General Administrative Regulations; Catastrophic Risk Protection Endorsement; Area Risk Protection Insurance Regulations; and the Common Crop Insurance Regulations, Basic Provisions, 42453-42475 [2016-15327]
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42453
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
Vol. 81, No. 126
Thursday, June 30, 2016
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains regulatory documents having general
applicability and legal effect, most of which
are keyed to and codified in the Code of
Federal Regulations, which is published under
50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by
the Superintendent of Documents. Prices of
new books are listed in the first FEDERAL
REGISTER issue of each week.
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Federal Crop Insurance Corporation
7 CFR Parts 400, 402, 407, and 457
[Docket No. FCIC–14–0005]
RIN 0563–AC43
General Administrative Regulations;
Catastrophic Risk Protection
Endorsement; Area Risk Protection
Insurance Regulations; and the
Common Crop Insurance Regulations,
Basic Provisions
Federal Crop Insurance
Corporation, USDA.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Federal Crop Insurance
Corporation (FCIC) finalizes the General
Administrative Regulations—
Ineligibility for Programs under the
Federal Crop Insurance Act, the
Catastrophic Risk Protection
Endorsement, the Area Risk Protection
Insurance Regulations, and the Common
Crop Insurance Regulations, Basic
Provisions to revise those provisions
affected by changes mandated by the
Agricultural Act of 2014 (commonly
referred to as the 2014 Farm Bill),
enacted on February 7, 2014.
DATES: This rule is effective June 30,
2016.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tim
Hoffmann, Director, Product
Management, Product Administration
and Standards Division, Risk
Management Agency, United States
Department of Agriculture, Beacon
Facility, Stop 0812, Room 421, P.O. Box
419205, Kansas City, MO 64141–6205,
telephone (816) 926–7730.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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SUMMARY:
Background
This rule finalizes changes to the
General Administrative Regulations—
Ineligibility for Programs under the
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Federal Crop Insurance Act, the
Catastrophic Risk Protection
Endorsement, the Area Risk Protection
Insurance Regulations, and the Common
Crop Insurance Regulations, Basic
Provisions that were published by FCIC
on July 1, 2014, as a notice of interim
rulemaking in the Federal Register at 79
FR 37155–37166. The public was
afforded 60 days to submit written
comments and opinions.
A total of 364 comments were
received from 74 commenters. The
commenters included persons or
entities from the following categories:
Academic, farmer, financial, insurance
company, producer group, trade
association, and other.
FCIC received a number of comments
regarding sections of the Farm Bill that
were not included in the interim rule.
The comments received included but
are not limited to (1) section 1404
participation of dairy operations in
margin protection program; (2) section
11003 supplemental coverage option; (3)
section 11017 stacked income
protection plan for producers of upland
cotton; (4) section 11022 whole farm
diversified risk management insurance
plan; and (5) section 11023 crop
insurance for organic crops. These
sections of the Farm Bill were not a part
of this regulation. Therefore, FCIC is not
publishing these comments in this final
rule. FCIC thanks the public for their
input.
The public comments received are
organized below by the issues identified
in this rule and the specific public
comments received. The comments
received and FCIC’s responses are as
follows:
General
Comment: A commenter stated
programs to educate farmers on the new
provisions contained in the Farm Bill
are essential to proper implementation
of this legislation and to the long-term
success of Northeast agriculture.
The commenter suggested the United
States Department of Agriculture
(USDA) aggressively promote
educational and informational
programming, especially initiatives that
involve and combine the efforts of
public, private and educational entities.
Response: FCIC collaborated with
producers, producers groups, agents,
approved insurance providers, as well
as the National Resource and
Conservation Service (NRCS) and the
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Farm Service Agency (FSA) regarding
several sections of the 2014 Farm Bill
through meetings, teleconferences,
webinars, and listening sessions to
develop policies and procedures. The
purpose of this outreach was to provide
feedback and explain revisions, explain
the rationale and approach for
implementation, and reach out to
specialty groups. General updates to
ongoing activities were provided to
approved insurance providers.
Conservation compliance education
included producers, producer groups,
agents, and approved insurance
provider meetings, collaborations with
RMA, NRCS, and FSA, revising forms
and certification policy and procedure,
as well as providing this information to
producers. FCIC conducted 135 inperson and webinar training sessions,
and conducted radio spots and other
forms of interviews reaching an even
larger audience.
FCIC has published information on its
Web site highlighting the major changes
to the Federal crop insurance program
in response to the 2014 Farm Bill
implementation. Also published on the
Web site are Fact Sheets, Question and
Answers, and brochures regarding each
section of the Farm Bill. FCIC has
worked closely with approved
insurance providers to make system
changes and prepare procedural
documents. In addition, FCIC
participated with approved insurance
providers and an insurance trade
association to train the trainers,
underwriters, loss adjusters, and agents.
FCIC will continue to promote and
educate on the implementation of the
Farm Bill provisions as opportunities
arise.
Comment: A commenter stated the
current agricultural subsidy system is a
maze of market distorting and highly
parochial policies that generally
rewards a handful of large farm
businesses or well-connected industry
segments at the expense of taxpayers.
The system results in costly
inefficiencies that detract from program
goals and produce numerous
unintended consequences. The Federal
government bears a disproportionate
amount of the financial risks for
agribusinesses to the detriment of
taxpayers, consumers, and agriculture as
a sector making it less competitive, less
resilient, and less accountable for its
impacts.
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The commenter has long advocated
for reforms to make the agricultural
safety net more cost-effective,
transparent, accountable to taxpayers,
and responsive to current market
conditions and needs. While the
Agricultural Act of 2014 fails to take the
necessary steps to achieve this reformed
safety net, instead of expanding the role
of Washington in agriculture through
new business income entitlement
programs and increasing spending on
federally subsidized crop insurance,
there is an opportunity to make progress
in the implementation of crop insurance
provisions.
The commenter strongly encouraged
FCIC to remember that while USDA may
consider producers and other
agricultural businesses ‘‘clients,’’ it is
taxpayers who are footing the bill. Farm
Bills are notorious for vastly exceeding
their estimated costs—the last two Farm
Bills are on pace to exceed by $400
billion their Congressional Budget
Office scores at passage. The decisions
FCIC makes in developing and
administering programs under its
jurisdiction play an important role in
determining whether taxpayer-funded
agricultural programs will continue to
be vastly over budget.
The commenter strongly encourages
FCIC to implement the Agricultural Act
of 2014 while being cognizant of the
reality that federal taxpayers are
responsible for more than $17 trillion in
debt and are facing annual deficits
exceeding $500 billion. The commenter
suggested FCIC not simply attempt to
maximize spending, but follow the will
of Congress in prioritizing federal
support only where necessary and in a
manner that is cost-effective and
transparent.
Response: FCIC does not have the
authority to change the amount of
subsidies that are mandated by the
Federal Crop Insurance Act and such
subsidies cannot be eliminated without
a change in law by Congress. Since the
program changes contained in this rule
were mandated by the 2014 Farm Bill,
FCIC is required by law to implement
the changes and will do so in the most
cost-effective and transparent manner
possible. No change has been made.
Comment: A commenter stated the
third paragraph of background item i.
indicates that as of the publication of FR
Doc. 2013–25321 on October 25, 2013,
a 1971 amendment to the
Administrative Procedures Act that
previously required codified Federal
crop insurance policies to be published
for public review and comment is no
longer in effect. The commenter
believed it would be a loss to FCIC if
approved insurance providers,
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producers and others outside the
Federal government were no longer able
to ask questions and offer comments to
planned policy revisions. Furthermore,
the publication of comments and
responses in the final rule clarifies the
reason for policy changes and helps to
avoid potential disputes and ambiguity
in policy language. The commenter
urged FCIC to continue its practice of
publishing all codified crop insurance
policy changes in the Federal Register
for public review and comment.
Response: FCIC is no longer required
by the Administrative Procedures Act
due to the revocation of the Hardin
Memorandum (78 FR 33045) to publish
proposed rules because contracts are
exempt from notice and comment
rulemaking and the crop insurance
policy is a contract. FCIC now has the
discretion to determine the
appropriateness of affording the public
an opportunity for notice and comment
when promulgating regulations relating
to contracts. When issuing rules
regarding crop insurance policies in the
future, FCIC will take many factors into
consideration including but not limited
to the nature of the change, and whether
it is anticipated to be controversial to
any party, the exigency of the change,
the significance of the change to
stakeholders and any recommendations
made by producers, producer groups,
agents, loss adjusters, approved
insurance providers or other interested
parties. To the extent practicable, FCIC
will solicit comments before making
administrative rules effective, all other
rules will be final rule with comment,
which still affords the opportunity for
the public to comment while making the
rule effective upon publication. FCIC
may consider the comments received
and may conduct additional rulemaking
based on those comments.
Comment: A commenter stated
throughout section 6 of the CAT
Endorsement, FCIC uses the word
‘‘paragraph’’ to reference other portions
of the Endorsement, the commenter
recommended FCIC replace the word
‘‘paragraph’’ with the word ‘‘section.’’
The commenter believed this change
will ensure the CAT Endorsement
would be consistent with phrasing used
in the CCIP Basic Provisions and other
crop insurance policies.
Response: FCIC agrees and has made
the change accordingly.
Comment: A commenter stated the
phrase ‘‘. . . within 30 days after you
have been billed . . .’’ in revised
section 6(b) of the CAT Endorsement
implies the payment must be received
within 30 days, precluding any
potential for interest owed and making
the timeframe for policy termination for
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unpaid premium ambiguous. As
written, this phrase in the CAT
Endorsement is inconsistent with the
Annual Premium and Administrative
Fees section in the applicable Basic
Provisions. The commenter therefore
recommended FCIC revise section 6(b)
as follows: ‘‘In return for catastrophic
risk protection coverage, you must pay
an administrative fee and any applicable
premium as specified in paragraph (f) of
this section to us, unless otherwise
authorized in the Federal Crop
Insurance Act;’’ and insert a new subclause 6(b)(3) that states ‘‘You will be
billed for any applicable premium and
administrative fee not earlier than the
premium billing date specified in the
Special Provisions.’’
Response: The phrase ‘‘within 30 days
after you have been billed’’ in section
6(b) of the CAT Endorsement was not a
change made by the interim final rule.
The only change made to section 6(b) of
the CAT Endorsement by the interim
final rule was to add the phrase ‘‘and
premium as specified in paragraph (f) of
this section’’ between the phrases
‘‘administrative fee’’ and ‘‘to us within.’’
The addition of the phrase ‘‘and
premium as specified in paragraph (f) of
this section’’ does not preclude the
potential for interest owed, when
applicable, nor change the termination
date of the policy. FCIC disagrees that
the addition of the phrase ‘‘and
premium as specified in paragraph (f) of
this section’’ or the existing phrase
‘‘within 30 days after you have been
billed’’ are inconsistent with the
provisions in the Annual Premium and
Administrative Fees section of the
applicable Basic Provisions. However,
as provided in the applicable Basic
Provisions, if a conflict exists between
the CAT Endorsement and the Basic
Provisions, the CAT Endorsement
controls. No change has been made.
Section 2611
Comment: A commenter did not think
crop insurance should be connected
with conservation. Farmers should be
left alone to maintain their own land.
The farmers are paying for their land,
not the Federal Government. Farmers
know and understand their land much
better than USDA or Natural Resources
Conservation Service (NRCS). USDA or
NRCS cannot even understand the land
classifications and want to make all
land in a parcel ‘‘highly erodible’’ when
there may be only a very small part of
the parcel that is really erodible. The
commenter recommended FCIC
disconnect insurance from NRCS and let
insurance companies compete for the
business rather than continue with the
current monopoly.
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The commenter felt we have gotten
very far off-base with government
programs. The commenter explained
that there are so many people working
in government now that don’t have any
real understanding of how to work land,
improve it, etc. They are only there to
draw a salary and pretend to know
something. Let the real farmers and
ranchers control agriculture.
Government programs now are really
created and maintained for special
interest groups, and that creates all
kinds of requirements for the real
farmers who know what they are doing.
The people who farm small operations
do not have a chance because there is
somebody telling them they must do
what the government wants when the
government is unfairly operated in favor
of takers rather than producers. The
further we go into government control of
farming, the less productivity we will
have, and our food costs will continue
to sky-rocket.
The commenter recommended
separating the Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program (SNAP) from farm
programs. SNAP is leading the country
in the wrong direction—dependency on
somebody else to provide for those who
will not keep a job, or maybe choose to
have children with no intention of
making a living for them.
Response: The 2014 Farm Bill linked
the conservation compliance provisions
to eligibility for Federal crop insurance
premium subsidy. FCIC is required to
implement these provisions of the 2014
Farm Bill. Further, FCIC has no control
over how the conservation compliance
programs are administered or the
designation of highly erodible land. All
such decisions are made by FSA and
NRCS and communicated to FCIC.
However, a producer may obtain
Federally reinsured crop insurance
without being in compliance with the
conservation compliance provisions but
such producer will be ineligible for
premium subsidy on all Federally
reinsured crop insurance policies and
plans of insurance. The interim rule did
not address any provisions of SNAP.
Therefore, the comments cannot be
considered in this final rule. No change
has been made.
Comment: A commenter stated
specialty crop and perennial producers
have had limited participation in USDA
programs, with the exception of the
Federal crop insurance program. This
agricultural segment is significant in
number of producers and overall
production throughout the Northeast
and will have the greatest challenge
meeting the timeline provided by USDA
to comply with the conservation
compliance requirements. The
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commenter requested that USDA
recognize this challenge and provide
leniency in the form of additional time
for specialty crop producers that do not
currently have an established
relationship with FSA and the NRCS.
Response: The 2014 Farm Bill
requires that all persons seeking
eligibility for Federal crop insurance
premium subsidy must provide a
certification of compliance with the
conservation compliance provisions
beginning with the first full reinsurance
year following February 7, 2014. The
2014 Farm Bill also requires that
existing processes and procedures be
used for certifying compliance to avoid
creating an additional burden on
producers and to provide fair and equal
treatment to all producers regardless of
what crops a producer grows or which
program benefits a producer is seeking
to obtain. Form AD–1026 has been used
by producers to certify compliance with
the provisions since the 1980’s,
including specialty and perennial crop
producers seeking FSA benefits under
programs such as the Tree Assistance
Program and multiple ad hoc disaster
programs.
However, while all persons must file
a certification of compliance, Form AD–
1026, by June 1, 2015, to be eligible for
Federal crop insurance premium
subsidy for the 2016 reinsurance year
(July 1, 2015—June 30, 2016), the 2014
Farm Bill does provide additional time
for producers who are subject to the
conservation compliance provisions for
the first time to develop and comply
with a conservation plan or remedy a
wetland violation, if needed. Since the
conservation provisions are
administered by FSA and NRCS, the
terms and conditions relating to the
additional time frames are specified in
7 CFR part 12. In addition, producers
who are subject to the conservation
compliance provisions for the first time
will receive priority for NRCS technical
assistance in developing and applying a
conservation plan or in making a
wetland determination, if needed.
Comment: A commenter stated the
interim rule states, ‘‘Section 2611 of the
2014 Farm Bill links the eligibility for
premium subsidy paid by FCIC to an
insured’s compliance with the Highly
Erodible Land Conservation (HELC) and
Wetland Conservation (WC) provisions
of the Food Security Act of 1985.’’ The
premise of these accountability
standards—‘‘conservation
compliance’’—is that receipt of Federal
funding is a two-way street, and
subsidies should not be used to tear up
sensitive land, drain wetlands, or shift
unintended costs onto others. These
Farm Bill provisions reduce the cost of
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agricultural pollution and limit long
term liabilities by ensuring producers
minimize soil erosion on highly
erodible land and forgo draining
wetlands.
The commenter added that in order
for these provisions to be effective,
adequate enforcement of these
minimum conservation practices must
be prioritized after implementation.
Independent analysts including USDA’s
own Office of Inspector General (OIG)
found that from 1991 to 2008,
compliance with conservation
accountability standards varied from
region to region, many farms were out
of compliance (up to 20 percent in the
1995 OIG report), and millions in
taxpayer dollars could have been saved
if subsidies were appropriately withheld
for risky production practices (https://
www.agri-pulse.com/uploaded/
ConservationCompliance.pdf). Strong
enforcement, proper monitoring, and
effective implementation should be
prioritized so these provisions achieve
measurable public benefits. Adequate
resources must also be provided to local
officials for monitoring and enforcement
efforts, and staff members must be welltrained to ensure consistent
enforcement from county to county and
state to state.
The commenter also suggested that
flexibility should also be built into
program regulations so local, on-theground knowledge and realities are
considered in farms’ conservation plans.
For instance, if only a small portion of
a field is categorized as highly-erodible
land, the sensitive acres may require a
different conservation plan than the rest
of the field. In addition, conservation
practices should be evaluated in a
holistic view to ensure that those with
public benefits greatly outweigh others
with potential negative impacts. For
instance, installing stream buffers to
conserve soil and water could be zeroed
out if they are covered in excess
agricultural residue left over from
flooding or heavy rains. Public benefits
of conservation practices may also be
reduced when drainage tile is installed
on farmland, increasing the rate at
which water flows from farmland to
nearby waterways. Considering these
factors when developing conservation
accountability standards will ensure
that these provisions not only achieve
their stated outcomes but also reduce
long-term liabilities of agricultural
runoff.
Response: Technical determinations
regarding the conservation compliance
provisions, such as whether land is
highly erodible or a wetland, are made
by NRCS. NRCS is also responsible for
approving conservation and mitigation
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plans, when needed, to ensure land
meets the conservation compliance
requirements. The interim rule did not
address the development, approval, or
enforcement of the technical
requirements for conservation or
mitigation plans or the associated
staffing needs. No change has been
made.
Comment: A commenter believed that
the conservation compliance provisions
from the 2014 Farm Bill are effectively
included in the rule concerning the CAT
Endorsement, ARPI, and CCIP Basic
Provisions. The commenter noted that
the same text is included under each of
these three parts of the rule. However,
there are a few areas where some
refinement could be helpful.
The rule specifically denies the
premium subsidy for a compliance
violation or failure to file a form AD–
1026, and then specifically states that
failure by the person to pay the full
premium (without the premium
subsidy) would result in termination of
the policy and all other policies with
FCIC. For example, section 6(f) of the
CAT Endorsement denies the premium
subsidy in the case of a violation and
section 6(h) terminates the policy for
failure to pay the required premium.
The commenter supported the way that
compliance has been handled in the
rule, and the way it has provided clarity
to the way FCIC will be handling it.
However, the commenter also pointed
out that form AD–1026, as revised in
June 2014 by FSA, can represent a
somewhat more complex form for
producers that are newly covered by
compliance requirements—most of
which have been participants in crop
insurance, but not other USDA
programs that have required compliance
for some time. This final rule should
provide some greater explanation about
the form AD–1026, such as indicating
the explanatory purpose of the appendix
(as expanded in June of 2014), some
description of the boxes to be checked
on the form, and the significance of the
affiliated person section.
The commenter recommended that
the final rule include a specific
discussion, perhaps in the background
section, that indicates the time
allowance for development and
compliance with an approved
conservation plan. The statute specified
that any person newly covered would
have five reinsurance years and persons
that would have been in violation if
they had continued participation in the
programs requiring compliance would
have two reinsurance years to come into
compliance. Some indication of this
phase in period would be helpful for
those producers that are not familiar
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with conservation compliance
requirements. This is especially
important since the rule (and the
statute) refer to reinsurance year
whereas the form AD–1026 refers to
crop year. While the commenter agreed
with the time allowance and certain
other provisions affecting a decision
concerning compliance or a violation
being left up to FSA, some greater
explanation to that effect and perhaps a
link to the FSA rules on HELC and WC
would be helpful. Even with the
reference to FSA responsibilities, the
commenter urged FCIC to provide some
clarity on the time allowance the
insured has for developing and
complying with conservation plans
where applicable.
The commenter agreed with the
clarity provided by the specific
reference in the rule background that
the HELC and WC provisions apply only
to annually tilled crops.
Response: Form AD–1026 is an FSA
form used by producers to self-certify
compliance with the conservation
compliance provisions. On June 30,
2014, FSA released a modified Form
AD–1026 and appendix to incorporate
the 2014 Farm Bill provisions relating to
crop insurance. As an FSA form, the
explanation of and instructions for
completing the form are provided by
FSA, which can be found at https://
forms.sc.egov.usda.gov/efcommon/
eFileServices/eForms/AD1026.PDF.
Since it is FSA that is administering the
AD–1026 process, it is best that FSA
explain the process and the forms to
producers and that such information is
contained in their procedures where it
can be more comprehensive and up to
date than FCIC can provide in this rule.
The interim rule changed the
applicable crop insurance Basic
Provisions to indicate that producers
must have Form AD–1026 on file and
they must be in compliance with the
conservation compliance provisions of 7
CFR part 12. FSA and NRCS administer
the conservation compliance programs
and make determinations regarding the
additional time frames. Therefore, FSA
and NRCS are in the best position to
explain the requirements to producers
regarding the additional time frames to
come into compliance with the
conservation compliance provisions.
The provisions of 7 CFR part 12
regarding the requirements for
conservation compliance and the
additional time frames for producers
who have never participated in
programs for which the conservation
compliance provisions were applicable
to come into compliance can be found
at https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR2015-04-24/pdf/2015-09599.pdf.
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However, RMA, FSA, and NRCS have
been working diligently to assure that
all producers are aware of their
obligations under the conservation
compliance provisions through
meetings, mailings, outreach, etc. To
clarify, a producer must provide an AD–
1026 form that encompasses all acreage
in the producers’ farming operation.
However, if the crop on acreage does not
qualify as an ‘‘agricultural commodity’’
as defined in section 2601 of the Food
Security Act of 1985, then the producer
may be exempt from the other
conservation compliance requirements.
No change has been made.
Comment: A commenter stated as
USDA implements the new
conservation compliance provisions that
link compliance to crop insurance, the
commenter asked that FCIC take into
consideration the impact of access and
availability of crop insurance for
producers. Close to 80 percent of the
nation’s wheat acres are covered by crop
insurance and the impact of the
regulations USDA is developing could
have a significant adverse impact on
wheat growers’ access to crop insurance
in future years. The ability of USDA
personnel to address highly erodible
land (HEL) and wetland compliance
issues in the field and work with
producers directly on mitigation and
understanding of the new requirements
will be critical to producers livelihoods.
Specifically, the commenter asked
that USDA clarify that producers must
only complete the AD–1026 prior to
June 1, 2015, not that a completed
compliance check be undertaken. It is
also very important that USDA ensure
that producers undergoing existing
wetland compliance review or appeals
are not adversely impacted when
seeking crop insurance next year.
The 2014 Farm Bill establishes a new
date of February 7, 2014 for wetland
conversion related to eligibility for crop
insurance premium subsidies and wheat
growers suggest a clear distinction be
made between reviews to determine
eligibility for premium subsidies for
crop insurance, and participation in
agriculture risk coverage (ARC) or price
loss coverage (PLC) and conservation
programs. The 2014 Farm Bill also
establishes timeframes for producers to
come into compliance if they have not
been participating in programs covered
by conservation compliance. There are
wheat growers who may not currently
be participating in commodity or
conservation programs, and are,
therefore, not subject to conservation
compliance, so they may need to use the
time to come into compliance. USDA
must ensure that these producers
needing to come into HEL compliance
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or wetland conservation compliance are
not adversely impacted when they are
seeking insurance next year and
subsequent years.
Response: The interim rule changed
the policy provisions to indicate that
producers must have Form AD–1026 on
file by June 1 prior to the sales closing
date, and they must be in compliance
with the conservation compliance
provisions of 7 CFR part 12. For
producers who have previously been
required to file Form AD–1026, such
producers must be in compliance with
the conservation compliance provisions.
For certain producers, additional time is
provided to get into compliance with
the conservation provisions. However,
since FSA and NRCS are administering
the conservation compliance programs,
the provisions to provide the additional
time frames to allow producers who
have never before been subject to the
conservation compliance provisions can
be found at 7 CFR part 12 and https://
www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2015-04-24/
pdf/2015-09599.pdf.
Technical determinations regarding
the conservation compliance provisions,
such as whether land is highly erodible
or a wetland, are made by NRCS. NRCS
is also responsible for approving
conservation and mitigation plans,
when needed, to ensure land meets the
conservation compliance requirements
and conducting any compliance reviews
and spot-checks. The interim rule did
not address the development, approval,
or enforcement of the technical
requirements for conservation or
mitigation plans, as these are not RMA,
FCIC, or approved insurance provider
responsibilities.
The details regarding the additional
time afforded for certain producers to
comply with the provisions, how
administrative appeals affect a final
determination of violation, and the
differing dates for determining
eligibility for FSA programs and Federal
crop insurance premium subsidy due to
a wetland conservation violation were
not included in the interim rule. The
details regarding such provisions and
how they apply are contained in an
amendment to the regulations at 7 CFR
part 12. No change has been made.
Comment: A commenter stated
section 7(h) of the CCIP Basic Provisions
is poorly organized and includes
repetition of Highly Erodible Land/
Wetland Conservation and Form AD–
1026 requirements. To streamline and
eliminate any ambiguity in this section,
the commenter recommended FCIC
reorganize section 7(h) of the CCIP Basic
Provisions as follows:
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(h) Effective for any policies with a sales
closing date on or after July 1, 2015:
(1) You will be ineligible for any premium
subsidy paid on your behalf by FCIC for any
policy issued by us if:
(i) USDA determines you have committed
a violation . . .; or
(ii) You fail to file form AD–1026, or a
successor form, with FSA by the applicable
deadline to be properly identified as in
compliance with the applicable conservation
provisions specified in section 7(h)(1):
(A) By June 1 after you make application
for insurance if you demonstrate you are a
beginning farmer or rancher . . . ; or
(B) By June 1 prior to the sales closing date
for all others.
(2) To be eligible for premium subsidy paid
on your behalf by FCIC, it is your
responsibility to assure you meet all the
requirements in section 7(h)(1) above.
Response: FCIC does not agree the
suggested language streamlines, clarifies
or improves the readability of the
section to the extent that a change is
warranted. The proposed changes may
have adverse or unintended
consequences. The proposed revision
introduces new paragraph designations
that are not necessary and create
additional cross-references that can lead
to greater confusion and potential for
inaccurate reading. In addition, the
proposed revisions could inadvertently
change the meaning of the provisions.
No change has been made.
Comment: A commenter requested
that FCIC allow producers who are out
of compliance as of June 1 preceding the
sales closing date for the upcoming
reinsurance year to be able to regain
eligibility if they are determined to be
back in compliance prior to the sales
closing date for any crop on their policy.
Another commenter agreed with the
requirement of maintaining
Conservation Compliance in order to
qualify for the insurance premium
subsidy and with FCIC’s approach of
not denying benefits during the year in
which a farm is found to be out of
compliance. However, the commenter
urged FCIC to reconsider the manner in
which penalties are imposed in the
following year. There is significant time
between the start of the reinsurance year
and the sales closing date for most
crops, especially cotton and other
spring-seeded crops. If a producer is
found to be out of compliance at the
beginning of the reinsurance year, the
commenter encouraged FCIC to consider
giving producers the opportunity to
reinstate their eligibility for premium
subsidies if they are able to achieve
conservation compliance by the sales
closing date.
Another commenter stated the
proposed June 1 deadline for filing the
AD–1026 form is in the regulation, but
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not in the statute. The commenter
requested that FCIC allow producers
who are out of compliance as of June 1
to be able to regain eligibility for
premium subsidy if they are determined
to be back in compliance before the SCD
for any crop on their policy. The
commenter assumed that FSA will
establish procedures around the ability
of producers to become eligible for
premium subsidy after June 1 but prior
to the SCD for any crop on their policy.
A commenter stated the proposed
implementation of the new
‘‘Conservation Compliance’’ provisions
for the Federal crop insurance program
appears to be fairly straightforward with
the exception of the direction FCIC has
taken regarding possible penalties for
producers who temporarily fall out of
compliance during an insurance year.
While the commenter supported
maintaining producer eligibility for
premium assistance during the year that
a conservation compliance-related
problem is recognized, the commenter
believed the automatic exclusion of the
producer from participating in the
program the following insurance year is
overly harsh and inflexible. It fails to
recognize that the producer may be able
to bring themselves back into
compliance prior to the start of the next
reinsurance year or by their next
applicable sales closing date. For cotton
producers in the commenter’s service
area, there is a nine-month difference
between the start of a reinsurance year
on July 1 and the applicable sales
closing date for cotton of March 15. This
is a significant period of time during
which a producer can come back into
compliance, especially if the issue that
made them non-compliant was
temporary or short-term in nature and
can be remedied prior to the next
growing season. The commenter
believed FCIC should reevaluate the
interim rule and revise so that it
recognizes and encourages a producer to
get back into compliance as quickly as
possible and prior to their next
applicable sales closing date in order to
prevent any lapse in their ability to
participate and receive premium
assistance. By allowing this option FCIC
will accomplish two important goals.
First, it will provide a reasonable
incentive to quickly address
conservation compliance related issues
and further the purpose of the provision
to enhance environmental stewardship.
Second, it will prevent the unnecessary
exclusion of otherwise eligible Federal
crop insurance program participants.
Response: The 2014 Farm Bill
specifies, in the case of a violation,
ineligibility for Federal crop insurance
premium subsidy applies to the
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reinsurance year following the date of a
final determination of a violation,
including all administrative appeals.
The reinsurance year runs from July 1
through June 30. This is why the June
1 date for determining compliance was
used so that approved insurance
providers would know before the start
of the reinsurance year on July 1 who
was in compliance and would be
eligible for premium subsidy. However,
under the commenters’ proposal, it
would directly conflict with the 2014
Farm Bill to allow producers to regain
their eligibility during the reinsurance
year when the 2014 Farm Bill expressly
states they are ineligible for premium
subsidy. For example, under the 2014
Farm Bill, if a producer is determined
to be in violation of the conservation
compliance provisions as of June 1,
2016 and all appeals have been
exhausted, the producer is ineligible for
Federal crop insurance premium
subsidy the 2017 reinsurance year,
which runs from July 1, 2016 to June 30,
2017. This means the producer would
be ineligible for premium subsidy for all
crops with a sales closing date within
that period. Even if the producer
becomes compliant in August 2016, the
2014 Farm Bill requires eligibility for
the remainder of the reinsurance year.
No change has been made.
Comment: A commenter stated the
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) and Implementing Regulations
NEPA requires all Federal agencies to
prepare an Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS) for ‘‘every
recommendation or report on proposals
for legislation and other major Federal
actions significantly affecting the
quality of the human environment.’’ As
a preliminary step, an agency may
prepare an Environmental Assessment
(EA) to determine whether the
environmental impact of the proposed
action is significant enough to warrant
an EIS. If an EA establishes that the
agency’s action may have a significant
effect upon the environment, the agency
must prepare an EIS.
An agency does not have to prepare
an EIS or EA if the action to be taken
falls under a categorical exclusion (CE),
which include agency-identified
categories of actions that do not
individually or cumulatively have a
significant effect on the human
environment. An EA or EIS must be
prepared even for otherwise
categorically excluded actions where
the action may have the potential to
affect the environment.
USDA regulations exempt FCIC from
NEPA compliance. However, the
commenter notes that actions of
excluded agencies, including FCIC, are
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no longer categorically excluded from
the preparation of an EA or EIS if ‘‘the
agency head determines that an action
may have a significant environmental
effect.’’
Similarly, FSA regulations provide
that ‘‘major changes in ongoing
programs’’ or ‘‘major environmental
concerns with ongoing programs’’ are
among the categories of FSA activities
‘‘that have or are likely to have
significant environment[al] impacts on
the human environment.’’ ‘‘Initial NEPA
involvement in program categories’’ that
are listed as likely to have significant
environmental impacts ‘‘shall begin at
the time [ ]FSA begins developing
proposed legislation, begins the
planning stage for implementing a new
or changed program or receives notice
that an ongoing program may have a
significant adverse impact on the
quality of the human environment.’’
Accordingly, CFS hereby provides
notice to FCIC as the joint administrator
of the crop insurance program that it
must comply with NEPA because the
crop insurance provisions of the 2014
Farm Bill implicate conservation
programs to which NEPA applies, and
may have a significant environmental
effect.
The 2014 Farm Bill made two
significant changes to existing
agricultural programs. First, it tied the
federally-funded portion of crop
insurance premiums for commodities to
conservation compliance. The 2014
Farm Bill requires farmers who
purchase subsidized crop insurance to
develop conservation plans when they
grow crops on land subject to high rates
of erosion. The 2014 Farm Bill
reattaches soil and wetland
conservation requirements to crop
insurance premium subsidies, and
establishes a Sodsaver provision to
protect native grasslands, which
prohibits recipients of crop insurance
subsidies from draining or filling
wetlands unless they mitigate those
wetland losses. Now a producer who
plows native prairie for crop production
in one of the six states covered by the
program will receive a 50-percentagepoint crop insurance premium subsidy
reduction. The prerequisite of
implementing an approved conservation
plan before producing a commodity on
highly erodible land or converting a
wetland to crop production has existed
since the 1985 Farm Bill and previously
affected most USDA farm program
benefits, but has excluded crop
insurance since 1996. The 2014 Farm
Bill again links crop insurance to
conservation compliance.
