General Administrative Regulations; Catastrophic Risk Protection Endorsement; Area Risk Protection Insurance Regulations; and the Common Crop Insurance Regulations, Basic Provisions, 37155-37166 [2014-15074]
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37155
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
Vol. 79, No. 126
Tuesday, July 1, 2014
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.
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Federal Crop Insurance Corporation
7 CFR Parts 400, 402, 407 and 457
[Docket No. FCIC–14–0005]
RIN 0563–AC43
General Administrative Regulations;
Catastrophic Risk Protection
Endorsement; Area Risk Protection
Insurance Regulations; and the
Common Crop Insurance Regulations,
Basic Provisions
Federal Crop Insurance
Corporation, USDA.
ACTION: Interim Rule.
AGENCY:
The Federal Crop Insurance
Corporation (FCIC) amends the General
Administrative Regulations—
Ineligibility for Programs under the
Federal Crop Insurance Act, the
Catastrophic Risk Protection
Endorsement, the Area Risk Protection
Insurance Regulations, and the Common
Crop Insurance Regulations, Basic
Provisions to revise those provisions
affected by changes mandated by the
Agricultural Act of 2014 (commonly
referred to as the 2014 Farm Bill),
enacted on February 7, 2014.
DATES: This rule is effective June 30,
2014. Written comments and opinions
on this rule will be accepted until close
of business September 2, 2014 and will
be considered when the rule is made
final.
ADDRESSES: FCIC prefers that comments
be submitted electronically through the
Federal eRulemaking Portal. You may
submit comments, identified by Docket
ID No. FCIC–14–0005, by any of the
following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail: Director, Product
Administration and Standards Division,
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SUMMARY:
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Risk Management Agency, United States
Department of Agriculture, P.O. Box
419205, Kansas City, MO 64133–6205.
All comments received, including
those received by mail, will be posted
without change to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided, and can
be accessed by the public. All comments
must include the agency name and
docket number or Regulatory
Information Number (RIN) for this rule.
For detailed instructions on submitting
comments and additional information,
see https://www.regulations.gov. If you
are submitting comments electronically
through the Federal eRulemaking Portal
and want to attach a document, we ask
that it be in a text-based format. If you
want to attach a document that is a
scanned Adobe PDF file, it must be
scanned as text and not as an image,
thus allowing FCIC to search and copy
certain portions of your submissions.
For questions regarding attaching a
document that is a scanned Adobe PDF
file, please contact the RMA Web
Content Team at (816) 823–4694 or by
email at rmaweb.content@rma.usda.gov.
Privacy Act: Anyone is able to search
the electronic form of all comments
received for any dockets by the name of
the person submitting the comment (or
signing the comment, if submitted on
behalf of an association, business, labor
union, etc.). You may review the
complete User Notice and Privacy
Notice for Regulations.gov at https://
www.regulations.gov/#!privacyNotice.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tim
Hoffmann, Director, Product
Management, Product Administration
and Standards Division, Risk
Management Agency, United States
Department of Agriculture, Beacon
Facility, Stop 0812, Room 421, P.O. Box
419205, Kansas City, MO 64141–6205,
telephone (816) 926–7730.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Executive Order 12866
This rule has been determined to be
economically significant for the
purposes of Executive Order 12866 and,
therefore, it has been reviewed by the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB).
Benefit-Cost Analysis
A Benefit-Cost Analysis (BCA) has
been completed and a summary is
shown below; the full analysis may be
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viewed on https://www.regulations.gov.
In summary, the analysis finds that
changes in the rule will have an
expected cost of $115.9 million
annually over a 10-year period to the
FCIC in administration of the Federal
crop insurance program. Nonquantifiable benefits of this rule include
increased program integrity, additional
risk management tools, and incentives
for beginning farmers and ranchers to
participate in the Federal crop
insurance program.
On February 7, 2014, the 2014 Farm
Bill was enacted. As a result, FCIC must
revise those provisions of the General
Administrative Regulations—
Ineligibility for Programs under the
Federal Crop Insurance Act (Subpart U),
Catastrophic Risk Protection
Endorsement (CAT Endorsement), Area
Risk Protection Insurance (ARPI) Basic
Provisions, and the Common Crop
Insurance Provisions (CCIP) Basic
Provisions to implement program
changes identified in Titles II and XI of
the 2014 Farm Bill.
On January 2014, the Congressional
Budget Office (CBO) issued its estimates
on the effects on direct spending and
revenues of the 2014 Farm Bill. These
estimates were used as a basis for the
quantifiable costs and benefits stated in
this BCA.
The purpose of this rule is to amend
Subpart U, the CAT Endorsement, the
ARPI Basic Provisions, and the CCIP
Basic Provisions to implement the
following changes:
Section 2611 requires those enrolled
in crop insurance, for certain agriculture
commodities, to comply with
conservation compliance requirements
or forego premium subsidy. For acts or
situations of non-compliance,
ineligibility for premium subsidy will
be applied beginning with the 2016
reinsurance year. Annually, FCIC
anticipates a savings of $4.6 million as
a result of this change.
Section 11007 makes available
insurance coverage by separate
enterprise units based on irrigated and
non-irrigated acreage of crops within
counties. Annually, FCIC anticipates a
cost of $53.3 million as a result of this
change.
Section 11009 allows insureds to
exclude any recorded or appraised yield
for any crop year in which the per
planted acre yield in the county is at
least 50 percent below the simple
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average for the crop in the county for
the previous 10 consecutive crop years,
and allows insureds in any county
contiguous to a county in which an
insured is eligible to exclude a recorded
or appraised yield to also elect a similar
adjustment. Annually, FCIC anticipates
a cost of $35.7 million as a result of this
change.
Section 11014 applies a reduction of
premium subsidy, a reduced insurance
guarantee, and eliminates substitute
yields in the insurance guarantee during
the first four crop years that land is
converted from native sod to the
production of an annual crop in the
States of Iowa, Minnesota, Montana,
Nebraska, North Dakota, and South
Dakota. Annually, FCIC anticipates a
savings of $11.4 million as a result of
this change.
Section 11015 allows producers to
elect a different level of coverage for an
agricultural commodity by irrigated and
non-irrigated acreage. Annually, FCIC
anticipates a cost of $16.8 million as a
result of this change.
Section 11016 establishes crop
insurance benefits for beginning farmers
and ranchers by increasing the premium
subsidy available by ten percentage
points, allowing the use of yield history
from any previous farm or ranch
operation in which they had decision
making or physical involvement, and
replacing a low yield in their actual
production history with a yield equal to
80 percent of the applicable transitional
yield. Annually, FCIC anticipates a cost
of $26.1 million as a result of this
change.
Section 11019 allows for the
correction of errors in information
obtained from the producer within a
reasonable amount of time and
consistent with information provided to
other agencies of the Department of
Agriculture subject to certain limitations
for maintaining program integrity. This
section also provides for the payment of
debt after the termination date in
accordance with procedures and
limitations established by the FCIC, if a
producer inadvertently fails to pay a
debt and has been determined to be
ineligible to participate in the Federal
crop insurance program. FCIC does not
believe there are any additional cost
outlays resulting from this change.
Therefore, FCIC believes insureds will
benefit from this change and the
benefits are non-quantifiable.
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
Pursuant to the provisions of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. chapter 35), the collections of
information in this rule have been
approved by OMB under control
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numbers 0563–0085, 0563–0083, and
0563–0053.
E-Government Act Compliance
FCIC is committed to complying with
the E-Government Act of 2002, 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.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA) establishes
requirements for Federal agencies to
assess the effects of their regulatory
actions on State, local, and tribal
governments and the private sector.
This rule contains no Federal mandates
(under the regulatory provisions of title
II of the UMRA) for State, local, and
tribal governments or the private sector.
Therefore, this rule is not subject to the
requirements of sections 202 and 205 of
UMRA.
Executive Order 13132
It has been determined under section
1(a) of Executive Order 13132,
Federalism, that this rule does not have
sufficient implications to warrant
consultation with the States. The
provisions contained in this rule will
not have a substantial direct effect on
States, or on the relationship between
the national government and the States,
or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
FCIC certifies that this regulation will
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities. Program requirements for the
Federal crop insurance program are the
same for all producers regardless of the
size of their farming operation. For
instance, all producers are required to
submit an application and acreage
report to establish their insurance
guarantees and compute premium
amounts, and all producers are required
to submit a notice of loss and
production information to determine the
amount of an indemnity payment in the
event of an insured cause of crop loss.
Whether a producer has 10 acres or
1000 acres, there is no difference in the
kind of information collected. To ensure
crop insurance is available to small
entities, the Federal Crop Insurance Act
(Act) authorizes FCIC to waive
collection of administrative fees from
beginning farmers or ranchers and
limited resource farmers. FCIC believes
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this waiver helps to ensure that small
entities are given the same opportunities
as large entities to manage their risks
through the use of crop insurance. A
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis has not
been prepared since this regulation does
not have an impact on small entities,
and, therefore, this regulation is exempt
from the provisions of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 605).
Federal Assistance Program
This program is listed in the Catalog
of Federal Domestic Assistance under
No. 10.450.
Executive Order 12372
This program is not subject to the
provisions of Executive Order 12372,
which require intergovernmental
consultation with State and local
officials. See the Notice related to 7 CFR
part 3015, subpart V, published at 48 FR
29115, June 24, 1983.
Executive Order 12988
This rule has been reviewed in
accordance with Executive Order 12988
on civil justice reform. The provisions
of this rule will not have a retroactive
effect. The provisions of this rule will
preempt State and local laws to the
extent such State and local laws are
inconsistent herewith. With respect to
any direct action taken by FCIC or to
require the insurance provider to take
specific action under the terms of the
crop insurance policy, the
administrative appeal provisions
published at 7 CFR part 11 must be
exhausted before any action against
FCIC for judicial review may be brought.
Environmental Evaluation
This action is not expected to have a
significant economic impact on the
quality of the human environment,
health, or safety. Therefore, neither an
Environmental Assessment nor an
Environmental Impact Statement is
needed.
Background
On February 7, 2014, the 2014 Farm
Bill was enacted. FCIC must revise those
provisions of the General
Administrative Regulations—
Ineligibility for Programs under the
Federal Crop Insurance Act (Subpart U),
Catastrophic Risk Protection
Endorsement (CAT Endorsement), Area
Risk Protection Insurance Basic
Provisions (ARPI Basic Provisions), and
the Common Crop Insurance Policy
Basic Provisions (CCIP Basic Provisions)
to implement program changes
mandated by the 2014 Farm Bill. On
March 14, 2014, the Farm Service
Agency (FSA) and Risk Management
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Agency (RMA) published a notice in the
Federal Register (79 FR 14472–14475)
announcing a listening session for
initial public input about the new
programs and changes to existing
programs for which FSA and RMA were
delegated authority to implement. The
agencies also announced an opportunity
for the public to also make written
statements through April 2, 2014. The
listening session was held on March 27,
2014, in the Department of Agriculture’s
Jefferson Auditorium in Washington,
DC.
FSA and RMA received 32 written
comments from individuals, trade
groups, other organizations, and State
entities. All written comments are
available to the public for review via
this link: https://www.regulations.gov/
#!documentDetail;D=FSA-2014-00020001.
Total attendance at the listening
session was 127 people. All of the
Commodity, Credit, and Crop Insurance
Titles, and parts of the Conservation,
Energy, and Miscellaneous Titles were
covered during the listening session. A
number of oral statements from
attendees were program-specific.
However, recurring overarching ideas
expressed during the listening session
included placing a priority on
information sharing between the United
States Department of Agriculture
(USDA) and its employees, farmers and
ranchers in general, and beginning and
socially disadvantaged farmers and
ranchers.
Another overarching recommendation
was the need to develop education,
outreach, and tools to help farmers and
ranchers in making their decisions.
Other recommendation urged USDA to
develop programs and policies that do
not hinder business and family farming
decisions and strengthen local
assistance to farmers and ranchers on
completing forms and planning.
Statements that addressed issues
outside the scope of the 2014 Farm Bill
are not addressed in this rule.
Statements, such as those about RMA
developing new products to help small,
diversified farmers are not related to
this rule but will be considered by RMA
when establishing its priorities for
research and development.
In general, RMA received listening
session statements regarding the timing
of when the 2014 Farm Bill
requirements would go into effect.
Statements were also received urging
RMA to issue rules and information as
quickly as possible.
Provisions in the 2014 Farm Bill that
require revisions in the regulations are
as follows:
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a. Section 2611 of the 2014 Farm Bill
links the eligibility for premium subsidy
paid by FCIC to an insured’s compliance
with the Highly Erodible Land
Conservation (HELC) and Wetland
Conservation (WC) provisions of the
Food Security Act of 1985. The
regulations covering these provisions
are set forth in the Federal Register at
7 CFR Part 12. To be eligible for
premium subsidy paid by FCIC, an
insured must (1) have a completed
certification of compliance, form AD–
1026, with the HELC and WC provisions
on file with the Farm Service Agency
(FSA); (2) be in compliance with a
conservation plan approved by NRCS
for all highly erodible land; (3) not plant
an agricultural commodity on a wetland
converted after February 7, 2014; and (4)
not have converted a wetland for the
purpose, or to have the effect, of making
the production of an annually planted
agricultural commodity possible on
such converted wetland after February
7, 2014.
For the purposes of the HELC and WC
provisions, ‘‘agricultural commodity’’ is
defined as any agricultural commodity
planted and produced in a state by
annual tilling of the soil, including
tilling by one-trip planters, or
sugarcane. Insureds determined
ineligible for premium subsidy paid by
FCIC for a reinsurance year will be
ineligible for premium subsidy paid by
FCIC on all their policies, including
CAT policies, unless specific
exemptions apply. There is a phase-in
period for insureds who have never
been subject to the HELC and WC
provisions previously and these
insureds will be given additional time to
become compliant before any premium
subsidy is denied.
USDA will determine an insured’s
eligibility for premium subsidy paid by
FCIC at a time that is as close to the
beginning of the next reinsurance year
(July 1) as practical. The determination
will be based on FSA and Natural
Resources Conservation Service
determinations regarding compliance
with the HELC and WC provisions, as
recorded in FSA’s automated system.
Insureds who do not have a certification
of compliance, form AD–1026, on file
with FSA prior to the beginning of the
reinsurance year (July 1) will be
ineligible for premium subsidy, unless
insureds can demonstrate they are a
beginning farmer or rancher who has
not previously had an insurable interest
in a crop or livestock and they began
farming for the first time after the
beginning of the reinsurance year but
prior to the sales closing date. In
addition, an insured who is in violation
of the HELC or WC provisions will be
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ineligible for premium subsidy, unless
specific exemptions apply. This means
that an insured who is determined to be
non-compliant on June 1, 2015, (2015
reinsurance year) will, unless otherwise
exempted, be denied premium subsidy
effective July 1, 2015, the start of the
2016 reinsurance year, and will not be
eligible for any premium subsidy for
any policies during the 2016
reinsurance year. Even if the insured
becomes compliant during the 2016
reinsurance year, the insured will not be
eligible for premium subsidy until the
2017 reinsurance year starting on July 1,
2016. FCIC is amending the CAT
Endorsement, ARPI Basic Provisions,
and CCIP Basic Provisions to implement
these provisions effective for any
policies with a sales closing date on or
after July 1, 2015.
b. Section 11003 of the 2014 Farm Bill
created a new insurance product that
provides coverage for a portion of the
underlying crop insurance policy
deductible called the Supplemental
Coverage Option (SCO). SCO must be
purchased as an endorsement to the
CCIP Basic Provisions and applicable
Crop Provisions. SCO will be available,
starting with the 2015 crop year, in
select counties for corn, soybeans,
wheat, sorghum, cotton, and rice, and
made available to other crops and areas
in future years if there is sufficient data
and coverage is provided on the
actuarial documents.
Prior to the 2014 Farm Bill, the CAT
Endorsement did not allow options or
endorsements to extend to CAT policies.
