2018 Farm Bill Implementation Listening Session, 4041-4044 [2019-02360]
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Notices
Federal Register
Vol. 84, No. 31
Thursday, February 14, 2019
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains documents other than rules or
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public. Notices of hearings and investigations,
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rulings, delegations of authority, filing of
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section.
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Farm Service Agency
Natural Resources Conservation
Service
Risk Management Agency
2018 Farm Bill Implementation
Listening Session
Farm Service Agency, Natural
Resources Conservation Service, and
Risk Management Agency, USDA.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
Notice.
In preparing to implement the
Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018
(commonly referred to as the 2018 Farm
Bill), we are hosting a listening session
for initial public input about new
programs and changes to existing
programs implemented by the Farm
Service Agency (FSA), the Natural
Resources Conservation Service (NRCS),
and the Risk Management Agency
(RMA). The 2018 Farm Bill is intended
to provide support, certainty, and
stability to our Nation’s farmers,
ranchers, and land stewards by
enhancing farm support programs,
improving crop insurance, maintaining
disaster programs, and promoting and
supporting voluntary conservation. We
invite you to participate in the listening
session. The listening session is open to
the public.
SUMMARY:
DATES:
Listening session: The listening
session will be on February 26, 2019,
and will begin at 9 a.m.
Registration: You must register by
February 22, 2019, to attend the
listening session and are encouraged to
provide written comments prior to the
listening session.
Comments: For those orally
presenting comments at the listening
session, written comments are
encouraged by February 22, 2019.
Additional written comments will be
accepted through March 1, 2019.
ADDRESSES:
Listening session: The meeting will be
held in the Jefferson Auditorium of the
South Building at 14th Street and
Independence Ave. SW, Washington,
DC 20250. Entry to the South Building
for the listening session is through Wing
5 on Independence Ave.; valid photo
identification is required.
Registration: To register, visit https://
www.farmers.gov/farmbill.
Comments: We invite you to submit
comments on this notice. In your
comments, include the date, volume,
and page number of this issue of the
Federal Register, and the title of notice.
You may submit comments by any of
the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov and search
for Docket ID USDA–2019–0001. Follow
the online instructions for submitting
comments.
• You may submit your written
comments at the listening session.
All written comments received will be
publicly available on
www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Andrew Fisher; phone: (202) 692–5298
or email: Andrew.Fisher@osec.usda.gov.
Persons with disabilities who require
alternative means for communication
should contact the USDA Target Center
at (202) 720–2600 (voice).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
listening session will provide an
opportunity for stakeholders to share
their thoughts about how USDA can
streamline and improve program
delivery, as well as enhance customer
service. Examples of programs FSA
implements include the Agriculture
Risk Coverage (ARC) and Price Loss
Coverage (PLC) programs, the Dairy
Margin Coverage (DMC) Program, the
Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance
Program (NAP), the Conservation
Reserve Program (CRP), and farm
ownership and operating loans. NRCS
implements the Environmental Quality
Incentives Program (EQIP), the
Conservation Stewardship Program
(CSP), the Agricultural Conservation
Easement Program (ACEP), the Regional
Conservation Partnership Program
(RCPP), and other conservation
provisions. RMA implements crop
insurance coverage. We invite you to
participate in the listening session. The
listening session is open to the public.
On December 20, 2018, the 2018 Farm
Bill (Pub. L. 115–334) was signed into
law (see https://www.congress.gov/bill/
115th-congress/house-bill/2/text). The
Secretary of Agriculture and the
respective USDA agencies, including,
but not limited to FSA, NRCS, and
RMA, are working to implement the
provisions of the 2018 Farm Bill as
expeditiously as possible to meet the
needs of producers and other
stakeholders. To allow for customer
input and ensure transparency, it is
important to hear from stakeholders
regarding their priorities, concerns, and
requests.
The purpose of the listening session is
for FSA, NRCS, and RMA to hear from
the public; this is not a discussion with
FSA, NRCS, and RMA officials or a
question and answer session. The
purpose is to receive public input that
each agency can factor into
discretionary decisions that need to be
made to implement the provisions of the
2018 Farm Bill.
Date
Time
Location information
February 26, 2019 .........
9 a.m ...........................
USDA headquarters, in the South Building, Jefferson Auditorium, 14th Street and Independence Ave. SW, Washington, DC 20250.
The listening session will begin with
brief opening remarks from USDA.
Individual speakers providing oral
comments will be limited to 3–5
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minutes each; however, if all speakers
can be accommodated within the
allotted time for the session, individual
speaking times may be adjusted at the
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written request of the stakeholder (use
the contact information above). As
noted above, we request that speakers
providing oral comments also provide a
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 31 / Thursday, February 14, 2019 / Notices
written copy of their comments by
February 22, 2019. All stakeholders and
interested members of the public are
welcome to register to provide oral and
written comments; however, based on
the session time or topic area
constraints, USDA may not be able to
allocate time for all registered attendees
to provide oral comments during the
session.
