Conservation Reserve Program, 41987-42005 [2015-17317]
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41987
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
Vol. 80, No. 136
Thursday, July 16, 2015
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
Farm Service Agency
7 CFR Part 718
Commodity Credit Corporation
7 CFR Part 1410
RIN 0560–AI30
Conservation Reserve Program
Commodity Credit Corporation
and Farm Service Agency, USDA.
ACTION: Interim rule.
AGENCY:
This rule amends the
Conservation Reserve Program (CRP)
regulations to implement provisions of
the Agricultural Act of 2014 (the 2014
Farm Bill). This rule specifies eligibility
requirements for enrollment of
grassland in CRP and adds references to
veteran farmers and ranchers to the
provisions for Transition Incentives
Program contracts, among other
changes. The provisions in this rule for
eligible land primarily apply to new
CRP offers and contracts. For existing
contracts, this rule provides additional
voluntary options for permissive uses,
early terminations, conservation and
land improvements, and incentive
payments for tree thinning. This rule
also makes conforming changes to
provisions applicable to multiple Farm
Service Agency (FSA) and Commodity
Credit Corporation (CCC) programs,
which include CRP, administered by
FSA, including acreage report
requirements, compliance monitoring,
and equitable relief provisions.
DATES: Effective Date: This rule is
effective July 16, 2015.
Comment Date: We will consider
comments that we receive by September
14, 2015.
ADDRESSES: We invite you to submit
comments on this interim rule. In your
comment, please specify RIN 0560–AI30
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SUMMARY:
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and include the volume, date, and page
number of this issue of the Federal
Register. You may submit comments by
any of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
online instructions for submitting
comments.
• Mail, Hand Delivery, or Courier:
Director, Conservation and
Environmental Programs Division
(CEPD), U.S. Department of Agriculture
(USDA) FSA CEPD, Mail Stop 0513,
Room 4709–S, 1400 Independence Ave.
SW., Washington, DC 20250–0513.
All written comments will be
available for inspection online at
www.regulations.gov and at the mail
address listed above between 8:00 a.m.
and 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except holidays. A copy of this interim
rule is available through the FSA home
page at https://www.fsa.usda.gov/.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Beverly J. Preston, CRP Program
Manager, telephone: (202) 720–9563.
Persons with disabilities who require
alternative means for communication
should contact the USDA Target Center
at 202–720–2600 (voice).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Overview of This Rule
This rule amends CRP regulations in
7 CFR part 1410 to implement changes
required by the 2014 Farm Bill (Pub. L.
113–79) and makes additional
discretionary changes that are needed to
clarify eligibility requirements and
terms. It also makes discretionary and
technical changes to 7 CFR part 718 that
are relevant to CRP implementation.
This document first provides
background information on CRP, then
discusses the changes to the CRP
regulations, followed by a discussion of
the changes to the part 718 regulations.
CRP Background and CRP Signups
The purpose of CRP is to costeffectively assist producers in
conserving and improving soil, water,
and wildlife, restoring wetlands,
improving other natural resources, and
addressing issues raised by State,
regional, and national conservation
initiatives by converting
environmentally sensitive cropland and
marginal pastureland from the
production of agricultural commodities
to a long-term vegetative cover, or to
improve conditions of grassland. CRP is
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administered by FSA on behalf of CCC.
Since its inception in 1985, CRP has
proven to be one of the largest and most
successful conservation programs in
USDA history. In exchange for annual
rental payments, participating farmers
and ranchers agree to remove
environmentally sensitive land from
agricultural production and establish
conservation covers comprised of
grasses, legumes, forbs, shrubs and tree
species that will improve environmental
health by preventing soil erosion,
improving air and water quality, and
enhancing wildlife habitat. In addition,
participants with suitable land may
restore wetlands and establish shallow
water areas for wildlife. Enrollment of
eligible grassland in CRP will result in
adoption of sustainable grazing
practices and preservation of wildlife
habitat. Participants also receive costshare payments and other one-time
incentive payments for certain practices
to establish, maintain, and manage the
conservation covers throughout 10 to 15
year CRP contracts. A wide range of
conservation practices may be enrolled
under CRP, including but not limited to,
introduced or native grasses and
legumes, hardwood trees, wildlife
habitat, grass waterways, filter strips,
riparian buffers, wetlands, rare and
declining habitat, upland bird habitat,
longleaf pine, duck nesting habitat, and
pollinator habitat.
There are three major types of CRP
signups: general, continuous, and
grassland. Each of the three types has
specific enrollment provisions, as
described below. The grassland type is
a new type added by the 2014 Farm Bill.
For all signups, potential participants
must submit an offer for enrollment at
the local FSA county office or USDA
service center.
Enrollment through general signup is
based on a competitive offer process
during designated signup periods. The
general signup occurs when the
Secretary of Agriculture announces
USDA will accept general signup offers
for enrollment. Offers from potential
program participants are ranked against
each other at the national level. Ranking
is based on the environmental benefits
expected to result from the proposed
conservation practices and expected
costs. Each offer is assigned an
Environmental Benefit Index (EBI) score
depending on ranking factors designed
to reflect the expected environmental
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benefits and costs. The EBI ranking
system is specified in detail in the CRP
handbook. These EBI factors include
wildlife habitat benefits, water quality
benefits, farm benefits due to reduced
erosion, air quality benefits, benefits
that last beyond the contract period, per
acre expected costs, and local
preference factors for certain benefits. In
a general signup, the offer process is
competitive and not all offers will
necessarily rank high enough to be
selected for CRP.
For practices and land with especially
high environmental value, enrollment
through continuous signup is available
year-round without ranking periods.
The continuous signup is focused on
environmentally sensitive land and
offers are not ranked against each other.
Land eligible for continuous signup
includes, but is not limited to,
agricultural land with a high erodibility
index; land in riparian areas that border
rivers, streams, and lakes; land suitable
for wetland restoration; and certain land
to be dedicated to other specialized
conservation measures. Subject to the
acreage caps allocated to States, all
continuous signup offers that meet the
eligibility requirements are accepted.
Enrollment through the new grassland
signup authorized by the 2014 Farm Bill
will be administered on a separate
continuous signup basis, and offers will
be evaluated periodically and ranked.
For grassland signup, this rule specifies
the applicable new categories of eligible
land and new grassland contract
provisions. Eligible grassland include
land that contain forbs or shrubland
(including improved rangeland and
pastureland) for which grazing is the
predominant use. Up to 2 million acres
may be enrolled in CRP as grassland.
This rule does not change the basic
administrative structure and nature of
CRP.
Overview of Changes to CRP
Regulations
The 2014 Farm Bill reduced the CRP
acreage enrollment cap and made
several changes to CRP. For example, it
mandated that non-easement functions
of the repealed Grassland Reserve
Program be carried out under CRP, with
enrollment of up to 2 million acres
authorized. These enrollments count
against the CRP acreage cap. In addition,
the 2014 Farm Bill mandates changes to
routine, prescribed, and emergency
grazing, managed harvesting frequency,
tree thinning payments, and other
provisions.
This rule implements the changes to
CRP required by the 2014 Farm Bill.
These changes include revised
permissive use provisions for
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emergency harvesting and grazing, and
other commercial uses on CRP land.
This rule also establishes a penalty-free
early CRP contract termination
opportunity in fiscal year (FY) 2015 for
contracts that have been in effect for at
least 5 years and meet certain
environmental criteria. It specifies that
CRP participants can make certain
conservation and land improvements for
economic use in the final year of the
CRP contract that facilitate protection of
enrolled land after contract expiration,
and establishes a new type of incentive
payment to encourage participants to
perform tree thinning and related
measures on CRP land. As discussed
earlier, it also adds references to veteran
farmers and ranchers to the Transition
Incentives Program, and includes
provisions to reflect the new eligibility
requirements for grassland in CRP. This
rule also includes the following
discretionary provisions to clarify
requirements where the 2014 Farm Bill
did not define terms or otherwise
provided FSA discretion in
implementation:
• The ‘‘infeasible to farm’’ provision
allows enrollment of the remainder of a
field in which CRP practices other than
buffers are enrolled on at least 75
percent of the acres in the field, if the
remaining land is ‘‘infeasible to farm;’’
• Grasslands are now eligible for CRP
and FSA may enroll up to 2 million
acres;
• Up to $10 million in incentive
payments may be made to encourage
tree thinning and other measures that
improve the environmental performance
of CRP tree plantings;
• Land may be transferred from CRP
to the Agricultural Conservation
Easement Program (ACEP); and
• The amount of cropland (that is not
in a National Conservation Priority
Area) that can be in a State Conservation
Priority Area (CPA) was reduced from
33 percent to 25 percent.
The changes to the CRP regulations
are discussed in this document in the
order that they appear in 7 CFR part
1410.
Many of the changes to CRP required
by the 2014 Farm Bill have already been
implemented through an extension of
authorization published June 5, 2014
(79 FR 32435–32436). Specifically, the
extension announced the continuation
of continuous signup, 2014 Transition
Incentives Program, and early contract
termination opportunities in FY 2015.
This rule implements the remaining
provisions required by the 2014 Farm
Bill, including the new grassland
eligibility provisions and the revisions
to permissive uses, as well as the
discretionary changes.
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Definitions
This rule makes the following changes
to the definitions specified in § 1410.2:
The rule adds a new definition for the
new ACEP authorized by the 2014 Farm
Bill. The 2014 Farm Bill allows USDA
to modify a CRP contract to allow a
participant to transfer CRP land into
ACEP.
The rule adds a new definition for
‘‘common grazing practices’’ that
applies to the new grassland
enrollments. For enrollments of eligible
grassland, section 2004 of the 2014
Farm Bill allows the Secretary to permit
common grazing practices, including
maintenance and necessary cultural
practices, on the enrolled land in a
manner that is consistent with
maintaining the viability of grassland,
forb, and shrub species appropriate to
that locality.
This rule modifies the definition of
‘‘conservation plan’’ to include
provisions for grassland enrollments.
This rule clarifies that ‘‘Erodibility
Index (EI)’’ means that FSA uses the
higher of the erodibility from water or
wind.
This rule adds definitions for ‘‘forb,
‘‘grassland,’’ ‘‘improved rangeland or
pastureland,’’ ‘‘pastureland,’’
‘‘rangeland,’’ and ‘‘shrubland’’ because
they are relevant for grassland
enrollments.
This rule revises the definition of
‘‘infeasible to farm’’ to add discretion
for the Deputy Administrator to
determine that land is infeasible to farm
for reasons in addition to the piece of
land being too small or isolated to be
economically viable.
This rule adds a new definition of
‘‘nesting season’’ to reflect the 2014
Farm Bill requirement that permitted
activities on CRP land must consider
certain categories of bird nesting
seasons.
This rule adds a new definition of
‘‘veteran farmer or rancher’’ as specified
in the 2014 Farm Bill.
This rule removes the following
definitions that are no longer used in
the CRP regulations: ‘‘cropped
wetlands,’’ ‘‘farmed wetlands,’’ ‘‘Water
Bank Program (WBP),’’ and ‘‘wetlands
farmed under natural conditions.’’ This
rule also removes definitions of
‘‘beginning farmer or rancher,’’ and
‘‘limited resource farmer or rancher’’
from 7 CFR part 1410, because those
terms are defined in 7 CFR part 718,
which is referenced in 7 CFR part 1410.
It removes terms including
‘‘merchantable timber,’’ ‘‘present
value,’’ and ‘‘private non-industrial
forest land’’ that were only needed to
implement the Emergency Forestry
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Conservation Reserve Program, which
the 2014 Farm Bill repealed.
Maximum County Acreage
Section 1410.4, ‘‘Maximum County
Acreage’’ specifies that acreage placed
in CRP and the Wetlands Reserve
Program (WRP) cannot exceed 25
percent of the total cropland in a
county. This rule revises that section to
specify that cropland enrolled under
WRP or ACEP wetland reserve
easements, as applicable, is included
with CRP cropland as part of the
maximum county acreage limits. These
changes are required for consistency
with the 2014 Farm Bill. This rule does
not change the existing waiver
provisions in this section that allow the
25 percent limit to be exceeded in some
circumstances.
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Eligible Persons
Section 1410.5 ‘‘Eligible Persons’’ is
amended to add references to veteran
farmers and ranchers that are required
by the 2014 Farm Bill. This rule also
removes a redundant provision from
this section concerning ownership or
operation of the land for at least 12
months prior to submitting an offer for
CRP.
Eligible Land
This adds new provisions to § 1410.6
‘‘Eligible Land’’ to reflect changes
required by the 2014 Farm Bill. As
provided for in the existing CRP
regulations, eligible land for CRP
includes cropland with a history of
production of tillable crops or marginal
pastureland. The purpose of these
eligibility requirements, which are not
changing with this rule, is to ensure
CRP is used to convert environmentally
sensitive land to a long-term
environmentally beneficial cover. As
part of an effort to consolidate the
USDA conservation programs, the 2014
Farm Bill adds grassland as a category
of eligible land for CRP, and ends
authorization for the Grassland Reserve
Program.
This rule amends the dates of the
cropping history required for certain
cropland to be eligible for CRP.
Previously, eligible cropland must have
been planted or considered planted for
4 of the 6 years during the period of
2002 through 2007. This rule changes
the relevant cropping history period to
2008 through 2013.
This rule adds additional provisions
regarding infeasible-to-farm land
eligibility, as required by the 2014 Farm
Bill. Specifically, it adds eligibility for
land in a portion of a field not enrolled
in CRP if more than 75 percent of the
land in the field is enrolled as a
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conservation practice other than a buffer
or filterstrip practice, and the remainder
of the field is determined to be
infeasible to farm.
This rule removes provisions for
eligible land concerning scour erosion,
cropped wetland and associated acres,
and land associated with non-cropped
wetlands. These discretionary changes
are needed for clarity and consistency
with current policy. This rule also
clarifies that land on which
environmental measures are already
required to be taken by State, local, or
Tribal laws is ineligible for CRP.
Duration of Contracts
This rule amends § 1410.7, ‘‘Duration
of Contracts,’’ to clarify that continuous
and general signup contracts can be
between 10 years and 15 years in length.
The rule also specifies that grassland
signup contracts will be 15 years in
length. The additional provision for
grassland contracts is required by the
2014 Farm Bill; the other changes are
technical clarifications that do not
change the existing eligible land or
contract requirements.
The current policy on contract
extensions is not changing with this
rule. Contracts can be extended, but the
total contract period including the
extension(s) cannot exceed 15 years in
length. For example, a 10 year contract
can be extended for 1 to 5 years, but a
contract currently in year 13 could only
be extended for 1 or 2 years. In the case
of a contract extension, existing contract
terms are extended, except when new
mandatory requirements apply, such as
when AGI eligibility requirements for
CRP are changed by the 2014 Farm Bill.
CPA
This rule modifies § 1410.8,
‘‘Conservation Priority Areas,’’ to reduce
the total acreage within a State that can
be approved for inclusion in a state CPA
from 33 percent to 25 percent of the
cropland not in a designated CRP
national CPA. This discretionary change
will help to ensure the most suitable,
highest priority land is enrolled. The
2014 Farm Bill also removed some
named specific CPAs, but because those
CPAs were not named in the
regulations, implementing that change
does not require a change to the
regulations.
Conversion to Trees
This rule removes § 1410.9,
‘‘Conversion to Trees,’’ because that
section is obsolete. It only applied to
CRP contracts that began before
November 28, 1990.
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Restoration of Wetlands and Farmable
Wetlands Program
Section 1410.10, ‘‘Restoration of
Wetlands,’’ is amended to include
references to wetland reserve easements
under ACEP. This rule modifies
§ 1410.11 ‘‘Farmable Wetlands
Program’’ to specify that a constructed
wetland that is developed to receive
surface and subsurface flow from row
crop agricultural production is eligible
for enrollment. This rule also specifies
that the total enrollment cap under
farmable wetlands is reduced from 1
million acres to 750,000 acres. Both
these changes are required by the 2014
Farm Bill.
Emergency Forestry Program
Section 2702 of the 2014 Farm Bill
repeals authority for Emergency
Forestry CRP enrollment; this rule
removes § 1410.12, ‘‘Emergency Forestry
Program,’’ to reflect this change. As
noted earlier, the definitions used only
in this section have also been removed
from the Definitions section. The end of
authorization for new Emergency
Forestry contracts, and the removal of
the regulations for Emergency Forestry
enrollments, does not change existing
Emergency Forestry contracts.
Grassland Enrollments
The 2014 Farm Bill terminates
authority for new enrollments under the
Grassland Reserve Program (7 CFR part
1415) but also provides new authority
for enrollment of certain grassland into
CRP. Previously, only cropland of
various types and marginal pastureland
was eligible for enrollment in CRP. This
rule adds new section on grassland
enrollments in § 1410.13, with
conforming changes that add grassland
provisions to § 1410.23, ‘‘Eligible
Practices,’’ § 1410.30, ‘‘Signup and Offer
Types,’’ § 1410.31, ‘‘Acceptability of
Offers,’’ and § 1410.40, ‘‘Cost Share
Payments.’’
In general, expiring Grassland Reserve
Program lands are authorized to be
enrolled in CRP, as well as grassland
that was not in the Grassland Reserve
Program but meet the provisions of
§ 1410.6 for eligible grassland.
Grassland previously enrolled in the
Grassland Reserve Program will
continue to be subject to 7 CFR part
1415 for existing contracts and
easements that have not expired. The
2014 Farm Bill sets an acreage cap of 2
million acres on the new grassland type
of enrollment.
CRP Conservation Plan
This rule modifies § 1410.22, ‘‘CRP
Conservation Plan,’’ to add provisions
and references for the new grassland
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contracts. It also contains other minor
edits, including adding a reference to
forest stewardship plans.
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Acceptability of Offers
This rule amends § 1410.31,
‘‘Acceptability of Offers,’’ to establish
new provisions for the grassland offer
acceptance process. In ranking and
evaluating grassland signup offers, FSA
will consider various factors, including,
but not limited to, whether the offer
includes expiring CRP or Grassland
Reserve Program land, row crop to
grassland conversion, multi-species
cover, livestock grazing operations, and
State priority enrollment criteria and
focus areas.
Contract Modifications
This rule adds references to veteran
farmers to the provisions for Transition
Incentives Program contracts, as
required by the 2014 Farm Bill. The
2014 Farm Bill also adds discretion for
FSA to modify or terminate contracts to
allow transition of CRP lands into other
Federal or State conservation programs,
as is reflected in this rule. This rule
specifies that CRP participants who
terminate CRP contracts in order to
participate in ACEP or other Federal or
State easement programs are generally
not required to refund CRP payments or
interest, or pay liquidated damages to
the CCC. However, participants will be
required to repay CRP Signing Incentive
Payments and Practice Incentive
Payments when enrolling CRP land in
wetlands reserve easements under
ACEP.
The 2014 Farm Bill allows contract
modifications for resource conserving
uses in the final year of the contract.
This rule adds provisions that allow an
owner or operator in the final year of the
CRP contract to make land
improvements for economic use,
provided that those land improvements
maintain protection of the land after
expiration of the contract and are
conducted in a manner consistent with
an approved CRP conservation plan.
Such land enrolled in resource
conserving use will not be eligible to be
re-enrolled in CRP for 5 years following
expiration of the contract. The rental
payment for that last year of the CRP
contract during which resource
conserving use land improvements are
implemented will be reduced by an
amount commensurate with the
economic value derived from practice
implementation.
Annual Rental and Incentive Payments
This rule amends the provisions in
§ 1410.42, ‘‘Annual Rental and Incentive
Payments,’’ to reflect the incorporation
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of grassland signup and tree thinning
incentives. The 2014 Farm Bill
authorizes CCC to provide incentives for
tree thinning to improve resource
conditions, primarily wildlife habitat
enhancement of CRP lands established
to trees.
Grassland rental rates will be based
on levels not to exceed 75 percent of the
estimated grazing value of the land, as
required by the 2014 Farm Bill. Tree
thinning incentive payments to
encourage landowners and operators to
implement forest management practices
that improve resource condition or
enhance wildlife habitat cannot exceed
150 percent of the total cost of the
practice installation.
This rule also clarifies provisions for
cropland soil rental rates to better reflect
that these rates are based on the relative
non-irrigated cropland productivity of
soils within a county using soil
productivity data and prevailing county
average cash rental estimates for nonirrigated cropland. This rule also
clarifies that marginal pastureland
rental rates are based on estimates of the
prevailing rental values of marginal
pastureland in riparian areas. These
clarifications are discretionary.
Section 1410.42 specifies a $50,000
per fiscal year payment limit on CRP
rental payments, which is not changing
with this rule because the 2014 Farm
Bill does not change the payment limits
for CRP.
Average Adjusted Gross Income (AGI)
Limitation
Section 1605 of the 2014 Farm Bill
establishes income limitations that
apply to 2015 and subsequent crop,
program, or fiscal year benefits for
programs in Title II of the 2014 Farm
Bill, which includes CRP. FSA
previously implemented these
limitations in 7 CFR part 1400 through
a final rule published on April 14, 2014
(79 FR 21086–21118). This rule makes
a conforming change to § 1410.44 to
reflect the new AGI limits. The 2014
Farm Bill reduces the average AGI
limitation for CRP from $1,000,000 to
$900,000.
Previously, there was a waiver to the
AGI limit for conservation programs if at
least 66.66 percent of the participant’s
income was from farming, or on a caseby-case basis for other reasons to protect
environmentally sensitive land of
special significance. The AGI waivers
for conservation practices are not
reauthorized in the 2014 Farm Bill;
therefore, this rule removes the waiver
provisions in § 1410.44 to reflect this
change.
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Permissive Uses
CRP land uses are limited to the list
of uses specified in § 1410.63,
‘‘Permissive Uses.’’ The intent is to
ensure that CRP land is not used for
activities that would tend to defeat the
conservation purposes of CRP, while
allowing limited activities that are
consistent with CRP goals, such as
grazing to control invasive species.
Permissive uses must be consistent with
the conservation of soil, water quality,
and wildlife habitat, including habitat
during the nesting season for certain
categories of birds in the area. To
achieve this goal, this rule adds and
revises provisions for permissive uses as
required by the 2014 Farm Bill. In
general, these provisions include new
restrictions and payment reductions
related to harvesting, grazing, and other
commercial land uses. There are also
new grazing, haying, mowing,
harvesting, and fire prevention
permissive uses that apply only to the
new grassland signup type.
Wind turbines are permitted on CRP
land, provided that wind turbines are
installed in numbers and locations as
determined appropriate by CCC
considering the location, size, and other
physical characteristics of land and the
extent to which the land contains listed
threatened or endangered wildlife and
wildlife habitat, and the purposes of
CRP. Wind turbines are not a new
permissive use, but it is slightly revised
by the 2014 Farm Bill, which adds the
provision about threatened or
endangered wildlife and wildlife
habitat.
This rule modifies the provisions for
customary forestry maintenance
activities to make an incentive payment
to encourage proper thinning and other
practices to improve the condition of
resources, promote forest management,
or enhance wildlife habitat on the land.
These are consistent with the 2014 Farm
Bill requirements.
No barrier fencing or boundary
limitation can be established or
maintained that prohibits wildlife
access to or from the CRP acreage unless
required by State law as part of any
permissive use. This is a discretionary
clarification that is consistent with 2014
Farm Bill requirements that permissive
uses be consistent with the conservation
of wildlife habitat.
This rule amends the provisions for
managed harvesting and other
commercial use including managed
harvesting of biomass, to reflect the
payment reduction of not less than 25
percent and the limitation that the
activity occur at least every 5 years but
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not more than once every 3 years, as
specified in the 2014 Farm Bill.
This rule modifies the provisions for
routine grazing to be consistent with the
2014 Farm Bill restriction on routine
grazing to not more than once every 2
years, with a payment reduction of not
less 25 percent unless CRP participant
is a beginning farmer or rancher.
The 2014 Farm Bill eliminates the
payment reduction for emergency
haying, emergency grazing, or other
commercial use of the forage on the land
in response to drought, flooding, or
other emergency. This rule amends
§ 1410.63 to reflect this change.
Language is added to § 1410.63 to
clarify that there is no payment
reduction for harvesting, grazing, or
other commercial use of the forage on
the land in response to a drought,
flooding, or other emergency, when
conducted consistent with an approved
CRP conservation plan, irrespective of
whether the harvested material is used
or sold by the contract holder.
This rule specifies a permissive use
for grazing of program acreage that has
been established to vegetative buffers
incidental to agricultural production
adjacent to the buffers, provided the use
does not destroy the permanent
vegetative cover, in exchange for a 25
percent payment reduction for the land
being grazed. This is a clarification of
the existing ‘‘incidental grazing’’ use
that was already permitted as a type of
grazing use but has not previously been
specified in the regulations as a separate
permissive use. Incidental grazing,
which requires the payment reduction,
does not include prescribed grazing to
control kudzu or other invasive species.
Prescribed grazing to control invasive
species also requires a payment
reduction, except that a beginning
farmer or rancher may conduct
prescribed grazing without a payment
reduction.
This rule specifies the permissive
activities under the new grassland
enrollment component of CRP, which
include common grazing practices;
haying, mowing, or harvesting outside
of nesting season; wildfire
considerations; grazing-related
activities, such as fencing; and other
activities as determined by the Deputy
Administrator.
Transition Incentives Program
This rule adds the term ‘‘veteran’’
throughout § 1410.64, ‘‘Transition
Incentives Program,’’ to reflect that
eligibility under this program includes
veteran farmers and ranchers in
addition to beginning and socially
disadvantaged farmers and ranchers.
The definition of ‘‘veteran’’ as specified
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in the 2014 Farm Bill and in this rule
specifies that to be eligible for the CRP
Transition Incentives Program, the
veteran must have farmed not more than
10 years. Therefore, while the addition
of the term ‘‘veteran’’ will improve our
outreach efforts to veterans and makes
it more clear that they are eligible for
the Transition Incentives Program, the
eligible veterans would already have
been eligible as beginning farmers.
‘‘Preparing to plant a crop’’ has been
added as an appropriate conservation
and land improvement practice during
the last year of the CRP contract that is
being transitioned to a beginning,
veteran, or socially disadvantaged
farmer or rancher under the Transition
Incentives Program. This additional
improvement practice is specified in the
2014 Farm Bill.
Miscellaneous Conforming and
Editorial Changes in CRP Regulations
In addition to the changes required by
the 2014 Farm Bill and the substantive
discretionary changes discussed above,
this rule makes a number of
nonsubstantive changes to make the
CRP regulations clear and consistent.
For example, where appropriate,
references to ‘‘CCC’’ have been replaced
with ‘‘Deputy Administrator’’ to better
reflect the office responsible for
applicable determinations and
decisions. ‘‘Shall’’ has been replaced
with ‘‘will’’ or ‘‘must’’ for plain
language and to add clarity to
requirements. Obsolete provisions are
removed in 7 CFR part 1410.
Provisions Applicable to Multiple
Programs
This rule amends FSA regulations in
7 CFR part 718 ‘‘Provisions Applicable
to Multiple Programs’’ that govern base
acres and acreage reports for CRP and
certain other FSA commodity programs
and CCC programs operated by FSA.