Second, the 2014 Farm Bill merges
commodity payments into the crop
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insurance scheme. The 2014 Farm Bill
eliminates direct commodity payments,
countercyclical payments in their
current form, and the Average Crop
Revenue Election (ACRE) program. In
place of direct payments, the 2014 Farm
Bill revises the counter-cyclical
payment program that was established
in 2002 and the ACRE program that
existed alongside direct payments into
the new Price Loss Coverage (PLC) and
Agriculture Risk Coverage (ARC) crop
insurance options. Thus commodity
support is now part of the crop
insurance program.
As a result of these two significant
changes, NEPA applies to the crop
insurance program. First, conservation
programs are subject to NEPA under
FSA regulations. Because the 2014 Farm
Bill explicitly links conservation
compliance to the new crop insurance
program, NEPA obligations attach to the
new crop insurance program.
Second, the changes to the crop
insurance program will significantly
affect the human environment. In fact,
the crop insurance-conservation
program is specifically designed to
significantly affect the quality of the
human environment by protecting
sensitive lands and preventing soil loss.
Degraded soil quality has a host of
serious environmental consequences,
while directly undermining the ability
of farmers to grow nutritious food and
be resilient in the face of disruption.
Soil erosion causes water pollution,
impacts wildlife habitat, and threatens
long-term land productivity. Soil
erosion and depletion also affects air
quality and climate change: Clearing
land converts stored carbon into carbon
monoxide, and more than a third of the
excess carbon monoxide that has been
added to the atmosphere has come from
the destruction of soils. Releasing more
carbon monoxide into the atmosphere
than it can effectively absorb also causes
ocean acidification and contributes to
the destruction of coral reefs and other
marine ecosystems.
Now, farmers who purchase or receive
crop insurance will have to develop
conservation plans when growing on
land subject to high rates of erosion and
will be prohibited from draining or
filling wetlands without mitigating the
losses. Approximately one third of
cropland in the United States is highly
erodible, meaning that these provisions
affect a significant percentage of
acreage. The program also limits
subsidies to farmers who convert native
grasslands to crop production. From
2008 to 2011, more than 23 million
acres of grassland, shrub land, and
wetlands were destroyed for crop
production, destroying habitat that
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sustains many species of birds and other
animals and threatening the diversity of
North America’s wildlife. In light of
these realities, the intended result of
these new provisions is to protect
sensitive land and prevent soil loss.
NEPA is concerned with all significant
environmental impacts, not merely
adverse impacts. These impacts alone
are significant enough to trigger NEPA.
The new crop insurance program may
also significantly, and directly, impact
the environment in a negative way. The
negative effects of commodity crop
subsidies have been thoroughly
documented. In short, subsidies—
including crop insurance—encourage
farmers to grow commodity crops on
otherwise fallow or environmentally
sensitive land. As just one example, a
2012 study by researchers at Iowa State
University utilized field-level yield data
up to 2006 and price data over 2005–
2008, and found that up to three percent
of land under the Federal crop
insurance program would not have been
converted from grassland if there had
been no crop insurance subsidies.
With commodity crop production
often comes intensive and
environmentally destructive practices
such as mono-cropping and heavy
pesticide use. Single-crop production is
more intensive and requires
significantly higher usage of pesticides,
herbicides, and fertilizers. Reduced crop
diversity significantly increases crop
losses due to insects and pathogens and
reduced soil organic matter. These
problems lead to increased use of
pesticides and fertilizers, which in turn
can increase pathogen and insect
populations. Commodity-crop
monoculture reduces habitat for
wildlife, including birds, pollinators,
and other animals that eat pest insects.
In addition to reducing species richness
and harming key species, this
compounds the need for pesticides. On
average organic farms have 30 percent
higher biodiversity, including birds,
pollinators, and plants, than their monocropped industrial counterparts.
Subsidies also create higher marginal
revenues for inputs (fertilizers,
pesticides, herbicides, seeds, and labor),
thereby motivating additional input use,
by raising prices and reducing price
variations in program crops. For
example, compared with farmers who
do not participate in commodity
programs, corn farmers receiving
subsidies have reported significantly
increased herbicide use in all cropping
sequences, ‘‘supporting the
conventional view that commodity
programs directly contribute to greater
herbicide use in corn production.’’ The
industrial-scale use of pesticides,
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herbicides, and fertilizers in turn
significantly affects rivers and
groundwater, harming aquatic
ecosystems and the life forms they
support. Over half of synthetic nitrogen
fertilizers used on global cereal
production (including corn and soy) are
lost through groundwater leaching or
released as nitrous oxide into the
atmosphere. Nitrous oxide is a
greenhouse gas 310 times more potent
than carbon monoxide, and in the
United States three-quarters of it comes
from agricultural soil management. The
effects of commodity farming as
supported by the new crop insurance
program are thus serious and
significant.
These impacts flow directly from the
new crop insurance program—a major
Federal action significantly affecting the
human environment—triggering FCIC’s
duty to comply with NEPA in
implementing the programs.
For the forgoing reasons, NEPA
applies to the new crop insurance
program. NEPA requires FCIC to, at a
minimum, conduct an EA for the new
crop insurance subsidies. FCIC’s failure
to comply with NEPA in implementing
these programs would constitute a
blatant violation of NEPA and USDA
regulations.
Response: The regulations at 7 CFR
part 1b provide that the FCIC is
categorically excluded from the
preparation of an environmental
assessment or environmental impact
statement unless the agency head
determines that an action may have a
significant environmental effect. The
2014 Farm Bill mandates the expansion
of current conservation compliance
requirements to apply to persons who
seek eligibility for Federal crop
insurance premium subsidy. However,
these 2014 Farm Bill provisions do not
change the existing rules regarding the
technical determinations for the
conservation compliance provisions,
such as whether land is highly erodible
or a wetland, conservation and
mitigation plans, when needed, to
ensure land meets the conservation
compliance requirements and
conducting any compliance reviews and
spot-checks. Further, FCIC merely
amended the policy to include the
requirements of the 2014 Farm Bill, the
regulations governing the conservation
compliance provisions of the Food
Security Act of 1985, as amended by the
2014 Farm Bill, are found at 7 CFR part
12. In addition, although Federal crop
insurance participants were not
previously subject to conservation
compliance, the majority of insured
participants were already participating
in farm programs subject to
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conservation compliance. Therefore, the
head of the agency has determined that
this final rule will not have a significant
environmental effect.
Comment: A commenter stated there
is considerable confusion surrounding
the issue of new conservation
compliance rules for crop insurance.
For instance, the Background in the
interim rule, in the third column of page
37157, states that ‘‘[e]ven if the insured
[determined to be non-compliant on
June 1, 2015, (2015 reinsurance year)]
becomes compliant during the 2016
reinsurance year, the insured will not be
eligible for premium subsidy until the
2017 reinsurance year starting on July 1,
2016.’’ However, when questioned
about this matter during a hearing of the
House Subcommittee on General Farm
Commodities and Risk Management,
held July 10, 2014, Undersecretary
Michael Scuse stated, ‘‘Well, remember,
we’re asking them to sign up that they
will be in compliance on June 15th and
then they are given a period of time to
come into compliance.’’ In response to
a follow up question of exactly how
long the producer would have to come
back into compliance, Undersecretary
Scuse stated that this would be
established ‘‘in the rule.’’
The commenter agreed with the
Undersecretary’s point of view that the
producer ought to be given time to come
back into compliance. However, the
interim rule, at least in the Background,
appears to take a punitive approach that
is inconsistent with the
Undersecretary’s statement. The
commenter respectfully urged that the
rule clarify that the producer does, in
fact, have time to come back into
compliance and what that time period is
precisely. The commenter also urged
that, beyond the rulemaking, FCIC
develop a FAQ document that answers
the questions concerning conservation
compliance. Only the Department can
provide answers that will give
producers confidence in the safe harbors
provided by the law and regulation.
Response: The 2014 Farm Bill states
that ineligibility for Federal crop
insurance premium subsidy due to a
violation of the conservation
compliance provisions shall apply to
reinsurance years subsequent to the date
of final determination of a violation,
including all administrative appeals.
The requirement that producers file
their AD–1026 form by June 1 did not
come into effect until June 1, 2015, more
than a year after enactment of the 2014
Farm Bill. RMA, FSA, NRCS, agents and
approved insurance providers have been
conducting a significant effort to inform
all producers of the conservation
compliance requirement so that any
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producers not in compliance would
have an opportunity to get into
compliance prior to June 1, 2015.
Since FCIC does not administer the
conservation compliance provisions or
make determinations of compliance, as
stated above, the details regarding the
additional time afforded certain
producers to comply with the
provisions and how administrative
appeals affect a final determination of
violation are contained in an
amendment to the regulations at 7 CFR
part 12.
However, the Food Security Act of
1985 and the 2014 Farm Bill provide an
exemption for persons who act in good
faith and without intent to commit a
violation. The exemption allows such
persons to remain eligible for Federal
crop insurance premium subsidy for a
period of time if the person is taking
action to remedy the violation. The
determination of whether a person acted
in good faith and without intent to
violate the provisions is part of the
administrative appeals process.
Therefore, a person who meets the
requirements of the good faith
exemption would not have a final
determination of violation unless they
do not take the appropriate steps to
remedy the violation within the
established time period. The person
would not be ineligible for Federal crop
insurance premium subsidy until a final
determination of violation is made. The
details of the good faith exemption are
contained in an amendment to the
regulations at 7 CFR part 12. No change
has been made in this final rule.
Comment: A commenter supported
the provision in the rule for beginning
farmers and ranchers concerning the
deadline for filing the form AD–1026.
While all other insureds must file a form
AD–1026 by June 1 of any reinsurance
year to be eligible for premium
assistance in the next reinsurance year,
beginning farmers that have not had any
insurable interest in a crop or livestock
operation previously, and started
farming after the beginning of the new
reinsurance year, have until the sales
closing date to file an AD–1026. In
effect, this allows a new entrant to
farming the same access to premium
assistance as established farmers, up
until the sales closing date. While the
commenter did not believe that there is
any provision in the 2014 Farm Bill or
in prior law that specifically authorizes
this flexibility to beginning farmers and
ranchers, the commenter believed that it
has merit and is fair to this special
group of producers.
Response: FCIC agrees with the
commenter that the exception to the
requirement to have form AD–1026 on
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file on or before June 1 prior to the sales
closing date for certain producers who
were not previously engaged in farming
is needed and is not inconsistent with
the statutory requirements. Such
producers would not have known of the
requirement to file an AD–1026 form by
June 1 and, therefore, they cannot be
penalized for non-compliance.
However, the term ‘‘beginning farmer or
rancher’’ has a specific definition that
will result in the exception not being
applied as intended. The intent of the
exception is to provide producers who
are new to or began farming for the first
time after the June 1 deadline the ability
to remain eligible for premium subsidy
the subsequent reinsurance year.
‘‘Beginning farmer or rancher’’ can
include producers who have been
farming for a few years. Therefore, in
order for the exception to be applied as
intended, the reference to ‘‘beginning
farmer or rancher’’ will be changed to
reference producers who begin farming
for the first time after June 1. The
needed changes were provided in the
Special Provisions of the applicable
crop insurance policies until this final
rule was published. FCIC has issued
administrative procedures that describes
what constitutes beginning farming for
the first time, and how producers
without form AD–1026 on file can selfcertify that such a situation applies to
them in procedures. Producers may only
qualify for this exception for one year
and must have form AD–1026 on file by
the following June 1 to remain eligible
for premium subsidy in subsequent
reinsurance years. Therefore, FCIC has
incorporated this change in section
6(f)(2)(i) of the CAT Endorsement,
section 7(h)(2)(i) of the CCIP Basic
Provisions, and section 7(i)(2)(i) of the
ARPI Basic Provisions of this final rule
and will remove the Special Provisions
statement after this final rule is
published.
Section 11007
Comment: A commenter stated the
current definition of enterprise unit is
‘‘All insurable acreage of the same
insured crop in the county in which you
have a share on the date coverage begins
for the crop year, provided the
requirements of section 34 are met.’’
With the new allowance for enterprise
units by irrigation practice, the
commenter does not believe this
definition is sufficient. The commenter
recommended FCIC revise the
enterprise unit definition in the CCIP
Basic Provisions as follows: ‘‘All
insurable acreage of the same insured
crop or crop/irrigation practice, when
allowed by the actuarial documents, in
the county in which you have a share
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on the date coverage begins for the crop
year, provided the requirements of
section 34 are met.’’
Response: FCIC agrees and has
revised the definition to take into
account that separate enterprise units
are allowed for all irrigated acreage and
non-irrigated acreage of the crop in the
county.
Comment: A commenter stated when
the option for enterprise unit coverage
was introduced in the 2008 Farm Bill,
it quickly gained popularity across the
Cotton Belt. The new farm law enhances
enterprise unit coverage by providing
the ability to separate irrigated and nonirrigated acres when using enterprise
unit coverage. However, the commenter
understood that this provision will only
be available when a producer has the
ability to qualify for enterprise unit
coverage for both their irrigated acreage
and non-irrigated acreage. If a producer
cannot qualify for enterprise unit
coverage on both practices, that
producer would then have a common
enterprise unit. The commenter
recommended FCIC implement the new
enterprise unit provisions with greater
flexibility than the commenter
understood to be the case. Specifically,
if a producer qualifies for enterprise
unit coverage for a single practice, the
producer should be allowed to select
enterprise unit coverage for that
practice, without impacting his ability
to choose the most appropriate unit
structure, be it a separate enterprise unit
or optional units that meets the needs of
his operation under the other practice.
This would allow producers to utilize
the law’s intent of separating by practice
and also prevent them from being
penalized simply because a portion of
their acreage does not meet the
enterprise unit size requirements.
Another commenter stated in § 457.8,
in section 34 of the CCIP Basic
Provisions, the units provision, if a
producer elects to insure dry land
acreage planted to a specific commodity
by enterprise unit, the producer is then
also required under the interim rule to
insure any irrigated acreage planted to
that commodity by enterprise unit. The
authority for separate enterprise units
by practice, section 11007 of the Farm
Bill, provides: ‘‘(D) Nonirrigated
crops.—Beginning with the 2015 crop
year, the Corporation shall make
available separate enterprise units for
irrigated and nonirrigated acreage of
crops in counties.’’ The purpose of the
provision is to require FCIC to make
separate enterprise units available to
irrigated and dry land acreage planted to
a commodity but to allow the producer
to elect enterprise units for both or
either. As a matter of policy, assuming
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minimum acreage requirements are met,
allowing a producer to elect to insure
irrigated acreage of a commodity by
enterprise unit and to elect to insure
dryland acreage planted to a commodity
by optional or basic units or vice-versa
still achieves the risk-reducing intent of
enterprise units because one practice
has been insured by enterprise unit
rather than optional or basic units.
Denying a producer the election to
insure one practice by an enterprise unit
and the other practice by optional or
basic units may frustrate the goal of
providing more options for producers by
forcing the producer to insure both
practices by optional or basic units.
Importantly, the premium support
connected with enterprise units would
be unchanged by a producer’s election
of enterprise units for one practice and
optional or basic units for the other
because the premium support for
enterprise units is fixed in statute and
optional or basic units have already
been appropriately rated.
If the purpose of section 11007 is fully
effectuated, the commenter believed
that the risk-reducing intent of
enterprise units will be furthered, not
diminished. Producers will have a more
complete set of options for how best to
manage risk, consistent with the goal of
the Farm Bill. The commenter
respectfully urged that the purpose of
section 11007 of the Farm Bill be
implemented accordingly.
Another commenter, regarding the
proposed implementation of the
‘‘Enterprise Unit by Practice’’ provision,
stated they believed that the proposed
rule does not provide the degree of
flexibility the commenter expected in
this provision. The commenter strongly
supported the provision based on their
understanding that producers would be
able to select the enterprise unit
structure for a single practice (i.e.—nonirrigated), as long as acreage insured
under that practice meets the minimum
requirements to be a stand-alone
enterprise unit, without compromising
their ability to select a different or more
suitable unit structure for a different
practice (i.e.—irrigated). This flexibility
provides the insured the ability to
match the most appropriate insurance
unit structure to the predominant risk
associated with a given practice. The
commenter believed the current
interpretation of the provision by FCIC
does not fully recognize the intent of
Congress to provide meaningful
flexibility to program participants.
Given that the overarching goal of this
provision is flexibility, the commenter
believed any concern or intent from
Congress to implement the provision in
a more restrictive manner as FCIC has
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proposed would have been specifically
indicated in the legislative language.
The commenter urged FCIC to
reconsider their current interpretation
in light of this commentary and revise
this provision accordingly.
Response: The text of Section 11007
states that ‘‘the Corporation shall make
available separate enterprise units for
irrigated and nonirrigated acreage of
crops in counties.’’ Under the plain
meaning of the text, this means two
separate enterprise units. Therefore,
FCIC has made changes to allow
separate enterprise units (not policies)
by practice, i.e. one enterprise unit for
irrigated acreage and one enterprise unit
for non-irrigated acreage. Since the
provision provides for two enterprise
units and does not change or otherwise
modify the definition of an enterprise
unit, FCIC interpreted this to mean that
the existing regulation for an enterprise
unit remained overarching and that all
acreage of the crop in the county had to
be insured as an enterprise unit
regardless of construct as a single
enterprise unit or two separate
enterprise units, one for all the irrigated
acreage in the county and one for all the
non-irrigated acreage in the county. To
allow producers to choose smaller unit
structures on some acreage of the crop
in the county, such as optional and
basic units, for one of the practices is
counter to this intent. In addition,
allowing an enterprise unit for one
practice and another unit structure for
the other practice complicates program
administration and premium subsidy
determination. Enterprise unit subsidies
are based on the average enterprise unit
discount received by growers. The
enterprise unit discounts themselves are
affected by the size of the unit—the
larger the acreage in an enterprise unit,
the greater the discount (and vice-versa).
As growers are given additional
flexibility to reduce the size (less acres)
of their enterprise unit, then the
enterprise unit discount becomes
smaller. This brings into question
whether the premium subsidy rates
offered for enterprise units would need
to be revised downward accordingly. To
the extent that the average size of
enterprise units moves closer towards
the average size of optional units, the
premium subsidy rates for enterprise
units must also move closer towards the
premium subsidy rates for optional
units. No change has been made.
Comment: A commenter stated the
interim rule stipulates timelines for
implementing separate enterprise units
and coverage levels for irrigated and
dryland acreage. These provisions will
greatly benefit growers in areas that
utilize irrigated agriculture. Producers
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who use both practices in their
operations are currently unable to fully
realize the benefits of using enterprise
units due to the wide variation in
production between their irrigated and
non-irrigated crops. As producers in
Texas have faced multiple years of
extreme drought, their dryland yields
have plummeted, bringing enterprise
unit yields down significantly even
though the irrigated acreage was not as
severely affected. The result is reduced
coverage and crop insurance policies
that do not reflect average production.
The ability to have separate, distinct
levels of coverage on irrigated and nonirrigated acres will allow farmers to
create a better risk management plan for
their operation. The commenter urged
FCIC to implement this provision as
soon as possible. By delaying the
implementation of these provisions
until spring of 2015, FCIC has put
winter wheat producers at a distinct
disadvantage to growers of other crops.
Response: The changes mandated by
the 2014 Farm Bill impact almost all
county crop programs within the
Federal crop insurance program.
Unfortunately, given the magnitude of
the work required, FCIC was unable to
implement the provision for crops with
a contract change date prior to
November 30, 2014. The actuarial
documents specified the ability to make
this election beginning with 2015 crop
year spring crops with a contract change
date of November 30, 2014, and later.
Comment: A commenter stated they
identified a major flaw in section
34(a)(4)(viii)(C)(1) of the CCIP Basic
Provisions as currently proposed. This
section needs to be clarified to indicate
that if the insured does not qualify for
enterprise units by practice that he or
she then has to automatically default to
enterprise unit, provided that he or she
qualifies for such unit structure on a
crop basis. If it is subsequently
determined that the insured does not
qualify for enterprise unit either, the
unit structure would then revert to basic
units or optional units, whichever the
insured reports on the acreage report
and qualifies for. There should not be an
option for the insured to not elect to
have enterprise unit simply because he
or she does not qualify for enterprise
units by practice up to the acreage
reporting date. The rationale for this is
that the insured has to make the
decision to elect enterprise units or
enterprise units by practice by the sales
closing date. Therefore, if the insureds
do not qualify for enterprise units by
practice the commenter felt it should
not allow insureds the opportunity to
not have enterprise units up to the
acreage reporting date. There are valid
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reasons for requiring the enterprise
units or enterprise units by practice
election by the sales closing date and if
this provision is not revised it would
allow insureds the opportunity to elect
enterprise units by practice by the sales
closing date, even if they know that they
will not qualify for such election, and
then have the option to decide by the
acreage reporting date if they want to go
with enterprise units or change to basic
or optional units, whichever they
qualify for. The current language as
structured allows insureds the
opportunity to circumvent the sales
closing date deadline for this election
which is counter to the requirement that
this election be made by the sales
closing date. It creates an unintended
loophole that producers could use to
circumvent the sales closing date
deadline for this election. If this
provision is not changed it subjects the
Approved Insurance Providers to
possible adverse selection by producers
since they would now be allowed to
decide if they want to have enterprise
units up to the acreage reporting date.
In summary, the commenter stated the
proper way to administer this
provisions is to automatically apply
enterprise units if the insured does not
qualify for enterprise units by practice
and then revert to basic or optional
units if the insured does not qualify for
enterprise units either (similar to how
the commenter would handle this if it
was discovered after the acreage
reporting date except that optional units
would also be an option in addition to
basic units).
Response: FCIC disagrees with the
commenter. There is nothing in the
policy that requires the election of unit
structure by the sales closing date. Such
decisions have always been made by the
acreage report once the producer knows
what crops/types/practices have been
used. It is impossible to make such
determinations by the sales closing date.
However, to protect program integrity,
coverage levels must be selected by the
sales closing date because there is
always a potential for loss before the
acreage reporting date and it would
adversely affect program integrity to
allow producers to change their
coverage level after a loss has occurred.
Even though the producer may request
separate coverage levels if authorized by
type or practice, it cannot be binding on
the producer because the producer may
elect not to plant to one of the selected
types or practices. This will not be
known until the crop is planted, which
may be months after the sales closing
date. Allowing the insured to choose,
before the acreage reporting date, one
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enterprise unit, or basic or optional
units depending on which the insured
has reported on the acreage report,
allows flexibility for those insureds who
would not have elected one enterprise
unit but for the new enterprise unit by
practice election. Removing this
flexibility may deter insureds from
electing separate enterprise units by
practice. FCIC does not allow this
flexibility after the acreage reporting
date. If after the acreage reporting date,
an insured who elected separate
coverage levels by practice does not
qualify is automatically applied basic or
optional units, depending on which
they have reported on their acreage
report. No change has been made.
Section 11009
Comment: A commenter stated their
reading of the regulation indicates that
USDA is limiting the use of actual
production history (APH) based on
production data availability. The
commenter strongly recommended that
APH Yield Adjustment Option be
implemented for all producers without
delay. This is an important provision
especially for very progressive farms
that have excellent production results.
Another commenter stated erosion of
APH due to consecutive years of
disaster is an issue the wheat industry
has been fighting for many years. With
wheat being grown in some of the most
diverse regions of the country, wheat
farmers can be devastated with drought,
floods or freezes in any given year. This
provision would be very beneficial to
wheat growers across the country,
primarily in areas where they are
dealing with multi-year disasters. FCIC
announced that this provision will not
be available for the 2015 crop year
which has left a number of wheat
farmers frustrated. The commenter
would appreciate FCIC doing everything
in its power to make this provision
available to our growers for 2015. The
commenter is specifically concerned
over continued economic injury to those
who can least afford it after years of
financial stress due to ongoing drought.
The commenter believed this provision
will go a long way toward their goal of
ensuring a producer is paying for
coverage that matches his or her
production expectation.
Another commenter stated this
provision will provide immediate relief
to farmers who have suffered from
multiple years of extreme weather
disasters. The provision is not likely to
trigger frequently, but will aid farmers
in disaster areas to secure crop
insurance coverage that meets average
production estimates. A delay in
implementation for the APH provision
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will result in one more year of eroding
APH levels for growers across the
Southern Plains region who are
currently experiencing a record
breaking, multiple year drought. The
APH provision should be implemented
immediately to adequately protect
farmers and maintain the strength of the
crop insurance program. As several key
farm policy leaders have mentioned, if
the provision cannot be implemented in
2015 for all areas and all crops, the
commenter urged FCIC to target those
areas most likely to benefit from the
provision.
Another commenter stated they
appreciated FCIC’s work in making
other provisions included in the 2014
Farm Bill applicable for the 2015
insurance year including: The ability to
insure at different coverage levels by
practice; enterprise unit coverage by
practice; and the beginning farmer
provisions. One provision that FCIC has
indicated will not be available in 2015
is the APH adjustment. This provision
is especially important for portions of
the Cotton Belt who have recently
incurred several years of historic
drought conditions. Again, with
insurance being the foundation of risk
management for cotton producers, the
commenter urged FCIC to continue to
review every avenue possible for
implementation of this important
provision.
Another commenter stated concerning
the implementation of section 11009 of
the 2014 Farm Bill allowing insureds to
exclude certain yields, the commenter
understood there has been considerable
discussion regarding the feasibility of an
implementation in time for the 2015
reinsurance year. The commenter also
supported the provision and its timely
implementation and the commenter
offered their expertise and their agent
members in assisting to achieve this
objective that is so important to
producers struck by natural disasters,
particularly the drought-stricken
producers of recent years.
A commenter stated ‘‘Section 11009—
The ‘‘APH Adjustment’’ provision is one
that is of particular importance to the
commenter’s membership and is among
their top priorities for implementation.
Based on previous statements from
FCIC, the commenter continues to be
concerned that this provision will not
be implemented in time for the 2015
insurance year. The commenter
appreciated FCIC’s willingness to
continue to evaluate possible avenues
for partial implementation of the
provision for those regions of the
country that are most impacted by the
current drought and for which this
provision was intended to provide
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relief. The commenter believed that
FCIC is making progress in this regard
as it has become clear in recent weeks
that FCIC has performed a significant
amount of data collection and analysis
in high impact regions. Based on these
observations the commenter believes
that FCIC can realistically implement
this provision at a significant level for
2015. The commenter encouraged FCIC
to continue to work on this issue and to
make every effort to make this provision
available to cotton and grain producers
in the regions that are most in need,
specifically Texas and Oklahoma.
Response: FCIC had a number of 2014
Farm Bill provisions that mandate a
2015 crop year implementation. In
accordance with these mandates by
Congress, FCIC had to devote
considerable resources to this effort.
Further, while many of the crop
insurance provisions in the 2014 Farm
Bill were found in previous versions,
section 11009 was not included until
the final enactment of the 2014 Farm
Bill. Due to many 2014 Farm Bill
programs being completed ahead of
schedule, and the timing of these
completions, FCIC was able to
implement this provision for select
spring crops for the 2015 crop year but
given the sheer amount of work required
to implement this provision for all
crops, in all counties, by irrigated and
non-irrigated practice, FCIC simply did
not have the time or the resources to
implement the provision for all crops
and counties.
Comment: A commenter stated
section 11009 of the 2014 Farm Bill
allows producers to exclude historic
yields when county yields were at least
50 percent below the ten-year simple
average. Agricultural producers already
receive generous premium subsidies in
addition to favorable provisions
allowing any producer to receive crop
insurance subsidies regardless of the
risk profile of the farmland. Basing these
taxpayer-subsidized guarantees on an
‘‘actual’’ production history that cherrypicks the best years of production is
fiscally reckless. APH should reflect the
history of production actually
experienced, rather than some
aspirational potential harvest that
would have occurred if not for the
growing conditions actually
experienced. The commenter suggested
this provision not be implemented. If it
is, the commenter suggested a surcharge
be charged for every yield plug inserted
in a producer’s APH, to account for the
likelihood of yields falling short of these
artificially high guarantees.
Response: Since the provisions
regarding exclusion of yields were
mandated by the 2014 Farm Bill, FCIC
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is required by law to implement the
changes. FCIC must also, by law, set
premium rates sufficient to cover
anticipated losses plus a reasonable
reserve. FCIC has revised the premium
rate calculations to account for the
increase in a grower’s coverage, and
potential losses, due to the exclusion of
certain yields from a producer’s actual
production history.
Comment: A commenter stated the
new CCIP Basic Provisions section 5
states ‘‘. . . the per planted acre yield
was at least 50 percent below the simple
average of the per acre planted yield for
the crop in the county for the previous
10 consecutive crop years.’’ The
commenter does not believe FCIC
intended to use different phrasing for
per planted acre yield. The commenter
recommended FCIC revise this section
to only use the phrase ‘‘per planted acre
yield’’ to accurately reflect that the
yields to be considered are on a per-acre
basis, but are limited to planted acreage.
Response: FCIC agrees with the
commenter and has revised the
provisions accordingly.
Section 11014
Comment: A commenter stated
section 11014 of the 2014 Farm Bill
reduces crop insurance premium
subsidies on native sod acres in certain
Midwestern states. This provision only
applies to plots of land that are larger
than five acres. Due to the unintended
consequences and large public costs of
tearing up native sod for cropland
production, this threshold should be
reduced to zero acres, or at a minimum,
ensure that producers tear up no more
than five acres across all of their farms,
regardless of location, joint ownership,
etc. The commenter believed taxpayers
should not subsidize the conversion of
sensitive cropland to crop production.
Proper enforcement and monitoring of
this provision should also be prioritized
to ensure that taxpayer subsidies are not
subsidizing risky planting decisions.
Response: The 2014 Farm Bill
specifically states ‘‘The Secretary shall
exempt areas of 5 acres or less’’.
Therefore, the 2014 Farm Bill does not
provide the authority to change this
threshold. FCIC has made changes to
exempt a total of five acres or less per
county, per producer, across all
applicable insured crop policies
cumulating each year until the 5-acre
threshold is reached. Once a producer
converts more than five acres of native
sod, the reduction in benefits will apply
to all native sod acreage going forward.
The premium subsidy reduction of 50
percentage points is required by the
2014 Farm Bill on converted native sod.
This guarantees that taxpayers will not
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bear the risk of the conversion of native
sod acreage. No change has been made.
Comment: Several commenters stated
under the interim rule, a producer could
convert native sod to an annual crop not
covered by their chosen crop insurance
policy and choose not to insure it
during the first four crop years. During
the fifth crop year the producer could
add the converted acres to their policy
and receive full Federal crop insurance
benefits. For example, a crop insurance
policy in the six sodsaver states would
be for corn, soybeans, and wheat. A
producer could plant annual crops of
sunflowers, sorghum, millet, or oats
during the first four years native sod is
cropped and not include them in their
crop insurance policy. The fifth year
they could plant corn, soybeans or
wheat and receive full crop insurance
benefits. A producer could alternatively
plant a perennial crop, like alfalfa,
during the first four years of cropping
native sod, receive full premium
subsidies for forage insurance, and then
again in year five plant an insurable
annual crop and never be subject to
sodsaver disincentives.
The commenters recommended to
avoid these potential loopholes,
minimize taxpayer liabilities, and
maintain Congressional intent, any
native sod acreage converted after
February 7, 2014, should be subject to
sodsaver premium reductions for the
first four years of Federally insured crop
production. For example, a producer
who converted 160 acres of native sod
in March 2014 plants alfalfa on that
acreage in 2014–2017, and plants
Federally insured wheat in 2018 should
be subject to four years of sodsaver
disincentives beginning in year 2018.
This would ensure that the disincentive
to convert native sod to cropland is
fulfilled as intended by Congress.
Response: The 2014 Farm Bill states
the reduction of benefits are during the
first four crop years of planting on
native sod acreage. These reduction of
benefits only apply to annual crops
planted during the first four crop years
of planting on such acreage. FCIC does
not have the authority to change these
requirements and make them more
restrictive. Therefore, no change has
been made.
Comment: Several commenters stated
the sodsaver provisions define native
sod as any land that has no
substantiated cropping history prior to
February 7, 2014. The statute reduces
Federal crop insurance premium
benefits by 50 percentage points
following conversion of native sod,
limits transitional yields to 65 percent,
and prohibits yield substitution during
the first four years an annual crop is
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Federally-insured. Substantiation of
cropping history should include a
combination of verifiable FSA records
and/or spatially-explicit data tied to
those tracts. The commenters stated
simply providing seed or input cost
receipts with no verifiable tract-level
spatial information or supporting FSA
documentation should not suffice as
adequate substantiation of cropping
history.
A few commenters stated a fact sheet
published in June titled ‘‘Native Sod
Guidelines for Federal Crop Insurance’’
does not provide any limitation on the
types of evidence that may be used to
prove that land has been tilled. Instead,
the guidance provides seven examples
of acceptable documentation. Moreover,
the interim rule stated that the absence
of tillage will be ‘‘determined in
accordance with information collected
and maintained by an agency of the
USDA or other verifiable records that
you provide and are acceptable to
us[. . .]’’ The commenters were
concerned that this flexibility will result
in the use of unreliable evidence of
tillage. Therefore, the commenters
recommended that if a producer cannot
provide FSA, NRCS, or Common Land
Unit documentation that demonstrates a
cropping history on the land, there must
be a body of spatially explicit evidence
(e.g., GIS planting/harvest maps vs.
simply seed or other input receipts with
no verifiable spatial information)
showing the cropping history clearly.