However, section 11003 specifically
makes SCO available to all policies
offered under Subtitle A of the Act,
which includes both additional
coverage and CAT coverage. Therefore,
this rule amends the CAT Endorsement
to allow SCO to be available for CAT
policies.
c. Section 11007 of the 2014 Farm Bill
makes available insurance coverage by
separate enterprise units for irrigated
and non-irrigated acreage of a crop
within the county. The new language
allows two separate enterprise units,
one for all irrigated acreage of the crop,
and one for all non-irrigated acreage of
the crop. Enterprise units by irrigated
and non-irrigated practice will be
available for any crop in which
enterprise units are allowed through the
actuarial documents, Crop Provisions,
or Special Provisions. Availability of
enterprise units will be subject to the
current requirements in the Basic
Provisions. This means that both the
irrigated and non-irrigated acreage must
each separately qualify for enterprise
units. If insureds do not qualify for
separate irrigated and non-irrigated
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enterprise units, there are two options
based on the timing of the
determination: (1) If the determination
is made on or before the acreage
reporting date, insureds may have one
enterprise unit comprise of all irrigated
and non-irrigated acreage in the county
of the crop, if they qualify, or basic or
optional units depending on which unit
structure the insureds reported on the
acreage report; or (2) if the
determination is made after acreage
reporting date, the policy allows
insureds to have one enterprise unit
comprise of all irrigated and nonirrigated acreage in the county of the
crop if they meet the qualifications or a
basic unit will be assigned. The
provisions regarding this section of the
2014 Farm Bill may not be implemented
upon publication; therefore to allow
flexibility, FCIC has revised section 34
of the CCIP Basic Provisions to allow
the actuarial documents to specify when
separate enterprise units by irrigated
and non-irrigated practice will be
available.
d. Section 11009 of the 2014 Farm Bill
allows insureds to elect to exclude any
recorded or appraised yield for any crop
year in which the per planted acre yield
in the county was at least 50 percent
below the simple average of the per
planted acre yield during the previous
10 consecutive crop years. A crop year
determined eligible for exclusion in a
county will also be eligible for exclusion
in any contiguous county. Elections to
exclude yields, by eligible crop year, by
irrigated and non-irrigated acreage will
be specified in the actuarial documents.
Eligible crop year(s) depends upon the
history for the crop year in comparison
to the previous 10 consecutive crop
years for a crop/county and irrigation
practice. Production data availability
and intensive data analysis may limit
FCIC’s ability to authorize exclusions of
yields for all APH crops in all counties.
The provisions regarding this section of
the 2014 Farm Bill may not be
implemented upon publication;
therefore, to allow flexibility, FCIC has
revised the CCIP Basic Provisions to
allow the actuarial documents to specify
when insureds may elect to exclude any
recorded or appraised yield.
e. Section 11014 of the 2014 Farm Bill
stipulates there will be a reduction of
benefits on native sod acreage during
the first four crop years after the acreage
is tilled and is planted to an annual crop
after the date of enactment of the 2014
Farm Bill. Insureds’ benefits are reduced
for native sod acreage during the first
four crop years of planting an annual
crop by reducing the amount of
premium subsidy by 50 percentage
points than otherwise would be
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available on additional coverage
policies, reducing the insurance
guarantee to 65 percent of the applicable
transitional yield, and eliminating yield
substitution for a year of poor or low
yields, as applicable. The reduction in
insureds’ benefits only applies to
insureds who have tilled an area of
native sod greater than five acres in the
county in the States of Iowa, Minnesota,
Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, or
South Dakota. FCIC has revised the
premium subsidy and insurance
guarantee provisions in the CCIP Basic
Provisions and the ARPI Basic
Provisions, as applicable, to incorporate
these changes.
f. Section 11015 of the 2014 Farm Bill
allows insureds with additional
coverage policies to elect two separate
coverage levels, one for all irrigated
acreage of the crop in the county and
one for all non-irrigated acreage of the
crop in the county. This will be
available where both an irrigated
practice and non-irrigated practice is
available in the actuarial documents.
For example, an insured may choose a
65 percent coverage level for all
irrigated acreage (corn irrigated practice)
and an 80 percent coverage level for all
non-irrigated acreage (corn non-irrigated
practice). Further, if the Crop Provisions
allow the option to separately insure
individual crop types or varieties,
separate coverage levels by irrigated and
non-irrigated practice will also be
available for each type or variety. For
example, an insured may choose 65
percent coverage level for processing
type apples with an irrigated practice
and a 70 percent coverage level for
processing type apples with a nonirrigated practice. The insured may also
choose a 70 percent coverage level for
fresh type apples with an irrigated
practice and a 75 percent coverage level
for fresh type apples with a nonirrigated practice. This election is
already allowed in the ARPI Basic
Provisions. The provisions regarding
this section of the 2014 Farm Bill may
not be implemented upon publication;
therefore, to allow flexibility for
implementing this provision, FCIC has
revised the CCIP Basic Provisions to
allow the actuarial documents to specify
when separate coverage levels by
irrigated and non-irrigated practices will
be available.
g. Section 11016 of the 2014 Farm Bill
establishes crop insurance incentives for
beginning farmers and ranchers by
waiving the administrative fee for CAT
coverage and additional coverage
policies, increasing the premium
subsidy that otherwise would have been
available by ten percentage points,
allowing the use of yield history from
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any previous involvement in a farm or
ranch operation, including decision
making or physical involvement in the
production of the crop or livestock, and
replacing an excluded yield within
actual production history with a yield
equal to 80 percent of the applicable
transitional yield. To qualify as a
beginning farmer or rancher, a producer
must not have actively operated and
managed a farm or ranch in any county,
in any state, with an insurable interest
in any crop or livestock as an owneroperator, landlord, tenant, or
sharecropper for more than five crop
years. This will exclude any crop year
when the beginning farmer or rancher
was under the age of 18, enrolled in
post-secondary studies or on active duty
in the U.S. military. Entities may qualify
for beginning farmer or rancher benefits
only if all of the substantial beneficial
interest holders qualify as a beginning
farmer or rancher. For example, a son
moves home to take over the family
farm and incorporates with his spouse
and neither have previous farming
experience. Their corporation would
qualify for beginning farmer or rancher
benefits. FCIC has added a definition of
‘‘beginning farmer and rancher’’ and
revised the administrative fee, premium
subsidy, insurance guarantee, and yield
substitution provision in the CCIP Basic
Provisions and the ARPI Basic
Provisions, as applicable, to incorporate
these changes.
h. Section 11017 of the 2014 Farm Bill
allows producers of upland cotton to
purchase an additional policy known as
the ‘‘Stacked Income Protection Plan’’
(STAX). STAX can be purchased as a
stand-alone policy or in conjunction
with any individual or area plan of
insurance at any coverage level offered
by FCIC. Further, STAX is found in
section 508B of the Act and is not
limited to the additional coverage found
in section 508(c) of the Act. This means
that STAX is statutorily authorized to be
offered with CAT policies. Therefore,
this rule amends the CAT Endorsement
to clarify that STAX will be available for
CAT policies. STAX will be available,
starting with the 2015 crop year, in
select counties were insurance for
upland cotton is available as specified
on the actuarial documents.
i. Section 11019 of the 2014 Farm Bill
allows for the correction of errors in
information obtained from the insured
in addition to the correction of
information currently authorized in the
policies for the purposes of obtaining
coverage. Within a reasonable amount of
time following the sales closing date,
corrections can be made in the
information provided for the purposes
of obtaining coverage to ensure
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consistency with information provided
to other agencies of the Department of
Agriculture. Section 11019 allows
certain information to be corrected after
the acreage reporting date to reconcile
information determined from any other
USDA program or verified by another
USDA agency. This ability to correct
reported information does not apply to
any other information that has not been
determined or verified for the purposes
of another USDA program. The ability to
make these corrections are not without
limitation and program integrity will be
protected. Lastly, electronic
transmission errors, such as
transpositions, committed by the
insurance provider, agent or any agency
within USDA can be corrected by the
insurance provider at any time the error
is discovered. This section of the 2014
Farm Bill also provides for the payment
of debt after the sales closing date in
accordance with procedures and
limitations established by FCIC, if an
insured inadvertently fails to pay a debt
and has been determined ineligible to
participate in the Federal crop
insurance program. FCIC is revising
Subpart U, the CCIP Basic Provisions,
and the ARPI Basic Provisions to
incorporate these changes.
The changes mandated by the 2014
Farm Bill impact almost all county crop
programs within the Federal crop
insurance program. This entails a
monumental amount of work. FCIC is
implementing the changes made by the
2014 Farm Bill to all applicable
programs as quickly as possible but
there may be situations in which certain
programs or program changes cannot be
made for the earliest crop or reinsurance
year after publication of these
regulations. FCIC will continue to work
on implementing the provisions
everywhere they are applicable as
expeditiously as possible. Insureds
should check with their agents and on
the RMA Web site at www.rma.usda.gov
for updates on the implementation
efforts.
Previously, changes made to the
Federal crop insurance policies codified
in the Code of Federal Regulations were
required to be implemented through the
rulemaking process. Such action was
not required by the Administrative
Procedures Act because contracts were
exempt from notice and comment
rulemaking and the crop insurance
policy is a contract. However, a prior
Secretary of Agriculture published a
notice in the Federal Register stating
that the Department of Agriculture
would, to the maximum extent
practicable, use the notice and comment
rulemaking process when making
program changes, including those
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involving contracts. FCIC has complied
with this notice over the subsequent
years. Recently, the current Secretary of
Agriculture has published a notice in
the Federal Register rescinding the
prior notice, thereby making contracts
again exempt from the notice and
comment rulemaking process. However,
FCIC values the input it receives
through comments and has elected to
solicit comments to this interim rule,
which will be considered when this rule
is made final. For these reasons, these
policy changes are effective upon filing
with the Office of the Federal Register.
The changes to the policy made in
this rule are applicable for the 2015 and
succeeding crop years for all crops with
a contract change date on or after the
effective date of this rule, and for the
2016 and succeeding crop years for all
crops with a contract change date prior
to the effective date of this rule,
provided the actuarial documents reflect
the implementation of the policy
changes, as applicable.
1. The specific changes to Subpart
U—Ineligibility for Programs Under the
Federal Crop Insurance Act (7 CFR part
400) are as follows:
a. FCIC is adding a new section
400.679(g) to specify when a person
who has requested to have their policy
reinstated by the Administrator of the
Risk Management Agency and the
request is denied, the person remains
ineligible consistent with section 11019
of the 2014 Farm Bill.
b. FCIC is adding a new section
400.682(g) to specify when FCIC will
allow the payment of debt after the sales
closing date if a producer inadvertently
fails to pay a debt and has been
determined ineligible to participate in
the Federal crop insurance program
consistent with section 11019 of the
2014 Farm Bill.
c. FCIC is revising section 400.485(b)
to specify reinstatement is an option to
regain ineligibility in this paragraph.
2. The specific changes to the CAT
Endorsement (7 CFR part 402) are as
follows:
a. Section 6—FCIC is revising section
6(a) to clarify that insureds will be
responsible to pay the premium if it is
determined the insured has committed
a violation of the HELC or WC
provisions of 7 CFR part 12 as amended
by the 2014 Farm Bill or the insured has
not filed a form AD–1026 consistent
with section 2611 of the 2014 Farm Bill
unless the insured is otherwise
exempted. FCIC is also revising section
6(a) to clarify that the policy will be
terminated for failure to pay any
premium that may be due.
FCIC is revising section 6(b) to clarify
that if premium is due, as specified in
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37159
new section 6(f), it must be paid within
30 days after the insured has been
billed.
FCIC is revising section 6(c) to specify
the administrative fee for CAT coverage
will also be waived for insureds who
qualify as beginning farmers or ranchers
consistent with section 11016 of the
2014 Farm Bill.
FCIC is revising section 6(e) to clarify
that if premium is owed, as specified in
new section 6(f), and is not paid when
due, the insured may be ineligible for
certain other USDA program benefits.
FCIC is adding a new section 6(f) to
specify the insured will be responsible
for the payment of the premium if it is
determined the insured has committed
a violation of the HELC or WC
provisions of 7 CFR part 12 as amended
by the 2014 Farm Bill or the insured has
not filed a form AD–1026 consistent
with section 2611 of the 2014 Farm Bill.
FCIC is adding a new section 6(g) to
specify that if the Act expressly
authorizes an option or endorsement to
be applicable to CAT coverage, the
insured will owe a separate annual
premium and administrative fee for
such option or endorsement. SCO and
STAX, authorized by sections 11003
and 11017 of the 2014 Farm Bill, will
require the payment of premium for
such coverage even if the insured has
elected CAT coverage. FCIC is also
adding a new section 6(h) to specify the
policy will be terminated if the insured
fails to pay the premium due by the
termination date.
b. Section 11—FCIC is revising
section 11(a) to specify that if the Act
authorizes options or endorsements to
be applicable to CAT coverage, such
options or endorsements may be
purchased in addition to the CAT
Endorsement. This revision should
eliminate any conflict between the CAT
Endorsement and SCO or STAX,
allowing both to be available with CAT
coverage consistent with sections 11003
and 11017of the 2014 Farm Bill.
3. The specific changes to the Area
Risk Protection Insurance Basic
Provisions (7 CFR part 407) are as
follows:
a. Section 1—FCIC is adding the
definition of ‘‘beginning farmer or
rancher’’ consistent with section 11016
of the 2014 Farm Bill, which allows the
exclusion of crop years in which an
individual had an insurable interest if,
at the time, the individual was under
the age of 18, while serving full-time in
the military service of the United States,
or while in post-secondary education.
FCIC is revising the definition of ‘‘native
sod’’ to clarify the designation now
refers to the date of enactment of the
2014 Farm Bill and removing the
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definition of ‘‘Prairie Pothole National
Priority Area’’ since only native sod in
the states of Iowa, Minnesota, Montana,
Nebraska, North Dakota, or South
Dakota and are effected by the
restrictions contained in section 11014
of the 2014 Farm Bill;
b. Section 2—FCIC is revising section
2(k)(2)(iii) to specify when FCIC will
allow the payment of debt after the sales
closing date if a producer inadvertently
fails to pay a debt and has been
determined ineligible to participate in
the Federal crop insurance program
consistent with section 11019 of the
2014 Farm Bill.
FCIC is adding section 2(k)(2)(iv) to
specify that any determination made in
accordance with section 2(k)(2)(iii)(B)
exhausts all administrative remedies for
the purposes of termination.
c. Section 5—FCIC is removing the
provisions in section 5(d) regarding the
ability of a Governor of a State
designated within the Prairie Pothole
National Priority Area to elect to make
native sod acreage uninsurable for the
first five crop years of planting because
these provisions are no longer
applicable under section 11014 of the
2014 Farm Bill. FCIC is adding
provisions to section 5(d) regarding the
consequences for the first four crop
years of planting on native sod acreage,
which requires guarantees to be based
on a reduced yield of 65 percent of the
transitional yield and a reduced
premium subsidy for additional
coverage policies that is 50 percentage
points less than would otherwise be
available. Since area based plans of
insurance do not have a transitional
yield, FCIC is amending the provisions
to require a reduced yield equal to a 65
percent protection factor. This will have
the similar effect as reducing the yield
to 65 percent of the transitional yield
consistent with section 11014 of the
2014 Farm Bill.
FCIC is adding a new section 5(e) that
clarifies that the provisions of section
5(d) do not apply to native sod areas of
five acres or less in a county.
d. Section 7—FCIC is revising section
7(a)(6) to specify the administrative fee
will be waived for insureds who qualify
as beginning farmers or ranchers
consistent with section 11016 of the
2014 Farm Bill.
FCIC is adding a new section 7(h) to
specify the insured’s premium subsidy
will be 10 percentage points greater if
they qualify as a beginning farmer or
rancher consistent with section 11016 of
the 2014 Farm Bill.
FCIC is adding a new section 7(i) to
specify the insured will be ineligible for
premium subsidy if it is determined the
insured has committed a violation of the
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HELC or WC provisions of 7 CFR part
12, as amended by the Agricultural Act
of 2014, or the insured has not filed a
form AD–1026 consistent with section
2611 of the 2014 Farm Bill unless the
insured is otherwise exempted.
e. Section 22—FCIC is revising
section 22(a) by removing the phrase
‘‘any portion thereof,’’ to remove
ambiguity of the billing process and
interest situations on amounts owed,
and to ensure consistency in how
insurance providers administer this
section. Section 11019 of the 2014 Farm
Bill allows producers to pay debts after
the termination date and still remain
eligible for insurance if certain
conditions are met.
f. FCIC is adding a new section 31 to
specify that in addition to the
corrections to information provided by
the insured previously allowed in the
policy, the insurance provider may
correct the information provided on an
application or by the sales closing date,
by the insured, including identification
numbers for the insured and any person
with an substantial beneficial interest in
the insured, within a reasonable time
after the sales closing date if the
information is in error to ensure such
information is correct and consistent
with information reported by the
insured for other USDA programs. FCIC
is also adding a provision that allows
the reconciliation of errors in
information reported by the insured
within a reasonable time after the
acreage reporting date if an agency
within USDA has determined the
correct information. Corrections can
also be made after the date an agency
within USDA has corrected the data as
a result of the verification of the
information. There are limitations on
such corrections if the insured would
avoid an eligibility requirement or
obtain a disproportionate benefit,
increase the guarantee or indemnity if a
cause of loss has occurred or avoid
premium if no cause of loss has
occurred, or to avoid an obligation
under Federal or State law. FCIC has
also added a provision that allows the
insurance provider at any time to revise
any incorrect information provided by
the insured, if the incorrect information
was caused by electronic transmission
errors by the insurance provider or
agent or errors made by any agency
within USDA in transmitting the
information provided by the insured for
purposes of other USDA programs. This
is consistent with section 11019 of the
2014 Farm Bill.
4. The specific changes to the
Common Crop Insurance Regulations,
Basic Provisions (7 CFR part 457) are as
follows:
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Fmt 4700
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a. Section 1—FCIC is adding the
definition of ‘‘beginning farmer or
rancher’’ consistent with section 11016
of the 2014 Farm Bill, which allows the
exclusion of crop years in which an
individual had an insurable interest if,
at the time, the individual was under
the age of 18, while serving full-time in
the military service of the United States,
or while in post-secondary education.
