Regulatory Streamlining of the Farm Service Agency's Direct Farm Loan Programs, 63242-63361 [07-5374]
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 216 / Thursday, November 8, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Farm Service Agency
7 CFR Parts 718, 761, 762, 763, 764,
765, 766, 767, 768, and 769
Commodity Credit Corporation
7 CFR Part 1405
RIN 0560–AF60
Regulatory Streamlining of the Farm
Service Agency’s Direct Farm Loan
Programs
Farm Service Agency, USDA.
Final rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: This rule streamlines the
Farm Service Agency’s (FSA)
regulations governing its direct Farm
Loan Programs. The final rule simplifies
and clarifies FSA’s direct loan
regulations; implements the
recommendations of the USDA Civil
Rights Action Team; meets the
objectives of the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995; and separates FSA’s direct
Farm Loan Programs regulations from
the Rural Development mission area’s
loan program regulations.
DATES: Effective Date: December 31,
2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
William D. Cobb; USDA/FSA/DAFLP/
STOP 0520, 1400 Independence
Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20250–
0520; telephone (202) 720–1059;
electronic mail: bill.cobb@wdc.usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Discussion of the Final Rule
On February 9, 2004, the agency
published a proposed rule (69 FR 6056–
6121) to streamline regulations
governing its direct Farm Loan Programs
(FLP). The comment period closed on
April 9, 2004. The agency received
several comments requesting the
comment period to be reopened. The
agency reopened the comment period
until May 4, 2004 (69 FR 20834). In
response to the proposed rule the
agency received 1,583 comments from
593 individuals and organizations,
including 181 banks or banking
organizations, 168 individuals, 81 FSA
employees, 71 Farm Credit
Administration offices or employees, 42
agricultural organizations, 18 state
agencies or officials, 13 Farm Bureaus,
five State representatives, three Federal
agencies, two FSA County Committee
members, one tribal association, one
university and one loan packager. In
addition, six comment letters signed by
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multiple Members of the United States
Congress were received.
Seven comments addressed the
agency’s decision to move the
administrative provisions of program
delivery from the Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR) to a series of agency
handbooks. Three comments opposed
the agency’s decision while four
comments supported it. In accordance
with the Administrative Procedures Act,
both the proposed and the final rules
provide the substantive requirements
applicable to the public requesting
assistance or benefits from FSA, not
internal agency procedures and
processes. The agency will issue its
internal guidance in handbooks
simultaneously with the final rule, since
internal guidance only describes the
operating procedures of the agency and
does not impact services provided to
applicants and borrowers. Further, the
agency is working on making all its
handbooks available on the internet so
that any interested party may view,
download, and print agency handbooks
as appropriate. Therefore, these
comments were not adopted.
Four comments were received
requesting the agency reopen the
comment period. As noted above, the
agency reopened and extended the
comment period from April 9, 2004, to
May 4, 2004, and published a Federal
Register notice to that effect on April
19, 2004.
Eleven comments provided general
comments not related to any specific
part, section, or policy of the proposed
rule. Therefore, the agency did not take
any action regarding these comments.
The following provides a summary of
the comments received and the agency’s
response by CFR part.
Part 761—General Program
Administration
The following discussion addresses
the comments received on Part 761.
Section 761.2 Abbreviations and
Definitions
Three comments were received on the
‘‘active borrower’’ and ‘‘borrower’’
definitions. Two comments stated the
definitions as written are very similar,
and therefore, the definition of ‘‘active
borrower’’ should be removed from the
CFR. The other comment stated the term
‘‘active borrower’’ is not used in the
proposed rule. The agency agrees with
the comments and has removed the
definition.
One comment was received on the
‘‘agreement for the use of proceeds’’
definition. The comment stated the
agreement for the use of proceeds has
not benefited borrowers or the agency
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since its inception. Further, the
comment stated if the comment is not
adopted, the agency should initiate a
study on how the agreement for the use
of proceeds has benefited the agency’s
borrowers. Section 335(f) of the
Consolidated Farm and Rural
Development Act (Act) (7 U.S.C.
1985(f)) requires the agency to release
normal income security proceeds to
borrowers for essential family living and
farm operating expenses until the loan
is accelerated. Further, Section 335(f)(6)
of the Act provides if a borrower is
required to plan or report how proceeds
from the sale of security will be used,
the agency must notify the borrower of
(a) the reporting requirement; (b) the
right to release proceeds; and (c) how to
request such funds. The agency
implemented the Act’s requirement
with the agreement for the use of
proceeds that provides a means for
reaching a consensus with a borrower
regarding the use of proceeds from the
sale of security property when the farm
operating plan is developed. In
addition, the agency delegates the
authority to release proceeds to
borrowers according to an established
agreement for the use of proceeds to
agency officials who do not have loan
approval authority. Further, the agency
utilizes the agreement for the use of
proceeds to account for the agency’s
security. Moreover, the agency
continuously evaluates forms utilized in
administering its programs for
effectiveness. Therefore, based on this
comment as well as the comments
received on § 765.302, the agency may
conduct further analysis to determine if
changes are warranted. Lastly, the
agency did not propose to make changes
to the agreement for the use of proceeds;
therefore, the agency will not take any
action on this comment at this time.
One comment stated the term
‘‘agribusiness’’ is not defined in the
proposed rule. The agency does not use
the term in the CFR; therefore, it does
not need to include a definition for
‘‘agribusiness.’’
Two comments were received on the
‘‘agricultural commodity’’ definition.
One comment stated the agency must
define ‘‘agriculture’’ in general to clarify
and distinguish that agriculture does not
solely consist of commodities and largescale operations. The definition as
written, the comment stated, will make
many Indian farm operators ineligible
for loans. The other comment stated that
the narrow definition of ‘‘agricultural
commodity’’ adversely impacts the
definition of ‘‘basic part of the
applicant’s total farming operation’’ and
urged that the definition of ‘‘agricultural
commodity’’ be broadened to include a
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specific list of agricultural products.
The agency believes the definition is
reasonably broad and provides the
agency discretion in determining what
constitutes an agricultural commodity.
The agency does not use this term in the
regulations to suggest that agriculture
consists only of commodities and largescale operations. Furthermore, the
definitions of both ‘‘agricultural
commodity’’ and ‘‘basic part of an
applicant’s total farming operation’’
included in the proposed rule are
identical to existing definitions
established in the agency’s emergency
loan regulations by a final rule (67 FR
791–801) published on January 8, 2002,
after considering public comments.
Based on reviews of assistance provided
since the implementation of that final
rule, the agency believes both
definitions have resulted in the
achievement of the program’s mission
and the agency is not aware of any
adverse impact on the public. Therefore,
neither comment is adopted.
Two comments were received on the
‘‘applicant’’ definition. One comment
stated the definition is not clear if
husband and wife applicants are
considered as a joint operation. Further,
the comment objected to husband and
wife applicants being considered joint
operations. The agency has not revised
the definition based on this comment,
but, the agency has revised the
applicant eligibility requirements under
§ 764.51, as discussed under that section
heading. The other comment stated the
agency should eliminate the definition
and use ‘‘lender applicant’’ in the
guaranteed loan program. The agency
clarified the definition of ‘‘applicant’’ to
be applicable to both direct and
guaranteed loan programs. The agency
believes using the terms ‘‘lender
applicant’’ and ‘‘lender’’ in the
guaranteed loan program, however,
would be confusing, therefore, the
comment is not adopted. Further, to
avoid confusion, the agency removed
the definition ‘‘loan applicant’’ in the
final rule. Therefore, the comment is not
adopted.
One comment was received on the
‘‘approval official’’ definition. The
comment stated the definition as written
is confusing, because it contains the
term ‘‘field official’’ which is not
defined. The agency agrees with the
comment, and removed the definition
and replaced the term in the text with
the word ‘‘Agency.’’
One comment was received on the
‘‘aquaculture’’ definition. The comment
stated the agency should work with
Tribes in the Northwestern,
Northeastern and Midwestern United
States to ensure the definition covers
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aquaculture on Tribal reservations. The
agency believes the definition as written
is broad enough to cover aquaculture
operations in every part of the country.
Further, the agency evaluates each
operation on its merits. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
Three comments were received on the
‘‘average farm customer’’ definition.
Two comments supported the definition
as written. One comment stated the
definition as proposed eliminates Indian
producers with niche markets who farm
traditionally and practice sustainable
agriculture. The agency does not foresee
that Indian producers will be impacted
by the definition since producers
eligible to receive guaranteed loans will
remain eligible. Therefore, the comment
is not adopted.
One comment was received on the
‘‘basic part of an applicant’s total
farming operation’’ definition. The
comment stated the definition as written
is narrowly based on the definition of
‘‘agricultural commodity’’ without a
definition of agriculture. Section 329 of
the Act (7 U.S.C. 1970), in part, provides
the agency may make emergency loans
to applicants based on production losses
if the applicant shows that a single
enterprise that is a ‘‘basic part of the
applicant’s farming, ranching, or
aquaculture operation’’ has suffered at
least a 30 percent loss of normal per
acre or per animal production. The
definition clarifies the agency’s
implementation of the Act’s provisions
and as discussed in the agency’s
response to comments on the definition
of ‘‘agricultural commodity,’’ the agency
does not believe either definition as
written, has an adverse impact on an
applicant’s eligibility. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
Five comments were received on the
‘‘beginning farmer’’ definition. Three
comments stated that the definition
precludes applicants with less than 3
years of experience from meeting the
conditions of the beginning farmer
definition. Further, the comments stated
an applicant with less than 3 years of
experience is eligible for a direct farm
ownership loan, but is not eligible for a
beginning farmer downpayment farm
ownership loan. The agency agrees with
the comments and has revised the
definition accordingly. One comment
stated the agency should revise the
definition to remove the word ‘‘direct’’
in describing ‘‘OL applicant’’ from
subparagraph (5). The subparagraph is
not applicable to direct or guaranteed
operating loans (OL) under the statutory
definition, therefore, the agency agrees
and has revised the definition
accordingly. Further, the comment
stated the agency should use the median
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acreage, as provided in Section
343(a)(11)(F) (7 U.S.C. 1991(a)(11)(F)) of
the Act, to determine if an applicant is
a beginning farmer. Section
343(a)(11)(F) of the Act was enacted
under the provisions of the Agricultural
Credit Improvement Act of 1992. As
addressed in the preamble of the
agency’s 1993 final rule (58 FR 48275)
published on September 15, 1993,
implementing the regulatory definition
of ‘‘beginning farmer,’’ while the statute
referred to ‘‘the median acreage of farm
* * * as reported in the most recent
census of agriculture,’’ the agency
utilized the term ‘‘average acreage’’ in
its regulations as the census of
agriculture did not capture ‘‘median
acreage’’ at that time. The National
Agricultural Statistics Service now
publishes both the median and average
farm size by county. Analysis of the data
reveals that the median acreage is
typically lower than the average acreage.
Adoption of the comment may result in
some applicants, who meet the existing
requirements of the definition, not being
considered a ‘‘beginning farmer.’’
However, the comment is correct in that
both the existing and proposed
regulations do not match the statute.
Therefore, the comment is adopted and
the definition has been revised
accordingly.
One comment stated the agency
should remove the requirement that all
members of an entity must materially
and substantially participate in the
operation. Section 343(a)(11) (7 U.S.C.
1991(a(11)) of the Act defines the term
‘‘qualified beginning farmer or rancher’’
and provides that for loans made to
entities, the entity members must
materially and substantially participate
in the operation of the farm. The
definition was based on the Act’s
provision, therefore, the comment
cannot be adopted.
Three comments were received on the
‘‘borrower’’ definition. One comment
stated the definition does not seem to be
applicable to the guaranteed loan
program. The agency agrees with the
comment and has revised the definition
accordingly. Another comment stated
the agency should revise the definition
to exclude cosigners since cosigners
merely sign the promissory note to
assure repayment of the loan and are not
program borrowers as defined in the
agency’s regulations. The agency does
not agree with the comment because a
cosigner has the same liability for the
debt as any other borrower who signed
the promissory note. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted. The last
comment stated the agency should
clarify the definition to provide if the
borrower’s name should match the
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operator’s name utilized by Farm
Programs in their internal agency
systems. The agency believes the
definition as written is clear; signature
requirements are a separate issue.
Further, as stated in § 761.2, the
definitions included in this part are
applicable to FLP only. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
One comment was received on the
‘‘cash flow budget’’ definition. The
comment stated that commercial lenders
have adopted the practice of not
including advances or principal
repayments on lines of credit in the cash
flow, since they are considered cash
flow neutral. The comment stated the
agency should revise the definition to
match commercial lenders’ standards.
The agency agrees with the comment
and has revised the definition
accordingly.
One comment was received on the
‘‘chattel security’’ definition. The
comment stated the agency should
clarify the definition to state that chattel
is non-real estate property. The agency
obtains a security interest using
mortgages, deeds of trust, financing
statements and security agreements. The
agency believes the comment is
proposing to delineate between chattels
and real estate which cannot be done
uniformly in all cases, especially for
loans for which security is growing
crops and fixtures. Further, the agency
believes the definition as written is
reasonably clear. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
One comment stated the term
‘‘commercial classified account’’ is not
used in the rule, while the terms
‘‘immediate family’’ and ‘‘immediate
family member’’ even though they are
used, are not defined. The agency agrees
and, in the final rule, the agency has
removed the term ‘‘commercial
classified account’’ and replaced the
terms ‘‘immediate family’’ and
‘‘immediate family member’’ with the
defined ‘‘family member’’ term.
Two comments were received on the
‘‘conservation contract review team’’
definition. Both comments stated the
agency should remove the adjacent
public landowners from the definition.
The comments did not provide any
reason for removing public landowners
from the conservation contract review
team. The agency has utilized the
definition, as published in the proposed
rule, since September 14, 1988, and has
not encountered any difficulties or
concerns. Further, the agency believes
public landowners may have concerns
or relevant information regarding the
potential easement that may affect the
agency’s decision. Therefore, the
comments are not adopted.
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One comment was received on the
‘‘cosigner’’ definition. The comment
stated the agency should revise the
definition to state that cosigners are not
eligible to receive loan servicing. The
agency agrees that cosigners do not have
independent rights to receive loan
servicing, but may submit a joint
application for servicing with all other
liable parties. Therefore, the definition
is revised accordingly.
One comment was received on the
‘‘current market value buyout’’
definition. The comment stated the
agency should revise the definition to
remove liquidation costs as the
definition conflicts with the explanation
of current market value buyout included
in Appendix B of 7 CFR part 766. The
agency agrees with the comment and
has revised the definition as the
provisions of Appendix B are identical
to existing regulations published in
subpart S of 7 CFR part 1951.
Furthermore, the Agency did not
address a revision to the existing
regulations in the preamble of the
proposed rule.
One comment was received on the
‘‘debt forgiveness’’ definition. The
comment stated the agency should
include in the definition the Act’s
provision, found in Section
343(a)(12)(B)(ii), which provides that
‘‘any write-down provided as part of a
resolution of a discrimination complaint
against the Secretary’’ is not considered
debt forgiveness. The agency agrees
with the comment and has revised the
definition. The agency also has clarified
the definition to state that the term does
not include prior debt forgiveness that
is repaid in full and debt reduction in
exchange for a conservation contract.
One comment was received on the
‘‘debt service margin’’ definition. The
comment stated the proposed
calculation would take a borrower off of
limited resource rates if the borrower
has atypical or one-time high
inventories or cash. Therefore, the
comment stated the agency should use
the term debt and capital lease coverage
ratio, which is the industry standard to
calculate the debt service margin. The
agency uses a typical plan to calculate
the debt service margin and does not
consider atypical high inventories or
cash when running the Debt and Loan
Restructuring System (DALR$) for
primary loan servicing. Further, the
definition of ‘‘feasible plan’’ provides
that the farm operating plan will not be
based on atypical or one-time high
inventories, or cash on hand. Therefore,
the comment is not adopted.
Six comments were received on the
‘‘delinquent borrower’’ definition. All
comments stated the definition
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contained in the proposed rule did not
match the definition in the agency’s
final rule published on February 4, 2004
(69 FR 5264–5267). The agency agrees
with the comments, and has revised the
definition accordingly.
Three comments were received on the
‘‘entity’’ definition. One comment stated
that the term ‘‘trust,’’ as used in the
definition, must be more clearly defined
‘‘so that it includes trusts established in
treaties’’ making tribal farms eligible for
assistance. Two comments stated that it
was not clear in the proposed rule how
less than traditional entity structures
would be handled. Act section 302(a) (7
U.S.C. 1922(a)) for farm ownership
loans, section 311(a) (7 U.S.C. 1941(a))
for operating loans, and section 321(a)
(7 U.S.C. 1961(a)) for emergency loans
specifically provide the types of entities
eligible to receive loans; entity
applicants must fit within at least one
of the types listed. The agency does not
believe the definition, as written, limits
the type of trust, or other organization
listed, that are considered an entity
under the Act’s provisions. However,
entity applicants must meet the
statutory eligibility requirement of being
the owner-operator or tenant-operator of
a family farm, as well as all other
applicable eligibility and loan making
requirements. The agency believes the
definition, as written, will not result in
the adverse impacts suggested in the
comments; therefore, the comments are
not adopted.
Two comments were received on the
‘‘essential family household expenses’’
definition. One comment stated that the
definition, along with the definition of
‘‘essential family living and farm
operating expenses,’’ makes the rule
unclear. The agency believes the
‘‘essential family household expenses’’
and the ‘‘essential family living and
farm operating expenses’’ definitions are
similar, and has therefore, removed the
definition of ‘‘essential family
household expenses’’ in the final rule as
unnecessary and replaced the term
throughout the CFR. The other comment
stated the agency should revise the text
‘‘the borrower and the immediate family
of the borrower’’ to read ‘‘the borrower,
spouse, and immediate family
members’’ since the agency defined the
term ‘‘family member.’’ Since the
agency removed the definition of
‘‘essential family household expenses,’’
the agency revised the definition of
‘‘family living expenses’’ to include
expenses for the borrower’s spouse and
immediate family members.
Two comments were received on the
‘‘essential family living and farm
operating expenses’’ definition. One
comment stated that the agency should
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revise the definition to provide that the
agency will consider the expenses
typical for the local community, instead
of expenses typical for that type of
operation in the area. Further, the
comment stated the agency should
remove the provision that the agency
will consider what constitutes an
efficient method of production for the
borrower’s resources because it is
ambiguous. The agency believes using
the term ‘‘local community’’ will make
the definition unclear when applied to
a rural area. Further, the agency believes
the provision, as written, furthers the
agency’s mission of providing
supervised credit and allowing the
agency and the applicant to adjust to the
needs of the operation. Therefore, this
part of the comment is not adopted. The
comment also stated the agency should
include in the definition nursing care of
immediate family members not living in
the same household. The agency has
revised the definition of ‘‘family living
expenses’’ to include the costs of
providing for the needs of family
members and those for whom the
borrower has a financial obligation,
such as alimony, child support, or
nursing care of an elderly parent. The
agency agrees that nursing care of
immediate family members is a family
living expense, but the agency believes
it is not always an essential family
living expense. Therefore, this part of
the comment is not adopted. Lastly, the
comment stated the agency should
remove the reference to church
expenses from the definition and
replace it with religious expenses. The
other comment stated the agency should
revise the definition to remove the
reference to ‘‘church.’’ The agency
agrees with the comments and has
revised the definition accordingly.
Eight comments were received on the
‘‘established farmer’’ definition. Two
comments stated the agency should
remove the subparagraph describing
entity eligibility from the definition
because it limits the use of different
legal structures for families attempting
to transfer the farm to a new generation.
The term ‘‘established farmer’’ is used
only in subpart H of 7 CFR part 764
which addresses requirements specific
to emergency loans in accordance with
section 321 of the Act (7 U.S.C. 1961).
The authorized uses for emergency loan
funds include the repair or replacement
of essential property damaged or
destroyed as a result of a disaster;
however, emergency loan funds would
not be used to finance the transfer of a
farm to a new generation. The agency
does not agree that the provision of the
definition adversely impacts inter-
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generational transfers and therefore, the
comments are not adopted.
Similar concerns regarding the impact
of entity eligibility requirements were
received in response to regulations at
§ 764.101. As described in the agency’s
response to those comments, the agency
revised the entity eligibility
requirements contained in that section,
and as a result made conforming
changes to the definition of ‘‘established
farmer’’ by revising the provision that
an established farmer is not ‘‘an entity
with an ownership interest of 50 percent
or more held by one or more entities’’
to require that an entity cannot be ‘‘an
entity whose members are themselves
entities.’’
One comment stated that the
‘‘established farmer’’ definition should
be revised to recognize that Tribal farms
have sovereign rights that allow for
complex land issues, which often
require the use of a full time farm
manager. As discussed in the response
to comments for the definition of entity,
the agency does not believe the
regulations, as written, impose any
additional limitations on a particular
type of entity. However, agency
assistance is only available to entity
operations that are family farms and,
therefore, must have a majority of the
day-to-day operational and strategic
management decisions made by the
members operating the farm, as well as
meet all other requirements established
within the definition of family farm.
Therefore, this portion of the comment
is not adopted. Further, the comment
stated that the ‘‘established farmer’’
definition requirement that 50 percent
or more of the ownership in the entity
cannot be held by another entity will
exclude Tribal farms. As discussed in
the response to comments received on
the general eligibility requirements for
loan making (§ 764.101), the agency has
revised the eligibility requirements
regarding entities to provide that an
entity applicant cannot be composed of
members that are themselves entities.
Therefore, appropriate conforming
changes have been made in the CFR,
and this portion of the comment is not
adopted.
Two comments stated the requirement
in the ‘‘established farmer’’ definition
that the entity is primarily engaged in
farming and has over 50 percent of its
gross income from all sources from
farming, is detrimental to small or
beginning farmers who rely on non-farm
income to meet operating and family
living expenses. This requirement is
supported by the ‘‘family farm’’
requirement that the farm produce
‘‘agricultural commodities for sale in
sufficient quantities to be recognized as
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63245
a farm rather than a rural residence.’’
Furthermore, the 50 percent gross
income requirement is included in
existing regulations published in 7 CFR
764.2 and the agency is not aware of any
adverse impacts on the public;
therefore, the comments are not
adopted. One comment stated it is not
clear what the term ‘‘such loans’’ refers
to in subparagraph (5)(ii) of the
definition. The agency agrees with the
comment and has revised the definition
to refer to ‘‘Agency loans.’’ Two
comments suggested that the word
‘‘employees’’ in the last sentence of the
definition be replaced with the word
‘‘employs.’’ The agency agrees with the
comments and has revised the
definition accordingly.
Two comments were received on the
‘‘false information’’ definition. One
comment stated the agency should
revise the definition to include
information the applicant or borrower
should have known to be false, because
it is difficult for the agency to prove the
information the applicant or borrower
submitted to the agency was false.
While the agency agrees with the
comment, the agency believes it is even
more difficult to prove the applicant or
borrower should have known
information submitted to the agency
was false. Therefore, the comment is not
adopted. The other comment stated the
agency should revise the definition to
include information the applicant or
borrower chose to withhold from the
agency. The term is used only in subpart
F of 7 CFR part 766 for the submission
of false information. Since the proposal
concerns information not submitted to
the agency, and therefore not relied on,
the comment is not adopted. Practically,
however, in such cases the information
submitted to the agency may be false in
light of conflicting information not
submitted and would, therefore, be
covered by the definition.
Five hundred sixty-four comments
were received on the ‘‘family farm’’
definition. Of the comments received,
12 supported the definition as proposed
while 552 comments opposed it. The
proposed definition would establish
that the typical year gross income of the
operation could not exceed the greater
of $750,000 in annual sales, or the 95th
percentile of the statistical distribution
of the income of farms in the state with
gross sales in excess of $10,000, based
on the farm data and survey of farm
economic factors published by the
National Agricultural Statistics Service.
The opposing comments stated the
proposed definition would make a large
number of family farms ineligible for
direct and guaranteed agency loans. One
hundred seventy comments
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recommended the gross income limit be
increased from $750,000 to $1,000,000,
$1,500,000, or $2,500,000. Seventy-four
comments opposed the use of any gross
income limit. Fifty-two comments stated
that the use of annual sales to determine
eligibility was arbitrary. Thirty-one
comments stated the proposed
definition would exclude high value
crop producing farms. Seventy
comments stated the agency provided
little justification in the proposed rule
for using a gross farm income cap.
Fourteen comments stated the agency
does not have a statutory basis for
changing the family farm definition.
Thirteen comments opposed using a
gross income limit that was not indexed
to inflation. Therefore, because of the
overwhelming opposition to the
proposed requirement, the agency will
not include a gross annual income in its
family farm definition. However, as
noted in the discussion of the proposed
rule published on February 9, 2004, the
broad guidelines contained within the
existing definition have resulted in
inconsistencies in applying the
definition on a nationwide basis. The
agency believes that the ‘‘family farm’’
definition in this final rule will
minimize inconsistencies regarding
management and labor requirements.
Based upon comments received, the
Office of Management and Budget
recommends the agency seek public
input as part of a further analysis
regarding the inclusion of an
appropriate nation-wide income
limitation, which may necessitate future
action. It is important to note that the
definition of a ‘‘family farm’’ as stated
in this final rule only applies to farm
loan program eligibility requirements.
Further, the proposed ‘‘family farm’’
definition included the provision that
the majority of the day-to-day
operational and management decisions
are made by the applicant and persons
related to the applicant by blood or
marriage. One hundred sixteen
comments were received on the ‘‘related
by blood or marriage’’ definition. All
comments stated the definition as
written excludes certain relationships,
including, but not limited to, cousins,
uncles, aunts, and grandparents and that
as a result, partnerships or entities
comprised of these individuals would
not be considered a family farm. The
agency agrees with the comments and
revised the definition to include the
relationships except cousins. In
addition, in response to the concerns
expressed, the agency revised the
definition of ‘‘relative’’ to include
cousin in the covered relationships.
Furthermore, the agency revised the
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‘‘family farm’’ definition to provide that
the day-to-day operational and
management decisions be made by the
applicant and persons related to the
applicant by blood or marriage or a
relative of the applicant.
One comment expressed concern
regarding the provision in the ‘‘family
farm’’ definition that the farm ‘‘in a
typical year generates net cash income
that improves the family’s standard of
living’’ as the term ‘‘typical year’’ is not
defined in the rule. The agency agrees
that the provision is subject to different
interpretations and could adversely
impact applicants that have been subject
to recent disasters. Therefore, the
agency removed the provision from the
definition.
One comment was received on the
‘‘family living expenses’’ definition. The
comment stated the agency should
remove the definition because the CFR
already includes the ‘‘essential family
living and farm operating expenses’’
definition. The agency believes the
terms are not synonymous as all family
living expenses are not considered
essential. Further, the terms are utilized
under different circumstances in the
loan making and servicing process when
the distinction is necessary. Therefore,
the comment is not adopted.
One comment was received on the
‘‘family member’’ definition. The
comment stated the agency should
revise the definition to provide family
members include the immediate
members of the family for whom the
borrower has a financial obligation, e.g.,
child support payments, alimony,
nursing care for an elderly parent. The
agency revised the definition of ‘‘family
living expenses’’ to include the
expenses provided in the comment, for
family members who are the borrower’s
responsibility, as revising that definition
is more appropriate.
One comment was received on the
‘‘farmer’’ definition. The comment
stated the agency should revise the
definition to provide that farmer is an
individual or entity who is a family
farmer. The agency believes the
definition as written is adequate as not
every farmer in the United States is a
family farmer. Therefore, the comment
is not adopted.
Two comments were received on the
‘‘feasible plan’’ definition. One
comment stated the agency should
revise the definition to state ‘‘feasible
plan is when the cash flow budget
shows total income equals or exceeds
total cash outflow.’’ The agency does
not agree with the comment to limit the
evaluation of feasibility to include only
‘‘total income’’ as there may be other
non-income sources of cash inflows,
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such as cash on hand, that impact the
borrower’s repayment ability. Therefore,
the comment is not adopted. The other
comment stated the agency should
clarify the definition to provide that the
margin after debt service and ending
cash, depending on the loan requested,
determine if the operation projects a
feasible plan. The agency agrees that the
feasibility for an annual operating loan
should be evaluated differently than for
a term loan. However, ‘‘margin after
debt service’’ and ‘‘ending cash’’ are
terms that apply to the Farm Business
Plan, a software application utilized by
the agency to determine feasibility for
direct loan making and servicing
requests. ‘‘Feasible plan’’ is a term
applicable to regulations for both the
direct and guaranteed loan programs.
While the term ‘‘ending cash’’ refers to
the applicant or borrower having
‘‘sufficient cash inflow to pay all cash
outflow’’ and the term ‘‘margin after
debt service’’ applies to consideration of
a typical plan when the ‘‘loan approval
or servicing action exceeds one
production cycle,’’ the agency believes
the definition, as written, adequately
describes the requirements for both the
direct and guaranteed loan programs.
Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
One comment was received on the
‘‘financially distressed borrower’’
definition. The comment stated the
definition should include borrowers
who do not have a 110 percent debt
service margin to match the DALR$
software program. The agency disagrees.
The agency notifies financially
distressed borrowers of the availability
of loan servicing programs as provided
under § 766.101. The agency does not
consider a borrower who can develop a
feasible plan, which does not require a
margin, with less than 10 percent
margin to be financially distressed.
However, a borrower who is not
delinquent, but cannot develop a
feasible plan for the current or next
production cycle, is considered
financially distressed and in need of
loan servicing. Further, § 766.105(b)(1)
provides the agency will attempt to
achieve a 110 percent of debt service
margin; however, under § 766.105(b)(3)
the agency only requires the borrower
‘‘be able to develop a feasible plan with
at least 100 percent of debt service
margin’’ to be considered for loan
servicing programs. If the agency revises
the definition as provided in the
comment, the agency would have to renotify all borrowers restructured with a
debt service margin of less than 110
percent immediately after the
restructuring is complete. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted. However, the
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agency did revise the definition by
removing the text, ‘‘unable to make
payments as planned for the current or
next business accounting period or to
project a feasible plan of operation for
the next business accounting period’’ as
the term ‘‘business accounting period’’
is not defined. The removed text was
replaced by the text, ‘‘unable to develop
a feasible plan for the current or next
production cycle’’ as the term
‘‘production cycle’’ is defined in the
rule, and is more easily understood.
Six comments were received on the
‘‘financially viable operation’’
definition. One comment recommended
the words ‘‘basic family living
expenses’’ in the definition be revised to
read ‘‘essential family living expenses.’’
One comment stated the agency should
revise the definition to provide the
operation must generate sufficient
income to meet essential family living
expenses to the extent they are not met
by dependable non-farm income. The
agency agrees with the comments and
has revised the definition accordingly.
In addition, the agency clarified the
definition further to provide that it is
applicable only under § 764.252, which
provides the conditions applicants have
to meet to request a waiver of the
operating loan term limit. Four
comments stated the definition requires
the operation to generate sufficient
income to provide for replacement of
capital items and long-term financial
growth, and that such an operation
should qualify for commercial credit,
with no agency assistance. Therefore,
the comments stated the agency should
either remove the definition or make it
identical to the ‘‘feasible plan’’
definition. In addition, one of the
comments stated the definition seems to
provide that non-farm income can only
be used to meet family living expenses,
but that non-farm income is used to
make debt payments, replace capital
items and supplement working capital.
Section 311(c)(4)(B) of the Act (7 U.S.C.
1941(c)(4)(B)) requires the applicant to
have a financially viable operation for
the agency to consider granting a onetime 2-year waiver of operating loan
limits. The agency believes the
definition as revised to refer to essential
family living expenses should allow
flexibility to small operations while
meeting the statutory requirements;
therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
One comment was received on the
‘‘foreclosed’’ definition. The comment
stated the agency should revise the
definition to provide ‘‘foreclosed’’ is the
completed act of selling real estate
security under the power of sale in the
security instrument or through judicial
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proceedings. The agency agrees with the
comment and has revised the definition
to refer to judicial proceedings.
One similar comment was received on
the ‘‘foreclosure sale’’ definition. The
comment stated the agency should
revise the definition to provide
‘‘foreclosure sale’’ is the act of selling
real estate security. The agency believes
the definition as written is adequate
since the agency can also foreclose on
loans secured by chattels. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
Two comments were received on the
‘‘good faith’’ definition. One comment
supported the definition as written.
Further, it stated it is not necessary for
the agency to consult the Office of
General Counsel to determine findings
of fraud, waste or conversion. The other
comment stated the agency should
retain the requirement for a written
Office of General Counsel opinion that
has been a regulatory requirement since
September of 1988, as such
determinations have ‘‘grave
consequences for the rights and interest
of FLP borrowers * * *’’ The agency
recognizes the seriousness of allegations
of fraud, waste, and conversion and
therefore has revised the definition to
include the requirement that an opinion
be obtained form the Office of the
General Counsel. Further, the comment
stated the ‘‘good faith’’ definition
should allow for inadvertent departures
from the agreements with the agency
because good faith deals with the
borrower’s state of mind at the time the
violation of the agreement occurs. The
agency does not believe its staff can
make determinations regarding a
borrower’s state of mind. The text, ‘‘The
Agency considers a borrower to act in
good faith, however, when the borrower
is unable to adhere to all agreements
due to circumstances beyond the
borrower’s control’’ adequately
addresses this concern; therefore, the
comment is not adopted. In addition,
the comment stated the statutory
requirement that a borrower who
disposed of security and used proceeds
for essential household and operating
expenses prior to October 14, 1988, is
not considered to lack good faith is not
included in the definition. While the
agency agrees with the comment, the
agency does not believe a borrower will
be determined to lack good faith based
on events that occurred more than 15
years prior to a current loan or servicing
application. However, as an added
precaution, the agency handbook will
provide guidance on dealing with
applicants and borrowers who disposed
of security and used proceeds for
essential family living and farm
operating expenses prior to October 14,
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1988. Therefore, the comment is not
adopted.
Lastly, the agency made an
administrative revision to the ‘‘good
faith’’ definition by clarifying that good
faith requires an applicant or borrower
to provide ‘‘current, complete, and
truthful information when applying for
assistance and in all past dealings with
the Agency.’’ This text supports the
acknowledgment currently included on
each loan or servicing application.
One comment was received on the
‘‘graduation’’ definition. The comment
stated the agency should revise the
definition as the payment in full of one
or more direct FLP loans. The agency
believes the payment in full of one or
more loans of the same type, when the
borrower has several outstanding loans,
cannot be considered as graduation
because the borrower is still depending
on the agency to obtain necessary credit
for the operation. As agency loans are a
temporary source of credit for
borrowers, for the agency to measure its
borrowers’ success, borrowers have to
obtain their credit needs from another
source with or without an agency
guarantee. Therefore, the comment is
not adopted.
One comment was received on the
‘‘homestead protection’’ definition. The
comment stated the agency should
clarify that homestead protection
applies to direct loan borrowers only.
The agency agrees with the comment
and has revised the definition
accordingly.
One comment was received on the
‘‘homestead protection property’’
definition. The comment stated the
agency should revise the definition to
clarify that homestead protection
property secured direct loans only. The
agency agrees with the comment and
has revised the definition accordingly.
One comment was received on the
‘‘household contents’’ definition. The
comment stated the agency should
remove the second sentence of the
proposed definition with exclusions for
luxury items. The agency believes the
definition as written is reasonable. The
term is used in Parts 764 and 766 in
relation to disaster-related damages and
taking additional security refers to
needed, not luxury household items.
Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
One comment was received on the
‘‘inaccurate information’’ definition.
The comment stated the agency should
revise the definition to include
information provided by an applicant
without the intent of fraudulently
obtaining benefits. The agency agrees
with the comment and has revised the
definition to refer to applicants,
borrowers, lenders, and other sources.
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Two comments were received on the
‘‘inventory property’’ definition. One
comment stated the definition as written
includes all Federal property, such as
Federal buildings and public land.
Further, the comment stated the agency
should clarify the definition to include
real estate property held by guaranteed
lenders after liquidation of guaranteed
loans. The other comment stated the
agency should revise the definition as
real estate and chattel property to which
the United States has acquired
ownership rights. In response to the
comments, the agency has clarified that
the term covers such property that
formerly secured an FLP loan and to
which the Government has acquired
title. The definition would not cover
former security property held by the
guaranteed lender.
One comment was received on the
‘‘joint operation’’ definition. The
comment stated the agency should
remove the definition. Section 343(a)(7)
of the Act (7 U.S.C. 1991(a)(7)) defines
the term ‘‘joint operation’’ and this type
of entity is specifically listed as an
eligible entity for farm loans. The
proposed rule was based on the Act’s
provision; therefore, the comment
cannot be adopted.
One comment was received on the
‘‘lien’’ definition. The comment stated
the agency should revise the definition
as a legally enforceable claim against
real or chattel property. The agency
agrees with the comment and has
revised the definition to refer to real or
chattel property.
One comment was received on the
‘‘line of credit agreement’’ definition.
The comment stated the agency should
revise the definition as a contract
between the lender and the borrower
that contains certain lender and
borrower conditions, limitations, and
responsibilities for revolving or nonrevolving credit. The agency’s current
guaranteed regulations and handbook
have contained the definition as
published in the proposed rule since
February 12, 1999, without causing
adverse impacts on the program. The
agency believes the less technical
definition is reasonable and easily
understood. Therefore, the comment is
not adopted.
One comment was received on the
‘‘loss rate’’ definition. The comment
stated the agency should revise the
definition as the net amount of loan loss
claims paid on loans made in the
previous 7 years divided by the total
loan amount guaranteed during the
same period. The agency’s current
guaranteed regulations and handbook
have contained the definition as
published in the proposed rule since
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February 12, 1999, without causing
adverse impacts on the program.
Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
The agency did however make an
administrative revision to the definition
to replace the text ‘‘guaranteed OL,
Farm Ownership (FO), and Soil and
Water (SW) loans’’ with the text ‘‘FSA
guaranteed loans’’ as the agency has not
made guaranteed SW loans in the last 7
years.
One comment was received on the
‘‘mortgage’’ definition. The comment
stated the agency should revise the
definition as a security instrument. The
agency defines the term ‘‘mortgage’’ to
clarify that it is synonymous with the
term ‘‘deed of trust’’ in those States that
use a deed of trust to obtain a lien on
real estate. Further, the agency has
added the definition for the term
‘‘security instrument’’ to describe any
document that provides the agency with
a security interest in real or personal
property. Therefore, the comment is not
adopted.
One comment was received on the
‘‘net recovery value of security
property’’ definition. The comment
stated the agency should include a
separate definition for the term ‘‘net
recovery value of non-essential assets’’
instead of including it in the definition
of ‘‘net recovery value of security
property.’’ The agency agrees with the
comment. Therefore, the agency defined
the term ‘‘net recovery value of nonessential assets’’ and revised the ‘‘net
recovery value of security property’’
definition accordingly.
Seventeen comments were received
on the ‘‘non-eligible enterprise’’
definition. Four comments supported
the agency’s proposed definition as
written. One comment stated the agency
should remove the definition and
provide the eligible enterprises under
the applicable loan purpose sections.
The agency believes enumerating all the
eligible enterprises will make the
applicable loan purpose sections
voluminous. Further, by not
enumerating the eligible enterprises in
the rule the agency eliminates the
possibility of inadvertently omitting an
eligible enterprise. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
Another comment stated the ‘‘noneligible enterprise’’ definition as written
could be confusing to the public. The
agency believes that by defining the
term and providing in the CFR text that
loan funds may not be used to finance
a non-eligible enterprise, it eliminates
confusion. Therefore, the comment is
not adopted. One comment, while it
supported the definition, stated the
agency should provide that an
economically viable transportation
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situation does not exist for the noneligible enterprise’s products. The
agency believes that it is not the
expenses associated with the enterprise
that makes the enterprise ineligible for
agency loans, it is the products the
enterprise produces. Further, when
considering any enterprise, the agency
includes transportation expenses when
it determines the operation’s feasibility,
since transportation costs can vary
greatly from locality to locality. It is not
the agency’s intent to allow financing of
non-eligible enterprises in one area and
not in other areas based on
transportation costs. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
Five comments opposed the ‘‘noneligible enterprise’’ definition as
proposed because it eliminates tropical
fish farming, the equine industry,
llamas, alpacas, and ratites from being
eligible for agency loans. The agency
has a long-standing policy not to finance
the production of animals kept solely
for pleasure or companionship. This
policy will continue. Therefore, the
comments are not adopted. Two
comments stated it is not clear if the
definition includes products bought and
further grown, and then resold, or
otherwise having value added to the
products. ‘‘Non-eligible enterprise’’
would not include common farming
operations that buy chickens, piglets,
seedling, etc., and resell them when
fully grown; it would include operations
that purchase ripened fruit and resell it
as jam, for example. No change is being
made in relation to the comments.
Further, the comments stated it is not
clear if the requirement that the
‘‘majority of the commodities processed
or marketed’’ by the enterprise is based
on dollar sales or the number of items.
The agency believes the requirement as
written is applicable only to the number
of items processed or sold. Therefore,
the comments are not adopted.
Another comment stated the ‘‘noneligible enterprise’’ definition adds
another tier of inquiry in determining if
a particular enterprise is eligible for
agency loans. Further, the comment
stated the definition provides
enterprises that produce exotic or nonfarm animals are not eligible for loans,
however, the terms ‘‘exotic’’ and ‘‘nonfarm animals’’ are not defined. In
response to the comment, the agency
revised the definition to clarify what the
agency considers exotic or non-farm
animal; however, the term is still
needed. The Federal Agriculture
Improvement and Reform Act of 1996
(Public Law 104–127), removed
financing of non-farm enterprises as an
authorized use of loan funds. The
agency needs to specify the type of
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enterprises that will not be financed to
avoid confusion and inconsistent
application of this restriction. Further,
financing enterprises producing animals
or products for which there is not an
established market is inconsistent with
prudent lending objectives.
Another comment stated the agency
must allow Tribal input to determine
what tribal agricultural enterprises
consist of, and set guidelines to
recognize traditional tribal markets.
Further, the comment stated the
production of leeches, vermiculture and
aquaculture must not be included in the
non-eligible enterprise definition. The
agency believes the definition as
revised, along with the definitions of
agricultural commodity and
aquaculture, adequately identify the
enterprises eligible for receiving loans.
Further, the agency evaluates each
individual operation requesting
assistance on its own merits. Therefore,
the comment is not adopted.
One comment was received on the
‘‘non-essential assets’’ definition. The
comment stated the agency should
revise the definition to include assets
that may contribute a small amount of
income to the farming operation but are
clearly non-essential for the operation to
function. The agency believes the
definition as written is adequate,
especially when read in the context of
the CFR text. Therefore, the comment is
not adopted.
One comment was received on the
‘‘non-program loan’’ definition. The
comment stated the definition as written
is too narrow and the agency should
continue to use the definition found in
current § 1951.451. The agency agrees
with the comment and has revised CFR
accordingly.
One comment was received on the
‘‘normal production yield’’ definition.
The comment stated the definition as
written is confusing and that the current
definition, found in § 764.2, provides
the priority for the types of records the
agency will use. The proposed
definition made no substantive changes
from current § 764.2. Some clarifying
language has been added in response to
the comment.
One comment was received on the
‘‘note’’ definition. The comment stated
the agency should remove the
definition, as the term ‘‘note’’ is
included in the ‘‘debt instrument’’
definition. The agency believes the term
‘‘debt instrument’’ does not adequately
describe the instruments the agency
uses to evidence debt and therefore, the
agency removed it in the final rule.
However, the agency added the term
‘‘promissory note’’ which is used in
several sections of the CFR to replace
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the term ‘‘note,’’ and further added the
term ‘‘assumption agreement’’ for clarity
since it is distinguished from the term
‘‘promissory note’’ in the text.
The agency revised the definition of
‘‘Operating loan’’ to include a youth
loan as provided in § 764.1(b).
One comment was received on the
‘‘owner-operator’’ definition. The
comment stated the definition should be
revised to read ‘‘* * *is the individual
or entity that owns the farm and
provides the labor, management, and
capital to operate the farm. An entity
must have one or more members
operating the farm.’’ The terms ‘‘owneroperator’’ and ‘‘tenant-operator’’ are
used in the general eligibility
requirements established in 7 CFR
764.101, as well as the additional
eligibility requirements established for
specific loan types in the applicable
subparts. While the proposed rule
included a definition of the term
‘‘owner-operator,’’ the terms ‘‘tenantoperator’’ and ‘‘operator’’ were not
defined. The agency believes the key
term that should be defined is
‘‘operator,’’ and has, therefore, removed
the definition of ‘‘owner-operator’’ in
the final rule and has added ‘‘operator.’’
The agency defined the term ‘‘operator’’
to include both an ‘‘owner-operator’’ or
‘‘tenant-operator’’ as applicable under
each loan program. The agency does not
believe that a definition of either of
these terms is necessary as they are self
explanatory. Further, the agency
believes that the new definition of
‘‘operator’’ uses the abbreviated text
suggested by the comment; therefore,
this portion of the comment is adopted.
However, the agency did not adopt the
portion of the comment suggesting the
inclusion of the text ‘‘An entity must
have one or more members operating
the farm’’ as this requirement is
adequately addressed in the revisions
made to the eligibility requirement
established in 7 CFR 764.101(k)
requiring the applicant be the operator
of a family farm.
One comment was received on the
‘‘partnership’’ definition. The comment
stated the agency’s requirement that
partnerships must be formally organized
is out of date and unnecessary. The
agency believes the definition as written
does not require a formal partnership
agreement, but instead it provides the
agency will comply with State
requirements pertaining to partnerships.
Therefore, the agency does not believe
a change to the definition is necessary.
One comment was received on the
‘‘protective advance’’ definition. The
comment stated since the definition will
be applicable to the guaranteed loan
program also, the agency should
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continue to use the definition found in
current § 762.102(b). The agency
believes the definition as written in the
proposed rule is adequate to cover both
the direct and guaranteed loan
programs. Further, under §§ 765.203
and 762.149, respectively, the agency
specifies the conditions for making
protective advances for the direct and
guaranteed loan programs. Therefore,
the comment is not adopted.
One hundred sixteen comments were
received on the ‘‘related by blood or
marriage’’ definition. As noted in the
agency’s response to comments received
on the definition of ‘‘family farm,’’ all
comments stated the definition as
written excludes certain relationships,
including, but not limited to, cousins,
uncles, aunts, and grandparents. The
agency agreed and revised the definition
accordingly.
One comment was received on the
‘‘relative’’ definition. The comment
recommended the word ‘‘of’’ be inserted
between the words ‘‘one’’ and ‘‘the.’’
The agency agrees and has revised the
definition accordingly. In addition, as
discussed in the agency’s response to
comments received on the definition of
‘‘family farm,’’ the definition of
‘‘relative’’ was revised to include the
term ‘‘cousin.’’
Two comments were received on the
‘‘restructuring’’ definition. Both
comments stated the definition as
written does not cover the guaranteed
loan programs. The agency agrees with
the comments and has revised the CFR
accordingly to adopt the definition from
current § 762.102.
Three comments were received on the
‘‘rural youth’’ definition. Two
comments supported the definition as
written and opposed lowering the age
limit for youth loans from the proposed
10 years to 8 years of age. One comment,
while it supported the definition, stated
the population limit should not exceed
20,000 inhabitants. The agency
disagrees. The agency believes rural
youth residing in areas of up to 50,000
inhabitants can benefit from the youth
loan program and that the age minimum
should remain at 10 years of age.
Seven comments were received on the
‘‘socially disadvantaged applicant’’
definition. Six comments stated that
applicants who are spouses are
penalized under the definition when the
wife is the operator and owns 50
percent of the farming operation,
because they do not meet the majority
ownership interest test. The agency
agrees there are circumstances where a
spouse’s ability to own the majority
interest in property is prohibited by
State laws governing spousal rights.
Therefore, the agency revised the
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definition to allow married couples to
be considered socially disadvantaged
when the socially disadvantaged spouse
owns 50 percent of the farming
operation and makes most of the
management decisions, contributes a
significant amount of labor and is
generally recognized as the operator of
the farm. Such construction of the term
as used in section 355 of the Act is
reasonable under these circumstances.
Another comment stated the
requirement for entities that the socially
disadvantaged member must have a
majority ownership interest in the
operation to receive targeted funds
reduces access to targeted funds by
eligible socially disadvantaged
applicants. The Act’s section 302(a) for
farm ownership loans, section 311(a) for
operating loans, and 321(a) for
emergency loans provide the eligibility
requirements for loans to entities. The
statutory eligibility requirements apply
to members holding a majority interest
in the entity. The proposed rule is
consistent with the Act’s provisions in
focusing on the majority interest holder.
The agency is taking a more lenient
approach only in the case of spouses as
discussed above. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
One comment was received on the
‘‘socially disadvantaged group’’
definition. The comment stated the
socially disadvantaged groups are not
specified in the proposed rule. The
agency agrees with the comment and
has revised the definition to include the
groups currently listed in § 1943.4.
One comment was received on the
‘‘trust’’ definition. The comment stated
the agency should revise the definition
to reflect that Tribes, as sovereign
nations, have the ability to create and
enforce laws to regulate businesses
conducted within their boundaries. The
requirement that a trust is recognized by
the state in which it conducts business
is the same as the requirement
applicable to all other entities. Agency
regulations cannot address every Tribe’s
unique situation; therefore, state offices
may develop guidance according to
applicable state and tribal laws in
consultation with the Regional Office of
General Counsel. The agency believes
the definition as written is adequate;
therefore, the comment is not adopted.
One comment was received on the
‘‘United States’’ definition. The
comment stated the definition as written
excludes the Republic of Palau, the
Federated States of Micronesia, and the
Republic of the Marshall Islands.
Further, the comment stated the Free
Association Treaty provides that the
agency may enter into loan agreements
with citizens of the countries mentioned
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above. The agency agrees with the
comment and has revised the definition
accordingly.
One comment was received on the
‘‘working capital’’ definition. The
comment stated the agency should
revise the definition for clarity to
provide ‘‘* * * including, but not
limited to, paying for feed, seed * * *’’
The agency agrees and has revised the
definition accordingly.
Four comments were received on the
‘‘youth loan’’ definition. Three
comments stated youth loans should not
be restricted to agricultural projects
only. One comment stated that changing
the youth loan purposes to include
financing agriculturally-related projects
only will have a devastating effect on
Tribal youth. As stated in the discussion
of comments received under § 764.301,
the agency believes that youth loan
funds should be used for modest,
income producing, agriculture-related
projects. Therefore, the comments are
not adopted.
Section 761.6 Appeals
Five comments were received on the
appeals provisions. Three comments
stated the agency should clarify the
provision that an adverse decision
involving a guaranteed loan may be
appealed by either the lender or the
applicant or borrower. One comment
stated the agency should revise § 761.6
as well as § 762.104 to provide a
guaranteed applicant or borrower may
appeal an adverse agency decision
without the lender appealing. Requests
for appeal are handled in accordance
with 7 CFR parts 11 and 780; therefore,
the agency removed the provisions
regarding who may request an appeal
from § 761.6 and revised § 762.104 to
remove the joint appeal requirement.
One comment stated that while § 761.6
provides appeals will be handled
according to 7 CFR parts 11 and 780,
§ 766.110 provides appeals of NRCS’
technical determinations on
conservation contracts will be handled
according to 7 CFR part 614. The
comment stated the rule as written is
not clear. The agency agrees with the
comment and has revised § 766.110 to
refer to 7 CFR parts 11 and 780.
Section 761.8 Loan Limitations
Thirty-two comments were received
on the direct loan limits. One comment
stated that the agency should work with
Congress to increase the direct loan
limit and include an inflation
percentage increase as provided for
guaranteed loans under section 313(b) of
the Act (7 U.S.C. 1943(b)). The agency
believes that the impact of any
legislative change to increase the direct
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loan limits must be carefully analyzed
as funds provided for direct farm
ownership and operating loans are
usually exhausted early in the fiscal
year, and the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB), along with the President
play a role in the appropriations
process. Therefore, the agency is
limiting this rule to revising its
regulations within its current statutory
authority. However, the
Administration’s 2007 Farm Bill
proposal recommends that the loan
limit for the direct loans be increased.
The Agency will make the appropriate
regulatory changes in the future, in the
event the Administration’s proposal is
adopted.
All other comments on this section
stated that the direct loan limit of
$200,000 is not adequate to cover the
credit needs of socially disadvantaged
and limited resource applicants because
they are denied commercial loans more
often. The proposed rule was based on
Section 313(a)(1), limits for direct loans,
therefore, the comments cannot be
adopted.
Section 761.9 Interest Rates for Direct
Loans
One comment was received on the
interest rate charged limited resource
borrowers. The comment stated the
agency should reduce the limited
resource interest rate to three percent
from five percent. Section 316(a)(2) of
the Act (7 U.S.C. 1946(a)(2)) sets the
limited resource interest rate minimum
at five percent; therefore, the comment
cannot be adopted.
Section 761.10 Planning and
Performing Construction and Other
Development
Five comments were received on the
planning and performing construction
and other development provisions. Two
comments supported the agency’s
proposal to make the applicant or
borrower responsible for ensuring
compliance with local construction
standards. One comment stated the
agency should require the applicant to
provide the plans and specifications
prior to the agency’s loan approval and
inspect the planned development at
least once. The agency believes the rule
as written is adequate as it requires the
applicant to provide the plans and
specifications to the agency. The
applicant or borrower must inspect
development work, as needed, to protect
their financial interest and provide
written certification to the agency that
the development conforms to the plans
and good construction practices,
applicable laws, ordinances, codes and
regulations. Under § 761.10(e)(4), the
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agency inspections of the planned
construction and development do not
create or imply any duty or obligation
of the agency to the applicant or
borrower. The agency inspects the
planned construction and development
solely to protect its financial interest.
The agency’s inspection process is
internal policy and will be addressed in
the appropriate agency handbook.
Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
Another comment stated the agency
should not require the same process for
insurance proceeds less than $5,000 as
it requires for direct loan funds, because
the process is not cost-effective. In
accordance with 7 CFR 764.108, all
security except growing crops must be
covered by hazard insurance, and the
agency must be listed as the beneficiary
of a mortgage loss payable clause.
Further, 7 CFR 765.152 provides that
‘‘cash proceeds of insurance claims
received on Agency collateral, if not
being used to repair or replace security
items’’ will be considered an ‘‘extra
payment.’’ Therefore, the agency
believes it is essential that the
provisions of 7 CFR 761.10 be adhered
to, regardless of the amount of insurance
proceeds. To do otherwise would
expose the agency to potential losses as
its security may deteriorate in value.
Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
One comment stated the provision
that requires applicants not to incur any
debts for material, labor or other
expenditures prior to loan closing is
unduly burdensome to applicants who
may be able to begin the project while
waiting on loan funds. The comment
further stated applicants are informed at
the beginning of the loan process that
agency funds may not be available to
close the loan, and as such, applicants
are aware that they are responsible for
any pre-loan development work. It is
important to highlight that the applicant
shall not be reimbursed for expenditures
incurred prior to loan closing. Further,
agency assistance is only available to
applicants unable to obtain the needed
credit from another source. Therefore, it
is unlikely that an applicant would have
personal funds available or be able to
incur debts to initiate development
prior to agency funds becoming
available. Therefore, the comment is not
adopted.
Section 761.51 Establishing a
Supervised Bank Account
Six comments were received on
establishing a supervised bank account.
One comment stated the agency should
clarify whether or not an applicant has
to consent to the establishment of a
supervised bank account. The agency
agrees with the comment and has
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revised the section to state that the
account will be used to assist borrowers
with limited financial skills only when
the borrower agrees. Three comments
stated it is not clear when the agency
will use the supervised bank accounts.
The agency agrees with the comments
and has revised the section to list the
conditions under which the agency will
use supervised bank accounts. In
addition, one of these comments stated
the requirement the agency provide
applicants $5,000 or 10 percent of the
loan funds for family living and
operating expenses in a non-supervised
bank account was not included in the
CFR. One comment supported the
agency’s decision not to include the
provision of providing $5,000 or 10
percent of loan funds in a nonsupervised bank account. As stated in
the proposed rule, Section 312 of the
Act provides that the agency ‘‘may
reserve a portion of the loan * * *’’ but
it is not required. The payment of family
living and operating expenses is an
authorized use of loan funds, and the
agency provides loan funds directly to
the applicant to use as specified in the
farm operating plan. Therefore,
supervised bank accounts for such use
are not needed and no change has been
made based on these comments. One
comment stated the agency should add
a section to explain the agency’s
policies regarding disbursement of
funds from a supervised bank account,
use of electronic funds transfer instead
of supervised bank accounts, and the
necessity of supervised bank accounts.
The agency believes the disbursement of
funds from a supervised bank account is
already adequately addressed in
§ 761.54. Section 764.402 requires the
agency to use electronic funds transfer
when feasible, so supervised bank
accounts are not expected to be
routinely used. Therefore, these parts of
the comment are not adopted. Lastly, as
stated above, the agency has added
language in § 761.51 on when
supervised bank accounts are necessary.
Section 761.52 Deposits Into a
Supervised Bank Account
One comment was received on the
deposits into a supervised bank account
provisions. The comment stated it is not
clear if a check made jointly payable to
the agency and the borrower can be
deposited in a supervised bank account.
The agency believes the CFR as written
is clear as it only excludes checks made
solely to the agency or the Federal
Government, or if it lists the Treasury of
the United States as joint payee. The
jointly payable check to the agency and
borrower could be deposited in the
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supervised bank account. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
Section 761.54 Withdrawals From a
Supervised Bank Account
Two comments were received on the
withdrawals from a supervised bank
account provisions. Both comments
stated the agency should clarify the CFR
to provide the borrower’s account must
be accelerated before the agency can
withdraw funds from a supervised bank
account without the borrower’s
signature. The proposed, as well as the
final rule provide the conditions under
which the agency will withdraw funds
from the supervised bank account
without the borrower’s signature. It has
been the agency’s policy to withdraw
funds from the supervised bank account
when it is in the agency and the
borrower’s financial interests. The
borrower’s account need not be
accelerated; the agency may withdraw
such funds at any time to apply to the
account or protect its lien as necessary.
The agency believes the limited
withdrawals by the agency are
reasonable. Therefore, the comments are
not adopted.
Section 761.55 Closing a Supervised
Bank Account
One comment was received on closing
supervised bank accounts. The
comment stated the agency should
clarify the CFR to provide the
borrower’s account must be accelerated
before the agency can close the
supervised bank account. The proposed,
as well as the final rule, provide the
conditions under which the agency will
close the supervised bank account. The
supervised bank account can be closed
when it is no longer needed; the
borrower’s account need not be
accelerated. The agency believes the
CFR as written is reasonable. Therefore,
the comment is not adopted.
Even though no comments were
received on the provision, the agency
increased, from $100 to $1,000, the
amount of loan funds remaining in the
supervised bank account that can be
released to the borrower to use for
authorized loan purposes, at the time
the account is closed. This action is in
the best interest of both the borrower
and the agency, as accounts with small
loan balances remaining will not be
maintained. The agency, however, did
not extend this provision to youth loans.
Section 761.104 Developing the Farm
Operating Plan (As Numbered in Final
Rule)
One comment stated the agency must
include in the final rule the provisions
of current § 1924.56 that address the
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development of farm and home plans
used for loan making and servicing
actions. Further, the comment stated the
agency did not address the farm and
home plan utilized by the agency. The
agency inadvertently omitted the
provisions addressing the development
of farm operating plans, and has
incorporated them in the final rule. The
farm and home plan has not been
incorporated, however. As provided in
the proposed rule, the agency is
removing all internal and administrative
provisions, which include identification
of specific forms, from its regulations.
While specific form numbers are not
included in the CFR, both the proposed
and final rules address the information
collection requirements. The agency no
longer uses FSA 431–2 and therefore, it
did not include any references to, nor
did it discuss the use of, the farm and
home plan form in the proposed rule.
The agency has developed new forms to
replace the farm and home plan,
however, the agency accepts any format
that provides the information required.
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Section 761.105 Year-End Analysis
(§ 761.104 in the Proposed Rule)
One comment was received on the
year-end analysis provisions. The
comment stated the agency should
require a year-end analysis for
borrowers who have received disaster
set-aside. The agency utilizes disaster
set-aside to resolve borrowers’
temporary financial set-backs due to a
natural disaster. Further, the agency
requires that borrowers who receive
disaster set-aside be able to develop a
feasible plan for the next production
cycle and provide the appropriate
documentation to support it. Since the
agency will obtain the documentation
needed during the disaster set-aside
determination, it does not believe an
annual year-end analysis is required.
Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
Section 761.208 Target Participation
Rates for Socially Disadvantaged Groups
Two comments were received on the
target participation rates for socially
disadvantaged groups. Both comments
questioned why the agency sets the
target participation rates for Farm
Ownership (FO) loans based on the total
rural population in the State that are
members of socially disadvantaged
groups but the target participation rates
for farm Operating loans (OL) are based
on the total number of farmers in the
State that are members of socially
disadvantaged groups. In addition, one
comment suggested that to achieve
equality, all participation rates should
be based on the number of farmers in a
State that are members of a socially
disadvantaged group. Section 355 of the
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Act (7 U.S.C. 2003) establishes these
different calculations for FO (subtitle A)
and OL (subtitle B) target participation
rates. Therefore, the comments cannot
be adopted.
Section 761.210 Transfer of Funds
Section 346(b)(4) of the Act (7 U.S.C.
1994) provides that beginning on
September 1 of each FY, Emergency
loan (EM) funds, not resulting from
supplemental appropriations, may be
used to fund the credit sale of real estate
security in the agency’s inventory. In
the last several FY’s, the agency has
received insufficient initial
appropriations to fund EM loan requests
and has relied on supplemental
appropriations to meet the demand.
Further, the agency does not anticipate
future appropriations actions to reverse
this trend. Moreover, the agency has not
taken a large number of real estate
properties in inventory in the last
several years. Lastly, other sections of
the Act mandate that real estate in the
agency’s inventory be sold to beginning
farmers. Therefore, the agency has not
utilized this authority and is removing
§ 761.210(b) in the final rule.
Part 764—Direct Loan Making
The following discussion addresses
the comments received on part 764.
One comment stated the provision
from current § 1910.3 that provides
persons wishing to apply for loans will
be encouraged to do so and that agency
staff will explain available programs to
applicants and assist applicants as
needed in completing farm operating
plans, should be included in the final
rule. Further, the comment stated the
agency should include the provision
from current § 1943.11 that states the
agency will provide socially
disadvantaged applicants with technical
assistance necessary when applying for
farm ownership loans or other
assistance to acquire inventory
farmland. The agency believes, through
outreach efforts, it provides explanation
of available programs and invites
persons wishing to apply for loans to do
so. Further, agency personnel, as well as
Extension agents, assist all applicants
who request it, in completing agency
forms and farm operating plans. It is the
agency’s mission to provide any
necessary assistance, including
technical assistance, to all applicants
and borrowers. It is not necessary to
publish the agency’s mission or internal
practices in the CFR. Therefore, the first
part of the comment is not adopted.
Section 623 of the Agricultural Credit
Act of 1987 (7 U.S.C. 1985 note), stated
the agency should inform socially
disadvantaged applicants of the
possibility of acquiring inventory
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farmland and provide technical
assistance to such applicants, while
section 335(c) of the Act (7 U.S.C. 1985
(c)) mandates the agency to offer to sell
its inventory property to beginning
farmers. The agency advertises available
inventory property, provides priority to
all beginning farmers to buy the
property, and assists applicants in
completing forms and information
necessary to acquire real estate in the
agency’s inventory, as required by the
Act.
Section 764.51
Loan Application
One comment stated that it is not
clear if the agency is maintaining the
requirement currently contained in 7
CFR 1910.3(c) that provides ‘‘For farmer
program loans, there will only be one
applicant. If a husband and wife insist
on applying as co-applicants for a
farmer program loan and the farming
operation is a sole proprietorship, they
will be considered a joint operation and
they both will have to meet the
eligibility requirements applicable to
the joint operation.’’ This comment, as
well as one other comment, stated the
Internal Revenue Service allows married
couples operating a farm to file a joint
tax return and does not mandate they be
considered a joint operation; therefore,
the agency should not treat them as joint
operations either. The agency’s
longstanding policy of considering
spouses applying jointly as a joint
operation when a formal type of entity
does not exist is based on amendments
to sections 302 and 311 of the Act.
Many of the general loan making
requirements established at 7 CFR
764.101 are based on the provisions of
sections 302 and 311 of the Act, which
specifically provide ‘‘To be eligible for
such loans, applicants who are
individuals, or in the case of
cooperatives, corporations partnerships,
joint operations, trusts, and limited
liability companies, individuals holding
a majority interest in such entity, must
* * *.’’ Based on this text, each
member of an entity applying for
assistance may not be required to meet
all eligibility requirements, whereas
applicants applying as an individual
must meet all the eligibility
requirements. Changing the agency’s
current policy to allow spouses
applying jointly to be considered an
individual applicant, rather than as an
entity applicant in the form of a joint
operation, would require that each
spouse meet all eligibility requirements.
The agency believes such a change
would result in a more restrictive
application of eligibility requirements
for spouses applying
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jointly and could result in an increased
number of these applicants being
determined ineligible. Therefore, while
the comments are not adopted, the
agency did revise § 764.51 to clarify its
policy that ‘‘Two or more applicants
applying jointly will be considered an
entity applicant.’’ In addition, the
agency revised its application form to
clarify its policy, and for applicants
applying as a joint operation, the
application form will serve as the entity
agreement required as part of a complete
application under 7 CFR
764.51(a)(2)(iv), unless State law
requires otherwise.
One comment stated the agency
should not require that a husband and
wife who apply for a loan together be
treated as a joint operation. The
comment pointed out that almost all
married individuals file taxes as a
married couple, not a joint operation.
The agency agrees that applicants
should apply in the form of business
organization that is most consistent with
the actual operating and financial
structure of the farm business. However,
the Act does not permit the agency to
make loans to multiple individuals as
one applicant. In situations where more
than one individual is applying for the
same loan, the applicant will be treated
as an entity. The agency acknowledges
that this requirement may be confusing
and burdensome for married couples in
particular, since many of them will file
income tax returns and conduct other
business affairs as a married couple. To
ease this burden, the agency revised this
section to recognize the existence of a
marriage as sufficient documentation of
a joint operation and its structure.
Information beyond that required of an
individual applicant will be required
only when necessary to evaluate
specific financial situations or contracts
such as prenuptial agreements, which
are unique to the marriage, and
pertinent to the evaluation of the loan
request.
Twenty-two comments were received
on the requirement for applicants to
provide 3 years of production and
financial records (§ 764.51(a)(4) and (5),
renumbered to § 764.51(b)(4) and (5)).
Eight comments supported the agency’s
proposal as written. Seven comments,
while they supported the agency’s
proposal, suggested the agency retain
the ability to request additional years of
records, if needed, to evaluate properly
the applicant’s operation. The
comments stated there are
circumstances beyond the applicant’s
control, such as adverse weather,
prolonged drought, and disease, which
would require the agency to have
additional records at its disposal to
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accurately evaluate the applicant’s
operation. Three comments, while they
agreed with the proposal, stated using
only 3 years of records may not reflect
the farming operation’s true capabilities.
One comment opposed the agency’s
proposal and further stated the CFR
does not provide that for years an
applicant suffered a disaster, State or
County records may be substituted for
the applicant’s records. The agency
believes the provision as written is
adequate. The agency requirements
match those of commercial lenders and
at the same time reduce the burden
imposed on the public. In developing an
accurate farm operating plan, § 761.104
excludes the production year with the
lowest actual or county average yield if
the applicant’s yields were affected by
disasters during at least 2 of the 3 years.
Therefore, no changes need to be made
to the records requirement, and the
comments are not adopted.
Two other comments stated the
agency should require applicants submit
3 years of Federal tax returns to match
commercial lenders’ requirements as
well as the agency’s loan servicing
requirements. In addition, one of the
comments stated that by providing
copies of Federal tax returns, the agency
will be able to verify other information
submitted by the applicant and will
reduce the paperwork burden the
agency imposes. Further, the comment
stated errors on the applicants’ part will
be eliminated since applicants will no
longer have to copy information from
their tax returns to the agency forms.
The agency agrees with the comments
and has revised the section to require 3
years of farm financial records,
including Federal tax returns, unless the
applicant has been farming for less than
3 years.
One comment stated the records
requirements under § 764.355(c)(3)
should be revised to match the
requirements under § 764.51(b)
(renumbered from § 764.51(a)). The
agency believes that the requirements
should remain as proposed. Section
764.355(c) is applicable only to
emergency loan applicants, who lack
security because of a disaster. Section
324(d)(2) of the Act (7 U.S.C. 1964(d)(2))
provides that the agency may not deny
an emergency loan because the
applicant lacks a particular amount of
security; however, the agency is
authorized to make the loan provided
the applicant has the ability to repay the
loan. For the agency to determine if an
applicant who lacks security has the
ability to repay the loan, the agency
needs access to additional records,
beyond what is required in § 764.51(b)
(renumbered from § 764.51(a)), to assess
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the applicant’s income generated by the
farming operation. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
One comment supported the agency’s
clarification that the payment of the
credit report fee is the applicant’s
responsibility as part of a complete
application (§ 764.51(b)(11),
renumbered from § 764.51(a)(11)). No
comments were received opposing this
clarification; therefore, no change was
made to this paragraph.
Three comments were received on the
verification of an applicant’s debts
requirement (§ 764.51(b)(12),
renumbered from § 764.51(a)(12)). All
comments stated it is not cost-effective
for the agency to verify debts under
$1,000 (two comments), or $500 (one
comment). The agency handbook
implementing the CFR will provide
additional guidance regarding
alternatives available to verify an
applicant’s debts. Therefore, the
comments are not adopted.
Two comments were received on the
‘‘additional information deemed
necessary by the agency’’ provision
(§ 764.51(b)(13), renumbered from
§ 764.51(a)(13)). One comment stated
the CFR should provide that the agency
requires the additional information to
better evaluate the feasibility of the
operation and identify any possible
security issues. The other comment
stated the agency should identify
general categories of information that
may be required to evaluate an
applicant’s operation instead of
including a general statement that the
agency may request additional
information deemed necessary. The
agency believes the provision as written
is adequate, as adoption of the
comments may limit the reasons
additional information could be
requested. As stated in the preamble of
the proposed rule, because every
farming operation is unique, different
information is required from each
applicant for the agency to assess
properly its risk. The agency handbook
implementing the CFR will provide
examples of additional information that
may be requested. Therefore, the
comments were not adopted.
