Livestock Indemnity Program and General Provisions for Supplemental Agricultural Disaster Assistance Programs, 31567-31578 [E9-15537]
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31567
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
Vol. 74, No. 126
Thursday, July 2, 2009
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains regulatory documents having general
applicability and legal effect, most of which
are keyed to and codified in the Code of
Federal Regulations, which is published under
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DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Farm Service Agency
7 CFR Part 760
Commodity Credit Corporation
7 CFR Parts 1400 and 1439
RIN 0560–AH95
Livestock Indemnity Program and
General Provisions for Supplemental
Agricultural Disaster Assistance
Programs
AGENCY: Farm Service Agency and
Commodity Credit Corporation, USDA.
ACTION: Final rule.
SUMMARY: This rule implements the
general eligibility provisions for all the
supplemental agricultural disaster
assistance programs authorized by the
Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of
2008 (2008 Farm Bill) and the specific
requirements for the Livestock
Indemnity Program (LIP). LIP provides
disaster assistance for livestock losses.
LIP applies only to livestock owners and
contract growers that had losses due to
livestock deaths in excess of normal
mortality due to adverse weather during
the calendar year, including losses due
to hurricanes, floods, blizzards, disease,
wildfires, extreme heat, and extreme
cold. Eligible LIP losses must have
occurred on or after January 1, 2008,
and before October 1, 2011. This rule
specifies how the LIP payments are
calculated and when producers may
apply for benefits. This rule also
removes some outdated rules from the
Code of Federal Regulations (CFR).
DATES: Effective Date: July 13, 2009.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Scotty Abbott, Production, Emergencies,
and Compliance Division, Farm Service
Agency (FSA), United States
Department of Agriculture, STOP 0517,
1400 Independence Avenue, SW.,
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Washington, DC 20250–0517; telephone
(202) 720–7997; e-mail
scotty.abbott@usda.gov. Persons with
disabilities who require alternative
means for communication (Braille, large
print, audio tape, etc.) should contact
the USDA Target Center at (202) 720
2600 (voice and TDD).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
This rule implements the general
eligibility provisions for the
supplemental agricultural disaster
assistance programs authorized by the
2008 Farm Bill (Pub. L. 110–246).
Sections 12033 and 15101 of the 2008
Farm Bill authorize the Secretary of
Agriculture (Secretary) to assist
producers who have had crop and
livestock losses due to adverse weather.
FSA will provide assistance through
five different programs:
• Livestock Indemnity Program
(referred to as Livestock Indemnity
Payments in the Farm Bill),
• Livestock Forage Disaster Program
(LFP),
• Emergency Assistance for
Livestock, Honey Bees, and Farm-Raised
Fish (ELAP),
• Supplemental Revenue Assistance
Payments Program (SURE) (which
covers general crop production losses,
but not those covered by LFP), and
• Tree Assistance Program (TAP).
This rule implements the first of these
programs, LIP, in 7 CFR part 760,
subpart E. The 2008 Farm Bill sets,
however, common eligibility
requirements for the programs. The
general provisions for supplemental
agricultural disaster assistance programs
will be implemented in regulations in 7
CFR part 760, subpart B. Specific
provisions for the other programs, LFP,
SURE, ELAP, and TAP, will be
implemented through separate
rulemakings. Where practical, these
programs will be implemented to be
similar to previous ad hoc disaster
assistance programs. For example, LIP
will be similar to the previous LIP
regulations that were in 7 CFR part 760,
subpart E.
Currently, for LIP, the 2008 Farm Bill
authorizes the Secretary to assist eligible
livestock producers on farms that have
had livestock death losses in excess of
the normal mortality due to adverse
weather.
The supplemental agricultural
disaster assistance programs will be
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administered by FSA using funds from
the Agricultural Disaster Relief Trust
Fund established under section 902 of
the Trade Act of 1974 (19 U.S.C. 2497a).
The disaster assistance programs
authorized by the 2008 Farm Bill are
permanent or ‘‘standing’’ programs that
have similar scope to the previous ad
hoc programs. The programs are
provided for in two separate places in
the 2008 Farm Bill. First, there is
section 12033, which adds a new
section 531 to the Federal Crop
Insurance Act (7 U.S.C. 1501–1524).
Second, there is section 15101, which
adds section 902 of the Trade Act of
1974. The provisions of the two sections
as enacted were identical except that the
Trade Act of 1974 provisions contained
the trust fund provisions. Since then,
there have been some amendments, but
the two sections of the 2008 Farm bill
are considered to be interchangeable for
the purposes of this rule.
General Eligibility Requirements
Payment Limits
The 2008 Farm Bill limits how much
a producer may receive from FSA
disaster assistance programs.
In applying payment limitation for
2008, no person, as defined and
determined by the regulations in 7 CFR
part 1400 in effect for 2008, may receive
more than $100,000:
• Total per crop year under ELAP,
LFP, LIP and SURE
• Per program years under TAP.
For 2009 through 2011, no person or
legal entity (excluding a joint venture or
general partnership), as defined and
determined by the regulations in 7 CFR
part 1400 may receive, directly or
indirectly, more than $100,000:
• Total per crop year under ELAP,
LFP, LIP and SURE
• Per program years under TAP.
For this purpose, both indirect and
direct benefits are counted by
attribution. In the case of a legal entity,
the same payment is attributed to the
direct payee in the full amount and
those that have an indirect interest to
the amount of the interest. For example,
under the attribution rules that applies
to these programs, assume:
• Corporation A is in line to receive
a $100,000 SURE payment,
• Corporation A is owned 50 percent
by Individual A and 50 percent by
Corporation B, and
• Corporation B is owned by
Individual B with a 30 percent interest
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and by Individual C with a 70 percent
interest.
If so, Corporation A, for payment
limitation purposes would be
considered to have received $100,000
and Individual C (who owns 70 percent
of Corporation B, which owns half of
Corporation A) would be considered to
have indirectly benefitted by the
amount of $35,000 (50 percent times 70
percent of the $100,000). Even though
no part of the $100,000 was actually
paid to Individual C, the amount of
$35,000 would count against individual
C’s overall payment limitation from all
sources and farms. Assume Individual C
was already at the maximum payment
limit, Individual C would not have been
eligible to receive $35,000; as a result,
the payment to Corporation A would be
reduced by $35,000.
The amount of any payment for which
a participant may be eligible under any
of these programs may be reduced by
any amount received by the participant
for the same or any similar loss from
any Federal disaster assistance program.
In applying the limitation on average
adjusted gross income (AGI) for 2008, an
individual or entity is ineligible for
payment under ELAP, LFP, LIP, SURE,
and TAP if the individual’s or entity’s
average AGI exceeds $2.5 million for
2007, 2006, and 2005 under the
provisions in 7 CFR part 1400 in effect
for 2008. For 2009 through 2011, the
average AGI limitation provisions in 7
CFR part 1400 applicable to Commodity
Credit Corporation (CCC) commodity
programs also apply to ELAP, LFP, LIP,
SURE, and TAP. Specifically, as
specified in the 2008 Farm Bill, for 2009
through 2011, a person or legal entity
with an average adjusted gross nonfarm
income, as defined in 7 CFR 1400.3, that
exceeds $500,000 for the relevant period
will not be eligible to receive payments
under these programs. Likewise, if a
person with an indirect interest in a
legal entity has an average nonfarm AGI
over $500,000, then the payment to the
legal entity will be reduced as
calculated based on the percent of
interest in the legal entity receiving the
payment. For example, continuing with
the assumptions in the example above,
if Individual B had an average AGI that
was over the limit, then the payment to
Corporation A will be reduced by 15
percent (Individual B’s 30 percent
interest in Corporation B times
Corporation B’s 50 percent interest in
Corporation A).
Payment and average AGI limits will
be determined under regulations
specified in 7 CFR part 1400 for
Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC)
commodity programs. The programs
covered in this final rule are not CCC
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programs, but the CCC regulations in 7
CFR part 1400 are adopted for these
programs.
The relevant AGI period for these
programs is the 3 calendar years that
precede the program year involved. For
livestock losses, the program year is the
calendar year of the loss of the livestock.
For SURE, the program year is the year
that corresponds to the relevant crop
year. The crop year concept in some
limited cases can involve a loss that
occurs in a different calendar year than
the calendar year whose number
corresponds to the crop year. For
example, wheat for the 2009 crop year
can be planted in the fall of 2008 and
be lost during 2008. SURE payments
related to such a loss would be made in
calendar year 2009.
The regulations in 7 CFR 1400.105
specify how payments will be attributed
and how far the attribution will go.
Attribution will be tracked through four
levels of ownership in legal entities. The
2008 Farm Bill removed the previous ‘‘3
entity rule,’’ so a person can now
receive benefits attributed through an
unlimited number of entities, subject to
the payment limits and the rules of
attribution described in this final rule
and in 7 CFR part 1400. In addition to
these limits, the 2008 Farm Bill imposes
limitations of payments to foreign
persons. Those limits are specified in
the regulations in § 760.103.
Risk Management Purchase
Requirement
To be eligible for program payments
under ELAP, SURE, and TAP, eligible
producers on a farm, as specified by the
2008 Farm Bill, must have purchased
insurance for each insurable
commodity, excluding grazing land; a
few exceptions allowed by the 2008
Farm Bill are discussed later in this
section. ‘‘Insurable commodities’’ are
those for which a plan of insurance can
be obtained from the USDA’s Risk
Management Agency (RMA) that makes
coverage for crops available under the
Federal Crop Insurance Act (FCIA).
Benefits for ‘‘noninsurable’’
commodities are generally available
through the Noninsured Crop Disaster
Assistance Program (NAP) run by FSA.
Except for grazing land, producers for
ELAP, SURE, and TAP must have
obtained an RMA policy or plan of
insurance or NAP coverage for all of
their crops. For LFP, producers must
have obtained an RMA policy or plan of
insurance or NAP coverage for those
grazing lands for which they seek
benefits.
LIP does not have a risk management
purchase requirement. The risk
management purchase requirement
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regulations are included in this rule
because they have multi-program
application. As noted, this final rule
contains general provisions for multiple
programs and specific provisions for
LIP. Additional provisions to cover the
other programs will be issued later.
Producers who did not purchase
required coverage are not eligible for
benefits unless an exception applies.
‘‘Socially disadvantaged farmers and
ranchers,’’ as well as ‘‘limited resource
farmers and ranchers,’’ or ‘‘beginning
farmers or ranchers,’’ are exempt. For
the 2008 crop, persons who paid a
certain buy-in fee were exempt from the
purchase requirement if the buy-in fee
was paid by September 16, 2008. By an
amendment to the 2008 Farm Bill,
Congress allowed a second buy-in
enabling producers to buy in from
February 17, 2009 up to May 18, 2009;
however, if the buy-in occurred after the
first deadline, or was not granted
administratively through some form of
equitable relief the producer had to
agree to buy crop insurance or NAP for
the next year for the crops to which the
buy-in applied. Also, there were special
benefit calculation provisions for
producers who made use of the second
deadline. The buy-in fee was equal to
the cost of the insurance or NAP
coverage, but did not entitle the
producer to insurance or NAP coverage.
Also, an amendment allowed a 2009
crop buy-in for crops if the 2009 Federal
Crop Insurance Corporation (FCIC) sales
closing date was prior to August 14,
2008. The deadline for the 2009 crop
buy-in was January 12, 2009. In addition
to these provisions, section 531(g)(5) of
the FCIA (and the corresponding
provisions of the Trade Act of 1974)
have some more general provisions
allowing the Secretary discretion to
grant equitable relief to persons with a
lack of coverage. The buy-in concept has
no application to LIP since LIP has no
purchase requirement. The buy-in fees
were different for 2008 and 2009.
Miscellaneous
Under this rule, participants receiving
disaster assistance payments under any
of the these programs must keep records
and supporting documentation for 3
years following the end of the year in
which the application for payment was
filed. This discretionary recordkeeping
requirement is consistent with other
FSA rules and programs, as well as with
previous similar disaster assistance
programs.
Restrictions apply to these programs
including, but not limited to, those
pertaining to highly erodible land and
wetland conservation provisions in 7
CFR part 12.
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This rule amends subpart B by adding
§ 760.110 to clarify that appeal
regulations specified in 7 CFR parts 11
and 780 apply. It also specifies that for
all the new standing disaster programs,
matters requiring FSA determinations
that are not in response to, or result
from, an individual disputable set of
facts in a specific individual
participant’s application, are not matters
that can be appealed under 7 CFR parts
11 or 780. These include, but are not
limited to, general statutory or
regulatory provisions that apply to
similarly situated participants, national
average payment prices, regions, crop
definition, average yields, or similar
items.
Specific Provisions for LIP
Overview
The 2008 Farm Bill provisions require
LIP payments to be made at a rate of 75
percent of the market value of the
livestock on the day before the date of
the death of the livestock. Payments are
to be made to eligible producers on
farms that have incurred livestock death
losses for the calendar year in excess of
the normal mortality. The eligible
livestock death losses must have
occurred on or after January 1, 2008, but
before October 1, 2011, due to adverse
weather, as determined by the Secretary,
during the calendar year for which
benefits are requested, including losses
due to hurricanes, floods, blizzards,
disease, wildfires, extreme heat, and
extreme cold. All the provisions
described in this paragraph, which are
implemented in this rule, are statutory
provisions over which FSA has little or
no discretion.
The details in this rule on what kinds
of livestock are eligible, acceptable
documentation of loss, and the
application process for payment, are
discretionary provisions. Generally,
FSA has based the discretionary
provisions of the program as specified
in this rule on the rules and policies
used for the 2005–2007 LIP because
they are known to the public and to
Congress and because they have worked
well to apportion benefits for the type
of loss involved in this program.
Unlike some previous livestockrelated programs, LIP does not cover
crawfish, catfish, or other aquaculture
because losses of that kind are covered
by SURE and the general direction of
the 2008 Farm bill is that there will not
be duplicative payments.
Eligibility Requirements; Livestock
Covered by LIP
LIP payments and eligibilities will be
calculated on the type of eligible
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livestock and the actual losses and the
calculations will be made by FSAapproved categories. Eligible livestock
for payment to livestock owners include
beef cattle, dairy cattle, buffalo, beefalo,
equine, sheep, goats, deer, swine,
poultry, reindeer, elk, emus, alpacas,
and llamas that died as a direct result
of an eligible adverse weather event.
The list of eligible livestock includes all
the types from the previous ad hoc
disaster program for livestock, except
for catfish and crawfish as described
above. Regulations for that program are
in 7 CFR part 760, subpart J. This final
rule adds alpacas, emus, and llamas to
the list of eligible livestock. FSA added
these types of livestock based on
concerns expressed with respect to
previous programs.
Benefits are only available for the
owners of livestock or for ‘‘contract
growers’’—persons who produce
livestock owned by someone else, but
have a risk in the livestock (such as a
farmer who raises chickens owned by a
company that produces chicken
products, but does not receive payment
for livestock that die before the livestock
is mature and returned to the owner).
The contract grower provisions only
cover swine and poultry because those
are the only known examples of that
kind of production arrangement. To be
eligible livestock for LIP, as of the day
they died the livestock must have been
both of the following:
• Owned by an eligible owner or in
the possession of an eligible contract
grower and
• Maintained for commercial use as
part of a farming operation of the
participant on the day they died.