The purpose of the listening session is
for FSA, NRCS, and RMA to hear from
stakeholders and other interested
members of the public about the
programs that are being implemented or
revised by FSA, NRCS, or RMA as
required by the 2018 Farm Bill. Please
refer to the name of the FSA, NRCS, or
RMA program in your comment and the
relevant section number in the 2018
Farm Bill. In your comments, provide
your input about the program(s),
changes, and anything else that may be
helpful to USDA. The following list of
programs span multiple sections in the
2018 Farm Bill or have program names
that may not be obvious from the
section title (see listing below for
complete section-by-section names):
• Revised ARC and PLC Programs
(2018 Farm Bill sections 1101–1107);
• Revised Marketing Assistance
Loans and Loan Deficiency Payments
and the extension of the Sugar Program
and the related Feedstock Flexibility
Program (2018 Farm Bill sections 1201–
1205; 1301; 9009);
• New DMC and Other Dairy-Related
Provisions (2018 Farm Bill section
1401);
• Revised disaster assistance
programs (2018 Farm Bill sections 1501;
1601);
• Common provisions for payment
limitations and payment eligibility
(2018 Farm Bill sections 1703–1704);
• FSA accountability, streamlining,
and related provisions (2018 Farm Bill
sections 1705–1707);
• Wetland conservation and
mitigation banking provisions (2018
Farm Bill sections 2101–2102);
• CRP (2018 Farm Bill sections 2201–
2209);
• EQIP (2018 Farm Bill sections
2301–2306);
• Conservation Innovation Grants and
Payments (2018 Farm Bill section 2307);
• CSP (2018 Farm Bill section 2308);
• Other conservation provisions,
including ACEP and RCPP (2018 Farm
Bill sections 2309–2822);
• Farm Loans (2018 Farm Bill
sections 5101–5416);
• Biomass Crop Assistance Program
(2018 Farm Bill section 9010);
• Crop Insurance (2018 Farm Bill
sections 11101–11126);
To identify the section numbers for
your comments and to find the relevant
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text for FSA, NRCS, and RMA programs
in the 2018 Farm Bill, the following is
an excerpt from the 2018 Farm Bill
Table of Contents that focuses on the
sections for the FSA, NRCS, and RMA
programs:
Title I—Commodities
Subtitle A—Commodity Policy
Sec. 1101. Definition of effective reference
price.
Sec. 1102. Base acres.
Sec. 1103. Payment yields.
Sec. 1104. Payment acres.
Sec. 1105. Producer election.
Sec. 1106. Price loss coverage.
Sec. 1107. Agriculture risk coverage.
Subtitle B—Marketing Loans
Sec. 1201. Extensions.
Sec. 1202. Loan rates for nonrecourse
marketing assistance loans.
Sec. 1204. Special competitive provisions for
extra long staple cotton.
Sec. 1205. Availability of recourse loans.
Subtitle C—Sugar
Sec. 1301. Sugar policy.
Subtitle D—Dairy Margin Coverage and Other
Dairy Related Provisions
Sec. 1401. Dairy margin coverage.
Sec. 1402. Reauthorizations.
Subtitle E—Supplemental Agricultural
Disaster Assistance
Sec. 1501. Supplemental agricultural disaster
assistance.
Subtitle F—Noninsured Crop Assistance
Sec. 1601. Noninsured crop assistance
program.
Subtitle G—Administration
Sec. 1702. Suspension of permanent price
support authority.
Sec. 1703. Payment limitations.
Sec. 1704. Adjusted gross income limitations.
Sec. 1705. Farm Service Agency
accountability.
Sec. 1706. Implementation.
Sec. 1707. Exemption from certain reporting
requirements for certain producers.
Title II—Conservation
Subtitle A—Wetland Conservation
Sec. 2101. Wetland conversion.
Sec. 2102. Wetland conservation.
Sec. 2103. Mitigation banking.
Subtitle B—Conservation Reserve Program
Sec. 2201. Conservation reserve.
Sec. 2202. Conservation reserve enhancement
program.
Sec. 2203. Farmable wetland program.
Sec. 2204. Pilot programs.
Sec. 2205. Duties of owners and operators.
Sec. 2206. Duties of the Secretary.
Sec. 2207. Payments.
Sec. 2208. Contracts.
Sec. 2209. Eligible land; State law
requirements.
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Subtitle C—Environmental Quality Incentives
Program and Conservation Stewardship
Program
Sec. 2302. Purposes of environmental quality
incentives program.
Sec. 2303. Definitions under environmental
quality incentives program.
Sec. 2304. Establishment and administration
of environmental quality incentives
program.
Sec. 2305. Environmental quality incentives
program plan.
Sec. 2306. Limitation on payments under
environmental quality incentives
program.
Sec. 2307. Conservation innovation grants
and payments.
Sec. 2308. Conservation stewardship
program.
Sec. 2309. Grassland conservation initiative.
Subtitle D—Other Conservation Programs
Sec. 2401. Watershed protection and flood
prevention.
Sec. 2402. Soil and water resources
conservation.
Sec. 2403. Emergency conservation program.
Sec. 2404. Conservation of private grazing
land.
Sec. 2405. Grassroots source water protection
program.
Sec. 2406. Voluntary public access and
habitat incentive program.
Sec. 2407. Wildlife management.
Sec. 2408. Feral swine eradication and
control pilot program.
Sec. 2409. Report on small wetlands.
Sec. 2410. Sense of Congress relating to
increased watershed-based collaboration.
Subtitle E—Funding and Administration
Sec. 2501. Commodity Credit Corporation.
Sec. 2502. Delivery of technical assistance.
Sec. 2503. Administrative requirements for
conservation programs.
Sec. 2504. Temporary administration of
conservation programs.
Subtitle F—Agricultural Conservation
Easement Program
Sec. 2601. Establishment and purposes.
Sec. 2602. Definitions.
Sec. 2603. Agricultural land easements.
Sec. 2604. Wetland reserve easements.
Sec. 2605. Administration.
Subtitle G—Regional Conservation
Partnership Program
Sec. 2701. Establishment and purposes.
Sec. 2702. Definitions.
Sec. 2703. Regional conservation
partnerships.
Sec. 2704. Assistance to producers.
Sec. 2705. Funding.
Sec. 2706. Administration.
Sec. 2707. Critical conservation areas.
