Pandemic Assistance Programs and Agricultural Disaster Assistance Programs, 1862-1892 [2023-00005]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 7 / Wednesday, January 11, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Office of the Secretary
7 CFR Part 9
Farm Service Agency
7 CFR Parts 701 and 760
Commodity Credit Corporation
7 CFR Parts 1400, 1416, 1437, and 1450
[Docket ID: USDA–2021–0012]
RIN 0503–AA75
Pandemic Assistance Programs and
Agricultural Disaster Assistance
Programs
Commodity Credit Corporation
(CCC), Farm Service Agency (FSA), and
Office of the Secretary, Department of
Agriculture (USDA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This rule announces Phase 2
of the Emergency Relief Program (ERP),
which provides assistance to producers
who suffered crop losses due to
wildfires, hurricanes, floods, derechos,
excessive heat, winter storms, freeze
(including a polar vortex), smoke
exposure, excessive moisture, and
qualifying droughts occurring in
calendar years 2020 and 2021. It also
announces Pandemic Assistance
Revenue Program (PARP), a new
program that provides support for
agricultural producers impacted by the
COVID–19 pandemic. In addition, this
rule makes changes to the Coronavirus
Food Assistance Program (CFAP); the
Emergency Conservation Program (ECP);
the Emergency Forest Restoration
Program (EFRP); the Emergency
Assistance for Livestock, Honeybees,
and Farm-Raised Fish Program (ELAP);
the Livestock Forage Disaster Program
(LFP); the Livestock Indemnity Program
(LIP); the Noninsured Crop Disaster
Assistance Program (NAP); and general
payment eligibility provisions. This rule
also makes a technical correction to the
Biomass Crop Assistance Program
(BCAP).
DATES:
Effective date: January 11, 2023.
Comment due date: For PARP, ECP,
and ERP, we will consider comments on
the information collection requirements
under the Paperwork Reduction Act that
we receive by March 13, 2023.
ADDRESSES: We invite you to submit
comments on the information collection
requirements. You may submit
comments by any of the following
methods:
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SUMMARY:
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• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to:
www.regulations.gov and search for
docket ID USDA–2021–0012. Follow the
online instructions for submitting
comments.
• Mail, Hand-Delivery, or Courier:
Director, Safety Net Division, FSA,
USDA, 1400 Independence Avenue SW,
Stop 0510, Washington, DC 20250–
0522. In your comment, specify the
docket ID USDA–2021–0012.
Comments will be available for
inspection online at https://
www.regulations.gov. Copies of the
information collection may be requested
by contacting Kathy Sayers or Shanita
Landon, respectively (see FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT below). You may
also send comments to the Desk Officer
for Agriculture, Office of Information
and Regulatory Affairs, Office of
Management and Budget, Washington,
DC 20503.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
CFAP, ERP, ELAP, LFP, LIP, NAP,
PARP, and PARP information collection
activity, and payment eligibility, Kathy
Sayers; telephone: (202) 720–6825;
email: kathy.sayers@usda.gov. For ECP,
EFRP, and BCAP, Shanita Landon;
telephone: (202) 690–1612; email:
shanita.landon@usda.gov. Persons with
disabilities who require alternative
means for communication should
contact the USDA Target Center at (202)
720–2600 (voice).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
This rule announces ERP Phase 2 and
PARP, a new program. In addition, this
rule amends the CFAP regulations to
provide an additional CFAP 2 payment
for underserved producers; 1 makes
clarifying changes based on previously
implemented provisions of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021
(CAA); and amends the payment
provisions for producers of swine. It
also updates provisions for and makes
technical changes to the regulations for
BCAP, ECP, ELAP, LFP, LIP, NAP, and
payment eligibility provisions of 7 CFR
part 1400, as described in this
document.
ERP Phase 2
Division B, Title I, of the Extending
Government Funding and Delivering
Emergency Assistance Act (Pub. L. 117–
43) provides $10 billion for necessary
expenses related to losses of crops
(including milk, on-farm stored
1 Throughout this document, the term
‘‘underserved farmer or rancher’’ refers to a
beginning farmer or rancher, limited resource
farmer or rancher, socially disadvantaged farmer or
rancher, or veteran farmer or rancher.
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commodities, crops prevented from
planting in 2020 and 2021, and
harvested adulterated wine grapes),
trees, bushes, and vines, as a
consequence of droughts, wildfires,
hurricanes, floods, derechos, excessive
heat, winter storms, freeze (including a
polar vortex), smoke exposure, quality
losses of crops, and excessive moisture
occurring in calendar years 2020 and
2021. FSA previously announced ERP
Phase 1 through a notice of funds
availability on May 18, 2022 (87 FR
30164–30172),2 which provided
assistance for crop, tree, bush, and vine
losses through a streamlined process
with pre-filled applications using data
already on file with FSA or the Risk
Management Agency (RMA), as a result
of the producer previously receiving a
NAP payment or a crop insurance
indemnity. This rule provides the
eligibility requirements, application
process, and payment calculations for
ERP Phase 2, which is intended to
address eligible crop losses not included
in ERP Phase 1.3 ERP Phase 2 provides
assistance for necessary expenses
related to both production and quality
losses of eligible crops. Where loss
information is not already on file with
FSA or RMA through NAP or Federal
crop insurance, and therefore included
in ERP Phase 1, FSA has determined
that the best approximation of such
losses is a producer’s decrease in gross
revenue, which will reflect losses in
both production and quality without
requiring the more extensive
calculations and documentation
required under previous programs
addressing crop losses due to disaster
events.4 Using a decrease in gross
revenue in the calculation of ERP Phase
2 payments also captures a producer’s
loss due to a qualifying disaster event
regardless of whether the loss occurs
before harvest or after harvest while the
2 A clarification to the notice of funds availability
for ERP Phase 1 was published on August 18, 2022
(87 FR 50828–50830).
3 Additional assistance authorized by the
Extending Government Funding and Delivering
Emergency Assistance Act for losses to milk and
livestock will be announced in subsequent
documents to be published in the Federal Register.
FSA previously announced Phase 1 of the
Emergency Livestock Relief Program (ELRP), which
provided payments to producers who faced
increased supplemental feed costs as a result of
forage losses due to a qualifying drought or wildfire
in calendar year 2021 on April 4, 2022 (87 FR
19465–19470).
4 Assistance for crop losses that occurred prior to
harvest due to disaster events in the 2018 and 2019
calendar years was provided through two separate
programs: the Wildfires and Hurricanes Indemnity
Program Plus (WHIP+) for production losses, and
the Quality Loss Adjustment (QLA) Program for
quality losses.
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crop is in storage, further streamlining
the delivery of assistance.
Decreases in gross revenue are
strongly correlated to crop production
and quality losses due to disaster
events. Gross revenue is essentially the
aggregation of the value of all of a
producer’s crops, and a decrease in
gross revenue in a year when a producer
suffered a loss due to a disaster event
reflects the producer’s crop losses
resulting from decreased production or
from obtaining a lower price due to a
reduction in quality for that year.
Previous FSA disaster assistance
programs have similarly been based on
a producer’s loss of value compared to
their expected value, using payment
calculations based on crop acres, price,
and yield (or inventory and price for
value loss crops) as a way to estimate
the value of a crop. While ERP Phase 2
uses a different calculation than
previous disaster assistance programs to
capture that value loss, it accounts for
crop losses in a streamlined way that
minimizes the burden on producers and
improves efficiency of application
processing by FSA county offices.
ERP Phase 2 Eligibility
To be eligible for ERP Phase 2, a
producer must have suffered a loss of an
eligible crop due in whole or in part to
a qualifying disaster event that occurred
in the 2020 or 2021 calendar year
(referred to as the ‘‘disaster year’’).
Qualifying disaster events include
wildfires, hurricanes, floods, derechos,
excessive heat, winter storms, freeze
(including a polar vortex), smoke
exposure, excessive moisture, qualifying
drought, and related conditions
occurring in calendar years 2020 and
2021. ‘‘Qualifying drought’’ means an
area within the county was rated by the
U.S. Drought Monitor as having a
drought intensity of D2 (severe drought)
for 8 consecutive weeks or D3 (extreme
drought) or higher level for any period
of time during the applicable calendar
year.
To receive a payment for ERP Phase
2, the eligible crop loss must have
resulted in a decrease of allowable gross
revenue, as described in the next section
of this document. ‘‘Eligible crop’’ for
ERP Phase 2 means a crop, including
eligible aquaculture, that is produced in
the United States as part of a farming
operation and is intended to be
commercially marketed. It excludes
crops for grazing, aquatic species that do
not meet the definition of aquaculture,
Cannabis sativa L. and any part of that
plant that does not meet the definition
of hemp, and timber.
For ERP, ‘‘producer’’ refers to a
person or legal entity who was entitled
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to a share in the eligible crop available
for marketing or would have shared had
the eligible crop been produced and
marketed. In addition, to be eligible for
ERP Phase 2, a producer must be one of
the following:
(1) Citizen of the United States;
(2) Resident alien, which for purposes
of this subpart means ‘‘lawful alien’’ as
defined in 7 CFR part 1400;
(3) Partnership organized under State
Law;
(4) Corporation, limited liability
company, or other organizational
structure organized under State law; or
(5) Indian Tribe or Tribal
organization, as defined in section 4(b)
of the Indian Self-Determination and
Education Assistance Act (25 U.S.C.
5304).
ERP Phase 2 Allowable Gross Revenue
In general, ERP Phase 2 payments are
based on the difference in allowable
gross revenue between a benchmark
year (2018 or 2019), reflective of a
typical year, as elected by the producer,
intended to represent a typical year of
revenue for the producer’s operation,
and the applicable disaster year (2020 or
2021). For the purposes of ERP Phase 2,
‘‘allowable gross revenue’’ includes
revenue from:
• Sales of eligible crops produced by
the producer, which includes sales
resulting from value added through
post-production activities (for example,
sales of jam from the processing of
strawberries) that were reportable on
IRS Schedule F;
• Sales of eligible crops a producer
purchased for resale that had a change
in characteristic due to the time held
(for example, a plant purchased at a size
of 2 inches and sold as an 18-inch plant
after 4 months), less the cost or other
basis of such eligible crops;
• The taxable amount of cooperative
distributions directly related to the sale
of the eligible crops produced by the
producer;
• Benefits under the following
agricultural programs: 2017 Wildfires
and Hurricanes Indemnity Program
(WHIP), Agriculture Risk Coverage
(ARC) and Price Loss Coverage (PLC),
Biomass Crop Assistance Program
(BCAP), Loan Deficiency Payment (LDP)
program, marketing loan gains (MLG)
under the Marketing Assistance Loan
(MAL) program, 2018 and 2019 Market
Facilitation Programs (MFP), Seafood
Trade Relief Program (STRP), and the
On-Farm Storage Loss Program;
• CCC loans, if treated as income and
reported to IRS;
• Crop insurance proceeds, minus the
amount of administrative fees and
premiums;
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• NAP payments, minus the amount
of service fees and premiums;
• ELAP payments for an aquaculture
crop;
• Payments issued through grant
agreements with FSA for losses of
eligible crops;
• Grants from the Department of
Commerce, National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration, and State
program funds providing direct
payments for the loss of eligible crops
or the loss of revenue from eligible
crops;
• Other revenue directly related to
the production of eligible crops that IRS
requires the producer to report as
income;
• For the applicable disaster year
only, ERP Phase 1 payments issued to
another person or entity for the
producer’s share of an eligible crop,
regardless of the tax year in which the
payment would be reported to IRS; 5 and
• For the benchmark year only, 2018,
2019 and 2020 WHIP+ and QLA
payments.
The allowable gross revenue will be
based on the year for which the revenue
would be reported for the purpose of
filing a tax return. Producers who file or
would be eligible to file a joint tax
return will certify their allowable gross
revenue based on what it would have
been had they filed taxes separately for
the applicable year.
If a producer decreased their
operation capacity in a disaster year, as
compared to the benchmark year, the
producer must certify to an adjusted
benchmark revenue on form FSA–521
that represents the producer’s
reasonably expected allowable gross
revenue for the disaster year prior to the
impact of the qualifying disaster event.
A producer may also certify to an
adjusted benchmark revenue on form
FSA–521 if the producer did not have
a full year of benchmark allowable gross
revenue or expanded their operation
capacity in a disaster year, compared to
their benchmark year. If requested by
FSA, producers are required to submit
documentation to support these
adjustments within 30 calendar days of
the request. The documentation to
support an adjustment due to a change
in operation capacity must show that
5 ERP Phase 1 allowed producers who received
pre-filled application forms to indicate shares in the
crop. In some cases, payment for a producer’s share
of a crop may have been issued to a different person
or entity than the producer applying for a related
revenue loss under ERP Phase 2. Applications for
ERP Phase 2 must include any ERP Phase 1
payments issued to another person or entity for the
producer’s share of an eligible crop in order to
prevent duplicate benefits being issued for the same
loss.
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the adjustment to the producer’s
benchmark revenue is due to an:
• Addition or decrease in production
capacity of the farming operation;
• Increase or decrease in the use of
existing production capacity; or
• Physical alterations that were made
to existing production capacity.
Change in production capacity does
not include crop rotation from year to
year, changes in farming practices such
as converting from conventional tillage
to no-till, or increasing the rate of
fertilizers or chemicals.
If a producer began farming in 2020
or 2021 and did not have allowable
gross revenue in a benchmark year, the
producer may certify to an adjusted
benchmark allowable gross revenue on
form FSA–521 that represents what had
been the producer’s reasonably expected
disaster year revenue prior to the impact
of the qualifying disaster event. If
requested by FSA, documentation
required to support a producer’s
certification must be provided within 30
calendar days of FSA’s request, or the
producer will be considered ineligible
for ERP Phase 2. Acceptable
documentation must be generated in the
ordinary course of business and dated
prior to the impact of the disaster event
and includes, but is not limited to:
• Financial documents such as a
business plan or cash flow statement
that demonstrate an expected level of
revenue;
• Sales contracts or purchase
agreements; and
• Documentation supporting
production capacity, use of existing
production capacity, or physical
alterations that demonstrate production
capacity.
FSA is providing an optional form,
FSA–521A, Continuation Sheet for
Emergency Relief Program (ERP)
Adjusted Revenue, to help producers
calculate their adjusted benchmark
revenue if they are certifying to an
adjustment on FSA–521.
In addition to providing their
allowable gross revenue for the
benchmark and disaster years,
producers will certify to the percentage
of their expected allowable gross
revenue from specialty and high value
crops and the percentage from other
crops for the applicable disaster year on
their application form. This information
is used in the payment calculation to
determine the amount applied to the
separate payment limitations for
specialty and high value crops and for
all other crops, as described later in this
document. The percentages certified
must be equal to the percentages that
the producer would have reasonably
expected for the disaster year if the
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qualifying disaster event had not
occurred. For ERP Phase 2 purposes,
‘‘specialty crop’’ has the same meaning
as in ERP Phase 1.6 A crop may be
considered a high value crop based on
either the crop itself, or how the crop is
marketed. High value crop includes any
eligible crop not specifically identified
as a specialty crop or listed in the
definition of ‘‘other crop’’ (that is,
cotton, peanuts, rice, feedstock, and any
crop grown with an intended use of
grain, silage, or forage), and it also
includes any eligible crop, regardless of
whether the crop is identified as a
specialty crop or listed in the definition
of ‘‘other crop,’’ if the crop is a direct
market crop, organic crop, or a crop
grown for a specific market in which
specialized products can be sold
resulting in an increased value
compared to the typical market for the
crops (for example, soybeans intended
for tofu production), as determined by
the Deputy Administrator for Farm
Programs (Deputy Administrator).
Applying for ERP Phase 2
A completed FSA–521, Emergency
Relief Program (ERP) Phase 2
Application, must be submitted to any
FSA county office by the close of
business on the date announced by the
Deputy Administrator. Applications
may be submitted in person or by mail,
email, facsimile, or other methods
announced by FSA.
Producers must also submit the
following forms if not already on file
with FSA within 60 days of the ERP
Phase 2 application deadline:
(1) Form AD–2047, Customer Data
Worksheet, for new customers or
existing customers who need to update
their customer profile;
(2) Form FSA–521A, Continuation
Sheet for Emergency Relief Program
(ERP) Adjusted Revenue, if applicable;
(3) Form CCC–860, Socially
Disadvantaged, Limited Resource,
Beginning and Veteran Farmer or
Rancher Certification, applicable for the
program year or years for which the
producer is applying for ERP; 7
6 As defined for ERP Phase 1, ‘‘specialty crops’’
means fruits, tree nuts, vegetables, culinary herbs
and spices, medicinal plants, and nursery,
floriculture, and horticulture crops. This includes
common specialty crops identified by USDA’s
Agricultural Marketing Service at https://
www.ams.usda.gov/services/grants/scbgp/specialtycrop and other crops as designated by the Deputy
Administrator for Farm Programs.
7 An individual who has filed CCC–860 certifying
their status as a socially disadvantaged, beginning,
or veteran farmer or rancher for a prior program
year is not required to submit a subsequent CCC–
860 certifying their status for a later program year
because an individual’s status as socially
disadvantaged would not change in different years,
and their certification as a beginning or veteran
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(4) Form CCC–901, Member
Information for Legal Entities, if
applicable;
(5) Form CCC–902, Farm Operating
Plan for an individual or legal entity as
provided in 7 CFR part 1400;
(6) Form FSA–510, Request for an
Exception to the $125,000 Payment
Limitation for Certain Programs,
accompanied by a certification from a
certified public accountant or attorney
as to that person or legal entity’s
certification, for a legal entity and all
members of that entity, for each
applicable program year, including the
legal entity’s members, partners, or
shareholders, as provided in 7 CFR part
1400; and
(7) Form AD–1026, Highly Erodible
Land Conservation (HELC) and Wetland
Conservation (WC) Certification, for the
ERP Phase 2 applicant and applicable
affiliates as provided in 7 CFR part 12.
If requested by FSA, the producer
must provide additional documentation
that establishes the producer’s eligibility
for ERP Phase 2. If supporting
documentation is requested, the
documentation must be submitted to
FSA within 30 calendar days from the
request or the application will be
disapproved by FSA. FSA may request
supporting documentation to verify
information provided by the producer
and the producer’s eligibility including,
but not limited to, the producer’s:
(1) Allowable gross revenue as
reported on the ERP Phase 2
application;
(2) Percentages of the expected
allowable gross revenue from specialty
and high value crops and other crops;
and
(3) Ownership share in the
agricultural commodities.
ERP Phase 2 Payment Calculation
Although producers will be able to
apply for both the 2020 and 2021
disaster years, as applicable, on one
form, ERP Phase 2 payments will be
calculated separately for each disaster
year. If a producer indicates that they
have expected revenue for both
specialty and high value crops and other
crops for a disaster year, a payment will
be calculated separately for specialty
farmer or rancher includes the relevant date needed
to determine for what program years the status
would apply. An entity that has filed CCC–860
certifying its status as a socially disadvantaged,
beginning, or veteran farmer or rancher for a prior
program year is not required to submit a subsequent
certification of its status for a later program year
unless the entity’s status has changed due to
changes in membership. Because a producer’s
status as a limited resource farmer or rancher may
change annually depending on the producer’s direct
and indirect gross farm sales, those producers must
submit CCC–860 for each applicable program year.
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and high value crops and other crops for
a disaster year.