Three comments were received on the
Low-Documentation Operating loan (LoDoc) requirements § 764.51(c),
renumbered from § 764.51(b)). All
comments stated that certain
information under § 764.51(a)
(§ 764.51(b) in final rule) should be
required for Lo-Doc applicants. Two of
the comments stated the applicant
should provide documentation that
other credit is not available; the other
comment stated the applicant should
provide the legal description of the farm
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property owned or to be acquired, when
applicable. Section 764.51(b)(4)
(§ 764.51(c)(4) in final rule) states the
agency may require a Lo-Doc applicant
to provide any other information listed
in § 764.51(a) (§ 764.51(b) in final rule),
as needed to make a loan determination
in a particular case. In addition, the
agency handbook implementing the CFR
will provide further guidance on when
additional information may be needed.
Therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
Nine comments were received on the
youth loan application requirements
(§ 764.51(d) renumbered from
§ 764.51(c)). One comment supported
the agency’s decision to implement an
abbreviated application process for
youth loans. Five comments stated that
since verification of non-farm income is
not a requirement for Lo-Doc applicants,
it should not be required from youth
loan applicants either. In addition, one
of the comments stated that since the
youth loan project is expected to
generate sufficient income to repay the
loan, the agency does not need to obtain
non-farm income information. Further,
two of the comments stated the agency
official should have discretion to
determine if verification of non-farm
income is needed for youth loan
applicants. The agency agrees with the
comments and has revised the CFR to
remove the requirement for verification
of non-farm income for youth loan
applicants. The flexibility to require
additional information as needed
remains.
Two comments stated the requirement
found in § 764.51(a)(13) (§ 764.51(b)(13)
in final rule) pertaining to the agency’s
ability to request additional
information, as needed, to evaluate an
applicant’s eligibility and plan of
operation should also be applicable to
youth applicants. In addition, the
comments stated that, for applicants less
than 18 years old, the agency should
require written permission from a
parent or guardian, and require
documentation from the project advisor
for all youth loan applicants. Under
§ 764.51(c)(3) (§ 764.51(d)(3) in final
rule), the agency can request any
information deemed necessary to
evaluate a youth loan applicant’s
operation. Further, under § 764.302(f),
the agency requires the parent or
guardian’s written permission, so it is
not necessary to specifically list it under
the general requirements for all youth
loans. Therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
One comment stated that Indian
youths have not purchased on credit by
the time they are 18 years old.
Therefore, the comment stated if the
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agency determines that additional
information is needed, or the youth may
be able to obtain other credit, then the
agency should process the application
as a guaranteed loan, as well as inquire
with other sources of credit before
involving a youth already intimidated
by the process. The agency believes the
youth loan requirements, as written, are
adequate. In most states, individuals
reach the age of majority at 18,
therefore, youth loan applicants who
have reached the age of 18, are required
to submit the credit report fee and
verification of debts, if any.
Additionally, § 764.302(a) provides the
eligibility requirements youth loan
applicants must meet as mandated by
Section 311(b)(1) of the Act (7 U.S.C.
1941 (b)(1)) and includes the ‘‘no credit
elsewhere’’ requirement. There is no
guaranteed loan program specifically for
youths. Therefore, the comment is not
adopted.
Lastly, the agency added the
provision requiring applicants to
provide a current financial statement as
part of a complete application. This is
a longstanding requirement that existed
under the loan making and loan
servicing regulations. The agency’s
application form contained the financial
statement; however, due to agency’s
paperwork reduction efforts, the
financial statement part was removed
from the application form.
Section 764.52 Processing an
Incomplete Application
Two comments were received on the
provisions for processing an incomplete
application. Both comments stated the
CFR provides that the information
requested by the agency must be
received within 10 calendar days from
the day the agency sent the second
incomplete application notification to
the applicant. However, the notice the
agency uses provides applicants must
submit the information requested or
contact the agency within 10 days. The
comments stated the CFR and the
agency notice should be consistent. The
agency agrees with the comments and
has revised its notice accordingly.
Section 764.53 Processing the
Complete Application
One comment was received on the
processing the complete application
provisions. The comment stated the
agency must include in the CFR the
requirement found in Section 333A(a)(1)
of the Act which states the agency shall
approve or disapprove an application
and notify the applicant no later than 60
days after a complete application has
been received. In addition, the comment
stated the reasons for the disapproval
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must be included in the notification, as
provided in Section 333A(a)(3) of the
Act. The agency agrees with the
comment and has revised the section to
add that the agency will notify the
applicant of the decision reached and
the reasons for any disapproval.
Section 764.54 Preferences When
There Is Limited Funding (Renumbered
in the Final Rule)
One comment was received on the
preferences when there is limited
funding. The comment stated the agency
should consider funding applications
based on the date the application was
determined to be complete, regardless of
whether there is a shortage of funds.
Section 764.53 provides the order in
which the agency processes loan
applications and states the agency
considers applications in the order
received, based on the date the
application is determined to be
complete. The agency cannot consider a
loan application until all the
information required is received.
Section 764.54 provides the preference
order in funding complete and approved
loan applications. The agency funds
applications based on the date the
application was received, whether
complete or incomplete, because that
date provides an easily identifiable
benchmark that can be consistently
applied. Therefore, the comment is not
adopted.
Section 764.101 General Eligibility
Requirements
One comment on the general
eligibility requirements suggested that
the requirements of sections 302 and
311 of the Act (7 U.S.C. 1922 and 1941)
for Farm Ownership and Operating
loans, which allow the agency to make
loans to entities engaged primarily and
directly in farming in the United States,
be added. The agency agrees and has
revised §§ 764.152(c) and 764.252(d) to
incorporate the requirement. In
addition, a similar provision is
contained in section 321 of the Act for
emergency loans. Therefore, the agency
revised § 764.352(c) (§ 764.352(a)(4) in
the proposed rule) accordingly.
Two comments were received on the
no prior drug convictions provisions
under § 764.101(a). One comment stated
that, unless the agency commences
background checks on applicants, the
requirement should be removed from
the CFR. Section 1764 of the Food
Security Act of 1985 (21 U.S.C. 889)
provides, in part, that an applicant for
certain Federal loans or benefits cannot
have been convicted under Federal or
State law of planting, cultivating,
growing, producing, harvesting or
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storing a controlled substance within
the previous 5 crop years. The agency
has complied with this provision since
it was incorporated into the law.
Applicants are required to self-certify,
on the agency’s application form, that
they have not been convicted of
controlled substance violations. If it is
later determined the applicant provided
false or inaccurate information on the
application form, the agency can deny
further benefits and take other
appropriate action. Lastly, the proposed
rule was based on the Food Security
Act’s requirements; therefore, the
comment cannot be adopted.
The other comment stated the agency
should add in the CFR the requirement
that applicants have not been convicted
of possession or distribution of a
controlled substance. Section 862 of 21
U.S.C. provides, in part, that applicants
may be made ineligible for Federal
benefits by court order as a result of a
conviction for the distribution of
controlled substances or any offense
involving the possession of a controlled
substance. Ineligibility is not automatic.
As stated above, applicants self-certify
that they have not been convicted of
controlled substance violations. Further,
both provisions are applicable to
multiple agency programs and are
already addressed, in part, in 7 CFR
718.6. The agency has modified 7 CFR
part 718 to clarify the impact of the
statutory provisions on FLP. The
comment, therefore, is not adopted.
Five comments were received on the
credit history provisions of the general
eligibility requirements (§ 764.101(d)).
One comment, while it agreed with the
clause that unacceptable credit history
is history of failures to repay past debts
when the ability to repay was within the
applicant’s control, stated the agency
should incorporate an objective
measurement of the criteria to protect
the agency and avoid the appearance of
disparate treatment. The proposed rule
reiterated the agency’s established
policy. In addition, the agency finds it
impossible to anticipate every credit
history scenario that may be
encountered. An inflexible and absolute
standard, such as a minimum credit
score, would remove the agency’s ability
to consider the reasons for an
applicant’s prior credit problems.
Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
Another comment stated the agency
should include in the final rule the
circumstances currently found in
§ 1910.5(c) that the agency does not
automatically consider unacceptable
credit history. The agency agrees with
the comment and has revised the CFR
for clarity. One comment supported the
removal of the requirement that the
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Office of the General Counsel be
involved when the agency believes
applicants have not dealt with the
agency in good faith. The agency
addressed this issue under the ‘‘good
faith’’ definition discussion.
Two comments stated the agency
should remove the requirement that an
applicant will make a sincere effort to
repay the loan and will devote the effort
required to carry out the terms and
conditions of the loan. The agency
agrees, as it will be difficult to assess the
efforts the applicant will make.
However, the agency believes the
objective requirement that the applicant
will carry out the terms and conditions
of the loan should remain in the CFR.
Therefore, that part of the comment is
not adopted.
Six comments were received on the
not delinquent on Federal debt
provisions of the general eligibility
requirements (§ 764.101(f)). Two
comments stated the agency should
include a definition of Federal debt in
the CFR for clarification purposes. The
agency agrees that a clarification is
needed to determine if an applicant or
borrower is in delinquent status of a
Federal debt for purposes of automatic
ineligibility under 31 U.S.C. 3720B.
However, the Department of Treasury
has responsibility to publishing
standards determining delinquent status
on a Federal debt, under this Debt
Collection Improvement Act provision.
Therefore, the agency simply has
incorporated a reference to the
applicable Department of Treasury
regulation (31 CFR 285.13) in its CFR.
Further, the agency handbook will
clarify application of this provision in
the consideration of loan applications.
Three comments stated the Federal
debt rule as written is more restrictive
than it needs to be because the term
‘‘delinquent borrower’’ is defined under
§ 761.2(b) as a borrower with any
portion of a payment to the agency that
is at least 30 days past due. As
addressed above on § 761.2(b), the
agency revised the ‘‘delinquent
borrower’’ definition to match the
definition included in the final rule
published on February 4, 2004. Further,
as stated above, the Department of
Treasury’s regulations provide when the
borrower’s Federal debt is in
‘‘delinquent status’’ for purposes of loan
eligibility only. This rule incorporates
the Department of Treasury’s statutory
and regulatory requirements applicable
to Federal agencies. Therefore, the
comments are not adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should extend the prohibition to
emergency loans as well to ensure
consistency between loan programs.
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Section 3720B of the Debt Collection
Improvement Act of 1996 (DCIA)
generally provides that, except for
emergency loans, borrowers who are in
delinquent status on any non-tax
Federal debt are not eligible to obtain
any Federal financial assistance. The
proposed rule was based on the DCIA;
therefore, the comment cannot be
adopted.
Three comments were received on the
managerial ability provisions of
proposed § 764.101(h) (§ 764.101(i) in
final rule). One comment stated the
applicant’s managerial experience
should be in an operation similar to the
one the applicant proposes, as there are
vast differences between types of
operations. The agency believes it is not
possible to differentiate between skills
required by various enterprises to draw
the distinction the comment suggested.
In addition, the agency can require an
applicant to take borrower training in
areas the agency considers the applicant
to lack adequate experience. Therefore,
the comment is not adopted.
One comment disagreed with the
provision that the applicant’s
managerial experience must have been
obtained within the last 5 years. The
agency believes recent training or
experience is important for an applicant
to have a reasonable prospect for
success, as farming is a rapidly changing
business and experience acquired more
than 5 years ago may no longer be
relevant. Therefore, the comment is not
adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should add examples of documentation
necessary to demonstrate the applicant’s
managerial ability and clarify whether
managerial ability covers production
only or all aspects of the operation. The
agency has provided extensive internal
administrative guidance on acceptable
documentation to demonstrate
managerial ability, and believes
examples of acceptable documentation
are more appropriate for inclusion in
the agency handbook, available on the
agency’s website. Further, the agency
does not want to limit applicants to a
specific form of acceptable
documentation and cannot provide an
exhaustive list of acceptable
documentation to demonstrate
managerial ability in the CFR. The
agency considers managerial ability to
cover both production and financial
management because both are required
to ensure the applicant has reasonable
prospects for loan repayment. Therefore,
the comment is not adopted.
Twenty-three comments were
received on the general eligibility
requirements for loans to entity
applicants (§ 764.101(k), renamed and
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renumbered to § 764.101(l)). Fifteen
comments stated that the general
eligibility requirements for entity
applicants are unduly restrictive,
complicated, and may prevent the
transfer of farms to beginning farmers.
Two comments stated that the
requirement that all entity members
must be involved in the operation is
restrictive and does not take into
consideration age and health issues. The
comments stated the agency should
require that only the members of the
entity holding the majority interest be
involved in the farming operation. One
comment stated the requirement is too
restrictive especially in cases where one
family member becomes physically
unable to assist in the farming operation
but the other members are not able to
buy out the physically unable member’s
share and suggested the agency only
require members holding a majority
interest be involved in the operation of
the farm. The agency agrees and has
revised the CFR accordingly.
Two comments stated that the
requirement for entity members
involved in other farming operations,
that the other operations must not be
larger than a family farm, is too
restrictive because it does not take into
consideration that entity members may
have an interest in cooperatives to
ensure a market for the farming
operation’s crop. Further, the comments
stated it would be difficult for the
agency to obtain income information on
the other entities in which the member
is a participant, unless the agency
revises the requirements applicable to
individuals to require all entity
members provide income information
for any other farming operation in
which they are participating. The
agency agrees with the comments and
has revised the CFR accordingly to
clarify requirements for majority interest
holders, members’ collective interests,
and entity interests.
One comment stated it is not clear if
each farming operation must generate
less than the maximum gross income
threshold, as proposed in the family
farm definition, or if the member’s
combined share in all entities they are
participating in must be under the
threshold, or the combined gross
income of all the farms must be under
the threshold. Further, the comment
stated the CFR appears to prohibit
financing an applicant entity that has an
ownership interest in another entity
such as a finishing cooperative. As
stated above, the agency is not adopting
the proposed gross income requirement
of the family farm definition. Further,
the agency revised § 764.101(j)
(§ 764.101(k) in final rule) in response to
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comments received on proposed
§ 764.101(j) and (k) (§ 764.101(k) in final
rule). Therefore, the agency believes the
comments are no longer applicable.
Two comments stated the family farm
requirements for entities as stated in
§ 764.101(j) (renamed and renumbered
to § 764.101(k) in final rule) do not
match the eligibility requirements for
EM loans at § 764.352. Both comments
stated the agency should make
§ 764.101(j) and § 764.352 consistent. As
stated above, the agency revised
§ 764.101(j) and (k) extensively. In the
final rule, § 764.101(k) provides the
operator requirements for entities
applicable to all loan types, except that
paragraph (k)(3) on collective interests
does not apply to EM loans. The
statutory basis for this paragraph is
found in sections 302 and 311 of the
Act, but not in section 321 for EM loans.
Section 764.352(j) provides EM loan
eligibility requirements if the entity
composition changes between the time
the disaster occurred and the time the
loan is closed. One EM loan eligibility
requirement applicable to entities is that
the entity members operated the farm at
the time of the disaster. This
requirement and other § 764.352
requirements are based on section 321
of the Act (7 U.S.C. 1961) and do not
apply to any other loan type; therefore,
the comments are not adopted.
Twenty-nine comments were received
on the entity eligibility requirements
under the general requirements
provisions (§ 764.101(j) and (k)). Five
comments supported the provisions as
written. Twenty-two comments opposed
the provisions and stated the provisions
as written are difficult to understand
and follow. The agency agrees with the
comments and has clarified the
paragraph and further revised § 764.352
for consistency. Two comments
recommended that the family farm and
entity composition requirements under
the general requirements provisions be
eliminated, as the requirements would
have a negative impact on the transition
plans for some farm families. The
agency believes the revisions discussed
above will address these comments and
that elimination of the requirements is
not necessary. Furthermore, the
regulations as revised mirror existing
regulatory requirements for guaranteed
loans, as well as direct farm ownership
and operating loans. The final rule, as
written, eliminates inconsistencies in
existing regulations governing
emergency loans.
Section 764.102 General Limitations
One comment was received on the
general limitations requirement that
loan funds must be used by farms
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located in the United States
(§ 764.102(b)(2) renumbered to
§ 764.102(c) in final rule). The comment
agrees that funds should not be used to
obtain or improve land not in the
United States, but does not agree with
making applicants with farms split by
the United States and Canadian border
that have been in operation or existence
for years ineligible for loans. Sections
302(a) and 311(a) of the Act (7 U.S.C.
1922 and 1941) for farm ownership and
operating loans, respectively, provide
that loans may be made to applicants in
the United States. The proposed rule
was based on the Act’s provisions;
therefore, the comment cannot be
adopted.
Three comments were received on the
highly erodible land and wetlands
conversion provision (§ 764.102(b)(3)
renumbered to § 764.102(d) in final
rule). All comments stated the agency
should include the prohibition found in
section 363 of the Act (7 U.S.C. 2006e),
which provides loan funds may not be
used to drain, dredge, fill, level or
otherwise manipulate a wetland, or in
any activity that will impair or reduce
the flow, circulation, or reach of water,
except for an activity related to the
maintenance of a previously converted
wetland. In addition, one of the
comments stated the words ‘‘to produce
an agricultural commodity’’ should be
removed. The agency agrees with the
comments, and has revised this section
and § 765.205(b)(10) accordingly.
Further, a definition of ‘‘highly erodible
land’’ has been added to § 761.2.
Eleven comments were received on
the noncontiguous tracts provision
(§ 764.102(b)(5)). Three of the comments
supported the provision while eight
comments either opposed it in its
entirety or stated reasons the agency
cannot realistically apply this specific
provision nation-wide. The agency
considered the comments opposing the
provision and concluded that it is not
possible to clarify the proposed
limitation in the CFR sufficiently,
without making it overly burdensome
on the agency and applicants.
Furthermore, the agency concluded that
there is not a policy concern associated
with operating non-contiguous tracts.
The changing structure of agriculture
and increased urban uses of farmland in
many localities require some operators
to farm widely-dispersed tracts in order
to assemble an economically viable
operation. The concern addressed by the
proposed requirement is actually that of
financial impact. Any increased costs
and financial inefficiencies resulting
from operating non-contiguous tracts are
most appropriately addressed through
the business planning process and the
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loan feasibility analysis, however, rather
than being a separate limitation.
Therefore, the agency agrees with the
comments and has removed the
paragraph.
Section 764.103 General Security
Requirements
Twenty comments were received on
the general security requirements
provisions. One comment was in favor
of requiring a lien on non-essential
assets for all loans except beginning
farmer downpayment and youth loans.
The comment stated that by adopting
this provision, the agency will eliminate
confusion on what liens have to be
obtained for what type loans. One
comment stated the agency should
apply the lien on non-essential assets
requirement to beginning farmer
downpayment loans, as these loans
should not be made to borrowers with
a significant accumulation of nonessential assets. One comment stated all
agency direct loans, including beginning
farmer downpayment and youth loans
should have the same security
requirements and that such loans are
often the most poorly collateralized. The
agency believes the downpayment
requirement and the short repayment
term for beginning farmer downpayment
loans result in a better collateral
position than most agency loans. Due to
the statutorily-mandated 10 percent
downpayment requirement, beginning
farmers do not normally have significant
non-essential assets. The time spent in
monitoring non-essential assets is better
spent in providing guidance and
oversight to beginning farmer borrowers.
Therefore, the suggested changes are not
adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should clarify that it is the agency’s
choice of what constitutes ‘‘best security
available’’ when there are several
options and that this determination is
appealable. The comment suggested the
agency make the loan and obtain the
best security available to protect the
taxpayer and the agency’s financial
interests. The agency disagrees. The
security requirements in part 764
adequately describe the required and
preferred items of security. In the rare
cases where there are security options
and the agency provides financing based
on the best security available, no
appealable adverse decision results.
Applicants, however, can request
National Appeals Division (NAD)
review of the agency’s determination of
appealability of any issue. Therefore,
the comment is not adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should consider, in addition to value,
the lien position when choosing
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between available security. The agency’s
handbook will provide guidance to
agency officials in considering lien
position when choosing between
available security. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
One comment suggested the agency
obtain a lien on all titled assets the
applicant owns, and provided examples
of non-titled assets on which the agency
should obtain a security interest. Two
comments stated the agency should
replace the 150 percent additional
security requirement with a lien on all
farm real estate for farm ownership
loans and a lien on all chattel property
for operating loans. In addition, one of
the comments stated the agency should
take a blanket lien appropriate for the
type of loan. The agency believes these
proposals are overly restrictive and do
not provide the agency or applicants
sufficient flexibility. Further, a blanket
requirement for liens on all titled
property would be overly burdensome
on the agency to administer and could
prevent qualified applicants from
receiving credit or from obtaining part
of their credit needs from other sources.
Therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should have discretion in obtaining
more than 150 percent of security, if
available, and if the agency’s lien will
not prevent the applicant from obtaining
other credit. The agency has determined
that the existing 150 percent loan to
value ratio is adequate. Most agency
applicants rely on other creditors for
part of their credit needs. A greater
security requirement could weaken the
applicant’s ability to obtain credit from
other sources and would increase
administrative burden on agency staff
unnecessarily. Therefore, the comment
is not adopted.
One comment stated the non-essential
asset value should be increased from
$5,000 to $15,000 because taking a lien
on an asset valued at $5,000 is a burden
for the agency to track and adds no
value to the agency loans. The agency
believes that taking a lien on nonessential assets of $5,000 is worthwhile.
The average direct operating loan is
between $45,000 and $50,000. Assets
that may provide a secondary source of
loan repayment of 10 percent or more of
the loan amount are considered
significant, and the agency will
continue to require liens on such assets
to reduce potential losses. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should make liquidation of nonessential assets a loan approval
condition as an applicant unable to
obtain other credit may realize a greater
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financial benefit from the liquidation of
an asset than from retaining it. The
agency believes making liquidation of
non-essential assets a mandatory loan
condition would potentially create
additional financial obligations for
applicants due to tax consequences. In
addition, the applicant may not be able
to sell the non-essential assets timely,
and therefore, the applicant’s access to
loan funds may be delayed for a
considerable amount of time and have a
negative impact on the farming
operation. Therefore, the comment is
not adopted.
One comment stated adequate
security should have a ‘‘market value of
at least 100 percent of the loan amount’’
instead of ‘‘security value equal to 100
percent of the loan amount’’. The
agency defines both ‘‘market value’’ and
‘‘security value’’. The difference
between the two is that the definition of
‘‘market value’’ does not include
reduction for any prior liens. Therefore,
the agency believes the provision as
written is correct, and the comment is
not adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should add in the adequate security
provision that a guarantee from a
Government or quasi-governmental
organization in the case of the Pacific
Basin where lands are held in
communal, rather than fee simple, and
where the U.S. Department of Justice
lacks jurisdiction will be acceptable.
The agency believes the provision as
written, which allows the pledge of
security from a third party, permits the
agency to accept the quasi-governmental
guarantees. Therefore, the agency
believes no change is necessary.
One comment stated the agency
should replace the 150 percent security
requirement with a lien on all assets
used in or essential to the farming
operation. The comment stated if the
comment is not adopted, the agency
should allow its officials discretionary
authority to waive the agency’s lien on
crops if the 150 percent requirement is
met and the agency is not providing
annual operating credit to produce the
crops. Another comment stated agency
officials should have discretionary
authority to waive a lien on crops if the
150 percent security requirement is met
and the agency is not providing annual
operating credit to produce the crops.
As stated above, the agency believes that
obtaining a lien on all the applicant’s
assets may prevent the applicant from
obtaining needed credit from other
sources. Further, if the 150 percent
requirement is met by other security and
the agency does not provide funds for
crop production, the agency does not
obtain a lien on the crops under the
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final rule. Therefore, the comments are
not adopted.
One comment stated the agency, with
applicant input, should make the final
decision on taking a lien on the
applicant’s non-essential assets. The
agency retains the discretion to
administratively allow for applicant
input; however, the agency needs to
make the final decision as to the
acceptability of loan collateral to protect
its financial interest. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
Two comments stated it is not clear
when the agency will take a lien on each
non-essential asset that has a value in
excess of $5,000. Both comments stated
there are circumstances under which
the agency may not be able to obtain a
lien if the CFR text is interpreted
literally. The agency agrees with the
comments and has revised the CFR to
require a lien on such assets when each
or the aggregate value of like assets
(such as stocks) has a value in excess of
$5,000.
Section 764.104 General Real Estate
Security Requirements
Three comments were received on the
general real estate security requirements
provisions. One comment stated the
provision that the applicant must agree
not to increase an existing prior lien
without the written consent of the
agency should be removed because the
agency increases its debt by capitalizing
interest, so other lenders should not be
held to a higher standard. It is agency
policy to accept junior lien positions as
adequate collateral while other lenders,
generally, do not. The prohibition on
increasing a prior lien holder’s debt
without agency consent is critical to
limiting the agency’s loss and assuring
that loan objectives are met. Therefore,
the comment is not adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should not take leaseholds as security,
because when the agency has taken
leaseholds as security it has suffered
inordinate losses and that very few
other lenders engage in the practice.
While the agency agrees that leaseholds
may decline in value during the term of
the loan, it has determined leaseholds
serve as security for only a small
percentage of its portfolio. Therefore,
the comment is not adopted.
One comment objected to the
provision on Tribal lands held in trust.
The comment stated the agency should
use the current provision in § 764.8(j)
that provides the agency will take
Indian trust lands as security. Further,
the comment stated if the applicant is
required to request title reports from the
Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), it should
be stated in the CFR. Current § 764.8(j)
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incorporates BIA title status reports and
approval requirements from
§ 1943.19(a)(7). The agency agrees with
the latter part of the comment and has
revised the CFR to require the applicant
to request BIA to furnish title status
reports and BIA provides them and
approves the lien.
Section 764.105 General Chattel
Security Requirements
Three comments were received on the
general chattel security requirements
provisions. All comments stated the
provision is too broad and requested the
agency clarify if the same chattel
security can be pledged for a direct and
a guaranteed loan at the same time. The
agency believes the provision is
adequate as written, and it allows the
agency flexibility needed to best meet
the needs of applicants. The same
chattel security could be pledged for a
direct and a guaranteed loan. Therefore,
the comments are not adopted.
Section 764.106 Exceptions to Security
Requirements
Nine comments were received on the
exceptions to security requirements
provisions. Three comments stated the
agency should take a lien on a non-farm
residence only when other security
property does not provide a security
value equal to 100 percent of the loan
amount. The comments stated that a
lien on the non-farm residence may
leave a family homeless if the farming
operation is not successful. In addition,
the comments stated the lien on the
non-farm residence would make it
difficult for applicants to take advantage
of low housing interest rates and further
impede their financial progress. One
comment stated the agency is
inconsistent in its security requirements
because the agency will not obtain a lien
on the non-farm residence but will
obtain a lien on crops and chattels to
meet the 150 percent security
requirement for long-term loans. The
comment stated crops and chattels are
typically considered short or
intermediate term assets for loan
underwriting purposes. In addition, the
comment stated the agency’s regulatory
limits on security do not seem to be
consistent with the Debt Collection
Improvement Act (DCIA). Therefore, the
comment stated the agency should
remove § 764.106(d). The agency
disagrees. The DCIA does not dictate
appropriate types of loan security but
provides collection remedies upon
delinquency. The proposed rule
continued the agency’s existing policy
in protecting its financial interest as
well as not imposing overly burdensome
conditions on applicants. The
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requirement, as published, provides for
some collateral margin, when available,
to mitigate the agency’s risk. The agency
does not want to encumber the
applicant’s home unnecessarily for the
reasons raised, but if the applicant
becomes delinquent and loan servicing
under 7 CFR part 766 is required to
bring the account current, the agency
will take a lien on the non-farm
residence at that time if it has not
already. Therefore, the comments are
not adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should use, in place of § 764.106(d)(2),
the language from existing 7 CFR
1941.19(c) because it provides
safeguards for applicants’ non-farm
residence. The agency believes
proposed § 764.106(d)(2) provides the
same safeguards as 7 CFR 1941.19(c);
therefore, the comment is not adopted.
Three comments stated the agency
should clarify the exception applicable
to special collateral accounts the
applicant uses for the farming operation.
Two of the comments stated the
provision as proposed, can include
almost any asset of the applicant. The
agency agrees with the comments and
has revised § 764.106(e) to refer to
working capital accounts the applicant
uses for the farming operation.
One comment stated the agency
should add the following to the security
exception provision: ‘‘when the U.S.
Department of Justice has no
jurisdiction or has advised the agency
that they will not litigate civil cases in
areas lacking a Federal District Court.’’
The agency believes the existing
provision under § 764.106(c), which
states the agency will not take as
security property on which it cannot
obtain a valid lien adequately addresses
this concern. Therefore, the comment is
not adopted.
Section 764.107 General Appraisal
Requirements for Real Estate and
Chattel
Four comments were received on the
general appraisal requirements for real
estate and chattel provisions. All
comments stated the security value of
livestock and crop production should
remain 100 percent of the amount
loaned for annual operating and family
living expenses instead of 100 percent
of the projected annual income
generated from livestock and crop
production. The agency agrees that the
loan amount is a known value, while
the projected annual income from
livestock and crops is an estimate,
which may be overstated. Use of the
projected annual income may
significantly overstate the security value
of the anticipated production and result
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in additional risk and higher loan losses
to the agency in the event the operation
fails. The agency agrees with the
comments and has revised the CFR
accordingly.
Section 764.108 General Insurance
Requirements
Six comments were received on the
general insurance requirements
provisions. One comment stated the
term ‘‘economically feasible’’ under
§ 764.108(b) is not clear. In addition, the
comment stated chattel security need
only be covered by hazard insurance if
it is available, and the cost of the
insurance does not exceed its benefit.
The agency agrees with the comment
and has revised the CFR text
accordingly.
Three comments stated § 764.108(d)
and (e) seem to conflict since
subparagraph (d) requires crop
insurance unless the applicant signs a
waiver for emergency crop loss
assistance and subparagraph (e) requires
crop insurance must be obtained for
crops providing adequate security. The
agency has revised the CFR to clarify
that these are separate requirements.
The catastrophic risk protection level of
crop insurance is a minimum
requirement under 7 U.S.C. 1508 (b)(7)
and section 371 of the Act. Insurance for
adequate security is an additional
administrative requirement.
One comment stated the proposed
rule did not provide guidance on the
type of insurance required, amount of
insurance or insurance waiver
conditions. In addition, the comment
stated it is not clear if including the
crop insurance premium does not result
in a feasible plan, would the decision to
deny a loan be upheld if a feasible plan
can be developed without crop
insurance. As stated above, the agency
has revised the insurance requirements
for clarification and elimination of
conflicts. Therefore, this part of the
comment is not adopted. The agency
considers crop insurance premiums to
be essential farm operating expenses
and the applicant can utilize operating
loan funds to pay the premiums.
Further, the agency requires the
applicant to obtain crop insurance for
growing crops used to provide adequate
security for the agency loan. There is no
economic feasibility condition.
Therefore, no change has been made in
response to the latter part of the
comment.
One comment stated there is a conflict
between the requirements for FLP loans
and Farm Program disaster benefits
regarding insurance. The comment
stated that for FLP loans an applicant
must either have crop insurance or sign
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a crop insurance waiver, but to receive
Farm Program benefits after a disaster,
an applicant must either have crop
insurance or not have insurance. The
agency believes the CFR as written
provides clear guidance on the
insurance requirements applicable to
FLP loans under the applicable statutes
noted above. Therefore, the comment is
not adopted.
Section 764.151 Farm Ownership Loan
Uses
One comment stated the agency
should extend the provision of
refinancing a temporary bridge loan,
made by a commercial lender for the
acquisition of a farm, to loans made
under a private contract for deed. The
comment stated contracts for deed are a
major source of funds for beginning
farmers and the restriction does not
benefit the agency. Section 303(a)(1)(E)
of the Act provides that farm ownership
loan funds can be used to refinance
temporary bridge loans made by
commercial or cooperative lenders to
farmers to acquire a farm in certain
instances. In addition, section 310F of
the Act authorizes the Secretary to
establish a pilot program to provide
guarantees of loans made by private
sellers on a contract land-sale basis to
qualified beginning farmers. The agency
implemented Section 310F in a Notice
of Funds Availability published in the
Federal Register on September 4, 2003
(68 FR 52557–52562). The proposed
rule was based on the Act’s provisions,
which do not authorize refinancing
contracts for deed on a permanent basis;
therefore, the comment cannot be
adopted.
Section 764.152 Eligibility
Requirements (Farm Ownership Loans)
Three comments were received on the
prior debt forgiveness provisions
(§§ 764.152(b) and 764.252(b)). One
comment stated the agency should
revise § 764.152(b) to include all the
debt forgiveness conditions found under
§ 764.252(b) to make the requirements
for farm ownership and farm operating
applicants the same. One comment
stated that applicants that have caused
losses to the agency through debt
forgiveness should not be eligible for
loans. The comment stated the agency
receives limited funding each year and
it should direct it to applicants who
have not received debt forgiveness. In
addition, the comment stated the
agency’s reputation and integrity is
harmed from the policy of allowing any
applicants who received previous debt
forgiveness to be eligible for loans. The
third comment objected to the provision
that applicants that have received debt
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63259
forgiveness due to a Presidentiallydesignated emergency are still eligible
for operating loans. The comment stated
that the determination if the debt
forgiveness was due to a Presidentiallydesignated emergency would be very
subjective and ripe for appeals. The
agency disagrees. Section 373(b)(1)(A) of
the Act provides that borrowers that
have received debt forgiveness on a
direct or guaranteed loan, generally are
no longer eligible for farm ownership or
operating loans. In addition, section 373
(b)(2) of the Act provides limited
exceptions under which an annual
operating loan may be made to
borrowers that received debt
forgiveness. The proposed rule was
based on the Act’s provisions; therefore,
the comments cannot be adopted.
Two comments stated changes to
Federal and State laws on property
ownership have made the agency’s
owner-operator requirement a barrier for
some applicants. The comments stated
if owners of the real estate are the same
persons who own the entity operating
the real estate, the agency should
consider the owner-operator
requirement to be met. The agency
understands that the entity ownership
requirement may be a barrier in some
cases; however, the agency’s application
of the owner-operator requirement to
entity applicants is consistent with
section 302 of the Act. The agency does
not choose to make a policy change at
this time.
In the proposed rule, the agency
inadvertently incorporated the
definition of ‘‘participated in the
business operation of a farm’’ under
§ 764.152(d). The agency received nine
comments requesting the definition be
moved to § 761.2(b) and § 764.152
should only provide FO loan eligibility
requirements. The agency agrees with
the comments and has revised the CFR
accordingly.
Four comments were received on
acceptable documentation of an
applicant’s participation in the business
operations of a farm (§ 764.152(d)). One
comment stated the agency should
either publish guidelines in the CFR on
what it considers acceptable
documentation or develop a form for
applicants to provide documentation.
One comment stated the agency should
publish in the CFR acceptable
documentation required for applicants
to establish participation in the business
operation of a farm. The comment stated
the agency requires applicants to
provide tax returns, with no alternative
form, to verify the applicant’s
participation in the business operation
of a farm. In addition, the comment
stated the agency should develop a
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standard form for applicants to
complete when applicants claim
participation in the business operation
of a farm by virtue of being raised on a
farm. The agency believes the rule as
written provides the flexibility needed
for applicants to document their
participation in the business operation
of a farm. Typically, documents include
tax returns, FSA records, or W–2’s. In
addition, because of the different skills
acquired through participation in
diverse agricultural enterprises by the
applicant, it will be difficult for the
agency to develop a standard form to
cover all potential farming
participations that may occur
throughout the country. Applicants can
address their participation in the
business operations of a farm when
documenting their farming experience.
Moreover, in the agency’s experience,
applicants have not had difficulty in
meeting the requirement as is included
in current § 1943.12(a)(6). Therefore, the
comments are not adopted.
One comment stated the example of
participation by the applicant having
been raised on a farm should be
removed, as it may have occurred more
than 50 years ago. The agency believes
it is unlikely the situation the comment
stated will occur, because as stated
under the general eligibility requirement
provisions, the applicant must possess
managerial ability by farming
experience obtained within the last 5
years. Therefore, the comment is not
adopted.
One comment stated the eligibility
requirements should require timely
experience relevant to the proposed
operation to insure a greater success rate
for applicants as they will have recent
experience in the ever-changing
agricultural technology and practices. In
addition, the comment stated the
requirement the applicant must have
participated in the business operation of
a farm in 3 out of the last 10 years
currently in effect is often
misunderstood by applicants, who
believe they are eligible for farm
ownership loans if they farmed 8, 9, and
10 years ago. The agency believes the
farm ownership requirements as written
are clear and accurately reflect the
statutory requirements in section 302 of
the Act. As stated previously, the
agency does not differentiate between
the skills required to operate various
types of farms. The agency cannot make
the farming experience timeframe any
different than specified in section
302(b)(1) of the Act and does not choose
to make the requirements overly
burdensome to beginning farmers.
Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
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One comment was received on the
provision that an applicant for a farm
ownership loan must not have received
a farm ownership loan. The comment
stated the provision as written implies
that an applicant is only eligible for one
farm ownership loan. The agency
disagrees. The proposed language sets
out alternatives. The agency, however,
has clarified that an applicant must
‘‘satisfy at least one of the following
conditions’’, and lists the alternative
requirements from section 302 of the
Act. Generally, the applicant may have
received a prior farm ownership loan,
but such loan may not have been
outstanding for more than a total of 10
years prior to the new closing date.
Two comments were received on the
requirement that an applicant for a farm
ownership loan had been the operator of
a farm. One comment stated that
changing the requirement is contrary to
wise supervised credit and will be a
disservice to young individuals since,
under the new rule they will be eligible
for loans without the necessary ability
to make wise financial decisions, as
evidenced by filing Schedule F with
their Federal tax returns. The other
comment stated that the 3-year
requirement for owning, managing or
operating a farm should not just be
stated as ‘‘a year’s complete production
and marketing cycle.’’ Section 302(b)(1)
of the Act provides that eligible
applicants for farm ownership loans are
farmers who have participated in the
business operations of a farm for not
less than 3 years. The proposed rule was
based on the Act’s provisions; therefore,
the comments cannot be adopted.
The agency inadvertently omitted in
the proposed rule the current
requirement that the entity must be
authorized to own and operate a farm in
the state in which the farm is located.
Therefore, the agency is adding the
requirement in the final rule at
§ 764.152(c).
Lastly, the agency revised § 764.152(e)
in the final rule because the transition
rule established under section 302(b)(2)
of the Act (7 U.S.C. 1922) is no longer
applicable.
Section 764.154 Rates and Terms
(Farm Ownership Loans)
Three comments were received on the
rates and terms provision pertaining to
the joint financing agreements. One
comment supported the joint financing
agreement provision stating that the
lower interest rate offered through the
joint financing agreements benefits
beginning farmers. Two comments
stated the agency should extend it to all
loan types. Section 307(a)(3)(D) of the
Act (7 U.S.C. 1927(a)(3)(D)) provides the
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minimum interest rate for a direct farm
ownership loan made as part of a joint
financing arrangement. The Act does
not specifically authorize joint financing
agreements with different interest rates
for any other type loans. The proposed
rule was based on the Act’s provisions;
therefore, the comments cannot be
adopted.
Section 764.203 Limitations
(Beginning Farmer Downpayment Loan)
Three comments were received on the
limitations provisions under the
beginning farmer downpayment loan.
One comment stated the Agency should
work with Congress to raise the limit
from $250,000 to $500,000. The agency
believes the impact of any legislative
change to increase the beginning farmer
downpayment loan limit must be
carefully analyzed as the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB), along
with the President play a role in the
appropriations process. Therefore, the
agency is limiting this rule to revising
its regulations within its current
statutory authority. However, the
Administration’s 2007 Farm Bill
proposal recommends that the loan
limit for the direct loans be increased.
The Agency will make the appropriate
regulatory changes in the future, in the
event the Administration’s proposal is
adopted. Two comments stated that this
limit is too low for their areas since
buying adequate acreage to operate a
farm efficiently far exceeds the limit.
Section 310E(c)(2) of the Act (7 U.S.C.
1935(c)(2)) provides the maximum
beginning farmer downpayment loan
limit. The proposed rule was based on
the Act’s current provision; therefore,
the comments cannot be adopted.
However, as provided above, the agency
will make the appropriate regulatory
changes should the Administration’s
proposal to increase the direct loan
limits be adopted.
Section 764.251 Operating Loan Uses
Fifteen comments were received on
the operating loan uses. One comment
stated the operating loan uses should be
clarified to indicate whether income
taxes can be paid for the current or prior
year and personal residence or personal
car payments can be made with
operating loan funds. The operating
loan uses as written provide for the
payment of family living and farm
operating expenses. The term ‘‘family
living expenses,’’ as defined in
§ 761.2(b), includes ‘‘the cost of
providing for the needs of family
members.’’ The agency believes that
income taxes, personal residence and
personal car payments are considered a
‘‘cost of providing for the needs of
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family members’’ and can, therefore, be
paid using operating loan funds. The
agency believes no additional revisions
to the operating loan uses are necessary
since it would be impossible to develop
an all-inclusive list of family living
expenses.
Three comments supported the
provision that up to $15,000 of
operating loan funds may be used for
real estate repairs or improvements.
Eleven comments either wanted to raise
the limit of operating loan funds to
$20,000 (1 comment), $25,000 (1
comment), $30,000 (2 comments),
$50,000 (3 comments), or did not want
to impose a limit as long as the farming
operation’s cash flow will sustain the
amount used for a 7 year term without
balloon payments (3 comments).
Further, one of the comments stated the
direct loan program should match the
guaranteed loan program, as there is no
limit on the amount of guaranteed
operating loan funds that can be used
for real estate repairs. In response, the
agency revised the CFR to provide that
direct operating loan funds can be used
to pay costs for minor real estate repairs
or improvements, provided the loan can
be repaid within 7 years. The agency
agrees that the direct loan provision
should be consistent with the
guaranteed loan provision.
Lastly, the agency inadvertently
omitted the current provision that the
applicant may not use Lo-Doc loan
funds for refinancing debt. Therefore,
the agency added the provision under
§ 764.251(j)(1).
Section 764.252 Eligibility
Requirements (Operating Loans)
Nine comments were received on the
eligibility requirements for operating
loans. One comment stated the agency
should change ‘‘CONACT’’ to ‘‘Act’’ and
remove the definition of ‘‘debt
forgiveness’’ found in § 764.252(b). In
addition, the comment stated the
applicant should be eligible for loans by
paying the amount of the debt
forgiveness the applicant received. The
agency agrees. The agency changed the
references from ‘‘CONACT’’ to ‘‘Act’’
throughout the final rule, wherever they
occurred, and revised the definition of
‘‘debt forgiveness’’ in § 761.2 to provide
that the term does not include prior debt
forgiveness that is repaid in its entirety.
One comment stated the one-time
debt forgiveness exception due to a
Presidentially-declared disaster is also
available to applicants farming in
contiguous counties. The agency agrees
with the comment and has revised the
CFR accordingly. This change is
allowed by section 373(b) of the Act (7
U.S.C. 2008h(b)) and is consistent with
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the agency’s policy of providing EM
loans in these contiguous counties.
Seven comments were received
requesting the agency clarify that
applicants who had reached the
statutory limits were no longer eligible
for OL. In the preamble of the proposed
rule, the agency provided ‘‘The OL loan
eligibility requirement that the
applicant and any persons signing the
promissory note may not close an OL
loan in more than 7 calendar years will
be modified to apply only after
December 31, 2002. This change is
required by section 255 of the
Agricultural Risk Protection Act of
2000, Public Law 106–224, enacted on
June 20, 2002.’’ However, the agency
removed the appropriate regulatory text
since the agency’s authority to make
operating loans to applicants that had
reached the statutory term limits
expired on December 31, 2002. As
acknowledged in the preamble, the
agency attempted to incorporate all the
regulatory and statutory revisions
required since calendar year 1999. It
was due to agency oversight the above
text was included in the proposed rule
even though the regulatory text was
removed. Therefore, the agency will
take no further action on these
comments.
One comment stated the agency
should revise § 764.252(d) (§ 764.252(e)
in the final rule) to provide that
beginning farmers are eligible for direct
operating loans for 10 years as provided
under section 311 of the Act. The
agency agrees that beginning farmers are
not subject to the 7-year limitation
under that statutory provision and has
revised the CFR accordingly.
Five comments were received on the
one time waiver for operating loan term
limits under the eligibility requirements
provisions. One comment disagreed
with the continuous waivers of the
operating loan term limits enacted by
Congress. The comment stated the term
limits either need to be removed
completely or implemented fully as
required by section 311(c) of the Act.
Two comments supported the removal
of the term limits and stated eligibility
for loans should be based on the
applicant’s credit worthiness instead of
on the number of years an applicant has
obtained loans. Both comments, as well
as an additional comment, stated that if
the term limits remain in effect, the
agency should use the term ‘‘financially
viable operation’’ instead of ‘‘feasible
plan’’ in § 764.252(f)(1)
(§ 764.252(e)(4)(i) in final rule). Sections
311(c)(1) and (4) of the Act (7 U.S.C.
1941 (c)(1) and (4)) provide the term
limits and waiver provisions for
operating loans. Paragraph (c)(4)(B)(i)
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63261
specifically allows a borrower to receive
a one time waiver of 2 years, if ‘‘the
borrower has a viable farm...operation.’’
The agency has interpreted the
‘‘financially viable operation’’ to mean
an operation that will improve over time
so that agency assistance is no longer
needed. The term ‘‘feasible plan’’
indicates the operation will generate
inflows to cover outflows but it is not
necessarily reflective of a borrower’s
ability to graduate to commercial credit
or to provide for replacement of capital
items and long-term growth. The
proposed rule was based on the Act’s
provisions; therefore, the comments
cannot be adopted.
One comment stated section
311(c)(4)(A) of the Act (7 U.S.C.
1941(c)(4)(A)) provides the Secretary
shall waive the operating loan term
limits for farmers whose farm and
security instruments are subject to the
jurisdiction of an Indian tribe if the
Secretary determines that commercial
credit is not generally available;
therefore, the comment stated
§ 764.252(g) (renumbered to
§ 764.252(e)(2)) needs to reflect the
statutory requirement. The agency
agrees with the comment and has
revised § 764.252(e) accordingly.
In the proposed rule, the agency
inadvertently stated that applicants
‘‘may request a one-time waiver of OL
term limits * * *’’ However, the
agency’s current policy is to
automatically consider a waiver for
applicants who have reached the OL
term limits and does not require a
formal waiver request. Therefore, the
agency revised § 764.252(e)(4) to
provide that ‘‘On a case-by-casis basis,
[the applicant] may be granted a onetime waiver of OL term limits * * *’’
Lastly, the agency believes the Act’s
provisions regarding waiver of the
operating term limit were not clearly
stated in the proposed rule for entity
applicants. Section 311 of the Act,
which addresses eligibility requirements
for operating loans, including both the
term limit and the one-time waiver,
specifically provides ‘‘To be eligible for
such loans, applicants who are
individuals, or, in the case of
cooperatives, corporations,
partnerships, joint operations, trusts,
and limited liability companies,
individuals holding a majority interest
in such entity, must * * *’’ Proposed
§ 764.252(f)(2) provided that one
condition for obtaining a waiver is the
applicant ‘‘Applied for commercial
credit from at least two lenders.’’ As
proposed, the rule could be interpreted
to imply that the applicant and all
members of the entity must ‘‘be unable
to obtain commercial credit’’ when the
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Act clearly provides the requirement
applies only to the entity applicant and
entity members holding a majority
interest. Therefore, the Agency clarified
the waiver requirements in the final rule
by revising § 764.252(e)(4)(ii) to read the
applicant ‘‘And in the case of an entity,
the members holding the majority
interest, applied for commercial credit
from at least two lenders and were
unable to obtain a commercial loan,
including an Agency-guaranteed loan.’’
Section 764.254 Rates and Terms
(Operating Loans)
Three comments were received on the
rates and terms provisions for operating
loans. One comment stated that balloon
installments should be authorized
specifically for direct operating loans as
they are for guaranteed operating loans.
One comment stated the rule establishes
a 7-year maximum term for operating
loans; however, the current agency
regulations permit unequal and balloon
installments. In addition, the comment
stated it is not clear if unequal and
balloon installments will be allowed
under the new rule. The last comment
stated the agency should incorporate the
conditions currently in regulations
under which the agency will allow
longer annual operating loan repayment
terms. The agency agrees with the
comments and has added
§ 764.254(b)(2)(i) and (ii) to continue
existing policies in these areas.
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Section 764.255 Security
Requirements (Operating Loans)
Two comments were received on the
operating loan security provisions. Both
comments stated the agency omitted the
requirement to obtain a first lien on all
property or products acquired or
produced with loan funds and the
requirement to keep the same lien
position when refinancing secured
debts. The comments are correct, in
part, as the proposed rule simply
required a lien, rather than a ‘‘first lien’’
as provided in existing regulations at 7
CFR 1941.19(a)(1). However, existing
regulations require ‘‘a first lien on all
property or products acquired,
produced, or refinanced with loan
funds,’’ not just ‘‘property or products
produced and acquired.’’ The agency
does believe, however, that the
comments have merit, as it may not be
possible for an applicant to ensure the
agency can obtain a higher lien position
than the creditor being refinanced.
Therefore, the agency is adopting the
comments as recommended and has
revised the CFR accordingly.
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Section 764.301 Youth Loan Uses
Twenty comments were received on
the youth loan uses. Four comments
supported the provisions as proposed.
Four comments stated the agency
should continue making youth loans
under the same provisions currently
utilized. Eleven comments opposed the
agency’s proposal and stated that since
the project advisors are involved in
agriculture, the youth loan project will
be agriculture-related. In addition, some
of the comments stated that even if the
project advisor is not involved in
agriculture, youth loans provide
practical business skills and educational
experience. Further, two of the
comments stated youth loan funds
should also be used for community
projects and help children ‘‘stay out of
trouble’’ after school. One comment
stated it is not clear if the youth loan
project should meet all of the following:
be a modest, income-producing,
agriculture-related, educational project.
The agency disagrees. As stated in the
preamble of the proposed rule, the
Youth Loan Program’s objective is to
provide credit to rural youths to
establish and operate modest, incomeproducing projects in connection with
4-H clubs, FFA, and similar
organizations. However, through the
years, the objectives of the Youth Loan
Program have been interpreted
inconsistently to allow loan funds to be
used for projects not related to
agriculture. The agency’s proposal was
intended to clarify that section 311(b)(1)
of the Act (7 U.S.C. 1941(b)(1))
specifically waives only the managerial
ability and borrower training
requirements applicable to operating
loans. The statute does not waive the
loan purposes authorized in section 312
(a) of the Act; therefore, projects should
be agriculture-related. Therefore, the
comments are not adopted.
Section 764.302 Eligibility
Requirements (Youth Loans)
Fifty comments were received on the
eligibility requirements for youth loans.
In the preamble of the proposed rule,
the agency solicited comments on
lowering the youth applicant’s age limit
to 8 years to coincide with the age
limitation to participate in 4–H clubs
(proposed § 764.302(b)). The agency
received 35 comments. Twenty-three
comments opposed lowering the youth
applicant’s age limit, while seven
comments supported it. Three
comments stated the agency should not
change the youth applicant age limit.
Two comments stated the agency should
not lower the age limit but instead
should increase it from 10 years of age
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to 12 or 14. In addition, one of the
comments stated the loan limit for
youth applicants younger than 14 years
old should be $1,000 instead of $5,000.
The agency considered all comments
received and determined that lowering
the age for youth loan applicants will
not enhance applicants’ chances of
becoming successful farmers. Therefore,
the agency is not lowering the youth
loan applicants’ age limit.
Twelve comments were received on
the provision that youth loan applicants
reside in a rural area, city, or town with
a population of 50,000 or fewer people
(proposed § 764.302(c)). Four comments
supported the agency’s proposal as
written. Two comments stated the
provision is unnecessarily restrictive
and will prevent minority children
living in urban areas, whose parents
own or operate farms outside of the
urban area, from participating in this
valuable program. One comment stated
youth loans should be available to
youths residing in towns with
populations of less than 10,000. One
comment supported increasing the
population’s limit to 20,000 because
cities with larger populations are not
considered rural areas. In addition, the
comment stated that by increasing the
population limit, demand for youth
loans will increase and fewer funds will
be available to make operating loans to
farmers. One comment opposed
increasing the population to 50,000
inhabitants for youth loans. One
comment stated the limitation should be
removed. One comment stated there is
no need to impose additional
population restrictions since youth loan
funds will be used for agriculturally
related projects only. One comment
stated that by increasing the population
limit to 50,000 or fewer inhabitants and
restricting the use of youth loan funds
to agricultural projects only, the agency
is not making the Youth Loan Program
more accessible than it currently is.
These opposing comments do not
consistently support a specific
alternative to the proposed Youth Loan
Program provisions. The agency
believes that the Youth Loan Program,
as proposed, will provide valuable
educational opportunities for youths to
experience farming. Therefore, no
changes have been made in response to
these comments.
One comment stated the agency
should remove the home economics
teacher as an acceptable project advisor
since the agency proposed to finance
only agriculture-related projects through
the youth loan program. The agency
agrees with the comment and has
revised the CFR accordingly.
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One comment stated the agency
should include a definition for a youth
loan project. The comment stated that
sometimes the project advisor provides
a written statement that the project
under consideration is educational,
agriculture-related and beneficial to the
applicant; however, the project advisor
does not monitor the applicant’s
progress with the project. The comment
stated, if the applicant has difficulties,
the project advisor is not available to
provide advice as required or needed.
The project advisor mainly helps the
youth loan applicant develop the
project. The agency cannot predict in
advance the advisor’s willingness to
provide assistance at a future date and
has no available means to exercise any
authority over the advisor. However, the
agency provides assistance to youth
loan borrowers experiencing difficulties.
The agency believes a definition for a
youth loan project is not needed since
§ 764.301 provides the types of projects
for which a youth loan may be made;
therefore, the comment is not adopted.
One comment stated the word
‘‘supervised’’ should be replaced by the
word ‘‘mentored’’ in proposed
§ 764.302(d). The agency believes the
term used in the CFR and the term
provided in the comment are largely the
same, so the change would not make a
meaningful difference. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
The agency inadvertently omitted in
the proposed rule the eligibility
requirement that a youth loan applicant
not have caused the Agency a loss by
receiving debt forgiveness currently
established in 7 CFR 1941.12(a)(8). The
agency, therefore, has incorporated the
provision in the final rule by adding
new § 764.302(b) and redesignating
proposed § 764.302 paragraphs (b)
through (e) as paragraphs (c) through (f).
Section 764.305 Security
Requirements (Youth Loans)
Nine comments were received on the
youth loan security requirements
provisions. One comment supported the
agency’s proposal not to continue the
150 percent security requirement for
youth loans. One comment stated the
agency should require a cosigner for
youth loans. One comment stated if the
agency will not continue the 150
percent security requirement, the
agency should require a cosigner for
youth loans like the Department of
Education for student loans. Six
comments stated the security
requirements for youth loans should
remain the same as for operating loans.
The agency believes youth loan
applicants have minimal assets beyond
those acquired with loan funds. In
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addition, the agency has a limited loss
exposure for youth loans because of the
$5,000 loan limit; therefore, the
additional security requirements for
operating loans would impose a
disproportional administrative burden
on the agency. Further, DCIA provisions
provide more effective and less costly
collection tools than disposition of
collateral when the loan amount is
small. Lastly, youth loans are made to
finance income producing, agriculturerelated projects unlike student loans for
which repayment of principal is
generally deferred until a date in the
future. Therefore, the agency does not
believe a cosigner is necessary when the
cash flow projection reflects a feasible
plan. However, the agency may still
require a cosigner for youth loans when
the agency determines there is not
adequate cash flow for the proposed
loan otherwise. Therefore, the
comments are not adopted.
Section 764.351 Emergency Loan Uses
Two comments stated it is not clear if
an agency direct loan can be refinanced
with chattel physical loss loan funds or
production loss loan funds. Proposed
§ 764.351 contains the conditions for
refinancing debts, including agency
debt. The agency did not propose to
make policy changes to the existing
emergency loan regulation. Therefore,
the comments are not adopted.
Three comments stated the agency
should clarify in the final rule that only
essential property will be repaired or
replaced with emergency loan funds.
The agency agrees with the comments
and has revised the CFR accordingly.
One comment stated the agency
should revise § 764.351(a)(2)(v) to
provide for ‘‘essential farm operating
and family living expenses’’ instead of
‘‘essential household expenses.’’ The
agency agrees with the comment and
has revised the CFR accordingly. Lastly,
the agency added the words ‘‘not from
breeding stock’’ from current
§ 764.3(a)(2)(v) that were inadvertently
omitted in the proposed rule.
The agency inadvertently omitted the
words ‘‘except that such costs shall not
include the payment of bankruptcy
expenses’’ from current § 764.3(b)(1).
Therefore, the agency revised
§ 764.351(b)(1) accordingly.
Section 764.352 Eligibility
Requirements (Emergency Loans)
Seven comments were received on the
eligibility requirements for emergency
loans. One comment suggested that only
the primary operators should meet the
eligibility requirements if the ownership
structure of a family farm changes from
the time a qualified loss occurred to the
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time the emergency loan is closed. The
agency believes adoption of the
comment will result in more permissive
requirements for entities that underwent
a change in their ownership structure
than for entities that remained the same.
Further, the agency believes that change
in the ownership structure does not
justify treating those entities any
different from entities that did not
change ownership structure. Therefore,
the comment is not adopted.
Two comments stated the agency
should make an eligibility requirement,
instead of a limitation, that the physical
property must have been covered by
general hazard insurance at the time the
disaster occurred. The agency disagrees.
The property insurance requirement
should not be made an eligibility
requirement because applicants may
have insured only the most valuable
physical property, and, therefore, would
be disqualified for assistance. Therefore,
the comments are not adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should require the applicant to obtain a
formal denial on a loan application that
specifies the commercial lender’s
reasons for denying credit to the
applicant. The comment stated written
declinations are not formal denials of
credit nor do they represent true
analysis of the applicant’s credit
worthiness. In addition, the comment
stated commercial lenders provide
written declinations to their clients as a
customer service. Another comment
stated the agency should remove the
requirement that applicants, depending
on the amount of the loan request,
provide up to 3 written declinations of
credit. The comment stated if applicants
seem to be able to obtain credit
elsewhere, they should apply for a loan
from a commercial lender. The agency
disagrees. Section 322(b) of the Act (7
U.S.C. 1962(b)) provides the specific
number of written declinations, based
on the loan amount requested,
applicants for emergency loans have to
provide the agency. Further, section
322(b) states the specific reasons that
have to be included in the declination
letter provided by the commercial
lender. The agency has incorporated
these statutory provisions in
§ 764.352(e). While there may be cases
where commercial lenders provide
declinations of credit letters to their
customers, the agency has the flexibility
under § 764.352(e)(4) to contact other
commercial lenders within reasonable
proximity of the applicant and make an
independent determination of the
applicant’s ability to obtain credit
elsewhere. Lastly, the agency based both
the proposed as well as the final rule on
the Act’s provisions; therefore, no
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policy changes have been made in
response to the comments.
One comment stated the test for credit
requirement will keep a wealthy partner
from receiving disaster benefits.
Therefore, the comment stated the
requirement that owners holding a
majority interest in the entity applicant,
if not related by blood or marriage, must
all operate the farm, should be removed.
Section 321 of the Act (7 U.S.C. 1961)
provides the entity eligibility
requirements for emergency loans. The
proposed rule was based on the Act’s
provisions; therefore, the comment
cannot be adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should correct § 764.352(b)(1) to state
the application for an emergency loan
must be received within 8 months after
the date the disaster is declared or
designated. In addition, the comment
stated the agency should correct
paragraph (a)(7) to state an emergency
loan applicant may have had one
occasion of debt forgiveness on or before
April 4, 1996, but none after April 4,
1996. The agency agrees with the
comment and has revised the CFR.
Another comment suggested that
proposed § 764.352(b)(3) be revised to
provide that the applicant ‘‘must have
suffered disaster-related damage to
chattel or real estate essential to the
farming operation, or to household
contents that must be repaired or
replaced, to harvested or stored crops,
or to perennial crops for physical loss
loans.’’ The agency agrees that this
language from current § 764.4(b)(2)(iii)
was inadvertently omitted and has
included the provision in § 764.352(i).
Further, the agency added the
provision that applicants that receive
duplicative Federal assistance based on
the same disaster must agree to repay it
to the agency that provided such
assistance. This provision is in current
§ 764.4(a)(15) and was omitted in the
proposed rule. Lastly, the agency
reorganized this section by removing the
subparagraph headings and
renumbering the paragraphs.
Section 764.353 Limitations
(Emergency Loans)
Two comments were received on the
limitations for emergency loans
provisions. The comments stated
section 321(b)(3) of the Act contains
specific provisions for hazard insurance
requirements applicable to poultry
farmers requesting emergency loans that
were not included in the proposed rule.
The agency agrees with the comments
and has revised paragraph (e)
accordingly.
Another comment suggested that
proposed § 764.353(d)(3) on calculating
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eligible physical losses be revised to
include the value of replacement
livestock products as well as
replacement livestock. The agency
agrees that such losses are covered
under current § 764.3 and has revised
the paragraph accordingly.
Lastly, the agency added in
§ 764.353(c)(4) and (d)(6) the words ‘‘or
insurance indemnities received or to be
received’’ from current § 764.5(c)(4) and
(e)(1)(vi) that were inadvertently
omitted in the proposed rule.
Section 764.354 Rates and Terms
(Emergency Loans)
One comment suggested that
§ 764.354(b)(3) be revised to provide
‘‘EM loans for annual operating
expenses, except expenses associated
with establishing a perennial crop, must
be repaid within 12 months.’’ The
agency agrees that this provision in
current § 764.7(c) was inadvertently
omitted, in part, and has revised the
paragraph accordingly.
The agency inadvertently omitted in
the proposed rule the provision for
expenses associated with establishing a
perennial crop found in current
764.7(c). The agency has therefore,
incorporated the provision in the final
rule and has revised the CFR
accordingly.
Section 764.355 Security
Requirements (Emergency Loans)
Three comments were received on the
security requirements for emergency
loans provisions. One comment stated
the requirement the applicant has had
positive net cash farm income in at least
three of the past 5 years should be
removed for applicants with no security
other than repayment ability, as it
would prevent start-up and struggling
limited resource operations from
obtaining needed assistance. The agency
believes that relying on the applicant’s
repayment ability in lieu of chattel or
real estate security significantly
increases the agency’s level of risk
associated with the loan. Therefore, the
agency believes the requirement as
written is essential to limit the agency’s
potential losses. In addition, the existing
regulation includes an identical
requirement when the applicant will
utilize repayment ability as security.
Further, the agency has not experienced
significant problems with the provision
as it currently exists and does not
expect that it will in the future.
Two comments stated there is an
inconsistency between the requirement
that applicants provide copies of
records to show they had positive net
cash farm income in at least three of the
past 5 years to obtain an emergency loan
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based on their repayment ability, and
the requirement for applicants to
provide records for only 3 years for any
other loan. Therefore, the comments
stated the records requirements under
§ 764.355(c)(3) should be revised to
match the requirements under
§ 764.51(a). For the reasons stated above
as well as in addressing comments for
§ 764.51(a), the agency believes that the
requirements are reasonable. Therefore,
the comments are not adopted.
Lastly, in § 764.355(c)(4) the agency
added the provision from current
§ 764.8(f)(4) that was inadvertently
omitted in the proposed rule.
Section 764.401 Loan Decision
Fourteen comments were received on
the loan decision provisions. Three
comments stated the agency should
clarify that the maximum loan limits
may be exceeded at the time of loan
approval, however, loan limits cannot
be exceeded at the time of loan closing.
The agency agrees with the comments
and has revised the CFR, at § 761.8,
accordingly. In addition, the agency
revised the guaranteed loan regulation
at § 762.122 to incorporate the
maximum loan limit of § 761.8.
One comment stated the CFR text
does not address the requirement to
notify the applicant of loan denial. Such
notification is covered under
§ 764.54(a), which provides that within
60 calendar days after receiving a
complete loan application, the agency
must complete the processing of the
loan request and notify the applicant of
the decision reached. Further, the
agency handbook provides guidance
and information needed to be included
in the notification to the applicant of
loan denial. Therefore, the comment is
not adopted.
Two comments stated the provisions
on loan denial should be removed
because they are redundant with the
loan approval provisions. The agency
disagrees. The loan denial provisions
enumerate the conditions under which
loan denial is appropriate. Therefore,
the comments are not adopted.
One comment stated the CFR contains
vague and not easily measurable
standards because the agency will not
make a loan if the applicant’s
circumstances may not permit
continuous operation and management
of the farm or the applicant, the
operation, or other circumstances
surrounding the loan are inconsistent
with the authorizing statutes, other
Federal laws or Federal credit policies.
The comment stated loan denial should
be based on objective standards. The
agency has responsibility, under
sections 302, 311 and 321 of the Act, to
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ensure it assists owner-operators or
tenant-operators of family-sized farms;
providing financial assistance to
applicants who may not be available to
continually operate the farm is not
consistent with program objectives.
Loan denials based on the applicant’s
availability to operate the farm are rare.
The agency cannot anticipate every
possible scenario that may be
encountered since each operation, and
the circumstances surrounding each
one, in the country is unique, so some
flexibility is needed. Applicants denied
financial assistance will be advised of
the reasons and provided appeal rights.
In addition, the agency has a
responsibility to implement Federal
laws and Federal credit policies
applicable to the Federal Government as
a whole, not just its authorizing statute.
Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should make the National Appeals
Division (NAD) official responsible for
making a loan to an applicant the
agency cannot certify meets all the
conditions for loan approval. While the
agency may not agree with all NAD final
decisions, it is responsible for
implementing them. A reversal of loan
denial by NAD, however, does not
automatically result in loan approval.
The agency is still responsible for
administering the applicable rules in
light of the NAD decision and making
a loan decision based on the particulars
of the case and the NAD determination.
Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should establish timelines for requiring
additional information when an agency
loan denial is overturned in an appeal.
The agency believes reasonable
timelines for requiring information from
an applicant when the agency’s loan
denial is overturned in an appeal are
appropriate to be included in the agency
handbook and in direct notices to the
applicant. Therefore, the comment is
not adopted.
Two comments stated the agency
must implement the NAD decision
when the agency’s loan denial is
overturned in an appeal and not request,
what is in effect, a new application. The
agency disagrees that updated financial
data may never be requested to
implement a NAD decision. The agency
has the responsibility to make financial
assistance available to eligible
applicants with feasible operations in
accordance with statutory and
regulatory limitations, and at the same
time protect the taxpayer and agency’s
financial interest. In most cases, from
the time the agency denied a loan
application to the time a final NAD
decision is granted several months have
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passed. The actual age of the
information would be substantially
older in many cases. During that time,
applicants’ circumstances can and do
change significantly so that the old
financial information would
inaccurately represent the current
financial condition of the appellant and
could result in significant losses to the
agency. The amount of time that has
passed may impact the applicant’s
yields or the ability to even produce a
crop. Therefore, agency implementation
of a final NAD decision without
obtaining and evaluating recent
financial information is irresponsible
and contrary to sound loan making
principles. The agency, however, will
consider making a loan for crop
production if the applicant can produce
a crop in the production cycle in which
the loan was requested or for the next
production cycle, upon review of
current financial data and a farm
operating plan for the next production
cycle, if the agency determines the loan
can be repaid.
One comment supported the
requirements that must be met for the
loan to be approved after an agency
decision is overturned in an appeal. One
comment stated the loan approval
section should follow the loan
application section in the CFR. The
proposed and final rules follow the loan
process step-by-step from the
application stage, through evaluation, to
loan decision and closing. If the agency
moves the loan approval section to
follow the loan application section the
step-by-step process will be broken, and
thus, the rule will be more difficult to
follow and understand. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
Section 764.402 Loan Closing
Ten comments were received on the
loan closing provisions. One comment
supported the agency’s proposal as
written. One comment suggested that for
entity applicants, all individuals with at
least 10 percent ownership interest in
the entity should be required to sign the
promissory note to evidence individual
liability. The agency believes the rule as
written provides adequate and clear
guidance on who is required to sign the
promissory note in the case of an entity
applicant. While the guaranteed
regulation at § 762.130 provides for a
waiver of individual liability in some
cases for members with less than 10
percent ownership interest, direct loans
inherently carry additional risk for the
agency. Therefore, the comment is not
adopted.
One comment stated the agency must
provide additional guidance for States
with community property laws
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63265
regarding who is required to sign the
promissory note. The comment stated it
is not fair for a spouse in community
property States to be required to sign the
promissory note. Further, the comment
stated the agency is vulnerable to
lawsuits because it does not provide
guidance to spouses in such States on
how they can avoid signing the
promissory note. Section 764.402(a)
provides the signatures required on the
promissory note. However, marital
property rights and the requirements for
obtaining a valid lien on property are
governed by State law; therefore, the
agency relies on its Regional Offices of
General Counsel for guidance on
compliance with State laws and
regulations. Requirements for valid liens
are required for all applicants. The
agency does not provide legal advice to
applicants. Therefore, the comment is
not adopted.
One comment stated the CFR text
should specify the minimum insurance
and bonding requirements for closing
agents. The agency believes the rule as
written provides adequate protection
against malfeasance or error by a closing
agent. In the agency’s experience,
closing agents carry adequate insurance
and fidelity bond to protect the integrity
of the service they provide. Further, the
documents closing agents execute for
providing services for the agency’s
applicants specify the amount of
insurance required. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
Four comments stated the
requirement that a new security
agreement be obtained for each new
loan prior to funds disbursement is
overly restrictive. All comments stated a
new security agreement should be
required for each initial loan, when
required under State law governing
secured lender transactions, when there
were substantial changes to the security,
or the operation. In addition, one of the
comments stated some new loans, such
as annual operating loans, do not result
in new security being taken. The agency
agrees with the comments and has
revised the CFR to require a new chattel
security agreement for new loans as
necessary to secure the loan under State
law.
Two comments were received on the
provision for making loan funds
available to applicants within 15 days of
loan approval, subject to funds
availability. Both comments requested
that the timeframe be changed to 30
days. Section 333A(b) of the Act (7
U.S.C. 1983a(b)) provides that loan
funds will be available to applicants
within 15 days of loan approval, unless
the applicants agree otherwise or funds
are unavailable. The proposed rule was
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based on the Act’s provisions; therefore,
the comments cannot be adopted.
