coronavirus .
 
 Visit farmers.gov/service-center-locator to find location and 
			contact information for the nearest FSA county office.
 
			[USDA Farm Service Agency] 
			  
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