In addition, to be eligible, the
livestock must have died as a direct
result of an eligible adverse weather
event in the calendar year for which
benefits are requested. Participants must
provide verifiable documentation of
livestock deaths claimed.
Animals kept for recreational
purposes, such as hunting animals,
animals used for roping practice, pets,
and show animals, are not eligible.
Wild, free roaming animals are not
eligible to generate payments.
Eligibility for payments to poultry and
swine contract growers will be limited
based on the amount of their contractual
risk and other payments received.
Payments will not exceed their
contractual risk, as determined by FSA.
Any compensation received by the
contract grower from the contractor for
loss of income for the dead livestock
will be deducted from the contract
grower’s payment.
Determination of LIP payment
eligibility will be based on actual losses
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in excess of normal mortality for the
calendar year for the relevant animal
type and approved category by an
individual producer or contract grower
due to adverse weather. There is not a
State or National ‘‘trigger’’ such as an
emergency declaration that provides
automatic eligibility for all producers in
a particular State, county, or region.
Adverse weather includes, but is not
limited to, events such as hurricanes,
floods, blizzards, wildfires, extreme
heat, and extreme cold. FSA has the
authority to determine eligibility of
livestock losses caused by other adverse
weather types, including disease caused
by such weather.
Applying for LIP Payment; LIP Payment
Calculations
There are two basic steps for a
producer to obtain LIP payments. One
step is to file a notice of loss when there
is an event that does or could generate
a claim because of the death of an
animal due to adverse weather. Because
the eligible losses are only those above
normal mortality that are calculated on
a yearly basis, a loss occurring in, for
example, July, will not necessarily
generate a claim depending on how
great the losses are, natural or
otherwise, for the rest of the year. It
could be, however, that a loss in July is
so great that the producer is already
beyond normal mortality for the year, in
which case there could already be a
claim for benefits. The second step is to
file the application for payment.
For the first step, after this final rule
is published, producers must provide a
notice of loss to the FSA county office
within 30 days of when the loss of
livestock was apparent, or within 30
days after the end of the calendar year
in which the loss occurred, whichever
comes first. Producers who suffered a
potentially eligible loss of livestock
prior to July 13, 2009 (prior to this rule
being effective), must provide a notice
of loss to the FSA county office by
September 13, 2009 (within 60 calendar
days after this rule is effective). As
indicated, however, a notice of loss is
one part of the application process;
other documentation is required for a
complete application for payment, as
described in this rule. The completed
application must be submitted to the
FSA county office no later than 30
calendar days after the end of the
calendar year in which the loss of
livestock occurred or, for 2008 losses, by
September 13, 2009 (60 calendar days
after this rule is effective). Producers
that suffer multiple livestock losses
during the calendar year may file
multiple notices of loss and multiple
applications for payment. This rule
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specifies the documents that are
required to show loss, such as inventory
records and grower contracts. The 30day deadline is a change from the
previous programs that had an
application period determined by the
Deputy Administrator for Farm
Programs for FSA. Putting a specific
deadline in the rules should make it
clear when applications are due.
As specified in the 2008 Farm Bill,
the payment for livestock owners will
be calculated based on 75 percent of the
average fair market value of the
applicable livestock on the day before
the date of death of the livestock, as
determined by the Agency. This
program is not a program funded by
CCC. Rather, it is funded by the trust
fund as provided for in section 902 of
the Trade Act of 1974, as added by the
2008 Farm Bill. For contract growers,
the payment will be based on 75 percent
of the average income loss sustained by
the grower with respect to the dead
livestock. Where there is a contract
grower holding the livestock at the time
of death, only the contract grower will
be eligible for the payment; the owner
is not eligible. When determining the
market value of applicable livestock in
order to determine payment rates for
LIP, FSA will establish market values
for each type and category of livestock
using data from credible livestock
markets. Credible livestock markets will
include sale barns and local sales as
well as sales at terminal market centers
or slaughtering facilities.
FSA, through the State FSA offices,
will obtain recommendations from
applicable State livestock organizations,
State Cooperative Extension Service,
and other knowledgeable and credible
sources, to establish the normal
mortality rate for each type of livestock
on a State-by-State basis. Payments are
only available for losses over normal
mortality over the course of the year and
those rates will be established on a
State-by-State basis.
Miscellaneous LIP Provisions
All owners, contract growers,
livestock, and losses must meet the
eligibility requirements provided in this
rule. False certifications carry serious
consequences. FSA will validate
applications with random spot-checks.
Livestock losses that are not weatherrelated are not eligible for LIP.
Structure of the Regulations
The regulations in 7 CFR part 760,
‘‘Indemnity Payment Programs,’’
currently contain subparts A through M,
which generally cover previous ad hoc
disaster assistance programs. This rule
revises subparts B and E and removes
and reserves subparts C, D, and F
through H. The current subpart B
specifies general provisions for the 2005
Hurricane Disaster Programs; this rule
revises subpart B to specify general
provisions for the new standing disaster
programs from the 2008 Farm Bill. The
current subpart E provides the
regulations for the 2005 Livestock
Indemnity Program; this rule revises
Subpart E to establish the regulations for
the new LIP established by the 2008
Farm Bill. This rule removes the
existing provisions for previous ad hoc
disaster programs in subparts C, D, F, G,
and H because the authority for the
programs has expired. For housekeeping
purposes, this rule also removes 7 CFR
part 1439, which contains some related
CCC programs. For questions on the
former regulations, interested parties
can refer to the appropriate regulation in
the January 1, 2009 edition of the Code
of Federal Regulations.
Subpart A of part 760 covers the Dairy
Indemnity Program and is not impacted
by this rule. Subparts I through M,
which provide the rules for the 2005–
2007 ad hoc disaster programs, are left
intact and not removed because of the
status of potential claims under those
subparts. In all cases, however, to the
extent of lingering or new disputes, the
rules governing these older programs
apply as they existed at the time the
programs were administered.
When all of the supplemental
agricultural disaster assistance programs
are implemented, 7 CFR part 760 will
have been revised as described in the
table below:
Current subpart
New subpart
Subpart A—Dairy Indemnity Payment Program .......................................
Subpart B—General Provisions for the 2005 Section 32 Hurricane Disaster Programs.
Subpart C—Hurricane Indemnity Program ...............................................
Subpart A—Dairy Indemnity Payment Program [unchanged].
760 Subpart B—General Provisions for Supplemental Agricultural Disaster Assistance Programs.
760 Subpart C—Emergency Assistance for Livestock, Honey Bees,
and Farm-Raised Fish.
760 Subpart D—Livestock Forage Disaster Program.
760 Subpart E—Livestock Indemnity Program [revised].
760 Subpart F—Tree Assistance Program.
760 Subpart G—Supplemental Revenue Assistance Payments Program.
None—removed.
Subparts I through M [unchanged].
Subpart
Subpart
Subpart
Subpart
D—Feed Indemnity Program ......................................................
E—Livestock Indemnity Program ................................................
F—Tree Indemnity Program .......................................................
G—Aquaculture Program ............................................................
Subpart H—2006 Livestock Assistance Grant Program ..........................
Subparts I through M ................................................................................
Miscellaneous Conforming
Amendments
We are updating the references in 7
CFR 1400.1 to refer to 7 CFR part 760
for the LIP, ELAP, LFP, SURE, and TAP
programs.
In addition, as indicated we are
removing in its entirety 7 CFR part
1439, ‘‘Emergency Livestock
Assistance,’’ as the programs there are
outdated even though there may be
some lingering claims. The times for
filing claims under all of those programs
has long since passed and in any event
all involve rules that were published in
the Federal Register and can be found
in the 2009 edition of the Code of
Federal Regulations.
Notice and Comment
The 2008 Consolidated Security,
Disaster Assistance, and Continuing
Appropriations Act (Pub. L. 110–329)
made section 1601(c)(2) of the 2008
Farm Bill applicable in implementing
section 12033 of the 2008 Farm Bill. To
the extent relevant, the exemption
applies, we believe to the corresponding
provision enacted in section 15101
since they are identical except for the
provisions for funding in section 15101,
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which do not appear at all in section
12033. Otherwise, the provisions of
Public Law 110–329 would have no
meaning. Therefore, these regulations
are exempt from the notice and
comment requirements of the
Administrative Procedures Act (5 U.S.C.
553), as specified in section 1601(c)(2)
of the 2008 Farm Bill, which requires
that the regulations be promulgated and
administered without regard to the
notice and comment provisions of
section 553 of title 5 of the United States
Code or the Statement of Policy of the
Secretary of Agriculture effective July
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24, 1971, (36 FR 13804) relating to
notices of proposed rulemaking and
public participation in rulemaking.
Effective Date
In making this final rule exempt from
notice and comment through section
1601(c)(2) of the 2008 Farm Bill, using
the administrative procedure provisions
in 5 U.S.C. 553, FSA finds that there is
good cause for making this rule effective
less than 30 days after publication in the
Federal Register. This rule allows FSA
to provide benefits to producers who
suffered losses due to livestock deaths
caused by adverse weather. Therefore,
to begin providing benefits to producers
as soon as possible, this final rule is
effective 13 days after publication in the
Federal Register.
Executive Order 12866
The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) designated this rule as not
significant under Executive Order 12866
and, therefore, OMB was not required to
review this rule.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
This rule is not subject to the
Regulatory Flexibility Act since FSA is
not required to publish a notice of
proposed rulemaking for this rule.
Environmental Review
The environmental impacts of this
rule have been considered in a manner
consistent with the provisions of the
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA, 42 U.S.C. 4321–4347), the
regulations of the Council on
Environmental Quality (40 CFR parts
1500–1508), and FSA regulations for
compliance with NEPA (7 CFR part
799). The LIP provisions required by the
2008 Farm Bill that are identified in this
rule are non-discretionary in nature,
solely providing financial assistance.
Therefore, FSA has determined that
provisions for further NEPA review do
not apply to this rule. Therefore, no
environmental assessment or
environmental impact statement will be
prepared.
Executive Order 12372
This program is not subject to
Executive Order 12372, which requires
consultation with State and local
officials. See the notice related to 7 CFR
part 3015, subpart V, published in the
Federal Register on June 24, 1983 (48
FR 29115).
Executive Order 12988
This rule has been reviewed under
Executive Order 12988. This rule is not
retroactive and it does not preempt State
or local laws, regulations, or policies
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unless they present an irreconcilable
conflict with this rule. Before any
judicial action may be brought regarding
the provisions of this rule the
administrative appeal provisions of 7
CFR parts 11 and 780 must be
exhausted.
List of Subjects
Executive Order 13132
Agriculture, Grant programs—
agriculture, Loan programs—agriculture,
Price support programs, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
The policies contained in this rule do
not have any substantial direct effect on
States, on the relationship between the
national government and States, or on
the distribution of power and
responsibilities among various levels of
government. Nor does this rule impose
substantial direct compliance costs on
State and local governments. Therefore,
consultation with States was not
required.
Executive Order 13175
The policies contained in this rule do
not impose substantial unreimbursed
direct compliance costs on Indian tribal
governments or have tribal implications
that preempt tribal law.
Unfunded Mandates
This rule contains no Federal
mandates under the regulatory
provisions of Title II of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
for State, local, and tribal government or
the private sector. In addition, FSA was
not required to publish a notice of
proposed rule making for this rule.
Therefore, this rule is not subject to the
requirements of sections 202 and 205 of
the UMRA.
Federal Assistance Programs
This rule applies to the following
Federal assistance program that is not in
the Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance: LIP.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The regulations in this rule are
exempt from the requirements of the
Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C.
Chapter 35), as specified in section
1601(c)(2) of the 2008 Farm Bill, which
provides that these regulations be
promulgated and administered without
regard to the Paperwork Reduction Act.
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.
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7 CFR Part 760
Dairy products, Indemnity payments,
Pesticide and pests, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
7 CFR Part 1400
7 CFR Part 1439
Animal feeds, Disaster assistance,
Grant programs—agriculture, Indians,
Livestock, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
For the reasons discussed above,
under the authority of 15 U. S.C. 714b,
this rule amends 7 CFR parts 760, 1400,
and 1439 as follows:
■
PART 760—INDEMNITY PAYMENT
PROGRAMS
1. Revise the authority citation for part
760 to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 4501, 7 U.S.C. 1531,
16 U.S.C. 3801, note, and 19 U.S.C. 2497;
Title III, Public Law 109–234, 120 Stat. 474;
and Title IX, Public Law 110–28, 121 Stat.
211.
■
2. Revise Subpart B to read as follows:
Subpart B—General Provisions for
Supplemental Agricultural Disaster
Assistance Programs
Sec.
760.101 Applicability.
760.102 Administration of ELAP, LFP, LIP,
SURE, and TAP.
760.103 Eligible producer.
760.104 Risk management purchase
requirements.
760.105 Waiver for certain crop years; buyin.
760.106 Equitable relief.
760.107 Socially disadvantaged, limited
resource, or beginning farmer or rancher.
760.108 Payment limitation.
760.109 Misrepresentation and scheme or
device.
760.110 Appeals.
760.111 Offsets, assignments, and debt
settlement.
760.112 Records and inspections.
760.113 Refunds; joint and several liability.
760.114 Minors.
760.115 Deceased individuals or dissolved
entities.
760.116 Miscellaneous.
Subpart B—General Provisions for
Supplemental Agricultural Disaster
Assistance Programs
§ 760.101
Applicability.
(a) This subpart establishes general
conditions for this subpart and subparts
C through H of this part and applies
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only to those subparts. Subparts C
through H cover the following programs
provided for in the ‘‘2008 Farm Bill’’
(Pub. L. 110–246):
(1) Emergency Assistance for
Livestock, Honey Bees, and Farm-Raised
Fish Program (ELAP);
(2) Livestock Forage Disaster Program
(LFP);
(3) Livestock Indemnity Payments
Program (LIP);
(4) Supplemental Revenue Assistance
Payments Program (SURE); and
(5) Tree Assistance Program (TAP).
(b) To be eligible for payments under
these programs, participants must
comply with all provisions under this
subpart and the relevant particular
subpart for that program. All other
provisions of law also apply.
§ 760.102 Administration of ELAP, LFP,
LIP, SURE, and TAP.
(a) The programs in subparts C
through H of this part will be
administered under the general
supervision and direction of the
Administrator, Farm Service Agency
(FSA), and the Deputy Administrator for
Farm Programs, FSA (who is referred to
as the ‘‘Deputy Administrator’’ in this
part).
(b) FSA representatives do not have
authority to modify or waive any of the
provisions of the regulations of this part
as amended or supplemented, except as
specified in paragraph (e) of this
section.
(c) The State FSA committee will take
any action required by the regulations of
this part that the county FSA committee
has not taken. The State FSA committee
will also:
(1) Correct, or require a county FSA
committee to correct, any action taken
by such county FSA committee that is
not in accordance with the regulations
of this part or
(2) Require a county FSA committee
to withhold taking any action that is not
in accordance with this part.
(d) No provision or delegation to a
State or county FSA committee will
preclude the Administrator, the Deputy
Administrator for Farm Programs, or a
designee or other such person, from
determining any question arising under
the programs of this part, or from
reversing or modifying any
determination made by a State or county
FSA committee.