Section 764.451 Purpose (Borrower
Training)
In the preamble of the proposed rule,
the agency stated it was eliminating the
requirement to assess the need for
borrower training when a borrower
requests primary loan servicing. Nine
comments were received on the
agency’s decision to eliminate borrower
training in primary loan servicing. Four
comments fully supported the agency
decision. One of the supporting
comments stated borrowers who failed
to complete borrower training as
required, and have therefore become
ineligible for direct loan assistance,
should become eligible again under the
provisions of the final rule. The agency
will not retroactively reinstate direct
loan eligibility for borrowers who were
clearly required to complete borrower
training but failed to do so. Therefore,
this part of the comment is not adopted.
One comment stated it is not clear
how the agency will handle delinquent
borrowers applying for primary loan
servicing who were required to
complete borrower training and did not
do so. Further, the comment stated it is
not fair for borrowers who are currently
delinquent and have not completed
borrower training because they are not
eligible for primary loan servicing,
while borrowers who become
delinquent after the final rule is
effective will still be eligible for primary
loan servicing even if they did not
complete borrower training as required.
After the final rule becomes effective,
the agency will assess a borrower’s
training needs through the initial loan
making stage and continuously evaluate
the borrower’s training needs with the
year-end analysis, farm visits and
information contained in the borrower’s
case file. If there are indications the
borrower may need training, the agency
may require the borrower to complete
training when evaluating subsequent
requests for direct loan assistance.
Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
One comment stated delinquent
borrowers requesting primary loan
servicing are prime candidates for
borrower training since delinquency
indicates need for training. In addition,
the comment stated primary loan
servicing provides a great incentive for
the borrower to complete required
training. One comment stated borrower
training can be helpful in primary loan
servicing since borrowers can see that
recordkeeping is a tool in the decision
making process. The agency believes
borrower training is most effective and
beneficial at the beginning of the loan
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relationship with the borrower. The
reason for eliminating the requirement
in primary loan servicing is that
borrower training is most beneficial in
the loan making stages. When the
borrower becomes delinquent, borrower
training actually hinders the agency’s
ability to provide effective and timely
primary loan servicing because the
borrower’s training needs have to be
assessed before primary loan servicing
can be considered. Moreover, eligibility
requirements established in § 766.104
provide a borrower is eligible for
primary loan servicing when the
financial distress or delinquency is due
to circumstances beyond the borrower’s
control. Therefore, the comments are
not adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should develop a workbook/DVD
combination and provide it to all
borrowers along with appropriate
software. Further, the comment stated
the agency should not provide any
further direct assistance until borrowers
complete all the assignments included
in the workbook. Section 359 of the Act
(7 U.S.C. 2006a) contains the agency’s
specific responsibilities for providing
financial and farm management training
to its borrowers. The requirements as
stated in the Act cannot be met by a
workbook/DVD combination as the
comment provides. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
One comment stated the provisions
under § 764.452(f) and § 764.454(a)(4), if
taken together, can be construed to
conflict with each other. Therefore, the
comment stated the agency should
clarify the provisions to ensure
borrowers required to take borrower
training complete it. The provision
under § 764.452(f) states the agency
cannot reject an initial loan application
based solely on the applicant’s need for
training, while the provision under
§ 764.454(a)(4) states that a borrower
who is required to complete training
and does not do so within the required
timeframe, will be ineligible for
additional FLP loans. This ineligibility
is not based on the need for training but
the failure to meet a loan condition. The
agency does not believe the two
provisions conflict with each other,
since they are applicable under different
circumstances. Therefore, the comment
is not adopted.
Section 764.453 Agency Waiver of
Borrower Training Requirements
Two comments were received on the
agency waiver of borrower training
requirements. One comment stated the
agency should clarify whether or not a
waiver of financial management training
requires evidence of formal coursework.
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The other comment stated the agency
should provide objective requirements
that applicants must meet to obtain a
waiver of borrower training instead of
the broad provision that the applicant
submit evidence to demonstrate to the
agency’s satisfaction the applicant
possesses experience and training
necessary for a waiver. The agency
believes the rule as written provides
adequate flexibility for applicants to
provide evidence of financial
management training through
completion of a course as required by
§ 764.453(b)(1) or other means. Further,
the agency evaluates each case based on
its individual merits, since it is
impossible to identify all possible
means through which financial
management training can be
accomplished. Any additional
specificity would limit the applicant
and the agency’s flexibility. Lastly, rigid
guidelines would place excessive
burden on some applicants and not
require others who may benefit from
borrower training to take the
opportunity. Therefore, the comments
are not adopted.
Section 764.454 Actions That an
Applicant Must Take When Training Is
Required
Four comments were received on the
actions an applicant must take when
training is required. Three comments
stated it is not clear if a borrower who
completes the required training outside
of the allowed timeframe remains
eligible for additional direct loans. The
comments suggested language to be
added clarifying whether or not this will
affect the borrower’s eligibility for
primary loan servicing. The agency
agrees with the first part of the
comments and has revised the CFR to
state that if such borrower later
completes the training, the borrower
will then become eligible for additional
direct loans. However, the agency
believes the impact on the borrower’s
eligibility for primary loan servicing is
adequately addressed above. While the
agency does not evaluate the need for
borrower training when a borrower
requests primary loan servicing, the
eligibility requirements under § 766.104
provide the borrower has acted in good
faith. The definition of good faith
includes the borrower’s adherence with
all written agreements with the agency.
Therefore, the second part of the
comments is not adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should replace the words ‘‘direct FLP
loans’’ with the words ‘‘direct FLP
assistance’’ in § 764.454(a)(4) to
strengthen the lack of good faith denial
when delinquent borrowers request
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primary loan servicing. The agency
believes the comment’s concern is
sufficiently addressed above. Therefore,
the comment is not adopted.
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Section 764.458 Vendor Approval
One comment was received on the
vendor approval provisions. The
comment stated the agreement to
conduct training should be for five
instead of 3 years. The comment stated
Certified and Preferred Lender
agreements are valid for 5 years, and
lenders have greater fiscal responsibility
as opposed to borrower training vendors
that only provide training. In addition,
the comment stated administrative time
spent on renewing vendors’ agreements
will be cut in half. The agency believes
the existing process is adequate. Vendor
renewals require minimal time in most
cases, and while the vendor is being
reviewed for renewal, it is a great
opportunity for the agency to assess the
vendor’s performance. Further, because
agriculture is a fast-changing field, the
agency needs to ensure that vendors
provide cutting-edge training to its
borrowers. Therefore, the comment is
not adopted.
Miscellaneous Comments in Part 764
Three comments stated the lack of the
Administrator’s exception provision in
the loan making CFR may adversely
affect the agency’s ability to deal with
unique issues for which action outside
of the CFR’s provisions may be in the
agency’s financial interest. The agency
must administer its loan programs
according to the Act and all other
Federal laws and regulations. Most loan
making requirements are required by
law and exceptions would primarily be
for the benefit of the applicant only. In
addition, the agency believes both the
proposed and the final rule have
adequately addressed mandatory loan
making provisions and provided
flexibility where needed. Further,
existing regulations applicable to loan
servicing only contain the suggested
exception authority where exceptions
may be needed to protect the agency’s
financial interest in an existing loan, if
not prohibited by statute. Therefore, the
comments are not adopted.
One comment stated the agency must
implement the provision of the Federal
Agriculture Improvement and Reform
Act of 1996 authorizing a direct
operating line of credit. The OMB has
advised the agency that for budgetary
purposes, under the provisions of the
Credit Reform Act of 1992, a multi-year
line of credit loan is treated as a series
of individual loans. As a result, a 5-year
operating line of credit requires the
agency to obligate five times the budget
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authority as it would for a 1-year
operating loan. Program funding levels
have been limited so that the agency has
exhausted or nearly exhausted operating
loan funds over the past several fiscal
years. Implementation of an operating
line of credit, while it would benefit
those who receive it, would consume
excessive budget authority and prevent
others in need of operating loan
assistance from receiving it. As a
compromise, the agency implemented
the Lo-Doc program in 2002, which with
the exception of a multi-year
commitment, is similar in most respects
to a line of credit. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
One comment stated the agency must
not provide any loan funds to
agribusinesses that mistreat animals, but
only to operations that grow animals
humanely. The agency relies on local
and state authorities to make
determinations in cases of mistreatment
of animals. Enforcement actions against
such operations would prevent them
from submitting a viable loan
application. Moreover, the agency does
not have authority to impose certain
animal husbandry practices on
applicants and borrowers. However, the
agency does require production training
for applicants that lack experience or
education. Therefore, the comment is
not adopted.
One comment stated the agency must
include that an applicant must request
the lower of the interest rates in effect
at the time of loan approval or loan
closing. In addition, the comment stated
the provision should be clearly offered
on the agency loan application form.
The agency revised Part 764 to state the
interest rate will be the lower at the time
of loan approval or loan closing.
Therefore, the agency will not take any
further action on this comment.
Part 765—Direct Loan Servicing—
Regular
The following discussion addresses
the comments received on Part 765.
Section 765.51 Annual Review
Four comments were received on the
provision for increasing a borrower’s
limited resource interest rate. One
comment stated that if the regular
interest rate becomes lower than the
limited resource rate charged on the
borrower’s loans, the agency should
change the borrower’s interest rate from
limited resource to the regular rate
without notifying the borrower. One
comment stated the agency should be
allowed to change a borrower’s limited
resource interest rate to the regular rate
if the regular interest rate is lower than
the limited resource rate, as has
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occurred in recent years, and should not
provide appeal rights when notifying
the borrower, since lowering the
borrower’s interest rate is not an adverse
action. The third comment stated that
there should be a mechanism for the
agency to provide the borrower with the
lower interest rate when the regular
interest rate drops below the limited
resource interest rate. The fourth
comment indicated that the proposed
rule does not provide guidance to
employees performing limited resource
reviews when the regular interest rates
are lower than the limited resource
rates. The authority for limited resource
interest rates was established by
Congress during a period of high regular
interest rates. The intent was to address
high delinquency rates and help farmers
stay on the farm. Congress did not
anticipate that the regular interest rate
would be lower than limited resource;
therefore, this situation was not
anticipated or addressed in the Act. The
agency has established internal
procedures to be followed in the
unusual situation where the limited
resource interest rate is higher than the
regular interest rate. The lower of the
regular or limited resource interest rate
has been used while conducting normal
limited resource reviews, year-end
analyses, and primary loan servicing.
Agency borrowers with limited resource
rate loans have been positively
impacted by the agency’s internal
procedures and the agency will
continue this established internal
guidance in the future. Therefore, the
comments are not adopted.
Section 765.101 Borrower Graduation
Requirements
Five comments were received on
borrower graduation requirements. One
comment stated that requiring all loans
of the same type be refinanced
undercuts graduation rates; therefore,
the agency should count any loan
refinanced as partial graduation. In
accordance with the Act, the agency
serves as a temporary source of credit.
The agency does not believe its mission
of assisting its borrowers to obtain
commercial credit has been achieved
unless all loans of the same type have
been refinanced as part of the
graduation process. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
Three comments stated that, due to
loan making and servicing
requirements, most borrowers’ loans are
cross-collateralized which makes it
virtually impossible for borrowers to
partially graduate. Further, all
comments stated the State Executive
Director should be granted authority, in
partial graduation cases, to release the
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security typically associated with the
loans under graduation provided the
remaining security is at least 150
percent of the remaining debt. The
agency disagrees. In loan making, the
agency requires, except as provided in
§ 764.106, security up to 150 percent of
the loan amount, if available. The
security value for loan making purposes
is established by an appraisal. In loan
servicing under 7 CFR part 766, the
agency requires the best lien obtainable
on all the borrower’s assets, except as
provided in § 766.112(b). Graduation
generally occurs a number of years after
a loan is made. The borrower’s assets
securing the agency loans are not
appraised as part of the graduation
process; therefore, the agency would be
basing the release of its liens solely on
the security’s estimated value. The
additional costs the agency would incur
by obtaining appraisals for such partial
releases would offset any benefits
achieved by the partial graduation.
Therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should revise § 765.101(d) to include
the statutory borrower notification
requirement when the agency provides
the borrower’s prospectus to lenders.
The agency agrees with the comment
and has revised this paragraph
accordingly.
Section 765.102 Borrower
Noncompliance With Graduation
Requirements
One comment was received on the
provisions regarding borrower
noncompliance with graduation
requirements. The comment stated that
only borrowers actually able to obtain
commercial credit but refuse to do so
should be considered as failing to
graduate, and will, therefore, be in nonmonetary default. In addition, the
comment stated the agency should add
that a borrower, for good cause, may
request additional time to apply for
commercial credit. The agency requires
the borrower to provide the information
needed to determine if commercial
credit may be available, apply for a loan
if a lender indicates interest in
refinancing the borrower’s agency loan,
and refinance the agency loan if the
lender extends credit. All of these
requirements are well within the
borrower’s control. The agency’s
determination of non-monetary default,
therefore, is not dependent on the
borrower’s successful graduation. To
add the provision that a borrower for
good cause may take additional time to
apply for commercial credit
unnecessarily requires additional
criteria and subjective decisions from
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the agency. In addition, Section 319 of
the Act (7 U.S.C. 1949) requires that
borrowers graduate to commercial credit
when able to do so. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
Section 765.103 Transfer and
Assignment of Agency Liens
In some States, graduation
requirements are impeded by State laws
preventing a lender from obtaining a
valid lied on homestead property unless
the lender has a purchase money
interest in the property. As a result,
approval of the transfer and assignment
of the agency’s lien to the lender
refinancing the FLP loan must be
approved on a case-by-case basis using
the exception authority currently
published in 7 CFR 1965.35. The agency
inadvertently failed to address this issue
in the proposed rule. The agency
believes a provision allowing transfer
and assignment of its lien should be
included in the final rule as it will
enable borrowers to graduate to
commercial credit in a timely manner.
Section 765.152 Types of Payments
Five comments were received
regarding types of payments. Three
comments stated the agency should
expand the provision allowing proceeds
from the sale of real estate security to be
applied as regular payments to also
include proceeds from the sale of basic
chattel security. In addition, the
comments stated that the use of
proceeds from real estate and basic
chattel security as regular payments
should be limited to only a delinquent
and or current year’s payments to
prevent basic security proceeds from
being used to pay ahead several years.
The proposal limiting the use of
proceeds from the sale of basic security
to only real estate security conforms to
the agency’s existing regulations at
§ 1965.13. Allowing the use of proceeds
from the sale of chattel basic security to
be used as regular payments increases
the risk of loss to the agency because,
unlike real estate security, the value of
chattel security generally declines each
year due to depreciation. Approval to
use the proceeds from the sale of real
estate basic security as a regular
payment is at the discretion of the
agency; and each situation will be
evaluated on its merits. The agency
believes the CFR as written provides
adequate clarification of its policy for
classifying proceeds a ‘‘regular’’ or
‘‘extra’’ payment. Further, the agency
clarified the authorized use for each
type of payment it receives. Therefore,
the comments are not adopted.
Two comments stated the agency
should specify in the CFR the agency
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employee with the authority to
determine if proceeds from the sale of
real estate can be applied as regular
payments. It is the agency’s policy not
to provide employee-specific titles in
the CFR since they are internal matters.
The agency handbook will delegate
necessary responsibility. Therefore, the
comments are not adopted.
Section 765.153 Application of
Payments
Nine comments were received on the
application of payments. Eight
comments stated publishing the order in
which payments will be applied to
borrowers’ accounts limits the borrower
and agency official’s flexibility and
discretion to apply payments in a
manner each feels is most beneficial. In
addition, one comment suggested the
agency consider the borrower’s
preference on which loan payments are
applied. The agency believes that
publishing the order in which payments
are applied removes inconsistencies,
ensures all borrowers are treated the
same, and ensures payments are applied
in a manner which best protects the
agency’s financial interest. Therefore,
the comments are not adopted.
One comment stated that it is not
clear what happens to proceeds after all
payments due on FLP loans are made
for the year. Sections 765.152, 765.153
and 765.154 describe the distinction
between regular and extra payments and
the order in which proceeds will be
applied to agency loans. Release of
proceeds after all FLP loan payments
have been paid is addressed in
§ 765.301(h). The agency has modified
that paragraph to clarify that in those
circumstances all proceeds from the sale
of normal income security will be
released to the borrower. Therefore, the
clarification suggested by the comment
has already been adequately addressed.
Section 765.154 Distribution of
Payments
Two comments were received on the
distribution of payments. One comment
stated that it is not clear what
percentage of each payment will be
applied to each of the items listed in
§ 765.154. The agency cannot assign a
percentage to each of the items listed in
§ 765.154 because outstanding
recoverable costs and protective
advances must be paid in full before any
of the other items listed can be paid.
Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
The other comment stated the agency
should revise the provision on the
payment of accrued deferred interest to
state ‘‘only a pro-rata portion of accrued
deferred interest will be paid before
loan principal is paid.’’ Accrued
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deferred interest is scheduled for
payment on an annual basis and
borrower payments received are applied
accordingly. Therefore, the comment is
not adopted.
Section 765.155 Final Loan Payments
One comment was received on final
loan payment provisions. The comment
stated that it is not clear how the agency
will settle underpayments of less than
$10. The rule provides that the agency
will not attempt to collect amounts less
than $10, and since there is no impact
on borrowers, guidance will be provided
only in the agency handbook. Therefore,
the comment is not adopted.
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Section 765.202 Borrower
Responsibilities
One comment was received on
borrower’s responsibilities. The
comment stated that the agency should
revise § 765.202(a)(2) to provide
‘‘Borrower failure to keep agreements
for reasons not beyond the borrower’s
control, will be considered* * *’’ The
agency believes that the provision as
written allows the agency to consider
circumstances for the borrower’s failure
to keep agreements. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
Section 765.205 Subordination of
Liens
Sixteen comments were received on
subordination of liens. Two comments
stated the agency should approve
subordinations made in conjunction
with a guaranteed loan only in a
sufficient amount to cover what is
currently ahead of the agency loan.
Section 762.142(c) provides the
conditions under which the agency will
subordinate its liens to a guaranteed
lender. Therefore, no change is needed
to § 765.205, and the comments are not
adopted.
One comment stated that the
application form required for chattel
subordinations is not referenced in the
CFR. Another comment stated the
agency should provide the general
information needed for any
subordination since the agency treats
subordinations as a method to meet
borrowers’ annual operating needs, and
subordinations are an important tool in
assisting its borrowers to obtain
commercial credit. As provided in the
preamble of the proposed rule, it is the
agency’s policy not to publish form
numbers in the CFR, except as provided
by the Act. The agency handbook will
provide the forms needed to complete
requests for real estate and chattel
subordinations, so that comment is not
adopted. However, the agency agrees the
subordination application requirements
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were inadvertently omitted in the
proposed rule and has included them in
the final rule.
One comment stated that it is not
clear what the term ‘‘operating cycle’’
means under the subordination
requirement that the borrower’s farm
business plan shows that all debts
scheduled during the operating cycle
will be paid. The agency agrees that the
term ‘‘operating cycle’’ is not clear.
Thus, the agency decided for
consistency to use the term ‘‘production
cycle’’ in place of ‘‘operating cycle’’
throughout the final rule. Further, in the
final rule the agency clarified the
definition of ‘‘production cycle’’ at
§ 761.2.
One comment stated that borrowers
with partial or complete deferrals
should not be eligible for
subordinations. Further, the comment
stated that while a borrower’s loans are
deferred, the borrower’s payments are
artificially low, and therefore, the
operation shows a feasible plan whereas
a feasible plan might not be achieved if
the deferral is taken into consideration.
The agency agrees the deferral may have
a significant impact on the borrower’s
repayment ability. However, the agency
makes decisions based on the
borrower’s current farm operating plan.
It would not be in the agency’s best
interest to deny a subordination request
if the subordination would allow the
operation to continue, thus increasing
the probability of repayment of the
agency loan. Should the borrower
experience financial difficulty after the
deferral period expires, the agency will
consider all available loan servicing
options. Adoption of the comment
would change a longstanding policy that
the agency did not propose to change.
Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
One comment stated the CFR should
provide that the agency ‘‘may’’ approve
a subordination, instead of ‘‘will’’
approve a subordination. The agency
cannot use ‘‘may’’ in this instance
because it would indicate that there are
additional requirements beyond the
requirements published. In addition, the
agency has no basis on which to deny
the subordination request if all
conditions have been met. Therefore,
the comment is not adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should clarify § 765.205(a)(11)
(§ 765.205(b)(12) as renumbered in the
final rule) to provide the subordination
has a definite maturity date. The agency
agrees with the comment and has
revised the CFR accordingly.
Three comments stated the agency
should allow multiple subordinations
on the same security to the same lender.
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63269
The agency agrees with the comments
and has revised the CFR accordingly.
Two comments stated the agency
should be able to subordinate its lien a
second time for the borrower to obtain
crop insurance. This provision is
authorized under proposed
§ 765.205(b)(2) (renumbered to
§ 765.205(c)(2) in final rule); therefore,
no action is required regarding the
comments.
One comment stated the agency
should allow multiple subordinations of
the same security to different lenders as
the current regulations allow. The
agency believes allowing multiple
subordinations to multiple lenders on
the same security increases the agency’s
risk because the complexities of
servicing the account would be
increased. When subordinations are
granted to multiple lenders, agreements
on responsibilities and lien priorities, as
well as lines of communication, have to
be established between all the lenders
before subordination is provided. The
agency cannot become involved in these
agreements as a matter of course, nor
can it be perceived as the mediator in
any future possible disagreement
between multiple lenders. Lastly, the
agency has not allowed multiple
subordinations of the same security to
multiple lenders in the past and did not
propose to change this longstanding
policy. Therefore, the comment is not
adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should adopt a limited documentation
subordination application similar to the
Lo-Doc application. The agency believes
Lo-Doc loans and subordinations are not
similar actions since subordination may
be considered for any authorized loan
purpose, whereas Lo-Doc loan proceeds
may only be utilized under limited
specific circumstances. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should require the lender, to whom
subordination is granted, to execute a
prior lienholder’s agreement. Further,
the comment stated the agency should
not grant a subordination, if agency
calculations at the time the
subordination is being considered
indicate the agency would not make a
protective advance to pay the prior
lienholders, should default occur on the
subordinated loan. The agency believes
its interests are adequately protected as
the provision was proposed. It is
impracticable to approve subordinations
and protective advances using similar
requirements. Protective advances are
generally necessary when a borrower’s
financial condition has severely
deteriorated, and are used to protect
agency security, while subordinations
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are generally considered for borrowers
able to meet commercial lenders’
requirements and demonstrate
repayment ability. Further, the agency
believes adoption of the comment
would impose unnecessary collections
of information on its borrowers.
Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
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Section 765.252 Lease of Security
Two comments were received on the
provisions regarding lease of security.
One comment stated the agency should
remove the provision that the term of
consecutive leases cannot exceed 3
years, and allow additional years for the
property to be leased if a generational
transfer is involved. The agency agrees
with the comment and has revised
paragraph (a)(2) to allow lease of
security for up to 5 years when the
lessee and the borrower are related by
blood or marriage. This will allow the
lessee additional time to obtain the
farming experience and managerial
ability necessary to operate the farm
with the elder farmer’s guidance and
help address the difficulties of affording
increasing real estate costs and
inadequate farm ownership loan
funding. The 5-year limit should be
sufficient time for agency funds to
become available or the lessee to obtain
a commercial loan to finance the
purchase of the existing farm. Some
lease limit is necessary in the case of
such leases because the borrower agreed
to operate the farm as a condition in
obtaining the loan.
One comment stated the agency
should provide the state level with
authority to approve lease of security for
more than 3 years under certain
circumstances. The agency no longer
includes in the CFR the office
responsible for approving leases of
security. A consistent, nation-wide
policy is preferred. Further, the agency
believes that by adopting the first
comment, it has addressed this
comment’s concerns. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
Section 765.253 Ceasing To Operate
Security (Renamed in Final Rule)
One comment stated the provisions
are not clear since it seems the borrower
must meet all conditions under
§ 765.253. Further, the comment stated
the provisions do not allow the agency
to consent to a borrower’s failure to
operate the farm where the borrower
transfers the operation to an S
corporation in which the borrower is the
sole member. The agency revised the
CFR to provide that borrowers must
meet the conditions specified under
subparagraphs (a) through (d) and any of
the conditions under subparagraph (e).
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However, the agency believes the
example the comment provided does
not fit conditions for the agency to
consent to the borrower ceasing
operating the security, as the borrower
would continue operating the security
with a different composition. In the
example, the agency would proceed
with a transfer and assumption and
allow the new borrower entity to
continue the loan and operate the
security. Therefore, this part of the
comment is not adopted.
Section 765.301 General
Six comments were received on the
general requirements for disposing of
chattel security. One comment stated
that, instead of requiring the borrower to
sell chattel security for the market
value, the agency should require that
‘‘the borrower may not dispose of
normal income security for less than its
market value and basic security for not
less than its recovery value.’’ Further,
the comment stated that the net
recovery value of basic security should
be determined by an appraisal, less sales
expenses. When determining whether or
not adequate security is available at the
time of loan approval, the agency uses
the market value of potential security.
Therefore, the agency cannot allow
disposition of chattel security for less
than its market value. Nation-wide
agency devaluation of security will
increase losses and is not in the
agency’s and the taxpayer’s financial
interests. In addition, under regular
servicing circumstances the agency has
no reason to calculate or accept
estimated involuntary liquidation
amounts. Therefore, the comment is not
accepted.
Five comments stated the agency
should revise § 765.301(h) to state that
if all agency loan installments and any
past due installments have been paid,
checks from the sale of normal income
security may be payable solely to the
borrower. The agency agrees with the
comments, and has revised the CFR
accordingly.
Section 765.302 Use and Maintenance
of Agreement for the Use of Proceeds
Three comments were received on the
use and maintenance of the agreement
for the use of proceeds. One comment
stated that completing the agreement for
the use of proceeds is time consuming
and confusing. In addition, for the
agreement to be properly completed, the
borrower must plan each expense for
the year and identify the source of
income to pay for it. Then, at the end
of the year, the agency needs to
reconcile each expense paid with the
source of income. The agency believes
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that the rule provides clear guidelines
on when the agreement for the use of
proceeds will be completed. Further, as
stated in the agency’s response to
comments received on the definition of
‘‘agreement for the use of proceeds,’’ the
agency may conduct further analysis to
determine if changes are warranted.
Therefore, the agency will take no
further action on these comments at this
time.
Two comments stated that the
requirement for the borrower to date
and initial changes made on the
agreement for the use of proceeds
should be eliminated. The agency
believes that since the agreement for the
use of proceeds is completed by both
the borrower and the agency, any
changes made should be concurred with
by both. Therefore, the comments are
not adopted.
Section 765.303 Use of Proceeds From
Chattel Security
Three comments were received
regarding the use of proceeds from the
sale of chattel security. One comment
stated that the guidance provided in the
existing regulations under § 1962.17 is
confusing as to when proceeds from the
sale of normal income and basic
security can be released. The agency
believes that both the proposed and
final rules clarified the use of proceeds
from the sale of normal income and
basic chattel security without changing
current policy. Therefore, the agency
believes the comment’s concern is
adequately addressed.
One comment stated the agency
should add a provision to protect its
interests when crop security is used as
feed for a third party’s livestock. This
section allows for crop security that
normally would be sold, to be fed to
livestock the borrower owns, if the
agency obtains a lien or an assignment
on the livestock and the livestock
products equal to the lien on the crops.
If the borrower feeds agency crop
security to a third party’s livestock, the
borrower has converted agency security
and is in non-monetary default with the
borrower’s agreements with the agency.
Agency actions when the borrower is in
non-monetary default are addressed in 7
CFR part 766. Therefore, the comment is
not adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should clarify that proceeds from the
sale of chattel security will not be used
to acquire real estate but may be used
to acquire property that meets the
operating loan program’s objectives. The
agency agrees with the comment and
has revised the CFR accordingly.
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Section 765.304
Disposition
Unapproved
Ten comments were received on
unapproved disposition of chattel
security. Six comments supported the
provision as written. One comment
stated that there are no standards
established on what information the
borrower has to provide for postapproval. In addition, the comment
stated that the agency has to release
proceeds for family living and farm
operating expenses until the account is
accelerated, implying that the borrower
does not need to provide any
information to the agency for postapproval. The agency disagrees. It is
impossible to list all possible sources of
documentation that a borrower could
submit to provide evidence that
proceeds were used for an authorized
purpose. Further, the essential family
living and farm operating expenses
definition (§ 761.2(b)) establishes a list
of expenses the agency considers to be
essential and states that the agency will
consider each expense on the list as it
applies to each operation. Moreover, the
agency and the borrower complete the
agreement for the use of proceeds at the
beginning of the production cycle. By
establishing the conditions under which
proceeds can be released, a borrower
should be able to determine the type of
documentation appropriate for postapproval. Therefore, the comment is not
adopted.
Three comments stated the agency
does not clearly provide that
unauthorized dispositions of security
are considered non-monetary defaults.
The agency agrees with the comments
and has revised the CFR accordingly.
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Section 765.351 Requirements To
Obtain Agency Consent
Six comments were received on the
requirements to obtain agency consent
to a partial release of real estate security.
Two comments stated the agency should
accept ‘‘no less than the agency-defined
recovery value’’ or ‘‘95 percent of the
market value’’ for the real estate
proposed for partial release. Loan
approvals are based on evaluation of the
loan security at its market value.
Approving real estate security releases
for less than market value would be
inconsistent with loan making
provisions and fiscally irresponsible as
doing so could increase the agency’s
losses. Therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
Three comments stated that because
many loans are cross-collateralized due
to loan making or servicing actions, the
agency should allow exchange of real
estate security for ‘‘any authorized loan
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purpose.’’ The agency believes the loan
purposes are broad enough to
accommodate the few cases where
exchange of property is considered.
Therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should clarify that terms for contracts
for deed will not exceed the remaining
loan term. The agency agrees with the
comment and has revised the CFR
accordingly.
Section 765.352 Use of Proceeds
Eight comments were received on the
use of proceeds from the partial release
of real estate. Two comments supported
the agency’s decision not to allow
proceeds from the sale of real estate to
be used for developing land not owned
by the borrower. One comment
disagreed with the agency’s decision to
not allow borrowers to use proceeds
from the sale of real estate security to
make improvements on rented land, on
which the agency does not have a lien.
The comment stated in § 764.151(b) the
agency provides the conditions under
which loan funds can be used to make
improvements on rented land.
Moreover, the comment stated the
agency accepts security interests in
property not owned by the applicant,
including leases that provide a
mortgageable value. Therefore, the
comment stated, the agency should not
eliminate the provision. The agency
disagrees. The agency accepts as
security leases that provide a
mortgageable value as well as security
pledged by third parties to satisfy the
agency’s security requirements. Further,
§ 764.151(b) provides that for the agency
to make a farm ownership loan, the
applicant must have a lease to ensure
the applicant will have use of the
improvement over its useful life or to
ensure the applicant will be
compensated for any remaining
economic life when the lease
terminates. In those cases, the agency
has a security interest in the land;
therefore, loan funds can be used to
make improvements. The agency
removed the provision that allowed
borrowers to use sale proceeds from
agency security to make improvements
on rented land, because the majority of
the applicants found it difficult to meet
the lease requirement. In addition, it is
not prudent to release proceeds from the
sale of agency security to improve land
on which the agency does not have a
lien. Therefore, the comment is not
adopted.
One comment stated that the agency
should not release proceeds from the
partial release of real estate to pay other
creditors, unless the amount is small
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and the agency debt to security ratio is
over 1/1 after the transaction is
completed. Another comment expressed
concern about not allowing proceeds
from partial real estate releases to be
paid to other creditors ‘‘to the extent
needed to establish a basis for
continuation of the other creditor’s
account.’’ One comment stated that the
agency should allow for SED discretion
as to how proceeds from the partial
release of real estate will be applied.
The agency believes that allowing
proceeds to be distributed outside of
established lien priorities usually occurs
at the expense of the agency, decreases
the agency’s equity in the security, and
increases the taxpayers’ risk. Therefore,
the comments are not adopted.
One comment inquired about the
interaction between § 765.152(c) and
§ 765.352. Section 765.152(c) establishes
that proceeds from the sale of real estate
security may be applied to the
borrower’s account as a regular
payment, in which case it is credited
toward the borrower’s annual payment
as opposed to an extra payment, which
simply reduces the unpaid loan balance,
if the agency’s loans will be adequately
secured after the transaction.
Furthermore, §§ 765.152 and 765.153
only address the order in which
payments are applied against agency
loans, whereas § 765.352 establishes the
use of proceeds from transactions
affecting the real estate security. The
agency sees no conflict between these
provisions; therefore, no change has
been made.
One comment stated the agency
should replace the words, ‘‘When
liquidation is pending,’’ with the words,
‘‘After acceleration’’ in § 765.352(b) to
explain when the agency will approve
transactions only in accordance with
lien priorities and customary costs. The
agency agrees with the comment and
has revised the CFR accordingly.
Section 765.353 Determining Market
Value
In the preamble of the proposed rule,
the agency proposed to increase the
estimated value of real estate security
considered for partial release to $25,000
before obtaining an appraisal. However,
the regulatory text provided that the
agency would require an appraisal for a
partial release of real estate when its
estimated value exceeded $20,000. The
agency’s intent was to include in the
regulatory text $25,000 as evidenced by
the final rule published by the agency
on June 2, 2004 (69 FR 30997–30999).
Fourteen comments were received on
the appraisal requirement for partial
releases. Several comments pointed out
the discrepancy between the preamble
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and the regulatory text; however, 10
comments supported the change, while
three comments stated the $25,000 limit
is too low and should be increased to
$35,000 (one comment) or $50,000 (two
comments). The agency believes that
changing the limit to $35,000 or
$50,000, as suggested, would increase
the agency’s risk to a level the agency
cannot accept. Therefore, the comments
are not adopted and the $25,000 limit
has been adopted.
One comment stated it was not clear
who will determine the real estate’s
estimated value and what qualifications
are required to make the determination,
since agency personnel are no longer
qualified. The agency assigns employee
responsibilities in its administrative
procedures. The agency handbook will
provide the agency official authorized to
determine estimated value for real
estate; therefore, the comment is not
adopted.
One comment was received on the
provision not to appraise the remaining
security when only part of the security
is released (§ 765.353(b)). The comment
stated it is sometimes not possible to
determine the effect the security being
released may have on the value of the
remaining security. The rule provides
that the agency will obtain an appraisal
if the agency believes that the
transaction will reduce the remaining
security’s value. In addition, the
agency’s handbook will provide further
guidance, which will address the
comment’s concern. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
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Section 765.402 Transfer of Security
and Loan Assumption on Same Rates
and Terms
Five comments were received on the
transfer of security and loan assumption
on same rates and terms. Three
comments stated that the process for
releasing an entity member from
liability in cases of transfer and
assumption should be similar to the
process of releasing a divorced spouse
under § 765.406(b). The agency
disagrees. The agency considers a
change in the composition of the entity
as a change in the entity, while a sole
proprietorship remains the same sole
proprietorship when a debtor leaves the
farming operation. In addition, this
section provides guidance for situations
where the agency debt is being assumed
by a party not currently liable for the
debt. Section 765.406(b) is applicable in
situations where both spouses are
individually liable for the debt, but one
is withdrawing from the operation.
Therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
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Two comments stated the agency
should allow assumptions by eligible
applicants on new rates and terms.
Assumption of debt by eligible
borrowers is addressed in § 765.403;
however, in reviewing this section, the
agency determined that it failed to
address the rates and terms for this type
of assumption. Therefore, the agency
added new paragraph (e) in the final
rule to refer to the rates and terms in
part 764 for the type of loan being
assumed. The agency also revised
paragraph (a) to clarify that EM loans for
physical and production losses cannot
be assumed under § 765.403. These
loans may only be assumed by persons
who were directly involved in the
operation at the time of the loss as
provided in § 765.402(e).
Section 765.404 Transfer of Security to
and Assumption of Debt by Ineligible
Applicants (Renamed in Final Rule)
Three comments were received on the
transfer of security to and assumption of
debt by ineligible applicants. Two
comments supported the agency’s
decision to change the term for Nonprogram loans secured by real estate to
25 years or less, based on the applicant’s
repayment ability. One comment stated
the agency should prohibit transfer and
assumption by transferees who have
received debt forgiveness from the
agency. The agency agrees with the
comment and has revised the CFR
accordingly. This is a continuation of
existing policy from 7 CFR 1962.34(b).
Section 765.451 Continuation of FLP
Debt and Transfer of Security
Three comments were received on the
continuation of FLP debt and transfer of
security when a borrower is deceased.
All comments stated the administrative
processes the agency uses to continue
FLP debt of deceased borrowers are not
clearly established in the CFR. The
agency disagrees. Section 765.451(a)
provides the agency will continue the
loan with any individual who is liable
for the debt. In addition, § 765.451(b)
provides the agency will continue the
loan with any individual not liable for
the debt in accordance with the transfer
and assumption provisions established
in § 765.401 through § 765.404.
Therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
Section 765.501 Agency Exception
Authority
Two comments were received on the
exception authority provisions. The
comments stated the agency should
provide in the CFR the internal process
utilized by agency employees to request
an exception. As stated above, the
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agency, like most Federal agencies, does
not promulgate internal processes in the
CFR. However, the agency handbook
will provide administrative guidance for
agency staff to process requests.
Therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
Miscellaneous Comments on Part 765
Six comments were received on the
agency’s decision to eliminate
accelerated repayment agreements for
borrowers able to graduate to
commercial credit. One comment
supported the agency’s decision, while
the remaining opposed it. The opposing
comments stated accelerated repayment
agreements are cost-efficient, because
the agency collects the funds loaned
faster and without incurring additional
costs, that may result when taking
action against a borrower for nonmonetary default. In addition, the
comments stated that the United States
Attorney’s offices usually will not
pursue foreclosure on these cases. The
agency believes that accelerated
repayment agreements for borrowers
who are able to graduate are not
appropriate, since the agency has
limited enforcement ability for these
agreements, and the agreements cannot
be applied consistently nation-wide.
Therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
Part 766—Direct Loan Servicing—
Special
The following discussion addresses
the comments received on part 766.
Section 766.1 Introduction
While loan making regulations in 7
CFR 764.304 clearly establish that the
limited resource operating loan interest
rate is not available for youth loans,
loan servicing limitations for youth
loans were not so clearly articulated.
The agency is authorized under 311(b)
of the Act to use operating loan funds
for youths, who are rural residents, to
enable them to operate enterprises in
connection with their participation in
4–H Clubs, Future Farmers of America,
and similar organizations. Youth loan
enterprises are not the typical farming
operations financed with other types of
agency farm loans and, therefore, are
treated differently in many respects. For
example, section 311(c)(2) of the Act
does not count youth loans against the
applicant seeking a direct operating loan
that are limited to beginning farmers or
farmers with 6 years or less of previous
direct operating loans. Section 302(b)(2)
further provides that operation of a
youth enterprise does not count towards
the required 3 years of participation in
a farm operation for a direct farm
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ownership loan. Section 353(a)(2) of the
Act provides one goal of restructuring
delinquent debts is ‘‘to ensure that
borrowers are able to continue farming
or ranching operations.’’ Considering
these sections together, the Congress did
not intend youth loan borrowers to be
treated like other delinquent loan
borrowers and receive full servicing
rights under section 353 of the Act. The
agency will continue its current policy
that provided youth loan borrowers may
not receive Disaster Set-Aside and may
only be considered for rescheduling and
deferral under the primary loan
servicing process. Therefore, the agency
has revised § 766.1(b) to clearly reflect
this existing policy.
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Section 766.51 General (Disaster SetAside)
Two comments were received on the
general Disaster Set-Aside (DSA)
provisions. The comments stated the
agency should not allow a borrower to
obtain DSA on Non-program loans, even
if the borrower also has program loans.
The intent of DSA is to relieve the
borrower’s immediate financial stress
caused by a natural disaster. The agency
believes it is in both its and the
borrower’s financial interest to allow
FLP borrowers that also have Nonprogram loans to obtain DSA. In
addition, this policy has been in effect
for several years without additional loss
to the agency. Therefore, the comments
are not adopted.
Section 766.52 Eligibility
Five comments were received on the
DSA eligibility provisions. Two
comments stated that it may be difficult
for borrowers to meet the requirement
that all program and Non-program loans
be current or less than 90 days past due
at the time the application for DSA is
complete. Borrowers with January 1st
scheduled payments may become 90
days past due before notice of DSA
availability is published in local
newspapers. The agency disagrees.
Under § 766.101, borrowers are notified
of primary loan servicing when they
become 90 days past due, and those
servicing options are designed to assist
the borrower in resolving the financial
distress and provide long-term financial
viability. DSA is not intended to replace
or supplant the statutorily mandated
primary loan servicing for financially
distressed or delinquent borrowers.
Thus, DSA does not apply to the
situation mentioned in the comments.
Therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should provide that borrowers must not
become 165 days past due before the
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appropriate agency documents for DSA
are executed. The agency agrees with
the comment and has revised the CFR
accordingly. DSA must not interfere
with statutory primary loan servicing
requirements. Allowing the agency 15
days to send notices to borrowers 90
days past due and 60 days for the
borrowers to submit a complete
application for primary loan servicing,
the DSA needs to be considered and
closed prior to the borrower becoming
165 days past due (90+15+60=165 days).
Two comments stated the agency
should clarify that the borrower’s
account may not have been accelerated
or subject to any special servicing. DSA
may not interfere with other available
statutory loan servicing options. DSA is
intended to be a temporary solution to
address the borrower’s financial distress
due to a natural disaster. Distressed and
delinquent borrower loan servicing
options attempt to address the
borrower’s financial distress and
delinquency, which are outside the
borrower’s control, and financially
stabilize the operation for the long term.
The agency agrees with the comments
and has revised the CFR accordingly.
Section 766.54
Requirements
Borrower Application
One comment was received on the
borrower application requirements for
DSA. The comment stated the agency
should require borrowers to submit 3
years of Federal tax returns as part of
the application for DSA, since in many
instances analysis of the account has not
been completed in several years. The
agency believes that the rule as written
provides the flexibility needed for
agency officials to request information
necessary to evaluate a borrower’s
application. Therefore, the comment is
not adopted.
Section 766.56
Security Requirements
Four comments were received on the
DSA security requirements. Two
comments stated the requirements
conflict with the requirements of
§ 766.52(b)(2). Two comments stated the
security requirements are not clear. The
agency disagrees. Sections 766.52(b)(2)
and 766.56 do not conflict. The prior
provision requires the loans to be
current after DSA; the latter provision
requires certain security if the loans are
not current before and when the DSA is
executed. The agency believes the
security requirements are adequate;
therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
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Section 766.57 Borrower Acceptance
of Disaster Set-Aside
One comment was received on the
borrower acceptance of DSA. The
comment stated the agency should
retain the provisions from the current
regulations that allow: If a borrower
repaid all previous DSA or all the
borrower’s previous DSA were
cancelled through primary loan
servicing, the loan is again eligible for
DSA; if the borrower has more than one
DSA outstanding, payments received
will be applied to the oldest DSA until
it is paid in full, before payments are
applied to the second DSA; and,
borrowers receive additional time to
accept DSA for extenuating
circumstances. The agency has clarified
§ 766.52 to state that to be eligible, the
loan must not have a DSA outstanding.
To avoid confusion, because a second
DSA on the same loan has not been
allowed since 2000, the agency did not
include in the proposed rule how
payments to multiple DSA will be
applied. However, the agency handbook
will provide guidance on such payment
application and allow borrowers
additional time to accept DSA for
extenuating circumstances. Therefore,
those portions of the comment are not
adopted.
Section 766.101 Initial Agency
Notification to Borrower of Loan
Servicing Programs
Eleven comments were received on
the initial agency notification to
borrowers of loan servicing programs.
Two comments stated the agency should
spell out the abbreviation ‘‘SA’’
throughout this part. In the preamble of
the proposed rule, the agency stated that
all abbreviations and definitions
applicable to FLP will be included in a
single section of the CFR (§ 761.2) to
eliminate the need for the public to
search multiple CFR parts to determine
if and where a term is defined, this
includes Shared Appreciation loan. The
abbreviation ‘‘SA’’ is included in
§ 761.2. Therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
Two comments stated that the process
of notifying borrowers with only
delinquent SA is not published in the
CFR. One comment inquired on the
servicing available to borrowers with
only SA. Borrowers with only SA debt
are considered Non-program borrowers
and may only be considered for
reamortization under § 766.108 as under
current policy. In addition, section 331D
of the Act (7 U.S.C. 1981d) only requires
the agency to publish the initial
notification provided to program
borrowers. The agency will address the
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form of notification to borrowers with
SA only in its handbook. Therefore, the
comments are not adopted.
Two comments stated that FSA–2512,
FSA–2510, and FSA–2514 do not
identify their content. These notices are
published in their entirety as
appendices to 7 CFR part 766 and are
identified as such in the table of
contents. Therefore, no changes have
been made in response to these
comments.
Two comments stated the CFR does
not include notification of loan
servicing for borrowers who want to
liquidate voluntarily. The agency will
no longer send primary loan servicing to
borrowers who, while current, request
agency permission to voluntary
liquidate the operation. Current 7 CFR
1965.26(a) requires the agency to send
primary loan servicing notices under
those circumstances and wait 60 days
(within which time the borrower has to
provide a complete primary loan
servicing application) before the agency
can process or consider the request for
voluntary liquidation. By that time, the
prospective buyer may no longer be
interested and the borrower may be
unable to sell the security. Under those
circumstances, the agency believes that
forced consideration of primary loan
servicing would hinder the borrower’s
effort to liquidate and could be
detrimental to the Government,
especially if the agency loans will be
paid in full with the transaction.
Furthermore, voluntary conveyance is
not a forced collection action by the
agency requiring such notice under
section 331D of the Act (7 U.S.C.
1981d). Therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
Two comments stated the CFR does
not mention that if the borrower does
not accept the notice by certified mail,
the agency will send it by regular mail.
The agency agrees with the comments
and has revised the CFR accordingly.
One comment stated that since FSA–
2512 does not provide a deadline for the
borrower to submit a loan servicing
application, the CFR should state that
borrowers who received an FSA–2512
and did not submit a loan servicing
application, will be renotified if they
become 90 days past due. This is
covered in § 766.103(a) and in FSA–
2512 under the paragraph heading
‘‘What Happens if You Do Not Apply?’’
Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
Section 766.102 Borrower Application
Requirements
Sixteen comments were received on
the borrower application requirements
for loan servicing. One comment stated
the CFR should specify that in the case
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of an entity, all entity members must
sign the acknowledgment form. The
agency agrees with the comments and
has revised the CFR accordingly.
Two comments supported the
reduction in the amount of production
and financial records requirement to 3
years. Four comments stated the agency
should be allowed the flexibility to
request additional years of records to
properly evaluate the borrower’s request
and assess the agency’s risk position.
One comment stated that due to the
number of natural disasters that have
occurred throughout the country, 3
years of records may not be sufficient in
providing an accurate assessment of a
borrower’s operation, so the agency
should require the borrower submit
records from ‘‘normal’’ years. For
consistency, the agency desires to have
the same records requirements for both
loan making and loan servicing actions.
In addition, the agency added in
§ 761.104 the methodology used by the
agency to project yields and prices on
farm operating plans for both loan
making and servicing purposes. As
mandated by section 331E(b) of the Act
(7 U.S.C. 1981e), appropriate
adjustments to projected yields are
made when the borrower’s production
history has been substantially affected
by a disaster. The agency believes this
addresses the concerns expressed in the
comments and, therefore, the comments
are not adopted.
One comment stated that a complete
application for loan servicing should
include all items required for a
complete loan making application,
including legal description of property,
leases, contracts, etc. The agency
disagrees. Borrowers provide copies of
legal description of property owned or
operated, leases, and contracts at the
time they apply for a loan. The agency
maintains the loan making application
records in the borrower’s file and any
updates as changes in the borrower’s
operation occur. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted. However, the
agency added the provision requiring
borrowers to provide a current financial
statement as part of a complete loan
servicing application. This is a
longstanding requirement that existed
under the loan making and loan
servicing regulations. The agency’s
application form contained the financial
statement; however, due to agency’s
paperwork reduction efforts, the
financial statement part was removed
from the application form.
Two comments were received
recommending that to be considered for
a conservation contract, the borrower
must submit an aerial photograph
delineating the land proposed for a
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conservation contract and provide the
term of the conservation contract in
writing when applying for primary loan
servicing. In § 766.102(b), the agency
already proposed that the borrower
must submit an aerial photograph
delineating the land for the proposed
conservation contract. The agency, with
direct input of the borrower, utilizes a
computer software program known as
the Debt and Loan Restructuring System
(DALRS) to evaluate each borrower’s
request for primary loan servicing. The
agency and the borrower can, and do,
consider different terms offered in
combination with other servicing
options available. Consequently, the
agency and the borrower need the
flexibility to evaluate all possible
options, including conservation
contracts, and enable the borrower to
choose the best loan servicing option
possible for the operation. Therefore,
there would be no benefit from
requiring the borrower to specify the
conservation contract term at the point
of application. No changes have been
made in response to these comments.
Three comments suggested the
requirement be added that, in cases
where jointly liable borrowers have
been divorced and one has withdrawn
from the operation, to release the
withdrawing individual from liability
the remaining individual must develop
a feasible plan. In many loan servicing
cases, a feasible plan cannot be
developed, yet it is not in the financial
interest of the agency to keep a divorced
spouse who has no repayment ability or
non-essential assets liable for the loan,
since all future servicing can become
unduly complicated. Therefore, the
comments are not adopted.
Two comments stated the agency
should clarify that the financial records
requirement is applicable to the entity
as well as the entity members
themselves. The agency does not agree.
The agency believes the provision as
written is adequate and does not believe
that further clarification is needed, so
no change has been made in response to
these comments.
Section 766.103 Borrower Does Not
Respond or Does Not Submit a
Complete Application
Two comments were received on the
provisions for notification requirements
for borrowers who do not respond or do
not submit a complete application. One
comment supported the identical
treatment of borrowers in monetary and
non-monetary default. One comment
stated that the agency’s current internal
policy of reminding borrowers that the
agency had not received a complete loan
servicing application was not included
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in the CFR. The agency handbook will
continue this policy. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
Section 766.104 Borrower Eligibility
Requirements
One comment was received on the
requirement that borrowers use the net
recovery value of any non-essential
assets to resolve their financial distress
or pay the delinquent portion of the
loan (§ 766.104(a)(2)). The comment
stated the requirement is harsh for a
simple debt-restructuring request, may
be overly burdensome, and may
discourage borrowers from applying for
servicing to resolve the financial
distress or delinquency. Section
353(c)(2)(A)(ii) of the Act (7 U.S.C.
200h) requires that the net recovery
value of all non-essential assets will be
considered to determine if the
borrower’s loans may be restructured.
Therefore, the comment cannot be
adopted.
One comment suggested the words,
‘‘in accordance with all loan
agreements’’ be dropped after the words,
‘‘the borrower has acted in good faith’’
in § 766.104(a)(4), since they are
included in the definition of good faith.
The agency agrees with the comment,
and has revised the CFR accordingly.
One comment was received on the
requirement that current or financially
distressed borrowers requesting primary
loan servicing must pay a portion of the
interest due on the loans
(§ 766.104(a)(5)). The comment
disagreed with this requirement and
stated that it seems the requirement is
new. The requirement is currently
published under § 1951.908(c)(5) and is
not new. Further, Section 372 of the Act
(7 U.S.C. 2008g) requires that to obtain
servicing, non-delinquent borrowers
must pay a portion of the interest due
on the loan. Therefore, the comment
cannot be adopted.
One comment stated the agency
process of consulting the Office of
General Counsel (OGC) when the agency
determines that a borrower has not
acted in good faith should be removed.
The agency does not agree. Therefore,
the agency will continue its current
policy of considering acts of fraud,
waste or conversion of security, when
substantiated by a legal opinion from
OGC, when determining if an applicant
or borrower has acted in good faith. The
comment is not adopted.
One comment supported the agency’s
inclusion of the list of circumstances
beyond the borrower’s control that may
result in a borrower’s failure to make
payments as agreed. Another comment
stated the agency should clarify that the
list of circumstances beyond the control
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of the borrower is not exhaustive. In
addition, the comment stated the agency
should state in § 765.202(a)(2) that the
borrower’s failure to keep agreements
will be considered when making
eligibility determinations only when the
failure is ‘‘for reasons not beyond the
borrower’s control.’’ The agency
believes the circumstances as listed in
§ 765.202(a)(2) encompass all causes for
a borrower to not make payments for
reasons beyond their control. The
agency believes that the suggested
language for § 765.202(a)(2) is
unnecessary as all aspects of the
borrower’s failure are to be
‘‘considered’’ and ‘‘may’’ adversely
impact future requests for loans or
servicing. Furthermore, a borrower’s
failure to keep agreements with the
agency is evaluated when determining if
the borrower has ‘‘acted in good faith’’
as required under the loan making and
servicing eligibility requirements. The
definition of ‘‘good faith’’ provides, ‘‘the
Agency considers a borrower to act in
good faith, however, when the borrower
is unable to adhere to all agreements
due to circumstances beyond the
borrower’s control.’’ Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
Two comments stated the agency
should spell out the abbreviation ‘‘SA.’’
As noted previously, all abbreviations
and definitions used are published in
§ 761.2. Therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should continue to assess a delinquent
borrower’s need for training to
determine the reasons for not being able
to pay. In cases where the delinquency
is due to lack of financial management
knowledge, the comment stated the
agency should require financial
management training. The agency
initially evaluates a borrower’s need for
training in the loan making process
according to § 764.452. As provided in
§ 761.103, as part of the farm assessment
initiated in the loan making process, the
agency reviews the borrower’s progress
at least annually to evaluate training
needs. While the agency may
recommend additional training,
requiring training as a condition of loan
servicing only hinders debt
restructuring. Restructure of debt is a
benefit to the borrower as they develop
a payment plan based on past history
and is a benefit to the agency as the debt
continues to be repaid as serviced
without liquidation. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
One comment stated subparagraph
(a)(1) as written is not clear. The agency
agrees with the comment and has
clarified the subparagraph introduction
to state that the delinquency or financial
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63275
distress is the result of reduced
repayment ability due to one of the
listed circumstances beyond the
borrower’s control.
Section 766.105 Agency Consideration
of Servicing Requests
Three comments were received on the
appraisal of a borrower’s assets. All
comments stated the agency should
clarify if an appraisal of the borrower’s
assets is needed only when a feasible
plan cannot be developed with a 110
percent debt service margin or when a
write down is required to achieve at
least a 100 percent debt service margin.
The agency believes the rule as written
specifies that the agency will not forgive
debt, through write down or current
market value buyout, before obtaining
an appraisal of all the borrower’s assets,
without regard to debt service margin.
In addition, the agency handbook will
provide guidance on when the agency
will obtain appraisals in loan servicing.
Therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
Section 766.106 Agency Notification
of Decision Regarding a Complete
Application
Nine comments were received on the
agency notification of the decision
regarding a complete application. Three
comments stated the agency must
continue to request mediation or
voluntary meeting of creditors if the
borrower cannot develop a feasible plan.
One comment stated the agency should
continue to initiate mediation
proactively, otherwise the number of
appeals and foreclosures will increase.
Two comments stated section 353(d) of
the Act (7 U.S.C. 2001) mandates the
agency to initiate mediation when a
borrower cannot develop a feasible plan
for restructuring. The agency disagrees.
This Section is applicable only when
write down is being considered as a
restructuring option. The section also
provides that before eliminating the
option for writedown, the Secretary will
make a reasonable effort to contact the
borrower’s creditors, either directly or
through the borrower to encourage
restructuring. This statutory
requirement is met by the agency’s
notification to the borrower of the
availability of mediation or voluntary
meeting of creditors, as applicable.
Further, the agency participates in StateCertified mediation when available.
Therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
Two comments stated the agency
should replace the terms ‘‘the agency
will notify the borrower’’ and ‘‘the
agency will renotify the borrower’’ with
the terms ‘‘the agency will send the
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borrower a notification’’ and ‘‘the
agency will send the borrower another
notification.’’ The agency agrees with
this clarification and has revised the
CFR accordingly.
One comment stated the statutory
requirements to provide the borrower
the agency’s calculations and notify the
borrower within 15 days of determining
the borrower’s ineligibility for loan
servicing was not included in the
proposed CFR. The agency agrees with
the comment and has revised the CFR
accordingly.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
Section 766.109 Deferral
Five comments were received on the
deferral provisions. Three comments
supported the agency’s clarification that
the deferral term will be the shortest
possible that provides a feasible plan.
One comment stated the agency should
not grant deferrals to borrowers who
have accumulated excessive debt for
non-essential expenses. The agency
agrees that in some cases, a borrower’s
financial distress or delinquency may be
the result of the borrower incurring
excessive debt for non-essential
expenses. The eligibility requirement
that the financial distress or
delinquency be the result of reduced
repayment ability due to circumstances
beyond the borrower’s control, however,
adequately addresses the concern.
Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
One comment stated deferrals should
be cancelled when a borrower files for
bankruptcy protection, since by filing
for bankruptcy, the borrower has elected
to restructure the agency debt. When the
agency restructures a borrower’s loans
with deferral of debt, the borrower
executes the promissory note
establishing the repayment schedule.
The terms established by the promissory
note take the deferral into consideration.
If a borrower files for bankruptcy
protection, the agency is not authorized
to modify the repayment schedule
without obtaining the prior approval of
the court. Therefore, the comment is not
adopted.
Section 766.110 Conservation Contract
Eighteen comments were received on
the conservation contract provisions.
Three comments stated the agency
should include SA debt when
calculating debt to be written down by
a conservation contract. The agency
agrees with the comments, provided the
borrower has other outstanding program
loans, and has revised the CFR
accordingly. SA-only debt may not be
serviced with a conservation contract.
SA-only debt is classified as Nonprogram debt for borrowers who have
no remaining program loans. The
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purposes of conservation contracts
include allowing the borrower to timely
repay the agency loans. Since those
borrowers have no program loans
remaining, this particular purpose of the
conservation contract cannot be met.
Therefore, the agency cannot offer
conservation contracts to those
borrowers. The section has been revised
to provide that for borrowers who have
at least one program loan outstanding,
the Non-program debt can be considered
for conservation contract because the
conservation contract’s purpose will be
fulfilled as the borrower will be in a
better position to repay the debt timely.
Three comments stated the agency
should clarify that borrowers can appeal
technical decisions made by NRCS
according to NRCS’s appeal process.
The agency agrees with the comments
and has revised the section to state that
NRCS technical decisions will be
handled in accordance with applicable
NRCS regulations. At this time, the
applicable NRCS regulations are
published at 7 CFR part 614. Other
aspects of a denial of conservation
contract by the agency would be
appealable under normal agency rules at
7 CFR parts 11 and 780.
Two comments stated the
abbreviation ‘‘SA’’ should be spelled
out; the agency loan under
consideration for conservation contract
must be secured by real estate; and that
Non-program loans cannot be
considered for conservation contracts.
As noted previously, all abbreviations
and definitions used are published in
§ 761.2. Therefore, this part of the
comments is not adopted. The agency
agrees that the loan under consideration
for conservation contract has to be
secured by real estate and has revised
the CFR accordingly. The agency
believes the benefit of conserving the
nation’s precious natural resources
cannot be limited to program loans only.
At least one program loan must be
involved, however, for the agency to
enter into a conservation contract with
a Non-program borrower because the
Act provides that only ‘‘qualified’’
borrowers may enter into conservation
contracts. The CFR has been revised to
accurately reflect this requirement and
therefore, this part of the comments is
not adopted.
Two comments suggested that the
borrower select in writing the term of
the conservation contract. As previously
explained in the response to comments
under § 766.102, the agency and the
borrower can, and do, consider different
options or combinations of options that
will allow the borrower’s account to be
restructured. Consequently, the agency
and the borrower need the flexibility to
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choose the best loan servicing option
possible for the borrower’s operation.
Therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
Two comments stated that NRCS
should develop the conservation
management plan and the agency
should approve it, as specified in the
Memorandum of Understanding
between the agencies. The agency agrees
and has revised the CFR accordingly.
Two comments stated the CFR does
not state the borrower has to sign the
conservation contract agreement nor
does it provide the form number for the
conservation contract agreement.
Section 766.109(j) requires the borrower
to sign the Conservation Contract
Agreement. As stated previously, the
agency does not publish form numbers
in the CFR; however, the agency
handbook will provide guidance for
employees. Therefore, the comments are
not adopted.
Two comments suggested the agency
include required servicing for
conservation contracts and agency
actions if the borrower is not following
the management plan or if the borrower
sells the property under the
conservation contract. One comment
stated the penalties for violating the
conservation contract agreement must
be more severe than currently provided,
because, if the only penalty the agency
will assess is the reinstatement of the
debt, it is sometimes to the borrower’s
economic benefit to violate the
conservation contract. The agency did
not propose to make substantive
changes to the conservation contract
requirements, but will do so through
separate rulemaking procedures.
Therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should require subordination of any
prior liens and title clearance on the
property under consideration for a
conservation contract and that the
conservation contract should not be
renegotiated during its term or removed
before expiration. The agency requires
the real estate property under a
conservation contract to be security for
agency loans. Therefore, the agency
would already have a lien on the
property and additional title clearance
is not required. Further, the agency, as
a matter of policy, does not renegotiate
the terms of the conservation contract,
nor does it remove the conservation
contract from the property until it
expires. Some flexibility, however,
should remain in the contract for
unusual cases. Therefore, the comment
is not adopted.
Two comments were received on the
maximum debt reduction calculation by
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a conservation contract used for current
or financially distressed and delinquent
borrowers (§ 766.110(h) and (i)). Both
comments stated that the calculations
should be the same for all. Section
349(e) of the Act (7 U.S.C. 1997)
however, provides different calculations
to be used for debt reduction by
conservation contract for delinquent
borrowers than non-delinquent
borrowers. Therefore, the comments
cannot be adopted.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
Section 766.111 Writedown
Two comments stated the reference to
the 101 percent debt service margin for
writedown as provided in § 766.111(b)
should be changed to 110 percent. The
101 percent reference is correct as used.
When the agency calculations in DALR$
reflect that a feasible plan can be
developed with writedown, the agency
will determine if a feasible plan and a
debt service margin of 101 percent or
more can be achieved without a
writedown. If so, the agency will
provide the borrower the option to
choose the plan used in the
restructuring. Therefore, the comments
are not adopted.
Three comments stated the agency
should remove subparagraph (a)(2),
excluding debtors with SA only, since
subparagraph (a)(1)(iii) provides the
borrower must not have received a
previous debt forgiveness to be eligible
for writedown. The agency agrees with
the comments and has revised the CFR
accordingly.
One comment stated the agency
should clarify on FSA–2512 (Appendix
A to part 766, subpart C) that to receive
writedown, the borrower must be
delinquent on the agency loans. The
agency agrees with the comment and
has revised FSA–2512 accordingly.
Section 766.112 Additional Security
for Restructured Loans
Eight comments were received on the
additional security for restructured
loans provision. Two comments stated
the agency should continue its current
policy of requiring a lien on all assets
when servicing delinquent borrowers’
loans only. Three comments stated the
agency should not require a lien on all
the borrower’s assets when servicing a
financially distressed borrower’s loans,
but instead require the borrower to
provide security of up to 150 percent of
the agency loans. The comments stated
that requiring a lien on all assets may
make financially distressed borrowers
not apply for loan servicing even when
such servicing may move their
operation towards financial viability.
The agency agrees and has revised the
proposed language to require a lien on
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all assets only when the borrower is
delinquent prior to restructuring. The
agency does not agree with the
comments on requiring such borrowers
to provide security of up to 150 percent
of the agency loans when servicing
loans. This is consistent with current
policy.
Two comments suggested agency
employees be granted authority to waive
the agency’s lien on crops when the
agency is not providing an annual
operating loan because a lien on crops
in a subordinate position frustrates
lenders, borrowers, and employees
when trying to secure new crop
production financing. The agency
believes that the lien on crops should
continue to be taken as it helps secure
the agency’s interests and provides a
valid lien on future crops. In addition,
it ensures that crop proceeds, which are
normal income security, are used to pay
agency debt, after the prior lien holder
has been paid. Therefore, the comments
are not adopted.
One comment stated that when
servicing loans, the agency should
obtain a lien on the borrower’s personal
residence, even if the residence is not
located on the farm, as the agency
obtains a lien on chattels and crops for
long-term loans. When the agency
provides primary loan servicing to
delinquent borrowers, the potential for
loss to the agency is increased due to
the borrowers’ deteriorated financial
position. Further, the agency will
continue to obtain a lien on crops to
ensure that normal income is applied to
the agency debt after prior lien holders
have been paid. Therefore, the agency
agrees with the comment and has
revised the CFR to remove the security
exception for personal residences.
Section 766.113 Buyout of Loan at
Current Market Value
One comment was received on the
buyout of loan at current market value
provisions. The comment stated it is not
clear if buyout of loans at current
market value is available for borrowers
who are 90 days past due only. The
agency agrees with the comment and
has clarified the CFR to reflect its
current policy making market value
buyout is available to delinquent
borrowers. Further, the agency clarified
FSA–2512 and FSA–2514 to state that
current market value buyout is available
to delinquent borrowers.
Section 766.115 Challenging the
Agency Appraisal
Three comments were received on the
appraisal options available to a
borrower requesting primary loan
servicing. Two comments stated that a
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63277
borrower who does not agree with the
agency’s appraisal should only be
offered the option of a technical
appraisal review. Further, one of the
comments stated that borrowers should
only be allowed to obtain a technical
appraisal review to determine if the
agency’s appraisal meets the Uniform
Standards of Professional Appraisal
Practice (USPAP) requirements and if
there are flaws in the agency’s appraisal
that would change the appraised value
of the property. In addition, the
comment stated if there are no flaws in
the agency’s appraisal there should be
no further challenge to the appraisal and
no need for a second appraisal. Section
353(c)(7) and (j) of the Act (7 U.S.C.
2001) requires negotiation of appraisals
and appellant rights to independent
appraisals. Therefore, the comments
cannot be adopted.
Another comment stated that since
the Act does not specify any percentage
that the appraisals may differ in the
negotiation process, the agency should
not limit the borrower’s right to have a
third appraisal conducted. While the
agency agrees the Act does not specify
the percentage the appraisals may differ,
the use of the five percent difference is
reasonable and does not create
limitations on the borrower’s rights. If
the appraisals differ by less than five
percent, the agency provides the
borrower the option to choose the
appraisal to be used, thus saving the
borrower and the agency the expense of
a third appraisal. It would be unrealistic
and cost prohibitive not to include any
limit, and it would not be in the
borrower and the agency’s financial
interest if the limit were any lower than
five percent. Lastly, the agency has
found that since its implementation, the
provision has worked well for both the
borrowers and the agency. Therefore,
the comment is not adopted. However,
the agency revised this section to correct
that the borrower selects the appraisal to
be used when the two appraisals differ
by five percent or less (rather than by
less than five percent) to reflect the
agency’s current policy.
Section 766.151 Purpose (Homestead
Protection)
Two comments were received on the
homestead protection program purpose
provision. Both comments stated the
agency should clarify that the former
borrower possesses no statutory right to
remain in possession of the acquired
property. In addition, both comments
stated the agency should replace the
word ‘‘retain’’ with the word ‘‘reacquire.’’ The agency agrees with the
first part of the comments, however, it
believes they are more applicable under
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the liquidation provisions. The agency,
therefore, has added § 766.353(e) to
adopt the comments. This section has
been removed as unnecessary.
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Section 766.152 Applying for
Homestead Protection (Renumbered to
766.151 in the Final Rule)
Two comments were received on the
provision for applying for homestead
protection. One comment stated that
appeal rights should not be provided to
borrowers who do not submit a
complete application. When borrowers
initially apply for loan servicing,
homestead protection is included in the
loan servicing options for which
borrowers may be considered, and
therefore, must automatically be
considered for pre-acquisition
homestead protection. If that option is
denied for any reason, appeal rights will
be provided. Therefore, the comment is
not adopted.
The other comment stated section
352(c)(6) of the Act (7 U.S.C. 2000)
provides for notice ‘‘no later than the
date of acquisition of the property’’ but
that the proposed rule requires notice
‘‘After the agency acquires title to the
property.’’ The comment stated the
agency should revise the CFR to comply
with the Act’s requirement. There is no
substantive difference between these
provisions. The proposed and final rule
language mirrors existing language at 7
CFR 1951.911. Therefore, the comment
is not adopted.
Section 766.153 Eligibility
(Renumbered to 766.152 in the Final
Rule)
Seven comments were received on the
eligibility requirements for homestead
protection. Two comments stated the
former owner should be responsible for
paying costs associated with obtaining
and meeting all state and local
requirements for dividing the
homestead property; otherwise the
agency should deny the homestead
protection request. After the former
owner’s property becomes the agency’s
inventory property, the agency is the
legal owner and is responsible for the
costs associated with separating the
homestead protection property. This
furthers the intent of the Act requiring
that the agency offer this benefit.
Therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
One comment stated the agency
should only pay junior liens when a
positive recovery can be made and
when the cost of foreclosure will exceed
the amount of the prior lien. The agency
agrees, in part, with the comment and
has revised § 766.152(a)(4) to reference
the voluntary conveyance requirements
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in § 766.353. Further, § 766.353 was
revised to provide that the agency may
attempt to negotiate a settlement with
the junior lienholder if it is in the
agency’s financial interest; however, the
agency’s attempt to negotiate with the
junior lienholder does not imply or
create a right for the borrower.
One comment stated the agency
should clarify the homestead protection
provisions applicable to entities. The
agency agrees with the comment and
has revised the CFR accordingly.
Three comments stated the agency
should further clarify the lessee’s
responsibilities regarding making
improvements to the property under the
homestead protection lease provisions.
The agency agrees with the comments
and has revised the CFR accordingly.
Three comments were received on the
former owner eligibility requirements
for homestead protection. The
comments stated that borrowers
requesting servicing are required to
provide 3 years of financial information,
and, therefore, the Agency will not have
financial records available to it to make
the proposed 60 percent income
determination from at least two of the
preceding 6 years. Section 352(c)(1)(B)
and (C) of the Act (7 U.S.C. 2000)
provide the former owner eligibility
requirements for homestead protection.