The statutory authority for the
regulations in 7 CFR part 718 come from
the 2014 Farm Bill, the Food,
Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008
(the 2008 Farm Bill, Pub. L. 110–246)
and the Farm Security and Rural
Investment Act of 2002 (Pub. L. 107–
171).
As discussed previously, the purpose
of CRP is to cost-effectively assist
producers in conserving and improving
soil, water, wildlife, restoring wetlands,
improving other natural resources and
addressing issues raised by State,
regional, and national conservation
initiatives by converting
environmentally sensitive cropland and
marginal pasture land from the
production of agricultural commodities
to a long-term vegetative cover.
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Enrollment of eligible grassland in CRP
will result in adoption of sustainable
grazing practices and preservation of
wildlife habitat. To be eligible for CRP,
cropland must have a cropping history
for 2008 through 2013, as specified in
this rule. Many FSA programs,
particularly the Agricultural Risk
Coverage (ARC) and Price Loss Coverage
(PLC) programs authorized by the 2014
Farm Bill, specify that eligible land
includes land that has base acres, which
are cropland acres with a cropping
history for certain years dating back to
the 1980s. When cropland is enrolled in
CRP, the base acres on a farm that
exceed the farm’s remaining cropland
that is not devoted to CRP must be
reduced to reflect the CRP enrollment.
In that case, the base acres are
voluntarily reduced and the base acres
reduced are protected (‘‘put on hold’’)
for that farm while the land is enrolled
in CRP. To ensure that producers are
able to transition land with base acres
to and from CRP, and preserve
eligibility of that land for other FSA
programs after the CRP contract ends, it
is necessary to clarify a number of terms
in part 718 that are relevant to cropping
histories, production records, and base
acres for multiple programs. In general,
the amendments to part 718 in this rule
are consistent with current agency
practice and merely clarify the
regulations without changing FSA
policy or practice.
This rule revises the term ‘‘base
acres’’ to remove obsolete references
and replace them with references to the
regulations for the new programs
authorized by the 2014 Farm Bill. It
adds definitions for ‘‘contiguous,’’
‘‘contiguous county,’’ and ‘‘contiguous
county office’’ for use in various
programs authorized under the 2014
Farm Bill including the CRP, the Cotton
Transition Assistance Program (CTAP),
ARC and PLC, disaster assistance
programs, and the Noninsured Crop
Disaster Assistance Program (NAP). The
addition of the definitions of
‘‘contiguous,’’ ‘‘contiguous county,’’ and
‘‘contiguous county office’’ are
necessary to clarify the policy
concerning changing a farm’s
administrative county. The addition of
the term ‘‘common land unit (CLU)’’ is
needed because FSA now uses CLU
numbers instead of field numbers for
many production and acreage reports.
The rule adds new definitions for
‘‘double cropping,’’ and ‘‘subsequent
crop,’’ which are relevant to the
cropping history requirements for
multiple programs. The rule amends the
definition of ‘‘entity’’ to be consistent
with the definition in 7 CFR part 1400.
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This rule makes clarifying changes to
the definition of ‘‘owner.’’ The intent of
these amendments to the definitions is
to have clear and consistent regulations
and to make it clear to producers what
they must do to preserve the eligibility
of land for multiple programs, including
CRP.
This rule removes obsolete provisions
in § 718.3, ‘‘State Committee
Responsibilities,’’ regarding county rates
for measurement services. The State
Committee does not set measurement
service rates.
This rule amends § 718.9 regarding
signature requirements to replace the
reference to ‘‘husband’’ and ‘‘wife’’ with
a reference to ‘‘spouse.’’ It also changes
the signature authority provisions to
clarify the validity of documents that
were previously acted on and approved
by a county office or county committee,
as required by section 1617 of the 2008
Farm Bill. These provisions have
already been implemented, but were not
in the regulations.
This rule amends § 718.102 to clarify
the programs for which participants
must submit acreage reports. It amends
§ 718.103 to clarify the requirements for
documenting prevented planting. These
are not new requirements; this reflects
a discretionary decision to include
detailed requirements previously in the
handbooks in the regulations. This is
needed to ensure that producers
correctly document prevented planting,
which is relevant to cropping history for
the purposes of program eligibility for
CRP and other programs.
This rule amends § 718.106, ‘‘Noncompliance and Acreage Reports,’’ to
remove references to good faith or
willful falsification. This is a program
integrity issue to clarify that false
acreage reports may result in program
ineligibility, independent of motivation
for the false report.
This rule amends § 718.112,
‘‘Redetermination,’’ to be consistent
with current policy on when producers
must submit requests for
redetermination of crop acreage,
appraised yield, or farm stored
production.
This rule amends § 718.201, ‘‘Farm
Reconstitution,’’ to be consistent with
current policy, and to include references
to land eligible for new programs
authorized by the 2014 Farm Bill. This
rule makes similar changes to § 718.205,
‘‘Substantive Changes in Farming
Operation, and Changes in Related Legal
Entities,’’ and § 718.206, ‘‘Determining
Farms, Tracts, Allotments, Quotas, and
Bases When Reconstitution is Made by
Division.’’ As discussed earlier, these
changes are relevant to preserving base
acres for a given farm as land is
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transitioned into CRP and back into
other FSA programs. This rule also
amends § 718.206 to specify that, within
30 days after a prescribed form, letter,
or contract providing base acres is
issued, owners of the reconstituted farm
may request a different designation of
base acres, so long as all the owners
agree in writing to the designation.
This rule amends § 718.301,
‘‘Applicability,’’ by adding a new
paragraph that clarifies that relief
provisions are not a means by which
persons can obtain a review of a
program’s regulations or the agency’s
interpretations of its own regulations.
This is a discretionary clarification to
clarify program integrity provisions that
is consistent with current policy.
Similar clarifying amendments are made
to other sections in subpart D,
‘‘Equitable Relief from Ineligibility.’’
This rule amends § 718.306 to clarify
that if a determination was in any way
based on erroneous, innocent, or
purposeful misrepresentation; false
statement; fraud; or willful misconduct
by or on behalf of the participant, the
determination is not final. Another
amendment clarifies that FSA will
correct errors and incorrect decisions.
Miscellaneous Conforming and
Editorial Changes to Part 718 Related to
CRP
In addition, this rule makes minor
plain language changes, such as
replacing ‘‘shall’’ with ‘‘will,’’ to several
sections of part 718. This rule removes
obsolete provisions related to CRP
referring to actions taken prior to the
2008 Farm Bill. The definition of
‘‘agricultural commodity’’ is removed
because the term is not used in the
subpart in which it was defined.
Notice and Comment
In general, the Administrative
Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 553) requires
that a notice of proposed rulemaking be
published in the Federal Register and
interested persons be given an
opportunity to participate in the
rulemaking through submission of
written data, views, or arguments with
or without opportunity for oral
presentation, except when the rule
involves a matter relating to public
property, loans, grants, benefits, or
contracts. Section 2608 of the 2014
Farm Bill requires that the programs of
Title II be implemented by interim rules
effective on publication with an
opportunity for notice and comment.
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
Executive Order 12866, ‘‘Regulatory
Planning and Review,’’ and Executive
Order 13563, ‘‘Improving Regulation
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and Regulatory Review,’’ direct agencies
to assess all costs and benefits of
available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select
regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential
economic, environmental, public health
and safety effects, distributive impacts,
and equity). Executive Order 13563
emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits, of
reducing costs, of harmonizing rules,
and of promoting flexibility.
The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) designated this interim rule as
significant under Executive Order
12866, ‘‘Regulatory Planning and
Review,’’ and therefore, OMB has
reviewed this rule. The costs and
benefits of this proposed rule are
summarized below. The full cost benefit
analysis is available on regulations.gov.
Clarity of the Regulation
Executive Order 12866, as
supplemented by Executive Order
13563, requires each agency to write all
rules in plain language. In addition to
your substantive comments on this
interim rule, we invite your comments
on how to make the rule easier to
understand. For example:
• Are the requirements in the rule
clearly stated? Are the scope and intent
of the rule clear?
• Does the rule contain technical
language or jargon that is not clear?
• Is the material logically organized?
• Would changing the grouping or
order of sections or adding headings
make the rule easier to understand?
• Could we improve clarity by adding
tables, lists, or diagrams?
• Would more, but shorter, sections
be better? Are there specific sections
that are too long or confusing?
• What else could we do to make the
rule easier to understand?
Cost Benefit Analysis
The mandatory and discretionary
changes to CRP specified in this rule are
expected to have a minimal cost impact
for CRP as a whole, although individual
producers could experience measurable
increases or decreases in financial and
environmental benefits. Incentive
payments for tree thinning, Transition
Incentives Program payments, and new
permissive uses specified in this rule
are expected to increase costs to the
government by $67 million for FY 2014
through 2018. That includes $10 million
for tree thinning, $28 million for
Transition Incentives Program
payments, and $29 million for rental
payments that are no longer reduced for
emergency haying and grazing.
Enrolling grasslands is expected to
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reduce costs by $31 million during FY
2014 through 2018, resulting in an
estimated net overall cost of $36 million
for FY 2014 through 2018, an average of
$7.3 million per year.
The acreage cap for CRP specified in
the 2014 Farm Bill is expected to reduce
overall payments to producers (and
costs to the government) for CRP by
$616 million total between FY 2014 and
FY 2018 ($2.8 billion between FY 2014
and FY 2023). However, that cost
reduction is not the result of the specific
provisions in this rule.
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Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601–612), as amended by the
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996 (SBREFA),
generally requires an agency to prepare
a regulatory flexibility analysis of any
rule whenever an agency is required by
the Administrative Procedure Act or any
other law to publish a proposed rule,
unless the agency certifies that the rule
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. This rule is not subject to the
Regulatory Flexibility Act because the
Secretary of Agriculture and FSA are
not required by any law to publish a
proposed rule for this rulemaking
initiative. CCC is required by section
2608 of the 2014 Farm Bill to issue an
interim rule effective on publication
with an opportunity for comment.
Environmental Evaluation
In accordance with the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA, 42
U.S.C. 4321–4347), FSA prepared a
Supplemental Programmatic
Environmental Impact Statement
(SPEIS) for the changes to CRP proposed
as a result of the mandatory provisions
of the 2014 Farm Bill. The CRP Final
SPEIS was completed as required by
NEPA, the Council on Environmental
Quality (CEQ) Regulations for
Implementing the Procedural Provisions
of NEPA (40 CFR parts 1500–1508), and
FSA’s NEPA regulations for compliance
with NEPA (7 CFR part 799).
FSA provided notice of intent (NOI)
to prepare the CRP SPEIS in the Federal
Register on November 29, 2013 (78 FR
71561–71562), and requested public
comment on the preliminary
alternatives for analyzing changes to
CRP that were proposed as a result of
the mandatory provisions of the 2014
Farm Bill. The Draft SPEIS public
comment period began with a Notice of
Availability (NOA) published in the
Federal Register on July 15, 2014 (79 FR
41247–41249), and public meetings
were held in several locations across the
country in July and August, 2014. The
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Final SPEIS public comment period
began with a NOA published in the
Federal Register on December 23, 2014
(79 FR 76952–76955).
Many of the changes to CRP from the
2014 Farm Bill did not require analysis
in the SPEIS because they were
administrative in nature, clarified the
mandatory provisions of the 2014 Farm
Bill, would not result in major changes
to the current administration of CRP,
and were addressed in previous NEPA
documentation concerning CRP. Only
those changes that did not meet these
criteria were included in the SPEIS.
As part of this CRP rulemaking
initiative, FSA prepared a Record of
Decision, which identified the
alternative selected for implementation
and outlines the rationale, as well as a
discussion of any final comments
received for the SPEIS, and was
published on June 18, 2015 (80 FR
34883–86).
Executive Order 12372
Executive Order 12372,
‘‘Intergovernmental Review of Federal
Programs,’’ requires consultation with
State and local officials that would be
directly affected by proposed Federal
financial assistance. The objectives of
the Executive Order are to foster an
intergovernmental partnership and a
strengthened Federalism, by relying on
State and local processes for State and
local government coordination and
review of proposed Federal financial
assistance and direct Federal
development. For reasons specified in
the final rule related document
regarding 7 CFR part 3015, subpart V
(48 FR 29115, June 24, 1983), the
programs and activities in this rule are
excluded from the scope of Executive
Order 12372.
Executive Order 12988
This rule has been reviewed under
Executive Order 12988, Civil Justice
Reform. This final rule is not retroactive
and does not preempt State or local
laws, regulations, or policies unless they
represent an irreconcilable conflict with
this rule. Before any judicial action may
be brought regarding provisions of this
rule, the administrative appeal
provisions of 7 CFR parts 11, 624, and
780 must be exhausted.
Executive Order 13132
This rule has been reviewed under
Executive Order 13132, ‘‘Federalism.’’
The policies contained in this proposed
rule would not have any substantial
direct effect on States, on the
relationship between the Federal
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
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responsibilities among the various
levels of government, except as required
by law. Nor does this rule impose
substantial direct compliance costs on
State and local governments. Therefore,
consultation with the States is not
required.
Executive Order 13175
This rule has been reviewed in
accordance with the requirements of
Executive Order 13175, ‘‘Consultation
and Coordination with Indian Tribal
Governments.’’ Executive Order 13175
requires Federal agencies to consult and
coordinate with tribes on a governmentto-government basis on policies that
have tribal implications, including
regulations, legislative comments or
proposed legislation, and other policy
statements or actions that have
substantial direct effects on one or more
Indian tribes, on the relationship
between the Federal Government and
Indian tribes or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities between the
Federal Government and Indian tribes.
FSA has assessed the impact of this
rule on Indian tribes and determined
that this rule would not, to our
knowledge, have tribal implications that
require tribal consultation under
Executive Order 13175. If a Tribe
requests consultation, FSA will work
with the USDA Office of Tribal
Relations to ensure meaningful
consultation is provided where changes,
additions, and modifications identified
in this rule are not expressly mandated
by the 2014 Farm Bill.
Unfunded Mandates
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA, Pub. L.
104–4) requires Federal agencies to
assess the effects of their regulatory
actions of State, local, and Tribal
governments or the private sector.
Agencies generally must prepare a
written statement, including cost
benefits analysis, for proposed and final
rules with Federal mandates that may
result in expenditures of $100 million or
more in any 1 year for State, local or
Tribal governments, in the aggregate, or
to the private sector. UMRA generally
requires agencies to consider
alternatives and adopt the more cost
effective or least burdensome alternative
that achieves the objectives of the rule.
This rule contains no Federal mandates
under the regulatory provisions of Title
II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform
Act of 1995 (UMRA, Pub. L. 104–4) for
State, local, or tribal governments, or the
private sector. In addition, CCC is not
required to publish a notice of proposed
rulemaking for this rule. Therefore, this
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rule is not subject to the requirements
of sections 202 and 205 of UMRA.
Federal Domestic Assistance Program
The title and number of the Federal
Domestic Assistance Program in the
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
to which this rule applies is the
Conservation Reserve Program—10.069.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The regulations in this rule are
exempt from the requirements of the
Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C.
Chapter 35), as specified in section 2608
of the 2014 Farm Bill, which provides
that these regulations be promulgated
and the program administered without
regard to the Paperwork Reduction Act.
E-Government Act Compliance
CCC is committed to complying with
the E-Government Act, to promote the
use of the Internet and other
information technologies to provide
increased opportunities for citizen
access to Government information and
services, and for other purposes.
List of Subjects
7 CFR Part 718
Acreage allotments, Drug traffic
control, Loan programs-agriculture,
Marketing quotas, Price support
programs, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
7 CFR Part 1410
Administrative practice and
procedure, Agriculture, Environmental
protection, Grant programs—
Agriculture, Natural resources,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Soil conservation,
Technical assistance, Water resources,
Wildlife.
For the reasons explained above, CCC
and FSA amend 7 CFR parts 718 and
1410 as follows:
PART 718—PROVISIONS APPLICABLE
TO MULTIPLE PROGRAMS
1. Revise the authority for part 718 to
read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1501–1524, 1921–
2008r, 7201–7334, 7901–8002 and 9011–
9097, 15 U.S.C. 714b and c, and 16 U.S.C.
3801–3847.
■
2. Revise § 718.1(a) to read as follows:
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§ 718.1
Applicability.
(a) This part is applicable to all
programs specified in chapters VII and
XIV of this title that are administered by
the Farm Service Agency (FSA) and to
any other programs that adopt this part
by reference. This part governs how
FSA administers marketing quotas,
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allotments, base acres, and acreage
reports for those programs to which this
part applies. The regulations to which
this part applies are those that establish
procedures for measuring allotments
and program eligible acreage, for
determining program compliance, farm
reconstitutions, application of finality,
and equitable relief from compliance or
ineligibility.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Amend § 718.2 as follows:
■ a. Revise the definitions for ‘‘Base
acres’’, ‘‘Entity’’, and ‘‘Owner’’; and
■ b. Add, in alphabetical order,
definitions for ‘‘Common land unit’’,
‘‘Contiguous’’, ‘‘Contiguous county’’,
‘‘Contiguous county office’’, ‘‘Double
cropping’’, ‘‘State committee’’, and
‘‘Subsequent crop’’;
■ c. In the definition of ‘‘Crop reporting
date’’, remove the words ‘‘date the’’ and
add the words ‘‘date upon which the’’
in their place; and
■ d. In the definition of ‘‘Minor child’’,
add the words and punctuation ‘‘For the
purpose of programs under chapters VII
and XIV of this title,’’ before the word
‘‘State’’.
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 718.2
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Base acres means, with respect to a
covered commodity on a farm, the
number of acres in effect on September
30, 2013, as defined in the regulations
in part 1412, subpart B, of this title that
were in effect on that date, subject to
any reallocation, adjustment, or
reduction. The term ‘‘base acres’’
includes any generic base acres as
specified in part 1412 planted to a
covered commodity as specified in part
1412.
*
*
*
*
*
Common land unit means the smallest
unit of land that has an identifiable
border and all of the following in
common:
(1) Owner;
(2) Management;
(3) Cover; and
(4) Where applicable, producer
association.
*
*
*
*
*
Contiguous means sharing any part of
a boundary but not overlapping.
Contiguous county means a county
contiguous to the reference county or
counties.
Contiguous county office means the
FSA county office that is in a
contiguous county.
*
*
*
*
*
Double cropping means, as
determined by the Deputy
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Administrator on a regional basis,
consecutive planting of two specific
crops that have the capability to be
planted and carried to maturity for the
intended uses, as reported by the
producer, on the same acreage within a
12-month period. To be considered
double cropping, the planting of two
specific crops must be in an area where
such double cropping is considered
normal, or could be considered normal,
for all growers under normal growing
conditions and growers are typically
able to repeat the same cycle
successfully in a subsequent 12-month
period.
Entity means a corporation, joint stock
company, association, limited
partnership, limited liability
partnership, limited liability company,
irrevocable trust, estate, charitable
organization, or other similar
organization, including any such
organization participating in the farming
operation as a partner in a general
partnership, a participant in a joint
venture, or a participant in a similar
organization.
*
*
*
*
*
Owner means one who has legal
ownership of farmland, including:
(1) Any agency of the Federal
Government; however, such agency is
not eligible to receive any program
payment;
(2) One who is buying farmland under
a contract for deed; or
(3) One who has a life-estate in the
property.
*
*
*
*
*
State committee means the FSA State
committee.
*
*
*
*
*
Subsequent crop means a crop
following an initial crop that is not in
an approved double cropping
combination.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 718.3
[Amended]
4. Amend § 718.3 as follows:
a. In paragraph (a)(2), add the word
‘‘or’’ at the end;
■ b. In paragraph (a)(3), remove the
semicolon and add a period in its place;
■ c. Remove paragraphs (a)(4), (5), and
(6); and
■ d. In paragraph (b), remove the
references to ‘‘§ 718.108’’ and
‘‘§ 718.111’’ and add references to
‘‘§ 718.109’’ and ‘‘§ 718.112’’,
respectively in their place.
■ 5. Revise § 718.7 to read as follows:
■
■
§ 718.7
Furnishing maps.
(a) A reasonable number, as
determined by FSA, of reproductions of
photographs, mosaic maps, and other
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maps will be made available to the
owner of a farm, an insurance company
reinsured by the Federal Crop Insurance
Corporation (FCIC), or a private party
contractor performing official duties on
behalf of FSA, CCC, and other USDA
agencies.
(b) For all others, reproductions will
be made available at the rate FSA
determines will cover the cost of making
such items available.
§ 718.8
[Amended]
6. Amend § 718.8(e) by removing the
word ‘‘COC’’ and adding the words
‘‘county committee’’ in its place.
■ 7. Amend § 718.9 as follows:
■ a. Revise paragraphs (a) and (b)
introductory text; and
■ b. Add paragraph (f).
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
■
§ 718.9
Signature requirements.
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(a) When a program authorized by this
chapter or chapter XIV of this title
requires the signature of a producer,
landowner, landlord, or tenant, then a
spouse may sign all such FSA or CCC
documents on behalf of the other
spouse, except as otherwise specified in
this section, unless such other spouse
has provided written notification to FSA
and CCC that such action is not
authorized. The notification must be
provided to FSA for each farm.
(b) A spouse may not sign a document
on behalf of the other spouse with
respect to:
*
*
*
*
*
(f) Documents that were previously
acted on and approved by the FSA
county office or county committee will
not subsequently be determined
inadequate or invalid because of the
lack of signature authority of any person
signing the document on behalf of the
applicant or any other individual,
entity, general partnership, or joint
venture, unless the person signing the
program document knowingly and
willfully falsified the evidence of
signature authority or a signature.
However, FSA may require affirmation
of the document by those parties
deemed appropriate for an affirmation,
as determined by the Deputy
Administrator. Nothing in this
paragraph relieves participants of any
other program requirements.
§ 718.101
[Amended]
8. Amend § 718.101(a)(1) by removing
the reference to ‘‘§ 718.103’’ and adding
a reference to ‘‘§ 718.104’’ in its place.
■
§ 718.102
■
[Amended]
9. Amend § 718.102 as follows:
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a. In paragraph (a), remove the words
‘‘annually submit accurate information’’
and add the words ‘‘submit accurate
information annually’’ in their place;
■ b. In paragraph (b)(1), remove the
words ‘‘the programs governed by part
1412 of this title’’ and add the words
‘‘programs for which eligibility for
benefits is tied to base acres’’ in their
place;
■ c. In paragraph (b)(6), remove the
word ‘‘intended’’;
■ d. Revise paragraphs (b)(7) and (c);
and
■ e. Add paragraph (d).
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
■
§ 718.102
Acreage reports.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(7) All producers reporting acreage as
prevented planted acreage or failed
acreage must provide documentation
that meets the provisions of § 718.103 to
the FSA county office where the farm is
administered.
(c) The annual acreage reports
required in paragraph (a) of this section
must be filed with the county committee
by the farm operator, farm owner,
producer of the crop on the farm, or
duly authorized representative by the
final reporting date applicable to the
crop as established by the Deputy
Administrator.
(d) Participants in programs to which
this part is applicable must report all
crops, in all counties, in which they
have an interest. This includes crops on
cropland and noncropland, including
native or improved grass that will be
hayed or grazed.
■ 10. Amend § 718.103 as follows:
■ a. Revise paragraphs (b) and (c);
■ b. Remove paragraphs (d) and (e);
■ c. Redesignate paragraphs (f) and (g)
as paragraphs (d) and (e);
■ d. In newly redesignated paragraph
(e), remove the words ‘‘shall apply’’ and
add the word ‘‘applies’’ it their place;
■ e. Add paragraphs (f) and (g);
■ f. Remove paragraph (h);
■ g. Redesignate paragraphs (i) through
(n) as paragraphs (h) through (m),
respectively;
■ h. In newly redesignated paragraph
(i), remove the words ‘‘the COC. The
COC will’’ and add the words ‘‘the
county committee. The county
committee may’’ in their place; and
■ i. In newly redesignated paragraph
(m)(2), remove the word ‘‘and’’ at the
end of the sentence and add the word
‘‘or’’ in its place.
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
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§ 718.103
acreage.
41995
Prevented planted and failed
*
*
*
*
*
(b) FSA may approve acreage as
‘‘prevented planted acreage’’ if all other
conditions for such approval are met
and provided the conditions in
paragraphs (b)(1) through (6) of this
section are met.
(1) Except as specified in paragraph
(b)(2) of this section, producers must
report the acreage, on forms specified by
FSA, within 15 calendar days after the
final planting date determined for the
crop by FSA.
(2) If the acreage is reported after the
period identified in paragraph (b)(1) of
this section, the application must be
filed in time to permit:
(i) The county committee or its
authorized representative to make a
farm visit to verify eligible disaster
conditions that prevented the specified
acreage or crop from being planted; or
(ii) The county committee or its
authorized representative the
opportunity to determine, based on
visual inspection, that the acreage or
crop in question was affected by eligible
disaster conditions such as damaging
weather or other adverse natural
occurrences that prevented the acreage
or crop from being planted.
(3) A farm visit to inspect the acreage
or crop is required for all late-filed
acreage reports where prevented
planting credit is sought. Under no
circumstance may acreage reported after
the 15-day period referenced in
paragraph (b)(1) of this section be
deemed acceptable unless the criteria in
paragraph (b)(2) of this section are met.
State and county committees do not
have the authority to waive the field
inspection and verification provisions
for late-filed reports.
(4) All determinations made during
field inspections must be documented
on each late-filed acreage report, with
results also recorded in county
committee minutes to support the
documentation.
(5) The acreage must have been
prevented from being planted as the
result of a natural disaster and not a
management decision.
(6) The prevented planted acreage
report was approved by the county
committee. The county committee may
disapprove prevented planted acreage
credit if it is not satisfied with the
documentation provided.
(c) To receive prevented planted
credit for acreage, the producer must
show to the satisfaction of FSA that the
producer intended to plant the acreage.