To determine a producer’s ERP Phase
2 payment amount, FSA will calculate:
(1) The ERP factor of 70 percent 8
multiplied by the producer’s benchmark
year allowable gross revenue, adjusted
according to 7 CFR 760.1903, if
applicable, minus
(2) The producer’s disaster year
allowable gross revenue; minus
(3) The sum of the producer’s net ERP
Phase 1 payments for the 2020 program
year, if the calculation is for the 2020
disaster year, or for the 2021 and 2022 9
program years, if the calculation is for
the 2021 disaster year; minus
(4) The sum of the producer’s net
CFAP payments (excluding payments
for contract producer revenue), net 2020
WHIP+ payments, and net 2020 Quality
Loss Adjustment (QLA) Program
payments, if the calculation is for the
2020 disaster year; and
(5) Multiplied by the percentage of the
expected disaster year revenue for
specialty and high value crops or other
crops, as applicable.
ERP Phase 2 payments are subject to
the availability of funds. FSA will issue
an initial payment equal to the lesser of:
• The amount calculated as described
above; or
• A maximum initial payment of
$2,000.
If a producer has also received a
payment under ERP Phase 1, FSA will
reduce the producer’s initial ERP Phase
2 payment amount by subtracting their
ERP Phase 1 gross payment amount.10 If
total calculated payments exceed the
total funding available for ERP Phase 2,
the ERP Factor may be adjusted and the
final payment amounts will be prorated
to stay within the amount of available
funding. If there are insufficient funds,
a differential of 15 percent will be used
for underserved producers similar to
ERP Phase 1, but with a cap at the
statutory maximum of 70 percent.11 For
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8 The
Extending Government Funding and
Delivering Emergency Assistance Act provides that
the total amount of payments cannot exceed 70
percent of the loss for producers who did not obtain
federal crop insurance or NAP coverage for the crop
incurring the losses.
9 For ERP Phase 1, the program year was based
on the crop year, as defined in the applicable crop
insurance policy or NAP provisions, and 2022 was
included because a qualifying disaster event
occurring in the 2021 calendar year may have
caused a loss of a crop during the 2022 crop year.
The program year for ERP Phase 2 is based on the
disaster year (2020 or 2021) because the payment
is based on a producer’s allowable gross revenue,
which may include revenue from multiple crops.
10 If the producer’s ERP Phase 1 payment is equal
to or exceeds the producer’s initial ERP Phase 2
payment amount, the producer will not receive an
initial ERP Phase 2 payment.
11 FSA calculates payments based on a higher
payment factor for underserved farmers and
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example, if the ERP Factor is set at 50
percent, the factor used for underserved
producers will be 65 percent, but if the
factor is set at 55 percent or higher, the
factor for underserved producers will be
capped at 70 percent. An initial
payment to a producer will not be
recalculated or reduced if the total
calculated ERP Phase 2 factored
payment for that producer is less than
the initial payment amount.
If a producer receives additional
assistance through CFAP or ERP Phase
1 after a producer’s ERP Phase 2
payment is calculated, the producer’s
ERP Phase 2 payment will be
recalculated and the producer must
refund any resulting overpayment.
ERP Phase 2 Payment Limitation and
Attribution
As required by the Extending
Government Funding and Delivering
Emergency Assistance Act and
consistent with 7 CFR 760.1507, the
payment limitation for ERP is
determined by the producer’s average
adjusted gross farm income (income
from activities related to farming,
ranching, or forestry). Specifically, if the
producer’s average adjusted gross farm
income is less than 75 percent of the
producer’s average adjusted gross
income (AGI) for the 3 taxable years
preceding the most immediately
preceding complete tax year, a
producer, other than a joint venture or
general partnership, cannot receive,
directly or indirectly, more than
$125,000 in payments for specialty
crops and high value crops 12 and
$125,000 in payment for all other crops
under:
(1) ERP Phase 1 for program year 2020
and ERP Phase 2 for program year 2020,
combined; and
(2) ERP Phase 1 for program years
2021 and 2022 13 and ERP Phase 2 for
program year 2021, combined.
ranchers (or specific groups included in that term)
in several programs, such as ECP, ELAP, and the
Tree Assistance Program. FSA has also used higher
payment factors for these producers in several
recently announced programs: the Food Safety
Certification for Specialty Crops Program, the
Organic and Transitional Education and
Certification Program, ELRP Phase 1, and ERP
Phase 1. In addition, NAP provides a reduced
service fee and premium for underserved farmers
and ranchers. This approach supports the equitable
administration of FSA programs, as underserved
farmers and ranchers are more likely to lack
financial reserves and access to capital that would
allow them to cope with losses due to unexpected
events outside of their control.
12 High value crops were not defined in ERP
Phase 1; therefore, only ERP Phase 1 payments to
specialty crops, as defined in the ERP Phase 1
notice, will be counted toward the increased
payment limitation for specialty and high value
crops.
13 For ERP Phase 1, the program year was based
on the crop year, as defined in the applicable crop
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If at least 75 percent of the producer’s
average AGI is derived from farming,
ranching, or forestry related activities
and the producer provides the required
certification and documentation, as
discussed below, the producer, other
than a joint venture or general
partnership, is eligible to receive,
directly or indirectly, up to:
(1) $900,000 for specialty crops and
high value crops combined for:
(i) ERP Phase 1 for program year 2020
and ERP Phase 2 for program year 2020,
combined; and
(ii) ERP Phase 1 for program years
2021 and 2022 and ERP Phase 2 for
program year 2021, combined; and
(2) $250,000 for all other crops for:
(i) ERP Phase 1 for program year 2020
and ERP Phase 2 for program year 2020,
combined; and
(ii) ERP Phase 1 for program years
2021 and 2022 and ERP Phase 2 for
program year 2021, combined.
The relevant tax years for establishing
a producer’s AGI and percentage
derived from farming, ranching, or
forestry related activities are:
(1) 2016, 2017, and 2018 for program
year 2020; and
(2) 2017, 2018, and 2019 for program
year 2021.
To receive more than $125,000 in ERP
payments, producers must submit form
FSA–510, accompanied by a
certification from a certified public
accountant or attorney as to that person
or legal entity’s certified AGI. If a
producer requesting the increased
payment limitation is a legal entity, all
members of that entity must also
complete form FSA–510 and provide
the required certification according to
the direct attribution provisions in 7
CFR 1400.105, ‘‘Attribution of
Payments.’’ If a legal entity would be
eligible for the increased payment
limitation based on the legal entity’s
average AGI derived from farming,
ranching, or forestry related activities
but a member of that legal entity either
does not complete a form FSA–510 and
provide the required certification or is
not eligible for the increased payment
limitation, the payment to the legal
entity will be reduced for the limitation
applicable to the share of the ERP Phase
2 payment attributed to that member.
If a producer files form FSA–510 and
the accompanying certification after
their ERP Phase 2 payment is issued but
insurance policy or NAP provisions, and 2022 was
included because a qualifying disaster event
occurring in the 2021 calendar year may have
caused a loss of a crop during the 2022 crop year.
The program year for ERP Phase 2 is based on the
disaster year (2020 or 2021) because the payment
is based on a producer’s allowable gross revenue,
which may include revenue from multiple crops.
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before the deadline announced by FSA,
FSA will process the form FSA–510 and
issue the additional payment amount if
a maximum initial payment amount has
not been reached.
A payment made to a legal entity will
be attributed to those members who
have a direct or indirect ownership
interest in the legal entity, unless the
payment of the legal entity has been
reduced by the proportionate ownership
interest of the member due to that
member’s ineligibility. Attribution of
payments made to legal entities will be
tracked through four levels of
ownership in legal entities as described
in § 760.1906.
Like other programs administered by
FSA, payments made to an Indian Tribe
or Tribal organization, as defined in
section 4(b) of the Indian SelfDetermination and Education
Assistance Act (25 U.S.C. 5304), will not
be subject to payment limitation.
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ERP Phase 2 Miscellaneous Provisions
If an ERP Phase 2 payment resulted
from erroneous information provided by
a producer, or any person acting on
their behalf, the payment will be
recalculated and the producer must
refund any excess payment with interest
calculated from the date of the
disbursement of the payment. If FSA
determines that the producer
intentionally misrepresented
information provided on the producer’s
application, the application will be
disapproved and the producer must
refund the full amount of any payments
to FSA with interest from the date of
disbursement.
ERP Phase 2 Requirement To Purchase
Crop Insurance or NAP Coverage
All producers who receive ERP Phase
2 payments are statutorily required to
purchase federal crop insurance, or NAP
coverage where crop insurance is not
available, for the next 2 available crop
years (Pub. L. 117–43, 135 STAT. 357)
as described in this section and as
determined by the Secretary. To identify
which crops suffered losses that
resulted in a revenue loss due to a
qualifying disaster event, producers
must complete form FSA–522, Crop
Insurance and/or NAP Coverage
Agreement. For each of those crops, a
producer must file an acreage report and
obtain federal crop insurance or NAP, as
may be applicable:
(1) At a coverage level equal to or
greater than 60 percent for insurable
crops; or
(2) At the catastrophic level or higher
for NAP crops.
The timing for the requirement to
purchase federal crop insurance or NAP
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for the next 2 available crop years will
be determined from the date a producer
receives an ERP payment and may vary
depending on the timing and
availability of crop insurance or NAP for
a producer’s particular crops. The final
crop year to purchase crop insurance or
NAP coverage to meet the second year
of coverage for this requirement is the
2026 crop year.
In situations where federal crop
insurance is unavailable for a crop, a
producer must obtain NAP coverage.
Section 1001D of the Food Security Act
of 1985 (1985 Farm Bill) provides that
a person or entity with an AGI greater
than $900,000 is not eligible to
participate in NAP; however, producers
with an AGI greater than $900,000 are
eligible for ERP. To reconcile this
restriction in the 1985 Farm Bill and the
requirement to obtain NAP or crop
insurance coverage, a producer may
meet the purchase requirement by
purchasing Whole-Farm Revenue
Protection (WFRP) crop insurance
coverage, if eligible, or they may pay the
applicable NAP service fee despite their
ineligibility for a NAP payment. In other
words, the service fee must be paid even
though no NAP payment may be made
because the AGI of the person or entity
exceeds the 1985 Farm Bill limitation.
If both federal crop insurance and
NAP coverage are unavailable for a crop,
the producer must obtain WFRP crop
insurance coverage, if eligible.
For all crops listed on form FSA–522,
any producer who has the crop or crop
acreage in subsequent years and who
fails to obtain the 2 years of crop
insurance or NAP coverage required as
specified in this document, must refund
the full amount of any ERP Phase 2
payments with interest from the date of
disbursement. Any producer who does
not plant a crop listed on form FSA–522
in a year for which this requirement
applies is not subject to the crop
insurance or NAP purchase requirement
for the crop for that year.
Producers who received an ERP Phase
1 payment for a crop are not required to
obtain additional years of crop
insurance or NAP coverage for that crop,
to the extent the producer is already
complying with the requirement in
connection with an ERP Phase 1
payment, if they also receive an ERP
Phase 2 payment for a loss associated
with that crop.
PARP
Secretary Tom Vilsack announced the
USDA Pandemic Assistance for
Producers initiative on March 24, 2021.
Through that initiative, USDA is
reaching a broader set of producers than
in previous COVID–19 assistance
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programs, with a specific focus on
strengthening outreach to underserved
producers and communities and small
and medium agricultural operations.
PARP, a new program administered by
FSA, is part of that initiative.
PARP will use funding authorized by
the Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2021 (CAA; Pub. L. 116–260), which
provides funding to prevent, prepare
for, and respond to the COVID–19
pandemic by providing support for
agricultural producers, growers, and
processors impacted by coronavirus.
This rule establishes PARP to respond
to the COVID–19 pandemic by
providing support for eligible producers
of agricultural commodities who
suffered an eligible revenue loss in
calendar year 2020 due to the COVID–
19 pandemic. PARP is intended to
provide assistance to a wide variety of
agricultural producers, including those
who produced agricultural commodities
that were not eligible for CFAP 1 and 2
(7 CFR part 9).
For PARP, ‘‘producer’’ refers to a
person or legal entity (including a
general partnership or joint venture)
who was in the business of farming to
produce an agricultural commodity in
calendar year 2020, and who was
entitled to a share in the agricultural
commodity available for marketing or
would have shared had the agricultural
commodity been produced and
marketed. ‘‘Producer’’ also includes
cattle feeder operations, which were not
eligible for CFAP 1 and CFAP 2. To be
eligible for PARP, a producer must:
• Have been in the business of
farming during at least part of the 2020
calendar year; and
• Have had at least a 15 percent
decrease in ‘‘allowable gross revenue’’ 14
for the 2020 calendar year, as compared
to:
Æ The 2018 or 2019 calendar year
(similar to the benchmark year for ERP
Phase 2), reflective of a typical year, as
elected by the producer, if they received
allowable gross revenue during the 2018
or 2019 calendar years; or
Æ The producer’s expected 2020
allowable gross revenue, if the producer
had no allowable gross revenue in 2018
and 2019.15
In addition, to be eligible for PARP, a
producer must be one of the following:
14 ‘‘Allowable gross revenue’’ is explained later in
this section of this document.
15 PARP provides assistance to participants
whose allowable gross revenue for the 2020
calendar year was at or below 85 percent of the
‘‘benchmark’’ allowable gross revenue. This uses
the same maximum level of coverage available
under RMA’s Whole Farm Revenue Program
(WFRP), coverage that requires 15 percent or more
decrease in revenue to trigger a payment.
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• A citizen of the United States;
• A resident alien, which for
purposes of this subpart means ‘‘lawful
alien’’ as defined in 7 CFR part 1400;
• A partnership organized under
State Law;
• A corporation, limited liability
company, or other organizational
structure organized under State law;
• An Indian Tribe or Tribal
organization, as defined in section 4(b)
of the Indian Self-Determination and
Education Assistance Act (25 U.S.C.
5304); or
• A foreign person or foreign entity
who meets all requirements as described
in 7 CFR part 1400.
For PARP, ‘‘agricultural commodity’’
means a crop, aquaculture, livestock,
livestock byproduct, or other animal or
animal byproduct that is produced as
part of a farming operation and is
intended to be commercially marketed.
It includes only commodities produced
in the United States, and commodities
produced outside the United States by
a producer located in the United States
and marketed inside the United States.
It excludes:
• Wild free-roaming animals;
• Horses and other animals used or
intended to be used for racing or
wagering;
• Aquatic species that do not meet
the definition of aquaculture;
• Cannabis sativa L. and any part of
that plant that does not meet the
definition of hemp; and
• Timber.
As provided in § 9.304, allowable
gross revenue for PARP includes
revenue from:
• Sales of agricultural commodities
produced by the producer, including the
sales resulting from value added
through post-production activities (for
example, sales of jam from the
processing of strawberries);
• Sales of agricultural commodities a
producer purchased for resale, less the
cost or other basis of such commodities;
• The taxable amount of cooperative
distributions directly related to the sale
of the agricultural commodities
produced by the producer;
• Benefits under certain federal
agricultural programs and disaster
programs (excluding conservation
programs, CFAP 1 and 2, 2020 program
year ERP, the Pandemic Livestock
Indemnity Program (PLIP), and the Spot
Market Hog Pandemic Program
(SMHPP));
• CCC loans, if treated as income and
reported to IRS;
• Crop insurance proceeds;
• Payments issued through grant
agreements with FSA for losses of
agricultural commodities;
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• Grants from the Department of
Commerce, National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration and State
program funds providing direct
payments for the loss of agricultural
commodities or the loss of revenue from
agricultural commodities;
• Revenue from raised breeding
livestock;
• Revenue earned as a cattle feeder
operation;
• Other revenue directly related to
the production of agricultural
commodities that IRS requires the
producer to report as income; and
• For 2020 allowable gross revenue,
payments under the Pandemic Market
Volatility Assistance Program regardless
of the calendar year in which the
payment was received.
An optional worksheet is available to
assist producer’s in computing their
revenue from the sources listed above.
Producers who file or would be eligible
to file a joint tax return will certify their
revenue based on what their revenue
would have been had they filed taxes
separately for the applicable year.
Revenue earned as a contract producer
of an agricultural commodity is not
included in allowable revenue for
PARP.
If a producer did not have a full year
of revenue for 2018 or 2019 or
physically expanded their operation in
2020, the producer may certify to an
adjusted 2018 or 2019 allowable gross
revenue on form FSA–1122A. Producers
must provide documentation to support
the adjusted amount within 30 calendar
days of submitting their PARP
application. The documentation must
show that the producer added
production capacity to the farming
operation, increased the use of existing
production capacity, or made physical
alterations to existing production
capacity that would have resulted in
increased revenue in 2020. Increases in
production capacity do not include crop
rotation from year to year, changes in
farming practices such as converting
from conventional tillage to no-till, or
increasing the rate of fertilizers or
chemicals.
If a producer did not have allowable
gross revenue in 2018 and 2019 but was
in the business of farming in 2020, the
producer must certify on form FSA–
1122A as to what had been their
reasonably expected 2020 allowable
gross revenue prior to the impact of the
COVID–19 pandemic. Producers must
provide documentation to support their
expected 2020 allowable gross revenue
within 30 days of submitting their PARP
application. Acceptable documentation
must be generated in the ordinary
course of business and dated prior to the
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impact of the COVID–19 pandemic and
includes, but is not limited to, financial
documents such as a business plan or
cash flow statement that demonstrates
an expected level of revenue; sales
contracts or purchase agreements; and
documentation supporting production
capacity, use of existing production
capacity, or physical alterations that
demonstrate production capacity.
PARP Application Process
FSA will accept PARP applications
until the date announced by the Deputy
Administrator. To apply for PARP,
producers must submit a complete
FSA–1122, Pandemic Assistance
Revenue Program Application, in
person, by mail, email, facsimile, or
other method announced by FSA to any
FSA county office.16 Applicants must
also submit all of the following items, if
not previously filed with FSA:
• Form AD–2047, Customer Data
Worksheet, for new customers or
existing customers who need to update
their customer profile;
• Form CCC–860, Socially
Disadvantaged, Limited Resource,
Beginning and Veteran Farmer or
Rancher Certification, applicable for the
2020 program year, if the applicant is an
underserved farmer or rancher; 17
• Form CCC–901, Member
Information for Legal Entities, if
applicable;
• Form CCC–902, Farm Operating
Plan for an individual or legal entity as
provided in 7 CFR part 1400;
• Form CCC–941, Average Adjusted
Gross Income (AGI) Certification and
Consent to Disclosure of Tax
Information, for the 2020 program year
for the producer, including the legal
entity’s members, partners,
shareholders, heirs, or beneficiaries as
provided in 7 CFR part 1400;
• Form FSA–1123, Certification of
2020 Adjusted Gross Income, if
applicable;
• Form FSA–1122A, Pandemic
Assistance Revenue Program (PARP)
Application, if applicable;
• Form AD–1026, Highly Erodible
Land Conservation (HELC) and Wetland
Conservation (WC) Certification, for the
16 The FSA county office locator can be found
through the ‘‘Find Your Local Service Center’’
section on: https://www.farmers.gov/.
17 For PARP, socially disadvantaged groups
include the following: American Indians or Alaskan
Natives, Asians or Asian-Americans, Blacks or
African Americans, Hispanics or Hispanic
Americans, Native Hawaiians or other Pacific
Islanders, and women. Form CCC–860 is not
required for underserved farmers and ranchers to
receive a payment; however, failure to submit form
CCC–860 will result in an producer’s payment
being calculated using a lower payment factor.
Also, see footnote 7.
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PARP applicant and applicable affiliates
as provided in 7 CFR part 12.
The required eligibility forms
specified above must be submitted no
later than 60 days from the PARP
application deadline. When the
producer does not timely submit the
required eligibility forms, or when a
member of a legal entity who is required
to submit AD–1026 has not done so,
FSA will not issue a payment to the
producer. When any other required
eligibility forms are not timely
submitted for a member of a legal entity,
FSA will reduce the payment based on
that member’s ownership share of the
legal entity.