Additionally, borrowers requesting
homestead protection will have received
assistance from the agency for a number
of years and as a result, prior years’
income records are likely to be in the
borrower’s agency file. If additional
information is needed to satisfy this
eligibility requirement, it must be
submitted with the application under
§ 766.152. Therefore, no changes have
been made in response to these
comments.
Section 766.155 Homestead Protection
Leases (Renumbered to 766.154 in the
Final Rule)
Three comments were received on
homestead protection leases. All
comments stated the CFR does not
specify that applicants can select the
appraiser to conduct the independent
appraisal to determine the property’s
market value. The agency agrees with
the comments and has revised the CFR
accordingly.
Further, one of the comments stated
the agency should incorporate the Act’s
provisions requiring the agency to
provide notice with appeal rights to
former owners for failing to make rental
payments and to comply with state and
local laws governing evictions. The
agency, at § 761.6, provided that review
or appeal of adverse agency decisions
will be handled in accordance with 7
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CFR parts 11 and 780. In addition, the
agency handbook will provide guidance
for employees to implement notice
requirements. Moreover, the agency
already consults with OGC for the
proper process to follow for evictions,
due to the differences in state and local
requirements. Therefore, these
comments are not adopted.
The comment finally stated, the
agency should not require borrowers
with homestead protection leases to
make costly improvements or replace
systems during the lease term. The
agency revised § 766.152(b)(5) to
provide lessees will be responsible for
the normal maintenance of the
homestead protection property.
One comment was received on the
requirement that a homestead protection
lease term be no less than three and no
more than 5 years. The comment stated
that the requirement should read ‘‘the
lease term must be less than 5 years.’’
Section 352(b)(3) of the Act provides
that a homestead protection lease may
not exceed 5 years, but in no case
should it be less than 3 years. Therefore,
the comment cannot be adopted.
Section 766.201 Shared Appreciation
Agreement
One comment questioned the term of
the Shared Appreciation Agreement as
being 5 years instead of 10 years. The
agency published a final rule on August
18, 2000 (65 FR 50401–50405) and
revised the term for Shared
Appreciation Agreements from 10 years
to 5 years. The agreement may be
triggered earlier by one of the events
described in the agreement. Therefore,
no change was made based on the
comment.
Section 766.202 Determining Shared
Appreciation Due
Five comments were received on
determining the shared appreciation
due. One comment stated the agency
should clarify the term ‘‘remaining
contributory value’’ as used in
§ 766.202(a)(3). The agency agrees
inclusion of the word ‘‘remaining’’ in
the phrase causes confusion and has
removed it.
Two comments stated that an
appraisal completed according to
§ 761.7 and within one year of the
maturity date or the triggering event of
the shared appreciation agreement, is
timely. The agency agrees with the
comments and has clarified the CFR
accordingly.
Two comments stated the agency
should clarify that the borrower is
responsible for providing the capital
improvements added during the term of
the shared appreciation agreement and
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should provide the information before
the agency obtains the appraisal. The
agency agrees with the comments and
has clarified the CFR accordingly.
Section 766.203 Payment of Recapture
One comment was received regarding
the payment of recapture. The comment
stated it is not clear what happens if the
borrower does not pay the recapture
amount due within the timeframe
provided. Section 766.204 describes the
actions the agency will take if the
borrower is not able to pay the recapture
amount due. Other internal collection
remedies available need not be
discussed in the rule. Therefore, no
change has been made in response to
the comment.
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Section 766.252 Unauthorized
Assistance Resulting From Submission
of False Information (Renumbered and
Renamed in Final Rule)
Proposed § 766.251 (types of
unauthorized assistance) was removed
in the final rule as unnecessary
One comment was received regarding
unauthorized assistance resulting from
false information (§ 766.253 in proposed
rule). The comment stated the agency
should revise the section to state that
false information includes information
the borrower should have known to be
false. As stated in the response to a
similar comment regarding the
definition of ‘‘false information,’’ it
would be very difficult for the agency to
prove the applicant or borrower should
have known the information submitted
to the agency was false. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
Section 766.253 Unauthorized
Assistance Resulting From Submission
of Inaccurate Information by Borrower
or Agency Error (Renumbered and
Renamed in Final Rule)
Nine comments were received on the
treatment of unauthorized assistance
received by borrowers (§ 766.254 in
proposed rule). Three comments stated
that borrowers should be able to
continue with the loan under program
rates and terms if they are unable to
repay the entire amount of unauthorized
assistance in a lump sum. In addition,
two comments stated borrowers may not
be able to repay the loan under Nonprogram rates and terms. While the
agency is willing to work with such
borrowers on a repayment plan, the
unauthorized debt must be repaid. The
Act does not authorize the agency to
allow borrowers who have received
unauthorized assistance to continue
with the loan on below market program
rates and terms. Therefore, the
comments are not adopted.
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Another comment stated that the
agency’s proposal to reclassify the entire
loan as a Non-program loan if a portion
of the loan is unauthorized seems to be
extreme, if the unauthorized loan was
the result of employee
misunderstanding. While the agency
understands the concern expressed in
the comment, it does not have the
authority to allow continued assistance
to an applicant or borrower that does
not meet statutory program
requirements. Therefore, the comment is
not adopted.
One comment questioned the ability
of the agency’s Finance Office to process
an accelerated repayment agreement.
Two comments stated the provisions
outlining possible resolutions needed to
be clarified. Two comments stated the
agency should specify if the terms of
current accelerated repayment
agreements (5 years or less), will be
changed according to the proposed
provisions. In evaluating the comments,
the agency determined that use of an
accelerated repayment agreement does
not resolve the unauthorized assistance
received, but rather allows for
continued assistance during the period
established by the agreement without
program compliance. Therefore, the
agency removed accelerated repayment
agreements as an option for
unauthorized assistance repayment. In
cases where the unauthorized assistance
is the result of borrower or agency error,
the agency retained the option allowing
the borrower to repay the unauthorized
assistance in a lump sum. If the
borrower is unable to repay all or part
of the unauthorized amount in a lump
sum and has repayment ability, the
agency may convert the loan to a Nonprogram loan, using rates and terms
identical to those proposed for
accelerated repayment agreements. In
addition, the agency revised § 766.251
to provide that the agency may reverse
any unauthorized loan servicing
received by the borrower, where
possible. The agency believes this action
provides those borrowers whose
unauthorized assistance is the result of
an error with reasonable alternatives,
ensures borrowers do not retain benefits
for which they are not entitled to, and
establishes enforceable loan and
security instruments ensuring
repayment of the debt.
Section 766.351 Liquidation
Two comments were received on the
general liquidation provision. Both
comments stated the proposed rule did
not provide for notification of loan
servicing for borrowers who want to
liquidate voluntarily. The agency
disagrees. Section 766.351(b)(2)(ii)
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provides ‘‘if the conditions of (b)(1) of
this section have not been met, the
agency will notify the borrower in
accordance with subpart C of this part,
prior to acting on the request for
voluntary liquidation.’’ No changes,
therefore, are necessary.
Section 766.352 Voluntary Sale of Real
Property and Chattel
Three comments were received
regarding the voluntary sale of real
property and chattel. One comment
stated that allowing borrowers to sell
security voluntarily in lieu of
involuntary liquidation should stop
once the involuntary liquidation process
has begun, otherwise the remaining
security has to continually be updated
through the court as the security
changes with each partial sale. Sections
766.352(a)(1) and (2) provide that a
borrower must sell all security until the
debt is paid in full or all security is
liquidated, if the agency approves the
sale. Further, paragraph (b)(4)(ii)
provides the agency will only approve
a sale that does not result in full
payment of the debt only when it is in
the agency’s financial interest. In
addition, as stated in § 766.351(b)(2)(i),
the agency will not delay involuntary
liquidation for a voluntary sale to close.
Therefore, the agency believes the
comment’s concerns are adequately
addressed in the CFR and no action is
required.
Two comments stated the sales
proceeds in voluntary liquidation
situations, for both real estate and
chattel security, should be ‘‘equal to or
greater than either the agency debt or
the agency-defined recovery value’’
instead of ‘‘equal to or greater than the
market value of the property.’’ The
comments stated that often the agency
receives only the recovery value if the
agency has to liquidate the borrower’s
security. The agency disagrees. When
the agency evaluates a loan request, the
adequacy of the security is based on the
market value of the property, therefore,
allowing liquidation of security for less
than its market value is not reasonable.
Such policy would increase losses and
is not in the agency and the taxpayers’
financial interest. Therefore, the
comments are not adopted.
Section 766.353 Voluntary
Conveyance of Real Property
Four comments were received
regarding the voluntary conveyance of
real property. Three comments stated
the agency form for voluntary
conveyance is not addressed in the CFR.
Two comments stated the same as to
chattel property. The agency does not
publish form numbers in the CFR;
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however, the agency handbook will
provide the form numbers required for
voluntary conveyance of chattel and real
property. Therefore, no changes have
been made in response to the comments.
Two of the comments also stated
junior liens, real estate taxes, and
judgments can be charged to the
borrower’s account as recoverable costs.
Recoverable costs may include
administrative costs associated with the
agency’s acquisition of the property
such as lien search or recording fees.
The agency agrees that recoverable costs
can be charged to the borrower’s
account as provided in the proposed
rule.
One comment stated there was a
conflict between § 766.353(c)(2) that
provides the borrower has to pay junior
liens, real estate taxes, judgments, and
other assessments before the agency will
accept a voluntary conveyance of real
property and paragraph (d)(1) that
provides the agency will charge the
borrower’s account for recoverable costs
incurred in connection with a voluntary
conveyance. As stated above, the agency
has revised the CFR as proposed.
Therefore, no further action is required.
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Section 766.357 Involuntary
Liquidation of Real Property and Chattel
(as Renumbered in Final Rule)
Three comments were received
regarding involuntary liquidation of real
property and chattel (§ 766.356 in
proposed rule). Two comments stated
the agency should clarify that the
borrower does not retain statutory or
implied or inherent regulatory right of
possession of the real estate property
after the date of the foreclosure sale. The
agency agrees with the comments and
has revised the CFR accordingly.
One comment stated the agency
should incorporate the requirement
found in 25 U.S.C. Section 483a(a)
which provides, in part, that foreclosure
proceedings involving Indian land will
be in accordance with Tribal laws, or if
Tribal foreclosure laws are absent,
according to State laws. Further, the
comment stated the agency should
recognize Indian reservations as
political subdivisions and Tribal entities
as State-approved entities. Foreclosure
proceedings differ from state to state,
thus, it would make for exceptionally
voluminous regulations for the agency
to include all internal foreclosure
procedures in its regulations. The
agency has adhered to Tribal and Statespecific foreclosure laws, as applicable,
and will continue to do so. Furthermore,
the agency does not impose different
requirements on entities approved by
States or by Tribes. Therefore, no
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changes have been made in response to
the comment.
One comment stated the agency
should incorporate the provisions found
in Section 335(e) of the Act that provide
detailed guidance for disposition and
administration of inventory property
located within an Indian reservation
where the borrower is a member of the
Tribe. Furthermore, section 335(e) of the
Act provides detailed guidance
regarding the acceleration of loans to
Native American borrowers that was not
addressed in the proposed rule. The
agency redesignated proposed § 766.356
as § 766.357 in the final rule and added
a new § 766.356 addressing statutory
provisions regarding the acceleration of
loans to Native American borrowers in
the final rule. These policies are
consistent with those currently
addressed in internal agency notices.
While no comment was received
regarding § 766.357(b)(2), the agency
determined that the proposed rule
modified existing regulations currently
published in 7 CFR 1955.18(e)(2)(ii).
Modification of the existing policy was
unintended and was not addressed in
the discussion of changes in the
preamble of the proposed rule.
Therefore, the agency revised
§ 766.357(b)(2) to provide that the
agency will credit a borrower’s account
after a foreclosure sale based on the
amount of its bid as provided in existing
regulations, rather than the market
value, less prior liens, as provided in
the proposed rule. No substantive
change was intended.
Appendices to 7 CFR Part 766
The agency renumbered all the
Appendices in the final rule to
accommodate its new numbering system
for all forms used in loan servicing.
Therefore, FSA–2501 has been
renumbered to FSA–2512; FSA–2503
has been renumbered to FSA–2510; and
FSA–2505 has been renumbered to
FSA–2515. Further, under paragraph (f)
in all appendices, the agency rearranged
the forms comprising a complete
primary loan servicing application in
numerical order. Under current rules,
applicants for primary loan servicing are
required to provide multiple copies of a
form to the agency to verify debts and
assets of the applicant. Under the final
rule, applicants will sign only one
authorization to release information and
provide it to the agency. The agency, in
turn, will use the authorization to verify
debts and assets as well as non-farm
income. This process closely matches
commercial lenders’ practices.
Therefore, paragraph (f) in all
appendices is revised to reflect the
agency’s new policy.
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Eight comments were received on the
Appendices to 7 CFR part 766. One
comment stated the agency should
replace the word ‘‘mediation’’ with the
words ‘‘Alternative Dispute Resolution
(ADR)’’ because ADR is the term used in
the agency’s handbook and describes
the agency’s informal process for
resolving disputes. The agency uses the
term ‘‘mediation’’ in all the Appendices
sent to the borrowers because the term
covers both the formal and informal
mediation process for resolving
disputes. In addition, agency borrowers
are familiar with the term ‘‘mediation,’’
while ADR encompasses a wider variety
of techniques not used by the agency.
Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
Two comments stated the title for
FSA–2512 should be revised to ‘‘Notice
of Availability of Loan Servicing to
Borrowers Who Are Current, Financially
Distressed or Less Than 90 Days Past
Due.’’ In addition, both comments stated
FSA–2512 should not include the
option for writedown and shared
appreciation agreement and inquired if
a lien on all assets will be required for
current or financially distressed
borrowers. The agency agrees and has
revised the Appendix’s title as
suggested. The agency published a final
rule on February 4, 2004 (69 FR 5264–
5267), that eliminated the 30-day past
due period prior to a determination that
a borrower is delinquent. As a result,
borrowers are eligible for writedown,
and therefore, shared appreciation
agreement, the day after they miss a
payment. Therefore, that part of the
comments is not adopted. The agency
did, however, revise FSA–2512 to
clarify that writedown is only available
to delinquent borrowers. The agency
will not require current or financially
distressed borrowers to provide a lien
on all assets.
Three comments stated the agency
should revise FSA–2510 to clarify that
after the agency sends it to the borrower,
along with the separate notice of
administrative offset, administrative
offset may occur at any time. Offset of
payments are initiated according to the
timeframes established in the offset
notice and applicable regulations.
Generally, offset may begin prior to the
timeframe provided to the borrower to
request loan servicing or pay the
account current. As a result, inclusion
of the reference to administrative offset
in the notice of availability of primary
and preservation loan servicing is
misleading. Therefore, the agency
removed the administrative offset
provision from FSA–2510.
One comment stated the agency
should revise the CFR to incorporate the
property restrictions and easement
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provisions found in the Appendices. As
stated in the preamble of the proposed
rule, the agency is eliminating the
redundancy found in its current
regulations. Once the agency has
acquired a property into inventory, the
property is subject to the provisions of
7 CFR 767, including Subpart E,
pertaining to real property with
important resources, or special hazard
areas; therefore, the first part of the
comment is not adopted.
The comment also stated the agency
should revise the Appendices to inform
borrowers that they can request a copy
of the regulations and agency
handbooks. The agency agrees with the
second part of the comment and has
revised the Appendices to state that
regulatory text is included in the agency
handbooks. The information had
already been included on the
availability of handbooks and forms.
Regulations also are published in the
Code of Federal Regulations.
Further, the comment stated the
agency should inform borrowers that the
negotiated appraisal non-appealability
determination is appealable to the NAD
Director. The comment stated the nonappealability determination of the
negotiated appraisal is not statutory,
and it should therefore be removed.
Moreover, the comment stated the
agency should remove the provision
that only the balance of the 30 days will
be available to the borrower to request
an appeal on issues other than the
negotiated appraisal since it is not
statutory. According to section 353(c)(7)
of the Act (7 U.S.C. 2001), the
negotiated appraisal value by the
appraiser mutually agreed upon
becomes the final appraisal of the
borrower’s assets. Therefore, the
negotiated appraisals are not appealable.
The agency provides the borrower the
opportunity to request a NAD Director
review of non-appealability
determinations in subsequent notices. In
addition, 7 CFR 11.4(c)(1) provides if a
borrower requests mediation prior to
requesting an appeal to NAD, this stops
the running of the 30-day period during
which the borrower may appeal to NAD,
and the borrower will have the balance
of days remaining in that period to
appeal to NAD once mediation has
concluded. The agency, for consistency
reasons, provides the borrower the
balance of days remaining to request an
appeal to NAD after the negotiation of
the appraisal has concluded. Therefore,
the comment is not adopted.
Another comment stated the agency
should revise the Appendices by
removing the last sentence under the
reconsideration, mediation, negotiation
and appeal rights subparagraph and
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include in FSA–2510 that the borrower
may apply for debt settlement even if
already applied for and rejected. The
agency agrees with the first part of the
comment and has revised all the
Appendices accordingly. Further, the
agency agrees with the last part of the
comment and has revised FSA–2510,
paragraph (i), accordingly.
One comment stated the agency
should expressly provide, where not
clear, that timeframes for borrower
response commence from the time the
agency’s notice is received by the
borrower. The agency believes that the
borrower response timeframes are
clearly stated in all the Appendices, so
no change has been made in response to
the comment.
appeal rights with the offer to
restructure a borrower’s account. The
agency’s offer to restructure the account
is a direct result of the borrower’s
request for loan servicing and the
agency is granting the benefit. If a
delinquent borrower does not accept the
agency’s offer to restructure the account,
the agency will send notification of its
intent to accelerate the account and will
provide appeal rights. The borrower can
then appeal both the offer to restructure
and the intent to accelerate. Further, the
borrower may seek NAD Director’s
review of the appealability
determination or otherwise attempt to
appeal without an adverse decision.
Therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
Miscellaneous Comments on Part 766
Two comments were received
requesting the agency continue to
provide notification of primary loan
servicing when a borrower’s request to
release proceeds of chattel security is
denied. In addition, the comments
stated that the agency has to release
proceeds for essential family living and
farm operating expenses until the loan
is accelerated. The agency may deny a
borrower’s request to release proceeds of
chattel security for expenses not
considered essential family living or
farm operating expenses. The agency is
committed to helping borrowers resolve
their financial distress at the earliest
opportunity, before the financial
condition of the operation deteriorates
to the point that primary loan servicing
is required. Such notification is not
required by the Act; however, it was the
agency’s intent to continue notifying
financially distressed and delinquent
borrowers of primary loan servicing
availability under § 766.101. However,
the agency believes that initiating
primary loan servicing in cases not
related to financial distress or
delinquency is a disservice to borrowers
since the primary loan servicing process
can be lengthy and complicated, when
the benefits are not needed. Therefore,
the comments are not adopted.
Three comments were received in
support of the agency’s decision not to
provide appeal rights in the offer to
restructure the account. The comments
stated that the borrowers’ rights are
protected because borrowers are
provided with appeal rights when the
agency proposes to take adverse action.
In addition, the comments stated that
the agency and the taxpayers are
benefiting from the change since it
eliminates the inefficiencies and
administrative expenses associated with
multiple appeals. Two comments were
received requesting the agency provide
Part 767—Inventory Property
Management
The following discussion addresses
the comments received on Part 767.
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Section 767.52 Disposition of Personal
Property From Real Estate Inventory
Property
One comment was received on the
disposition of personal property from
real estate inventory property. The
comment stated the agency should
clarify in the CFR how the former owner
and any known lienholders will be
notified when personal property has
been left on the real estate inventory
property. The agency believes the CFR
as written adequately addresses the
agency’s obligation to provide notice,
and the agency handbook will provide
further guidance to agency personnel
regarding the method for notifying
former owners and prior lienholders.
Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
Section 767.101 Leasing Real Estate
Inventory Property
Two comments were received on
leasing real estate inventory property.
Both comments stated the agency
should add that when the borrower or
any other party remains in possession of
the real estate property after the agency
acquires the title to the property, that
person does so without the benefit of a
written lease agreement with the
agency. Further, the comments stated,
the agency, at its sole discretion, can
remove such parties and property,
pursue civil or criminal action, and
pursue claims for use and occupancy of
the agency’s property. The agency
agrees with the concerns expressed in
the comments, and has revised
§ 766.357 to clarify that after the date of
foreclosure, the former owner of the
property does not retain any rights,
except rights granted under state law.
Since property can become inventory
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only through foreclosure or voluntary
conveyance, the agency believes it is
more appropriate to revise § 766.353
similarly. Section 767.52 adequately
addresses the removal of personal
property. Lastly, 7 CFR 1955.61
provides that the agency will request
OGC assistance when eviction is
necessary. The agency will continue this
policy in its handbook, since procedures
may vary from state to state. Therefore,
no change has been made to this section
in response to these comments.
Section 767.151 General Requirements
Three comments were received on the
general requirements for disposal of
inventory property. All comments stated
the proposed rule requires nonbeginning farmers to make a 10 percent
downpayment when purchasing
inventory property. The comments
stated non-beginning farmer applicants
eligible for farm ownership loans should
be able to purchase inventory property
and the agency provide 100 percent of
the financing as when a non-beginning
farmer purchases real estate from a third
party. The agency disagrees. Section 335
of the Act (7 U.S.C. 1985) requires the
agency to ensure prompt sale of
acquired inventory property, as well as
the availability of acquired property to
beginning farmers. The purchase of
inventory property by beginning farmers
may be financed with the agency’s
direct farm ownership loan allocation.
As provided in section 346 of the Act (7
U.S.C. 1994), farm ownership funds are
targeted for beginning farmers.
Historically, non-targeted farm
ownership funds are exhausted early in
the fiscal year. While beginning farmer
targeted farm ownership funds may also
become exhausted, section 335(c)(5) of
the Act authorizes the lease of inventory
property only to beginning farmers
when funds are not available to
consummate the sale. Further, section
335(c)(1)(C) of the Act requires the sale
of the property within 30 days after it
is determined an acceptable offer has
not been received from a qualified
beginning farmer. To meet this
timeframe, the purchaser generally is
required to have funds available from
sources other than the agency since nontargeted farm ownership funds are
usually exhausted quickly. The 10
percent deposit is required to ensure
only those with the necessary funds
submit offers. Therefore, the comments
are not adopted.
One comment stated the requirement
in section 335(c)(1)(iv) of the Act that
the Secretary will combine or subdivide
inventory property, as appropriate, to
maximize the opportunity for beginning
farmers to purchase inventory property,
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was not included in the proposed rule.
The agency agrees with the comment
and has added the requirement in
paragraph (a).
Lastly, the agency revised § 767.151(b)
(renumbered from § 767.151(a)) by
removing the last sentence of the
paragraph that provided beginning
farmers may apply up through 135 days
after the advertisement to purchase
inventory property. Section 335(c) of the
Act, as well as existing regulations at 7
CFR 1955.107(a)(2)(i), provide that the
agency has 135 days from acquisition to
complete the sale to a beginning farmer.
By providing beginning farmers up
through 135 days after the
advertisement to apply to purchase the
inventory property, the proposed rule
text would prohibit the agency from
meeting the statutory deadline for
closing the sale.
In addition, the agency revised
§ 767.151(d) (renumbered from
767.151(c)) which provided if no
acceptable offer was received from a
beginning farmer, the agency would
offer to sell inventory property to the
general public between days 136 and
165 after the agency obtained title to the
property, As written, this requirement
would prohibit the agency from selling
the inventory property within the 165day requirement as mandated under
Section 335(c) of the Act.
Section 767.155 Selling Chattel
Property
Five comments were received on
selling chattel property. Three
comments stated it may be in the
agency’s financial interest to sell
specialty livestock and equipment by
private contract instead of public
auction. In addition, all three comments
did not support the removal of the
sealed bid method for selling chattel
inventory property. One comment stated
the agency should not make any
changes to the way it currently sells
chattel inventory property. The
comment stated some small items must
be sold through methods other than
auction as the transportation costs to the
auction site may be more than the value
of the items to be auctioned. The agency
believes its financial interests are
protected when chattel inventory
property is sold by public auction.
However, the agency recognizes that a
greater recovery may occur by selling
specialty livestock and equipment by
private contract. The agency agrees with
the comments and has revised the
section to provide for sealed bids.
One comment stated the agency
should be prohibited from accepting
chattels into inventory as the agency
does not have the resources to manage
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the property and the property will
depreciate while being held by the
agency. As provided in § 766.354(b), the
agency will only accept a conveyance of
chattel property if the borrower has
made every effort possible to sell the
property voluntarily, the property is free
of other liens, and it is in the agency’s
financial interest. Based on these
requirements, the agency believes that
the agency will rarely accept chattels
into inventory. Therefore, the comment
is not adopted.
Section 767.203 Inventory Real
Property Containing Environmental
Risks (Removed in Final Rule)
Three comments were received on the
real estate inventory property
containing environmental risks
provisions. All comments stated the
agency’s proposed rule went far beyond
the lender liability responsibilities as
provided in applicable Federal and
State laws. The comments stated the
agency seems to take on the prior
owner’s responsibility for
environmental problems and hazardous
waste cleanup and provided the final
rule should afford the lender liability
protection to the agency as stated in all
applicable statutes. The Comprehensive
Environmental Response,
Compensation, and Liability Act and
other applicable laws specify actions the
agency has to undertake when property
held in inventory contains hazardous
wastes and materials. The agency
recognizes that this law provides some
protection from lender liability for
clean-up of hazardous waste. The
agency, however, may choose to do
more than legally required when such
action is in the agency’s best financial
interests. The agency believes this
matter is internal policy and has
removed the section in the final rule.
The agency handbook, however, will
provide guidance to employees.
Miscellaneous Comments
Two comments were received
supporting the elimination of the
definitions for suitable and surplus
property from the CFR. The comments
stated the elimination of the definitions
will help reduce unnecessary
administrative burden placed on the
agency and free employees’ time to
provide assistance to young and
beginning farmers.
Miscellaneous CFR Parts
As stated in the preamble of the
proposed rule, the agency intends to
amend 7 CFR part 799 to incorporate
environmental policies currently found
in subpart G of 7 CFR part 1940.
However, 7 CFR part 799 has not been
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amended yet, therefore, the agency will
refer to subpart G of 7 CFR part 1940
when environmental policies are
discussed in the final rule. The agency
will make conforming changes to
subpart G when the final rule amending
7 CFR part 799 is published.
Further, as stated in the preamble of
the proposed rule, the agency intends to
amend 7 CFR part 792 to incorporate
offset of Federal payments and debt
settlement policies currently found in
subpart C of 7 CFR part 1951 and
subpart B of 7 CFR part 1956,
respectively. However, 7 CFR part 792
has not been amended yet; therefore, the
agency refers to subpart C of 7 CFR part
1951 and subpart B of 7 CFR part 1956
when offset of Federal payments and
debt settlement policies are discussed in
the final rule. The agency will make
conforming changes to subpart C of 7
CFR part 1951 and subpart B of 7 CFR
1956 when the final rule amending 7
CFR part 792 is published.
The agency’s policies on controlled
substances and disqualification for
Federal benefits due to Federal crop
insurance violations are currently
addressed in 7 CFR part 718. However,
the agency determined that Farm Loan
Programs were not adequately covered;
therefore, the agency revised 7 CFR part
718 where appropriate. In addition,
conforming changes were made to
Commodity Credit Corporation
regulations in 7 CFR 1405.8.
Executive Order 12866
This rule has been determined to be
significant under Executive Order 12866
and was reviewed by OMB.
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Regulatory Flexibility Act
In compliance with the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601–602), the
undersigned has determined and
certified by signature of this document
that this rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. This rule does
not impose any new requirements on
Agency applicants and borrowers. In
some cases, existing information
collections and regulatory requirements
have been reduced as a result of
streamlining the loan making and
servicing application processes.
Environmental Assessment
FSA has completed an Environmental
Assessment (EA) in accordance with the
provisions of the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969
(NEPA), 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq., the
regulations of the Council on
Environmental Quality (40 CFR parts
1500–1508) and the FSA regulations for
compliance with NEPA, 7 CFR part
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1940, subpart G. A finding of no
significant impact (FONSI) was
determined as a result of the EA
process. The final EA and FONSI are
available for review at https://www.fsa.
usda.gov/FSA/webapp?area=home
&subject=ecrc&topic=enl-ea. The
agency will accept comments on the
final EA and FONSI for a period of 30
days from the date of publication of this
rule.
Executive Order 13132
The policies contained in this rule do
not have a substantial direct effect on
states, on the relationship between the
national government and the states, or
on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. Nor does this rule
impose substantial direct compliance
costs on state and local governments.
Therefore, consultation with the states
is not required.
Executive Order 12988
This rule has been reviewed in
accordance with Executive Order 12988,
Civil Justice Reform. In accordance with
this Executive Order: (1) All State and
local laws and regulations that are in
conflict with this rule will be
preempted; (2) no retroactive effect will
be given to this rule; and (3)
administrative proceedings in
accordance with 7 CFR parts 11 and 780
must be exhausted before bringing suit
in court challenging action taken under
this rule unless those regulations
specifically allow bringing suit at an
earlier time.
Executive Order 12372
For reasons contained in the Notice to
7 CFR part 3015, subpart V (48 FR
29115, June 24, 1983), the programs
within this rule are excluded from the
scope of E.O. 12372, which requires
intergovernmental consultation with
State and local officials.
Unfunded Mandates
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), Pub. L.
104–4, requires Federal agencies to
assess the effects of their regulatory
actions on State, local, and tribal
governments or the private sector of
$100 million or more in any one year.
When such a statement is needed for a
rule, section 205 of the UMRA requires
FSA to prepare a written statement,
including a cost benefit assessment, for
proposed and final rules with ‘‘Federal
mandates’’ that may result in such
expenditures for State, local, or tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or to the
private sector. UMRA generally requires
agencies to consider alternatives and
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63283
adopt the more cost effective or least
burdensome alternative that achieves
the objectives of the rule.
This rule contains no Federal
mandates, as defined under Title II of
the UMRA, for State, local, and tribal
governments or the private sector. Thus,
this rule is not subject to the
requirements of sections 202 and 205 of
UMRA.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The Information Collection Packages
for the amendments to 7 CFR parts 761,
764, 765, 766, and 767 contained in this
final rule have been submitted to OMB
for approval. A proposed rule
containing an estimate of the burden
impact of the rule was published on
February 9, 2004 (69 FR 6055–6121). No
comments regarding the burden
estimates were received.
E-Government Act Compliance
FSA is committed to complying with
the E-Government Act, to promote the
use of the Internet and other
information technologies to provide
increased opportunities for citizen
access to Government information and
services, and for other purposes.
The agency has posted online at
https://www.sc.egov.usda.gov all the
forms an applicant or borrower either
has to complete in their entirety or
review and execute. For forms the
applicant or borrower is required to
complete in their entirety, the fillable
version of the form, as well as detailed
instructions on completing the form, are
included online. Forms prepared by the
agency, that applicants or borrowers
simply review and sign, are also
provided on the e-Gov Web site,
however, in lieu of detailed instructions
for completing those forms, the
instructions state that the forms are
provided on the Web site for
information purposes only. Applicants
or borrowers may download and review
forms required to apply for benefits
from the agency.
Lastly, the agency provides access to
the handbooks that implement the CFR
parts included in the final rule and
provide internal and administrative
guidance to its employees, at https://
www.fsa.usda.gov/FSA/webapp?area=
home&subject=lare&topic=hbk.
Applicants or borrowers may download
and review any agency handbook and
become familiar with the requirements
for applying for benefits.
Federal Assistance Programs
These changes affect the following FSA
programs as listed in the Catalog of Federal
Domestic Assistance:
10.404—Emergency Loans
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10.406—Farm Operating Loans
10.407—Farm Ownership Loans
List of Subjects
7 CFR Part 718
Acreage allotments, Agricultural
commodities, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
7 CFR Part 761
Administrative practice and
procedure, Agriculture, Authority
delegations, Credit, Loan programs—
Agriculture.
7 CFR Part 762
Agriculture, Credit, Loan programs—
Agriculture.
7 CFR Part 764
Agriculture, Agricultural
commodities, Credit, Disaster
assistance, Livestock, Loan programs—
Agriculture, Mortgages.
7 CFR Part 765
Agriculture, Agricultural
commodities, Credit, Livestock, Loan
programs—Agriculture.
7 CFR Part 766
Agriculture, Agricultural
commodities, Credit, Livestock, Loan
programs—Agriculture.
7 CFR Part 767
Agriculture, Credit, Government
property, Government property
management, Indians—loans, Loan
programs—Agriculture.
7 CFR Part 1405
Agricultural commodities, Feed
grains, Grains, Loan programs
‘‘Agriculture, Oilseeds, Price support
programs, Reporting and record keeping
requirements.
I Accordingly, 7 CFR chapters VII and
XIV are amended as follows:
7 CFR Chapter VII
PART 718—PROVISIONS APPLICABLE
TO MULTIPLE PROGRAMS
1. The authority citation for part 718
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1311 et seq., 1501 et
seq., 1921 et seq., 7201 et seq., 15 U.S.C.
714b.
I
2. Revise § 718.1 to read as follows:
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§ 718.1
Applicability.
(a) This part:
(1) Is applicable to all programs set
forth in chapters VII and XIV of this title
which are administered by the Farm
Service Agency (FSA), except that only
§§ 718.6 and 718.11 are applicable to
parts 761 through 774 of this chapter;
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(2) Governs how FSA monitors
marketing quotas, allotments, base acres
and acreage reports. The regulations
affected are those that establish
procedures for measuring allotments
and program eligible acreage, and
determining program compliance.
(b) For all programs, except for those
administered under parts 761 through
774 of this chapter:
(1) The provisions of this part will be
administered under the general
supervision of the Administrator, FSA,
and carried out in the field by State and
county FSA committees (State and
county committees);
(2) State and county committees, and
representatives and employees thereof,
do not have authority to modify or
waive any regulations in this part;
(3) No provisions or delegation herein
to a State or county committee will
preclude the Administrator, FSA, or a
designee, from determining any
question arising under the program or
from reversing or modifying any
determination made by a State or county
committee;
(4) The Deputy Administrator, FSA,
may authorize State and county
committees to waive or modify
deadlines and other requirements in
cases where lateness or failure to meet
such other requirements does not
adversely affect the operation of the
program.
(c) The programs under parts 761
through 774 will be administered
according to the part, or parts,
applicable to the specific program.
I 3. Revise § 718.6 to read as follows:
§ 718.6
Controlled substance.
(a) The following terms apply to this
section:
(1) USDA benefit means the issuance
of any grant, contract, loan, or payment
by appropriated funds of the United
States.
(2) Person means an individual.
(b) Notwithstanding any other
provision of law, any person convicted
under Federal or State law of:
(1) Planting, cultivating, growing,
producing, harvesting, or storing a
controlled substance in any crop year is
ineligible during the crop year of
conviction and the four succeeding crop
years, for any of the following USDA
benefits:
(i) Any payments or benefits under
the Direct and Counter Cyclical Program
(DCP) in accordance with part 1412 of
this title;
(ii) Any payments or benefits for
losses to trees, crops, or livestock
covered under disaster programs
administered by FSA;
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(iii) Any price support loan available
in accordance with part 1421 of this
title;
(iv) Any price support or payment
made under the Commodity Credit
Corporation Charter Act;
(v) A farm storage facility loan made
under section 4(h) of the Commodity
Credit Corporation Charter Act or any
other Act;
(vi) Crop Insurance under the Federal
Crop Insurance Act;
(vii) A loan made or guaranteed under
the Consolidated Farm and Rural
Development Act or any other law
administered by FSA’s Farm Loan
Programs.
(2) Possession or trafficking of a
controlled substance, is ineligible for
any or all USDA benefits:
(i) At the discretion of the court,
(ii) To the extent and for a period of
time the court determines.
(c) If a person denied benefits under
this section is a shareholder,
beneficiary, or member of an entity or
joint operation, benefits for which the
entity or joint operation is eligible will
be reduced, for the appropriate period,
by a percentage equal to the total
interest of the shareholder, beneficiary,
or member.
I 4. Revise § 718.11 to read as follows:
§ 718.11 Disqualification due to Federal
crop insurance violation.
(a) Section 515(h) of the Federal Crop
Insurance Act (FCIA) provides that a
person who willfully and intentionally
provides false or inaccurate information
to the Federal Crop Insurance
Corporation (FCIC) or to an approved
insurance provider with respect to a
policy or plan of FCIC insurance, after
notice and an opportunity for a hearing
on the record, will be subject to one or
more of the sanctions described in
section 515(h)(3). In section 515(h)(3),
the FCIA specifies that in the case of a
violation committed by a producer, the
producer may be disqualified for a
period of up to 5 years from receiving
any monetary or non-monetary benefit
under a number of programs. The list
includes, but is not limited to, benefits
under:
(1) The FCIA.
(2) The Agricultural Market
Transition Act (7 U.S.C. 7201 et seq.),
including the Noninsured Crop Disaster
Assistance Program under section 196 of
that Act (7 U.S.C. 7333).
(3) The Agricultural Act of 1949 (7
U.S.C. 1421 et seq.).
(4) The Commodity Credit
Corporation Charter Act (15 U.S.C. 714
et seq.).
(5) The Agricultural Adjustment Act
of 1938 (7 U.S.C. 1281 et seq.).
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(6) Title XII of the Food Security Act
of 1985 (16 U.S.C. 3801 et seq.).
(7) The Consolidated Farm and Rural
Development Act (7 U.S.C. 1921 et seq.).
(8) Any law that provides assistance
to a producer of an agricultural
commodity affected by a crop loss or a
decline in prices of agricultural
commodities.
(b) Violation determinations are made
by FCIC. However, upon notice from
FCIC to FSA that a producer has been
found to have committed a violation to
which paragraph (a) of this section
applies, that person will be ineligible for
payments under the programs specified
in paragraph (a) of this section that are
funded by FSA for the same period of
time for which, as determined by FCIC,
the producer will be ineligible for crop
insurance benefits of the kind referred
to in paragraph (a)(1) of this section.
Appeals of the determination of
ineligibility will be administered under
the rules set by FCIC.
(c) Other sanctions may also apply.
I 5. Revise part 761 to read as follows:
PART 761—GENERAL PROGRAM
ADMINISTRATION
Subpart A—General Provisions
Sec.
761.1 Introduction.
761.2 Abbreviations and definitions.
761.3 Civil rights.
761.4 Conflict of interest.
761.5 Restrictions on lobbying.
761.6 Appeals.
761.7 Appraisals.
761.8 Loan limitations.
761.9 Interest rates for direct loans.
761.10 Planning and performing
construction and other development.
761.11–761.50 [Reserved]
Subpart B—Supervised Bank Accounts
761.51 Establishing a supervised bank
account.
761.52 Deposits into a supervised bank
account.
761.53 Interest bearing accounts.
761.54 Withdrawals from a supervised bank
account.
761.55 Closing a supervised bank account.
761.56–761.100 [Reserved]
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Subpart C—Supervised Credit
761.101 Applicability.
761.102 Borrower recordkeeping, reporting,
and supervision.
761.103 Farm assessment.
761.104 Developing the farm operating
plan.
761.105 Year-end analysis.
761.106–761.200 [Reserved]
Subpart D—Allocation of Farm Loan
Programs Funds to State Offices
761.201 Purpose.
761.202 Timing of allocations.
761.203 National reserves for Farm
Ownership and Operating loans.
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761.204 Methods of allocating funds to
State Offices.
761.205 Computing the formula allocation.
761.206 Pooling of unobligated funds
allocated to State Offices.
761.207 Distribution of loan funds by State
Offices.
761.208 Target participation rates for
socially disadvantaged groups.
761.209 Loan funds for beginning farmers.
761.210 Transfer of funds.
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301 and 7 U.S.C. 1989.
Subpart A—General Provisions
§ 761.1
Introduction.
(a) The Administrator delegates the
responsibility to administer Farm Loan
Programs of the Consolidated Farm and
Rural Development Act (7 U.S.C. 1921
et seq.) to the Deputy Administrator for
Farm Loan Programs subject to any
limitations established in 7 CFR
2.16(a)(2) and 7 CFR 2.42.
(b) The Deputy Administrator may:
(1) Redelegate authorities received
under subparagraph (a); and
(2) Establish procedures for further
redelegation of authority.
(c) Parts 761 through 767 describe the
Agency’s policies for its Farm Loan
Programs. The objective of these
programs is to provide supervised credit
and management assistance to eligible
farmers to become owners or operators,
or both, of family farms, to continue
such operations when credit is not
available elsewhere, or to return to
normal farming operations after
sustaining substantial losses as a result
of a designated or declared disaster.
These regulations apply to loan
applicants, borrowers, lenders, holders,
Agency personnel, and other parties
involved in making, guaranteeing,
holding, servicing, or liquidating such
loans.
(d) This part describes the Agency’s
general and administrative policies for
its guaranteed and direct Farm Loan
Programs. In general, this part addresses
issues that affect both guaranteed and
direct loan programs.
§ 761.2
Abbreviations and definitions.
The following abbreviations and
definitions are applicable to the Farm
Loan Programs addressed in parts 761
through 767 unless otherwise noted.
(a) Abbreviations.
CLP Certified Lender Program.
DSA Disaster Set-Aside.
EE Economic Emergency loan.
EM Emergency loan.
FLP Farm Loan Programs.
FO Farm Ownership loan.
FSA Farm Service Agency, an Agency
of the USDA, including its personnel
and any successor Agency.
Lo-Doc Low-Documentation
Operating loan.
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OGC Office of the General Counsel of
the USDA.
OL Operating loan.
PLP Preferred Lender Program.
RHF Rural Housing loan for farm
service buildings.
RL Recreation loan.
SAA Shared Appreciation Agreement.
SA Shared Appreciation loan.
SEL Standard Eligible Lender.
ST Softwood Timber loan.
SW Soil and Water loan.
USDA United States Department of
Agriculture.
USPAP Uniform Standards of
Professional Appraisal Practice.
(b) Definitions.
Abandoned security property is
security property that a borrower is not
occupying, is not in possession of, or
has relinquished control of and has not
made arrangements for its care or sale.
Accrued deferred interest is unpaid
interest from past due installments
posted to a borrower’s loan account.
Act is the Consolidated Farm and
Rural Development Act (7 U.S.C. 1921
et seq.).
Additional security is property which
provides security in excess of the
amount of security value equal to the
loan amount.
Adequate security is property which
is required to provide security value at
least equal to the direct loan amount.
Adjustment is a form of settlement
that reduces the financial obligation to
the Agency, conditioned upon the
completion of payment of a specified
amount at a future time. An adjustment
is not a final settlement until all
payments have been made under the
agreement.
Administrative appraisal review is a
review of an appraisal to determine if
the appraisal:
(1) Meets applicable Agency
requirements; and
(2) Is accurate outside the
requirements of standard 3 of USPAP.
Agency is the FSA.
Agreement for the use of proceeds is
an agreement between the borrower and
the Agency that reflects how, when, and
to whom the borrower will sell,
exchange, or consume chattel security
and the planned use of any proceeds
during a specific production cycle.
Agricultural commodity is livestock,
livestock products, grains, cotton,
oilseeds, dry beans, tobacco, peanuts,
sugar beets, sugar cane, fruit, vegetable,
forage, tree farming, nursery crops, nuts,
aquaculture species, and other plant and
animal production, as determined by
the Agency.
Allonge is an attachment or an
addendum to a promissory note.
Allowable costs are those costs for
replacement or repair that are supported
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by acceptable documentation,
including, but not limited to, written
estimates, invoices, and bills.
Applicant is the individual or entity
applying for a loan or loan servicing
under either the direct or guaranteed
loan program.
Aquaculture is the husbandry of any
aquatic organisms (including fish,
mollusks, crustaceans or other
invertebrates, amphibians, reptiles, or
aquatic plants) raised in a controlled or
selected environment of which the
applicant has exclusive rights to use.
Assignment of guaranteed portion is a
process by which the lender transfers
the right to receive payments or income
on a guaranteed loan to another party,
usually in return for payment in the
amount of the loan’s guaranteed
principal. The lender retains the
unguaranteed portion in its portfolio
and receives a fee from the purchaser or
assignee to service the loan and receive
and remit payments according to a
written assignment agreement. This
assignment can be reassigned or sold
multiple times.
Assignment of indemnity is the
transfer of rights to compensation under
an insurance contract.
Assistance is financial assistance in
the form of a direct or guaranteed loan
or interest subsidy or servicing action.
Assumption is the act of agreeing to
be legally responsible for another party’s
indebtedness.
Assumption agreement is a written
agreement on the appropriate Agency
form to pay the FLP debt incurred by
another.
Average agricultural loan customer is
a conventional farm borrower who is
required to pledge crops, livestock,
other chattel and/or real estate security
for the loan. This term does not include
a high-risk farmer with limited security
and management ability who is
generally charged a higher interest rate
by conventional agricultural lenders.
Also, this term does not include a lowrisk farm customer who obtains
financing on a secured or unsecured
basis, who is able to pledge as collateral
for a loan items such as savings
accounts, time deposits, certificates of
deposit, stocks and bonds, and life
insurance.
Basic part of an applicant’s total
farming operation is any single
agricultural commodity or livestock
production enterprise of an applicant’s
farming operation which normally
generates sufficient income to be
considered essential to the success of
such farming operation.
Basic security is all farm machinery,
equipment, vehicles, foundation and
breeding livestock herds and flocks,
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including replacements, and real estate
that serves as security for a loan made
or guaranteed by the Agency.
Beginning farmer is an individual or
entity who:
(1) Meets the loan eligibility
requirements for a direct or guaranteed
OL or FO loan, as applicable;
(2) Has not operated a farm for more
than 10 years. This requirement applies
to all members of an entity;
(3) Will materially and substantially
participate in the operation of the farm:
(i) In the case of a loan made to an
individual, individually or with the
family members, material and
substantial participation requires that
the individual provide substantial dayto-day labor and management of the
farm, consistent with the practices in
the county or State where the farm is
located.
(ii) In the case of a loan made to an
entity, all members must materially and
substantially participate in the
operation of the farm. Material and
substantial participation requires that
the member provide some amount of the
management, or labor and management
necessary for day-to-day activities, such
that if the individual did not provide
these inputs, operation of the farm
would be seriously impaired;
(4) Agrees to participate in any loan
assessment and borrower training
required by Agency regulations;
(5) Except for an OL applicant, does
not own real farm property or who,
directly or through interests in family
farm entities owns real farm property,
the aggregate acreage of which does not
exceed 30 percent of the acreage of the
farms in the county where the property
is located. If the farm is located in more
than one county, the median farm
acreage of the county where the
applicant’s residence is located will be
used in the calculation. If the
applicant’s residence is not located on
the farm or if the applicant is an entity,
the median farm acreage of the county
where the major portion of the farm is
located will be used. The median
county farm acreage will be determined
from the most recent Census of
Agriculture;
(6) Demonstrates that the available
resources of the applicant and spouse (if
any) are not sufficient to enable the
applicant to enter or continue farming
on a viable scale; and
(7) In the case of an entity:
(i) All the members are related by
blood or marriage; and
(ii) All the members are beginning
farmers.
Beginning Farmer Downpayment
Loan is a type of FO loan made to
eligible applicants to finance a portion
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of a real estate purchase under part 764,
subpart E of this chapter.
Borrower (or debtor) is an individual
or entity that has an outstanding
obligation to the Agency or to a lender
under any direct or guaranteed FLP
loan, without regard to whether the loan
has been accelerated. The term
‘‘borrower’’ includes all parties liable
for such obligation, including
collection-only borrowers, except for
debtors whose total loans and accounts
have been voluntarily or involuntarily
foreclosed, sold, or conveyed, or who
have been discharged of all such
obligations owed to the Agency or
guaranteed lender.
Cancellation is the final discharge of,
and release of liability for, a financial
obligation to the Agency on which no
settlement amount has been paid.
Cash flow budget is a projection
listing all anticipated cash inflows
(including all farm income, nonfarm
income and all loan advances) and all
cash outflows (including all farm and
nonfarm debt service and other
expenses) to be incurred during the
period of the budget. Advances and
principal repayments of lines of credit
may be excluded from a cash flow
budget. Cash flow budgets for
guaranteed loans under $125,000 do not
require income and expenses itemized
by categories. A cash flow budget may
be completed either for a 12-month
period, a typical production cycle, or
the life of the loan, as appropriate. It
may also be prepared with a breakdown
of cash inflows and outflows for each
month of the review period and include
the expected outstanding operating
credit balance for the end of each
month. The latter type is referred to as
a ‘‘monthly cash flow budget.’’
Chattel or real estate essential to the
operation is chattel or real estate that
would be necessary for the applicant to
continue operating the farm after the
disaster in a manner similar to the
manner in which the farm was operated
immediately prior to the disaster, as
determined by the Agency.
Chattel security is property that may
consist of, but is not limited to: Crops;
livestock; aquaculture species; farm
equipment; inventory; accounts;
contract rights; general intangibles; and
supplies that are covered by financing
statements and security agreements,
chattel mortgages, and other security
instruments.
Civil action is a court proceeding to
protect the Agency’s financial interests.
A civil action does not include
bankruptcy and similar proceedings to
impound and distribute the bankrupt’s
assets to creditors, or probate or similar
proceedings to settle and distribute
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estates of incompetents or decedents,
and pay claims of creditors.
Closing agent is the attorney or title
insurance company selected by the
applicant and approved by the Agency
to provide closing services for the
proposed loan or servicing action.
Unless a title insurance company
provides loan closing services, the term
‘‘title company’’ does not include ‘‘title
insurance company.’’
Coastal barrier is an area of land
identified as part of the national Coastal
Barrier Resources System under the
Coastal Barrier Resources Act of 1980.
Compromise is the settlement of an
FLP debt or claim by a lump-sum
payment of less than the total amount
owed in satisfaction of the debt or
claim.
Conditional commitment is the
Agency’s commitment to a lender that
the material the lender has submitted is
approved subject to the completion of
all listed conditions and requirements.
Conservation Contract is a contract
under which a borrower agrees to set
aside land for conservation, recreation
or wildlife purposes in exchange for
reduction of a portion of an outstanding
FLP debt.
Conservation Contract review team is
comprised by the appropriate offices of
FSA, the Natural Resources
Conservation Service, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, State Fish and Wildlife
Agencies, Conservation Districts,
National Park Service, Forest Service,
State Historic Preservation Officer, State
Conservation Agencies, State
Environmental Protection Agency, State
Natural Resource Agencies, adjacent
public landowner, and any other entity
that may have an interest and qualifies
to be a management authority for a
proposed conservation contract.
Consolidation is the process of
combining the outstanding principal
and interest balance of two or more
loans of the same type made for
operating purposes.
Construction is work such as erecting,
repairing, remodeling, relocating,
adding to, or salvaging any building or
structure, and the installing, repairing,
or adding to heating and electrical
systems, water systems, sewage disposal
systems, walks, steps, and driveways.
Controlled is when a director or an
employee has more than a 50 percent
ownership in an entity or, the director
or employee, together with relatives of
the director or employee, have more
than a 50 percent ownership.
Controlled substance is the term as
defined in 21 U.S.C. 812.
Cooperative is an entity that has
farming as its purpose, whose members
have agreed to share the profits of the
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farming enterprise, and is recognized as
a farm cooperative by the laws of the
state in which the entity will operate a
farm.
Corporation is a private domestic
corporation created and organized
under the laws of the state in which it
will operate a farm.
Cosigner is a party, other than the
applicant, who joins in the execution of
a promissory note to assure its
repayment. The cosigner becomes
jointly and severally liable to comply
with the repayment terms of the note,
but is not authorized to severally receive
loan servicing available under 7 CFR
parts 765 and 766. In the case of an
entity applicant, the cosigner cannot be
a member of the entity.
County is a local administrative
subdivision of a State or similar
political subdivision of the United
States.
County average yield is the historical
average yield for an agricultural
commodity in a particular political
subdivision, as determined or published
by a government entity or other
recognized source.
Criminal action is the prosecution by
the United States to exact punishment
in the form of fines or imprisonment for
alleged violation of criminal statutes.
Crop allotment or quota is a farm’s
share of an approved national tobacco or
peanut allotment or quota.
Current market value buyout is the
termination of a borrower’s loan
obligations to the Agency in exchange
for payment of the current appraised
value of the borrower’s security
property and non-essential assets, less
any prior liens.
Debt forgiveness is a reduction or
termination of a debt under the Act in
a manner that results in a loss to the
Agency, through:
(1) Writing down or writing off a debt
pursuant to 7 U.S.C. 2001;
(2) Compromising, adjusting,
reducing, or charging off a debt or claim
pursuant to 7 U.S.C. 1981; or
(3) Paying a loss pursuant to 7 U.S.C.
2005 on a FLP loan guaranteed by the
Agency.
Debt forgiveness does not include:
(1) Debt reduction through a
conservation contract;
(2) Any writedown provided as part of
the resolution of a discrimination
complaint against the Agency;
(3) Prior debt forgiveness that has
been repaid in its entirety; and
(4) Consolidation, rescheduling,
reamortization, or deferral of a loan.
Debt settlement is a compromise,
adjustment, or cancellation of an FLP
debt.
Debt service margin is the difference
between all of the borrower’s expected
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expenditures in a planning period
(including farm operating expenses,
capital expenses, essential family living
expenses, and debt payments) and the
borrower’s projected funds available to
pay all expenses and payments.
Debt writedown is the reduction of the
borrower’s debt to that amount the
Agency determines to be collectible
based on an analysis of the security
value and the borrower’s ability to pay.
Default is the failure of a borrower to
observe any agreement with the Agency,
or the lender in the case of a guaranteed
loan, as contained in promissory notes,
security instruments, and similar or
related instruments.
Deferral is a postponement of the
payment of interest or principal, or
both.
Delinquent borrower, for loan
servicing purposes, is a borrower who
has failed to make all scheduled
payments by the due date.
Direct loan is a loan funded and
serviced by the Agency as the lender.
Disaster is an event of unusual and
adverse weather conditions or other
natural phenomena, or quarantine, that
has substantially affected the
production of agricultural commodities
by causing physical property or
production losses in a county, or similar
political subdivision, that triggered the
inclusion of such county or political
subdivision in the disaster area as
designated by the Agency.
Disaster area is the county or counties
declared or designated as a disaster area
for EM loan assistance as a result of
disaster related losses. This area
includes counties contiguous to those
counties declared or designated as
disaster areas.
Disaster set-aside is the deferral of
payment of an annual loan installment
to the Agency to the end of the loan
term in accordance with part 766,
subpart B of this chapter.
Disaster yield is the per-acre yield of
an agricultural commodity for the
operation during the production cycle
when the disaster occurred.
Economic Emergency loan is a loan
that was made or guaranteed to an
eligible applicant to allow for
continuation of the operation during an
economic emergency which was caused
by a lack of agricultural credit or an
unfavorable relationship between
production costs and prices received for
agricultural commodities. EE loans are
not currently funded; however, such
outstanding loans are serviced by the
Agency or the lender in the case of a
guaranteed EE loan.
Emergency loan is a loan made to
eligible applicants who have incurred
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substantial financial losses from a
disaster.
Entity is a corporation, partnership,
joint operation, cooperative, limited
liability company or trust.
Essential family living and farm
operating expenses:
(1) Are those that are basic, crucial or
indispensable.
(2) Are determined by the Agency
based on the following considerations:
(i) The specific borrower’s operation;
(ii) What is typical for that type of
operation in the area; and
(iii) What is an efficient method of
production considering the borrower’s
resources.
(3) Include, but are not limited to,
essential: Household operating
expenses; food, including lunches;
clothing and personal care; health and
medical expenses, including medical
insurance; house repair and sanitation;
school and religious expenses;
transportation; hired labor; machinery
repair; farm building and fence repair;
interest on loans and credit or purchase
agreement; rent on equipment, land, and
buildings; feed for animals; seed,
fertilizer, pesticides, herbicides, spray
materials and other necessary farm
supplies; livestock expenses, including
medical supplies, artificial
insemination, and veterinarian bills;
machinery hire; fuel and oil; taxes;
water charges; personal, property and
crop insurance; auto and truck
expenses; and utility payments.
Established farmer is a farmer who
operates the farm (in the case of an
entity, its members as a group) who:
(1) Actively participated in the
operation and the management,
including, but not limited to, exercising
control over, making decisions
regarding, and establishing the direction
of, the farming operation at the time of
the disaster;
(2) Spends a substantial portion of
time in carrying out the farming
operation;
(3) Planted the crop, or purchased or
produced the livestock on the farming
operation;
(4) In the case of an entity, is
primarily engaged in farming and has
over 50 percent of its gross income from
all sources from its farming operation
based on the operation’s projected cash
flow for the next crop year or the next
12-month period, as mutually
determined; and
(5) Is not:
(i) An entity whose members are
themselves entities;
(ii) An integrated livestock, poultry,
or fish processor who operates primarily
and directly as a commercial business
through contracts or business
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arrangements with farmers, except a
grower under contract with an integrator
or processor may be considered an
established farmer, provided the
farming operation is not managed by an
outside full-time manager or
management service and Agency loans
shall be based on the applicant’s share
of the agricultural production as set
forth in the contract; or
(iii) An operation which employs a
full time farm manager.
False information is information
provided by an applicant, borrower or
other source to the Agency that the
applicant or borrower knows to be
incorrect.
Family farm is a farm that:
(1) Produces agricultural commodities
for sale in sufficient quantities so that it
is recognized as a farm rather than a
rural residence;
(2) Has both physical labor and
management provided as follows:
(i) The majority of day-to-day,
operational decisions, and all strategic
management decisions are made by:
(A) The borrower and persons who
are either related to the borrower by
blood or marriage, or are a relative, for
an individual borrower; or
(B) The members responsible for
operating the farm, in the case of an
entity.
(ii) A substantial amount of labor to
operate the farm is provided by:
(A) The borrower and persons who
are either related to the borrower by
blood or marriage, or are a relative, for
an individual borrower; or
(B) The members responsible for
operating the farm, in the case of an
entity.
(3) May use full-time hired labor in
amounts only to supplement family
labor.
(4) May use reasonable amounts of
temporary labor for seasonal peak
workload periods or intermittently for
labor intensive activities.
Family living expenses are the costs of
providing for the needs of family
members and those for whom the
borrower has a financial obligation,
such as alimony, child support, and care
expenses of an elderly parent.
Family members are the immediate
members of the family residing in the
same household with the borrower.
Farm is a tract or tracts of land,
improvements, and other appurtenances
that are used or will be used in the
production of crops, livestock, or
aquaculture products for sale in
sufficient quantities so that the property
is recognized as a farm rather than a
rural residence. The term ‘‘farm’’ also
includes the term ‘‘ranch.’’ It may also
include land and improvements and
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facilities used in a non-eligible
enterprise or the residence which,
although physically separate from the
farm acreage, is ordinarily treated as
part of the farm in the local community.
Farmer is an individual, corporation,
partnership, joint operation,
cooperative, trust, or limited liability
company that is the operator of a farm.
Farm income is the proceeds from the
sale of agricultural commodities that are
normally sold annually during the
regular course of business, such as
crops, feeder livestock, and other farm
products.
Farm Loan Programs are Agency
programs to make, guarantee, and
service loans to family farmers
authorized under the Act or Agency
regulations.
Farm Ownership loan is a loan made
to eligible applicants to purchase,
enlarge, or make capital improvements
to family farms, or to promote soil and
water conservation and protection. It
also includes the Beginning Farmer
Downpayment loan.
Farm Program payments are benefits
received from FSA for any commodity,
disaster, or cost share program.
Feasible plan is when an applicant or
borrower’s cash flow budget or farm
operating plan indicates that there is
sufficient cash inflow to pay all cash
outflow. If a loan approval or servicing
action exceeds one production cycle
and the planned cash flow budget or
farm operating plan is atypical due to
cash or inventory on hand, new
enterprises, carryover debt, atypical
planned purchases, important operating
changes, or other reasons, a cash flow
budget or farm operating plan must be
prepared that reflects a typical cycle. If
the request is for only one cycle, a
feasible plan for only one production
cycle is required for approval.
Financially distressed borrower is a
borrower unable to develop a feasible
plan for the current or next production
cycle.
Financially viable operation, for the
purposes of considering a waiver of OL
term limits under § 764.252 of this
chapter, is a farming operation that,
with Agency assistance, is projected to
improve its financial condition over a
period of time to the point that the
operator can obtain commercial credit
without further Agency assistance. Such
an operation must generate sufficient
income to:
(1) Meet annual operating expenses
and debt payments as they become due;
(2) Meet essential family living
expenses to the extent they are not met
by dependable non-farm income;
(3) Provide for replacement of capital
items; and
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(4) Provide for long-term financial
growth.
Fixture is an item of personal property
attached to real estate in such a way that
it cannot be removed without defacing
or dismantling the structure, or
damaging the item itself.
Floodplains are lowland and
relatively flat areas adjoining inland and
coastal waters, including flood-prone
areas of offshore islands, including at a
minimum, that area subject to a one
percent or greater chance of flooding in
any given year. The base floodplain is
used to designate the 100-year
floodplain (one percent chance
floodplain). The critical floodplain is
defined as the 500-year floodplain (0.2
percent chance floodplain).
Foreclosed is the completed act of
selling security either under the power
of sale in the security instrument or
through judicial proceedings.
Foreclosure sale is the act of selling
security either under the power of sale
in the security instrument or through
judicial proceedings.
Good faith is when an applicant or
borrower provides current, complete,
and truthful information when applying
for assistance and in all past dealings
with the Agency, and adheres to all
written agreements with the Agency
including, but not limited to, loan
agreement, security instruments, farm
operating plans, and agreements for use
of proceeds. The Agency considers a
borrower to act in good faith, however,
if the borrower’s inability to adhere to
all agreements is due to circumstances
beyond the borrower’s control. In
addition, the Agency will consider
fraud, waste, or conversion actions,
when substantiated by a legal opinion
from OGC, when determining if an
applicant or borrower has acted in good
faith.
Graduation is the payment in full of
all direct FLP loans made for operating,
real estate, or both purposes by
refinancing with other credit sources
either with or without an Agency
guarantee.
Guaranteed loan is a loan made and
serviced by a lender for which the
Agency has entered into a Lender’s
Agreement and for which the Agency
has issued a Loan Guarantee. This term
also includes guaranteed lines of credit
except where otherwise indicated.
Guarantor is a party not included in
the farming operation who assumes
responsibility for repayment in the
event of default.
Hazard insurance is insurance
covering fire, windstorm, lightning, hail,
explosion, riot, civil commotion,
aircraft, vehicles, smoke, builder’s risk,
public liability, property damage, flood
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or mudslide, workers compensation, or
any similar insurance that is available
and needed to protect the Agency
security or that is required by law.
Highly erodible land is land as
determined by Natural Resources
Conservation Service to meet the
requirements provided in section 1201
of the Food Security Act of 1985.
Holder is a person or organization
other than the lender that holds all or
a part of the guaranteed portion of an
Agency guaranteed loan but has no
servicing responsibilities. When the
lender assigns a part of the guaranteed
loan by executing an Agency assignment
form, the assignee becomes a holder.
Homestead protection is the previous
owner’s right to lease with an option to
purchase the principal residence and up
to 10 acres of adjoining land which
secured an FLP direct loan.
Homestead protection property is the
principal residence that secured an FLP
direct loan and is subject to homestead
protection.
Household contents are essential
household items necessary to maintain
viable living quarters. Household
contents exclude all luxury items such
as jewelry, furs, antiques, paintings, etc.
Inaccurate information is incorrect
information provided by an applicant,
borrower, lender, or other source
without the intent of fraudulently
obtaining benefits.
Indian reservation is all land located
within the limits of any Indian
reservation under the jurisdiction of the
United States, notwithstanding the
issuance of any patent, and including
rights-of-way running through the
reservation; trust or restricted land
located within the boundaries of a
former reservation of a Federally
recognized Indian Tribe in the State of
Oklahoma; or all Indian allotments the
Indian titles to which have not been
extinguished if such allotments are
subject to the jurisdiction of a Federally
recognized Indian Tribe.
In-house expenses are expenses
associated with credit management and
loan servicing by the lender and the
lender’s contractor. In-house expenses
include, but are not limited to,
employee salaries, staff lawyers, travel,
supplies, and overhead.
Interest Assistance Agreement is the
appropriate Agency form executed by
the Agency and the lender containing
the terms and conditions under which
the Agency will make interest assistance
payments to the lender on behalf of the
guaranteed loan borrower.
Inventory property is real estate or
chattel property and related rights that
formerly secured an FLP loan and to
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63289
which the Federal Government has
acquired title.
Joint financing arrangement is an
arrangement in which two or more
lenders make separate loans
simultaneously to supply the funds
required by one applicant.
Joint operation is an operation run by
individuals who have agreed to operate
a farm or farms together as an entity,
sharing equally or unequally land, labor,
equipment, expenses, or income, or
some combination of these items. The
real and personal property is owned
separately or jointly by the individuals.
Leasehold is a right to use farm
property for a specific period of time
under conditions provided for in a lease
agreement.
Lender is the organization making and
servicing a loan, or advancing and
servicing a line of credit that is
guaranteed by the Agency. The lender is
also the party requesting a guarantee.
Lender’s Agreement is the appropriate
Agency form executed by the Agency
and the lender setting forth their loan
responsibilities when the Loan
Guarantee is issued.
Lien is a legally enforceable claim
against real or chattel property of
another obtained as security for the
repayment of indebtedness or an
encumbrance on property to enforce
payment of an obligation.
Limited resource interest rate is an
interest rate normally below the
Agency’s regular interest rate, which is
available to applicants unable to
develop a feasible plan at regular rates
and are requesting:
(1) FO or OL loan assistance under
part 764 of this title; or
(2) Primary loan servicing on an FO,
OL, or SW loan under part 766 of this
title.
Line of Credit Agreement is a contract
between the borrower and the lender
that contains certain lender and
borrower conditions, limitations, and
responsibilities for credit extension and
acceptance where loan principal
balance may fluctuate throughout the
term of the contract.
Liquidation is the act of selling
security for recovery of amounts owed
to the Agency or lender.
Liquidation expenses are the costs of
an appraisal, due diligence evaluation,
environmental assessment, outside
attorney fees, and other costs incurred
as a direct result of liquidating the
security for a direct or guaranteed loan.
Liquidation expenses do not include
internal Agency expenses for a direct
loan or in-house expenses for a
guaranteed loan.
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Livestock is a member of the animal
kingdom, or product thereof, as
determined by the Agency.
Loan Agreement is a contract between
the borrower and the lender that
contains certain lender and borrower
agreements, conditions, limitations, and
responsibilities for credit extension and
acceptance.
Loan servicing programs include any
primary loan servicing program,
conservation contract, current market
value buyout, and homestead
protection.
Loan transaction is any loan approval
or servicing action.
Loss claim is a request made to the
Agency by a lender to receive a
reimbursement based on a percentage of
the lender’s loss on a loan covered by
an Agency guarantee.
Loss rate is the net amount of loan
loss claims paid on FSA guaranteed
loans made in the previous 7 years
divided by the total loan amount of all
such loans guaranteed during the same
period.
Low-Documentation Operating loan is
an OL loan made to eligible applicants
based on reduced documentation.
Major deficiency is a deficiency that
directly affects the soundness of the
loan.
Majority interest is more than a 50
percent interest in an entity held by an
individual or group of individuals.
Market value is the amount that an
informed and willing buyer would pay
an informed and willing, but not forced,
seller in a completely voluntary sale.
Mineral right is an ownership interest
in minerals in land, with or without
ownership of the surface of the land.
Minor deficiency is a deficiency that
violates Agency regulations, but does
not affect the soundness of the loan.
Mortgage is a legal instrument giving
the lender a security interest or lien on
real or personal property of any kind.
The term ‘‘mortgage’’ also includes the
terms ‘‘deed of trust’’ and ‘‘security
agreement.’’
Natural disaster is unusual and
adverse weather conditions or natural
phenomena that have substantially
affected farmers by causing severe
physical or production, or both, losses.
Negligent servicing is servicing that
fails to include those actions that are
considered normal industry standards of
loan management or comply with the
lender’s agreement or the guarantee.
Negligent servicing includes failure to
act or failure to act in a timely manner
consistent with actions of a reasonable
lender in loan making, servicing, and
collection.
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Negotiated sale is a sale in which
there is a bargaining of price or terms,
or both.
Net recovery value of security is the
market value of the security property,
assuming that the lender in the case of
a guaranteed loan, or the Agency in the
case of a direct loan, will acquire the
property and sell it for its highest and
best use, less the lender’s or the
Agency’s costs of property acquisition,
retention, maintenance, and liquidation.
Net recovery value of non-essential
assets is the appraised market value of
the non-essential assets less any prior
liens and any selling costs that may
include such items as taxes due,
commissions, and advertising costs.
However, no deduction is made for
maintenance of the property while in
inventory.
Non-capitalized interest is accrued
interest on a loan that was not
reclassified as principal at the time of
restructuring. Between October 10,
1988, and November 27, 1990, the
Agency did not capitalize interest that
was less than 90 days past due when
restructuring a direct loan.
Non-eligible enterprise is a business
that meets the criteria in any one of the
following categories:
(1) Produces exotic animals, birds, or
aquatic organisms or their products
which may be agricultural in nature, but
are not normally associated with
agricultural production, e.g. there is no
established or stable market for them or
production is speculative in nature.
(2) Produces non-farm animals, birds,
or aquatic organisms ordinarily used for
pets, companionship, or pleasure and
not typically associated with human
consumption, fiber, or draft use.
(3) Markets non-farm goods or
provides services which might be
agriculturally related, but are not
produced by the farming operation.
(4) Processes or markets farm
products when the majority of the
commodities processed or marketed are
not produced by the farming operation.
Non-essential assets are assets in
which the borrower has an ownership
interest, that:
(1) Do not contribute to:
(i) Income to pay essential family
living expenses, or
(ii) The farming operation; and
(2) Are not exempt from judgment
creditors or in a bankruptcy action.
Non-program loan is a loan on terms
more stringent than terms for a program
loan that is an extension of credit for the
convenience of the Agency, because the
applicant does not qualify for program
assistance or the property to be financed
is not suited for program purposes. Such
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loans are made or continued only when
it is in the best interest of the Agency.
Normal income security is all security
not considered basic security, including
crops, livestock, poultry products, other
property covered by Agency liens that is
sold in conjunction with the operation
of a farm or other business, and FSA
Farm Program payments.