Documentation supporting such intent
includes documents related to field
preparation, seed purchase, and any
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other information that shows the
acreage could and would have been
planted and harvested absent the
natural disaster or eligible cause of loss
that prevented the planting.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) Acreage ineligible for prevented
planting coverage includes, but is not
limited to, acreage:
(1) With respect to which the planting
history or conservation plans indicate it
would remain fallow for crop rotation
purposes;
(2) Used for conservation purposes or
intended to be or considered to have
been left unplanted under any program
administered by USDA, including the
Conservation Reserve and Wetland
Reserve Programs;
(3) Not planted because of a
management decision;
(4) Affected by the containment or
release of water by any governmental,
public, or private dam or reservoir
project, if an easement exists on the
acreage affected for the containment or
release of water;
(5) Where any other person receives a
prevented planted payment for any crop
for the same crop year, unless the
acreage meets all the requirements for
double cropping under this part;
(6) Where pasture or other forage crop
is in place on the acreage during the
time that planting of the crop generally
occurs in the area;
(7) Where another crop is planted
(previous or subsequent) that does not
meet the double cropping definition;
(8) Where any volunteer or cover crop
is hayed, grazed, or otherwise harvested
on the acreage for the same crop year;
(9) Where there is an inadequate
supply of irrigation water beginning on
the Federal crop insurance sale closing
date for the previous crop year or the
Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance
Program (NAP) application closing date
for the crop as specified in part 1437 of
this title through the final planting date
of the current year;
(10) On which a failure or breakdown
of irrigation equipment or facilities,
unless the failure or breakdown is due
to a natural disaster;
(11) That is under quarantine imposed
by a county, State, or Federal
government agency;
(12) That is affected by chemical or
herbicide residue, unless the residue is
due to a natural disaster;
(13) That is affected by drifting
herbicide;
(14) On which a crop was produced,
but the producer was unable to obtain
a market for the crop;
(15) Involving a planned planting of a
‘‘value loss crop’’ as that term is defined
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for NAP as specified in part 1437 of this
title, including, but not limited to,
Christmas trees, aquaculture, or
ornamental nursery, for which NAP
assistance is provided under value loss
procedure;
(16) For which the claim for
prevented planted credit relates to trees
or other perennials unless the producer
can prove resources were available to
plant, grow, and harvest the crop, as
applicable;
(17) That is affected by wildlife
damage;
(18) Upon which, the reduction in the
water supply for irrigation is due to
participation in an electricity buy-back
program, or the sale of water under a
water buy-back or legislative changes
regarding water usage, or any other
cause which is not a natural disaster; or
(19) That is devoted to non-cropland.
(g) CCC may allow exceptions to
acreage ineligible for prevented planting
coverage when surface water or ground
water is reduced because of a natural
disaster (as determined by CCC).
*
*
*
*
*
§ 718.104
[Amended]
11. Amend § 718.104 as follows:
a. In paragraph (a), introductory text,
remove words ‘‘date, and be considered
timely filed, if’’ and add the words
‘‘date and processed by FSA if’’ in their
place;
■ b. In paragraph (a)(1), remove the
words and punctuation ‘‘is in the field,’’
and add the words and punctuation
‘‘remains in the field, permitting FSA to
verify and determine the acreage;’’ in
their place;
■ c. In paragraph (a)(2), add the words
‘‘amount of’’ in front of the word
‘‘acreage’’; and
■ d. In paragraph (b), remove the word
‘‘shall’’ and add the word ‘‘must’’ in its
place.
■
■
§ 718.105
[Amended]
12. Amend § 718.105(c)(2) by
removing the word ‘‘when’’ and adding
the words ‘‘upon which’’ in its place.
■ 13. Revise § 718.106 to read as
follows:
■
§ 718.106 Non-compliance and false
acreage reports.
(a) Participants who provide false or
inaccurate acreage reports may be
ineligible for some or all payments or
benefits, subject to the requirements of
§ 718.102(b)(1) and (3).
(b) [Reserved]
■ 14. Revise § 718.111 to read as
follows:
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§ 718.111
Notice of measured acreage.
(a) FSA will provide notice of
measured acreage and mail it to the farm
operator. This notice constitutes notice
to all parties who have ownership,
leasehold interest, or other interest in
such farm.
(b) [Reserved]
■ 15. Amend § 718.112 as follows:
■ a. Revise paragraph (a); and
■ b. In paragraph (b), introductory text,
remove the words ‘‘The county
committee shall’’ and add the words
‘‘FSA will’’ in their place.
The revision reads as follows:
§ 718.112
Redetermination.
(a) A redetermination of crop acreage,
appraised yield, or farm-stored
production for a farm may be initiated
by the county committee, State
committee, or Deputy Administrator at
any time. Redetermination may be
requested by a producer with an interest
in the farm if the producer pays the cost
of the redetermination. The request
must be submitted to FSA within 5
calendar days after the initial appraisal
of the yield of a crop, or before the farmstored production is removed from
storage. A redetermination will be
undertaken in the manner prescribed by
the Deputy Administrator. A
redetermination will be used in lieu of
any prior determination unless it is
determined by the representative of the
Deputy Administrator that there is good
cause not to do so.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 16. Revise the heading of subpart C to
read as follows:
Subpart C—Reconstitution of Farms,
Allotments, Quotas, and Base Acres
17. Revise § 718.201(a), (c)
introductory text, and (c)(1) to read as
follows:
■
§ 718.201
Farm constitution.
(a) In order to implement FSA
programs and monitor compliance with
regulations, FSA must have records on
what land is being farmed by a
particular producer. This is
accomplished by a determination of
what land or group of lands ‘‘constitute’’
an individual unit or farm. Land that
was properly constituted under prior
regulations will remain so constituted
until a reconstitution is required by
paragraph (c) of this section. The
constitution and identification of land
as a ‘‘farm’’ for the first time and the
subsequent reconstitution of a farm
made thereafter will include all land
operated by an individual entity or joint
operation as a single farming unit except
that it may not include:
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(1) Land under separate ownership
unless the owners agree in writing or
have previously agreed in writing and
the labor, equipment, accounting
system, and management are operated
in common by the operator, but separate
from other tracts;
(2) Land under a lease agreement of
less than 1 year duration;
(3) Federally owned land unless it is
rangeland on which no crops are
planted and on which there are no crop
base acres established;
(4) State-owned wildlife lands unless
the former owner has possession of the
land under a leasing agreement;
(5) Land constituting a farm that is
declared ineligible to be enrolled in a
program under the regulations
governing the program;
(6) For base acre crops, land located
in counties that are not contiguous
except where:
(i) Counties are divided by a river;
(ii) Counties do not share a common
border because of a correction line
adjustment; or
(iii) The land is within 20 miles, by
road, of other land that will be a part of
the farming unit;
(7) Land subject to either a default
election or a valid election made under
part 1412 of this title for each and all
covered commodities constituted with
land that has a different default election
or valid election for each and all
covered commodities, irrespective of
whether or not any of the land has base
acres; or
(8) Land subject to an election of
individual coverage under the
Agriculture Risk Coverage Program
(ARC–IC) in any State constituted with
any land in another State.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) A reconstitution of a farm either by
division or by combination is required
whenever:
(1) A change has occurred in the
operation of the land since the last
constitution or reconstitution and as a
result of such change the farm does not
meet the conditions for constitution of
a farm as specified in paragraph (a) of
this section, except that no
reconstitution will be made if the
county committee determines that the
primary purpose of the change in
operation is to establish eligibility to
transfer allotments subject to sale or
lease, or increase the amount of program
benefits received;
*
*
*
*
*
18. Revise § 718.206 to read as
follows:
■
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§ 718.206 Determining farms, tracts, and
base acres when reconstitution is made by
division.
(a) The methods for dividing farms,
tracts, and base acres are, in order of
precedence: Estate, designation by
landowner, cropland, and default. The
proper method will be determined on a
crop-by-crop basis.
(b) The estate method for
reconstitution is the pro-rata
distribution of base acres for a parent
farm among the heirs in settling an
estate. If the estate sells a tract of land
before the farm is divided among the
heirs, the base acres for that tract will
be determined according to paragraphs
(c) through (e) of this section.
(1) Base acres must be divided in
accordance with a will, but only if the
county committee determines that the
terms of the will are such that a division
can reasonably be made by the estate
method.
(2) If there is no will or the county
committee determines that the terms of
a will are not clear as to the division of
base acres, the base acres will be
apportioned in the manner agreed to in
writing by all interested heirs or
devisees who acquire an interest in the
property for which base acres have been
established. An agreement by the
administrator or executor will not be
accepted in lieu of an agreement by the
heirs or devisees.
(3) If base acres are not apportioned
as specified in paragraph (b)(1) or (2) of
this section, the base acres must be
divided as specified in paragraph (d) or
(e) of this section, as applicable.
(c) If the ownership of a tract of land
is transferred from a parent farm, the
transferring owner may request that the
county committee divide the base acres,
including historical acreage that has
been double cropped, between the
parent farm and the transferred tract, or
between the various tracts if the entire
farm is sold to two or more purchasers.
(1) If the county committee
determines that base acres cannot be
divided in the manner designated by the
owner because the owner’s designation
does not meet the requirements of
paragraph (c)(2) of this section, FSA will
notify the owner and permit the owner
to revise the designation to meet the
requirements. If the owner does not
furnish a revised designation of base
acres within a reasonable time after
such notification, or if the revised
designation does not meet the
requirements, the county committee
will divide the base acres in a pro-rata
manner in accordance with paragraph
(d) or (e) of this section.
(2) The landowner may designate a
manner in which base acres are divided
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by filing a signed written memorandum
of understanding of the designation of
base acres with the county committee
before the transfer of ownership of the
land. Both the transferring owner and
transferee must sign the written
designation of base acres.
(i) Within 30 days after a prescribed
form, letter, or notice of base acres is
issued by FSA following the
reconstitution of a farm but before any
subsequent transfer of ownership of the
land, all owners in existence at time of
the reconstitution request may seek a
different manner of base acre
designation by agreeing in writing by
executing a form CCC–517 or other
designated form.
(ii) The landowner must designate the
base acres that will be permanently
reduced when the sum of the base acres
exceeds the effective cropland plus
double-cropped acres for the farm.
(iii) When the part of the farm from
which the ownership is being
transferred was owned for less than 3
years, the designation by landowner
method of designating base acres cannot
be used unless the county committee
determines that the primary purpose of
the ownership transfer was other than to
retain or to sell base acres. In the
absence of such a determination, and if
the farm contains land that has been
owned for less than 3 years, the part of
the farm that has been owned for less
than 3 years will be considered as a
separate farm and the base acres must be
assigned to that farm in accordance with
paragraph (d) or (e) of this section. Such
apportionment will be made prior to
any designation of base acres with
respect to the part that has been owned
for 3 years or more.
(3) The designation by landowner
method may be applied, at the owner’s
request, to land owned by an Indian
Tribal Council that is leased to two or
more producers for the production of
any crop of a commodity for which base
acres have been established. If the land
is leased to two or more producers, an
Indian Tribal Council may request that
the county committee divide the base
acres between the applicable tracts in
the manner designated by the Council.
The use of this method is not subject to
the requirements specified in paragraph
(c)(2) of this section.
(d) The cropland method for
reconstitution is the pro-rata
distribution of base acres to the
resulting tracts in the same proportion
that each resulting tract bears to the
cropland for the parent tract. This
method of division will be used if
paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section do
not apply.
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(e) The default method for
reconstitution is the separation of tracts
from a farm with each tract maintaining
the base acres attributed to the tract
when the reconstitution is initiated.
(f) Farm program payment yields
calculated for the resulting farms of a
division may be increased or decreased
if the county committee determines the
method used did not provide an
equitable distribution considering
available land, cultural operations, and
changes in the type of farming
conducted on the farm. Any increase in
the farm program payment yield on a
resulting farm will be offset by a
corresponding decrease on another
resulting farm of the division.
■ 19. Revise § 718.207 to read as
follows:
§ 718.207 Determining base acres when
reconstitution is made by combination.
(a) When two or more farms or tracts
are combined for a year, that year’s base
acres, with respect to the combined farm
or tract, as required by applicable
program regulations, will not be greater
than the sum of the base acres for each
of the farms or tracts comprising the
combination, subject to the provisions
of § 718.204.
(b) [Reserved]
■ 20. Amend § 718.301 as follows:
■ a. In paragraph (a), add the
punctuation and words ‘‘, as amended’’
at the end of the first sentence;
■ b. Remove paragraph (b);
■ c. Redesignate paragraph (c) as
paragraph (b); and
■ d. Add paragraph (c).
The addition reads as follows:
§ 718.301
Applicability.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) The relief provisions of this part
cannot be used to extend a benefit or
assistance not otherwise available under
law or not otherwise available to others
who have satisfied or complied with
every eligibility or compliance
requirement of the provisions of law or
regulations governing the program
benefit or assistance.
§ 718.302
[Amended]
21. In § 718.302, remove the definition
of ‘‘Agricultural commodity’’.
■ 22. Revise § 718.303 to read as
follows:
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■
§ 718.303 Reliance on incorrect actions or
information.
(a) Notwithstanding any other law, if
an action or inaction by a participant is
based upon good faith reliance on the
action or advice of an authorized
representative of an FSA county or State
committee, and that action or inaction
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results in the participant’s
noncompliance with the requirements
of a covered program that is to the
detriment of the participant, then that
action or inaction still may be approved
by the Deputy Administrator as meeting
the requirements of the covered
program, and benefits may be extended
or payments made in as specified in
§ 718.305.
(b) This section applies only to a
participant who:
(1) Relied in good faith upon the
action of, or information provided by,
an FSA county or State committee or an
authorized representative of such
committee regarding a covered program;
(2) Acted, or failed to act, as a result
of the FSA action or information; and
(3) Was determined to be not in
compliance with the requirements of
that covered program.
(c) This section does not apply to
cases where the participant had
sufficient reason to know that the action
or information upon which they relied
was improper or erroneous or where the
participant acted in reliance on their
own misunderstanding or
misinterpretation of program provisions,
notices or information.
■ 23. Revise § 718.304 to read as
follows:
§ 718.304
Failure to fully comply.
(a) When the failure of a participant
to fully comply with the terms and
conditions of a covered program
precludes the providing of payments or
benefits, relief may be authorized as
specified in § 718.305 if the participant
made a good faith effort to comply fully
with the requirements of the covered
program.
(b) This section only applies to
participants who are determined by FSA
to have made a good faith effort to
comply fully with the terms and
conditions of the covered program and
have performed substantial actions
required for program eligibility.
■ 24. Amend § 718.306 as follows:
■ a. Revise paragraphs (a) introductory
text, (a)(2) and (4), and (b); and
■ b. Add paragraph (c).
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
§ 718.306
Finality.
(a) A determination by an FSA State
or county committee (or employee of
such committee) becomes final on an
application for benefits and binding 90
days from the date the application for
benefits has been filed, and supporting
documentation required to be supplied
by the producer as a condition for
eligibility for the particular program has
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been filed, unless any of the following
exceptions exist:
*
*
*
*
*
(2) The determination was in any way
based on erroneous, innocent, or
purposeful misrepresentation; false
statement; fraud; or willful misconduct
by or on behalf of the participant;
*
*
*
*
*
(4) The participant knew or had
reason to know that the determination
was erroneous.
(b) Should an erroneous
determination become final under the
provisions of this section, the erroneous
decision will be corrected according to
paragraph (c) of this section.
(1) If, as a result of the erroneous
decision, payment was issued, no action
will be taken by FSA, CCC, or a State
or county committee to recover
unearned payment amounts unless one
or more of the exceptions in paragraph
(a) of this section applies;
(2) If payment was not issued before
the error was discovered, the payment
will not be issued. FSA and CCC are
under no obligation to issue payments
or render decisions that are contrary to
law or regulation.
(c) FSA and CCC will modify and
correct determinations when errors are
discovered. As specified in paragraph
(b) of this section, FSA or CCC may be
precluded from recovering unearned
payments that issued as a result of the
erroneous decision. FSA or CCC’s
inability to recover or demand refunds
of unearned amounts as specified in
paragraph (b) will only be effective
through the year in which the error was
found and communicated to the
participant.
■ 25. Amend § 718.307 as follows:
■ a. In paragraph (a), introductory text,
remove the words ‘‘an SED’’ and add the
words ‘‘an SED, after consultation with
and approval from OGC but’’ in their
place, and remove the reference to
‘‘§§ 718.303 and 718.304’’ and add a
reference to ‘‘§§ 718.303 through
718.305’’ in its place;
■ b. In paragraph (a)(2), remove the
word ‘‘person’’ and add the word
‘‘participant’’ in its place;
■ c. In paragraph (a)(3), remove the
words ‘‘in that year’’;
■ d. In paragraph (a)(4), remove the
words ‘‘the SED (or the SED’s
predecessor)’’ and add the words ‘‘an
SED’’ in their place;
■ e. Revise paragraph (d); and
■ f. In paragraph (e), remove the last
sentence.
The revision reads as follows:
§ 718.307 Special relief approval authority
for State Executive Directors.
*
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(d) Relief may not be provided by the
SED under this section until a written
opinion or written acknowledgment is
obtained from OGC that grounds exist
for determination that requirements for
granting relief under § 718.303 or
§ 718.304 have been met, that the form
of relief is authorized under § 718.305,
and that the granting of the relief is
within the lawful authority of the SED.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 1410—CONSERVATION
RESERVE PROGRAM
26. The authority citation for 7 CFR
part 1410 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 714b and 714c; 16
U.S.C. 3801–3847.
27. Revise § 1410.1(f) and (j) to read as
follows:
Administration.
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*
*
*
*
*
(f) Notwithstanding other provisions
of this section, the suitability of land for
permanent vegetative or water cover,
factors for determining the likelihood of
improved water quality, and adequacy
of the planned practice to achieve
desired objectives will be determined by
the Natural Resource Conservation
Service (NRCS) or other sources
approved by the Deputy Administrator,
in accordance with the Field Office
Technical Guide (FOTG) of NRCS or
other guidelines deemed appropriate by
NRCS. In no case will such
determination compel the Deputy
Administrator to execute a contract that
the Deputy Administrator does not
believe will serve the purposes of CRP
established by this part. Any approved
technical authority will use CRP
guidelines established by the Deputy
Administrator.
*
*
*
*
*
(j) Except as agreed by CCC and the
participant together, the regulations in
this part apply to all contracts approved
after July 16, 2015.
■ 28. Amend § 1410.2 as follows:
■ a. In paragraphs (a) and (b),
introductory text, remove the words
‘‘shall be’’ each time they appear and
add the word ‘‘are’’ in their place,
■ b. Amend paragraph (b) as follows:
■ i. Add, in alphabetical order,
definitions for ‘‘Agricultural
Conservation Easement Program’’,
‘‘Common grazing practices’’, ‘‘Forb’’,
‘‘Grassland’’, ‘‘Improved rangeland or
pastureland’’, ‘‘Nesting season’’,
‘‘Pastureland’’, ‘‘Rangeland’’,
‘‘Shrubland’’, and ‘‘Veteran farm or
rancher’’;
■ ii. Revise the definitions for
‘‘Conservation plan’’, ‘‘Conserving use’’,
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§ 1410.2
Definitions.
*
■
§ 1410.1
‘‘Considered planted’’, ‘‘Erodibility
Index’’, ‘‘Highly Erodible Land’’,
‘‘Infeasible to farm’’, and ‘‘Local FSA
Office’’; and
■ iii. Remove the definitions of
‘‘Beginning farmer or rancher’’,
‘‘Cropped wetlands’’, ‘‘Farmed
wetlands’’, ‘‘Limited resource farmer or
rancher’’, ‘‘Merchantable timber’’,
‘‘Present value’’, ‘‘Private non-industrial
forest land’’, ‘‘Private non-industrial
forest landowner’’, ‘‘Water Bank
Program (WBP)’’, and ‘‘Wetlands farmed
under natural conditions’’.
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
Agricultural Conservation Easement
Program means the program that
provides for the establishment of
wetland easements on land under
subtitle H of Title XII of the Food
Security Act of 1985, as amended by
section 2301 of the Agricultural Act of
2014.
*
*
*
*
*
Common grazing practices means
grazing practices, including those
related to forage and seed production,
common to the area of the subject
ranching or farming operation. Included
are routine management activities
necessary to maintain the viability of
forage or browse resources that are
common to the locale of the subject
ranching or farming operation.
*
*
*
*
*
Conservation plan means a record of
the participant’s decisions and
supporting information for treatment of
a unit of land or water, and includes a
schedule of operations, activities, and
estimated expenditures needed to solve
identified natural resource problems by
devoting eligible land to permanent
vegetative cover, trees, water, or other
comparable measures. For grassland
signup enrollments where grazing is
occurring or is likely to occur, the
conservation plan will contain
provisions for common grazing practices
and related activities consistent with
achieving CRP purposes and
maintaining the health and viability of
grassland resources.
*
*
*
*
*
Conserving use means a use of land
that meets crop rotation requirements,
as specified by the Deputy
Administrator, for: Alfalfa, multi-year
grasses, and legumes planted during
2008 through 2013; for summer fallow
during 2008 through 2013; or for land
on which the contract expired during
the period 2008 through 2013 and on
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41999
which the grass cover required by the
CRP contract continues to be
maintained as though still enrolled.
Land that meets this definition of
‘‘conserving use’’ will be considered to
have been planted to an agricultural
commodity for the purposes of
eligibility specified in § 1410.6(a)(1).
Considered planted means land
devoted to a conserving use during the
crop year or during any of the 2 years
preceding the crop year if the contract
expired; cropland enrolled in CRP; or
land for which the producer received
insurance indemnity payment for
prevented planting.
*
*
*
*
*
Erodibility index (EI), as prescribed by
the Deputy Administrator, is an index
used to determine the inherent
erodibility from either from water or
wind, but not both combined, of a soil
in relation to the soil loss tolerance for
that soil.
*
*
*
*
*
Forb means any herbaceous plant
other than those in the grass family.
Grassland means land on which the
vegetation is dominated by grasses,
grass-like plants, shrubs, or forbs,
including shrubland, land that contains
forbs, pastureland, and rangeland, and
improved pastureland and rangeland, as
determined by the Deputy
Administrator.
Highly Erodible Land (HEL) means
land determined to have an EI equal to
or greater than 8 on the acreage offered,
as determined by the Deputy
Administrator.
Improved rangeland or pastureland
means grazing land permanently
producing naturalized forage species
that receives varying degrees of periodic
cultural treatment to enhance forage
quality and yields and is primarily
consumed by livestock.
Infeasible to farm means an area of
land that is too small or isolated to be
economically farmed, or is otherwise
suitable for such classification, as
determined by the Deputy
Administrator.
*
*
*
*
*
Local FSA office means the FSA
county office serving the area in which
the FSA records are located for the farm
or ranch.
*
*
*
*
*
Nesting season means the nesting
season for birds in the local area that are
economically significant, in significant
decline, or conserved in accordance
with Federal or State law, as determined
by the Deputy Administrator in
consultation with the State technical
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committee established as specified in
part 610 of this title.
*
*
*
*
*
Pastureland means grazing lands
comprised of introduced or
domesticated native forage species that
are used primarily for the production of
livestock. These lands receive periodic
renovation and cultural treatments, such
as tillage, aeration, fertilization,
mowing, and weed control, and may be
irrigated. This term does not include
lands that are in rotation with crops.
*
*
*
*
*
Rangeland means a land cover or use
category with a climax or potential plant
cover composed principally of native
grasses, grass-like plants, forbs, or
shrubs suitable for grazing and
browsing, and introduced forage species
that are managed like rangeland.
Rangeland includes lands re-vegetated
naturally or artificially when routine
management of that vegetation is
accomplished mainly through
manipulation of grazing. This term
includes areas where introduced hardy
and persistent grasses are planted and
such practices as deferred grazing,
burning, chaining, and rotational
grazing are used with little or no
chemicals or fertilizer being applied.
Grassland, savannas, many wetlands,
some deserts, and tundra are considered
to be rangeland. Certain communities of
low forbs and shrubs, such as mesquite,
chaparral, mountain shrub, and pinyon
juniper are also included as rangeland.
*
*
*
*
*
Shrubland means land where the
dominant plant species are shrubs,
which are plants that are persistent,
have woody stems, and a relatively low
growth habit.
*
*
*
*
*
Veteran farmer or rancher means a
farmer or rancher who has served in the
Armed Forces, as defined in 38 U.S.C.
101(10), and who either:
(1) Has not operated a farm or ranch;
or
(2) Has operated a farm or ranch for
not more than 10 years.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 29. Revise § 1410.4 to read as follows:
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES
§ 1410.4
Maximum county acreage.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph
(b) of this section and certain
shelterbelts, windbreaks, and wet and
saturated soils enrolled under ACEP, the
maximum cropland acreage that may be
placed in the CRP and the wetland
reserve easements of WRP and ACEP, as
appropriate, may not exceed 25 percent
of the total cropland in the county. No
more than 10 percent of the cropland in
a county may be subject, in the
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aggregate, to a CRP or wetland reserve
easement.
(b) The restrictions in paragraph (a) of
this section may be waived by the
Deputy Administrator as follows:
(1) If the Deputy Administrator
determines that such action would not
adversely affect the local economy of
the county and that operators in the
county are having difficulties complying
with conservation plans implemented
under part 12 of this title; or
(2) Cropland in a county enrolled
under provisions as specified in
§ 1410.30 or § 1410.50 may be excluded
from the restrictions in paragraph (a) of
this section, as determined by the
Deputy Administrator, provided that the
county government concurs.
(c) These restrictions on participation
are in addition to any other restriction
imposed by law.
§ 1410.5
[Amended]
30. Amend § 1410.5 as follows:
a. In paragraph (a)(2)(iii), remove the
words ‘‘are such that’’;
■ b. Remove paragraph (b);
■ c. Redesignate paragraph (c) as
paragraph (b); and
■ d. In newly redesignated paragraph
(b), remove the words ‘‘beginning or
socially disadvantaged’’ and add the
words ‘‘beginning, socially
disadvantaged, or veteran’’ in their
place.
■ 31. Amend § 1410.6 as follows:
■ a. Revise paragraph (a)(1);
■ b. In paragraph (a)(2)(i), remove the
words ‘‘in a CREP for similar water
quality purposes as determined by CCC’’
and add the words ‘‘under a
Conservation Reserve Enhancement
Program (CREP) agreement for similar
water quality purposes as determined by
the Deputy Administrator’’ in their
place;
■ c. Revise paragraph (a)(3);
■ d. Add paragraph (a)(4);
■ e. Remove paragraph (b)(2) and
redesignate paragraphs (b)(3) through
(10) as paragraphs (b)(2) through (9),
respectively;
■ f. Revise newly designated paragraphs
(b)(2) and (3);
■ g. In newly redesignated paragraph
(b)(4), add the words ‘‘as determined by
the Deputy Administrator’’ at the end;
■ h. In newly designated paragraph
(b)(5), remove the word ‘‘CCC’’ each
times it appears and add the words
‘‘Deputy Administrator’’ in its place;
■ i. Revise newly designated paragraph
(b)(6);
■ j. Remove paragraphs (b)(11) and (12)
and redesignate paragraph (b)(13) as
paragraph (b)(10);
■ k. In newly designated paragraph
(b)(10), remove the period at the end of
■
■
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the paragraph and add the words and
punctuation ‘‘; or’’ in its place;
■ l. Add paragraph (b)(11);
■ m. Revise paragraph (c); and
■ n. Add paragraph (d).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 1410.6
Eligible land.
(a) * * *
(1) Cropland that is subject to a
conservation plan and has been
annually planted or considered planted,
as defined in § 1410.2, to an agricultural
commodity in 4 of the 6 crop years from
2008 through 2013, as determined by
the Deputy Administrator, including
field margins that are incidental to the
planting of crops if:
(i) Including such field margins is
determined appropriate by the Deputy
Administrator; and
(ii) The field margins are physically
and legally capable of being planted in
a normal manner to an agricultural
commodity, as determined by the
Deputy Administrator; or
*
*
*
*
*
(3) Acreage enrolled in CRP during
the final year of the CRP contract,
provided the scheduled expiration date
of the current CRP contract is before the
effective date the new CRP contract, as
determined by the CCC; or
(4) Grassland as specified in
paragraph (c) of this section.