The commenters strongly opposed the
use of receipts and/or invoices as
evidence of tillage, and the commenters
urged that the rule explicitly exclude
this as a form of documentation. The
commenters believed third-party
verification will help ensure accurate
‘‘substantiation’’ of prior cropping
history. A commenter further
recommended that the final rule
explicitly exclude the use of receipts
and/or invoices as documentation of
tillage.
Response: FCIC agrees that the
evidence for a cropping history must be
tied to the specific acreage. Therefore,
FCIC has removed from its issued
procedures the reference to ‘‘receipts
and invoices’’ as a form of
documentation that may be used to
substantiate the ground has been
previously tilled for the production of a
crop. In addition, FCIC has revised and
issued procedures requiring the use of
USDA documentation when available,
including FSA and NRCS
documentation.
Comment: Several commenters stated
under the interim rule, crop insurance
agents would determine the
classification of native sod. Three
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significant factors make this process
unworkable: Inadequate training on
landscape classification, lack of access
to FSA information, and conflict of
interest. Crop insurance agents are
trained in crop insurance regulations,
coverage, and processing. Their
responsibilities require considerable
knowledge of a number of processes.
Adding another component starkly
foreign to their existing heavy workload
and for one which few crop insurance
agents are trained is not an effective
method for processing native sod
determinations. This would likely result
in a significant rate of errors, leading to
the need for new determinations by a
trained staff of experts.
The commenters also stated that
functionally, crop insurance agents have
access to their own records regarding
the cropping history of insured fields.
However, that data often does not
include the full cropping history of a
field. Many fields may have data and
history not accessible in insurance files.
Often only FSA files have information
on cropping history. This would require
all crop insurance agents to contact FSA
offices to obtain all information. It
would simply be easier for FSA to make
the determination and to remove the
extra step of having the crop insurance
agent make the inquiry into FSA.
For many crop insurance agents,
selling crop insurance is their
livelihood. Placing them in charge of
making native sod determinations, what
is and is not insurable, stands in a stark
conflict of interest. In the free market of
crop insurance, if a farmer is not happy
with the decision of an agent, they can
simply go to another agent. This threat
of lost business for upholding the
sodsaver provisions could punish crop
insurance agents who do the right thing.
It is unfair to place that burden on crop
insurance agents. Here again, it is better
to leave native sod determinations to an
independent third party and in
particular, to the FSA since they already
possess much of the necessary data.
A few commenters stated the FSA and
RMA have the ability, expertise and
resources to work together to provide
independent third-party verifications in
a timely and accurate manner.
Response: Native sod guidelines
apply to all counties in Iowa,
Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, North
Dakota, and South Dakota. An insured’s
benefits are reduced if they till native
sod acreage to grow an annual crop
during the first 4 crop years they are
covered by Federal crop insurance for
that acreage. Native sod acreage is
acreage that has never been tilled or that
the insured cannot prove to have been
previously tilled for crop production. To
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prove that acreage was previously tilled,
the insured must provide
documentation to the approved
insurance provider. Acceptable
documentation may include, but is not
limited to:
(1) A Farm Service Agency (FSA)–578
document showing the crop that was
previously planted on the requested
acreage;
(2) A prior crop year’s FSA–578
document showing that the requested
acreage is classified as cropland;
(3) A prior crop year’s Common Land
Unit (CLU) Schema (RMA provides this
to approved insurance providers),
presented in a map format that contains
the farm number, tract number, field
number, CLU classification (the
cropland classification code is ‘2’), and
calculated acres by field;
(4) Receipts and/or invoices from
custom planters or harvesters
identifying the fields that were planted
or harvested;
(5) A Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS) Form CPA–026e
identifying the acreage with a ‘‘No’’ in
the Sodbust column and a ‘‘Yes’’ in the
HEL column;
(6) An NRCS Form CPA–026e
identifying the acreage with a ‘‘Yes’’ in
the Sodbust column and a
determination date on or before
February 7, 2014; or
(7) Precision agriculture planting
records and/or raw data for previous
crop years, provided such records meet
the precision farming acreage reporting
requirements.
Therefore, agents do not determine
the classification of land as native sod
but rather the acreage itself and records
provided by the producer to the
approved insurance providers will be
the basis for such determinations. The
agent’s role in native sod classification
is to gather the documents provided by
the insured to submit to the approved
insurance providers or FCIC. Since
agents do not make the determination,
approved insurance providers or FCIC
acts as a third-party verifier. No change
has been made.
Comment: A commenter was not in
favor of the provisions regarding native
sod. The commenter recommended the
determination of whether a parcel of
land is prairie, or that it once was
cultivated, should be made by the
USDA as opposed to crop insurance
agents.
Response: Since the provisions
regarding native sod contained in this
rule were mandated by the 2014 Farm
Bill, FCIC is required by law to
implement the changes. As stated above,
determinations are made based on
records provided by the producer to
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approved insurance providers. Agents
do not make the determination. No
change has been made.
Comment: Several commenters stated
FSA and RMA should monitor and
provide publically available new
breakings reports each year. This
requirement was highlighted in the 2014
Farm Bill, which directs USDA to report
changes in cropland acreage at the
county level (including changes from
non-cropland to cropland) since 2000
and on an annual basis post-enactment
of the 2014 Farm Bill. The reporting
requirement within Sec. 11014 Crop
Production on Native Sod (Subsection C
‘‘Cropland Report’’) also directs USDA
to report changes in cropland acreage.
While not explicitly stated, the intent of
this subsection was to monitor and
report changes in native sod acreage.
Simply reporting annual cropland
acreage does not achieve this goal and
would be duplicative of other ongoing
USDA cropland reporting efforts.
According to USDA Bulletin—MGR–11–
006, FSA should already be tracking and
reporting new breakings each year.
The commenters recommended FSA
and RMA work together to monitor and
provide annual new breakings reports at
the county-level to measure the
effectiveness of these policies, maintain
public transparency, and help inform
future policy making decisions. This
can be done in a timely and accurate
manner without jeopardizing landowner
confidentiality. Specifically, the
commenters asked USDA to develop
and maintain a county-level ‘‘data field’’
of new breakings with no prior cropping
history as they update their IT
technology infrastructure. A commenter
recommended that in order to track the
impact of policies on grassland loss and
the resulting impacts on wildlife, FSA
must produce an annual report that
tracks the conversion of native
grasslands into row crop production.
Another commenter stated information
about new land breakings should be
made available to the public on an
annual basis.
Response: The 2014 Farm Bill
provides that a cropland report shall be
required to be provided to the specific
congressional committees indicating the
changes in cropland acreage by county
and state from year to year. Congress
provided no other interpretation or
intent other than what is provided in
the 2014 Farm Bill. Therefore the report
will be constructed according to the
2014 Farm Bill language. FSA is the
lead agency in preparing the cropland
acreage report because they have a more
complete data set of the changes in
cropland acreage. FCIC works with FSA,
providing any data applicable and
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appropriate, to provide this report to
specific congressional committees.
Comment: Several commenters stated
the sodsaver provisions include a de
minimis exemption for lands five acres
or less. That means producers can
convert up to five acres of their land
without being subject to sodsaver
provisions. The interim rule is unclear
whether this five-acre exemption is
annual or cumulative over time. The
intent of this de minimis provision was
not to encourage conversion of five
acres of native sod for a particular tract
in year one, five more acres in year two,
five more acres in year three, etc.
Instead, it was intended to minimize
conversion of native sod, like in the case
of field round-outs, and avoid slowly
converting native tracts over time.
The commenters recommended a
cumulative five-acre limit apply to all
land that the producer is a property
owner, operator, or tenant, similar to
current FSA policy for conservation
compliance provisions.
Response: FCIC agrees that the
interim rule was ambiguous. FCIC also
agrees that the actual text and intent of
the provision in the 2014 Farm Bill is
to discourage conversion of native sod
and to make this determination on an
annual county and crop basis would
allow the continued slow conversion
over time. Therefore, FCIC has
determined native sod acreage will be
determined on a cumulative basis over
time by county. FCIC procedures will be
revised to require producers to report
native sod acreage by insured crop of
five acres or less beginning with the
2017 crop year. Once a producer breaks
out more than five acres cumulatively
across all insured crops dating back to
the 2015 crop year, the provisions for
reduced benefits due to converting
native sod will be applied to the current
crop year’s insured native sod acreage
and to any native sod acreage broken
out in all subsequent crop years.
Comment: A commenter supported
the provision that indicates the de
minimis acreage for the native sod
provision to apply is five acres. This
was in the earlier statutory provisions
where the new sodsaver provisions were
inserted, so the five acre minimum
continues to apply.
Response: FCIC agrees with the
commenter and has retained the fiveacre de minimis provision in the final
rule but has also made revisions so that
the five-acre rule applies on a
cumulative basis over time by county.
Comment: A commenter stated they
are glad that the rule appears to have
incorporated the legislative provisions
for sodsaver very effectively. The rule
includes a new definition of ‘‘native
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sod’’ that references: (1) Absence of
tillage; and (2) vegetative plant cover of
native grasses, forbs, or shrubs as well
as the trigger date of February 7, 2014,
concerning potential violation. It also
includes the specific listing of states
covered by this aspect of the rule and
removes the prior provision of the
‘‘Prairie Pothole National Priority Area’’
and the option formerly available for
governors in those states. In the rule, if
the native sod acreage is located in any
of the listed states of Iowa, Minnesota,
North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska,
and Montana and tilled and planted,
after February 7, 2014, to an annual crop
during the first four crop years the rule
reduces the insurance liability to be 65
percent of the protection factor and
reduces the premium subsidy by 50
percentage points. The rule indicates
that if the premium subsidy applicable
to these acres is less than 50 percent
before the reduction, then no premium
subsidy at all would be available.
However, the commenter did not find
anything in the rule that bars yield
substitution as specified in the native
sod statutory provisions. While the
commenter supported what is provided
for native sod in the interim rule, they
urged FCIC to include in the final rule
the bar on yield substitution for
violations and consider an amendment
to the interim rule to include this
important statutory provision.
Response: FCIC agrees with the
commenter that the 2014 Farm Bill
required yield substitution be
disallowed on native sod acreage.
However, by restricting the native sod
acreage yield guarantee to 65 percent of
the insured’s applicable transitional
yield, yield substitution cannot be
utilized on native sod acreage because
yield substitution is only applicable
when the actual yields in the insured’s
production history database are less
than 60 percent of the applicable
transitional yield. Therefore, yield
substitution would not be applicable to
native sod acreage. To avoid any
confusion, FCIC did not include this
restriction to yield substitution in the
interim rule and it is not necessary in
the final rule. No change has been made.
Comment: A commenter stated the
language in item e. of the background
and in section 9(f) of the CCIP Basic
Provisions indicates that section 9(e) is
not applicable to acres of native sod
acreage that is five acres or less in the
county. The commenter stated they
received additional clarification from
FCIC based on the procedures issued for
native sod as a part of Information
Memorandum: PM–14–027 that the five
acres applies on a crop and county
basis. For example, if an insured tilled
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and planted four acres of native sod to
corn and tilled and planted a different
tract of four acres of native sod in the
same county and year to soybeans that
this would be allowable and that such
acreage would not be subject to the
reduction of benefits for the first four
years. The language in this section of
the provisions should be revised to be
consistent with the procedural
interpretations that are being made by
the FCIC that the five-acre threshold for
native sod is based on the crop and
county.
Response: As stated above, FCIC has
determined that to allow determinations
of the five-acre threshold by crop and
county was inconsistent with the 2014
Farm Bill. Instead, native sod acreage
will be cumulative over time by county
to prevent the scenario stated above
where producers continue to slowly
convert new land by simply planting the
acreage to a different crop on the
acreage. Once a producer breaks out
more than five acres cumulatively
across all insured crops dating back to
the 2015 crop year, the provisions for
reduced benefits due to converting
native sod will be applied to the current
crop year’s insured native sod acreage
and to any native sod acreage broken
out in all subsequent crop years. Since
the native sod acreage is cumulative for
all insured crops by county, a
specification by crop is no longer
needed.
Comment: A commenter stated since
the rule was not issued until July 1,
2014, producers who made investments
to prepare ground for planting in 2014
had no way of knowing their decisions
would result in a reduction of premium
subsidies and production guarantees.
Applying these penalties after-the-fact is
unreasonable. The commenter proposed
the rule be modified to prevent this
unintended consequence by striking
‘‘and is planted to an annual crop’’ from
section 9(e) of the CCIP.
The suggested change will also ensure
that it conforms to the agency’s
definition of native sod (which makes
no reference to a restriction on acreage
being planted for crop year 2014).
Response: FCIC agrees and has
revised the provisions of the CCIP Basic
Provisions and the ARPI Basic
Provisions accordingly.
Section 11015
Comment: A commenter stated
section 11015 of the 2014 Farm Bill
allows producers to receive taxpayer
subsidies for separate coverage of
irrigated versus non-irrigated cropland
in a county. Agricultural producers have
access to a suite of unsubsidized risk
management options; some of the
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primary risk management techniques
are diversification of crops, use of
hybrids, and irrigation practices.
Taxpayers should not subsidize risk
management options that are readily
available and already widely used in the
private sector. At a minimum, when
implementing this provision, the
commenter recommended FCIC reduce
the likelihood that producers shift
acreage between irrigated and nonirrigated acres after this rule is finalized,
a likely unintended consequence if
adequate measures are not taken in
advance.
Response: When enacting this
provision, Congress observed that the
risks relative to producing crops on dry
land acreage versus irrigated acreage are
considerably different, and that many
insureds seek different coverage levels
that are tailored to those varying risks.
An insured must make an election for
separate coverage levels for irrigated
and non-irrigated acreage by the sales
closing date and must meet all the
policy requirements to insure their
acreage under an irrigated practice. If
the insured does not meet the policy
requirements for insuring a crop under
an irrigated practice by the acreage
reporting date, the coverage level
percentage they elected for the nonirrigated practice will be used to insure
all acres qualifying for a non-irrigated
practice. Therefore, FCIC does not
believe there is a risk that insureds will
shift acreage between irrigated and nonirrigated acreage. Insureds can only
insure acreage as irrigated for which
they have an adequate amount of water
to irrigate as specified by good farming
practices for the area. Further, they have
to actually apply the irrigation water to
the acreage in the recommended
amounts and intervals or any
subsequent loss will be considered due
to poor farming practices and no
indemnity may be due. No change has
been made.
Comment: A commenter supported a
producer’s ability to purchase separate
insurance for irrigated versus dry-land
production. This Farm Bill provision
was supported by the U.S. cotton
industry and will be extremely
beneficial to cotton producers. The
commenter commended FCIC for
making this change available for the
2015 crop year.
Response: All acreage of the crop in
the county must be insured under a
single policy, but producers will now
have the option of selecting different
coverage levels for the irrigated and
non-irrigated practices.
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Section 11016
Comment: A commenter strongly
recommended that USDA expand
incentives for beginning and young
farmers and ranchers to Military
Veterans and urged an increased
premium subsidy for this segment of
farmers.
Response: FCIC has implemented the
beginning farmer and rancher
provisions in a way that is fair to all
military personnel and consistent with
the Joint Explanatory Statement of the
Committee of Conference, which states
the Managers intend this section to be
implemented in a manner that does not
discriminate against producers who
grew up on a farm or ranch, left for postsecondary education or military service,
and returned to the farm or ranch. When
calculating the five crop years in this
section, the Managers intend that any
year when a producer was under the age
of 18, in post-secondary studies, or
serving in the U.S. military should not
be counted. The implementation of this
provision has been done to give the
maximum benefit possible to military
veterans as allowed by law. No change
has been made.
Comment: A commenter stated as the
average age of farmers increase, it is
imperative for U.S. agriculture to
encourage more new and beginning
farmers. The commenter believed the 10
percentage point premium subsidy
increase for beginning farmers is an
important provision that can allow a
new producer to possibly purchase
higher levels of coverage or provide a
savings in insurance premiums that can
be used for further investments. For
many of these individuals, the prospect
of starting an operation from the bottom
up is nearly impossible due to the
capital costs and credit availability. A
more common practice is for new and
beginning farmers to form partnerships
within established operations with the
intention of taking over the operation as
the more established producer retires.
FCIC’s exclusion of these individuals by
limiting the increased premium subsidy
to only operations in which all of the
substantial beneficial interested holders
qualify as a beginning famer severely
limits the reach of this provision. The
commenter understood that the
percentage of substantial beneficial
interest holders is noted within the
insurance documents. The commenter
recommended that FCIC prorate the 10
percentage point increase in relation to
the new and beginning farmer’s
percentage of substantial beneficial
interest. This would allow more
beginning farmers to utilize this
provision and not put disadvantages on
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the type of partnerships that represent
the only option for some beginning
farmers to enter farming.
Response: Implementing the
provision as suggested by the
commenter would extend beginning
farmer and rancher benefits to
individuals who have previous farming
experience and who are not the
intended target of the 2014 Farm Bill.
The 2014 Farm Bill defines a beginning
farmer or rancher as one who has not
actively operated and managed a farm or
ranch with a bona fide interest in a crop
or livestock as an owner-operator,
landlord, tenant, or sharecropper for
more than five crop years. Since the
2014 Farm Bill specifically limits
benefits to producers with five crop
years or less of insurable interest in any
crop or livestock, no change has been
made.
Comment: A commenter stated the
language in item g. of the background
describes the additional crop insurance
incentives for beginning farmers and
ranchers. This includes allowing the
producer who qualifies as a beginning
farmer or rancher to use the yield
history from any previous involvement
in a farm or ranch operation. The
commenter questioned if a producer
qualifies to use four years of history
from another operator, can he/she pick
and choose which year(s) to use or must
all four years be used if he/she chooses
to use such records. In addition, this
item indicates that years of insurable
interest can be excluded if earned while
under the age of 18. The commenter
questioned if it mattered when the
person in question turns 18. For
example, if the beginning farmer or
rancher applicant turns 18 on December
31, after the crop year has already
ended, the commenter questioned if he/
she is able to exclude that crop year for
beginning farmer or rancher purposes.
The commenter questioned if the fact
that he or she turned 18 during the same
calendar year would disallow that year
from being excluded for beginning
farmer or rancher purposes.
Response: FCIC issued procedures
allow a beginning farmer or rancher to
use the APH of the previous producer
when the beginning farmer or rancher
was previously involved in the farming
or ranching operation. The insured may
choose how many years in which to
transfer but the history being transferred
must start with the most recent crop
year and there must not be a break in
continuity in the crop years being
transferred. Therefore, there are
limitations on the insured’s ability to
pick and choose which years to transfer.
FCIC issued procedures specify that an
individual may exclude a crop year as
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insurable interest if the insurable
interest in the crop occurred while the
individual was under the age of 18,
which includes any crop year in which
a beginning farmer or rancher turns 18.
Comment: A commenter stated FCIC
needs to clarify that a non-individual
insured person may qualify as a
beginning farmer or rancher when all
the individual substantial beneficial
interest holders qualify as beginning
farmers or ranchers. The commenter
recommended FCIC revise the last
sentence in the definition of ‘‘beginning
farmer or rancher’’ as follows: ‘‘. . .
may be eligible for beginning farmer or
rancher benefits if there is at least one
individual substantial beneficial interest
holder and all individual substantial
beneficial interest holders qualify as a
beginning farmer or rancher.’’
Response: FCIC agrees with
commenter and has revised the
definition of ‘‘beginning farmer or
rancher’’ accordingly.
Comment: A commenter stated
section 3(l)(1) of the CCIP Basic
Provisions indicates that the person
who qualifies as a beginning farmer or
rancher can use the APH of the previous
producer of the crop or livestock on the
acreage he or she was previously
involved with. This section of the policy
should be clarified to indicate the
person who qualifies as a beginning
farmer or rancher can only use the
year(s) he or she was a part of the
decision-making or physical
involvement which may not be all years
of past history from the previous
producer. The way this section is
currently written it could be construed
that all years from this other producer
can be used which may not always be
the case if the beginning farmer or
rancher was only involved with some of
those years of APH.
Response: Unlike existing transfer of
APH data requirements contained in
FCIC-issued procedures, the number of
years of production history that may be
transferred is not limited by the number
of years the beginning farmer or rancher
was previously involved in the other
person’s farming or ranching operation.
However, a beginning farmer or rancher
can only use another person’s
production history for a crop that the
beginning farmer or rancher was
previously involved in. Since the 2014
Farm Bill used the phrase ‘‘actual
production history of the previous
producer,’’ FCIC interprets that to
include all of the years of actual
production history of the previous
producer on the acreage, not limited to
just those years the beginning farmer or
rancher was involved in the operation.
If the beginning farmer or rancher was
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involved with the livestock, they can
use the other person’s livestock records.
If the beginning farmer or rancher was
involved with a crop, they can use the
other person’s crop production records.
Only the production history of the
specific acreage being transferred may
be used by the beginning farmer or
rancher. No change has been made.
Comment: A commenter
recommended section 36 of the CCIP
Basic Provisions should be revised to
indicate that if it is later determined that
the producer does not qualify as a
beginning farmer or rancher, or once the
producer has produced a crop for more
than five years and no longer qualifies
as a beginning farmer or rancher, that
the excluded actual yield(s) will then
change from 80 percent of the
applicable transitional yield to 60
percent of the applicable transitional
yield. The commenter stated this
language needs to clarify that the 80
percent of the applicable transitional
yield is not retained once the producer
no longer qualifies as a beginning farmer
or rancher.
Response: Provisions and benefits
regarding beginning farmer or rancher
are only applicable when a producer
qualifies as a beginning farmer or
rancher. Although the policy is
continuous, the insured must meet the
terms and conditions of the policy each
crop year and must qualify for
beginning farmer or rancher benefits
each crop year. That means that in those
years the producer qualifies as a
beginning farmer and rancher, the
producer will receive 80 percent of the
transitional yield. However, after five
years, the producer’s own yields are
used to establish the APH and
transitional yields are no longer used.
No change has been made.
Comment: A commenter
recommended FCIC add a comma in
section 36(c) of the CCIP Basic
Provisions as follows: ‘‘. . . qualify as a
beginning farmer or rancher, in which
case. . .’’
Response: FCIC agrees with
commenter and has revised the
provisions accordingly.
Section 11019
Comment: A few commenters stated
the term ‘‘reinstatement’’ used in
section 2(k)(2)(iii)(B)(3)(i) of the ARPI
Basic Provisions and section
2(f)(2)(ii)(B)(3)(i) of the CCIP Basic
Provisions should be defined (either
added in each of the applicable Basic
Provisions as a definition or included in
the applicable section of each of the
applicable Basic Provisions). The
commenters stated this is important to
define as reinstatement should not
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allow or require new applications to be
submitted after the sales closing date,
but limit reinstatement to the coverage
that was terminated for which there
would already be an application form
on file. Allowing or requiring a new
application to reinstate coverage is not
necessary and could imply that changes
to the coverage that was terminated is
acceptable which would create a
disproportionate benefit to those for
whom coverage is reinstated. The
commenters recommended
‘‘reinstatement’’ be defined as
‘‘Reinstatement of coverage will be
limited to the coverage you had in place
on the sales closing date for the crops
that were terminated due to ineligibility
for debt. No new application is required
and no requests to change coverage
level, change plans of insurance or add
or remove options or endorsements will
be accepted unless such changes were
made and submitted on an application
form on or prior to the sales closing date
for the crop.’’
Response: FCIC agrees that the
applicable provisions should clarify that
reinstatement is under the same terms
and conditions of the policy in effect as
of the date termination became effective.
Currently procedures published at
https://www.rma.usda.gov/bulletins/pm/
2015/15-010a.pdf make this clear.
However, a definition of
‘‘reinstatement’’ has been added to
subpart U because it is applicable to
ineligibility determinations, appeals,
and reinstatement requests and cross
references have been added to section
2(k)(2)(iii)(B)(3)(i) of the ARPI Basic
Provisions and section 2(f)(2)(iii)(B)(3)(i)
of the CCIP Basic Provisions.
Comment: A commenter questioned
how is an approved insurance provider
going to determine whether a
policyholders failure to pay premium
was inadvertent in section
2(k)(2)(iii)(C)(1)(i) of the ARPI Basic
Provisions and section 2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(1)(i)
of the CCIP Basic Provisions.
Response: On February 24, 2015, FCIC
issued information memorandum PM–
15–010 Late Payment of Debt
procedures found at https://
www.rma.usda.gov/bulletins/pm/2015/
15-010a.pdf. The criteria to qualify for
an approved insurance provider
authorized reinstatement can be found
in section 2, paragraph 2 of these
procedures. Those procedures have
been modified to clarify the specific
conditions that approved insurance
providers are required to use in making
the determination. The approved
insurance providers must use the
requirements in section 2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(1)
of the CCIP and section 2(k)(2)(iii)(C)(1)
of the ARPI Basic Provisions to make
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this determination. Additionally, on
June 30, 2015, FCIC issued the General
Standards Handbook, which can be
found at https://www.rma.usda.gov/
handbooks/18000/ to further clarify the
criteria an approved insurance provider
is required to use in making a
determination. No change has been
made.
Comment: A commenter
recommended FCIC move the current
section 2(f)(2)(iii)(B)(3)(ii) of the CCIP
Basic Provisions to be new a new
section 2(f)(2)(iii)(B)(3) of the CCIP
Basic Provisions, and combine the
current sections 2(f)(2)(iii)(B)(3)(i) and
2(f)(2)(iii)(B)(3) of the CCIP Basic
Provisions as a new section
2(f)(2)(iii)(B)(4) of the CCIP Basic
Provisions. This organizational change
sets the requirement that ‘‘there is no
evidence of fraud or misrepresentation’’
apart from other text and appropriately
makes it a key criteria for the
Administrator granting reinstatement.
Response: FCIC disagrees with the
commenter that the change provides
improved organizational benefits to the
extent that a change is warranted. The
proposed changes may have adverse or
unintended consequences. The
proposed revision introduces new
paragraph designations that are not
necessary and may create the potential
for additional cross-references that can
lead to greater confusion and potential
for inaccurate reading. No change has
been made.
Comment: A commenter
recommended FCIC revise section
2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(1)(iii) of the CCIP Basic
Provisions as follows: ‘‘You timely
made the full payment of the amount
owed but the delivery of that payment
was delayed, and was postmarked no
more than 7 calendar days. . .’’ This
change will clarify that this clause only
provides an allowance for reinstatement
following termination for a late
postmarked payment; it does not allow
the payment itself to be made late (e.g.,
a late-dated check).
Response: FCIC agrees with the
commenter and has revised the
provisions accordingly.
Comment: A commenter stated
section 2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(3) of the CCIP
Basic Provisions requires the insured to
submit a written request for
reinstatement by the approved
insurance provider in the situations
indicated in sections 2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(1)(i)
through (iii). The commenter believed
the insured should only be required to
submit a formal written request for
sections 2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(1)(i) and (ii); the
insured should not have to submit a
written request for section
2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(1)(iii). For section
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2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(1)(iii), the insured’s full
payment of the premium owed should
serve as the payment and an implicit
request for reinstatement. For any such
late payment, the insured will not know
at the time the check is mailed that the
payment would be delayed in postal
processing which resulted in policy
termination. For reinstatements under
section 2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(1)(iii), the
approved insurance provider will verify
the insured made a timely and full
payment. This approach would
eliminate any need for the insured to
complete a form before an approved
insurance provider can accept a
payment that was postmarked late.
Response: FCIC issued procedures,
which can be found at https://
www.rma.usda.gov/handbooks/18000/,
provide the approved insurance
providers the guidance and direction
that satisfy the written request
requirement of 2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(1)(iii). No
change has been made.
Comment: A commenter suggested
that the language in current section
2(f)(2)(iii)(B)(3)(i) of the CCIP Basic
Provisions also be included in section
2(f)(2)(iii)(C) of the CCIP Basic
Provisions. It should be clear that
reinstatement, whether granted by the
Administrator or an approved insurance
provider, is effective at the beginning of
the crop year for which this insured was
determined to be ineligible.
Response: FCIC agrees and has added
the same language from section
2(f)(2)(iii)(B)(3)(i) of the CCIP Basic
Provisions in a new section
2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(4) of the CCIP Basic
Provisions. FCIC has made the same
change in a new section 2(k)(2)(iii)(C)(4)
of the ARPI Basic Provisions.
Comment: A commenter stated to
make the policy clear concerning the
specific administrative remedies the
insured is waiving, as well as to ensure
the insured understands they are
waiving all other administrative
remedies for any reinstatement request
under these provisions, the commenter
recommended FCIC replace section
2(f)(2)(iv) of the CCIP Basic Provisions
as follows: ‘‘You may not commence
litigation or arbitration against us,
obtain an administrative review in
accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart
J (administrative review), or file an
appeal in accordance with 7 CFR part 11
(appeal), with respect to any
determination made under section
2(f)(2)(iii)(B) or section 2(f)(2)(iii)(C).’’
Response: FCIC disagrees with the
commenter. Section 20 of the CCIP
Basic Provisions states that if the
insured and the approved insurance
provider fail to agree, the insured has a
right to commence litigation, arbitration,
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administrative review, or file an appeal
against the approved insurance
provider. A determination made under
section 2(f)(2)(iii)(B) or section
2(f)(2)(iii)(C) of the CCIP Basic
Provisions is consistent with those for
which the insured has a right to pursue
appeal or other recourse. FCIC has
revised the provisions to clarify that
determinations made by the
Administrator are only appealable to
National Appeals Division, and
determinations made by the approved
insurance provider are appealable
through the arbitration process in
section 20 of the CCIP Basic Provisions.
Comment: A commenter stated it is
unclear from section 2(f)(2)(iv) of the
CCIP Basic Provisions if an insured still
has the right to appeal a determination
made by RMA under section
2(f)(2)(iii)(B) to USDA’s National
Appeals Division. RMA’s draft
procedures on this section stated that
appeals to the National Appeals
Division were not allowed. However,
the commenter believed it is
questionable whether FCIC has the
authority to completely prohibit
insured’s from appealing these
determinations to the National Appeals
Division. Additionally, FCIC needs to
clarify that requests for reinstatements
made by approved insurance providers
under section 2(f)(2)(iii)(C) are not
subject to arbitration. Ultimately, only
RMA has the power to reinstate a policy
that has been terminated, even if the
request is being made by the approved
insurance provider under section
2(f)(iii)(C); therefore, these
determinations should not be subject to
arbitration.
If National Appeals Division appeals
are precluded, the commenter
recommended revising section 2(f)(2)(iv)
to read as follows: ‘‘You may not
commence litigation or arbitration
against us, obtain an administrative
review in accordance with 7 CFR part
400, subpart J (administrative review),
or file an appeal in accordance with 7
CFR part 11 (appeal), with respect to
any determination made under section
2(f)(2)(iii)(B) or section 2(f)(2)(iii)(C).’’
If National Appeals Division appeals
are allowed, the commenter
recommended revising section 2(f)(2)(iv)
to read as follows: ‘‘Determinations
made under section 2(f)(2)(iii)(B) or
section 2(f)(2)(iii)(C) may only be
appealed in accordance with 7 CFR part
11 (appeal). You may not commence
litigation or arbitration against us, or
obtain an administrative review in
accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart
J (administrative review), with respect
to any determination made under
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section 2(f)(2)(iii)(B) or section
2(f)(2)(iii)(C).’’
Response: FCIC agrees that section
2(f)(2)(iv) is ambiguous and it was only
intended to preclude requests for
reconsideration under 7 CFR part 400,
subpart J. It was never intended to
preclude an appeal to the National
Appeals Division. Further, producers
have the right to appeal determinations
by approved insurance providers under
section 20 of the CCIP Basic Provisions.
The provisions have been revised
accordingly.
Comment: A commenter stated the
interim rule narrative item 4.g. (Federal
Register page 37161) indicates that
removal of the phrase ‘‘, or any portion
thereof,’’ from current section 24(a) of
the CCIP Basic Provisions is intended
‘‘. . . to remove ambiguity of the billing
process and interest situations on
amounts owed, and to ensure
consistency in how insurance providers
administer this section.’’ The
commenter does not believe this change
clarifies how interest is to accrue. For
example, if the insured does not pay
premium for a crop with a 7/31 billing
date until 9/15, under the 2014
provisions the insured could be
assessed two months interest for the
period of August and September. Absent
the clause in 24(a), it is now unclear
whether the insured would owe interest
for any portion of the month of
September. Any change to current
billing practices could impact approved
insurance providers ability to recoup
debt collection costs for the insured’s
late payment when full premium
payment was timely made to FCIC on
behalf of the insured. The commenter
questioned if this phrase should be
removed.
A commenter stated for the 2015
reinsurance year, FCIC continues to
issue Special Provision statement
number 01282, which states ‘‘In lieu of
the second sentence of Section 24(a) of
the Basic Provisions, for the purpose of
premium amounts owed to us or
administrative fees owed to FCIC,
interest will start to accrue on the first
day of the month following the issuance
of the notice by us, provided that a
minimum of 30 days have passed from
the premium billing date specified in
the Special Provisions.’’ The interim
rule does not change the second
sentence of 24(a). The commenter did
not see a reason why this Special
Provision statement could not be
incorporated into the interim rule and
the Special Provision statement be
discontinued. However, the commenter
noted that for the February 1 billing date
the added provision of a minimum of 30
days does not work as there are only 28
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or 29 days in the month of February.