(e) The Deputy Administrator for
Farm Programs may authorize State and
county FSA committees to waive or
modify non-statutory deadlines, or other
program requirements of this part in
cases where lateness or failure to meet
such requirements does not adversely
affect operation of the programs in this
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part. Participants have no right to seek
an exception under this provision. The
Deputy Administrator’s refusal to
consider cases or circumstances or
decision not to exercise this
discretionary authority under this
provision will not be considered an
adverse decision and is not appealable.
§ 760.103
Eligible producer.
(a) In general, the term ‘‘eligible
producer’’ means, in addition to other
requirements as may apply, an
individual or entity described in
paragraph (b) of this section that, as
determined by the Secretary, assumes
the production and market risks
associated with the agricultural
production of crops or livestock on a
farm either as the owner of the farm,
when there is no contract grower, or a
contract grower of the livestock when
there is a contract grower.
(b) To be eligible for benefits, an
individual or entity must be a:
(1) Citizen of the United States;
(2) Resident alien; for purposes of this
part, resident alien means ‘‘lawful
alien’’ as defined in 7 CFR part 1400;
(3) Partnership of citizens of the
United States; or
(4) Corporation, limited liability
corporation, or other farm
organizational structure organized
under State law.
§ 760.104 Risk management purchase
requirements.
(a) To be eligible for program
payments under:
(1) ELAP, SURE, and TAP, eligible
producers for any commodity at any
location for which the producer seeks
benefits must have for every commodity
on every farm in which the producer
has an interest for the relevant program
year:
(i) In the case of an ‘‘insurable
commodity,’’ (which for this part means
a commodity for which the Deputy
Administrator determines catastrophic
coverage is available from the USDA
Risk Management Agency (RMA))
obtained catastrophic coverage or better
under a policy or plan of insurance
administered by RMA under the Federal
Crop Insurance Act (FCIA) (7 U.S.C.
1501–1524), except that this obligation
will not include crop insurance pilot
programs so designated by RMA or to
forage crops, and
(ii) In the case of a ‘‘noninsurable
commodity,’’ (which is any commodity
for which, as to the particular
production in question, is not an
‘‘insurable commodity,’’ but for which
coverage is available under the
Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance
Program (NAP) operated under 7 CFR
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part 1437), have obtained NAP coverage
by filing the proper paperwork and fee
within the relevant deadlines, except
that this requirement will not include
forage on grazing land.
(2) LFP, with respect to those grazing
lands incurring losses for which
assistance is being requested, eligible
livestock producers must have:
(i) Obtained a policy or plan of
insurance for the forage crop under
FCIA, or
(ii) Filed the required paperwork and
paid the administrative fee by the
applicable State filing deadline for NAP
coverage for that grazing land.
(b) Producers who did not purchase a
policy or plan of insurance
administered by RMA in accordance
with FCIA (7 U.S.C. 1501–1524), or NAP
coverage for their applicable crops, will
not be eligible for assistance under
ELAP, LFP, SURE, and TAP, as
provided in paragraph (a) of this section
unless the producer is one of the classes
of farmers for which an exemption
under § 760.107 apply, is exempt under
the ‘‘buy-in’’ provisions of this subpart,
or is granted relief from that
requirement by the Deputy
Administrator under some other
provision of this part.
(c) Producers who have obtained
insurance by a written agreement as
specified in § 400.652(d) of this title
even though that production would not
normally be considered an ‘‘insurable
commodity’’ under the rules of this
subpart, will be considered to have met
the risk management purchase
requirement of this subpart with respect
to such production. The commodity to
which the agreement applies will be
considered for purposes of this subpart
to be an ‘‘insurable commodity.’’
(d) Producers by an administrative
process who were granted NAP coverage
for the relevant period as a form of relief
in an administrative proceeding, or who
were awarded NAP coverage for the
relevant period through an appeal
through the National Appeals Division
(NAD), will be considered as having met
the NAP eligibility criteria of this
section for that crop as long as the
applicable NAP service fee has been
paid.
(e) The risk management purchase
requirement for programs specified
under this part will be determined
based on the initial intended use of a
crop at the time a policy or plan of
insurance or NAP coverage was
purchased and as reported on the
acreage report.
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§ 760.105
buy-in.
Waiver for certain crop years;
(a) For the 2008 crop year, the
insurance or NAP purchase
requirements of § 760.104 (this is
referred to as the ‘‘purchase’’
requirement) will be waived for eligible
producers for losses during the 2008
crop year if the eligible producer paid
a fee (buy-in fee) equal to the applicable
NAP service fee or catastrophic risk
protection plan fee to the Secretary by
September 16, 2008. Payment of a buyin fee under this section is for the sole
purpose of becoming eligible for
participation in ELAP, LFP, SURE, and
TAP. Payment of a buy-in fee does not
provide any actual insurance or NAP
coverage or assistance.
(b) For the 2009 crop year, the
purchase requirement will be waived for
purchases where the closing date for
coverage occurred prior to August 14,
2008, so long as the buy-in fee set by the
Secretary of Agriculture was paid by
January 12, 2009.
(c) Any producer of 2008
commodities who is otherwise ineligible
because of the purchase requirement
and who did not meet the conditions of
paragraph (a) of this section may still be
covered for ELAP, SURE, or TAP
assistance if the producer paid the
applicable fee described in paragraph
(d) of this section no later than May 18,
2009, provided that in the case of each:
(1) Insurable commodity, excluding
grazing land, the eligible producers on
the farm agree to obtain a policy or plan
of insurance under FCIA (7 U.S.C.
1501–1524), excluding a crop insurance
pilot program under that subtitle, for the
next insurance year for which crop
insurance is available to the eligible
producers on the farm at a level of
coverage equal to 70 percent or more of
the recorded or appraised average yield
indemnified at 100 percent of the
expected market price, or an equivalent
coverage, and
(2) Noninsurable commodity, the
eligible producers on the farm must
agree to file the required paperwork,
and pay the administrative fee by the
applicable State filing deadline, for NAP
for the next year for which a policy is
available.
(d) For producers seeking eligibility
under paragraph (c) of this section, the
applicable buy-in fee for the 2008 crop
year was the catastrophic risk protection
plan fee or the applicable NAP service
fee in effect prior to NAP service fee
adjustments specified in the 2008 Farm
Bill.
§ 760.106
Equitable relief.
(a) The Secretary may provide
equitable relief on a case-by-case basis
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for the purchase requirement to eligible
participants that:
(1) Are otherwise ineligible or
unintentionally fail to meet the
requirements of § 760.104 for one or
more eligible crops on the farm, as
determined by the Secretary, or
(2) Failed to meet the requirements of
§ 760.104 due to the enactment of the
2008 Farm Bill after the:
(i) Applicable sales closing date for a
policy or plan of insurance in
accordance with the FCIA (7 U.S.C.
1501–1524) or
(ii) Application closing date for NAP.
(b) Equitable relief will not be granted
to participants in instances of:
(1) A scheme or device that had the
effect or intent of defeating the purposes
of a program of insurance, NAP, or any
other program administered under this
part or elsewhere in this title,
(2) An intentional decision to not
meet the purchase or buy-in
requirements,
(3) Producers against whom sanctions
have been imposed by RMA or FSA
prohibiting the purchase of coverage or
prohibiting the receipt of payments
otherwise payable under this part,
(4) Violations of highly erodible land
and wetland conservation provisions of
7 CFR part 12,
(5) Producers who are ineligible under
any provisions of law, including
regulations, relating to controlled
substances (see for example 7 CFR
718.6), or
(6) A producer’s debarment by a
federal agency from receiving any
federal government payment if such
debarment included payments of the
type involved in this matter.
(c) In general, no relief that is
discretionary will be allowed except
upon a finding by the Deputy
Administrator or the Deputy
Administrator’s designee that the person
seeking the relief acted in good faith as
determined in accordance with such
rules and procedures as may be set by
the Deputy Administrator.
§ 760.107 Socially disadvantaged, limited
resource, or beginning farmer or rancher.
(a) Risk management purchase
requirements, as provided in § 760.104,
will be waived for a participant who, as
specified in paragraphs (b)(1) through
(3) of this section, is eligible to be
considered a ‘‘socially disadvantaged
farmer or rancher,’’ a ‘‘limited resource
farmer or rancher,’’ or a ‘‘beginning
farmer or rancher.’’
(b) To qualify for this section as a
‘‘socially disadvantaged farmer or
rancher,’’ ‘‘limited resource farmer or
rancher,’’ or ‘‘beginning farmer or
rancher,’’ participants must meet
eligibility criteria as follows:
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(1) A ‘‘socially disadvantaged farmer
or rancher’’ is, for this section, a farmer
or rancher who is a member of a socially
disadvantaged group whose members
have been subjected to racial or ethnic
prejudice because of their identity as
members of a group without regard to
their individual qualities. Gender is not
included as a covered group. Socially
disadvantaged groups include the
following and no others unless
approved in writing by the Deputy
Administrator:
(i) American Indians or Alaskan
Natives,
(ii) Asians or Asian-Americans,
(iii) Blacks or African Americans,
(iv) Native Hawaiians or other Pacific
Islanders, and
(v) Hispanics.
(2) A ‘‘limited resource farmer or
rancher’’ means for this section a
producer who is both:
(i) A producer whose direct or
indirect gross farm sales do not exceed
$100,000 in both of the two calendar
years that precede the calendar year that
corresponds to the relevant program
year, adjusted upwards for any general
inflation since fiscal year 2004, inflation
as measured using the Prices Paid by
Farmer Index compiled by the National
Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS),
and
(ii) A producer whose total household
income is at or below the national
poverty level for a family of four, or less
than 50 percent of the county median
household income for the same two
calendar years referenced in paragraph
(a) of this section, as determined
annually using Commerce Department
data. (Limited resource farmer or
rancher status can be determined using
a Web site available through the Limited
Resource Farmer and Rancher Online
Self Determination Tool through the
National Resource and Conservation
Service at https://
www.lrftool.sc.egov.usda.gov/tool.asp.)
(3) A ‘‘beginning farmer or rancher’’
means for this section a person or legal
entity who for a program year both:
(i) Has never previously operated a
farm or ranch, or who has not operated
a farm or ranch in the previous 10 years,
applicable to all members (shareholders,
partners, beneficiaries, etc., as fits the
circumstances) of an entity, and
(ii) Will have or has had for the
relevant period materially and
substantially participated in the
operation of a farm or ranch.
(c) If a legal entity requests to be
considered a ‘‘socially disadvantaged,’’
‘‘limited resource,’’ or ‘‘beginning’’
farmer or rancher, at least 50 percent of
the persons in the entity must in their
individual capacities meet the
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definition as provided in paragraphs
(b)(1) through (3) of this section and it
must be clearly demonstrated that the
entity was not formed for the purposes
of avoiding the purchase requirements
or formed after the deadline for the
purchase requirement.
§ 760.108
Payment limitation.
(a) For 2008, no person, as defined
and determined under the provisions in
part 1400 of this title in effect for 2008
may receive more than:
(1) $100,000 total for the 2008
program year under ELAP, LFP, LIP,
and SURE combined or
(2) $100,000 for the 2008 program
year under TAP.
(b) For 2009 and subsequent program
years, no person or legal entity,
excluding a joint venture or general
partnership, as determined by the rules
in part 1400 of this title may receive,
directly or indirectly, more than:
(1) $100,000 per program year total
under ELAP, LFP, LIP, and SURE
combined; or
(2) $100,000 per program year under
TAP.
(c) The Deputy Administrator may
take such actions as needed, whether or
not specifically provided for, to avoid a
duplication of benefits under the
multiple programs provided for in this
part, or duplication of benefits received
in other programs, and may impose
such cross-program payment limitations
as may be consistent with the intent of
this part.
(d) In applying the limitation on
average adjusted gross income (AGI) for
2008, an individual or entity is
ineligible for payment under ELAP,
LFP, LIP, SURE, and TAP if the
individual’s or entity’s average adjusted
gross income (AGI) exceeds $2.5 million
for 2007, 2006, and 2005 under the
provisions in part 1400 of this title in
effect for 2008.
(e) For 2009 through 2011, the average
AGI limitation provisions in part 1400
of this title relating to limits on
payments for persons or legal entities,
excluding joint ventures and general
partnerships, with certain levels of
average adjusted gross income (AGI)
will apply under this subpart and will
apply to each applicant for ELAP, LFP,
LIP, SURE, and TAP. Specifically, for
2009 through 2011, a person or legal
entity with an average adjusted gross
nonfarm income, as defined in § 1404.3
of this title, that exceeds $500,000 will
not be eligible to receive benefits under
this part.
(f) The direct attribution provisions in
part 1400 of this title apply to ELAP,
LFP, LIP, SURE, and TAP for 2009 and
subsequent years. Under those rules,
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any payment to any legal entity will also
be considered for payment limitation
purposes to be a payment to persons or
legal entities with an interest in the
legal entity or in a sub-entity. If any
such interested person or legal entity is
over the payment limitation because of
direct payment or their indirect interests
or a combination thereof, then the
payment to the actual payee will be
reduced commensurate with the amount
of the interest of the interested person
in the payee. Likewise, by the same
method, if anyone with a direct or
indirect interest in a legal entity or subentity of a payee entity exceeds the AGI
levels that would allow a participant to
directly receive a payment under this
part, then the payment to the actual
payee will be reduced commensurately
with that interest. For all purposes
under this section, unless otherwise
specified in part 1400 of this title, the
AGI figure that will be relevant for a
person or legal entity will be an average
AGI for the three taxable years that
precede the most immediately
preceding complete taxable year, as
determined by CCC.
§ 760.109 Misrepresentation and scheme
or device.
(a) A participant who is determined to
have deliberately misrepresented any
fact affecting a program determination
made in accordance with this part, or
otherwise used a scheme or device with
the intent to receive benefits for which
the participant would not otherwise be
entitled, will not be entitled to program
payments and must refund all such
payments received, plus interest as
determined in accordance with part 792
of this chapter. The participant will also
be denied program benefits for the
immediately subsequent period of at
least 2 crop years, and up to 5 crop
years. Interest will run from the date of
the original disbursement by FSA.
(b) A participant will refund to FSA
all program payments, plus interest, as
determined in accordance with part 792
of this chapter, provided however, that
in any case it will run from the date of
the original disbursement, received by
such participant with respect to all
contracts or applications, as may be
applicable, if the participant is
determined to have knowingly done any
of the following:
(1) Adopted any scheme or device
that tends to defeat the purpose of the
program,
(2) Made any fraudulent
representation, or
(3) Misrepresented any fact affecting a
program determination.
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§ 760.110
Appeals.
(a) Appeals. Appeal regulations set
forth at parts 11 and 780 of this title
apply to this part.
(b) Determinations not eligible for
administrative review or appeal. FSA
determinations that are not in response
to a specific individual participant’s
application are not to be construed to be
individual program eligibility
determinations or adverse decisions and
are, therefore, not subject to
administrative review or appeal under
parts 11 or 780 of this title. Such
determinations include, but are not
limited to, application periods,
deadlines, coverage periods, crop years,
fees, prices, general statutory or
regulatory provisions that apply to
similarly situated participants, national
average payment prices, regions, crop
definition, average yields, and payment
factors established by FSA for any of the
programs for which this subpart applies
or similar matters requiring FSA
determinations.