FCIC is revising the definition of ‘‘native
sod’’ to clarify the designation now
refers to the date of enactment of the
2014 Farm Bill and removing the
definition of ‘‘Prairie Pothole National
Priority Area’’ since only native sod in
the states of Iowa, Minnesota, Montana,
Nebraska, North Dakota, and South
Dakota and are effected by the
restrictions contained in section 11014
of the 2014 Farm Bill.
b. Section 2—FCIC is revising section
2(f)(2)(iii) to specify when FCIC will
allow the payment of debt after the sales
closing date if a producer inadvertently
fails to pay a debt and has been
determined ineligible to participate in
the Federal crop insurance program
consistent with section 11019 of the
2014 Farm Bill.
FCIC is adding section 2(f)(2)(iv) to
specify that any determination made in
accordance with section 2(f)(2)(iii)(B)
exhausts all administrative remedies for
the purposes of termination.
c. Section 3—FCIC is adding a new
section 3(b)(2)(iii) to allow separate
coverage levels for irrigated and nonirrigated practices consistent with
section 11015 of the 2014 Farm Bill.
FCIC is also adding a new section 3(l)
to specify that notwithstanding any
other provision in section 3, if the
insured is a beginning farmer or rancher
who was previously involved in a
farming or ranching operation,
including involvement in the decisionmaking or physical involvement in the
production of the crop or livestock on
the farm, for any acreage obtained by the
beginning farmer or rancher, the
beginning farmer or rancher shall
receive a yield that is the higher of: (1)
The actual production history of the
previous producer of the crop or
livestock on the acreage in which the
beginning farmer or rancher was
involved; or (2) the actual production
history of the beginning farmer or
rancher.
d. Section 5—FCIC is replacing the
previously reserved section 5 with a
new section titled ‘‘Exclusion of Yields’’
to specify when an insured may elect to
exclude their actual yields if the actual
yield for the acreage is at least 50
percent below the simple average of the
per planted acre yield for the crop in the
county for the previous 10 years
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 126 / Tuesday, July 1, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
consistent with section 11009 of the
2014 Farm Bill.
e. Section 7—FCIC is revising section
7(e)(4) to specify the administrative fee
will be waived for insureds who qualify
as beginning farmers or ranchers
consistent with section 11016 of the
2014 Farm Bill.
FCIC is adding a new section 7(g) to
specify the insured’s premium subsidy
will be 10 percentage points greater if
they qualify as a beginning farmer or
rancher consistent with section 11016 of
the 2014 Farm Bill.
FCIC is adding a new section 7(h) to
specify the insured will be ineligible for
premium subsidy if it is determined the
insured has committed a violation of the
HELC or WC provisions of 7 CFR part
12, as amended by the 2014 Farm Bill,
or the insured has not filed a form AD–
1026 consistent with section 2611 of the
2014 Farm Bill unless the insured is
otherwise exempted.
f. Section 9—FCIC is removing the
provisions in section 9(e) regarding the
ability of a Governor of a State
designated within the Prairie Pothole
National Priority Area to elect to make
native sod acreage uninsurable for the
first five crop years of planting because
these provisions are no longer
applicable under section 11014 of the
2014 Farm Bill. FCIC is adding
provisions to section 9(e) regarding the
consequences for the first four crop
years of planting on native sod acreage,
which requires guarantees to be based
on a reduced yield of 65 percent of the
transitional yield, meaning the
established yield for the insured will be
based on 65 percent of the transitional
yield, and a reduced premium subsidy
for additional coverage policies that is
50 percentage points less than would
otherwise be available consistent with
section 11014 of the 2014 Farm Bill.
FCIC is adding a new section 9(f) that
clarifies that the provisions of section
9(e) do not apply to native sod areas of
five acres or less in a county.
g. Section 24—FCIC is revising
section 24(a) by removing the phrase
‘‘any portion thereof,’’ to remove
ambiguity of the billing process and
interest situations on amounts owed,
and to ensure consistency in how
insurance providers administer this
section. Section 11019 of the 2014 Farm
Bill allows producers to pay debts after
the termination date and still remain
eligible for insurance if certain
conditions are met.
h. FCIC is replacing the previously
reserved section 25 with a new section
titled ‘‘Correction of Errors’’ to specify
that in addition to the corrections to
information provided by the insured
previously allowed in the policy, the
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Jkt 232001
insurance provider may correct the
information provided on an application
or by the sales closing date, by the
insured, including identification
numbers for the insured and any person
with a substantial beneficial interest in
the insured, within a reasonable time
after the sales closing date if the
information is in error to ensure such
information is correct and consistent
with information reported by the
insured for other USDA programs. FCIC
is also adding a provision that allows
the reconciliation of errors in
information reported by the insured
within a reasonable time after the
acreage reporting date if an agency
within USDA has determined the
correct information. Corrections can
also be made after the date an agency
within USDA has corrected the data as
a result of the verification of the
information. There are limitations on
such corrections if the insured would
avoid an eligibility requirement or
obtain a disproportionate benefit,
increase the guarantee or indemnity if a
cause of loss has occurred, or avoid
premium if no cause of loss has
occurred, or to avoid an obligation
under Federal or State law. FCIC has
also added a provision that allows the
insurance provider at any time to revise
any incorrect information provided by
the insured, if the incorrect information
was caused by electronic transmission
errors by the insurance provider or
agent, or errors made by any agency
within USDA in transmitting the
information provided by the insured for
purposes of other USDA programs. This
is consistent with section 11019 of the
2014 Farm Bill.
i. Section 34—FCIC is adding a new
section 34(a)(4)(viii) to allow enterprise
units for irrigated and non-irrigated
practices if the acreage of each practice
separately qualifies for an enterprise
unit consistent with section 11007 of
the 2014 Farm Bill.
j. Section 36—FCIC is revising section
36(c) to specify that if the insured
qualifies as a beginning farmer or
rancher, the insured can elect to replace
the excluded actual yield with a yield
equal to 80 percent of the applicable
transitional yield for the crop year in
which the yield is being replaced
consistent with section 11016 of the
2014 Farm Bill.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Parts 400, 402,
407 and 457
Administrative practice and
procedure, Crop insurance, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
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37161
Interim Rule
Accordingly, as set forth in the
preamble, the Federal Crop Insurance
Corporation amends 7 CFR parts 400,
402, 407 and 457 as follows:
PART 400—GENERAL
ADMINISTRATIVE REGULATIONS
1. The authority citation for 7 CFR
part 400 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1506(1), 1506(o).
2. Amend § 400.679 as follows:
a. In paragraph (e) by removing the
word ‘‘or’’ after the semicolon at the end
of the paragraph;
■ b. In paragraph (f) by removing the
period at the end of the paragraph and
adding ‘‘; or’’ in its place; and
■ c. Add new paragraph (g).
The addition reads as follows:
■
■
§ 400.679
Criteria for ineligibility.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Has requested the Administrator of
the Risk Management Agency for
consideration to reinstate their
eligibility in accordance with the
applicable policy provisions and such
request has been denied.
■ 3. Amend § 400.682 by adding a new
paragraph (g) to read as follows:
§ 400.682
Determination and notification.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) No later than 60 days after the
termination date, the missed payment
date of a previously executed written
payment agreement, or the due date
specified in the notice to the person of
the amount due, as applicable, the
ineligible person may request
consideration for reinstatement from the
Administrator of the Risk Management
Agency in accordance with section 2 of
the Common Crop insurance Policy
Basic Provisions (7 CFR 457.8).
§ 400.685
[Amended]
4. Amend paragraph (b) in § 400.685
by adding the word ‘‘reinstatement,’’
between the words ‘‘through’’ and
‘‘mediation’’.
■
PART 402—CATASTROPHIC RISK
PROTECTION ENDORSEMENT
5. The authority citation for 7 CFR
part 402 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1506(l), 1506(o).
6. Amend § 402.4 as follows:
a. In section 6(a) by removing the
word ‘‘Notwithstanding’’ and adding in
its place the phrase ‘‘Except as provided
in paragraphs (f) and (h) of this section
and notwithstanding’’;
■ b. In section 6(b) introductory text by
adding the phrase ‘‘and premium as
■
■
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 126 / Tuesday, July 1, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
specified in paragraph (f) of this
section’’ between the phrases
‘‘administrative fee’’ and ‘‘to us within;’’
■ c. Revise section 6(c);
■ d. In section 6(e) by adding the phrase
‘‘and premium as specified in paragraph
(f) of this section’’ between the phrases
‘‘administrative fee’’ and ‘‘is not paid;’’
■ e. Add new sections 6(f), (g), and (h);
and
■ f. Revise section 11(a).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 402.4 Catastrophic Risk Protection
Endorsement Provisions.
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*
*
*
*
*
6. Annual Premium and
Administrative Fees.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) The administrative fee provisions
of paragraph (b) of this section do not
apply if you are a ‘‘beginning farmer or
rancher’’ or a ‘‘limited resource farmer’’
as defined in the applicable crop policy.
The administrative fee will be waived if
you request it and you meet the
requirements contained in the annual
premium provisions of the applicable
crop policy.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) Effective for any policies with a
sales closing date on or after July 1,
2015, you will be responsible for
payment of the premium established for
the coverage provided under this
endorsement if:
(1) USDA determines you have
committed a violation of the highly
erodible land conservation or wetland
conservation provisions of 7 CFR part
12 as amended by the Agricultural Act
of 2014; or
(2) You have not filed form AD–1026
or successor form with FSA by June 1
prior to the sales closing date to be
properly identified as in compliance
with the conservation provisions
specified in paragraph (f)(1) of this
section (For example, to be eligible for
a premium subsidy for a crop with a
sales closing date of March 15, 2016,
you must have filed your form AD–1026
by June 1, 2015).
(i) Notwithstanding paragraph (f)(2) of
this section, if you demonstrate you are
a beginning farmer or rancher who has
not previously had an insurable interest
in a crop or livestock and began farming
for the first time after June 30 prior to
the sales closing date, you fail to file
form AD–1026 or successor form with
the FSA, by June 1 after you make
application for insurance.
(ii) To be eligible for premium
subsidy paid on your behalf by FCIC, it
is your responsibility to assure you meet
all the requirements for:
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(A) Compliance with the conservation
provisions specified in paragraph (f)(1)
of this section; and
(B) Filing form AD–1026, or successor
form, to be properly identified as in
compliance with the conservation
provisions specified in paragraph (f)(1)
of this section.
(g) If the Act expressly authorizes an
option or endorsement to be available in
addition to the coverage available under
this Endorsement (for example, the
Supplemental Coverage Option) or any
other additional coverage offered under
the Federal Crop Insurance Act (for
example, the Stacked Income Protection
Plan), you will owe a separate annual
premium and administrative fee for
such option or endorsement if the
option or endorsement has been made
available in the actuarial documents and
you elect to purchase such coverage.
(h) Failure to pay the premium
specified in paragraph (f) of this section
will result in the termination of the
policy and all other policies in
accordance with the termination
provisions specified in the applicable
Basic Provisions.
*
*
*
*
*
11. Exclusion of Coverage
(a) Options or endorsements that
extend the coverage available under any
crop policy offered by FCIC will not be
available under this endorsement,
except for the Supplemental Coverage
Option and any other option or
endorsement or other additional
coverage expressly authorized in the
Federal Crop Insurance Act and allowed
in the actuarial documents (for example,
the Stacked Income Protection Plan).
Written agreements are not available for
any crop insured under this
endorsement.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 407—AREA RISK PROTECTION
INSURANCE REGULATIONS
7. The authority citation for 7 CFR
part 407 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1506(l), 1506(o).
8. Amend § 407.9 as follows:
a. In section 1 by adding the definition
of ‘‘beginning farmer or rancher’’ in
alphabetical order, revising the
definition of ‘‘native sod,’’ and
removing the definition of ‘‘Prairie
Pothole National Priority Area’’;
■ b. Revise section 2(k)(2)(iii);
■ c. Add new section 2(k)(2)(iv);
■ d. Revise section 5(d);
■ f. Add a new section 5(e);
■ g. Revise section 7(a)(6)(i);
■ h. Redesignate section 7(a)(6)(ii) as
section 7(a)(6)(iii) and add a new
section 7(a)(6)(ii);
■
■
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i. Add new sections 7(h) and (i);
j. In section 22(a) by removing the
phrase ‘‘, or any portion thereof,’’; and
■ k. Add a new section 31.
The revisions and additions reads as
follows:
■
■
§ 407.9
policy.
Area risk protection insurance
*
*
*
*
*
1. Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Beginning farmer or rancher. An
individual who has not actively
operated and managed a farm or ranch
in any state, with an insurable interest
in a crop or livestock as an owneroperator, landlord, tenant, or
sharecropper for more than five crop
years, as determined in accordance with
FCIC procedures. Any crop year’s
insurable interest may, at your election,
be excluded if earned while under the
age of 18, while in full-time military
service of the United States, or while in
post-secondary education, in
accordance with FCIC procedures. A
person other than an individual may be
eligible for beginning farmer or rancher
benefits if all of the substantial
beneficial interest holders qualify as a
beginning farmer or rancher.
*
*
*
*
*
Native sod. Acreage that has no record
of being tilled (determined in
accordance with information collected
and maintained by an agency of the
USDA or other verifiable records that
you provide and are acceptable to us)
for the production of an annual crop on
or before February 7, 2014, and on
which the plant cover is composed
principally of native grasses, grass-like
plants, forbs, or shrubs suitable for
grazing and browsing.
*
*
*
*
*
2. Life of Policy, Cancellation, and
Termination.
*
*
*
*
*
(k) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) Once the policy is terminated, it
cannot be reinstated for the current crop
year unless:
(A) The termination was in error;
(B) The Administrator of the Risk
Management Agency, at his or her sole
discretion, determines that the
following conditions are met:
(1) In accordance with 7 CFR part 400,
subpart U and FCIC issued procedures,
you provide documentation that your
failure to pay your debt is due to an
unforeseen or unavoidable event or an
extraordinary weather event that created
an impossible situation for you to make
timely payment;
(2) You remit full payment of the
delinquent debt owed to us or FCIC
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with your request submitted in
accordance with section
2(k)(2)(iii)(B)(3); and
(3) You submit a written request for
reinstatement of your policy to us no
later than 60 days after the termination
date or the missed payment date of a
previously executed written payment
agreement, or the due date specified in
the notice to you of the amount due, if
applicable.
(i) If authorization for reinstatement is
granted, your policies will be reinstated
effective at the beginning of the crop
year for which you were determined
ineligible, and you will be entitled to all
applicable benefits under such policies,
provided you meet all eligibility
requirements and comply with the
terms of the policy; and
(ii) There is no evidence of fraud or
misrepresentation; or
(C) We determine that, in accordance
with 7 CFR part 400, subpart U and
FCIC issued procedures, the following
are met:
(1) You can demonstrate:
(i) You made timely payment for the
amount of premium owed but you
inadvertently omitted some small
amount, such as the most recent
month’s interest or a small
administrative fee;
(ii) The amount of the payment was
clearly transposed from the amount that
was otherwise due (For example, you
owed $832 but you paid $823); or
(iii) You made the full payment of the
amount owed but the payment was
delayed and postmarked by no more
than 7 calendar days after the
termination date or the missed payment
date of a previously executed written
payment agreement, or the due date
specified in the notice to you of the
amount due, as applicable;
(2) You remit full payment of the
delinquent debt owed to us; and
(3) You submit a written request for
reinstatement of your policy to us in
accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart
U and applicable procedures no later
than 30 days after the termination date
or the missed payment date of a
previously executed written payment
agreement, or the due date specified in
the notice to you of the amount due, if
applicable; and
(4) There is no evidence of fraud or
misrepresentation.
(iv) A determination made in section
2(k)(2)(iii)(B) exhausts all administrative
remedies for purposes of termination.
*
*
*
*
*
5. Insurable Acreage.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Except as provided in section 5(e),
in the states of Iowa, Minnesota,
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Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, and
South Dakota, during the first four crop
years of planting on native sod acreage
that has been tilled and is planted to an
annual crop, after February 7, 2014,
such acreage may be insured if the
requirements of section 5(a) have been
met but will, for additional coverage
policies;
(1) Notwithstanding the provisions in
section 6, receive a liability that is based
on a 65 percent of the protection factor;
and
(2) Receive a premium subsidy that is
50 percentage points less than would
otherwise be provided on acreage not
qualifying as native sod. If the premium
subsidy applicable to these acres is less
than 50 percent before the reduction,
you will receive no premium subsidy.