Normal production yield as used in 7
CFR part 764 for EM loans, is:
(1) The per acre actual production
history of the crops produced by the
farming operation used to determine
Federal crop insurance payments or
payment under the Noninsured Crop
Disaster Assistance Program for the
production year during which the
disaster occurred;
(2) The applicant’s own production
records, or the records of production on
which FSA Farm Program payments are
made contained in the applicant’s Farm
Program file, if available, for the
previous 3 years, when the actual
production history in paragraph (1) of
this definition is not available;
(3) The county average production
yield, when the production records
outlined in paragraphs (1) and (2) of this
definition are not available.
Operating loan is a loan made to an
eligible applicant to assist with the
financial costs of operating a farm. The
term also includes a Youth loan.
Operator is the individual or entity
that provides the labor, management,
and capital to operate the farm. The
operator can be either an owneroperator or tenant-operator. Under
applicable State law, an entity may have
to receive authorization from the State
in which the farm is located to be the
owner and/or operator of the farm.
Participated in the business
operations of a farm requires that an
applicant has:
(1) Been the owner, manager or
operator of a farming operation for the
year’s complete production cycle as
evidenced by tax returns, FSA farm
records or similar documentation;
(2) Been employed as a farm manager
or farm management consultant for the
year’s complete production cycle; or
(3) Participated in the operation of a
farm by virtue of being raised on a farm
or having worked on a farm with
significant responsibility for the day-today decisions for the year’s complete
production cycle, which may include
selection of seed varieties, weed control
programs, input suppliers, or livestock
feeding programs or decisions to replace
or repair equipment.
Partnership is any entity consisting of
two or more individuals who have
agreed to operate a farm as one business
unit. The entity must be recognized as
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a partnership by the laws of the State in
which the partnership will operate a
farm. It also must be authorized to own
both real and personal property and to
incur debt in its own name.
Past due is when a payment is not
made by the due date.
Physical loss is verifiable damage or
destruction with respect to real estate or
chattel, excluding annual growing
crops.
Potential liquidation value is the
amount of a lender’s protective bid at a
foreclosure sale. Potential liquidation
value is determined by an independent
appraiser using comparables from other
forced liquidation sales.
Present value is the present worth of
a future stream of payments discounted
to the current date.
Presidentially-designated emergency
is a major disaster or emergency
designated by the President under the
Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and
Emergency Assistance Act (42 U.S.C.
5121 et seq.).
Primary loan servicing programs
include:
(1) Loan consolidation and
rescheduling, or reamortization;
(2) Interest rate reduction, including
use of the limited resource rate program;
(3) Deferral;
(4) Write-down of the principal or
accumulated interest; or
(5) Any combination of paragraphs (1)
through (4) of this definition.
Production cycle is the time it takes to
produce an agricultural commodity
from the beginning of the production
process until it is normally disposed of
or sold.
Production loss is verifiable damage
or destruction with respect to annual
growing crops.
Program loans include FO, OL, and
EM. In addition, for loan servicing
purposes the term includes existing
loans for the following programs no
longer funded: SW, RL, EE, ST, and
RHF.
Promissory note is a written
agreement to pay a specified sum on
demand or at a specified time to the
party designated. The terms
‘‘promissory note’’ and ‘‘note’’ are
interchangeable.
Prospectus consists of a transmittal
letter, a current balance sheet and
projected year’s budget which is sent to
commercial lenders to determine their
interest in financing or refinancing
specific Agency direct loan applicants
and borrowers.
Protective advance is an advance
made by the Agency or a lender to
protect or preserve the collateral from
loss or deterioration.
Quarantine is a quarantine imposed
by the Secretary under the Plant
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Protection Act or animal quarantine
laws (as defined in section 2509 of the
Food, Agriculture, Conservation and
Trade Act of 1990).
Reamortization is the rewriting of
rates or terms, or both, of a loan made
for real estate purposes.
Reasonable rates and terms are those
commercial rates and terms that other
farmers are expected to meet when
borrowing from a commercial lender or
private source for a similar purpose and
similar period of time. The ‘‘similar
period of time’’ of available commercial
loans will be measured against, but need
not be the same as, the remaining or
original term of the loan.
Recoverable cost is a loan cost
expense chargeable to either a borrower
or property account.
Recreation loan is a loan that was
made to eligible applicants to assist in
the conversion of all or a portion of the
farm they owned or operated to outdoor
income producing recreation enterprises
to supplement or supplant farm income.
RL’s are no longer funded, however,
such outstanding loans are serviced by
the Agency.
Redemption right is a Federal or state
right to reclaim property for a period of
time established by law, by paying the
amount paid at the involuntary sale plus
accrued interest and costs.
Related by blood or marriage is being
connected to one another as husband,
wife, parent, child, brother, sister,
uncle, aunt, or grandparent.
Relative is the spouse and anyone
having one of the following
relationships to an applicant or
borrower: parent, son, daughter, sibling,
stepparent, stepson, stepdaughter,
stepbrother, stepsister, half brother, half
sister, uncle, aunt, nephew, niece,
cousin, grandparent, grandson,
granddaughter, or the spouses of the
foregoing.
Repossessed property is security
property in the Agency’s custody.
Rescheduling is the rewriting of the
rates or terms, or both, of a loan made
for operating purposes.
Restructuring is changing the terms of
a debt through rescheduling,
reamortization, deferral, writedown, or a
combination thereof.
Rural youth is a person who has
reached the age of 10 but has not
reached the age of 21 and resides in a
rural area or any city or town with a
population of 50,000 or fewer people.
Security is property or right of any
kind that is subject to a real or personal
property lien. Any reference to
‘‘collateral’’ or ‘‘security property’’ will
be considered a reference to the term
‘‘security.’’
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Security instrument includes any
document giving the Agency a security
interest on real or personal property.
Security value is the market value of
real estate or chattel property (less the
value of any prior liens) used as security
for an Agency loan.
Shared Appreciation Agreement is an
agreement between the Agency, or a
lender in the case of a guaranteed loan,
and a borrower on the appropriate
Agency form that requires the borrower
who has received a writedown on a
direct or guaranteed loan to repay the
Agency or the lender some or all of the
writedown received, based on a
percentage of any increase in the value
of the real estate securing an SAA at a
future date.
Socially disadvantaged applicant is
an applicant who is a member of a
socially disadvantaged group. For entity
applicants, the majority interest must be
held by socially disadvantaged
individuals. For married couples, the
socially disadvantaged individual must
have at least 50 percent ownership in
the farm business and make most of the
management decisions, contribute a
significant amount of labor, and
generally be recognized as the operator
of the farm.
Socially disadvantaged group is a
group whose members have been
subject to racial, ethnic, or gender
prejudice because of their identity as
members of a group without regard to
their individual qualities. These groups
consist of: American Indians or Alaskan
Natives, Asians, Blacks or African
Americans, Native Hawaiians or other
Pacific Islanders, Hispanics, and
women.
Softwood Timber Program loan was
available to eligible financially
distressed borrowers who would take
marginal land, including highly erodible
land, out of production of agricultural
commodities other than the production
of softwood timber. ST loans are no
longer available, however, such
outstanding loans are serviced by the
Agency.
Soil and Water loan is a loan that was
made to an eligible applicant to
encourage and facilitate the
improvement, protection, and proper
use of farmland by providing financing
for soil conservation, water
development, conservation, and use;
forestation; drainage of farmland; the
establishment and improvement of
permanent pasture; pollution abatement
and control; and other related measures
consistent with all Federal, State and
local environmental standards. SW
loans are no longer funded, however,
such outstanding loans are serviced by
the Agency.
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Subordination is a creditor’s
temporary relinquishment of all or a
portion of its lien priority in favor of
another creditor, providing the other
creditor with a priority right to collect
a debt of a specific dollar amount from
the sale of the same collateral.
Subsequent loan is any FLP loan
processed by the Agency after an initial
loan of the same type has been made to
the same borrower.
Supervised bank account is an
account with a financial institution
established through a deposit agreement
entered into between the borrower, the
Agency, and the financial institution.
Technical appraisal review is a review
of an appraisal to determine if such
appraisal meets the requirements of
USPAP pursuant to standard 3 of
USPAP.
Transfer and assumption is the
conveyance by a debtor to an assuming
party of the assets, collateral, and
liabilities of a loan in return for the
assuming party’s binding promise to pay
the debt outstanding or the market value
of the collateral.
Trust is an entity that under
applicable state law meets the criteria of
being a trust of any kind but does not
meet the criteria of being a farm
cooperative, private domestic
corporation, partnership, or joint
operation.
Unaccounted for security is security
for a direct or guaranteed loan that was
misplaced, stolen, sold, or otherwise
missing, where replacement security
was not obtained or the proceeds from
its sale have not been applied to the
loan.
Unauthorized assistance is any loan,
loan servicing action, lower interest
rate, loan guarantee, or subsidy received
by a borrower, or lender, for which the
borrower or lender was not eligible,
which was not made in accordance with
all Agency procedures and
requirements, or which the Agency
obligated from the wrong appropriation
or fund. Unauthorized assistance may
result from borrower, lender, or Agency
error.
Uniform Standards of Professional
Appraisal Practice are standards
governing the preparation, reporting,
and reviewing of appraisals established
by the Appraisal Foundation pursuant
to the Financial Institutions Reform,
Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989.
United States is any of the 50 States,
the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the
Virgin Islands of the United States,
Guam, American Samoa, the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana
Islands, Republic of Palau, Federated
States of Micronesia, and the Republic
of the Marshall Islands.
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U. S. Attorney is an attorney for the
United States Department of Justice.
Veteran is any person who served in
the military, naval, or air service during
any war as defined in section 101(12) of
title 38, United States Code.
Wetlands are those lands or areas of
land as determined by the Natural
Resources Conservation Service to meet
the requirements provided in section
1201 of the Food Security Act of 1985.
Working capital is cash available to
conduct normal daily operations
including, but not limited to, paying for
feed, seed, fertilizer, pesticides, farm
supplies, cooperative stock, and cash
rent.
Youth loan is an operating type loan
made to an eligible rural youth
applicant to finance a modest incomeproducing agricultural project.
§ 761.3
Civil rights.
Part 15d of this title contains
applicable regulations pertaining to civil
rights and filing of discrimination
complaints by program participants.
§ 761.4
Conflict of interest.
The Agency enforces conflict of
interest policies to maintain high
standards of honesty, integrity, and
impartiality in the making and servicing
of direct and guaranteed loans. These
requirements are established in 5 CFR
parts 2635 and 8301.
§ 761.5
Restrictions on lobbying.
A person who applies for or receives
a loan made or guaranteed by the
Agency must comply with the
restrictions on lobbying in 7 CFR part
3018.
§ 761.6
Appeals.
Except as provided in 7 CFR part 762,
appeal of an adverse decision made by
the Agency will be handled in
accordance with 7 CFR parts 11 and
780.
§ 761.7
Appraisals.
(a) General. This section describes
Agency requirements for:
(1) Real estate and chattel appraisals
made in connection with the making
and servicing of direct FLP and Nonprogram loans; and
(2) Appraisal reviews conducted on
appraisals made in connection with the
making and servicing of direct and
guaranteed FLP and Non-program loans.
(b) Appraisal standards. (1) Real
estate appraisals, technical appraisal
reviews and their respective forms must
comply with the standards contained in
USPAP, as well as applicable Agency
regulations and procedures for the
specific FLP activity involved. A current
copy of USPAP along with other
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applicable procedures and regulations
are available for review in each Agency
State Office.
(2) When a chattel appraisal is
required, it must be completed on an
applicable Agency form (available in
each Agency State Office) or other
format containing the same information.
(c) Use of an existing real estate
appraisal. Except where specified
elsewhere, when a real estate appraisal
is required, the Agency will use the
existing real estate appraisal to reach
loan making or servicing decisions
under either of the following conditions:
(1) The appraisal was completed
within the previous 12 months and the
Agency determines that:
(i) The appraisal meets the provisions
of this section and the applicable
Agency loan making or servicing
requirements; and
(ii) Market values have remained
stable since the appraisal was
completed; or
(2) The appraisal was not completed
in the previous 12 months, but has been
updated by the appraiser or appraisal
firm that completed the appraisal, and
both the update and the original
appraisal were completed in accordance
with USPAP.
(d) Appraisal reviews. (1) With
respect to a real estate appraisal, the
Agency may conduct a technical
appraisal review or an administrative
appraisal review, or both.
(2) With respect to a chattel appraisal,
the Agency may conduct an
administrative appraisal review.
§ 761.8
Loan Limitations.
(a) Dollar limits. The outstanding
principal balances for an applicant or
anyone who will sign the promissory
note cannot exceed any of the following
at the time of loan closing or
assumption of indebtedness. If the
outstanding principal balance exceeds
any of the limits at the time of approval,
the farm operating plan must reflect that
funds will be available to reduce the
indebtedness prior to loan closing or
assumption of indebtedness.
(1) Farm Ownership loans, Beginning
Farmer Down payment loans and Soil
and Water loans:
(i) Direct—$200,000;
(ii) Guaranteed—$700,000 (for fiscal
year 2000 and increased at the
beginning of each fiscal year in
accordance with paragraph (b) of this
section);
(iii) Any combination of a direct Soil
and Water loan, direct Farm Ownership
loan, guaranteed Soil and Water loan,
and guaranteed Farm Ownership loan—
$700,000 (for fiscal year 2000 and
increased each fiscal year in accordance
with paragraph (b) of this section);
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(2) Operating loans:
(i) Direct—$200,000;
(ii) Guaranteed—$700,000 (for fiscal
year 2000 and increased each fiscal year
in accordance with paragraph (b) of this
section);
(iii) Any combination of a direct
Operating loan and guaranteed
Operating loan—$700,000 (for fiscal
year 2000 and increased each fiscal year
in accordance with paragraph (b) of this
section);
(3) Any combination of guaranteed
Farm Ownership loan, guaranteed Soil
and Water loan, and guaranteed
Operating loan—$700,000 (for fiscal
year 2000 and increased each fiscal year
in accordance with paragraph (b) of this
section);
(4) Any combination of direct Farm
Ownership loan, direct Soil and Water
loan, direct Operating loan, guaranteed
Farm Ownership loan, guaranteed Soil
and Water loan, and guaranteed
Operating loan—the amount in
paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this section plus
$200,000;
(5) Emergency loans—$500,000;
(6) Any combination of direct Farm
Ownership loan, direct Soil and Water
loan, direct Operating loan, guaranteed
Farm Ownership loan, guaranteed Soil
and Water loan, guaranteed Operating
loan, and Emergency loan—the amount
in paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this section
plus $700,000.
(b) Guaranteed loan limit. The dollar
limits of guaranteed loans will be
increased each fiscal year based on the
percentage change in the Prices Paid by
Farmers Index as compiled by the
National Agricultural Statistics Service,
USDA. The maximum loan limits for the
current fiscal year are available in any
FSA office and on the FSA website at
https://www.fsa.usda.gov.
(c) Line of credit advances. The total
dollar amount of guaranteed line of
credit advances and income releases
cannot exceed the total estimated
expenses, less interest expense, as
indicated on the borrower’s cash flow
budget, unless the cash flow budget is
revised and continues to reflect a
feasible plan.
§ 761.9
Interest rates for direct loans.
Interest rates for all direct loans are
set in accordance with the Act. A copy
of the current interest rates may be
obtained in any Agency office.
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§ 761.10 Planning and performing
construction and other development.
(a) Purpose. This section describes
Agency policies regarding the planning
and performing of construction and
other development work performed
with:
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(1) Direct FLP loan funds; or
(2) Insurance or other proceeds
resulting from damage or loss to direct
loan security.
(b) Funds for development work. The
applicant or borrower:
(1) Must provide the Agency with an
estimate of the total cash cost of all
planned development prior to loan
approval;
(2) Must show proof of sufficient
funds to pay for the total cash cost of all
planned development at or before loan
closing;
(3) Must not incur any debts for
materials or labor or make any
expenditures for development purposes
prior to loan closing with the
expectation of being reimbursed from
Agency loan funds.
(c) Scheduling, planning, and
completing development work. The
applicant or borrower:
(1) Is responsible for scheduling and
planning development work in a
manner acceptable to the Agency and
must furnish the Agency information
fully describing the planned
development, the proposed schedule,
and the manner in which it will be
accomplished;
(2) Is responsible for obtaining all
necessary State and local construction
approvals and permits prior to loan
closing;
(3) Must ensure that all development
work meets the environmental
requirements established in subpart G of
7 CFR part 1940;
(4) Must schedule development work
to start as soon as feasible after the loan
is closed and complete work as quickly
as practicable;
(5) Is responsible for obtaining any
required technical services from
qualified technicians, tradespeople, and
contractors.
(d) Construction and repair standards.
(1) The construction of a new building
and the alteration or repair of an
existing building must conform with
industry-acceptable construction
practices and standards.
(2) All improvements to a property
must conform to applicable laws,
ordinances, codes, and regulations.
(3) The applicant or borrower is
responsible for selecting a design
standard that meets all applicable local
and state laws, ordinances, codes, and
regulations, including building,
plumbing, mechanical, electrical, water,
and waste management.
(4) The Agency will require drawings,
specifications, and estimates to fully
describe the work as necessary to
protect the Agency’s financial interests.
The drawings and specifications must
identify any specific development
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standards being used. Such information
must be sufficiently complete to avoid
any misunderstanding as to the extent,
kind, and quality of work to be
performed.
(5) The Agency will require technical
data, tests, or engineering evaluations to
support the design of the development
as necessary to protect its financial
interests.
(6) The Agency will require the
applicant or borrower to provide written
certification that final drawings and
specifications conform with the
applicable development standard as
necessary to protect its financial
interests. Certification must be obtained
from individuals or organizations
trained and experienced in the
compliance, interpretation, or
enforcement of the applicable
development standards, such as
licensed architects, professional
engineers, persons certified by a
relevant national model code
organization, authorized local building
officials, or national code organizations.
(e) Inspection. (1) The applicant or
borrower is responsible for inspecting
development work as necessary to
protect their interest.
(2) The applicant or borrower must
provide the Agency written certification
that the development conforms to the
plans and good construction practices,
and complies with applicable laws,
ordinances, codes, and regulations.
(3) The Agency will require the
applicant or borrower to obtain
professional inspection services during
construction as necessary to protect its
financial interests.
(4) Agency inspections do not create
or imply any duty or obligation of the
Agency to the applicant or borrower.
(f) Warranty and lien waivers. The
applicant or borrower must obtain and
submit all lien waivers on any
construction before the Agency will
issue final payment.
(g) Surety. The Agency will require
surety to guarantee both payment and
performance for construction contracts
as necessary to protect its financial
interests.
(h) Changing the planned
development. An applicant or borrower
must request, in writing, Agency
approval for any change to a planned
development. The Agency will approve
a change if all of the following are met:
(1) It will not reduce the value of the
Agency’s security;
(2) It will not adversely affect the
soundness of the farming operation;
(3) It complies with all applicable
laws and regulations;
(4) It is for an authorized loan
purpose;
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(5) It is within the scope of the
original loan proposal;
(6) If required, documentation that
sufficient funding for the full amount of
the planned development is approved
and available;
(7) If required, surety to cover the full
revised development amount has been
provided; and
(8) The modification is certified in
accordance with paragraph (d) (6) of this
section.
§§ 761.11–761.50
[Reserved]
§ 761.52 Deposits into a supervised bank
account.
Subpart B—Supervised Bank
Accounts
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§ 761.51 Establishing a supervised bank
account.
(a) Supervised bank accounts will be
used to:
(1) Assure correct use of funds
planned for capital purchases or debt
refinancing and perfection of the
Agency’s security interest in the assets
purchased or refinanced when
electronic funds transfer or treasury
check processes are not practicable;
(2) Protect the Agency’s security
interest in insurance indemnities or
other loss compensation resulting from
loss or damage to loan security; or
(3) Assist borrowers with limited
financial skills with cash management,
subject to the following conditions:
(i) Use of a supervised bank for this
purpose will be temporary and
infrequent;
(ii) The need for a supervised bank
account in this situation will be
determined on a case-by-case basis; and
(iii) The borrower agrees to the use of
a supervised bank account for this
purpose by executing the deposit
agreement.
(b) The borrower may select the
financial institution in which the
account will be established, provided
the institution is Federally insured. If
the borrower does not select an
institution, the Agency will choose one.
(c) Only one supervised bank account
will be established for any borrower.
(d) If both spouses sign an FLP note
and security agreement, the supervised
bank account will be established as a
joint tenancy account with right of
survivorship from which either
borrower can withdraw funds.
(e) If the funds to be deposited into
the account cause the balance to exceed
$100,000, the financial institution must
agree to pledge acceptable collateral
with the Federal Reserve Bank for the
excess over $100,000, before the deposit
is made.
(1) If the financial institution is not a
member of the Federal Reserve System,
the institution must pledge acceptable
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collateral with a correspondent bank
that is a member of the Federal Reserve
System. The correspondent bank must
inform the Federal Reserve Bank that it
is holding securities pledged for the
supervised bank account in accordance
with 31 CFR part 202 (Treasury Circular
176).
(2) When the balance in the account
has been reduced, the financial
institution may request a release of part
or all of the collateral, as applicable,
from the Agency.
(a) Checks or money orders may be
deposited into a supervised bank
account provided they are not payable:
(1) Solely to the Federal Government
or any agency thereof; or
(2) To the Treasury of the United
States as a joint payee.
(b) Loan proceeds may be deposited
electronically.
§ 761.53
Interest bearing accounts.
(a) A supervised bank account, if
possible, will be established as an
interest bearing deposit account
provided that the funds will not be
immediately disbursed, and the account
is held jointly by the borrower and the
Agency if this arrangement will benefit
the borrower.
(b) Interest earned on a supervised
bank account will be treated as normal
income security.
§ 761.54 Withdrawals from a supervised
bank account.
(a) The Agency will authorize a
withdrawal from the supervised bank
account for an approved purpose after
ensuring that:
(1) Sufficient funds in the supervised
bank account are available;
(2) No loan proceeds are disbursed
prior to confirmation of proper lien
position, except to pay for lien search if
needed;
(3) No checks are issued to ‘‘cash;’’
and
(4) The use of funds is consistent with
the current farm operating plan or other
agreement with the Agency.
(b) A check must be signed by the
borrower with countersignature of the
Agency, except as provided in
paragraph (c) of this section. All checks
must bear the legend ‘‘countersigned,
not as co-maker or endorser.’’
(c) The Agency will withdraw funds
from a supervised bank account without
borrower counter-signature only for the
following purposes:
(1) For application on Agency
indebtedness;
(2) To refund Agency loan funds;
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(3) To protect the Agency’s lien or
security;
(4) To accomplish a purpose for
which such advance was made; or
(5) In the case of a deceased borrower,
to continue to pay necessary farm
expenses to protect Agency security in
conjunction with the borrower’s estate.
§ 761.55 Closing a supervised bank
account.
(a) If the supervised bank account is
no longer needed and the loan account
is not paid in full, the Agency will
determine the source of the remaining
funds in the supervised bank account. If
the funds are determined to be:
(1) Loan funds:
(i) From any loan type, except Youth
loan, and the balance is less than
$1,000, the Agency will provide the
balance to the borrower to use for
authorized loan purposes;
(ii) From a Youth loan, and the
balance is less than $100, the Agency
will provide the balance to the borrower
to use for authorized loan purposes;
(2) Loan funds:
(i) From any loan type, except Youth
loan, and the balance is $1,000 or
greater, the Agency will apply the
balance to the FLP loan;
(ii) From a Youth loan, and the
balance is $100 or greater, the Agency
will apply the balance to the FLP loan;
(3) Normal income funds, the Agency
will apply the balance to the remaining
current year’s scheduled payments and
pay any remaining balance to the
borrower; and
(4) Basic security funds, the Agency
will apply the balance to the FLP loan
as an extra payment or the borrower
may apply the balance toward the
purchase of basic security, provided the
Agency obtains a lien on such security
and its security position is not
diminished.
(b) If the borrower is uncooperative in
closing a supervised bank account, the
Agency will make written demand to
the financial institution for the balance
and apply it in accordance with
paragraph (a) of this section.
(c) In the event of a borrower’s death,
the Agency may:
(1) Apply the balance to the
borrower’s FLP loan;
(2) Continue with a remaining
borrower, provided the supervised bank
account was established as a joint
tenancy with right of survivorship
account;
(3) Refund unobligated balances from
other creditors in the supervised bank
account for specific operating purposes
in accordance with any prior written
agreement between the Agency and the
deceased borrower; or
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(4) Continue to pay expenses from the
supervised bank account in conjunction
with the borrower’s estate.
§§ 761.56–761.100
[Reserved]
Subpart C—Supervised Credit
§ 761.101
Applicability.
This subpart applies to all direct
applicants and borrowers, except
borrowers with only Non-program
loans.
§ 761.102 Borrower recordkeeping,
reporting, and supervision.
(a) A borrower must maintain
accurate records sufficient to make
informed management decisions and to
allow the Agency to render loan making
and servicing decisions in accordance
with Agency regulations. These records
must include the following:
(1) Production (e.g., total and per unit
for livestock and crops);
(2) Revenues, by source;
(3) Other sources of funds, including
borrowed funds;
(4) Operating expenses;
(5) Interest;
(6) Family living expenses;
(7) Profit and loss;
(8) Tax-related information;
(9) Capital expenses;
(10) Outstanding debt; and
(11) Debt repayment.
(b) A borrower also must agree in
writing to:
(1) Cooperate with the Agency and
comply with all supervisory agreements,
farm assessments, farm operating plans,
year-end analyses, and all other loanrelated requirements and documents;
(2) Submit financial information and
an updated farm operating plan when
requested by the Agency;
(3) Immediately notify the Agency of
any proposed or actual significant
change in the farming operation, any
significant changes in family income,
expenses, or the development of
problem situations, or any losses or
proposed significant changes in
security.
(c) If the borrower fails to comply
with these requirements, unless due to
reasons outside the borrower’s control,
the non-compliance may adversely
impact future requests for assistance.
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§ 761.103
Farm assessment.
(a) The Agency assesses each farming
operation to determine the applicant’s
financial condition, organizational
structure, management strengths and
weaknesses, appropriate levels of
Agency oversight, credit counseling
needs, and training needs. The
applicant will participate in developing
the assessment.
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(b) The initial assessment must
evaluate, at a minimum, the:
(1) Farm organization and key
personnel qualifications;
(2) Type of farming operation;
(3) Goals for the operation;
(4) Adequacy of real estate, including
facilities, to conduct the farming
operation;
(5) Adequacy of chattel property used
to conduct the farming operation;
(6) Historical performance;
(7) Farm operating plan;
(8) Loan evaluation;
(9) Supervisory plan; and
(10) Training plan.
(c) An assessment update must be
prepared for each subsequent loan. The
update must include a farm operating
plan, a loan evaluation, and any other
items discussed in paragraph (b) of this
section that have significantly changed
since the initial assessment.
(d) The Agency reviews the
assessment to determine a borrower’s
progress at least annually. The review
will be in the form of an office visit,
field visit, letter, phone conversation, or
year-end analysis, as determined by the
Agency.
§ 761.104
plan.
Developing the farm operating
(a) An applicant or borrower must
submit a farm operating plan to the
Agency, upon request, for loan making
or servicing purposes.
(b) An applicant or borrower may
request Agency assistance in developing
the farm operating plan.
(c) The farm operating plan will be
based on accurate and verifiable
information.
(1) Historical information will be used
as a guide.
(2) Positive and negative trends,
mutually agreed upon changes and
improvements, and current input prices
will be taken into consideration when
arriving at reasonable projections.
(3) Projected yields will be calculated
according to the following priorities:
(i) The applicant or borrower’s own
production records for the previous 3
years;
(ii) The per-acre actual production
history of the crops produced by the
farming operation used to determine
Federal crop insurance payments, if
available;
(iii) FSA Farm Program actual yield
records;
(iv) County averages;
(v) State averages.
(4) If the applicant or borrower’s
production history has been
substantially affected by a disaster
declared by the President or designated
by the Secretary of Agriculture, or the
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applicant or borrower has had a
qualifying loss from such disaster but
the farming operation was not located in
a declared or designated disaster area,
the applicant or borrower may:
(i) Use county average yields, or state
average yields if county average yields
are not available, in place of the disaster
year yields; or
(ii) Exclude the production year with
the lowest actual or county average
yield if their yields were affected by
disasters during at least 2 of the 3 years.
(d) Unit prices for agricultural
commodities established by the Agency
will generally be used. Applicants and
borrowers that provide evidence that
they will receive a premium price for a
commodity may use a price above the
price established by the Agency.
(e) Except as provided in paragraph (f)
of this section, the applicant or
borrower must sign the final farm
operating plan prior to approval of any
loan or servicing action.
(f) If the Agency believes the
applicant or borrower’s farm operating
plan is inaccurate, or the information
upon which it is based cannot be
verified, the Agency will discuss and try
to resolve the concerns with the
applicant or borrower. If an agreement
cannot be reached, the Agency will
make loan approval and servicing
determinations based on the Agency’s
revised farm operating plan.
§ 761.105
Year-end analysis.
(a) The Agency conducts a year-end
analysis at its discretion or if the
borrower:
(1) Has received any direct loan,
chattel subordination, or primary loan
servicing action within the last year;
(2) Is financially distressed or
delinquent;
(3) Has a loan deferred, excluding
deferral of an installment under subpart
B of part 766; or
(4) Is receiving a limited resource
interest rate on any loan.
(b) To the extent practicable, the yearend analysis will be completed within
60 days after the end of the business
year or farm budget planning period and
must include:
(1) An analysis comparing actual
income, expenses, and production to
projected income, expenses, and
production for the preceding production
cycle; and
(2) An updated farm operating plan.
§§ 761.106–761.200
[Reserved]
Subpart D—Allocation of Farm Loan
Programs Funds to State Offices
§ 761.201
Purpose.
(a) This subpart addresses:
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(1) The allocation of funds for direct
and guaranteed FO and OL loans;
(2) The establishment of socially
disadvantaged target participation rates;
and
(3) The reservation of loan funds for
beginning farmers.
(b) The Agency does not allocate EM
loan funds to State Offices but makes
funds available following a designated
or declared disaster. EM loan funds are
available on a first-come first-served
basis.
(c) State funding information is
available for review in any State Office.
§ 761.202
Timing of allocations.
The Agency’s National Office
allocates funds for FO and OL loans to
the State Offices on a fiscal year basis,
as made available by the Office of
Management and Budget. However, the
National Office will retain control over
the funds when funding or
administrative constraints make
allocation to State Offices impractical.
§ 761.203 National reserves for Farm
Ownership and Operating loans.
(a) Reservation of funds. At the start
of each fiscal year, the National Office
reserves a portion of the funds available
for each direct and guaranteed loan
program. These reserves enable the
Agency to meet unexpected or
justifiable program needs during the
fiscal year.
(b) Allocation of reserved funds. The
National Office distributes funds from
the reserve to one or more State Offices
to meet a program need or Agency
objective.
§ 761.204 Methods of allocating funds to
State Offices.
FO and OL loan funds are allocated to
State Offices using one or more of the
following allocation methods:
(a) Formula allocation, if data, as
specified in § 761.205, is available to
use the formula for the State.
(b) Administrative allocation, if the
Agency cannot adequately meet
program objectives with a formula
allocation. The National Office
determines the amount of an
administrative allocation on a case-bycase basis.
(c) Base allocation, to ensure funding
for at least one loan in each State,
District, or County Office. In making a
base allocation, the National Office may
use criteria other than those used in the
formula allocation, such as historical
Agency funding information.
§ 761.205 Computing the formula
allocation.
(a) The formula allocation for FO or
OL loan funds is equal to:
(1) The amount available for
allocation by the Agency minus the
amounts held in the National Office
reserve and distributed by base and
administrative allocation, multiplied by
(2) The State Factor, which represents
the percentage of the total amount of the
funds for a loan program that the
National Office allocates to a State
Office.
formula allocation = (amount available for
allocation¥national reserve¥base
allocation¥administrative allocation) ×
State Factor
(b) To calculate the State Factor, the
Agency:
(1) Uses the following criteria, data
sources, and weights:
Weight for
FO loans
(percent)
Weight for
OL loans
(percent)
Criteria
Loan type criterion is used
for
Data source
Farm operators with sales of $2,500–$39,999 and less
than 200 days work off the farm.
Farm operators with sales of $40,000 or more and less
than 200 days work off farm.
Tenant farm operators ....................................................
3-year average net farm income ....................................
FO and OL loans ...............
U.S. Census of Agriculture
15
15
FO and OL loans ...............
U.S. Census of Agriculture
35
35
FO and OL loans ...............
FO and OL loans ...............
25
15
20
15
Value of farm real estate assets ....................................
FO loans ............................
10
N/A
Value of farm non-real estate assets .............................
OL loans ............................
U.S. Census of Agriculture
USDA Economic Research
Service.
USDA Economic Research
Service.
USDA Economic Research
Service.
N/A
15
(2) Determines each State’s percentage
of the national total for each criterion;
(3) Multiplies the percentage for each
State determined in paragraph (b)(2) of
this section by the applicable weight for
that criterion;
(4) Sums the weighted criteria for
each State to obtain the State factor.
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§ 761.206 Pooling of unobligated funds
allocated to State Offices.
The Agency periodically pools
unobligated FO and OL loan funds that
have been allocated to State Offices.
When pooling these funds, the Agency
places all unobligated funds in the
appropriate National Office reserve. The
pooled funds may be retained in the
national reserve or reallocated to the
States.
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§ 761.207 Distribution of loan funds by
State Offices.
A State Office may distribute its
allocation of loan funds to District or
County level using the same allocation
methods that are available to the
National Office. State Offices may
reserve a portion of the funds to meet
unexpected or justifiable program needs
during the fiscal year.
§ 761.208 Target participation rates for
socially disadvantaged groups.
(a) General. (1) The Agency
establishes target participation rates for
providing FO and OL loans to members
of socially disadvantaged groups.
(2) The Agency sets the target
participation rates for State and County
levels annually.
(3) When distributing loan funds in
counties within Indian reservations, the
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Agency will allocate the funds on a
reservation-wide basis.
(4) The Agency reserves and allocates
sufficient loan funds to achieve these
target participation rates. The Agency
may also use funds that are not reserved
and allocated for socially disadvantaged
groups to make or guarantee loans to
members of socially disadvantaged
groups.
(b) FO loans based on ethnicity or
race. The FO loan target participation
rate based on ethnicity or race in each:
(1) State is equal to the percent of the
total rural population in the State who
are members of such socially
disadvantaged groups.
(2) County is equal to the percent of
rural population in the county who are
members of such socially disadvantaged
groups.
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(c) OL loans based on ethnicity or
race. The OL loan target participation
rate based on ethnicity or race in each:
(1) State is equal to the percent of the
total number of farmers in the State who
are members of such socially
disadvantaged groups.
(2) County is equal to the percent of
the total number of farmers in the
county who are members of socially
disadvantaged ethnic groups.
(d) Women farmers. (1) The target
participation rate for women farmers in
each:
(i) State is equal to the percent of
farmers in the State who are women.
(ii) County is equal to the percent of
farmers in the county who are women.
(2) In developing target participation
rates for women, the Agency will
consider the number of women who are
current farmers and potential farmers.
§ 761.209
farmers.
Loan funds for beginning
Each fiscal year, the Agency reserves
a portion of direct and guaranteed FO
and OL loan funds for beginning farmers
in accordance with section 346(b)(2) of
the Act.
§ 761.210
Transfer of funds.
If sufficient unsubsidized guaranteed
OL funds are available, then beginning
on:
(a) August 1 of each fiscal year, the
Agency will use available unsubsidized
guaranteed OL loan funds to make
approved direct FO loans to beginning
farmers under the Beginning Farmer
Downpayment loan program; and
(b) September 1 of each fiscal year the
Agency will use available unsubsidized
guaranteed OL loan funds to make
approved direct FO loans to beginning
farmers.
PART 762—GUARANTEED FARM
LOANS
I e. Remove the phrase ‘‘loan
applicant’’ each time it ppears and add
in its place the term ‘‘applicant’’
I f. Remove the phrase ‘‘loan
applicant’s’’ each time it appears and
add in its place the term ‘‘applicant’s’’.
I g. Remove the phrase ‘‘loan
applicants’’ each time it appears and
add in its place the term ‘‘applicants’’.
I h. Remove the phrase ‘‘Non-farm
enterprises’’ each time it appears and
add in its place the term ‘‘Non-eligible
enterprises’’.
I 8. Amend § 762.101 by revising
paragraphs (b) and (c) to read as follows:
§ 762.101
*
*
*
*
(b) Lender list. The Agency maintains
a current list of lenders who express a
desire to participate in the guaranteed
loan program. This list is made available
to farmers upon request.
(c) Lender classification. Lenders who
participate in the Agency guaranteed
loan program will be classified into one
of the following categories:
(1) Standard Eligible Lender under
§ 762.105;
(2) Certified Lender, or
(3) Preferred Lender under § 762.106.
*
*
*
*
*
I 9. Revise § 762.102 to read as follows:
§ 762.102
§ 762.104
PART 762—[AMENDED]
7. Amend part 762 to read as follows:
a. Remove the phrase ‘‘farm or ranch’’
each time it appears and add in its place
the term ‘‘farm’’.
I b. Remove the phrase ‘‘farmer or
rancher’’ each time it appears and add
in its place the term ‘‘farmer’’.
I c. Remove the phrase ‘‘farmers or
ranchers’’ each time it appears and add
in its place the term ‘‘farmers’’.
I d. Remove the phrase ‘‘Loan
Applicant’’ each time it appears and add
in its place the term ‘‘Applicant’’.
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[Amended]
10. Amend § 762.104 by removing
paragraph (a) and redesignating
paragraphs (b) through (d) as (a) through
(c).
I 11. Amend § 762.110 by adding a new
paragraph (g) to to read as follows:
I
Loan applications.
*
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301, 7 U.S.C. 1989, 42
U.S.C. 1480.
I
I
Abbreviations and definitions.
Abbreviations and definitions for
terms used in this part are provided in
§ 761.2 of this chapter.
§ 762.110
6. The authority citation for part 762
continues to read as follows:
I
Introduction.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Market Placement Program. When
the Agency determines that a direct loan
applicant or borrower may qualify for
guaranteed credit, the Agency may
submit the applicant or borrower’s
financial information to one or more
guaranteed lenders. If a lender indicates
interest in providing financing to the
applicant or borrower through the
guaranteed loan program, the Agency
will assist in completing the application
for a guarantee.
I 12. Amend § 762.120 as follows:
I a. In paragraph (a), remove the word
‘‘CONACT’’ everywhere it appears and
add the word ‘‘Act’’ in its place.
I b. Revise paragraph (l) to read as
follows:
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§ 762.120
63297
Applicant eligibility.
*
*
*
*
*
(l) Controlled substances. The
applicant, and anyone who will sign the
promissory note, must not be ineligible
as a result of a conviction for controlled
substances according to 7 CFR part 718
of this chapter. If the lender uses the
lender’s Agency approved forms, the
certification may be an attachment to
the form.
§ 762.121
[Amended]
13. Amend § 762.121(b)(1) by
removing the words ‘‘1943, subpart A of
this title’’ and adding the words ‘‘764 of
this chapter’’ in their place.
I 14. Amend § 762.122 by redesignating
paragraphs (a) through (d) as (b) through
(e) and adding a new paragraph (a) to
read as follows.
I
§ 762.122
Loan limitations.
(a) Dollar limits. The Agency will not
guarantee any loan that would result in
the applicant’s total indebtedness
exceeding the limits established in
§ 761.8 of this chapter.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 762.123
[Amended]
15. Amend § 762.123(a)(2)(ii) by
removing the words ‘‘1945, subpart D, of
this title’’ and adding the words ‘‘764 of
this chapter’’ in their place.
I
§ 762.124
[Amended]
16. Amend § 762.124(e)(3) by
removing the words ‘‘1943, subpart A,
of this title’’ and adding the words ‘‘764
of this chapter’’ in their place.
I
§ 762.128
[Amended]
17. Amend § 762.128 as follows:
a. In paragraph (c)(3), remove the
words, ‘‘and part 1901, subpart F, of this
title.’’
I b. In paragraph (c)(4), remove the
word ‘‘CONACT’’ and add the word
‘‘Act’’ in its place.
I
I
§ 762.129
[Amended]
18. Amend § 762.129(b)(1) by
removing the words ‘‘farm credit
program’’ in the second sentence.
I
§ 762.130
[Amended]
19. Amend § 762.130(d)(4)(iii)(C) by
removing the words ‘‘beginning farmers
or ranchers,’’ and adding the words
‘‘beginning farmers’’ in their place.
I 20. Revise § 762.130(e) by removing
the words ‘‘in Louisiana and Puerto
Rico.’’
I
§ 762.143
[Amended]
21. Revise § 762.143(b)(3)(ii) by
removing the words ‘‘credit officer,’’
wherever they appear and adding the
word, ‘‘official’’ in their place.
I
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PART 763—[RESERVED]
I
I
22. Add and reserve part 763.
23. Revise part 764 to read as follows:
PART 764—DIRECT LOAN MAKING
Subpart A—Overview
Sec.
764.1 Introduction.
764.2 Abbreviations and definitions.
764.3–764.50 [Reserved]
Subpart B—Loan Application Process
764.51 Loan application.
764.52 Processing an incomplete
application.
764.53 Processing the complete application.
764.54 Preferences when there is limited
funding.
764.55–764.100 [Reserved]
Subpart C—Requirements for All Direct
Program Loans
764.101 General eligibility requirements.
764.102 General limitations.
764.103 General security requirements.
764.104 General real estate security
requirements.
764.105 General chattel security
requirements.
764.106 Exceptions to security
requirements.
764.107 General appraisal requirements.
764.108 General insurance requirements.
764.109–764.150 [Reserved]
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Subpart H—Emergency Loan Program
764.351 Emergency loan uses.
764.352 Eligibility requirements.
764.353 Limitations.
764.354 Rates and terms.
764.355 Security requirements.
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Subpart J—Borrower Training and Training
Vendor Requirements
764.451 Purpose.
764.452 Borrower training requirements.
764.453 Agency waiver of training
requirements.
764.454 Actions that an applicant must take
when training is required.
764.455 Potential training vendors.
764.456 Applying to be a vendor.
764.457 Vendor requirements.
764.458 Vendor approval.
764.459 Evaluation of borrower progress.
Subpart A—Overview
§ 764.1
Subpart E—Beginning Farmer
Downpayment Loan Program
764.201 Beginning Farmer Downpayment
loan uses.
764.202 Eligibility requirements.
764.203 Limitations.
764.204 Rates and terms.
764.205 Security requirements.
764.206–764.250 [Reserved]
Subpart G—Youth Loan Program
764.301 Youth loan uses.
764.302 Eligibility requirements.
764.303 Limitations.
764.304 Rates and terms.
764.305 Security requirements.
764.306–764.350 [Reserved]
Subpart I—Loan Decision and Closing
764.401 Loan decision.
764.402 Loan closing.
764.403–764.450 [Reserved]
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301 and 7 U.S.C. 1989.
Subpart D—Farm Ownership Loan Program
764.151 Farm Ownership loan uses.
764.152 Eligibility requirements.
764.153 Limitations.
764.154 Rates and terms.
764.155 Security requirements.
764.156–764.200 [Reserved]
Subpart F—Operating Loan Program
764.251 Operating loan uses.
764.252 Eligibility requirements.
764.253 Limitations.
764.254 Rates and terms.
764.255 Security requirements.
764.256–764.300 [Reserved]
764.356 Appraisal and valuation
requirements.
764.357–764.400 [Reserved]
Introduction.
(a) Purpose. This part describes the
Agency’s policies for making direct FLP
loans.
(b) Types of loans. The Agency makes
the following types of loans:
(1) FO, including Beginning Farmer
Downpayment loans;
(2) OL, including Youth loans; and
(3) EM.
§ 764.2
Abbreviations and definitions.
Abbreviations and definitions for
terms used in this part are provided in
§ 761.2 of this chapter.
§§ 764.3–764.50
[Reserved]
Subpart B—Loan Application Process
§ 764.51
Loan application.
(a) A loan application must be
submitted in the name of the actual
operator of the farm. Two or more
applicants applying jointly will be
considered an entity applicant. The
Agency will consider tax filing status
and other business dealings as
indicators of the operator of the farm.
(b) A complete loan application,
except as provided in paragraphs (c)
through (e) of this section, will include:
(1) The completed Agency application
form;
(2) If the applicant is an entity:
(i) A complete list of entity members
showing the address, citizenship,
principal occupation, and the number of
shares and percentage of ownership or
stock held in the entity by each member,
or the percentage of interest in the entity
held by each member;
(ii) A current personal financial
statement from each member of the
entity;
(iii) A current financial statement
from the entity itself;
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(iv) A copy of the entity’s charter or
any entity agreement, any articles of
incorporation and bylaws, any
certificate or evidence of current
registration (good standing), and a
resolution adopted by the Board of
Directors or entity members authorizing
specified officers of the entity to apply
for and obtain the desired loan and
execute required debt, security and
other loan instruments and agreements;
(v) In the form of married couples
applying as a joint operation, items (i)
and (iv) will not be required. The
Agency may request copies of the
marriage license, prenuptial agreement
or similar documents as needed to
verify loan eligibility and security. Items
(ii) and (iii) are only required to the
extent needed to show the individual
and joint finances of the husband and
wife without duplication.
(3) A written description of the
applicant’s farm training and
experience, including each entity
member who will be involved in
managing or operating the farm;
(4) The last 3 years of farm financial
records, including tax returns, unless
the applicant has been farming less than
three years;
(5) The last 3 years of farm production
records, unless the applicant has been
farming less than 3 years;
(6) Documentation that the applicant
and each member of an entity applicant
cannot obtain sufficient credit
elsewhere on reasonable rates and
terms, including a loan guaranteed by
the Agency;
(7) Documentation of compliance
with the Agency’s environmental
regulations contained in subpart G of 7
CFR part 1940;
(8) Verification of all non-farm
income;
(9) A current financial statement and
the operation’s farm operating plan,
including the projected cash flow
budget reflecting production, income,
expenses, and loan repayment plan;
(10) A legal description of the farm
property owned or to be acquired and,
if applicable, any leases, contracts,
options, and other agreements with
regard to the property;
(11) Payment to the Agency for
ordering a credit report on the
applicant;
(12) Verification of all debts;
(13) Any additional information
deemed necessary by the Agency to
effectively evaluate the applicant’s
eligibility and farm operating plan; and
(14) For EM loans, a statement of loss
or damage on the appropriate Agency
form.
(c) For a Lo-Doc OL request, the
applicant must:
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(1) Be current on all payments to all
creditors including the Agency (if an
Agency borrower);
(2) Have not received primary loan
servicing on any FLP debt within the
past 5 years; and
(3) Meet one of the following sets of
criteria:
(i) The loan requested is $50,000 or
less and the total outstanding Agency
OL loan debt at the time of loan closing
will be less than $100,000; or
(ii) The loan requested is to pay
annual operating expenses and the
applicant is an existing Agency
borrower who has received and timely
repaid at least two previous annual OL
loans from the Agency.
(4) Submit items (1), (2), (7), (9), and
(11) of paragraph (b) of this section. The
Agency may require a Lo-Doc applicant
to submit any other information listed
in paragraph (b) of this section as
needed to make a determination on the
loan application.
(d) For a youth loan request:
(1) The applicant must submit items
(1), (7), and (9) of paragraph (b) of this
section.
(2) Applicants 18 years or older, must
also provide items (11) and (12) of
paragraph (b) of this section.
(3) The Agency may require a youth
loan applicant to submit any other
information listed in paragraph (b) of
this section as needed to make a
determination on the loan application.
(e) The applicant need not submit any
information under this section that
already exists in the applicant’s Agency
file and is still current.
§ 764.52 Processing an incomplete
application.
(a) Within 10 days of receipt of an
incomplete application, the Agency will
provide the applicant written notice of
any additional information which must
be provided. The applicant must
provide the additional information
within 20 calendar days of the date of
this notice.
(b) If the additional information is not
received, the Agency will provide
written notice that the application will
be withdrawn if the information is not
received within 10 calendar days of the
date of this second notice.
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§ 764.53 Processing the complete
application.
Upon receiving a complete loan
application, the Agency will:
(a) Consider the loan application in
the order received, based on the date the
application was determined to be
complete.
(b) Provide written notice to the
applicant that the application is
complete.
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(c) Within 60 calendar days after
receiving a complete loan application,
the Agency will complete the processing
of the loan request and notify the
applicant of the decision reached, and
the reason for any disapproval.
(d) If, based on the Agency’s review
of the application, it appears the
applicant’s credit needs could be met
through the guaranteed loan program,
the Agency will assist the applicant in
securing guaranteed loan assistance
under the market placement program in
accordance with § 762.110(g) of this
chapter.
(e) In the absence of funds for a direct
loan, the Agency will keep an approved
loan application on file until funding is
available. At least annually, the Agency
will contact the applicant to determine
if the Agency should retain the
application or if the applicant wants the
application withdrawn.
(f) If funding becomes available, the
Agency will resume processing of
approved loans in accordance with this
part.
§ 764.54 Preferences when there is limited
funding.
(a) First priority. When there is a
shortage of loan funds, approved
applications will be funded in the order
of the date the application was received,
whether or not complete.
(b) Secondary priorities. If two or
more applications were received on the
same date, the Agency will give
preference to:
(1) First, an applicant who is a veteran
of any war;
(2) Second, an applicant who is not a
veteran, but:
(i) Has a dependent family;
(ii) Is able to make a downpayment;
or
(iii) Owns livestock and farm
implements necessary to farm
successfully.
(3) Third, to other eligible applicants.
§§ 764.55–764.100
[Reserved]
Subpart C—Requirements for All
Direct Program Loans
§ 764.101
General eligibility requirements.
The following requirements must be
met unless otherwise provided in the
eligibility requirements for the
particular type of loan.
(a) Controlled substances. The
applicant, and anyone who will sign the
promissory note, must not be ineligible
for loans as a result of a conviction for
controlled substances according to 7
CFR part 718 of this chapter.
(b) Legal capacity. The applicant, and
anyone who will sign the promissory
note, must possess the legal capacity to
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incur the obligation of the loan. A Youth
loan applicant will incur full personal
liability upon execution of the
promissory note without regard to the
applicant’s minority status.
(c) Citizenship. The applicant, and
anyone who will sign the promissory
note, must be a citizen of the United
States, United States non-citizen
national, or a qualified alien under
applicable Federal immigration laws.
(d) Credit history. The applicant must
have acceptable credit history
demonstrated by debt repayment.
(1) As part of the credit history, the
Agency will determine whether the
applicant will carry out the terms and
conditions of the loan and deal with the
Agency in good faith. In making this
determination, the Agency may examine
whether the applicant has properly
fulfilled its obligations to other parties,
including other agencies of the Federal
Government.
(2) When the applicant caused the
Agency a loss by receiving debt
forgiveness, the applicant may be
ineligible for assistance in accordance
with eligibility requirements for the
specific loan type. If the debt
forgiveness is cured by repayment of the
Agency’s loss, the Agency may still
consider the debt forgiveness in
determining the applicant’s credit
worthiness.
(3) A history of failures to repay past
debts as they came due when the ability
to repay was within the applicant’s
control will demonstrate unacceptable
credit history. The following
circumstances, for example, do not
automatically indicate an unacceptable
credit history:
(i) Foreclosures, judgments,
delinquent payments of the applicant
which occurred more than 36 months
before the application, if no recent
similar situations have occurred, or
Agency delinquencies that have been
resolved through loan servicing
programs available under 7 CFR part
766.
(ii) Isolated incidents of delinquent
payments which do not represent a
general pattern of unsatisfactory or slow
payment.
(iii) ‘‘No history’’ of credit
transactions by the applicant.
(iv) Recent foreclosure, judgment,
bankruptcy, or delinquent payment
when the applicant can satisfactorily
demonstrate that the adverse action or
delinquency was caused by
circumstances that were of a temporary
nature and beyond the applicant’s
control; or the result of a refusal to make
full payment because of defective goods
or services or other justifiable dispute
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relating to the purchase or contract for
goods or services.
(e) Availability of credit elsewhere.
The applicant, and all entity members
in the case of an entity, must be unable
to obtain sufficient credit elsewhere to
finance actual needs at reasonable rates
and terms. The Agency will evaluate the
ability to obtain credit based on factors
including, but not limited to:
(1) Loan amounts, rates, and terms
available in the marketplace; and
(2) Property interests, income, and
significant non-essential assets.
(f) Not in delinquent status on Federal
debt. As provided in 31 CFR part 285,
except for EM loan applicants, the
applicant, and anyone who will sign the
promissory note, must not be in
delinquent status on any Federal debt,
other than a debt under the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986 at the time of
loan closing. All delinquent debts,
however, will be considered in
determining credit history and ability to
repay under this part.
(g) Outstanding judgments. The
applicant, and anyone who will sign the
promissory note, must have no
outstanding unpaid judgments obtained
by the United States in any court. Such
judgments do not include those filed as
a result of action in the United States
Tax Courts.
(h) Federal crop insurance violation.
The applicant, and all entity members
in the case of an entity, must not be
ineligible due to disqualification
resulting from Federal crop insurance
violation according to 7 CFR part 718.
(i) Managerial ability. The applicant
must have sufficient managerial ability
to assure reasonable prospects of loan
repayment, as determined by the
Agency. The applicant must
demonstrate this managerial ability by:
(1) Education. For example, the
applicant obtained a 4-year college
degree in agricultural business,
horticulture, animal science, agronomy,
or other agricultural-related field.
(2) On-the-job training. For example,
the applicant is currently working on a
farm as part of an apprenticeship
program.
(3) Farming experience. For example,
the applicant has been an owner,
manager, or operator of a farm business
for at least one entire production cycle.
The farming experience must have been
obtained within the last 5 years.
(j) Borrower training. The applicant
must agree to meet the training
requirements in subpart J of this part.
(k) Operator of a family farm. (1) The
applicant must be the operator of a
family farm after the loan is closed.
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(2) For an entity applicant, if the
entity members holding a majority
interest are:
(i) Related by blood or marriage, at
least one member must be the operator
of a family farm;
(ii) Not related by blood or marriage,
the entity members holding a majority
interest must be operators of a family
farm.
(3) Except for EM loans, the collective
interests of the members may be larger
than a family farm only if:
(i) Each member’s ownership interest
is not larger than a family farm;
(ii) All of the members of the entity
are related by blood or marriage; and
(iii) All of the members are or will
become operators of the family farm;
and
(4) If the entity applicant has an
operator and ownership interest for farm
ownership loans and emergency loans
for farm ownership loan purposes, in
any other farming operation, that
farming operation must not exceed the
requirements of a family farm.
(l) Entity composition. If the applicant
is an entity, the entity members are not
themselves entities.
§ 764.102
General limitations.
(a) Limitations specific to each loan
program are contained in subparts D
through H of this part.
(b) The total principal balance owed
to the Agency at any one time by the
applicant, or any one who will sign the
promissory note, cannot exceed the
limits established in § 761.8 of this
chapter.
(c) The funds from the FLP loan must
be used for farming operations located
in the United States.
(d) The Agency will not make a loan
if the proceeds will be used:
(1) For any purpose that contributes to
excessive erosion of highly erodible
land, or to the conversion of wetlands;
(2) To drain, dredge, fill, level, or
otherwise manipulate a wetland; or
(3) To engage in any activity that
results in impairing or reducing the
flow, circulation, or reach of water,
except in the case of activity related to
the maintenance of previously
converted wetlands as defined in the
Food Security Act of 1985.
(e) Any construction financed by the
Agency must comply with the standards
established in § 761.10 of this chapter.
(f) Loan funds will not be used to
establish or support a non-eligible
enterprise, even if the non-eligible
enterprise contributes to the farm.
§ 764.103
General security requirements.
(a) Security requirements specific to
each loan program are outlined in
subparts D through H of this part.
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(b) All loans must be secured by
assets having a security value of at least
100 percent of the loan amount, except
for EM loans as provided in subpart H
of this part. If the applicant’s assets do
not provide adequate security, the
Agency may accept:
(1) A pledge of security from a third
party; or
(2) Interests in property not owned by
the applicant (such as leases that
provide a mortgageable value, water
rights, easements, mineral rights, and
royalties).
(c) An additional amount of security
up to 150 percent of the loan amount
will be taken when available, except for
beginning farmer downpayment loans
and youth loans.
(d) The Agency will choose the best
security available when there are several
alternatives that meet the Agency’s
security requirements.
(e) The Agency will take a lien on all
assets that are not essential to the
farming operation and are not being
converted to cash to reduce the loan
amount when each such asset, or
aggregate value of like assets (such as
stocks), has a value in excess of $5,000.
The value of this security is not
included in the Agency’s additional
security requirement stated in paragraph
(c) of this section. This requirement
does not apply to beginning farmer
downpayment loans and youth loans.
§ 764.104 General real estate security
requirements.
(a) Agency lien position requirements.
If real estate is pledged as security for
a loan, the Agency must obtain a first
lien, if available. When a first lien is not
available, the Agency may take a junior
lien under the following conditions:
(1) The prior lien does not contain
any provisions that may jeopardize the
Agency’s interest or the applicant’s
ability to repay the FLP loan;
(2) Prior lienholders agree to notify
the Agency prior to foreclosure;
(3) The applicant must agree not to
increase an existing prior lien without
the written consent of the Agency; and
(4) Equity in the collateral exists.
(b) Real estate held under a purchase
contract. If the real estate offered as
security is held under a recorded
purchase contract:
(1) The applicant must provide a
security interest in the real estate;
(2) The applicant and the purchase
contract holder must agree in writing
that any insurance proceeds received for
real estate losses will be used only for
one or more of the following purposes:
(i) To replace or repair the damaged
real estate improvements which are
essential to the farming operation;
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(ii) To make other essential real estate
improvements; or
(iii) To pay any prior real estate lien,
including the purchase contract.
(3) The purchase contract must
provide the applicant with possession,
control and beneficial use of the
property, and entitle the applicant to
marketable title upon fulfillment of the
contract terms.
(4) The purchase contract must not:
(i) Be subject to summary cancellation
upon default;
(ii) Contain provisions which
jeopardize the Agency’s security
position or the applicant’s ability to
repay the loan.
(5) The purchase contract holder must
agree in writing to:
(i) Not sell or voluntarily transfer their
interest without prior written consent of
the Agency;
(ii) Not encumber or cause any liens
to be levied against the property;
(iii) Not take any action to accelerate,
forfeit, or foreclose the applicant’s
interest in the security property until a
specified period of time after notifying
the Agency of the intent to do so;
(iv) Consent to the Agency making the
loan and taking a security interest in the
applicant’s interest under the purchase
contract as security for the FLP loan;
(v) Not take any action to foreclose or
forfeit the interest of the applicant
under the purchase contract because the
Agency has acquired the applicant’s
interest by foreclosure or voluntary
conveyance, or because the Agency has
subsequently sold or assigned the
applicant’s interest to a third party who
will assume the applicant’s obligations
under the purchase contract;
(vi) Notify the Agency in writing of
any breach by the applicant; and
(vii) Give the Agency the option to
rectify the conditions that amount to a
breach within 30 days after the date the
Agency receives written notice of the
breach.
(6) If the Agency acquires the
applicant’s interest under the purchase
contract by foreclosure or voluntary
conveyance, the Agency will not be
deemed to have assumed any of the
applicant’s obligations under the
contract, provided that if the Agency
fails to perform the applicant’s
obligations while it holds the
applicant’s interest is grounds for
terminating the purchase contract.
(c) Tribal lands held in trust or
restricted. The Agency may take a lien
on Indian Trust lands as security
provided the applicant requests the
Bureau of Indian Affairs to furnish Title
Status Reports to the agency and the
Bureau of Indian Affairs provides the
reports and approves the lien.
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(d) Security for more than one loan.
The same real estate may be pledged as
security for more than one direct or
guaranteed loan.
(e) Loans secured by leaseholds. A
loan may be secured by a mortgage on
a leasehold, if the leasehold has
negotiable value and can be mortgaged.
§ 764.105 General chattel security
requirements.
The same chattel may be pledged as
security for more than one direct or
guaranteed loan.
§ 764.106 Exceptions to security
requirements.
Notwithstanding any other provision
of this part, the Agency will not take a
security interest:
(a) When adequate security is
otherwise available and the lien will
prevent the applicant from obtaining
credit from other sources;
(b) When the property could have
significant environmental problems or
costs as described in subpart G of 7 CFR
part 1940;
(c) When the Agency cannot obtain a
valid lien;
(d) When the property is the
applicant’s personal residence and
appurtenances and:
(1) They are located on a separate
parcel; and
(2) The real estate that serves as
security for the FLP loan plus crops and
chattels are greater than or equal to 150
percent of the unpaid balance due on
the loan;
(e) When the property is subsistence
livestock, cash, working capital
accounts the applicant uses for the
farming operation, retirement accounts,
personal vehicles necessary for family
living, household contents, or small
equipment such as hand tools and lawn
mowers; or
(f) On marginal land and timber that
secures an outstanding ST loan.
§ 764.107
General appraisal requirements.
(a) Establishing value for real estate.
The value of real estate will be
established by an appraisal completed
in accordance with § 761.7 of this
chapter.
(b) Establishing value for chattels. The
value of chattels will be established as
follows:
(1) Annual production. The security
value of annual livestock and crop
production is presumed to be 100
percent of the amount loaned for annual
operating and family living expenses, as
outlined in the approved farm operating
plan.
(2) Livestock and equipment. The
value of livestock and equipment will
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be established by an appraisal
completed in accordance with § 761.7 of
this chapter.
§ 764.108
General insurance requirements.
The applicant must obtain and
maintain insurance, equal to the lesser
of the value of the security at the time
of loan closing or the principal of all
FLP and non-FLP loans secured by the
property, subject to the following:
(a) All security, except growing crops,
must be covered by hazard insurance if
it is readily available (sold by insurance
agents in the applicant’s normal trade
area) and insurance premiums do not
exceed the benefit. The Agency must be
listed as loss payee for the insurance
indemnity payment or as a beneficiary
in the mortgagee loss payable clause.
(b) Real estate security located in
flood or mudslide prone areas must be
covered by flood or mudslide insurance.
The Agency must be listed as a
beneficiary in the mortgagee loss
payable clause.
(c) Growing crops used to provide
adequate security must be covered by
crop insurance if such insurance is
available. The Agency must be listed as
loss payee for the insurance indemnity
payment.
(d) Prior to closing the loan, the
applicant must have obtained at least
the catastrophic risk protection level of
crop insurance coverage for each crop
which is a basic part of the applicant’s
total operation, if such insurance is
available, unless the applicant executes
a written waiver of any emergency crop
loss assistance with respect to such
crop. The applicant must execute an
assignment of indemnity in favor of the
Agency for this coverage.
§§ 764.109–764.150
[Reserved]
Subpart D—Farm Ownership Loan
Program
§ 764.151
Farm Ownership loan uses.
FO loan funds may only be used to:
(a) Acquire or enlarge a farm or make
a down payment on a farm;
(b) Make capital improvements to a
farm owned by the applicant, for
construction, purchase or improvement
of farm dwellings, service buildings or
other facilities and improvements
essential to the farming operation. In the
case of leased property, the applicant
must have a lease to ensure use of the
improvement over its useful life or to
ensure that the applicant receives
compensation for any remaining
economic life upon termination of the
lease;
(c) Promote soil and water
conservation and protection;
(d) Pay loan closing costs;
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(e) Refinance a bridge loan if the
following conditions are met:
(1) The applicant obtained the loan to
be refinanced to purchase a farm after a
direct FO was approved;
(2) Direct FO funds were not available
to fund the loan at the time of approval;
(3) The loan to be refinanced is
temporary financing; and
(4) The loan was made by a
commercial or cooperative lender.
§ 764.152
Eligibility requirements.
The applicant:
(a) Must comply with the general
eligibility requirements established at
§ 764.101;
(b) And anyone who will sign the
promissory note, must not have received
debt forgiveness from the Agency on
any direct or guaranteed loan;
(c) Must be the owner-operator of the
farm financed with Agency funds after
the loan is closed. In the case of an
entity:
(1) The entity is controlled by farmers
engaged primarily and directly in
farming in the United States, after the
loan is made;
(2) The entity must be authorized to
own and operate the farm in the State
in which the farm is located;
(3) If the entity members holding a
majority interest are:
(i) Related by blood or marriage, at
least one member of the entity must
operate the farm;
(ii) Not related by blood or marriage,
the entity members holding a majority
interest must own and operate the farm.
(d) And in the case of an entity, one
or more members constituting a majority
interest, must have participated in the
business operations of a farm for at least
3 years out of the 10 years prior to the
date the application is submitted.
(e) And anyone who will sign the
promissory note, must satisfy at least
one of the following conditions:
(1) Meet the definition of a beginning
farmer;
(2) Have not had a direct FO loan
outstanding for more than a total of 10
years prior to the date the new FO loan
is closed;
(3) Have never received a direct FO
loan.
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§ 764.153
Limitations.
The applicant must:
(a) Comply with the general
limitations established at § 764.102;
(b) Have dwellings and other
buildings necessary for the planned
operation of the farm available for use
after the loan is made.
§ 764.154
Rates and terms.
(a) Rates. (1) The interest rate is the
Agency’s Direct Farm Ownership rate,
available in each Agency office.
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(2) The limited resource Farm
Ownership interest rate is available to
applicants who are unable to develop a
feasible plan at regular interest rates.
(3) If the FO loan is part of a joint
financing arrangement and the amount
of the Agency’s loan does not exceed 50
percent of the total amount financed,
the Agency will use the Farm
Ownership participation rate, available
in each Agency office.
(4) The interest rate charged will be
the lower of the rate in effect at the time
of loan approval or loan closing.
(b) Terms. The Agency schedules
repayment of an FO loan based on the
applicant’s ability to repay and the
useful life of the security. In no event
will the term be more than 40 years
from the date of the note.
§ 764.155
Security requirements.
An FO loan must be secured:
(a) In accordance with §§ 764.103
through 764.106;
(b) At a minimum, by the real estate
being purchased or improved.
§§ 764.156–764.200
§ 764.204
§ 764.205
§§ 764.206–764.250
§ 764.251
§ 764.201 Beginning Farmer Downpayment
loan uses.
Beginning Farmer Downpayment loan
funds may be used to partially finance
the purchase of a family farm by an
eligible beginning farmer.
Eligibility requirements.
The applicant must:
(a) Comply with the general eligibility
requirements established at § 764.101
and the FO eligibility requirements of
§ 764.152; and
(b) Be a beginning farmer.
§ 764.203
Limitations.
(a) The applicant must:
(1) Comply with the general
limitations established at § 764.102; and
(2) Provide a minimum downpayment
of 10 percent of the purchase price of
the farm.
(b) The purchase price or appraised
value of the farm, whichever is lower,
must not exceed $250,000.
(c) Beginning Farmer Downpayment
loans will not exceed 40 percent of the
lesser of the purchase price or appraised
value of the farm to be acquired.
(d) Financing provided by the Agency
and all other creditors must not exceed
90 percent of the lesser of the purchase
price or appraised value of the farm and
may be guaranteed by the Agency under
part 762 of this chapter.
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Security requirements.
A Beginning Farmer Downpayment
loan must:
(a) Be secured in accordance with
§§ 764.103 through 764.106;
(b) Be secured by a lien on the
property being acquired with the loan
funds and junior only to the party
financing the balance of the purchase
price.
[Reserved]
Subpart F—Operating Loan Program
[Reserved]
Subpart E—Beginning Farmer
Downpayment Loan Program
§ 764.202
Rates and terms.
(a) Rates. The interest rate for
Beginning Farmer Downpayment loans
shall be 4 percent.
(b) Terms. (1) The Agency schedules
repayment of Beginning Farmer
Downpayment loans in equal, annual
installments over a term not to exceed
15 years.
(2) The non-Agency financing must
have an amortization period of at least
30 years and cannot have a balloon
payment due within the first 15 years of
the loan.
Operating loan uses.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph
(b), OL loan funds may only be used for:
(1) Costs associated with reorganizing
a farm to improve its profitability;
(2) Purchase of livestock, including
poultry, farm equipment, quotas and
bases, and cooperative stock for credit,
production, processing or marketing
purposes;
(3) Farm operating expenses,
including, but not limited to, feed, seed,
fertilizer, pesticides, farm supplies,
repairs and improvements which are to
be expensed, cash rent and family living
expenses;
(4) Scheduled principal and interest
payments on term debt provided the
debt is for authorized FO or OL
purposes;
(5) Other farm needs;
(6) Costs associated with land and
water development, use, or
conservation;
(7) Loan closing costs;
(8) Costs associated with Federal or
State-approved standards under the
Occupational Safety and Health Act of
1970 (29 U.S.C. 655 and 667) if the
applicant can show that compliance or
non-compliance with the standards will
cause substantial economic injury;
(9) Borrower training costs required or
recommended by the Agency;
(10) Refinancing farm-related debts
other than real estate to improve the
farm’s profitability provided the
applicant has refinanced direct or
guaranteed OL loans four times or fewer
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and one of the following conditions is
met:
(i) A designated or declared disaster
caused the need for refinancing; or
(ii) The debts to be refinanced are
owed to a creditor other than the USDA;
(11) Costs for minor real estate repairs
or improvements, provided the loan can
be repaid within 7 years.
(b) Lo-Doc funds approved under:
(1) Section 764.51(c)(3)(i) may be used
for any OL purpose except for
refinancing debt under paragraph
(a)(10);
(2) Section 764.51(c)(3)(ii) may only
be used for expenses under paragraph
(a)(3).
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
§ 764.252
Eligibility requirements.
The applicant:
(a) Must comply with the general
eligibility requirements established at
§ 764.101.
(b) And anyone who will sign the
promissory note, except as provided in
paragraph (c) of this section, must not
have received debt forgiveness from the
Agency on any direct or guaranteed
loan.
(c) And anyone who will sign the
promissory note, may receive direct OL
loans to pay annual farm operating and
family living expenses, provided that
the applicant meets all other applicable
requirements under this part, if the
applicant:
(1) Received a write-down under
section 353 of the Act;
(2) Is current on payments under a
confirmed reorganization plan under
Chapter 11, 12, or 13 of Title 11 of the
United States Code; or
(3) Received debt forgiveness on not
more than one occasion after April 4,
1996, resulting directly and primarily
from a Presidentially-designated
emergency for the county or contiguous
county in which the applicant operates.