§ 760.111 Offsets, assignments, and debt
settlement.
(a) Any payment to any participant
under this part will be made without
regard to questions of title under State
law, and without regard to any claim or
lien against the commodity, or proceeds,
in favor of the owner or any other
creditor except agencies of the U.S.
Government. The regulations governing
offsets and withholdings in part 792 of
this title apply to payments made under
this part.
(b) Any participant entitled to any
payment may assign any payment(s) in
accordance with regulations governing
the assignment of payments in part 1404
of this title.
§ 760.112
Records and inspections.
(a) Any participant receiving
payments under any program in ELAP,
LFP, LIP, SURE, or TAP, or any other
legal entity or person who provides
information for the purposes of enabling
a participant to receive a payment under
ELAP, LFP, LIP, SURE, or TAP, must:
(1) Maintain any books, records, and
accounts supporting the information for
3 years following the end of the year
during which the request for payment
was submitted, and
(2) Allow authorized representatives
of USDA and the Government
Accountability Office, during regular
business hours, to inspect, examine, and
make copies of such books or records,
and to enter the farm and to inspect and
verify all applicable livestock and
acreage in which the participant has an
interest for the purpose of confirming
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the accuracy of information provided by
or for the participant.
(b) [Reserved]
§ 760.113
liability.
Subpart C [Removed and Reserved]
Refunds; joint and several
■
(a) In the event that the participant
fails to comply with any term,
requirement, or condition for payment
or assistance arising under ELAP, LFP,
LIP, SURE, or TAP and if any refund of
a payment to FSA will otherwise
become due in connection with this
part, the participant must refund to FSA
all payments made in regard to such
matter, together with interest and latepayment charges as provided for in part
792 of this chapter provided that
interest will in all cases run from the
date of the original disbursement.
(b) All persons with a financial
interest in an operation or in an
application for payment will be jointly
and severally liable for any refund,
including related charges, that is
determined to be due FSA for any
reason under this part.
§ 760.114
Minors.
A minor child is eligible to apply for
program benefits under ELAP, LFP, LIP,
SURE, or TAP if all the eligibility
requirements are met and the provision
for minor children in part 1400 of this
title are met.
§ 760.115 Deceased individuals or
dissolved entities.
(a) Payments may be made for eligible
losses suffered by an eligible participant
who is now a deceased individual or is
a dissolved entity if a representative,
who currently has authority to enter
into a contract, on behalf of the
participant, signs the application for
payment.
(b) Legal documents showing proof of
authority to sign for the deceased
individual or dissolved entity must be
provided.
(c) If a participant is now a dissolved
general partnership or joint venture, all
members of the general partnership or
joint venture at the time of dissolution
or their duly authorized representatives
must sign the application for payment.
§ 760.116
in this subpart were programs funded by
the Commodity Credit Corporation.
Miscellaneous.
(a) As a condition to receive benefits
under ELAP, LFP, LIP, SURE, or TAP,
a participant must have been in
compliance with the provisions of parts
12 and 718 of this title, and must not
otherwise be precluded from receiving
benefits under those provisions or under
any law.
(b) Rules of the Commodity Credit
Corporation that are cited in this part
will be applied to this subpart in the
same manner as if the programs covered
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3. Remove and reserve subpart C.
Subpart D [Removed and Reserved]
■
■
4. Remove and reserve subpart D.
5. Revise subpart E to read as follows:
Subpart E—Livestock Indemnity Program
Sec.
760.401 Applicability.
760.402 Definitions.
760.403 Eligible owners and contract
growers.
760.404 Eligible livestock.
760.405 Application process.
760.406 Payment calculation.
Subpart E—Livestock Indemnity
Program
§ 760.401
Applicability.
(a) This subpart establishes the terms
and conditions under which the
Livestock Indemnity Program (LIP) will
be administered under Titles XII and XV
of the 2008 Farm Bill (Pub. L. 110–246).
(b) Eligible livestock owners and
contract growers will be compensated in
accordance with § 760.406 for eligible
livestock deaths in excess of normal
mortality that occurred in the calendar
year for which benefits are being
requested as a direct result of an eligible
adverse weather event. An ‘‘eligible
adverse weather event’’ is one, as
determined by the Secretary, occurring
in the program year that could and did,
even when normal preventative or
corrective measures were taken and
good farming practices were followed,
directly result in the death of livestock.
Because feed can be purchased or
otherwise obtained in the event of a
drought, drought is not an eligible
adverse weather event except when
anthrax, resulting from drought, causes
the death of eligible livestock.
§ 760.402
Definitions.
The following definitions apply to
this subpart. The definitions in parts
718 and 1400 of this title also apply,
except where they conflict with the
definitions in this section.
Adult beef bull means a male beef
breed bovine animal that was at least 2
years old and used for breeding
purposes before it died.
Adult beef cow means a female beef
breed bovine animal that had delivered
one or more offspring before dying. A
first-time bred beef heifer is also
considered an adult beef cow if it was
pregnant at the time it died.
Adult buffalo and beefalo bull means
a male animal of those breeds that was
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at least 2 years old and used for
breeding purposes before it died.
Adult buffalo and beefalo cow means
a female animal of those breeds that had
delivered one or more offspring before
dying. A first-time bred buffalo or
beefalo heifer is also considered an
adult buffalo or beefalo cow if it was
pregnant at the time it died.
Adult dairy bull means a male dairy
breed bovine animal at least 2 years old
used primarily for breeding dairy cows
before it died.
Adult dairy cow means a female
bovine dairy breed animal used for the
purpose of providing milk for human
consumption that had delivered one or
more offspring before dying. A first-time
bred dairy heifer is also considered an
adult dairy cow if it was pregnant at the
time it died.
Adverse weather means damaging
weather events, including, but not
limited to, hurricanes, floods, blizzards,
disease, wildfires, extreme heat, and
extreme cold.
Agricultural operation means a
farming operation.
Application means the ‘‘Livestock
Indemnity Program’’ form.
Buck means a male goat.
Commercial use means used in the
operation of a business activity engaged
in as a means of livelihood for profit by
the eligible producer.
Contract means, with respect to
contracts for the handling of livestock,
a written agreement between a livestock
owner and another individual or entity
setting the specific terms, conditions,
and obligations of the parties involved
regarding the production of livestock or
livestock products.
Deputy Administrator or DAFP means
the Deputy Administrator for Farm
Programs, Farm Service Agency, U.S.
Department of Agriculture or the
designee.
Equine animal means a domesticated
horse, mule, or donkey.
Ewe means a female sheep.
Farming operation means a business
enterprise engaged in producing
agricultural products.
FSA means the Farm Service Agency.
Goat means a domesticated, ruminant
mammal of the genus Capra, including
Angora goats. Goats are further defined
by sex (bucks and nannies) and age
(kids).
Kid means a goat less than 1 year old.
Lamb means a sheep less than 1 year
old.
Livestock owner means one having
legal ownership of the livestock for
which benefits are being requested on
the day such livestock died.
Nanny means a female goat.
Non-adult beef cattle means a beef
breed bovine animal that does not meet
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the definition of adult beef cow or bull.
Non-adult beef cattle are further
delineated by weight categories of either
less than 400 pounds or 400 pounds or
more at the time they died.
Non-adult buffalo or beefalo means an
animal of those breeds that does not
meet the definition of adult buffalo or
beefalo cow or bull. Non-adult buffalo
or beefalo are further delineated by
weight categories of either less than 400
pounds or 400 pounds or more at the
time of death.
Non-adult dairy cattle means a dairy
breed bovine animal, of a breed used for
the purpose of providing milk for
human consumption, that does not meet
the definition of adult dairy cow or bull.
Non-adult dairy cattle are further
delineated by weight categories of either
less than 400 pounds or 400 pounds or
more at the time they died.
Normal mortality means the
numerical amount, computed by a
percentage, as established for the area
by the FSA State Committee, of
expected livestock deaths, by category,
that normally occur during a calendar
year for a producer.
Poultry means domesticated chickens,
turkeys, ducks, and geese. Poultry are
further delineated by sex, age, and
purpose of production as determined by
FSA.
Ram means a male sheep.
Secretary means the Secretary of
Agriculture or a designee of the
Secretary.
Sheep means a domesticated,
ruminant mammal of the genus Ovis.
Sheep are further defined by sex (rams
and ewes) and age (lambs) for purposes
of dividing into categories for loss
calculations.
State committee, State office, county
committee, or county office means the
respective FSA committee or office.
Swine means a domesticated
omnivorous pig, hog, or boar. Swine for
purposes of dividing into categories for
loss calculations are further delineated
by sex and weight as determined by
FSA.
United States means all fifty States of
the United States, the Commonwealth of
Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam,
and the District of Columbia.
§ 760.403
growers.
Eligible owners and contract
(a) In addition to other eligibility rules
that may apply, to be eligible as a:
(1) Livestock owner for benefits with
respect to the death of an animal under
this subpart, the applicant must have
had legal ownership of the eligible
livestock on the day the livestock died
and under conditions in which no
contract grower could have been eligible
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Jkt 217001
for benefits with respect to the animal.
Eligible types of animal categories for
which losses can be calculated for an
owner are specified in § 760.404(a).
(2) Contract grower for benefits with
respect to the death of an animal, the
animal must be in one of the categories
specified on § 760.404(b), and the
contract grower must have had
(i) A written agreement with the
owner of eligible livestock setting the
specific terms, conditions, and
obligations of the parties involved
regarding the production of livestock;
(ii) Control of the eligible livestock on
the day the livestock died; and
(iii) A risk of loss in the animal.
(b) A producer seeking payment must
not be ineligible under the restrictions
applicable to foreign persons contained
in § 760.103(b) and must meet all other
requirements of subpart B and other
applicable USDA regulations.
§ 760.404
Eligible livestock.
(a) To be considered eligible livestock
for livestock owners, the kind of
livestock must be alpacas, adult or nonadult dairy cattle, beef cattle, buffalo,
beefalo, elk, emus, equine, llamas,
sheep, goats, swine, poultry, deer, or
reindeer and meet all the conditions in
paragraph (c) of this section.
(b) To be considered eligible livestock
for contract growers, the kind of
livestock must be poultry or swine as
defined in § 760.402 and meet all the
conditions in paragraph (c) of this
section.
(c) To be considered eligible livestock
for the purpose of generating payments
under this subpart, livestock must meet
all of the following conditions:
(1) Died as a direct result of an
eligible adverse weather event:
(i) On or after January 1, 2008, but
before October 1, 2011,
(ii) No later than 60 calendar days
from the ending date of the applicable
adverse weather event, but before
October 1, 2011, and
(iii) In the calendar year for which
benefits are being requested;
(2) Been maintained for commercial
use as part of a farming operation on the
day they died; and
(3) Before dying, not have been
produced or maintained for reasons
other than commercial use as part of a
farming operation, such non-eligible
uses being understood to include, but
not be limited to, any uses of wild free
roaming animals or use of the animals
for recreational purposes, such as
pleasure, hunting, roping, pets, or for
show.
(d) The following categories of
animals owned by a livestock owner are
eligible livestock and calculations of
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eligibility for payments will be
calculated separately for each producer
with respect to each category:
(1) Adult beef bulls;
(2) Adult beef cows;
(3) Adult buffalo or beefalo bulls;
(4) Adult buffalo or beefalo cows;
(5) Adult dairy bulls;
(6) Adult dairy cows;
(7) Alpacas;
(8) Chickens, broilers, pullets;
(9) Chickens, chicks;
(10) Chickens, layers, roasters;
(11) Deer;
(12) Ducks;
(13) Ducks, ducklings;
(14) Elk;
(15) Emus;
(16) Equine;
(17) Geese, goose;
(18) Geese, gosling;
(19) Goats, bucks;
(20) Goats, nannies;
(21) Goats, kids;
(22) Llamas;
(23) Non-adult beef cattle;
(24) Non-adult buffalo or beefalo;
(25) Non-adult dairy cattle;
(26) Reindeer;
(27) Sheep, ewes;
(28) Sheep, lambs;
(29) Sheep, rams;
(30) Swine, feeder pigs under 50
pounds;
(31) Swine, sows, boars, barrows, gilts
50 to 150 pounds;
(32) Swine, sows, boars, barrows, gilts
over 150 pounds;
(33) Turkeys, poults; and
(34) Turkeys, toms, fryers, and
roasters.
(e) The following categories of
animals are eligible livestock for
contract growers and calculations of
eligibility for payments will be
calculated separately for each producer
with respect to each category:
(1) Chickens, broilers, pullets;
(2) Chickens, layers, roasters;
(3) Geese, goose;
(4) Swine, boars, sows;
(5) Swine, feeder pigs;
(6) Swine, lightweight barrows, gilts;
(7) Swine, sows, boars, barrows, gilts;
and
(8) Turkeys, toms, fryers, and roasters.
§ 760.405
Application process.
(a) In addition to submitting an
application for payment at the
appropriate time, a producer or contract
grower that suffered livestock losses that
create or could create a claim for
benefits must:
(1) For losses during 2008 and losses
in 2009, prior to July 13, 2009, provide
a notice of loss to FSA no later than
September 13, 2009.
(2) For losses on or after July 13, 2009,
provide a notice of loss to FSA within
the earlier of:
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(i) 30 calendar days of when the loss
of livestock is apparent to the
participant or
(ii) 30 calendar days after the end of
the calendar year in which the loss of
livestock occurred.
(3) The participant must submit the
notice of loss required in paragraphs
(a)(1) and (a)(2) to the FSA
administrative county office that
maintains the participant’s farm records
for the agricultural operation.
(b) In addition to the notices of loss
required in paragraph (a) of this section,
a participant must also submit a
completed application for payment no
later than
(1) 30 calendar days after the end of
the calendar year in which the loss of
livestock occurred or
(2) September 13, 2009 for losses
during 2008.
(c) Applicants must submit
supporting documentation with their
application. For contract growers, the
information must include a copy of the
grower contract and other documents
establishing their status. In addition, for
all applicants, including contract
growers, supporting documents must
show:
(1) Evidence of loss,
(2) Current physical location of
livestock in inventory,
(3) Physical location of claimed
livestock at the time of death, and
(4) Inventory numbers and other
inventory information necessary to
establish actual mortality as required by
FSA.
(d) The participant must provide
adequate proof that the death of the
eligible livestock occurred as a direct
result of an eligible adverse weather
event in the calendar year for which
benefits are requested. The quantity and
kind of livestock that died as a direct
result of the eligible adverse weather
event during the calendar year for
which benefits are being requested may
be documented by: purchase records;
veterinarian records; bank or other loan
papers; rendering-plant truck receipts;
Federal Emergency Management Agency
records; National Guard records; written
contracts; production records; Internal
Revenue Service records; property tax
records; private insurance documents;
and other similar verifiable documents
as determined by FSA.
(e) If adequate verifiable proof of
death documentation is not available,
the participant may provide reliable
records, in conjunction with verifiable
beginning and ending inventory records,
as proof of death. Reliable records may
include contemporaneous producer
records, dairy herd improvement
records, brand inspection records,
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13:31 Jul 01, 2009
Jkt 217001
vaccination records, pictures, and other
similar reliable documents as
determined by FSA.