(e) Section 5(d) is not applicable to
areas of native sod acreage that is five
acres or less in the county.
*
*
*
*
*
7. Annual Premium and
Administrative Fees.
(a) * * *
(6) * * *
(i) You qualify as a beginning farmer
or rancher;
(ii) You qualify as a limited resource
farmer; or
*
*
*
*
*
(h) If you qualify as a beginning
farmer or rancher, your premium
subsidy will be 10 percentage points
greater than the premium subsidy that
you would otherwise receive, unless
otherwise specified in the Special
Provisions.
(i) Effective for any policies with a
sales closing date on or after July 1,
2015, you will be ineligible for any
premium subsidy paid on your behalf
by FCIC for any policy issued by us if:
(1) USDA determines you have
committed a violation of the highly
erodible land conservation or wetland
conservation provisions of 7 CFR part
12 as amended by the Agricultural Act
of 2014; or
(2) You have not filed form AD–1026,
or successor form, with FSA by June 1
prior to the sales closing date to be
properly identified as in compliance
with the conservation provisions
specified in section 7(i)(1) (For example,
to be eligible for a premium subsidy for
a crop with a sales closing date of March
15, 2016, you must have filed your form
AD–1026 by June 1, 2015).
(i) Notwithstanding section 7(i)(2), if
you demonstrate you are a beginning
farmer or rancher who has not
previously had an insurable interest in
a crop or livestock and began farming
for the first time after June 30 prior to
the sales closing date, you fail to file
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37163
form AD–1026 or successor form with
the FSA by June 1 after you make
application for insurance.
(ii) To be eligible for premium
subsidy paid on your behalf by FCIC, it
is your responsibility to assure you meet
all the requirements for:
(A) Compliance with the conservation
provisions specified in section 7(i)(1) of
this section; and
(B) Filing form AD–1026, or successor
form, to be properly identified as in
compliance with the conservation
provisions specified in section 7(i)(1) of
this section.
*
*
*
*
*
31. Correction of Errors.
(a) In addition to any other
corrections allowed in your policy
subject to section 31(b), we may correct:
(1) Within 60 days after the sales
closing date, any incorrect information
on your application or provided by the
sales closing date, including
identification numbers for you and any
person with a substantial beneficial
interest in the you, to ensure that the
eligibility information is correct and
consistent with information reported by
you to any USDA agency;
(2) Within 30 days after the acreage
reporting date, information reported to
reconcile errors in the information with
correct information that has been
determined by any USDA agency;
(3) Within 30 days of any subsequent
correction of data by FSA, erroneous
information corrected as a result of
verification of information; and
(4) At any time, any incorrect
information if the incorrect information
was caused by electronic transmission
errors by us or errors made by any
agency within USDA in transmitting the
information provided by you for
purposes of other USDA programs.
(b) Corrections may be made but will
not take effect for the current crop year
if the correction would allow you to:
(1) Avoid ineligibility requirements
for insurance or obtain a
disproportionate benefit under the crop
insurance program or any related
program administered by the Secretary;
(2) Obtain, enhance, or increase an
insurance guarantee or indemnity if a
cause of loss exists or has occurred
before any correction has been made, or
avoid premium owed if no loss is likely
to occur; or
(3) Avoid an obligation or
requirement under any Federal or State
law.
PART 457—COMMON CROP
INSURANCE REGULATIONS
9. The authority citation for 7 CFR
part 457 continues to read as follows:
■
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 126 / Tuesday, July 1, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1506(1), 1506(o).
10. Amend § 457.8 as follows:
a. In section 1 by adding the definition
of ‘‘beginning farmer or rancher,’’
revising the definition of ‘‘native sod,’’
and removing the definition of ‘‘Prairie
Pothole National Priority Area;’’
■ b. Revise section 2(f)(2)(iii);
■ c. Add new section 2(f)(2)(iv);
■ d. Add new section 3(b)(2)(iii);
■ e. Add new section 3(l);
■ f. Add new section 5;
■ g. Revise section 7(e)(4)(i);
■ h. Redesignate section 7(e)(4)(ii) as
section 7(e)(4)(iii) and add a new
section 7(e)(4)(ii);
■ i. Add new sections 7(g) and (h);
■ j. Revise section 9(e);
■ k. Add a new section 9(f);
■ l. In section 24(b) [For FCIC policies]
by removing the phrase ‘‘, or any part
thereof,’’;
■ m. In section 24(a) [For reinsured
policies] by removing the phrase ‘‘, or
any portion thereof,’’;
■ n. Add new section 25;
■ o. Add new section 34(a)(4)(viii); and
■ p. Revise section 36(c).
The revisions and additions reads as
follows:
■
■
§ 457.8
The application and policy.
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*
*
*
*
*
1. Definitions.
*
*
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*
Beginning farmer or rancher. An
individual who has not actively
operated and managed a farm or ranch
in any state, with an insurable interest
in a crop or livestock as an owneroperator, landlord, tenant, or
sharecropper for more than five crop
years, as determined in accordance with
FCIC procedures. Any crop year’s
insurable interest may, at your election,
be excluded if earned while under the
age of 18, while in full-time military
service of the United States, or while in
post-secondary education, in
accordance with FCIC procedures. A
person other than an individual may be
eligible for beginning farmer or rancher
benefits if all of the substantial
beneficial interest holders qualify as a
beginning farmer or rancher.
*
*
*
*
*
Native sod. Acreage that has no record
of being tilled (determined in
accordance with information collected
and maintained by an agency of the
USDA or other verifiable records that
you provide and are acceptable to us)
for the production of an annual crop on
or before February 7, 2014, and on
which the plant cover is composed
principally of native grasses, grass-like
plants, forbs, or shrubs suitable for
grazing and browsing.
*
*
*
*
*
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2. Life of Policy, Cancellation, and
Termination.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) Once the policy is terminated, it
cannot be reinstated for the current crop
year unless:
(A) The termination was in error;
(B) The Administrator of the Risk
Management Agency, at his or her sole
discretion, determines that the
following are met:
(1) In accordance with 7 CFR part 400,
subpart U and FCIC issued procedures,
you provide documentation that your
failure to pay your debt is due to an
unforeseen or unavoidable event or an
extraordinary weather event that created
an impossible situation for you to make
timely payment;
(2) You remit full payment of the
delinquent debt owed to us or FCIC
with your request submitted in
accordance with section 2(f)(2)(iii)(B)(3);
and
(3) You submit a written request for
reinstatement of your policy to us no
later than 60 days after the termination
date or the missed payment date of a
previously executed written payment
agreement, or the due date specified in
the notice to you of the amount due, if
applicable.
(i) If authorization for reinstatement is
granted, your policies will be reinstated
effective at the beginning of the crop
year for which you were determined
ineligible, and you will be entitled to all
applicable benefits under such policies,
provided you meet all eligibility
requirements and comply with the
terms of the policy; and
(ii) There is no evidence of fraud or
misrepresentation; or
(C) We determine that, in accordance
with 7 CFR part 400, subpart U and
FCIC issued procedures, the following
are met:
(1) You can demonstrate:
(i) You made timely payment for the
amount of premium owed but you
inadvertently omitted some small
amount, such as the most recent
month’s interest or a small
administrative fee;
(ii) The amount of the payment was
clearly transposed from the amount that
was otherwise due (For example, you
owed $832 but you paid $823); or
(iii) You made the full payment of the
amount owed but the payment was
delayed and postmarked by no more
than 7 calendar days after the
termination date or the missed payment
date of a previously executed written
payment agreement, or the due date
specified in the notice to you of the
amount due, as applicable.
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(2) You remit full payment of the
delinquent debt owed to us; and
(3) You submit a written request for
reinstatement of your policy to us in
accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart
U and applicable procedures no later
than 30 days after the termination date
or the missed payment date of a
previously executed written payment
agreement, or the due date specified in
the notice to you of the amount due, if
applicable; and
(4) There is no evidence of fraud or
misrepresentation.
(iv) A determination made in section
2(f)(2)(iii)(B) exhausts all administrative
remedies for purposes of termination.
*
*
*
*
*
3. Insurance Guarantees, Coverage
Levels, and Prices.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) You have additional coverage for
the crop in the county, and the actuarial
documents provide for separate
coverage by irrigated and non-irrigated
practices for the crop.
(A) You may select one coverage level
for all irrigated acreage and one
coverage level for all non-irrigated
acreage. For example: You may choose
a 65 percent coverage level for all
irrigated acreage (corn irrigated practice)
and an 80 percent coverage level for all
non-irrigated acreage (corn non-irrigated
practice).
(B) If the Crop Provisions allow the
option to separately insure individual
crop types or varieties, and the actuarial
documents provide for separate
coverage, you may select coverage levels
by irrigated and non-irrigated practice
for each separate type or variety.
*
*
*
*
*
(l) Notwithstanding any other
provision, if you qualify as a beginning
farmer or rancher and were previously
involved in a farming or ranching
operation, including involvement in the
decision-making or physical
involvement in the production of the
crop or livestock on the farm, for any
acreage obtained by you, you may
receive a yield that is the higher of:
(1) The actual production history of
the previous producer of the crop or
livestock on the acreage you were
previously involved with; or
(2) Your actual production history.
*
*
*
*
*
5. Exclusion of Yields.
If provided in the actuarial
documents, you may elect to exclude
any actual yield for any crop year when
FCIC determines for a county, or its
contiguous counties, the per planted
acre yield was at least 50 percent below
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the simple average of the per acre
planted yield for the crop in the county
for the previous 10 consecutive crop
years.
*
*
*
*
*
7. Annual Premium and
Administrative Fees.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(4) * * *
(i) You qualify as a beginning farmer
or rancher;
(ii) You qualify as a limited resource
farmer; or
*
*
*
*
*
(g) If you qualify as a beginning
farmer or rancher, your premium
subsidy will be 10 percentage points
greater than the premium subsidy that
you would otherwise receive, unless
otherwise specified in the Special
Provisions.
(h) Effective for any policies with a
sales closing date on or after July 1,
2015, you will be ineligible for any
premium subsidy paid on your behalf
by FCIC for any policy issued by us if:
(1) USDA determines you have
committed a violation of the highly
erodible land conservation or wetland
conservation provisions of 7 CFR part
12 as amended by the Agricultural Act
of 2014; or
(2) You have not filed form AD–1026,
or successor form, with FSA by June 1
prior to the sales closing date to be
properly identified as in compliance
with the applicable conservation
provisions specified in section 7(h)(1).
(i) Notwithstanding section 7(h)(2), if
you demonstrate you are a beginning
farmer or rancher who has not
previously had an insurable interest in
a crop or livestock and began farming
for the first time after June 30 prior to
the sales closing date, you fail to file
form AD–1026 or successor form with
the FSA, by June 1 after you make
application for insurance.
(ii) To be eligible for premium
subsidy paid on your behalf by FCIC, it
is your responsibility to assure you meet
all the requirements for:
(A) Compliance with the conservation
provisions specified in section 7(h)(1) of
this section; and
(B) Filing form AD–1026, or successor
form, to be properly identified as in
compliance with the conservation
provisions specified in section 7(h)(1) of
this section.
*
*
*
*
*
9. Insurable Acreage.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Except as provided in section 9(f),
in the states of Iowa, Minnesota,
Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, or
South Dakota, during the first four crop
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Jkt 232001
years of planting on native sod acreage
that has been tilled and is planted to an
annual crop after February 7, 2014, such
acreage may be insured if the
requirements of section 9(a) have been
met but will:
(1) Notwithstanding the provisions in
section 3 regarding your production
guarantee, receive a production
guarantee (per acre) that is based on 65
percent of the transitional yield for the
county; and
(2) For additional coverage policies,
receive a premium subsidy that is 50
percentage points less than would
otherwise be provided on acreage not
qualifying as native sod. If the premium
subsidy applicable to these acres is less
than 50 percent before the reduction,
you will receive no premium subsidy.
(f) Section 9(e) is not applicable to
areas of native sod acreage that is five
acres or less in the county.
*
*
*
*
*
25. Correction of Errors.
(a) In addition to any other
corrections allowed in your policy
subject to section 25(b), we may correct:
(1) Within 60 days after the sales
closing date, any incorrect information
on your application or provided by the
sales closing date, including
identification numbers for you and any
person with an substantial beneficial
interest in the you, to ensure that the
eligibility information is correct and
consistent with information reported by
you to any USDA agency;
(2) Within 30 days after the acreage
reporting date, information reported to
reconcile errors in the information with
correct information that has been
determined by any USDA agency;
(3) Within 30 days of any subsequent
correction of data by FSA, erroneous
information corrected as a result of
verification of information; and
(4) At any time, any incorrect
information if the incorrect information
was caused by electronic transmission
errors by us or errors made by any
agency within USDA in transmitting the
information provided by you for
purposes of other USDA programs.
(b) Corrections may be made but will
not take effect for the current crop year
if the correction would allow you to:
(1) Avoid ineligibility requirements
for insurance or obtain a
disproportionate benefit under the crop
insurance program or any related
program administered by the Secretary;
(2) Obtain, enhance, or increase an
insurance guarantee or indemnity if a
cause of loss exists or has occurred
before any correction has been made, or
avoid premium owed if no loss is likely
to occur; or
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37165
(3) Avoid an obligation or
requirement under any Federal or State
law.
*
*
*
*
*
34. Units.
(a) * * *
(4) * * *
(viii) If allowed by the actuarial
documents, you may elect separate
enterprise units for irrigated and nonirrigated practices.
(A) You may elect one enterprise unit
for all irrigated practices and one
enterprise unit for all non-irrigated
practices.
(B) You must separately meet the
requirements in section 34(a)(4) for each
enterprise unit.
(C) If we discover you do not qualify
for an enterprise unit for the irrigated
and non-irrigated practices and such
discovery is made:
(1) On or before the acreage reporting
date, you may elect to insure all acreage
of the crop in the county in one
enterprise unit provided you meet the
requirements in section 34(a)(4), or your
unit division will be based on basic or
optional units, whichever you report on
your acreage report and qualify for; or
(2) At any time after the acreage
reporting date, your unit structure will
be one enterprise unit provided you
meet the requirements in section
34(a)(4). Otherwise, we will assign the
basic unit structure.
*
*
*
*
*
36. Substitution of Yields.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Each excluded actual yield will be
replaced with a yield equal to 60
percent of the applicable transitional
yield for the crop year in which the
yield is being replaced, unless you
qualify as a beginning farmer or rancher
in which case the excluded actual yield
will be replaced with a yield equal to 80
percent of the applicable transitional
yield for the crop year in which the
yield is being replaced. (For example, if
you elect to exclude a 2001 crop year
actual yield, the transitional yield in
effect for the 2001 crop year in the
county will be used. If you also elect to
exclude a 2002 crop year actual yield,
the transitional yield in effect for the
2002 crop year in the county will be
used). The replacement yields will be
used in the same manner as actual
yields for the purpose of calculating the
approved yield.
*
*
*
*
*
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 126 / Tuesday, July 1, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
Signed in Washington, DC, on June 23,
2014.
Brandon C. Willis,
Manager, Federal Crop Insurance
Corporation.
[FR Doc. 2014–15074 Filed 6–30–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–08–P
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Parts 208 and 225
[Docket No. R–1493 RIN 7100 AE–21]
Interagency Guidelines Establishing
Information Security Standards
Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.
ACTION: Final rule; technical
amendment.
AGENCY:
The Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System (Board) is
amending Appendix D–2 of Regulation
H and Appendix F of Regulation Y to
correct citations to rules on privacy of
consumer financial information.
DATES: Effective Date: This rule is
effective July 31, 2014.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Clinton Chen, Attorney, (202) 452–3952,
Legal Division. For the hearing impaired
only, Telecommunication Device for the
Deaf (TDD), (202) 263–4869.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section
501(b) of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act
(GLB Act) 1 requires the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency, Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, and Office of Thrift
Supervision (the Agencies), as well as
the National Credit Union, the
Securities and Exchange Commission,
and the Federal Trade Commission, to
establish appropriate standards for the
financial institutions subject to their
respective jurisdictions relating to the
administrative, technical, and physical
safeguards for customer records and
information.
In February 2001, the Agencies issued
a joint final rule implementing
guidelines for establishing standards for
safeguarding customer information
under section 501(b) of the GLB Act.2
The Board’s versions of the guidelines
(now entitled Interagency Guidelines
Establishing Information Security
Standards (Security Guidelines)) are
codified in Appendix D–2 of Regulation
H (12 CFR part 208) and Appendix F of
Regulation Y (12 CFR part 225). In
December 2004, the Agencies amended
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SUMMARY:
1 15
2 66
U.S.C. 6801.