(b) * * *
(2) Be non-irrigated or irrigated
cropland that would facilitate a net
savings in groundwater or surface water
of the agricultural operation of the
producer, only as determined by, and
only when specifically authorized by,
the Deputy Administrator;
(3) Be land in a portion of a field not
enrolled in CRP, if either:
(i) More than 50 percent of the
remainder of the field is enrolled as a
buffer or filterstrip practice; or
(ii) More than 75 percent of the field
is enrolled as a conservation practice
other than a buffer or filterstrip; and
(iii) With respect to both paragraphs
(b)(3)(i) and (ii) of this section, the
remainder portion of the field is
determined to be infeasible to farm, as
defined in § 1410.2, and enrolled at an
annual payment rate not to exceed the
maximum annual calculated soil rental
rate, as determined by the Deputy
Administrator;
*
*
*
*
*
(6) Be non-irrigated or irrigated
cropland that produces or serves as the
recharge area for saline seeps, or acreage
that is functionally related to such
saline seeps, or where a rising water
table contributes to increased levels of
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salinity at or near the ground surface, as
determined by the Deputy
Administrator;
*
*
*
*
*
(11) Land that meets other continuous
signup land eligibility criteria, as
established by the Deputy
Administrator.
(c) For land to be eligible under a
grassland signup as specified in
§ 1410.30, the land must, as established
by the Deputy Administrator:
(1) Not be cropland or marginal
pastureland at the time of enrollment as
grassland. Land enrolled under an
expiring CRP contract may be eligible to
be re-enrolled as grassland during the
final year of the CRP contract, provided
the scheduled expiration date of the
current CRP contract is the day before
the effective date of the new CRP
contract, and suitable grass, legume,
forb or shrub covers predominate, and;
(2) Be needed and suitable for
enrollment as grassland following a
determination that such land:
(i) Contain forbs or shrubland,
including improved rangeland and
pastureland, for which grazing is the
predominant use;
(ii) Is located in an area historically
dominated by grassland;
(iii) Is able to provide habitat for
animal and plant populations of
significant ecological value if the land is
retained in its current use or restored to
a natural condition; and
(iv) Meets other grassland signup land
eligibility criteria as may be established
by the Deputy Administrator.
(d) Notwithstanding paragraphs (a),
(b), and (c) of this section, land will be
ineligible for enrollment if, as
determined by the Deputy
Administrator, the land is one of the
following:
(1) Federally-owned land, unless the
applicant has a lease for the contract
period;
(2) Land on which the use of the land
is either restricted through deed or other
restriction prior to enrollment in CRP
prohibiting the production of
agricultural commodities, or requires
any resource-conserving measures,
during any part of the proposed contract
term;
(3) Land already enrolled in the CRP,
unless authorized by § 1410.6(a)(3), as
determined by the Deputy
Administrator;
(4) Land for which Tribal, State, or
other locals laws, ordinances, or other
regulations require any resource
conserving or environmental protection
measures or practices and the owners or
operators of such land have been
notified in writing of such requirements;
or
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(5) Land that is required to be used,
or otherwise dedicated to mitigate
actions undertaken, or planned to be
undertaken, on other land, or to mitigate
other actions taken by landowners or
operators, as determined by the Deputy
Administrator.
■ 32. Revise § 1410.7 to read as follows:
§ 1410.7
Duration of contracts.
(a) Contracts with land devoted to
hardwood trees, shelterbelts,
windbreaks, or wildlife corridors will be
for a term of 10 years to 15 years, as
requested by the applicant.
(b) Other general and continuous
signup contracts under this part will be
for a term of 10 to 15 years, as
determined by the Deputy
Administrator.
(c) Grassland signup contracts will be
for a term of 15 years.
(d) All contracts will expire on
September 30 of the final calendar year
of the contract.
§ 1410.8
33. Amend § 1410.8 as follows:
■ a. In paragraph (b), remove the word
‘‘CCC’’ and add the words ‘‘Deputy
Administrator’’ in its place and remove
the number ‘‘33’’ and add the number
‘‘25’’ in its place;
■ b. In paragraph (d), introductory text,
remove the word ‘‘shall’’ and add the
word ‘‘will’’ in its place and add the
words ‘‘before 5 years’’ at the end of the
paragraph; and
■ c. In paragraph (d)(2), remove the
word ‘‘By’’ and add the words ‘‘As
determined appropriate by’’ in its place.
■
§ 1410.9
[Removed]
34. Remove § 1410.9.
35. Revise § 1410.10(a) to read as
follows:
■
■
§ 1410.10
Restoration of wetlands.
(a) An owner or operator who entered
into a CRP contract on land that is
suitable for restoration to wetlands or
that was restored to wetlands while
under such contract, may, if approved
by the Deputy Administrator, subject to
any restrictions as may be imposed by
law, apply to transfer such acres that are
devoted to an approved cover from CRP
to a wetland reserve easement under
WRP or ACEP, as appropriate.
Transferred acreage will be terminated
from CRP effective the day a WRP or
ACEP wetland reserve easement is filed.
Participants will receive a prorated CRP
annual payment for the part of the year
the acreage was enrolled in CRP as
specified in § 1410.42. Cost-share
payments or applicable incentive
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Fmt 4700
payments need not be refunded unless
specified by the Deputy Administrator.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 36. Amend § 1410.11 as follows:
■ a. In paragraph (b)(2), remove the
words ‘‘to receive flow from a row crop
agricultural drainage system’’ and add
the words ‘‘so as to receive surface and
subsurface flow from row crop
agricultural production’’ in their place;
and
■ b. Revise paragraph (d) introductory
text.
The revision reads as follows:
§ 1410.11
Sfmt 4700
Farmable Wetlands Program.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Total enrollment in CRP under
this section may not exceed 750,000
acres. In addition, the maximum size of
land enrolled under this section may
not exceed, as determined by the
Deputy Administrator:
*
*
*
*
*
§ 1410.12
■
[Amended]
42001
■
[Removed]
37. Remove § 1410.12.
38. Add § 1410.13 to read as follows:
§ 1410.13
Grassland enrollments.
(a) Land may be enrolled in CRP
under grassland signup as specified in
§§ 1410.6, 1410.30, and 1410.31.
Eligible grassland includes grassland
that was previously enrolled in the
Grassland Reserve Program, as specified
in part 1415 of this chapter.
(b) Grassland enrollments will
generally be administered under all the
provisions of this part, except where
specific provisions apply only to
grassland enrollments.
(c) Grassland enrolled in CRP is
eligible for the Transition Incentives
Program as specified in § 1410.64.
(d) Grassland previously enrolled in
rental contracts under terms of the
Grassland Reserve Program specified in
part 1415 of this chapter will continue
to be subject to the provisions of those
contracts.
■ 39. Amend § 1410.22 as follows:
■ a. Revise paragraphs (a) and (b);
■ b. In paragraph (c), remove the word
‘‘shall’’ and add the words ‘‘or forest
stewardship plan must’’ in its place; and
■ c. Revise paragraph (f).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 1410.22
CRP conservation plan.
(a) The producer must obtain a CRP
conservation plan that complies with
CCC guidelines and is approved by the
conservation district for the land to be
entered in CRP. If the conservation
district declines to review the CRP
conservation plan, or disapproves the
conservation plan, such approval may
be waived by the Deputy Administrator.
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(b) The practices and management
activities included in the CRP
conservation plan and agreed to by the
participant must cost-effectively reduce
erosion necessary to maintain the
productive capability of the soil,
improve water quality, protect wildlife
or wetlands, protect a public well head,
improve grassland, or achieve other
environmental benefits as applicable.
The producer must undertake
management activities on the land as
needed throughout the term of the CRP
contract to implement the conservation
plan.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) For general signup and continuous
signup contracts except grasslands, midcontract management must be
conducted to implement management
activities, such as disking and
prescribed burning according to an
approved conservation plan, as part of
the CRP contractual obligation on all
contracts entered into under general
signup and continuous signup, as
specified in § 1410.30.
§ 1410.23
[Amended]
40. Amend § 1410.23 as follows:
a. In paragraph (a)(1), remove the
words ‘‘and permanent wildlife habitat’’
and add the words ‘‘permanent wildlife
habitat, and grassland improvements’’
in their place;
■ b. In paragraph (a)(3), remove the
words ‘‘the program’’ and add the word
‘‘CRP’’ in their place; and
■ c. In paragraph (b), remove the word
‘‘aquiculture’’ and add the word
‘‘aquaculture’’ in its place.
■ 41. Revise § 1410.30 to read as
follows:
■
■
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES
§ 1410.30
Signup.
(a) Offers for contracts may be
submitted only during signup periods as
announced periodically by the Deputy
Administrator, except that CCC may
hold a continuous signup for land to be
devoted to particular uses, as CCC
deems necessary. Generally, continuous
signup is limited to those offers that
provide appropriate environmental
benefits, as determined by the Deputy
Administrator, or that would otherwise
rank highly under § 1410.31(b) and
include high priority practices such as
filter strips, riparian buffers,
shelterbelts, field windbreaks, living
snow fences, grass waterways, shallow
water areas for wildlife, salt-tolerant
vegetation, and practices to benefit
certain approved public wellhead
protection areas.
(b) Grassland signups will be
conducted year-round with periodic
ranking periods, as determined by the
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Jkt 235001
Deputy Administrator. The eligible
offers that rank the highest according to
the environmental benefits ranking plan
established under § 1410.31(e), as
determined by the Deputy
Administrator, will be accepted,
provided sufficient acres and funds are
available.
■ 42. Amend § 1410.31 as follows:
■ a. In paragraphs (a), (b) introductory
text, (b)(7), and (d) introductory text and
(d)(3), remove the words ‘‘the program’’
each time they appear and add the word
‘‘CRP’’ in their place; and
■ b. Add paragraphs (e) and (f).
The additions read as follows:
§ 1410.31
Acceptability of offers.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Grassland signup offers will be
periodically batched, evaluated, and
ranked on a competitive basis in which
the offers selected will be those where
the greatest environmental benefits
relative to cost are generated, as
determined by the Deputy
Administrator, and further provided
that:
(1) The offered land is eligible under
§§ 1410.4 and 1410.6, as determined by
the Deputy Administrator;
(2) The producer is eligible under
§ 1410.5;
(3) The producer accepts either the
maximum payment rate the Deputy
Administrator is willing to offer to
enroll the acreage in CRP, or a lesser
rate; and
(4) The offer ranks above the
minimum ranking level applicable to
each ranking period needed for offer
acceptance, as determined by the
Deputy Administrator.
(5) Notwithstanding the preceding,
acceptance or rejection of any grassland
signup offers will be in the sole
discretion of the Deputy Administrator
and offers may be rejected for any
reason as determined necessary and
appropriate to accomplish the goals of
CRP.
(f) In ranking and evaluating grassland
signup offers, different factors, as
determined by the Deputy
Administrator, may be considered from
time to time for priority purposes to
accomplish the goals of CRP. Such
factors may include, but are not limited
to:
(1) Existence of expiring CRP or
Grassland Reserve Program land;
(2) Existing grassland;
(3) Multi-species cover existence and
predominance of native species;
(4) Livestock grazing operation;
(5) State priority enrollment criteria
(non-land based) and State Focus Area
(land-based) determined in consultation
with State Technical Committee;
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(6) Whether the applicant is an
eligible beginning, veteran, or socially
disadvantaged farmer or rancher; and
(7) Other factors as determined by the
Deputy Administrator.
■ 43. Amend § 1410.32 by revising
paragraphs (c)(2), (f)(7), (g), and (h) to
read as follows:
§ 1410.32
CRP contracts.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(2) An offer to enroll land in CRP will
be irrevocable for such period as is
determined and announced by the
Deputy Administrator. The producer
will be liable to CCC for liquidated
damages if the applicant revokes an
offer during the period in which the
offer is irrevocable, as determined by
the Deputy Administrator. The Deputy
Administrator may waive payment of
such liquidated damages, if the Deputy
Administrator determines that the
assessment of such damages, in a
particular case, is not in the best interest
of CCC and CRP.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(7) The Deputy Administrator
determines that such a termination is
needed in the public interest, or is
otherwise necessary and appropriate to
further the goals of CRP.
(g) Except as allowed and approved
by the Deputy Administrator, where the
new owner of land enrolled in CRP is
a Federal agency that agrees to abide by
the terms and conditions of the
terminated contract, the participant in a
contract that has been terminated must
refund all or part of the payments made
with respect to the contract plus
interest, as determined by the Deputy
Administrator, and must pay liquidated
damages as provided for in the contract.
The Deputy Administrator may permit
the amount to be repaid to be reduced
to the extent that such a reduction will
not impair the purposes of CRP. Further,
a refund of all payments need not be
required from a participant who is
otherwise in full compliance with the
CRP contract when the land is
purchased by or for the United States,
as determined by the Deputy
Administrator.
(h) During the final year of the CRP
contract’s term, the participants on a
CRP contract will not be in violation of
the terms of the contract if both the
following are met:
(1) During the final year of the
contract the land is enrolled in the
Conservation Stewardship Program, and
such enrollment is reported promptly to
the Deputy Administrator; and
(2) The land management and
conservation practice measures that are
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conducted under the Conservation
Stewardship Program are not in
violation of the approved CRP
conservation plan and are otherwise
consistent with this part, as determined
by the Deputy Administrator.
■ 44. Amend § 1410.33 as follows:
■ a. In paragraph (a)(4), remove the
words ‘‘beginning or socially
disadvantaged’’ and add the words
‘‘beginning, socially disadvantaged, or
veteran’’ in their place; and
■ b. Add paragraphs (e) and (f).
The additions read as follows:
§ 1410.33
Contract modifications.
*
*
*
*
(e) CCC may terminate or modify a
CRP contract when the land is
transferred into WRP, ACEP, or other
Federal or State programs, as
determined by the Deputy
Administrator.
(1) For contracts terminated or
modified for enrollment in other Federal
or State programs, participants will not
be required to repay CRP payments or
pay interest and liquidated damages to
CCC, as otherwise required for contract
violations under § 1410.52, unless
determined otherwise by the Deputy
Administrator, with the following
exception:
(2) Participants will be required to
repay CRP Signing Incentive Payments
and Practice Incentive Payments if land
containing a wetland reserve easement
is enrolled in ACEP.
(f) During the final year of the CRP
contract’s term, CCC will allow an
owner or operator to make conservation
and land improvements (resource
conserving uses) for economic use that
facilitate maintaining protection of
enrolled land after expiration of the
contract, but only under the following
conditions:
(1) All provisions are identified in an
approved CRP conservation plan;
(2) Land improved in accordance with
paragraph (f) of this section will not be
eligible to be re-enrolled in CRP for 5
years after the date of the expiration or
termination of the contract; and
(3) CCC will reduce the final annual
rental payment otherwise payable under
the contract by an amount
commensurate with the economic value
of the resource conserving use activity
carried out.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES
*
§ 1410.40
[Amended]
45. Amend § 1410.40 as follows:
a. In paragraph (a), remove the word
‘‘shall’’ and add the word ‘‘will’’ in its
place and remove the word ‘‘CCC’’ and
add the words ‘‘the Deputy
Administrator’’ in its place;
■
■
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b. In paragraph (d)(1), remove the
words ‘‘wellheads; and’’ and add the
words ‘‘wellheads, grassland
improvement, or other conservation
measures, as determined by the Deputy
Administrator; and’’ in their place; and
■ c. In paragraphs (e) and (f), remove the
word ‘‘shall’’ each time it appears and
add the word ‘‘will’’ in its place.
■ 46. Amend § 1410.41 by revising
paragraph (a) to read as follows:
■
§ 1410.41 Levels and rates for cost share
payments.
(a) As determined by the Deputy
Administrator, CCC will not pay more
than 50 percent of the actual or average
cost of establishing eligible practices
specified in the conservation plan. CCC
may allow cost-share payments for
maintenance costs, consistent with the
provisions of § 1410.40 and the Deputy
Administrator may determine the period
and amount of such cost-share
payments.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 47. Amend § 1410.42 as follows:
■ a. Revise paragraphs (b) and (f)
introductory text;
■ b. In paragraphs (c) and (e), remove
the word ‘‘shall’’ each time it appears
and add the word ‘‘will’’ in its place;
and
■ c. Add paragraph (h).
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
§ 1410.42
Annual rental payments.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Annual rental payments per acre
include a payment based on a weighted
average soil rental rate, marginal
pastureland rental rate, or grassland
rate, as appropriate, and an incentive
payment as a portion of the annual
payment for certain practices, as
determined by the Deputy
Administrator. In addition, a national
maximum annual rental payment rate
may also be established by the Deputy
Administrator for certain categories of
CRP offers and contracts.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) The Deputy Administrator will
prepare a schedule for each county that
shows the maximum soil rental rate
CCC may pay which may be
supplemented to reflect special contract
requirements. As determined by the
Deputy Administrator, such schedule
will be calculated for cropland based on
the relative productivity of soils within
the county using NRCS data and local
FSA average cash rental estimates. For
marginal pastureland, rental rates will
be based on estimates of the prevailing
rental values of marginal pastureland in
riparian areas. Grassland rental rates
will be based on not more than 75
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percent of the estimated grazing value of
the land. The schedule will be available
in the local FSA office and, as
determined by the Deputy
Administrator, will indicate, when
appropriate, that:
*
*
*
*
*
(h) CCC may make tree thinning
incentive payments to owners and
operators of enrolled land in an amount
sufficient to encourage proper tree
thinning and other practices to improve
the condition of resources, promote
forest management, or enhance wildlife
habitat on the land, as determined by
the Deputy Administrator. Incentive
payments for tree thinning and other
tree stand practices will:
(1) Not exceed 150 percent of the total
cost of the practice, as determined by
the Deputy Administrator; and
(2) Only be available for practices
outlined in the tree planting plan under
the approved CRP conservation plan.
■ 48. Revise § 1410.44 to read as
follows:
§ 1410.44
Average adjusted gross income.
(a) Benefits under this part will not be
available to persons or legal entities
whose average adjusted gross income
exceeds $900,000 for the 3 taxable years
preceding the most immediately
preceding complete taxable year, or who
otherwise do not meet the AGI
requirements specified in part 1400 of
this chapter.
(b) [Reserved]
■ 49. Amend § 1410.52 as follows:
■ a. In paragraph (a)(2)(i), add a comma
after the word ‘‘contract’’, and remove
the word ‘‘together’’; and
■ b. Revise paragraph (c).
The revision reads as follows:
§ 1410.52
Violations.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) The Deputy Administrator may
reduce a demand for a refund under this
section to the extent the Deputy
Administrator determines that such
relief would be appropriate and will not
deter the accomplishment of the goals of
CRP.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 50. Revise § 1410.53 to read as
follows:
§ 1410.53 Executed CRP contract not in
conformity with the regulations.
(a) If, after a CRP contract is approved
by CCC, it is discovered that such CRP
contract is found to contain material
errors of fact or is not in conformity
with this part, these regulations will
prevail, and the Deputy Administrator
may, at his or her sole discretion,
terminate or modify the CRP contract,
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effective immediately or at a later date
as the Deputy Administrator determines
appropriate.
(b) [Reserved]
■ 51. Amend § 1410.62 by revising
paragraph (g) to read as follows:
§ 1410.62
Miscellaneous.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) As determined by the Deputy
Administrator, incentives may be
authorized to foster opportunities for
Indian tribes and beginning, limited
resource, socially disadvantaged, and
veteran farmers and ranchers, and to
enhance long-term environmental goals.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 52. Amend § 1410.63 as follows:
■ a. In paragraph (b)(2), add the word
‘‘and’’ at the end;
■ b. In paragraph (b)(3), remove the
words ‘‘plan; and’’ and add the word
and punctuation ‘‘plan.’’ in their place;
■ c. Remove paragraph (b)(4);
■ d. Revise paragraph (c); and
■ e. Add paragraphs (d) and (e).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 1410.63
Permissive uses.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES
*
*
*
*
*
(c) No barrier fencing or boundary
limitations that prohibit wildlife access
to or from the CRP acreage are allowed
as part of any permissive use, unless
required by State law.
(d) The following activities may be
permitted, as determined by the Deputy
Administrator, on CRP enrolled land
insofar as they are consistent with the
conservation purposes of CRP including
timing, frequency, and duration as
provided in an approved CRP
conservation plan that identifies
appropriate vegetative management
requirements:
(1) Managed harvesting and other
commercial uses, including managed
harvesting of biomass, but only in
exchange for a payment reduction of not
less than 25 percent as determined by
the Deputy Administrator, and only in
accordance with vegetative management
requirements, harvest period, and a
harvest frequency developed in
coordination with the State Technical
committee and timing of harvesting
activities outside the nesting season at
least every 5 years, but not more than
once every 3 years, and only as
identified in an approved CRP
conservation plan;
(2) Routine grazing in accordance
with appropriate vegetative
management requirements and stocking
rates for the land, grazing frequency,
and grazing periods outside the nesting
season developed in coordination with
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16:14 Jul 15, 2015
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the State Technical Committee, of not
more than once every 2 years, and only
as identified in an approved CRP
conservation plan. Routine grazing will
only be permitted in exchange for a
payment reduction of not less than 25
percent, as determined by the Deputy
Administrator, except that a beginning
farmer or rancher may conduct routine
grazing without payment reduction;
(3) Prescribed grazing for the control
of invasive species in accordance with
appropriate vegetative management
requirements and stocking rates for the
land, grazing frequency, and grazing
periods outside the nesting season, and
only as identified in an approved CRP
conservation plan. Prescribed grazing
will only be permitted in exchange for
a payment reduction of not less than 25
percent, as determined by the Deputy
Administrator, except that a beginning
farmer or rancher may conduct
prescribed grazing by without payment
reduction;
(4) Harvesting, grazing, or other
commercial use of the forage on the land
in response to a drought, flooding, or
other emergency, consistent with an
approved CRP conservation plan;
(5) Wind turbines on CRP land
installed in numbers and locations as
determined appropriate by the Deputy
Administrator considering the location,
size, and other physical characteristics
of the land, the extent to which the land
contains threatened or endangered
wildlife and wildlife habitat, and the
purposes of CRP, but only in exchange
for a payment reduction as determined
by the Deputy Administrator;
(6) Spot grazing, if necessary for
control of weed infestation, and not to
exceed a 30-day period according to an
approved conservation plan, but only in
exchange for a payment reduction as
determined by the Deputy
Administrator;
(7) Intermittent and seasonal use of
vegetative buffer practices incidental to
agricultural production on lands
adjacent to the buffer such that the
permitted use does not destroy the
permanent vegetative cover, as
determined by the Deputy
Administrator, only as identified in an
approved CRP conservation plan, and in
exchange for a payment reduction of not
less than 25 percent;
(8) The sale of carbon, water quality,
or environmental credits, as determined
appropriate by CCC;
(9) When enrolled land is established
to tree planting practices or otherwise
converted to forestry uses, customary
forestry activities are authorized such
as, but not limited to, thinning and
prescribed burning, in a manner
consistent with the participant’s
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conservation plan. Such activities must
be designed to promote forest health,
enhance wildlife habitat, and improve
the general resource conditions of
enrolled lands. An incentive payment is
authorized as specified in § 1410.42(h).
(e) For land enrolled under a
grassland signup type as authorized by
§ 1410.30(b) only, the following
activities may also be permitted, as
determined by the Deputy
Administrator:
(1) Common grazing practices,
including maintenance and necessary
cultural practices, on the land in a
manner that is consistent with
maintaining the viability of grassland,
forb, and shrub species appropriate to
the locality;
(2) Haying, mowing, or harvesting for
seed production subject to appropriate
restrictions during the nesting season;
(3) Fire pre-suppression, fire-related
rehabilitation, and construction of
firebreaks;
(4) Grazing related activities, such as
fencing and livestock watering facilities;
and
(5) Other activities as determined by
the Deputy Administrator, when the
manner, number, intensity, location,
operation, and other features associated
with the activity will not adversely
affect the grassland resources or related
conservation values protected under a
grassland CRP contract.
■ 53. Amend § 1410.64 as follows:
■ a. Revise paragraphs (a) introductory
text, (a)(2), and (a)(6);
■ b. In paragraphs (a)(4), (a)(5), (b)
introductory text and (b)(1), (c), (d), and
(e), remove the words ‘‘beginning or’’
each time they appear and add the
words ‘‘beginning, veteran, or’’ in their
place;
■ a. Revise paragraph (f); and
■ c. Remove paragraph (g).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 1410.64
Transition Incentives Program.
(a) To be eligible for the Transition
Incentives Program, the retired or
retiring owner or operator must:
*
*
*
*
*
(2) Sell or lease (under a qualifying
irrevocable lease of at least 5 years in
length) expiring CRP land to a
beginning, veteran, or socially
disadvantaged farmer or rancher who
will return some or all of the land to
production using sustainable grazing or
crop production methods;
*
*
*
*
*
(6) Allow the beginning, veteran, or
socially disadvantaged farmer or
rancher to install conservation practices
and initiate land improvements,
including preparing to plant a crop, that
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 136 / Thursday, July 16, 2015 / Rules and Regulations
are consistent with the conservation
plan during the last year of the contract.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) The eligible retired or retiring
owner or operator and the eligible
beginning, veteran, or socially
disadvantaged farmer or rancher must
agree to be jointly and severally
responsible for complying with both the
provisions of the Transition Incentives
Program agreement and the provisions
of this part, and must also agree to be
jointly and severally responsible for any
payment adjustments that may result
from violations of the terms or
conditions of the Transition Incentives
Program agreement or this part.
§§ 1410.1, 1410.2, 1410.3, 1410.6, 1410.8,
1410.10, 1410.11, 1410.22, 1410.32, 1410.33,
1410.40, 1410.41, 1410.43, 1410.50, 1410.51,
1410.60, 1410.61, and 1410.62 [Amended]
54. In addition to the amendments set
forth above, in 7 CFR part 1410, remove
the word ‘‘CCC’’ each time it appears
and add the words ‘‘the Deputy
Administrator’’ in its place, in the
following places:
■ a. In § 1410.1(g), (h), and (i);
■ b. In § 1410.2, in the definitions of
‘‘Agricultural commodity’’,
‘‘Commercial pond-raised aquaculture
facility’’, ‘‘Field’’, ‘‘Field windbreak,
shelterbelt, and/or living snowfence’’,
‘‘Offer’’, ‘‘Offeror’’, ‘‘Operator’’,
‘‘Perennial crop’’, and ‘‘Technical
assistance’’;
■ c. In § 1410.3(b) and (d);
■ d. In § 1410.6(a)(2);
■ e. In § 1410.8(a);
■ f. In § 1410.10(b);
■ g. In § 1410.11(b) introductory text,
(b)(1), (e), and (g);
■ h. In § 1410.22(e);
■ i. In § 1410.32(b)(3), (d) introductory
text, and (f)(2);
■ j. In § 1410.33(d);
■ k. In § 1410.40(b) and (g);
■ l. In § 1410.41(b) and (c);
■ m. In § 1410.43;
■ n. In § 1410.50(a);
■ o. In § 1410.51(a)(1) and (c);
■ p. In § 1410.60(a);
■ q. In § 1410.61; and
■ r. In § 1410.62(h).