(f) Certification of livestock deaths by
third parties may be accepted only if
verifiable proof of death records or
reliable proof of death records in
conjunction with verifiable beginning
and ending inventory records are not
available and both of the following
conditions are met:
(1) The livestock owner or livestock
contract grower, as applicable, certifies
in writing:
(i) That there is no other verifiable or
reliable documentation of death
available;
(ii) The number of livestock, by
category identified in this subpart and
by FSA were in inventory at the time
the applicable adverse weather event
occurred;
(iii) The physical location of the
livestock, by category, in inventory
when the deaths occurred; and
(iv) Other details required for FSA to
determine the certification acceptable;
and
(2) The third party is an independent
source who is not affiliated with the
farming operation such as a hired hand
and is not a ‘‘family member,’’ defined
as a person whom a member in the
farming operation or their spouse is
related as lineal ancestor, lineal
descendant, sibling, spouse, and
provides their telephone number,
address, and a written statement
containing specific details about:
(i) Their knowledge of the livestock
deaths;
(ii) Their affiliation with the livestock
owner;
(iii) The accuracy of the deaths
claimed by the livestock owner or
contract grower including, but not
limited to, the number and kind or type
of the participant’s livestock that died
because of the eligible adverse weather
event; and
(iv) Other information required by
FSA to determine the certification
acceptable.
(g) Data furnished by the participant
and the third party will be used to
determine eligibility for program
benefits. Furnishing the data is
voluntary; however, without all
required data program benefits will not
be approved or provided.
§ 760.406
Payment calculation.
(a) Under this subpart, separate
payment rates for eligible livestock
owners and eligible livestock contract
growers are specified in paragraphs (b)
and (c) of this section, respectively.
Payments for LIP are calculated by
multiplying the national payment rate
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31577
for each livestock category by the
number of eligible livestock in excess of
normal mortality in each category that
died as a result of an eligible adverse
weather event. Normal mortality for
each livestock category will be
determined by FSA on a State-by-State
basis using local data sources including,
but not limited to, State livestock
organizations and the Cooperative
Extension Service for the State.
Adjustments will be applied as
specified in paragraph (d) of this
section.
(b) The LIP national payment rate for
eligible livestock owners is based on 75
percent of the average fair market value
of the applicable livestock as computed
using nationwide prices for the previous
calendar year unless some other price is
approved by the Deputy Administrator.
(c) The LIP national payment rate for
eligible livestock contract growers is
based on 75 percent of the average
income loss sustained by the contract
grower with respect to the dead
livestock.
(d) The LIP payment calculated for
eligible livestock contract growers will
be reduced by the amount the
participant received from the party who
contracted with the producer to raise
the livestock for the loss of income from
the dead livestock.
Subpart F [Removed and Reserved]
■
6. Remove and reserve subpart F.
Subpart G [Removed and Reserved]
■
7. Remove and reserve subpart G.
Subpart H [Removed and Reserved]
■
8. Remove and reserve subpart H.
PART 1400—PAYMENT LIMITATION
AND PAYMENT ELIGIBILITY FOR 2009
AND SUBSEQUENT CROP, PROGRAM,
OR FISCAL YEARS
9. The authority citation for part 1400
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1308, 1308–1, 1308–2,
1308–3, 1308–3a, 1308–4, and 1308–5.
§ 1400.1
[Amended]
10. Amend § 1400.1 as follows:
a. In paragraph (a)(4), remove the
reference ‘‘part 1480 of this chapter’’
and add, in its place, the reference ‘‘part
760 of this title’’;
■ b. In paragraph (a)(5), remove the
reference ‘‘part 1439 of this chapter’’
and add, in its place, the reference ‘‘part
760 of this title’’; and
■ c. In paragraph (a)(6), remove the
reference ‘‘part 783’’ and add, in its
place, the reference ‘‘part 760’’.
■
■
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PART 1439—EMERGENCY LIVESTOCK
ASSISTANCE
■
11. Remove part 1439.
Signed in Washington, DC, June 25, 2009.
Carolyn B. Cooksie,
Acting Administrator, Farm Service Agency,
and Acting Executive Vice President,
Commodity Credit Corporation.
[FR Doc. E9–15537 Filed 7–1–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–05–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Commodity Credit Corporation
7 CFR Part 1491
RIN 0578–AA46
Farm and Ranch Lands Protection
Program
AGENCY: Natural Resources
Conservation Service (NRCS) and the
Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC),
United States Department of Agriculture
(USDA).
ACTION: Interim final rule; correction
with reopening of public comment
period.
SUMMARY: The Natural Resources
Conservation Service (NRCS) published
in the Federal Register of January 16,
2009, an interim final rule with request
for comment amending the program
regulations for the Farm and Ranch
Lands Protection Program (FRPP) to
incorporate programmatic changes
authorized by the Food, Conservation,
and Energy Act of 2008 (2008 Act). The
public comment period closed March
17, 2009.
The January 16, 2009, interim final
rule identified the contingent right of
enforcement as an acquisition of a real
property right. This correction to the
January 16, 2009, interim final rule
clarifies that the right of enforcement is
a condition placed upon the award of
financial assistance and, therefore, does
not constitute an acquisition. NRCS is
also using the opportunity presented by
this rulemaking to ask for public input
on key programmatic implementation
questions. Finally, this document
reopens the public comment period for
the January 16, 2009, interim final rule,
as amended, upon publication until
August 3, 2009.
DATES: Effective Date: The rule is
effective July 2, 2009.
Comment date: Submit comments on
or before August 3, 2009. The comment
period for the FRPP interim final rule
published on January 16, 2009 (74 FR
2317), as changed by this rulemaking, is
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13:31 Jul 01, 2009
Jkt 217001
reopened. Comments must be received
on or before August 3, 2009.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments
(identified by Docket Number NRCS–
IFR–08013) using any of the following
methods:
• Government-wide rulemaking Web
site: Go to https://www.regulations.gov
and follow the instructions for sending
comments electronically.
• Mail: John Glover, Acting Director,
Easements Programs Division,
Department of Agriculture, Natural
Resources Conservation Service, Farm
and Ranch Lands Protection Program
Comments, Post Office Box 2890,
Washington, DC 20013.
• Fax: (202) 720–9689.
• Hand Delivery: USDA South
Building, 1400 Independence Avenue,
SW., Room 6819, Washington, DC
20250, between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, except Federal
Holidays. Please ask the guard at the
entrance to the South Building to call
(202) 720–1854 in order to be escorted
into the building.
• This interim final rule may be
accessed via the Internet. Users can
access the NRCS homepage at https://
www.nrcs.usda.gov/; select the Farm
Bill link from the menu; select the
Interim final link from beneath the Final
and Interim Final Rules Index title.
Persons with disabilities who require
alternative means for communication
(Braille, large print, audio tape, etc.)
should contact the USDA TARGET
Center at: (202) 720–2600 (voice and
TDD).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John
Glover, Acting Director, Easement
Programs Division, Department of
Agriculture, Natural Resources
Conservation Service, Post Office Box
2890, Washington, DC 20013–2890;
Phone: (202) 720–1854; Fax: (202) 720–
9689; or e-mail:
FRPP2008@wdc.usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Regulatory Certifications
Executive Order 12866
The Office of Management and Budget
reviewed the January 16, 2009, interim
final rule and determined that it was a
significant regulatory action. Pursuant
to Executive Order 12866, NRCS
conducted a cost-benefit analysis of the
potential impacts associated with the
interim final rule for FRPP published in
the Federal Register on January 16,
2009. The provisions of this interim
final rule do not alter the analysis that
was originally prepared. The
administrative record is available for
public inspection in the Department of
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Agriculture, Natural Resources
Conservation Service, Room 5831 South
Building, 1400 Independence Avenue,
SW., Washington, DC. A copy of the
analysis is available upon request from
John Glover, Acting Director, Easement
Programs Division, Department of
Agriculture, Natural Resources
Conservation Service, Room 6819–S,
Washington, DC 20250–2890 or
electronically at: https://
www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/FRPP/
under the Program Information title.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act is not
applicable to this interim final rule
because the Commodity Credit
Corporation (CCC) is not required by 5
U.S.C. 553, or by any other provision of
law, to publish a notice of proposed
rulemaking with respect to the subject
matter of this rule.
Environmental Analysis
A programmatic environmental
assessment has been prepared in
association with the interim final
rulemaking published on January 16,
2009. The provisions of this interim
final rule do not alter the assessment
that was originally prepared. The
analysis has determined that there will
not be a significant impact to the human
environment, and as a result, an
Environmental Impact Statement is not
required to be prepared (40 CFR Part
1508.13). The comment period for the
Environmental (EA) Analysis and
Finding of No Significant Impact
(FONSI) is reopened and hereby
extended to August 3, 2009. A copy of
the EA and FONSI may be obtained
from the following Web site: https://
www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/
Env_Assess/. A hard copy may also be
requested from the following address
and contact: Matt Harrington, National
Environmental Coordinator, Natural
Resources Conservation Service,
Ecological Sciences Division, 1400
Independence Ave., SW., Washington
DC 20250. Comments from the public
should be specific and reference that
comments provided are on the EA and
FONSI. Public comment may be
submitted by any of the following
means: (1) E-mail comments to
NEPA2008@wdc.usda.gov, (2) e-mail to
e-gov Web site www.regulations.gov, or
(3) written comments to: Matt
Harrington, National Environmental
Coordinator, Ecological Sciences
Division, Natural Resources
Conservation Service, 1400
Independence Ave., SW., Washington
DC 20250.
E:\FR\FM\02JYR1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 126 (Thursday, July 2, 2009)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 31567-31578]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-15537]
========================================================================
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains regulatory documents
having general applicability and legal effect, most of which are keyed
to and codified in the Code of Federal Regulations, which is published
under 50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by the Superintendent of Documents.
Prices of new books are listed in the first FEDERAL REGISTER issue of each
week.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 126 / Thursday, July 2, 2009 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 31567]]
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Farm Service Agency
7 CFR Part 760
Commodity Credit Corporation
7 CFR Parts 1400 and 1439
RIN 0560-AH95
Livestock Indemnity Program and General Provisions for
Supplemental Agricultural Disaster Assistance Programs
AGENCY: Farm Service Agency and Commodity Credit Corporation, USDA.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This rule implements the general eligibility provisions for
all the supplemental agricultural disaster assistance programs
authorized by the Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008 (2008 Farm
Bill) and the specific requirements for the Livestock Indemnity Program
(LIP). LIP provides disaster assistance for livestock losses. LIP
applies only to livestock owners and contract growers that had losses
due to livestock deaths in excess of normal mortality due to adverse
weather during the calendar year, including losses due to hurricanes,
floods, blizzards, disease, wildfires, extreme heat, and extreme cold.
Eligible LIP losses must have occurred on or after January 1, 2008, and
before October 1, 2011. This rule specifies how the LIP payments are
calculated and when producers may apply for benefits. This rule also
removes some outdated rules from the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR).
DATES: Effective Date: July 13, 2009.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Scotty Abbott, Production,
Emergencies, and Compliance Division, Farm Service Agency (FSA), United
States Department of Agriculture, STOP 0517, 1400 Independence Avenue,
SW., Washington, DC 20250-0517; telephone (202) 720-7997; e-mail
scotty.abbott@usda.gov. Persons with disabilities who require
alternative means for communication (Braille, large print, audio tape,
etc.) should contact the USDA Target Center at (202) 720 2600 (voice
and TDD).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
This rule implements the general eligibility provisions for the
supplemental agricultural disaster assistance programs authorized by
the 2008 Farm Bill (Pub. L. 110-246). Sections 12033 and 15101 of the
2008 Farm Bill authorize the Secretary of Agriculture (Secretary) to
assist producers who have had crop and livestock losses due to adverse
weather. FSA will provide assistance through five different programs:
Livestock Indemnity Program (referred to as Livestock
Indemnity Payments in the Farm Bill),
Livestock Forage Disaster Program (LFP),
Emergency Assistance for Livestock, Honey Bees, and Farm-
Raised Fish (ELAP),
Supplemental Revenue Assistance Payments Program (SURE)
(which covers general crop production losses, but not those covered by
LFP), and
Tree Assistance Program (TAP).
This rule implements the first of these programs, LIP, in 7 CFR
part 760, subpart E. The 2008 Farm Bill sets, however, common
eligibility requirements for the programs. The general provisions for
supplemental agricultural disaster assistance programs will be
implemented in regulations in 7 CFR part 760, subpart B. Specific
provisions for the other programs, LFP, SURE, ELAP, and TAP, will be
implemented through separate rulemakings. Where practical, these
programs will be implemented to be similar to previous ad hoc disaster
assistance programs. For example, LIP will be similar to the previous
LIP regulations that were in 7 CFR part 760, subpart E.
Currently, for LIP, the 2008 Farm Bill authorizes the Secretary to
assist eligible livestock producers on farms that have had livestock
death losses in excess of the normal mortality due to adverse weather.
The supplemental agricultural disaster assistance programs will be
administered by FSA using funds from the Agricultural Disaster Relief
Trust Fund established under section 902 of the Trade Act of 1974 (19
U.S.C. 2497a). The disaster assistance programs authorized by the 2008
Farm Bill are permanent or ``standing'' programs that have similar
scope to the previous ad hoc programs. The programs are provided for in
two separate places in the 2008 Farm Bill. First, there is section
12033, which adds a new section 531 to the Federal Crop Insurance Act
(7 U.S.C. 1501-1524). Second, there is section 15101, which adds
section 902 of the Trade Act of 1974. The provisions of the two
sections as enacted were identical except that the Trade Act of 1974
provisions contained the trust fund provisions. Since then, there have
been some amendments, but the two sections of the 2008 Farm bill are
considered to be interchangeable for the purposes of this rule.
General Eligibility Requirements
Payment Limits
The 2008 Farm Bill limits how much a producer may receive from FSA
disaster assistance programs.
In applying payment limitation for 2008, no person, as defined and
determined by the regulations in 7 CFR part 1400 in effect for 2008,
may receive more than $100,000:
Total per crop year under ELAP, LFP, LIP and SURE
Per program years under TAP.
For 2009 through 2011, no person or legal entity (excluding a joint
venture or general partnership), as defined and determined by the
regulations in 7 CFR part 1400 may receive, directly or indirectly,
more than $100,000:
Total per crop year under ELAP, LFP, LIP and SURE
Per program years under TAP.
For this purpose, both indirect and direct benefits are counted by
attribution. In the case of a legal entity, the same payment is
attributed to the direct payee in the full amount and those that have
an indirect interest to the amount of the interest. For example, under
the attribution rules that applies to these programs, assume:
Corporation A is in line to receive a $100,000 SURE
payment,
Corporation A is owned 50 percent by Individual A and 50
percent by Corporation B, and
Corporation B is owned by Individual B with a 30 percent
interest
[[Page 31568]]
and by Individual C with a 70 percent interest.
If so, Corporation A, for payment limitation purposes would be
considered to have received $100,000 and Individual C (who owns 70
percent of Corporation B, which owns half of Corporation A) would be
considered to have indirectly benefitted by the amount of $35,000 (50
percent times 70 percent of the $100,000). Even though no part of the
$100,000 was actually paid to Individual C, the amount of $35,000 would
count against individual C's overall payment limitation from all
sources and farms. Assume Individual C was already at the maximum
payment limit, Individual C would not have been eligible to receive
$35,000; as a result, the payment to Corporation A would be reduced by
$35,000.