FR 8616 (Feb. 1, 2001).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
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Jkt 232001
the Security Guidelines pursuant to
section 628 of the Fair Credit Reporting
Act,3 which requires proper disposal of
consumer information.4 The Security
Guidelines establish standards relating
to administrative, technical, and
physical safeguards to ensure the
security, confidentiality, integrity and
the proper disposal of consumer
information. The Security Guidelines in
the Board’s Regulation H and Y
currently cross-reference the definitions
of ‘‘customer’’ and ‘‘customer
information’’ in the Board’s Regulation
P (Privacy of Consumer Financial
Information).
In May 2014, the Board approved the
repeal of Regulation P, effective June 30,
2014.5 The Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act
(Dodd-Frank Act) transferred
rulemaking authority for a number of
consumer financial protection laws from
the Board and other agencies to the
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
(CFPB), except with respect to certain
motor vehicle dealers.6 The transfer
includes rulemaking authority for
Regulation P under the financial privacy
provisions of the GLB Act.7 (The DoddFrank Act did not transfer responsibility
for the Security Guidelines.) The CFPB
has issued interim final rules that are
substantially identical to the Board’s
Regulation P.
The Board is amending the crossreferences in the Security Guidelines to
refer to the CFPB’s version of Regulation
P. These amendments do not have any
effect on the substantive requirements
imposed by the Security Guidelines.
Administrative Procedure Act
In accordance with section 553(b) the
Administrative Procedures Act (APA) (5
U.S.C. 553(b)), the Board finds, for good
cause, that providing an opportunity for
public comment is unnecessary. The
amendments are solely technical
amendments that change citations in
two definitions from references to the
Board’s Regulation P to the CFPB’s
Regulation P, which contain identical
definitions. The revisions result in no
substantive change to the rule.
Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3506;
5 CFR part 1320 Appendix A.1), the
3 15 U.S.C. 1681w. This section was added by
section 216 of the Fair and Accurate Credit
Transactions Act of 2003.
4 69 FR 77610 (Dec. 28, 2004).
5 79 FR 30708 (May 29, 2014).
6 Pub. L. 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376 (Jul. 21, 2010).
7 The GLB Act’s privacy provisions are contained
in sections 502 and 503 of that Act. 15 U.S.C. 6802–
6803.
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Board has reviewed the final rule under
authority delegated to the Board by the
Office of Management and Budget. The
technical amendments to the Security
Guidelines will revise the crossreferences in the Security Guidelines to
refer to the CFPB’s version of Regulation
P. The amendments do not change any
substantive requirements of the
regulation or currently approved
information collections. Therefore, no
additional paperwork burden will be
imposed as a result of this rulemaking.
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 208
Banks, banking, Consumer protection,
Federal Reserve System, Foreign
banking, Holding companies,
Information, Privacy, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
12 CFR Part 225
Administrative practice and
procedure, Banks, banking, Federal
Reserve System, Holding companies,
Privacy, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Securities.
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Board amends
Regulations H and Y, 12 CFR parts 208
and 225 as follows:
PART 208—MEMBERSHIP OF STATE
BANKING INSTITUTIONS IN THE
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
(REGULATION H)
1. The authority citation for part 208
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 24, 36, 92a, 93a,
248(a), 248(c), 321–338a, 371d, 461, 481–486,
601, 611, 1814, 1816, 1818, 1820(d)(9),
1823(j), 1828(o), 1831, 1831o, 1831p–1,
1831r–1, 1831w, 1831x, 1835a, 1882, 2901–
2907, 3105, 3310, 3331–3351, 3905–3909,
and 5371; 15 U.S.C. 78b, 78I(b), 78l(i), 780–
4(c)(5), 78q, 78q–1, and 78w, 1681s, 1681w,
6801, and 6805; 31 U.S.C. 5318; 42 U.S.C.
4012a, 4104a, 4104b, 4106 and 4128.
2. Amend Appendix D–2 to part 208,
as follows:
■ a. In section I.C.2.d., remove
‘‘§ 216.3(h)’’ and add in its place
‘‘§ 1016.3(i)’’; and
■ b. In section I.C.2.e., remove
‘‘§ 216.3(n)’’ and add in its place
‘‘§ 1016.3(p).’’
■
PART 225—BANK HOLDING
COMPANIES AND CHANGE IN BANK
CONTROL (REGULATION Y)
3. The authority citation for part 225
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1817(j)(13), 1818,
1828(o), 1831i, 1831p–1, 1843(c)(8), 1844(b),
E:\FR\FM\01JYR1.SGM
01JYR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 126 (Tuesday, July 1, 2014)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 37155-37166]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-15074]
========================================================================
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. 79, No. 126 / Tuesday, July 1, 2014 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 37155]]
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Federal Crop Insurance Corporation
7 CFR Parts 400, 402, 407 and 457
[Docket No. FCIC-14-0005]
RIN 0563-AC43
General Administrative Regulations; Catastrophic Risk Protection
Endorsement; Area Risk Protection Insurance Regulations; and the Common
Crop Insurance Regulations, Basic Provisions
AGENCY: Federal Crop Insurance Corporation, USDA.
ACTION: Interim Rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Federal Crop Insurance Corporation (FCIC) amends the
General Administrative Regulations--Ineligibility for Programs under
the Federal Crop Insurance Act, the Catastrophic Risk Protection
Endorsement, the Area Risk Protection Insurance Regulations, and the
Common Crop Insurance Regulations, Basic Provisions to revise those
provisions affected by changes mandated by the Agricultural Act of 2014
(commonly referred to as the 2014 Farm Bill), enacted on February 7,
2014.
DATES: This rule is effective June 30, 2014. Written comments and
opinions on this rule will be accepted until close of business
September 2, 2014 and will be considered when the rule is made final.
ADDRESSES: FCIC prefers that comments be submitted electronically
through the Federal eRulemaking Portal. You may submit comments,
identified by Docket ID No. FCIC-14-0005, by any of the following
methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Mail: Director, Product Administration and Standards
Division, Risk Management Agency, United States Department of
Agriculture, P.O. Box 419205, Kansas City, MO 64133-6205.
All comments received, including those received by mail, will be
posted without change to https://www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided, and can be accessed by the public. All
comments must include the agency name and docket number or Regulatory
Information Number (RIN) for this rule. For detailed instructions on
submitting comments and additional information, see https://www.regulations.gov. If you are submitting comments electronically
through the Federal eRulemaking Portal and want to attach a document,
we ask that it be in a text-based format. If you want to attach a
document that is a scanned Adobe PDF file, it must be scanned as text
and not as an image, thus allowing FCIC to search and copy certain
portions of your submissions. For questions regarding attaching a
document that is a scanned Adobe PDF file, please contact the RMA Web
Content Team at (816) 823-4694 or by email at
rmaweb.content@rma.usda.gov.
Privacy Act: Anyone is able to search the electronic form of all
comments received for any dockets by the name of the person submitting
the comment (or signing the comment, if submitted on behalf of an
association, business, labor union, etc.). You may review the complete
User Notice and Privacy Notice for Regulations.gov at https://www.regulations.gov/#!privacyNotice.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tim Hoffmann, Director, Product
Management, Product Administration and Standards Division, Risk
Management Agency, United States Department of Agriculture, Beacon
Facility, Stop 0812, Room 421, P.O. Box 419205, Kansas City, MO 64141-
6205, telephone (816) 926-7730.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Executive Order 12866
This rule has been determined to be economically significant for
the purposes of Executive Order 12866 and, therefore, it has been
reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB).
Benefit-Cost Analysis
A Benefit-Cost Analysis (BCA) has been completed and a summary is
shown below; the full analysis may be viewed on https://www.regulations.gov. In summary, the analysis finds that changes in the
rule will have an expected cost of $115.9 million annually over a 10-
year period to the FCIC in administration of the Federal crop insurance
program. Non-quantifiable benefits of this rule include increased
program integrity, additional risk management tools, and incentives for
beginning farmers and ranchers to participate in the Federal crop
insurance program.
On February 7, 2014, the 2014 Farm Bill was enacted. As a result,
FCIC must revise those provisions of the General Administrative
Regulations--Ineligibility for Programs under the Federal Crop
Insurance Act (Subpart U), Catastrophic Risk Protection Endorsement
(CAT Endorsement), Area Risk Protection Insurance (ARPI) Basic
Provisions, and the Common Crop Insurance Provisions (CCIP) Basic
Provisions to implement program changes identified in Titles II and XI
of the 2014 Farm Bill.
On January 2014, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) issued its
estimates on the effects on direct spending and revenues of the 2014
Farm Bill. These estimates were used as a basis for the quantifiable
costs and benefits stated in this BCA.
The purpose of this rule is to amend Subpart U, the CAT
Endorsement, the ARPI Basic Provisions, and the CCIP Basic Provisions
to implement the following changes:
Section 2611 requires those enrolled in crop insurance, for certain
agriculture commodities, to comply with conservation compliance
requirements or forego premium subsidy. For acts or situations of non-
compliance, ineligibility for premium subsidy will be applied beginning
with the 2016 reinsurance year. Annually, FCIC anticipates a savings of
$4.6 million as a result of this change.
Section 11007 makes available insurance coverage by separate
enterprise units based on irrigated and non-irrigated acreage of crops
within counties. Annually, FCIC anticipates a cost of $53.3 million as
a result of this change.
Section 11009 allows insureds to exclude any recorded or appraised
yield for any crop year in which the per planted acre yield in the
county is at least 50 percent below the simple
[[Page 37156]]
average for the crop in the county for the previous 10 consecutive crop
years, and allows insureds in any county contiguous to a county in
which an insured is eligible to exclude a recorded or appraised yield
to also elect a similar adjustment. Annually, FCIC anticipates a cost
of $35.7 million as a result of this change.
Section 11014 applies a reduction of premium subsidy, a reduced
insurance guarantee, and eliminates substitute yields in the insurance
guarantee during the first four crop years that land is converted from
native sod to the production of an annual crop in the States of Iowa,
Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota. Annually,
FCIC anticipates a savings of $11.4 million as a result of this change.
Section 11015 allows producers to elect a different level of
coverage for an agricultural commodity by irrigated and non-irrigated
acreage. Annually, FCIC anticipates a cost of $16.8 million as a result
of this change.
Section 11016 establishes crop insurance benefits for beginning
farmers and ranchers by increasing the premium subsidy available by ten
percentage points, allowing the use of yield history from any previous
farm or ranch operation in which they had decision making or physical
involvement, and replacing a low yield in their actual production
history with a yield equal to 80 percent of the applicable transitional
yield. Annually, FCIC anticipates a cost of $26.1 million as a result
of this change.
Section 11019 allows for the correction of errors in information
obtained from the producer within a reasonable amount of time and
consistent with information provided to other agencies of the
Department of Agriculture subject to certain limitations for
maintaining program integrity. This section also provides for the
payment of debt after the termination date in accordance with
procedures and limitations established by the FCIC, if a producer
inadvertently fails to pay a debt and has been determined to be
ineligible to participate in the Federal crop insurance program. FCIC
does not believe there are any additional cost outlays resulting from
this change. Therefore, FCIC believes insureds will benefit from this
change and the benefits are non-quantifiable.
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
Pursuant to the provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. chapter 35), the collections of information in this rule
have been approved by OMB under control numbers 0563-0085, 0563-0083,
and 0563-0053.
E-Government Act Compliance
FCIC is committed to complying with the E-Government Act of 2002,
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.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
establishes requirements for Federal agencies to assess the effects of
their regulatory actions on State, local, and tribal governments and
the private sector. This rule contains no Federal mandates (under the
regulatory provisions of title II of the UMRA) for State, local, and
tribal governments or the private sector. Therefore, this rule is not
subject to the requirements of sections 202 and 205 of UMRA.
Executive Order 13132
It has been determined under section 1(a) of Executive Order 13132,
Federalism, that this rule does not have sufficient implications to
warrant consultation with the States. The provisions contained in this
rule will not have a substantial direct effect on States, or on the
relationship between the national government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and responsibilities among the various levels of
government.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
FCIC certifies that this regulation will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. Program
requirements for the Federal crop insurance program are the same for
all producers regardless of the size of their farming operation. For
instance, all producers are required to submit an application and
acreage report to establish their insurance guarantees and compute
premium amounts, and all producers are required to submit a notice of
loss and production information to determine the amount of an indemnity
payment in the event of an insured cause of crop loss. Whether a
producer has 10 acres or 1000 acres, there is no difference in the kind
of information collected. To ensure crop insurance is available to
small entities, the Federal Crop Insurance Act (Act) authorizes FCIC to
waive collection of administrative fees from beginning farmers or
ranchers and limited resource farmers. FCIC believes this waiver helps
to ensure that small entities are given the same opportunities as large
entities to manage their risks through the use of crop insurance. A
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis has not been prepared since this
regulation does not have an impact on small entities, and, therefore,
this regulation is exempt from the provisions of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 605).
Federal Assistance Program
This program is listed in the Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance under No. 10.450.
Executive Order 12372
This program is not subject to the provisions of Executive Order
12372, which require intergovernmental consultation with State and
local officials. See the Notice related to 7 CFR part 3015, subpart V,
published at 48 FR 29115, June 24, 1983.
Executive Order 12988
This rule has been reviewed in accordance with Executive Order
12988 on civil justice reform. The provisions of this rule will not
have a retroactive effect. The provisions of this rule will preempt
State and local laws to the extent such State and local laws are
inconsistent herewith. With respect to any direct action taken by FCIC
or to require the insurance provider to take specific action under the
terms of the crop insurance policy, the administrative appeal
provisions published at 7 CFR part 11 must be exhausted before any
action against FCIC for judicial review may be brought.
Environmental Evaluation
This action is not expected to have a significant economic impact
on the quality of the human environment, health, or safety. Therefore,
neither an Environmental Assessment nor an Environmental Impact
Statement is needed.
Background
On February 7, 2014, the 2014 Farm Bill was enacted. FCIC must
revise those provisions of the General Administrative Regulations--
Ineligibility for Programs under the Federal Crop Insurance Act
(Subpart U), Catastrophic Risk Protection Endorsement (CAT
Endorsement), Area Risk Protection Insurance Basic Provisions (ARPI
Basic Provisions), and the Common Crop Insurance Policy Basic
Provisions (CCIP Basic Provisions) to implement program changes
mandated by the 2014 Farm Bill. On March 14, 2014, the Farm Service
Agency (FSA) and Risk Management
[[Page 37157]]
Agency (RMA) published a notice in the Federal Register (79 FR 14472-
14475) announcing a listening session for initial public input about
the new programs and changes to existing programs for which FSA and RMA
were delegated authority to implement. The agencies also announced an
opportunity for the public to also make written statements through
April 2, 2014. The listening session was held on March 27, 2014, in the
Department of Agriculture's Jefferson Auditorium in Washington, DC.
FSA and RMA received 32 written comments from individuals, trade
groups, other organizations, and State entities. All written comments
are available to the public for review via this link: https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=FSA-2014-0002-0001.
Total attendance at the listening session was 127 people. All of
the Commodity, Credit, and Crop Insurance Titles, and parts of the
Conservation, Energy, and Miscellaneous Titles were covered during the
listening session. A number of oral statements from attendees were
program-specific. However, recurring overarching ideas expressed during
the listening session included placing a priority on information
sharing between the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) and
its employees, farmers and ranchers in general, and beginning and
socially disadvantaged farmers and ranchers.
Another overarching recommendation was the need to develop
education, outreach, and tools to help farmers and ranchers in making
their decisions. Other recommendation urged USDA to develop programs
and policies that do not hinder business and family farming decisions
and strengthen local assistance to farmers and ranchers on completing
forms and planning.
Statements that addressed issues outside the scope of the 2014 Farm
Bill are not addressed in this rule. Statements, such as those about
RMA developing new products to help small, diversified farmers are not
related to this rule but will be considered by RMA when establishing
its priorities for research and development.
In general, RMA received listening session statements regarding the
timing of when the 2014 Farm Bill requirements would go into effect.
Statements were also received urging RMA to issue rules and information
as quickly as possible.
Provisions in the 2014 Farm Bill that require revisions in the
regulations are as follows:
a. Section 2611 of the 2014 Farm Bill links the eligibility for
premium subsidy paid by FCIC to an insured's compliance with the Highly
Erodible Land Conservation (HELC) and Wetland Conservation (WC)
provisions of the Food Security Act of 1985. The regulations covering
these provisions are set forth in the Federal Register at 7 CFR Part
12. To be eligible for premium subsidy paid by FCIC, an insured must
(1) have a completed certification of compliance, form AD-1026, with
the HELC and WC provisions on file with the Farm Service Agency (FSA);
(2) be in compliance with a conservation plan approved by NRCS for all
highly erodible land; (3) not plant an agricultural commodity on a
wetland converted after February 7, 2014; and (4) not have converted a
wetland for the purpose, or to have the effect, of making the
production of an annually planted agricultural commodity possible on
such converted wetland after February 7, 2014.