Only applicants who were current on all
existing direct and guaranteed FLP
loans prior to the beginning date of the
incidence period of a Presidentiallydesignated emergency and received debt
forgiveness on that debt within 3 years
after the designation of such emergency
meet this exception.
(d) And in the case of an entity, the
entity must be:
(1) Controlled by farmers engaged
primarily and directly in farming in the
United States; and
(2) Authorized to operate the farm in
the State in which the farm is located.
(e) And anyone who will sign the
promissory note, may close an OL loan
in no more than 7 calendar years, either
as an individual or as a member of an
entity, except as provided in paragraphs
(e)(1) through (4) of this section. The
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years may be consecutive or
nonconsecutive, and there is no limit on
the number of loans closed in a year.
Youth loans are not counted toward this
limitation. The following exceptions are
applicable.
(1) This limitation does not apply if
the applicant and anyone who will sign
the promissory note is a beginning
farmer.
(2) This limitation does not apply if
the applicant’s land is subject to the
jurisdiction of an Indian tribe, the loan
is secured by one or more security
instruments subject to the jurisdiction of
an Indian tribe, and commercial credit
is generally not available to such farm
operations.
(3) If the applicant, and anyone who
will sign the promissory note, has
closed direct OL loans in four or more
previous calendar years as of April 4,
1996, the applicant is eligible to close
OL loans in any three additional years
after that date.
(4) On a case-by-case basis, may be
granted a one-time waiver of OL term
limits for a period of 2 years, not subject
to administrative appeal, if the
applicant:
(i) Has a financially viable operation;
(ii) And in the case of an entity, the
members holding the majority interest,
applied for commercial credit from at
least two lenders and were unable to
obtain a commercial loan, including an
Agency-guaranteed loan; and
(iii) Has successfully completed, or
will complete within one year, borrower
training. Previous waivers to the
borrower training requirements are not
applicable under this paragraph.
§ 764.253
Limitations.
The applicant must comply with the
general limitations established at
§ 764.102.
§ 764.254
Rates and terms.
(a) Rates. (1) The interest rate is the
Agency’s Direct Operating Loan rate,
available in each Agency office.
(2) The limited resource Operating
Loan interest rate is available to
applicants who are unable to develop a
feasible plan at regular interest rates.
(3) The interest rate charged will be
the lower rate in effect at the time of
loan approval or loan closing.
(b) Terms. (1) The Agency schedules
repayment of annual OL loans made for
family living and farm operating
expenses when planned income is
projected to be available.
(i) The term of the loan may not
exceed 18 months from the date of the
note.
(ii) The term of the loan may exceed
18 months in unusual situations such as
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63303
establishing a new enterprise,
developing a farm, purchasing feed
while crops are being established,
marketing plans, or recovery from a
disaster or economic reverse. In no
event will the term of the loan exceed
7 years from the date of the note. Crops
and livestock produced for sale will not
be considered adequate security for
such loans.
(2) The Agency schedules the
repayment of all other OL loans based
on the applicant’s ability to repay and
the useful life of the security. In no
event will the term of the loan exceed
7 years from the date of the note.
Repayment schedules may include
equal, unequal, or balloon installments
if needed to establish a new enterprise,
develop a farm, or recover from a
disaster or economic reversal. Loans
with balloon installments:
(i) Must have adequate security at the
time the balloon installment comes due.
Crops, livestock other than breeding
stock, or livestock products produced
are not adequate collateral for such
loans;
(ii) Are only authorized when the
applicant can project the ability to
refinance the remaining debt at the time
the balloon payment comes due based
on the expected financial condition of
the operation, the depreciated value of
the collateral, and the principal balance
on the loan;
(iii) Are not authorized when loan
funds are used for real estate repairs or
improvements.
§ 764.255
Security requirements.
An OL loan must be secured:
(a) In accordance with §§ 764.103
through 764.106.
(b) By a:
(1) First lien on all property or
products acquired or produced with
loan funds;
(2) Lien of equal or higher position of
that held by the creditor being
refinanced with loan funds.
§§ 764.256–764.300
[Reserved]
Subpart G—Youth Loan Program
§ 764.301
Youth loan uses.
Youth loan funds may only be used to
finance a modest, income-producing,
agriculture-related, educational project
while participating in 4–H, FFA, or a
similar organization.
§ 764.302
Eligibility requirements.
The applicant:
(a) Must comply with the general
eligibility requirements established at
§ 764.101(a) through (g);
(b) And anyone who will sign the
promissory note, must not have received
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debt forgiveness from the Agency on
any direct or guaranteed loan;
(c) Must be at least 10 but not yet 21
years of age at the time the loan is
closed;
(d) Must reside in a rural area, city or
town with a population of 50,000 or
fewer people;
(e) Must be recommended and
continuously supervised by a project
advisor, such as a 4–H Club advisor, a
vocational teacher, a county extension
agent, or other agriculture-related
organizational sponsor; and
(f) Must obtain a written
recommendation and consent from a
parent or guardian if the applicant has
not reached the age of majority under
state law.
§ 764.303
Limitations.
(a) The applicant must comply with
the general limitations established at
§ 764.102.
(b) The total principal balance owed
by the applicant to the Agency on all
Youth loans at any one time cannot
exceed $5,000.
§ 764.304
Rates and terms.
(a) Rates. (1) The interest rate is the
Agency’s Direct Operating Loan rate,
available in each Agency office.
(2) The limited resource Operating
Loan interest rate is not available for
Youth loans.
(3) The interest rate charged will be
the lower rate in effect at the time of
loan approval or loan closing.
(b) Terms. Youth loan terms are the
same as for an OL established at
§ 764.254(b).
§ 764.305
Security requirements.
A first lien will be obtained on
property or products acquired or
produced with loan funds.
§§ 764.306–764.350
[Reserved]
Subpart H—Emergency Loan Program
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
§ 764.351
Emergency loan uses.
(a) Physical losses—(1) Real estate
losses. EM loan funds for real estate
physical losses may only be used to
repair or replace essential property
damaged or destroyed as a result of a
disaster as follows:
(i) For any FO purpose, as specified
in § 764.151, except subparagraph (e) of
that section;
(ii) To establish a new site for farm
dwelling and service buildings outside
of a flood or mudslide area; and
(iii) To replace land from the farm
that was sold or conveyed, if such land
is necessary for the farming operation to
be effective.
(2) Chattel losses. EM loan funds for
chattel physical losses may only be used
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to repair or replace essential property
damaged or destroyed as a result of a
disaster as follows:
(i) Purchase livestock, farm
equipment, quotas and bases, and
cooperative stock for credit, production,
processing, or marketing purposes;
(ii) Pay customary costs associated
with obtaining and closing a loan that
an applicant cannot pay from other
sources (e.g., fees for legal, architectural,
and other technical services, but not
fees for agricultural management
consultation, or preparation of Agency
forms);
(iii) Repair or replace household
contents damaged in the disaster;
(iv) Pay the costs to restore
perennials, which produce an
agricultural commodity, to the stage of
development the damaged perennials
had obtained prior to the disaster;
(v) Pay essential family living and
farm operating expenses, in the case of
an operation that has suffered livestock
losses not from breeding stock, or losses
to stored crops held for sale; and
(vi) Refinance farm-related debts other
than real estate to improve farm
profitability, if the applicant has
refinanced direct or guaranteed loans
four times or fewer and one of the
following conditions is met:
(A) A designated or declared disaster
caused the need for refinancing; or
(B) The debts to be refinanced are
owed to a creditor other than the USDA.
(b) Production losses. EM loan funds
for production losses to agricultural
commodities (except the losses
associated with the loss of livestock)
may be used to:
(1) Pay costs associated with
reorganizing the farm to improve its
profitability except that such costs must
not include the payment of bankruptcy
expenses;
(2) Pay annual operating expenses,
which include, but are not limited to,
feed, seed, fertilizer, pesticides, farm
supplies, and cash rent;
(3) Pay costs associated with Federal
or State-approved standards under the
Occupational Safety and Health Act of
1970 (29 U.S.C. 655 and 667) if the
applicant can show that compliance or
non-compliance with the standards will
cause substantial economic injury;
(4) Pay borrower training costs
required or recommended by the
Agency;
(5) Pay essential family living
expenses;
(6) Refinance farm-related debts other
than real estate to improve farm
profitability, if the applicant has
refinanced direct or guaranteed loans
four times or fewer and one of the
following conditions is met:
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(i) A designated or declared disaster
caused the need for refinancing; or
(ii) The debts to be refinanced are
owed to a creditor other than the USDA;
and
(7) Replace lost working capital.
§ 764.352
Eligibility requirements.
The applicant:
(a) Must comply with the general
eligibility requirements established at
§ 764.101;
(b) Must be an established farmer;
(c) Must be the owner-operator or
tenant-operator as follows:
(1) For a loan made under
§ 764.351(a)(1), must have been:
(i) The owner-operator of the farm at
the time of the disaster; or
(ii) The tenant-operator of the farm at
the time of the disaster whose lease on
the affected real estate exceeds the term
of the loan. The operator will provide
prior notification to the Agency if the
lease is proposed to terminate during
the term of the loan. The lessor will
provide the Agency a mortgage on the
real estate as security for the loan;
(2) For a loan made under § 764.351(a)
(2) or (b), must have been the operator
of the farm at the time of the disaster;
and
(3) In the case of an entity, the entity
must be:
(i) Engaged primarily and directly in
farming in the United States;
(ii) Authorized to operate and own the
farm, if the funds are used for farm
ownership loan purposes, in the State in
which the farm is located;
(d) Must demonstrate the intent to
continue the farming operation after the
designated or declared disaster;
(e) And all entity members must be
unable to obtain sufficient credit
elsewhere at reasonable rates and terms.
To establish this, the applicant must
obtain written declinations of credit,
specifying the reasons for declination,
from legally organized commercial
lending institutions within reasonable
proximity of the applicant as follows:
(1) In the case of a loan in excess of
$300,000, two written declinations of
credit are required;
(2) In the case of a loan of $300,000
or less, one written declination of credit
is required; and
(3) In the case of a loan of $100,000
or less, the Agency may waive the
requirement for obtaining a written
declination of credit, if the Agency
determines that it would pose an undue
burden on the applicant, the applicant
certifies that they cannot get credit
elsewhere, and based on the applicant’s
circumstances credit is not likely to be
available;
(4) Notwithstanding the applicant’s
submission of the required written
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declinations of credit, the Agency may
contact other commercial lending
institutions within reasonable proximity
of the applicant and make an
independent determination of the
applicant’s ability to obtain credit
elsewhere;
(f) And all entity members in the case
of an entity, must not have received
debt forgiveness from the Agency on
more than one occasion on or before
April 4, 1996, or any time after April 4,
1996.
(g) Must submit an application to be
received by the Agency no later than 8
months after the date the disaster is
declared or designated in the county of
the applicant’s operation.
(h) For production loss loans, must
have a disaster yield that is at least 30
percent below the normal production
yield of the crop, as determined by the
Agency, which comprises a basic part of
an applicant’s total farming operation.
(i) For physical loss loans, must have
suffered disaster-related damage to
chattel or real estate essential to the
farming operation, or to household
contents that must be repaired or
replaced, to harvested or stored crops,
or to perennial crops.
(j) Must meet all of the following
requirements if the ownership structure
of the family farm changes between the
time of a qualifying loss and the time an
EM loan is closed:
(1) The applicant, including all
owners must meet all of the eligibility
requirements;
(2) The individual applicant, or all
owners of a entity applicant, must have
had an ownership interest in the
farming operation at the time of the
disaster; and
(3) The amount of the loan will be
based on the percentage of the former
farming operation transferred to the
applicant and in no event will the
individual portions aggregated equal
more than would have been authorized
for the former farming operation.
(k) Must agree to repay any
duplicative Federal assistance to the
agency providing such assistance. An
applicant receiving Federal assistance
for a major disaster or emergency is
liable to the United States to the extent
that the assistance duplicates benefits
available to the applicant for the same
purpose from another source.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
§ 764.353
Limitations.
(a) EM loans must comply with the
general limitations established at
§ 764.102.
(b) EM loans may not exceed the
lesser of:
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(1) The amount of credit necessary to
restore the farming operation to its predisaster condition;
(2) In the case of a physical loss loan,
the total eligible physical losses caused
by the disaster; or
(3) In the case of a production loss
loan, 100 percent of the total actual
production loss sustained by the
applicant as calculated in paragraph (c)
of this section.
(c) For production loss loans, the
applicant’s actual crop production loss
will be calculated as follows:
(1) Subtract the disaster yield from the
normal yield to determine the per acre
production loss;
(2) Multiply the per acre production
loss by the number of acres of the
farming operation devoted to the crop to
determine the volume of the production
loss;
(3) Multiply the volume of the
production loss by the market price for
such crop as determined by the Agency
to determine the dollar value for the
production loss; and
(4) Subtract any other disaster related
compensation or insurance indemnities
received or to be received by the
applicant for the production loss.
(d) For a physical loss loan, the
applicant’s total eligible physical losses
will be calculated as follows:
(1) Add the allowable costs associated
with replacing or repairing chattel
covered by hazard insurance (excluding
labor, machinery, equipment, or
materials contributed by the applicant
to repair or replace chattel);
(2) Add the allowable costs associated
with repairing or replacing real estate,
covered by hazard insurance;
(3) Add the value of replacement
livestock and livestock products for
which the applicant provided:
(i) Written documentation of
inventory on hand immediately
preceding the loss;
(ii) Records of livestock product sales
sufficient to allow the Agency to
establish a value;
(4) Add the allowable costs to restore
perennials to the stage of development
the damaged perennials had obtained
prior to the disaster;
(5) Add, in the case of an individual
applicant, the allowable costs associated
with repairing or replacing household
contents, not to exceed $20,000; and
(6) Subtract any other disaster related
compensation or insurance indemnities
received or to be received by the
applicant for the loss or damage to the
chattel or real estate.
(e) EM loan funds may not be used for
physical loss purposes unless:
(1) The physical property was covered
by general hazard insurance at the time
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63305
that the damage caused by the natural
disaster occurred. The level of the
coverage in effect at the time of the
disaster must have been the tax or cost
depreciated value, whichever is less.
Chattel property must have been
covered at the tax or cost depreciated
value, whichever is less, when such
insurance was readily available and the
benefit of the coverage was greater than
the cost of the insurance; or
(2) The loan is to a poultry farmer to
cover the loss of a chicken house for
which the applicant did not have hazard
insurance at the time of the loss and the
applicant:
(i) Applied for, but was unable to
obtain hazard insurance for the chicken
house;
(ii) Uses the loan to rebuild the
chicken house in accordance with
industry standards in effect on the date
the applicant submits an application for
the loan;
(iii) Obtains, for the term of the loan,
hazard insurance for the full market
value of the chicken house; and
(iv) Meets all other requirements for
the loan.
(f) EM loan funds may not be used to
refinance consumer debt, such as
automobile loans, or credit card debt
unless such credit card debt is directly
attributable to the farming operation.
§ 764.354
Rates and terms.
(a) Rates. (1) The interest rate is the
Agency’s Emergency Loan Actual Loss
rate, available in each Agency office.
(2) The interest rate charged will be
the lower rate in effect at the time of
loan approval or loan closing.
(b) Terms. (1) The Agency schedules
repayment of EM loans based on the
useful life of the security, the
applicant’s repayment ability, and the
type of loss.
(2) The repayment schedule must
include at least one payment every year.
(3) EM loans for annual operating
expenses, except expenses associated
with establishing a perennial crop that
are subject to paragraph (b)(4), must be
repaid within 12 months. The Agency
may extend this term to not more than
18 months to accommodate the
production cycle of the agricultural
commodities.
(4) EM loans for production losses or
physical losses to chattel (including, but
not limited to, assets with an expected
life between one and 7 years) may not
exceed 7 years. The Agency may extend
this term up to a total length not to
exceed 20 years, if necessary to improve
the applicant’s repayment ability and
real estate security is available.
(5) The repayment schedule for EM
loans for physical losses to real estate is
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based on the applicant’s repayment
ability and the useful life of the security,
but in no case will the term exceed 40
years.
§ 764.355
Security requirements.
(a) EM loans made under
§ 764.351(a)(1) must comply with the
general security requirements
established at §§ 764.103, 764.104 and
764.155(b).
(b) EM loans made under
§ 764.351(a)(2) and (b) must comply
with the general security requirements
established at §§ 764.103, 764.104 and
764.255(b).
(c) Notwithstanding the requirements
of paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section,
when adequate security is not available
because of the disaster, the loan may be
approved if the Agency determines,
based on an otherwise feasible plan,
there is a reasonable assurance that the
applicant has the ability to repay the
loan provided:
(1) The applicant has pledged as
security for the loan all available
personal and business security, except
as provided in § 764.106;
(2) The farm operating plan, approved
by the Agency, indicates the loan will
be repaid based upon the applicant’s
production and income history;
addresses applicable pricing risks
through the use of marketing contracts,
hedging, options, or other revenue
protection mechanisms, and includes a
marketing plan or similar risk
management practice;
(3) The applicant has had positive net
cash farm income in at least 3 of the past
5 years; and
(4) The applicant has provided the
Agency an assignment on any USDA
program payments to be received.
(d) For loans over $25,000, title
clearance is required when real estate is
taken as security.
(e) For loans of $25,000 or less, when
real estate is taken as security, a
certification of ownership in real estate
is required. Certification of ownership
may be in the form of an affidavit which
is signed by the applicant, names the
record owner of the real estate in
question and lists the balances due on
all known debts against the real estate.
Whenever the Agency is uncertain of
the record owner or debts against the
real estate security, a title search is
required.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
§ 764.356 Appraisal and valuation
requirements.
(a) In the case of physical losses
associated with livestock, the applicant
must have written documentation of the
inventory of livestock and records of
livestock product sales sufficient to
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allow the Agency to value such
livestock or livestock products just prior
to the loss.
(b) In the case of farm assets damaged
by the disaster, the value of such
security shall be established as of the
day before the disaster occurred.
§§ 764.357–764.400
[Reserved]
Subpart I—Loan Decision and Closing
§ 764.401
Loan decision.
(a) Loan approval. (1) The Agency
will approve a loan only if it determines
that:
(i) The applicant’s farm operating
plan reflects a feasible plan, which
includes repayment of the proposed
loan and demonstrates that all other
credit needs can be met;
(ii) The proposed use of loan funds is
authorized for the type of loan
requested;
(iii) The applicant has been
determined eligible for the type of loan
requested;
(iv) All security requirements for the
type of loan requested have been, or will
be met before the loan is closed;
(v) The applicant’s total indebtedness
to the Agency, including the proposed
loan, will not exceed the maximum
limits established in § 761.8 of this
chapter;
(vi) There have been no significant
changes in the farm operating plan or
the applicant’s financial condition since
the time the Agency received a complete
application; and
(vii) All other pertinent requirements
have been, or will be met before the loan
is closed.
(2) The Agency will place conditions
upon loan approval it determines
necessary to protect its interest and
maximize the applicant’s potential for
success.
(b) Loan denial. The Agency will not
approve a loan if it determines that:
(1) The applicant’s farm operating
plan does not reflect a feasible plan;
(2) The proposed use of loan funds is
not authorized for the type of loan
requested;
(3) The applicant does not meet the
eligibility requirements for the type of
loan requested;
(4) There is inadequate security for
the type of loan requested;
(5) Approval of the loan would cause
the applicant’s total indebtedness to the
Agency to exceed the maximum limits
established in § 761.8 of this chapter;
(6) The applicant’s circumstances may
not permit continuous operation and
management of the farm; or
(7) The applicant, the farming
operation, or other circumstances
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surrounding the loan are inconsistent
with the authorizing statutes, other
Federal laws, or Federal credit policies.
(c) Overturn of an Agency decision by
appeal. If an FLP loan denial is
overturned on administrative appeal,
the Agency will not automatically
approve the loan. Unless prohibited by
the final appeal determination or
otherwise advised by the Office of
General Counsel, the Agency will:
(1) Request current financial
information from the applicant as
necessary to determine whether any
changes in the applicant’s financial
condition or agricultural conditions
which occurred after the Agency’s
adverse decision was made will
adversely affect the applicant’s farming
operation;
(2) Approve a loan for crop
production:
(i) Only if the Agency can determine
that the applicant will be able to
produce a crop in the production cycle
for which the loan is requested; or
(ii) For the next production cycle,
upon review of current financial data
and a farm operating plan for the next
production cycle, if the Agency
determines the loan can be repaid. The
new farm operating plan must reflect
any financial issues resolved in the
appeal.
(3) Determine whether the applicant’s
farm operating plan, as modified based
on the appeal decision, reflects a
feasible plan, which includes repayment
of the proposed loan and demonstrates
that all other credit needs can be met.
§ 764.402
Loan closing.
(a) Signature requirements. Signatures
on loan documents are required as
follows:
(1) For individual applicants, only the
applicant is required to sign the
promissory note.
(2) For entity applicants, the
promissory note will be executed to
evidence the liability of the entity and
the individual liability of all members of
the entity.
(3) Despite minority status, a youth
executing a promissory note for a Youth
loan will incur full personal liability for
the debt.
(4) A cosigner will be required to sign
the promissory note if they assist the
applicant in meeting the repayment
requirements for the loan requested.
(5) All signatures needed for the
Agency to acquire the required security
interests will be obtained according to
State law.
(b) Payment of fees. The applicant, or
in the case of a real estate purchase, the
applicant and seller, must pay all filing,
recording, notary, lien search, and any
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other fees necessary to process and close
a loan.
(c) Chattel-secured loans. The
following requirements apply to loans
secured by chattel:
(1) The Agency will close a chattel
loan only when it determines the
Agency requirements for the loan have
been satisfied;
(2) A financing statement is required
for every loan except when a filed
financing statement covering the
applicant’s property is still effective,
covers all types of chattel property that
will serve as security for the loan,
describes the land on which crops and
fixtures are or will be located, and
complies with the law of the
jurisdiction where filed;
(3) A new security agreement is
required for new loans, as necessary to
secure the loan under State law, prior to
the disbursement of loan funds.
(d) Real estate-secured loans. (1) The
Agency will close a real estate loan only
when it determines that the Agency
requirements for the loan have been
satisfied and the closing agent can issue
a policy of title insurance or final title
opinion as of the date of closing. The
title insurance or final title opinion
requirement may be waived:
(i) For loans of $10,000 or less;
(ii) As provided in § 764.355 for EM
loans;
(iii) When the real estate is considered
additional security by the Agency; or
(iv) When the real estate is a nonessential asset.
(2) The title insurance or final title
opinion must show title vested as
required by the Agency, the lien of the
Agency’s security instrument in the
priority required by the Agency, and
title to the security property, subject
only to those exceptions approved in
writing by the Agency.
(3) The Agency must approve agents
who will close FLP loans. Closing
agents must meet all of the following
requirements to the Agency’s
satisfaction:
(i) Be licensed in the state where the
loan will be closed;
(ii) Not be debarred or suspended
from participating in any Federal
programs;
(iii) Maintain liability insurance;
(iv) Have a fidelity bond that covers
all employees with access to loan funds;
(v) Have current knowledge of the
requirements of State law in connection
with the loan closing and title clearance;
(vi) Not represent both the buyer and
seller in the transaction;
(vii) Not be related as a family
member or business associate with the
applicant; and
(viii) Act promptly to provide
required services.
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(e) Disbursement of funds. (1) Loan
funds will be made available to the
applicant within 15 days of loan
approval, subject to the availability of
funding.
(2) If the loan is not closed within 90
days of loan approval or if the
applicant’s financial condition changes
significantly, the Agency must
reconfirm the requirements for loan
approval prior to loan closing. The
applicant may be required to provide
updated information for the Agency to
reconfirm approval and proceed with
loan closing.
(3) The Agency or closing agent will
be responsible for disbursing loan
funds. The electronic funds transfer
process, followed by Treasury checks,
are the Agency’s preferred methods of
loan funds disbursement. The Agency
will use these processes on behalf of
borrowers to disburse loan proceeds
directly to creditors being refinanced
with loan funds or to sellers of chattel
property that is being acquired with
loan funds. A supervised bank account
will be used according to subpart B of
part 761 of this chapter when these
processes are not practicable.
§§ 764.403–764.450
[Reserved]
Subpart J—Borrower Training and
Training Vendor Requirements
§ 764.451
Purpose.
The purpose of production and
financial management training is to help
an applicant develop and improve skills
necessary to:
(a) Successfully operate a farm;
(b) Build equity in the operation; and
(c) Become financially successful and
prepared to graduate from Agency
financing to commercial sources of
credit.
§ 764.452
Borrower training requirements.
(a) The applicant must agree to
complete production and financial
management training, unless the Agency
provides a waiver in accordance with
§ 764.453, or the applicant has
previously satisfied the training
requirements. In the case of an entity:
(1) Any individual member holding a
majority interest in the entity or who is
operating the farm must complete
training on behalf of the entity, except
as provided in paragraph (a)(2) of this
section;
(2) If one entity member is solely
responsible for production or financial
management, then only that member
will be required to complete training.
(b) When the Agency determines that
production training is required, the
applicant must agree to complete course
work covering production management
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63307
in each crop or livestock enterprise the
Agency determines necessary.
(c) When the Agency determines that
financial management training is
required, the applicant must agree to
complete course work covering all
aspects of farm accounting and
integrating accounting elements into a
financial management system.
(d) An applicant who applies for a
loan to finance a new enterprise, such
as a new crop or a new type of livestock,
must agree to complete production
training with regard to that enterprise,
even if production training
requirements were waived or satisfied
under a previous loan request, unless
the Agency provides a waiver in
accordance with § 764.453.
(e) Even if a waiver is granted, the
borrower must complete borrower
training as a condition for future loans
if and when Agency supervision
provided in 7 CFR part 761 subpart C
reflects that such training is needed.
(f) The Agency cannot reject a request
for a direct loan based solely on an
applicant’s need for training.
(g) The Agency will provide written
notification of required training or
waiver of training.
§ 764.453 Agency waiver of training
requirements.
(a) The applicant must request the
waiver in writing.
(b) The Agency will grant a waiver for
training in production, financial
management, or both, under the
following conditions:
(1) The applicant submits evidence of
successful completion of a course
similar to a course approved under
section § 764.457 and the Agency
determines that additional training is
not needed; or
(2) The applicant submits evidence
which demonstrates to the Agency’s
satisfaction the applicant’s experience
and training necessary for a successful
and efficient operation.
(c) If the production and financial
functions of the operation are shared
among individual entity members, the
Agency will consider the collective
knowledge and skills of those
individuals when determining whether
to waive training requirements.
§ 764.454 Actions that an applicant must
take when training is required.
(a) Deadline for completion of
training. (1) If the Agency requires an
applicant to complete training, at loan
closing the applicant must agree in
writing to complete all required training
within 2 years.
(2) The Agency will grant a one-year
extension to complete training if the
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applicant is unable to complete training
within the 2-year period due to
circumstances beyond the applicant’s
control.
(3) The Agency will grant an
extension longer than one year for
extraordinary circumstances as
determined by the Agency.
(4) An applicant who does not
complete the required training within
the specified time-period will be
ineligible for additional direct FLP loans
until the training is completed.
(b) Arranging training with a vendor.
The applicant must select and contact
an Agency approved vendor and make
all arrangements to begin training.
(c) Payment of training fees. (1) The
applicant is responsible for the cost of
training and must include training fees
in the farm operating plan as a farm
operating expense.
(2) The payment of training fees is an
authorized use of OL funds.
(3) The Agency is not a party to fee
or other agreements between the
applicant and the vendor.
(d) Evaluation of a vendor. Upon
completion of the required training, the
applicant will complete an evaluation of
the course and submit it to the vendor.
The vendor will forward the completed
evaluation forms to the Agency.
§ 764.455
Potential training vendors.
The Agency will contract for training
services with State or private providers
of production and financial
management training services.
§ 764.456
Applying to be a vendor.
(a) A vendor for borrower training
services must apply to the Agency for
approval.
(b) The vendor application must
include:
(1) A sample of the course materials
and a description of the vendor’s
training methods;
(2) Specific training objectives for
each section of the course;
(3) A detailed course agenda
specifying the topics to be covered, the
time devoted to each topic, and the
number of sessions to be attended;
(4) A list of instructors and their
qualifications;
(5) The criteria by which additional
instructors will be selected;
(6) The proposed locations where
training will take place;
(7) The cost per participant, including
cost for additional members of a farming
operation;
(8) The minimum and maximum class
size;
(9) The vendor’s experience in
developing and administering training
to farmers;
(10) The monitoring and quality
control methods the vendor will use;
(11) The policy on allowing Agency
employees to attend the course for
monitoring purposes;
(12) A plan of how the needs of
applicants with physical, mental, or
learning disabilities will be met; and
(13) A plan of how the needs of
applicants who do not speak English as
their primary language will be met.
§ 764.457
Vendor requirements.
(a) Minimum experience. The vendor
must demonstrate a minimum of 3 years
of experience in conducting training
courses or teaching the subject matter.
(b) Training objectives. The courses
provided by a vendor must enable the
applicant to accomplish one or more of
the following objectives:
(1) Describe the specific goals of the
farming operation, any changes required
to attain the goals, and outline how
these changes will occur using present
and projected cash flow budgets;
(2) Maintain and use a financial
management information system to
make financial decisions;
(3) Understand and use an income
statement;
(4) Understand and use a balance
sheet;
(5) Understand and use a cash flow
budget; and
(6) Use production records and other
production information to identify
problems, evaluate alternatives, and
correct current production practices to
improve efficiency and profitability.
(c) Curriculum. At least one of the
following subjects must be covered:
(1) Business planning courses,
covering general goal setting, risk
management, and planning.
(2) Financial management courses,
covering all aspects of farm accounting
and focusing on integrating accounting
elements into a financial management
system.
(3) Crop and livestock production
courses focusing on improving the
profitability of the farm.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
Score
Criteria used to determine score
1 ................
If the borrower:
• Attended sessions as agreed, ...............................................
• Satisfactorily completed all assignments, and
• Demonstrated an understanding of the course material.
If the borrower:
2 ................
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Frm 00068
(d) Instructor qualifications. All
instructors must have:
(1) Sufficient knowledge of the
material and experience in adult
education;
(2) A bachelor’s degree or comparable
experience in the subject area to be
taught; and
(3) A minimum of 3 years experience
in conducting training courses or
teaching.
§ 764.458
Vendor approval.
(a) Agreement to conduct training. (1)
Upon approval, the vendor must sign an
agreement to conduct training for the
Agency’s borrowers.
(2) The agreement to conduct training
is valid for 3 years.
(3) Any changes in curriculum,
instructor, or cost require prior approval
by the Agency.
(4) The vendor may revoke the
agreement by giving the Agency a
written 30-day notice.
(5) The Agency may revoke the
agreement if the vendor does not
comply with the responsibilities listed
in the agreement by giving the vendor
a written 30-day notice.
(b) Renewal of agreement to conduct
training. (1) To renew the agreement to
conduct training, the vendor must
submit in writing to the Agency:
(i) A request to renew the agreement;
(ii) Any changes in curricula,
instructor, or cost; and
(iii) Documentation that the vendor is
providing effective training.
(2) The Agency will review renewal
requests in accordance with § 764.457.
§ 764.459 Evaluation of borrower
progress.
(a) The vendor must provide the
Agency with a periodic progress report
for each borrower enrolled in training in
accordance with the agreement to
complete training. The reports will
indicate whether the borrower is
attending sessions, completing the
training program, and demonstrating an
understanding of the course material.
(b) Upon borrower completion of the
training, the vendor must provide the
Agency with an evaluation of the
borrower’s knowledge of the course
material and assign a score. The
following table lists the possible scores,
the criteria used to assign each score,
and Agency consideration of each score:
Agency consideration
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Training requirement associated with course is complete.
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63309
Score
Criteria used to determine score
Agency consideration
Training requirement associated with couse is complete. Additional Agency supervision may be necessary.
3 ................
• Attended sessions as agreed, and ........................................
• Attempted to complete all assignments, but
• Does not demonstrate an understanding of the course material.
If the borrower did not:
• Attend sessions as agreed, or ..............................................
• Attempt to complete assignments, or
• Otherwise make a good faith effort to complete the training.
I
Training requirement associated with course is not complete.
The borrower is ineligible for future direct loans until the training is completed.
Subpart H—Partial Release of Real Estate
Security
24. Add part 765 to read as follows:
PART 765—DIRECT LOAN
SERVICING—REGULAR
765.351 Requirements to obtain Agency
consent.
765.352 Use of proceeds.
765.353 Determining market value.
765.354–765.400 [Reserved]
Sec.
Subpart A—Overview
765.1 Introduction.
765.2 Abbreviations and definitions.
765.3–765.50 [Reserved]
Subpart I—Transfer of Security and
Assumption of Debt
765.101 Borrower graduation requirements.
765.102 Borrower noncompliance with
graduation requirements.
765.103 Transfer and assignment of Agency
liens.
765.104—765.150 [Reserved]
765.401 Conditions for transfer of real
estate and chattel security.
765.402 Transfer of security and loan
assumption on same rates and terms.
765.403 Transfer of security to and
assumption of debt by eligible
applicants.
765.404 Transfer of security to and
assumption of debt by ineligible
applicants.
765.405 Payment of costs associated with
transfers.
765.406 Release of transferor from liability.
765.407–765.450 [Reserved]
Subpart D—Borrower Payments
Subpart J—Deceased Borrowers
765.151 Handling payments.
765.152 Types of payments.
765.153 Application of payments.
765.154 Distribution of payments.
765.155 Final loan payments.
765.156–765.200 [Reserved]
765.451 Continuation of FLP debt and
transfer of security.
765.452 Borrowers with Non-program
loans.
765.453–765.500 [Reserved]
Subpart B—Borrowers with Limited
Resource Interest Rate Loans
765.51 Annual review.
765.52–765.100 [Reserved]
Subpart C—Borrower Graduation
Subpart K—Exception Authority
Subpart E—Protecting the Agency’s
Security Interest
765.501
765.201 General policy.
765.202 Borrower responsibilities.
765.203 Protective advances.
765.204 Notifying potential purchasers.
765.205 Subordination of liens.
765.206 Junior liens.
765.207 Conditions for severance
agreements.
765.208–765.250 [Reserved]
Subpart A—Overview
§ 765.1
Subpart F—Required Use and Operation of
Agency Security
765.251 General.
765.252 Lease of security.
765.253 Ceasing to operate security.
765.254–765.300 [Reserved]
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
Subpart G—Disposal of Chattel Security
765.301 General.
765.302 Use and maintenance of the
agreement for the use of proceeds.
765.303 Use of proceeds from chattel
security.
765.304 Unapproved disposition.
765.305 Release of security interest.
765.306–765.350 [Reserved]
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18:34 Nov 07, 2007
Jkt 214001
Agency exception authority.
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301 and 7 U.S.C. 1989.
Introduction.
(a) Purpose. This part describes the
policies for servicing direct FLP loans,
except for borrowers who are
delinquent, financially distressed, or
otherwise in default on their loan.
(b) Servicing actions. Servicing
actions described in this part include:
(1) Limited resource reviews;
(2) Graduation to commercial credit;
(3) Application of payments;
(4) Maintaining and disposing of
security;
(5) Transfer of security and
assumption of debt; and
(6) Servicing accounts of deceased
borrowers.
(c) Loans covered. The Agency
services direct FLP loans under the
policies contained in this part. This part
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is not applicable to Non-program loans,
except where noted.
§ 765.2
Abbreviations and definitions.
Abbreviations and definitions for
terms used in this part are provided in
§ 761.2 of this chapter.
§§ 765.3–765.50
[Reserved]
Subpart B—Borrowers With Limited
Resource Interest Rate Loans
§ 765.51
Annual review.
(a) A borrower with limited resource
interest rate loans is required to provide
the Agency annually the operation’s
financial information to determine if the
borrower can afford to pay a higher
interest rate on the loan. The Agency
will review the information provided in
accordance with § 761.105 of this
chapter.
(b) If the borrower’s farm operating
plan shows that the debt service margin
exceeds 110 percent, the Agency will
increase the interest rate on the loans
with a limited resource interest rate
until:
(1) A further increase in the interest
rate results in a debt service margin of
less than 110 percent; or
(2) The interest rate is equal to the
interest rate currently in effect for the
type of loan.
(c) Except as provided in paragraph
(d) of this section, the Agency will
increase the limited resource interest
rate to the current interest rate for the
type of loan, if the borrower:
(1) Purchases items not planned
during the term of the loan;
(2) Refuses to submit information the
Agency requests for use in reviewing the
borrower’s financial condition;
(3) Ceases farming, as described in
§ 765.253; or
(4) Is ineligible due to disqualification
resulting from Federal crop insurance
violation according to 7 CFR part 718.
(d) If the borrower has limited
resource interest rate loans that are
deferred, the Agency will not change the
interest rate during the deferral period.
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§ 765.52–765.100
[Reserved]
§ 765.103 Transfer and assignment of
Agency liens.
Subpart C—Borrower Graduation
§ 765.101 Borrower graduation
requirements.
(a) In accordance with the promissory
note and security instruments, the
borrower must graduate to another
source of credit if the Agency
determines that:
(1) The borrower has the ability to
obtain credit from other sources; and
(2) Adequate credit is available from
other sources at reasonable rates and
terms.
(b) The Agency may require partial or
full graduation.
(1) In a partial graduation, all FLP
loans of one type (i.e. all chattel loans
or all real estate loans) must be paid in
full by refinancing with other credit
with or without an Agency guarantee.
(2) In a full graduation, all FLP loans
are paid in full by refinancing with
other credit with or without an Agency
guarantee.
(3) A loan made for chattel and real
estate purposes will be categorized
according to how the majority of the
loan’s funds are expended.
(c) The borrower must submit all
information that the Agency requests in
conjunction with the review of the
borrower’s financial condition.
(d) The Agency may provide a
borrower’s prospectus to lenders in an
attempt to identify sources of nonAgency credit and assess the lenders’
interest in refinancing the borrower’s
loan. The Agency will notify the
borrower when the borrower’s
prospectus is provided to one or more
lenders.
(e) If a lender expresses an interest in
refinancing the borrower’s FLP loan, the
borrower must:
(1) Apply for a loan from the
interested lender within 30 days of
notice; or
(2) Seek guaranteed loan assistance
under the market placement program in
accordance with § 762.110(g) of this
chapter.
(f) The borrower will be responsible
for any application fees or purchase of
stock in conjunction with graduation.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
§ 765.102 Borrower noncompliance with
graduation requirements.
16:19 Nov 07, 2007
Jkt 214001
§§ 765.104–765.150
[Reserved]
Subpart D—Borrower Payments
§ 765.151
Handling payments.
(a) Borrower payments. Borrowers
must submit their loan payments in a
form acceptable to the Agency, such as
checks, cash, and money orders. Forms
of payment not acceptable to the Agency
include, but are not limited to, foreign
currency, foreign checks, and sight
drafts.
(b) Crediting account. The Agency
credits the borrower’s account as of the
date the Agency receives payment.
§ 765.152
Types of payments.
(a) Regular payments. Regular
payments are derived from, but are not
limited to:
(1) The sale of normal income
security;
(2) The sale of farm products;
(3) Lease income, including mineral
lease signing bonus;
(4) Program or disaster-related
disbursements from USDA or crop
insurance entities; and
(5) Non-farm income.
(b) Extra payments. Extra payments
are derived from any of the following:
(1) Sale of chattel security other than
normal income security;
(2) Sale of real estate security;
(3) Refinancing of FLP debt;
(4) Cash proceeds of insurance claims
received on Agency security, if not
being used to repair or replace the
security;
(5) Any transaction that results in a
loss in the value of any Agency basic
security;
(6) Refunds of duplicate disaster
program benefits to be applied on an EM
loan; or
(7) Refunds of unused loan funds.
(c) Payments from sale of real estate.
Notwithstanding any other provision of
this section, payments derived from the
sale of real estate security will be treated
as regular payments at the Agency’s
discretion, if the FLP loans will be
adequately secured after the transaction.
§ 765.153
Borrower failure to fulfill all
graduation requirements within the
time-period specified by the Agency
constitutes default on the loan. The
Agency will accelerate the borrower’s
loan without offering servicing options
provided in 7 CFR part 766.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
The Agency may assign its lien to the
new lender when the borrower is
graduating and all FLP debt will be paid
in full.
Application of payments.
(a) Regular payments. A regular
payment is credited to a scheduled
installment on program and nonprogram loans. Regular payments are
applied to loans in the following order:
(1) Annual operating loan;
(2) Delinquent FLP installments,
paying least secured loans first;
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(3) Non-delinquent FLP installments
due in the current production cycle in
order of security priority, paying least
secured loans first;
(4) Any future installments due.
(b) Extra payments. An extra payment
is not credited to a scheduled
installment and does not relieve the
borrower’s responsibility to make
scheduled loan installments, but will
reduce the borrower’s FLP
indebtedness. Extra payments are
applied to FLP loans in order of lien
priority except for refunds of unused
loan funds, which shall be applied to
the loan for which the funds were
advanced.
§ 765.154
Distribution of payments.
The Agency applies both regular and
extra payments to each loan in the
following order, as applicable:
(a) Recoverable costs and protective
advances plus interest;
(b) Deferred non-capitalized interest;
(c) Accrued deferred interest;
(d) Interest accrued to date of
payment; and
(e) Loan principal.
§ 765.155
Final loan payments.
(a) General. (1) Unless the Agency has
reservations regarding the validity of the
payment, the Agency may release the
borrower’s security instruments at the
time payment is made, if the borrower
makes a final payment by one of the
following methods:
(i) Cash;
(ii) U.S. Treasury check;
(iii) Cashier’s check; or
(iv) Certified check.
(2) Security instruments will only be
released when all loans secured by the
instruments have been paid in full or
otherwise satisfied.
(3) The Agency will return the paid
note and satisfied security instruments
to the borrower after the Agency
processes the final payment and
determines that the total indebtedness is
paid in full.
(b) Borrower refunds. If the borrower
refunds the entire loan after the loan is
closed, the borrower must pay interest
from the date of the note to the date the
Agency received the funds.
(c) Overpayments. If an Agency
miscalculation of a final payment
results in an overpayment by the
borrower of less than $10, the borrower
must request a refund from the Agency
in writing. Overpayments of $10 or
more automatically will be refunded by
the Agency.
(d) Underpayments. If an Agency
miscalculation of a final payment
amount results in an underpayment, the
Agency may collect all account balances
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resulting from its error. If the Agency
cannot collect an underpayment from
the borrower, the Agency will attempt to
settle the debt in accordance with
subpart B of 7 CFR part 1956.
(h) Pay expenses for emergency
measures to protect the Agency’s
collateral; and
(i) Protect the Agency from actions by
third parties.
§§ 765.156–765.200
§ 765.204
[Reserved]
Subpart E—Protecting the Agency’s
Security Interest
§ 765.201
General policy.
All Agency servicing actions
regarding preservation and protection of
Agency security will be consistent with
the covenants and agreements contained
in all loan agreements and security
instruments.
§ 765.202
Borrower responsibilities.
The borrower must:
(a) Comply with all provisions of the
loan agreements;
(1) Non-compliance with the
provisions of loan agreements and
documents, other than failure to meet
scheduled loan repayment installments
contained in the promissory note,
constitutes non-monetary default on
FLP loans by the borrower;
(2) Borrower non-compliance will be
considered by the Agency when making
eligibility determinations for future
requests for assistance and may
adversely impact such requests;
(b) Maintain, protect, and account for
all security;
(c) Pay the following, unless State law
requires the Agency to pay:
(1) Fees for executing, filing or
recording financing statements,
continuation statements or other
security instruments; and
(2) The cost of lien search reports;
(d) Pay taxes on property securing
FLP loans when they become due;
(e) Maintain insurance coverage in an
amount specified by the Agency;
(f) Protect the interests of the Agency
when a third party brings suit or takes
other action that could affect Agency
security.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
§ 765.203
Protective advances.
When necessary to protect the
Agency’s security interest, costs
incurred for the following actions will
be charged to the borrower’s account:
(a) Maintain abandoned security
property;
(b) Preserve inadequately maintained
security;
(c) Pay real estate taxes and
assessments;
(d) Pay property, hazard, or flood
insurance;
(e) Pay harvesting costs;
(f) Maintain Agency security
instruments;
(g) Pay ground rents;
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Notifying potential purchasers.
(a) States with Central Filing System
(CFS). The Agency participates and
complies with central filing systems in
States where CFS has been organized. In
a State with a CFS, the Agency is not
required to additionally notify potential
purchasers that the Agency has a lien on
a borrower’s chattel security, unless
specifically required by State law.
(b) States without CFS. In a State
without CFS, the Agency follows the
filing requirements specified for
perfecting a lien on a borrower’s chattel
security under State law. The Agency
will distribute the list of chattel and
crop borrowers to sale barns,
warehouses, and other businesses that
buy or sell chattels or crops. In addition,
the Agency may provide the list of
borrowers to potential purchasers upon
request.
§ 765.205
Subordination of liens.
(a) Borrower application
requirements. The borrower must
submit the following, unless it already
exists in the Agency’s file and is still
current as determined by the Agency:
(1) Completed Agency application for
subordination form;
(2) A current financial statement,
including, in the case of an entity,
financial statements from all entity
members;
(3) Documentation of compliance
with the Agency’s environmental
regulations contained in subpart G of 7
CFR part 1940;
(4) Verification of all non-farm
income;
(5) The farm’s operating plan,
including a projected cash flow budget
reflecting production, income, expenses,
and debt repayment plan; and
(6) Verification of all debts.
(b) Real estate security. For loans
secured by real estate, the Agency will
approve a request for subordination if
all of the following conditions are met:
(1) The borrower is not in default or
will not be in default on FLP loans by
the time the subordination closing is
complete;
(2) The loan will be used for an
authorized loan purpose or is made in
conjunction with a guaranteed loan;
(3) The credit is essential to the
farming operation, and the borrower
cannot obtain the credit without a
subordination;
(4) The borrower can demonstrate,
through a current farm operating plan,
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63311
the ability to repay all debt payments
scheduled, and to be scheduled, during
the production cycle;
(5) The FLP loan is still adequately
secured after the subordination, or the
value of the loan security will be
increased by an amount at least equal to
the advance to be made under the
subordination;
(6) The borrower is not able to
graduate;
(7) If the borrower is an entity and the
Agency has taken real estate as
additional security on property owned
by a member, a subordination for any
authorized loan purpose may be
approved when it is needed for the
entity member to finance a separate
farming operation, provided the
subordination does not cause the
unpaid principal and interest on the
FLP loans to exceed the value of loan
security or otherwise adversely affect
the security;
(8) The borrower must not be
ineligible as a result of a conviction for
controlled substances according to 7
CFR part 718 of this chapter;
(9) The borrower must not be
ineligible due to disqualification
resulting from Federal crop insurance
violation according to 7 CFR part 718 of
this chapter;
(10) The borrower will not use loan
funds in a way that will contribute to
erosion of highly erodible land or
conversion of wetlands as described in
subpart G of 7 CFR part 1940;
(11) There is no other subordination
outstanding with another lender in
connection with the same security;
(12) The subordination is limited to a
specific amount; the loan made in
conjunction with the subordination will
be closed within a reasonable time and
has a definite maturity date;
(13) In the case of real property
purchase or exchange, the Agency will
obtain a valid mortgage and the required
lien position on the real property. The
Agency will require title clearance and
loan closing for the property in
accordance with § 764.402 of this
chapter;
(14) Any planned development of real
estate security will be performed as
directed by the creditor, approved by
the Agency, and will comply with the
terms and conditions of § 761.10 of this
chapter;
(15) Subordinations of SAA mortgages
may only be approved when there is no
increase in the debt which is prior to the
SAA debt; and
(16) If a borrower has only a Nonprogram loan, the Agency does not
permit subordination. The Agency may
subordinate Non-program security when
it is also security for a program loan
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with the same borrower in accordance
with this section.
(c) Chattel security. (1) For loans
secured by chattel, the subordination
must meet the conditions contained in
paragraphs (b)(1) through (12) of this
section.
(2) The Agency will approve a request
for a second subordination to enable a
borrower to obtain crop insurance, if the
following conditions are met:
(i) The creditor to whom the first
subordination was given did not
provide for payment of the current
year’s crop insurance premium, and
consents in writing to the provisions of
the second subordination to pay
insurance premiums from the crop or
insurance proceeds;
(ii) The borrower assigns the
insurance proceeds to the Agency or
names the Agency in the loss payable
clause of the policy; and
(iii) The subordination meets the
conditions under paragraphs (b)(1)
through (12) of this section.
(d) Appraisals. An appraisal of the
property that secures the FLP loan will
be required when the Agency
determines it necessary to protect its
interest. Appraisals will be obtained in
accordance with § 761.7 of this chapter.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
§ 765.206
Junior liens.
(a) General policy. The borrower will
not give a lien on Agency security
without the consent of the Agency.
Failure to obtain Agency consent will be
considered by the Agency when making
eligibility determinations for future
requests for assistance and may
adversely impact such requests.
(b) Conditions for consent. The
Agency will consent to the terms of a
junior lien if all of the following
conditions are met:
(1) The borrower’s ability to make
scheduled loan payments is not
jeopardized;
(2) The borrower provides the Agency
a copy of the farm operating plan
submitted to the junior lienholder, and
the plan is consistent with the Agency
operating plan;
(3) The total debt against the security
does not exceed the security’s market
value;
(4) The junior lienholder agrees in
writing not to foreclose the security
instrument unless written notice is
provided to the Agency;
(5) The borrower is unable to
graduate; and
(6) The junior lien will not otherwise
adversely impact the Agency’s financial
interests.
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§ 765.207 Conditions for severance
agreements.
For loans secured by real estate, a
borrower may request Agency consent
to a severance agreement or similar
instrument so that future chattel
acquired by the borrower will not
become part of the real estate securing
the FLP debt. The Agency will consent
to severance agreements if all of the
following conditions are met:
(a) The financing arrangements are in
the financial interest of the Agency and
the borrower;
(b) The transaction will not adversely
affect the Agency’s security position;
(c) The borrower is unable to
graduate;
(d) The transaction will not jeopardize
the borrower’s ability to pay all
outstanding debts to the Agency and
other creditors; and
(e) The property acquired is
consistent with authorized loan
purposes.
§§ 765.208–765.250
[Reserved]
Subpart F—Required Use and
Operation of Agency Security
§ 765.251
General.
(a) A borrower is required to be the
operator of Agency security in
accordance with loan purposes, loan
agreements, and security instruments.
(b) A borrower who fails to operate
the security without Agency consent is
in violation of loan agreements and
security instruments.
(c) The Agency will consider a
borrower’s request to lease or cease to
operate the security as provided in
§§ 765.252 and 765.253.
§ 765.252
Lease of security.
(a) Real estate leases. The borrower
may lease real estate security provided
the following conditions are met:
(1) The Agency approves the
borrower’s request;
(2) The term of consecutive leases
does not exceed 3 years, or 5 years if the
borrower and the lessee are related by
blood or marriage;
(3) The lease does not contain an
option to purchase; and
(4) The requirements of § 765.253
have been met.
(b) Mineral leases. The borrower must
request Agency consent to lease any
mineral rights used as security for FLP
loans.
(1) For loans secured by real estate
before December 23, 1985, the Agency
has a security interest in any mineral
rights the borrower has on the real estate
pledged as collateral.
(2) For loans secured by real estate on
or after December 23, 1985, the Agency
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has a security interest in any mineral
rights if the mineral rights were
included in an appraisal.
(3) The Agency may consent to a
mineral lease if the proposed use of the
leased rights will not adversely affect
either:
(i) The Agency’s security interest; or
(ii) Compliance with any applicable
environmental requirements of subpart
G of 7 CFR part 1940.
(c) Lease of chattel security. Lease of
chattel security is not authorized.
(d) Lease proceeds. Lease proceeds are
considered normal income security and
may be used in accordance with
§ 765.303.
(e) Lease of allotments. (1) The
Agency will not approve any crop
allotment lease that will adversely affect
its security interest in the allotment.
(2) The borrower must assign all
rental proceeds from an allotment lease
to the Agency.
§ 765.253
Ceasing to operate security.
If the borrower requests Agency
consent to cease operating the security
or if the Agency discovers that the
borrower is failing to operate the
security, the Agency will give consent
if:
(a) Such action is in the Agency’s best
interests;
(b) The borrower is unable to
graduate;
(c) The borrower is not ineligible as a
result of disqualification for Federal
crop insurance violation according to 7
CFR part 718;
(d) The borrower has leased the
security according to § 765.252(a)(2);
and
(e) Any one of the following
conditions is met:
(1) The borrower is involved in the
day-to-day operational activities,
management decisions, costs and
returns of the farming operation, and
will continue to reside in the immediate
farming community for reasonable
management and operation
involvement;
(2) The borrower’s failure to operate
the security is due to age or poor health,
and the borrower continues to reside in
the immediate farming community for
reasonable management and operation
involvement; or
(3) The borrower’s failure to operate
the security is beyond the borrower’s
control, and the borrower will resume
the farming operation within 3 years.
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§§ 765.254–765.300
[Reserved]
Subpart G—Disposal of Chattel
Security
§ 765.301
General.
(a) The borrower must account for all
security.
(b) The borrower may not dispose of
chattel security for an amount less than
its market value. All proceeds,
including any amount in excess of the
market value, must be distributed to
lienholders for application to the
borrower’s account in the order of lien
priority.
(1) The Agency considers the market
value of normal income security to be
the prevailing market price of the
commodity in the area in which the
farm is located.
(2) The market value for basic security
is determined by an appraisal obtained
in accordance with § 761.7 of this
chapter.
(c) When the borrower sells chattel
security, the property and proceeds
remain subject to the Agency lien until
the lien is released by the Agency.
(d) The Agency and all other
lienholders must provide written
consent before a borrower may use
proceeds for a purpose other than
payment of lienholders in the order of
lien priority.
(e) The transaction must not interfere
with the borrower’s farming operation
or jeopardize the borrower’s ability to
repay the FLP loan.
(f) The disposition must enhance the
program objectives of the FLP loan.
(g) When the borrower exchanges
security property for other property or
purchases new property with sale
proceeds, the acquisition must be
essential to the farming operation as
well as meet the program objectives,
purposes, and limitations for the type of
loan.
(h) All checks, drafts, or money orders
which the borrower receives from the
sale of Agency security must be payable
to the borrower and the Agency. If all
FLP loan installments and any past due
installments, for the period of the
agreement for the use of proceeds have
been paid, however, these payments
from the sale of normal income security
may be payable solely to the borrower.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
§ 765.302 Use and maintenance of the
agreement for the use of proceeds.
(a) The borrower and the Agency will
execute an agreement for the use of
proceeds for each production cycle,
including proceeds from the sale of
milk, crops on hand or in storage,
planned proceeds from Government
payments, crop insurance and insurance
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proceeds derived from the loss of
security.
(b) The agreement for the use of
proceeds will remain in effect until the
proper disposition of all listed chattel
security has been accomplished, or the
remaining chattel security has been
transferred to a new agreement for the
use of proceeds.
(c) The borrower must report any
disposition of basic or normal income
security immediately to the Agency.
(d) If a borrower wants to dispose of
chattel security not listed or in a way
different than provided on the
agreement for the use of proceeds, the
borrower must obtain the Agency’s
consent before the disposition.
(e) If the borrower sells security to a
purchaser not listed in the agreement for
the use of proceeds, the borrower must
immediately notify the Agency of what
property has been sold and of the name
and business address of the purchaser.
(f) The borrower must provide the
Agency with the necessary information
to update the farm operating plan and
the agreement for the use of proceeds in
accordance with § 761.102 of this
chapter.
(g) Changes to the agreement on the
use of proceeds will be recorded, dated
and initialed by the borrower and the
Agency.
(h) The borrower must maintain
records of dispositions of chattel
security and the actual use of proceeds.
The borrower must make these records
available to the Agency at the end of the
period covered by the agreement for the
use of proceeds.
§ 765.303
security.
Use of proceeds from chattel
(a) General. (1) Proceeds from the sale
of basic security and normal income
security must be remitted to lienholders
in order of lien priority.
(2) Proceeds remitted to the Agency
may be used as follows:
(i) Applied to the FLP loan;
(ii) Pay customary costs appropriate to
the transaction.
(3) With the concurrence of all
lienholders, proceeds may be used to
preserve the security because of a
natural disaster or other severe
catastrophe, when funds cannot be
obtained by other means in time to
prevent the borrower and the Agency
from suffering a substantial loss.
(4) Security may be consumed as
follows:
(i) Livestock may be used by the
borrower’s family for subsistence;
(ii) If crops serve as security and
usually would be marketed, the Agency
may allow such crops to be fed to the
borrower’s livestock, if this is preferable
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63313
to marketing, provided the Agency
obtains a lien or assignment on the
livestock, and livestock products, at
least equal to the lien on the crops.
(b) Proceeds from the sale of normal
income security. In addition to the uses
specified in paragraph (a) of this
section, the agreement for the use of
proceeds will allow for release of
proceeds from the sale of normal
income security to be used to pay
essential family living and farm
operating expenses. Such releases will
be terminated when an account is
accelerated.
(c) Proceeds from the sale of basic
security. In addition to the uses
specified in paragraph (a) of this
section:
(1) Proceeds from the sale of basic
security may not be used for any family
living and farm operating expenses.
(2) Security may be exchanged for
chattel property better suited to the
borrower’s needs if the Agency will
acquire a lien on the new property at
least equal in value to the lien held on
the property exchanged.
(3) Proceeds may be used to purchase
chattel property better suited to the
borrower’s needs if the Agency will
acquire a lien on the purchased
property. The value of the purchased
property, together with any proceeds
applied to the FLP loan, must at least
equal the value of the Agency lien on
the old security.
§ 765.304
Unapproved disposition.
(a) If a borrower disposes of chattel
security without Agency approval, or
misuses proceeds, the borrower must:
(1) Make restitution to the Agency
within 30 days of Agency notification;
or
(2) Provide disposition or use
information to enable the Agency to
consider post-approval within 30 days
of Agency notification.
(b) Failure to cure the first
unauthorized disposition in accordance
with paragraph (a) of this section, or a
second unauthorized disposition,
whether or not cured, constitutes a nonmonetary default, will be considered by
the Agency when making eligibility
determinations for future requests for
assistance, may adversely impact such
requests, and may result in civil or
criminal action.
§ 765.305
Release of security interest.
(a) When Agency security is sold,
exchanged, or consumed in accordance
with the agreement for the use of
proceeds, the Agency will release its
security interest to the extent of the
value of the security disposed.
(b) Security interests on wool and
mohair may be released when the
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security is marketed by consignment,
provided all of the following conditions
are met:
(1) The borrower assigns to the
Agency the proceeds of any advances
made, or to be made, on the wool or
mohair by the broker, less shipping,
handling, processing, and marketing
costs;
(2) The borrower assigns to the
Agency the proceeds of the sale of the
wool or mohair, less any remaining
costs in shipping, handling, processing,
and marketing, and less the amount of
any advance (including any interest
which may have accrued on the
advance) made by the broker against the
wool or mohair; and
(3) The borrower and broker agree that
the net proceeds of any advances on, or
sale of, the wool or mohair will be paid
by checks made payable jointly to the
borrower and the Agency.
§§ 765.306–765.350
[Reserved]
Subpart H—Partial Release of Real
Estate Security
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
§ 765.351
consent.
Requirements to obtain Agency
The borrower must obtain prior
consent from the Agency for any
transactions affecting the real estate
security, including, but not limited to,
sale or exchange of security, a right-ofway across security, and a partial
release. The Agency may consent to
such transactions provided the
conditions in this section are met.
(a) General. The following conditions
apply to all transactions affecting real
estate:
(1) The transaction will enhance the
objectives for which the FLP loan or
loans were made;
(2) The transaction will not jeopardize
the borrower’s ability to repay the FLP
loan, or is necessary to place the
borrower’s farming operation on a
sound basis;
(3) The amount received for the
security being disposed of or the rights
being granted is not less than the market
value;
(4) Any proceeds in excess of the
market value are remitted to lienholders
in the order of lien priority;
(5) The transaction must not interfere
with the borrower’s farming operation;
(6) The market value of the remaining
security is adequate to secure the FLP
loans, or if the market value of the
security before the transaction was
inadequate to fully secure the FLP
loans, the Agency’s equity in the
security is not diminished;
(7) The environmental requirements
of subpart G of 7 CFR part 1940 must
be met;
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(8) The borrower cannot graduate to
other credit;
(9) The borrower must not be
ineligible due to disqualification
resulting from Federal crop insurance
violation according to 7 CFR part 718;
and
(10) The disposition of real estate
security for an outstanding ST loan will
only be authorized if the transaction
will result in full repayment of the loan.
(b) Sale of timber, gravel, oil, gas,
coal, or other minerals. (1) Agency
security instruments require that the
borrower request and receive written
consent from the Agency prior to certain
transactions, including, but not limited
to, cutting, removal, or lease of timber,
gravel, oil, gas, coal, or other minerals,
except small amounts used by the
borrower for ordinary household
purposes.
(i) The sale of timber from real estate
that secures an FLP loan will be
considered a disposition of a portion of
the security.
(ii) For loans secured by real estate
before December 23, 1985, the Agency
has a security interest in mineral
products, gravel, oil, gas, coal, or other
resources and the sale by unit or lump
sum payment will be considered a
disposition of security.
(iii) For loans secured by real estate
on or after December 23, 1985, the
Agency has a security interest in
mineral products, gravel, oil, gas, coal,
or other resources if the value of such
products was included in an appraisal.
When the Agency has a security
interest, the sale of such products will
be considered a disposition of a portion
of the security.
(2) Any compensation the borrower
may receive for damages to the surface
of the real estate security resulting from
exploration for, or recovery of, minerals
must be assigned to the Agency. Such
proceeds will be used to repair the
damage, and any remaining funds must
be remitted to lienholders in the order
of lien priority or, with all lienholders’
consent, used for an authorized loan
purpose.
(c) Exchange of security property. (1)
When an exchange of security results in
a balance owing to the borrower, the
proceeds must be used in accordance
with § 765.352.
(2) Property acquired by the borrower
must meet program objectives, purposes
and limitations relating to the type of
loan involved as well as applicable
requirements for appraisal, title
clearance and security.
(d) Sale under contract for deed. A
borrower may sell a portion of the
security for not less than its market
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value under a contract for deed subject
to the following:
(1) Not less than 10 percent of the
purchase price will be paid as a down
payment and remitted to lienholders in
the order of lien priority;
(2) Payments will not exceed 10
annual installments of principal plus
interest or the remaining term of the
FLP loan, whichever is less. The interest
rate will be the current rate being
charged on a regular FO loan plus 1
percent or the rate on the borrower’s
notes, whichever is greater. Payments
may be in equal or unequal installments
with a balloon final installment;
(3) The Agency’s security rights,
including the right to foreclose on either
the portion being sold or retained, will
not be impaired;
(4) Any subsequent payments must be
assigned to the lienholders and remitted
in order of lien priority, or with
lienholder’s approval, used in
accordance with § 765.352;
(5) The mortgage on the property sold
will not be released prior to either full
payment of the borrower’s account or
receipt of the full amount of sale
proceeds;
(6) The sale proceeds applied to the
borrower’s loan accounts will not
relieve the borrower from obligations
under the terms of the note or other
agreements approved by the Agency;
(7) All other requirements of this
section are met.
(e) Transfer of allotments. (1) The
Agency will not approve any crop
allotment lease that will adversely affect
its security interest.
(2) The sale of an allotment must
comply with all conditions of this
subpart.
(3) The borrower may transfer crop
allotments to another farm owned or
controlled by the borrower. Such
transfer will be treated as a lease under
§ 765.252.
§ 765.352
Use of proceeds.
(a) Proceeds from transactions
affecting the real estate security may
only be used as follows:
(1) Applied on liens in order of
priority;
(2) To pay customary costs
appropriate to the transaction, which
meet the following conditions:
(i) Are reasonable in amount;
(ii) Cannot be paid by the borrower;
(iii) Will not be paid by the purchaser;
(iv) Must be paid to consummate the
transaction; and
(v) May include postage and
insurance when it is necessary for the
Agency to present the promissory note
to the recorder to obtain a release of a
portion of the real estate from the
mortgage.
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(3) For development or enlargement of
real estate owned by the borrower as
follows:
(i) Development or enlargement must
be necessary to improve the borrower’s
debt repayment ability, place the
borrower’s farming operation on a
sound basis, or otherwise enhance the
objectives of the loan;
(ii) Such use will not conflict with the
loan purposes, restrictions or
requirements of the type of loan
involved;
(iii) Funds will be deposited in a
supervised bank account in accordance
with subpart B of part 761 of this
chapter;
(iv) The Agency has, or will obtain, a
lien on the real estate developed or
enlarged;
(v) Construction and development
will be completed in accordance with
§ 761.10 of this chapter.
(b) After acceleration, the Agency may
approve transactions only when all the
proceeds will be applied to the liens
against the security in the order of their
priority, after deducting customary costs
appropriate to the transaction. Such
approval will not cancel or delay
liquidation, unless all loan defaults are
otherwise cured.
§ 765.353
Determining market value.
(a) Security proposed for disposition.
(1) The Agency will obtain an appraisal
of the security proposed for disposition.
(2) The Agency may waive the
appraisal requirement when the
estimated value is less than $25,000.
(b) Security remaining after
disposition. The Agency will obtain an
appraisal of the remaining security if it
determines that the transaction will
reduce the value of the remaining
security.
(c) Appraisal requirements.
Appraisals, when required, will be
conducted in accordance with § 761.7 of
this chapter.
§§ 765.354–765.400
[Reserved]
Subpart I—Transfer of Security and
Assumption of Debt
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
§ 765.401 Conditions for transfer of real
estate and chattel security.
(a) General conditions. (1) Approval
of a security transfer and corresponding
loan assumption obligates a new
borrower to repay an existing FLP debt.
(2) All transferees will become
personally liable for the debt and
assume the full responsibilities and
obligations of the debt transferred when
the transfer and assumption is complete.
If the transferee is an entity, the entity
and each member must assume personal
liability for the loan.
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(3) A transfer and assumption will
only be approved if the Agency
determines it is in the Agency’s
financial interest.
(b) Agency consent. A borrower must
request and obtain written Agency
consent prior to selling or transferring
security to another party.
§ 765.402 Transfer of security and loan
assumption on same rates and terms.
An eligible applicant may assume an
FLP loan on the same rates and terms as
the original note if:
(a) The original borrower has died and
the spouse, other relative, or joint tenant
who is not obligated on the note inherits
the security property;
(b) A family member of the borrower
or an entity comprised solely of family
members of the borrower assumes the
debt along with the original borrower;
(c) An individual with an ownership
interest in the borrower entity buys the
entire ownership interest of the other
members and continues to operate the
farm in accordance with loan
requirements. The new owner must
assume personal liability for the loan;
(d) A new entity buys the borrower
entity and continues to operate the farm
in accordance with loan requirements;
or
(e) The original loan is an EM loan for
physical or production losses and
persons who were directly involved in
the farm’s operation at the time of the
loss will assume the loan. If the original
loan was made to:
(1) An individual borrower, the
transferee must be a family member of
the original borrower or an entity that is
comprised solely of family members of
the original borrower.
(2) A trust, partnership or joint
operation, the transferee must have been
a member, partner or joint operator
when the Agency made the original loan
or remain an entity comprised solely of
people who were original members,
partners or joint operators when the
entity received the original loan.
(3) A corporation, including limited
liability company, or cooperative, the
transferee must:
(i) Have been a corporate stockholder
or a cooperative member when the
Agency made the original loan or will
be an entity comprised solely of people
who were corporate stockholders or
cooperative members when the entity
received the loan; and
(ii) Assume only the portion of the
physical or production loss loan equal
to the transferee’s percentage of
ownership. In the case of entity
transferees, the transferee must assume
that portion of the loan equal to the
combined percentages of ownership of
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63315
the individual stockholders or members
in the transferee.
§ 765.403 Transfer of security to and
assumption of debt by eligible applicants.
(a) Transfer of real estate and chattel
security. The Agency may approve
transfers of security with assumption of
FLP debt, other than EM loans for
physical or production losses, by
transferees eligible for the type of loan
being assumed if:
(1) The transferee meets all loan and
security requirements in part 764 of this
chapter for the type of loan being
assumed; and
(2) The outstanding loan balance
(principal and interest) does not exceed
the maximum loan limit for the type of
loan as contained in § 761.8 of this
chapter.
(b) Assumption of Non-program
loans. Applicants eligible for FO loans
under part 764 of this chapter may
assume Non-program loans made for
real estate purposes if the Agency
determines the property meets program
requirements. In such case, the Agency
will reclassify the Non-program loan as
an FO loan.
(c) Loan types that the Agency no
longer makes. Real estate loan types the
Agency no longer makes (i.e. EE, RL,
RHF) may be assumed and reclassified
as FO loans if the transferee is eligible
for an FO loan under part 764 of this
chapter and the property proposed for
transfer meets program requirements.
(d) Amount of assumption. The
transferee must assume the lesser of:
(1) The outstanding balance of the
transferor’s loan; or
(2) The market value of the security,
less prior liens and authorized costs, if
the outstanding loan balance exceeds
the market value of the property.
(e) Rates and terms. The interest rate
and loan term will be determined
according to rates and terms established
in part 764 of this chapter for the type
of loan being assumed.
§ 765.404 Transfer of security to and
assumption of debt by ineligible applicants.
(a) General. (1) The Agency will allow
the transfer of real estate and chattel
security property to applicants who are
ineligible for the type of loan being
assumed only on Non-program loan
rates and terms.
(2) The Agency will reclassify the
assumed loan as a Non-program loan.
(b) Eligibility. Transferees must:
(1) Provide written documentation
verifying their credit worthiness and
debt repayment ability;
(2) Not have received debt forgiveness
from the Agency;
(3) Not be ineligible for loans as a
result of a conviction for controlled
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substances according to 7 CFR part 718;
and
(4) Not be ineligible due to
disqualification resulting from Federal
crop insurance violation according to 7
CFR part 718.
(c) Assumption amount. The
transferee must assume the total
outstanding FLP debt or if the value of
the property is less than the entire
amount of debt, an amount equal to the
market value of the security less any
prior liens. The total outstanding FLP
debt will include any unpaid deferred
interest that accrued on the loan to the
extent that the debt does not exceed the
security’s market value.