FCIC should therefore consider
changing this to 28 days.
However, instead of the two changes
suggested above by the commenter,
ambiguity as to the precise amount of
interest owed on unpaid premium
billings could be eliminated by
replacing the second sentence of 24(a)
with the following language, which is
modeled on 24(b): ‘‘For the purpose of
premium amounts owed to us or
administrative fees owed to FCIC,
interest will start to accrue on the date
that notice is issued to you for the
collection of the unpaid amount.
Amounts found due under this
paragraph will not be charged interest if
payment is made within 30 days of
issuance of the notice by us.’’ This
change not only standardizes basic
provision policy language, it is also
consistent with revisions to section 6(b)
of the CAT Endorsement and ensures
premium billing is administered
uniformly because interest accrues on a
daily basis for all amounts owed.
Response: Interest is accrued on a
monthly basis, not daily. For example,
the billing date is July 1 and the due
date for payment is July 31. Interest will
be included on the next bill dated
August 1 if the payment is not made on
or before July 31, 30 days after the
notice has been issued to the
policyholder. If the producer pays their
bill on September 15, they are only
billed interest for July and August. The
interest for the month of September has
not yet accrued and therefore would not
be owed or included in the amount due.
Because interest accrues on a monthly
basis the phrase ‘‘, or any portion
thereof,’’ is not needed. No change has
been made. FCIC agrees with the
commenter’s suggestion to incorporate
Special Provisions Statement 01282 into
the policy language and has revised the
language accordingly.
Comment: A commenter stated the
interim rule removes the phrase ‘‘, or
any portion thereof,’’. However, the
Farm Bill Amendment posted to RMA’s
Web site did not remove the word ‘‘or’’.
The revised section 24(a) of the CCIP
Basic Provisions in RMA’s Farm Bill
Amendment should read: ‘‘Interest will
accrue at the rate of 1.25 percent simple
interest per calendar month or on any
unpaid amount owed to us or on any
unpaid administrative fees owed to
FCIC . . .’’
Response: The Farm Bill Amendment
published on RMA’s Web site contained
an error and did not remove the word
‘‘or.’’ However, the interim rule
provided the correct language and the
word ‘‘or’’ was removed in the
regulation. FCIC will make this
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correction when the amendment for this
final rule is issued.
Comment: A commenter stated the
interim rule indicates the phrase ‘‘, or
any part thereof,’’ was removed from
24(b) for FCIC policies. The commenter
was unaware of any Federal crop
insurance policy regulation specific to
‘‘FCIC policies’’ and there is no such
phrase in CCIP 24(b). The commenter
stated FCIC should remove this item
from the interim rule.
Response: For certain portions of the
policy, FCIC maintains separate sections
‘‘for Reinsured Policies’’ and ‘‘FCIC
Policies’’ in the Code of Federal
Regulations. While no FCIC Policies are
currently written, the authority to write
such policies still exists and if there
comes a time when such policies are
needed, FCIC needs the provisions to
enable it to provide such policies.
Information regarding FCIC policies is
only contained in the Code of Federal
Regulations and is not included in the
typeset policies published on the RMA
Web site. Therefore, no change has been
made.
Comment: A commenter stated the
time limit set-forth in § 400.682(g)
should be revised. An insured will
always receive a notice of the amount
due well before the policy is terminated
and this 60 day period could potentially
expire before the policy is terminated.
Thus, the 60 day period should not be
tied to a notice of debt. Also, until the
insured receives notice that the policy
has been terminated, there would really
be no need for the insured to move
forward with requesting relief from
RMA. Therefore, we think a fairer and
clearer approach to this issue would be
to shorten the time period to 30 days;
however, the 30 days would not begin
to accrue until the insured receives
notice that the policy has been
terminated. The revised language would
read as follows:
(3) No later than 30 days from the date
of the notice from the FCIC informing
the person of ineligibility due to
nonpayment of a debt, the ineligible
person may request consideration for
reinstatement from the Administrator of
the Risk Management Agency in
accordance with section 2 of the CCIP
Basic Provisions (7 CFR 457.8).
Response: FCIC agrees that as written,
the language in § 400.682(g) can be
confusing and requires further
clarification. The phrase ‘‘the due date
specified in the notice to the person of
the amount due’’ could be interpreted to
apply to different types of scenarios
and/or notices, i.e. billing statements.
FCIC intended for this phrase to only
apply in situations where the insured
has received notice of an amount due
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after the termination date (for example,
an overpaid indemnity or when
premium revisions occur requiring
additional premium be owed and
billed), meaning the ineligible person
may request consideration for
reinstatement no later than 60 days after
the due date specified in the notice of
overpaid indemnity, additional
premium owed due to revisions, or any
other amounts due after the termination
date. FCIC has revised § 400.682(g) to
state the 60-day time period starts on
the due date specified in the notice to
the person of the amount due in the case
of an overpaid indemnity or any other
amount that becomes due after the
termination date. FCIC has also made
the same change in the ARPI Basic
Provisions and CCIP Basic Provisions.
Comment: A commenter stated the
time limit set-forth in section
2(f)(2)(iii)(B)(3) of the CCIP Basic
Provisions should be revised. An
insured will always receive a notice of
the amount due well before the policy
is terminated and this 60 day period
could potentially expire before the
policy is terminated. Thus, the 60 day
period should not be tied to a notice of
debt. Also, until the insured receives
notice that the policy has been
terminated, there would really be no
need for the insured to move forward
with requesting reinstatement from
RMA. Therefore, the commenter thought
a fairer and clearer approach to this
issue would be to shorten the time
period to 30 days; however the 30 days
would not begin to accrue until the
insured receives notice that the policy
has been terminated. The revised
language would read as follows:
You submit a written request for
reinstatement of your policy to us no
later than 30 days from the date of the
notice from the FCIC informing you of
your ineligibility due to nonpayment of
a debt.
The commenter stated the same
comment above about the time limit for
these requests that applies to section
2(f)(2)(iii)(C) of the CCIP Basic
Provisions. Additionally, it makes no
sense to apply the written request
requirement to late postmarks that fall
within the 7 day transit period. These
should just be automatically reinstated
by the approved insurance providers.
An Appendix III code should be
developed so that policies which fit
these criteria are tracked, but are never
actually terminated and made ineligible
in the first instance. As revised, this
section would read as follows:
(C) We determine that, in accordance
with 7 CFR part 400, subpart U and
FCIC issued procedures, one of the
following two conditions are met:
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(1) You submit a written request for
reinstatement of your policy to us in
accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart
U and applicable procedures no later
than 30 days after the termination date
or the missed payment date of a
previously executed written payment
agreement, or the due date specified in
the notice to you of the amount due, if
applicable, in which you demonstrate
that:
(i) You made timely payment for the
amount of premium owed but you
inadvertently omitted some small
amount, such as the most recent
month’s interest or a small
administrative fee or the amount of the
payment was clearly transposed from
the amount that was otherwise due (For
example, you owed $832 but you paid
$823);
(ii) You remit full payment of the
delinquent debt owed to us with your
request for reinstatement; and
(iii) There is no evidence of fraud or
misrepresentation; or
(2) You sent the full payment to us by
mail and the payment was postmarked
after the termination date or other
applicable due date, but received by us
within 7 calendar days after the
termination date or other applicable due
date.
Response: As stated above, FCIC
agrees that as written, the language
regarding the 60 day period can be
confusing and requires further
clarification. FCIC has revised section
2(f)(2)(iii) of the CCIP Basic Provisions
and section 2(k)(2)(iii) of the ARPI Basic
Provisions to state the 60 days starts on
the due date specified in the notice to
the person of the amount due in the case
of an overpaid indemnity or any other
amount that becomes due after the
termination date. Lastly, FCIC has
revised the reference to ‘‘$832 but you
paid $823’’ in section 2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(1)(ii)
of the CCIP Basic Provisions to ‘‘$892
but you paid $829’’ for clarity and
consistency purposes in accordance
with Appendix III to the Standard
Reinsurance Agreement and
instructions for handling debt and
ineligibility. Appendix III of the
Standard Reinsurance Agreement allows
approved insurance providers the
latitude to write-off balances equal to or
less than $50. Therefore, the example
has been revised to reflect a difference
of greater than $50.
In addition to the changes described
above, FCIC has revised the definition of
‘‘approved yield’’ to clarify the
approved yield may have yield
exclusions elected under section 5 of
the CCIP Basic Provisions. The
definition listed exceptions or
adjustments that may be made to an
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approved yield. Section 5, which
addresses exclusion of yields should be
included in this list.
FCIC has also revised the provisions
in section 34(a)(5)(i)(A)(3) of the CCIP
Basic Provisions. The requirement to
allow separate units by irrigated and
non-irrigated practice were added to
enterprise units in the interim rule.
FCIC inadvertently omitted allowing
separate units by irrigated and nonirrigated practices for whole-farm units.
FCIC published a Special Provisions
statement to allow such and has
incorporated this change in the final
rule and will remove the Special
Provisions statement after this final rule
is published.
Effective Date
The Administrative Procedure Act (5
U.S.C. 553) provides generally that
before rules are issued by Government
agencies, the rule is required to be
published in the Federal Register, and
the required publication of a substantive
rule is to be not less than 30 days before
its effective date. One of the exceptions
is when the agency finds good cause for
not delaying the effective date. Delaying
the effective of this rule would result in
the inability of the Federal Government
to implement these changes prior to the
contract change date for fall planted
crops, effectively delaying their
implementation for an entire year.
Therefore, using the administrative
procedure provisions in 5 U.S.C. 553,
RMA finds that there is good cause for
making this rule effective less than 30
days after publication in the Federal
Register. This rule allows RMA to make
the changes to the General
Administrative Regulations;
Catastrophic Risk Protection
Endorsement; Area Risk Protection
Insurance Regulations; and the Common
Crop Insurance Regulations, Basic
Provisions in time for 2017 fall planted
crops. Therefore, this final rule is
effective when published in the Federal
Register.
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES
Executive Order 12866
This rule has been determined to be
economically significant for the
purposes of Executive Order 12866 and,
therefore, it has been reviewed by the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB).
Benefit-Cost Analysis
A Benefit-Cost Analysis (BCA) has
been completed and a summary is
shown below; the full analysis may be
viewed on https://www.regulations.gov
in the docket listed above. In summary,
the analysis finds that changes in the
rule will have an expected cost to FCIC
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of $115.9 million annually over a 10year period in administration of the
Federal crop insurance program. Nonquantifiable benefits of this rule include
increased program integrity, additional
risk management tools for producers,
and incentives for beginning farmers
and ranchers to participate in the
Federal crop insurance program.
On February 7, 2014, the 2014 Farm
Bill was enacted. As a result, FCIC
revised those provisions of the General
Administrative Regulations—
Ineligibility for Programs under the
Federal Crop Insurance Act (subpart U),
Catastrophic Risk Protection
Endorsement (CAT Endorsement), Area
Risk Protection Insurance (ARPI) Basic
Provisions, and the Common Crop
Insurance Provisions (CCIP) Basic
Provisions to timely implement program
changes identified in Titles II and XI of
the 2014 Farm Bill.
On January 2014, the Congressional
Budget Office (CBO) issued its estimates
for the effects on direct spending and
revenues of the 2014 Farm Bill. These
estimates were used as a basis for the
quantifiable costs and benefits stated in
this BCA.
The purpose of this rule is to amend
subpart U, the CAT Endorsement, the
ARPI Basic Provisions, and the CCIP
Basic Provisions to implement the
following changes:
Section 2611 requires those enrolled
in Federal crop insurance, for certain
agriculture commodities, to comply
with conservation compliance
requirements or forego premium
subsidy. For acts or situations of noncompliance, ineligibility for premium
subsidy will be applied beginning with
the 2016 reinsurance year. Annually,
FCIC anticipates a savings of $4.6
million as a result of this change.
Section 11007 makes available
insurance coverage by separate
enterprise units based on irrigated and
non-irrigated acreage of a crop within a
county. Annually, FCIC anticipates a
cost of $53.3 million as a result of this
change.
Section 11009 allows insureds to
exclude any recorded or appraised yield
for any crop year in which the per
planted acre yield in the county is at
least 50 percent below the simple
average per planted acre yield for the
crop in the county for the previous 10
consecutive crop years, and allows
insureds in any county contiguous to a
county in which an insured is eligible
to exclude a recorded or appraised yield
to also elect a similar adjustment.
Annually, FCIC anticipates a cost of
$35.7 million as a result of this change.
Section 11014 applies a reduction of
premium subsidy, a reduced insurance
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42471
guarantee, and eliminates substitute
yields in the insurance guarantee during
the first four crop years that land is
converted from native sod to the
production of an annual crop in the
States of Iowa, Minnesota, Montana,
Nebraska, North Dakota, and South
Dakota. Annually, FCIC anticipates a
savings of $11.4 million as a result of
this change.
Section 11015 allows producers to
elect a different level of coverage for an
agricultural commodity by irrigated and
non-irrigated acreage. Annually, FCIC
anticipates a cost of $16.8 million as a
result of this change.
Section 11016 establishes crop
insurance benefits for beginning farmers
and ranchers by increasing the premium
subsidy available by ten percentage
points, allowing the use of yield history
from any previous farm or ranch
operation in which they had decision
making or physical involvement, and
replacing a low yield in their actual
production history (APH) with a yield
equal to 80 percent of the applicable
transitional yield. Annually, FCIC
anticipates a cost of $26.1 million as a
result of this change.
Section 11019 allows for the
correction of errors in information
obtained from the producer within a
reasonable amount of time and
consistent with information provided by
the producer to other agencies of the
Department of Agriculture subject to
certain limitations for maintaining
program integrity. This section also
provides for the payment of debt after
the termination date in accordance with
procedures and limitations established
by the FCIC, if a producer inadvertently
fails to pay a debt and has been
determined to be ineligible to
participate in the Federal crop
insurance program. FCIC does not
believe there are any additional cost
outlays resulting from this change.
Therefore, FCIC believes some insureds
will benefit from this change and the
benefits are non-quantifiable.
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
Pursuant to the provisions of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. chapter 35), the collections of
information in this rule have been
approved by OMB under control
numbers 0563–0085, 0563–0083, and
0563–0053.
E-Government Act Compliance
FCIC is committed to complying with
the E-Government Act of 2002, to
promote the use of the Internet and
other information technologies to
provide increased opportunities for
citizen access to Government
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information and services, and for other
purposes.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA) establishes
requirements for Federal agencies to
assess the effects of their regulatory
actions on State, local, and tribal
governments and the private sector.
This rule contains no Federal mandates
(under the regulatory provisions of title
II of the UMRA) for State, local, and
tribal governments or the private sector.
Therefore, this rule is not subject to the
requirements of sections 202 and 205 of
UMRA.
Executive Order 13132
It has been determined under section
1(a) of Executive Order 13132,
Federalism, that this rule does not have
sufficient implications to warrant
consultation with the States. The
provisions contained in this rule will
not have a substantial direct effect on
States, or on the relationship between
the national government and the States,
or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES
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.
The Federal Crop Insurance
Corporation has assessed the impact of
this rule on Indian tribes and
determined that this rule does not, to
our knowledge, have tribal implications
that require tribal consultation under
E.O. 13175. If a Tribe requests
consultation, the Federal Crop
Insurance Corporation will work with
the Office of Tribal Relations to ensure
meaningful consultation is provided
where changes, additions and
modifications identified herein are not
expressly mandated by Congress.
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Regulatory Flexibility Act
FCIC certifies that this regulation will
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities. Program requirements for the
Federal crop insurance program are the
same for all producers regardless of the
size of their farming operation. For
instance, all producers are required to
submit an application and acreage
report to establish their insurance
guarantees and compute premium
amounts, and all producers are required
to submit a notice of loss and
production information to determine the
amount of an indemnity payment in the
event of an insured cause of crop loss.
Whether a producer has 10 acres or
1000 acres, there is no difference in the
kind of information collected. To ensure
crop insurance is available to small
entities, the Federal Crop Insurance Act
(Act) authorizes FCIC to waive
collection of administrative fees from
beginning farmers or ranchers and
limited resource farmers. FCIC believes
this waiver helps to ensure that small
entities are given the same opportunities
as large entities to manage their risks
through the use of Federal crop
insurance. A Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis has not been prepared since
this regulation does not have an impact
on small entities, and, therefore, this
regulation is exempt from the provisions
of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 605).
Federal Assistance Program
This program is listed in the Catalog
of Federal Domestic Assistance under
No. 10.450.
Executive Order 12372
This program is not subject to the
provisions of Executive Order 12372,
which require intergovernmental
consultation with State and local
officials. See the Notice related to 7 CFR
part 3015, subpart V, published at 48 FR
29115, June 24, 1983.
Executive Order 12988
This rule has been reviewed in
accordance with Executive Order 12988
on civil justice reform. The provisions
of this rule will not have a retroactive
effect. The provisions of this rule will
preempt State and local laws to the
extent such State and local laws are
inconsistent herewith. With respect to
any direct action taken by FCIC or to
require the insurance provider to take
specific action under the terms of the
crop insurance policy, the
administrative appeal provisions
published at 7 CFR part 11 must be
exhausted before any action against
FCIC for judicial review may be brought.
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Environmental Evaluation
This action is not expected to have a
significant economic impact on the
quality of the human environment,
health, or safety. Therefore, neither an
Environmental Assessment nor an
Environmental Impact Statement is
needed.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Parts 400, 402,
407 and 457
Administrative practice and
procedure, Crop insurance, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
Final Rule
Accordingly, as set forth in the
preamble, the Federal Crop Insurance
Corporation adopts as final the interim
rule amending 7 CFR parts 400, 402,
407, and 457, published at 79 FR 37155
on July 1, 2014, as final with the
following changes:
PART 400—GENERAL
ADMINISTRATIVE REGULATIONS
1. The authority citation is added for
7 CFR part 400 to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1506(1), 1506(o).
2. Amend § 400.677 by adding the
definition of ‘‘reinstatement’’ in
alphabetical order to read as follows:
■
§ 400.677
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Reinstatement means that the policy
will retain the same plan of insurance,
coverage levels, price percentages,
endorsements and options the person
had prior to termination, provided the
person continues to meet all eligibility
requirements, comply with the terms of
the policy, and there is no evidence of
misrepresentation or fraud.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Amend § 400.679 as follows:
■ a. In paragraph (e) by adding a
semicolon at the end of the paragraph;
and
■ b. Revising paragraph (g).
The revision reads as follows:
§ 400.679
Criteria for ineligibility.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Has requested the Administrator,
Risk Management Agency, for
consideration to reinstate their
eligibility in accordance with the
applicable policy provisions and such
request has been denied.
■ 4. Amend § 400.682 by revising
paragraph (g) to read as follows:
§ 400.682
Determination and notification.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) No later than 60 days after the
termination date, a missed payment date
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of a previously executed written
payment agreement, or in the case of an
overpaid indemnity or any amount that
became due after the termination date,
the due date specified in a notice to the
person of an amount due, as applicable,
such ineligible person may request
consideration for reinstatement from the
Administrator, Risk Management
Agency, in accordance with section 2 of
the Common Crop Insurance Policy
Basic Provisions (7 CFR 457.8).
PART 402—CATASTROPHIC RISK
PROTECTION ENDORSEMENT
5. The authority citation for 7 CFR
part 402 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1506(l), 1506(o).
6. Amend § 402.4 as follows:
a. In section 3(c) by removing the
phrase ‘‘paragraph (b) above’’ and
adding in its place the phrase ‘‘section
3(b)’’;
■ b. In section 6(a) by removing the
phrase ‘‘paragraphs (f) and (h) of this
section’’ and adding in its place the
phrase ‘‘sections 6(f) and (h)’’;
■ c. In section 6(b) by removing the
phrase ‘‘paragraph (f) of this section’’
and adding in its place the phrase
‘‘section 6(f)’’;
■ d. In section 6(c) by removing the
phrase ‘‘paragraph (b) of this section’’
and adding in its place the phrase
‘‘section 6(b)’’;
■ e. In section 6(d) by removing the
phrase ‘‘paragraph (b) of this section’’
and adding in its place the phrase
‘‘section 6(b)’’;
■ f. In section 6(e) by removing the
phrase ‘‘paragraph (f) of this section’’
and adding in its place the phrase
‘‘section 6(f)’’;
■ g. In section 6(f)(2) by removing the
phrase ‘‘paragraph (f)(1) of this section’’
and adding in its place the phrase
‘‘section 6(f)(1)’’;
■ h. Revise section 6(f)(2)(i);
■ i. In section 6(f)(2)(ii)(A) by removing
the phrase ‘‘paragraph (f)(1) of this
section’’ and adding in its place the
phrase ‘‘section 6(f)(1)’’;
■ j. In section 6(f)(2)(ii)(B) by removing
the phrase ‘‘paragraph (f)(1) of this
section’’ and adding in its place the
phrase ‘‘section 6(f)(1)’’; and
■ k. In section 6(h) by removing the
phrase ‘‘paragraph (f) of this section’’
and adding in its place the phrase
‘‘section 6(f)’’.
The revision reads as follows:
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES
■
■
§ 402.4 Catastrophic Risk Protection
Endorsement Provisions.
*
*
*
*
*
6. Annual Premium and
Administrative Fees
*
*
*
*
*
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(f) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) Notwithstanding section 6(f)(2), if
you demonstrate you began farming for
the first time after June 1 but prior to the
beginning of the reinsurance year (July
1), you may be eligible for premium
subsidy the subsequent reinsurance year
without having form AD–1026 on file
with FSA on or before June 1. For
example, if you demonstrate you started
farming for the first time on June 15,
2015, you may be eligible for premium
subsidy for the 2016 reinsurance year
without form AD–1026 on file with
FSA.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 407—AREA RISK PROTECTION
INSURANCE REGULATIONS
7. The authority citation for 7 CFR
part 407 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1506(l), 1506(o).
8. Amend § 407.9 as follows:
a. In section 1 by revising the
definition of ‘‘beginning farmer or
rancher’’;
■ b. Revise sections 2(k)(2)(iii) and (iv);
■ c. Revise section 5(d);
■ d. In section 5(e) by removing the
phrase ‘‘areas of’’ and adding in its
place the word ‘‘cumulative’’;
■ e. Revise section 7(i)(2)(i);
■ f. In section 22(b) [FCIC policies] by
adding the phrase ‘‘the issuance of the
notice by us, provided that a minimum
of 30 days have passed from’’ after the
phrase ‘‘interest will start to accrue on
the first day of the month following’’;
■ g. In section 22(a)(1) [Reinsured
policies] by adding the phrase ‘‘the
issuance of the notice by us, provided
that a minimum of 30 days have passed
from’’ after the phrase ‘‘interest will
start to accrue on the first day of the
month following’’; and
■ h. In section 31(a)(1) by removing the
word ‘‘the’’ after the phrase ‘‘any person
with a substantial beneficial interest
in’’.
The revisions read as follows:
■
■
§ 407.9
policy.
Area risk protection insurance
*
*
*
*
*
1. Definitions
*
*
*
*
*
Beginning farmer or rancher. An
individual who has not actively
operated and managed a farm or ranch
in any state, with an insurable interest
in a crop or livestock as an owneroperator, landlord, tenant, or
sharecropper for more than five crop
years, as determined in accordance with
FCIC procedures. Any crop year’s
insurable interest may, at your election,
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42473
be excluded if earned while under the
age of 18, while in full-time military
service of the United States, or while in
post-secondary education, in
accordance with FCIC procedures. A
person other than an individual may be
eligible for beginning farmer or rancher
benefits if there is at least one
individual substantial beneficial interest
holder and all individual substantial
beneficial interest holders qualify as a
beginning farmer or rancher.
*
*
*
*
*
2. Life of Policy, Cancellation, and
Termination
*
*
*
*
*
(k) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) Once the policy is terminated, it
cannot be reinstated for the current crop
year unless:
(A) The termination was in error;
(B) The Administrator of the Risk
Management Agency, at his or her sole
discretion, determines that the
following conditions are met:
(1) In accordance with 7 CFR part 400,
subpart U, and FCIC issued procedures,
you provide documentation that your
failure to pay your debt is due to an
unforeseen or unavoidable event or an
extraordinary weather event that created
an impossible situation for you to make
timely payment;
(2) You remit full payment of the
delinquent debt owed to us or FCIC
with your request submitted in
accordance with section
2(k)(2)(iii)(B)(3); and
(3) You submit a written request for
reinstatement of your policy to us no
later than 60 days after the termination
date or the missed payment date of a
previously executed written payment
agreement, or in the case of overpaid
indemnity or any amount that became
due after the termination date, the due
date specified in the notice to you of the
amount due, if applicable.
(i) If authorization for reinstatement,
as defined in 7 CFR part 400, subpart U,
is granted, your policies will be
reinstated effective at the beginning of
the crop year for which you were
determined ineligible, and you will be
entitled to all applicable benefits under
such policies, provided you meet all
eligibility requirements and comply
with the terms of the policy; and
(ii) There is no evidence of fraud or
misrepresentation; or
(C) We determine that, in accordance
with 7 CFR part 400, subpart U, and
FCIC issued procedures, the following
are met:
(1) You can demonstrate:
(i) You made timely payment for the
amount of premium owed but you
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 126 / Thursday, June 30, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
inadvertently omitted some small
amount, such as the most recent
month’s interest or a small
administrative fee;
(ii) The amount of the payment was
clearly transposed from the amount that
was otherwise due (For example, you
owed $892 but you paid $829); or
(iii) You timely made the full payment
of the amount owed but the delivery of
that payment was delayed, and was
postmarked no more than seven
calendar days after the termination date
or the missed payment date of a
previously executed written payment
agreement, or in the case of overpaid
indemnity or any amount that became
due after the termination date, the due
date specified in a notice to you of an
amount due, as applicable;
(2) You remit full payment of the
delinquent debt owed to us; and
(3) You submit a written request for
reinstatement of your policy to us in
accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart
U, and applicable procedures no later
than 30 days after the termination date
or the missed payment date of a
previously executed written payment
agreement, or in the case of overpaid
indemnity or any amount that became
due after the termination date, the due
date specified in the notice to you of the
amount due, if applicable; and
(4) If authorization for reinstatement,
as defined in 7 CFR part 400, subpart U,
is granted, your policies will be
reinstated effective at the beginning of
the crop year for which you were
determined ineligible, and you will be
entitled to all applicable benefits under
such policies, provided you meet all
eligibility requirements and comply
with the terms of the policy; and
(5) There is no evidence of fraud or
misrepresentation.
(iv) A determination made under:
(A) Section 2(k)(2)(iii)(B) may only be
appealed to the National Appeals
Division in accordance with 7 CFR part
11; and
(B) Section 2(k)(2)(iii)(C) may only be
appealed in accordance with section 23.
*
*
*
*
*
5. Insurable Acreage
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Except as provided in section 5(e),
in the states of Iowa, Minnesota,
Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, and
South Dakota, during the first four crop
years of planting on native sod acreage
that has been tilled after February 7,
2014, such acreage may be insured if the
requirements of section 5(a) have been
met but will:
(1) Notwithstanding the provisions in
section 6, receive a liability that is based
on 65 percent of the protection factor;
and
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20:00 Jun 29, 2016
Jkt 238001
(2) For additional coverage policies,
receive a premium subsidy that is 50
percentage points less than would
otherwise be provided on acreage not
qualifying as native sod. If the premium
subsidy applicable to these acres is less
than 50 percent before the reduction,
you will receive no premium subsidy.
*
*
*
*
*
7. Annual Premium and
Administrative Fees
*
*
*
*
*
(i) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) Notwithstanding section 7(i)(2), if
you demonstrate you began farming for
the first time after June 1 but prior to the
beginning of the reinsurance year (July
1), you may be eligible for premium
subsidy the subsequent reinsurance year
without having form AD–1026 on file
with FSA on or before June 1. For
example, if you demonstrate you started
farming for the first time on June 15,
2015, you may be eligible for premium
subsidy for the 2016 reinsurance year
without form AD–1026 on file with
FSA.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 457—COMMON CROP
INSURANCE REGULATIONS
9. The authority citation for 7 CFR
part 457 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1506(1) and 1506(o).
10. Amend § 457.8, in the Common
Crop Insurance Policy, as follows:
■ a. In section 1 by revising the
definitions of ‘‘approved yield’’,
‘‘beginning farmer or rancher’’, and
‘‘enterprise unit’’;
■ b. Revise sections 2(f)(2)(iii) and (iv);
■ c. In section 5 by removing the phrase
‘‘per acre planted’’ and adding in its
place the phrase ‘‘per planted acre’’;
■ d. Revise section 7(h)(2)(i);
■ e. In section 9(e) by removing the
phrase ‘‘and is planted to an annual
crop’’;
■ f. In section 9(f) by removing the
phrase ‘‘areas of’’ and adding in its
place the word ‘‘cumulative’’;
■ g. Under ‘‘For FCIC policies’’, in
section 24(b), by adding the phrase ‘‘the
issuance of the notice by us, provided
that a minimum of 30 days have passed
from’’ after the phrase ‘‘interest will
start to accrue on the first day of the
month following’’;
■ h. Under ‘‘For reinsured policies’’, in
section 24(a), by adding the phrase ‘‘the
issuance of the notice by us, provided
that a minimum of 30 days have passed
from’’ after the phrase ‘‘interest will
start to accrue on the first day of the
month following’’;
■
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Frm 00022
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
i. In section 25(a)(1) by removing the
word ‘‘the’’ after the phrase ‘‘any person
with a substantial beneficial interest
in’’;
■ j. Revise section 34(a)(5)(i)(A)(3); and
■ k. In section 36(c) by adding a comma
after the phrase ‘‘unless you qualify as
a beginning farmer or rancher’’.
The revisions read as follows:
■
§ 457.8
*
*
The application and policy.
*
*
*
Common Crop Insurance Policy
*
*
*
*
*
1. Definitions
*
*
*
*
*
Approved yield. The actual
production history (APH) yield,
calculated and approved by the verifier,
used to determine the production
guarantee by summing the yearly actual,
assigned, adjusted or unadjusted
transitional yields and dividing the sum
by the number of yields contained in the
database, which will always contain at
least four yields. The database may
contain up to 10 consecutive crop years
of actual or assigned yields. The
approved yield may have yield
exclusions elected under section 5,
yield adjustments elected under section
36, revisions according to section 3, or
other limitations according to FCIC
approved procedures applied when
calculating the approved yield.
*
*
*
*
*
Beginning farmer or rancher. An
individual who has not actively
operated and managed a farm or ranch
in any state, with an insurable interest
in a crop or livestock as an owneroperator, landlord, tenant, or
sharecropper for more than five crop
years, as determined in accordance with
FCIC procedures. Any crop year’s
insurable interest may, at your election,
be excluded if earned while under the
age of 18, while in full-time military
service of the United States, or while in
post-secondary education, in
accordance with FCIC procedures. A
person other than an individual may be
eligible for beginning farmer or rancher
benefits if there is at least one
individual substantial beneficial interest
holder and all individual substantial
beneficial interest holders qualify as a
beginning farmer or rancher.
*
*
*
*
*
Enterprise unit. All insurable acreage
of the same insured crop or all insurable
irrigated or non-irrigated acreage of the
same insured crop in the county in
which you have a share on the date
coverage begins for the crop year,
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 126 / Thursday, June 30, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
provided the requirements of section 34
are met.
*
*
*
*
*
2. Life of Policy, Cancellation, and
Termination
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) Once the policy is terminated, it
cannot be reinstated for the current crop
year unless:
(A) The termination was in error;
(B) The Administrator of the Risk
Management Agency, at his or her sole
discretion, determines that the
following are met:
(1) In accordance with 7 CFR part 400,
subpart U, and FCIC issued procedures,
you provide documentation that your
failure to pay your debt is due to an
unforeseen or unavoidable event or an
extraordinary weather event that created
an impossible situation for you to make
timely payment;
(2) You remit full payment of the
delinquent debt owed to us or FCIC
with your request submitted in
accordance with section 2(f)(2)(iii)(B)(3);
and
(3) You submit a written request for
reinstatement of your policy to us no
later than 60 days after the termination
date or the missed payment date of a
previously executed written payment
agreement, or in the case of overpaid
indemnity or any amount that became
due after the termination date, the due
date specified in the notice to you of the
amount due, if applicable.
(i) If authorization for reinstatement,
as defined in 7 CFR part 400, subpart U,
is granted, your policies will be
reinstated effective at the beginning of
the crop year for which you were
determined ineligible, and you will be
entitled to all applicable benefits under
such policies, provided you meet all
eligibility requirements and comply
with the terms of the policy; and
(ii) There is no evidence of fraud or
misrepresentation; or
(C) We determine that, in accordance
with 7 CFR part 400, subpart U, and
FCIC issued procedures, the following
are met:
(1) You can demonstrate:
(i) You made timely payment for the
amount of premium owed but you
inadvertently omitted some small
amount, such as the most recent
month’s interest or a small
administrative fee;
(ii) The amount of the payment was
clearly transposed from the amount that
was otherwise due (For example, you
owed $892 but you paid $829); or
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:00 Jun 29, 2016
Jkt 238001
(iii) You timely made the full payment
of the amount owed but the delivery of
that payment was delayed, and was
postmarked no more than seven
calendar days after the termination date
or the missed payment date of a
previously executed written payment
agreement, or in the case of overpaid
indemnity or any amount that became
due after the termination date, the due
date specified in a notice to you of an
amount due, as applicable.