In addition, producers must provide
documentation within 30 calendar days
of submitting the FSA–1122, if
applicable, to verify:
• The producer’s certified expected
2020 allowable gross revenue; and
• The physical expansion of a
producer’s operation in 2020.
If requested by FSA, the producer
must provide additional documentation
that establishes the producer’s eligibility
for PARP. If any supporting
documentation is requested, the
documentation must be submitted to
FSA within 30 days from the request or
the application will be disapproved by
FSA.
PARP Payment Calculation
The PARP payment calculation is
based on the difference in a producer’s
revenue compared to a prior
‘‘benchmark’’ year. Producers who had
allowable gross revenue in 2018 or 2019
will elect which of those years is most
reflective of a typical year to use as a
benchmark for the purposes of
calculating a PARP payment. FSA will
determine the result of the producer’s
2018 or 2019 allowable gross revenue,
minus the producer’s 2020 allowable
gross revenue, multiplied by a payment
factor. The adjusted 2018 or 2019
allowable gross revenue, as described
above, will be used for producers who
did not have a full year of revenue for
2019 or increased their operation size in
2020. The payment factor will be 90
percent for underserved farmers and
ranchers who have filed CCC–860
certifying their status for the 2020
program year.18 The payment rate for all
other producers will be 80 percent. The
PARP payment will be equal to the
result of that calculation minus any
2020 program year ERP payments and
pandemic assistance received by the
producer under CFAP 1 and 2 (not
including any CFAP 2 payments for
contract producer revenue), PLIP, and
18 See
footnotes 7 and 11.
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SMHPP. If a producer receives
assistance through any of those
programs after their PARP payment is
calculated, their PARP payment will be
recalculated and the producer must
refund any resulting overpayment to
FSA.
If a producer was in the business of
farming in 2020 but did not have
allowable gross revenue in 2018 and
2019, then the payment calculation will
be equal to the producer’s expected
2020 allowable gross revenue minus the
producer’s actual 2020 allowable gross
revenue, multiplied by a payment factor
of 90 percent for underserved farmers
and ranchers who have filed the form
CCC–860, or 80 percent for all other
producers. As described above, the
PARP payment will be equal to the
result of that calculation minus any
assistance received by the producer
under CFAP 1 and 2 (not including any
CFAP 2 payments for contract producer
revenue), 2020 program year ERP, PLIP,
and SMHPP, and the PARP payment
will be recalculated if the producer
receives additional payments under
those programs. Those producers must
provide documentation to support their
certification of their expected 2020
allowable gross revenue within 30 days
of submitting their PARP application or
they will be ineligible for payment.
PARP payments will be issued after
the application period ends. PARP
payments are subject to the availability
of funds and may be factored if total
calculated payments exceed the
available funding. PARP payments are
not subject to offset.
PARP Payment Limitation, Average
AGI Limitation, and Attribution
PARP payments are subject to a per
person or legal entity payment
limitation of $125,000. USDA may
establish a lower maximum payment
amount per person, legal entity, or
member of a joint venture or general
partnership after the application period
has ended if calculated payment
amounts exceed available funding.
Similar to the manner in which
payment limitations are applied in the
major commodity and disaster
assistance programs administered by
FSA, payments will be attributed to an
individual through the direct attribution
process used in those programs. The
total payment amount of PARP
payments attributed to an individual
will be determined by taking into
account the direct and indirect
ownership interests of the individual in
all legal entities participating in PARP.
A producer, other than a joint venture
or general partnership, is ineligible for
payments if the producer’s average AGI,
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using the average of the adjusted gross
incomes for the 2016, 2017, and 2018
tax years, is more than $900,000, unless
the producer’s AGI for 2020 is $900,000
or less. To be eligible for payment, a
producer whose average AGI for 2016,
2017, and 2018 exceeds $900,000 but
whose 2020 AGI is $900,000 or less
must submit form FSA–1123 and
provide a certification from a licensed
CPA or attorney affirming the
producer’s 2020 AGI is not more than
$900,000. With respect to joint ventures
and general partnerships, this AGI
provision will be applied to each
member of the joint venture and general
partnership.
To be eligible for payment and
facilitate administration of payment
limitation, payment attribution, AGI,
and rules applicable to foreign persons,
producers that are a legal entity must
provide the names, addresses, valid
taxpayer identification numbers, and
ownership share of each person or each
legal entity that holds or acquires a
direct or indirect ownership interest in
the legal entity. Payments to a legal
entity will be reduced in proportion to
a member’s ownership share in cases
where a person or legal entity holds less
than a 10 percent direct or indirect
ownership interest and fails to provide
a taxpayer identification number to
USDA.
PARP General Requirements
General requirements that apply to
other FSA-administered commodity
programs also apply to PARP, including
compliance with the provisions of 7
CFR part 12, ‘‘Highly Erodible Land and
Wetland Conservation.’’
The regulations in 7 CFR part 1400,
subpart E, are applicable to foreign
persons and legal entities containing
members, stockholders, or partners who
are not U.S. citizens or resident aliens
that own more than 10 percent of the
legal entity. In order for a foreign person
to receive a PARP payment, the person
must provide land, capital, and a
substantial amount of active personal
labor to the farming operation, as
required by § 1400.401(a), and comply
with the other requirements of subpart
E.
Additionally, United States Federal,
State, and local governments (including
public schools) are not eligible for PARP
payments.
Appeal regulations specified in 7 CFR
parts 11 and 780 and equitable relief
and finality provisions in 7 CFR part
718, subpart D, apply to determinations
under PARP. The determination of
matters of general applicability that are
not in response to, or result from, an
individual set of facts in an individual
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producer’s application for payment are
not matters that can be appealed. Such
matters of general applicability include,
but are not limited to, eligibility criteria,
the payment calculation, and payment
rates.
In the event that any application for
a PARP payment resulted from
erroneous information reported by the
producer, the payment will be
recalculated, and the producer must
refund any excess payment to USDA,
including interest to be calculated from
the date of the disbursement to the
producer. If FSA determines that the
producer intentionally misrepresented
information provided on their
application, the application will be
disapproved and the producer must
refund the full payment to FSA with
interest from the date of disbursement.
Any required refunds must be resolved
in accordance with debt settlement
regulations in 7 CFR part 3.
CFAP
USDA established CFAP to assist
producers of agricultural commodities
marketed in 2020 who faced continuing
market disruptions, reduced farm-level
prices, and increased production and
marketing costs due to COVID–19 under
authority provided by the Coronavirus
Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act
(CARES Act; Pub. L. 116–136) and
sections 5(b), (d), and (e) of the CCC
Charter Act (15 U.S.C. 714c(b), (d), and
(e)). USDA implemented CFAP through
two rounds of payments (CFAP 1 and
CFAP 2), administered by FSA. CFAP 1
was implemented through a final rule
published in the Federal Register on
May 21, 2020 (85 FR 30825–30835),
with corrections published in the
Federal Register on June 12, 2020 (85
FR 35799–35800), July 10, 2020 (85 FR
41328–41330), August 14, 2020 (85 FR
49593–49594), and September 21, 2020
(85 FR 59174–59175), and documents
published in the Federal Register on
May 22, 2020 (85 FR 31062–31065),
June 12, 2020 (85 FR 35812), July 10,
2020 (85 FR 41321–41323), and August
14, 2020 (85 FR 49589–49593). USDA
implemented CFAP 2 through a final
rule published in the Federal Register
on September 22, 2020 (85 FR 59380–
59388). USDA also published a final
rule in the Federal Register on January
19, 2021 (86 FR 4877–4883), to provide
additional assistance for certain
commodities under CFAP 1 and CFAP
2, but suspended implementation of that
rule on January 20, 2021, to allow
further evaluation of the assistance
offered through CFAP. A final rule
published on August 27, 2021 (86 FR
48013–48018), revised the CFAP 2
application deadline, amended
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provisions for contract producers, and
allowed producers of sales-based
commodities to use 2018 sales for their
payment calculation.
FSA is issuing an additional CFAP 2
payment to underserved farmers and
ranchers.19 These payments will be
issued under the same authority as the
producers’ previous CFAP 2 payments,
using CCC funds as authorized by
sections 5(b), (d), and (e) of the CCC
Charter Act (15 U.S.C. 714c(b), (d), and
(e)), except for payments for tobacco
which will use remaining funds
authorized by the CARES Act. As
provided in § 9.203(p), the additional
payment will be equal to 15 percent of
a producer’s previous CFAP 2 payment,
subject to CFAP 2 payment limitation
provisions in § 9.7.20 Contract producers
are not eligible for this additional
payment because CFAP 2 payments to
contract producers were authorized and
funded through the CAA, which
specified that those payments could
‘‘cover not more than 80 percent of
revenue losses.’’ Previous CFAP 2
payments to contract producers were
already calculated to have covered 80
percent of contract producers’ revenue
losses.
As specified in § 9.4(e), CCC–860,
Socially Disadvantaged, Limited
Resource, Beginning and Veteran
Farmer or Rancher Certification, must
be on file with FSA with a certification
applicable for the 2020 program year to
receive the additional payment.21
Producers who have not previously
certified to their status for the 2020
program year may submit CCC–860
until the date announced by the Deputy
Administrator to be eligible for the
additional payment.
The final rule published on January
19, 2021, included a provision for an
additional CFAP 1 payment for hog and
pig inventory owned between April 16,
2020, and May 14, 2020, based on a rate
of $17 per head. USDA suspended
implementation of that provision and,
after further review, USDA has
determined that it will not issue the
additional CFAP 1 payment for hog and
pig inventory. To provide assistance to
19 See
footnote 11.
additional CFAP payment is similar to
FSA’s administration of ELRP Phase 1 and ERP
Phase 1, which provided a 15 percent increase for
payments to underserved producers and Congress
has directed for underserved producers in some
permanent disaster programs a 15 percent higher
payment rate (Emergency Livestock Assistance
Program or Emergency Conservation Program).
Consistent with those programs, 15 percent has
been determined as the increased rate for
underserved producers.
21 See footnote 7 for an explanation of how long
an underserved producer’s certification remains
valid and the requirement to file CCC–860 in
subsequent years.
20 This
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1869
hog producers, FSA implemented the
Spot Market Hog Pandemic Program
(SMHPP), which provided targeted
assistance to producers who sold hogs
through a spot market sale from April
16, 2020, through September 1, 2020,
the period in which those producers
faced the greatest reduction in market
prices due to the COVID–19 pandemic.
Producers of hogs and pigs may also be
eligible for PARP as previously
discussed in this rule if they suffered an
eligible revenue loss in 2020.
FSA previously implemented
mandatory provisions of CAA that
provide additional assistance for
producers of cattle, price trigger crops,
and flat-rate crops. Cattle payments are
based on inventory owned between
April 16, 2020, to May 14, 2020, based
on a producer’s previously filed CFAP
1 application, multiplied by the
following payment rates per head:
$14.75 for slaughter cattle—mature
cattle, $63 for slaughter cattle—fed
cattle, $7 for feeder cattle less than 600
pounds, $25.50 for feeder cattle 600
pounds or more, and $17.25 for all other
cattle. Payments for flat-rate and pricetrigger crops, as defined in § 9.201, are
equal to the eligible acres of the crop
included on a producer’s CFAP 2
application, multiplied by a payment
rate of $20 per eligible acre. This rule
amends the payment calculations for
cattle in § 9.102(c), price trigger crops in
§ 9.203(a), and flat-rate crops in
§ 9.203(b) for consistency with CAA to
reflect these additional payments. FSA
already issued these payments and
producers were not required to take any
additional action to qualify. These
payments were subject to existing CFAP
payment limitations and eligibility
requirements.
This rule amends the general CFAP
provisions to clarify how FSA will
handle applications when the taxpayer
identification number for a person or
legal entity that holds a direct or
indirect ownership interest in a
business structure is not provided to
USDA. To receive a CFAP payment, a
person or legal entity must provide their
name, address, and taxpayer
identification number to USDA. In
addition, consistent with most other
FSA programs, a legal entity must
provide the name, taxpayer
identification number, address and
ownership share of each person or legal
entity that holds or acquires a direct or
indirect ownership interest in the legal
entity; however, the previous CFAP
rules did not specify how the failure to
provide such information would affect
the producer’s payment eligibility.
Previously, FSA had implemented this
requirement by determining that the
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producer was ineligible for payment.
Rather than determining the producer
ineligible for payment, in cases where a
person or legal entity holding less than
10 percent direct or indirect ownership
interest does not submit a taxpayer
identification number, FSA will reduce
the producer’s payment in proportion to
a member’s ownership share when the
taxpayer identification number for a
person or legal entity that holds a direct
or indirect ownership interest of less
than 10 percent at, or above, the fourth
level of ownership in the business
structure is not provided to USDA as
provided in § 9.7(i). Additionally, a
legal entity will not be eligible to
receive payment when a valid taxpayer
identification number for a person or
legal entity that holds a direct or
indirect ownership interest of 10
percent or greater at, or above the fourth
level of ownership in the business
structure is not provided to USDA as
provided in § 9.7(i). USDA is making
this change because many farm
operations suffered sales losses and had
increased marketing costs in 2020 due
to the COVID–19 pandemic, and the
ability to receive a partial CFAP
payment will assist those operations in
managing those losses and costs. USDA
is not reopening the CFAP application
period; this change only affects how
FSA will process CFAP applications
currently on file.
This rule also updates references
throughout 7 CFR part 9, subparts A
through C, to refer specifically to those
subparts rather than part 9 due to the
addition of subpart D for PARP.
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ECP, EFRP, and BCAP
The Agricultural Credit Act of 1978
(16 U.S.C. 2201), amended by section
2403 of the Agriculture Improvement
Act of 2018 (Pub. L. 115–334),
authorizes ECP, and generally
authorizes payments to farmers and
ranchers to rehabilitate farmland
damaged by certain natural disasters
and to implement emergency water
conservation measures in periods of
severe drought. The ECP regulations are
in 7 CFR part 701, subpart B.
Prior to this rule, land owned or
controlled by the United States or
States, including State agencies or other
political subdivisions, was specified in
the regulation as ineligible for cost
share. This rule amends the general ECP
provision at § 701.105 to allow
eligibility of that land under certain
conditions. The intent of this change is
to allow producers who lease Federal
and State land the opportunity to
participate in ECP. This is consistent
with the previous operational policy,
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which allowed payments as specified in
the FSA Handbook 1–ECP.22
This rule also corrects a typographical
error in a section number to redesignate
§ 718.128 to be § 701.128. Prior to this
rule, the ECP regulation authorized
advance payment only for fence repair
or replacement. This rule further
amends § 701.128 to allow advance
payments for all ECP practices.
Consistent with the authorization for
fence repair or replacement, ECP will
provide advance payments of up to 25
percent of the cost for all ECP practices
before the restoration is carried out. In
the event this cost share assistance is
not spent within 60 calendar days of
being issued, the participant will be
required to refund the advance costshare payment. To reflect these changes,
we are revising the section heading of
§ 701.128 to ‘‘Advance Payment.’’
Additionally, this rule clarifies the
duplicate benefits provisions in
§ 701.111. The language was modified to
further define parameters surrounding
restoration activities being performed on
the same piece of land. This will ensure
that other Federal program-related
benefits do not cover the same or similar
expenses so as to create duplicative
payments on the same piece of land and
that any other Federal cost-share
payments would not result in paying
more than is authorized for ECP.
This rule also makes minor technical
amendments to the existing ECP and
EFRP regulations. Specifically, this rule:
• Adds the definition of ‘‘Socially
disadvantaged farmer or rancher’’ and,
within that definition, defines ‘‘Socially
disadvantaged group’’ in § 701.2 to be
consistent with the definition (7 U.S.C.
2279(a)) used in its authorizing
legislation instead of defaulting to using
the definition in § 718.2 and makes the
same technical correction in § 1450.2 for
the BCAP regulation;
• Removes outdated provisions,
specifically removing: 7 CFR 701.44,
701.45, and 701.150 through 701.157;
• Adds the definition for
‘‘Forestland,’’ removes the definition of
‘‘Commercial forestland,’’ and corrects
the definition of ‘‘Non-industrial private
forestland’’ to remove the words
‘‘commercial forest’’ in § 701.102.
• Recognizes Public Law 117–180,
the Continuing Appropriations and
Ukraine Supplemental Appropriations
Act, 2023, Division G, section
104(k)(3)(A) authorizing 100 percent
Federal assistance for the cost of
damages to producers associated with
the ‘‘Hermit’s Peak/Calf Canyon’’ Fire.
This rule is amending the regulations in
22 See https://www.fsa.usda.gov/internet/FSA_
File/1-ecp_r06_a01.pdf.
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7 CFR 701.126, 701.127, and 701.226 to
authorize the Secretary to waive the
maximum limitations to the maximum
extent otherwise allowed by law.
Supplemental Agricultural Disaster
Assistance Programs
This rule makes discretionary changes
to ELAP, LFP, and LIP to amend what
is considered eligible livestock.
Previously, livestock that were
maintained for pleasure, roping, pets, or
show were ineligible under ELAP, LFP,
and LIP. This rule removes those
restrictions in §§ 1416.104, 1416.204,
and 1416.304 because FSA recognizes
that animals maintained in a
commercial operation for those
purposes have value and could be
available for marketing from the farm. In
addition, FSA is clarifying that horses
and other animals used or intended to
be used for racing or wagering are
considered ineligible livestock for
ELAP, LFP, and LIP.
This rule also amends §§ 1416.104
and 1416.204 to remove the restriction
on ostrich eligibility for LFP and ELAP.
FSA is making this change because
ostriches satisfy more than 50 percent of
their net energy requirement through
the consumption of growing forage
grasses and legumes; therefore, they are
considered ‘‘grazing animals,’’ as
defined in §§ 1416.102 and 1416.202,
for the purpose of LFP and ELAP. This
change is effective for the 2022 program
year for both LFP and ELAP. ELAP
requires a notice of loss to be filed
within 30 days of when the loss is first
apparent. Because that deadline may
have passed for producers’ 2022 losses
related to ostriches that occurred prior
to publication of this rule, FSA is
extending the deadline for those notices
of loss through February 10, 2023.
This rule removes and reserves
§ 1416.5, which provides policy related
to equitable relief determinations under
ELAP, LFP, LIP, and the Tree Assistance
Program (TAP). These programs are
already subject to the general equitable
relief provisions in 7 CFR part 718,
subpart C; therefore, the provisions in
§ 1416.5 are unnecessary. Equitable
relief for these programs will be
administered in a manner that is
consistent with other FSA programs to
which part 718 applies. This rule also
makes minor clarifications and
technical corrections to the definition of
‘‘eligible loss condition’’ in § 1416.102
and to §§ 1416.103(a), 1416.103(d)(6),
1416.304(c)(3), 1416.305(g), and
1416.305(i).
NAP
FSA is amending the NAP regulations
to update provisions related to
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applications for coverage. This rule
updates the definition of ‘‘application
for coverage’’ and 7 CFR 1437.7(a) to
reflect that the application for coverage
may be filed in any FSA county office,
rather than only in the producer’s
administrative county. The definition of
‘‘application for coverage’’ is also
amended to provide flexibility as FSA
reviews ways to streamline the
application process for underserved
farmers and ranchers who are eligible
for catastrophic coverage without
paying a service fee.
Following the change to the
regulation, FSA intends to designate the
CCC–860 to be an application for
catastrophic coverage for NAP if filed
before the deadline for application for
the coverage period. The catastrophic
coverage for underserved producers,
once in effect, will be treated as
continuous coverage for all eligible
crops as long as the producer’s
certification is valid.23 Once the
applicable status expires, a producer
will need to apply for NAP coverage by
the deadline and pay the applicable
service fee. Many underserved
producers have previously filed a
certification of their underserved status
with FSA, and those producers will be
considered as having timely applied for
catastrophic coverage for the 2022 crop
year if the certification was filed before
the deadline for application for the NAP
coverage period.