(d) Downpayment. Non-program
transferees must make a downpayment
to the Agency of not less than 10
percent of the lesser of the market value
or unpaid debt.
(e) Interest rate. The interest rate will
be the Non-program interest rate in
effect at the time of loan approval.
(f) Loan terms. (1) For a Non-program
loan secured by real estate, the Agency
schedules repayment in 25 years or less,
based on the applicant’s repayment
ability.
(2) For a Non-program loan secured
by chattel property only, the Agency
schedules repayment in 5 years or less,
based on the applicant’s repayment
ability.
§ 765.405 Payment of costs associated
with transfers.
The transferor and transferee are
responsible for paying transfer costs
such as real estate taxes, title
examination, attorney’s fees, surveys,
and title insurance. When the transferor
is unable to pay its portion of the
transfer costs, the transferee, with
Agency approval, may pay these costs
provided:
(a) Any cash equity due the transferor
is applied first to payment of costs and
the transferor does not receive any cash
payment above these costs;
(b) The transferee’s payoff of any
junior liens does not exceed $5,000;
(c) Fees are customary and reasonable;
(d) The transferee can verify that
personal funds are available to pay
transferor and transferee fees; and
(e) Any equity due the transferor is
held in escrow by an Agency designated
closing agent and is disbursed at
closing.
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§ 765.406
liability.
Release of transferor from
(a) General. Agency approval of an
assumption does not automatically
release the transferor from liability.
(b) Requirements for release. (1) The
Agency may release the transferor from
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liability when all of the security is
transferred and the total outstanding
debt is assumed.
(2) If an outstanding debt balance will
remain and only part of the transferor’s
Agency security is transferred, the
written request for release of liability
will not be approved, unless the
deficiency is otherwise resolved to the
Agency’s satisfaction.
(3) If an outstanding balance will
remain and all of the transferor’s
security has been transferred, the
transferor may pay the remaining
balance or request debt settlement in
accordance with subpart B of 7 CFR part
1956.
(4) Except for loans in default being
serviced under 7 CFR part 766, if an
individual who is jointly liable for
repayment of an FLP loan withdraws
from the farming operation and conveys
all of their interest in the security to the
remaining borrower, the withdrawing
party may be released from liability
under the following conditions:
(i) A divorce decree or property
settlement states that the withdrawing
party is no longer responsible for
repaying the loan;
(ii) All of the withdrawing party’s
interests in the security are conveyed to
the persons with whom the loan will be
continued; and
(iii) The persons with whom the loan
will be continued can demonstrate the
ability to repay all of the existing and
proposed debt obligations.
§§ 765.407–765.450
[Reserved]
indebtedness provided the individual
makes payments as scheduled and
fulfills all other responsibilities of the
borrower according to the loan and
security instruments.
(b) Loan assumption. A deceased
borrower’s loan may be assumed by an
individual not liable for the
indebtedness in accordance with
subpart I of this part.
(c) Loan discontinuation. (1) The
Agency will not continue a loan for any
subsequent transfer of title by the heirs,
or sale of interests between heirs to
consolidate title; and
(2) The Agency treats any subsequent
transfer of title as a sale subject to
requirements listed in subpart I of this
part.
§§ 765.453–765.500
[Reserved]
Subpart K—Exception Authority
§ 765.501
Agency exception authority.
On an individual case basis, the
Agency may consider granting an
exception to any regulatory requirement
or policy of this part if:
(a) The exception is not inconsistent
with the authorizing statute or other
applicable law; and
(b) The Agency’s financial interest
would be adversely affected by acting in
accordance with published regulations
or policies and granting the exception
would resolve or eliminate the adverse
effect upon the Agency’s financial
interest.
I 25. Add part 766 to read as follows:
Subpart J—Deceased Borrowers
PART 766—DIRECT LOAN
SERVICING—SPECIAL
§ 765.451 Continuation of FLP debt and
transfer of security.
Sec.
(a) Individuals who are liable.
Following the death of a borrower, the
Agency will continue the loan with any
individual who is liable for the
indebtedness provided that the
individual complies with the
obligations of the loan and security
instruments.
(b) Individuals who are not liable. The
Agency will continue the loan with a
person who is not liable for the
indebtedness in accordance with
subpart I of this part.
Subpart A—Overview
766.1 Introduction.
766.2 Abbreviations and definitions.
766.3–766.50 [Reserved]
§ 765.452
loans.
Borrowers with Non-program
(a) Loan continuation. (1) The Agency
will continue the loan with a jointly
liable borrower if the remaining
borrower continues to pay the deceased
borrower’s loan in accordance with the
loan and security instruments.
(2) The Agency may continue the loan
with an individual who inherits title to
the property and is not liable for the
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Subpart B—Disaster Set-Aside
766.51 General.
766.52 Eligibility.
766.53 Disaster Set-Aside amount
limitations.
766.54 Borrower application requirements.
766.55 Eligibility determination.
766.56 Security requirements.
766.57 Borrower acceptance of Disaster SetAside.
766.58 Installment to be set aside.
766.59 Payments toward set-aside
installments.
766.60 Canceling a Disaster Set-Aside.
766.61 Reversal of a Disaster Set-Aside.
766.62–766.100 [Reserved]
Subpart C—Loan Servicing Programs
766.101 Initial Agency notification to
borrower of loan servicing programs.
766.102 Borrower application requirements.
766.103 Borrower does not respond or does
not submit a complete application.
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766.104 Borrower eligibility requirements.
766.105 Agency consideration of servicing
requests.
766.106 Agency notification of decision
regarding a complete application.
766.107 Consolidation and rescheduling.
766.108 Reamortization.
766.109 Deferral.
766.110 Conservation Contract.
766.111 Writedown.
766.112 Additional security for restructured
loans.
766.113 Buyout of loan at current market
value.
766.114 State-certified mediation and
voluntary meeting of creditors.
766.115 Challenging the Agency appraisal.
766.116–766.150 [Reserved]
Appendix A to Subpart C of Part 766—FSA–
2512, Notice of Availability of Loan
Servicing to Borrowers Who Are Current,
Financially Distressed, or Less Than 90
Days Past Due
Appendix B to Subpart C of Part 766—FSA–
2510, Notice of Availability of Loan
Servicing to Borrowers Who Are 90 Days
Past Due
Appendix C to Subpart C of Part 766—FSA–
2514, Notice of Availability of Loan
Servicing to Borrowers in Non-Monetary
Default
Subpart D—Homestead Protection Program
766.151 Applying for Homestead
Protection.
766.152 Eligibility.
766.153 Homestead Protection
transferability.
766.154 Homestead Protection leases.
766.155 Conflict with State law.
766.156–766.200 [Reserved]
Subpart E—Servicing Shared Appreciation
Agreements and Net Recovery Buyout
Agreements
766.201 Shared Appreciation Agreement.
766.202 Determining the shared
appreciation due.
766.203 Payment of recapture.
766.204 Amortization of recapture.
766.205 Shared Appreciation Payment
Agreement rates and terms.
766.206 Net Recovery Buyout Recapture
Agreement.
766.207–766.250 [Reserved]
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Subpart F—Unauthorized Assistance
766.251 Repayment of unauthorized
assistance.
766.252 Unauthorized assistance resulting
from submission of false information.
766.253 Unauthorized assistance resulting
from submission of inaccurate
information by borrower or Agency error.
766.254–766.300 [Reserved]
Subpart G—Loan Servicing For Borrowers
in Bankruptcy
766.301 Notifying borrower in bankruptcy
of loan servicing.
766.302 Loan servicing application
requirements for borrowers in
bankruptcy.
766.303 Processing loan servicing requests
from borrowers in bankruptcy.
766.304–766.350 [Reserved]
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Subpart H—Loan Liquidation
766.351 Liquidation.
766.352 Voluntary sale of real property and
chattel.
766.353 Voluntary conveyance of real
property.
766.354 Voluntary conveyance of chattel.
766.355 Acceleration of loans.
766.336 Acceleration of loans to American
Indian borrowers.
766.357 Involuntary liquidation of real
property and chattel.
766.358–766.400 [Reserved]
Subpart I—Exception Authority
766.401 Agency exception authority.
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301 and 7 U.S.C. 1981d
and 1989.
Subpart A—Overview
§ 766.1
Introduction.
(a) This part describes the Agency’s
servicing policies for direct loan
borrowers who:
(1) Are financially distressed;
(2) Are delinquent in paying direct
loans or otherwise in default;
(3) Have received unauthorized
assistance;
(4) Have filed bankruptcy or are
involved in other civil or criminal cases
affecting the Agency; or
(5) Have loan security being
liquidated voluntarily or involuntarily.
(b) The Agency services direct FLP
loans under the policies contained in
this part.
(1) Youth loans:
(i) May not receive Disaster Set-Aside
under subpart B of this part;
(ii) Will only be considered for
rescheduling according to § 766.107 and
deferral according to § 766.109.
(2) The Agency does not service Nonprogram loans under this part except
where noted.
(c) The Agency requires the borrower
to make every reasonable attempt to
make payments and comply with loan
agreements before the Agency considers
special servicing.
§ 766.2
Abbreviations and definitions.
Abbreviations and definitions for
terms used in this part are provided in
§ 761.2 of this chapter.
§§ 766.3–766.50
[Reserved]
Subpart B—Disaster Set-Aside
§ 766.51
General.
(a) DSA is available to borrowers with
program loans who suffered losses as a
result of a natural disaster.
(b) DSA is not intended to circumvent
other servicing available under this part.
(c) Non-program loans may be
serviced under this subpart for
borrowers who also have program loans.
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§ 766.52
63317
Eligibility.
(a) Borrower eligibility. The borrower
must meet all of the following
requirements to be eligible for a DSA:
(1) The borrower must have operated
the farm in a county designated or
declared a disaster area or a contiguous
county at the time of the disaster.
Farmers who have rented out their land
base for cash are not operating the farm.
(2) The borrower must have acted in
good faith, and the borrower’s inability
to make the upcoming scheduled loan
payments must be for reasons not
within the borrower’s control.
(3) The borrower cannot have more
than one installment set aside on each
loan.
(4) As a direct result of the natural
disaster, the borrower does not have
sufficient income available to pay all
family living and farm operating
expenses, other creditors, and debts to
the Agency. This determination will be
based on:
(i) The borrower’s actual production,
income and expense records for the year
the natural disaster occurred;
(ii) Any other records required by the
Agency;
(iii) Compensation received for losses;
and
(iv) Increased expenses incurred
because of the natural disaster.
(5) For the next production cycle, the
borrower must develop a feasible plan
showing that the borrower will at least
be able to pay all operating expenses
and taxes due during the year, essential
family living expenses, and meet
scheduled payments on all debts,
including FLP debts. The borrower must
provide any documentation required to
support the farm operating plan.
(6) The borrower must not be in nonmonetary default.
(7) The borrower must not be
ineligible due to disqualification
resulting from Federal crop insurance
violation according to 7 CFR part 718.
(8) The borrower must not become
165 days past due before the appropriate
Agency DSA documents are executed.
(b) Loan eligibility. (1) Any FLP loan
to be considered for DSA must have
been outstanding at the time the natural
disaster occurred.
(2) All of the borrower’s program and
non-program loans must be current after
the Agency completes a DSA of the
scheduled installment.
(3) All FLP loans must be current or
less than 90 days past due at the time
the application for DSA is complete.
(4) The Agency has not accelerated or
applied any special servicing action
under this part to the loan since the
natural disaster occurred.
(5) For any loan that will receive a
DSA, the remaining term of the loan
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must equal or exceed 2 years from the
due date of the installment set-aside.
(6) The loan must not have a DSA in
place.
§ 766.53 Disaster Set-Aside amount
limitations.
(a) The DSA amount is limited to the
lesser of:
(1) The first or second scheduled
annual installment on the FLP loans due
after the disaster occurred; or
(2) The amount the borrower is unable
to pay the Agency due to the disaster.
Borrowers are required to pay any
portion of an installment they are able
to pay.
(b) The amount set aside will be the
unpaid balance remaining on the
installment at the time the DSA is
complete. This amount will include the
unpaid interest and any principal that
would be credited to the account as if
the installment were paid on the due
date, taking into consideration any
payments applied to principal and
interest since the due date.
(c) Recoverable cost items may not be
set aside.
§ 766.54 Borrower application
requirements.
§ 766.58
Installment to be set aside.
(a) The Agency will set-aside the first
installment due immediately after the
disaster occurred.
(b) If the borrower has already paid
the installment due immediately after
the disaster occurred, the Agency will
set-aside the next annual installment.
§ 766.59 Payments toward set-aside
installments.
(a) Interest accrual. (1) Interest will
accrue on any principal portion of the
set-aside installment at the same rate
charged on the balance of the loan.
(2) If the borrower’s set-aside
installment is for a loan with a limited
resource rate and the Agency modifies
that limited resource rate, the interest
rate on the set-aside portion will be
modified concurrently.
(b) Due date. The amount set-aside,
including interest accrued on the
principal portion of the set-aside, is due
on or before the final due date of the
loan.
(c) Applying payments. The Agency
will apply borrower payments toward
set-aside installments first to interest
and then to principal.
§ 766.60
Canceling a Disaster Set-Aside.
(a) Requests for DSA. (1) A borrower
must submit a request for DSA in
writing within eight months from the
date the natural disaster was designated.
(2) All borrowers must sign the DSA
request.
(b) Required financial information. (1)
The borrower must submit actual
production, income, and expense
records for the production cycle in
which the disaster occurred unless the
Agency already has this information.
(2) The Agency may request other
information needed to make an
eligibility determination.
The Agency will cancel a DSA if:
(a) The Agency takes any primary
loan servicing action on the loan;
(b) The borrower pays the current
market value buyout in accordance with
§ 766.113; or
(c) The borrower pays the set-aside
installment.
§ 766.55
Subpart C—Loan Servicing Programs
Eligibility determination.
Within 30 days of a complete DSA
application, the Agency will determine
if the borrower meets the eligibility
requirements for DSA.
§ 766.56
Security requirements.
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If, prior to executing the appropriate
DSA Agency documents, the borrower is
not current on all FLP loans, the
borrower must execute and provide to
the Agency a best lien obtainable on all
of their assets except those listed under
§ 766.112(b).
§ 766.57 Borrower acceptance of Disaster
Set-Aside.
The borrower must execute the
appropriate Agency documents within
45 days after the borrower receives
notification of Agency approval of DSA.
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§ 766.61
Reversal of a Disaster Set-Aside.
If the Agency determines that the
borrower received an unauthorized
DSA, the Agency will reverse the DSA
after all appeals are concluded.
§§ 766.62–766.100
[Reserved]
§ 766.101 Initial Agency notification to
borrower of loan servicing programs.
(a) Borrowers notified. The Agency
will provide servicing information
under this section to borrowers who:
(1) Have a current farm operating plan
that demonstrates the borrower is
financially distressed;
(2) Are 90 days or more past due on
loan payments, even if the borrower has
submitted an application for loan
servicing as a financially distressed
borrower;
(3) Are in non-monetary default on
any loan agreements;
(4) Have filed bankruptcy;
(5) Request this information;
(6) Request voluntary conveyance of
security;
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(7) Have only delinquent SA; or
(8) Are subject to any other collection
action, except when such action is a
result of failure to graduate. Borrowers
who fail to graduate when required and
are able to do so, will be accelerated
without providing notification of loan
servicing options.
(b) Form of notification. The Agency
will notify borrowers of the availability
of primary loan servicing programs,
conservation contract, current market
value buyout, debt settlement programs,
and homestead protection as follows:
(1) A borrower who is financially
distressed, or current and requesting
servicing will be provided FSA–2512
(Appendix A to this subpart);
(2) A borrower who is 90 days past
due will be sent FSA–2510 (Appendix
B to this subpart);
(3) A borrower who is in nonmonetary or both monetary and nonmonetary default will receive FSA–2514
(Appendix C to this subpart);
(4) A borrower who has only
delinquent SA will be notified of
available loan servicing;
(5) Notification to a borrower who
files bankruptcy will be provided in
accordance with subpart G of this part.
(c) Mailing. Notices to delinquent
borrowers or borrowers in non-monetary
default will be sent by certified mail to
the last known address of the borrower.
If the certified mail is not accepted, the
notice will be sent immediately by first
class mail to the last known address.
The appropriate response time will
begin three days following the date of
the first class mailing. For all other
borrowers requesting the notices, the
notices will be sent by regular mail or
hand-delivered.
(d) Borrower response timeframes. To
be considered for loan servicing, a
borrower who is:
(1) Current or financially distressed
may submit a complete application any
time prior to becoming 90 days past
due;
(2) Ninety (90) days past due must
submit a complete application within 60
days from receipt of FSA–2510;
(3) In non-monetary default with or
without monetary default must submit a
complete application within 60 days
from receipt of FSA–2514.
§ 766.102 Borrower application
requirements.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph
(e) of this section, an application for
primary loan servicing, conservation
contract, current market value buyout,
homestead protection, or some
combination of these options, must
include the following to be considered
complete:
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(1) Completed acknowledgment form
provided with the Agency notification
and signed by all borrowers;
(2) Completed Agency application
form;
(3) Financial records for the 3 most
recent years, including income tax
returns;
(4) The farming operation’s
production records for the 3 most recent
years or the years the borrower has been
farming, whichever is less;
(5) Documentation of compliance
with the Agency’s environmental
regulations contained in subpart G of 7
CFR part 1940;
(6) Verification of all non-farm
income;
(7) A current financial statement and
the operation’s farm operating plan,
including the projected cash flow
budget reflecting production, income,
expenses, and debt repayment plan. In
the case of an entity, the entity and all
entity members must provide current
financial statements; and
(8) Verification of all debts and
collateral.
(b) In addition to the requirements
contained in paragraph (a) of this
section, the borrower must submit an
aerial photo delineating any land to be
considered for a conservation contract.
(c) To be considered for debt
settlement, the borrower must provide
the appropriate Agency form, and any
additional information required under
subpart B of 7 CFR part 1956.
(d) If a borrower who submitted a
complete application while current or
financially distressed is renotified as a
result of becoming 90 days past due, the
borrower must only submit a request for
servicing in accordance with paragraph
(a)(1) of this section, provided all other
information is less than 90 days old and
is based on the current production
cycle. Any information 90 or more days
old or not based on the current
production cycle must be updated.
(e) The borrower need not submit any
information under this section that
already exists in the Agency’s file and
is still current as determined by the
Agency.
(f) When jointly liable borrowers have
been divorced and one has withdrawn
from the farming operation, the Agency
may release the withdrawing individual
from liability, provided:
(1) The remaining individual submits
a complete application in accordance
with this section;
(2) Both parties have agreed in a
divorce decree or property settlement
that only the remaining individual will
be responsible for all FLP loan
payments;
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(3) The withdrawing individual has
conveyed all ownership interest in the
security to the remaining individual;
and
(4) The withdrawing individual does
not have repayment ability and does not
own any non-essential assets.
§ 766.103 Borrower does not respond or
does not submit a complete application.
(a) If a borrower, who is financially
distressed or current, requested loan
servicing and received FSA–2512, but
fails to respond timely and subsequently
becomes 90 days past due, the Agency
will notify the borrower in accordance
with § 766.101(a)(2).
(b) If a borrower who is 90 days past
due and received FSA–2510, or is in
non-monetary, or both monetary and
non-monetary default and received
FSA–2514, and fails to timely respond
or does not submit a complete
application within the 60-day
timeframe, the Agency will notify the
borrower by certified mail of the
following:
(1) The Agency’s intent to accelerate
the loan; and
(2) The borrower’s right to request
reconsideration, mediation and appeal
in accordance with 7 CFR parts 11 and
780.
§ 766.104 Borrower eligibility
requirements.
(a) A borrower must meet the
following eligibility requirements to be
considered for primary loan servicing:
(1) The delinquency or financial
distress is the result of reduced
repayment ability due to one of the
following circumstances beyond the
borrower’s control:
(i) Illness, injury, or death of a
borrower or other individual who
operates the farm;
(ii) Natural disaster, adverse weather,
disease, or insect damage which caused
severe loss of agricultural production;
(iii) Widespread economic conditions
such as low commodity prices;
(iv) Damage or destruction of property
essential to the farming operation; or
(v) Loss of, or reduction in, the
borrower or spouse’s essential non-farm
income.
(2) The borrower does not have nonessential assets for which the net
recovery value is sufficient to resolve
the financial distress or pay the
delinquent portion of the loan.
(3) If the borrower is in non-monetary
default, the borrower will resolve the
non-monetary default prior to closing
the servicing action.
(4) The borrower has acted in good
faith.
(5) Financially distressed or current
borrowers requesting servicing must pay
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63319
a portion of the interest due on the
loans.
(6) The borrower must not be
ineligible due to disqualification
resulting from Federal crop insurance
violation according to 7 CFR part 718.
(b) Debtors with SA only must:
(1) Be delinquent due to
circumstances beyond their control;
(2) Have acted in good faith.
§ 766.105 Agency consideration of
servicing requests.
(a) Order in which Agency considers
servicing options. The Agency will
consider loan servicing options and
combinations of options to maximize
loan repayment and minimize losses to
the Agency. The Agency will consider
loan servicing options in the following
order for each eligible borrower who
requests servicing:
(1) Conservation Contract, if
requested;
(2) Consolidation and rescheduling or
reamortization;
(3) Deferral;
(4) Writedown; and
(5) Current market value buyout.
(b) Debt service margin. (1) The
Agency will attempt to achieve a 110
percent debt service margin for the
servicing options listed in paragraphs
(a)(2) through (4) of this section.
(2) If the borrower cannot develop a
feasible plan with the 110 percent debt
service margin, the Agency will reduce
the debt service margin by one percent
and reconsider all available servicing
authorities. This process will be
repeated until a feasible plan has been
developed or it has been determined
that a feasible plan is not possible with
a 100 percent margin.
(3) The borrower must be able to
develop a feasible plan with at least a
100 percent debt service margin to be
considered for the servicing options
listed in paragraphs (a)(1) through (4) of
this section.
(c) Appraisal of borrower’s assets. The
Agency will obtain an appraisal on:
(1) All Agency security, non-essential
assets, and real property unencumbered
by the Agency that does not meet the
criteria established in § 766.112(b),
when:
(i) A writedown is required to develop
a feasible plan;
(ii) The borrower will be offered
current market value buyout.
(2) The borrower’s non-essential
assets when their net recovery value
may be adequate to bring the delinquent
loans current.
§ 766.106 Agency notification of decision
regarding a complete application.
The Agency will send the borrower
notification of the Agency’s decision
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within 60 calendar days after receiving
a complete application for loan
servicing.
(a) Notification to financially
distressed or current borrowers. (1) If the
borrower can develop a feasible plan
and is eligible for primary loan
servicing, the Agency will offer to
service the account.
(i) The borrower will have 45 days to
accept the offer of servicing. After
accepting the Agency’s offer, the
borrower must execute loan agreements
and security instruments, as
appropriate.
(ii) If the borrower does not accept the
offer, the Agency will send the borrower
another notification of the availability of
loan servicing if the borrower becomes
90 days past due in accordance with
§ 766.101(a)(2).
(2) If the borrower cannot develop a
feasible plan, or is not eligible for loan
servicing, the Agency will send the
borrower the calculations used and the
reasons for the adverse decision.
(i) The borrower may request
reconsideration, mediation and appeal
in accordance with 7 CFR parts 11 and
780 of this title.
(ii) The Agency will send the
borrower another notification of the
availability of loan servicing if the
borrower becomes 90 days past due in
accordance with § 766.101(a)(2).
(b) Notification to borrowers 90 days
past due or in non-monetary default. (1)
If the borrower can develop a feasible
plan and is eligible for primary loan
servicing, the Agency will offer to
service the account.
(i) The borrower will have 45 days to
accept the offer of servicing. After
accepting the Agency’s offer, the
borrower must execute loan agreements
and security instruments, as
appropriate.
(ii) If the borrower does not timely
accept the offer, or fails to respond, the
Agency will notify the borrower of its
intent to accelerate the account.
(2) If the borrower cannot develop a
feasible plan, or is not eligible for loan
servicing, the Agency will send the
borrower notification within 15 days,
including the calculations used and
reasons for the adverse decision, of its
intent to accelerate the account in
accordance with subpart H of this part,
unless the account is resolved through
any of the following options:
(i) The borrower may request
reconsideration, mediation or voluntary
meeting of creditors, or appeal in
accordance with 7 CFR parts 11 and
780.
(ii) The borrower may request
negotiation of appraisal within 30 days
in accordance with § 766.115.
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(iii) If the net recovery value of nonessential assets is sufficient to pay the
account current, the borrower has 90
days to pay the account current.
(iv) The borrower, if eligible in
accordance with § 766.113, may buy out
the loans at the current market value
within 90 days.
(v) The borrower may request
homestead protection if the borrower’s
primary residence was pledged as
security by providing the information
required under § 766.151.
§ 766.107
Consolidation and rescheduling.
(a) Loans eligible for consolidation.
The Agency may consolidate OL loans
if:
(1) The borrower meets the loan
servicing eligibility requirements in
§ 766.104;
(2) The Agency determines that
consolidation will assist the borrower to
repay the loans;
(3) Consolidating the loans will bring
the borrower’s account current or
prevent the borrower from becoming
delinquent;
(4) The Agency has not referred the
borrower’s account to OGC or the U.S.
Attorney, and the Agency does not plan
to refer the account to either of these
two offices in the near future;
(5) The borrower is in compliance
with the Highly Erodible Land and
Wetland Conservation requirements of 7
CFR part 12, if applicable;
(6) The loans are not secured by real
estate;
(7) The Agency holds the same lien
position on each loan;
(8) The Agency has not serviced the
loans for unauthorized assistance under
subpart F of this part; and
(9) The loan is not currently deferred,
as described in § 766.109, or set-aside,
as described in subpart B of this part.
The Agency may consolidate loans upon
cancellation of the deferral or DSA.
(b) Loans eligible for rescheduling.
The Agency may reschedule loans made
for chattel purposes, including OL, SW,
RL, EE, or EM if:
(1) The borrower meets the loan
servicing eligibility requirements in
§ 766.104;
(2) Rescheduling the loans will bring
the borrower’s account current or
prevent the borrower from becoming
delinquent;
(3) The Agency determines that
rescheduling will assist the borrower to
repay the loans;
(4) The Agency has not referred the
borrower’s account to OGC or the U.S.
Attorney, and the Agency does not plan
to refer the account to either of these
two offices in the near future;
(5) The borrower is in compliance
with the Highly Erodible Land and
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Wetland Conservation requirements of 7
CFR part 12, if applicable; and
(6) The loan is not currently deferred,
as described in § 766.109, or set-aside,
as described in subpart B of this part.
The Agency may reschedule loans upon
cancellation of the deferral or DSA.
(c) Consolidated and rescheduled
loan terms. (1) The Agency determines
the repayment schedule for
consolidated and rescheduled loans
according to the borrower’s repayment
ability.
(2) The repayment period cannot
exceed 15 years from the date of the
consolidation and rescheduling, except
that the repayment schedule for RL
loans may not exceed 7 years from the
date of rescheduling.
(d) Consolidated and rescheduled
loan interest rate. The interest rate of
consolidated and rescheduled loans will
be as follows:
(1) The interest rate for loans made at
the regular interest rate will be the
lesser of:
(i) The interest rate for that type of
loan on the date a complete servicing
application was received;
(ii) The interest rate for that type of
loan on the date of restructure; or
(iii) The lowest original loan note rate
on any of the original notes being
consolidated and rescheduled.
(2) The interest rate for loans made at
the limited resource interest rate will be
the lesser of:
(i) The limited resource interest rate
for that type of loan on the date a
complete servicing application was
received;
(ii) The limited resource interest rate
for that type of loan on the date of
restructure; or
(iii) The lowest original loan note rate
on any of the original notes being
consolidated and rescheduled.
(3) At the time of consolidation and
rescheduling, the Agency may reduce
the interest rate to a limited resource
rate, if available, if:
(i) The borrower meets the
requirements for the limited resource
interest rate; and
(ii) A feasible plan cannot be
developed at the regular interest rate
and maximum terms permitted in this
section.
(4) Loans consolidated and
rescheduled at the limited resource
interest rate will be subject to annual
limited resource review in accordance
with § 765.51 of this chapter.
(e) Capitalizing accrued interest and
adding protective advances to the loan
principal. (1) The Agency capitalizes the
amount of outstanding accrued interest
on the loan at the time of consolidation
and rescheduling.
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(2) The Agency adds protective
advances for the payment of real estate
taxes to the principal balance at the time
of consolidation and rescheduling.
(3) The borrower must resolve all
other protective advances not
capitalized prior to closing the servicing
actions.
(f) Installments. If there are no
deferred installments, the first
installment payment under the
consolidation and rescheduling will be
at least equal to the interest amount
which will accrue on the new principal
between the date the promissory note is
executed and the next installment due
date.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
§ 766.108
Reamortization.
(a) Loans eligible for reamortization.
The Agency may reamortize loans made
for real estate purposes, including FO,
SW, RL, SA, EE, RHF, and EM if:
(1) The borrower meets the loan
servicing eligibility requirements in
§ 766.104;
(2) Reamortization will bring the
borrower’s account current or prevent
the borrower from becoming delinquent;
(3) The Agency determines that
reamortization will assist the borrower
to repay the loan;
(4) The Agency has not referred the
borrower’s account to OGC or the U.S.
Attorney, and the Agency does not plan
to refer the account to either of these
two offices in the near future;
(5) The borrower is in compliance
with the Highly Erodible Land and
Wetland Conservation requirements of 7
CFR part 12, if applicable; and
(6) The loan is not currently deferred,
as described in § 766.109, or set-aside,
as described in subpart B of this part.
The Agency may reamortize loans upon
cancellation of the deferral or DSA.
(b) Reamortized loan terms. (1) Except
as provided in paragraph (b)(2), the
Agency will reamortize loans within the
remaining term of the original loan or
assumption agreement unless a feasible
plan cannot be developed or debt
forgiveness will be required to develop
a feasible plan.
(2) If the Agency extends the loan
term, the repayment period from the
original loan date may not exceed the
maximum number of years for the type
of loan being reamortized in paragraphs
(2)(i) through (iv), or the useful life of
the security, whichever is less.
(i) FO, SW, RL, EE real estate-type,
and EM loans made for real estate
purposes may not exceed 40 years from
the date of the original note or
assumption agreement.
(ii) EE real estate-type loans secured
by chattels only may not exceed 20
years from the date of the original note
or assumption agreement.
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(iii) RHF loans may not exceed 33
years from the date of the original note
or assumption agreement.
(iv) SA loans may not exceed 25 years
from the date of the original Shared
Appreciation note.
(c) Reamortized loan interest rate. The
interest rate will be as follows:
(1) The interest rate for loans made at
the regular interest rate will be the
lesser of:
(i) The interest rate for that type of
loan on the date a complete servicing
application was received;
(ii) The interest rate for that type of
loan on the date of restructure; or
(iii) The original loan note rate of the
note being reamortized.
(2) The interest rate for loans made at
the limited resource interest rate will be
the lesser of:
(i) The limited resource interest rate
for that type of loan on the date a
complete servicing application was
received;
(ii) The limited resource interest rate
for that type of loan on the date of
restructure; or
(iii) The original loan note rate of the
note being reamortized.
(3) At the time of reamortization, the
Agency may reduce the interest rate to
a limited resource rate, if available, if:
(i) The borrower meets the
requirements for the limited resource
interest rate; and
(ii) A feasible plan cannot be
developed at the regular interest rate
and maximum terms permitted in this
section.
(4) Loans reamortized at the limited
resource interest rate will be subject to
annual limited resource review in
accordance with § 765.51 of this
chapter.
(5) SA payment agreements will be
reamortized at the current SA
amortization rate in effect on the date of
approval or the rate on the original
payment agreement, whichever is less.
(d) Capitalizing accrued interest and
adding protective advances to the loan
principal. (1) The Agency capitalizes the
amount of outstanding accrued interest
on the loan at the time of
reamortization.
(2) The Agency adds protective
advances for the payment of real estate
taxes to the principal balance at the time
of reamortization.
(3) The borrower must resolve all
other protective advances not
capitalized prior to closing the
reamortization.
(e) Installments. If there are no
deferred installments, the first
installment payment under the
reamortization will be at least equal to
the interest amount which will accrue
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63321
on the new principal between the date
the promissory note is executed and the
next installment due date.
§ 766.109
Deferral.
(a) Conditions for approving deferrals.
The Agency will only consider deferral
of loan payments if:
(1) The borrower meets the loan
servicing eligibility requirements in
§ 766.104;
(2) Rescheduling, consolidation, and
reamortization of all the borrower’s
loans, will not result in a feasible plan
with 110 percent debt service margin;
(3) The need for deferral is temporary;
and
(4) The borrower develops feasible
first-year deferral and post-deferral farm
operating plans subject to the following:
(i) The deferral will not create
excessive net cash reserves beyond that
necessary to develop a feasible plan.
(ii) The Agency will consider a partial
deferral if deferral of the total Agency
payment would result in the borrower
developing more cash availability than
necessary to meet debt repayment
obligations.
(b) Deferral period. (1) The deferral
term will not exceed 5 years and will be
determined based on the post-deferral
plan that results in the:
(i) Greatest improvement over the first
year cash available to service FLP debt;
(ii) The shortest possible deferral
period.
(2) The Agency will distribute interest
accrued on the deferred principal
portion of the loan equally to payments
over the remaining loan term after the
deferral period ends.
(c) Agency actions when borrower’s
repayment ability improves. (1) If during
the deferral period the borrower’s
repayment ability has increased to allow
the borrower to make payments on the
deferred loans, the borrower must make
supplemental payments, as determined
by the Agency. If the borrower agrees to
make supplemental payments, but does
not do so, the borrower will be
considered to be in non-monetary
default.
(2) If the Agency determines that the
borrower’s improved repayment ability
will allow graduation, the Agency will
require the borrower to graduate in
accordance with part 765, subpart C of
this chapter.
(d) Associated loan servicing. (1) The
Agency must cancel an existing deferral
if the Agency approves any new primary
loan servicing action.
(2) Loans deferred will also be
serviced in accordance with §§ 766.107,
766.108 and 766.111, as appropriate.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
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63322
Conservation Contract.
(a) General. (1) A debtor with only SA
or Non-program loans is not eligible for
a Conservation Contract. However, an
SA or Non-program loan may be
considered for a Conservation Contract
if the borrower also has program loans.
(2) A current or financially distressed
borrower may request a Conservation
Contract at any time prior to becoming
90 days past due.
(3) A delinquent borrower may
request a Conservation Contract during
the same 60-day time period in which
the borrower may apply for primary
loan servicing. The borrower eligibility
requirements in § 766.104 will apply.
(4) A Conservation Contract may be
established for conservation, recreation,
and wildlife purposes.
(5) The land under a Conservation
Contract cannot be used for the
production of agricultural commodities
during the term of the contract.
(6) Only loans secured by the real
estate that will be subject to the
easement, may be considered for a
Conservation Contract.
(b) Eligible lands. The following types
of lands are eligible to be considered for
a Conservation Contract by the
Conservation Contract review team:
(1) Wetlands or highly erodible lands;
and
Contract acres
Total FLP debt
×
(3) Multiply the borrower’s total
unpaid FLP loan balance (principal,
divided by
Total acres
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Percent of contract acres to total acres
paid by the Agency) by the percentage
calculated under paragraph (h)(1) of this
section to determine the amount of FLP
Percent calculated under (h)(1)
=
debt that is secured by the contract
acreage.
FLP debt secured by contract acres
interest, and recoverable costs already
paid by the Agency) by 33 percent.
Total FLP debt
(4) The lesser of the amounts
calculated in paragraphs (h)(2) and
(h)(3) of this section is the maximum
=
contract, which may be 10, 30, or 50
years.
(e) Conservation management plan.
The Agency, through the
recommendations of the Conservation
Contract review team, is responsible for
approving the conservation management
plan.
(f) Management authority. The
Agency has enforcement authority over
the Conservation Contract. The Agency,
however, may delegate contract
management to another entity if doing
so is in the Agency’s interest.
(g) Limitations. The Conservation
Contract must meet the following
conditions:
(1) Result in a feasible plan for current
borrowers; or
(2) Result in a feasible plan with or
without primary loan servicing for
financially distressed or delinquent
borrowers; and
(3) Improve the borrower’s ability to
repay the remaining balance of the loan.
(h) Maximum debt reduction for a
financially distressed or current
borrower. The amount of debt reduction
by a Conservation Contract is calculated
as follows:
(1) Divide the contract acres by the
total acres that secure the borrower’s
FLP loans to determine the contract
acres percentage.
× 33% =
amount of debt reduction for a 50-year
contract.
(5) The borrower will receive 60
percent of the amount calculated in
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paragraph (h)(4) of this section for a 30year contract.
E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
ER08NO07.001 ER08NO07.002
(2) Multiply the borrower’s total
unpaid FLP loan balance (principal,
interest, and recoverable costs already
(2) Uplands that meet any one of the
following criteria:
(i) Land containing aquatic life,
endangered species, or wildlife habitat
of local, State, tribal, or national
importance;
(ii) Land in 100-year floodplains;
(iii) Areas of high water quality or
scenic value;
(iv) Historic or cultural properties
listed in or eligible for the National
Register of Historic Places;
(v) Aquifer recharge areas of local,
regional, State, or tribal importance;
(vi) Buffer areas necessary for the
adequate protection of proposed
Conservation Contract areas;
(vii) Areas that contain soils generally
not suited for cultivation; or
(viii) Areas within or adjacent to
Federal, State, tribal, or locally
administered conservation areas.
(c) Unsuitable acreage. Acreage is
unsuitable for Conservation Contract if:
(1) It is not suited or eligible for the
program due to legal restrictions;
(2) It has on-site or off-site conditions
that prohibit the use of the land for
conservation, wildlife, or recreational
purposes; or
(3) The Conservation Contract review
team determines that the land is not
suitable for conservation, wildlife, or
recreational purposes.
(d) Conservation Contract terms. The
borrower selects the term of the
ER08NO07.000
§ 766.110
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Result from (h)(4)
× 60% =
63323
Maximum debt reduction for a 30-year contract
(6) The borrower will receive 20
percent of the amount calculated in
paragraph (h)(4) of this section for a 10year contract.
(i) Maximum debt reduction for a
delinquent borrower. The amount of
debt reduction by a Conservation
Contract is calculated as follows:
(1) Divide the contract acres by the
total acres that secure the borrower’s
FLP loans to determine the contract
acres percentage.
Percent of contract acres to total acres
FLP debt secured by contract acres
secure the borrower’s FLP loans by the
percent calculated in paragraph (i)(1) of
(3) Multiply the market value of the
total acres, less contributory value of
any structural improvements, that
this section to determine the current
value of the acres in the contract.
×
=
Market value of
Market value of total acres Percent calculated in (i)(1)
l
less contributory value of
acres in the contract
t
structural improvements
(4) Subtract the market value of the
contract acres calculated in paragraph
(i)(3) of this section from the FLP debt
secured by the contract acres as
Result from (i)(2)
(5) Select the greater of the amounts
calculated in either paragraphs (i)(3)
and (i)(4) of this section.
(6) The lesser of the amounts
calculated in paragraphs (i)(2) and (i)(5)
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Result from (i)(3)
=
Difference
of this section will be the maximum
amount of debt reduction for a 50-year
contract term.
(7) The borrower will receive 60
percent of the amount calculated in
Result from (i)(6)
(8) The borrower will receive 20
percent of the amount calculated in
−
× 60% =
calculated in paragraph (i)(2) of this
section.
paragraph (i)(6) of this section for a 30year contract term.
Maximum debt cancellation for a 30-year term
paragraph (i)(6) of this section for a 10year contract term.
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E:\FR\FM\08NOR2.SGM
08NOR2
ER08NO07.009
=
ER08NO07.008
Percent calculated in (i)(1)
ER08NO07.007
×
debt that is secured by the contract
acreage.
ER08NO07.006
=
paid by the Agency) by the percentage
calculated in paragraph (i)(1) of this
section to determine the amount of FLP
(2) Multiply the borrower’s total
unpaid FLP loan balance (principal,
interest, and recoverable costs already
Total FLP debt
Total acres
EH06NO07.004 ER08NO07.005
divided by
ER08NO07.003
Contract acres
63324
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(j) Conservation Contract Agreement.
The borrower must sign the
Conservation Contract Agreement
establishing the contract’s terms and
conditions.
(k) Transferring title to land under
Conservation Contract. If the borrower
or any subsequent landowner transfers
title to the property, the Conservation
Contract will remain in effect for the
duration of the contract term.
(l) Borrower appeals of technical
decisions. Borrower appeals of the
Natural Resources Conservation
Service’s (NRCS) technical decisions
made in connection with a Conservation
Contract, will be handled in accordance
with applicable NRCS regulations.
Other aspects of the denial of a
conservation contract may be appealed
in accordance with 7 CFR parts 11 and
780.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
§ 766.111
Writedown.
(a) Eligibility. The Agency will only
consider a writedown if the borrower:
(1) Meets the eligibility criteria in
§ 766.104;
(2) Is delinquent;
(3) Has not previously received debt
forgiveness on any FLP direct loan; and
(4) Complies with the Highly Erodible
Land and Wetland Conservation
requirements of 7 CFR part 12.
(b) Conditions. (1) Rescheduling,
consolidation, reamortization, deferral
or some combination of these options on
all of the borrower’s loans would not
result in a feasible plan with a 110
percent debt service margin. If a feasible
plan, including writedown is achieved
with a debt service margin of 101
percent or more, the Agency will
determine if a feasible plan can be
achieved without a writedown. If a
feasible plan is achieved with and
without a writedown and the borrower
meets all the eligibility requirements,
both options will be offered and the
borrower may choose one option.
(2) The present value of the
restructured loan must be greater than
or equal to the net recovery value of
Agency security and any non-essential
assets.
(3) The writedown amount, excluding
debt reduction received through
Conservation Contract, does not exceed
$300,000.
(4) A borrower who owns real estate
must execute an SAA in accordance
with § 766.201.
(c) Associated loan servicing. Loans
written down will also be serviced in
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× 20% =
Maximum debt cancellation for a 10-year term
accordance with §§ 766.107 and
766.108, as appropriate.
§ 766.112 Additional security for
restructured loans.
(a) If the borrower is delinquent prior
to restructuring, the borrower, and all
entity members in the case of an entity,
must execute and provide to the Agency
a lien on all of their assets, except as
provided in paragraph (b) of this
section, when the Agency is servicing a
loan.
(b) The Agency will take the best lien
obtainable on all assets the borrower
owns, except:
(1) When taking a lien on such
property will prevent the borrower from
obtaining credit from other sources;
(2) When the property could have
significant environmental problems or
costs as described in subpart G of 7 CFR
part 1940;
(3) When the Agency cannot obtain a
valid lien;
(4) When the property is subsistence
livestock, cash, special collateral
accounts the borrower uses for the
farming operation, retirement accounts,
personal vehicles necessary for family
living, household contents, or small
equipment such as hand tools and lawn
mowers; or
(5) When a contractor holds title to a
livestock or crop enterprise, or the
borrower manages the enterprise under
a share lease or share agreement.
§ 766.113
value.
Buyout of loan at current market
(a) Borrower eligibility. A delinquent
borrower may buy out the borrower’s
FLP loans at the current market value of
the loan security, including security not
in the borrower’s possession, and all
non-essential assets if:
(1) The borrower has not previously
received debt forgiveness on any other
FLP direct loan;
(2) The borrower has acted in good
faith;
(3) The borrower does not have nonessential assets for which the net
recovery value is sufficient to pay the
account current;
(4) The borrower is unable to develop
a feasible plan through primary loan
servicing programs or a Conservation
Contract, if requested;
(5) The present value of the
restructured loans is less than the net
recovery value of Agency security;
(6) The borrower pays the amount
required in a lump sum without
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guaranteed or direct credit from the
Agency; and
(7) The amount of debt forgiveness
does not exceed $300,000.
(b) Buyout time frame. After the
Agency offers current market value
buyout of the loan, the borrower has 90
days from the date of Agency
notification to pay that amount.
§ 766.114 State-certified mediation or
voluntary meeting of creditors.
(a) A borrower who is unable to
develop a feasible plan but is otherwise
eligible for primary loan servicing may
request:
(1) State-certified mediation; or
(2) Voluntary meeting of creditors
when a State does not have a certified
mediation program.
(b) Any negotiation of the Agency’s
appraisal must be completed before
State-certified mediation or voluntary
meeting of creditors.
§ 766.115 Challenging the Agency
appraisal.
(a) A borrower considered for primary
loan servicing who does not agree with
the Agency’s appraisal of the borrower’s
assets may:
(1) Obtain a technical appraisal
review of the Agency’s appraisal and
provide it at the reconsideration or
appeal hearing;
(2) Obtain an independent appraisal
completed in accordance with § 761.7 as
part of the appeals process. The
borrower must:
(i) Pay for this appraisal;
(ii) Choose which appraisal will be
used in Agency calculations, if the
difference between the two appraisals is
five percent or less.
(3) Negotiate the Agency’s appraisal
by obtaining a second appraisal.
(i) If the difference between the two
appraisals is five percent or less, the
borrower will choose the appraisal to be
used in Agency calculations.
(ii) If the difference between the two
appraisals is greater than five percent,
the borrower may request a third
appraisal. The Agency and the borrower
will share the cost of the third appraisal
equally. The average of the two
appraisals closest in value will serve as
the final value.
(iii) A borrower may request a
negotiated appraisal only once in
connection with an application for
primary loan servicing.
(iv) The borrower may not appeal a
negotiated appraisal.
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(b) If the appraised value of the
borrower’s assets changes as a result of
the appealed appraisal or the negotiated
appraisal, the Agency will reconsider its
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previous loan servicing decision using
the new appraisal value.
(c) If the appeal process results in a
determination that the borrower is
eligible for primary loan servicing, the
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Agency will use the information utilized
to make the appeal decision, unless
stated otherwise in the appeal decision
letter.
§§ 766.116–766.150
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Appendix A to Subpart C of Part 766—
Notice of Availability of Loan Servicing
to Borrowers Who Are Current,
Financially Distressed, or Less Than 90
Days Past Due
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Appendix B to Subpart C of Part 766—
Notice of Availability of Loan Servicing
to Borrowers Who Are 90 Days Past
Due
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Appendix C to Subpart C of Part 766—
Notice of Availability of Loan Servicing
to Borrowers Who Are in NonMonetary Default
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§ 766.152
Subpart D—Homestead Protection
Program
(a) Property. (1) The principal
residence and the adjoining land of up
to 10 acres, must have served as real
estate security for the FLP loan and may
include existing farm service buildings.
Homestead protection does not apply if
the FLP loans were secured only by
chattels.
(2) The applicant may propose a
homestead protection site. Any
proposed site is subject to Agency
approval.
(3) The proposed homestead
protection site must meet all State and
local requirements for division into a
separate legal lot.
(4) Where voluntary conveyance of
the property to the Agency is required
to process the homestead protection
request, the Agency will process any
request for voluntary conveyance
according to § 766.353.
(b) Applicant. To be eligible for
homestead protection, the applicant:
(1) Must be the owner, or former
owner from whom the Agency acquired
title of the property pledged as security
for an FLP loan. For homestead
protection purposes, an owner or former
owner includes:
(i) A member of an entity who is or
was personally liable for the FLP loan
secured by the homestead protection
property when the applicant or entity
held fee title to the property; or
(ii) A member of an entity who is or
was personally liable for the FLP loan
that possessed and occupied a separate
dwelling on the security property;
(2) Must have earned gross farm
income commensurate with:
(i) The size and location of the farm;
and
(ii) The local agricultural conditions
in at least 2 calendar years during the
6-year period immediately preceding
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§ 766.151 Applying for Homestead
Protection.
(a) Pre-acquisition—(1) Notification. If
the borrower requested primary loan
servicing but cannot develop a feasible
plan, the Agency will notify the
borrower of any additional information
needed to process the homestead
protection request. The borrower must
provide this information within 30 days
of Agency notification.
(2) Borrower does not respond. If the
borrower does not timely provide the
information requested, the Agency will
deny the homestead protection request
and provide appeal rights.
(3) Application requirements. A
complete application for homestead
protection will include:
(i) Updates to items required under
§ 766.102;
(ii) Information required under
§ 766.353; and
(iii) Identification of land and
buildings to be considered.
(b) Post-acquisition—(1) Notification.
After the Agency acquires title to the
real estate property, the Agency will
notify the borrower of the availability of
homestead protection. The borrower
must submit a complete application
within 30 days of Agency notification.
(2) Borrower does not respond. If the
borrower does not respond to the
Agency notice, the Agency will dispose
of the property in accordance with 7
CFR part 767.
(3) Application requirements. A
complete application for homestead
protection will include:
(i) Updates to items required under
§ 766.102; and
(ii) Identification of land and
buildings to be considered.
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the calendar year in which the applicant
applied for homestead protection;
(3) Must have received 60 percent of
gross income from farming in at least
two of the 6 years immediately
preceding the year in which the
applicant applied for homestead
protection;
(4) Must have lived in the home
during the 6-year period immediately
preceding the year in which the
applicant applied for homestead
protection. The applicant may have left
the home for not more than 12 months
if it was due to circumstances beyond
their control;
(5) Must demonstrate sufficient
income to make rental payments on the
homestead property for the term of the
lease, and maintain the property in good
condition. The lessee will be
responsible for any normal
maintenance; and
(6) Must not be ineligible due to
disqualification resulting from Federal
crop insurance violation according to 7
CFR part 718.
§ 766.153 Homestead Protection
transferability.
Homestead protection rights are not
transferable or assignable, unless the
eligible party dies or becomes legally
incompetent, in which case the
homestead protection rights may be
transferred to the spouse only, upon the
spouse’s agreement to comply with the
terms and conditions of the lease.
§ 766.154
Homestead Protection leases.
(a) General. (1) The Agency may
approve a lease-purchase agreement on
the appropriate Agency form subject to
obtaining title to the property.
(2) If a third party obtains title to the
property:
(i) The applicant and the property are
no longer eligible for homestead
protection;
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(ii) The Agency will not implement
any outstanding lease-purchase
agreement.
(3) The borrower may request
homestead protection for property
subject to third party redemption rights.
In such case, homestead protection will
not begin until the Agency obtains title
to the property.
(b) Lease terms and conditions. (1)
The amount of rent will be based on
equivalent rents charged for similar
residential properties in the area in
which the dwelling is located.
(2) All leases will include an option
to purchase the homestead protection
property as described in paragraph (c) of
this section.
(3) The lease term will not be less
than 3 years and will not exceed 5 years.
(4) The lessee must agree to make
lease payments on time and maintain
the property.
(5) The lessee must cooperate with
Agency efforts to sell the remaining
portion of the farm.
(c) Lease-purchase options. (1) The
lessee may exercise in writing the
purchase option and complete the
homestead protection purchase at any
time prior to the expiration of the lease
provided all lease payments are current.
(2) The purchase price is the market
value of the property when the option
is exercised as determined by a current
appraisal obtained by the Agency.
(3) The lessee may purchase
homestead protection property with
cash or other credit source.
(4) The lessee may receive Agency
Non-program financing provided:
(i) The lessee has not received
previous debt forgiveness;
(ii) The Agency has funds available to
finance the purchase of homestead
protection property; and
(iii) The lessee demonstrates an
ability to repay such an FLP loan.
(d) Lease terminations. The Agency
may terminate the lease if the lessee
does not cure any lease defaults within
30 days of Agency notification.
(e) Appraisal of homestead protection
property. The Agency will use an
appraisal obtained within six months
from the date of the application for
considering homestead protection. If a
current appraisal does not exist, the
applicant will select an independent
real estate appraiser from a list of
appraisers approved by the Agency.
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§ 766.155
Conflict with State law.
If there is a conflict between a
borrower’s homestead protection rights
and any provisions of State law relating
to redemption rights, the State law
prevails.
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§§ 766.156–766.200
[Reserved]
Subpart E—Servicing Shared
Appreciation Agreements and Net
Recovery Buyout Agreements
§ 766.201
Shared Appreciation Agreement.
(a) When a SAA is required. The
Agency requires a borrower to enter into
a SAA with the Agency covering all real
estate security when the borrower:
(1) Owns any real estate that serves or
will serve as loan security; and
(2) Accepts a writedown in
accordance with § 766.111.
(b) When SAA is due. The borrower
must repay the calculated amount of
shared appreciation after a term of 5
years from the date of the writedown, or
earlier if:
(1) The borrower sells or conveys all
or a portion of the Agency’s real estate
security, unless real estate is conveyed
upon the death of a borrower to a
spouse who will continue farming;
(2) The borrower repays or satisfies all
FLP loans;
(3) The borrower ceases farming; or
(4) The Agency accelerates the
borrower’s loans.
§ 766.202 Determining the shared
appreciation due.
(a) The value of the real estate
security at the time of maturity of the
SAA (market value) will be the
appraised value of the security at the
highest and best use, less the increase in
the value of the security resulting from
capital improvements added during the
term of the SAA (contributory value).
The market value of the real estate
security property will be determined
based on a current appraisal completed
within the previous 12 months in
accordance with § 761.7 of this chapter,
and subject to the following:
(1) Prior to completion of the
appraisal, the borrower will identify any
capital improvements that have been
added to the real estate security since
the execution of the SAA.
(2) The appraisal must specifically
identify the contributory value of capital
improvements made to the real estate
security during the term of the SAA to
make deductions for that value.
(3) For calculation of shared
appreciation recapture, the contributory
value of capital improvements added
during the term of the SAA will be
deducted from the market value of the
property. Such capital improvements
must also meet at least one of the
following criteria:
(i) It is the borrower’s primary
residence. If the new residence is
affixed to the real estate security as a
replacement for a residence which
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existed on the security property when
the SAA was originally executed, or, the
living area square footage of the original
residence was expanded, only the value
added to the real property by the new
or expanded portion of the original
residence (if it added value) will be
deducted from the market value.
(ii) It is an improvement to the real
estate with a useful life of over one year
and is affixed to the property, the
following conditions must be met:
(A) The item must have been
capitalized and not taken as an annual
operating expense on the borrower’s
Federal income tax returns. The
borrower must provide copies of
appropriate tax returns to verify that
capital improvements claimed for
shared appreciation recapture reduction
are capitalized.
(B) If the new item is affixed to the
real estate as a replacement for an item
that existed on the real estate at the time
the SAA was originally executed, only
the value added by the new item will be
deducted from the market value.
(b) In the event of a partial sale, an
appraisal of the property being sold may
be required to determine the market
value at the time the SAA was signed if
such value cannot be obtained through
another method.
§ 766.203
Payment of recapture.
(a) The borrower must pay on the due
date or 30 days from Agency
notification, whichever is later:
(1) Seventy-five percent of the
appreciation in the real estate security if
the agreement is triggered within 4 years
or less from the date of the writedown;
or
(2) Fifty percent of such appreciation
if the agreement is triggered more than
4 years from the date of the writedown
or when the agreement matures.
(b) If the borrower sells a portion of
the security, the borrower must pay
shared appreciation only on the portion
sold. Shared appreciation on the
remaining portion will be due in
accordance with paragraph (a) of this
section.
(c) The amount of recapture cannot
exceed the amount of the debt written
off through debt writedown.
§ 766.204
Amortization of recapture.
(a) The Agency will amortize the
recapture into a Shared Appreciation
Payment Agreement provided the
borrower:
(1) Has not ceased farming and the
borrower’s account has not been
accelerated;
(2) Provides a complete application in
accordance with § 764.51(b), by the
recapture due date or within 60 days of
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Agency notification of the amount of
recapture due, whichever is later;
(3) Is unable to pay the recapture and
cannot obtain funds from any other
source;
(4) Develops a feasible plan that
includes repayment of the shared
appreciation amount;
(5) Provides a lien on all assets,
except those listed in § 766.112(b); and
(6) Signs loan agreements and security
instruments as required.
(b) If the borrower later becomes
delinquent or financially distressed,
reamortization of the Shared
Appreciation Payment Agreement can
be considered under subpart C of this
part.
§ 766.205 Shared Appreciation Payment
Agreement rates and terms.
(a) The interest rate for Shared
Appreciation Payment Agreements is
the Agency’s SA amortization rate.
(b) The term of the Shared
Appreciation Payment Agreement is
based on the borrower’s repayment
ability and the useful life of the security.
The term will not exceed 25 years.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
§ 766.206 Net Recovery Buyout Recapture
Agreement.
(a) Servicing existing Net Recovery
Buyout Recapture Agreements. Prior to
July 3, 1996, the Agency was authorized
to offer borrowers buy out their loans at
the net recovery value. A Net Recovery
Buyout Agreement was required for
borrowers who bought out their loans at
the net recovery value. The Agency
services existing Net Recovery Buyout
Recapture Agreements as described in
this section.
(b) Requirements and terms. (1) The
term of a Net Recovery Buyout
Recapture Agreement is 10 years. Net
Recovery Buyout Recapture Agreements
are secured by a lien on the former
borrower’s real estate.
(2) If the former borrower sells or
conveys real estate within the 10-year
term, the former borrower must repay
the Agency the lesser of:
(i) The market value of the real estate
parcel at the time of sale or conveyance,
as determined by an Agency appraisal,
minus the portion of the recovery value
of the real estate paid to the Agency in
the buyout;
(ii) The market value of the real estate
parcel at the time of the sale or
conveyance, as determined by an
Agency appraisal, minus:
(A) The unpaid balance of prior liens
at the time of the sale or conveyance;
and
(B) The net recovery value of the real
estate the borrower paid to the Agency
in the buyout if this amount has not
been accounted for as a prior lien;
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(iii) The total amount of the FLP debt
the Agency wrote off for loans secured
by real estate.
(3) If the former borrower does not
pay the amount due, the Agency will
liquidate the Net Recovery Buyout
account in accordance with subpart H of
this part.
(4) If the former borrower does not
sell or convey the real estate within the
10-year term, no recapture is due.
§§ 766.207–766.250
§ 766.251 Repayment of unauthorized
assistance.
(a) Except where otherwise specified,
the borrower is responsible for repaying
any unauthorized assistance in full
within 90 days of Agency notice. The
Agency may reverse any unauthorized
loan servicing actions, when possible.
(b) The borrower has the opportunity
to meet with the Agency to discuss or
refute the Agency’s findings.
§ 766.252 Unauthorized assistance
resulting from submission of false
information.
A borrower is ineligible for continued
Agency assistance if the borrower, or a
third party on the borrower’s behalf,
submits information to the Agency that
the borrower knows to be false.
§ 766.253 Unauthorized assistance
resulting from submission of inaccurate
information by borrower or Agency error.
(a) Borrower options. (1) The borrower
may repay the amount of the
unauthorized assistance in a lump sum
within 90 days of Agency notice.
(2) If the borrower is unable to repay
the entire amount in a lump sum, the
Agency will accept partial repayment of
the unauthorized assistance within 90
days of Agency notice to the extent of
the borrower’s ability to repay.
(3) If the borrower is unable to repay
all or part of the unauthorized amount,
the loan will be converted to a Nonprogram loan under the following
conditions:
(i) The borrower did not provide false
information;
(ii) It is in the interest of the Agency;
(iii) The debt will be subject to the
interest rate for Non-program loans;
(iv) The debt will be serviced as a
Non-program loan;
(v) The term of the Non-program loan
will be as short as feasible, but in no
case will exceed:
(A) The remaining term of the FLP
loan;
(B) Twenty-five (25) years for real
estate loans; or
(C) The life of the security for chattel
loans.
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(b) Borrower refusal to pay. If the
borrower is able to pay the unauthorized
assistance amount but refuses to do so,
the Agency will notify the borrower of
the availability of loan servicing in
accordance with subpart C of this part.
§§ 766.254–766.300
[Reserved]
Subpart G—Loan Servicing For
Borrowers in Bankruptcy
§ 766.301 Notifying borrower in
bankruptcy of loan servicing.
[Reserved]
Subpart F—Unauthorized Assistance
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If a borrower files for bankruptcy, the
Agency will provide written notification
to the borrower’s attorney with a copy
to the borrower as follows:
(a) Borrower not previously notified.
The Agency will provide notice of all
loan servicing options available under
subpart C of this part, if the borrower
has not been previously notified of these
options.
(b) Borrower with prior notification. If
the borrower received notice of all loan
servicing options available under
subpart C of this part prior to the time
of bankruptcy filing but all loan
servicing was not completed, the
Agency will provide notice of any
remaining loan servicing options
available.
§ 766.302 Loan servicing application
requirements for borrowers in bankruptcy.
(a) Borrower not previously notified.
To be considered for loan servicing, the
borrower or borrower’s attorney must
sign and return the appropriate response
form and any forms or information
requested by the Agency within 60 days
of the date of receipt of Agency notice
on loan servicing options.
(b) Borrower previously notified. To
be considered for continued loan
servicing, the borrower or borrower’s
attorney must sign and return the
appropriate response form and any
forms or information requested by the
Agency within the greater of:
(1) Sixty days after the borrower’s
attorney received the notification of any
remaining loan servicing options; or
(2) The remaining time from the
Agency’s previous notification of all
servicing options that the Agency
suspended when the borrower filed
bankruptcy.
(c) Court approval. The borrower is
responsible for obtaining court approval
prior to exercising any available
servicing rights.
§ 766.303 Processing loan servicing
requests from borrowers in bankruptcy.
(a) Considering borrower requests for
servicing. Any request for servicing is
the borrower’s acknowledgment that the
Agency will not interfere with any
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rights or protections under the
Bankruptcy Code and its automatic stay
provisions.
(b) Borrowers with confirmed
bankruptcy plans. If a plan is confirmed
before servicing and any appeal is
completed under 7 CFR part 11, the
Agency will complete the servicing or
appeals process and may consent to a
post-confirmation modification of the
plan if it is consistent with the
Bankruptcy Code and subpart C of this
part, as appropriate.
(c) Chapter 7 borrowers. A borrower
filing for bankruptcy under chapter 7 of
the Bankruptcy Code may not receive
primary loan servicing unless the
borrower reaffirms the entire FLP debt.
A borrower who filed chapter 7 does not
have to reaffirm the debt in order to be
considered for homestead protection.
§§ 766.304–766.350
[Reserved]
Subpart H—Loan Liquidation
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
§ 766.351
Liquidation.
(a) General. (1) When a borrower
cannot or will not meet a loan
obligation, the Agency will consider
liquidating the borrower’s account in
accordance with this subpart.
(2) The Agency will charge protective
advances against the borrower’s account
as necessary to protect the Agency’s
interests during liquidation in
accordance with § 765.203 of this
chapter.
(3) When no surviving family member
or third party assumes or repays a
deceased borrower’s loan in accordance
with part 765, subpart J, of this chapter,
or when the estate does not otherwise
fully repay or sell loan security to repay
a deceased borrower’s FLP loans, the
Agency will liquidate the security as
quickly as possible in accordance with
State and local requirements.
(b) Liquidation for Program borrowers.
(1) If the borrower does not apply, does
not accept, or is not eligible for primary
loan servicing, conservation contract,
market value buyout or homestead
protection, and all administrative
appeals are concluded, the Agency will
accelerate the borrower’s account in
accordance with §§ 766.355 and
766.356, as appropriate.
(2) Borrowers may voluntarily
liquidate their security in accordance
with §§ 766.352, 766.353 and 766.354.
In such case, the Agency will:
(i) Not delay involuntary liquidation
action.
(ii) Notify the borrower in accordance
with subpart C of this part, prior to
acting on the request for voluntary
liquidation, if the conditions of
paragraph (b)(1) of this section have not
been met.
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(c) Liquidation for Non-program
borrowers. If a borrower has both
program and Non-program loans, the
borrower’s account will be handled in
accordance with paragraph (b) of this
section. If a borrower with only Nonprogram loans is in default, the
borrower may liquidate voluntarily,
subject to the following:
(1) The Agency may delay involuntary
liquidation actions when in the
Agency’s financial interest for a period
not to exceed 60 days.
(2) The borrower must obtain the
Agency’s consent prior to the sale of the
property.
(3) If the borrower will not pay the
Agency in full, the minimum sales price
must be the market value of the property
as determined by the Agency.
(4) The Agency will accept a
conveyance offer only when it is in the
Agency’s financial interest.
(5) If a Non-program borrower does
not cure the default, or cannot or will
not voluntarily liquidate, the Agency
will accelerate the loan.
(5) If an unpaid loan balance remains
after the sale, the Agency will continue
to service the loan in accordance with
subpart B of 7 CFR part 1956.
(b) Voluntary sale of chattel. If the
borrower complies with paragraph (a) of
this section, the borrower may sell
chattel security by:
(1) Public sale if the borrower obtains
the agreement of lienholders as
necessary to complete the public sale; or
(2) Private sale if the borrower:
(i) Sells all of the security for not less
than the market value;
(ii) Obtains the agreement of
lienholders as necessary to complete the
sale;
(iii) Has a buyer who is ready and able
to purchase the property; and
(iv) Obtains the Agency’s agreement
for the sale.
§ 766.353
property.
Voluntary conveyance of real
(a) Requirements for conveying real
property. The borrower must supply the
Agency with the following:
(1) An Agency application form;
§ 766.352 Voluntary sale of real property
(2) A current financial statement. If
and chattel.
the borrower is an entity, all entity
(a) General. A borrower may
members must provide current financial
voluntarily sell real property or chattel
statements;
security to repay FLP debt in lieu of
(3) Information on present and future
involuntary liquidation if all applicable income and potential earning ability;
requirements of this section are met.
(4) A warranty deed or other deed
Partial dispositions are handled in
acceptable to the Agency;
accordance with part 765, subparts G
(5) A resolution approved by the
and H, of this chapter.
governing body that authorizes the
(1) The borrower must sell all real
conveyance in the case of an entity;
property and chattel that secure FLP
(6) Assignment of all leases to the
debt until the debt is paid in full or until Agency. The borrower must put all oral
all security has been liquidated.
leases in writing;
(2) The Agency must approve the sale
(7) Title insurance or title record for
and approve the use of proceeds.
the security, if available;
(3) The sale proceeds are applied in
(8) Complete debt settlement
order of lien priority, except that
proceeds may be used to pay customary application in accordance with subpart
B of 7 CFR part 1956 before or in
costs appropriate to the transaction
conjunction with the voluntary
provided:
conveyance offer if the value of the
(i) The costs are reasonable in
property to be conveyed is less than the
amount;
FLP debt; and
(ii) The borrower is unable to pay the
(9) Any other documentation required
costs from personal funds or have the
by the Agency to evaluate the request.
purchaser pay;
(b) Conditions for conveying real
(iii) The costs must be paid to
property. The Agency will accept
complete the sale;
voluntary conveyance of real property
(iv) Costs are not for postage and
by a borrower if:
insurance of the note while in transit
(1) Conveyance is in the Agency’s
when required for the Agency to present
financial interest;
the promissory note to the recorder to
(2) The borrower conveys all real
obtain a release of a portion of the real
property securing the FLP loan; and
property from the mortgage.
(3) The borrower has received prior
(4) The Agency will approve the sale
notification of the availability of loan
of property when the proceeds do not
servicing in accordance with subpart C
cover the borrower’s full debt only if:
(i) The sales price must be equal to or of this part.
(c) Prior and junior liens. (1) The
greater than the market value of the
Agency will pay prior liens to the extent
property; and
(ii) The sale is in the Agency’s
consistent with the Agency’s financial
financial interest.
interest.
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(2) Before conveyance, the borrower
must pay or obtain releases of all junior
liens, real estate taxes, judgments, and
other assessments. If the borrower is
unable to pay or obtain a release of the
liens, the Agency may attempt to
negotiate a settlement with the
lienholder if it is in the Agency’s
financial interest.
(d) Charging and crediting the
borrower’s account. (1) The Agency will
charge the borrower’s account for all
recoverable costs incurred in connection
with a conveyance.
(2) The Agency will credit the
borrower’s account for the amount of
the market value of the property less
any prior liens, or the debt, whichever
is less. In the case of an American
Indian borrower whose loans are
secured by real estate located within the
boundaries of a Federally recognized
Indian reservation, however, the Agency
will credit the borrower’s account with
the greater of the market value of the
security or the borrower’s FLP debt.
(e) Right of possession. After
voluntary conveyance, the borrower or
former owner retains no statutory,
implied, or inherent right of possession
to the property beyond those rights
under an approved lease-purchase
agreement executed according to
§ 766.154 or required by State law.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
§ 766.354
Voluntary conveyance of chattel.
(a) Requirements for conveying
chattel. The borrower must supply the
Agency with the following:
(1) An Agency application form;
(2) A current financial statement. If
the borrower is an entity, all entity
members must provide current financial
statements;
(3) Information on present and future
income and potential earning ability;
(4) A bill of sale including each item
and titles to all vehicles and equipment,
as applicable;
(5) A resolution approved by the
governing body that authorizes the
conveyance in the case of an entity
borrower;
(6) Complete debt settlement
application in accordance with subpart
B of 7 CFR part 1956 before or in
conjunction with the voluntary
conveyance offer if the value of the
property to be conveyed is less than the
debt.
(b) Conditions for conveying chattel.
The Agency will accept conveyance of
chattel only if:
(1) The borrower has made every
possible effort to sell the property
voluntarily;
(2) The borrower can convey the
chattel free of other liens;
(3) The conveyance is in the Agency’s
financial interest;
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Jkt 214001
(4) The borrower conveys all chattel
securing the FLP loan; and
(5) The borrower has received prior
notification of the availability of loan
servicing in accordance with subpart C
of this part.
(c) Charging and crediting the
borrower’s account. (1) The Agency will
charge the borrower’s account for all
recoverable costs incurred in connection
with the conveyance.
(2) The Agency will credit the
borrower’s account in the amount of the
market value of the chattel.
§ 766.355
Acceleration of loans.
(a) General. (1) The Agency
accelerates loans in accordance with
this section, unless:
(i) State law imposes separate
restrictions on accelerations;
(ii) The borrower is American Indian,
whose real estate is located on an Indian
reservation.
(2) The Agency accelerates all of the
borrower’s loans at the same time,
regardless of whether each individual
loan is delinquent or not.
(3) All borrowers must receive prior
notification in accordance with subpart
C of this part, except for borrowers who
fail to graduate in accordance with
§ 766.101(a)(8).
(b) Time limitations. The borrower
has 30 days from the date of the Agency
acceleration notice to pay the Agency in
full.
