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				 ARC 
				and PLC provide financial protections to farmers from 
				substantial drops in crop prices or revenues and are vital 
				economic safety nets for most American farms. Meanwhile, DMC 
				provides producers with price support to help offset milk and 
				feed price differences. 
 The American Relief Act, 2025 extended many Farm Bill-authorized 
				programs for another year, including ARC and PLC as well as DMC.
 
 ARC and PLC
 
 Producers can elect coverage and enroll in ARC-County (ARC-CO) 
				or PLC, which provide crop-by-crop protection, or ARC-Individual 
				(ARC-IC), which protects the entire farm. Although election 
				changes for 2025 are optional, producers must enroll through a 
				signed contract each year. Also, if a producer has a multi-year 
				contract on the farm it will continue for 2025 unless an 
				election change is made.
 
 If producers do not submit their election revision by the April 
				15 deadline, their election remains the same as their 2024 
				election for commodities on the farm from the prior year. Farm 
				owners cannot enroll in either program unless they have a share 
				interest in the cropland.
 
 Covered commodities include barley, canola, large and small 
				chickpeas, corn, crambe, flaxseed, grain sorghum, lentils, 
				mustard seed, oats, peanuts, dry peas, rapeseed, long grain 
				rice, medium grain rice, safflower seed, seed cotton, sesame, 
				soybeans, sunflower seed and wheat.
 
 USDA also reminds producers that ARC and PLC elections and 
				enrollments can impact eligibility for some crop insurance 
				products including Supplemental Coverage Option, Enhanced 
				Coverage Option and, for cotton producers, the Stacked Income 
				Protection Plan (commonly referred to as STAX). For more 
				information on ARC and PLC, producers can visit the ARC and PLC 
				webpage or contact their local USDA Service Center.
 
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			DMC
 DMC is a voluntary risk management program that offers protection to 
			dairy producers when the difference between the all-milk price and 
			the average feed price (the margin) falls below a certain dollar 
			amount selected by the producer.
 
 DMC offers different levels of coverage, even an option that is free 
			to producers, minus a $100 administrative fee. The administrative 
			fee is waived for dairy producers who are considered limited 
			resource, beginning, socially disadvantaged or a military veteran.
 
 DMC payments are calculated using updated feed and premium hay 
			costs, making the program more reflective of actual dairy producer 
			expenses. These updated feed calculations use 100% premium alfalfa 
			hay. For more information on DMC, visit the DMC webpage.
 
			[U.S. Dept. of Agriculture] 
			
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