The amount of any payment for which a participant may be eligible
under any of these programs may be reduced by any amount received by
the participant for the same or any similar loss from any Federal
disaster assistance program.
In applying the limitation on average adjusted gross income (AGI)
for 2008, an individual or entity is ineligible for payment under ELAP,
LFP, LIP, SURE, and TAP if the individual's or entity's average AGI
exceeds $2.5 million for 2007, 2006, and 2005 under the provisions in 7
CFR part 1400 in effect for 2008. For 2009 through 2011, the average
AGI limitation provisions in 7 CFR part 1400 applicable to Commodity
Credit Corporation (CCC) commodity programs also apply to ELAP, LFP,
LIP, SURE, and TAP. Specifically, as specified in the 2008 Farm Bill,
for 2009 through 2011, a person or legal entity with an average
adjusted gross nonfarm income, as defined in 7 CFR 1400.3, that exceeds
$500,000 for the relevant period will not be eligible to receive
payments under these programs. Likewise, if a person with an indirect
interest in a legal entity has an average nonfarm AGI over $500,000,
then the payment to the legal entity will be reduced as calculated
based on the percent of interest in the legal entity receiving the
payment. For example, continuing with the assumptions in the example
above, if Individual B had an average AGI that was over the limit, then
the payment to Corporation A will be reduced by 15 percent (Individual
B's 30 percent interest in Corporation B times Corporation B's 50
percent interest in Corporation A).
Payment and average AGI limits will be determined under regulations
specified in 7 CFR part 1400 for Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC)
commodity programs. The programs covered in this final rule are not CCC
programs, but the CCC regulations in 7 CFR part 1400 are adopted for
these programs.
The relevant AGI period for these programs is the 3 calendar years
that precede the program year involved. For livestock losses, the
program year is the calendar year of the loss of the livestock. For
SURE, the program year is the year that corresponds to the relevant
crop year. The crop year concept in some limited cases can involve a
loss that occurs in a different calendar year than the calendar year
whose number corresponds to the crop year. For example, wheat for the
2009 crop year can be planted in the fall of 2008 and be lost during
2008. SURE payments related to such a loss would be made in calendar
year 2009.
The regulations in 7 CFR 1400.105 specify how payments will be
attributed and how far the attribution will go. Attribution will be
tracked through four levels of ownership in legal entities. The 2008
Farm Bill removed the previous ``3 entity rule,'' so a person can now
receive benefits attributed through an unlimited number of entities,
subject to the payment limits and the rules of attribution described in
this final rule and in 7 CFR part 1400. In addition to these limits,
the 2008 Farm Bill imposes limitations of payments to foreign persons.
Those limits are specified in the regulations in Sec. 760.103.
Risk Management Purchase Requirement
To be eligible for program payments under ELAP, SURE, and TAP,
eligible producers on a farm, as specified by the 2008 Farm Bill, must
have purchased insurance for each insurable commodity, excluding
grazing land; a few exceptions allowed by the 2008 Farm Bill are
discussed later in this section. ``Insurable commodities'' are those
for which a plan of insurance can be obtained from the USDA's Risk
Management Agency (RMA) that makes coverage for crops available under
the Federal Crop Insurance Act (FCIA). Benefits for ``noninsurable''
commodities are generally available through the Noninsured Crop
Disaster Assistance Program (NAP) run by FSA. Except for grazing land,
producers for ELAP, SURE, and TAP must have obtained an RMA policy or
plan of insurance or NAP coverage for all of their crops. For LFP,
producers must have obtained an RMA policy or plan of insurance or NAP
coverage for those grazing lands for which they seek benefits.
LIP does not have a risk management purchase requirement. The risk
management purchase requirement regulations are included in this rule
because they have multi-program application. As noted, this final rule
contains general provisions for multiple programs and specific
provisions for LIP. Additional provisions to cover the other programs
will be issued later.
Producers who did not purchase required coverage are not eligible
for benefits unless an exception applies. ``Socially disadvantaged
farmers and ranchers,'' as well as ``limited resource farmers and
ranchers,'' or ``beginning farmers or ranchers,'' are exempt. For the
2008 crop, persons who paid a certain buy-in fee were exempt from the
purchase requirement if the buy-in fee was paid by September 16, 2008.
By an amendment to the 2008 Farm Bill, Congress allowed a second buy-in
enabling producers to buy in from February 17, 2009 up to May 18, 2009;
however, if the buy-in occurred after the first deadline, or was not
granted administratively through some form of equitable relief the
producer had to agree to buy crop insurance or NAP for the next year
for the crops to which the buy-in applied. Also, there were special
benefit calculation provisions for producers who made use of the second
deadline. The buy-in fee was equal to the cost of the insurance or NAP
coverage, but did not entitle the producer to insurance or NAP
coverage. Also, an amendment allowed a 2009 crop buy-in for crops if
the 2009 Federal Crop Insurance Corporation (FCIC) sales closing date
was prior to August 14, 2008. The deadline for the 2009 crop buy-in was
January 12, 2009. In addition to these provisions, section 531(g)(5) of
the FCIA (and the corresponding provisions of the Trade Act of 1974)
have some more general provisions allowing the Secretary discretion to
grant equitable relief to persons with a lack of coverage. The buy-in
concept has no application to LIP since LIP has no purchase
requirement. The buy-in fees were different for 2008 and 2009.
Miscellaneous
Under this rule, participants receiving disaster assistance
payments under any of the these programs must keep records and
supporting documentation for 3 years following the end of the year in
which the application for payment was filed. This discretionary
recordkeeping requirement is consistent with other FSA rules and
programs, as well as with previous similar disaster assistance
programs.
Restrictions apply to these programs including, but not limited to,
those pertaining to highly erodible land and wetland conservation
provisions in 7 CFR part 12.
[[Page 31569]]
This rule amends subpart B by adding Sec. 760.110 to clarify that
appeal regulations specified in 7 CFR parts 11 and 780 apply. It also
specifies that for all the new standing disaster programs, matters
requiring FSA determinations that are not in response to, or result
from, an individual disputable set of facts in a specific individual
participant's application, are not matters that can be appealed under 7
CFR parts 11 or 780. These include, but are not limited to, general
statutory or regulatory provisions that apply to similarly situated
participants, national average payment prices, regions, crop
definition, average yields, or similar items.
Specific Provisions for LIP
Overview
The 2008 Farm Bill provisions require LIP payments to be made at a
rate of 75 percent of the market value of the livestock on the day
before the date of the death of the livestock. Payments are to be made
to eligible producers on farms that have incurred livestock death
losses for the calendar year in excess of the normal mortality. The
eligible livestock death losses must have occurred on or after January
1, 2008, but before October 1, 2011, due to adverse weather, as
determined by the Secretary, during the calendar year for which
benefits are requested, including losses due to hurricanes, floods,
blizzards, disease, wildfires, extreme heat, and extreme cold. All the
provisions described in this paragraph, which are implemented in this
rule, are statutory provisions over which FSA has little or no
discretion.
The details in this rule on what kinds of livestock are eligible,
acceptable documentation of loss, and the application process for
payment, are discretionary provisions. Generally, FSA has based the
discretionary provisions of the program as specified in this rule on
the rules and policies used for the 2005-2007 LIP because they are
known to the public and to Congress and because they have worked well
to apportion benefits for the type of loss involved in this program.
Unlike some previous livestock-related programs, LIP does not cover
crawfish, catfish, or other aquaculture because losses of that kind are
covered by SURE and the general direction of the 2008 Farm bill is that
there will not be duplicative payments.
Eligibility Requirements; Livestock Covered by LIP
LIP payments and eligibilities will be calculated on the type of
eligible livestock and the actual losses and the calculations will be
made by FSA-approved categories. Eligible livestock for payment to
livestock owners include beef cattle, dairy cattle, buffalo, beefalo,
equine, sheep, goats, deer, swine, poultry, reindeer, elk, emus,
alpacas, and llamas that died as a direct result of an eligible adverse
weather event. The list of eligible livestock includes all the types
from the previous ad hoc disaster program for livestock, except for
catfish and crawfish as described above. Regulations for that program
are in 7 CFR part 760, subpart J. This final rule adds alpacas, emus,
and llamas to the list of eligible livestock. FSA added these types of
livestock based on concerns expressed with respect to previous
programs.
Benefits are only available for the owners of livestock or for
``contract growers''--persons who produce livestock owned by someone
else, but have a risk in the livestock (such as a farmer who raises
chickens owned by a company that produces chicken products, but does
not receive payment for livestock that die before the livestock is
mature and returned to the owner). The contract grower provisions only
cover swine and poultry because those are the only known examples of
that kind of production arrangement. To be eligible livestock for LIP,
as of the day they died the livestock must have been both of the
following:
Owned by an eligible owner or in the possession of an
eligible contract grower and
Maintained for commercial use as part of a farming
operation of the participant on the day they died.
In addition, to be eligible, the livestock must have died as a
direct result of an eligible adverse weather event in the calendar year
for which benefits are requested. Participants must provide verifiable
documentation of livestock deaths claimed.
Animals kept for recreational purposes, such as hunting animals,
animals used for roping practice, pets, and show animals, are not
eligible. Wild, free roaming animals are not eligible to generate
payments.
Eligibility for payments to poultry and swine contract growers will
be limited based on the amount of their contractual risk and other
payments received. Payments will not exceed their contractual risk, as
determined by FSA. Any compensation received by the contract grower
from the contractor for loss of income for the dead livestock will be
deducted from the contract grower's payment.
Determination of LIP payment eligibility will be based on actual
losses in excess of normal mortality for the calendar year for the
relevant animal type and approved category by an individual producer or
contract grower due to adverse weather. There is not a State or
National ``trigger'' such as an emergency declaration that provides
automatic eligibility for all producers in a particular State, county,
or region. Adverse weather includes, but is not limited to, events such
as hurricanes, floods, blizzards, wildfires, extreme heat, and extreme
cold. FSA has the authority to determine eligibility of livestock
losses caused by other adverse weather types, including disease caused
by such weather.
Applying for LIP Payment; LIP Payment Calculations
There are two basic steps for a producer to obtain LIP payments.
One step is to file a notice of loss when there is an event that does
or could generate a claim because of the death of an animal due to
adverse weather. Because the eligible losses are only those above
normal mortality that are calculated on a yearly basis, a loss
occurring in, for example, July, will not necessarily generate a claim
depending on how great the losses are, natural or otherwise, for the
rest of the year. It could be, however, that a loss in July is so great
that the producer is already beyond normal mortality for the year, in
which case there could already be a claim for benefits. The second step
is to file the application for payment.
For the first step, after this final rule is published, producers
must provide a notice of loss to the FSA county office within 30 days
of when the loss of livestock was apparent, or within 30 days after the
end of the calendar year in which the loss occurred, whichever comes
first. Producers who suffered a potentially eligible loss of livestock
prior to July 13, 2009 (prior to this rule being effective), must
provide a notice of loss to the FSA county office by September 13, 2009
(within 60 calendar days after this rule is effective). As indicated,
however, a notice of loss is one part of the application process; other
documentation is required for a complete application for payment, as
described in this rule. The completed application must be submitted to
the FSA county office no later than 30 calendar days after the end of
the calendar year in which the loss of livestock occurred or, for 2008
losses, by September 13, 2009 (60 calendar days after this rule is
effective). Producers that suffer multiple livestock losses during the
calendar year may file multiple notices of loss and multiple
applications for payment. This rule
[[Page 31570]]
specifies the documents that are required to show loss, such as
inventory records and grower contracts. The 30-day deadline is a change
from the previous programs that had an application period determined by
the Deputy Administrator for Farm Programs for FSA. Putting a specific
deadline in the rules should make it clear when applications are due.
As specified in the 2008 Farm Bill, the payment for livestock
owners will be calculated based on 75 percent of the average fair
market value of the applicable livestock on the day before the date of
death of the livestock, as determined by the Agency. This program is
not a program funded by CCC. Rather, it is funded by the trust fund as
provided for in section 902 of the Trade Act of 1974, as added by the
2008 Farm Bill. For contract growers, the payment will be based on 75
percent of the average income loss sustained by the grower with respect
to the dead livestock. Where there is a contract grower holding the
livestock at the time of death, only the contract grower will be
eligible for the payment; the owner is not eligible. When determining
the market value of applicable livestock in order to determine payment
rates for LIP, FSA will establish market values for each type and
category of livestock using data from credible livestock markets.
Credible livestock markets will include sale barns and local sales as
well as sales at terminal market centers or slaughtering facilities.
FSA, through the State FSA offices, will obtain recommendations
from applicable State livestock organizations, State Cooperative
Extension Service, and other knowledgeable and credible sources, to
establish the normal mortality rate for each type of livestock on a
State-by-State basis. Payments are only available for losses over
normal mortality over the course of the year and those rates will be
established on a State-by-State basis.
Miscellaneous LIP Provisions
All owners, contract growers, livestock, and losses must meet the
eligibility requirements provided in this rule. False certifications
carry serious consequences. FSA will validate applications with random
spot-checks.
Livestock losses that are not weather-related are not eligible for
LIP.
Structure of the Regulations
The regulations in 7 CFR part 760, ``Indemnity Payment Programs,''
currently contain subparts A through M, which generally cover previous
ad hoc disaster assistance programs. This rule revises subparts B and E
and removes and reserves subparts C, D, and F through H. The current
subpart B specifies general provisions for the 2005 Hurricane Disaster
Programs; this rule revises subpart B to specify general provisions for
the new standing disaster programs from the 2008 Farm Bill. The current
subpart E provides the regulations for the 2005 Livestock Indemnity
Program; this rule revises Subpart E to establish the regulations for
the new LIP established by the 2008 Farm Bill. This rule removes the
existing provisions for previous ad hoc disaster programs in subparts
C, D, F, G, and H because the authority for the programs has expired.
For housekeeping purposes, this rule also removes 7 CFR part 1439,
which contains some related CCC programs. For questions on the former
regulations, interested parties can refer to the appropriate regulation
in the January 1, 2009 edition of the Code of Federal Regulations.
Subpart A of part 760 covers the Dairy Indemnity Program and is not
impacted by this rule. Subparts I through M, which provide the rules
for the 2005-2007 ad hoc disaster programs, are left intact and not
removed because of the status of potential claims under those subparts.
In all cases, however, to the extent of lingering or new disputes, the
rules governing these older programs apply as they existed at the time
the programs were administered.
When all of the supplemental agricultural disaster assistance
programs are implemented, 7 CFR part 760 will have been revised as
described in the table below:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current subpart New subpart
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart A--Dairy Indemnity Payment Subpart A--Dairy Indemnity Payment
Program. Program [unchanged].
Subpart B--General Provisions for 760 Subpart B--General Provisions
the 2005 Section 32 Hurricane for Supplemental Agricultural
Disaster Programs. Disaster Assistance Programs.
Subpart C--Hurricane Indemnity 760 Subpart C--Emergency Assistance
Program. for Livestock, Honey Bees, and
Farm-Raised Fish.
Subpart D--Feed Indemnity Program.. 760 Subpart D--Livestock Forage
Disaster Program.
Subpart E--Livestock Indemnity 760 Subpart E--Livestock Indemnity
Program. Program [revised].