(2) You remit full payment of the
delinquent debt owed to us; and
(3) You submit a written request for
reinstatement of your policy to us in
accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart
U, and applicable procedures no later
than 30 days after the termination date
or the missed payment date of a
previously executed written payment
agreement, or in the case of overpaid
indemnity or any amount that became
due after the termination date, the due
date specified in the notice to you of the
amount due, if applicable; and
(4) If authorization for reinstatement,
as defined in 7 CFR part 400, subpart U,
is granted, your policies will be
reinstated effective at the beginning of
the crop year for which you were
determined ineligible, and you will be
entitled to all applicable benefits under
such policies, provided you meet all
eligibility requirements and comply
with the terms of the policy; and
(5) There is no evidence of fraud or
misrepresentation.
(iv) A determination made under:
(A) Section 2(f)(2)(iii)(B) may only be
appealed to the National Appeals
Division in accordance with 7 CFR part
11; and
(B) Section 2(f)(2)(iii)(C) may only be
appealed in accordance with section 20.
*
*
*
*
*
7. Annual Premium and
Administrative Fees
*
*
*
*
*
(h) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) Notwithstanding section 7(h)(2), if
you demonstrate you began farming for
the first time after June 1 but prior to the
beginning of the reinsurance year (July
1), you may be eligible for premium
subsidy the subsequent reinsurance year
without having form AD–1026 on file
with FSA on or before June 1. For
example, if you demonstrate you started
farming for the first time on June 15,
2015, you may be eligible for premium
subsidy for the 2016 reinsurance year
without form AD–1026 on file with
FSA.
*
*
*
*
*
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42475
34. Units
(a) * * *
(5) * * *
(i) * * *
(A) * * *
(3) At the same coverage level (e.g., if
you elect to insure your corn and canola
at the 65 percent coverage level and
your soybeans at the 75 percent
coverage level, the corn, soybeans and
canola would be assigned the unit
structure in accordance with section
34(a)(5)(v)) unless you can elect separate
coverage levels for all irrigated and all
non-irrigated crops in accordance with
section 3(b)(2)(iii) (e.g. if you elect to
insure your irrigated corn at the 65
percent coverage level you must insure
your irrigated canola at the 65 percent
coverage level. If you elect to insure
your non-irrigated corn at the 70 percent
coverage level you must insure your
non-irrigated canola at the 70 percent
coverage level. If you elect to insure
your irrigated corn at the 65 percent
coverage level and your irrigated canola
at the 70 percent coverage level your
unit structure will be assigned in
accordance with section 34(a)(5)(v));
*
*
*
*
*
Signed in Washington, DC, on June 23,
2016.
Brandon C. Willis,
Manager, Federal Crop Insurance
Corporation.
[FR Doc. 2016–15327 Filed 6–29–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–08–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 39
[Docket No. FAA 2015 7491; Directorate
Identifier 2015–NE–39–AD; Amendment 39–
18569; AD 2016–13–05]
RIN 2120–AA64
Airworthiness Directives; General
Electric Company Turbofan Engines
Correction
In rule document 2016–14474,
beginning on page 41208 in the issue of
Friday, June 24, 2016, make the
following correction:
§ 39.13
[Corrected]
On page 41210, in the table titled
‘‘Table 1 to Paragraph (e)—HPC Stage
8–10 Spool S/Ns’’, the first row of the
table should appear as follows:
E:\FR\FM\30JNR1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 126 (Thursday, June 30, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 42453-42475]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-15327]
========================================================================
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. 81, No. 126 / Thursday, June 30, 2016 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 42453]]
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Federal Crop Insurance Corporation
7 CFR Parts 400, 402, 407, and 457
[Docket No. FCIC-14-0005]
RIN 0563-AC43
General Administrative Regulations; Catastrophic Risk Protection
Endorsement; Area Risk Protection Insurance Regulations; and the Common
Crop Insurance Regulations, Basic Provisions
AGENCY: Federal Crop Insurance Corporation, USDA.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Federal Crop Insurance Corporation (FCIC) finalizes the
General Administrative Regulations--Ineligibility for Programs under
the Federal Crop Insurance Act, the Catastrophic Risk Protection
Endorsement, the Area Risk Protection Insurance Regulations, and the
Common Crop Insurance Regulations, Basic Provisions to revise those
provisions affected by changes mandated by the Agricultural Act of 2014
(commonly referred to as the 2014 Farm Bill), enacted on February 7,
2014.
DATES: This rule is effective June 30, 2016.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tim Hoffmann, Director, Product
Management, Product Administration and Standards Division, Risk
Management Agency, United States Department of Agriculture, Beacon
Facility, Stop 0812, Room 421, P.O. Box 419205, Kansas City, MO 64141-
6205, telephone (816) 926-7730.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
This rule finalizes changes to the General Administrative
Regulations--Ineligibility for Programs under the Federal Crop
Insurance Act, the Catastrophic Risk Protection Endorsement, the Area
Risk Protection Insurance Regulations, and the Common Crop Insurance
Regulations, Basic Provisions that were published by FCIC on July 1,
2014, as a notice of interim rulemaking in the Federal Register at 79
FR 37155-37166. The public was afforded 60 days to submit written
comments and opinions.
A total of 364 comments were received from 74 commenters. The
commenters included persons or entities from the following categories:
Academic, farmer, financial, insurance company, producer group, trade
association, and other.
FCIC received a number of comments regarding sections of the Farm
Bill that were not included in the interim rule. The comments received
included but are not limited to (1) section 1404 participation of dairy
operations in margin protection program; (2) section 11003 supplemental
coverage option; (3) section 11017 stacked income protection plan for
producers of upland cotton; (4) section 11022 whole farm diversified
risk management insurance plan; and (5) section 11023 crop insurance
for organic crops. These sections of the Farm Bill were not a part of
this regulation. Therefore, FCIC is not publishing these comments in
this final rule. FCIC thanks the public for their input.
The public comments received are organized below by the issues
identified in this rule and the specific public comments received. The
comments received and FCIC's responses are as follows:
General
Comment: A commenter stated programs to educate farmers on the new
provisions contained in the Farm Bill are essential to proper
implementation of this legislation and to the long-term success of
Northeast agriculture.
The commenter suggested the United States Department of Agriculture
(USDA) aggressively promote educational and informational programming,
especially initiatives that involve and combine the efforts of public,
private and educational entities.
Response: FCIC collaborated with producers, producers groups,
agents, approved insurance providers, as well as the National Resource
and Conservation Service (NRCS) and the Farm Service Agency (FSA)
regarding several sections of the 2014 Farm Bill through meetings,
teleconferences, webinars, and listening sessions to develop policies
and procedures. The purpose of this outreach was to provide feedback
and explain revisions, explain the rationale and approach for
implementation, and reach out to specialty groups. General updates to
ongoing activities were provided to approved insurance providers.
Conservation compliance education included producers, producer groups,
agents, and approved insurance provider meetings, collaborations with
RMA, NRCS, and FSA, revising forms and certification policy and
procedure, as well as providing this information to producers. FCIC
conducted 135 in-person and webinar training sessions, and conducted
radio spots and other forms of interviews reaching an even larger
audience.
FCIC has published information on its Web site highlighting the
major changes to the Federal crop insurance program in response to the
2014 Farm Bill implementation. Also published on the Web site are Fact
Sheets, Question and Answers, and brochures regarding each section of
the Farm Bill. FCIC has worked closely with approved insurance
providers to make system changes and prepare procedural documents. In
addition, FCIC participated with approved insurance providers and an
insurance trade association to train the trainers, underwriters, loss
adjusters, and agents. FCIC will continue to promote and educate on the
implementation of the Farm Bill provisions as opportunities arise.
Comment: A commenter stated the current agricultural subsidy system
is a maze of market distorting and highly parochial policies that
generally rewards a handful of large farm businesses or well-connected
industry segments at the expense of taxpayers. The system results in
costly inefficiencies that detract from program goals and produce
numerous unintended consequences. The Federal government bears a
disproportionate amount of the financial risks for agribusinesses to
the detriment of taxpayers, consumers, and agriculture as a sector
making it less competitive, less resilient, and less accountable for
its impacts.
[[Page 42454]]
The commenter has long advocated for reforms to make the
agricultural safety net more cost-effective, transparent, accountable
to taxpayers, and responsive to current market conditions and needs.
While the Agricultural Act of 2014 fails to take the necessary steps to
achieve this reformed safety net, instead of expanding the role of
Washington in agriculture through new business income entitlement
programs and increasing spending on federally subsidized crop
insurance, there is an opportunity to make progress in the
implementation of crop insurance provisions.
The commenter strongly encouraged FCIC to remember that while USDA
may consider producers and other agricultural businesses ``clients,''
it is taxpayers who are footing the bill. Farm Bills are notorious for
vastly exceeding their estimated costs--the last two Farm Bills are on
pace to exceed by $400 billion their Congressional Budget Office scores
at passage. The decisions FCIC makes in developing and administering
programs under its jurisdiction play an important role in determining
whether taxpayer-funded agricultural programs will continue to be
vastly over budget.
The commenter strongly encourages FCIC to implement the
Agricultural Act of 2014 while being cognizant of the reality that
federal taxpayers are responsible for more than $17 trillion in debt
and are facing annual deficits exceeding $500 billion. The commenter
suggested FCIC not simply attempt to maximize spending, but follow the
will of Congress in prioritizing federal support only where necessary
and in a manner that is cost-effective and transparent.
Response: FCIC does not have the authority to change the amount of
subsidies that are mandated by the Federal Crop Insurance Act and such
subsidies cannot be eliminated without a change in law by Congress.
Since the program changes contained in this rule were mandated by the
2014 Farm Bill, FCIC is required by law to implement the changes and
will do so in the most cost-effective and transparent manner possible.
No change has been made.
Comment: A commenter stated the third paragraph of background item
i. indicates that as of the publication of FR Doc. 2013-25321 on
October 25, 2013, a 1971 amendment to the Administrative Procedures Act
that previously required codified Federal crop insurance policies to be
published for public review and comment is no longer in effect. The
commenter believed it would be a loss to FCIC if approved insurance
providers, producers and others outside the Federal government were no
longer able to ask questions and offer comments to planned policy
revisions. Furthermore, the publication of comments and responses in
the final rule clarifies the reason for policy changes and helps to
avoid potential disputes and ambiguity in policy language. The
commenter urged FCIC to continue its practice of publishing all
codified crop insurance policy changes in the Federal Register for
public review and comment.
Response: FCIC is no longer required by the Administrative
Procedures Act due to the revocation of the Hardin Memorandum (78 FR
33045) to publish proposed rules because contracts are exempt from
notice and comment rulemaking and the crop insurance policy is a
contract. FCIC now has the discretion to determine the appropriateness
of affording the public an opportunity for notice and comment when
promulgating regulations relating to contracts. When issuing rules
regarding crop insurance policies in the future, FCIC will take many
factors into consideration including but not limited to the nature of
the change, and whether it is anticipated to be controversial to any
party, the exigency of the change, the significance of the change to
stakeholders and any recommendations made by producers, producer
groups, agents, loss adjusters, approved insurance providers or other
interested parties. To the extent practicable, FCIC will solicit
comments before making administrative rules effective, all other rules
will be final rule with comment, which still affords the opportunity
for the public to comment while making the rule effective upon
publication. FCIC may consider the comments received and may conduct
additional rulemaking based on those comments.
Comment: A commenter stated throughout section 6 of the CAT
Endorsement, FCIC uses the word ``paragraph'' to reference other
portions of the Endorsement, the commenter recommended FCIC replace the
word ``paragraph'' with the word ``section.'' The commenter believed
this change will ensure the CAT Endorsement would be consistent with
phrasing used in the CCIP Basic Provisions and other crop insurance
policies.
Response: FCIC agrees and has made the change accordingly.
Comment: A commenter stated the phrase ``. . . within 30 days after
you have been billed . . .'' in revised section 6(b) of the CAT
Endorsement implies the payment must be received within 30 days,
precluding any potential for interest owed and making the timeframe for
policy termination for unpaid premium ambiguous. As written, this
phrase in the CAT Endorsement is inconsistent with the Annual Premium
and Administrative Fees section in the applicable Basic Provisions. The
commenter therefore recommended FCIC revise section 6(b) as follows:
``In return for catastrophic risk protection coverage, you must pay an
administrative fee and any applicable premium as specified in paragraph
(f) of this section to us, unless otherwise authorized in the Federal
Crop Insurance Act;'' and insert a new sub-clause 6(b)(3) that states
``You will be billed for any applicable premium and administrative fee
not earlier than the premium billing date specified in the Special
Provisions.''
Response: The phrase ``within 30 days after you have been billed''
in section 6(b) of the CAT Endorsement was not a change made by the
interim final rule. The only change made to section 6(b) of the CAT
Endorsement by the interim final rule was to add the phrase ``and
premium as specified in paragraph (f) of this section'' between the
phrases ``administrative fee'' and ``to us within.'' The addition of
the phrase ``and premium as specified in paragraph (f) of this
section'' does not preclude the potential for interest owed, when
applicable, nor change the termination date of the policy. FCIC
disagrees that the addition of the phrase ``and premium as specified in
paragraph (f) of this section'' or the existing phrase ``within 30 days
after you have been billed'' are inconsistent with the provisions in
the Annual Premium and Administrative Fees section of the applicable
Basic Provisions. However, as provided in the applicable Basic
Provisions, if a conflict exists between the CAT Endorsement and the
Basic Provisions, the CAT Endorsement controls. No change has been
made.
Section 2611
Comment: A commenter did not think crop insurance should be
connected with conservation. Farmers should be left alone to maintain
their own land. The farmers are paying for their land, not the Federal
Government. Farmers know and understand their land much better than
USDA or Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS). USDA or NRCS
cannot even understand the land classifications and want to make all
land in a parcel ``highly erodible'' when there may be only a very
small part of the parcel that is really erodible. The commenter
recommended FCIC disconnect insurance from NRCS and let insurance
companies compete for the business rather than continue with the
current monopoly.
[[Page 42455]]
The commenter felt we have gotten very far off-base with government
programs. The commenter explained that there are so many people working
in government now that don't have any real understanding of how to work
land, improve it, etc. They are only there to draw a salary and pretend
to know something. Let the real farmers and ranchers control
agriculture. Government programs now are really created and maintained
for special interest groups, and that creates all kinds of requirements
for the real farmers who know what they are doing. The people who farm
small operations do not have a chance because there is somebody telling
them they must do what the government wants when the government is
unfairly operated in favor of takers rather than producers. The further
we go into government control of farming, the less productivity we will
have, and our food costs will continue to sky-rocket.
The commenter recommended separating the Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program (SNAP) from farm programs. SNAP is leading the
country in the wrong direction--dependency on somebody else to provide
for those who will not keep a job, or maybe choose to have children
with no intention of making a living for them.
Response: The 2014 Farm Bill linked the conservation compliance
provisions to eligibility for Federal crop insurance premium subsidy.
FCIC is required to implement these provisions of the 2014 Farm Bill.
Further, FCIC has no control over how the conservation compliance
programs are administered or the designation of highly erodible land.
All such decisions are made by FSA and NRCS and communicated to FCIC.
However, a producer may obtain Federally reinsured crop insurance
without being in compliance with the conservation compliance provisions
but such producer will be ineligible for premium subsidy on all
Federally reinsured crop insurance policies and plans of insurance. The
interim rule did not address any provisions of SNAP. Therefore, the
comments cannot be considered in this final rule. No change has been
made.
Comment: A commenter stated specialty crop and perennial producers
have had limited participation in USDA programs, with the exception of
the Federal crop insurance program. This agricultural segment is
significant in number of producers and overall production throughout
the Northeast and will have the greatest challenge meeting the timeline
provided by USDA to comply with the conservation compliance
requirements. The commenter requested that USDA recognize this
challenge and provide leniency in the form of additional time for
specialty crop producers that do not currently have an established
relationship with FSA and the NRCS.
Response: The 2014 Farm Bill requires that all persons seeking
eligibility for Federal crop insurance premium subsidy must provide a
certification of compliance with the conservation compliance provisions
beginning with the first full reinsurance year following February 7,
2014. The 2014 Farm Bill also requires that existing processes and
procedures be used for certifying compliance to avoid creating an
additional burden on producers and to provide fair and equal treatment
to all producers regardless of what crops a producer grows or which
program benefits a producer is seeking to obtain. Form AD-1026 has been
used by producers to certify compliance with the provisions since the
1980's, including specialty and perennial crop producers seeking FSA
benefits under programs such as the Tree Assistance Program and
multiple ad hoc disaster programs.
However, while all persons must file a certification of compliance,
Form AD-1026, by June 1, 2015, to be eligible for Federal crop
insurance premium subsidy for the 2016 reinsurance year (July 1, 2015--
June 30, 2016), the 2014 Farm Bill does provide additional time for
producers who are subject to the conservation compliance provisions for
the first time to develop and comply with a conservation plan or remedy
a wetland violation, if needed. Since the conservation provisions are
administered by FSA and NRCS, the terms and conditions relating to the
additional time frames are specified in 7 CFR part 12. In addition,
producers who are subject to the conservation compliance provisions for
the first time will receive priority for NRCS technical assistance in
developing and applying a conservation plan or in making a wetland
determination, if needed.
Comment: A commenter stated the interim rule states, ``Section 2611
of the 2014 Farm Bill links the eligibility for premium subsidy paid by
FCIC to an insured's compliance with the Highly Erodible Land
Conservation (HELC) and Wetland Conservation (WC) provisions of the
Food Security Act of 1985.'' The premise of these accountability
standards--``conservation compliance''--is that receipt of Federal
funding is a two-way street, and subsidies should not be used to tear
up sensitive land, drain wetlands, or shift unintended costs onto
others. These Farm Bill provisions reduce the cost of agricultural
pollution and limit long term liabilities by ensuring producers
minimize soil erosion on highly erodible land and forgo draining
wetlands.
The commenter added that in order for these provisions to be
effective, adequate enforcement of these minimum conservation practices
must be prioritized after implementation. Independent analysts
including USDA's own Office of Inspector General (OIG) found that from
1991 to 2008, compliance with conservation accountability standards
varied from region to region, many farms were out of compliance (up to
20 percent in the 1995 OIG report), and millions in taxpayer dollars
could have been saved if subsidies were appropriately withheld for
risky production practices (https://www.agri-pulse.com/uploaded/ConservationCompliance.pdf). Strong enforcement, proper monitoring, and
effective implementation should be prioritized so these provisions
achieve measurable public benefits. Adequate resources must also be
provided to local officials for monitoring and enforcement efforts, and
staff members must be well-trained to ensure consistent enforcement
from county to county and state to state.
The commenter also suggested that flexibility should also be built
into program regulations so local, on-the-ground knowledge and
realities are considered in farms' conservation plans. For instance, if
only a small portion of a field is categorized as highly-erodible land,
the sensitive acres may require a different conservation plan than the
rest of the field. In addition, conservation practices should be
evaluated in a holistic view to ensure that those with public benefits
greatly outweigh others with potential negative impacts. For instance,
installing stream buffers to conserve soil and water could be zeroed
out if they are covered in excess agricultural residue left over from
flooding or heavy rains. Public benefits of conservation practices may
also be reduced when drainage tile is installed on farmland, increasing
the rate at which water flows from farmland to nearby waterways.
Considering these factors when developing conservation accountability
standards will ensure that these provisions not only achieve their
stated outcomes but also reduce long-term liabilities of agricultural
runoff.
Response: Technical determinations regarding the conservation
compliance provisions, such as whether land is highly erodible or a
wetland, are made by NRCS. NRCS is also responsible for approving
conservation and mitigation
[[Page 42456]]
plans, when needed, to ensure land meets the conservation compliance
requirements. The interim rule did not address the development,
approval, or enforcement of the technical requirements for conservation
or mitigation plans or the associated staffing needs. No change has
been made.
Comment: A commenter believed that the conservation compliance
provisions from the 2014 Farm Bill are effectively included in the rule
concerning the CAT Endorsement, ARPI, and CCIP Basic Provisions. The
commenter noted that the same text is included under each of these
three parts of the rule. However, there are a few areas where some
refinement could be helpful.
The rule specifically denies the premium subsidy for a compliance
violation or failure to file a form AD-1026, and then specifically
states that failure by the person to pay the full premium (without the
premium subsidy) would result in termination of the policy and all
other policies with FCIC. For example, section 6(f) of the CAT
Endorsement denies the premium subsidy in the case of a violation and
section 6(h) terminates the policy for failure to pay the required
premium. The commenter supported the way that compliance has been
handled in the rule, and the way it has provided clarity to the way
FCIC will be handling it.
However, the commenter also pointed out that form AD-1026, as
revised in June 2014 by FSA, can represent a somewhat more complex form
for producers that are newly covered by compliance requirements--most
of which have been participants in crop insurance, but not other USDA
programs that have required compliance for some time. This final rule
should provide some greater explanation about the form AD-1026, such as
indicating the explanatory purpose of the appendix (as expanded in June
of 2014), some description of the boxes to be checked on the form, and
the significance of the affiliated person section.
The commenter recommended that the final rule include a specific
discussion, perhaps in the background section, that indicates the time
allowance for development and compliance with an approved conservation
plan. The statute specified that any person newly covered would have
five reinsurance years and persons that would have been in violation if
they had continued participation in the programs requiring compliance
would have two reinsurance years to come into compliance. Some
indication of this phase in period would be helpful for those producers
that are not familiar with conservation compliance requirements. This
is especially important since the rule (and the statute) refer to
reinsurance year whereas the form AD-1026 refers to crop year. While
the commenter agreed with the time allowance and certain other
provisions affecting a decision concerning compliance or a violation
being left up to FSA, some greater explanation to that effect and
perhaps a link to the FSA rules on HELC and WC would be helpful. Even
with the reference to FSA responsibilities, the commenter urged FCIC to
provide some clarity on the time allowance the insured has for
developing and complying with conservation plans where applicable.
The commenter agreed with the clarity provided by the specific
reference in the rule background that the HELC and WC provisions apply
only to annually tilled crops.
Response: Form AD-1026 is an FSA form used by producers to self-
certify compliance with the conservation compliance provisions. On June
30, 2014, FSA released a modified Form AD-1026 and appendix to
incorporate the 2014 Farm Bill provisions relating to crop insurance.
As an FSA form, the explanation of and instructions for completing the
form are provided by FSA, which can be found at https://forms.sc.egov.usda.gov/efcommon/eFileServices/eForms/AD1026.PDF. Since
it is FSA that is administering the AD-1026 process, it is best that
FSA explain the process and the forms to producers and that such
information is contained in their procedures where it can be more
comprehensive and up to date than FCIC can provide in this rule.
The interim rule changed the applicable crop insurance Basic
Provisions to indicate that producers must have Form AD-1026 on file
and they must be in compliance with the conservation compliance
provisions of 7 CFR part 12. FSA and NRCS administer the conservation
compliance programs and make determinations regarding the additional
time frames. Therefore, FSA and NRCS are in the best position to
explain the requirements to producers regarding the additional time
frames to come into compliance with the conservation compliance
provisions. The provisions of 7 CFR part 12 regarding the requirements
for conservation compliance and the additional time frames for
producers who have never participated in programs for which the
conservation compliance provisions were applicable to come into
compliance can be found at https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2015-04-24/pdf/2015-09599.pdf. However, RMA, FSA, and NRCS have been working
diligently to assure that all producers are aware of their obligations
under the conservation compliance provisions through meetings,
mailings, outreach, etc. To clarify, a producer must provide an AD-1026
form that encompasses all acreage in the producers' farming operation.
However, if the crop on acreage does not qualify as an ``agricultural
commodity'' as defined in section 2601 of the Food Security Act of
1985, then the producer may be exempt from the other conservation
compliance requirements. No change has been made.
Comment: A commenter stated as USDA implements the new conservation
compliance provisions that link compliance to crop insurance, the
commenter asked that FCIC take into consideration the impact of access
and availability of crop insurance for producers. Close to 80 percent
of the nation's wheat acres are covered by crop insurance and the
impact of the regulations USDA is developing could have a significant
adverse impact on wheat growers' access to crop insurance in future
years. The ability of USDA personnel to address highly erodible land
(HEL) and wetland compliance issues in the field and work with
producers directly on mitigation and understanding of the new
requirements will be critical to producers livelihoods.
Specifically, the commenter asked that USDA clarify that producers
must only complete the AD-1026 prior to June 1, 2015, not that a
completed compliance check be undertaken. It is also very important
that USDA ensure that producers undergoing existing wetland compliance
review or appeals are not adversely impacted when seeking crop
insurance next year.
The 2014 Farm Bill establishes a new date of February 7, 2014 for
wetland conversion related to eligibility for crop insurance premium
subsidies and wheat growers suggest a clear distinction be made between
reviews to determine eligibility for premium subsidies for crop
insurance, and participation in agriculture risk coverage (ARC) or
price loss coverage (PLC) and conservation programs. The 2014 Farm Bill
also establishes timeframes for producers to come into compliance if
they have not been participating in programs covered by conservation
compliance. There are wheat growers who may not currently be
participating in commodity or conservation programs, and are,
therefore, not subject to conservation compliance, so they may need to
use the time to come into compliance. USDA must ensure that these
producers needing to come into HEL compliance
[[Page 42457]]
or wetland conservation compliance are not adversely impacted when they
are seeking insurance next year and subsequent years.
Response: The interim rule changed the policy provisions to
indicate that producers must have Form AD-1026 on file by June 1 prior
to the sales closing date, and they must be in compliance with the
conservation compliance provisions of 7 CFR part 12. For producers who
have previously been required to file Form AD-1026, such producers must
be in compliance with the conservation compliance provisions. For
certain producers, additional time is provided to get into compliance
with the conservation provisions. However, since FSA and NRCS are
administering the conservation compliance programs, the provisions to
provide the additional time frames to allow producers who have never
before been subject to the conservation compliance provisions can be
found at 7 CFR part 12 and https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2015-04-24/pdf/2015-09599.pdf.
Technical determinations regarding the conservation compliance
provisions, such as whether land is highly erodible or a wetland, are
made by NRCS. NRCS is also responsible for approving conservation and
mitigation plans, when needed, to ensure land meets the conservation
compliance requirements and conducting any compliance reviews and spot-
checks. The interim rule did not address the development, approval, or
enforcement of the technical requirements for conservation or
mitigation plans, as these are not RMA, FCIC, or approved insurance
provider responsibilities.
The details regarding the additional time afforded for certain
producers to comply with the provisions, how administrative appeals
affect a final determination of violation, and the differing dates for
determining eligibility for FSA programs and Federal crop insurance
premium subsidy due to a wetland conservation violation were not
included in the interim rule. The details regarding such provisions and
how they apply are contained in an amendment to the regulations at 7
CFR part 12. No change has been made.
Comment: A commenter stated section 7(h) of the CCIP Basic
Provisions is poorly organized and includes repetition of Highly
Erodible Land/Wetland Conservation and Form AD-1026 requirements. To
streamline and eliminate any ambiguity in this section, the commenter
recommended FCIC reorganize section 7(h) of the CCIP Basic Provisions
as follows:
(h) Effective for any policies with a sales closing date on or
after July 1, 2015:
(1) You will be ineligible for any premium subsidy paid on your
behalf by FCIC for any policy issued by us if:
(i) USDA determines you have committed a violation . . .; or
(ii) You fail to file form AD-1026, or a successor form, with
FSA by the applicable deadline to be properly identified as in
compliance with the applicable conservation provisions specified in
section 7(h)(1):
(A) By June 1 after you make application for insurance if you
demonstrate you are a beginning farmer or rancher . . . ; or
(B) By June 1 prior to the sales closing date for all others.
(2) To be eligible for premium subsidy paid on your behalf by
FCIC, it is your responsibility to assure you meet all the
requirements in section 7(h)(1) above.
Response: FCIC does not agree the suggested language streamlines,
clarifies or improves the readability of the section to the extent that
a change is warranted. The proposed changes may have adverse or
unintended consequences. The proposed revision introduces new paragraph
designations that are not necessary and create additional cross-
references that can lead to greater confusion and potential for
inaccurate reading. In addition, the proposed revisions could
inadvertently change the meaning of the provisions. No change has been
made.
Comment: A commenter requested that FCIC allow producers who are
out of compliance as of June 1 preceding the sales closing date for the
upcoming reinsurance year to be able to regain eligibility if they are
determined to be back in compliance prior to the sales closing date for
any crop on their policy.
Another commenter agreed with the requirement of maintaining
Conservation Compliance in order to qualify for the insurance premium
subsidy and with FCIC's approach of not denying benefits during the
year in which a farm is found to be out of compliance. However, the
commenter urged FCIC to reconsider the manner in which penalties are
imposed in the following year. There is significant time between the
start of the reinsurance year and the sales closing date for most
crops, especially cotton and other spring-seeded crops. If a producer
is found to be out of compliance at the beginning of the reinsurance
year, the commenter encouraged FCIC to consider giving producers the
opportunity to reinstate their eligibility for premium subsidies if
they are able to achieve conservation compliance by the sales closing
date.
Another commenter stated the proposed June 1 deadline for filing
the AD-1026 form is in the regulation, but not in the statute. The
commenter requested that FCIC allow producers who are out of compliance
as of June 1 to be able to regain eligibility for premium subsidy if
they are determined to be back in compliance before the SCD for any
crop on their policy. The commenter assumed that FSA will establish
procedures around the ability of producers to become eligible for
premium subsidy after June 1 but prior to the SCD for any crop on their
policy.
A commenter stated the proposed implementation of the new
``Conservation Compliance'' provisions for the Federal crop insurance
program appears to be fairly straightforward with the exception of the
direction FCIC has taken regarding possible penalties for producers who
temporarily fall out of compliance during an insurance year. While the
commenter supported maintaining producer eligibility for premium
assistance during the year that a conservation compliance-related
problem is recognized, the commenter believed the automatic exclusion
of the producer from participating in the program the following
insurance year is overly harsh and inflexible. It fails to recognize
that the producer may be able to bring themselves back into compliance
prior to the start of the next reinsurance year or by their next
applicable sales closing date. For cotton producers in the commenter's
service area, there is a nine-month difference between the start of a
reinsurance year on July 1 and the applicable sales closing date for
cotton of March 15. This is a significant period of time during which a
producer can come back into compliance, especially if the issue that
made them non-compliant was temporary or short-term in nature and can
be remedied prior to the next growing season. The commenter believed
FCIC should reevaluate the interim rule and revise so that it
recognizes and encourages a producer to get back into compliance as
quickly as possible and prior to their next applicable sales closing
date in order to prevent any lapse in their ability to participate and
receive premium assistance. By allowing this option FCIC will
accomplish two important goals. First, it will provide a reasonable
incentive to quickly address conservation compliance related issues and
further the purpose of the provision to enhance environmental
stewardship. Second, it will prevent the unnecessary exclusion of
otherwise eligible Federal crop insurance program participants.
Response: The 2014 Farm Bill specifies, in the case of a violation,
ineligibility for Federal crop insurance premium subsidy applies to the
[[Page 42458]]
reinsurance year following the date of a final determination of a
violation, including all administrative appeals. The reinsurance year
runs from July 1 through June 30. This is why the June 1 date for
determining compliance was used so that approved insurance providers
would know before the start of the reinsurance year on July 1 who was
in compliance and would be eligible for premium subsidy. However, under
the commenters' proposal, it would directly conflict with the 2014 Farm
Bill to allow producers to regain their eligibility during the
reinsurance year when the 2014 Farm Bill expressly states they are
ineligible for premium subsidy. For example, under the 2014 Farm Bill,
if a producer is determined to be in violation of the conservation
compliance provisions as of June 1, 2016 and all appeals have been
exhausted, the producer is ineligible for Federal crop insurance
premium subsidy the 2017 reinsurance year, which runs from July 1, 2016
to June 30, 2017. This means the producer would be ineligible for
premium subsidy for all crops with a sales closing date within that
period. Even if the producer becomes compliant in August 2016, the 2014
Farm Bill requires eligibility for the remainder of the reinsurance
year. No change has been made.
Comment: A commenter stated the National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) and Implementing Regulations NEPA requires all Federal agencies
to prepare an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for ``every
recommendation or report on proposals for legislation and other major
Federal actions significantly affecting the quality of the human
environment.'' As a preliminary step, an agency may prepare an
Environmental Assessment (EA) to determine whether the environmental
impact of the proposed action is significant enough to warrant an EIS.
If an EA establishes that the agency's action may have a significant
effect upon the environment, the agency must prepare an EIS.
An agency does not have to prepare an EIS or EA if the action to be
taken falls under a categorical exclusion (CE), which include agency-
identified categories of actions that do not individually or
cumulatively have a significant effect on the human environment. An EA
or EIS must be prepared even for otherwise categorically excluded
actions where the action may have the potential to affect the
environment.