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES
■
Val Dolcini,
Administrator, Farm Service Agency, and
Executive Vice President, Commodity Credit
Corporation.
[FR Doc. 2015–17317 Filed 7–15–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–05–P
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Jkt 235001
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 39
[Docket No. FAA–2015–0086; Directorate
Identifier 2014–NM–191–AD; Amendment
39–18206; AD 2015–14–08]
RIN 2120–AA64
Airworthiness Directives; Airbus
Airplanes
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
We are adopting a new
airworthiness directive (AD) for all
Airbus Model A310–203 airplanes. This
AD is intended to complete certain
mandated programs intended to support
the airplane reaching its limit of validity
(LOV) of the engineering data that
support the established structural
maintenance program. This AD was
prompted by reports that side link clevis
bolts of the front engine mount do not
meet the design service goal (DSG)
requirements on airplanes equipped
with General Electric Company CF6–
80A3 engines. This AD requires
repetitive replacement of all side link
clevis engine mount bolts. We are
issuing this AD to prevent failure of the
front engine mount, and consequent
possible departure of the engine.
DATES: This AD becomes effective
August 20, 2015.
The Director of the Federal Register
approved the incorporation by reference
of a certain publication listed in this AD
as of August 20, 2015.
ADDRESSES: You may examine the AD
docket on the Internet at https://
www.regulations.gov/
#!docketDetail;D=FAA-2015-0086or in
person at the Docket Management
Facility, U.S. Department of
Transportation, Docket Operations, M–
30, West Building Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,
Washington, DC.
For service information identified in
this AD, contact Airbus SAS,
Airworthiness Office—EAW, 1 Rond
Point Maurice Bellonte, 31707 Blagnac
Cedex, France; telephone: +33 5 61 93
36 96; fax: +33 5 61 93 44 51; email:
account.airworth-eas@airbus.com;
Internet https://www.airbus.com. You
may view this referenced service
information at the FAA, Transport
Airplane Directorate, 1601 Lind Avenue
SW., Renton, WA. It is also available on
the Internet at https://
www.regulations.gov by searching for
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
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42005
and locating Docket No. FAA–2015–
0086.
Dan
Rodina, Aerospace Engineer,
International Branch, ANM–116,
Transport Airplane Directorate, FAA,
1601 Lind Avenue SW., Renton, WA
98057–3356; telephone: 425–227–2125;
fax: 425–227–1149.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Discussion
We issued a notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPRM) to amend 14 CFR
part 39 by adding an AD that would
apply to all Airbus Model A310–203
airplanes. The NPRM published in the
Federal Register on February 18, 2015
(80 FR 8575). The NPRM is intended to
complete certain mandated programs
intended to support the airplane
reaching its limit of validity (LOV) of
the engineering data that support the
established structural maintenance
program. The NPRM was prompted by
reports that side link clevis bolts of the
front engine mount do not meet the DSG
requirements on airplanes equipped
with General Electric Company CF6–
80A3 engines. The NPRM proposed to
require repetitive replacement of all side
link clevis engine mount bolts. We are
issuing this AD to prevent failure of the
front engine mount, and consequent
possible departure of the engine.
The European Aviation Safety Agency
(EASA), which is the Technical Agent
for the Member States of the European
Union, has issued EASA AD 2014–0191,
dated August 29, 2014 (referred to after
this as the Mandatory Continuing
Airworthiness Information, or ‘‘the
MCAI’’), to correct an unsafe condition
for all Airbus Model A310–203
airplanes. The MCAI states:
During fatigue analysis performed in the
scope of the Extended Service Goal, taking
into account the certification loads and the
new lift-off loads, Airbus determined that
side link clevis engine mount bolts do not
meet the Design Service Goal (DSG)
requirements on aeroplanes equipped with
CF6–80A3 engines.
This condition, if not corrected, could lead
to failure of the front engine mount, possibly
resulting in-flight separation of the engine
from the aeroplane.
To address this potential unsafe condition,
Airbus issued Service Bulletin (SB) A310–
71–2038 to introduce a life limit on the side
link clevis engine mount bolts.
For the reason described above, this
[EASA] AD requires implementation of the
new life limit and replacement of all side
link clevis engine mount bolts that have
exceeded the new limit.
You may examine the MCAI in the
AD docket on the Internet at https://
www.regulations.gov/
E:\FR\FM\16JYR1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 136 (Thursday, July 16, 2015)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 41987-42005]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-17317]
========================================================================
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. 80, No. 136 / Thursday, July 16, 2015 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 41987]]
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Farm Service Agency
7 CFR Part 718
Commodity Credit Corporation
7 CFR Part 1410
RIN 0560-AI30
Conservation Reserve Program
AGENCY: Commodity Credit Corporation and Farm Service Agency, USDA.
ACTION: Interim rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This rule amends the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP)
regulations to implement provisions of the Agricultural Act of 2014
(the 2014 Farm Bill). This rule specifies eligibility requirements for
enrollment of grassland in CRP and adds references to veteran farmers
and ranchers to the provisions for Transition Incentives Program
contracts, among other changes. The provisions in this rule for
eligible land primarily apply to new CRP offers and contracts. For
existing contracts, this rule provides additional voluntary options for
permissive uses, early terminations, conservation and land
improvements, and incentive payments for tree thinning. This rule also
makes conforming changes to provisions applicable to multiple Farm
Service Agency (FSA) and Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) programs,
which include CRP, administered by FSA, including acreage report
requirements, compliance monitoring, and equitable relief provisions.
DATES: Effective Date: This rule is effective July 16, 2015.
Comment Date: We will consider comments that we receive by
September 14, 2015.
ADDRESSES: We invite you to submit comments on this interim rule. In
your comment, please specify RIN 0560-AI30 and include the volume,
date, and page number of this issue of the Federal Register. You may
submit comments by any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the online instructions for submitting
comments.
Mail, Hand Delivery, or Courier: Director, Conservation
and Environmental Programs Division (CEPD), U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) FSA CEPD, Mail Stop 0513, Room 4709-S, 1400
Independence Ave. SW., Washington, DC 20250-0513.
All written comments will be available for inspection online at
www.regulations.gov and at the mail address listed above between 8:00
a.m. and 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, except holidays. A copy of
this interim rule is available through the FSA home page at https://www.fsa.usda.gov/.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Beverly J. Preston, CRP Program
Manager, telephone: (202) 720-9563. Persons with disabilities who
require alternative means for communication should contact the USDA
Target Center at 202-720-2600 (voice).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Overview of This Rule
This rule amends CRP regulations in 7 CFR part 1410 to implement
changes required by the 2014 Farm Bill (Pub. L. 113-79) and makes
additional discretionary changes that are needed to clarify eligibility
requirements and terms. It also makes discretionary and technical
changes to 7 CFR part 718 that are relevant to CRP implementation. This
document first provides background information on CRP, then discusses
the changes to the CRP regulations, followed by a discussion of the
changes to the part 718 regulations.
CRP Background and CRP Signups
The purpose of CRP is to cost-effectively assist producers in
conserving and improving soil, water, and wildlife, restoring wetlands,
improving other natural resources, and addressing issues raised by
State, regional, and national conservation initiatives by converting
environmentally sensitive cropland and marginal pastureland from the
production of agricultural commodities to a long-term vegetative cover,
or to improve conditions of grassland. CRP is administered by FSA on
behalf of CCC. Since its inception in 1985, CRP has proven to be one of
the largest and most successful conservation programs in USDA history.
In exchange for annual rental payments, participating farmers and
ranchers agree to remove environmentally sensitive land from
agricultural production and establish conservation covers comprised of
grasses, legumes, forbs, shrubs and tree species that will improve
environmental health by preventing soil erosion, improving air and
water quality, and enhancing wildlife habitat. In addition,
participants with suitable land may restore wetlands and establish
shallow water areas for wildlife. Enrollment of eligible grassland in
CRP will result in adoption of sustainable grazing practices and
preservation of wildlife habitat. Participants also receive cost-share
payments and other one-time incentive payments for certain practices to
establish, maintain, and manage the conservation covers throughout 10
to 15 year CRP contracts. A wide range of conservation practices may be
enrolled under CRP, including but not limited to, introduced or native
grasses and legumes, hardwood trees, wildlife habitat, grass waterways,
filter strips, riparian buffers, wetlands, rare and declining habitat,
upland bird habitat, longleaf pine, duck nesting habitat, and
pollinator habitat.
There are three major types of CRP signups: general, continuous,
and grassland. Each of the three types has specific enrollment
provisions, as described below. The grassland type is a new type added
by the 2014 Farm Bill. For all signups, potential participants must
submit an offer for enrollment at the local FSA county office or USDA
service center.
Enrollment through general signup is based on a competitive offer
process during designated signup periods. The general signup occurs
when the Secretary of Agriculture announces USDA will accept general
signup offers for enrollment. Offers from potential program
participants are ranked against each other at the national level.
Ranking is based on the environmental benefits expected to result from
the proposed conservation practices and expected costs. Each offer is
assigned an Environmental Benefit Index (EBI) score depending on
ranking factors designed to reflect the expected environmental
[[Page 41988]]
benefits and costs. The EBI ranking system is specified in detail in
the CRP handbook. These EBI factors include wildlife habitat benefits,
water quality benefits, farm benefits due to reduced erosion, air
quality benefits, benefits that last beyond the contract period, per
acre expected costs, and local preference factors for certain benefits.
In a general signup, the offer process is competitive and not all
offers will necessarily rank high enough to be selected for CRP.
For practices and land with especially high environmental value,
enrollment through continuous signup is available year-round without
ranking periods. The continuous signup is focused on environmentally
sensitive land and offers are not ranked against each other. Land
eligible for continuous signup includes, but is not limited to,
agricultural land with a high erodibility index; land in riparian areas
that border rivers, streams, and lakes; land suitable for wetland
restoration; and certain land to be dedicated to other specialized
conservation measures. Subject to the acreage caps allocated to States,
all continuous signup offers that meet the eligibility requirements are
accepted.
Enrollment through the new grassland signup authorized by the 2014
Farm Bill will be administered on a separate continuous signup basis,
and offers will be evaluated periodically and ranked. For grassland
signup, this rule specifies the applicable new categories of eligible
land and new grassland contract provisions. Eligible grassland include
land that contain forbs or shrubland (including improved rangeland and
pastureland) for which grazing is the predominant use. Up to 2 million
acres may be enrolled in CRP as grassland.
This rule does not change the basic administrative structure and
nature of CRP.
Overview of Changes to CRP Regulations
The 2014 Farm Bill reduced the CRP acreage enrollment cap and made
several changes to CRP. For example, it mandated that non-easement
functions of the repealed Grassland Reserve Program be carried out
under CRP, with enrollment of up to 2 million acres authorized. These
enrollments count against the CRP acreage cap. In addition, the 2014
Farm Bill mandates changes to routine, prescribed, and emergency
grazing, managed harvesting frequency, tree thinning payments, and
other provisions.
This rule implements the changes to CRP required by the 2014 Farm
Bill. These changes include revised permissive use provisions for
emergency harvesting and grazing, and other commercial uses on CRP
land. This rule also establishes a penalty-free early CRP contract
termination opportunity in fiscal year (FY) 2015 for contracts that
have been in effect for at least 5 years and meet certain environmental
criteria. It specifies that CRP participants can make certain
conservation and land improvements for economic use in the final year
of the CRP contract that facilitate protection of enrolled land after
contract expiration, and establishes a new type of incentive payment to
encourage participants to perform tree thinning and related measures on
CRP land. As discussed earlier, it also adds references to veteran
farmers and ranchers to the Transition Incentives Program, and includes
provisions to reflect the new eligibility requirements for grassland in
CRP. This rule also includes the following discretionary provisions to
clarify requirements where the 2014 Farm Bill did not define terms or
otherwise provided FSA discretion in implementation:
The ``infeasible to farm'' provision allows enrollment of
the remainder of a field in which CRP practices other than buffers are
enrolled on at least 75 percent of the acres in the field, if the
remaining land is ``infeasible to farm;''
Grasslands are now eligible for CRP and FSA may enroll up
to 2 million acres;
Up to $10 million in incentive payments may be made to
encourage tree thinning and other measures that improve the
environmental performance of CRP tree plantings;
Land may be transferred from CRP to the Agricultural
Conservation Easement Program (ACEP); and
The amount of cropland (that is not in a National
Conservation Priority Area) that can be in a State Conservation
Priority Area (CPA) was reduced from 33 percent to 25 percent.
The changes to the CRP regulations are discussed in this document
in the order that they appear in 7 CFR part 1410.
Many of the changes to CRP required by the 2014 Farm Bill have
already been implemented through an extension of authorization
published June 5, 2014 (79 FR 32435-32436). Specifically, the extension
announced the continuation of continuous signup, 2014 Transition
Incentives Program, and early contract termination opportunities in FY
2015. This rule implements the remaining provisions required by the
2014 Farm Bill, including the new grassland eligibility provisions and
the revisions to permissive uses, as well as the discretionary changes.
Definitions
This rule makes the following changes to the definitions specified
in Sec. 1410.2:
The rule adds a new definition for the new ACEP authorized by the
2014 Farm Bill. The 2014 Farm Bill allows USDA to modify a CRP contract
to allow a participant to transfer CRP land into ACEP.
The rule adds a new definition for ``common grazing practices''
that applies to the new grassland enrollments. For enrollments of
eligible grassland, section 2004 of the 2014 Farm Bill allows the
Secretary to permit common grazing practices, including maintenance and
necessary cultural practices, on the enrolled land in a manner that is
consistent with maintaining the viability of grassland, forb, and shrub
species appropriate to that locality.
This rule modifies the definition of ``conservation plan'' to
include provisions for grassland enrollments.
This rule clarifies that ``Erodibility Index (EI)'' means that FSA
uses the higher of the erodibility from water or wind.
This rule adds definitions for ``forb, ``grassland,'' ``improved
rangeland or pastureland,'' ``pastureland,'' ``rangeland,'' and
``shrubland'' because they are relevant for grassland enrollments.
This rule revises the definition of ``infeasible to farm'' to add
discretion for the Deputy Administrator to determine that land is
infeasible to farm for reasons in addition to the piece of land being
too small or isolated to be economically viable.
This rule adds a new definition of ``nesting season'' to reflect
the 2014 Farm Bill requirement that permitted activities on CRP land
must consider certain categories of bird nesting seasons.
This rule adds a new definition of ``veteran farmer or rancher'' as
specified in the 2014 Farm Bill.
This rule removes the following definitions that are no longer used
in the CRP regulations: ``cropped wetlands,'' ``farmed wetlands,''
``Water Bank Program (WBP),'' and ``wetlands farmed under natural
conditions.'' This rule also removes definitions of ``beginning farmer
or rancher,'' and ``limited resource farmer or rancher'' from 7 CFR
part 1410, because those terms are defined in 7 CFR part 718, which is
referenced in 7 CFR part 1410. It removes terms including
``merchantable timber,'' ``present value,'' and ``private non-
industrial forest land'' that were only needed to implement the
Emergency Forestry
[[Page 41989]]
Conservation Reserve Program, which the 2014 Farm Bill repealed.
Maximum County Acreage
Section 1410.4, ``Maximum County Acreage'' specifies that acreage
placed in CRP and the Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP) cannot exceed 25
percent of the total cropland in a county. This rule revises that
section to specify that cropland enrolled under WRP or ACEP wetland
reserve easements, as applicable, is included with CRP cropland as part
of the maximum county acreage limits. These changes are required for
consistency with the 2014 Farm Bill. This rule does not change the
existing waiver provisions in this section that allow the 25 percent
limit to be exceeded in some circumstances.
Eligible Persons
Section 1410.5 ``Eligible Persons'' is amended to add references to
veteran farmers and ranchers that are required by the 2014 Farm Bill.
This rule also removes a redundant provision from this section
concerning ownership or operation of the land for at least 12 months
prior to submitting an offer for CRP.
Eligible Land
This adds new provisions to Sec. 1410.6 ``Eligible Land'' to
reflect changes required by the 2014 Farm Bill. As provided for in the
existing CRP regulations, eligible land for CRP includes cropland with
a history of production of tillable crops or marginal pastureland. The
purpose of these eligibility requirements, which are not changing with
this rule, is to ensure CRP is used to convert environmentally
sensitive land to a long-term environmentally beneficial cover. As part
of an effort to consolidate the USDA conservation programs, the 2014
Farm Bill adds grassland as a category of eligible land for CRP, and
ends authorization for the Grassland Reserve Program.
This rule amends the dates of the cropping history required for
certain cropland to be eligible for CRP. Previously, eligible cropland
must have been planted or considered planted for 4 of the 6 years
during the period of 2002 through 2007. This rule changes the relevant
cropping history period to 2008 through 2013.
This rule adds additional provisions regarding infeasible-to-farm
land eligibility, as required by the 2014 Farm Bill. Specifically, it
adds eligibility for land in a portion of a field not enrolled in CRP
if more than 75 percent of the land in the field is enrolled as a
conservation practice other than a buffer or filterstrip practice, and
the remainder of the field is determined to be infeasible to farm.
This rule removes provisions for eligible land concerning scour
erosion, cropped wetland and associated acres, and land associated with
non-cropped wetlands. These discretionary changes are needed for
clarity and consistency with current policy. This rule also clarifies
that land on which environmental measures are already required to be
taken by State, local, or Tribal laws is ineligible for CRP.
Duration of Contracts
This rule amends Sec. 1410.7, ``Duration of Contracts,'' to
clarify that continuous and general signup contracts can be between 10
years and 15 years in length. The rule also specifies that grassland
signup contracts will be 15 years in length. The additional provision
for grassland contracts is required by the 2014 Farm Bill; the other
changes are technical clarifications that do not change the existing
eligible land or contract requirements.
The current policy on contract extensions is not changing with this
rule. Contracts can be extended, but the total contract period
including the extension(s) cannot exceed 15 years in length. For
example, a 10 year contract can be extended for 1 to 5 years, but a
contract currently in year 13 could only be extended for 1 or 2 years.
In the case of a contract extension, existing contract terms are
extended, except when new mandatory requirements apply, such as when
AGI eligibility requirements for CRP are changed by the 2014 Farm Bill.
CPA
This rule modifies Sec. 1410.8, ``Conservation Priority Areas,''
to reduce the total acreage within a State that can be approved for
inclusion in a state CPA from 33 percent to 25 percent of the cropland
not in a designated CRP national CPA. This discretionary change will
help to ensure the most suitable, highest priority land is enrolled.
The 2014 Farm Bill also removed some named specific CPAs, but because
those CPAs were not named in the regulations, implementing that change
does not require a change to the regulations.
Conversion to Trees
This rule removes Sec. 1410.9, ``Conversion to Trees,'' because
that section is obsolete. It only applied to CRP contracts that began
before November 28, 1990.
Restoration of Wetlands and Farmable Wetlands Program
Section 1410.10, ``Restoration of Wetlands,'' is amended to include
references to wetland reserve easements under ACEP. This rule modifies
Sec. 1410.11 ``Farmable Wetlands Program'' to specify that a
constructed wetland that is developed to receive surface and subsurface
flow from row crop agricultural production is eligible for enrollment.
This rule also specifies that the total enrollment cap under farmable
wetlands is reduced from 1 million acres to 750,000 acres. Both these
changes are required by the 2014 Farm Bill.
Emergency Forestry Program
Section 2702 of the 2014 Farm Bill repeals authority for Emergency
Forestry CRP enrollment; this rule removes Sec. 1410.12, ``Emergency
Forestry Program,'' to reflect this change. As noted earlier, the
definitions used only in this section have also been removed from the
Definitions section. The end of authorization for new Emergency
Forestry contracts, and the removal of the regulations for Emergency
Forestry enrollments, does not change existing Emergency Forestry
contracts.
Grassland Enrollments
The 2014 Farm Bill terminates authority for new enrollments under
the Grassland Reserve Program (7 CFR part 1415) but also provides new
authority for enrollment of certain grassland into CRP. Previously,
only cropland of various types and marginal pastureland was eligible
for enrollment in CRP. This rule adds new section on grassland
enrollments in Sec. 1410.13, with conforming changes that add
grassland provisions to Sec. 1410.23, ``Eligible Practices,'' Sec.
1410.30, ``Signup and Offer Types,'' Sec. 1410.31, ``Acceptability of
Offers,'' and Sec. 1410.40, ``Cost Share Payments.''
In general, expiring Grassland Reserve Program lands are authorized
to be enrolled in CRP, as well as grassland that was not in the
Grassland Reserve Program but meet the provisions of Sec. 1410.6 for
eligible grassland. Grassland previously enrolled in the Grassland
Reserve Program will continue to be subject to 7 CFR part 1415 for
existing contracts and easements that have not expired. The 2014 Farm
Bill sets an acreage cap of 2 million acres on the new grassland type
of enrollment.
CRP Conservation Plan
This rule modifies Sec. 1410.22, ``CRP Conservation Plan,'' to add
provisions and references for the new grassland
[[Page 41990]]
contracts. It also contains other minor edits, including adding a
reference to forest stewardship plans.
Acceptability of Offers
This rule amends Sec. 1410.31, ``Acceptability of Offers,'' to
establish new provisions for the grassland offer acceptance process. In
ranking and evaluating grassland signup offers, FSA will consider
various factors, including, but not limited to, whether the offer
includes expiring CRP or Grassland Reserve Program land, row crop to
grassland conversion, multi-species cover, livestock grazing
operations, and State priority enrollment criteria and focus areas.
Contract Modifications
This rule adds references to veteran farmers to the provisions for
Transition Incentives Program contracts, as required by the 2014 Farm
Bill. The 2014 Farm Bill also adds discretion for FSA to modify or
terminate contracts to allow transition of CRP lands into other Federal
or State conservation programs, as is reflected in this rule. This rule
specifies that CRP participants who terminate CRP contracts in order to
participate in ACEP or other Federal or State easement programs are
generally not required to refund CRP payments or interest, or pay
liquidated damages to the CCC. However, participants will be required
to repay CRP Signing Incentive Payments and Practice Incentive Payments
when enrolling CRP land in wetlands reserve easements under ACEP.
The 2014 Farm Bill allows contract modifications for resource
conserving uses in the final year of the contract. This rule adds
provisions that allow an owner or operator in the final year of the CRP
contract to make land improvements for economic use, provided that
those land improvements maintain protection of the land after
expiration of the contract and are conducted in a manner consistent
with an approved CRP conservation plan. Such land enrolled in resource
conserving use will not be eligible to be re-enrolled in CRP for 5
years following expiration of the contract. The rental payment for that
last year of the CRP contract during which resource conserving use land
improvements are implemented will be reduced by an amount commensurate
with the economic value derived from practice implementation.
Annual Rental and Incentive Payments
This rule amends the provisions in Sec. 1410.42, ``Annual Rental
and Incentive Payments,'' to reflect the incorporation of grassland
signup and tree thinning incentives. The 2014 Farm Bill authorizes CCC
to provide incentives for tree thinning to improve resource conditions,
primarily wildlife habitat enhancement of CRP lands established to
trees.
Grassland rental rates will be based on levels not to exceed 75
percent of the estimated grazing value of the land, as required by the
2014 Farm Bill. Tree thinning incentive payments to encourage
landowners and operators to implement forest management practices that
improve resource condition or enhance wildlife habitat cannot exceed
150 percent of the total cost of the practice installation.
This rule also clarifies provisions for cropland soil rental rates
to better reflect that these rates are based on the relative non-
irrigated cropland productivity of soils within a county using soil
productivity data and prevailing county average cash rental estimates
for non-irrigated cropland. This rule also clarifies that marginal
pastureland rental rates are based on estimates of the prevailing
rental values of marginal pastureland in riparian areas. These
clarifications are discretionary.
Section 1410.42 specifies a $50,000 per fiscal year payment limit
on CRP rental payments, which is not changing with this rule because
the 2014 Farm Bill does not change the payment limits for CRP.
Average Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) Limitation
Section 1605 of the 2014 Farm Bill establishes income limitations
that apply to 2015 and subsequent crop, program, or fiscal year
benefits for programs in Title II of the 2014 Farm Bill, which includes
CRP. FSA previously implemented these limitations in 7 CFR part 1400
through a final rule published on April 14, 2014 (79 FR 21086-21118).
This rule makes a conforming change to Sec. 1410.44 to reflect the new
AGI limits. The 2014 Farm Bill reduces the average AGI limitation for
CRP from $1,000,000 to $900,000.
Previously, there was a waiver to the AGI limit for conservation
programs if at least 66.66 percent of the participant's income was from
farming, or on a case-by-case basis for other reasons to protect
environmentally sensitive land of special significance. The AGI waivers
for conservation practices are not reauthorized in the 2014 Farm Bill;
therefore, this rule removes the waiver provisions in Sec. 1410.44 to
reflect this change.
Permissive Uses
CRP land uses are limited to the list of uses specified in Sec.
1410.63, ``Permissive Uses.'' The intent is to ensure that CRP land is
not used for activities that would tend to defeat the conservation
purposes of CRP, while allowing limited activities that are consistent
with CRP goals, such as grazing to control invasive species. Permissive
uses must be consistent with the conservation of soil, water quality,
and wildlife habitat, including habitat during the nesting season for
certain categories of birds in the area. To achieve this goal, this
rule adds and revises provisions for permissive uses as required by the
2014 Farm Bill. In general, these provisions include new restrictions
and payment reductions related to harvesting, grazing, and other
commercial land uses. There are also new grazing, haying, mowing,
harvesting, and fire prevention permissive uses that apply only to the
new grassland signup type.
Wind turbines are permitted on CRP land, provided that wind
turbines are installed in numbers and locations as determined
appropriate by CCC considering the location, size, and other physical
characteristics of land and the extent to which the land contains
listed threatened or endangered wildlife and wildlife habitat, and the
purposes of CRP. Wind turbines are not a new permissive use, but it is
slightly revised by the 2014 Farm Bill, which adds the provision about
threatened or endangered wildlife and wildlife habitat.
This rule modifies the provisions for customary forestry
maintenance activities to make an incentive payment to encourage proper
thinning and other practices to improve the condition of resources,
promote forest management, or enhance wildlife habitat on the land.
These are consistent with the 2014 Farm Bill requirements.
No barrier fencing or boundary limitation can be established or
maintained that prohibits wildlife access to or from the CRP acreage
unless required by State law as part of any permissive use. This is a
discretionary clarification that is consistent with 2014 Farm Bill
requirements that permissive uses be consistent with the conservation
of wildlife habitat.
This rule amends the provisions for managed harvesting and other
commercial use including managed harvesting of biomass, to reflect the
payment reduction of not less than 25 percent and the limitation that
the activity occur at least every 5 years but
[[Page 41991]]
not more than once every 3 years, as specified in the 2014 Farm Bill.