Title V—Credit
Subtitle A—Farm Ownership Loans
Sec. 5101. Modification of the 3-year
experience eligibility requirement for
farm ownership loans.
Sec. 5102. Conservation loan and loan
guarantee program.
Sec. 5103. Limitations on amount of farm
ownership loans.
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Sec. 5104. Relending program to resolve
ownership and succession on farmland.
Subtitle B—Operating Loans
Sec. 5201. Limitations on amount of
operating loans.
Sec. 5202. Microloans.
Sec. 5203. Cooperative lending pilot projects.
Subtitle C—Administrative Provisions
Sec. 5301. Beginning farmer and rancher
individual development accounts pilot
program.
Sec. 5302. Loan authorization levels.
Sec. 5303. Loan fund set-asides.
Sec. 5304. Use of additional funds for direct
operating microloans under certain
conditions.
Sec. 5305. Equitable relief.
Sec. 5306. Socially disadvantaged farmers
and ranchers; qualified beginning
farmers and ranchers.
Sec. 5307. Emergency loan eligibility.
Subtitle D—Miscellaneous
Sec. 5402. State agricultural mediation
programs.
Sec. 5403. Compensation of bank directors.
Sec. 5404. Sharing of privileged and
confidential information.
Sec. 5406. Removal and prohibition
authority; industry-wide prohibition.
Sec. 5407. Jurisdiction over institutionaffiliated parties.
Sec. 5408. Definition of institution-affiliated
party.
Sec. 5409. Prohibition on use of funds.
Sec. 5410. Expansion of acreage exception to
loan amount limitation.
Sec. 5412. Corporation as conservator or
receiver; certain other powers.
Sec. 5413. Reporting.
Sec. 5414. Study on loan risk.
Sec. 5415. GAO report on ability of the Farm
Credit System to meet the agricultural
credit needs of Indian tribes and their
members.
Sec. 5416. GAO report on credit service to
socially disadvantaged farmers and
ranchers.
Title VIII—Forestry
Sec. 8628. Purchase of Natural Resources
Conservation Service property, Riverside
County, California.
Title IX—Energy
Sec. 9009. Feedstock flexibility.
Sec. 9010. Biomass Crop Assistance Program.
Title XI—Crop Insurance
Sec. 11101. Definitions.
Sec. 11102. Data collection.
Sec. 11103. Sharing of records.
Sec. 11104. Use of resources.
Sec. 11105. Specialty crops.
Sec. 11106. Insurance period.
Sec. 11107. Cover crops.
Sec. 11108. Underserved producers.
Sec. 11109. Treatment of forage and grazing.
Sec. 11110. Administrative basic fee.
Sec. 11111. Enterprise units.
Sec. 11112. Continued authority.
Sec. 11113. Submission of policies and
materials to board.
Sec. 11114. Crop production on native sod.
Sec. 11115. Use of national agricultural
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statistics service data to combat waste,
fraud, and abuse.
Sec. 11116. Submission of information to
corporation.
Sec. 11117. Continuing education for loss
adjusters and agents.
Sec. 11118. Program administration.
Sec. 11119. Agricultural commodity.
Sec. 11120. Maintenance of policies.
Sec. 11121. Reimbursement of research,
development, and maintenance costs.
Sec. 11122. Research and development
authority.
Sec. 11123. Funding for research and
development.
Sec. 11124. Technical amendment to pilot
programs.
Sec. 11125. Education and risk management
assistance.
Title XII—Miscellaneous
Subtitle A—Livestock
Sec. 12104. Definition of livestock.
Subtitle C—Historically Underserved
Producers
Sec. 12303. Tribal Advisory Committee.
Sec. 12304. Beginning farmer and rancher
coordination.
Sec. 12306. Availability of Department of
Agriculture programs for veteran farmers
and ranchers.
Subtitle D—Department of Agriculture
Reorganization Act of 1994 Amendments
Sec. 12410. Natural Resources Conservation
Service.
Part I—Miscellaneous Agriculture
Provisions
Sec. 12612. National agriculture imagery
program.
Sec. 12615. Eligibility for operators on heirs
property land to obtain a farm number.
Sec. 12618. Data on conservation practices.
Instructions for Attending the Meeting
Space for attendance at the listening
session is limited. All persons wishing
to attend the listening session must
register at https://www.farmers.gov/
farmbill by February 22, 2019. To
register, information will be required,
including, but not limited to:
• Attendee contact information;
• Company or organization
representation information;
• Farm Bill topic interests; and
• If you would like to speak, written
comments.
Upon arrival at the 5th wing of the
USDA South Building, registered
persons must provide valid photo
identification to enter. Please allow
extra time to get through security.
All written comments received will be
publicly available on
www.regulations.gov.
If you require special
accommodations, such as a sign
language interpreter, use the contact
information above. The listening session
location is accessible to persons with
disabilities.
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FSA, RMA, and NRCS are interested
in all comments, but in particular
request input on:
FSA
1. Specific ideas to simplify program
implementation and enhance customer
service.
2. Producers who apply for FSA,
NRCS, and RMA benefits are required to
file common eligibility forms including
the CCC–902 Farm Operating Plan, the
CCC–941 Certification of Average
Adjusted Gross Income, and the AD–
1026 Certification of compliance with
Highly Erodible Lands and Wetland
Conservation provisions. How can FSA
improve the process for obtaining these
forms from program applicants?
3. What changes to NAP requirements
would improve and simplify the process
for submitting acreage reports and
required records for diverse production
systems (such as urban, small-scale, and
direct-to-consumer production
systems)?