For the purposes of the HELC and WC provisions, ``agricultural
commodity'' is defined as any agricultural commodity planted and
produced in a state by annual tilling of the soil, including tilling by
one-trip planters, or sugarcane. Insureds determined ineligible for
premium subsidy paid by FCIC for a reinsurance year will be ineligible
for premium subsidy paid by FCIC on all their policies, including CAT
policies, unless specific exemptions apply. There is a phase-in period
for insureds who have never been subject to the HELC and WC provisions
previously and these insureds will be given additional time to become
compliant before any premium subsidy is denied.
USDA will determine an insured's eligibility for premium subsidy
paid by FCIC at a time that is as close to the beginning of the next
reinsurance year (July 1) as practical. The determination will be based
on FSA and Natural Resources Conservation Service determinations
regarding compliance with the HELC and WC provisions, as recorded in
FSA's automated system. Insureds who do not have a certification of
compliance, form AD-1026, on file with FSA prior to the beginning of
the reinsurance year (July 1) will be ineligible for premium subsidy,
unless insureds can demonstrate they are a beginning farmer or rancher
who has not previously had an insurable interest in a crop or livestock
and they began farming for the first time after the beginning of the
reinsurance year but prior to the sales closing date. In addition, an
insured who is in violation of the HELC or WC provisions will be
ineligible for premium subsidy, unless specific exemptions apply. This
means that an insured who is determined to be non-compliant on June 1,
2015, (2015 reinsurance year) will, unless otherwise exempted, be
denied premium subsidy effective July 1, 2015, the start of the 2016
reinsurance year, and will not be eligible for any premium subsidy for
any policies during the 2016 reinsurance year. Even if the insured
becomes compliant during the 2016 reinsurance year, the insured will
not be eligible for premium subsidy until the 2017 reinsurance year
starting on July 1, 2016. FCIC is amending the CAT Endorsement, ARPI
Basic Provisions, and CCIP Basic Provisions to implement these
provisions effective for any policies with a sales closing date on or
after July 1, 2015.
b. Section 11003 of the 2014 Farm Bill created a new insurance
product that provides coverage for a portion of the underlying crop
insurance policy deductible called the Supplemental Coverage Option
(SCO). SCO must be purchased as an endorsement to the CCIP Basic
Provisions and applicable Crop Provisions. SCO will be available,
starting with the 2015 crop year, in select counties for corn,
soybeans, wheat, sorghum, cotton, and rice, and made available to other
crops and areas in future years if there is sufficient data and
coverage is provided on the actuarial documents.
Prior to the 2014 Farm Bill, the CAT Endorsement did not allow
options or endorsements to extend to CAT policies. However, section
11003 specifically makes SCO available to all policies offered under
Subtitle A of the Act, which includes both additional coverage and CAT
coverage. Therefore, this rule amends the CAT Endorsement to allow SCO
to be available for CAT policies.
c. Section 11007 of the 2014 Farm Bill makes available insurance
coverage by separate enterprise units for irrigated and non-irrigated
acreage of a crop within the county. The new language allows two
separate enterprise units, one for all irrigated acreage of the crop,
and one for all non-irrigated acreage of the crop. Enterprise units by
irrigated and non-irrigated practice will be available for any crop in
which enterprise units are allowed through the actuarial documents,
Crop Provisions, or Special Provisions. Availability of enterprise
units will be subject to the current requirements in the Basic
Provisions. This means that both the irrigated and non-irrigated
acreage must each separately qualify for enterprise units. If insureds
do not qualify for separate irrigated and non-irrigated
[[Page 37158]]
enterprise units, there are two options based on the timing of the
determination: (1) If the determination is made on or before the
acreage reporting date, insureds may have one enterprise unit comprise
of all irrigated and non-irrigated acreage in the county of the crop,
if they qualify, or basic or optional units depending on which unit
structure the insureds reported on the acreage report; or (2) if the
determination is made after acreage reporting date, the policy allows
insureds to have one enterprise unit comprise of all irrigated and non-
irrigated acreage in the county of the crop if they meet the
qualifications or a basic unit will be assigned. The provisions
regarding this section of the 2014 Farm Bill may not be implemented
upon publication; therefore to allow flexibility, FCIC has revised
section 34 of the CCIP Basic Provisions to allow the actuarial
documents to specify when separate enterprise units by irrigated and
non-irrigated practice will be available.
d. Section 11009 of the 2014 Farm Bill allows insureds to elect to
exclude any recorded or appraised yield for any crop year in which the
per planted acre yield in the county was at least 50 percent below the
simple average of the per planted acre yield during the previous 10
consecutive crop years. A crop year determined eligible for exclusion
in a county will also be eligible for exclusion in any contiguous
county. Elections to exclude yields, by eligible crop year, by
irrigated and non-irrigated acreage will be specified in the actuarial
documents. Eligible crop year(s) depends upon the history for the crop
year in comparison to the previous 10 consecutive crop years for a
crop/county and irrigation practice. Production data availability and
intensive data analysis may limit FCIC's ability to authorize
exclusions of yields for all APH crops in all counties. The provisions
regarding this section of the 2014 Farm Bill may not be implemented
upon publication; therefore, to allow flexibility, FCIC has revised the
CCIP Basic Provisions to allow the actuarial documents to specify when
insureds may elect to exclude any recorded or appraised yield.
e. Section 11014 of the 2014 Farm Bill stipulates there will be a
reduction of benefits on native sod acreage during the first four crop
years after the acreage is tilled and is planted to an annual crop
after the date of enactment of the 2014 Farm Bill. Insureds' benefits
are reduced for native sod acreage during the first four crop years of
planting an annual crop by reducing the amount of premium subsidy by 50
percentage points than otherwise would be available on additional
coverage policies, reducing the insurance guarantee to 65 percent of
the applicable transitional yield, and eliminating yield substitution
for a year of poor or low yields, as applicable. The reduction in
insureds' benefits only applies to insureds who have tilled an area of
native sod greater than five acres in the county in the States of Iowa,
Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, or South Dakota. FCIC has
revised the premium subsidy and insurance guarantee provisions in the
CCIP Basic Provisions and the ARPI Basic Provisions, as applicable, to
incorporate these changes.
f. Section 11015 of the 2014 Farm Bill allows insureds with
additional coverage policies to elect two separate coverage levels, one
for all irrigated acreage of the crop in the county and one for all
non-irrigated acreage of the crop in the county. This will be available
where both an irrigated practice and non-irrigated practice is
available in the actuarial documents. For example, an insured may
choose a 65 percent coverage level for all irrigated acreage (corn
irrigated practice) and an 80 percent coverage level for all non-
irrigated acreage (corn non-irrigated practice). Further, if the Crop
Provisions allow the option to separately insure individual crop types
or varieties, separate coverage levels by irrigated and non-irrigated
practice will also be available for each type or variety. For example,
an insured may choose 65 percent coverage level for processing type
apples with an irrigated practice and a 70 percent coverage level for
processing type apples with a non-irrigated practice. The insured may
also choose a 70 percent coverage level for fresh type apples with an
irrigated practice and a 75 percent coverage level for fresh type
apples with a non-irrigated practice. This election is already allowed
in the ARPI Basic Provisions. The provisions regarding this section of
the 2014 Farm Bill may not be implemented upon publication; therefore,
to allow flexibility for implementing this provision, FCIC has revised
the CCIP Basic Provisions to allow the actuarial documents to specify
when separate coverage levels by irrigated and non-irrigated practices
will be available.
g. Section 11016 of the 2014 Farm Bill establishes crop insurance
incentives for beginning farmers and ranchers by waiving the
administrative fee for CAT coverage and additional coverage policies,
increasing the premium subsidy that otherwise would have been available
by ten percentage points, allowing the use of yield history from any
previous involvement in a farm or ranch operation, including decision
making or physical involvement in the production of the crop or
livestock, and replacing an excluded yield within actual production
history with a yield equal to 80 percent of the applicable transitional
yield. To qualify as a beginning farmer or rancher, a producer must not
have actively operated and managed a farm or ranch in any county, in
any state, with an insurable interest in any crop or livestock as an
owner-operator, landlord, tenant, or sharecropper for more than five
crop years. This will exclude any crop year when the beginning farmer
or rancher was under the age of 18, enrolled in post-secondary studies
or on active duty in the U.S. military. Entities may qualify for
beginning farmer or rancher benefits only if all of the substantial
beneficial interest holders qualify as a beginning farmer or rancher.
For example, a son moves home to take over the family farm and
incorporates with his spouse and neither have previous farming
experience. Their corporation would qualify for beginning farmer or
rancher benefits. FCIC has added a definition of ``beginning farmer and
rancher'' and revised the administrative fee, premium subsidy,
insurance guarantee, and yield substitution provision in the CCIP Basic
Provisions and the ARPI Basic Provisions, as applicable, to incorporate
these changes.
h. Section 11017 of the 2014 Farm Bill allows producers of upland
cotton to purchase an additional policy known as the ``Stacked Income
Protection Plan'' (STAX). STAX can be purchased as a stand-alone policy
or in conjunction with any individual or area plan of insurance at any
coverage level offered by FCIC. Further, STAX is found in section 508B
of the Act and is not limited to the additional coverage found in
section 508(c) of the Act. This means that STAX is statutorily
authorized to be offered with CAT policies. Therefore, this rule amends
the CAT Endorsement to clarify that STAX will be available for CAT
policies. STAX will be available, starting with the 2015 crop year, in
select counties were insurance for upland cotton is available as
specified on the actuarial documents.
i. Section 11019 of the 2014 Farm Bill allows for the correction of
errors in information obtained from the insured in addition to the
correction of information currently authorized in the policies for the
purposes of obtaining coverage. Within a reasonable amount of time
following the sales closing date, corrections can be made in the
information provided for the purposes of obtaining coverage to ensure
[[Page 37159]]
consistency with information provided to other agencies of the
Department of Agriculture. Section 11019 allows certain information to
be corrected after the acreage reporting date to reconcile information
determined from any other USDA program or verified by another USDA
agency. This ability to correct reported information does not apply to
any other information that has not been determined or verified for the
purposes of another USDA program. The ability to make these corrections
are not without limitation and program integrity will be protected.
Lastly, electronic transmission errors, such as transpositions,
committed by the insurance provider, agent or any agency within USDA
can be corrected by the insurance provider at any time the error is
discovered. This section of the 2014 Farm Bill also provides for the
payment of debt after the sales closing date in accordance with
procedures and limitations established by FCIC, if an insured
inadvertently fails to pay a debt and has been determined ineligible to
participate in the Federal crop insurance program. FCIC is revising
Subpart U, the CCIP Basic Provisions, and the ARPI Basic Provisions to
incorporate these changes.
The changes mandated by the 2014 Farm Bill impact almost all county
crop programs within the Federal crop insurance program. This entails a
monumental amount of work. FCIC is implementing the changes made by the
2014 Farm Bill to all applicable programs as quickly as possible but
there may be situations in which certain programs or program changes
cannot be made for the earliest crop or reinsurance year after
publication of these regulations. FCIC will continue to work on
implementing the provisions everywhere they are applicable as
expeditiously as possible. Insureds should check with their agents and
on the RMA Web site at www.rma.usda.gov for updates on the
implementation efforts.
Previously, changes made to the Federal crop insurance policies
codified in the Code of Federal Regulations were required to be
implemented through the rulemaking process. Such action was not
required by the Administrative Procedures Act because contracts were
exempt from notice and comment rulemaking and the crop insurance policy
is a contract. However, a prior Secretary of Agriculture published a
notice in the Federal Register stating that the Department of
Agriculture would, to the maximum extent practicable, use the notice
and comment rulemaking process when making program changes, including
those involving contracts. FCIC has complied with this notice over the
subsequent years. Recently, the current Secretary of Agriculture has
published a notice in the Federal Register rescinding the prior notice,
thereby making contracts again exempt from the notice and comment
rulemaking process. However, FCIC values the input it receives through
comments and has elected to solicit comments to this interim rule,
which will be considered when this rule is made final. For these
reasons, these policy changes are effective upon filing with the Office
of the Federal Register.
The changes to the policy made in this rule are applicable for the
2015 and succeeding crop years for all crops with a contract change
date on or after the effective date of this rule, and for the 2016 and
succeeding crop years for all crops with a contract change date prior
to the effective date of this rule, provided the actuarial documents
reflect the implementation of the policy changes, as applicable.
1. The specific changes to Subpart U--Ineligibility for Programs
Under the Federal Crop Insurance Act (7 CFR part 400) are as follows:
a. FCIC is adding a new section 400.679(g) to specify when a person
who has requested to have their policy reinstated by the Administrator
of the Risk Management Agency and the request is denied, the person
remains ineligible consistent with section 11019 of the 2014 Farm Bill.
b. FCIC is adding a new section 400.682(g) to specify when FCIC
will allow the payment of debt after the sales closing date if a
producer inadvertently fails to pay a debt and has been determined
ineligible to participate in the Federal crop insurance program
consistent with section 11019 of the 2014 Farm Bill.
c. FCIC is revising section 400.485(b) to specify reinstatement is
an option to regain ineligibility in this paragraph.
2. The specific changes to the CAT Endorsement (7 CFR part 402) are
as follows:
a. Section 6--FCIC is revising section 6(a) to clarify that
insureds will be responsible to pay the premium if it is determined the
insured has committed a violation of the HELC or WC provisions of 7 CFR
part 12 as amended by the 2014 Farm Bill or the insured has not filed a
form AD-1026 consistent with section 2611 of the 2014 Farm Bill unless
the insured is otherwise exempted. FCIC is also revising section 6(a)
to clarify that the policy will be terminated for failure to pay any
premium that may be due.
FCIC is revising section 6(b) to clarify that if premium is due, as
specified in new section 6(f), it must be paid within 30 days after the
insured has been billed.
FCIC is revising section 6(c) to specify the administrative fee for
CAT coverage will also be waived for insureds who qualify as beginning
farmers or ranchers consistent with section 11016 of the 2014 Farm
Bill.
FCIC is revising section 6(e) to clarify that if premium is owed,
as specified in new section 6(f), and is not paid when due, the insured
may be ineligible for certain other USDA program benefits.
FCIC is adding a new section 6(f) to specify the insured will be
responsible for the payment of the premium if it is determined the
insured has committed a violation of the HELC or WC provisions of 7 CFR
part 12 as amended by the 2014 Farm Bill or the insured has not filed a
form AD-1026 consistent with section 2611 of the 2014 Farm Bill.
FCIC is adding a new section 6(g) to specify that if the Act
expressly authorizes an option or endorsement to be applicable to CAT
coverage, the insured will owe a separate annual premium and
administrative fee for such option or endorsement. SCO and STAX,
authorized by sections 11003 and 11017 of the 2014 Farm Bill, will
require the payment of premium for such coverage even if the insured
has elected CAT coverage. FCIC is also adding a new section 6(h) to
specify the policy will be terminated if the insured fails to pay the
premium due by the termination date.
b. Section 11--FCIC is revising section 11(a) to specify that if
the Act authorizes options or endorsements to be applicable to CAT
coverage, such options or endorsements may be purchased in addition to
the CAT Endorsement. This revision should eliminate any conflict
between the CAT Endorsement and SCO or STAX, allowing both to be
available with CAT coverage consistent with sections 11003 and 11017of
the 2014 Farm Bill.
3. The specific changes to the Area Risk Protection Insurance Basic
Provisions (7 CFR part 407) are as follows:
a. Section 1--FCIC is adding the definition of ``beginning farmer
or rancher'' consistent with section 11016 of the 2014 Farm Bill, which
allows the exclusion of crop years in which an individual had an
insurable interest if, at the time, the individual was under the age of
18, while serving full-time in the military service of the United
States, or while in post-secondary education. FCIC is revising the
definition of ``native sod'' to clarify the designation now refers to
the date of enactment of the 2014 Farm Bill and removing the
[[Page 37160]]
definition of ``Prairie Pothole National Priority Area'' since only
native sod in the states of Iowa, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, North
Dakota, or South Dakota and are effected by the restrictions contained
in section 11014 of the 2014 Farm Bill;
b. Section 2--FCIC is revising section 2(k)(2)(iii) to specify when
FCIC will allow the payment of debt after the sales closing date if a
producer inadvertently fails to pay a debt and has been determined
ineligible to participate in the Federal crop insurance program
consistent with section 11019 of the 2014 Farm Bill.