This rule modifies the provisions for routine grazing to be
consistent with the 2014 Farm Bill restriction on routine grazing to
not more than once every 2 years, with a payment reduction of not less
25 percent unless CRP participant is a beginning farmer or rancher.
The 2014 Farm Bill eliminates the payment reduction for emergency
haying, emergency grazing, or other commercial use of the forage on the
land in response to drought, flooding, or other emergency. This rule
amends Sec. 1410.63 to reflect this change.
Language is added to Sec. 1410.63 to clarify that there is no
payment reduction for harvesting, grazing, or other commercial use of
the forage on the land in response to a drought, flooding, or other
emergency, when conducted consistent with an approved CRP conservation
plan, irrespective of whether the harvested material is used or sold by
the contract holder.
This rule specifies a permissive use for grazing of program acreage
that has been established to vegetative buffers incidental to
agricultural production adjacent to the buffers, provided the use does
not destroy the permanent vegetative cover, in exchange for a 25
percent payment reduction for the land being grazed. This is a
clarification of the existing ``incidental grazing'' use that was
already permitted as a type of grazing use but has not previously been
specified in the regulations as a separate permissive use. Incidental
grazing, which requires the payment reduction, does not include
prescribed grazing to control kudzu or other invasive species.
Prescribed grazing to control invasive species also requires a payment
reduction, except that a beginning farmer or rancher may conduct
prescribed grazing without a payment reduction.
This rule specifies the permissive activities under the new
grassland enrollment component of CRP, which include common grazing
practices; haying, mowing, or harvesting outside of nesting season;
wildfire considerations; grazing-related activities, such as fencing;
and other activities as determined by the Deputy Administrator.
Transition Incentives Program
This rule adds the term ``veteran'' throughout Sec. 1410.64,
``Transition Incentives Program,'' to reflect that eligibility under
this program includes veteran farmers and ranchers in addition to
beginning and socially disadvantaged farmers and ranchers. The
definition of ``veteran'' as specified in the 2014 Farm Bill and in
this rule specifies that to be eligible for the CRP Transition
Incentives Program, the veteran must have farmed not more than 10
years. Therefore, while the addition of the term ``veteran'' will
improve our outreach efforts to veterans and makes it more clear that
they are eligible for the Transition Incentives Program, the eligible
veterans would already have been eligible as beginning farmers.
``Preparing to plant a crop'' has been added as an appropriate
conservation and land improvement practice during the last year of the
CRP contract that is being transitioned to a beginning, veteran, or
socially disadvantaged farmer or rancher under the Transition
Incentives Program. This additional improvement practice is specified
in the 2014 Farm Bill.
Miscellaneous Conforming and Editorial Changes in CRP Regulations
In addition to the changes required by the 2014 Farm Bill and the
substantive discretionary changes discussed above, this rule makes a
number of nonsubstantive changes to make the CRP regulations clear and
consistent. For example, where appropriate, references to ``CCC'' have
been replaced with ``Deputy Administrator'' to better reflect the
office responsible for applicable determinations and decisions.
``Shall'' has been replaced with ``will'' or ``must'' for plain
language and to add clarity to requirements. Obsolete provisions are
removed in 7 CFR part 1410.
Provisions Applicable to Multiple Programs
This rule amends FSA regulations in 7 CFR part 718 ``Provisions
Applicable to Multiple Programs'' that govern base acres and acreage
reports for CRP and certain other FSA commodity programs and CCC
programs operated by FSA. The statutory authority for the regulations
in 7 CFR part 718 come from the 2014 Farm Bill, the Food, Conservation,
and Energy Act of 2008 (the 2008 Farm Bill, Pub. L. 110-246) and the
Farm Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002 (Pub. L. 107-171).
As discussed previously, the purpose of CRP is to cost-effectively
assist producers in conserving and improving soil, water, wildlife,
restoring wetlands, improving other natural resources and addressing
issues raised by State, regional, and national conservation initiatives
by converting environmentally sensitive cropland and marginal pasture
land from the production of agricultural commodities to a long-term
vegetative cover. Enrollment of eligible grassland in CRP will result
in adoption of sustainable grazing practices and preservation of
wildlife habitat. To be eligible for CRP, cropland must have a cropping
history for 2008 through 2013, as specified in this rule. Many FSA
programs, particularly the Agricultural Risk Coverage (ARC) and Price
Loss Coverage (PLC) programs authorized by the 2014 Farm Bill, specify
that eligible land includes land that has base acres, which are
cropland acres with a cropping history for certain years dating back to
the 1980s. When cropland is enrolled in CRP, the base acres on a farm
that exceed the farm's remaining cropland that is not devoted to CRP
must be reduced to reflect the CRP enrollment. In that case, the base
acres are voluntarily reduced and the base acres reduced are protected
(``put on hold'') for that farm while the land is enrolled in CRP. To
ensure that producers are able to transition land with base acres to
and from CRP, and preserve eligibility of that land for other FSA
programs after the CRP contract ends, it is necessary to clarify a
number of terms in part 718 that are relevant to cropping histories,
production records, and base acres for multiple programs. In general,
the amendments to part 718 in this rule are consistent with current
agency practice and merely clarify the regulations without changing FSA
policy or practice.
This rule revises the term ``base acres'' to remove obsolete
references and replace them with references to the regulations for the
new programs authorized by the 2014 Farm Bill. It adds definitions for
``contiguous,'' ``contiguous county,'' and ``contiguous county office''
for use in various programs authorized under the 2014 Farm Bill
including the CRP, the Cotton Transition Assistance Program (CTAP), ARC
and PLC, disaster assistance programs, and the Noninsured Crop Disaster
Assistance Program (NAP). The addition of the definitions of
``contiguous,'' ``contiguous county,'' and ``contiguous county office''
are necessary to clarify the policy concerning changing a farm's
administrative county. The addition of the term ``common land unit
(CLU)'' is needed because FSA now uses CLU numbers instead of field
numbers for many production and acreage reports. The rule adds new
definitions for ``double cropping,'' and ``subsequent crop,'' which are
relevant to the cropping history requirements for multiple programs.
The rule amends the definition of ``entity'' to be consistent with the
definition in 7 CFR part 1400.
[[Page 41992]]
This rule makes clarifying changes to the definition of ``owner.'' The
intent of these amendments to the definitions is to have clear and
consistent regulations and to make it clear to producers what they must
do to preserve the eligibility of land for multiple programs, including
CRP.
This rule removes obsolete provisions in Sec. 718.3, ``State
Committee Responsibilities,'' regarding county rates for measurement
services. The State Committee does not set measurement service rates.
This rule amends Sec. 718.9 regarding signature requirements to
replace the reference to ``husband'' and ``wife'' with a reference to
``spouse.'' It also changes the signature authority provisions to
clarify the validity of documents that were previously acted on and
approved by a county office or county committee, as required by section
1617 of the 2008 Farm Bill. These provisions have already been
implemented, but were not in the regulations.
This rule amends Sec. 718.102 to clarify the programs for which
participants must submit acreage reports. It amends Sec. 718.103 to
clarify the requirements for documenting prevented planting. These are
not new requirements; this reflects a discretionary decision to include
detailed requirements previously in the handbooks in the regulations.
This is needed to ensure that producers correctly document prevented
planting, which is relevant to cropping history for the purposes of
program eligibility for CRP and other programs.
This rule amends Sec. 718.106, ``Non-compliance and Acreage
Reports,'' to remove references to good faith or willful falsification.
This is a program integrity issue to clarify that false acreage reports
may result in program ineligibility, independent of motivation for the
false report.
This rule amends Sec. 718.112, ``Redetermination,'' to be
consistent with current policy on when producers must submit requests
for redetermination of crop acreage, appraised yield, or farm stored
production.
This rule amends Sec. 718.201, ``Farm Reconstitution,'' to be
consistent with current policy, and to include references to land
eligible for new programs authorized by the 2014 Farm Bill. This rule
makes similar changes to Sec. 718.205, ``Substantive Changes in
Farming Operation, and Changes in Related Legal Entities,'' and Sec.
718.206, ``Determining Farms, Tracts, Allotments, Quotas, and Bases
When Reconstitution is Made by Division.'' As discussed earlier, these
changes are relevant to preserving base acres for a given farm as land
is transitioned into CRP and back into other FSA programs. This rule
also amends Sec. 718.206 to specify that, within 30 days after a
prescribed form, letter, or contract providing base acres is issued,
owners of the reconstituted farm may request a different designation of
base acres, so long as all the owners agree in writing to the
designation.
This rule amends Sec. 718.301, ``Applicability,'' by adding a new
paragraph that clarifies that relief provisions are not a means by
which persons can obtain a review of a program's regulations or the
agency's interpretations of its own regulations. This is a
discretionary clarification to clarify program integrity provisions
that is consistent with current policy. Similar clarifying amendments
are made to other sections in subpart D, ``Equitable Relief from
Ineligibility.'' This rule amends Sec. 718.306 to clarify that if a
determination was in any way based on erroneous, innocent, or
purposeful misrepresentation; false statement; fraud; or willful
misconduct by or on behalf of the participant, the determination is not
final. Another amendment clarifies that FSA will correct errors and
incorrect decisions.
Miscellaneous Conforming and Editorial Changes to Part 718 Related to
CRP
In addition, this rule makes minor plain language changes, such as
replacing ``shall'' with ``will,'' to several sections of part 718.
This rule removes obsolete provisions related to CRP referring to
actions taken prior to the 2008 Farm Bill. The definition of
``agricultural commodity'' is removed because the term is not used in
the subpart in which it was defined.
Notice and Comment
In general, the Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 553)
requires that a notice of proposed rulemaking be published in the
Federal Register and interested persons be given an opportunity to
participate in the rulemaking through submission of written data,
views, or arguments with or without opportunity for oral presentation,
except when the rule involves a matter relating to public property,
loans, grants, benefits, or contracts. Section 2608 of the 2014 Farm
Bill requires that the programs of Title II be implemented by interim
rules effective on publication with an opportunity for notice and
comment.
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
Executive Order 12866, ``Regulatory Planning and Review,'' and
Executive Order 13563, ``Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review,''
direct agencies to assess all costs and benefits of available
regulatory alternatives and, if regulation is necessary, to select
regulatory approaches that maximize net benefits (including potential
economic, environmental, public health and safety effects, distributive
impacts, and equity). Executive Order 13563 emphasizes the importance
of quantifying both costs and benefits, of reducing costs, of
harmonizing rules, and of promoting flexibility.
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) designated this interim
rule as significant under Executive Order 12866, ``Regulatory Planning
and Review,'' and therefore, OMB has reviewed this rule. The costs and
benefits of this proposed rule are summarized below. The full cost
benefit analysis is available on regulations.gov.
Clarity of the Regulation
Executive Order 12866, as supplemented by Executive Order 13563,
requires each agency to write all rules in plain language. In addition
to your substantive comments on this interim rule, we invite your
comments on how to make the rule easier to understand. For example:
Are the requirements in the rule clearly stated? Are the
scope and intent of the rule clear?
Does the rule contain technical language or jargon that is
not clear?
Is the material logically organized?
Would changing the grouping or order of sections or adding
headings make the rule easier to understand?
Could we improve clarity by adding tables, lists, or
diagrams?
Would more, but shorter, sections be better? Are there
specific sections that are too long or confusing?
What else could we do to make the rule easier to
understand?
Cost Benefit Analysis
The mandatory and discretionary changes to CRP specified in this
rule are expected to have a minimal cost impact for CRP as a whole,
although individual producers could experience measurable increases or
decreases in financial and environmental benefits. Incentive payments
for tree thinning, Transition Incentives Program payments, and new
permissive uses specified in this rule are expected to increase costs
to the government by $67 million for FY 2014 through 2018. That
includes $10 million for tree thinning, $28 million for Transition
Incentives Program payments, and $29 million for rental payments that
are no longer reduced for emergency haying and grazing. Enrolling
grasslands is expected to
[[Page 41993]]
reduce costs by $31 million during FY 2014 through 2018, resulting in
an estimated net overall cost of $36 million for FY 2014 through 2018,
an average of $7.3 million per year.
The acreage cap for CRP specified in the 2014 Farm Bill is expected
to reduce overall payments to producers (and costs to the government)
for CRP by $616 million total between FY 2014 and FY 2018 ($2.8 billion
between FY 2014 and FY 2023). However, that cost reduction is not the
result of the specific provisions in this rule.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-612), as amended by
the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996
(SBREFA), generally requires an agency to prepare a regulatory
flexibility analysis of any rule whenever an agency is required by the
Administrative Procedure Act or any other law to publish a proposed
rule, unless the agency certifies that the rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
This rule is not subject to the Regulatory Flexibility Act because the
Secretary of Agriculture and FSA are not required by any law to publish
a proposed rule for this rulemaking initiative. CCC is required by
section 2608 of the 2014 Farm Bill to issue an interim rule effective
on publication with an opportunity for comment.
Environmental Evaluation
In accordance with the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA, 42
U.S.C. 4321-4347), FSA prepared a Supplemental Programmatic
Environmental Impact Statement (SPEIS) for the changes to CRP proposed
as a result of the mandatory provisions of the 2014 Farm Bill. The CRP
Final SPEIS was completed as required by NEPA, the Council on
Environmental Quality (CEQ) Regulations for Implementing the Procedural
Provisions of NEPA (40 CFR parts 1500-1508), and FSA's NEPA regulations
for compliance with NEPA (7 CFR part 799).
FSA provided notice of intent (NOI) to prepare the CRP SPEIS in the
Federal Register on November 29, 2013 (78 FR 71561-71562), and
requested public comment on the preliminary alternatives for analyzing
changes to CRP that were proposed as a result of the mandatory
provisions of the 2014 Farm Bill. The Draft SPEIS public comment period
began with a Notice of Availability (NOA) published in the Federal
Register on July 15, 2014 (79 FR 41247-41249), and public meetings were
held in several locations across the country in July and August, 2014.
The Final SPEIS public comment period began with a NOA published in the
Federal Register on December 23, 2014 (79 FR 76952-76955).
Many of the changes to CRP from the 2014 Farm Bill did not require
analysis in the SPEIS because they were administrative in nature,
clarified the mandatory provisions of the 2014 Farm Bill, would not
result in major changes to the current administration of CRP, and were
addressed in previous NEPA documentation concerning CRP. Only those
changes that did not meet these criteria were included in the SPEIS.
As part of this CRP rulemaking initiative, FSA prepared a Record of
Decision, which identified the alternative selected for implementation
and outlines the rationale, as well as a discussion of any final
comments received for the SPEIS, and was published on June 18, 2015 (80
FR 34883-86).
Executive Order 12372
Executive Order 12372, ``Intergovernmental Review of Federal
Programs,'' requires consultation with State and local officials that
would be directly affected by proposed Federal financial assistance.
The objectives of the Executive Order are to foster an
intergovernmental partnership and a strengthened Federalism, by relying
on State and local processes for State and local government
coordination and review of proposed Federal financial assistance and
direct Federal development. For reasons specified in the final rule
related document regarding 7 CFR part 3015, subpart V (48 FR 29115,
June 24, 1983), the programs and activities in this rule are excluded
from the scope of Executive Order 12372.
Executive Order 12988
This rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12988, Civil
Justice Reform. This final rule is not retroactive and does not preempt
State or local laws, regulations, or policies unless they represent an
irreconcilable conflict with this rule. Before any judicial action may
be brought regarding provisions of this rule, the administrative appeal
provisions of 7 CFR parts 11, 624, and 780 must be exhausted.
Executive Order 13132
This rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 13132,
``Federalism.'' The policies contained in this proposed rule would not
have any substantial direct effect on States, on the relationship
between the Federal government and the States, or on the distribution
of power and responsibilities among the various levels of government,
except as required by law. Nor does this rule impose substantial direct
compliance costs on State and local governments. Therefore,
consultation with the States is not required.
Executive Order 13175
This rule has been reviewed in accordance with the requirements of
Executive Order 13175, ``Consultation and Coordination with Indian
Tribal Governments.'' Executive Order 13175 requires Federal agencies
to consult and coordinate with tribes on a government-to-government
basis on policies that have tribal implications, including regulations,
legislative comments or proposed legislation, and other policy
statements or actions that have substantial direct effects on one or
more Indian tribes, on the relationship between the Federal Government
and Indian tribes or on the distribution of power and responsibilities
between the Federal Government and Indian tribes.
FSA has assessed the impact of this rule on Indian tribes and
determined that this rule would not, to our knowledge, have tribal
implications that require tribal consultation under Executive Order
13175. If a Tribe requests consultation, FSA will work with the USDA
Office of Tribal Relations to ensure meaningful consultation is
provided where changes, additions, and modifications identified in this
rule are not expressly mandated by the 2014 Farm Bill.
Unfunded Mandates
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA, Pub. L.
104-4) requires Federal agencies to assess the effects of their
regulatory actions of State, local, and Tribal governments or the
private sector. Agencies generally must prepare a written statement,
including cost benefits analysis, for proposed and final rules with
Federal mandates that may result in expenditures of $100 million or
more in any 1 year for State, local or Tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or to the private sector. UMRA generally requires agencies
to consider alternatives and adopt the more cost effective or least
burdensome alternative that achieves the objectives of the rule. This
rule contains no Federal mandates under the regulatory provisions of
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA, Pub. L.
104-4) for State, local, or tribal governments, or the private sector.
In addition, CCC is not required to publish a notice of proposed
rulemaking for this rule. Therefore, this
[[Page 41994]]
rule is not subject to the requirements of sections 202 and 205 of
UMRA.
Federal Domestic Assistance Program
The title and number of the Federal Domestic Assistance Program in
the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance to which this rule applies
is the Conservation Reserve Program--10.069.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The regulations in this rule are exempt from the requirements of
the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. Chapter 35), as specified in
section 2608 of the 2014 Farm Bill, which provides that these
regulations be promulgated and the program administered without regard
to the Paperwork Reduction Act.
E-Government Act Compliance
CCC is committed to complying with the E-Government Act, to promote
the use of the Internet and other information technologies to provide
increased opportunities for citizen access to Government information
and services, and for other purposes.
List of Subjects
7 CFR Part 718
Acreage allotments, Drug traffic control, Loan programs-
agriculture, Marketing quotas, Price support programs, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
7 CFR Part 1410
Administrative practice and procedure, Agriculture, Environmental
protection, Grant programs--Agriculture, Natural resources, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements, Soil conservation, Technical
assistance, Water resources, Wildlife.
For the reasons explained above, CCC and FSA amend 7 CFR parts 718
and 1410 as follows:
PART 718--PROVISIONS APPLICABLE TO MULTIPLE PROGRAMS
0
1. Revise the authority for part 718 to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1501-1524, 1921-2008r, 7201-7334, 7901-8002
and 9011-9097, 15 U.S.C. 714b and c, and 16 U.S.C. 3801-3847.
0
2. Revise Sec. 718.1(a) to read as follows:
Sec. 718.1 Applicability.
(a) This part is applicable to all programs specified in chapters
VII and XIV of this title that are administered by the Farm Service
Agency (FSA) and to any other programs that adopt this part by
reference. This part governs how FSA administers marketing quotas,
allotments, base acres, and acreage reports for those programs to which
this part applies. The regulations to which this part applies are those
that establish procedures for measuring allotments and program eligible
acreage, for determining program compliance, farm reconstitutions,
application of finality, and equitable relief from compliance or
ineligibility.
* * * * *
0
3. Amend Sec. 718.2 as follows:
0
a. Revise the definitions for ``Base acres'', ``Entity'', and
``Owner''; and
0
b. Add, in alphabetical order, definitions for ``Common land unit'',
``Contiguous'', ``Contiguous county'', ``Contiguous county office'',
``Double cropping'', ``State committee'', and ``Subsequent crop'';
0
c. In the definition of ``Crop reporting date'', remove the words
``date the'' and add the words ``date upon which the'' in their place;
and
0
d. In the definition of ``Minor child'', add the words and punctuation
``For the purpose of programs under chapters VII and XIV of this
title,'' before the word ``State''.
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 718.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
Base acres means, with respect to a covered commodity on a farm,
the number of acres in effect on September 30, 2013, as defined in the
regulations in part 1412, subpart B, of this title that were in effect
on that date, subject to any reallocation, adjustment, or reduction.
The term ``base acres'' includes any generic base acres as specified in
part 1412 planted to a covered commodity as specified in part 1412.
* * * * *
Common land unit means the smallest unit of land that has an
identifiable border and all of the following in common:
(1) Owner;
(2) Management;
(3) Cover; and
(4) Where applicable, producer association.
* * * * *
Contiguous means sharing any part of a boundary but not
overlapping.
Contiguous county means a county contiguous to the reference county
or counties.
Contiguous county office means the FSA county office that is in a
contiguous county.
* * * * *
Double cropping means, as determined by the Deputy Administrator on
a regional basis, consecutive planting of two specific crops that have
the capability to be planted and carried to maturity for the intended
uses, as reported by the producer, on the same acreage within a 12-
month period. To be considered double cropping, the planting of two
specific crops must be in an area where such double cropping is
considered normal, or could be considered normal, for all growers under
normal growing conditions and growers are typically able to repeat the
same cycle successfully in a subsequent 12-month period.
Entity means a corporation, joint stock company, association,
limited partnership, limited liability partnership, limited liability
company, irrevocable trust, estate, charitable organization, or other
similar organization, including any such organization participating in
the farming operation as a partner in a general partnership, a
participant in a joint venture, or a participant in a similar
organization.
* * * * *
Owner means one who has legal ownership of farmland, including:
(1) Any agency of the Federal Government; however, such agency is
not eligible to receive any program payment;
(2) One who is buying farmland under a contract for deed; or
(3) One who has a life-estate in the property.
* * * * *
State committee means the FSA State committee.
* * * * *
Subsequent crop means a crop following an initial crop that is not
in an approved double cropping combination.
* * * * *
Sec. 718.3 [Amended]
0
4. Amend Sec. 718.3 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (a)(2), add the word ``or'' at the end;
0
b. In paragraph (a)(3), remove the semicolon and add a period in its
place;
0
c. Remove paragraphs (a)(4), (5), and (6); and
0
d. In paragraph (b), remove the references to ``Sec. 718.108'' and
``Sec. 718.111'' and add references to ``Sec. 718.109'' and ``Sec.
718.112'', respectively in their place.
0
5. Revise Sec. 718.7 to read as follows:
Sec. 718.7 Furnishing maps.
(a) A reasonable number, as determined by FSA, of reproductions of
photographs, mosaic maps, and other
[[Page 41995]]
maps will be made available to the owner of a farm, an insurance
company reinsured by the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation (FCIC), or
a private party contractor performing official duties on behalf of FSA,
CCC, and other USDA agencies.
(b) For all others, reproductions will be made available at the
rate FSA determines will cover the cost of making such items available.
Sec. 718.8 [Amended]
0
6. Amend Sec. 718.8(e) by removing the word ``COC'' and adding the
words ``county committee'' in its place.
0
7. Amend Sec. 718.9 as follows:
0
a. Revise paragraphs (a) and (b) introductory text; and
0
b. Add paragraph (f).
The revisions and addition read as follows:
Sec. 718.9 Signature requirements.
(a) When a program authorized by this chapter or chapter XIV of
this title requires the signature of a producer, landowner, landlord,
or tenant, then a spouse may sign all such FSA or CCC documents on
behalf of the other spouse, except as otherwise specified in this
section, unless such other spouse has provided written notification to
FSA and CCC that such action is not authorized. The notification must
be provided to FSA for each farm.
(b) A spouse may not sign a document on behalf of the other spouse
with respect to:
* * * * *
(f) Documents that were previously acted on and approved by the FSA
county office or county committee will not subsequently be determined
inadequate or invalid because of the lack of signature authority of any
person signing the document on behalf of the applicant or any other
individual, entity, general partnership, or joint venture, unless the
person signing the program document knowingly and willfully falsified
the evidence of signature authority or a signature. However, FSA may
require affirmation of the document by those parties deemed appropriate
for an affirmation, as determined by the Deputy Administrator. Nothing
in this paragraph relieves participants of any other program
requirements.
Sec. 718.101 [Amended]
0
8. Amend Sec. 718.101(a)(1) by removing the reference to ``Sec.
718.103'' and adding a reference to ``Sec. 718.104'' in its place.
Sec. 718.102 [Amended]
0
9. Amend Sec. 718.102 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (a), remove the words ``annually submit accurate
information'' and add the words ``submit accurate information
annually'' in their place;
0
b. In paragraph (b)(1), remove the words ``the programs governed by
part 1412 of this title'' and add the words ``programs for which
eligibility for benefits is tied to base acres'' in their place;
0
c. In paragraph (b)(6), remove the word ``intended'';
0
d. Revise paragraphs (b)(7) and (c); and
0
e. Add paragraph (d).
The revisions and addition read as follows:
Sec. 718.102 Acreage reports.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(7) All producers reporting acreage as prevented planted acreage or
failed acreage must provide documentation that meets the provisions of
Sec. 718.103 to the FSA county office where the farm is administered.
(c) The annual acreage reports required in paragraph (a) of this
section must be filed with the county committee by the farm operator,
farm owner, producer of the crop on the farm, or duly authorized
representative by the final reporting date applicable to the crop as
established by the Deputy Administrator.
(d) Participants in programs to which this part is applicable must
report all crops, in all counties, in which they have an interest. This
includes crops on cropland and noncropland, including native or
improved grass that will be hayed or grazed.
0
10. Amend Sec. 718.103 as follows:
0
a. Revise paragraphs (b) and (c);
0
b. Remove paragraphs (d) and (e);
0
c. Redesignate paragraphs (f) and (g) as paragraphs (d) and (e);
0
d. In newly redesignated paragraph (e), remove the words ``shall
apply'' and add the word ``applies'' it their place;
0
e. Add paragraphs (f) and (g);
0
f. Remove paragraph (h);
0
g. Redesignate paragraphs (i) through (n) as paragraphs (h) through
(m), respectively;
0
h. In newly redesignated paragraph (i), remove the words ``the COC. The
COC will'' and add the words ``the county committee. The county
committee may'' in their place; and
0
i. In newly redesignated paragraph (m)(2), remove the word ``and'' at
the end of the sentence and add the word ``or'' in its place.
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 718.103 Prevented planted and failed acreage.
* * * * *
(b) FSA may approve acreage as ``prevented planted acreage'' if all
other conditions for such approval are met and provided the conditions
in paragraphs (b)(1) through (6) of this section are met.
(1) Except as specified in paragraph (b)(2) of this section,
producers must report the acreage, on forms specified by FSA, within 15
calendar days after the final planting date determined for the crop by
FSA.
(2) If the acreage is reported after the period identified in
paragraph (b)(1) of this section, the application must be filed in time
to permit:
(i) The county committee or its authorized representative to make a
farm visit to verify eligible disaster conditions that prevented the
specified acreage or crop from being planted; or
(ii) The county committee or its authorized representative the
opportunity to determine, based on visual inspection, that the acreage
or crop in question was affected by eligible disaster conditions such
as damaging weather or other adverse natural occurrences that prevented
the acreage or crop from being planted.