(c) Borrower options. The borrower
may:
(1) Pay cash;
(2) Transfer the security to a third
party in accordance with part 765,
subpart I of this chapter;
(3) Sell the security property in
accordance with § 766.352; or
(4) Voluntarily convey the security to
the Agency in accordance with
§§ 766.353 and 766.354, as appropriate.
(d) Partial payments. The Agency may
accept a payment that does not cover
the unpaid balance of the accelerated
loan if the borrower is in the process of
selling security, unless acceptance of
the payment would reverse the
acceleration.
(e) Failure to satisfy the debt. The
Agency will liquidate the borrower’s
account in accordance with § 766.357 if
the borrower does not pay the account
in full within the time period specified
in the acceleration notice.
§ 766.356 Acceleration of loans to
American Indian borrowers.
(a) General. (1) The Agency
accelerates loans to American Indian
borrowers whose real estate is located
on an Indian reservation in accordance
with this section, unless State law
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63357
imposes separate restrictions on
accelerations.
(2) The Agency accelerates all of the
borrower’s loans at the same time,
regardless of whether each individual
loan is delinquent or not.
(3) All borrowers must receive prior
notification in accordance with subpart
C of this part, except for borrowers who
fail to graduate in accordance with
§ 766.101(a)(8).
(4) At the time of acceleration, the
Agency will notify the borrower and the
Tribe that has jurisdiction over the
Indian reservation of:
(i) The possible outcomes of a
foreclosure sale and the potential
impacts of those outcomes on rights
established under paragraphs (a)(4)(ii)
and (iii) of this section;
(ii) The priority for purchase of the
property acquired by the Agency
through voluntary conveyance or
foreclosure;
(iii) Transfer of acquired property to
the Secretary of the Interior if the
priority of purchase of the property
established under paragraph (a)(4)(ii) of
this section is not exercised.
(b) Borrower options. The Agency will
notify an American Indian borrower of
the right to:
(1) Request the Tribe, having
jurisdiction over the Indian reservation
in which the real property is located, be
assigned the loan;
(i) The Tribe will have 30 calendar
days after the Agency notification of
such request to accept the assignment of
the loan.
(ii) The Tribe must pay the Agency
the lesser of the outstanding Agency
indebtedness secured by the real estate
or the market value of the property.
(iii) The Tribe may pay the amount in
a lump sum or according to the rates,
terms and requirements established in
part 770 of this chapter, subject to the
following:
(A) The Tribe must execute the
promissory note and loan documents
within 90 calendar days of receipt from
the Agency;
(B) Such loan may not be considered
for debt writedown under 7 CFR part
770.
(iv) The Tribe’s failure to respond to
the request for assignment of the loan or
to finalize the assignment transaction
within the time provided, shall be
treated as the Tribe’s denial of the
request.
(2) Request the loan be assigned to the
Secretary of the Interior. The Secretary
of the Interior’s failure to respond to the
request for assignment of the loan or to
finalize the assignment transaction,
shall be treated as denial of the request;
(3) Voluntarily convey the real estate
property to the Agency;
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(i) The Agency will conduct a
environmental review before accepting
voluntary conveyance.
(ii) The Agency will credit the
account with the greater of the market
value of the real estate or the amount of
the debt.
(4) Sell the real estate;
(i) The buyer must have the financial
ability to buy the property.
(ii) The sale of the property must be
completed within 90 calendar days of
the Agency’s notification.
(iii) The loan can be transferred and
assumed by an eligible buyer.
(5) Pay the FLP debt in full.
(6) Consult with the Tribe that has
jurisdiction over the Indian reservation
to determine if State or Tribal law
provides rights and protections that are
more beneficial than those provided
under this section.
(c) Tribe notification. At the time of
acceleration, the Agency will notify the
Tribe that has jurisdiction over the
Indian reservation in which the
property is located, of the:
(1) Sale of the American Indian
borrower’s property;
(2) Market value of the property;
(3) Amount the Tribe would be
required to pay the Agency for
assignment of the loan.
(d) Partial payments. The Agency may
accept a payment that does not cover
the unpaid balance of the accelerated
loan if the borrower is in the process of
selling security, unless acceptance of
the payment would reverse the
acceleration.
(e) Failure to satisfy the debt. The
Agency will liquidate the borrower’s
account in accordance with § 766.357 if:
(1) The borrower does not pay the
account in full within the time period
specified in the acceleration notice;
(2) The borrower does not voluntarily
convey the property to the Agency;
(3) Neither the Tribe nor the Secretary
of the Interior accepts assignment of the
borrower’s loan.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
Jkt 214001
§§ 766.358—766.400
(a) Purpose. This part describes the
Agency’s policies for:
(1) Managing inventory property;
(2) Selling inventory property;
(3) Leasing inventory property;
(4) Managing real and chattel property
the Agency takes into custody after
abandonment by the borrower;
(5) Selling or leasing inventory
property with important resources, or
located in special hazard areas; and
(6) Conveying interest in real property
for conservation purposes.
(b) Basic policy. The Agency
maintains, manages and sells inventory
property as necessary to protect the
Agency’s financial interest.
§ 766.401
(a) General. The Agency will liquidate
the borrower’s security if:
(1) The borrower does not satisfy the
account in accordance with §§ 766.355
and 766.356, as appropriate;
(2) The involuntary liquidation is in
the Agency’s financial interest.
(b) Foreclosure on loans secured by
real property. (1) The Agency will
charge the borrower’s account for all
recoverable costs incurred in connection
with the foreclosure and sale of the
property.
(2) If the Agency acquires the
foreclosed property, the Agency will
18:34 Nov 07, 2007
PART 767—INVENTORY PROPERTY
MANAGEMENT
[Reserved]
Subpart I—Exception Authority
§ 766.357 Involuntary liquidation of real
property and chattel.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
credit the borrower’s account in the
amount of the Agency’s bid except
when incremental bidding was used, in
which case the amount of credit will be
the maximum bid that was authorized.
If the Agency does not acquire the
foreclosed property, the Agency will
credit the borrower’s account in
accordance with State law and guidance
from the Regional OGC.
(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (b)(2),
for an American Indian borrower whose
real property secures an FLP loan and
is located within the confines of a
Federally-recognized Indian reservation,
the Agency will credit the borrower’s
account in the amount that is the greater
of:
(i) The market value of the security;
or
(ii) The amount of the FLP debt
against the property.
(4) After the date of foreclosure, the
borrower or former owner retains no
statutory, implied, or inherent right of
possession to the property beyond those
rights granted by State law.
(5) If an unpaid balance on the FLP
loan remains after the foreclosure sale of
the property, the Agency may debt settle
the account in accordance with subpart
B of 7 CFR part 1956.
(c) Foreclosure of loans secured by
chattel. (1) The Agency will charge the
borrower’s account for all recoverable
costs incurred by the Agency as a result
of the repossession and sale of the
property.
(2) The Agency will apply the
proceeds from the repossession sale to
the borrower’s account less prior liens
and all authorized liquidation costs.
(3) If an unpaid balance on the FLP
loan remains after the sale of the
repossessed property, the Agency may
debt settle the account in accordance
with subpart B of 7 CFR part 1956.
Agency exception authority.
On an individual case basis, the
Agency may consider granting an
exception to any regulatory requirement
or policy of this part if:
(a) The exception is not inconsistent
with the authorizing statute or other
applicable law; and
(b) The Agency’s financial interest
would be adversely affected by acting in
accordance with published regulations
or policies and granting the exception
would resolve or eliminate the adverse
effect upon its financial interest.
I
26. Add part 767 to read as follows:
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Subpart A—Overview
Sec.
767.1 Introduction.
767.2 Abbreviations and definitions.
767.3–767.50 [Reserved]
Subpart B—Property Abandonment and
Personal Property Removal
767.51 Property abandonment.
767.52 Disposition of personal property
from real estate inventory property.
767.53–767.100 [Reserved]
Subpart C—Lease of Real Estate Inventory
Property
767.101 Leasing real estate inventory
property.
767.102 Leasing non-real estate inventory
property.
767.103 Managing leased real estate
inventory property.
767.104–767.150 [Reserved]
Subpart D—Disposal of Inventory Property
767.151 General requirements.
767.152 Exceptions.
767.153 Sale of real estate inventory
property.
767.154 Conveying easements, rights-ofway, and other interests in inventory
property.
767.155 Selling chattel property.
767.156–767.200 [Reserved]
Subpart E—Real Estate Property with
Important Resources or Located in Special
Hazard Areas
767.201 Real estate inventory property with
important resources.
767.202 Real estate inventory property
located in special hazard areas.
767.203–767.250 [Reserved]
Subpart F—Exception Authority
767.251
Agency exception authority.
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301 and 7 U.S.C. 1989.
Subpart A—Overview
§ 767.1
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§ 767.2
Abbreviations and definitions.
Abbreviations and definitions for
terms used in this part are provided in
§ 761.2 of this chapter.
§§ 767.3–767.50
[Reserved]
Subpart B—Property Abandonment
and Personal Property Removal
§ 767.51
Property abandonment.
The Agency will take actions
necessary to secure, maintain, preserve,
manage, and operate the abandoned
security property, including marketing
perishable security property on behalf of
the borrower when such action is in the
Agency’s financial interest. If the
security is in jeopardy, the Agency will
take the above actions prior to
completing servicing actions contained
in 7 CFR part 766.
§ 767.52 Disposition of personal property
from real estate inventory property.
(a) Preparing to dispose of personal
property. If, at the time of acquisition,
personal property has been left on the
real estate inventory property, the
Agency will notify the former real estate
owner and any known lienholders that
the Agency will dispose of the personal
property. Property of value may be sold
at a public sale.
(b) Reclaiming personal property. The
owner or lienholder may reclaim
personal property at any time prior to
the property’s sale or disposal by paying
all expenses incurred by the Agency in
connection with the personal property.
(c) Use of proceeds from sale of
personal property. Proceeds from the
public sale of personal property will be
distributed as follows:
(1) To lienholders in order of lien
priority less a pro rata share of the sale
expenses;
(2) To the inventory account up to the
amount of expenses incurred by the
Agency in connection with the sale of
personal property;
(3) To the outstanding balance on the
FLP loan; and
(4) To the borrower, if the borrower’s
whereabouts are known.
§§ 767.53–767.100
[Reserved]
Subpart C—Lease of Real Estate
Inventory Property
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§ 767.101
property.
16:19 Nov 07, 2007
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§ 767.102 Leasing non-real estate
inventory property.
opportunity for beginning farmers to
purchase real property.
(b) The Agency will advertise all real
estate inventory property that can be
used for any authorized FO loan
purpose for sale to beginning farmers no
later than 15 days after the Agency
obtains title to the property.
(c) If more than one eligible beginning
farmer applies, the Agency will select a
purchaser by a random selection process
open to the public.
(1) All applicants will be advised of
the time and place of the selection.
(2) All drawn offers will be numbered.
(3) Offers drawn after the first will be
held in suspense pending sale to the
successful applicant.
(4) Random selection is final and not
subject to administrative appeal.
(d) If there are no offers from
beginning farmers, the Agency will sell
inventory property by auction or sealed
bid to the general public no later than
165 days after the Agency obtains title
to the property. All bidders will be
required to submit a 10 percent deposit
with their bid.
(e) If the Agency receives no
acceptable bid through an auction or
sealed bid, the Agency will attempt to
sell the property through a negotiated
sale at the best obtainable price.
(f) If the Agency is not able to sell the
property through negotiated sale, the
Agency may list the property with a real
estate broker. The broker must be
properly licensed in the State in which
the property is located.
§ 767.152
The Agency does not lease non-real
estate property unless it is attached as
a fixture to real estate inventory
property that is being leased and it is
essential to the farming operation.
§ 767.103 Managing leased real estate
inventory property.
(a) The Agency will pay for repairs to
leased real estate inventory property
only when necessary to protect the
Agency’s interest.
(b) If the lessee purchases the real
estate inventory property, the Agency
will not credit lease payments to the
purchase price of the property.
[Reserved]
Subpart D—Disposal of Inventory
Property
(a) The Agency may lease real estate
inventory property:
(1) To the former owner under the
Homestead Protection Program;
(2) To a beginning farmer selected to
purchase the property but who was
unable to purchase it because of a lack
VerDate Aug<31>2005
of Agency direct or guaranteed loan
funds;
(3) When the Agency is unable to sell
the property because of lengthy
litigation or appeal processes.
(b) The Agency will lease real estate
inventory property in an ‘‘as is’’
condition.
(c) The Agency will lease property for:
(1) Homestead protection in
accordance with part 766, subpart D, of
this chapter.
(2) A maximum of 18 months to a
beginning farmer the Agency selected as
purchaser when no Agency loan funds
are available; or
(3) The shortest possible duration for
all other cases subject to the following:
(i) The maximum lease term for such
a lease is 12 months.
(ii) The lease is not subject to renewal
or extension.
(d) The lessee may pay:
(1) A lump sum;
(2) On an annual installment basis; or
(3) On a crop-share basis, if the lessee
is a beginning farmer under paragraph
(a) of this section.
(e) The Agency leases real estate
inventory property for a market rent
amount charged for similar properties in
the area.
(f) The Agency may require the lessee
to provide a security deposit.
(g) Only leases to a beginning farmer
or Homestead Protection Program
participant will contain an option to
purchase the property.
§§ 767.104–767.150
Leasing real estate inventory
63359
§ 767.151
General requirements.
Subject to § 767.152, the Agency will
attempt to sell its inventory property as
follows:
(a) The Agency will combine or
divide inventory property, as
appropriate, to maximize the
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Exceptions.
The Agency’s disposition procedure
under § 767.151 is subject to the
following:
(a) If the Agency leases real estate
inventory property to a beginning
farmer in accordance with
§ 767.101(a)(2), and the lease expires,
the Agency will not advertise the
property if the Agency has direct or
guaranteed loan funds available to
finance the transaction.
(b) The Agency will not advertise a
property for sale until the homestead
protection rights have terminated in
accordance with part 766, subpart D of
this chapter.
(c) The Agency may allow an
additional 60 days if needed for
conservation easements or
environmental reviews.
(d) If the property was owned by an
American Indian borrower and is
located on an Indian reservation, the
Agency will:
(1) No later than 90 days after
acquiring the property, offer the
opportunity to purchase or lease the
property in accordance with:
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(i) The priorities established by the
Indian Tribe having jurisdiction over
the Indian reservation;
(ii) In cases where priorities have not
been established, the following order:
(A) A member of the Indian Tribe that
has jurisdiction over the Indian
reservation;
(B) An Indian entity;
(C) The Indian Tribe.
(2) Transfer the property to the
Secretary of the Interior if the property
is not purchased or leased under
paragraph (1) of this section.
(e) If Agency analysis of farm real
estate market conditions indicates the
sale of the Agency’s inventory property
will have a negative effect on the value
of farms in the area, the Agency may
withhold inventory farm properties in
the affected area from the market until
further analysis indicates otherwise.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
§ 767.153
property.
Sale of real estate inventory
(a) Pricing. (1) The Agency will
advertise property for sale at its market
value, as established by an appraisal
obtained in accordance with § 761.7.
(2) Property sold by auction or sealed
bid will be sold for the best obtainable
price. The Agency reserves the right to
reject any and all bids.
(b) Agency-financed sales. The
Agency may finance sales to purchasers
if:
(1) The Agency has direct or
guaranteed FO loan funds available;
(2) All applicable loan making
requirements are met; and
(3) All non-beginning farmer
purchasers make a 10 percent down
payment.
(c) Taxes and assessments. (1)
Property taxes and assessments will be
prorated between the Agency and the
purchaser based on the date the Agency
conveys title to the purchaser.
(2) The purchaser is responsible for
paying all taxes and assessments after
the Agency conveys title to the
purchaser.
(d) Loss or damage to property. If,
through no fault of either party, the
property is lost or damaged as a result
of fire, vandalism, or act of God before
the Agency conveys the property, the
Agency may reappraise the property and
set the sale price accordingly.
(e) Termination of contract. Either
party may terminate the sales contract.
If the contract is terminated by the
Agency, the Agency returns any deposit
to the bidder. If the contract is
terminated by the purchaser, any
deposit will be retained by the Agency
as full liquidated damages, except
where failure to close is due to Agency
non-approval of credit.
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16:19 Nov 07, 2007
Jkt 214001
(f) Warranty on title. The Agency will
not provide any warranty on the title or
on the condition of the property.
§ 767.154 Conveying easements, rights-ofway, and other interests in inventory
property.
(a) Appraisal of real property and real
property interests. The Agency will
determine the value of real property and
real property interests being transferred
in accordance with § 761.7 of this
chapter.
(b) Easements and rights-of-way on
inventory property. (1) The Agency may
grant or sell an easement or right-of-way
for roads, utilities, and other
appurtenances if the conveyance is in
the public interest and does not
adversely affect the value of the real
property.
(2) The Agency may sell an easement
or right-of-way by negotiation for market
value to any purchaser for cash without
giving public notice if:
(i) The sale would not prevent the
Agency from selling the property; and
(ii) The sale would not decrease the
value of the property by an amount
greater than the price received.
(3) In the case of condemnation
proceedings by a State or political
subdivision, the transfer of title will not
be completed until adequate
compensation and damages have been
determined and paid.
(c) Disposal of other interests in
inventory property. (1) If applicable, the
Agency will sell mineral and water
rights, mineral lease interests, mineral
royalty interests, air rights, and
agricultural and other lease interests
with the surface land except as provided
in paragraph (b) of this section.
(2) If the Agency sells the land in
separate parcels, any rights or interests
that apply to each parcel are included
with the sale.
(3) The Agency will assign lease or
royalty interests not passing by deed to
the purchaser at the time of sale.
(4) Appraisals of property will reflect
the value of such rights, interests, or
leases.
§ 767.155
Selling chattel property.
(a) Method of sale. (1) The Agency
will use sealed bid or established public
auctions for selling chattel. The Agency
does not require public notice of sale in
addition to the notice commonly used
by the auction facility.
(2) The Agency may sell chattel
inventory property, including fixtures,
concurrently with real estate inventory
property if, by doing so, the Agency can
obtain a higher aggregate price. The
Agency may accept an offer for chattel
based upon the combined final sales
price of both the chattel and real estate.
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
(b) Agency-financed sales. The
Agency may finance the purchase of
chattel inventory property if the Agency
has direct or guaranteed OL loan funds
available and all applicable loan making
requirements are met.
§§ 767.156–767.200
[Reserved]
Subpart E—Real Estate Property With
Important Resources or Located in
Special Hazard Areas
§ 767.201 Real estate inventory property
with important resources.
In addition to the requirements
established in subpart G of 7 CFR part
1940, the following apply to inventory
property with important resources:
(a) Wetland conservation easements.
The Agency will establish permanent
wetland conservation easements to
protect and restore certain wetlands that
exist on inventory property prior to the
sale of such property, regardless of
whether the sale is cash or credit.
(1) The Agency establishes
conservation easements on all wetlands
or converted wetlands located on real
estate inventory property that:
(i) Were not considered cropland on
the date the property was acquired by
the Agency; and
(ii) Were not used for farming at any
time during the 5 years prior to the date
of acquisition by the Agency.
(A) The Agency will consider
property to have been used for farming
if it was used for agricultural purposes
including, but not limited to, cropland,
pastures, hayland, orchards, vineyards,
and tree farming.
(B) In the case of cropland, hayland,
orchards, vineyards, or tree farms, the
Agency must be able to demonstrate that
the property was harvested for crops.
(C) In the case of pastures, the Agency
must be able to demonstrate that the
property was actively managed for
grazing by documenting practices such
as fencing, fertilization, and weed
control.
(2) The wetland conservation
easement will provide for access to
other portions of the property as
necessary for farming or other uses.
(b) Mandatory conservation
easements. The Agency will establish
conservation easements to protect 100year floodplains and other Federallydesignated important resources.
Federally-designated important
resources include, but are not limited to:
(1) Listed or proposed endangered or
threatened species;
(2) Listed or proposed critical habitats
for endangered or threatened species;
(3) Designated or proposed wilderness
areas;
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sroberts on PROD1PC70 with RULES
(4) Designated or proposed wild or
scenic rivers;
(5) Historic or archeological sites
listed or eligible for listing on the
National Register of Historic Places;
(6) Coastal barriers included in
Coastal Barrier Resource Systems;
(7) Natural landmarks listed on
National Registry of Natural Landmarks;
and
(8) Sole source aquifer recharge areas
as designated by EPA.
(c) Discretionary easements. The
Agency may grant or sell an easement,
restriction, development right, or
similar legal right to real property for
conservation purposes to a State
government, a political subdivision of a
State government, or a private nonprofit organization.
(1) The Agency may grant or sell
discretionary easements separate from
the underlying fee or property rights.
(2) The Agency may convey property
interests under this paragraph by
negotiation to any eligible recipient
without giving public notice if the
conveyance does not change the
intended use of the property.
(d) Conservation transfers. The
Agency may transfer real estate
inventory property to a Federal or State
agency provided the following
conditions are met:
(1) The transfer of title must serve a
conservation purpose;
(2) A predominance of the property
must:
(i) Have marginal value for
agricultural production;
(ii) Be environmentally sensitive; or
(iii) Have special management
importance;
(3) The homestead protection rights of
the previous owner have been
exhausted;
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18:34 Nov 07, 2007
Jkt 214001
(4) The Agency will notify the public
of the proposed transfer; and
(5) The transfer is in the Agency’s
financial interest.
(e) Use restrictions on real estate
inventory property with important
resources. (1) Lessees and purchasers
receiving Agency credit must follow a
conservation plan developed with
assistance from NRCS.
(2) Lessees and purchasers of property
with important resources or real
property interests must allow the
Agency or its representative to
periodically inspect the property to
determine if it is being used for
conservation purposes.
§ 767.202 Real estate inventory property
located in special hazard areas.
(a) The Agency considers the
following to be special hazard areas:
(1) Mudslide hazard areas;
(2) Special flood areas; and
(3) Earthquake areas.
(b) The Agency will use deed
restrictions to prohibit residential use of
properties determined to be unsafe in
special hazard areas.
(c) The Agency will incorporate use
restrictions in its leases of property in
special hazard areas.
§§ 767.203–767.250
[Reserved]
Subpart F—Exception Authority
§ 767.251
Agency exception authority.
On an individual case basis, the
Agency may consider granting an
exception to any regulatory requirement
or policy of this part if:
(a) The exception is not inconsistent
with the authorizing statute or other
applicable law; and
(b) The Agency’s financial interest
would be adversely affected by acting in
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
63361
accordance with published regulations
or policies and granting the exception
would reduce or eliminate the adverse
effect upon the its financial interest.
PART 768–769—[RESERVED]
27. Add and reserve parts 768 and
769.
I
7 CFR Chapter XIV
PART 1405—LOANS, PURCHASES,
AND OTHER OPERATIONS
28. Revise the authority citation to
read as follows:
I
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1515; 7 U.S.C. 7416a;
7 U.S.C. 7991(e); 15 U.S.C. 714b and 714c.
29. Amend § 1405.8 as follows:
a. Revise the section heading to read
as set forth below;
I b. Revise paragraph (a)(1) to read as
set forth below; and
I c. Redesignate paragraph (a)(7) as
(a)(8) and add a new paragraph (a)(7) to
read as set forth below.
I
I
§ 1405.8 Disqualification due to crop
insurance violation.
(a) * * *
(1) The FCIA.
*
*
*
*
*
(7) The Consolidated Farm and Rural
Development Act (7 U.S.C. 1921 et seq.).
*
*
*
*
*
Signed in Washington, DC, on October 23,
2007.
Teresa C. Lasseter,
Executive Vice President, Commodity Credit
Corporation and Administrator, Farm Service
Agency.
[FR Doc. 07–5374 Filed 11–7–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–05–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 216 (Thursday, November 8, 2007)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 63242-63361]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 07-5374]
[[Page 63241]]
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Part II
Department of Agriculture
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Farm Service Agency
Commodity Credit Corporation
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
7 CFR Parts 718, 761, 762 et al.
Regulatory Streamlining of the Farm Service Agency's Direct Farm Loan
Programs; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 216 / Thursday, November 8, 2007 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 63242]]
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DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Farm Service Agency
7 CFR Parts 718, 761, 762, 763, 764, 765, 766, 767, 768, and 769
Commodity Credit Corporation
7 CFR Part 1405
RIN 0560-AF60
Regulatory Streamlining of the Farm Service Agency's Direct Farm
Loan Programs
AGENCY: Farm Service Agency, USDA.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This rule streamlines the Farm Service Agency's (FSA)
regulations governing its direct Farm Loan Programs. The final rule
simplifies and clarifies FSA's direct loan regulations; implements the
recommendations of the USDA Civil Rights Action Team; meets the
objectives of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995; and separates FSA's
direct Farm Loan Programs regulations from the Rural Development
mission area's loan program regulations.
DATES: Effective Date: December 31, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: William D. Cobb; USDA/FSA/DAFLP/STOP
0520, 1400 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20250-0520;
telephone (202) 720-1059; electronic mail: bill.cobb@wdc.usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Discussion of the Final Rule
On February 9, 2004, the agency published a proposed rule (69 FR
6056-6121) to streamline regulations governing its direct Farm Loan
Programs (FLP). The comment period closed on April 9, 2004. The agency
received several comments requesting the comment period to be reopened.
The agency reopened the comment period until May 4, 2004 (69 FR 20834).
In response to the proposed rule the agency received 1,583 comments
from 593 individuals and organizations, including 181 banks or banking
organizations, 168 individuals, 81 FSA employees, 71 Farm Credit
Administration offices or employees, 42 agricultural organizations, 18
state agencies or officials, 13 Farm Bureaus, five State
representatives, three Federal agencies, two FSA County Committee
members, one tribal association, one university and one loan packager.
In addition, six comment letters signed by multiple Members of the
United States Congress were received.
Seven comments addressed the agency's decision to move the
administrative provisions of program delivery from the Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR) to a series of agency handbooks. Three comments
opposed the agency's decision while four comments supported it. In
accordance with the Administrative Procedures Act, both the proposed
and the final rules provide the substantive requirements applicable to
the public requesting assistance or benefits from FSA, not internal
agency procedures and processes. The agency will issue its internal
guidance in handbooks simultaneously with the final rule, since
internal guidance only describes the operating procedures of the agency
and does not impact services provided to applicants and borrowers.
Further, the agency is working on making all its handbooks available on
the internet so that any interested party may view, download, and print
agency handbooks as appropriate. Therefore, these comments were not
adopted.
Four comments were received requesting the agency reopen the
comment period. As noted above, the agency reopened and extended the
comment period from April 9, 2004, to May 4, 2004, and published a
Federal Register notice to that effect on April 19, 2004.
Eleven comments provided general comments not related to any
specific part, section, or policy of the proposed rule. Therefore, the
agency did not take any action regarding these comments.
The following provides a summary of the comments received and the
agency's response by CFR part.
Part 761--General Program Administration
The following discussion addresses the comments received on Part
761.
Section 761.2 Abbreviations and Definitions
Three comments were received on the ``active borrower'' and
``borrower'' definitions. Two comments stated the definitions as
written are very similar, and therefore, the definition of ``active
borrower'' should be removed from the CFR. The other comment stated the
term ``active borrower'' is not used in the proposed rule. The agency
agrees with the comments and has removed the definition.
One comment was received on the ``agreement for the use of
proceeds'' definition. The comment stated the agreement for the use of
proceeds has not benefited borrowers or the agency since its inception.
Further, the comment stated if the comment is not adopted, the agency
should initiate a study on how the agreement for the use of proceeds
has benefited the agency's borrowers. Section 335(f) of the
Consolidated Farm and Rural Development Act (Act) (7 U.S.C. 1985(f))
requires the agency to release normal income security proceeds to
borrowers for essential family living and farm operating expenses until
the loan is accelerated. Further, Section 335(f)(6) of the Act provides
if a borrower is required to plan or report how proceeds from the sale
of security will be used, the agency must notify the borrower of (a)
the reporting requirement; (b) the right to release proceeds; and (c)
how to request such funds. The agency implemented the Act's requirement
with the agreement for the use of proceeds that provides a means for
reaching a consensus with a borrower regarding the use of proceeds from
the sale of security property when the farm operating plan is
developed. In addition, the agency delegates the authority to release
proceeds to borrowers according to an established agreement for the use
of proceeds to agency officials who do not have loan approval
authority. Further, the agency utilizes the agreement for the use of
proceeds to account for the agency's security. Moreover, the agency
continuously evaluates forms utilized in administering its programs for
effectiveness. Therefore, based on this comment as well as the comments
received on Sec. 765.302, the agency may conduct further analysis to
determine if changes are warranted. Lastly, the agency did not propose
to make changes to the agreement for the use of proceeds; therefore,
the agency will not take any action on this comment at this time.
One comment stated the term ``agribusiness'' is not defined in the
proposed rule. The agency does not use the term in the CFR; therefore,
it does not need to include a definition for ``agribusiness.''
Two comments were received on the ``agricultural commodity''
definition. One comment stated the agency must define ``agriculture''
in general to clarify and distinguish that agriculture does not solely
consist of commodities and large-scale operations. The definition as
written, the comment stated, will make many Indian farm operators
ineligible for loans. The other comment stated that the narrow
definition of ``agricultural commodity'' adversely impacts the
definition of ``basic part of the applicant's total farming operation''
and urged that the definition of ``agricultural commodity'' be
broadened to include a
[[Page 63243]]
specific list of agricultural products. The agency believes the
definition is reasonably broad and provides the agency discretion in
determining what constitutes an agricultural commodity. The agency does
not use this term in the regulations to suggest that agriculture
consists only of commodities and large-scale operations. Furthermore,
the definitions of both ``agricultural commodity'' and ``basic part of
an applicant's total farming operation'' included in the proposed rule
are identical to existing definitions established in the agency's
emergency loan regulations by a final rule (67 FR 791-801) published on
January 8, 2002, after considering public comments. Based on reviews of
assistance provided since the implementation of that final rule, the
agency believes both definitions have resulted in the achievement of
the program's mission and the agency is not aware of any adverse impact
on the public. Therefore, neither comment is adopted.
Two comments were received on the ``applicant'' definition. One
comment stated the definition is not clear if husband and wife
applicants are considered as a joint operation. Further, the comment
objected to husband and wife applicants being considered joint
operations. The agency has not revised the definition based on this
comment, but, the agency has revised the applicant eligibility
requirements under Sec. 764.51, as discussed under that section
heading. The other comment stated the agency should eliminate the
definition and use ``lender applicant'' in the guaranteed loan program.
The agency clarified the definition of ``applicant'' to be applicable
to both direct and guaranteed loan programs. The agency believes using
the terms ``lender applicant'' and ``lender'' in the guaranteed loan
program, however, would be confusing, therefore, the comment is not
adopted. Further, to avoid confusion, the agency removed the definition
``loan applicant'' in the final rule. Therefore, the comment is not
adopted.
One comment was received on the ``approval official'' definition.
The comment stated the definition as written is confusing, because it
contains the term ``field official'' which is not defined. The agency
agrees with the comment, and removed the definition and replaced the
term in the text with the word ``Agency.''
One comment was received on the ``aquaculture'' definition. The
comment stated the agency should work with Tribes in the Northwestern,
Northeastern and Midwestern United States to ensure the definition
covers aquaculture on Tribal reservations. The agency believes the
definition as written is broad enough to cover aquaculture operations
in every part of the country. Further, the agency evaluates each
operation on its merits. Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
Three comments were received on the ``average farm customer''
definition. Two comments supported the definition as written. One
comment stated the definition as proposed eliminates Indian producers
with niche markets who farm traditionally and practice sustainable
agriculture. The agency does not foresee that Indian producers will be
impacted by the definition since producers eligible to receive
guaranteed loans will remain eligible. Therefore, the comment is not
adopted.
One comment was received on the ``basic part of an applicant's
total farming operation'' definition. The comment stated the definition
as written is narrowly based on the definition of ``agricultural
commodity'' without a definition of agriculture. Section 329 of the Act
(7 U.S.C. 1970), in part, provides the agency may make emergency loans
to applicants based on production losses if the applicant shows that a
single enterprise that is a ``basic part of the applicant's farming,
ranching, or aquaculture operation'' has suffered at least a 30 percent
loss of normal per acre or per animal production. The definition
clarifies the agency's implementation of the Act's provisions and as
discussed in the agency's response to comments on the definition of
``agricultural commodity,'' the agency does not believe either
definition as written, has an adverse impact on an applicant's
eligibility. Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
Five comments were received on the ``beginning farmer'' definition.
Three comments stated that the definition precludes applicants with
less than 3 years of experience from meeting the conditions of the
beginning farmer definition. Further, the comments stated an applicant
with less than 3 years of experience is eligible for a direct farm
ownership loan, but is not eligible for a beginning farmer downpayment
farm ownership loan. The agency agrees with the comments and has
revised the definition accordingly. One comment stated the agency
should revise the definition to remove the word ``direct'' in
describing ``OL applicant'' from subparagraph (5). The subparagraph is
not applicable to direct or guaranteed operating loans (OL) under the
statutory definition, therefore, the agency agrees and has revised the
definition accordingly. Further, the comment stated the agency should
use the median acreage, as provided in Section 343(a)(11)(F) (7 U.S.C.
1991(a)(11)(F)) of the Act, to determine if an applicant is a beginning
farmer. Section 343(a)(11)(F) of the Act was enacted under the
provisions of the Agricultural Credit Improvement Act of 1992. As
addressed in the preamble of the agency's 1993 final rule (58 FR 48275)
published on September 15, 1993, implementing the regulatory definition
of ``beginning farmer,'' while the statute referred to ``the median
acreage of farm * * * as reported in the most recent census of
agriculture,'' the agency utilized the term ``average acreage'' in its
regulations as the census of agriculture did not capture ``median
acreage'' at that time. The National Agricultural Statistics Service
now publishes both the median and average farm size by county. Analysis
of the data reveals that the median acreage is typically lower than the
average acreage. Adoption of the comment may result in some applicants,
who meet the existing requirements of the definition, not being
considered a ``beginning farmer.'' However, the comment is correct in
that both the existing and proposed regulations do not match the
statute. Therefore, the comment is adopted and the definition has been
revised accordingly.
One comment stated the agency should remove the requirement that
all members of an entity must materially and substantially participate
in the operation. Section 343(a)(11) (7 U.S.C. 1991(a(11)) of the Act
defines the term ``qualified beginning farmer or rancher'' and provides
that for loans made to entities, the entity members must materially and
substantially participate in the operation of the farm. The definition
was based on the Act's provision, therefore, the comment cannot be
adopted.
Three comments were received on the ``borrower'' definition. One
comment stated the definition does not seem to be applicable to the
guaranteed loan program. The agency agrees with the comment and has
revised the definition accordingly. Another comment stated the agency
should revise the definition to exclude cosigners since cosigners
merely sign the promissory note to assure repayment of the loan and are
not program borrowers as defined in the agency's regulations. The
agency does not agree with the comment because a cosigner has the same
liability for the debt as any other borrower who signed the promissory
note. Therefore, the comment is not adopted. The last comment stated
the agency should clarify the definition to provide if the borrower's
name should match the
[[Page 63244]]
operator's name utilized by Farm Programs in their internal agency
systems. The agency believes the definition as written is clear;
signature requirements are a separate issue. Further, as stated in
Sec. 761.2, the definitions included in this part are applicable to
FLP only. Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
One comment was received on the ``cash flow budget'' definition.
The comment stated that commercial lenders have adopted the practice of
not including advances or principal repayments on lines of credit in
the cash flow, since they are considered cash flow neutral. The comment
stated the agency should revise the definition to match commercial
lenders' standards. The agency agrees with the comment and has revised
the definition accordingly.
One comment was received on the ``chattel security'' definition.
The comment stated the agency should clarify the definition to state
that chattel is non-real estate property. The agency obtains a security
interest using mortgages, deeds of trust, financing statements and
security agreements. The agency believes the comment is proposing to
delineate between chattels and real estate which cannot be done
uniformly in all cases, especially for loans for which security is
growing crops and fixtures. Further, the agency believes the definition
as written is reasonably clear. Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
One comment stated the term ``commercial classified account'' is
not used in the rule, while the terms ``immediate family'' and
``immediate family member'' even though they are used, are not defined.
The agency agrees and, in the final rule, the agency has removed the
term ``commercial classified account'' and replaced the terms
``immediate family'' and ``immediate family member'' with the defined
``family member'' term.
Two comments were received on the ``conservation contract review
team'' definition. Both comments stated the agency should remove the
adjacent public landowners from the definition. The comments did not
provide any reason for removing public landowners from the conservation
contract review team. The agency has utilized the definition, as
published in the proposed rule, since September 14, 1988, and has not
encountered any difficulties or concerns. Further, the agency believes
public landowners may have concerns or relevant information regarding
the potential easement that may affect the agency's decision.
Therefore, the comments are not adopted.
One comment was received on the ``cosigner'' definition. The
comment stated the agency should revise the definition to state that
cosigners are not eligible to receive loan servicing. The agency agrees
that cosigners do not have independent rights to receive loan
servicing, but may submit a joint application for servicing with all
other liable parties. Therefore, the definition is revised accordingly.
One comment was received on the ``current market value buyout''
definition. The comment stated the agency should revise the definition
to remove liquidation costs as the definition conflicts with the
explanation of current market value buyout included in Appendix B of 7
CFR part 766. The agency agrees with the comment and has revised the
definition as the provisions of Appendix B are identical to existing
regulations published in subpart S of 7 CFR part 1951. Furthermore, the
Agency did not address a revision to the existing regulations in the
preamble of the proposed rule.
One comment was received on the ``debt forgiveness'' definition.
The comment stated the agency should include in the definition the
Act's provision, found in Section 343(a)(12)(B)(ii), which provides
that ``any write-down provided as part of a resolution of a
discrimination complaint against the Secretary'' is not considered debt
forgiveness. The agency agrees with the comment and has revised the
definition. The agency also has clarified the definition to state that
the term does not include prior debt forgiveness that is repaid in full
and debt reduction in exchange for a conservation contract.
One comment was received on the ``debt service margin'' definition.
The comment stated the proposed calculation would take a borrower off
of limited resource rates if the borrower has atypical or one-time high
inventories or cash. Therefore, the comment stated the agency should
use the term debt and capital lease coverage ratio, which is the
industry standard to calculate the debt service margin. The agency uses
a typical plan to calculate the debt service margin and does not
consider atypical high inventories or cash when running the Debt and
Loan Restructuring System (DALR$) for primary loan servicing. Further,
the definition of ``feasible plan'' provides that the farm operating
plan will not be based on atypical or one-time high inventories, or
cash on hand. Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
Six comments were received on the ``delinquent borrower''
definition. All comments stated the definition contained in the
proposed rule did not match the definition in the agency's final rule
published on February 4, 2004 (69 FR 5264-5267). The agency agrees with
the comments, and has revised the definition accordingly.
Three comments were received on the ``entity'' definition. One
comment stated that the term ``trust,'' as used in the definition, must
be more clearly defined ``so that it includes trusts established in
treaties'' making tribal farms eligible for assistance. Two comments
stated that it was not clear in the proposed rule how less than
traditional entity structures would be handled. Act section 302(a) (7
U.S.C. 1922(a)) for farm ownership loans, section 311(a) (7 U.S.C.
1941(a)) for operating loans, and section 321(a) (7 U.S.C. 1961(a)) for
emergency loans specifically provide the types of entities eligible to
receive loans; entity applicants must fit within at least one of the
types listed. The agency does not believe the definition, as written,
limits the type of trust, or other organization listed, that are
considered an entity under the Act's provisions. However, entity
applicants must meet the statutory eligibility requirement of being the
owner-operator or tenant-operator of a family farm, as well as all
other applicable eligibility and loan making requirements. The agency
believes the definition, as written, will not result in the adverse
impacts suggested in the comments; therefore, the comments are not
adopted.
Two comments were received on the ``essential family household
expenses'' definition. One comment stated that the definition, along
with the definition of ``essential family living and farm operating
expenses,'' makes the rule unclear. The agency believes the ``essential
family household expenses'' and the ``essential family living and farm
operating expenses'' definitions are similar, and has therefore,
removed the definition of ``essential family household expenses'' in
the final rule as unnecessary and replaced the term throughout the CFR.
The other comment stated the agency should revise the text ``the
borrower and the immediate family of the borrower'' to read ``the
borrower, spouse, and immediate family members'' since the agency
defined the term ``family member.'' Since the agency removed the
definition of ``essential family household expenses,'' the agency
revised the definition of ``family living expenses'' to include
expenses for the borrower's spouse and immediate family members.
Two comments were received on the ``essential family living and
farm operating expenses'' definition. One comment stated that the
agency should
[[Page 63245]]
revise the definition to provide that the agency will consider the
expenses typical for the local community, instead of expenses typical
for that type of operation in the area. Further, the comment stated the
agency should remove the provision that the agency will consider what
constitutes an efficient method of production for the borrower's
resources because it is ambiguous. The agency believes using the term
``local community'' will make the definition unclear when applied to a
rural area. Further, the agency believes the provision, as written,
furthers the agency's mission of providing supervised credit and
allowing the agency and the applicant to adjust to the needs of the
operation. Therefore, this part of the comment is not adopted. The
comment also stated the agency should include in the definition nursing
care of immediate family members not living in the same household. The
agency has revised the definition of ``family living expenses'' to
include the costs of providing for the needs of family members and
those for whom the borrower has a financial obligation, such as
alimony, child support, or nursing care of an elderly parent. The
agency agrees that nursing care of immediate family members is a family
living expense, but the agency believes it is not always an essential
family living expense. Therefore, this part of the comment is not
adopted. Lastly, the comment stated the agency should remove the
reference to church expenses from the definition and replace it with
religious expenses. The other comment stated the agency should revise
the definition to remove the reference to ``church.'' The agency agrees
with the comments and has revised the definition accordingly.
Eight comments were received on the ``established farmer''
definition. Two comments stated the agency should remove the
subparagraph describing entity eligibility from the definition because
it limits the use of different legal structures for families attempting
to transfer the farm to a new generation. The term ``established
farmer'' is used only in subpart H of 7 CFR part 764 which addresses
requirements specific to emergency loans in accordance with section 321
of the Act (7 U.S.C. 1961). The authorized uses for emergency loan
funds include the repair or replacement of essential property damaged
or destroyed as a result of a disaster; however, emergency loan funds
would not be used to finance the transfer of a farm to a new
generation. The agency does not agree that the provision of the
definition adversely impacts inter-generational transfers and
therefore, the comments are not adopted.
Similar concerns regarding the impact of entity eligibility
requirements were received in response to regulations at Sec. 764.101.
As described in the agency's response to those comments, the agency
revised the entity eligibility requirements contained in that section,
and as a result made conforming changes to the definition of
``established farmer'' by revising the provision that an established
farmer is not ``an entity with an ownership interest of 50 percent or
more held by one or more entities'' to require that an entity cannot be
``an entity whose members are themselves entities.''
One comment stated that the ``established farmer'' definition
should be revised to recognize that Tribal farms have sovereign rights
that allow for complex land issues, which often require the use of a
full time farm manager. As discussed in the response to comments for
the definition of entity, the agency does not believe the regulations,
as written, impose any additional limitations on a particular type of
entity. However, agency assistance is only available to entity
operations that are family farms and, therefore, must have a majority
of the day-to-day operational and strategic management decisions made
by the members operating the farm, as well as meet all other
requirements established within the definition of family farm.
Therefore, this portion of the comment is not adopted. Further, the
comment stated that the ``established farmer'' definition requirement
that 50 percent or more of the ownership in the entity cannot be held
by another entity will exclude Tribal farms. As discussed in the
response to comments received on the general eligibility requirements
for loan making (Sec. 764.101), the agency has revised the eligibility
requirements regarding entities to provide that an entity applicant
cannot be composed of members that are themselves entities. Therefore,
appropriate conforming changes have been made in the CFR, and this
portion of the comment is not adopted.
Two comments stated the requirement in the ``established farmer''
definition that the entity is primarily engaged in farming and has over
50 percent of its gross income from all sources from farming, is
detrimental to small or beginning farmers who rely on non-farm income
to meet operating and family living expenses. This requirement is
supported by the ``family farm'' requirement that the farm produce
``agricultural commodities for sale in sufficient quantities to be
recognized as a farm rather than a rural residence.'' Furthermore, the
50 percent gross income requirement is included in existing regulations
published in 7 CFR 764.2 and the agency is not aware of any adverse
impacts on the public; therefore, the comments are not adopted. One
comment stated it is not clear what the term ``such loans'' refers to
in subparagraph (5)(ii) of the definition. The agency agrees with the
comment and has revised the definition to refer to ``Agency loans.''
Two comments suggested that the word ``employees'' in the last sentence
of the definition be replaced with the word ``employs.'' The agency
agrees with the comments and has revised the definition accordingly.
Two comments were received on the ``false information'' definition.
One comment stated the agency should revise the definition to include
information the applicant or borrower should have known to be false,
because it is difficult for the agency to prove the information the
applicant or borrower submitted to the agency was false. While the
agency agrees with the comment, the agency believes it is even more
difficult to prove the applicant or borrower should have known
information submitted to the agency was false. Therefore, the comment
is not adopted. The other comment stated the agency should revise the
definition to include information the applicant or borrower chose to
withhold from the agency. The term is used only in subpart F of 7 CFR
part 766 for the submission of false information. Since the proposal
concerns information not submitted to the agency, and therefore not
relied on, the comment is not adopted. Practically, however, in such
cases the information submitted to the agency may be false in light of
conflicting information not submitted and would, therefore, be covered
by the definition.
Five hundred sixty-four comments were received on the ``family
farm'' definition. Of the comments received, 12 supported the
definition as proposed while 552 comments opposed it. The proposed
definition would establish that the typical year gross income of the
operation could not exceed the greater of $750,000 in annual sales, or
the 95th percentile of the statistical distribution of the income of
farms in the state with gross sales in excess of $10,000, based on the
farm data and survey of farm economic factors published by the National
Agricultural Statistics Service. The opposing comments stated the
proposed definition would make a large number of family farms
ineligible for direct and guaranteed agency loans. One hundred seventy
comments
[[Page 63246]]
recommended the gross income limit be increased from $750,000 to
$1,000,000, $1,500,000, or $2,500,000. Seventy-four comments opposed
the use of any gross income limit. Fifty-two comments stated that the
use of annual sales to determine eligibility was arbitrary. Thirty-one
comments stated the proposed definition would exclude high value crop
producing farms. Seventy comments stated the agency provided little
justification in the proposed rule for using a gross farm income cap.
Fourteen comments stated the agency does not have a statutory basis for
changing the family farm definition. Thirteen comments opposed using a
gross income limit that was not indexed to inflation. Therefore,
because of the overwhelming opposition to the proposed requirement, the
agency will not include a gross annual income in its family farm
definition. However, as noted in the discussion of the proposed rule
published on February 9, 2004, the broad guidelines contained within
the existing definition have resulted in inconsistencies in applying
the definition on a nationwide basis. The agency believes that the
``family farm'' definition in this final rule will minimize
inconsistencies regarding management and labor requirements. Based upon
comments received, the Office of Management and Budget recommends the
agency seek public input as part of a further analysis regarding the
inclusion of an appropriate nation-wide income limitation, which may
necessitate future action. It is important to note that the definition
of a ``family farm'' as stated in this final rule only applies to farm
loan program eligibility requirements.
Further, the proposed ``family farm'' definition included the
provision that the majority of the day-to-day operational and
management decisions are made by the applicant and persons related to
the applicant by blood or marriage. One hundred sixteen comments were
received on the ``related by blood or marriage'' definition. All
comments stated the definition as written excludes certain
relationships, including, but not limited to, cousins, uncles, aunts,
and grandparents and that as a result, partnerships or entities
comprised of these individuals would not be considered a family farm.
The agency agrees with the comments and revised the definition to
include the relationships except cousins. In addition, in response to
the concerns expressed, the agency revised the definition of
``relative'' to include cousin in the covered relationships.
Furthermore, the agency revised the ``family farm'' definition to
provide that the day-to-day operational and management decisions be
made by the applicant and persons related to the applicant by blood or
marriage or a relative of the applicant.
One comment expressed concern regarding the provision in the
``family farm'' definition that the farm ``in a typical year generates
net cash income that improves the family's standard of living'' as the
term ``typical year'' is not defined in the rule. The agency agrees
that the provision is subject to different interpretations and could
adversely impact applicants that have been subject to recent disasters.
Therefore, the agency removed the provision from the definition.
One comment was received on the ``family living expenses''
definition. The comment stated the agency should remove the definition
because the CFR already includes the ``essential family living and farm
operating expenses'' definition. The agency believes the terms are not
synonymous as all family living expenses are not considered essential.
Further, the terms are utilized under different circumstances in the
loan making and servicing process when the distinction is necessary.
Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
One comment was received on the ``family member'' definition. The
comment stated the agency should revise the definition to provide
family members include the immediate members of the family for whom the
borrower has a financial obligation, e.g., child support payments,
alimony, nursing care for an elderly parent. The agency revised the
definition of ``family living expenses'' to include the expenses
provided in the comment, for family members who are the borrower's
responsibility, as revising that definition is more appropriate.
One comment was received on the ``farmer'' definition. The comment
stated the agency should revise the definition to provide that farmer
is an individual or entity who is a family farmer. The agency believes
the definition as written is adequate as not every farmer in the United
States is a family farmer. Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
Two comments were received on the ``feasible plan'' definition. One
comment stated the agency should revise the definition to state
``feasible plan is when the cash flow budget shows total income equals
or exceeds total cash outflow.'' The agency does not agree with the
comment to limit the evaluation of feasibility to include only ``total
income'' as there may be other non-income sources of cash inflows, such
as cash on hand, that impact the borrower's repayment ability.
Therefore, the comment is not adopted. The other comment stated the
agency should clarify the definition to provide that the margin after
debt service and ending cash, depending on the loan requested,
determine if the operation projects a feasible plan. The agency agrees
that the feasibility for an annual operating loan should be evaluated
differently than for a term loan. However, ``margin after debt
service'' and ``ending cash'' are terms that apply to the Farm Business
Plan, a software application utilized by the agency to determine
feasibility for direct loan making and servicing requests. ``Feasible
plan'' is a term applicable to regulations for both the direct and
guaranteed loan programs. While the term ``ending cash'' refers to the
applicant or borrower having ``sufficient cash inflow to pay all cash
outflow'' and the term ``margin after debt service'' applies to
consideration of a typical plan when the ``loan approval or servicing
action exceeds one production cycle,'' the agency believes the
definition, as written, adequately describes the requirements for both
the direct and guaranteed loan programs. Therefore, the comment is not
adopted.
One comment was received on the ``financially distressed borrower''
definition. The comment stated the definition should include borrowers
who do not have a 110 percent debt service margin to match the DALR$
software program. The agency disagrees. The agency notifies financially
distressed borrowers of the availability of loan servicing programs as
provided under Sec. 766.101. The agency does not consider a borrower
who can develop a feasible plan, which does not require a margin, with
less than 10 percent margin to be financially distressed. However, a
borrower who is not delinquent, but cannot develop a feasible plan for
the current or next production cycle, is considered financially
distressed and in need of loan servicing. Further, Sec. 766.105(b)(1)
provides the agency will attempt to achieve a 110 percent of debt
service margin; however, under Sec. 766.105(b)(3) the agency only
requires the borrower ``be able to develop a feasible plan with at
least 100 percent of debt service margin'' to be considered for loan
servicing programs. If the agency revises the definition as provided in
the comment, the agency would have to re-notify all borrowers
restructured with a debt service margin of less than 110 percent
immediately after the restructuring is complete. Therefore, the comment
is not adopted. However, the
[[Page 63247]]
agency did revise the definition by removing the text, ``unable to make
payments as planned for the current or next business accounting period
or to project a feasible plan of operation for the next business
accounting period'' as the term ``business accounting period'' is not
defined. The removed text was replaced by the text, ``unable to develop
a feasible plan for the current or next production cycle'' as the term
``production cycle'' is defined in the rule, and is more easily
understood.
Six comments were received on the ``financially viable operation''
definition. One comment recommended the words ``basic family living
expenses'' in the definition be revised to read ``essential family
living expenses.'' One comment stated the agency should revise the
definition to provide the operation must generate sufficient income to
meet essential family living expenses to the extent they are not met by
dependable non-farm income. The agency agrees with the comments and has
revised the definition accordingly. In addition, the agency clarified
the definition further to provide that it is applicable only under
Sec. 764.252, which provides the conditions applicants have to meet to
request a waiver of the operating loan term limit. Four comments stated
the definition requires the operation to generate sufficient income to
provide for replacement of capital items and long-term financial
growth, and that such an operation should qualify for commercial
credit, with no agency assistance. Therefore, the comments stated the
agency should either remove the definition or make it identical to the
``feasible plan'' definition. In addition, one of the comments stated
the definition seems to provide that non-farm income can only be used
to meet family living expenses, but that non-farm income is used to
make debt payments, replace capital items and supplement working
capital. Section 311(c)(4)(B) of the Act (7 U.S.C. 1941(c)(4)(B))
requires the applicant to have a financially viable operation for the
agency to consider granting a one-time 2-year waiver of operating loan
limits. The agency believes the definition as revised to refer to
essential family living expenses should allow flexibility to small
operations while meeting the statutory requirements; therefore, the
comments are not adopted.
One comment was received on the ``foreclosed'' definition. The
comment stated the agency should revise the definition to provide
``foreclosed'' is the completed act of selling real estate security
under the power of sale in the security instrument or through judicial
proceedings. The agency agrees with the comment and has revised the
definition to refer to judicial proceedings.
One similar comment was received on the ``foreclosure sale''
definition. The comment stated the agency should revise the definition
to provide ``foreclosure sale'' is the act of selling real estate
security. The agency believes the definition as written is adequate
since the agency can also foreclose on loans secured by chattels.
Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
Two comments were received on the ``good faith'' definition. One
comment supported the definition as written. Further, it stated it is
not necessary for the agency to consult the Office of General Counsel
to determine findings of fraud, waste or conversion. The other comment
stated the agency should retain the requirement for a written Office of
General Counsel opinion that has been a regulatory requirement since
September of 1988, as such determinations have ``grave consequences for
the rights and interest of FLP borrowers * * *'' The agency recognizes
the seriousness of allegations of fraud, waste, and conversion and
therefore has revised the definition to include the requirement that an
opinion be obtained form the Office of the General Counsel. Further,
the comment stated the ``good faith'' definition should allow for
inadvertent departures from the agreements with the agency because good
faith deals with the borrower's state of mind at the time the violation
of the agreement occurs. The agency does not believe its staff can make
determinations regarding a borrower's state of mind. The text, ``The
Agency considers a borrower to act in good faith, however, when the
borrower is unable to adhere to all agreements due to circumstances
beyond the borrower's control'' adequately addresses this concern;
therefore, the comment is not adopted. In addition, the comment stated
the statutory requirement that a borrower who disposed of security and
used proceeds for essential household and operating expenses prior to
October 14, 1988, is not considered to lack good faith is not included
in the definition. While the agency agrees with the comment, the agency
does not believe a borrower will be determined to lack good faith based
on events that occurred more than 15 years prior to a current loan or
servicing application. However, as an added precaution, the agency
handbook will provide guidance on dealing with applicants and borrowers
who disposed of security and used proceeds for essential family living
and farm operating expenses prior to October 14, 1988. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
Lastly, the agency made an administrative revision to the ``good
faith'' definition by clarifying that good faith requires an applicant
or borrower to provide ``current, complete, and truthful information
when applying for assistance and in all past dealings with the
Agency.'' This text supports the acknowledgment currently included on
each loan or servicing application.
One comment was received on the ``graduation'' definition. The
comment stated the agency should revise the definition as the payment
in full of one or more direct FLP loans. The agency believes the
payment in full of one or more loans of the same type, when the
borrower has several outstanding loans, cannot be considered as
graduation because the borrower is still depending on the agency to
obtain necessary credit for the operation. As agency loans are a
temporary source of credit for borrowers, for the agency to measure its
borrowers' success, borrowers have to obtain their credit needs from
another source with or without an agency guarantee. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
One comment was received on the ``homestead protection''
definition. The comment stated the agency should clarify that homestead
protection applies to direct loan borrowers only. The agency agrees
with the comment and has revised the definition accordingly.
One comment was received on the ``homestead protection property''
definition. The comment stated the agency should revise the definition
to clarify that homestead protection property secured direct loans
only. The agency agrees with the comment and has revised the definition
accordingly.
One comment was received on the ``household contents'' definition.
The comment stated the agency should remove the second sentence of the
proposed definition with exclusions for luxury items. The agency
believes the definition as written is reasonable. The term is used in
Parts 764 and 766 in relation to disaster-related damages and taking
additional security refers to needed, not luxury household items.
Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
One comment was received on the ``inaccurate information''
definition. The comment stated the agency should revise the definition
to include information provided by an applicant without the intent of
fraudulently obtaining benefits. The agency agrees with the comment and
has revised the definition to refer to applicants, borrowers, lenders,
and other sources.
[[Page 63248]]
Two comments were received on the ``inventory property''
definition. One comment stated the definition as written includes all
Federal property, such as Federal buildings and public land. Further,
the comment stated the agency should clarify the definition to include
real estate property held by guaranteed lenders after liquidation of
guaranteed loans. The other comment stated the agency should revise the
definition as real estate and chattel property to which the United
States has acquired ownership rights. In response to the comments, the
agency has clarified that the term covers such property that formerly
secured an FLP loan and to which the Government has acquired title. The
definition would not cover former security property held by the
guaranteed lender.
One comment was received on the ``joint operation'' definition. The
comment stated the agency should remove the definition. Section
343(a)(7) of the Act (7 U.S.C. 1991(a)(7)) defines the term ``joint
operation'' and this type of entity is specifically listed as an
eligible entity for farm loans. The proposed rule was based on the
Act's provision; therefore, the comment cannot be adopted.
One comment was received on the ``lien'' definition. The comment
stated the agency should revise the definition as a legally enforceable
claim against real or chattel property. The agency agrees with the
comment and has revised the definition to refer to real or chattel
property.
One comment was received on the ``line of credit agreement''
definition. The comment stated the agency should revise the definition
as a contract between the lender and the borrower that contains certain
lender and borrower conditions, limitations, and responsibilities for
revolving or non-revolving credit. The agency's current guaranteed
regulations and handbook have contained the definition as published in
the proposed rule since February 12, 1999, without causing adverse
impacts on the program. The agency believes the less technical
definition is reasonable and easily understood. Therefore, the comment
is not adopted.
One comment was received on the ``loss rate'' definition. The
comment stated the agency should revise the definition as the net
amount of loan loss claims paid on loans made in the previous 7 years
divided by the total loan amount guaranteed during the same period. The
agency's current guaranteed regulations and handbook have contained the
definition as published in the proposed rule since February 12, 1999,
without causing adverse impacts on the program. Therefore, the comment
is not adopted. The agency did however make an administrative revision
to the definition to replace the text ``guaranteed OL, Farm Ownership
(FO), and Soil and Water (SW) loans'' with the text ``FSA guaranteed
loans'' as the agency has not made guaranteed SW loans in the last 7
years.
One comment was received on the ``mortgage'' definition. The
comment stated the agency should revise the definition as a security
instrument. The agency defines the term ``mortgage'' to clarify that it
is synonymous with the term ``deed of trust'' in those States that use
a deed of trust to obtain a lien on real estate. Further, the agency
has added the definition for the term ``security instrument'' to
describe any document that provides the agency with a security interest
in real or personal property. Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
One comment was received on the ``net recovery value of security
property'' definition. The comment stated the agency should include a
separate definition for the term ``net recovery value of non-essential
assets'' instead of including it in the definition of ``net recovery
value of security property.'' The agency agrees with the comment.
Therefore, the agency defined the term ``net recovery value of non-
essential assets'' and revised the ``net recovery value of security
property'' definition accordingly.
Seventeen comments were received on the ``non-eligible enterprise''
definition. Four comments supported the agency's proposed definition as
written. One comment stated the agency should remove the definition and
provide the eligible enterprises under the applicable loan purpose
sections. The agency believes enumerating all the eligible enterprises
will make the applicable loan purpose sections voluminous. Further, by
not enumerating the eligible enterprises in the rule the agency
eliminates the possibility of inadvertently omitting an eligible
enterprise. Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
Another comment stated the ``non-eligible enterprise'' definition
as written could be confusing to the public. The agency believes that
by defining the term and providing in the CFR text that loan funds may
not be used to finance a non-eligible enterprise, it eliminates
confusion. Therefore, the comment is not adopted. One comment, while it
supported the definition, stated the agency should provide that an
economically viable transportation situation does not exist for the
non-eligible enterprise's products. The agency believes that it is not
the expenses associated with the enterprise that makes the enterprise
ineligible for agency loans, it is the products the enterprise
produces. Further, when considering any enterprise, the agency includes
transportation expenses when it determines the operation's feasibility,
since transportation costs can vary greatly from locality to locality.
It is not the agency's intent to allow financing of non-eligible
enterprises in one area and not in other areas based on transportation
costs. Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
Five comments opposed the ``non-eligible enterprise'' definition as
proposed because it eliminates tropical fish farming, the equine
industry, llamas, alpacas, and ratites from being eligible for agency
loans. The agency has a long-standing policy not to finance the
production of animals kept solely for pleasure or companionship. This
policy will continue. Therefore, the comments are not adopted. Two
comments stated it is not clear if the definition includes products
bought and further grown, and then resold, or otherwise having value
added to the products. ``Non-eligible enterprise'' would not include
common farming operations that buy chickens, piglets, seedling, etc.,
and resell them when fully grown; it would include operations that
purchase ripened fruit and resell it as jam, for example. No change is
being made in relation to the comments. Further, the comments stated it
is not clear if the requirement that the ``majority of the commodities
processed or marketed'' by the enterprise is based on dollar sales or
the number of items. The agency believes the requirement as written is
applicable only to the number of items processed or sold. Therefore,
the comments are not adopted.
Another comment stated the ``non-eligible enterprise'' definition
adds another tier of inquiry in determining if a particular enterprise
is eligible for agency loans. Further, the comment stated the
definition provides enterprises that produce exotic or non-farm animals
are not eligible for loans, however, the terms ``exotic'' and ``non-
farm animals'' are not defined. In response to the comment, the agency
revised the definition to clarify what the agency considers exotic or
non-farm animal; however, the term is still needed. The Federal
Agriculture Improvement and Reform Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-127),
removed financing of non-farm enterprises as an authorized use of loan
funds. The agency needs to specify the type of
[[Page 63249]]
enterprises that will not be financed to avoid confusion and
inconsistent application of this restriction. Further, financing
enterprises producing animals or products for which there is not an
established market is inconsistent with prudent lending objectives.
Another comment stated the agency must allow Tribal input to
determine what tribal agricultural enterprises consist of, and set
guidelines to recognize traditional tribal markets. Further, the
comment stated the production of leeches, vermiculture and aquaculture
must not be included in the non-eligible enterprise definition. The
agency believes the definition as revised, along with the definitions
of agricultural commodity and aquaculture, adequately identify the
enterprises eligible for receiving loans. Further, the agency evaluates
each individual operation requesting assistance on its own merits.
Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
One comment was received on the ``non-essential assets''
definition. The comment stated the agency should revise the definition
to include assets that may contribute a small amount of income to the
farming operation but are clearly non-essential for the operation to
function. The agency believes the definition as written is adequate,
especially when read in the context of the CFR text. Therefore, the
comment is not adopted.
One comment was received on the ``non-program loan'' definition.
The comment stated the definition as written is too narrow and the
agency should continue to use the definition found in current Sec.
1951.451. The agency agrees with the comment and has revised CFR
accordingly.
One comment was received on the ``normal production yield''
definition. The comment stated the definition as written is confusing
and that the current definition, found in Sec. 764.2, provides the
priority for the types of records the agency will use. The proposed
definition made no substantive changes from current Sec. 764.2. Some
clarifying language has been added in response to the comment.
One comment was received on the ``note'' definition. The comment
stated the agency should remove the definition, as the term ``note'' is
included in the ``debt instrument'' definition. The agency believes the
term ``debt instrument'' does not adequately describe the instruments
the agency uses to evidence debt and therefore, the agency removed it
in the final rule. However, the agency added the term ``promissory
note'' which is used in several sections of the CFR to replace the term
``note,'' and further added the term ``assumption agreement'' for
clarity since it is distinguished from the term ``promissory note'' in
the text.
The agency revised the definition of ``Operating loan'' to include
a youth loan as provided in Sec. 764.1(b).
One comment was received on the ``owner-operator'' definition. The
comment stated the definition should be revised to read ``* * *is the
individual or entity that owns the farm and provides the labor,
management, and capital to operate the farm. An entity must have one or
more members operating the farm.'' The terms ``owner-operator'' and
``tenant-operator'' are used in the general eligibility requirements
established in 7 CFR 764.101, as well as the additional eligibility
requirements established for specific loan types in the applicable
subparts. While the proposed rule included a definition of the term
``owner-operator,'' the terms ``tenant-operator'' and ``operator'' were
not defined. The agency believes the key term that should be defined is
``operator,'' and has, therefore, removed the definition of ``owner-
operator'' in the final rule and has added ``operator.'' The agency
defined the term ``operator'' to include both an ``owner-operator'' or
``tenant-operator'' as applicable under each loan program. The agency
does not believe that a definition of either of these terms is
necessary as they are self explanatory. Further, the agency believes
that the new definition of ``operator'' uses the abbreviated text
suggested by the comment; therefore, this portion of the comment is
adopted. However, the agency did not adopt the portion of the comment
suggesting the inclusion of the text ``An entity must have one or more
members operating the farm'' as this requirement is adequately
addressed in the revisions made to the eligibility requirement
established in 7 CFR 764.101(k) requiring the applicant be the operator
of a family farm.
One comment was received on the ``partnership'' definition. The
comment stated the agency's requirement that partnerships must be
formally organized is out of date and unnecessary. The agency believes
the definition as written does not require a formal partnership
agreement, but instead it provides the agency will comply with State
requirements pertaining to partnerships. Therefore, the agency does not
believe a change to the definition is necessary.
One comment was received on the ``protective advance'' definition.
The comment stated since the definition will be applicable to the
guaranteed loan program also, the agency should continue to use the
definition found in current Sec. 762.102(b). The agency believes the
definition as written in the proposed rule is adequate to cover both
the direct and guaranteed loan programs. Further, under Sec. Sec.
765.203 and 762.149, respectively, the agency specifies the conditions
for making protective advances for the direct and guaranteed loan
programs. Therefore, the comment is not adopted.
One hundred sixteen comments were received on the ``related by
blood or marriage'' definition. As noted in the agency's response to
comments received on the definition of ``family farm,'' all comments
stated the definition as written excludes certain relationships,
including, but not limited to, cousins, uncles, aunts, and
grandparents. The agency agreed and revised the definition accordingly.
One comment was received on the ``relative'' definition. The
comment recommended the word ``of'' be inserted between the words
``one'' and ``the.'' The agency agrees and has revised the definition
accordingly. In addition, as discussed in the agency's response to
comments received on the definition of ``family farm,'' the definition
of ``relative'' was revised to include the term ``cousin.''
Two comments were received on the ``restructuring'' definition.
Both comments stated the definition as written does not cover the
guaranteed loan programs. The agency agrees with the comments and has
revised the CFR accordingly to adopt the definition from current Sec.
762.102.
Three comments were received on the ``rural youth'' definition. Two
comments supported the definition as written and opposed lowering the
age limit for youth loans from the proposed 10 years to 8 years of age.
One comment, while it supported the definition, stated the population
limit should not exceed 20,000 inhabitants. The agency disagrees. The
agency believes rural youth residing in areas of up to 50,000
inhabitants can benefit from the youth loan program and that the age
minimum should remain at 10 years of age.
Seven comments were received on the ``socially disadvantaged
applicant'' definition. Six comments stated that applicants who are
spouses are penalized under the definition when the wife is the
operator and owns 50 percent of the farming operation, because they do
not meet the majority ownership interest test. The agency agrees there
are circumstances where a spouse's ability to own the majority interest
in property is prohibited by State laws governing spousal rights.
Therefore, the agency revised the
[[Page 63250]]
definition to allow married couples to be considered socially
disadvantaged when the socially disadvantaged spouse owns 50 percent of
the farming operation and makes most of the management decisions,
contributes a significant amount of labor and is generally recognized
as the operator of the farm. Such construction of the term as used in
section 355 of the Act is reasonable under these circumstances.
Another comment stated the requirement for entities that the
socially disadvantaged member must have a majority ownership interest
in the operation to receive targeted funds reduces access to targeted
funds by eligible socially disadvantaged applicants. The Act's section
302(a) for farm ownership loans, section 311(a) for operating loans,
and 321(a) for emergency loans provide the eligibility requirements for
loans to entities. The statutory eligibility requirements apply to
members holding a majority interest in the entity. The proposed rule is
consistent with the Act's provisions in focusing on the majority
interest holder. The agency is taking a more lenient approach only in
the case of spouses as discussed above. Therefore, the comment is not
adopted.
One comment was received on the ``socially disadvantaged group''
definition. The comment stated the socially disadvantaged groups are
not specified in the proposed rule. The agency agrees with the comment
and has revised the definition to include the groups currently listed
in Sec. 1943.4.
One comment was received on the ``trust'' definition. The comment
stated the agency should revise the definition to reflect that Tribes,
as sovereign nations, have the ability to create and enforce laws to
regulate businesses conducted within their boundaries. The requirement
that a trust is recognized by the state in which it conducts business
is the same as the requirement applicable to all other entities. Agency
regulations cannot address every Tribe's unique situation; therefore,
state offices may develop guidance according to applicable state and
tribal laws in consultation with the Regional Office of General
Counsel. The agency believes the definition as written is adequate;
therefore, the comment is not adopted.
One comment was received on the ``United States'' definition. The
comment stated the definition as written excludes the Republic of
Palau, the Federated States of Micronesia, and the Republic of the
Marshall Islands. Further, the comment stated the Free Association
Treaty provides that the agency may enter into loan agreements with
citizens of the countries mentioned above. The agency agrees with the
comment and has revised the definition accordingly.
One comment was received on the ``working capital'' definition. The
comment stated the agency should revise the definition for clarity to
provide ``* * * including, but not limited to, paying for feed, seed *
* *'' The agency agrees and has revised the definition accordingly.
Four comments were received on the ``youth loan'' definition. Three
comments stated youth loans should not be restricted to agricultural
projects only. One comment stated that changing the youth loan purposes
to include financing agriculturally-related projects only will have