As provided in 7 CFR 1437.2(e), the
Deputy Administrator may authorize
State and county committees to waive or
modify deadlines in cases where
lateness or failure to meet such other
requirements does not adversely affect
the operation of NAP; therefore, FSA is
amending 7 CFR 1437.6(a) to remove an
unnecessary provision related to
applications filed after the deadline.
This rule also makes minor
clarifications in 7 CFR 1437.7.
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Payment Eligibility
Notification of interest requirements
in § 1400.107 provide that an entity is
ineligible for any payment under any
program listed in § 1400.1, including
certain programs administered by the
Natural Resources Conservation Service
(NRCS), when the names and taxpayer
identification numbers for members
holding an ownership interest in the
legal entity are not provided to FSA.
FSA has determined for the programs
that it administers that prohibiting
payments to a legal entity when member
23 See footnote 7 for an explanation of how long
an underserved producer’s certification remains
valid and the requirement to file CCC–860 in
subsequent years.
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Jkt 259001
information is provided for some, but
not all members, may adversely impact
a farm operation’s sustainability during
times when farm program payments
may be a large portion of the farm’s
income. FSA recognizes that names,
addresses, valid taxpayer identification
numbers, and ownership shares are
important elements necessary to
facilitate administration of FSA’s rules
for payment eligibility and establishing
maximum payment limitations for each
program. However, if a valid taxpayer
identification number is not provided
for a member of a legal entity, FSA is
still able to make applicable
determinations of eligibility and
establish a maximum payment
limitation for the legal entity and its
other members.
With this rule change, for programs
administered by FSA, FSA will reduce
the payment to a legal entity in
proportion to a member’s ownership
share in cases where a person or legal
entity holding less than a 10 percent
direct or indirect ownership interest
fails to provide a valid taxpayer
identification number, instead of
prohibiting any payment to the legal
entity. Additionally, a legal entity will
not be eligible to receive payment when
a valid taxpayer identification number
for a person or legal entity that holds a
direct or indirect ownership interest of
10 percent or greater, at or above the
fourth level of ownership in the
business structure, is not provided to
USDA. This change will allow the legal
entity to earn a partial payment based
on the ownership shares of the members
whose valid taxpayer identification
numbers are submitted in cases where a
member or members holding less than a
10 percent interest do not submit a valid
taxpayer identification number.
NRCS has determined that such
change in the notification requirements
is not appropriate for the programs it
administers. Unlike the intended
purposes of FSA program payments,
NRCS conservation program payments
are not intended to provide economic
support, including in times of disaster,
to keep operations economically viable.
Rather, they are payments made to
reimburse a participant for costs
incurred by a participant to voluntarily
implement conservation practices and
activities or payments made for the
conveyance of a conservation easement.
Therefore, for the programs NRCS
administers, the participant is ineligible
to receive any payment specified in
§ 1400.1(a)(7) or as NRCS provides in
individual program regulations if the
participant fails to provide: (1) the
name, address, valid taxpayer
identification number, and ownership
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1871
share of each person; or (2) the name,
address, valid taxpayer identification
number, and ownership share of each
legal entity, that holds or acquires an
ownership interest in the legal entity.
For programs administered by FSA
that are subject to the provisions of
§ 1400.107, this change will be effective
for the current and subsequent program
years. FSA is also making this change
retroactive to the 2020 program year,
subject to funding availability, because
many farm operations suffered income
losses in 2020 due to the COVID–19
pandemic, and the ability to receive a
partial payment under the applicable
programs will assist those operations in
managing those losses. FSA is not
reopening sign up periods for programs
with payments that could be affected by
this change; it will only affect the way
payments are processed for legal entities
that previously filed applications.
Because the notification of interest
provisions are general provisions that
are applicable to part 1400, subparts B,
C, E, and F, FSA is also moving the
notification of interest requirement from
§ 1400.107 in subpart B, Payment
Limitation, to § 1400.10 in subpart A,
General Provisions.
Notice and Comment and Effective Date
The Administrative Procedure Act
(APA, 5 U.S.C. 553(a)(2)) provides that
the notice and comment and 30-day
delay in the effective date provisions do
not apply when the rule involves
specified actions, including matters
relating to benefits or contracts. This
rule governs pandemic assistance and
disaster assistance payments to certain
commodity producers and therefore
falls within the benefits exemption for
ERP, PARP, ECP, BCAP, and the disaster
assistance programs.
As specified in 7 U.S.C. 9091, the
regulations to implement the ELAP, LIP,
LFP, and NAP are:
• Exempt from the notice and
comment provisions of 5 U.S.C. 553,
and
• Exempt from the Paperwork
Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. chapter 35).
As specified in 16 U.S.C. 3648, the
regulations to implement EFRP are
exempt from the Paperwork Reduction
Act (44 U.S.C. chapter 35).
This rule is exempt from the
regulatory analysis requirements of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C.
601–612), as amended by the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996 (SBREFA). The
requirements for the regulatory
flexibility analysis in 5 U.S.C. 603 and
604 are specifically tied to the
requirement for a proposed rule by
section 553 or any other law; in
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addition, the definition of rule in 5
U.S.C. 601 is tied to the publication of
a proposed rule.
The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) designated this rule as major
under the Congressional Review Act
(CRA), as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Section 808 of the CRA allows an
agency to make a major regulation
effective immediately if the agency finds
there is good cause to do so. The
beneficiaries of this rule have been
significantly impacted by the COVID–19
outbreak and disaster events, which has
resulted in significant declines in
demand and market disruptions. USDA
finds that notice and public procedure
are contrary to the public interest.
Therefore, even though this rule is a
major rule for purposes of the
Congressional Review Act, USDA is not
required to delay the effective date for
60 days from the date of publication to
allow for Congressional review.
Accordingly, this rule is effective upon
publication in the Federal Register.
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Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
Executive Order 12866, ‘‘Regulatory
Planning and Review,’’ and Executive
Order 13563, ‘‘Improving Regulation
and Regulatory Review,’’ direct agencies
to assess all costs and benefits of
available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select
regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential
economic, environmental, public health
and safety effects, distributive impacts,
and equity). Executive Order 13563
emphasized the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits, of
reducing costs, of harmonizing rules,
and of promoting flexibility. The
requirements in Executive Orders 12866
and 13563 for the analysis of costs and
benefits apply to rules that are
determined to be significant.
The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) designated this rule as
economically significant under
Executive Order 12866 and therefore,
OMB has reviewed this rule. The costs
and benefits of this rule are summarized
below. The full cost benefit analysis is
available on regulations.gov.
Cost Benefit Analysis Summary
The cost-benefit analysis covers the
unrelated programs or program changes,
which are included in this rule, that
largely address pandemic assistance or
natural disaster assistance.
The accompanying rule announces
Phase 2 of the Emergency Relief
Program (ERP), which addresses eligible
crop losses not included in ERP Phase
1. ERP is authorized in the Extending
Government Funding and Delivering
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Jkt 259001
Emergency Assistance Act (Pub. L. 117–
43), which provided $10 billion for
expenses related to losses of crops
(including milk, on-farm stored
commodities, crops prevented from
planting in 2020 and 2021, and
harvested adulterated wine grapes),
trees, bushes, and vines, as a
consequence of droughts, wildfires,
hurricanes, and other events occurring
in calendar years 2020 and 2021.
Targeted outlays for ERP Phase 2 are
$1.2 billion; a pro-rate in payments is
likely as gross outlays are projected at
$1.5 billion (see Table 1).
Two programs—including a new
pandemic assistance program and
additional assistance for underserved
producers—address COVID–19 losses.
Prior rules associated with the COVID–
19 pandemic, CFAP 1, CFAP 2, and
CFAP 2: Producers of Sales-Based
Commodities and Contract Producers,
assisted producers of agricultural
commodities marketed in 2020 who
faced continuing market disruptions,
reduced farm-level prices, and increased
production and marketing costs due to
COVID–19. The additional costs are
associated with declines in demand,
surplus production, or disruptions to
shipping patterns and marketing
channels.
In implementing the pandemic related
programs, USDA determined that
additional assistance was necessary:
• PARP will assist producers with
revenue loss resulting from the COVID–
19 pandemic for eligible agricultural
commodities. Payments will be made on
a whole farm basis and not on a
commodity-by-commodity basis. The
aggregate allocation for PARP is targeted
at $250 million; a pro-rate in payments
is likely as gross outlays are projected at
$2.7 billion (Table 1).
• CFAP 2 recipients who are
underserved (beginning, limited
resource, socially disadvantaged, and
veteran farmers and ranchers),
excluding contract producers, will
receive a 15-percent top-up payment.
Net outlays are estimated at $325
million (Table 1). As few underserved
producers are likely to have AGI issues
or reach the payment limit, gross and
net outlays are assumed to be identical.
The other changes relate to existing
FSA programs or requirements:
• Expanded Eligibility of Animals in
Livestock Disaster Programs—This rule
makes discretionary changes to ELAP,
LFP, and LIP to amend the definition of
eligible livestock. Previously, animals
that contributed to the commercial
viability of an operation and were
maintained for the purposes of pleasure,
roping, hunting, pets, or show, as well
as animals intended for consumption by
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an owner, lessee, or contract grower,
were ineligible for ELAP, LFP, and LIP.
This rule removes those restrictions.
Estimated net outlays (accounting for
AGI considerations, payment limits, and
other reductions) are $17.7 million
annually.
• Flexibility in Non-Insured Crop
Disaster Assistance Program (NAP)
Enrollment for Underserved
Producers—FSA is updating NAP
provisions regarding program
flexibilities for underserved producers.
For example, the ‘‘application of
coverage’’ is amended to provide
flexibility as FSA reviews ways to
streamline the application process for
underserved farmers and ranchers. Net
outlays are estimated at $4.3 million
annually (identical to the gross outlay
estimate).
• Notification of Interest Changes—
Prior to this rule, a legal entity was
ineligible for farm programs when the
names and valid taxpayer identification
numbers for all members holding an
ownership interest in the entity were
not provided to USDA. Now, a legal
entity can receive a partial payment in
cases where a person or legal entity
holding less than a 10 percent direct or
indirect ownership interest fails to
provide a taxpayer identification
number. Net outlays are estimated at
$3.7 million annually.
• ECP Expansion to Public Lands
(that is, Federally- and State-owned
Land)—ECP provides payments to
farmers and ranchers to rehabilitate
farmland damaged by certain natural
disasters and to implement emergency
water conservation measures in periods
of severe drought. ECP eligibility on
public lands has not been included in
the regulation until now. ECP coverage
of public lands has been FSA policy, as
specified in the FSA handbook, for
many years, however, and FSA staff in
the field have provided ECP assistance
to both public and private lands since
at least the 1990s. As a result, no
increase in net outlays is expected.
• ECP and EFRP and the Hermit’s
Peak/Calf Canyon Fire—Section
104(3)(A) of the Continuing
Appropriations and Ukraine
Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2023
authorizes the Federal government to
pay 100 percent of the ECP and
Emergency Forest Restoration Program
(EFRP) cost for damage associated with
the Hermit’s Peak/Calf Canyon Fire.
This fire burned over 340,000 acres from
April 2022 to June 2022 and was the
largest wildfire in recorded history in
New Mexico. The cost-share rate for
both ECP and EFRP, prior to this
legislation, was generally 75 percent
regardless of location. The legislation
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applies only to the locale of the Hermit’s
Peak/Calf Canyon Fire. The expected
net cost is $22.5 million for FY 2023.
Gross outlays for these items are
estimated at $4.5 billion (see Table 1).
After taking into account AGI
considerations and payment limitations,
as well as the targeted caps on ERP
Phase 2 and PARP spending, net outlays
are estimated at $1.8 billion. ERP Phase
2 accounts for about two-thirds of
expected total net outlays.
FSA will administer all programs in
Table 1. Producers must fill out
1873
paperwork to participate in these
programs, and the associated
administrative costs are estimated at
$18.4 million. Note that ERP Phase 2,
PARP, and the Hermit’s Peak/Calf’s
Canyon ECP/EFRP fire item use
exclusively appropriated funds.
TABLE 1—ESTIMATED GROSS AND NET OUTLAYS FOR THE PANDEMIC ASSISTANCE AND AGRICULTURAL DISASTER
ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS RULE FOR FY 2023
Item
Gross estimated
outlays in 2023
Net estimated
outlays
Implementing
agency
Funding source
Item 1—Emergency Relief Program
(ERP) Phase 2.
$1.504 billion a ......
$1.2 billion ............
FSA .......................
Item 2—PARP ......................................
Item 3—15 Percent Top-Up for Underserved Recipients of CFAP 2 Payments.
Item 4—Recreational Animals and
Livestock Disaster Programs.
Item 5—Flexibility in NAP Enrollment
for Underserved Producers d.
Item
6—Notification
of
Interest
Changes.
Item 7—ECP and Public Lands ............
Item 8—ECP and EFRP and the Hermit’s Peak/Calf’s Canyon Fire c.
$2.662 billion b ......
325 million ............
250 million ............
325 million ............
FSA .......................
FSA .......................
19.5 million ...........
17.7 million ...........
FSA .......................
Extending Government Funding and
Delivering Emergency Assistance
Act.
CAA.
CCC net transfer except for the tobacco portion, which is from the
CARES Act.
CCC.
4.3 million .............
4.3 million .............
FSA .......................
CCC.
3.7 million .............
3.7 million .............
FSA .......................
CCC.
No change in cost
24.2 million ...........
No change in cost
22.5 million ...........
FSA .......................
FSA .......................
CCC.
Continuing
Appropriations
and
Ukraine Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2023.
4.54 billion ............
1.82 billion ............
Total ...............................................
a This
estimate uses the 50-percent loss scenario. Note that both 2020 and 2021 losses are expected to be paid in FY 2023. The significant
difference between gross and net outlays is because the targeted amount for ERP Phase 2 spending is $1.2 billion.
b This estimate represents the most plausible scenario but, as discussed below, gross estimated outlays could be considerably higher. Note
that the significant difference between gross and net outlays is because the targeted amount for PARP spending is $250 million.
c The difference between the gross and net amount is due to adjusted gross income (AGI) considerations, payment limitations, and other reductions.
d This estimate uses the 20 percent increase-in-participation scenario.
Note: Benefits associated with items 4 through 7 continue in FY 2023 and in perpetuity in each FY beyond. Payments associated with Items 1,
2, 3, and 8 are assumed to be paid in FY 2023 and to not continue beyond.
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Environmental Review
The environmental impacts of this
final rule have been considered in a
manner consistent with the provisions
of the National Environmental Policy
Act (NEPA, 42 U.S.C. 4321–4347), the
regulations of the Council on
Environmental Quality (40 CFR parts
1500–1508), and because USDA will be
making the payments to producers, the
USDA regulation for compliance with
NEPA (7 CFR part 1b).
Although OMB has designated this
rule as ‘‘economically significant’’
under Executive Order 12866, ‘‘. . .
economic or social effects are not
intended by themselves to require
preparation of an environmental impact
statement’’ when not interrelated to
natural or physical environmental
effects (see 40 CFR 1502.16(b)). The
pandemic assistance and disaster
assistance programs were designed to
avoid skewing planting decisions.
Producers continue to make their
planting and production decisions with
the market signals in mind, rather than
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any expectation of what a new USDA
program might look like.
This rule includes discretionary
amendments for ECP and EFRP.
Accordingly, the discretionary
provisions of this action are covered by
the Categorical Exclusion, in 7 CFR
799.31(b)(2)(iii) for minor amendments
or revisions to previously approved
actions and § 799.31(b)(3)(i), for the
issuance of minor technical corrections
to regulations.
The rule implements discretionary
amendments for BCAP, CFAP, ELAP,
LIP, LFP, NAP, and PARP. The
discretionary aspects are to improve
administration of the programs and
clarify existing program requirements.
The change to BCAP is a technical
clarification and does not alter the
impacts or alternatives previously
considered in the BCAP Programmatic
Environmental Impact Statement and
Record of Decision dated June 2010.
FSA is providing the disaster assistance
under ELAP, LIP, LFP, and NAP to
eligible producers. The discretionary
provisions would not alter any
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environmental impacts resulting from
implementing the mandatory changes to
those programs. Accordingly, these
discretionary aspects are coved by the
following Categorical Exclusion: in 7
CFR 799.31(b)(6)(vi) safety net programs
administrated by FSA. ERP Phase 2 is a
new regulation, which is a benefit
program providing assistance after
specific natural disasters; therefore,
similar to the other programs discussed
in this paragraph, ERP Phase 2 has
similar discretionary aspects that are
coved by the following Categorical
Exclusion: in 7 CFR 799.31(b)(6)(vi)
safety net programs administrated by
FSA.
Through this review, FSA determined
that the proposed discretionary changes
in this rule fit within the categorical
exclusions listed above. Categorical
exclusions apply when no extraordinary
circumstances (§ 799.33) exist.
Therefore, as this rule presents only
discretionary amendments that will not
have an impact to the human
environments, individually or
cumulatively, FSA will not prepare an
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environmental assessment or
environmental impact statement for this
rule; this rule serves as documentation
of the programmatic environmental
compliance decision for this federal
action.
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Executive Order 12988
This rule has been reviewed under
Executive Order 12988, ‘‘Civil Justice
Reform.’’ This rule will not preempt
State or local laws, regulations, or
policies unless they represent an
irreconcilable conflict with this rule.
For the payment eligibility regulation
changes, payments will be adjusted
retroactively, starting in January 2020,
as discussed above in the Payment
Eligibility section, above. For the ELAP
regulation changes, payments will be
made retroactively starting at January 1,
2021, as discussed in the Cost Benefit
Analysis Summary section, above.
Before any judicial actions may be
brought regarding the provisions of this
rule, the administrative appeal
provisions of 7 CFR parts 11 and 780 are
to be exhausted.
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.
USDA has assessed the impact of this
rule on Indian Tribes and determined
that this rule does not, to our
knowledge, have Tribal implications
that required Tribal consultation under
Executive Order 13175 at this time. If a
Tribe requests consultation, the USDA
Office of Tribal Relations (OTR) will
ensure meaningful consultation is
provided where changes, additions, and
modifications are not expressly
mandated by law. Outside of Tribal
consultation, USDA is working with
Tribes to provide information about
pandemic assistance, agricultural
disaster assistance, and other issues.
Unfunded Mandates
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA, Pub. L.
104–4) requires Federal agencies to
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assess the effects of their regulatory
actions of State, local, and Tribal
governments or the private sector.
Agencies generally must prepare a
written statement, including cost
benefits analysis, for proposed and final
rules with Federal mandates that may
result in expenditures of $100 million or
more in any 1 year for State, local or
Tribal governments, in the aggregate, or
to the private sector. UMRA generally
requires agencies to consider
alternatives and adopt the more cost
effective or least burdensome alternative
that achieves the objectives of the rule.
This rule contains no Federal mandates,
as defined in Title II of 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.
Federal Assistance Programs
The titles and numbers of the Federal
Domestic Assistance Programs found in
the Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance to which this rule applies
are:
10.051—Commodity Loans and Loan
Deficiency Payments
10.054—Emergency Conservation
Program
10.069—Conservation Reserve Program
10.087—Biomass Crop Assistance
Program
10.088—Livestock Indemnity Program
10.089—Livestock Forage Disaster
Program
10.091—Emergency Assistance for
Livestock, Honeybees, and FarmRaised Fish Program
10.092—Tree Assistance Program
10.112—Price Loss Coverage
10.113—Agriculture Risk Coverage
10.130—Coronavirus Food Assistance
Program 1
10.132—Coronavirus Food Assistance
Program 2
10.143—Pandemic Assistance Revenue
Program
10.451—Noninsured Assistance
10.912—Environmental Quality
Incentives Program
10.917—Agricultural Management
Assistance
10.964—Emergency Relief Program
Paperwork Reduction Act
As noted above, the regulations to
implement the EFRP, ELAP, LIP, LFP,
and NAP changes are exempt from PRA
as specified in 7 U.S.C. 9091(c)(2)(B)
and 16 U.S.C. 3846(b)(1).