(3) A farm visit to inspect the acreage or crop is required for all
late-filed acreage reports where prevented planting credit is sought.
Under no circumstance may acreage reported after the 15-day period
referenced in paragraph (b)(1) of this section be deemed acceptable
unless the criteria in paragraph (b)(2) of this section are met. State
and county committees do not have the authority to waive the field
inspection and verification provisions for late-filed reports.
(4) All determinations made during field inspections must be
documented on each late-filed acreage report, with results also
recorded in county committee minutes to support the documentation.
(5) The acreage must have been prevented from being planted as the
result of a natural disaster and not a management decision.
(6) The prevented planted acreage report was approved by the county
committee. The county committee may disapprove prevented planted
acreage credit if it is not satisfied with the documentation provided.
(c) To receive prevented planted credit for acreage, the producer
must show to the satisfaction of FSA that the producer intended to
plant the acreage. Documentation supporting such intent includes
documents related to field preparation, seed purchase, and any
[[Page 41996]]
other information that shows the acreage could and would have been
planted and harvested absent the natural disaster or eligible cause of
loss that prevented the planting.
* * * * *
(f) Acreage ineligible for prevented planting coverage includes,
but is not limited to, acreage:
(1) With respect to which the planting history or conservation
plans indicate it would remain fallow for crop rotation purposes;
(2) Used for conservation purposes or intended to be or considered
to have been left unplanted under any program administered by USDA,
including the Conservation Reserve and Wetland Reserve Programs;
(3) Not planted because of a management decision;
(4) Affected by the containment or release of water by any
governmental, public, or private dam or reservoir project, if an
easement exists on the acreage affected for the containment or release
of water;
(5) Where any other person receives a prevented planted payment for
any crop for the same crop year, unless the acreage meets all the
requirements for double cropping under this part;
(6) Where pasture or other forage crop is in place on the acreage
during the time that planting of the crop generally occurs in the area;
(7) Where another crop is planted (previous or subsequent) that
does not meet the double cropping definition;
(8) Where any volunteer or cover crop is hayed, grazed, or
otherwise harvested on the acreage for the same crop year;
(9) Where there is an inadequate supply of irrigation water
beginning on the Federal crop insurance sale closing date for the
previous crop year or the Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program
(NAP) application closing date for the crop as specified in part 1437
of this title through the final planting date of the current year;
(10) On which a failure or breakdown of irrigation equipment or
facilities, unless the failure or breakdown is due to a natural
disaster;
(11) That is under quarantine imposed by a county, State, or
Federal government agency;
(12) That is affected by chemical or herbicide residue, unless the
residue is due to a natural disaster;
(13) That is affected by drifting herbicide;
(14) On which a crop was produced, but the producer was unable to
obtain a market for the crop;
(15) Involving a planned planting of a ``value loss crop'' as that
term is defined for NAP as specified in part 1437 of this title,
including, but not limited to, Christmas trees, aquaculture, or
ornamental nursery, for which NAP assistance is provided under value
loss procedure;
(16) For which the claim for prevented planted credit relates to
trees or other perennials unless the producer can prove resources were
available to plant, grow, and harvest the crop, as applicable;
(17) That is affected by wildlife damage;
(18) Upon which, the reduction in the water supply for irrigation
is due to participation in an electricity buy-back program, or the sale
of water under a water buy-back or legislative changes regarding water
usage, or any other cause which is not a natural disaster; or
(19) That is devoted to non-cropland.
(g) CCC may allow exceptions to acreage ineligible for prevented
planting coverage when surface water or ground water is reduced because
of a natural disaster (as determined by CCC).
* * * * *
Sec. 718.104 [Amended]
0
11. Amend Sec. 718.104 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (a), introductory text, remove words ``date, and be
considered timely filed, if'' and add the words ``date and processed by
FSA if'' in their place;
0
b. In paragraph (a)(1), remove the words and punctuation ``is in the
field,'' and add the words and punctuation ``remains in the field,
permitting FSA to verify and determine the acreage;'' in their place;
0
c. In paragraph (a)(2), add the words ``amount of'' in front of the
word ``acreage''; and
0
d. In paragraph (b), remove the word ``shall'' and add the word
``must'' in its place.
Sec. 718.105 [Amended]
0
12. Amend Sec. 718.105(c)(2) by removing the word ``when'' and adding
the words ``upon which'' in its place.
0
13. Revise Sec. 718.106 to read as follows:
Sec. 718.106 Non-compliance and false acreage reports.
(a) Participants who provide false or inaccurate acreage reports
may be ineligible for some or all payments or benefits, subject to the
requirements of Sec. 718.102(b)(1) and (3).
(b) [Reserved]
0
14. Revise Sec. 718.111 to read as follows:
Sec. 718.111 Notice of measured acreage.
(a) FSA will provide notice of measured acreage and mail it to the
farm operator. This notice constitutes notice to all parties who have
ownership, leasehold interest, or other interest in such farm.
(b) [Reserved]
0
15. Amend Sec. 718.112 as follows:
0
a. Revise paragraph (a); and
0
b. In paragraph (b), introductory text, remove the words ``The county
committee shall'' and add the words ``FSA will'' in their place.
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 718.112 Redetermination.
(a) A redetermination of crop acreage, appraised yield, or farm-
stored production for a farm may be initiated by the county committee,
State committee, or Deputy Administrator at any time. Redetermination
may be requested by a producer with an interest in the farm if the
producer pays the cost of the redetermination. The request must be
submitted to FSA within 5 calendar days after the initial appraisal of
the yield of a crop, or before the farm-stored production is removed
from storage. A redeter mina tion will be undertaken in the manner
prescribed by the Deputy Administrator. A redetermination will be used
in lieu of any prior determination unless it is determined by the
representative of the Deputy Administrator that there is good cause not
to do so.
* * * * *
0
16. Revise the heading of subpart C to read as follows:
Subpart C--Reconstitution of Farms, Allotments, Quotas, and Base
Acres
0
17. Revise Sec. 718.201(a), (c) introductory text, and (c)(1) to read
as follows:
Sec. 718.201 Farm constitution.
(a) In order to implement FSA programs and monitor compliance with
regulations, FSA must have records on what land is being farmed by a
particular producer. This is accomplished by a determination of what
land or group of lands ``constitute'' an individual unit or farm. Land
that was properly constituted under prior regulations will remain so
constituted until a reconstitution is required by paragraph (c) of this
section. The constitution and identification of land as a ``farm'' for
the first time and the subsequent reconstitution of a farm made
thereafter will include all land operated by an individual entity or
joint operation as a single farming unit except that it may not
include:
[[Page 41997]]
(1) Land under separate ownership unless the owners agree in
writing or have previously agreed in writing and the labor, equipment,
accounting system, and management are operated in common by the
operator, but separate from other tracts;
(2) Land under a lease agreement of less than 1 year duration;
(3) Federally owned land unless it is rangeland on which no crops
are planted and on which there are no crop base acres established;
(4) State-owned wildlife lands unless the former owner has
possession of the land under a leasing agreement;
(5) Land constituting a farm that is declared ineligible to be
enrolled in a program under the regulations governing the program;
(6) For base acre crops, land located in counties that are not
contiguous except where:
(i) Counties are divided by a river;
(ii) Counties do not share a common border because of a correction
line adjustment; or
(iii) The land is within 20 miles, by road, of other land that will
be a part of the farming unit;
(7) Land subject to either a default election or a valid election
made under part 1412 of this title for each and all covered commodities
constituted with land that has a different default election or valid
election for each and all covered commodities, irrespective of whether
or not any of the land has base acres; or
(8) Land subject to an election of individual coverage under the
Agriculture Risk Coverage Program (ARC-IC) in any State constituted
with any land in another State.
* * * * *
(c) A reconstitution of a farm either by division or by combination
is required whenever:
(1) A change has occurred in the operation of the land since the
last constitution or reconstitution and as a result of such change the
farm does not meet the conditions for constitution of a farm as
specified in paragraph (a) of this section, except that no
reconstitution will be made if the county committee determines that the
primary purpose of the change in operation is to establish eligibility
to transfer allotments subject to sale or lease, or increase the amount
of program benefits received;
* * * * *
0
18. Revise Sec. 718.206 to read as follows:
Sec. 718.206 Determining farms, tracts, and base acres when
reconstitution is made by division.
(a) The methods for dividing farms, tracts, and base acres are, in
order of precedence: Estate, designation by landowner, cropland, and
default. The proper method will be determined on a crop-by-crop basis.
(b) The estate method for reconstitution is the pro-rata
distribution of base acres for a parent farm among the heirs in
settling an estate. If the estate sells a tract of land before the farm
is divided among the heirs, the base acres for that tract will be
determined according to paragraphs (c) through (e) of this section.
(1) Base acres must be divided in accordance with a will, but only
if the county committee determines that the terms of the will are such
that a division can reasonably be made by the estate method.
(2) If there is no will or the county committee determines that the
terms of a will are not clear as to the division of base acres, the
base acres will be apportioned in the manner agreed to in writing by
all interested heirs or devisees who acquire an interest in the
property for which base acres have been established. An agreement by
the administrator or executor will not be accepted in lieu of an
agreement by the heirs or devisees.
(3) If base acres are not apportioned as specified in paragraph
(b)(1) or (2) of this section, the base acres must be divided as
specified in paragraph (d) or (e) of this section, as applicable.
(c) If the ownership of a tract of land is transferred from a
parent farm, the transferring owner may request that the county
committee divide the base acres, including historical acreage that has
been double cropped, between the parent farm and the transferred tract,
or between the various tracts if the entire farm is sold to two or more
purchasers.
(1) If the county committee determines that base acres cannot be
divided in the manner designated by the owner because the owner's
designation does not meet the requirements of paragraph (c)(2) of this
section, FSA will notify the owner and permit the owner to revise the
designation to meet the requirements. If the owner does not furnish a
revised designation of base acres within a reasonable time after such
notification, or if the revised designation does not meet the
requirements, the county committee will divide the base acres in a pro-
rata manner in accordance with paragraph (d) or (e) of this section.
(2) The landowner may designate a manner in which base acres are
divided by filing a signed written memorandum of understanding of the
designation of base acres with the county committee before the transfer
of ownership of the land. Both the transferring owner and transferee
must sign the written designation of base acres.
(i) Within 30 days after a prescribed form, letter, or notice of
base acres is issued by FSA following the reconstitution of a farm but
before any subsequent transfer of ownership of the land, all owners in
existence at time of the reconstitution request may seek a different
manner of base acre designation by agreeing in writing by executing a
form CCC-517 or other designated form.
(ii) The landowner must designate the base acres that will be
permanently reduced when the sum of the base acres exceeds the
effective cropland plus double-cropped acres for the farm.
(iii) When the part of the farm from which the ownership is being
transferred was owned for less than 3 years, the designation by
landowner method of designating base acres cannot be used unless the
county committee determines that the primary purpose of the ownership
transfer was other than to retain or to sell base acres. In the absence
of such a determination, and if the farm contains land that has been
owned for less than 3 years, the part of the farm that has been owned
for less than 3 years will be considered as a separate farm and the
base acres must be assigned to that farm in accordance with paragraph
(d) or (e) of this section. Such apportionment will be made prior to
any designation of base acres with respect to the part that has been
owned for 3 years or more.
(3) The designation by landowner method may be applied, at the
owner's request, to land owned by an Indian Tribal Council that is
leased to two or more producers for the production of any crop of a
commodity for which base acres have been established. If the land is
leased to two or more producers, an Indian Tribal Council may request
that the county committee divide the base acres between the applicable
tracts in the manner designated by the Council. The use of this method
is not subject to the requirements specified in paragraph (c)(2) of
this section.
(d) The cropland method for reconstitution is the pro-rata
distribution of base acres to the resulting tracts in the same
proportion that each resulting tract bears to the cropland for the
parent tract. This method of division will be used if paragraphs (b)
and (c) of this section do not apply.
[[Page 41998]]
(e) The default method for reconstitution is the separation of
tracts from a farm with each tract maintaining the base acres
attributed to the tract when the reconstitution is initiated.
(f) Farm program payment yields calculated for the resulting farms
of a division may be increased or decreased if the county committee
determines the method used did not provide an equitable distribution
considering available land, cultural operations, and changes in the
type of farming conducted on the farm. Any increase in the farm program
payment yield on a resulting farm will be offset by a corresponding
decrease on another resulting farm of the division.
0
19. Revise Sec. 718.207 to read as follows:
Sec. 718.207 Determining base acres when reconstitution is made by
combination.
(a) When two or more farms or tracts are combined for a year, that
year's base acres, with respect to the combined farm or tract, as
required by applicable program regulations, will not be greater than
the sum of the base acres for each of the farms or tracts comprising
the combination, subject to the provisions of Sec. 718.204.
(b) [Reserved]
0
20. Amend Sec. 718.301 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (a), add the punctuation and words ``, as amended'' at
the end of the first sentence;
0
b. Remove paragraph (b);
0
c. Redesignate paragraph (c) as paragraph (b); and
0
d. Add paragraph (c).
The addition reads as follows:
Sec. 718.301 Applicability.
* * * * *
(c) The relief provisions of this part cannot be used to extend a
benefit or assistance not otherwise available under law or not
otherwise available to others who have satisfied or complied with every
eligibility or compliance requirement of the provisions of law or
regulations governing the program benefit or assistance.
Sec. 718.302 [Amended]
0
21. In Sec. 718.302, remove the definition of ``Agricultural
commodity''.
0
22. Revise Sec. 718.303 to read as follows:
Sec. 718.303 Reliance on incorrect actions or information.
(a) Notwithstanding any other law, if an action or inaction by a
participant is based upon good faith reliance on the action or advice
of an authorized representative of an FSA county or State committee,
and that action or inaction results in the participant's noncompliance
with the requirements of a covered program that is to the detriment of
the participant, then that action or inaction still may be approved by
the Deputy Administrator as meeting the requirements of the covered
program, and benefits may be extended or payments made in as specified
in Sec. 718.305.
(b) This section applies only to a participant who:
(1) Relied in good faith upon the action of, or information
provided by, an FSA county or State committee or an authorized
representative of such committee regarding a covered program;
(2) Acted, or failed to act, as a result of the FSA action or
information; and
(3) Was determined to be not in compliance with the requirements of
that covered program.
(c) This section does not apply to cases where the participant had
sufficient reason to know that the action or information upon which
they relied was improper or erroneous or where the participant acted in
reliance on their own misunderstanding or misinterpretation of program
provisions, notices or information.
0
23. Revise Sec. 718.304 to read as follows:
Sec. 718.304 Failure to fully comply.
(a) When the failure of a participant to fully comply with the
terms and conditions of a covered program precludes the providing of
payments or benefits, relief may be authorized as specified in Sec.
718.305 if the participant made a good faith effort to comply fully
with the requirements of the covered program.
(b) This section only applies to participants who are determined by
FSA to have made a good faith effort to comply fully with the terms and
conditions of the covered program and have performed substantial
actions required for program eligibility.
0
24. Amend Sec. 718.306 as follows:
0
a. Revise paragraphs (a) introductory text, (a)(2) and (4), and (b);
and
0
b. Add paragraph (c).
The revisions and addition read as follows:
Sec. 718.306 Finality.
(a) A determination by an FSA State or county committee (or
employee of such committee) becomes final on an application for
benefits and binding 90 days from the date the application for benefits
has been filed, and supporting documentation required to be supplied by
the producer as a condition for eligibility for the particular program
has been filed, unless any of the following exceptions exist:
* * * * *
(2) The determination was in any way based on erroneous, innocent,
or purposeful misrepresentation; false statement; fraud; or willful
misconduct by or on behalf of the participant;
* * * * *
(4) The participant knew or had reason to know that the
determination was erroneous.
(b) Should an erroneous determination become final under the
provisions of this section, the erroneous decision will be corrected
according to paragraph (c) of this section.
(1) If, as a result of the erroneous decision, payment was issued,
no action will be taken by FSA, CCC, or a State or county committee to
recover unearned payment amounts unless one or more of the exceptions
in paragraph (a) of this section applies;
(2) If payment was not issued before the error was discovered, the
payment will not be issued. FSA and CCC are under no obligation to
issue payments or render decisions that are contrary to law or
regulation.
(c) FSA and CCC will modify and correct determinations when errors
are discovered. As specified in paragraph (b) of this section, FSA or
CCC may be precluded from recovering unearned payments that issued as a
result of the erroneous decision. FSA or CCC's inability to recover or
demand refunds of unearned amounts as specified in paragraph (b) will
only be effective through the year in which the error was found and
communicated to the participant.
0
25. Amend Sec. 718.307 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (a), introductory text, remove the words ``an SED'' and
add the words ``an SED, after consultation with and approval from OGC
but'' in their place, and remove the reference to ``Sec. Sec. 718.303
and 718.304'' and add a reference to ``Sec. Sec. 718.303 through
718.305'' in its place;
0
b. In paragraph (a)(2), remove the word ``person'' and add the word
``participant'' in its place;
0
c. In paragraph (a)(3), remove the words ``in that year'';
0
d. In paragraph (a)(4), remove the words ``the SED (or the SED's
predecessor)'' and add the words ``an SED'' in their place;
0
e. Revise paragraph (d); and
0
f. In paragraph (e), remove the last sentence.
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 718.307 Special relief approval authority for State Executive
Directors.
* * * * *
[[Page 41999]]
(d) Relief may not be provided by the SED under this section until
a written opinion or written acknowledgment is obtained from OGC that
grounds exist for determination that requirements for granting relief
under Sec. 718.303 or Sec. 718.304 have been met, that the form of
relief is authorized under Sec. 718.305, and that the granting of the
relief is within the lawful authority of the SED.
* * * * *
PART 1410--CONSERVATION RESERVE PROGRAM
0
26. The authority citation for 7 CFR part 1410 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 714b and 714c; 16 U.S.C. 3801-3847.
0
27. Revise Sec. 1410.1(f) and (j) to read as follows:
Sec. 1410.1 Administration.
* * * * *
(f) Notwithstanding other provisions of this section, the
suitability of land for permanent vegetative or water cover, factors
for determining the likelihood of improved water quality, and adequacy
of the planned practice to achieve desired objectives will be
determined by the Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS) or other
sources approved by the Deputy Administrator, in accordance with the
Field Office Technical Guide (FOTG) of NRCS or other guidelines deemed
appropriate by NRCS. In no case will such determination compel the
Deputy Administrator to execute a contract that the Deputy
Administrator does not believe will serve the purposes of CRP
established by this part. Any approved technical authority will use CRP
guidelines established by the Deputy Administrator.
* * * * *
(j) Except as agreed by CCC and the participant together, the
regulations in this part apply to all contracts approved after July 16,
2015.
0
28. Amend Sec. 1410.2 as follows:
0
a. In paragraphs (a) and (b), introductory text, remove the words
``shall be'' each time they appear and add the word ``are'' in their
place,
0
b. Amend paragraph (b) as follows:
0
i. Add, in alphabetical order, definitions for ``Agricultural
Conservation Easement Program'', ``Common grazing practices'',
``Forb'', ``Grassland'', ``Improved rangeland or pastureland'',
``Nesting season'', ``Pastureland'', ``Rangeland'', ``Shrubland'', and
``Veteran farm or rancher'';
0
ii. Revise the definitions for ``Conservation plan'', ``Conserving
use'', ``Considered planted'', ``Erodibility Index'', ``Highly Erodible
Land'', ``Infeasible to farm'', and ``Local FSA Office''; and
0
iii. Remove the definitions of ``Beginning farmer or rancher'',
``Cropped wetlands'', ``Farmed wetlands'', ``Limited resource farmer or
rancher'', ``Merchantable timber'', ``Present value'', ``Private non-
industrial forest land'', ``Private non-industrial forest landowner'',
``Water Bank Program (WBP)'', and ``Wetlands farmed under natural
conditions''.
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 1410.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
Agricultural Conservation Easement Program means the program that
provides for the establishment of wetland easements on land under
subtitle H of Title XII of the Food Security Act of 1985, as amended by
section 2301 of the Agricultural Act of 2014.
* * * * *
Common grazing practices means grazing practices, including those
related to forage and seed production, common to the area of the
subject ranching or farming operation. Included are routine management
activities necessary to maintain the viability of forage or browse
resources that are common to the locale of the subject ranching or
farming operation.
* * * * *
Conservation plan means a record of the participant's decisions and
supporting information for treatment of a unit of land or water, and
includes a schedule of operations, activities, and estimated
expenditures needed to solve identified natural resource problems by
devoting eligible land to permanent vegetative cover, trees, water, or
other comparable measures. For grassland signup enrollments where
grazing is occurring or is likely to occur, the conservation plan will
contain provisions for common grazing practices and related activities
consistent with achieving CRP purposes and maintaining the health and
viability of grassland resources.
* * * * *
Conserving use means a use of land that meets crop rotation
requirements, as specified by the Deputy Administrator, for: Alfalfa,
multi-year grasses, and legumes planted during 2008 through 2013; for
summer fallow during 2008 through 2013; or for land on which the
contract expired during the period 2008 through 2013 and on which the
grass cover required by the CRP contract continues to be maintained as
though still enrolled. Land that meets this definition of ``conserving
use'' will be considered to have been planted to an agricultural
commodity for the purposes of eligibility specified in Sec.
1410.6(a)(1).
Considered planted means land devoted to a conserving use during
the crop year or during any of the 2 years preceding the crop year if
the contract expired; cropland enrolled in CRP; or land for which the
producer received insurance indemnity payment for prevented planting.
* * * * *
Erodibility index (EI), as prescribed by the Deputy Administrator,
is an index used to determine the inherent erodibility from either from
water or wind, but not both combined, of a soil in relation to the soil
loss tolerance for that soil.
* * * * *
Forb means any herbaceous plant other than those in the grass
family.
Grassland means land on which the vegetation is dominated by
grasses, grass-like plants, shrubs, or forbs, including shrubland, land
that contains forbs, pastureland, and rangeland, and improved
pastureland and rangeland, as determined by the Deputy Administrator.
Highly Erodible Land (HEL) means land determined to have an EI
equal to or greater than 8 on the acreage offered, as determined by the
Deputy Administrator.
Improved rangeland or pastureland means grazing land permanently
producing naturalized forage species that receives varying degrees of
periodic cultural treatment to enhance forage quality and yields and is
primarily consumed by livestock.
Infeasible to farm means an area of land that is too small or
isolated to be economically farmed, or is otherwise suitable for such
classification, as determined by the Deputy Administrator.
* * * * *
Local FSA office means the FSA county office serving the area in
which the FSA records are located for the farm or ranch.
* * * * *
Nesting season means the nesting season for birds in the local area
that are economically significant, in significant decline, or conserved
in accordance with Federal or State law, as determined by the Deputy
Administrator in consultation with the State technical
[[Page 42000]]
committee established as specified in part 610 of this title.
* * * * *
Pastureland means grazing lands comprised of introduced or
domesticated native forage species that are used primarily for the
production of livestock. These lands receive periodic renovation and
cultural treatments, such as tillage, aeration, fertilization, mowing,
and weed control, and may be irrigated. This term does not include
lands that are in rotation with crops.
* * * * *
Rangeland means a land cover or use category with a climax or
potential plant cover composed principally of native grasses, grass-
like plants, forbs, or shrubs suitable for grazing and browsing, and
introduced forage species that are managed like rangeland. Rangeland
includes lands re-vegetated naturally or artificially when routine
management of that vegetation is accomplished mainly through
manipulation of grazing. This term includes areas where introduced
hardy and persistent grasses are planted and such practices as deferred
grazing, burning, chaining, and rotational grazing are used with little
or no chemicals or fertilizer being applied. Grassland, savannas, many
wetlands, some deserts, and tundra are considered to be rangeland.
Certain communities of low forbs and shrubs, such as mesquite,
chaparral, mountain shrub, and pinyon juniper are also included as
rangeland.
* * * * *
Shrubland means land where the dominant plant species are shrubs,
which are plants that are persistent, have woody stems, and a
relatively low growth habit.
* * * * *
Veteran farmer or rancher means a farmer or rancher who has served
in the Armed Forces, as defined in 38 U.S.C. 101(10), and who either:
(1) Has not operated a farm or ranch; or
(2) Has operated a farm or ranch for not more than 10 years.
* * * * *
0
29. Revise Sec. 1410.4 to read as follows:
Sec. 1410.4 Maximum county acreage.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section and certain
shelterbelts, windbreaks, and wet and saturated soils enrolled under
ACEP, the maximum cropland acreage that may be placed in the CRP and
the wetland reserve easements of WRP and ACEP, as appropriate, may not
exceed 25 percent of the total cropland in the county. No more than 10
percent of the cropland in a county may be subject, in the aggregate,
to a CRP or wetland reserve easement.
(b) The restrictions in paragraph (a) of this section may be waived
by the Deputy Administrator as follows:
(1) If the Deputy Administrator determines that such action would
not adversely affect the local economy of the county and that operators
in the county are having difficulties complying with conservation plans
implemented under part 12 of this title; or
(2) Cropland in a county enrolled under provisions as specified in
Sec. 1410.30 or Sec. 1410.50 may be excluded from the restrictions in
paragraph (a) of this section, as determined by the Deputy
Administrator, provided that the county government concurs.
(c) These restrictions on participation are in addition to any
other restriction imposed by law.
Sec. 1410.5 [Amended]
0
30. Amend Sec. 1410.5 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (a)(2)(iii), remove the words ``are such that'';
0
b. Remove paragraph (b);
0
c. Redesignate paragraph (c) as paragraph (b); and
0
d. In newly redesignated paragraph (b), remove the words ``beginning or
socially disadvantaged'' and add the words ``beginning, socially
disadvantaged, or veteran'' in their place.
0
31. Amend Sec. 1410.6 as follows:
0
a. Revise paragraph (a)(1);
0
b. In paragraph (a)(2)(i), remove the words ``in a CREP for similar
water quality purposes as determined by CCC'' and add the words ``under
a Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (CREP) agreement for similar
water quality purposes as determined by the Deputy Administrator'' in
their place;
0
c. Revise paragraph (a)(3);
0
d. Add paragraph (a)(4);
0
e. Remove paragraph (b)(2) and redesignate paragraphs (b)(3) through
(10) as paragraphs (b)(2) through (9), respectively;
0
f. Revise newly designated paragraphs (b)(2) and (3);
0
g. In newly redesignated paragraph (b)(4), add the words ``as
determined by the Deputy Administrator'' at the end;
0
h. In newly designated paragraph (b)(5), remove the word ``CCC'' each
times it appears and add the words ``Deputy Administrator'' in its
place;
0
i. Revise newly designated paragraph (b)(6);
0
j. Remove paragraphs (b)(11) and (12) and redesignate paragraph (b)(13)
as paragraph (b)(10);
0
k. In newly designated paragraph (b)(10), remove the period at the end
of the paragraph and add the words and punctuation ``; or'' in its
place;
0
l. Add paragraph (b)(11);
0
m. Revise paragraph (c); and
0
n. Add paragraph (d).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 1410.6 Eligible land.