FCIC is adding section 2(k)(2)(iv) to specify that any
determination made in accordance with section 2(k)(2)(iii)(B) exhausts
all administrative remedies for the purposes of termination.
c. Section 5--FCIC is removing the provisions in section 5(d)
regarding the ability of a Governor of a State designated within the
Prairie Pothole National Priority Area to elect to make native sod
acreage uninsurable for the first five crop years of planting because
these provisions are no longer applicable under section 11014 of the
2014 Farm Bill. FCIC is adding provisions to section 5(d) regarding the
consequences for the first four crop years of planting on native sod
acreage, which requires guarantees to be based on a reduced yield of 65
percent of the transitional yield and a reduced premium subsidy for
additional coverage policies that is 50 percentage points less than
would otherwise be available. Since area based plans of insurance do
not have a transitional yield, FCIC is amending the provisions to
require a reduced yield equal to a 65 percent protection factor. This
will have the similar effect as reducing the yield to 65 percent of the
transitional yield consistent with section 11014 of the 2014 Farm Bill.
FCIC is adding a new section 5(e) that clarifies that the
provisions of section 5(d) do not apply to native sod areas of five
acres or less in a county.
d. Section 7--FCIC is revising section 7(a)(6) to specify the
administrative fee will be waived for insureds who qualify as beginning
farmers or ranchers consistent with section 11016 of the 2014 Farm
Bill.
FCIC is adding a new section 7(h) to specify the insured's premium
subsidy will be 10 percentage points greater if they qualify as a
beginning farmer or rancher consistent with section 11016 of the 2014
Farm Bill.
FCIC is adding a new section 7(i) to specify the insured will be
ineligible for premium subsidy if it is determined the insured has
committed a violation of the HELC or WC provisions of 7 CFR part 12, as
amended by the Agricultural Act of 2014, or the insured has not filed a
form AD-1026 consistent with section 2611 of the 2014 Farm Bill unless
the insured is otherwise exempted.
e. Section 22--FCIC is revising section 22(a) by removing the
phrase ``any portion thereof,'' to remove ambiguity of the billing
process and interest situations on amounts owed, and to ensure
consistency in how insurance providers administer this section. Section
11019 of the 2014 Farm Bill allows producers to pay debts after the
termination date and still remain eligible for insurance if certain
conditions are met.
f. FCIC is adding a new section 31 to specify that in addition to
the corrections to information provided by the insured previously
allowed in the policy, the insurance provider may correct the
information provided on an application or by the sales closing date, by
the insured, including identification numbers for the insured and any
person with an substantial beneficial interest in the insured, within a
reasonable time after the sales closing date if the information is in
error to ensure such information is correct and consistent with
information reported by the insured for other USDA programs. FCIC is
also adding a provision that allows the reconciliation of errors in
information reported by the insured within a reasonable time after the
acreage reporting date if an agency within USDA has determined the
correct information. Corrections can also be made after the date an
agency within USDA has corrected the data as a result of the
verification of the information. There are limitations on such
corrections if the insured would avoid an eligibility requirement or
obtain a disproportionate benefit, increase the guarantee or indemnity
if a cause of loss has occurred or avoid premium if no cause of loss
has occurred, or to avoid an obligation under Federal or State law.
FCIC has also added a provision that allows the insurance provider at
any time to revise any incorrect information provided by the insured,
if the incorrect information was caused by electronic transmission
errors by the insurance provider or agent or errors made by any agency
within USDA in transmitting the information provided by the insured for
purposes of other USDA programs. This is consistent with section 11019
of the 2014 Farm Bill.
4. The specific changes to the Common Crop Insurance Regulations,
Basic Provisions (7 CFR part 457) are as follows:
a. Section 1--FCIC is adding the definition of ``beginning farmer
or rancher'' consistent with section 11016 of the 2014 Farm Bill, which
allows the exclusion of crop years in which an individual had an
insurable interest if, at the time, the individual was under the age of
18, while serving full-time in the military service of the United
States, or while in post-secondary education. FCIC is revising the
definition of ``native sod'' to clarify the designation now refers to
the date of enactment of the 2014 Farm Bill and removing the definition
of ``Prairie Pothole National Priority Area'' since only native sod in
the states of Iowa, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, and
South Dakota and are effected by the restrictions contained in section
11014 of the 2014 Farm Bill.
b. Section 2--FCIC is revising section 2(f)(2)(iii) to specify when
FCIC will allow the payment of debt after the sales closing date if a
producer inadvertently fails to pay a debt and has been determined
ineligible to participate in the Federal crop insurance program
consistent with section 11019 of the 2014 Farm Bill.
FCIC is adding section 2(f)(2)(iv) to specify that any
determination made in accordance with section 2(f)(2)(iii)(B) exhausts
all administrative remedies for the purposes of termination.
c. Section 3--FCIC is adding a new section 3(b)(2)(iii) to allow
separate coverage levels for irrigated and non-irrigated practices
consistent with section 11015 of the 2014 Farm Bill.
FCIC is also adding a new section 3(l) to specify that
notwithstanding any other provision in section 3, if the insured is a
beginning farmer or rancher who was previously involved in a farming or
ranching operation, including involvement in the decision-making or
physical involvement in the production of the crop or livestock on the
farm, for any acreage obtained by the beginning farmer or rancher, the
beginning farmer or rancher shall receive a yield that is the higher
of: (1) The actual production history of the previous producer of the
crop or livestock on the acreage in which the beginning farmer or
rancher was involved; or (2) the actual production history of the
beginning farmer or rancher.
d. Section 5--FCIC is replacing the previously reserved section 5
with a new section titled ``Exclusion of Yields'' to specify when an
insured may elect to exclude their actual yields if the actual yield
for the acreage is at least 50 percent below the simple average of the
per planted acre yield for the crop in the county for the previous 10
years
[[Page 37161]]
consistent with section 11009 of the 2014 Farm Bill.
e. Section 7--FCIC is revising section 7(e)(4) to specify the
administrative fee will be waived for insureds who qualify as beginning
farmers or ranchers consistent with section 11016 of the 2014 Farm
Bill.
FCIC is adding a new section 7(g) to specify the insured's premium
subsidy will be 10 percentage points greater if they qualify as a
beginning farmer or rancher consistent with section 11016 of the 2014
Farm Bill.
FCIC is adding a new section 7(h) to specify the insured will be
ineligible for premium subsidy if it is determined the insured has
committed a violation of the HELC or WC provisions of 7 CFR part 12, as
amended by the 2014 Farm Bill, or the insured has not filed a form AD-
1026 consistent with section 2611 of the 2014 Farm Bill unless the
insured is otherwise exempted.
f. Section 9--FCIC is removing the provisions in section 9(e)
regarding the ability of a Governor of a State designated within the
Prairie Pothole National Priority Area to elect to make native sod
acreage uninsurable for the first five crop years of planting because
these provisions are no longer applicable under section 11014 of the
2014 Farm Bill. FCIC is adding provisions to section 9(e) regarding the
consequences for the first four crop years of planting on native sod
acreage, which requires guarantees to be based on a reduced yield of 65
percent of the transitional yield, meaning the established yield for
the insured will be based on 65 percent of the transitional yield, and
a reduced premium subsidy for additional coverage policies that is 50
percentage points less than would otherwise be available consistent
with section 11014 of the 2014 Farm Bill.
FCIC is adding a new section 9(f) that clarifies that the
provisions of section 9(e) do not apply to native sod areas of five
acres or less in a county.
g. Section 24--FCIC is revising section 24(a) by removing the
phrase ``any portion thereof,'' to remove ambiguity of the billing
process and interest situations on amounts owed, and to ensure
consistency in how insurance providers administer this section. Section
11019 of the 2014 Farm Bill allows producers to pay debts after the
termination date and still remain eligible for insurance if certain
conditions are met.
h. FCIC is replacing the previously reserved section 25 with a new
section titled ``Correction of Errors'' to specify that in addition to
the corrections to information provided by the insured previously
allowed in the policy, the insurance provider may correct the
information provided on an application or by the sales closing date, by
the insured, including identification numbers for the insured and any
person with a substantial beneficial interest in the insured, within a
reasonable time after the sales closing date if the information is in
error to ensure such information is correct and consistent with
information reported by the insured for other USDA programs. FCIC is
also adding a provision that allows the reconciliation of errors in
information reported by the insured within a reasonable time after the
acreage reporting date if an agency within USDA has determined the
correct information. Corrections can also be made after the date an
agency within USDA has corrected the data as a result of the
verification of the information. There are limitations on such
corrections if the insured would avoid an eligibility requirement or
obtain a disproportionate benefit, increase the guarantee or indemnity
if a cause of loss has occurred, or avoid premium if no cause of loss
has occurred, or to avoid an obligation under Federal or State law.
FCIC has also added a provision that allows the insurance provider at
any time to revise any incorrect information provided by the insured,
if the incorrect information was caused by electronic transmission
errors by the insurance provider or agent, or errors made by any agency
within USDA in transmitting the information provided by the insured for
purposes of other USDA programs. This is consistent with section 11019
of the 2014 Farm Bill.
i. Section 34--FCIC is adding a new section 34(a)(4)(viii) to allow
enterprise units for irrigated and non-irrigated practices if the
acreage of each practice separately qualifies for an enterprise unit
consistent with section 11007 of the 2014 Farm Bill.
j. Section 36--FCIC is revising section 36(c) to specify that if
the insured qualifies as a beginning farmer or rancher, the insured can
elect to replace the excluded actual yield with a yield equal to 80
percent of the applicable transitional yield for the crop year in which
the yield is being replaced consistent with section 11016 of the 2014
Farm Bill.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Parts 400, 402, 407 and 457
Administrative practice and procedure, Crop insurance, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
Interim Rule
Accordingly, as set forth in the preamble, the Federal Crop
Insurance Corporation amends 7 CFR parts 400, 402, 407 and 457 as
follows:
PART 400--GENERAL ADMINISTRATIVE REGULATIONS
0
1. The authority citation for 7 CFR part 400 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1506(1), 1506(o).
0
2. Amend Sec. 400.679 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (e) by removing the word ``or'' after the semicolon at
the end of the paragraph;
0
b. In paragraph (f) by removing the period at the end of the paragraph
and adding ``; or'' in its place; and
0
c. Add new paragraph (g).
The addition reads as follows:
Sec. 400.679 Criteria for ineligibility.
* * * * *
(g) Has requested the Administrator of the Risk Management Agency
for consideration to reinstate their eligibility in accordance with the
applicable policy provisions and such request has been denied.
0
3. Amend Sec. 400.682 by adding a new paragraph (g) to read as
follows:
Sec. 400.682 Determination and notification.
* * * * *
(g) No later than 60 days after the termination date, the missed
payment date of a previously executed written payment agreement, or the
due date specified in the notice to the person of the amount due, as
applicable, the ineligible person may request consideration for
reinstatement from the Administrator of the Risk Management Agency in
accordance with section 2 of the Common Crop insurance Policy Basic
Provisions (7 CFR 457.8).
Sec. 400.685 [Amended]
0
4. Amend paragraph (b) in Sec. 400.685 by adding the word
``reinstatement,'' between the words ``through'' and ``mediation''.
PART 402--CATASTROPHIC RISK PROTECTION ENDORSEMENT
0
5. The authority citation for 7 CFR part 402 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1506(l), 1506(o).
0
6. Amend Sec. 402.4 as follows:
0
a. In section 6(a) by removing the word ``Notwithstanding'' and adding
in its place the phrase ``Except as provided in paragraphs (f) and (h)
of this section and notwithstanding'';
0
b. In section 6(b) introductory text by adding the phrase ``and premium
as
[[Page 37162]]
specified in paragraph (f) of this section'' between the phrases
``administrative fee'' and ``to us within;''
0
c. Revise section 6(c);
0
d. In section 6(e) by adding the phrase ``and premium as specified in
paragraph (f) of this section'' between the phrases ``administrative
fee'' and ``is not paid;''
0
e. Add new sections 6(f), (g), and (h); and
0
f. Revise section 11(a).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 402.4 Catastrophic Risk Protection Endorsement Provisions.
* * * * *
6. Annual Premium and Administrative Fees.
* * * * *
(c) The administrative fee provisions of paragraph (b) of this
section do not apply if you are a ``beginning farmer or rancher'' or a
``limited resource farmer'' as defined in the applicable crop policy.
The administrative fee will be waived if you request it and you meet
the requirements contained in the annual premium provisions of the
applicable crop policy.
* * * * *
(f) Effective for any policies with a sales closing date on or
after July 1, 2015, you will be responsible for payment of the premium
established for the coverage provided under this endorsement if:
(1) USDA determines you have committed a violation of the highly
erodible land conservation or wetland conservation provisions of 7 CFR
part 12 as amended by the Agricultural Act of 2014; or
(2) You have not filed form AD-1026 or successor form with FSA by
June 1 prior to the sales closing date to be properly identified as in
compliance with the conservation provisions specified in paragraph
(f)(1) of this section (For example, to be eligible for a premium
subsidy for a crop with a sales closing date of March 15, 2016, you
must have filed your form AD-1026 by June 1, 2015).
(i) Notwithstanding paragraph (f)(2) of this section, if you
demonstrate you are a beginning farmer or rancher who has not
previously had an insurable interest in a crop or livestock and began
farming for the first time after June 30 prior to the sales closing
date, you fail to file form AD-1026 or successor form with the FSA, by
June 1 after you make application for insurance.
(ii) To be eligible for premium subsidy paid on your behalf by
FCIC, it is your responsibility to assure you meet all the requirements
for:
(A) Compliance with the conservation provisions specified in
paragraph (f)(1) of this section; and
(B) Filing form AD-1026, or successor form, to be properly
identified as in compliance with the conservation provisions specified
in paragraph (f)(1) of this section.
(g) If the Act expressly authorizes an option or endorsement to be
available in addition to the coverage available under this Endorsement
(for example, the Supplemental Coverage Option) or any other additional
coverage offered under the Federal Crop Insurance Act (for example, the
Stacked Income Protection Plan), you will owe a separate annual premium
and administrative fee for such option or endorsement if the option or
endorsement has been made available in the actuarial documents and you
elect to purchase such coverage.
(h) Failure to pay the premium specified in paragraph (f) of this
section will result in the termination of the policy and all other
policies in accordance with the termination provisions specified in the
applicable Basic Provisions.
* * * * *
11. Exclusion of Coverage
(a) Options or endorsements that extend the coverage available
under any crop policy offered by FCIC will not be available under this
endorsement, except for the Supplemental Coverage Option and any other
option or endorsement or other additional coverage expressly authorized
in the Federal Crop Insurance Act and allowed in the actuarial
documents (for example, the Stacked Income Protection Plan). Written
agreements are not available for any crop insured under this
endorsement.
* * * * *
PART 407--AREA RISK PROTECTION INSURANCE REGULATIONS
0
7. The authority citation for 7 CFR part 407 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1506(l), 1506(o).
0
8. Amend Sec. 407.9 as follows:
0
a. In section 1 by adding the definition of ``beginning farmer or
rancher'' in alphabetical order, revising the definition of ``native
sod,'' and removing the definition of ``Prairie Pothole National
Priority Area'';
0
b. Revise section 2(k)(2)(iii);
0
c. Add new section 2(k)(2)(iv);
0
d. Revise section 5(d);
0
f. Add a new section 5(e);
0
g. Revise section 7(a)(6)(i);
0
h. Redesignate section 7(a)(6)(ii) as section 7(a)(6)(iii) and add a
new section 7(a)(6)(ii);
0
i. Add new sections 7(h) and (i);
0
j. In section 22(a) by removing the phrase ``, or any portion
thereof,''; and
0
k. Add a new section 31.
The revisions and additions reads as follows:
Sec. 407.9 Area risk protection insurance policy.
* * * * *
1. Definitions.
* * * * *
Beginning farmer or rancher. An individual who has not actively
operated and managed a farm or ranch in any state, with an insurable
interest in a crop or livestock as an owner-operator, landlord, tenant,
or sharecropper for more than five crop years, as determined in
accordance with FCIC procedures. Any crop year's insurable interest
may, at your election, be excluded if earned while under the age of 18,
while in full-time military service of the United States, or while in
post-secondary education, in accordance with FCIC procedures. A person
other than an individual may be eligible for beginning farmer or
rancher benefits if all of the substantial beneficial interest holders
qualify as a beginning farmer or rancher.
* * * * *
Native sod. Acreage that has no record of being tilled (determined
in accordance with information collected and maintained by an agency of
the USDA or other verifiable records that you provide and are
acceptable to us) for the production of an annual crop on or before
February 7, 2014, and on which the plant cover is composed principally
of native grasses, grass-like plants, forbs, or shrubs suitable for
grazing and browsing.
* * * * *
2. Life of Policy, Cancellation, and Termination.
* * * * *
(k) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) Once the policy is terminated, it cannot be reinstated for
the current crop year unless:
(A) The termination was in error;
(B) The Administrator of the Risk Management Agency, at his or her
sole discretion, determines that the following conditions are met:
(1) In accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart U and FCIC issued
procedures, you provide documentation that your failure to pay your
debt is due to an unforeseen or unavoidable event or an extraordinary
weather event that created an impossible situation for you to make
timely payment;
(2) You remit full payment of the delinquent debt owed to us or
FCIC
[[Page 37163]]
with your request submitted in accordance with section
2(k)(2)(iii)(B)(3); and
(3) You submit a written request for reinstatement of your policy
to us no later than 60 days after the termination date or the missed
payment date of a previously executed written payment agreement, or the
due date specified in the notice to you of the amount due, if
applicable.