USDA regulations exempt FCIC from NEPA compliance. However, the
commenter notes that actions of excluded agencies, including FCIC, are
no longer categorically excluded from the preparation of an EA or EIS
if ``the agency head determines that an action may have a significant
environmental effect.''
Similarly, FSA regulations provide that ``major changes in ongoing
programs'' or ``major environmental concerns with ongoing programs''
are among the categories of FSA activities ``that have or are likely to
have significant environment[al] impacts on the human environment.''
``Initial NEPA involvement in program categories'' that are listed as
likely to have significant environmental impacts ``shall begin at the
time [ ]FSA begins developing proposed legislation, begins the planning
stage for implementing a new or changed program or receives notice that
an ongoing program may have a significant adverse impact on the quality
of the human environment.''
Accordingly, CFS hereby provides notice to FCIC as the joint
administrator of the crop insurance program that it must comply with
NEPA because the crop insurance provisions of the 2014 Farm Bill
implicate conservation programs to which NEPA applies, and may have a
significant environmental effect.
The 2014 Farm Bill made two significant changes to existing
agricultural programs. First, it tied the federally-funded portion of
crop insurance premiums for commodities to conservation compliance. The
2014 Farm Bill requires farmers who purchase subsidized crop insurance
to develop conservation plans when they grow crops on land subject to
high rates of erosion. The 2014 Farm Bill reattaches soil and wetland
conservation requirements to crop insurance premium subsidies, and
establishes a Sodsaver provision to protect native grasslands, which
prohibits recipients of crop insurance subsidies from draining or
filling wetlands unless they mitigate those wetland losses. Now a
producer who plows native prairie for crop production in one of the six
states covered by the program will receive a 50-percentage-point crop
insurance premium subsidy reduction. The prerequisite of implementing
an approved conservation plan before producing a commodity on highly
erodible land or converting a wetland to crop production has existed
since the 1985 Farm Bill and previously affected most USDA farm program
benefits, but has excluded crop insurance since 1996. The 2014 Farm
Bill again links crop insurance to conservation compliance.
Second, the 2014 Farm Bill merges commodity payments into the crop
insurance scheme. The 2014 Farm Bill eliminates direct commodity
payments, countercyclical payments in their current form, and the
Average Crop Revenue Election (ACRE) program. In place of direct
payments, the 2014 Farm Bill revises the counter-cyclical payment
program that was established in 2002 and the ACRE program that existed
alongside direct payments into the new Price Loss Coverage (PLC) and
Agriculture Risk Coverage (ARC) crop insurance options. Thus commodity
support is now part of the crop insurance program.
As a result of these two significant changes, NEPA applies to the
crop insurance program. First, conservation programs are subject to
NEPA under FSA regulations. Because the 2014 Farm Bill explicitly links
conservation compliance to the new crop insurance program, NEPA
obligations attach to the new crop insurance program.
Second, the changes to the crop insurance program will
significantly affect the human environment. In fact, the crop
insurance-conservation program is specifically designed to
significantly affect the quality of the human environment by protecting
sensitive lands and preventing soil loss. Degraded soil quality has a
host of serious environmental consequences, while directly undermining
the ability of farmers to grow nutritious food and be resilient in the
face of disruption. Soil erosion causes water pollution, impacts
wildlife habitat, and threatens long-term land productivity. Soil
erosion and depletion also affects air quality and climate change:
Clearing land converts stored carbon into carbon monoxide, and more
than a third of the excess carbon monoxide that has been added to the
atmosphere has come from the destruction of soils. Releasing more
carbon monoxide into the atmosphere than it can effectively absorb also
causes ocean acidification and contributes to the destruction of coral
reefs and other marine ecosystems.
Now, farmers who purchase or receive crop insurance will have to
develop conservation plans when growing on land subject to high rates
of erosion and will be prohibited from draining or filling wetlands
without mitigating the losses. Approximately one third of cropland in
the United States is highly erodible, meaning that these provisions
affect a significant percentage of acreage. The program also limits
subsidies to farmers who convert native grasslands to crop production.
From 2008 to 2011, more than 23 million acres of grassland, shrub land,
and wetlands were destroyed for crop production, destroying habitat
that
[[Page 42459]]
sustains many species of birds and other animals and threatening the
diversity of North America's wildlife. In light of these realities, the
intended result of these new provisions is to protect sensitive land
and prevent soil loss. NEPA is concerned with all significant
environmental impacts, not merely adverse impacts. These impacts alone
are significant enough to trigger NEPA.
The new crop insurance program may also significantly, and
directly, impact the environment in a negative way. The negative
effects of commodity crop subsidies have been thoroughly documented. In
short, subsidies--including crop insurance--encourage farmers to grow
commodity crops on otherwise fallow or environmentally sensitive land.
As just one example, a 2012 study by researchers at Iowa State
University utilized field-level yield data up to 2006 and price data
over 2005-2008, and found that up to three percent of land under the
Federal crop insurance program would not have been converted from
grassland if there had been no crop insurance subsidies.
With commodity crop production often comes intensive and
environmentally destructive practices such as mono-cropping and heavy
pesticide use. Single-crop production is more intensive and requires
significantly higher usage of pesticides, herbicides, and fertilizers.
Reduced crop diversity significantly increases crop losses due to
insects and pathogens and reduced soil organic matter. These problems
lead to increased use of pesticides and fertilizers, which in turn can
increase pathogen and insect populations. Commodity-crop monoculture
reduces habitat for wildlife, including birds, pollinators, and other
animals that eat pest insects. In addition to reducing species richness
and harming key species, this compounds the need for pesticides. On
average organic farms have 30 percent higher biodiversity, including
birds, pollinators, and plants, than their mono-cropped industrial
counterparts. Subsidies also create higher marginal revenues for inputs
(fertilizers, pesticides, herbicides, seeds, and labor), thereby
motivating additional input use, by raising prices and reducing price
variations in program crops. For example, compared with farmers who do
not participate in commodity programs, corn farmers receiving subsidies
have reported significantly increased herbicide use in all cropping
sequences, ``supporting the conventional view that commodity programs
directly contribute to greater herbicide use in corn production.'' The
industrial-scale use of pesticides, herbicides, and fertilizers in turn
significantly affects rivers and groundwater, harming aquatic
ecosystems and the life forms they support. Over half of synthetic
nitrogen fertilizers used on global cereal production (including corn
and soy) are lost through groundwater leaching or released as nitrous
oxide into the atmosphere. Nitrous oxide is a greenhouse gas 310 times
more potent than carbon monoxide, and in the United States three-
quarters of it comes from agricultural soil management. The effects of
commodity farming as supported by the new crop insurance program are
thus serious and significant.
These impacts flow directly from the new crop insurance program--a
major Federal action significantly affecting the human environment--
triggering FCIC's duty to comply with NEPA in implementing the
programs.
For the forgoing reasons, NEPA applies to the new crop insurance
program. NEPA requires FCIC to, at a minimum, conduct an EA for the new
crop insurance subsidies. FCIC's failure to comply with NEPA in
implementing these programs would constitute a blatant violation of
NEPA and USDA regulations.
Response: The regulations at 7 CFR part 1b provide that the FCIC is
categorically excluded from the preparation of an environmental
assessment or environmental impact statement unless the agency head
determines that an action may have a significant environmental effect.
The 2014 Farm Bill mandates the expansion of current conservation
compliance requirements to apply to persons who seek eligibility for
Federal crop insurance premium subsidy. However, these 2014 Farm Bill
provisions do not change the existing rules regarding the technical
determinations for the conservation compliance provisions, such as
whether land is highly erodible or a wetland, conservation and
mitigation plans, when needed, to ensure land meets the conservation
compliance requirements and conducting any compliance reviews and spot-
checks. Further, FCIC merely amended the policy to include the
requirements of the 2014 Farm Bill, the regulations governing the
conservation compliance provisions of the Food Security Act of 1985, as
amended by the 2014 Farm Bill, are found at 7 CFR part 12. In addition,
although Federal crop insurance participants were not previously
subject to conservation compliance, the majority of insured
participants were already participating in farm programs subject to
conservation compliance. Therefore, the head of the agency has
determined that this final rule will not have a significant
environmental effect.
Comment: A commenter stated there is considerable confusion
surrounding the issue of new conservation compliance rules for crop
insurance.
For instance, the Background in the interim rule, in the third
column of page 37157, states that ``[e]ven if the insured [determined
to be non-compliant on June 1, 2015, (2015 reinsurance year)] becomes
compliant during the 2016 reinsurance year, the insured will not be
eligible for premium subsidy until the 2017 reinsurance year starting
on July 1, 2016.'' However, when questioned about this matter during a
hearing of the House Subcommittee on General Farm Commodities and Risk
Management, held July 10, 2014, Undersecretary Michael Scuse stated,
``Well, remember, we're asking them to sign up that they will be in
compliance on June 15th and then they are given a period of time to
come into compliance.'' In response to a follow up question of exactly
how long the producer would have to come back into compliance,
Undersecretary Scuse stated that this would be established ``in the
rule.''
The commenter agreed with the Undersecretary's point of view that
the producer ought to be given time to come back into compliance.
However, the interim rule, at least in the Background, appears to take
a punitive approach that is inconsistent with the Undersecretary's
statement. The commenter respectfully urged that the rule clarify that
the producer does, in fact, have time to come back into compliance and
what that time period is precisely. The commenter also urged that,
beyond the rulemaking, FCIC develop a FAQ document that answers the
questions concerning conservation compliance. Only the Department can
provide answers that will give producers confidence in the safe harbors
provided by the law and regulation.
Response: The 2014 Farm Bill states that ineligibility for Federal
crop insurance premium subsidy due to a violation of the conservation
compliance provisions shall apply to reinsurance years subsequent to
the date of final determination of a violation, including all
administrative appeals. The requirement that producers file their AD-
1026 form by June 1 did not come into effect until June 1, 2015, more
than a year after enactment of the 2014 Farm Bill. RMA, FSA, NRCS,
agents and approved insurance providers have been conducting a
significant effort to inform all producers of the conservation
compliance requirement so that any
[[Page 42460]]
producers not in compliance would have an opportunity to get into
compliance prior to June 1, 2015.
Since FCIC does not administer the conservation compliance
provisions or make determinations of compliance, as stated above, the
details regarding the additional time afforded certain producers to
comply with the provisions and how administrative appeals affect a
final determination of violation are contained in an amendment to the
regulations at 7 CFR part 12.
However, the Food Security Act of 1985 and the 2014 Farm Bill
provide an exemption for persons who act in good faith and without
intent to commit a violation. The exemption allows such persons to
remain eligible for Federal crop insurance premium subsidy for a period
of time if the person is taking action to remedy the violation. The
determination of whether a person acted in good faith and without
intent to violate the provisions is part of the administrative appeals
process. Therefore, a person who meets the requirements of the good
faith exemption would not have a final determination of violation
unless they do not take the appropriate steps to remedy the violation
within the established time period. The person would not be ineligible
for Federal crop insurance premium subsidy until a final determination
of violation is made. The details of the good faith exemption are
contained in an amendment to the regulations at 7 CFR part 12. No
change has been made in this final rule.
Comment: A commenter supported the provision in the rule for
beginning farmers and ranchers concerning the deadline for filing the
form AD-1026. While all other insureds must file a form AD-1026 by June
1 of any reinsurance year to be eligible for premium assistance in the
next reinsurance year, beginning farmers that have not had any
insurable interest in a crop or livestock operation previously, and
started farming after the beginning of the new reinsurance year, have
until the sales closing date to file an AD-1026. In effect, this allows
a new entrant to farming the same access to premium assistance as
established farmers, up until the sales closing date. While the
commenter did not believe that there is any provision in the 2014 Farm
Bill or in prior law that specifically authorizes this flexibility to
beginning farmers and ranchers, the commenter believed that it has
merit and is fair to this special group of producers.
Response: FCIC agrees with the commenter that the exception to the
requirement to have form AD-1026 on file on or before June 1 prior to
the sales closing date for certain producers who were not previously
engaged in farming is needed and is not inconsistent with the statutory
requirements. Such producers would not have known of the requirement to
file an AD-1026 form by June 1 and, therefore, they cannot be penalized
for non-compliance. However, the term ``beginning farmer or rancher''
has a specific definition that will result in the exception not being
applied as intended. The intent of the exception is to provide
producers who are new to or began farming for the first time after the
June 1 deadline the ability to remain eligible for premium subsidy the
subsequent reinsurance year. ``Beginning farmer or rancher'' can
include producers who have been farming for a few years. Therefore, in
order for the exception to be applied as intended, the reference to
``beginning farmer or rancher'' will be changed to reference producers
who begin farming for the first time after June 1. The needed changes
were provided in the Special Provisions of the applicable crop
insurance policies until this final rule was published. FCIC has issued
administrative procedures that describes what constitutes beginning
farming for the first time, and how producers without form AD-1026 on
file can self-certify that such a situation applies to them in
procedures. Producers may only qualify for this exception for one year
and must have form AD-1026 on file by the following June 1 to remain
eligible for premium subsidy in subsequent reinsurance years.
Therefore, FCIC has incorporated this change in section 6(f)(2)(i) of
the CAT Endorsement, section 7(h)(2)(i) of the CCIP Basic Provisions,
and section 7(i)(2)(i) of the ARPI Basic Provisions of this final rule
and will remove the Special Provisions statement after this final rule
is published.
Section 11007
Comment: A commenter stated the current definition of enterprise
unit is ``All insurable acreage of the same insured crop in the county
in which you have a share on the date coverage begins for the crop
year, provided the requirements of section 34 are met.'' With the new
allowance for enterprise units by irrigation practice, the commenter
does not believe this definition is sufficient. The commenter
recommended FCIC revise the enterprise unit definition in the CCIP
Basic Provisions as follows: ``All insurable acreage of the same
insured crop or crop/irrigation practice, when allowed by the actuarial
documents, in the county in which you have a share on the date coverage
begins for the crop year, provided the requirements of section 34 are
met.''
Response: FCIC agrees and has revised the definition to take into
account that separate enterprise units are allowed for all irrigated
acreage and non-irrigated acreage of the crop in the county.
Comment: A commenter stated when the option for enterprise unit
coverage was introduced in the 2008 Farm Bill, it quickly gained
popularity across the Cotton Belt. The new farm law enhances enterprise
unit coverage by providing the ability to separate irrigated and non-
irrigated acres when using enterprise unit coverage. However, the
commenter understood that this provision will only be available when a
producer has the ability to qualify for enterprise unit coverage for
both their irrigated acreage and non-irrigated acreage. If a producer
cannot qualify for enterprise unit coverage on both practices, that
producer would then have a common enterprise unit. The commenter
recommended FCIC implement the new enterprise unit provisions with
greater flexibility than the commenter understood to be the case.
Specifically, if a producer qualifies for enterprise unit coverage for
a single practice, the producer should be allowed to select enterprise
unit coverage for that practice, without impacting his ability to
choose the most appropriate unit structure, be it a separate enterprise
unit or optional units that meets the needs of his operation under the
other practice. This would allow producers to utilize the law's intent
of separating by practice and also prevent them from being penalized
simply because a portion of their acreage does not meet the enterprise
unit size requirements.
Another commenter stated in Sec. 457.8, in section 34 of the CCIP
Basic Provisions, the units provision, if a producer elects to insure
dry land acreage planted to a specific commodity by enterprise unit,
the producer is then also required under the interim rule to insure any
irrigated acreage planted to that commodity by enterprise unit. The
authority for separate enterprise units by practice, section 11007 of
the Farm Bill, provides: ``(D) Nonirrigated crops.--Beginning with the
2015 crop year, the Corporation shall make available separate
enterprise units for irrigated and nonirrigated acreage of crops in
counties.'' The purpose of the provision is to require FCIC to make
separate enterprise units available to irrigated and dry land acreage
planted to a commodity but to allow the producer to elect enterprise
units for both or either. As a matter of policy, assuming
[[Page 42461]]
minimum acreage requirements are met, allowing a producer to elect to
insure irrigated acreage of a commodity by enterprise unit and to elect
to insure dryland acreage planted to a commodity by optional or basic
units or vice-versa still achieves the risk-reducing intent of
enterprise units because one practice has been insured by enterprise
unit rather than optional or basic units. Denying a producer the
election to insure one practice by an enterprise unit and the other
practice by optional or basic units may frustrate the goal of providing
more options for producers by forcing the producer to insure both
practices by optional or basic units. Importantly, the premium support
connected with enterprise units would be unchanged by a producer's
election of enterprise units for one practice and optional or basic
units for the other because the premium support for enterprise units is
fixed in statute and optional or basic units have already been
appropriately rated.
If the purpose of section 11007 is fully effectuated, the commenter
believed that the risk-reducing intent of enterprise units will be
furthered, not diminished. Producers will have a more complete set of
options for how best to manage risk, consistent with the goal of the
Farm Bill. The commenter respectfully urged that the purpose of section
11007 of the Farm Bill be implemented accordingly.
Another commenter, regarding the proposed implementation of the
``Enterprise Unit by Practice'' provision, stated they believed that
the proposed rule does not provide the degree of flexibility the
commenter expected in this provision. The commenter strongly supported
the provision based on their understanding that producers would be able
to select the enterprise unit structure for a single practice (i.e.--
non-irrigated), as long as acreage insured under that practice meets
the minimum requirements to be a stand-alone enterprise unit, without
compromising their ability to select a different or more suitable unit
structure for a different practice (i.e.--irrigated). This flexibility
provides the insured the ability to match the most appropriate
insurance unit structure to the predominant risk associated with a
given practice. The commenter believed the current interpretation of
the provision by FCIC does not fully recognize the intent of Congress
to provide meaningful flexibility to program participants. Given that
the overarching goal of this provision is flexibility, the commenter
believed any concern or intent from Congress to implement the provision
in a more restrictive manner as FCIC has proposed would have been
specifically indicated in the legislative language. The commenter urged
FCIC to reconsider their current interpretation in light of this
commentary and revise this provision accordingly.
Response: The text of Section 11007 states that ``the Corporation
shall make available separate enterprise units for irrigated and
nonirrigated acreage of crops in counties.'' Under the plain meaning of
the text, this means two separate enterprise units. Therefore, FCIC has
made changes to allow separate enterprise units (not policies) by
practice, i.e. one enterprise unit for irrigated acreage and one
enterprise unit for non-irrigated acreage. Since the provision provides
for two enterprise units and does not change or otherwise modify the
definition of an enterprise unit, FCIC interpreted this to mean that
the existing regulation for an enterprise unit remained overarching and
that all acreage of the crop in the county had to be insured as an
enterprise unit regardless of construct as a single enterprise unit or
two separate enterprise units, one for all the irrigated acreage in the
county and one for all the non-irrigated acreage in the county. To
allow producers to choose smaller unit structures on some acreage of
the crop in the county, such as optional and basic units, for one of
the practices is counter to this intent. In addition, allowing an
enterprise unit for one practice and another unit structure for the
other practice complicates program administration and premium subsidy
determination. Enterprise unit subsidies are based on the average
enterprise unit discount received by growers. The enterprise unit
discounts themselves are affected by the size of the unit--the larger
the acreage in an enterprise unit, the greater the discount (and vice-
versa). As growers are given additional flexibility to reduce the size
(less acres) of their enterprise unit, then the enterprise unit
discount becomes smaller. This brings into question whether the premium
subsidy rates offered for enterprise units would need to be revised
downward accordingly. To the extent that the average size of enterprise
units moves closer towards the average size of optional units, the
premium subsidy rates for enterprise units must also move closer
towards the premium subsidy rates for optional units. No change has
been made.
Comment: A commenter stated the interim rule stipulates timelines
for implementing separate enterprise units and coverage levels for
irrigated and dryland acreage. These provisions will greatly benefit
growers in areas that utilize irrigated agriculture. Producers who use
both practices in their operations are currently unable to fully
realize the benefits of using enterprise units due to the wide
variation in production between their irrigated and non-irrigated
crops. As producers in Texas have faced multiple years of extreme
drought, their dryland yields have plummeted, bringing enterprise unit
yields down significantly even though the irrigated acreage was not as
severely affected. The result is reduced coverage and crop insurance
policies that do not reflect average production. The ability to have
separate, distinct levels of coverage on irrigated and non-irrigated
acres will allow farmers to create a better risk management plan for
their operation. The commenter urged FCIC to implement this provision
as soon as possible. By delaying the implementation of these provisions
until spring of 2015, FCIC has put winter wheat producers at a distinct
disadvantage to growers of other crops.
Response: The changes mandated by the 2014 Farm Bill impact almost
all county crop programs within the Federal crop insurance program.
Unfortunately, given the magnitude of the work required, FCIC was
unable to implement the provision for crops with a contract change date
prior to November 30, 2014. The actuarial documents specified the
ability to make this election beginning with 2015 crop year spring
crops with a contract change date of November 30, 2014, and later.
Comment: A commenter stated they identified a major flaw in section
34(a)(4)(viii)(C)(1) of the CCIP Basic Provisions as currently
proposed. This section needs to be clarified to indicate that if the
insured does not qualify for enterprise units by practice that he or
she then has to automatically default to enterprise unit, provided that
he or she qualifies for such unit structure on a crop basis. If it is
subsequently determined that the insured does not qualify for
enterprise unit either, the unit structure would then revert to basic
units or optional units, whichever the insured reports on the acreage
report and qualifies for. There should not be an option for the insured
to not elect to have enterprise unit simply because he or she does not
qualify for enterprise units by practice up to the acreage reporting
date. The rationale for this is that the insured has to make the
decision to elect enterprise units or enterprise units by practice by
the sales closing date. Therefore, if the insureds do not qualify for
enterprise units by practice the commenter felt it should not allow
insureds the opportunity to not have enterprise units up to the acreage
reporting date. There are valid
[[Page 42462]]
reasons for requiring the enterprise units or enterprise units by
practice election by the sales closing date and if this provision is
not revised it would allow insureds the opportunity to elect enterprise
units by practice by the sales closing date, even if they know that
they will not qualify for such election, and then have the option to
decide by the acreage reporting date if they want to go with enterprise
units or change to basic or optional units, whichever they qualify for.
The current language as structured allows insureds the opportunity to
circumvent the sales closing date deadline for this election which is
counter to the requirement that this election be made by the sales
closing date. It creates an unintended loophole that producers could
use to circumvent the sales closing date deadline for this election. If
this provision is not changed it subjects the Approved Insurance
Providers to possible adverse selection by producers since they would
now be allowed to decide if they want to have enterprise units up to
the acreage reporting date. In summary, the commenter stated the proper
way to administer this provisions is to automatically apply enterprise
units if the insured does not qualify for enterprise units by practice
and then revert to basic or optional units if the insured does not
qualify for enterprise units either (similar to how the commenter would
handle this if it was discovered after the acreage reporting date
except that optional units would also be an option in addition to basic
units).
Response: FCIC disagrees with the commenter. There is nothing in
the policy that requires the election of unit structure by the sales
closing date. Such decisions have always been made by the acreage
report once the producer knows what crops/types/practices have been
used. It is impossible to make such determinations by the sales closing
date. However, to protect program integrity, coverage levels must be
selected by the sales closing date because there is always a potential
for loss before the acreage reporting date and it would adversely
affect program integrity to allow producers to change their coverage
level after a loss has occurred. Even though the producer may request
separate coverage levels if authorized by type or practice, it cannot
be binding on the producer because the producer may elect not to plant
to one of the selected types or practices. This will not be known until
the crop is planted, which may be months after the sales closing date.
Allowing the insured to choose, before the acreage reporting date, one
enterprise unit, or basic or optional units depending on which the
insured has reported on the acreage report, allows flexibility for
those insureds who would not have elected one enterprise unit but for
the new enterprise unit by practice election. Removing this flexibility
may deter insureds from electing separate enterprise units by practice.
FCIC does not allow this flexibility after the acreage reporting date.
If after the acreage reporting date, an insured who elected separate
coverage levels by practice does not qualify is automatically applied
basic or optional units, depending on which they have reported on their
acreage report. No change has been made.
Section 11009
Comment: A commenter stated their reading of the regulation
indicates that USDA is limiting the use of actual production history
(APH) based on production data availability. The commenter strongly
recommended that APH Yield Adjustment Option be implemented for all
producers without delay. This is an important provision especially for
very progressive farms that have excellent production results.
Another commenter stated erosion of APH due to consecutive years of
disaster is an issue the wheat industry has been fighting for many
years. With wheat being grown in some of the most diverse regions of
the country, wheat farmers can be devastated with drought, floods or
freezes in any given year. This provision would be very beneficial to
wheat growers across the country, primarily in areas where they are
dealing with multi-year disasters. FCIC announced that this provision
will not be available for the 2015 crop year which has left a number of
wheat farmers frustrated. The commenter would appreciate FCIC doing
everything in its power to make this provision available to our growers
for 2015. The commenter is specifically concerned over continued
economic injury to those who can least afford it after years of
financial stress due to ongoing drought. The commenter believed this
provision will go a long way toward their goal of ensuring a producer
is paying for coverage that matches his or her production expectation.
Another commenter stated this provision will provide immediate
relief to farmers who have suffered from multiple years of extreme
weather disasters. The provision is not likely to trigger frequently,
but will aid farmers in disaster areas to secure crop insurance
coverage that meets average production estimates. A delay in
implementation for the APH provision will result in one more year of
eroding APH levels for growers across the Southern Plains region who
are currently experiencing a record breaking, multiple year drought.
The APH provision should be implemented immediately to adequately
protect farmers and maintain the strength of the crop insurance
program. As several key farm policy leaders have mentioned, if the
provision cannot be implemented in 2015 for all areas and all crops,
the commenter urged FCIC to target those areas most likely to benefit
from the provision.
Another commenter stated they appreciated FCIC's work in making
other provisions included in the 2014 Farm Bill applicable for the 2015
insurance year including: The ability to insure at different coverage
levels by practice; enterprise unit coverage by practice; and the
beginning farmer provisions. One provision that FCIC has indicated will
not be available in 2015 is the APH adjustment. This provision is
especially important for portions of the Cotton Belt who have recently
incurred several years of historic drought conditions. Again, with
insurance being the foundation of risk management for cotton producers,
the commenter urged FCIC to continue to review every avenue possible
for implementation of this important provision.
Another commenter stated concerning the implementation of section
11009 of the 2014 Farm Bill allowing insureds to exclude certain
yields, the commenter understood there has been considerable discussion
regarding the feasibility of an implementation in time for the 2015
reinsurance year. The commenter also supported the provision and its
timely implementation and the commenter offered their expertise and
their agent members in assisting to achieve this objective that is so
important to producers struck by natural disasters, particularly the
drought-stricken producers of recent years.
A commenter stated ``Section 11009--The ``APH Adjustment''
provision is one that is of particular importance to the commenter's
membership and is among their top priorities for implementation. Based
on previous statements from FCIC, the commenter continues to be
concerned that this provision will not be implemented in time for the
2015 insurance year. The commenter appreciated FCIC's willingness to
continue to evaluate possible avenues for partial implementation of the
provision for those regions of the country that are most impacted by
the current drought and for which this provision was intended to
provide
[[Page 42463]]
relief. The commenter believed that FCIC is making progress in this
regard as it has become clear in recent weeks that FCIC has performed a
significant amount of data collection and analysis in high impact
regions. Based on these observations the commenter believes that FCIC
can realistically implement this provision at a significant level for
2015. The commenter encouraged FCIC to continue to work on this issue
and to make every effort to make this provision available to cotton and
grain producers in the regions that are most in need, specifically
Texas and Oklahoma.
Response: FCIC had a number of 2014 Farm Bill provisions that
mandate a 2015 crop year implementation. In accordance with these
mandates by Congress, FCIC had to devote considerable resources to this
effort. Further, while many of the crop insurance provisions in the
2014 Farm Bill were found in previous versions, section 11009 was not
included until the final enactment of the 2014 Farm Bill. Due to many
2014 Farm Bill programs being completed ahead of schedule, and the
timing of these completions, FCIC was able to implement this provision
for select spring crops for the 2015 crop year but given the sheer
amount of work required to implement this provision for all crops, in
all counties, by irrigated and non-irrigated practice, FCIC simply did
not have the time or the resources to implement the provision for all
crops and counties.
Comment: A commenter stated section 11009 of the 2014 Farm Bill
allows producers to exclude historic yields when county yields were at
least 50 percent below the ten-year simple average. Agricultural
producers already receive generous premium subsidies in addition to
favorable provisions allowing any producer to receive crop insurance
subsidies regardless of the risk profile of the farmland. Basing these
taxpayer-subsidized guarantees on an ``actual'' production history that
cherry-picks the best years of production is fiscally reckless. APH
should reflect the history of production actually experienced, rather
than some aspirational potential harvest that would have occurred if
not for the growing conditions actually experienced. The commenter
suggested this provision not be implemented. If it is, the commenter
suggested a surcharge be charged for every yield plug inserted in a
producer's APH, to account for the likelihood of yields falling short
of these artificially high guarantees.
Response: Since the provisions regarding exclusion of yields were
mandated by the 2014 Farm Bill, FCIC is required by law to implement
the changes. FCIC must also, by law, set premium rates sufficient to
cover anticipated losses plus a reasonable reserve. FCIC has revised
the premium rate calculations to account for the increase in a grower's
coverage, and potential losses, due to the exclusion of certain yields
from a producer's actual production history.
Comment: A commenter stated the new CCIP Basic Provisions section 5
states ``. . . the per planted acre yield was at least 50 percent below
the simple average of the per acre planted yield for the crop in the
county for the previous 10 consecutive crop years.'' The commenter does
not believe FCIC intended to use different phrasing for per planted
acre yield. The commenter recommended FCIC revise this section to only
use the phrase ``per planted acre yield'' to accurately reflect that
the yields to be considered are on a per-acre basis, but are limited to
planted acreage.
Response: FCIC agrees with the commenter and has revised the
provisions accordingly.
Section 11014
Comment: A commenter stated section 11014 of the 2014 Farm Bill
reduces crop insurance premium subsidies on native sod acres in certain
Midwestern states. This provision only applies to plots of land that
are larger than five acres. Due to the unintended consequences and
large public costs of tearing up native sod for cropland production,
this threshold should be reduced to zero acres, or at a minimum, ensure
that producers tear up no more than five acres across all of their
farms, regardless of location, joint ownership, etc. The commenter
believed taxpayers should not subsidize the conversion of sensitive
cropland to crop production. Proper enforcement and monitoring of this
provision should also be prioritized to ensure that taxpayer subsidies
are not subsidizing risky planting decisions.
Response: The 2014 Farm Bill specifically states ``The Secretary
shall exempt areas of 5 acres or less''. Therefore, the 2014 Farm Bill
does not provide the authority to change this threshold. FCIC has made
changes to exempt a total of five acres or less per county, per
producer, across all applicable insured crop policies cumulating each
year until the 5-acre threshold is reached. Once a producer converts
more than five acres of native sod, the reduction in benefits will
apply to all native sod acreage going forward. The premium subsidy
reduction of 50 percentage points is required by the 2014 Farm Bill on
converted native sod. This guarantees that taxpayers will not bear the
risk of the conversion of native sod acreage. No change has been made.
Comment: Several commenters stated under the interim rule, a
producer could convert native sod to an annual crop not covered by
their chosen crop insurance policy and choose not to insure it during
the first four crop years. During the fifth crop year the producer
could add the converted acres to their policy and receive full Federal
crop insurance benefits. For example, a crop insurance policy in the
six sodsaver states would be for corn, soybeans, and wheat. A producer
could plant annual crops of sunflowers, sorghum, millet, or oats during
the first four years native sod is cropped and not include them in
their crop insurance policy. The fifth year they could plant corn,
soybeans or wheat and receive full crop insurance benefits. A producer
could alternatively plant a perennial crop, like alfalfa, during the
first four years of cropping native sod, receive full premium subsidies
for forage insurance, and then again in year five plant an insurable
annual crop and never be subject to sodsaver disincentives.
The commenters recommended to avoid these potential loopholes,
minimize taxpayer liabilities, and maintain Congressional intent, any
native sod acreage converted after February 7, 2014, should be subject
to sodsaver premium reductions for the first four years of Federally
insured crop production. For example, a producer who converted 160
acres of native sod in March 2014 plants alfalfa on that acreage in
2014-2017, and plants Federally insured wheat in 2018 should be subject
to four years of sodsaver disincentives beginning in year 2018. This
would ensure that the disincentive to convert native sod to cropland is
fulfilled as intended by Congress.
Response: The 2014 Farm Bill states the reduction of benefits are
during the first four crop years of planting on native sod acreage.
These reduction of benefits only apply to annual crops planted during
the first four crop years of planting on such acreage. FCIC does not
have the authority to change these requirements and make them more
restrictive. Therefore, no change has been made.
Comment: Several commenters stated the sodsaver provisions define
native sod as any land that has no substantiated cropping history prior
to February 7, 2014. The statute reduces Federal crop insurance premium
benefits by 50 percentage points following conversion of native sod,
limits transitional yields to 65 percent, and prohibits yield
substitution during the first four years an annual crop is
[[Page 42464]]
Federally-insured. Substantiation of cropping history should include a
combination of verifiable FSA records and/or spatially-explicit data
tied to those tracts. The commenters stated simply providing seed or
input cost receipts with no verifiable tract-level spatial information
or supporting FSA documentation should not suffice as adequate
substantiation of cropping history.