4. The 2018 Farm Bill requires better
coordination between FSA and NRCS
regarding CRP, EQIP, and CSP. How can
we better coordinate the programs?
5. The 2018 Farm Bill provides a new
CRP pilot, the Soil Health and Income
Protection Pilot Program. What can we
do to most effectively implement this
pilot? Specifically, what does the public
recommend for perennial conserving
use cover?
6. Would DMC participants have an
interest in a premium fee payment
option for any current year premiums
(2019) to be deducted before indemnity
payments are made for 2019?
7. The 2018 Farm Bill raises the level
of loan guarantees to 95 percent of the
outstanding principal for socially
disadvantaged and beginning farmers.
Are there other programmatic changes
that FSA should consider to enhance
the level of participation by socially
disadvantaged and beginning farmers in
the guaranteed loan programs?
RMA
1. Specific ideas to simplify program
implementation and enhance customer
service.
2. Specific examples of how cover
crop use has affected insurability or a
claim determination. If so, what
adjustments to the Cover Crop
Termination Guidelines should RMA
consider?
3. Specific ideas to reduce paperwork
and reporting requirements for Whole
Farm Revenue Protection while
ensuring program integrity.
4. Specific ideas for how crop
insurance can meet the needs of
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specialty crop growers and those
involved in the local food movement.
NRCS
1. Specific ideas to simplify program
implementation and enhance customer
service.
2. Specific ideas on how NRCS can
use its programs to support precision
agriculture.
3. Mechanisms to improve the
targeting of financial resources to
address resource concerns.
4. The 2018 Farm Bill introduced a
new incentive contract enrollment
option for EQIP that provides for
practice installment and annual
payments. How should EQIP and CSP
be used in conjunction with each other
to prevent overlap and improve
opportunities for producers to address
resource concerns?
5. The 2018 Farm Bill includes EQIP
provisions for water conservation or
irrigation efficiency practices that are
available to States, irrigation districts,
groundwater management districts,
acequia, land-grant mercedes, or similar
entities under a streamlined contracting
process to implement water
conservation or irrigation practices
under a watershed-wide project that
will effectively conserve water, provide
fish and wildlife habitat, or provide for
drought-related environmental
mitigation, as determined by the
Secretary. What issues or factors should
NRCS consider when developing
procedures to implement these
provisions?
6. Both CSP and EQIP have provisions
for organic producers. How should the
programs be used to maximize service to
producers while avoiding overlap and
competition between CSP and EQIP?
7. The 2018 Farm Bill updated the
Conservation Innovation Grants
provisions to expand the list of eligible
partners and focus a portion of the
enrollment to on-farm conservation
trials pursuing new or innovative
conservation approaches. The term
‘‘new or innovative’’ is defined as
precision agriculture technologies,
enhanced nutrient management plans,
nutrient recovery systems, and
fertilization systems; water management
systems; soil health management,
including systems addressing soil
carbon levels; resource-conserving crop
rotations; cover crops; irrigation
systems; and any other conservation
approach approved by the Secretary as
new or innovative. What criteria should
NRCS use to prioritize funding
proposals defined as ‘‘new or
innovative’’ approaches?
8. The 2018 Farm Bill introduces new
authority under ACEP—Agricultural
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Land Easements in the ‘‘Buy-ProtectSell’’ provision (see section 2602 of the
2018 Farm Bill). Describe scenarios
where you anticipate having a quality
conservation easement that is legally
effective under the ‘‘Buy-Protect-Sell’’
provisions in the 2018 Farm Bill.
9. The 2018 Farm Bill modified the
requirements for the non-Federal share
provided by eligibility entities under
ACEP Agricultural Land Easements. The
Managers’ report indicates that the
program should not be limited to
entities that can provide a cash match.
Further, the Managers’ report indicates
that Congress does not intend for NRCS
to reject cash matches entirely but
broaden options available to eligible
entities. How can NRCS ensure both
equity for producers and flexibility for
entities? (See House Report 115–1072
for the Managers’ Report, at the end.)
10. For RCPP:
• What are ways to streamline
program administration and increase
transparency?
• How should NRCS prioritize
partner contributions (financial and inkind)?
• The 2018 Farm Bill encourages
NRCS and partners to move RCPP
projects toward environmental,
economic, and social outcomes-based
reporting. What are ideas for doing so?
• What are ways for NRCS to
incentivize participation of historically
underserved producers in RCPP
projects?
William Northey,
Under Secretary, Farm Production and
Conservation.
[FR Doc. 2019–02360 Filed 2–11–19; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 3410–05–P
COMMISSION ON CIVIL RIGHTS
Agenda and Notice of Public Meeting
of the Colorado Advisory Committee
Commission on Civil Rights.
Announcement of briefing
meeting.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
Notice is hereby given,
pursuant to the provisions of the rules
and regulations of the U.S. Commission
on Civil Rights (Commission), and the
Federal Advisory Committee Act
(FACA), that a briefing meeting of the
Colorado Advisory Committee to the
Commission will convene at 10:00 a.m.
(MST) on Friday, February 22, 2019 in
the Wittemeyer Court Room of the Wolf
Law Building at the University of
Boulder, 2450 Kittredge Loop Drive,
Boulder, CO 80309. The purpose of the
briefing is to examine the backlog in
SUMMARY:
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citizenship and naturalization
applications in Colorado.
DATES: Friday, February 22, 2019 (MST).
Times: 10:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m.
ADDRESSES: Wittemeyer Court Room,
Wolf Law Building, University of
Colorado Law School, 2450 Kittredge
Loop Drive, Boulder, CO 80309.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Evelyn Bohor at ebohor@usccr.gov, or
(303) 866–1040
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: If other
persons who plan to attend the meeting
require other accommodations, please
contact Evelyn Bohor at ebohor@
usccr.gov at the Rocky Mountain Office
at least ten (10) working days before the
scheduled date of the meeting.