For ECP and BCAP, there are no
changes to the information collection
activities approved by OMB under
control number 0560–0082.
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, the PARP
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information collection activity was
submitted to OMB for emergency
approval. FSA will collect and evaluate
the application and other required
paperwork from the producers for
PARP. The forms are described above in
the PARP Application Process section.
Following the 60-day public comment
period provided by this rule, FSA
intends to request 3-year OMB approval
to cover the PARP information
collection request.
Title: PARP.
OMB Control Number: 0560–New.
Type of Request: New Collection.
Abstract: This information collection
is required to support PARP information
collection activities to provide
payments to eligible producers who,
with respect to their agricultural
commodities, have been impacted by
the effects of the COVID–19 pandemic.
The information collection is necessary
to evaluate the application and other
required paperwork for determining the
producer’s eligibility and assist in the
producer’s payment calculations. The
forms are included in the request.
For the following estimated total
annual burden on respondents, the
formula used to calculate the total
burden hour is the estimated average
time per response multiplied by the
estimated total annual responses.
Estimate of Respondent Burden:
Public reporting burden for this
information collection is estimated to
average 0.51385 hours per response,
including the time for reviewing
instructions, searching existing data
sources, gathering and maintaining the
data needed, and completing and
reviewing the collections of
information.
Type of Respondents: Producers or
farmers.
Estimated Annual Number of
Respondents: 313,901.
Estimated Number of Responses per
Respondent: 1.6550.
Estimated Total Annual Responses:
519,506.
Estimated Average Time per
Response: 0.51385 hours.
Estimated Annual Burden on
Respondents: 266,947 hours.
Also, FSA is requesting comments
from all interested individuals and
organizations on a new information
collection associated with ERP Phase 1
and 2. The emergency request was
approved for the ERP Phase 1 using
OMB control number 0560–0309. The
emergency request was approved for the
ERP Phase 2 using temporary OMB
control number. The ERP Phase 2 will
be merged with the approved 0560–
0309 information collection request.
ERP is for the producers who suffered
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losses of crops, trees, bushes, and vines
due to wildfires, hurricanes, floods,
derechos, excessive heat, winter storms,
freeze (including a polar vortex), smoke
exposure, excessive moisture, qualifying
drought, and related conditions
occurring in calendar years 2020 and
2021. FSA needs to disburse the
payments to the eligible producers to
cover the losses of crops, trees, bushes
and vines, and the payments will
seriously assist the producers not to
consider making business decisions to
lose the farm business.
Title: ERP Phase 2.
Type of Request: New.
Abstract: ERP is for the producers
who suffered losses of crops, trees,
bushes, and vines due to wildfires,
hurricanes, floods, derechos, excessive
heat, winter storms, freeze (including a
polar vortex), smoke exposure,
excessive moisture, qualifying drought,
and related conditions occurring in
calendar years 2020 and 2021. FSA
needs to disburse the payments to the
eligible producers to cover the losses of
crops, trees, bushes and vines, and the
payments will seriously assist the
producers not to consider making
business decisions to lose the farm
business.
For the following estimated total
annual burden on respondents, the
formula used to calculate the total
burden hour is the estimated average
time per response multiplied by the
estimated total annual responses.
Estimate of Respondent Burden:
Public reporting burden for this
information collection is estimated to
average 0.54492 hours per response,
including the time for reviewing
instructions, searching existing data
sources, gathering and maintaining the
data needed, and completing and
reviewing the collections of
information.
Type of Respondents: Producers or
farmers.
Estimated Annual Number of
Respondents: 48,402.
Estimated Number of Responses per
Respondent: 2.085.
Estimated Total Annual Responses:
100,918.
Estimated Average Time per
Response: 0.54492 hours.
Estimated Annual Burden on
Respondents: 54,992 hours.
Also, FSA is requesting comments
from all interested individuals and
organizations on a new information
collection associated with CFAP 2. The
emergency request was approved under
a temporary OMB control number and
will merge with CFAP 2 under the OMB
control number 0560–0297.
Title: CFAP 2.
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Jkt 259001
Type of Request: New.
Abstract: This information collection
is required to support CFAP 2
information collection activities to
provide payments to eligible producers
who, with respect to their agricultural
commodities, have been impacted by
the effects of the COVID–19 pandemic.
The information collection is necessary
to evaluate the application and other
required paperwork for determining the
producer’s eligibility and assist in the
producer’s payment calculations.
For the following estimated total
annual burden on respondents, the
formula used to calculate the total
burden hour is the estimated average
time per response multiplied by the
estimated total annual responses.
Estimate of Respondent Burden:
Public reporting burden for this
information collection is estimated to
average 0.0999 hours per response,
including the time for reviewing
instructions, searching existing data
sources, gathering and maintaining the
data needed, and completing and
reviewing the collections of
information.
Type of Respondents: Producers or
farmers.
Estimated Annual Number of
Respondents: 96,973.
Estimated Number of Responses per
Respondent: 1.
Estimated Total Annual Responses:
96,973.
Estimated Average Time per
Response: 0.0999 hours.
Estimated Annual Burden on
Respondents: 9,697 hours.
FSA is requesting comments on all
aspects of this information collection to
help FSA to:
(1) Evaluate whether the collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of FSA,
including whether the information will
have practical utility;
(2) Evaluate the accuracy of the FSA’s
estimate of burden including the
validity of the methodology and
assumptions used;
(3) Enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and
(4) Minimize the burden of the
collection of information on those who
are to respond, including through the
use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology.
All comments received in response to
this document, including names and
addresses when provided, will be a
matter of public record. Comments will
be summarized and included in the
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1875
submission for Office of Management
and Budget approval.
USDA Non-Discrimination Policy
In accordance with Federal civil
rights law and U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) civil rights
regulations and policies, USDA, its
Agencies, offices, and employees, and
institutions participating in or
administering USDA programs are
prohibited from discriminating based on
race, color, national origin, religion, sex,
gender identity (including gender
expression), sexual orientation,
disability, age, marital status, family or
parental status, income derived from a
public assistance program, political
beliefs, or reprisal or retaliation for prior
civil rights activity, in any program or
activity conducted or funded by USDA
(not all bases apply to all programs).
Remedies and complaint filing
deadlines vary by program or incident.
Persons with disabilities who require
alternative means of communication for
program information (for example,
braille, large print, audiotape, American
Sign Language, etc.) should contact the
responsible Agency or USDA TARGET
Center at (202) 720–2600 or (844) 433–
2774 (toll-free nationwide).
Additionally, program information may
be made available in languages other
than English.
To file a program discrimination
complaint, complete the USDA Program
Discrimination Complaint Form, AD–
3027, found online at https://
www.usda.gov/oascr/how-to-file-aprogram-discrimination-complaint and
at any USDA office or write a letter
addressed to USDA and provide in the
letter all the information requested in
the form. To request a copy of the
complaint form, call (866) 632–9992.
Submit your completed form or letter to
USDA by mail to: U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Civil Rights, 1400
Independence Avenue SW, Washington,
DC 20250–9410 or email: OAC@
usda.gov.
USDA is an equal opportunity
provider, employer, and lender.
List of Subjects
7 CFR Part 9
Agricultural commodities,
Agriculture, Disaster assistance,
Indemnity payments.
7 CFR Part 701
Disaster assistance, Environmental
protection, Forests and forest products,
Grant programs—agriculture, Grant
programs—natural resources, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements, Rural
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areas, Soil conservation, Water
resources, Wildlife.
Agriculture, Grant programs—
agriculture, Loan programs—agriculture,
Natural resources, Price support
programs.
c. In paragraph (d), remove words ‘‘the
programs of this part’’ and add ‘‘CFAP’’
in their place.
■ 5. Amend § 9.2 as follows:
■ a. In the introductory text, remove the
words ‘‘this part’’ and add ‘‘subparts A
through C of this part’’ in its place;
■ b. In the definition of ‘‘NOFA’’,
remove the words ‘‘under this part’’;
and
■ c. Add a definition for ‘‘Ownership
interest’’ in alphabetical order.
The addition reads as follows:
7 CFR Part 1416
§ 9.2
Administrative practice and
procedure, Agriculture, Disaster
assistance, Fruits, Livestock, Nursery
stock, Seafood.
*
■
7 CFR Part 760
Dairy products, Indemnity payments,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
7 CFR Part 1400
7 CFR Part 1437
Acreage allotments, Agricultural
commodities, Crop insurance, Disaster
assistance, Fraud, Penalties, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
7 CFR Part 1450
Administrative practice and
procedure, Agriculture, Energy,
Environmental protection, Grant
programs-agriculture, Natural resources,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Technical assistance.
For the reasons discussed above, this
final rule amends 7 CFR parts 9, 701,
760, 1400, 1416, 1437, and 1450 as
follows:
PART 9—PANDEMIC ASSISTANCE
PROGRAMS
1. The authority citation for part 9
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 714b and 714c;
Division B, Title I, Pub. L. 116–136, 134 Stat.
505; and Division N, Title VII, Subtitle B,
Chapter 1, Pub. L. 116–260.
2. Revise the heading for part 9 to read
as set forth above.
■
Subpart A—CFAP General Provisions
3. Revise the heading for subpart A to
read as set forth above.
■
§ 9.1
[Amended]
4. Amend § 9.1 as follows:
■ a. In paragraph (a) introductory text,
remove the words ‘‘This part specifies’’
and add ‘‘Subparts A through C of this
part specify’’ in their place, and remove
the words ‘‘payment made under this
part’’ and add ‘‘CFAP payment’’ in their
place;
■ b. In paragraph (c), remove the words
‘‘this part’’ each time they appear and
add ‘‘subparts A through C of this part’’
in their place; and
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■
VerDate Sep<11>2014
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Jkt 259001
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
Ownership interest means to have
either legal ownership interest or
beneficial ownership interest in a legal
entity. For the purposes of
administering CFAP, a person or legal
entity that owns a share or stock in a
legal entity that is a corporation, limited
liability company, limited partnership,
or similar type entity, and shares in the
profits or losses of such entity is
considered to have an ownership
interest in such legal entity. A person or
legal entity that is a beneficiary of a
trust or heir of an estate who benefits
from the profits or losses of such entity
is also considered to have an ownership
interest in such legal entity.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 9.3
6. Amend § 9.3 as follows:
a. In paragraph (a), remove the words
‘‘this part’’ and add ‘‘subparts A through
C of this part’’ in their place; and
■ b. In paragraph (b)(2), remove the
words ‘‘this part means’’ and add
‘‘subparts A through C of this part
means’’ in its place.
■ 7. Amend § 9.4 by adding paragraph
(e) to read as follows:
Time and method of application.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) To receive an additional payment
under § 9.203(p), a producer must
submit form CCC–860, Socially
Disadvantaged, Limited Resource,
Beginning and Veteran Farmer or
Rancher Certification, with a
certification applicable to the 2020
program year by the date announced by
the Deputy Administrator.
■ 8. Amend § 9.7 as follows:
■ a. In paragraphs (b), (c), (d), and
(e)(2)(ii) and (iii), add the words
‘‘subparts A through C of’’ before the
words ‘‘this part’’ each time they
appear;
■ b. In paragraph (h), remove the words
‘‘This part applies’’ and add ‘‘Subparts
A through C of this part apply’’ in their
place; and
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c. Add paragraph (i).
The addition reads as follows.
§ 9.7
Miscellaneous provisions.
*
*
*
*
*
(i) To be eligible to receive a CFAP
payment and facilitate administration of
paragraphs (d) and (e) of this section, a
person or legal entity must provide their
name, address, and taxpayer
identification number to USDA. In
addition, a legal entity must provide the
name taxpayer identification number,
address and ownership share of each
person or legal entity that holds or
acquires a direct or indirect ownership
interest in the legal entity. CFAP
payments to a legal entity will be
reduced in proportion to a member’s
ownership share when the taxpayer
identification number for a person or
legal entity that holds less than a 10
percent direct or indirect ownership
interest at, or above, the fourth level of
ownership in the business structure is
not provided to USDA. Additionally, a
legal entity will not be eligible to
receive CFAP payments when a valid
taxpayer identification number for a
person or legal entity that holds a direct
or indirect ownership interest of 10
percent or greater, at or above the fourth
level of ownership in the business
structure, is not provided to USDA.
Subpart B—CFAP 1
[Amended]
■
■
§ 9.4
■
Sfmt 4700
§ 9.101
[Amended]
9. Amend § 9.101, in the definition of
‘‘All other cattle’’, by removing the word
‘‘part’’ and adding ‘‘subpart’’ in its
place.
■ 10. Amend § 9.102 as follows:
■ a. In paragraph (c) introductory text,
remove the word ‘‘two’’ and add ‘‘three’’
in its place;
■ b. In paragraph (c)(1), remove the
word ‘‘and’’;
■ c. In paragraph (c)(2), remove the
period and add ‘‘; and’’ at the end of the
paragraph;
■ d. Add paragraph (c)(3);
■ e. In paragraph (d) introductory text,
remove the word ‘‘three’’ and add ‘‘two’’
in its place;
■ f. In paragraph (d)(1), add the word
‘‘and’’ at the end of the paragraph;
■ g. In paragraph (d)(2), remove ‘‘; and’’
and add a period in its place; and
■ h. Remove paragraph (d)(3).
The addition reads as follows.
■
§ 9.102
Calculation of payments.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(3) Cattle inventory owned between
April 16, 2020, to May 14, 2020,
multiplied by:
(i) $14.75 for slaughter cattle—mature
cattle;
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(ii) $63 for slaughter cattle—fed cattle;
(iii) $7 for feeder cattle less than 600
pounds;
(iv) $25.50 for feeder cattle 600
pounds or more; and
(v) $17.25 for all other cattle.
*
*
*
*
*
Subpart C—CFAP 2
11. In § 9.201, add definitions for
‘‘Beginning farmer or rancher’’,
‘‘Limited resource farmer or rancher’’,
‘‘Socially disadvantaged farmer or
rancher’’, ‘‘Underserved farmer or
rancher’’, and ‘‘Veteran farmer or
rancher’’ in alphabetical order to read as
follows:
■
§ 9.201
Definitions.
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*
*
*
*
*
Beginning farmer or rancher means a
farmer or rancher who has not operated
a farm or ranch for more than 10 years
and who materially and substantially
participates in the operation. For a legal
entity to be considered a beginning
farmer or rancher, at least 50 percent of
the interest must be beginning farmers
or ranchers.
*
*
*
*
*
Limited resource farmer or rancher
means a farmer or rancher:
(1) Who is a person whose:
(i) Direct or indirect gross farm sales
did not exceed $180,300 in each
calendar year for 2017 and 2018 (the
relevant years for the 2020 program
year); and
(ii) Total household income was at or
below the national poverty level for a
family of four in each of the same two
previous years referenced in paragraph
(1)(i) of this definition; 24 or
(2) That is an entity and all members
who hold an ownership interest in the
entity meet the criteria in paragraph (1)
of this definition.
*
*
*
*
*
Socially disadvantaged farmer or
rancher means a farmer or rancher who
is a member of a group whose members
have been subjected to racial, ethnic, or
gender prejudice because of their
identity as members of a group without
regard to their individual qualities. For
entities, at least 50 percent of the
ownership interest must be held by
individuals who are members of such a
group. Socially disadvantaged groups
include the following and no others
unless approved in writing by the
Deputy Administrator:
24 Limited resource farmer or rancher status can
be determined using a website available through the
Limited Resource Farmer and Rancher Online Self
Determination Tool through Natural Resources
Conservation Service at https://lrftool.sc.egov.
usda.gov.
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(1) American Indians or Alaskan
Natives;
(2) Asians or Asian-Americans;
(3) Blacks or African Americans;
(4) Hispanics or Hispanic Americans;
(5) Native Hawaiians or other Pacific
Islanders; and
(6) Women.
*
*
*
*
*
Underserved farmer or rancher means
a beginning farmer or rancher, limited
resource farmer or rancher, socially
disadvantaged farmer or rancher, or
veteran farmer or rancher.
*
*
*
*
*
Veteran farmer or rancher means a
farmer or rancher:
(1) Who has served in the Armed
Forces (as defined in 38 U.S.C.
101(10) 25) and:
(i) Has not operated a farm or ranch
for more than 10 years; or
(ii) Has obtained status as a veteran
(as defined in 38 U.S.C. 101(2) 26) during
the most recent 10-year period; or
(2) That is an entity and at least 50
percent of the ownership interest is held
by members who meet the criteria in
paragraph (1) of this definition.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 9.202
[Amended]
12. Amend § 9.202 as follows:
a. In paragraph (a), remove the words
‘‘this part’’ and add the words ‘‘subpart
A of this part and this subpart’’ in their
place; and
■ b. In paragraphs (b)(4) and (d)(2),
remove the words ‘‘this part’’ and add
the words ‘‘subpart A of this part and
this subpart’’ in their place.
■ 13. Amend § 9.203 as follows:
■ a. Add paragraph (a)(5);
■ b. In paragraph (b), add a sentence at
the end of the paragraph;
■ c. In paragraphs (f)(2) and (h)(2),
remove the word ‘‘part’’ and add the
word ‘‘subpart’’ in its place; and
■ d. Add paragraph (p).
The additions read as follows.
■
■
§ 9.203
Calculation of payments.
(a) * * *
(5) An additional payment will be
issued for price trigger crops equal to
the eligible acres of the crop multiplied
by a payment rate of $20 per acre.
(b) * * * An additional payment will
be issued for flat-rate crops equal to the
eligible acres of the crop multiplied by
a payment rate of $20 per acre.
*
*
*
*
*
25 The term ‘‘Armed Forces’’ means the United
States Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, Space
Force, and Coast Guard, including the reserve
components.
26 The term ‘‘veteran’’ means a person who served
in the active military, naval, air, or space service,
and who was discharged or released under
conditions other than dishonorable.
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1877
(p) An additional payment equal to 15
percent of a producer’s CFAP 2 payment
calculated according to paragraphs (a)
through (k) of this section will be issued
to producers who have certified their
status as an underserved farmer or
rancher, applicable to the 2020 program
year, on CCC–860, Socially
Disadvantaged, Limited Resource,
Beginning and Veteran Farmer or
Rancher Certification.
■ 14. Add subpart D, consisting of
§§ 9.301 through 9.310, to read as
follows:
Subpart D—Pandemic Assistance Revenue
Program
Sec.
9.301 Applicability and administration.
9.302 Definitions.
9.303 Producer eligibility requirements.
9.304 Allowable gross revenue.
9.305 Time and method of application.
9.306 Payment calculation.
9.307 Adjusted gross income limitation,
payment limitation, and attribution.
9.308 Eligibility subject to verification.
9.309 Miscellaneous provisions.
9.310 Perjury.
Subpart D—Pandemic Assistance
Revenue Program
§ 9.301
Applicability and administration.
(a) This subpart specifies the
eligibility requirements and payment
calculations for the Pandemic
Assistance Revenue Program (PARP).
FSA is administering PARP to respond
to the COVID–19 pandemic by
providing support for eligible producers
of agricultural commodities who
suffered an eligible revenue loss in
calendar year 2020 due to the COVID–
19 pandemic. To be eligible for PARP
payments, participants must comply
with all provisions under this subpart.
(b) PARP is administered under the
general supervision and direction of the
Administrator, Farm Service Agency
(FSA).