A few commenters stated a fact sheet published in June titled
``Native Sod Guidelines for Federal Crop Insurance'' does not provide
any limitation on the types of evidence that may be used to prove that
land has been tilled. Instead, the guidance provides seven examples of
acceptable documentation. Moreover, the interim rule stated that the
absence of tillage will be ``determined in accordance with information
collected and maintained by an agency of the USDA or other verifiable
records that you provide and are acceptable to us[. . .]'' The
commenters were concerned that this flexibility will result in the use
of unreliable evidence of tillage. Therefore, the commenters
recommended that if a producer cannot provide FSA, NRCS, or Common Land
Unit documentation that demonstrates a cropping history on the land,
there must be a body of spatially explicit evidence (e.g., GIS
planting/harvest maps vs. simply seed or other input receipts with no
verifiable spatial information) showing the cropping history clearly.
The commenters strongly opposed the use of receipts and/or invoices as
evidence of tillage, and the commenters urged that the rule explicitly
exclude this as a form of documentation. The commenters believed third-
party verification will help ensure accurate ``substantiation'' of
prior cropping history. A commenter further recommended that the final
rule explicitly exclude the use of receipts and/or invoices as
documentation of tillage.
Response: FCIC agrees that the evidence for a cropping history must
be tied to the specific acreage. Therefore, FCIC has removed from its
issued procedures the reference to ``receipts and invoices'' as a form
of documentation that may be used to substantiate the ground has been
previously tilled for the production of a crop. In addition, FCIC has
revised and issued procedures requiring the use of USDA documentation
when available, including FSA and NRCS documentation.
Comment: Several commenters stated under the interim rule, crop
insurance agents would determine the classification of native sod.
Three significant factors make this process unworkable: Inadequate
training on landscape classification, lack of access to FSA
information, and conflict of interest. Crop insurance agents are
trained in crop insurance regulations, coverage, and processing. Their
responsibilities require considerable knowledge of a number of
processes. Adding another component starkly foreign to their existing
heavy workload and for one which few crop insurance agents are trained
is not an effective method for processing native sod determinations.
This would likely result in a significant rate of errors, leading to
the need for new determinations by a trained staff of experts.
The commenters also stated that functionally, crop insurance agents
have access to their own records regarding the cropping history of
insured fields. However, that data often does not include the full
cropping history of a field. Many fields may have data and history not
accessible in insurance files. Often only FSA files have information on
cropping history. This would require all crop insurance agents to
contact FSA offices to obtain all information. It would simply be
easier for FSA to make the determination and to remove the extra step
of having the crop insurance agent make the inquiry into FSA.
For many crop insurance agents, selling crop insurance is their
livelihood. Placing them in charge of making native sod determinations,
what is and is not insurable, stands in a stark conflict of interest.
In the free market of crop insurance, if a farmer is not happy with the
decision of an agent, they can simply go to another agent. This threat
of lost business for upholding the sodsaver provisions could punish
crop insurance agents who do the right thing. It is unfair to place
that burden on crop insurance agents. Here again, it is better to leave
native sod determinations to an independent third party and in
particular, to the FSA since they already possess much of the necessary
data.
A few commenters stated the FSA and RMA have the ability, expertise
and resources to work together to provide independent third-party
verifications in a timely and accurate manner.
Response: Native sod guidelines apply to all counties in Iowa,
Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota. An
insured's benefits are reduced if they till native sod acreage to grow
an annual crop during the first 4 crop years they are covered by
Federal crop insurance for that acreage. Native sod acreage is acreage
that has never been tilled or that the insured cannot prove to have
been previously tilled for crop production. To prove that acreage was
previously tilled, the insured must provide documentation to the
approved insurance provider. Acceptable documentation may include, but
is not limited to:
(1) A Farm Service Agency (FSA)-578 document showing the crop that
was previously planted on the requested acreage;
(2) A prior crop year's FSA-578 document showing that the requested
acreage is classified as cropland;
(3) A prior crop year's Common Land Unit (CLU) Schema (RMA provides
this to approved insurance providers), presented in a map format that
contains the farm number, tract number, field number, CLU
classification (the cropland classification code is `2'), and
calculated acres by field;
(4) Receipts and/or invoices from custom planters or harvesters
identifying the fields that were planted or harvested;
(5) A Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) Form CPA-026e
identifying the acreage with a ``No'' in the Sodbust column and a
``Yes'' in the HEL column;
(6) An NRCS Form CPA-026e identifying the acreage with a ``Yes'' in
the Sodbust column and a determination date on or before February 7,
2014; or
(7) Precision agriculture planting records and/or raw data for
previous crop years, provided such records meet the precision farming
acreage reporting requirements.
Therefore, agents do not determine the classification of land as
native sod but rather the acreage itself and records provided by the
producer to the approved insurance providers will be the basis for such
determinations. The agent's role in native sod classification is to
gather the documents provided by the insured to submit to the approved
insurance providers or FCIC. Since agents do not make the
determination, approved insurance providers or FCIC acts as a third-
party verifier. No change has been made.
Comment: A commenter was not in favor of the provisions regarding
native sod. The commenter recommended the determination of whether a
parcel of land is prairie, or that it once was cultivated, should be
made by the USDA as opposed to crop insurance agents.
Response: Since the provisions regarding native sod contained in
this rule were mandated by the 2014 Farm Bill, FCIC is required by law
to implement the changes. As stated above, determinations are made
based on records provided by the producer to
[[Page 42465]]
approved insurance providers. Agents do not make the determination. No
change has been made.
Comment: Several commenters stated FSA and RMA should monitor and
provide publically available new breakings reports each year. This
requirement was highlighted in the 2014 Farm Bill, which directs USDA
to report changes in cropland acreage at the county level (including
changes from non-cropland to cropland) since 2000 and on an annual
basis post-enactment of the 2014 Farm Bill. The reporting requirement
within Sec. 11014 Crop Production on Native Sod (Subsection C
``Cropland Report'') also directs USDA to report changes in cropland
acreage. While not explicitly stated, the intent of this subsection was
to monitor and report changes in native sod acreage. Simply reporting
annual cropland acreage does not achieve this goal and would be
duplicative of other ongoing USDA cropland reporting efforts. According
to USDA Bulletin--MGR-11-006, FSA should already be tracking and
reporting new breakings each year.
The commenters recommended FSA and RMA work together to monitor and
provide annual new breakings reports at the county-level to measure the
effectiveness of these policies, maintain public transparency, and help
inform future policy making decisions. This can be done in a timely and
accurate manner without jeopardizing landowner confidentiality.
Specifically, the commenters asked USDA to develop and maintain a
county-level ``data field'' of new breakings with no prior cropping
history as they update their IT technology infrastructure. A commenter
recommended that in order to track the impact of policies on grassland
loss and the resulting impacts on wildlife, FSA must produce an annual
report that tracks the conversion of native grasslands into row crop
production. Another commenter stated information about new land
breakings should be made available to the public on an annual basis.
Response: The 2014 Farm Bill provides that a cropland report shall
be required to be provided to the specific congressional committees
indicating the changes in cropland acreage by county and state from
year to year. Congress provided no other interpretation or intent other
than what is provided in the 2014 Farm Bill. Therefore the report will
be constructed according to the 2014 Farm Bill language. FSA is the
lead agency in preparing the cropland acreage report because they have
a more complete data set of the changes in cropland acreage. FCIC works
with FSA, providing any data applicable and appropriate, to provide
this report to specific congressional committees.
Comment: Several commenters stated the sodsaver provisions include
a de minimis exemption for lands five acres or less. That means
producers can convert up to five acres of their land without being
subject to sodsaver provisions. The interim rule is unclear whether
this five-acre exemption is annual or cumulative over time. The intent
of this de minimis provision was not to encourage conversion of five
acres of native sod for a particular tract in year one, five more acres
in year two, five more acres in year three, etc. Instead, it was
intended to minimize conversion of native sod, like in the case of
field round-outs, and avoid slowly converting native tracts over time.
The commenters recommended a cumulative five-acre limit apply to
all land that the producer is a property owner, operator, or tenant,
similar to current FSA policy for conservation compliance provisions.
Response: FCIC agrees that the interim rule was ambiguous. FCIC
also agrees that the actual text and intent of the provision in the
2014 Farm Bill is to discourage conversion of native sod and to make
this determination on an annual county and crop basis would allow the
continued slow conversion over time. Therefore, FCIC has determined
native sod acreage will be determined on a cumulative basis over time
by county. FCIC procedures will be revised to require producers to
report native sod acreage by insured crop of five acres or less
beginning with the 2017 crop year. Once a producer breaks out more than
five acres cumulatively across all insured crops dating back to the
2015 crop year, the provisions for reduced benefits due to converting
native sod will be applied to the current crop year's insured native
sod acreage and to any native sod acreage broken out in all subsequent
crop years.
Comment: A commenter supported the provision that indicates the de
minimis acreage for the native sod provision to apply is five acres.
This was in the earlier statutory provisions where the new sodsaver
provisions were inserted, so the five acre minimum continues to apply.
Response: FCIC agrees with the commenter and has retained the five-
acre de minimis provision in the final rule but has also made revisions
so that the five-acre rule applies on a cumulative basis over time by
county.
Comment: A commenter stated they are glad that the rule appears to
have incorporated the legislative provisions for sodsaver very
effectively. The rule includes a new definition of ``native sod'' that
references: (1) Absence of tillage; and (2) vegetative plant cover of
native grasses, forbs, or shrubs as well as the trigger date of
February 7, 2014, concerning potential violation. It also includes the
specific listing of states covered by this aspect of the rule and
removes the prior provision of the ``Prairie Pothole National Priority
Area'' and the option formerly available for governors in those states.
In the rule, if the native sod acreage is located in any of the listed
states of Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, and
Montana and tilled and planted, after February 7, 2014, to an annual
crop during the first four crop years the rule reduces the insurance
liability to be 65 percent of the protection factor and reduces the
premium subsidy by 50 percentage points. The rule indicates that if the
premium subsidy applicable to these acres is less than 50 percent
before the reduction, then no premium subsidy at all would be
available. However, the commenter did not find anything in the rule
that bars yield substitution as specified in the native sod statutory
provisions. While the commenter supported what is provided for native
sod in the interim rule, they urged FCIC to include in the final rule
the bar on yield substitution for violations and consider an amendment
to the interim rule to include this important statutory provision.
Response: FCIC agrees with the commenter that the 2014 Farm Bill
required yield substitution be disallowed on native sod acreage.
However, by restricting the native sod acreage yield guarantee to 65
percent of the insured's applicable transitional yield, yield
substitution cannot be utilized on native sod acreage because yield
substitution is only applicable when the actual yields in the insured's
production history database are less than 60 percent of the applicable
transitional yield. Therefore, yield substitution would not be
applicable to native sod acreage. To avoid any confusion, FCIC did not
include this restriction to yield substitution in the interim rule and
it is not necessary in the final rule. No change has been made.
Comment: A commenter stated the language in item e. of the
background and in section 9(f) of the CCIP Basic Provisions indicates
that section 9(e) is not applicable to acres of native sod acreage that
is five acres or less in the county. The commenter stated they received
additional clarification from FCIC based on the procedures issued for
native sod as a part of Information Memorandum: PM-14-027 that the five
acres applies on a crop and county basis. For example, if an insured
tilled
[[Page 42466]]
and planted four acres of native sod to corn and tilled and planted a
different tract of four acres of native sod in the same county and year
to soybeans that this would be allowable and that such acreage would
not be subject to the reduction of benefits for the first four years.
The language in this section of the provisions should be revised to be
consistent with the procedural interpretations that are being made by
the FCIC that the five-acre threshold for native sod is based on the
crop and county.
Response: As stated above, FCIC has determined that to allow
determinations of the five-acre threshold by crop and county was
inconsistent with the 2014 Farm Bill. Instead, native sod acreage will
be cumulative over time by county to prevent the scenario stated above
where producers continue to slowly convert new land by simply planting
the acreage to a different crop on the acreage. Once a producer breaks
out more than five acres cumulatively across all insured crops dating
back to the 2015 crop year, the provisions for reduced benefits due to
converting native sod will be applied to the current crop year's
insured native sod acreage and to any native sod acreage broken out in
all subsequent crop years. Since the native sod acreage is cumulative
for all insured crops by county, a specification by crop is no longer
needed.
Comment: A commenter stated since the rule was not issued until
July 1, 2014, producers who made investments to prepare ground for
planting in 2014 had no way of knowing their decisions would result in
a reduction of premium subsidies and production guarantees. Applying
these penalties after-the-fact is unreasonable. The commenter proposed
the rule be modified to prevent this unintended consequence by striking
``and is planted to an annual crop'' from section 9(e) of the CCIP.
The suggested change will also ensure that it conforms to the
agency's definition of native sod (which makes no reference to a
restriction on acreage being planted for crop year 2014).
Response: FCIC agrees and has revised the provisions of the CCIP
Basic Provisions and the ARPI Basic Provisions accordingly.
Section 11015
Comment: A commenter stated section 11015 of the 2014 Farm Bill
allows producers to receive taxpayer subsidies for separate coverage of
irrigated versus non-irrigated cropland in a county. Agricultural
producers have access to a suite of unsubsidized risk management
options; some of the primary risk management techniques are
diversification of crops, use of hybrids, and irrigation practices.
Taxpayers should not subsidize risk management options that are readily
available and already widely used in the private sector. At a minimum,
when implementing this provision, the commenter recommended FCIC reduce
the likelihood that producers shift acreage between irrigated and non-
irrigated acres after this rule is finalized, a likely unintended
consequence if adequate measures are not taken in advance.
Response: When enacting this provision, Congress observed that the
risks relative to producing crops on dry land acreage versus irrigated
acreage are considerably different, and that many insureds seek
different coverage levels that are tailored to those varying risks. An
insured must make an election for separate coverage levels for
irrigated and non-irrigated acreage by the sales closing date and must
meet all the policy requirements to insure their acreage under an
irrigated practice. If the insured does not meet the policy
requirements for insuring a crop under an irrigated practice by the
acreage reporting date, the coverage level percentage they elected for
the non-irrigated practice will be used to insure all acres qualifying
for a non-irrigated practice. Therefore, FCIC does not believe there is
a risk that insureds will shift acreage between irrigated and non-
irrigated acreage. Insureds can only insure acreage as irrigated for
which they have an adequate amount of water to irrigate as specified by
good farming practices for the area. Further, they have to actually
apply the irrigation water to the acreage in the recommended amounts
and intervals or any subsequent loss will be considered due to poor
farming practices and no indemnity may be due. No change has been made.
Comment: A commenter supported a producer's ability to purchase
separate insurance for irrigated versus dry-land production. This Farm
Bill provision was supported by the U.S. cotton industry and will be
extremely beneficial to cotton producers. The commenter commended FCIC
for making this change available for the 2015 crop year.
Response: All acreage of the crop in the county must be insured
under a single policy, but producers will now have the option of
selecting different coverage levels for the irrigated and non-irrigated
practices.
Section 11016
Comment: A commenter strongly recommended that USDA expand
incentives for beginning and young farmers and ranchers to Military
Veterans and urged an increased premium subsidy for this segment of
farmers.
Response: FCIC has implemented the beginning farmer and rancher
provisions in a way that is fair to all military personnel and
consistent with the Joint Explanatory Statement of the Committee of
Conference, which states the Managers intend this section to be
implemented in a manner that does not discriminate against producers
who grew up on a farm or ranch, left for post-secondary education or
military service, and returned to the farm or ranch. When calculating
the five crop years in this section, the Managers intend that any year
when a producer was under the age of 18, in post-secondary studies, or
serving in the U.S. military should not be counted. The implementation
of this provision has been done to give the maximum benefit possible to
military veterans as allowed by law. No change has been made.
Comment: A commenter stated as the average age of farmers increase,
it is imperative for U.S. agriculture to encourage more new and
beginning farmers. The commenter believed the 10 percentage point
premium subsidy increase for beginning farmers is an important
provision that can allow a new producer to possibly purchase higher
levels of coverage or provide a savings in insurance premiums that can
be used for further investments. For many of these individuals, the
prospect of starting an operation from the bottom up is nearly
impossible due to the capital costs and credit availability. A more
common practice is for new and beginning farmers to form partnerships
within established operations with the intention of taking over the
operation as the more established producer retires. FCIC's exclusion of
these individuals by limiting the increased premium subsidy to only
operations in which all of the substantial beneficial interested
holders qualify as a beginning famer severely limits the reach of this
provision. The commenter understood that the percentage of substantial
beneficial interest holders is noted within the insurance documents.
The commenter recommended that FCIC prorate the 10 percentage point
increase in relation to the new and beginning farmer's percentage of
substantial beneficial interest. This would allow more beginning
farmers to utilize this provision and not put disadvantages on
[[Page 42467]]
the type of partnerships that represent the only option for some
beginning farmers to enter farming.
Response: Implementing the provision as suggested by the commenter
would extend beginning farmer and rancher benefits to individuals who
have previous farming experience and who are not the intended target of
the 2014 Farm Bill. The 2014 Farm Bill defines a beginning farmer or
rancher as one who has not actively operated and managed a farm or
ranch with a bona fide interest in a crop or livestock as an owner-
operator, landlord, tenant, or sharecropper for more than five crop
years. Since the 2014 Farm Bill specifically limits benefits to
producers with five crop years or less of insurable interest in any
crop or livestock, no change has been made.
Comment: A commenter stated the language in item g. of the
background describes the additional crop insurance incentives for
beginning farmers and ranchers. This includes allowing the producer who
qualifies as a beginning farmer or rancher to use the yield history
from any previous involvement in a farm or ranch operation. The
commenter questioned if a producer qualifies to use four years of
history from another operator, can he/she pick and choose which year(s)
to use or must all four years be used if he/she chooses to use such
records. In addition, this item indicates that years of insurable
interest can be excluded if earned while under the age of 18. The
commenter questioned if it mattered when the person in question turns
18. For example, if the beginning farmer or rancher applicant turns 18
on December 31, after the crop year has already ended, the commenter
questioned if he/she is able to exclude that crop year for beginning
farmer or rancher purposes. The commenter questioned if the fact that
he or she turned 18 during the same calendar year would disallow that
year from being excluded for beginning farmer or rancher purposes.
Response: FCIC issued procedures allow a beginning farmer or
rancher to use the APH of the previous producer when the beginning
farmer or rancher was previously involved in the farming or ranching
operation. The insured may choose how many years in which to transfer
but the history being transferred must start with the most recent crop
year and there must not be a break in continuity in the crop years
being transferred. Therefore, there are limitations on the insured's
ability to pick and choose which years to transfer. FCIC issued
procedures specify that an individual may exclude a crop year as
insurable interest if the insurable interest in the crop occurred while
the individual was under the age of 18, which includes any crop year in
which a beginning farmer or rancher turns 18.
Comment: A commenter stated FCIC needs to clarify that a non-
individual insured person may qualify as a beginning farmer or rancher
when all the individual substantial beneficial interest holders qualify
as beginning farmers or ranchers. The commenter recommended FCIC revise
the last sentence in the definition of ``beginning farmer or rancher''
as follows: ``. . . may be eligible for beginning farmer or rancher
benefits if there is at least one individual substantial beneficial
interest holder and all individual substantial beneficial interest
holders qualify as a beginning farmer or rancher.''
Response: FCIC agrees with commenter and has revised the definition
of ``beginning farmer or rancher'' accordingly.
Comment: A commenter stated section 3(l)(1) of the CCIP Basic
Provisions indicates that the person who qualifies as a beginning
farmer or rancher can use the APH of the previous producer of the crop
or livestock on the acreage he or she was previously involved with.
This section of the policy should be clarified to indicate the person
who qualifies as a beginning farmer or rancher can only use the year(s)
he or she was a part of the decision-making or physical involvement
which may not be all years of past history from the previous producer.
The way this section is currently written it could be construed that
all years from this other producer can be used which may not always be
the case if the beginning farmer or rancher was only involved with some
of those years of APH.
Response: Unlike existing transfer of APH data requirements
contained in FCIC-issued procedures, the number of years of production
history that may be transferred is not limited by the number of years
the beginning farmer or rancher was previously involved in the other
person's farming or ranching operation. However, a beginning farmer or
rancher can only use another person's production history for a crop
that the beginning farmer or rancher was previously involved in. Since
the 2014 Farm Bill used the phrase ``actual production history of the
previous producer,'' FCIC interprets that to include all of the years
of actual production history of the previous producer on the acreage,
not limited to just those years the beginning farmer or rancher was
involved in the operation. If the beginning farmer or rancher was
involved with the livestock, they can use the other person's livestock
records. If the beginning farmer or rancher was involved with a crop,
they can use the other person's crop production records. Only the
production history of the specific acreage being transferred may be
used by the beginning farmer or rancher. No change has been made.
Comment: A commenter recommended section 36 of the CCIP Basic
Provisions should be revised to indicate that if it is later determined
that the producer does not qualify as a beginning farmer or rancher, or
once the producer has produced a crop for more than five years and no
longer qualifies as a beginning farmer or rancher, that the excluded
actual yield(s) will then change from 80 percent of the applicable
transitional yield to 60 percent of the applicable transitional yield.
The commenter stated this language needs to clarify that the 80 percent
of the applicable transitional yield is not retained once the producer
no longer qualifies as a beginning farmer or rancher.
Response: Provisions and benefits regarding beginning farmer or
rancher are only applicable when a producer qualifies as a beginning
farmer or rancher. Although the policy is continuous, the insured must
meet the terms and conditions of the policy each crop year and must
qualify for beginning farmer or rancher benefits each crop year. That
means that in those years the producer qualifies as a beginning farmer
and rancher, the producer will receive 80 percent of the transitional
yield. However, after five years, the producer's own yields are used to
establish the APH and transitional yields are no longer used. No change
has been made.
Comment: A commenter recommended FCIC add a comma in section 36(c)
of the CCIP Basic Provisions as follows: ``. . . qualify as a beginning
farmer or rancher, in which case. . .''
Response: FCIC agrees with commenter and has revised the provisions
accordingly.
Section 11019
Comment: A few commenters stated the term ``reinstatement'' used in
section 2(k)(2)(iii)(B)(3)(i) of the ARPI Basic Provisions and section
2(f)(2)(ii)(B)(3)(i) of the CCIP Basic Provisions should be defined
(either added in each of the applicable Basic Provisions as a
definition or included in the applicable section of each of the
applicable Basic Provisions). The commenters stated this is important
to define as reinstatement should not
[[Page 42468]]
allow or require new applications to be submitted after the sales
closing date, but limit reinstatement to the coverage that was
terminated for which there would already be an application form on
file. Allowing or requiring a new application to reinstate coverage is
not necessary and could imply that changes to the coverage that was
terminated is acceptable which would create a disproportionate benefit
to those for whom coverage is reinstated. The commenters recommended
``reinstatement'' be defined as ``Reinstatement of coverage will be
limited to the coverage you had in place on the sales closing date for
the crops that were terminated due to ineligibility for debt. No new
application is required and no requests to change coverage level,
change plans of insurance or add or remove options or endorsements will
be accepted unless such changes were made and submitted on an
application form on or prior to the sales closing date for the crop.''
Response: FCIC agrees that the applicable provisions should clarify
that reinstatement is under the same terms and conditions of the policy
in effect as of the date termination became effective. Currently
procedures published at https://www.rma.usda.gov/bulletins/pm/2015/15-010a.pdf make this clear. However, a definition of ``reinstatement''
has been added to subpart U because it is applicable to ineligibility
determinations, appeals, and reinstatement requests and cross
references have been added to section 2(k)(2)(iii)(B)(3)(i) of the ARPI
Basic Provisions and section 2(f)(2)(iii)(B)(3)(i) of the CCIP Basic
Provisions.
Comment: A commenter questioned how is an approved insurance
provider going to determine whether a policyholders failure to pay
premium was inadvertent in section 2(k)(2)(iii)(C)(1)(i) of the ARPI
Basic Provisions and section 2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(1)(i) of the CCIP Basic
Provisions.
Response: On February 24, 2015, FCIC issued information memorandum
PM-15-010 Late Payment of Debt procedures found at https://www.rma.usda.gov/bulletins/pm/2015/15-010a.pdf. The criteria to qualify
for an approved insurance provider authorized reinstatement can be
found in section 2, paragraph 2 of these procedures. Those procedures
have been modified to clarify the specific conditions that approved
insurance providers are required to use in making the determination.
The approved insurance providers must use the requirements in section
2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(1) of the CCIP and section 2(k)(2)(iii)(C)(1) of the
ARPI Basic Provisions to make this determination. Additionally, on June
30, 2015, FCIC issued the General Standards Handbook, which can be
found at https://www.rma.usda.gov/handbooks/18000/ to further clarify
the criteria an approved insurance provider is required to use in
making a determination. No change has been made.
Comment: A commenter recommended FCIC move the current section
2(f)(2)(iii)(B)(3)(ii) of the CCIP Basic Provisions to be new a new
section 2(f)(2)(iii)(B)(3) of the CCIP Basic Provisions, and combine
the current sections 2(f)(2)(iii)(B)(3)(i) and 2(f)(2)(iii)(B)(3) of
the CCIP Basic Provisions as a new section 2(f)(2)(iii)(B)(4) of the
CCIP Basic Provisions. This organizational change sets the requirement
that ``there is no evidence of fraud or misrepresentation'' apart from
other text and appropriately makes it a key criteria for the
Administrator granting reinstatement.
Response: FCIC disagrees with the commenter that the change
provides improved organizational benefits to the extent that a change
is warranted. The proposed changes may have adverse or unintended
consequences. The proposed revision introduces new paragraph
designations that are not necessary and may create the potential for
additional cross-references that can lead to greater confusion and
potential for inaccurate reading. No change has been made.
Comment: A commenter recommended FCIC revise section
2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(1)(iii) of the CCIP Basic Provisions as follows: ``You
timely made the full payment of the amount owed but the delivery of
that payment was delayed, and was postmarked no more than 7 calendar
days. . .'' This change will clarify that this clause only provides an
allowance for reinstatement following termination for a late postmarked
payment; it does not allow the payment itself to be made late (e.g., a
late-dated check).
Response: FCIC agrees with the commenter and has revised the
provisions accordingly.
Comment: A commenter stated section 2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(3) of the CCIP
Basic Provisions requires the insured to submit a written request for
reinstatement by the approved insurance provider in the situations
indicated in sections 2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(1)(i) through (iii). The
commenter believed the insured should only be required to submit a
formal written request for sections 2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(1)(i) and (ii); the
insured should not have to submit a written request for section
2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(1)(iii). For section 2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(1)(iii), the
insured's full payment of the premium owed should serve as the payment
and an implicit request for reinstatement. For any such late payment,
the insured will not know at the time the check is mailed that the
payment would be delayed in postal processing which resulted in policy
termination. For reinstatements under section 2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(1)(iii),
the approved insurance provider will verify the insured made a timely
and full payment. This approach would eliminate any need for the
insured to complete a form before an approved insurance provider can
accept a payment that was postmarked late.
Response: FCIC issued procedures, which can be found at https://www.rma.usda.gov/handbooks/18000/, provide the approved insurance
providers the guidance and direction that satisfy the written request
requirement of 2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(1)(iii). No change has been made.
Comment: A commenter suggested that the language in current section
2(f)(2)(iii)(B)(3)(i) of the CCIP Basic Provisions also be included in
section 2(f)(2)(iii)(C) of the CCIP Basic Provisions. It should be
clear that reinstatement, whether granted by the Administrator or an
approved insurance provider, is effective at the beginning of the crop
year for which this insured was determined to be ineligible.
Response: FCIC agrees and has added the same language from section
2(f)(2)(iii)(B)(3)(i) of the CCIP Basic Provisions in a new section
2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(4) of the CCIP Basic Provisions. FCIC has made the same
change in a new section 2(k)(2)(iii)(C)(4) of the ARPI Basic
Provisions.
Comment: A commenter stated to make the policy clear concerning the
specific administrative remedies the insured is waiving, as well as to
ensure the insured understands they are waiving all other
administrative remedies for any reinstatement request under these
provisions, the commenter recommended FCIC replace section 2(f)(2)(iv)
of the CCIP Basic Provisions as follows: ``You may not commence
litigation or arbitration against us, obtain an administrative review
in accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart J (administrative review),
or file an appeal in accordance with 7 CFR part 11 (appeal), with
respect to any determination made under section 2(f)(2)(iii)(B) or
section 2(f)(2)(iii)(C).''
Response: FCIC disagrees with the commenter. Section 20 of the CCIP
Basic Provisions states that if the insured and the approved insurance
provider fail to agree, the insured has a right to commence litigation,
arbitration,
[[Page 42469]]
administrative review, or file an appeal against the approved insurance
provider. A determination made under section 2(f)(2)(iii)(B) or section
2(f)(2)(iii)(C) of the CCIP Basic Provisions is consistent with those
for which the insured has a right to pursue appeal or other recourse.
FCIC has revised the provisions to clarify that determinations made by
the Administrator are only appealable to National Appeals Division, and
determinations made by the approved insurance provider are appealable
through the arbitration process in section 20 of the CCIP Basic
Provisions.
Comment: A commenter stated it is unclear from section 2(f)(2)(iv)
of the CCIP Basic Provisions if an insured still has the right to
appeal a determination made by RMA under section 2(f)(2)(iii)(B) to
USDA's National Appeals Division. RMA's draft procedures on this
section stated that appeals to the National Appeals Division were not
allowed. However, the commenter believed it is questionable whether
FCIC has the authority to completely prohibit insured's from appealing
these determinations to the National Appeals Division. Additionally,
FCIC needs to clarify that requests for reinstatements made by approved
insurance providers under section 2(f)(2)(iii)(C) are not subject to
arbitration. Ultimately, only RMA has the power to reinstate a policy
that has been terminated, even if the request is being made by the
approved insurance provider under section 2(f)(iii)(C); therefore,
these determinations should not be subject to arbitration.
If National Appeals Division appeals are precluded, the commenter
recommended revising section 2(f)(2)(iv) to read as follows: ``You may
not commence litigation or arbitration against us, obtain an
administrative review in accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart J
(administrative review), or file an appeal in accordance with 7 CFR
part 11 (appeal), with respect to any determination made under section
2(f)(2)(iii)(B) or section 2(f)(2)(iii)(C).''
If National Appeals Division appeals are allowed, the commenter
recommended revising section 2(f)(2)(iv) to read as follows:
``Determinations made under section 2(f)(2)(iii)(B) or section
2(f)(2)(iii)(C) may only be appealed in accordance with 7 CFR part 11
(appeal). You may not commence litigation or arbitration against us, or
obtain an administrative review in accordance with 7 CFR part 400,
subpart J (administrative review), with respect to any determination
made under section 2(f)(2)(iii)(B) or section 2(f)(2)(iii)(C).''
Response: FCIC agrees that section 2(f)(2)(iv) is ambiguous and it
was only intended to preclude requests for reconsideration under 7 CFR
part 400, subpart J. It was never intended to preclude an appeal to the
National Appeals Division. Further, producers have the right to appeal
determinations by approved insurance providers under section 20 of the
CCIP Basic Provisions. The provisions have been revised accordingly.
Comment: A commenter stated the interim rule narrative item 4.g.
(Federal Register page 37161) indicates that removal of the phrase ``,
or any portion thereof,'' from current section 24(a) of the CCIP Basic
Provisions is intended ``. . . to remove ambiguity of the billing
process and interest situations on amounts owed, and to ensure
consistency in how insurance providers administer this section.'' The
commenter does not believe this change clarifies how interest is to
accrue. For example, if the insured does not pay premium for a crop
with a 7/31 billing date until 9/15, under the 2014 provisions the
insured could be assessed two months interest for the period of August
and September. Absent the clause in 24(a), it is now unclear whether
the insured would owe interest for any portion of the month of
September. Any change to current billing practices could impact
approved insurance providers ability to recoup debt collection costs
for the insured's late payment when full premium payment was timely
made to FCIC on behalf of the insured. The commenter questioned if this
phrase should be removed.
A commenter stated for the 2015 reinsurance year, FCIC continues to
issue Special Provision statement number 01282, which states ``In lieu
of the second sentence of Section 24(a) of the Basic Provisions, for
the purpose of premium amounts owed to us or administrative fees owed
to FCIC, interest will start to accrue on the first day of the month
following the issuance of the notice by us, provided that a minimum of
30 days have passed from the premium billing date specified in the
Special Provisions.'' The interim rule does not change the second
sentence of 24(a). The commenter did not see a reason why this Special
Provision statement could not be incorporated into the interim rule and
the Special Provision statement be discontinued. However, the commenter
noted that for the February 1 billing date the added provision of a
minimum of 30 days does not work as there are only 28 or 29 days in the
month of February. FCIC should therefore consider changing this to 28
days.
However, instead of the two changes suggested above by the
commenter, ambiguity as to the precise amount of interest owed on
unpaid premium billings could be eliminated by replacing the second
sentence of 24(a) with the following language, which is modeled on
24(b): ``For the purpose of premium amounts owed to us or
administrative fees owed to FCIC, interest will start to accrue on the
date that notice is issued to you for the collection of the unpaid
amount. Amounts found due under this paragraph will not be charged
interest if payment is made within 30 days of issuance of the notice by
us.'' This change not only standardizes basic provision policy
language, it is also consistent with revisions to section 6(b) of the
CAT Endorsement and ensures premium billing is administered uniformly
because interest accrues on a daily basis for all amounts owed.