Time will be set aside at the end of
the briefing so that members of the
public may address the Committee after
the formal presentations have been
completed. Persons interested in the
issue are also invited to submit written
comments; the comments must be
received in the regional office by Friday,
March 22, 2019. Written comments may
be mailed to the Rocky Mountain
Regional Office, U.S. Commission on
Civil Rights, 1961 Stout Street, Suite
13–201, Denver, CO 80294, faxed to
(303) 866–1040, or emailed to Evelyn
Bohor at ebohor@usccr.gov. Persons
who desire additional information may
contact the Rocky Mountain Regional
Office at (303) 866–1040.
Records and documents discussed
during the meeting will be available for
public viewing as they become available
at https://www.facadatabase.gov/FACA/
FACAPublicViewCommitteeDetails?id=
a10t0000001gzksAAA; and clicking on
the ‘‘Meeting Details’’ and ‘‘Documents’’
links. Records generated from this
meeting may also be inspected and
reproduced at the Rocky Mountain
Regional Office, as they become
available, both before and after the
meeting. Persons interested in the work
of this advisory committee are advised
to go to the Commission’s website,
www.usccr.gov, or to contact the Rocky
Mountain Regional Office at the above
phone number, email or street address.
Tentative Agenda
Friday, February 22, 2019 at 10:00 a.m.
I. Welcome and Introductions
II. Briefing
III. Open Session
IV. Adjournment
Exceptional Circumstance: Pursuant
to 41 CFR 102–3.150, the notice for this
meeting is given less than 15 calendar
days prior to the meeting because of the
exceptional circumstances of the federal
government shutdown.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 31 (Thursday, February 14, 2019)]
[Notices]
[Pages 4041-4044]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-02360]
========================================================================
Notices
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains documents other than rules
or proposed rules that are applicable to the public. Notices of hearings
and investigations, committee meetings, agency decisions and rulings,
delegations of authority, filing of petitions and applications and agency
statements of organization and functions are examples of documents
appearing in this section.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 31 / Thursday, February 14, 2019 /
Notices
[[Page 4041]]
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Farm Service Agency
Natural Resources Conservation Service
Risk Management Agency
2018 Farm Bill Implementation Listening Session
AGENCY: Farm Service Agency, Natural Resources Conservation Service,
and Risk Management Agency, USDA.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In preparing to implement the Agriculture Improvement Act of
2018 (commonly referred to as the 2018 Farm Bill), we are hosting a
listening session for initial public input about new programs and
changes to existing programs implemented by the Farm Service Agency
(FSA), the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), and the Risk
Management Agency (RMA). The 2018 Farm Bill is intended to provide
support, certainty, and stability to our Nation's farmers, ranchers,
and land stewards by enhancing farm support programs, improving crop
insurance, maintaining disaster programs, and promoting and supporting
voluntary conservation. We invite you to participate in the listening
session. The listening session is open to the public.
DATES:
Listening session: The listening session will be on February 26,
2019, and will begin at 9 a.m.
Registration: You must register by February 22, 2019, to attend the
listening session and are encouraged to provide written comments prior
to the listening session.
Comments: For those orally presenting comments at the listening
session, written comments are encouraged by February 22, 2019.
Additional written comments will be accepted through March 1, 2019.
ADDRESSES:
Listening session: The meeting will be held in the Jefferson
Auditorium of the South Building at 14th Street and Independence Ave.
SW, Washington, DC 20250. Entry to the South Building for the listening
session is through Wing 5 on Independence Ave.; valid photo
identification is required.
Registration: To register, visit https://www.farmers.gov/farmbill.
Comments: We invite you to submit comments on this notice. In your
comments, include the date, volume, and page number of this issue of
the Federal Register, and the title of notice. You may submit comments
by any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to https://www.regulations.gov and search for Docket ID USDA-2019-0001. Follow the
online instructions for submitting comments.
You may submit your written comments at the listening
session.
All written comments received will be publicly available on
www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Andrew Fisher; phone: (202) 692-5298
or email: Andrew.Fisher@osec.usda.gov. Persons with disabilities who
require alternative means for communication should contact the USDA
Target Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The listening session will provide an
opportunity for stakeholders to share their thoughts about how USDA can
streamline and improve program delivery, as well as enhance customer
service. Examples of programs FSA implements include the Agriculture
Risk Coverage (ARC) and Price Loss Coverage (PLC) programs, the Dairy
Margin Coverage (DMC) Program, the Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance
Program (NAP), the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP), and farm
ownership and operating loans. NRCS implements the Environmental
Quality Incentives Program (EQIP), the Conservation Stewardship Program
(CSP), the Agricultural Conservation Easement Program (ACEP), the
Regional Conservation Partnership Program (RCPP), and other
conservation provisions. RMA implements crop insurance coverage. We
invite you to participate in the listening session. The listening
session is open to the public.
On December 20, 2018, the 2018 Farm Bill (Pub. L. 115-334) was
signed into law (see https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/2/text). The Secretary of Agriculture and the respective
USDA agencies, including, but not limited to FSA, NRCS, and RMA, are
working to implement the provisions of the 2018 Farm Bill as
expeditiously as possible to meet the needs of producers and other
stakeholders. To allow for customer input and ensure transparency, it
is important to hear from stakeholders regarding their priorities,
concerns, and requests.
The purpose of the listening session is for FSA, NRCS, and RMA to
hear from the public; this is not a discussion with FSA, NRCS, and RMA
officials or a question and answer session. The purpose is to receive
public input that each agency can factor into discretionary decisions
that need to be made to implement the provisions of the 2018 Farm Bill.