Subpart F--Tree Indemnity Program.. 760 Subpart F--Tree Assistance
Program.
Subpart G--Aquaculture Program..... 760 Subpart G--Supplemental Revenue
Assistance Payments Program.
Subpart H--2006 Livestock None--removed.
Assistance Grant Program.
Subparts I through M............... Subparts I through M [unchanged].
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Miscellaneous Conforming Amendments
We are updating the references in 7 CFR 1400.1 to refer to 7 CFR
part 760 for the LIP, ELAP, LFP, SURE, and TAP programs.
In addition, as indicated we are removing in its entirety 7 CFR
part 1439, ``Emergency Livestock Assistance,'' as the programs there
are outdated even though there may be some lingering claims. The times
for filing claims under all of those programs has long since passed and
in any event all involve rules that were published in the Federal
Register and can be found in the 2009 edition of the Code of Federal
Regulations.
Notice and Comment
The 2008 Consolidated Security, Disaster Assistance, and Continuing
Appropriations Act (Pub. L. 110-329) made section 1601(c)(2) of the
2008 Farm Bill applicable in implementing section 12033 of the 2008
Farm Bill. To the extent relevant, the exemption applies, we believe to
the corresponding provision enacted in section 15101 since they are
identical except for the provisions for funding in section 15101, which
do not appear at all in section 12033. Otherwise, the provisions of
Public Law 110-329 would have no meaning. Therefore, these regulations
are exempt from the notice and comment requirements of the
Administrative Procedures Act (5 U.S.C. 553), as specified in section
1601(c)(2) of the 2008 Farm Bill, which requires that the regulations
be promulgated and administered without regard to the notice and
comment provisions of section 553 of title 5 of the United States Code
or the Statement of Policy of the Secretary of Agriculture effective
July
[[Page 31571]]
24, 1971, (36 FR 13804) relating to notices of proposed rulemaking and
public participation in rulemaking.
Effective Date
In making this final rule exempt from notice and comment through
section 1601(c)(2) of the 2008 Farm Bill, using the administrative
procedure provisions in 5 U.S.C. 553, FSA finds that there is good
cause for making this rule effective less than 30 days after
publication in the Federal Register. This rule allows FSA to provide
benefits to producers who suffered losses due to livestock deaths
caused by adverse weather. Therefore, to begin providing benefits to
producers as soon as possible, this final rule is effective 13 days
after publication in the Federal Register.
Executive Order 12866
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) designated this rule as
not significant under Executive Order 12866 and, therefore, OMB was not
required to review this rule.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
This rule is not subject to the Regulatory Flexibility Act since
FSA is not required to publish a notice of proposed rulemaking for this
rule.
Environmental Review
The environmental impacts of this rule have been considered in a
manner consistent with the provisions of the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA, 42 U.S.C. 4321-4347), the regulations of the Council
on Environmental Quality (40 CFR parts 1500-1508), and FSA regulations
for compliance with NEPA (7 CFR part 799). The LIP provisions required
by the 2008 Farm Bill that are identified in this rule are non-
discretionary in nature, solely providing financial assistance.
Therefore, FSA has determined that provisions for further NEPA review
do not apply to this rule. Therefore, no environmental assessment or
environmental impact statement will be prepared.
Executive Order 12372
This program is not subject to Executive Order 12372, which
requires consultation with State and local officials. See the notice
related to 7 CFR part 3015, subpart V, published in the Federal
Register on June 24, 1983 (48 FR 29115).
Executive Order 12988
This rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12988. This rule
is not retroactive and it does not preempt State or local laws,
regulations, or policies unless they present an irreconcilable conflict
with this rule. Before any judicial action may be brought regarding the
provisions of this rule the administrative appeal provisions of 7 CFR
parts 11 and 780 must be exhausted.
Executive Order 13132
The policies contained in this rule do not have any substantial
direct effect on States, on the relationship between the national
government and States, or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among various levels of government. Nor does this rule
impose substantial direct compliance costs on State and local
governments. Therefore, consultation with States was not required.
Executive Order 13175
The policies contained in this rule do not impose substantial
unreimbursed direct compliance costs on Indian tribal governments or
have tribal implications that preempt tribal law.
Unfunded Mandates
This rule contains no Federal mandates under the regulatory
provisions of Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(UMRA) for State, local, and tribal government or the private sector.
In addition, FSA was not required to publish a notice of proposed rule
making for this rule. Therefore, this rule is not subject to the
requirements of sections 202 and 205 of the UMRA.
Federal Assistance Programs
This rule applies to the following Federal assistance program that
is not in the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance: LIP.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The regulations in this rule are exempt from the requirements of
the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. Chapter 35), as specified in
section 1601(c)(2) of the 2008 Farm Bill, which provides that these
regulations be promulgated and administered without regard to the
Paperwork Reduction Act.
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.
List of Subjects
7 CFR Part 760
Dairy products, Indemnity payments, Pesticide and pests, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
7 CFR Part 1400
Agriculture, Grant programs--agriculture, Loan programs--
agriculture, Price support programs, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
7 CFR Part 1439
Animal feeds, Disaster assistance, Grant programs--agriculture,
Indians, Livestock, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
0
For the reasons discussed above, under the authority of 15 U. S.C.
714b, this rule amends 7 CFR parts 760, 1400, and 1439 as follows:
PART 760--INDEMNITY PAYMENT PROGRAMS
0
1. Revise the authority citation for part 760 to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 4501, 7 U.S.C. 1531, 16 U.S.C. 3801, note,
and 19 U.S.C. 2497; Title III, Public Law 109-234, 120 Stat. 474;
and Title IX, Public Law 110-28, 121 Stat. 211.
0
2. Revise Subpart B to read as follows:
Subpart B--General Provisions for Supplemental Agricultural Disaster
Assistance Programs
Sec.
760.101 Applicability.
760.102 Administration of ELAP, LFP, LIP, SURE, and TAP.
760.103 Eligible producer.
760.104 Risk management purchase requirements.
760.105 Waiver for certain crop years; buy-in.
760.106 Equitable relief.
760.107 Socially disadvantaged, limited resource, or beginning
farmer or rancher.
760.108 Payment limitation.
760.109 Misrepresentation and scheme or device.
760.110 Appeals.
760.111 Offsets, assignments, and debt settlement.
760.112 Records and inspections.
760.113 Refunds; joint and several liability.
760.114 Minors.
760.115 Deceased individuals or dissolved entities.
760.116 Miscellaneous.
Subpart B--General Provisions for Supplemental Agricultural
Disaster Assistance Programs
Sec. 760.101 Applicability.
(a) This subpart establishes general conditions for this subpart
and subparts C through H of this part and applies
[[Page 31572]]
only to those subparts. Subparts C through H cover the following
programs provided for in the ``2008 Farm Bill'' (Pub. L. 110-246):
(1) Emergency Assistance for Livestock, Honey Bees, and Farm-Raised
Fish Program (ELAP);
(2) Livestock Forage Disaster Program (LFP);
(3) Livestock Indemnity Payments Program (LIP);
(4) Supplemental Revenue Assistance Payments Program (SURE); and
(5) Tree Assistance Program (TAP).
(b) To be eligible for payments under these programs, participants
must comply with all provisions under this subpart and the relevant
particular subpart for that program. All other provisions of law also
apply.
Sec. 760.102 Administration of ELAP, LFP, LIP, SURE, and TAP.
(a) The programs in subparts C through H of this part will be
administered under the general supervision and direction of the
Administrator, Farm Service Agency (FSA), and the Deputy Administrator
for Farm Programs, FSA (who is referred to as the ``Deputy
Administrator'' in this part).
(b) FSA representatives do not have authority to modify or waive
any of the provisions of the regulations of this part as amended or
supplemented, except as specified in paragraph (e) of this section.
(c) The State FSA committee will take any action required by the
regulations of this part that the county FSA committee has not taken.
The State FSA committee will also:
(1) Correct, or require a county FSA committee to correct, any
action taken by such county FSA committee that is not in accordance
with the regulations of this part or
(2) Require a county FSA committee to withhold taking any action
that is not in accordance with this part.
(d) No provision or delegation to a State or county FSA committee
will preclude the Administrator, the Deputy Administrator for Farm
Programs, or a designee or other such person, from determining any
question arising under the programs of this part, or from reversing or
modifying any determination made by a State or county FSA committee.
(e) The Deputy Administrator for Farm Programs may authorize State
and county FSA committees to waive or modify non-statutory deadlines,
or other program requirements of this part in cases where lateness or
failure to meet such requirements does not adversely affect operation
of the programs in this part. Participants have no right to seek an
exception under this provision. The Deputy Administrator's refusal to
consider cases or circumstances or decision not to exercise this
discretionary authority under this provision will not be considered an
adverse decision and is not appealable.
Sec. 760.103 Eligible producer.
(a) In general, the term ``eligible producer'' means, in addition
to other requirements as may apply, an individual or entity described
in paragraph (b) of this section that, as determined by the Secretary,
assumes the production and market risks associated with the
agricultural production of crops or livestock on a farm either as the
owner of the farm, when there is no contract grower, or a contract
grower of the livestock when there is a contract grower.
(b) To be eligible for benefits, an individual or entity must be a:
(1) Citizen of the United States;
(2) Resident alien; for purposes of this part, resident alien means
``lawful alien'' as defined in 7 CFR part 1400;
(3) Partnership of citizens of the United States; or
(4) Corporation, limited liability corporation, or other farm
organizational structure organized under State law.
Sec. 760.104 Risk management purchase requirements.
(a) To be eligible for program payments under:
(1) ELAP, SURE, and TAP, eligible producers for any commodity at
any location for which the producer seeks benefits must have for every
commodity on every farm in which the producer has an interest for the
relevant program year:
(i) In the case of an ``insurable commodity,'' (which for this part
means a commodity for which the Deputy Administrator determines
catastrophic coverage is available from the USDA Risk Management Agency
(RMA)) obtained catastrophic coverage or better under a policy or plan
of insurance administered by RMA under the Federal Crop Insurance Act
(FCIA) (7 U.S.C. 1501-1524), except that this obligation will not
include crop insurance pilot programs so designated by RMA or to forage
crops, and
(ii) In the case of a ``noninsurable commodity,'' (which is any
commodity for which, as to the particular production in question, is
not an ``insurable commodity,'' but for which coverage is available
under the Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program (NAP) operated
under 7 CFR part 1437), have obtained NAP coverage by filing the proper
paperwork and fee within the relevant deadlines, except that this
requirement will not include forage on grazing land.
(2) LFP, with respect to those grazing lands incurring losses for
which assistance is being requested, eligible livestock producers must
have:
(i) Obtained a policy or plan of insurance for the forage crop
under FCIA, or
(ii) Filed the required paperwork and paid the administrative fee
by the applicable State filing deadline for NAP coverage for that
grazing land.
(b) Producers who did not purchase a policy or plan of insurance
administered by RMA in accordance with FCIA (7 U.S.C. 1501-1524), or
NAP coverage for their applicable crops, will not be eligible for
assistance under ELAP, LFP, SURE, and TAP, as provided in paragraph (a)
of this section unless the producer is one of the classes of farmers
for which an exemption under Sec. 760.107 apply, is exempt under the
``buy-in'' provisions of this subpart, or is granted relief from that
requirement by the Deputy Administrator under some other provision of
this part.
(c) Producers who have obtained insurance by a written agreement as
specified in Sec. 400.652(d) of this title even though that production
would not normally be considered an ``insurable commodity'' under the
rules of this subpart, will be considered to have met the risk
management purchase requirement of this subpart with respect to such
production. The commodity to which the agreement applies will be
considered for purposes of this subpart to be an ``insurable
commodity.''
(d) Producers by an administrative process who were granted NAP
coverage for the relevant period as a form of relief in an
administrative proceeding, or who were awarded NAP coverage for the
relevant period through an appeal through the National Appeals Division
(NAD), will be considered as having met the NAP eligibility criteria of
this section for that crop as long as the applicable NAP service fee
has been paid.
(e) The risk management purchase requirement for programs specified
under this part will be determined based on the initial intended use of
a crop at the time a policy or plan of insurance or NAP coverage was
purchased and as reported on the acreage report.
[[Page 31573]]
Sec. 760.105 Waiver for certain crop years; buy-in.
(a) For the 2008 crop year, the insurance or NAP purchase
requirements of Sec. 760.104 (this is referred to as the ``purchase''
requirement) will be waived for eligible producers for losses during
the 2008 crop year if the eligible producer paid a fee (buy-in fee)
equal to the applicable NAP service fee or catastrophic risk protection
plan fee to the Secretary by September 16, 2008. Payment of a buy-in
fee under this section is for the sole purpose of becoming eligible for
participation in ELAP, LFP, SURE, and TAP. Payment of a buy-in fee does
not provide any actual insurance or NAP coverage or assistance.
(b) For the 2009 crop year, the purchase requirement will be waived
for purchases where the closing date for coverage occurred prior to
August 14, 2008, so long as the buy-in fee set by the Secretary of
Agriculture was paid by January 12, 2009.
(c) Any producer of 2008 commodities who is otherwise ineligible
because of the purchase requirement and who did not meet the conditions
of paragraph (a) of this section may still be covered for ELAP, SURE,
or TAP assistance if the producer paid the applicable fee described in
paragraph (d) of this section no later than May 18, 2009, provided that
in the case of each:
(1) Insurable commodity, excluding grazing land, the eligible
producers on the farm agree to obtain a policy or plan of insurance
under FCIA (7 U.S.C. 1501-1524), excluding a crop insurance pilot
program under that subtitle, for the next insurance year for which crop
insurance is available to the eligible producers on the farm at a level
of coverage equal to 70 percent or more of the recorded or appraised
average yield indemnified at 100 percent of the expected market price,
or an equivalent coverage, and
(2) Noninsurable commodity, the eligible producers on the farm must
agree to file the required paperwork, and pay the administrative fee by
the applicable State filing deadline, for NAP for the next year for
which a policy is available.
(d) For producers seeking eligibility under paragraph (c) of this
section, the applicable buy-in fee for the 2008 crop year was the
catastrophic risk protection plan fee or the applicable NAP service fee
in effect prior to NAP service fee adjustments specified in the 2008
Farm Bill.
Sec. 760.106 Equitable relief.
(a) The Secretary may provide equitable relief on a case-by-case
basis for the purchase requirement to eligible participants that:
(1) Are otherwise ineligible or unintentionally fail to meet the
requirements of Sec. 760.104 for one or more eligible crops on the
farm, as determined by the Secretary, or
(2) Failed to meet the requirements of Sec. 760.104 due to the
enactment of the 2008 Farm Bill after the:
(i) Applicable sales closing date for a policy or plan of insurance
in accordance with the FCIA (7 U.S.C. 1501-1524) or
(ii) Application closing date for NAP.
(b) Equitable relief will not be granted to participants in
instances of:
(1) A scheme or device that had the effect or intent of defeating
the purposes of a program of insurance, NAP, or any other program
administered under this part or elsewhere in this title,
(2) An intentional decision to not meet the purchase or buy-in
requirements,
(3) Producers against whom sanctions have been imposed by RMA or
FSA prohibiting the purchase of coverage or prohibiting the receipt of
payments otherwise payable under this part,
(4) Violations of highly erodible land and wetland conservation
provisions of 7 CFR part 12,
(5) Producers who are ineligible under any provisions of law,
including regulations, relating to controlled substances (see for
example 7 CFR 718.6), or
(6) A producer's debarment by a federal agency from receiving any
federal government payment if such debarment included payments of the
type involved in this matter.