Response: Interest is accrued on a monthly basis, not daily. For
example, the billing date is July 1 and the due date for payment is
July 31. Interest will be included on the next bill dated August 1 if
the payment is not made on or before July 31, 30 days after the notice
has been issued to the policyholder. If the producer pays their bill on
September 15, they are only billed interest for July and August. The
interest for the month of September has not yet accrued and therefore
would not be owed or included in the amount due. Because interest
accrues on a monthly basis the phrase ``, or any portion thereof,'' is
not needed. No change has been made. FCIC agrees with the commenter's
suggestion to incorporate Special Provisions Statement 01282 into the
policy language and has revised the language accordingly.
Comment: A commenter stated the interim rule removes the phrase ``,
or any portion thereof,''. However, the Farm Bill Amendment posted to
RMA's Web site did not remove the word ``or''. The revised section
24(a) of the CCIP Basic Provisions in RMA's Farm Bill Amendment should
read: ``Interest will accrue at the rate of 1.25 percent simple
interest per calendar month or on any unpaid amount owed to us or on
any unpaid administrative fees owed to FCIC . . .''
Response: The Farm Bill Amendment published on RMA's Web site
contained an error and did not remove the word ``or.'' However, the
interim rule provided the correct language and the word ``or'' was
removed in the regulation. FCIC will make this
[[Page 42470]]
correction when the amendment for this final rule is issued.
Comment: A commenter stated the interim rule indicates the phrase
``, or any part thereof,'' was removed from 24(b) for FCIC policies.
The commenter was unaware of any Federal crop insurance policy
regulation specific to ``FCIC policies'' and there is no such phrase in
CCIP 24(b). The commenter stated FCIC should remove this item from the
interim rule.
Response: For certain portions of the policy, FCIC maintains
separate sections ``for Reinsured Policies'' and ``FCIC Policies'' in
the Code of Federal Regulations. While no FCIC Policies are currently
written, the authority to write such policies still exists and if there
comes a time when such policies are needed, FCIC needs the provisions
to enable it to provide such policies. Information regarding FCIC
policies is only contained in the Code of Federal Regulations and is
not included in the typeset policies published on the RMA Web site.
Therefore, no change has been made.
Comment: A commenter stated the time limit set-forth in Sec.
400.682(g) should be revised. An insured will always receive a notice
of the amount due well before the policy is terminated and this 60 day
period could potentially expire before the policy is terminated. Thus,
the 60 day period should not be tied to a notice of debt. Also, until
the insured receives notice that the policy has been terminated, there
would really be no need for the insured to move forward with requesting
relief from RMA. Therefore, we think a fairer and clearer approach to
this issue would be to shorten the time period to 30 days; however, the
30 days would not begin to accrue until the insured receives notice
that the policy has been terminated. The revised language would read as
follows:
(3) No later than 30 days from the date of the notice from the FCIC
informing the person of ineligibility due to nonpayment of a debt, the
ineligible person may request consideration for reinstatement from the
Administrator of the Risk Management Agency in accordance with section
2 of the CCIP Basic Provisions (7 CFR 457.8).
Response: FCIC agrees that as written, the language in Sec.
400.682(g) can be confusing and requires further clarification. The
phrase ``the due date specified in the notice to the person of the
amount due'' could be interpreted to apply to different types of
scenarios and/or notices, i.e. billing statements. FCIC intended for
this phrase to only apply in situations where the insured has received
notice of an amount due after the termination date (for example, an
overpaid indemnity or when premium revisions occur requiring additional
premium be owed and billed), meaning the ineligible person may request
consideration for reinstatement no later than 60 days after the due
date specified in the notice of overpaid indemnity, additional premium
owed due to revisions, or any other amounts due after the termination
date. FCIC has revised Sec. 400.682(g) to state the 60-day time period
starts on the due date specified in the notice to the person of the
amount due in the case of an overpaid indemnity or any other amount
that becomes due after the termination date. FCIC has also made the
same change in the ARPI Basic Provisions and CCIP Basic Provisions.
Comment: A commenter stated the time limit set-forth in section
2(f)(2)(iii)(B)(3) of the CCIP Basic Provisions should be revised. An
insured will always receive a notice of the amount due well before the
policy is terminated and this 60 day period could potentially expire
before the policy is terminated. Thus, the 60 day period should not be
tied to a notice of debt. Also, until the insured receives notice that
the policy has been terminated, there would really be no need for the
insured to move forward with requesting reinstatement from RMA.
Therefore, the commenter thought a fairer and clearer approach to this
issue would be to shorten the time period to 30 days; however the 30
days would not begin to accrue until the insured receives notice that
the policy has been terminated. The revised language would read as
follows:
You submit a written request for reinstatement of your policy to us
no later than 30 days from the date of the notice from the FCIC
informing you of your ineligibility due to nonpayment of a debt.
The commenter stated the same comment above about the time limit
for these requests that applies to section 2(f)(2)(iii)(C) of the CCIP
Basic Provisions. Additionally, it makes no sense to apply the written
request requirement to late postmarks that fall within the 7 day
transit period. These should just be automatically reinstated by the
approved insurance providers. An Appendix III code should be developed
so that policies which fit these criteria are tracked, but are never
actually terminated and made ineligible in the first instance. As
revised, this section would read as follows:
(C) We determine that, in accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart U
and FCIC issued procedures, one of the following two conditions are
met:
(1) You submit a written request for reinstatement of your policy
to us in accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart U and applicable
procedures no later than 30 days after the termination date or the
missed payment date of a previously executed written payment agreement,
or the due date specified in the notice to you of the amount due, if
applicable, in which you demonstrate that:
(i) You made timely payment for the amount of premium owed but you
inadvertently omitted some small amount, such as the most recent
month's interest or a small administrative fee or the amount of the
payment was clearly transposed from the amount that was otherwise due
(For example, you owed $832 but you paid $823);
(ii) You remit full payment of the delinquent debt owed to us with
your request for reinstatement; and
(iii) There is no evidence of fraud or misrepresentation; or
(2) You sent the full payment to us by mail and the payment was
postmarked after the termination date or other applicable due date, but
received by us within 7 calendar days after the termination date or
other applicable due date.
Response: As stated above, FCIC agrees that as written, the
language regarding the 60 day period can be confusing and requires
further clarification. FCIC has revised section 2(f)(2)(iii) of the
CCIP Basic Provisions and section 2(k)(2)(iii) of the ARPI Basic
Provisions to state the 60 days starts on the due date specified in the
notice to the person of the amount due in the case of an overpaid
indemnity or any other amount that becomes due after the termination
date. Lastly, FCIC has revised the reference to ``$832 but you paid
$823'' in section 2(f)(2)(iii)(C)(1)(ii) of the CCIP Basic Provisions
to ``$892 but you paid $829'' for clarity and consistency purposes in
accordance with Appendix III to the Standard Reinsurance Agreement and
instructions for handling debt and ineligibility. Appendix III of the
Standard Reinsurance Agreement allows approved insurance providers the
latitude to write-off balances equal to or less than $50. Therefore,
the example has been revised to reflect a difference of greater than
$50.
In addition to the changes described above, FCIC has revised the
definition of ``approved yield'' to clarify the approved yield may have
yield exclusions elected under section 5 of the CCIP Basic Provisions.
The definition listed exceptions or adjustments that may be made to an
[[Page 42471]]
approved yield. Section 5, which addresses exclusion of yields should
be included in this list.
FCIC has also revised the provisions in section 34(a)(5)(i)(A)(3)
of the CCIP Basic Provisions. The requirement to allow separate units
by irrigated and non-irrigated practice were added to enterprise units
in the interim rule. FCIC inadvertently omitted allowing separate units
by irrigated and non-irrigated practices for whole-farm units. FCIC
published a Special Provisions statement to allow such and has
incorporated this change in the final rule and will remove the Special
Provisions statement after this final rule is published.
Effective Date
The Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 553) provides generally
that before rules are issued by Government agencies, the rule is
required to be published in the Federal Register, and the required
publication of a substantive rule is to be not less than 30 days before
its effective date. One of the exceptions is when the agency finds good
cause for not delaying the effective date. Delaying the effective of
this rule would result in the inability of the Federal Government to
implement these changes prior to the contract change date for fall
planted crops, effectively delaying their implementation for an entire
year. Therefore, using the administrative procedure provisions in 5
U.S.C. 553, RMA finds that there is good cause for making this rule
effective less than 30 days after publication in the Federal Register.
This rule allows RMA to make the changes to the General Administrative
Regulations; Catastrophic Risk Protection Endorsement; Area Risk
Protection Insurance Regulations; and the Common Crop Insurance
Regulations, Basic Provisions in time for 2017 fall planted crops.
Therefore, this final rule is effective when published in the Federal
Register.
Executive Order 12866
This rule has been determined to be economically significant for
the purposes of Executive Order 12866 and, therefore, it has been
reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB).
Benefit-Cost Analysis
A Benefit-Cost Analysis (BCA) has been completed and a summary is
shown below; the full analysis may be viewed on https://www.regulations.gov in the docket listed above. In summary, the
analysis finds that changes in the rule will have an expected cost to
FCIC of $115.9 million annually over a 10-year period in administration
of the Federal crop insurance program. Non-quantifiable benefits of
this rule include increased program integrity, additional risk
management tools for producers, and incentives for beginning farmers
and ranchers to participate in the Federal crop insurance program.
On February 7, 2014, the 2014 Farm Bill was enacted. As a result,
FCIC revised those provisions of the General Administrative
Regulations--Ineligibility for Programs under the Federal Crop
Insurance Act (subpart U), Catastrophic Risk Protection Endorsement
(CAT Endorsement), Area Risk Protection Insurance (ARPI) Basic
Provisions, and the Common Crop Insurance Provisions (CCIP) Basic
Provisions to timely implement program changes identified in Titles II
and XI of the 2014 Farm Bill.
On January 2014, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) issued its
estimates for the effects on direct spending and revenues of the 2014
Farm Bill. These estimates were used as a basis for the quantifiable
costs and benefits stated in this BCA.
The purpose of this rule is to amend subpart U, the CAT
Endorsement, the ARPI Basic Provisions, and the CCIP Basic Provisions
to implement the following changes:
Section 2611 requires those enrolled in Federal crop insurance, for
certain agriculture commodities, to comply with conservation compliance
requirements or forego premium subsidy. For acts or situations of non-
compliance, ineligibility for premium subsidy will be applied beginning
with the 2016 reinsurance year. Annually, FCIC anticipates a savings of
$4.6 million as a result of this change.
Section 11007 makes available insurance coverage by separate
enterprise units based on irrigated and non-irrigated acreage of a crop
within a county. Annually, FCIC anticipates a cost of $53.3 million as
a result of this change.
Section 11009 allows insureds to exclude any recorded or appraised
yield for any crop year in which the per planted acre yield in the
county is at least 50 percent below the simple average per planted acre
yield for the crop in the county for the previous 10 consecutive crop
years, and allows insureds in any county contiguous to a county in
which an insured is eligible to exclude a recorded or appraised yield
to also elect a similar adjustment. Annually, FCIC anticipates a cost
of $35.7 million as a result of this change.
Section 11014 applies a reduction of premium subsidy, a reduced
insurance guarantee, and eliminates substitute yields in the insurance
guarantee during the first four crop years that land is converted from
native sod to the production of an annual crop in the States of Iowa,
Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota. Annually,
FCIC anticipates a savings of $11.4 million as a result of this change.
Section 11015 allows producers to elect a different level of
coverage for an agricultural commodity by irrigated and non-irrigated
acreage. Annually, FCIC anticipates a cost of $16.8 million as a result
of this change.
Section 11016 establishes crop insurance benefits for beginning
farmers and ranchers by increasing the premium subsidy available by ten
percentage points, allowing the use of yield history from any previous
farm or ranch operation in which they had decision making or physical
involvement, and replacing a low yield in their actual production
history (APH) with a yield equal to 80 percent of the applicable
transitional yield. Annually, FCIC anticipates a cost of $26.1 million
as a result of this change.
Section 11019 allows for the correction of errors in information
obtained from the producer within a reasonable amount of time and
consistent with information provided by the producer to other agencies
of the Department of Agriculture subject to certain limitations for
maintaining program integrity. This section also provides for the
payment of debt after the termination date in accordance with
procedures and limitations established by the FCIC, if a producer
inadvertently fails to pay a debt and has been determined to be
ineligible to participate in the Federal crop insurance program. FCIC
does not believe there are any additional cost outlays resulting from
this change. Therefore, FCIC believes some insureds will benefit from
this change and the benefits are non-quantifiable.
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
Pursuant to the provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. chapter 35), the collections of information in this rule
have been approved by OMB under control numbers 0563-0085, 0563-0083,
and 0563-0053.
E-Government Act Compliance
FCIC is committed to complying with the E-Government Act of 2002,
to promote the use of the Internet and other information technologies
to provide increased opportunities for citizen access to Government
[[Page 42472]]
information and services, and for other purposes.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
establishes requirements for Federal agencies to assess the effects of
their regulatory actions on State, local, and tribal governments and
the private sector. This rule contains no Federal mandates (under the
regulatory provisions of title II of the UMRA) for State, local, and
tribal governments or the private sector. Therefore, this rule is not
subject to the requirements of sections 202 and 205 of UMRA.
Executive Order 13132
It has been determined under section 1(a) of Executive Order 13132,
Federalism, that this rule does not have sufficient implications to
warrant consultation with the States. The provisions contained in this
rule will not have a substantial direct effect on States, or on the
relationship between the national government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and responsibilities among the various levels of
government.
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.
The Federal Crop Insurance Corporation has assessed the impact of
this rule on Indian tribes and determined that this rule does not, to
our knowledge, have tribal implications that require tribal
consultation under E.O. 13175. If a Tribe requests consultation, the
Federal Crop Insurance Corporation will work with the Office of Tribal
Relations to ensure meaningful consultation is provided where changes,
additions and modifications identified herein are not expressly
mandated by Congress.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
FCIC certifies that this regulation will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. Program
requirements for the Federal crop insurance program are the same for
all producers regardless of the size of their farming operation. For
instance, all producers are required to submit an application and
acreage report to establish their insurance guarantees and compute
premium amounts, and all producers are required to submit a notice of
loss and production information to determine the amount of an indemnity
payment in the event of an insured cause of crop loss. Whether a
producer has 10 acres or 1000 acres, there is no difference in the kind
of information collected. To ensure crop insurance is available to
small entities, the Federal Crop Insurance Act (Act) authorizes FCIC to
waive collection of administrative fees from beginning farmers or
ranchers and limited resource farmers. FCIC believes this waiver helps
to ensure that small entities are given the same opportunities as large
entities to manage their risks through the use of Federal crop
insurance. A Regulatory Flexibility Analysis has not been prepared
since this regulation does not have an impact on small entities, and,
therefore, this regulation is exempt from the provisions of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 605).
Federal Assistance Program
This program is listed in the Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance under No. 10.450.
Executive Order 12372
This program is not subject to the provisions of Executive Order
12372, which require intergovernmental consultation with State and
local officials. See the Notice related to 7 CFR part 3015, subpart V,
published at 48 FR 29115, June 24, 1983.
Executive Order 12988
This rule has been reviewed in accordance with Executive Order
12988 on civil justice reform. The provisions of this rule will not
have a retroactive effect. The provisions of this rule will preempt
State and local laws to the extent such State and local laws are
inconsistent herewith. With respect to any direct action taken by FCIC
or to require the insurance provider to take specific action under the
terms of the crop insurance policy, the administrative appeal
provisions published at 7 CFR part 11 must be exhausted before any
action against FCIC for judicial review may be brought.
Environmental Evaluation
This action is not expected to have a significant economic impact
on the quality of the human environment, health, or safety. Therefore,
neither an Environmental Assessment nor an Environmental Impact
Statement is needed.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Parts 400, 402, 407 and 457
Administrative practice and procedure, Crop insurance, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
Final Rule
Accordingly, as set forth in the preamble, the Federal Crop
Insurance Corporation adopts as final the interim rule amending 7 CFR
parts 400, 402, 407, and 457, published at 79 FR 37155 on July 1, 2014,
as final with the following changes:
PART 400--GENERAL ADMINISTRATIVE REGULATIONS
0
1. The authority citation is added for 7 CFR part 400 to read as
follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1506(1), 1506(o).
0
2. Amend Sec. 400.677 by adding the definition of ``reinstatement'' in
alphabetical order to read as follows:
Sec. 400.677 Definitions.
* * * * *
Reinstatement means that the policy will retain the same plan of
insurance, coverage levels, price percentages, endorsements and options
the person had prior to termination, provided the person continues to
meet all eligibility requirements, comply with the terms of the policy,
and there is no evidence of misrepresentation or fraud.
* * * * *
0
3. Amend Sec. 400.679 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (e) by adding a semicolon at the end of the paragraph;
and
0
b. Revising paragraph (g).
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 400.679 Criteria for ineligibility.
* * * * *
(g) Has requested the Administrator, Risk Management Agency, for
consideration to reinstate their eligibility in accordance with the
applicable policy provisions and such request has been denied.
0
4. Amend Sec. 400.682 by revising paragraph (g) to read as follows:
Sec. 400.682 Determination and notification.
* * * * *
(g) No later than 60 days after the termination date, a missed
payment date
[[Page 42473]]
of a previously executed written payment agreement, or in the case of
an overpaid indemnity or any amount that became due after the
termination date, the due date specified in a notice to the person of
an amount due, as applicable, such ineligible person may request
consideration for reinstatement from the Administrator, Risk Management
Agency, in accordance with section 2 of the Common Crop Insurance
Policy Basic Provisions (7 CFR 457.8).
PART 402--CATASTROPHIC RISK PROTECTION ENDORSEMENT
0
5. The authority citation for 7 CFR part 402 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1506(l), 1506(o).
0
6. Amend Sec. 402.4 as follows:
0
a. In section 3(c) by removing the phrase ``paragraph (b) above'' and
adding in its place the phrase ``section 3(b)'';
0
b. In section 6(a) by removing the phrase ``paragraphs (f) and (h) of
this section'' and adding in its place the phrase ``sections 6(f) and
(h)'';
0
c. In section 6(b) by removing the phrase ``paragraph (f) of this
section'' and adding in its place the phrase ``section 6(f)'';
0
d. In section 6(c) by removing the phrase ``paragraph (b) of this
section'' and adding in its place the phrase ``section 6(b)'';
0
e. In section 6(d) by removing the phrase ``paragraph (b) of this
section'' and adding in its place the phrase ``section 6(b)'';
0
f. In section 6(e) by removing the phrase ``paragraph (f) of this
section'' and adding in its place the phrase ``section 6(f)'';
0
g. In section 6(f)(2) by removing the phrase ``paragraph (f)(1) of this
section'' and adding in its place the phrase ``section 6(f)(1)'';
0
h. Revise section 6(f)(2)(i);
0
i. In section 6(f)(2)(ii)(A) by removing the phrase ``paragraph (f)(1)
of this section'' and adding in its place the phrase ``section
6(f)(1)'';
0
j. In section 6(f)(2)(ii)(B) by removing the phrase ``paragraph (f)(1)
of this section'' and adding in its place the phrase ``section
6(f)(1)''; and
0
k. In section 6(h) by removing the phrase ``paragraph (f) of this
section'' and adding in its place the phrase ``section 6(f)''.
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 402.4 Catastrophic Risk Protection Endorsement Provisions.
* * * * *
6. Annual Premium and Administrative Fees
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) Notwithstanding section 6(f)(2), if you demonstrate you began
farming for the first time after June 1 but prior to the beginning of
the reinsurance year (July 1), you may be eligible for premium subsidy
the subsequent reinsurance year without having form AD-1026 on file
with FSA on or before June 1. For example, if you demonstrate you
started farming for the first time on June 15, 2015, you may be
eligible for premium subsidy for the 2016 reinsurance year without form
AD-1026 on file with FSA.
* * * * *
PART 407--AREA RISK PROTECTION INSURANCE REGULATIONS
0
7. The authority citation for 7 CFR part 407 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1506(l), 1506(o).
0
8. Amend Sec. 407.9 as follows:
0
a. In section 1 by revising the definition of ``beginning farmer or
rancher'';
0
b. Revise sections 2(k)(2)(iii) and (iv);
0
c. Revise section 5(d);
0
d. In section 5(e) by removing the phrase ``areas of'' and adding in
its place the word ``cumulative'';
0
e. Revise section 7(i)(2)(i);
0
f. In section 22(b) [FCIC policies] by adding the phrase ``the issuance
of the notice by us, provided that a minimum of 30 days have passed
from'' after the phrase ``interest will start to accrue on the first
day of the month following'';
0
g. In section 22(a)(1) [Reinsured policies] by adding the phrase ``the
issuance of the notice by us, provided that a minimum of 30 days have
passed from'' after the phrase ``interest will start to accrue on the
first day of the month following''; and
0
h. In section 31(a)(1) by removing the word ``the'' after the phrase
``any person with a substantial beneficial interest in''.
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 407.9 Area risk protection insurance policy.
* * * * *
1. Definitions
* * * * *
Beginning farmer or rancher. An individual who has not actively
operated and managed a farm or ranch in any state, with an insurable
interest in a crop or livestock as an owner-operator, landlord, tenant,
or sharecropper for more than five crop years, as determined in
accordance with FCIC procedures. Any crop year's insurable interest
may, at your election, be excluded if earned while under the age of 18,
while in full-time military service of the United States, or while in
post-secondary education, in accordance with FCIC procedures. A person
other than an individual may be eligible for beginning farmer or
rancher benefits if there is at least one individual substantial
beneficial interest holder and all individual substantial beneficial
interest holders qualify as a beginning farmer or rancher.
* * * * *
2. Life of Policy, Cancellation, and Termination
* * * * *
(k) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) Once the policy is terminated, it cannot be reinstated for
the current crop year unless:
(A) The termination was in error;
(B) The Administrator of the Risk Management Agency, at his or her
sole discretion, determines that the following conditions are met:
(1) In accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart U, and FCIC issued
procedures, you provide documentation that your failure to pay your
debt is due to an unforeseen or unavoidable event or an extraordinary
weather event that created an impossible situation for you to make
timely payment;
(2) You remit full payment of the delinquent debt owed to us or
FCIC with your request submitted in accordance with section
2(k)(2)(iii)(B)(3); and
(3) You submit a written request for reinstatement of your policy
to us no later than 60 days after the termination date or the missed
payment date of a previously executed written payment agreement, or in
the case of overpaid indemnity or any amount that became due after the
termination date, the due date specified in the notice to you of the
amount due, if applicable.
(i) If authorization for reinstatement, as defined in 7 CFR part
400, subpart U, is granted, your policies will be reinstated effective
at the beginning of the crop year for which you were determined
ineligible, and you will be entitled to all applicable benefits under
such policies, provided you meet all eligibility requirements and
comply with the terms of the policy; and
(ii) There is no evidence of fraud or misrepresentation; or
(C) We determine that, in accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart
U, and FCIC issued procedures, the following are met:
(1) You can demonstrate:
(i) You made timely payment for the amount of premium owed but you
[[Page 42474]]
inadvertently omitted some small amount, such as the most recent
month's interest or a small administrative fee;
(ii) The amount of the payment was clearly transposed from the
amount that was otherwise due (For example, you owed $892 but you paid
$829); or
(iii) You timely made the full payment of the amount owed but the
delivery of that payment was delayed, and was postmarked no more than
seven calendar days after the termination date or the missed payment
date of a previously executed written payment agreement, or in the case
of overpaid indemnity or any amount that became due after the
termination date, the due date specified in a notice to you of an
amount due, as applicable;
(2) You remit full payment of the delinquent debt owed to us; and
(3) You submit a written request for reinstatement of your policy
to us in accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart U, and applicable
procedures no later than 30 days after the termination date or the
missed payment date of a previously executed written payment agreement,
or in the case of overpaid indemnity or any amount that became due
after the termination date, the due date specified in the notice to you
of the amount due, if applicable; and
(4) If authorization for reinstatement, as defined in 7 CFR part
400, subpart U, is granted, your policies will be reinstated effective
at the beginning of the crop year for which you were determined
ineligible, and you will be entitled to all applicable benefits under
such policies, provided you meet all eligibility requirements and
comply with the terms of the policy; and
(5) There is no evidence of fraud or misrepresentation.
(iv) A determination made under:
(A) Section 2(k)(2)(iii)(B) may only be appealed to the National
Appeals Division in accordance with 7 CFR part 11; and
(B) Section 2(k)(2)(iii)(C) may only be appealed in accordance with
section 23.
* * * * *
5. Insurable Acreage
* * * * *
(d) Except as provided in section 5(e), in the states of Iowa,
Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota, during
the first four crop years of planting on native sod acreage that has
been tilled after February 7, 2014, such acreage may be insured if the
requirements of section 5(a) have been met but will:
(1) Notwithstanding the provisions in section 6, receive a
liability that is based on 65 percent of the protection factor; and
(2) For additional coverage policies, receive a premium subsidy
that is 50 percentage points less than would otherwise be provided on
acreage not qualifying as native sod. If the premium subsidy applicable
to these acres is less than 50 percent before the reduction, you will
receive no premium subsidy.
* * * * *
7. Annual Premium and Administrative Fees
* * * * *
(i) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) Notwithstanding section 7(i)(2), if you demonstrate you began
farming for the first time after June 1 but prior to the beginning of
the reinsurance year (July 1), you may be eligible for premium subsidy
the subsequent reinsurance year without having form AD-1026 on file
with FSA on or before June 1. For example, if you demonstrate you
started farming for the first time on June 15, 2015, you may be
eligible for premium subsidy for the 2016 reinsurance year without form
AD-1026 on file with FSA.
* * * * *
PART 457--COMMON CROP INSURANCE REGULATIONS
0
9. The authority citation for 7 CFR part 457 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1506(1) and 1506(o).
0
10. Amend Sec. 457.8, in the Common Crop Insurance Policy, as follows:
0
a. In section 1 by revising the definitions of ``approved yield'',
``beginning farmer or rancher'', and ``enterprise unit'';
0
b. Revise sections 2(f)(2)(iii) and (iv);
0
c. In section 5 by removing the phrase ``per acre planted'' and adding
in its place the phrase ``per planted acre'';
0
d. Revise section 7(h)(2)(i);
0
e. In section 9(e) by removing the phrase ``and is planted to an annual
crop'';
0
f. In section 9(f) by removing the phrase ``areas of'' and adding in
its place the word ``cumulative'';
0
g. Under ``For FCIC policies'', in section 24(b), by adding the phrase
``the issuance of the notice by us, provided that a minimum of 30 days
have passed from'' after the phrase ``interest will start to accrue on
the first day of the month following'';
0
h. Under ``For reinsured policies'', in section 24(a), by adding the
phrase ``the issuance of the notice by us, provided that a minimum of
30 days have passed from'' after the phrase ``interest will start to
accrue on the first day of the month following'';
0
i. In section 25(a)(1) by removing the word ``the'' after the phrase
``any person with a substantial beneficial interest in'';
0
j. Revise section 34(a)(5)(i)(A)(3); and
0
k. In section 36(c) by adding a comma after the phrase ``unless you
qualify as a beginning farmer or rancher''.
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 457.8 The application and policy.
* * * * *
Common Crop Insurance Policy
* * * * *
1. Definitions
* * * * *
Approved yield. The actual production history (APH) yield,
calculated and approved by the verifier, used to determine the
production guarantee by summing the yearly actual, assigned, adjusted
or unadjusted transitional yields and dividing the sum by the number of
yields contained in the database, which will always contain at least
four yields. The database may contain up to 10 consecutive crop years
of actual or assigned yields. The approved yield may have yield
exclusions elected under section 5, yield adjustments elected under
section 36, revisions according to section 3, or other limitations
according to FCIC approved procedures applied when calculating the
approved yield.
* * * * *
Beginning farmer or rancher. An individual who has not actively
operated and managed a farm or ranch in any state, with an insurable
interest in a crop or livestock as an owner-operator, landlord, tenant,
or sharecropper for more than five crop years, as determined in
accordance with FCIC procedures. Any crop year's insurable interest
may, at your election, be excluded if earned while under the age of 18,
while in full-time military service of the United States, or while in
post-secondary education, in accordance with FCIC procedures. A person
other than an individual may be eligible for beginning farmer or
rancher benefits if there is at least one individual substantial
beneficial interest holder and all individual substantial beneficial
interest holders qualify as a beginning farmer or rancher.
* * * * *
Enterprise unit. All insurable acreage of the same insured crop or
all insurable irrigated or non-irrigated acreage of the same insured
crop in the county in which you have a share on the date coverage
begins for the crop year,
[[Page 42475]]
provided the requirements of section 34 are met.
* * * * *
2. Life of Policy, Cancellation, and Termination
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) Once the policy is terminated, it cannot be reinstated for
the current crop year unless:
(A) The termination was in error;
(B) The Administrator of the Risk Management Agency, at his or her
sole discretion, determines that the following are met:
(1) In accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart U, and FCIC issued
procedures, you provide documentation that your failure to pay your
debt is due to an unforeseen or unavoidable event or an extraordinary
weather event that created an impossible situation for you to make
timely payment;
(2) You remit full payment of the delinquent debt owed to us or
FCIC with your request submitted in accordance with section
2(f)(2)(iii)(B)(3); and
(3) You submit a written request for reinstatement of your policy
to us no later than 60 days after the termination date or the missed
payment date of a previously executed written payment agreement, or in
the case of overpaid indemnity or any amount that became due after the
termination date, the due date specified in the notice to you of the
amount due, if applicable.
(i) If authorization for reinstatement, as defined in 7 CFR part
400, subpart U, is granted, your policies will be reinstated effective
at the beginning of the crop year for which you were determined
ineligible, and you will be entitled to all applicable benefits under
such policies, provided you meet all eligibility requirements and
comply with the terms of the policy; and
(ii) There is no evidence of fraud or misrepresentation; or
(C) We determine that, in accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart
U, and FCIC issued procedures, the following are met:
(1) You can demonstrate:
(i) You made timely payment for the amount of premium owed but you
inadvertently omitted some small amount, such as the most recent
month's interest or a small administrative fee;
(ii) The amount of the payment was clearly transposed from the
amount that was otherwise due (For example, you owed $892 but you paid
$829); or
(iii) You timely made the full payment of the amount owed but the
delivery of that payment was delayed, and was postmarked no more than
seven calendar days after the termination date or the missed payment
date of a previously executed written payment agreement, or in the case
of overpaid indemnity or any amount that became due after the
termination date, the due date specified in a notice to you of an
amount due, as applicable.
(2) You remit full payment of the delinquent debt owed to us; and
(3) You submit a written request for reinstatement of your policy
to us in accordance with 7 CFR part 400, subpart U, and applicable
procedures no later than 30 days after the termination date or the
missed payment date of a previously executed written payment agreement,
or in the case of overpaid indemnity or any amount that became due
after the termination date, the due date specified in the notice to you
of the amount due, if applicable; and
(4) If authorization for reinstatement, as defined in 7 CFR part
400, subpart U, is granted, your policies will be reinstated effective
at the beginning of the crop year for which you were determined
ineligible, and you will be entitled to all applicable benefits under
such policies, provided you meet all eligibility requirements and
comply with the terms of the policy; and
(5) There is no evidence of fraud or misrepresentation.
(iv) A determination made under:
(A) Section 2(f)(2)(iii)(B) may only be appealed to the National
Appeals Division in accordance with 7 CFR part 11; and
(B) Section 2(f)(2)(iii)(C) may only be appealed in accordance with
section 20.
* * * * *
7. Annual Premium and Administrative Fees
* * * * *
(h) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) Notwithstanding section 7(h)(2), if you demonstrate you began
farming for the first time after June 1 but prior to the beginning of
the reinsurance year (July 1), you may be eligible for premium subsidy
the subsequent reinsurance year without having form AD-1026 on file
with FSA on or before June 1. For example, if you demonstrate you
started farming for the first time on June 15, 2015, you may be
eligible for premium subsidy for the 2016 reinsurance year without form
AD-1026 on file with FSA.
* * * * *
34. Units
(a) * * *
(5) * * *
(i) * * *
(A) * * *
(3) At the same coverage level (e.g., if you elect to insure your
corn and canola at the 65 percent coverage level and your soybeans at
the 75 percent coverage level, the corn, soybeans and canola would be
assigned the unit structure in accordance with section 34(a)(5)(v))
unless you can elect separate coverage levels for all irrigated and all
non-irrigated crops in accordance with section 3(b)(2)(iii) (e.g. if
you elect to insure your irrigated corn at the 65 percent coverage
level you must insure your irrigated canola at the 65 percent coverage
level. If you elect to insure your non-irrigated corn at the 70 percent
coverage level you must insure your non-irrigated canola at the 70
percent coverage level. If you elect to insure your irrigated corn at
the 65 percent coverage level and your irrigated canola at the 70
percent coverage level your unit structure will be assigned in
accordance with section 34(a)(5)(v));
* * * * *
Signed in Washington, DC, on June 23, 2016.
Brandon C. Willis,
Manager, Federal Crop Insurance Corporation.
[FR Doc. 2016-15327 Filed 6-29-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-08-P