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Date Time Location information
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February 26, 2019.................... 9 a.m.................. USDA headquarters, in the South Building,
Jefferson Auditorium, 14th Street and
Independence Ave. SW, Washington, DC 20250.
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The listening session will begin with brief opening remarks from
USDA. Individual speakers providing oral comments will be limited to 3-
5 minutes each; however, if all speakers can be accommodated within the
allotted time for the session, individual speaking times may be
adjusted at the written request of the stakeholder (use the contact
information above). As noted above, we request that speakers providing
oral comments also provide a
[[Page 4042]]
written copy of their comments by February 22, 2019. All stakeholders
and interested members of the public are welcome to register to provide
oral and written comments; however, based on the session time or topic
area constraints, USDA may not be able to allocate time for all
registered attendees to provide oral comments during the session.
The purpose of the listening session is for FSA, NRCS, and RMA to
hear from stakeholders and other interested members of the public about
the programs that are being implemented or revised by FSA, NRCS, or RMA
as required by the 2018 Farm Bill. Please refer to the name of the FSA,
NRCS, or RMA program in your comment and the relevant section number in
the 2018 Farm Bill. In your comments, provide your input about the
program(s), changes, and anything else that may be helpful to USDA. The
following list of programs span multiple sections in the 2018 Farm Bill
or have program names that may not be obvious from the section title
(see listing below for complete section-by-section names):
Revised ARC and PLC Programs (2018 Farm Bill sections
1101-1107);
Revised Marketing Assistance Loans and Loan Deficiency
Payments and the extension of the Sugar Program and the related
Feedstock Flexibility Program (2018 Farm Bill sections 1201-1205; 1301;
9009);
New DMC and Other Dairy-Related Provisions (2018 Farm Bill
section 1401);
Revised disaster assistance programs (2018 Farm Bill
sections 1501; 1601);
Common provisions for payment limitations and payment
eligibility (2018 Farm Bill sections 1703-1704);
FSA accountability, streamlining, and related provisions
(2018 Farm Bill sections 1705-1707);
Wetland conservation and mitigation banking provisions
(2018 Farm Bill sections 2101-2102);
CRP (2018 Farm Bill sections 2201-2209);
EQIP (2018 Farm Bill sections 2301-2306);
Conservation Innovation Grants and Payments (2018 Farm
Bill section 2307);
CSP (2018 Farm Bill section 2308);
Other conservation provisions, including ACEP and RCPP
(2018 Farm Bill sections 2309-2822);
Farm Loans (2018 Farm Bill sections 5101-5416);
Biomass Crop Assistance Program (2018 Farm Bill section
9010);
Crop Insurance (2018 Farm Bill sections 11101-11126);
To identify the section numbers for your comments and to find the
relevant text for FSA, NRCS, and RMA programs in the 2018 Farm Bill,
the following is an excerpt from the 2018 Farm Bill Table of Contents
that focuses on the sections for the FSA, NRCS, and RMA programs:
Title I--Commodities
Subtitle A--Commodity Policy
Sec. 1101. Definition of effective reference price.
Sec. 1102. Base acres.
Sec. 1103. Payment yields.
Sec. 1104. Payment acres.
Sec. 1105. Producer election.
Sec. 1106. Price loss coverage.
Sec. 1107. Agriculture risk coverage.
Subtitle B--Marketing Loans
Sec. 1201. Extensions.
Sec. 1202. Loan rates for nonrecourse marketing assistance loans.
Sec. 1204. Special competitive provisions for extra long staple
cotton.
Sec. 1205. Availability of recourse loans.
Subtitle C--Sugar
Sec. 1301. Sugar policy.
Subtitle D--Dairy Margin Coverage and Other Dairy Related
Provisions
Sec. 1401. Dairy margin coverage.
Sec. 1402. Reauthorizations.
Subtitle E--Supplemental Agricultural Disaster Assistance
Sec. 1501. Supplemental agricultural disaster assistance.
Subtitle F--Noninsured Crop Assistance
Sec. 1601. Noninsured crop assistance program.
Subtitle G--Administration
Sec. 1702. Suspension of permanent price support authority.
Sec. 1703. Payment limitations.
Sec. 1704. Adjusted gross income limitations.
Sec. 1705. Farm Service Agency accountability.
Sec. 1706. Implementation.
Sec. 1707. Exemption from certain reporting requirements for certain
producers.
Title II--Conservation
Subtitle A--Wetland Conservation
Sec. 2101. Wetland conversion.
Sec. 2102. Wetland conservation.
Sec. 2103. Mitigation banking.
Subtitle B--Conservation Reserve Program
Sec. 2201. Conservation reserve.
Sec. 2202. Conservation reserve enhancement program.
Sec. 2203. Farmable wetland program.
Sec. 2204. Pilot programs.
Sec. 2205. Duties of owners and operators.
Sec. 2206. Duties of the Secretary.
Sec. 2207. Payments.
Sec. 2208. Contracts.
Sec. 2209. Eligible land; State law requirements.
Subtitle C--Environmental Quality Incentives Program and
Conservation Stewardship Program
Sec. 2302. Purposes of environmental quality incentives program.
Sec. 2303. Definitions under environmental quality incentives
program.
Sec. 2304. Establishment and administration of environmental quality
incentives program.
Sec. 2305. Environmental quality incentives program plan.
Sec. 2306. Limitation on payments under environmental quality
incentives program.
Sec. 2307. Conservation innovation grants and payments.
Sec. 2308. Conservation stewardship program.