(c) The FSA State committee will take
any action required by this subpart that
an FSA county committee has not taken.
The FSA State committee will also:
(1) Correct, or require an FSA county
committee to correct, any action taken
by such county FSA committee that is
not in accordance with the regulations
of this subpart; or
(2) Require an FSA county committee
to withhold taking any action that is not
in accordance with this subpart.
(d) No provision or delegation to an
FSA State or county committee will
preclude the FSA Administrator, the
Deputy Administrator, or a designee or
other such person, from determining
any question arising under the programs
of this subpart, or from reversing or
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modifying any determination made by
an FSA State or county committee.
(e) The Deputy Administrator has the
authority to permit State and county
committees to waive or modify
deadlines (except deadlines specified in
a law) and other requirements or
program provisions not specified in law,
in cases where lateness or failure to
meet such other requirements or
program provisions do not adversely
affect operation of PARP.
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§ 9.302
Definitions.
The following definitions apply to
this subpart. The definitions in part
1400 of this title apply, except where
they conflict with the definitions in this
section.
2017 WHIP means the 2017 Wildfires
and Hurricanes Indemnity Program
under 7 CFR part 760, subpart O.
Agricultural commodity means a crop,
aquaculture, livestock, livestock
byproduct, or other animal or animal
byproduct that is produced as part of a
farming operation and is intended to be
commercially marketed. It includes only
commodities produced in the United
States, or produced outside the United
States by a producer located in the
United States and marketed inside the
United States. It excludes:
(1) Wild free-roaming animals;
(2) Horses and other animals used or
intended to be used for racing or
wagering;
(3) Aquatic species that do not meet
the definition of aquaculture;
(4) Cannabis sativa L. and any part of
that plant that does not meet the
definition of hemp; and
(5) Timber.
Applicable pandemic assistance
includes payments received directly by
an applicant under the following
programs:
(1) The Coronavirus Food Assistance
Program (CFAP);
(2) The Pandemic Livestock
Indemnity Program (PLIP); and
(3) The Spot Market Hog Pandemic
Program (SMHPP).
Application means the PARP
application form.
Aquaculture means any species of
aquatic organisms grown as food for
human or livestock consumption or for
industrial or biomass uses, fish raised as
feed for fish that are consumed by
humans, and ornamental fish
propagated and reared in an aquatic
medium. Eligible aquacultural species
must be raised by a commercial operator
and in water in a controlled
environment.
ARC and PLC means the Agriculture
Risk Coverage (ARC) and Price Loss
Coverage (PLC) programs under 7 CFR
part 1412.
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BCAP means the Biomass Crop
Assistance Program under 7 CFR part
1450.
Beginning farmer or rancher means a
farmer or rancher who has not operated
a farm or ranch for more than 10 years
and who materially and substantially
participates in the operation. For a legal
entity to be considered a beginning
farmer or rancher, at least 50 percent of
the interest must be beginning farmers
or ranchers.
Cattle feeder operation means an
operation that intensely feeds cattle on
behalf of another person or entity for
finishing purposes and is compensated
based on feed, yardage, or weight gain
of the cattle.
CCC means the Commodity Credit
Corporation.
CFAP means the Coronavirus Food
Assistance Program 1 and 2 under 7
CFR part 9, subparts A through C,
excluding assistance for contract
producers specified in § 9.203(l) through
(o).
Contract producer means a producer
who grows or produces an agricultural
commodity under contract for or on
behalf of another person or entity. The
contract producer does not have
ownership in the commodity and is not
entitled to a share from sales proceeds
of the commodity. The term ‘‘contract
producer’’ does not include cattle feeder
operations.
Controlled environment means an
environment in which everything that
can practicably be controlled by the
producer with structures, facilities, and
growing media (including but not
limited to water, soil, or nutrients), is in
fact controlled by the producer, as
determined by industry standards.
County means the county or parish of
a state. For Alaska, Puerto Rico, and the
Virgin Islands, a county is an area
designated by the State committee with
the concurrence of the Deputy
Administrator.
County committee means the FSA
county committee.
Crop insurance means an insurance
policy reinsured by Federal Crop
Insurance Corporation under the
provisions of the Federal Crop
Insurance Act, as amended, or a private
plan of insurance.
Deputy Administrator means Deputy
Administrator for Farm Programs, Farm
Service Agency, U.S. Department of
Agriculture, or their designee.
DMC means the Dairy Margin
Coverage Program under 7 CFR part
1430, subpart D.
ELAP means the Emergency
Assistance for Livestock, Honeybees,
and Farm-Raised Fish Program under 7
CFR part 1416, subpart B.
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ERP means the Emergency Relief
Program, which was administered in 2
phases:
(1) ERP Phase 1, administered
according to the notice of funds
availability published in the Federal
Register on May 18, 2022 (87 FR 30164–
30172) and the clarification to the notice
of funds availability that was published
on August 18, 2022 (87 FR 50828–
50830); and
(2) ERP Phase 2, administered
according to 7 CFR part 760, subpart S.
Farming operation means a business
enterprise engaged in the production of
agricultural products, commodities, or
livestock, operated by a person, legal
entity, or joint operation, and that is
eligible to receive payments, directly or
indirectly, under this subpart. A person
or legal entity may have more than one
farming operation if the person or legal
entity is a member of one or more legal
entity or joint operation.
Foreign entity means a corporation,
trust, estate, or other similar
organization that has more than 10
percent of its beneficial interest held by
individuals who are not:
(1) Citizens of the United States; or
(2) Lawful aliens possessing a valid
Alien Registration Receipt Card.
Foreign person means any person who
is not a citizen or national of the United
States or who is admitted into the
United States for permanent residence
under the Immigration and Nationality
Act and possesses a valid Alien
Registration Receipt Card issued by the
United States Citizenship and
Immigration Services, Department of
Homeland Security.
Hemp means the plant species
Cannabis sativa L. and any part of that
plant, including the seeds thereof and
all derivatives, extracts, cannabinoids,
isomers, acids, salts, and salts of
isomers, whether growing or not, with a
delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol
concentration of not more than 0.3
percent on a dry weight basis, that is
grown under a license or other required
authorization issued by the applicable
governing authority that permits the
production of the hemp.
IRS means the Department of
Treasury, Internal Revenue Service.
LDP means the Loan Deficiency
Payment programs in 7 CFR parts 1421,
1425, 1427, 1434, and 1435.
Legal entity means a corporation, joint
stock company, association, limited
partnership, irrevocable trust, estate,
charitable organization, or other similar
organization including any such
organization participating in a business
structure as a partner in a general
partnership, a participant in a joint
venture, a grantor of a revocable trust,
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or as a participant in a similar
organization. A business operating as a
sole proprietorship is considered a legal
entity.
Limited resource farmer or rancher
means a farmer or rancher:
(1) Who is a person whose:
(i) Direct or indirect gross farm sales
did not exceed $180,300 in each
calendar year for 2017 and 2018 (the
relevant years for the 2020 program
year); and
(ii) Total household income was at or
below the national poverty level for a
family of four in each of the same two
previous years referenced in paragraph
(1)(i) of this definition; 1 or
(2) That is an entity and all members
who hold an ownership interest in the
entity meet the criteria in paragraph (1)
of this definition.
LFP means the Livestock Forage
Disaster Program under CFR part 1416,
subpart C.
LIP means the Livestock Indemnity
Program under 7 CFR part 1416, subpart
D.
Minor child means a person who is
under 18 years of age as of June 1, 2020.
MFP means the 2018 Market
Facilitation Program under 7 CFR part
1409, subpart A, and the 2019 Market
Facilitation Program under 7 CFR part
1409, subpart B.
Milk Loss Program means the Milk
Loss Program under 7 CFR part 760,
subpart Q.
MLG means a marketing loan gain
under the Marketing Assistance Loan
programs in 7 CFR parts 1421, 1425,
1427, 1434, and 1435.
MPP-Dairy means the Margin
Protection Program for Dairy under 7
CFR part 1430, subpart A.
NAP means the Noninsured Crop
Disaster Assistance Program under
section 196 of the Federal Agriculture
Improvement and Reform Act of 1996 (7
U.S.C. 7333) and 7 CFR part 1437.
On-Farm Storage Loss Program means
the On-Farm Storage Loss Program
under 7 CFR part 760, subpart P.
Ownership interest means to have
either legal ownership interest or
beneficial ownership interest in a legal
entity. For the purposes of
administering PARP, a person or legal
entity that owns a share or stock in a
legal entity that is a corporation, limited
liability company, limited partnership,
or similar type entity where members
hold a legal ownership interest and
shares in the profits or losses of such
1 Limited resource farmer or rancher status can be
determined using a website available through the
Limited Resource Farmer and Rancher Online Self
Determination Tool through Natural Resources
Conservation Service at https://lrftool.sc.egov.
usda.gov.
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entity is considered to have an
ownership interest in such legal entity.
A person or legal entity that is a
beneficiary of a trust or heir of an estate
who benefits from the profits or losses
of such entity is also considered to have
a beneficial ownership interest in such
legal entity.
Person means an individual, natural
person and does not include a legal
entity.
PLIP means the Pandemic Livestock
Indemnity Program announced in the
notice of funds availability published on
July 19, 2021 (86 FR 37990–37994).
PMVAP means the Pandemic Market
Volatility Assistance Program
administered by USDA’s Agricultural
Marketing Service.
Producer means a person or legal
entity who was in the business of
farming to produce an agricultural
commodity in calendar year 2020, and
who was entitled to a share in the
agricultural commodity available for
marketing or would have shared had the
agricultural commodity been produced
and marketed. For PARP, ‘‘producer’’
also includes cattle feeder operations.
Socially disadvantaged farmer or
rancher means a farmer or rancher who
is a member of a group whose members
have been subjected to racial, ethnic, or
gender prejudice because of their
identity as members of a group without
regard to their individual qualities. For
entities, at least 50 percent of the
ownership interest must be held by
individuals who are members of such a
group. Socially disadvantaged groups
include the following and no others
unless approved in writing by the
Deputy Administrator:
(1) American Indians or Alaskan
Natives;
(2) Asians or Asian-Americans;
(3) Blacks or African Americans;
(4) Hispanics or Hispanic Americans;
(5) Native Hawaiians or other Pacific
Islanders; and
(6) Women.
TAP means the Tree Assistance
Program under 7 CFR part 1416, subpart
E.
SMHPP means the Spot Market Hog
Pandemic Program announced in the
notice of funds availability published on
December 14, 2021 (86 FR 71003–
71007).
STRP means the Seafood Trade Relief
Program announced in the notice of
funds availability published on
September 14, 2020 (85 FR 56572–
56575).
Underserved farmer or rancher means
a beginning farmer or rancher, limited
resource farmer or rancher, socially
disadvantaged farmer or rancher, or
veteran farmer or rancher.
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United States means all 50 States of
the United States, the District of
Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico, and any other territory or
possession of the United States.
Veteran farmer or rancher means a
farmer or rancher:
(1) Who has served in the Armed
Forces (as defined in 38 U.S.C.
101(10) 2) and:
(i) Has not operated a farm or ranch
for more than 10 years; or
(ii) Has obtained status as a veteran
(as defined in 38 U.S.C. 101(2) 3) during
the most recent 10-year period; or
(2) That is an entity and at least 50
percent of the ownership interest is held
by members who meet the criteria in
paragraph (1) of this definition.
WHIP+ means the Wildfires and
Hurricanes Indemnity Program Plus
under 7 CFR part 760, subpart O.
§ 9.303
Producer eligibility requirements.
(a) To be eligible for PARP, a producer
must:
(1) Have been in the business of
farming in the 2020 calendar year;
(2) Have had at least a 15 percent
decrease in allowable gross revenue for
the 2020 calendar year, as compared to
the:
(i) Actual allowable gross revenue for
the 2018 or 2019 calendar year,
whichever is reflective of a typical year,
as elected by the producer, if the
producer had allowable gross revenue in
the 2018 or 2019 calendar year; or
(ii) Producer’s expected allowable
gross revenue for the 2020 calendar
year, if the producer had no allowable
gross revenue for the 2018 and 2019
calendar years; and
(3) Meet all other requirements for
eligibility under this subpart.
(b) To be eligible for a PARP payment,
a producer must be a:
(1) Citizen of the United States;
(2) Resident alien, which for purposes
of this subpart means ‘‘lawful alien’’ as
defined in part 1400 of this title;
(3) Partnership organized under State
Law;
(4) Corporation, limited liability
company, or other organizational
structure organized under State law;
(5) Indian Tribe or Tribal
organization, as defined in section 4(b)
of the Indian Self-Determination and
Education Assistance Act (25 U.S.C.
5304); or
2 The term ‘‘Armed Forces’’ means the United
States Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, Space
Force, and Coast Guard, including the reserve
components.
3 The term ‘‘veteran’’ means a person who served
in the active military, naval, air, or space service,
and who was discharged or released under
conditions other than dishonorable.
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(6) Foreign person or foreign entity
who meets all requirements as described
in 7 CFR part 1400.
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§ 9.304
Allowable gross revenue.
(a) For the purposes of this subpart,
‘‘allowable gross revenue’’ includes
revenue from:
(1) Sales of agricultural commodities
produced by the producer, including
sales resulting from value added
through post-production activities;
(2) Sales of agricultural commodities
a producer purchased for resale that had
a change in characteristic due to the
time held (for example, a plant
purchased at a size of 2 inches and sold
as an 18-inch plant after 4 months), less
the cost or other basis of such
commodities;
(3) The taxable amount of cooperative
distributions directly related to the sale
of the agricultural commodities
produced by the producer;
(4) Benefits under the following
agricultural programs: ARC and PLC,
BCAP, DMC, LDP, MFP, MLG, and
MPP-Dairy;
(5) CCC loans, if treated as income
and reported to IRS;
(6) Crop insurance proceeds;
(7) Federal disaster program payments
under the following programs: 2017
WHIP, ELAP, LFP, LIP, NAP, Milk Loss
Program, On-Farm Storage Loss
Program, STRP, TAP, and WHIP+;
(8) Payments issued through grant
agreements with FSA for losses of
agricultural commodities;
(9) Grants from the Department of
Commerce, National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration and State
program funds providing direct
payments for the loss of agricultural
commodities or the loss of revenue from
agricultural commodities;
(10) Revenue from raised breeding
livestock;
(11) Revenue earned as a cattle feeder
operation;
(12) Other revenue directly related to
the production of agricultural
commodities that IRS requires the
producer to report as income and
(13) For 2020 allowable gross revenue,
payments PMVAP regardless of the
calendar year in which the payment was
received.
(b) Allowable gross revenue does not
include revenue from sources other than
those listed in paragraph (a) of this
section, including but not limited to,
revenue from:
(1) Applicable pandemic assistance;
(2) Sales of commodities that are
excluded from ‘‘agricultural
commodities,’’
(3) Resale items not held for
characteristic change;
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(4) Income from a pass-through entity
such as an S Corp or limited liability
company;
(5) Conservation program payments;
(6) Any pandemic assistance
payments that were not intended to
compensate for the loss of agricultural
commodities or the loss of revenue from
agricultural commodities due to the
pandemic (for example, payments to
provide assistance with the cost of
purchasing personal protective
equipment, retrofitting facilities for
worker and consumer safety, shifting to
online sales platforms, transportation,
worker housing, or medical costs);
(7) Custom hire income;
(8) Net gain from hedging or
speculation;
(9) Wages, salaries, tips, and cash
rent;
(10) Rental of equipment or supplies;
and
(11) Acting as a contract producer of
an agricultural commodity.
(c) If a producer did not have a full
year of revenue for 2018 or 2019, or
increased their production capacity in
2020 compared to 2018 or 2019, the
producer may certify to an adjusted
2018 or 2019 allowable gross revenue on
form FSA–1122A. Increases in
production capacity do not include
changes due to crop rotation from year
to year, changes in farming practices
such as converting from conventional
tillage to no-till, or increasing the rate of
fertilizers or chemicals. Documentation
required to support such an adjustment
must be provided within 30 calendar
days of submitting their PARP
application and demonstrate that the
producer:
(1) Had the production capacity to
support the expected full year revenue;
(2) Added production capacity to the
farming operation;
(3) Increased the use of existing
production capacity; or
(4) Made physical alterations to
existing production capacity.
(d) If a producer did not have
allowable gross revenue in 2018 and
2019, the producer must certify on form
FSA–1122A as to what had been their
reasonably expected 2020 allowable
gross revenue prior to the impact of the
COVID–19 pandemic. Documentation
required to support the producer’s
certification must be provided within 30
calendar days of submitting the
producer’s PARP application.
Acceptable documentation must be
generated in the ordinary course of
business and dated prior to the impact
of the COVID–19 pandemic and
includes, but is not limited to:
(1) Financial documents such as a
business plan or cash flow statement
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that demonstrate an expected level of
revenue;
(2) Sales contracts or purchase
agreements; and
(3) Documentation supporting
production capacity, use of existing
production capacity, or physical
alterations that demonstrate production
capacity.
(e) A producer who does not provide
acceptable documentation described in
paragraph (c) or (d) of this section
within 30 calendar days of submitting
their application is not eligible for an
adjustment to their 2019 allowable gross
revenue or to have their payment
calculated using an expected 2020
allowable gross revenue, as applicable.
(f) Except as provided in paragraph
(a)(13) of this section, the allowable
gross revenue for a specific calendar
year will be based on the calendar year
in which that revenue was received by
the producer.
(g) Producers who file or would file a
joint tax return will certify their
allowable gross revenue based on what
it would have been had they filed taxes
separately for the applicable year.
§ 9.305
Time and method of application.
(a) A completed PARP application
under this subpart must be submitted to
any FSA county office by the close of
business on the date announced by the
Deputy Administrator. Applications
may be submitted in person or by mail,
email, facsimile, or other methods
announced by FSA.
(b) Failure of an individual, entity, or
a member of an entity to submit the
following payment limitation and
payment eligibility forms within 60
days from the PARP application
deadline, may result in no payment or
a reduced payment:
(1) Form AD–2047, Customer Data
Worksheet, for new customers or
existing customers who need to update
their customer profile;
(2) Form FSA–1122A, PARP
Application, if applicable;
(3) Form CCC–860, Socially
Disadvantaged, Limited Resource,
Beginning and Veteran Farmer or
Rancher Certification, if applicable;
(4) Form CCC–901, Member
Information for Legal Entities, if
applicable;
(5) Form CCC–902 Farm Operating
Plan for an individual or legal entity as
provided in 7 CFR part 1400;
(6) Form CCC–941, Average Adjusted
Gross Income (AGI) Certification and
Consent to Disclosure of Tax
Information, for the 2020 program year
for the person or legal entity, including
the legal entity’s members, partners, or
shareholders, as provided in 7 CFR part
1400;
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(7) Form FSA–1123, Certification of
2020 Adjusted Gross Income (AGI), if
applicable; and
(8) Form AD–1026, Highly Erodible
Land Conservation (HELC) and Wetland
Conservation (WC) Certification, for the
PARP applicant and applicable affiliates
as provided in 7 CFR part 12.
(c) If requested by USDA, the
producer must provide additional
documentation that establishes the
producer’s eligibility for PARP. If
supporting documentation is requested,
the documentation must be submitted to
USDA within 30 calendar days from the
request or the application will be
disapproved by USDA. FSA may request
supporting documentation to verify
information provided by the producer
and their eligibility including, but not
limited to, the producer’s:
(1) Allowable gross revenue reported
on the PARP application; and
(2) Ownership share in the
agricultural commodities.
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§ 9.306
Payment calculation.