(i) If authorization for reinstatement is granted, your policies
will be reinstated effective at the beginning of the crop year for
which you were determined ineligible, and you will be entitled to all
applicable benefits under such policies, provided you meet all
eligibility requirements and comply with the terms of the policy; and
(ii) There is no evidence of fraud or misrepresentation; or
(C) We determine that, in accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart U
and FCIC issued procedures, the following are met:
(1) You can demonstrate:
(i) You made timely payment for the amount of premium owed but you
inadvertently omitted some small amount, such as the most recent
month's interest or a small administrative fee;
(ii) The amount of the payment was clearly transposed from the
amount that was otherwise due (For example, you owed $832 but you paid
$823); or
(iii) You made the full payment of the amount owed but the payment
was delayed and postmarked by no more than 7 calendar days after the
termination date or the missed payment date of a previously executed
written payment agreement, or the due date specified in the notice to
you of the amount due, as applicable;
(2) You remit full payment of the delinquent debt owed to us; and
(3) You submit a written request for reinstatement of your policy
to us in accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart U and applicable
procedures no later than 30 days after the termination date or the
missed payment date of a previously executed written payment agreement,
or the due date specified in the notice to you of the amount due, if
applicable; and
(4) There is no evidence of fraud or misrepresentation.
(iv) A determination made in section 2(k)(2)(iii)(B) exhausts all
administrative remedies for purposes of termination.
* * * * *
5. Insurable Acreage.
* * * * *
(d) Except as provided in section 5(e), in the states of Iowa,
Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota, during
the first four crop years of planting on native sod acreage that has
been tilled and is planted to an annual crop, after February 7, 2014,
such acreage may be insured if the requirements of section 5(a) have
been met but will, for additional coverage policies;
(1) Notwithstanding the provisions in section 6, receive a
liability that is based on a 65 percent of the protection factor; and
(2) Receive a premium subsidy that is 50 percentage points less
than would otherwise be provided on acreage not qualifying as native
sod. If the premium subsidy applicable to these acres is less than 50
percent before the reduction, you will receive no premium subsidy.
(e) Section 5(d) is not applicable to areas of native sod acreage
that is five acres or less in the county.
* * * * *
7. Annual Premium and Administrative Fees.
(a) * * *
(6) * * *
(i) You qualify as a beginning farmer or rancher;
(ii) You qualify as a limited resource farmer; or
* * * * *
(h) If you qualify as a beginning farmer or rancher, your premium
subsidy will be 10 percentage points greater than the premium subsidy
that you would otherwise receive, unless otherwise specified in the
Special Provisions.
(i) Effective for any policies with a sales closing date on or
after July 1, 2015, you will be ineligible for any premium subsidy paid
on your behalf by FCIC for any policy issued by us if:
(1) USDA determines you have committed a violation of the highly
erodible land conservation or wetland conservation provisions of 7 CFR
part 12 as amended by the Agricultural Act of 2014; or
(2) You have not filed form AD-1026, or successor form, with FSA by
June 1 prior to the sales closing date to be properly identified as in
compliance with the conservation provisions specified in section
7(i)(1) (For example, to be eligible for a premium subsidy for a crop
with a sales closing date of March 15, 2016, you must have filed your
form AD-1026 by June 1, 2015).
(i) Notwithstanding section 7(i)(2), if you demonstrate you are a
beginning farmer or rancher who has not previously had an insurable
interest in a crop or livestock and began farming for the first time
after June 30 prior to the sales closing date, you fail to file form
AD-1026 or successor form with the FSA by June 1 after you make
application for insurance.
(ii) To be eligible for premium subsidy paid on your behalf by
FCIC, it is your responsibility to assure you meet all the requirements
for:
(A) Compliance with the conservation provisions specified in
section 7(i)(1) of this section; and
(B) Filing form AD-1026, or successor form, to be properly
identified as in compliance with the conservation provisions specified
in section 7(i)(1) of this section.
* * * * *
31. Correction of Errors.
(a) In addition to any other corrections allowed in your policy
subject to section 31(b), we may correct:
(1) Within 60 days after the sales closing date, any incorrect
information on your application or provided by the sales closing date,
including identification numbers for you and any person with a
substantial beneficial interest in the you, to ensure that the
eligibility information is correct and consistent with information
reported by you to any USDA agency;
(2) Within 30 days after the acreage reporting date, information
reported to reconcile errors in the information with correct
information that has been determined by any USDA agency;
(3) Within 30 days of any subsequent correction of data by FSA,
erroneous information corrected as a result of verification of
information; and
(4) At any time, any incorrect information if the incorrect
information was caused by electronic transmission errors by us or
errors made by any agency within USDA in transmitting the information
provided by you for purposes of other USDA programs.
(b) Corrections may be made but will not take effect for the
current crop year if the correction would allow you to:
(1) Avoid ineligibility requirements for insurance or obtain a
disproportionate benefit under the crop insurance program or any
related program administered by the Secretary;
(2) Obtain, enhance, or increase an insurance guarantee or
indemnity if a cause of loss exists or has occurred before any
correction has been made, or avoid premium owed if no loss is likely to
occur; or
(3) Avoid an obligation or requirement under any Federal or State
law.
PART 457--COMMON CROP INSURANCE REGULATIONS
0
9. The authority citation for 7 CFR part 457 continues to read as
follows:
[[Page 37164]]
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1506(1), 1506(o).
0
10. Amend Sec. 457.8 as follows:
0
a. In section 1 by adding the definition of ``beginning farmer or
rancher,'' revising the definition of ``native sod,'' and removing the
definition of ``Prairie Pothole National Priority Area;''
0
b. Revise section 2(f)(2)(iii);
0
c. Add new section 2(f)(2)(iv);
0
d. Add new section 3(b)(2)(iii);
0
e. Add new section 3(l);
0
f. Add new section 5;
0
g. Revise section 7(e)(4)(i);
0
h. Redesignate section 7(e)(4)(ii) as section 7(e)(4)(iii) and add a
new section 7(e)(4)(ii);
0
i. Add new sections 7(g) and (h);
0
j. Revise section 9(e);
0
k. Add a new section 9(f);
0
l. In section 24(b) [For FCIC policies] by removing the phrase ``, or
any part thereof,'';
0
m. In section 24(a) [For reinsured policies] by removing the phrase ``,
or any portion thereof,'';
0
n. Add new section 25;
0
o. Add new section 34(a)(4)(viii); and
0
p. Revise section 36(c).
The revisions and additions reads as follows:
Sec. 457.8 The application and policy.
* * * * *
1. Definitions.
* * * * *
Beginning farmer or rancher. An individual who has not actively
operated and managed a farm or ranch in any state, with an insurable
interest in a crop or livestock as an owner-operator, landlord, tenant,
or sharecropper for more than five crop years, as determined in
accordance with FCIC procedures. Any crop year's insurable interest
may, at your election, be excluded if earned while under the age of 18,
while in full-time military service of the United States, or while in
post-secondary education, in accordance with FCIC procedures. A person
other than an individual may be eligible for beginning farmer or
rancher benefits if all of the substantial beneficial interest holders
qualify as a beginning farmer or rancher.
* * * * *
Native sod. Acreage that has no record of being tilled (determined
in accordance with information collected and maintained by an agency of
the USDA or other verifiable records that you provide and are
acceptable to us) for the production of an annual crop on or before
February 7, 2014, and on which the plant cover is composed principally
of native grasses, grass-like plants, forbs, or shrubs suitable for
grazing and browsing.
* * * * *
2. Life of Policy, Cancellation, and Termination.
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) Once the policy is terminated, it cannot be reinstated for
the current crop year unless:
(A) The termination was in error;
(B) The Administrator of the Risk Management Agency, at his or her
sole discretion, determines that the following are met:
(1) In accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart U and FCIC issued
procedures, you provide documentation that your failure to pay your
debt is due to an unforeseen or unavoidable event or an extraordinary
weather event that created an impossible situation for you to make
timely payment;
(2) You remit full payment of the delinquent debt owed to us or
FCIC with your request submitted in accordance with section
2(f)(2)(iii)(B)(3); and
(3) You submit a written request for reinstatement of your policy
to us no later than 60 days after the termination date or the missed
payment date of a previously executed written payment agreement, or the
due date specified in the notice to you of the amount due, if
applicable.
(i) If authorization for reinstatement is granted, your policies
will be reinstated effective at the beginning of the crop year for
which you were determined ineligible, and you will be entitled to all
applicable benefits under such policies, provided you meet all
eligibility requirements and comply with the terms of the policy; and
(ii) There is no evidence of fraud or misrepresentation; or
(C) We determine that, in accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart U
and FCIC issued procedures, the following are met:
(1) You can demonstrate:
(i) You made timely payment for the amount of premium owed but you
inadvertently omitted some small amount, such as the most recent
month's interest or a small administrative fee;
(ii) The amount of the payment was clearly transposed from the
amount that was otherwise due (For example, you owed $832 but you paid
$823); or
(iii) You made the full payment of the amount owed but the payment
was delayed and postmarked by no more than 7 calendar days after the
termination date or the missed payment date of a previously executed
written payment agreement, or the due date specified in the notice to
you of the amount due, as applicable.
(2) You remit full payment of the delinquent debt owed to us; and
(3) You submit a written request for reinstatement of your policy
to us in accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart U and applicable
procedures no later than 30 days after the termination date or the
missed payment date of a previously executed written payment agreement,
or the due date specified in the notice to you of the amount due, if
applicable; and
(4) There is no evidence of fraud or misrepresentation.
(iv) A determination made in section 2(f)(2)(iii)(B) exhausts all
administrative remedies for purposes of termination.
* * * * *
3. Insurance Guarantees, Coverage Levels, and Prices.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) You have additional coverage for the crop in the county, and
the actuarial documents provide for separate coverage by irrigated and
non-irrigated practices for the crop.
(A) You may select one coverage level for all irrigated acreage and
one coverage level for all non-irrigated acreage. For example: You may
choose a 65 percent coverage level for all irrigated acreage (corn
irrigated practice) and an 80 percent coverage level for all non-
irrigated acreage (corn non-irrigated practice).
(B) If the Crop Provisions allow the option to separately insure
individual crop types or varieties, and the actuarial documents provide
for separate coverage, you may select coverage levels by irrigated and
non-irrigated practice for each separate type or variety.
* * * * *
(l) Notwithstanding any other provision, if you qualify as a
beginning farmer or rancher and were previously involved in a farming
or ranching operation, including involvement in the decision-making or
physical involvement in the production of the crop or livestock on the
farm, for any acreage obtained by you, you may receive a yield that is
the higher of:
(1) The actual production history of the previous producer of the
crop or livestock on the acreage you were previously involved with; or
(2) Your actual production history.
* * * * *
5. Exclusion of Yields.
If provided in the actuarial documents, you may elect to exclude
any actual yield for any crop year when FCIC determines for a county,
or its contiguous counties, the per planted acre yield was at least 50
percent below
[[Page 37165]]
the simple average of the per acre planted yield for the crop in the
county for the previous 10 consecutive crop years.
* * * * *
7. Annual Premium and Administrative Fees.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(4) * * *
(i) You qualify as a beginning farmer or rancher;
(ii) You qualify as a limited resource farmer; or
* * * * *
(g) If you qualify as a beginning farmer or rancher, your premium
subsidy will be 10 percentage points greater than the premium subsidy
that you would otherwise receive, unless otherwise specified in the
Special Provisions.
(h) Effective for any policies with a sales closing date on or
after July 1, 2015, you will be ineligible for any premium subsidy paid
on your behalf by FCIC for any policy issued by us if:
(1) USDA determines you have committed a violation of the highly
erodible land conservation or wetland conservation provisions of 7 CFR
part 12 as amended by the Agricultural Act of 2014; or
(2) You have not filed form AD-1026, or successor form, with FSA by
June 1 prior to the sales closing date to be properly identified as in
compliance with the applicable conservation provisions specified in
section 7(h)(1).
(i) Notwithstanding section 7(h)(2), if you demonstrate you are a
beginning farmer or rancher who has not previously had an insurable
interest in a crop or livestock and began farming for the first time
after June 30 prior to the sales closing date, you fail to file form
AD-1026 or successor form with the FSA, by June 1 after you make
application for insurance.
(ii) To be eligible for premium subsidy paid on your behalf by
FCIC, it is your responsibility to assure you meet all the requirements
for:
(A) Compliance with the conservation provisions specified in
section 7(h)(1) of this section; and
(B) Filing form AD-1026, or successor form, to be properly
identified as in compliance with the conservation provisions specified
in section 7(h)(1) of this section.
* * * * *
9. Insurable Acreage.
* * * * *
(e) Except as provided in section 9(f), in the states of Iowa,
Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, or South Dakota, during the
first four crop years of planting on native sod acreage that has been
tilled and is planted to an annual crop after February 7, 2014, such
acreage may be insured if the requirements of section 9(a) have been
met but will:
(1) Notwithstanding the provisions in section 3 regarding your
production guarantee, receive a production guarantee (per acre) that is
based on 65 percent of the transitional yield for the county; and
(2) For additional coverage policies, receive a premium subsidy
that is 50 percentage points less than would otherwise be provided on
acreage not qualifying as native sod. If the premium subsidy applicable
to these acres is less than 50 percent before the reduction, you will
receive no premium subsidy.
(f) Section 9(e) is not applicable to areas of native sod acreage
that is five acres or less in the county.
* * * * *
25. Correction of Errors.
(a) In addition to any other corrections allowed in your policy
subject to section 25(b), we may correct:
(1) Within 60 days after the sales closing date, any incorrect
information on your application or provided by the sales closing date,
including identification numbers for you and any person with an
substantial beneficial interest in the you, to ensure that the
eligibility information is correct and consistent with information
reported by you to any USDA agency;
(2) Within 30 days after the acreage reporting date, information
reported to reconcile errors in the information with correct
information that has been determined by any USDA agency;
(3) Within 30 days of any subsequent correction of data by FSA,
erroneous information corrected as a result of verification of
information; and
(4) At any time, any incorrect information if the incorrect
information was caused by electronic transmission errors by us or
errors made by any agency within USDA in transmitting the information
provided by you for purposes of other USDA programs.
(b) Corrections may be made but will not take effect for the
current crop year if the correction would allow you to:
(1) Avoid ineligibility requirements for insurance or obtain a
disproportionate benefit under the crop insurance program or any
related program administered by the Secretary;
(2) Obtain, enhance, or increase an insurance guarantee or
indemnity if a cause of loss exists or has occurred before any
correction has been made, or avoid premium owed if no loss is likely to
occur; or
(3) Avoid an obligation or requirement under any Federal or State
law.
* * * * *
34. Units.
(a) * * *
(4) * * *
(viii) If allowed by the actuarial documents, you may elect
separate enterprise units for irrigated and non-irrigated practices.
(A) You may elect one enterprise unit for all irrigated practices
and one enterprise unit for all non-irrigated practices.
(B) You must separately meet the requirements in section 34(a)(4)
for each enterprise unit.
(C) If we discover you do not qualify for an enterprise unit for
the irrigated and non-irrigated practices and such discovery is made:
(1) On or before the acreage reporting date, you may elect to
insure all acreage of the crop in the county in one enterprise unit
provided you meet the requirements in section 34(a)(4), or your unit
division will be based on basic or optional units, whichever you report
on your acreage report and qualify for; or
(2) At any time after the acreage reporting date, your unit
structure will be one enterprise unit provided you meet the
requirements in section 34(a)(4). Otherwise, we will assign the basic
unit structure.
* * * * *
36. Substitution of Yields.
* * * * *
(c) Each excluded actual yield will be replaced with a yield equal
to 60 percent of the applicable transitional yield for the crop year in
which the yield is being replaced, unless you qualify as a beginning
farmer or rancher in which case the excluded actual yield will be
replaced with a yield equal to 80 percent of the applicable
transitional yield for the crop year in which the yield is being
replaced. (For example, if you elect to exclude a 2001 crop year actual
yield, the transitional yield in effect for the 2001 crop year in the
county will be used. If you also elect to exclude a 2002 crop year
actual yield, the transitional yield in effect for the 2002 crop year
in the county will be used). The replacement yields will be used in the
same manner as actual yields for the purpose of calculating the
approved yield.
* * * * *
[[Page 37166]]
Signed in Washington, DC, on June 23, 2014.
Brandon C. Willis,
Manager, Federal Crop Insurance Corporation.
[FR Doc. 2014-15074 Filed 6-30-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-08-P