Sec. 2309. Grassland conservation initiative.
Subtitle D--Other Conservation Programs
Sec. 2401. Watershed protection and flood prevention.
Sec. 2402. Soil and water resources conservation.
Sec. 2403. Emergency conservation program.
Sec. 2404. Conservation of private grazing land.
Sec. 2405. Grassroots source water protection program.
Sec. 2406. Voluntary public access and habitat incentive program.
Sec. 2407. Wildlife management.
Sec. 2408. Feral swine eradication and control pilot program.
Sec. 2409. Report on small wetlands.
Sec. 2410. Sense of Congress relating to increased watershed-based
collaboration.
Subtitle E--Funding and Administration
Sec. 2501. Commodity Credit Corporation.
Sec. 2502. Delivery of technical assistance.
Sec. 2503. Administrative requirements for conservation programs.
Sec. 2504. Temporary administration of conservation programs.
Subtitle F--Agricultural Conservation Easement Program
Sec. 2601. Establishment and purposes.
Sec. 2602. Definitions.
Sec. 2603. Agricultural land easements.
Sec. 2604. Wetland reserve easements.
Sec. 2605. Administration.
Subtitle G--Regional Conservation Partnership Program
Sec. 2701. Establishment and purposes.
Sec. 2702. Definitions.
Sec. 2703. Regional conservation partnerships.
Sec. 2704. Assistance to producers.
Sec. 2705. Funding.
Sec. 2706. Administration.
Sec. 2707. Critical conservation areas.
Title V--Credit
Subtitle A--Farm Ownership Loans
Sec. 5101. Modification of the 3-year experience eligibility
requirement for farm ownership loans.
Sec. 5102. Conservation loan and loan guarantee program.
Sec. 5103. Limitations on amount of farm ownership loans.
[[Page 4043]]
Sec. 5104. Relending program to resolve ownership and succession on
farmland.
Subtitle B--Operating Loans
Sec. 5201. Limitations on amount of operating loans.
Sec. 5202. Microloans.
Sec. 5203. Cooperative lending pilot projects.
Subtitle C--Administrative Provisions
Sec. 5301. Beginning farmer and rancher individual development
accounts pilot program.
Sec. 5302. Loan authorization levels.
Sec. 5303. Loan fund set-asides.
Sec. 5304. Use of additional funds for direct operating microloans
under certain conditions.
Sec. 5305. Equitable relief.
Sec. 5306. Socially disadvantaged farmers and ranchers; qualified
beginning farmers and ranchers.
Sec. 5307. Emergency loan eligibility.
Subtitle D--Miscellaneous
Sec. 5402. State agricultural mediation programs.
Sec. 5403. Compensation of bank directors.
Sec. 5404. Sharing of privileged and confidential information.
Sec. 5406. Removal and prohibition authority; industry-wide
prohibition.
Sec. 5407. Jurisdiction over institution-affiliated parties.
Sec. 5408. Definition of institution-affiliated party.
Sec. 5409. Prohibition on use of funds.
Sec. 5410. Expansion of acreage exception to loan amount limitation.
Sec. 5412. Corporation as conservator or receiver; certain other
powers.
Sec. 5413. Reporting.
Sec. 5414. Study on loan risk.
Sec. 5415. GAO report on ability of the Farm Credit System to meet
the agricultural credit needs of Indian tribes and their members.
Sec. 5416. GAO report on credit service to socially disadvantaged
farmers and ranchers.
Title VIII--Forestry
Sec. 8628. Purchase of Natural Resources Conservation Service
property, Riverside County, California.
Title IX--Energy
Sec. 9009. Feedstock flexibility.
Sec. 9010. Biomass Crop Assistance Program.
Title XI--Crop Insurance
Sec. 11101. Definitions.
Sec. 11102. Data collection.
Sec. 11103. Sharing of records.
Sec. 11104. Use of resources.
Sec. 11105. Specialty crops.
Sec. 11106. Insurance period.
Sec. 11107. Cover crops.
Sec. 11108. Underserved producers.
Sec. 11109. Treatment of forage and grazing.
Sec. 11110. Administrative basic fee.
Sec. 11111. Enterprise units.
Sec. 11112. Continued authority.
Sec. 11113. Submission of policies and materials to board.
Sec. 11114. Crop production on native sod.
Sec. 11115. Use of national agricultural statistics service data to
combat waste, fraud, and abuse.
Sec. 11116. Submission of information to corporation.
Sec. 11117. Continuing education for loss adjusters and agents.
Sec. 11118. Program administration.
Sec. 11119. Agricultural commodity.
Sec. 11120. Maintenance of policies.
Sec. 11121. Reimbursement of research, development, and maintenance
costs.
Sec. 11122. Research and development authority.
Sec. 11123. Funding for research and development.
Sec. 11124. Technical amendment to pilot programs.
Sec. 11125. Education and risk management assistance.
Title XII--Miscellaneous
Subtitle A--Livestock
Sec. 12104. Definition of livestock.
Subtitle C--Historically Underserved Producers
Sec. 12303. Tribal Advisory Committee.
Sec. 12304. Beginning farmer and rancher coordination.
Sec. 12306. Availability of Department of Agriculture programs for
veteran farmers and ranchers.
Subtitle D--Department of Agriculture Reorganization Act of 1994
Amendments
Sec. 12410. Natural Resources Conservation Service.
Part I--Miscellaneous Agriculture Provisions
Sec. 12612. National agriculture imagery program.
Sec. 12615. Eligibility for operators on heirs property land to
obtain a farm number.
Sec. 12618. Data on conservation practices.