(a) If the producer’s allowable gross
revenue for 2020 decreased by at least
15 percent compared to the producer’s
allowable gross revenue for 2018 or
2019, as elected by the producer:
(1) FSA will calculate:
(i) The producer’s 2018 or 2019
allowable gross revenue, as elected by
the producer and as adjusted according
to § 9.304(c), if applicable; minus
(ii) The producer’s 2020 allowable
gross revenue; multiplied by
(iii) A payment factor of:
(A) Ninety (90) percent for
underserved farmers or ranchers, who
have submitted form CCC–860 certifying
they meet the definition for at least one
of the applicable groups; or
(B) Eighty (80) percent for all other
producers; and
(2) The producer’s PARP payment
will be equal to the result of the
calculation in paragraph (a)(1) of this
section minus the producer’s applicable
pandemic assistance, and 2020 program
year ERP payments.
(b) If a producer did not have
allowable gross revenue in 2018 and
2019 and the producer’s allowable gross
revenue for 2020 decreased by at least
15 percent compared to the producer’s
expected 2020 allowable gross revenue:
(1) FSA will calculate:
(i) The producer’s expected 2020
allowable gross revenue, as specified in
§ 9.304(d), minus
(ii) The producer’s actual 2020
allowable gross revenue;
(iii) Multiplied by a payment factor of:
(A) 90 percent for underserved
farmers or ranchers who have submitted
form CCC–860 certifying they meet the
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definition for at least one of the
applicable groups; or
(B) 80 percent for all other producers;
and
(2) The producer’s PARP payment
will be equal to the result of the
calculation in paragraph (b)(1) of this
section minus the producer’s applicable
pandemic assistance, and 2020 program
year ERP payments.
(c) If a producer receives assistance
through 2020 program year ERP or any
program included under applicable
pandemic assistance after their PARP
payment is calculated, their PARP
payment will be recalculated and the
producer must refund any resulting
overpayment.
(d) Payments calculated according to
this section are subject to the
availability of funds and may be
factored if total calculated payments
exceed the available funding.
§ 9.307 Adjusted gross income limitation,
payment limitation, and attribution.
(a) To be eligible to receive a PARP
payment and facilitate administration of
paragraphs (b) through (f) of this
section, a person or legal entity must
provide their name, address, valid
taxpayer identification number, and
ownership share to USDA. In addition,
a legal entity must provide the name,
address, valid taxpayer identification
number, and ownership share of each
person or legal entity, that holds or
acquires a direct or indirect ownership
interest in the legal entity. PARP
payments to a legal entity will be
reduced in proportion to a member’s
ownership share when a valid taxpayer
identification number for a person or
legal entity that holds less than a 10
percent direct or indirect ownership
interest, at or above the fourth level of
ownership in the business structure, is
not provided to USDA. Additionally, a
legal entity will not be eligible to
receive PARP payments when a valid
taxpayer identification number for a
person or legal entity that holds a direct
or indirect ownership interest of 10
percent or greater, at or above the fourth
level of ownership in the business
structure, is not provided to USDA.
(b) The $900,000 average adjusted
gross income limitation provisions in 7
CFR part 1400 relating to limits on
income for persons or legal entities,
including members of legal entities,
joint ventures, and general partnerships
applies to PARP. The average adjusted
gross income will be calculated for a
person or legal entity based on the 2016,
2017, and 2018 tax years. If the person’s
or legal entity’s average adjusted gross
income exceeds $900,000, the applicant
is ineligible for PARP except as
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provided in paragraph (c) of this
section.
(c) A person or legal entity that does
not meet the average adjusted gross
income requirements described in
paragraph (b) of this section, may
otherwise meet the adjusted gross
income requirements, provided the
person’s or legal entity’s 2020 adjusted
gross income, as defined under 26
U.S.C. 62 or comparable measure, is not
more than $900,000. Except for general
partnerships and joint ventures, a PARP
applicant that is a person or legal entity,
including members holding an
ownership interest in the legal entity, is
required to:
(1) Certify, on a form that is approved
for that purpose by the Deputy
Administrator, that their 2020 adjusted
gross income or comparable measure is
not more than $900,000; and
(2) Submit a certification from a
licensed CPA or attorney affirming the
person’s or legal entity’s 2020 adjusted
gross income is not more than $900,000.
(d) Members of general partnerships
and joint ventures not meeting the
income requirements described in
paragraph (b) of this section may
otherwise meet the income
requirements, provided the member’s
2020 adjusted gross income, as defined
under 26 U.S.C. 62 or comparable
measure, is not more than $900,000. The
member is required to provide the
information described in paragraphs
(c)(1) and (2) of this section.
(e) A person or legal entity other than
a joint venture or general partnership
cannot receive, directly or indirectly,
more than $125,000 under PARP. USDA
may establish a lower maximum
payment amount per person, legal
entity, or member of a joint venture or
general partnership after the application
period has ended if calculated payment
amounts exceed available funding.
Payments made to a PARP applicant
who is a joint operation, including a
joint venture or a general partnership,
may not exceed the amount determined
by multiplying $125,000 (or the reduced
maximum payment limitation, if
applicable) by the number of persons or
legal entities that comprise the firstlevel membership of the joint operation.
(f) A PARP payment made to a legal
entity will be considered in
combination with other PARP payments
attributed to every person or legal entity
with a direct or indirect ownership
interest in the legal entity. The
maximum limitation described in
paragraph (e) of this section for a legal
entity is determined based on payments
to the legal entity and members who are
an individual person or a legal entity. If
a member’s combined PARP payments
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reach the maximum payment limitation
when summed from all businesses in
which the person or legal entity has an
ownership interest, then subsequent
payments to the legal entity will be
reduced by the proportionate ownership
interest of the member. A payment to a
legal entity will be attributed to those
members who have a direct or indirect
ownership interest in the legal entity,
unless the payment of the legal entity
has been reduced by the proportionate
ownership interest of the member due to
that member’s ineligibility. Attribution
of payments made to legal entities will
be tracked through four levels of
ownership in legal entities as follows:
(1) First level of ownership: Any
payment made to a legal entity that is
owned in whole or in part by a person
will be attributed to the person in an
amount that represents the direct
ownership interest in the first-level or
payment legal entity;
(2) Second level of ownership: Any
payment made to a first-level legal
entity that is owned in whole or in part
by another legal entity (referred to as a
second-level legal entity) will be
attributed to the second-level legal
entity in proportion to the ownership of
the second-level legal entity in the firstlevel legal entity; if the second-level
legal entity is owned in whole or in part
by a person, the amount of the payment
made to the first-level legal entity will
be attributed to the person in the
amount that represents the indirect
ownership in the first-level legal entity
by the person;
(3) Third and fourth levels of
ownership: Except as provided in the
second-level ownership in paragraph
(f)(2) of this section and in the fourth
level of ownership in paragraph (f)(4) of
this section, any payments made to a
legal entity at the third and fourth levels
of ownership will be attributed in the
same manner as specified in paragraph
(f)(2) of this section; and
(4) Fourth-level of ownership: If the
fourth level of ownership is that of a
legal entity and not that of a person, a
reduction in payment will be applied to
the first-level or payment legal entity in
the amount that represents the indirect
ownership in the first level or payment
legal entity by the fourth-level legal
entity.
(g) Payments made to a PARP
applicant that is an Indian Tribe or
Tribal organization, as defined in the
section 4(b) of the Indian SelfDetermination and Education
Assistance Act (25 U.S.C. 5304), are not
subject to:
(1) AGI requirements described in
paragraphs (b) through (d) of this
section;
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(2) Payment limitation described in
paragraph (e) of this section; and
(3) Attribution of payments described
in paragraph (f) of this section.
(h) Payments made directly or
indirectly to a person who is a minor
child will not be combined with the
earnings of the minor child’s parent or
legal guardian.
§ 9.308
Eligibility subject to verification.
(a) Producers who are approved for
participation in PARP are required to
retain documentation in support of their
application for 3 years after the date of
approval.
(b) Participants receiving PARP
payments must permit authorized
representatives of USDA or the
Government Accountability Office,
during regular business hours, to enter
the agricultural operation and to
inspect, examine, and to allow
representatives to make copies of books,
records, or other items for the purpose
of confirming the accuracy of the
information provided by the participant.
§ 9.309
Miscellaneous provisions.
(a) If a PARP payment resulted from
erroneous information provided by a
producer, or any person acting on their
behalf, the payment will be recalculated
and the producer must refund any
excess payment with interest calculated
from the date of the disbursement of the
payment.
(b) If FSA determines that the
producer intentionally misrepresented
information provided on their
application, the application will be
disapproved and the producer must
refund the full payment to FSA with
interest from the date of disbursement.
(c) Any required refunds must be
resolved in accordance with part 3 of
this title.
(d) The regulations in 7 CFR part 718,
subpart D, and 7 CFR parts 11 and 780
apply to determinations made under
this subpart.
(e) A producer, whether a person or
legal entity that either fails to timely
provide all required documentation or
fails to satisfy any eligibility
requirement for PARP, is not eligible to
receive PARP payments, directly or
indirectly. A PARP payment to an
eligible legal entity applicant whose
member(s) either fails to timely provide
all required documentation or fails to
satisfy any eligibility requirement for
PARP will be reduced proportionate to
that member’s ownership interest in the
legal entity.
(f) Any payment under this subpart
will be made without regard to
questions of title under State law and
without regard to any claim or lien
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against the commodity or proceeds from
the sale of the commodity. The
regulations governing offsets in part 3 of
this title do not apply to payments made
under this subpart.
(g) For the purposes of the effect of a
lien on eligibility for Federal programs
(28 U.S.C. 3201(e)), USDA waives the
restriction on receipt of funds under
PARP but only as to beneficiaries who,
as a condition of the waiver, agree to
apply the PARP payments to reduce the
amount of the judgment lien.
(h) The provisions in 7 CFR 718.3,
718.4, 718.5, 718.6, 718.8, 718.9, 718.10,
and 718.11 are applicable to multiple
programs and apply to PARP.
(i) In addition to any other Federal
laws that apply to PARP, the following
laws apply: 15 U.S.C. 714; 18 U.S.C.
286, 287, 371, and 1001.
§ 9.310
Perjury.
In either applying for or participating
in PARP, or both, the producer is
subject to laws against perjury and any
resulting penalties and prosecution,
including, but not limited to, 18 U.S.C.
1621. If the producer willfully makes
and represents as true any verbal or
written declaration, certification,
statement, or verification that the
producer knows or believes not to be
true, in the course of either applying for
or participating in PARP, or both, then
the producer may be guilty of perjury
and, except as otherwise provided by
law, may be fined, imprisoned for not
more than 5 years, or both, regardless of
whether the producer makes such verbal
or written declaration, certification,
statement, or verification within or
without the United States.
PART 701—EMERGENCY
CONSERVATION PROGRAM,
EMERGENCY FOREST RESTORATION
PROGRAM, AND CERTAIN RELATED
PROGRAMS PREVIOUSLY
ADMINISTERED UNDER THIS PART
15. The authority citation for part 701
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 2201–2206; Sec. 101,
Pub. L. 109–148, 119 Stat. 2747; and Pub. L.
111–212, 124 Stat. 2302.
Subpart A—General
16. Amend § 701.2 in paragraph (b) as
follows:
■ a. Remove the definition of
‘‘Commercial forest land’’;
■ b. Add the definition of ‘‘Forestland’’
in alphabetical order;
■ c. In a definition for ‘‘Nonindustrial
private forest land’’, remove the words
‘‘commercial forest’’; and
■
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d. Add a definition for ‘‘Socially
disadvantaged farmer or rancher’’ in
alphabetical order.
The additions read as follows:
■
§ 701.2
Abbreviations and definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
Forestland means land that is at least
120 feet wide and 1 acre in size and at
least 10 percent covered by live trees of
any size.
*
*
*
*
*
Socially disadvantaged farmer or
rancher means a farmer or rancher who
is a member of a socially disadvantaged
group. A socially disadvantaged group
is a group whose members have been
subjected to racial or ethnic prejudice
because of their identity as members of
a group without regard to their
individual qualities.
§§ 701.44 and 701.45
Reserved]
[Removed and
17. Remove and reserve §§ 701.44 and
701.45.
■
Subpart B—Emergency Conservation
Program
18. Amend § 701.105 as follows:
a. Remove paragraphs (b)(1) and (2);
b. Redesignate paragraphs (b)(3)
through (13) as paragraphs (b)(1)
through (11), respectively;
■ c. Add paragraph (d).
The addition reads as set forth below.
■
■
■
§ 701.105
Land eligibility.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Additional provisions making
Government-owned land eligible is
specified in § 701.106.
■ 19. Add § 701.106 to read as follows:
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§ 701.106
Government-owned land.
(a) State-owned land. When land is
owned by a State, whether it is eligible
for cost share is as specified in this
paragraph (a) in addition to the
requirements in § 701.105.
(1) If an eligible person or legal entity
has a lease for the State-owned land that
allows cost share, and files a cost share
request for the State-owned land, the
land is eligible for cost share if, as
determined by FSA, the:
(i) Eligible person or legal entity will
directly benefit from the practice; or
(ii) The land will remain in
agricultural production throughout the
established practice life span.
(2) If an eligible person or legal entity
files a cost-share request for Stateowned land, the land is ineligible for
cost share if, as determined by FSA, the:
(i) Practice is for the primary benefit
of the State or State agencies; or
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(ii) Eligible person or legal entity is
prohibited by the lease from accepting
cost-share.
(b) Federally-owned farmland. When
land is federally owned, whether it is
eligible for cost-share is as specified in
this paragraph (a), in addition to the
requirements in § 701.105.
(1) If an eligible person or legal entity
files a cost-share request on federally
owned farmland, the land is eligible if
all of the following apply:
(i) An eligible private person or legal
entity is farming or ranching the
farmland;
(ii) An eligible person or legal entity
has a lease that does not prohibit costshare;
(iii) The practice will primarily
benefit nearby or adjacent privately
owned farmland of the eligible person
or legal entity performing the practice;
(iv) A person or legal entity
performing the practice has
authorization from a Federal agency to
install and maintain the practice;
(v) The Federal land is the most
practical location for the eligible
practice; and
(vi) During a drought, the practice
will primarily benefit the livestock
owned or managed by the eligible
person or legal entity performing the
practice.
(2) If an eligible person or legal entity
files a cost share request on federallyowned land, the land is ineligible if the
practices performed on these lands are
for the benefit of land owned by a
Federal agency.
(c) Federal or State agency. For the
purposes of this subpart, private persons
or legal entities exclude Federal and
State agencies.
■ 20. Amend § 701.111 by revising
paragraph (a) to read as follows:
§ 701.111 Prohibition on duplicate
payments.
(a) Duplicate payments. Participants
are not eligible to receive funding under
ECP on the same piece of land for which
the participant has or will receive
funding under any other Federal or
State program that covers the same or
similar expenses so as to create
duplicate payments, or, in effect, a
higher rate of cost share than is allowed
under this part.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 21. Amend § 701.126 by adding
paragraph (d) to read as follows.
§ 701.126 Maximum cost-share
percentages.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) The Secretary may waive the
maximum limitations described in
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paragraphs (a) through (c) of this section
to the maximum extent allowed by law.
■ 22. Amend § 701.127 by designating
the undesignated paragraph as
paragraph (a) and adding paragraph (b)
to read as follows.
§ 701.127 Maximum ECP payments per
person or legal entity.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) The Secretary may waive the
maximum limitations described in
paragraph (a) of this section to the
maximum extent allowed by law.
■ 23. Amend § 701.128 by revising the
section heading and paragraph (a) to
read as follows.
§ 701.128
Advance payment.
(a) With respect to a payment to an
agricultural producer for any eligible
ECP practice, the agricultural producer
has the option of receiving up to 25
percent of the projected payment,
determined based on the applicable
percentage of the fair market value of
the cost of the practice, as determined
by FSA, before the agricultural producer
carries out the restoration.
*
*
*
*
*
§§ 701.150 through 701.157
[Removed]
25. Remove §§ 701.150 through
701.157.
■
Subpart C—Emergency Forest
Restoration Program
26. Amend § 701.226 by adding
paragraph (c) to read as follows.
■
§ 701.226 Maximum cost-share
percentages.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) The Secretary may waive the
maximum limitations described in
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section to
the maximum extent allowed by law.
Farm Service Administration
Chapter VII
PART 760—INDEMNITY PAYMENT
PROGRAMS
27. The authority citation for part 760
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 4501 and 1531; 16
U.S.C. 3801, note; 19 U.S.C. 2497; Title III,
Pub. L. 109–234, 120 Stat. 474; Title IX, Pub.
L. 110–28, 121 Stat. 211; Sec. 748, Pub. L.
111–80, 123 Stat. 2131; Title I, Pub. L. 115–
123, 132 Stat. 65; Title I, Pub. L. 116–20, 133
Stat. 871; Division B, Title VII, Pub. L. 116–
94, 133 Stat. 2658; and Division B, Title I,
Pub. L. 117– 43, 135 Stat. 344.
■
28. Add subpart S to read as follows.
Subpart S—Emergency Relief Program
Sec.
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760.1900 Applicability and administration.
760.1901 Definitions.
760.1902 Producer eligibility requirements.
760.1903 Allowable gross revenue.
760.1904 Time and method of application.
760.1905 Payment calculation.
760.1906 Payment limitation and
attribution.
760.1907 Eligibility subject to verification.
760.1908 Miscellaneous provisions.
760.1909 Perjury.
760.1910 Requirement to purchase crop
insurance or NAP coverage.
Subpart S—Emergency Relief Program
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§ 760.1900 Applicability and
administration.
(a) This subpart specifies the
eligibility requirements and payment
calculations for Phase 2 of the
Emergency Relief Program (ERP). ERP
provides payments to producers who
suffered eligible crop losses due to
qualifying disaster events, which
include wildfires, hurricanes, floods,
derechos, excessive heat, winter storms,
freeze (including a polar vortex), smoke
exposure, excessive moisture, qualifying
drought, and related conditions
occurring in calendar years 2020 and
2021.1 To be eligible for ERP Phase 2
payments, participants must comply
with all provisions under this subpart.
(b) ERP is administered under the
general supervision and direction of the
Administrator, Farm Service Agency
(FSA).
(c) The FSA State committee will take
any action required by this subpart that
an FSA county committee has not taken.
The FSA State committee will also:
(1) Correct, or require an FSA county
committee to correct, any action taken
by such county FSA committee that is
not in accordance with the regulations
of this subpart; or
(2) Require an FSA county committee
to withhold taking any action that is not
in accordance with this subpart.
(d) No provision or delegation to an
FSA State or county committee will
preclude the FSA Administrator, the
Deputy Administrator, or a designee or
other such person, from determining
any question arising under the programs
of this subpart, or from reversing or
modifying any determination made by
an FSA State or county committee.
(e) The Deputy Administrator has the
authority to permit State and county
committees to waive or modify
deadlines (except deadlines specified in
a law) and other requirements or
program provisions not specified in law,
1 ERP Phase 1 was administered according to the
notice of funds availability published in the Federal
Register on May 18, 2022 (87 FR 30164–30172). A
clarification to the notice of funds availability for
ERP Phase 1 was published on August 18, 2022 (87
FR 50828–50830).
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in cases where lateness or failure to
meet such other requirements or
program provisions do not adversely
affect operation of ERP.
§ 760.1901
Definitions.
The following definitions apply to
this subpart. The definitions in parts
718 and 1400 of this title apply, except
where they conflict with the definitions
in this section.
2017 WHIP means the 2017 Wildfires
and Hurricanes Indemnity Program
under 7 CFR part 760, subpart O.
Administrative fee means the amount
an insured producer paid for
catastrophic risk protection, and
additional coverage for each crop year
as specified in the applicable crop
insurance policy.
Application means the ERP Phase 2
application form.