(c) In general, no relief that is discretionary will be allowed
except upon a finding by the Deputy Administrator or the Deputy
Administrator's designee that the person seeking the relief acted in
good faith as determined in accordance with such rules and procedures
as may be set by the Deputy Administrator.
Sec. 760.107 Socially disadvantaged, limited resource, or beginning
farmer or rancher.
(a) Risk management purchase requirements, as provided in Sec.
760.104, will be waived for a participant who, as specified in
paragraphs (b)(1) through (3) of this section, is eligible to be
considered a ``socially disadvantaged farmer or rancher,'' a ``limited
resource farmer or rancher,'' or a ``beginning farmer or rancher.''
(b) To qualify for this section as a ``socially disadvantaged
farmer or rancher,'' ``limited resource farmer or rancher,'' or
``beginning farmer or rancher,'' participants must meet eligibility
criteria as follows:
(1) A ``socially disadvantaged farmer or rancher'' is, for this
section, a farmer or rancher who is a member of a socially
disadvantaged group whose members have been subjected to racial or
ethnic prejudice because of their identity as members of a group
without regard to their individual qualities. Gender is not included as
a covered group. Socially disadvantaged groups include the following
and no others unless approved in writing by the Deputy Administrator:
(i) American Indians or Alaskan Natives,
(ii) Asians or Asian-Americans,
(iii) Blacks or African Americans,
(iv) Native Hawaiians or other Pacific Islanders, and
(v) Hispanics.
(2) A ``limited resource farmer or rancher'' means for this section
a producer who is both:
(i) A producer whose direct or indirect gross farm sales do not
exceed $100,000 in both of the two calendar years that precede the
calendar year that corresponds to the relevant program year, adjusted
upwards for any general inflation since fiscal year 2004, inflation as
measured using the Prices Paid by Farmer Index compiled by the National
Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS), and
(ii) A producer whose total household income is at or below the
national poverty level for a family of four, or less than 50 percent of
the county median household income for the same two calendar years
referenced in paragraph (a) of this section, as determined annually
using Commerce Department data. (Limited resource farmer or rancher
status can be determined using a Web site available through the Limited
Resource Farmer and Rancher Online Self Determination Tool through the
National Resource and Conservation Service at https://www.lrftool.sc.egov.usda.gov/tool.asp.)
(3) A ``beginning farmer or rancher'' means for this section a
person or legal entity who for a program year both:
(i) Has never previously operated a farm or ranch, or who has not
operated a farm or ranch in the previous 10 years, applicable to all
members (shareholders, partners, beneficiaries, etc., as fits the
circumstances) of an entity, and
(ii) Will have or has had for the relevant period materially and
substantially participated in the operation of a farm or ranch.
(c) If a legal entity requests to be considered a ``socially
disadvantaged,'' ``limited resource,'' or ``beginning'' farmer or
rancher, at least 50 percent of the persons in the entity must in their
individual capacities meet the
[[Page 31574]]
definition as provided in paragraphs (b)(1) through (3) of this section
and it must be clearly demonstrated that the entity was not formed for
the purposes of avoiding the purchase requirements or formed after the
deadline for the purchase requirement.
Sec. 760.108 Payment limitation.
(a) For 2008, no person, as defined and determined under the
provisions in part 1400 of this title in effect for 2008 may receive
more than:
(1) $100,000 total for the 2008 program year under ELAP, LFP, LIP,
and SURE combined or
(2) $100,000 for the 2008 program year under TAP.
(b) For 2009 and subsequent program years, no person or legal
entity, excluding a joint venture or general partnership, as determined
by the rules in part 1400 of this title may receive, directly or
indirectly, more than:
(1) $100,000 per program year total under ELAP, LFP, LIP, and SURE
combined; or
(2) $100,000 per program year under TAP.
(c) The Deputy Administrator may take such actions as needed,
whether or not specifically provided for, to avoid a duplication of
benefits under the multiple programs provided for in this part, or
duplication of benefits received in other programs, and may impose such
cross-program payment limitations as may be consistent with the intent
of this part.
(d) In applying the limitation on average adjusted gross income
(AGI) for 2008, an individual or entity is ineligible for payment under
ELAP, LFP, LIP, SURE, and TAP if the individual's or entity's average
adjusted gross income (AGI) exceeds $2.5 million for 2007, 2006, and
2005 under the provisions in part 1400 of this title in effect for
2008.
(e) For 2009 through 2011, the average AGI limitation provisions in
part 1400 of this title relating to limits on payments for persons or
legal entities, excluding joint ventures and general partnerships, with
certain levels of average adjusted gross income (AGI) will apply under
this subpart and will apply to each applicant for ELAP, LFP, LIP, SURE,
and TAP. Specifically, for 2009 through 2011, a person or legal entity
with an average adjusted gross nonfarm income, as defined in Sec.
1404.3 of this title, that exceeds $500,000 will not be eligible to
receive benefits under this part.
(f) The direct attribution provisions in part 1400 of this title
apply to ELAP, LFP, LIP, SURE, and TAP for 2009 and subsequent years.
Under those rules, any payment to any legal entity will also be
considered for payment limitation purposes to be a payment to persons
or legal entities with an interest in the legal entity or in a sub-
entity. If any such interested person or legal entity is over the
payment limitation because of direct payment or their indirect
interests or a combination thereof, then the payment to the actual
payee will be reduced commensurate with the amount of the interest of
the interested person in the payee. Likewise, by the same method, if
anyone with a direct or indirect interest in a legal entity or sub-
entity of a payee entity exceeds the AGI levels that would allow a
participant to directly receive a payment under this part, then the
payment to the actual payee will be reduced commensurately with that
interest. For all purposes under this section, unless otherwise
specified in part 1400 of this title, the AGI figure that will be
relevant for a person or legal entity will be an average AGI for the
three taxable years that precede the most immediately preceding
complete taxable year, as determined by CCC.
Sec. 760.109 Misrepresentation and scheme or device.
(a) A participant who is determined to have deliberately
misrepresented any fact affecting a program determination made in
accordance with this part, or otherwise used a scheme or device with
the intent to receive benefits for which the participant would not
otherwise be entitled, will not be entitled to program payments and
must refund all such payments received, plus interest as determined in
accordance with part 792 of this chapter. The participant will also be
denied program benefits for the immediately subsequent period of at
least 2 crop years, and up to 5 crop years. Interest will run from the
date of the original disbursement by FSA.
(b) A participant will refund to FSA all program payments, plus
interest, as determined in accordance with part 792 of this chapter,
provided however, that in any case it will run from the date of the
original disbursement, received by such participant with respect to all
contracts or applications, as may be applicable, if the participant is
determined to have knowingly done any of the following:
(1) Adopted any scheme or device that tends to defeat the purpose
of the program,
(2) Made any fraudulent representation, or
(3) Misrepresented any fact affecting a program determination.
Sec. 760.110 Appeals.
(a) Appeals. Appeal regulations set forth at parts 11 and 780 of
this title apply to this part.
(b) Determinations not eligible for administrative review or
appeal. FSA determinations that are not in response to a specific
individual participant's application are not to be construed to be
individual program eligibility determinations or adverse decisions and
are, therefore, not subject to administrative review or appeal under
parts 11 or 780 of this title. Such determinations include, but are not
limited to, application periods, deadlines, coverage periods, crop
years, fees, prices, general statutory or regulatory provisions that
apply to similarly situated participants, national average payment
prices, regions, crop definition, average yields, and payment factors
established by FSA for any of the programs for which this subpart
applies or similar matters requiring FSA determinations.
Sec. 760.111 Offsets, assignments, and debt settlement.
(a) Any payment to any participant under this part will be made
without regard to questions of title under State law, and without
regard to any claim or lien against the commodity, or proceeds, in
favor of the owner or any other creditor except agencies of the U.S.
Government. The regulations governing offsets and withholdings in part
792 of this title apply to payments made under this part.
(b) Any participant entitled to any payment may assign any
payment(s) in accordance with regulations governing the assignment of
payments in part 1404 of this title.
Sec. 760.112 Records and inspections.
(a) Any participant receiving payments under any program in ELAP,
LFP, LIP, SURE, or TAP, or any other legal entity or person who
provides information for the purposes of enabling a participant to
receive a payment under ELAP, LFP, LIP, SURE, or TAP, must:
(1) Maintain any books, records, and accounts supporting the
information for 3 years following the end of the year during which the
request for payment was submitted, and
(2) Allow authorized representatives of USDA and the Government
Accountability Office, during regular business hours, to inspect,
examine, and make copies of such books or records, and to enter the
farm and to inspect and verify all applicable livestock and acreage in
which the participant has an interest for the purpose of confirming
[[Page 31575]]
the accuracy of information provided by or for the participant.
(b) [Reserved]
Sec. 760.113 Refunds; joint and several liability.
(a) In the event that the participant fails to comply with any
term, requirement, or condition for payment or assistance arising under
ELAP, LFP, LIP, SURE, or TAP and if any refund of a payment to FSA will
otherwise become due in connection with this part, the participant must
refund to FSA all payments made in regard to such matter, together with
interest and late-payment charges as provided for in part 792 of this
chapter provided that interest will in all cases run from the date of
the original disbursement.
(b) All persons with a financial interest in an operation or in an
application for payment will be jointly and severally liable for any
refund, including related charges, that is determined to be due FSA for
any reason under this part.
Sec. 760.114 Minors.
A minor child is eligible to apply for program benefits under ELAP,
LFP, LIP, SURE, or TAP if all the eligibility requirements are met and
the provision for minor children in part 1400 of this title are met.
Sec. 760.115 Deceased individuals or dissolved entities.
(a) Payments may be made for eligible losses suffered by an
eligible participant who is now a deceased individual or is a dissolved
entity if a representative, who currently has authority to enter into a
contract, on behalf of the participant, signs the application for
payment.
(b) Legal documents showing proof of authority to sign for the
deceased individual or dissolved entity must be provided.
(c) If a participant is now a dissolved general partnership or
joint venture, all members of the general partnership or joint venture
at the time of dissolution or their duly authorized representatives
must sign the application for payment.
Sec. 760.116 Miscellaneous.
(a) As a condition to receive benefits under ELAP, LFP, LIP, SURE,
or TAP, a participant must have been in compliance with the provisions
of parts 12 and 718 of this title, and must not otherwise be precluded
from receiving benefits under those provisions or under any law.
(b) Rules of the Commodity Credit Corporation that are cited in
this part will be applied to this subpart in the same manner as if the
programs covered in this subpart were programs funded by the Commodity
Credit Corporation.
Subpart C [Removed and Reserved]
0
3. Remove and reserve subpart C.
Subpart D [Removed and Reserved]
0
4. Remove and reserve subpart D.
0
5. Revise subpart E to read as follows:
Subpart E--Livestock Indemnity Program
Sec.
760.401 Applicability.
760.402 Definitions.
760.403 Eligible owners and contract growers.
760.404 Eligible livestock.
760.405 Application process.
760.406 Payment calculation.
Subpart E--Livestock Indemnity Program
Sec. 760.401 Applicability.
(a) This subpart establishes the terms and conditions under which
the Livestock Indemnity Program (LIP) will be administered under Titles
XII and XV of the 2008 Farm Bill (Pub. L. 110-246).
(b) Eligible livestock owners and contract growers will be
compensated in accordance with Sec. 760.406 for eligible livestock
deaths in excess of normal mortality that occurred in the calendar year
for which benefits are being requested as a direct result of an
eligible adverse weather event. An ``eligible adverse weather event''
is one, as determined by the Secretary, occurring in the program year
that could and did, even when normal preventative or corrective
measures were taken and good farming practices were followed, directly
result in the death of livestock. Because feed can be purchased or
otherwise obtained in the event of a drought, drought is not an
eligible adverse weather event except when anthrax, resulting from
drought, causes the death of eligible livestock.
Sec. 760.402 Definitions.
The following definitions apply to this subpart. The definitions in
parts 718 and 1400 of this title also apply, except where they conflict
with the definitions in this section.
Adult beef bull means a male beef breed bovine animal that was at
least 2 years old and used for breeding purposes before it died.
Adult beef cow means a female beef breed bovine animal that had
delivered one or more offspring before dying. A first-time bred beef
heifer is also considered an adult beef cow if it was pregnant at the
time it died.
Adult buffalo and beefalo bull means a male animal of those breeds
that was at least 2 years old and used for breeding purposes before it
died.
Adult buffalo and beefalo cow means a female animal of those breeds
that had delivered one or more offspring before dying. A first-time
bred buffalo or beefalo heifer is also considered an adult buffalo or
beefalo cow if it was pregnant at the time it died.
Adult dairy bull means a male dairy breed bovine animal at least 2
years old used primarily for breeding dairy cows before it died.
Adult dairy cow means a female bovine dairy breed animal used for
the purpose of providing milk for human consumption that had delivered
one or more offspring before dying. A first-time bred dairy heifer is
also considered an adult dairy cow if it was pregnant at the time it
died.
Adverse weather means damaging weather events, including, but not
limited to, hurricanes, floods, blizzards, disease, wildfires, extreme
heat, and extreme cold.
Agricultural operation means a farming operation.
Application means the ``Livestock Indemnity Program'' form.
Buck means a male goat.
Commercial use means used in the operation of a business activity
engaged in as a means of livelihood for profit by the eligible
producer.
Contract means, with respect to contracts for the handling of
livestock, a written agreement between a livestock owner and another
individual or entity setting the specific terms, conditions, and
obligations of the parties involved regarding the production of
livestock or livestock products.
Deputy Administrator or DAFP means the Deputy Administrator for
Farm Programs, Farm Service Agency, U.S. Department of Agriculture or
the designee.
Equine animal means a domesticated horse, mule, or donkey.
Ewe means a female sheep.
Farming operation means a business enterprise engaged in producing
agricultural products.
FSA means the Farm Service Agency.
Goat means a domesticated, ruminant mammal of the genus Capra,
including Angora goats. Goats are further defined by sex (bucks and
nannies) and age (kids).
Kid means a goat less than 1 year old.
Lamb means a sheep less than 1 year old.
Livestock owner means one having legal ownership of the livestock
for which benefits are being requested on the day such livestock died.
Nanny means a female goat.
Non-adult beef cattle means a beef breed bovine animal that does
not meet
[[Page 31576]]
the definition of adult beef cow or bull. Non-adult beef cattle are
further delineated by weight categories of either less than 400 pounds
or 400 pounds or more at the time they died.
Non-adult buffalo or beefalo means an animal of those breeds that
does not meet the definition of adult buffalo or beefalo cow or bull.
Non-adult buffalo or beefalo are further delineated by weight
categories of either less than 400 pounds or 400 pounds or more at the
time of death.
Non-adult dairy cattle means a dairy breed bovine animal, of a
breed used for the purpose of providing milk for human consumption,
that does not meet the definition of adult dairy cow or bull. Non-adult
dairy cattle are further delineated by weight categories of either less
than 400 pounds or 400 pounds or more at the time they died.
Normal mortality means the numerical amount, computed by a
percentage, as established for the area by the FSA State Committee, of
expected