Instructions for Attending the Meeting
Space for attendance at the listening session is limited. All
persons wishing to attend the listening session must register at
https://www.farmers.gov/farmbill by February 22, 2019. To register,
information will be required, including, but not limited to:
Attendee contact information;
Company or organization representation information;
Farm Bill topic interests; and
If you would like to speak, written comments.
Upon arrival at the 5th wing of the USDA South Building, registered
persons must provide valid photo identification to enter. Please allow
extra time to get through security.
All written comments received will be publicly available on
www.regulations.gov.
If you require special accommodations, such as a sign language
interpreter, use the contact information above. The listening session
location is accessible to persons with disabilities.
FSA, RMA, and NRCS are interested in all comments, but in
particular request input on:
FSA
1. Specific ideas to simplify program implementation and enhance
customer service.
2. Producers who apply for FSA, NRCS, and RMA benefits are required
to file common eligibility forms including the CCC-902 Farm Operating
Plan, the CCC-941 Certification of Average Adjusted Gross Income, and
the AD-1026 Certification of compliance with Highly Erodible Lands and
Wetland Conservation provisions. How can FSA improve the process for
obtaining these forms from program applicants?
3. What changes to NAP requirements would improve and simplify the
process for submitting acreage reports and required records for diverse
production systems (such as urban, small-scale, and direct-to-consumer
production systems)?
4. The 2018 Farm Bill requires better coordination between FSA and
NRCS regarding CRP, EQIP, and CSP. How can we better coordinate the
programs?
5. The 2018 Farm Bill provides a new CRP pilot, the Soil Health and
Income Protection Pilot Program. What can we do to most effectively
implement this pilot? Specifically, what does the public recommend for
perennial conserving use cover?
6. Would DMC participants have an interest in a premium fee payment
option for any current year premiums (2019) to be deducted before
indemnity payments are made for 2019?
7. The 2018 Farm Bill raises the level of loan guarantees to 95
percent of the outstanding principal for socially disadvantaged and
beginning farmers. Are there other programmatic changes that FSA should
consider to enhance the level of participation by socially
disadvantaged and beginning farmers in the guaranteed loan programs?
RMA
1. Specific ideas to simplify program implementation and enhance
customer service.
2. Specific examples of how cover crop use has affected
insurability or a claim determination. If so, what adjustments to the
Cover Crop Termination Guidelines should RMA consider?
3. Specific ideas to reduce paperwork and reporting requirements
for Whole Farm Revenue Protection while ensuring program integrity.
4. Specific ideas for how crop insurance can meet the needs of
[[Page 4044]]
specialty crop growers and those involved in the local food movement.
NRCS
1. Specific ideas to simplify program implementation and enhance
customer service.
2. Specific ideas on how NRCS can use its programs to support
precision agriculture.
3. Mechanisms to improve the targeting of financial resources to
address resource concerns.
4. The 2018 Farm Bill introduced a new incentive contract
enrollment option for EQIP that provides for practice installment and
annual payments. How should EQIP and CSP be used in conjunction with
each other to prevent overlap and improve opportunities for producers
to address resource concerns?
5. The 2018 Farm Bill includes EQIP provisions for water
conservation or irrigation efficiency practices that are available to
States, irrigation districts, groundwater management districts,
acequia, land-grant mercedes, or similar entities under a streamlined
contracting process to implement water conservation or irrigation
practices under a watershed-wide project that will effectively conserve
water, provide fish and wildlife habitat, or provide for drought-
related environmental mitigation, as determined by the Secretary. What
issues or factors should NRCS consider when developing procedures to
implement these provisions?
6. Both CSP and EQIP have provisions for organic producers. How
should the programs be used to maximize service to producers while
avoiding overlap and competition between CSP and EQIP?
7. The 2018 Farm Bill updated the Conservation Innovation Grants
provisions to expand the list of eligible partners and focus a portion
of the enrollment to on-farm conservation trials pursuing new or
innovative conservation approaches. The term ``new or innovative'' is
defined as precision agriculture technologies, enhanced nutrient
management plans, nutrient recovery systems, and fertilization systems;
water management systems; soil health management, including systems
addressing soil carbon levels; resource-conserving crop rotations;
cover crops; irrigation systems; and any other conservation approach
approved by the Secretary as new or innovative. What criteria should
NRCS use to prioritize funding proposals defined as ``new or
innovative'' approaches?
8. The 2018 Farm Bill introduces new authority under ACEP--
Agricultural Land Easements in the ``Buy-Protect-Sell'' provision (see
section 2602 of the 2018 Farm Bill). Describe scenarios where you
anticipate having a quality conservation easement that is legally
effective under the ``Buy-Protect-Sell'' provisions in the 2018 Farm
Bill.
9. The 2018 Farm Bill modified the requirements for the non-Federal
share provided by eligibility entities under ACEP Agricultural Land
Easements. The Managers' report indicates that the program should not
be limited to entities that can provide a cash match. Further, the
Managers' report indicates that Congress does not intend for NRCS to
reject cash matches entirely but broaden options available to eligible
entities. How can NRCS ensure both equity for producers and flexibility
for entities? (See House Report 115-1072 for the Managers' Report, at
the end.)
10. For RCPP:
What are ways to streamline program administration and
increase transparency?
How should NRCS prioritize partner contributions
(financial and in-kind)?
The 2018 Farm Bill encourages NRCS and partners to move
RCPP projects toward environmental, economic, and social outcomes-based
reporting. What are ideas for doing so?
What are ways for NRCS to incentivize participation of
historically underserved producers in RCPP projects?
William Northey,
Under Secretary, Farm Production and Conservation.
[FR Doc. 2019-02360 Filed 2-11-19; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 3410-05-P