(a) * * *
(1) Cropland that is subject to a conservation plan and has been
annually planted or considered planted, as defined in Sec. 1410.2, to
an agricultural commodity in 4 of the 6 crop years from 2008 through
2013, as determined by the Deputy Administrator, including field
margins that are incidental to the planting of crops if:
(i) Including such field margins is determined appropriate by the
Deputy Administrator; and
(ii) The field margins are physically and legally capable of being
planted in a normal manner to an agricultural commodity, as determined
by the Deputy Administrator; or
* * * * *
(3) Acreage enrolled in CRP during the final year of the CRP
contract, provided the scheduled expiration date of the current CRP
contract is before the effective date the new CRP contract, as
determined by the CCC; or
(4) Grassland as specified in paragraph (c) of this section.
(b) * * *
(2) Be non-irrigated or irrigated cropland that would facilitate a
net savings in groundwater or surface water of the agricultural
operation of the producer, only as determined by, and only when
specifically authorized by, the Deputy Administrator;
(3) Be land in a portion of a field not enrolled in CRP, if either:
(i) More than 50 percent of the remainder of the field is enrolled
as a buffer or filterstrip practice; or
(ii) More than 75 percent of the field is enrolled as a
conservation practice other than a buffer or filterstrip; and
(iii) With respect to both paragraphs (b)(3)(i) and (ii) of this
section, the remainder portion of the field is determined to be
infeasible to farm, as defined in Sec. 1410.2, and enrolled at an
annual payment rate not to exceed the maximum annual calculated soil
rental rate, as determined by the Deputy Administrator;
* * * * *
(6) Be non-irrigated or irrigated cropland that produces or serves
as the recharge area for saline seeps, or acreage that is functionally
related to such saline seeps, or where a rising water table contributes
to increased levels of
[[Page 42001]]
salinity at or near the ground surface, as determined by the Deputy
Administrator;
* * * * *
(11) Land that meets other continuous signup land eligibility
criteria, as established by the Deputy Administrator.
(c) For land to be eligible under a grassland signup as specified
in Sec. 1410.30, the land must, as established by the Deputy
Administrator:
(1) Not be cropland or marginal pastureland at the time of
enrollment as grassland. Land enrolled under an expiring CRP contract
may be eligible to be re-enrolled as grassland during the final year of
the CRP contract, provided the scheduled expiration date of the current
CRP contract is the day before the effective date of the new CRP
contract, and suitable grass, legume, forb or shrub covers predominate,
and;
(2) Be needed and suitable for enrollment as grassland following a
determination that such land:
(i) Contain forbs or shrubland, including improved rangeland and
pastureland, for which grazing is the predominant use;
(ii) Is located in an area historically dominated by grassland;
(iii) Is able to provide habitat for animal and plant populations
of significant ecological value if the land is retained in its current
use or restored to a natural condition; and
(iv) Meets other grassland signup land eligibility criteria as may
be established by the Deputy Administrator.
(d) Notwithstanding paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) of this section,
land will be ineligible for enrollment if, as determined by the Deputy
Administrator, the land is one of the following:
(1) Federally-owned land, unless the applicant has a lease for the
contract period;
(2) Land on which the use of the land is either restricted through
deed or other restriction prior to enrollment in CRP prohibiting the
production of agricultural commodities, or requires any resource-
conserving measures, during any part of the proposed contract term;
(3) Land already enrolled in the CRP, unless authorized by Sec.
1410.6(a)(3), as determined by the Deputy Administrator;
(4) Land for which Tribal, State, or other locals laws, ordinances,
or other regulations require any resource conserving or environmental
protection measures or practices and the owners or operators of such
land have been notified in writing of such requirements; or
(5) Land that is required to be used, or otherwise dedicated to
mitigate actions undertaken, or planned to be undertaken, on other
land, or to mitigate other actions taken by landowners or operators, as
determined by the Deputy Administrator.
0
32. Revise Sec. 1410.7 to read as follows:
Sec. 1410.7 Duration of contracts.
(a) Contracts with land devoted to hardwood trees, shelterbelts,
windbreaks, or wildlife corridors will be for a term of 10 years to 15
years, as requested by the applicant.
(b) Other general and continuous signup contracts under this part
will be for a term of 10 to 15 years, as determined by the Deputy
Administrator.
(c) Grassland signup contracts will be for a term of 15 years.
(d) All contracts will expire on September 30 of the final calendar
year of the contract.
Sec. 1410.8 [Amended]
0
33. Amend Sec. 1410.8 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (b), remove the word ``CCC'' and add the words ``Deputy
Administrator'' in its place and remove the number ``33'' and add the
number ``25'' in its place;
0
b. In paragraph (d), introductory text, remove the word ``shall'' and
add the word ``will'' in its place and add the words ``before 5 years''
at the end of the paragraph; and
0
c. In paragraph (d)(2), remove the word ``By'' and add the words ``As
determined appropriate by'' in its place.
Sec. 1410.9 [Removed]
0
34. Remove Sec. 1410.9.
0
35. Revise Sec. 1410.10(a) to read as follows:
Sec. 1410.10 Restoration of wetlands.
(a) An owner or operator who entered into a CRP contract on land
that is suitable for restoration to wetlands or that was restored to
wetlands while under such contract, may, if approved by the Deputy
Administrator, subject to any restrictions as may be imposed by law,
apply to transfer such acres that are devoted to an approved cover from
CRP to a wetland reserve easement under WRP or ACEP, as appropriate.
Transferred acreage will be terminated from CRP effective the day a WRP
or ACEP wetland reserve easement is filed. Participants will receive a
prorated CRP annual payment for the part of the year the acreage was
enrolled in CRP as specified in Sec. 1410.42. Cost-share payments or
applicable incentive payments need not be refunded unless specified by
the Deputy Administrator.
* * * * *
0
36. Amend Sec. 1410.11 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (b)(2), remove the words ``to receive flow from a row
crop agricultural drainage system'' and add the words ``so as to
receive surface and subsurface flow from row crop agricultural
production'' in their place; and
0
b. Revise paragraph (d) introductory text.
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 1410.11 Farmable Wetlands Program.
* * * * *
(d) Total enrollment in CRP under this section may not exceed
750,000 acres. In addition, the maximum size of land enrolled under
this section may not exceed, as determined by the Deputy Administrator:
* * * * *
Sec. 1410.12 [Removed]
0
37. Remove Sec. 1410.12.
0
38. Add Sec. 1410.13 to read as follows:
Sec. 1410.13 Grassland enrollments.
(a) Land may be enrolled in CRP under grassland signup as specified
in Sec. Sec. 1410.6, 1410.30, and 1410.31. Eligible grassland includes
grassland that was previously enrolled in the Grassland Reserve
Program, as specified in part 1415 of this chapter.
(b) Grassland enrollments will generally be administered under all
the provisions of this part, except where specific provisions apply
only to grassland enrollments.
(c) Grassland enrolled in CRP is eligible for the Transition
Incentives Program as specified in Sec. 1410.64.
(d) Grassland previously enrolled in rental contracts under terms
of the Grassland Reserve Program specified in part 1415 of this chapter
will continue to be subject to the provisions of those contracts.
0
39. Amend Sec. 1410.22 as follows:
0
a. Revise paragraphs (a) and (b);
0
b. In paragraph (c), remove the word ``shall'' and add the words ``or
forest stewardship plan must'' in its place; and
0
c. Revise paragraph (f).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 1410.22 CRP conservation plan.
(a) The producer must obtain a CRP conservation plan that complies
with CCC guidelines and is approved by the conservation district for
the land to be entered in CRP. If the conservation district declines to
review the CRP conservation plan, or disapproves the conservation plan,
such approval may be waived by the Deputy Administrator.
[[Page 42002]]
(b) The practices and management activities included in the CRP
conservation plan and agreed to by the participant must cost-
effectively reduce erosion necessary to maintain the productive
capability of the soil, improve water quality, protect wildlife or
wetlands, protect a public well head, improve grassland, or achieve
other environmental benefits as applicable. The producer must undertake
management activities on the land as needed throughout the term of the
CRP contract to implement the conservation plan.
* * * * *
(f) For general signup and continuous signup contracts except
grasslands, mid-contract management must be conducted to implement
management activities, such as disking and prescribed burning according
to an approved conservation plan, as part of the CRP contractual
obligation on all contracts entered into under general signup and
continuous signup, as specified in Sec. 1410.30.
Sec. 1410.23 [Amended]
0
40. Amend Sec. 1410.23 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (a)(1), remove the words ``and permanent wildlife
habitat'' and add the words ``permanent wildlife habitat, and grassland
improvements'' in their place;
0
b. In paragraph (a)(3), remove the words ``the program'' and add the
word ``CRP'' in their place; and
0
c. In paragraph (b), remove the word ``aquiculture'' and add the word
``aquaculture'' in its place.
0
41. Revise Sec. 1410.30 to read as follows:
Sec. 1410.30 Signup.
(a) Offers for contracts may be submitted only during signup
periods as announced periodically by the Deputy Administrator, except
that CCC may hold a continuous signup for land to be devoted to
particular uses, as CCC deems necessary. Generally, continuous signup
is limited to those offers that provide appropriate environmental
benefits, as determined by the Deputy Administrator, or that would
otherwise rank highly under Sec. 1410.31(b) and include high priority
practices such as filter strips, riparian buffers, shelterbelts, field
windbreaks, living snow fences, grass waterways, shallow water areas
for wildlife, salt-tolerant vegetation, and practices to benefit
certain approved public wellhead protection areas.
(b) Grassland signups will be conducted year-round with periodic
ranking periods, as determined by the Deputy Administrator. The
eligible offers that rank the highest according to the environmental
benefits ranking plan established under Sec. 1410.31(e), as determined
by the Deputy Administrator, will be accepted, provided sufficient
acres and funds are available.
0
42. Amend Sec. 1410.31 as follows:
0
a. In paragraphs (a), (b) introductory text, (b)(7), and (d)
introductory text and (d)(3), remove the words ``the program'' each
time they appear and add the word ``CRP'' in their place; and
0
b. Add paragraphs (e) and (f).
The additions read as follows:
Sec. 1410.31 Acceptability of offers.
* * * * *
(e) Grassland signup offers will be periodically batched,
evaluated, and ranked on a competitive basis in which the offers
selected will be those where the greatest environmental benefits
relative to cost are generated, as determined by the Deputy
Administrator, and further provided that:
(1) The offered land is eligible under Sec. Sec. 1410.4 and
1410.6, as determined by the Deputy Administrator;
(2) The producer is eligible under Sec. 1410.5;
(3) The producer accepts either the maximum payment rate the Deputy
Administrator is willing to offer to enroll the acreage in CRP, or a
lesser rate; and
(4) The offer ranks above the minimum ranking level applicable to
each ranking period needed for offer acceptance, as determined by the
Deputy Administrator.
(5) Notwithstanding the preceding, acceptance or rejection of any
grassland signup offers will be in the sole discretion of the Deputy
Administrator and offers may be rejected for any reason as determined
necessary and appropriate to accomplish the goals of CRP.
(f) In ranking and evaluating grassland signup offers, different
factors, as determined by the Deputy Administrator, may be considered
from time to time for priority purposes to accomplish the goals of CRP.
Such factors may include, but are not limited to:
(1) Existence of expiring CRP or Grassland Reserve Program land;
(2) Existing grassland;
(3) Multi-species cover existence and predominance of native
species;
(4) Livestock grazing operation;
(5) State priority enrollment criteria (non-land based) and State
Focus Area (land-based) determined in consultation with State Technical
Committee;
(6) Whether the applicant is an eligible beginning, veteran, or
socially disadvantaged farmer or rancher; and
(7) Other factors as determined by the Deputy Administrator.
0
43. Amend Sec. 1410.32 by revising paragraphs (c)(2), (f)(7), (g), and
(h) to read as follows:
Sec. 1410.32 CRP contracts.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(2) An offer to enroll land in CRP will be irrevocable for such
period as is determined and announced by the Deputy Administrator. The
producer will be liable to CCC for liquidated damages if the applicant
revokes an offer during the period in which the offer is irrevocable,
as determined by the Deputy Administrator. The Deputy Administrator may
waive payment of such liquidated damages, if the Deputy Administrator
determines that the assessment of such damages, in a particular case,
is not in the best interest of CCC and CRP.
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(7) The Deputy Administrator determines that such a termination is
needed in the public interest, or is otherwise necessary and
appropriate to further the goals of CRP.
(g) Except as allowed and approved by the Deputy Administrator,
where the new owner of land enrolled in CRP is a Federal agency that
agrees to abide by the terms and conditions of the terminated contract,
the participant in a contract that has been terminated must refund all
or part of the payments made with respect to the contract plus
interest, as determined by the Deputy Administrator, and must pay
liquidated damages as provided for in the contract. The Deputy
Administrator may permit the amount to be repaid to be reduced to the
extent that such a reduction will not impair the purposes of CRP.
Further, a refund of all payments need not be required from a
participant who is otherwise in full compliance with the CRP contract
when the land is purchased by or for the United States, as determined
by the Deputy Administrator.
(h) During the final year of the CRP contract's term, the
participants on a CRP contract will not be in violation of the terms of
the contract if both the following are met:
(1) During the final year of the contract the land is enrolled in
the Conservation Stewardship Program, and such enrollment is reported
promptly to the Deputy Administrator; and
(2) The land management and conservation practice measures that are
[[Page 42003]]
conducted under the Conservation Stewardship Program are not in
violation of the approved CRP conservation plan and are otherwise
consistent with this part, as determined by the Deputy Administrator.
0
44. Amend Sec. 1410.33 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (a)(4), remove the words ``beginning or socially
disadvantaged'' and add the words ``beginning, socially disadvantaged,
or veteran'' in their place; and
0
b. Add paragraphs (e) and (f).
The additions read as follows:
Sec. 1410.33 Contract modifications.
* * * * *
(e) CCC may terminate or modify a CRP contract when the land is
transferred into WRP, ACEP, or other Federal or State programs, as
determined by the Deputy Administrator.
(1) For contracts terminated or modified for enrollment in other
Federal or State programs, participants will not be required to repay
CRP payments or pay interest and liquidated damages to CCC, as
otherwise required for contract violations under Sec. 1410.52, unless
determined otherwise by the Deputy Administrator, with the following
exception:
(2) Participants will be required to repay CRP Signing Incentive
Payments and Practice Incentive Payments if land containing a wetland
reserve easement is enrolled in ACEP.
(f) During the final year of the CRP contract's term, CCC will
allow an owner or operator to make conservation and land improvements
(resource conserving uses) for economic use that facilitate maintaining
protection of enrolled land after expiration of the contract, but only
under the following conditions:
(1) All provisions are identified in an approved CRP conservation
plan;
(2) Land improved in accordance with paragraph (f) of this section
will not be eligible to be re-enrolled in CRP for 5 years after the
date of the expiration or termination of the contract; and
(3) CCC will reduce the final annual rental payment otherwise
payable under the contract by an amount commensurate with the economic
value of the resource conserving use activity carried out.
Sec. 1410.40 [Amended]
0
45. Amend Sec. 1410.40 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (a), remove the word ``shall'' and add the word
``will'' in its place and remove the word ``CCC'' and add the words
``the Deputy Administrator'' in its place;
0
b. In paragraph (d)(1), remove the words ``wellheads; and'' and add the
words ``wellheads, grassland improvement, or other conservation
measures, as determined by the Deputy Administrator; and'' in their
place; and
0
c. In paragraphs (e) and (f), remove the word ``shall'' each time it
appears and add the word ``will'' in its place.
0
46. Amend Sec. 1410.41 by revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 1410.41 Levels and rates for cost share payments.
(a) As determined by the Deputy Administrator, CCC will not pay
more than 50 percent of the actual or average cost of establishing
eligible practices specified in the conservation plan. CCC may allow
cost-share payments for maintenance costs, consistent with the
provisions of Sec. 1410.40 and the Deputy Administrator may determine
the period and amount of such cost-share payments.
* * * * *
0
47. Amend Sec. 1410.42 as follows:
0
a. Revise paragraphs (b) and (f) introductory text;
0
b. In paragraphs (c) and (e), remove the word ``shall'' each time it
appears and add the word ``will'' in its place; and
0
c. Add paragraph (h).
The revisions and addition read as follows:
Sec. 1410.42 Annual rental payments.
* * * * *
(b) Annual rental payments per acre include a payment based on a
weighted average soil rental rate, marginal pastureland rental rate, or
grassland rate, as appropriate, and an incentive payment as a portion
of the annual payment for certain practices, as determined by the
Deputy Administrator. In addition, a national maximum annual rental
payment rate may also be established by the Deputy Administrator for
certain categories of CRP offers and contracts.
* * * * *
(f) The Deputy Administrator will prepare a schedule for each
county that shows the maximum soil rental rate CCC may pay which may be
supplemented to reflect special contract requirements. As determined by
the Deputy Administrator, such schedule will be calculated for cropland
based on the relative productivity of soils within the county using
NRCS data and local FSA average cash rental estimates. For marginal
pastureland, rental rates will be based on estimates of the prevailing
rental values of marginal pastureland in riparian areas. Grassland
rental rates will be based on not more than 75 percent of the estimated
grazing value of the land. The schedule will be available in the local
FSA office and, as determined by the Deputy Administrator, will
indicate, when appropriate, that:
* * * * *
(h) CCC may make tree thinning incentive payments to owners and
operators of enrolled land in an amount sufficient to encourage proper
tree thinning and other practices to improve the condition of
resources, promote forest management, or enhance wildlife habitat on
the land, as determined by the Deputy Administrator. Incentive payments
for tree thinning and other tree stand practices will:
(1) Not exceed 150 percent of the total cost of the practice, as
determined by the Deputy Administrator; and
(2) Only be available for practices outlined in the tree planting
plan under the approved CRP conservation plan.
0
48. Revise Sec. 1410.44 to read as follows:
Sec. 1410.44 Average adjusted gross income.
(a) Benefits under this part will not be available to persons or
legal entities whose average adjusted gross income exceeds $900,000 for
the 3 taxable years preceding the most immediately preceding complete
taxable year, or who otherwise do not meet the AGI requirements
specified in part 1400 of this chapter.
(b) [Reserved]
0
49. Amend Sec. 1410.52 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (a)(2)(i), add a comma after the word ``contract'', and
remove the word ``together''; and
0
b. Revise paragraph (c).
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 1410.52 Violations.
* * * * *
(c) The Deputy Administrator may reduce a demand for a refund under
this section to the extent the Deputy Administrator determines that
such relief would be appropriate and will not deter the accomplishment
of the goals of CRP.
* * * * *
0
50. Revise Sec. 1410.53 to read as follows:
Sec. 1410.53 Executed CRP contract not in conformity with the
regulations.
(a) If, after a CRP contract is approved by CCC, it is discovered
that such CRP contract is found to contain material errors of fact or
is not in conformity with this part, these regulations will prevail,
and the Deputy Administrator may, at his or her sole discretion,
terminate or modify the CRP contract,
[[Page 42004]]
effective immediately or at a later date as the Deputy Administrator
determines appropriate.
(b) [Reserved]
0
51. Amend Sec. 1410.62 by revising paragraph (g) to read as follows:
Sec. 1410.62 Miscellaneous.
* * * * *
(g) As determined by the Deputy Administrator, incentives may be
authorized to foster opportunities for Indian tribes and beginning,
limited resource, socially disadvantaged, and veteran farmers and
ranchers, and to enhance long-term environmental goals.
* * * * *
0
52. Amend Sec. 1410.63 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (b)(2), add the word ``and'' at the end;
0
b. In paragraph (b)(3), remove the words ``plan; and'' and add the word
and punctuation ``plan.'' in their place;
0
c. Remove paragraph (b)(4);
0
d. Revise paragraph (c); and
0
e. Add paragraphs (d) and (e).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 1410.63 Permissive uses.
* * * * *
(c) No barrier fencing or boundary limitations that prohibit
wildlife access to or from the CRP acreage are allowed as part of any
permissive use, unless required by State law.
(d) The following activities may be permitted, as determined by the
Deputy Administrator, on CRP enrolled land insofar as they are
consistent with the conservation purposes of CRP including timing,
frequency, and duration as provided in an approved CRP conservation
plan that identifies appropriate vegetative management requirements:
(1) Managed harvesting and other commercial uses, including managed
harvesting of biomass, but only in exchange for a payment reduction of
not less than 25 percent as determined by the Deputy Administrator, and
only in accordance with vegetative management requirements, harvest
period, and a harvest frequency developed in coordination with the
State Technical committee and timing of harvesting activities outside
the nesting season at least every 5 years, but not more than once every
3 years, and only as identified in an approved CRP conservation plan;
(2) Routine grazing in accordance with appropriate vegetative
management requirements and stocking rates for the land, grazing
frequency, and grazing periods outside the nesting season developed in
coordination with the State Technical Committee, of not more than once
every 2 years, and only as identified in an approved CRP conservation
plan. Routine grazing will only be permitted in exchange for a payment
reduction of not less than 25 percent, as determined by the Deputy
Administrator, except that a beginning farmer or rancher may conduct
routine grazing without payment reduction;
(3) Prescribed grazing for the control of invasive species in
accordance with appropriate vegetative management requirements and
stocking rates for the land, grazing frequency, and grazing periods
outside the nesting season, and only as identified in an approved CRP
conservation plan. Prescribed grazing will only be permitted in
exchange for a payment reduction of not less than 25 percent, as
determined by the Deputy Administrator, except that a beginning farmer
or rancher may conduct prescribed grazing by without payment reduction;
(4) Harvesting, grazing, or other commercial use of the forage on
the land in response to a drought, flooding, or other emergency,
consistent with an approved CRP conservation plan;
(5) Wind turbines on CRP land installed in numbers and locations as
determined appropriate by the Deputy Administrator considering the
location, size, and other physical characteristics of the land, the
extent to which the land contains threatened or endangered wildlife and
wildlife habitat, and the purposes of CRP, but only in exchange for a
payment reduction as determined by the Deputy Administrator;
(6) Spot grazing, if necessary for control of weed infestation, and
not to exceed a 30-day period according to an approved conservation
plan, but only in exchange for a payment reduction as determined by the
Deputy Administrator;
(7) Intermittent and seasonal use of vegetative buffer practices
incidental to agricultural production on lands adjacent to the buffer
such that the permitted use does not destroy the permanent vegetative
cover, as determined by the Deputy Administrator, only as identified in
an approved CRP conservation plan, and in exchange for a payment
reduction of not less than 25 percent;
(8) The sale of carbon, water quality, or environmental credits, as
determined appropriate by CCC;
(9) When enrolled land is established to tree planting practices or
otherwise converted to forestry uses, customary forestry activities are
authorized such as, but not limited to, thinning and prescribed
burning, in a manner consistent with the participant's conservation
plan. Such activities must be designed to promote forest health,
enhance wildlife habitat, and improve the general resource conditions
of enrolled lands. An incentive payment is authorized as specified in
Sec. 1410.42(h).
(e) For land enrolled under a grassland signup type as authorized
by Sec. 1410.30(b) only, the following activities may also be
permitted, as determined by the Deputy Administrator:
(1) Common grazing practices, including maintenance and necessary
cultural practices, on the land in a manner that is consistent with
maintaining the viability of grassland, forb, and shrub species
appropriate to the locality;
(2) Haying, mowing, or harvesting for seed production subject to
appropriate restrictions during the nesting season;
(3) Fire pre-suppression, fire-related rehabilitation, and
construction of firebreaks;
(4) Grazing related activities, such as fencing and livestock
watering facilities; and
(5) Other activities as determined by the Deputy Administrator,
when the manner, number, intensity, location, operation, and other
features associated with the activity will not adversely affect the
grassland resources or related conservation values protected under a
grassland CRP contract.
0
53. Amend Sec. 1410.64 as follows:
0
a. Revise paragraphs (a) introductory text, (a)(2), and (a)(6);
0
b. In paragraphs (a)(4), (a)(5), (b) introductory text and (b)(1), (c),
(d), and (e), remove the words ``beginning or'' each time they appear
and add the words ``beginning, veteran, or'' in their place;
0
a. Revise paragraph (f); and
0
c. Remove paragraph (g).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 1410.64 Transition Incentives Program.
(a) To be eligible for the Transition Incentives Program, the
retired or retiring owner or operator must:
* * * * *
(2) Sell or lease (under a qualifying irrevocable lease of at least
5 years in length) expiring CRP land to a beginning, veteran, or
socially disadvantaged farmer or rancher who will return some or all of
the land to production using sustainable grazing or crop production
methods;
* * * * *
(6) Allow the beginning, veteran, or socially disadvantaged farmer
or rancher to install conservation practices and initiate land
improvements, including preparing to plant a crop, that
[[Page 42005]]
are consistent with the conservation plan during the last year of the
contract.
* * * * *
(f) The eligible retired or retiring owner or operator and the
eligible beginning, veteran, or socially disadvantaged farmer or
rancher must agree to be jointly and severally responsible for
complying with both the provisions of the Transition Incentives Program
agreement and the provisions of this part, and must also agree to be
jointly and severally responsible for any payment adjustments that may
result from violations of the terms or conditions of the Transition
Incentives Program agreement or this part.
Sec. Sec. 1410.1, 1410.2, 1410.3, 1410.6, 1410.8, 1410.10, 1410.11,
1410.22, 1410.32, 1410.33, 1410.40, 1410.41, 1410.43, 1410.50, 1410.51,
1410.60, 1410.61, and 1410.62 [Amended]
0
54. In addition to the amendments set forth above, in 7 CFR part 1410,
remove the word ``CCC'' each time it appears and add the words ``the
Deputy Administrator'' in its place, in the following places:
0
a. In Sec. 1410.1(g), (h), and (i);
0
b. In Sec. 1410.2, in the definitions of ``Agricultural commodity'',
``Commercial pond-raised aquaculture facility'', ``Field'', ``Field
windbreak, shelterbelt, and/or living snowfence'', ``Offer'',
``Offeror'', ``Operator'', ``Perennial crop'', and ``Technical
assistance'';
0
c. In Sec. 1410.3(b) and (d);
0
d. In Sec. 1410.6(a)(2);
0
e. In Sec. 1410.8(a);
0
f. In Sec. 1410.10(b);
0
g. In Sec. 1410.11(b) introductory text, (b)(1), (e), and (g);
0
h. In Sec. 1410.22(e);
0
i. In Sec. 1410.32(b)(3), (d) introductory text, and (f)(2);
0
j. In Sec. 1410.33(d);
0
k. In Sec. 1410.40(b) and (g);
0
l. In Sec. 1410.41(b) and (c);
0
m. In Sec. 1410.43;
0
n. In Sec. 1410.50(a);
0
o. In Sec. 1410.51(a)(1) and (c);
0
p. In Sec. 1410.60(a);
0
q. In Sec. 1410.61; and
0
r. In Sec. 1410.62(h).
Val Dolcini,
Administrator, Farm Service Agency, and Executive Vice President,
Commodity Credit Corporation.
[FR Doc. 2015-17317 Filed 7-15-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-05-P