Aquaculture means any species of
aquatic organisms grown as food for
human or livestock consumption or for
industrial or biomass uses, fish raised as
feed for fish that are consumed by
humans, and ornamental fish
propagated and reared in an aquatic
medium. Eligible aquacultural species
must be raised by a commercial operator
and in water in a controlled
environment.
ARC and PLC means the Agriculture
Risk Coverage (ARC) and Price Loss
Coverage (PLC) programs under 7 CFR
part 1412.
Average adjusted gross farm income
means the average of the person or legal
entity’s adjusted gross income derived
from farming, ranching, or forestry
operations for the 3 taxable years
preceding the most immediately
preceding complete taxable year.
(1) If the resulting average adjusted
gross farm income is at least 66.66
percent of the average adjusted gross
income of the person or legal entity,
then the average adjusted gross farm
income may also take into consideration
income or benefits derived from the
following:
(i) The sale of equipment to conduct
farm, ranch, or forestry operations; and
(ii) The provision of production
inputs and services to farmers, ranchers,
foresters, and farm operations.
(2) The relevant tax years are:
(i) For the 2020 program year, 2016,
2017, and 2018; and
(ii) For the 2021 program year, 2017,
2018, and 2019.
Average adjusted gross income means
the average of the adjusted gross income
as defined under 26 U.S.C. 62 or
comparable measure of the person or
legal entity. The relevant tax years are:
(1) For the 2020 program year, 2016,
2017, and 2018; and
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(2) For the 2021 program year, 2017,
2018, and 2019.
BCAP means the Biomass Crop
Assistance Program under 7 CFR part
1450.
Beginning farmer or rancher means a
farmer or rancher who has not operated
a farm or ranch for more than 10 years
and who materially and substantially
participates in the operation. For a legal
entity to be considered a beginning
farmer or rancher, at least 50 percent of
the interest must be beginning farmers
or ranchers.
Benchmark revenue means allowable
gross revenue for the benchmark year. If
a producer began farming in 2020 or
2021 and did not have allowable gross
revenue in either 2018 or 2019, the
benchmark revenue is the producer’s
reasonably expected allowable gross
revenue for the disaster year prior to the
impact of the qualifying disaster event.
Benchmark year means the 2018 or
2019 tax year, as elected by the
producer.
Buy-up NAP coverage means NAP
coverage at a payment amount that is
equal to an indemnity amount
calculated for buy-up coverage
computed under section 508(c) or (h) of
the Federal Crop Insurance Act and
equal to the amount that the buy-up
coverage yield for the crop exceeds the
actual yield for the crop.
Catastrophic coverage has the same
meaning as in 7 CFR 1437.3.
CCC means the Commodity Credit
Corporation.
Certifying agent means a private or
governmental entity accredited by the
USDA Secretary for the purpose of
certifying a production, processing, or
handling operation as organic.
CFAP means the Coronavirus Food
Assistance Program 1 and 2 under 7
CFR part 9, subparts A through C,
excluding assistance for contract
producers specified in § 9.203(l) through
(o).
Controlled environment means an
environment in which everything that
can practicably be controlled by the
producer with structures, facilities, and
growing media (including but not
limited to water, soil, or nutrients), is in
fact controlled by the producer, as
determined by industry standards.
County means the county or parish of
a state. For Alaska, Puerto Rico, and the
Virgin Islands, a county is an area
designated by the State committee with
the concurrence of the Deputy
Administrator.
County committee means the FSA
county committee.
Coverage level means the percentage
determined by multiplying the elected
yield percentage under a crop insurance
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policy or NAP coverage by the elected
price percentage.
Crop insurance means an insurance
policy reinsured by the Federal Crop
Insurance Corporation under the
provisions of the Federal Crop
Insurance Act, as amended.
Crop insurance indemnity means the
payment to a participant for crop losses
covered under crop insurance
administered by RMA in accordance
with the Federal Crop Insurance Act (7
U.S.C. 1501–1524).
Deputy Administrator means Deputy
Administrator for Farm Programs, Farm
Service Agency, U.S. Department of
Agriculture, or their designee.
Direct market crop means a crop sold
directly to consumers without the
intervention of an intermediary such as
a registered handler, wholesaler,
retailer, packer, processor, shipper, or
buyer (for example, a crop sold at a
farmer’s market or roadside stand),
excluding crops sold for livestock
consumption.
Disaster year means the calendar year
in which the qualifying disaster event
occurred (that is, 2020 or 2021).
Disaster year revenue means the
allowable gross revenue for:
(1) The 2020 or 2021 tax year, as
elected by the producer, for the 2020
disaster year; and
(2) The 2021 or 2022 tax year, as
elected by the producer, for the 2021
disaster year.
(3) Producers must choose
consecutive tax years if they are
applying for both the 2020 and 2021
disaster years (that is, they may choose
2020 tax year revenue for the 2020
disaster year, and 2021 tax year revenue
for the 2021 disaster year; or they may
choose 2021 tax year revenue for the
2020 disaster year, and 2022 tax year
revenue for the 2021 disaster year).
ELAP means the Emergency
Assistance for Livestock, Honeybees,
and Farm-Raised Fish Program under
part 1416, subpart B, of this title.
Eligible crop means a crop, including
eligible aquaculture, that is produced in
the United States as part of a farming
operation and is intended to be
commercially marketed. It excludes:
(1) Crops for grazing;
(2) Aquatic species that do not meet
the definition of aquaculture;
(3) Cannabis sativa L. and any part of
that plant that does not meet the
definition of hemp; and
(4) Timber.
Farming operation means a business
enterprise engaged in the production of
agricultural products, commodities, or
livestock, operated by a person, legal
entity, or joint operation, and that is
eligible to receive payments, directly or
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indirectly, under this subpart. A person
or legal entity may have more than one
farming operation if the person or legal
entity is a member of one or more legal
entity or joint operation.
FCIC means the Federal Crop
Insurance Corporation, a wholly owned
Government Corporation of USDA,
administered by RMA.
Hemp means the plant species
Cannabis sativa L. and any part of that
plant, including the seeds thereof and
all derivatives, extracts, cannabinoids,
isomers, acids, salts, and salts of
isomers, whether growing or not, with a
delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol
concentration of not more than 0.3
percent on a dry weight basis, that is
grown under a license or other required
authorization issued by the applicable
governing authority that permits the
production of the hemp.
High value crop means:
(1) Any eligible crop not specifically
identified as a specialty crop or listed in
the definition of ‘‘other crop’’; and
(2) Any eligible crop, regardless of
whether it is identified as a specialty
crop or listed in the definition of ‘‘other
crop,’’ if the crop is a direct market
crop, organic crop, or a crop grown for
a specific market in which specialized
products can be sold resulting in an
increased value compared to the typical
market for the crops (for example,
soybeans intended for tofu production),
as determined by the Deputy
Administrator.
Income derived from farming,
ranching, and forestry operations means
income of an individual or entity
derived from:
(1) Production of crops, specialty
crops, and unfinished raw forestry
products;
(2) Production of livestock,
aquaculture products used for food,
honeybees, and products derived from
livestock;
(3) Production of farm-based
renewable energy;
(4) Selling (including the sale of
easements and development rights) of
farm, ranch, and forestry land, water or
hunting rights, or environmental
benefits;
(5) Rental or lease of land or
equipment used for farming, ranching,
or forestry operations, including water
or hunting rights;
(6) Processing, packing, storing, and
transportation of farm, ranch, forestry
commodities including renewable
energy;
(7) Feeding, rearing, or finishing of
livestock;
(8) Payments of benefits, including
benefits from risk management
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1885
practices, crop insurance indemnities,
and catastrophic risk protection plans;
(9) Sale of land that has been used for
agricultural purposes;
(10) Payments and benefits authorized
under any program made available and
applicable to payment eligibility and
payment limitation rules;
(11) Income reported on Internal
Revenue Service (IRS) Schedule F or
other schedule used by the person or
legal entity to report income from such
operations to the IRS;
(12) Wages or dividends received
from a closely held corporation, Interest
Charge Domestic International Sales
Corporation (IC–DISC), or legal entity
comprised entirely of family members
when more than 50 percent of the legal
entity’s gross receipts for each tax year
are derived from farming, ranching, or
forestry activities as defined in this
document; and
(13) Any other activity related to
farming, ranching, and forestry, as
determined by the Deputy
Administrator.
IRS means the Department of
Treasury, Internal Revenue Service.
LDP means the Loan Deficiency
Payment programs in 7 CFR parts 1421,
1425, 1427, 1434, and 1435.
Legal entity means a corporation, joint
stock company, association, limited
partnership, irrevocable trust, estate,
charitable organization, or other similar
organization including any such
organization participating in a business
structure as a partner in a general
partnership, a participant in a joint
venture, a grantor of a revocable trust,
or as a participant in a similar
organization. A business operating as a
sole proprietorship is considered a legal
entity.
Limited resource farmer or rancher
means a farmer or rancher:
(1) Who is a person whose:
(i) Direct or indirect gross farm sales
did not exceed:
(A) $180,300 in each calendar year for
2017 and 2018 (the relevant years for
the 2020 program year); or
(B) $179,000 in each of the 2018 and
2019 calendar years for the 2021
program year;
and
(ii) Total household income was at or
below the national poverty level for a
family of four in each of the same two
previous years referenced in paragraph
(1)(i) of this definition; 1 or
1 Limited resource farmer or rancher status can be
determined using a website available through the
Limited Resource Farmer and Rancher Online Self
Determination Tool through Natural Resources
Conservation Service at https://lrftool.sc.egov.
usda.gov.
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(2) That is an entity and all members
who hold an ownership interest in the
entity meet the criteria in paragraph (1)
of this definition.
LFP means the Livestock Forage
Disaster Program under CFR part 1416,
subpart C.
MLG means marketing loan gains
under the Marketing Assistance Loan
program provisions in 7 CFR parts 1421,
1425, 1427, 1434, and 1435.
Minor child means a person who is
under 18 years of age as of June 1, 2020.
MFP means the 2018 Market
Facilitation Program under 7 CFR part
1409, subpart A, and the 2019 Market
Facilitation Program under 7 CFR part
1409, subpart B.
NAP means the Noninsured Crop
Disaster Assistance Program under
section 196 of the Federal Agriculture
Improvement and Reform Act of 1996 (7
U.S.C. 7333) and 7 CFR part 1437.
On-Farm Storage Loss Program means
the On-Farm Storage Loss Program
under 7 CFR part 760, subpart P.
Organic crop means a crop that is
organically produced consistent with
section 2103 of the Organic Foods
Production Act of 1990 (7 U.S.C. 6502)
and grown on acreage certified by a
certifying agent as conforming to
organic standards specified in 7 CFR
part 205.
Other crop means cotton, peanuts,
rice, feedstock, and any crop grown
with an intended use of grain, silage, or
forage, unless the crop meets the
requirements in paragraph (2) of the
definition of ‘‘high value crop.’’
Ownership interest means to have
either legal ownership interest or
beneficial ownership interest in a legal
entity. For the purposes of
administering ERP Phase 2, a person or
legal entity that owns a share or stock
in a legal entity that is a corporation,
limited liability company, limited
partnership, or similar type entity where
members hold a legal ownership interest
and shares in the profits or losses of
such entity is considered to have an
ownership interest in such legal entity.
A person or legal entity that is a
beneficiary of a trust or heir of an estate
who benefits from the profits or losses
of such entity is also considered to have
a beneficial ownership interest in such
legal entity.
Person means an individual, natural
person and does not include a legal
entity.
Premium means the premium paid by
the producer for crop insurance
coverage or NAP buy-up coverage
levels.
Producer means a person or legal
entity who was entitled to a share in the
eligible crop available for marketing or
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would have shared had the eligible crop
been produced and marketed.
Program year means:
(1) For ERP Phase 2, the disaster year;
and
(2) For all other programs, the
program year as defined in the
applicable program provisions.
Qualifying disaster event means
wildfires, hurricanes, floods, derechos,
excessive heat, winter storms, freeze
(including a polar vortex), smoke
exposure, excessive moisture, qualifying
drought, and related conditions.
Qualifying drought means an area
within the county was rated by the U.S.
Drought Monitor as having a drought
intensity of D2 (severe drought) for eight
consecutive weeks or D3 (extreme
drought) or higher level for any period
of time during the applicable calendar
year.
Related condition means damaging
weather and adverse natural
occurrences that occurred concurrently
with and as a direct result of a specified
qualifying disaster event. Related
conditions include, but are not limited
to:
(1) Excessive wind that occurred as a
direct result of a derecho;
(2) Silt and debris that occurred as a
direct and proximate result of flooding;
(3) Excessive wind, storm surges,
tornados, tropical storms, and tropical
depressions that occurred as a direct
result of a hurricane; and
(4) Excessive wind and blizzards that
occurred as a direct result of a winter
storm.
Socially disadvantaged farmer or
rancher means a farmer or rancher who
is a member of a group whose members
have been subjected to racial, ethnic, or
gender prejudice because of their
identity as members of a group without
regard to their individual qualities. For
entities, at least 50 percent of the
ownership interest must be held by
individuals who are members of such a
group. Socially disadvantaged groups
include the following and no others
unless approved in writing by the
Deputy Administrator:
(1) American Indians or Alaskan
Natives;
(2) Asians or Asian-Americans;
(3) Blacks or African Americans;
(4) Hispanics or Hispanic Americans;
(5) Native Hawaiians or other Pacific
Islanders; and
(6) Women.
Specialty crops means fruits, tree
nuts, vegetables, culinary herbs and
spices, medicinal plants, and nursery,
floriculture, and horticulture crops. This
includes common specialty crops
identified by USDA’s Agricultural
Marketing Service at https://
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www.ams.usda.gov/services/grants/
scbgp/specialty-crop and other crops as
designated by the Deputy
Administrator.
Substantial beneficial interest (SBI)
has the same meaning as specified in
the applicable crop insurance policy.
For the purposes of ERP Phase 1,
Federal crop insurance records for
‘‘transfer of coverage, right to
indemnity’’ are considered the same as
SBIs.
STRP means the Seafood Trade Relief
Program announced in the notice of
funds availability published on
September 14, 2020 (85 FR 56572–
56575).
Underserved farmer or rancher means
a beginning farmer or rancher, limited
resource farmer or rancher, socially
disadvantaged farmer or rancher, or
veteran farmer or rancher.
United States means all 50 States of
the United States, the District of
Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico, and any other territory or
possession of the United States.
U.S. Drought Monitor means the
system for classifying drought severity
according to a range of abnormally dry
to exceptional drought. It is a
collaborative effort between Federal and
academic partners, produced on a
weekly basis, to synthesize multiple
indices, outlooks, and drought impacts
on a map and in narrative form. This
synthesis of indices is reported by the
National Drought Mitigation Center at
https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu.
Veteran farmer or rancher means a
farmer or rancher:
(1) Who has served in the Armed
Forces (as defined in 38 U.S.C.
101(10) 2) and:
(i) Has not operated a farm or ranch
for more than 10 years; or
(ii) Has obtained status as a veteran
(as defined in 38 U.S.C. 101(2) 3) during
the most recent 10-year period; or
(2) That is an entity and at least 50
percent of the ownership interest is held
by members who meet the criteria in
paragraph (1) of this definition.
WHIP+ means the Wildfires and
Hurricanes Indemnity Program Plus
under 7 CFR part 760, subpart O.
§ 760.1902 Producer eligibility
requirements.
(a) To be eligible for ERP Phase 2, a
producer must have suffered a loss in
2 The term ‘‘Armed Forces’’ means the United
States Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, Space
Force, and Coast Guard, including the reserve
components.
3 The term ‘‘veteran’’ means a person who served
in the active military, naval, air, or space service,
and who was discharged or released under
conditions other than dishonorable.
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disaster year allowable gross revenue, as
compared to the benchmark allowable
gross revenue, due to necessary
expenses associated with losses of
eligible crops due in whole or in part to
a qualifying disaster event that occurred
in the 2020 or 2021 calendar year.
(b) To be eligible for an ERP Phase 2
payment, a producer must be a:
(1) Citizen of the United States;
(2) Resident alien, which for purposes
of this subpart means ‘‘lawful alien’’ as
defined in part 1400 of this title;
(3) Partnership organized under State
Law;
(4) Corporation, limited liability
company, or other organizational
structure organized under State law; or
(5) Indian Tribe or Tribal
organization, as defined in section 4(b)
of the Indian Self-Determination and
Education Assistance Act (25 U.S.C.
5304).
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§ 760.1903
Allowable gross revenue.
(a) For the purposes of this subpart,
‘‘allowable gross revenue’’ includes
revenue from:
(1) Sales of eligible crops produced by
the producer, which includes sales
resulting from value added through
post-production activities that were
reportable on IRS Schedule F;
(2) Sales of eligible crops a producer
purchased for resale that had a change
in characteristic due to the time held
(for example, a plant purchased at a size
of 2 inches and sold as an 18-inch plant
after 4 months), less the cost or other
basis of such eligible crops;
(3) The taxable amount of cooperative
distributions directly related to the sale
of the eligible crops produced by the
producer;
(4) Benefits under the following
agricultural programs: 2017 WHIP, ARC
and PLC, BCAP, LDP, MLG, MFP, the
On-Farm Storage Loss Program, and
STRP;
(5) CCC loans, if treated as income
and reported to IRS;
(6) Crop insurance proceeds for
eligible crops, minus the amount of
administrative fees and premiums;
(7) NAP payments for eligible crops,
minus the amount of service fees and
premiums;
(8) ELAP payments for an aquaculture
crop;
(9) Payments issued through grant
agreements with FSA for losses of
eligible crops;
(10) Grants from the Department of
Commerce, National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration and State
program funds providing direct
payments for the loss of eligible crops
or the loss of revenue from eligible
crops;
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(11) Other revenue directly related to
the production of eligible crops that IRS
requires the producer to report as
income;
(12) For the disaster year only, ERP
Phase 1 payments issued to another
person or entity for the producer’s share
of an eligible crop, regardless of the tax
year in which the payment would be
reported to IRS; and
(13) For the benchmark year only,
2018, 2019 and 2020 WHIP+ and QLA
payments.
(b) Allowable gross revenue does not
include revenue from sources other than
those listed in paragraph (a) of this
section, including but not limited to,
revenue from:
(1) Federal assistance programs not
included in paragraph (a) of this section;
(2) Sales of livestock, animal byproducts, and any commodities that are
excluded from ‘‘eligible crops’’;
(3) Resale items not held for
characteristic change;
(4) Income from a pass-through entity
such as an S Corp or limited liability
company;
(5) Conservation program payments;
(6) Any pandemic assistance
payments that were not for the loss of
eligible crops or the loss of revenue
from eligible crops;
(7) Custom hire income;
(8) Net gain from hedging or
speculation;
(9) Wages, salaries, tips, and cash
rent;
(10) Rental of equipment or supplies;
and
(11) Acting as a contract producer of
an agricultural commodity.
(c) A producer is required to certify to
an adjusted allowable gross revenue for
the benchmark year on FSA–521 if the
producer had a decreased operation
capacity in a disaster year for which
they are applying for ERP Phase 2,
compared to the benchmark year.
(d) A producer may certify to an
adjusted allowable gross revenue for the
benchmark year on FSA–521 if either of
the following apply:
(1) The producer did not have a full
year of revenue for 2018 or 2019; or
(2) The producer had expanded their
operation capacity in a disaster year for
which they are applying for ERP Phase
2, compared to the benchmark year.
(e) Change in operation capacity does
not include crop rotation from year to
year, changes in farming practices such
as converting from conventional tillage
to no-till, or increasing the rate of
fertilizers or chemicals. If requested by
FSA, producers are required to submit
documentation to FSA to support
adjustments described in paragraphs (c)
and (d) of this section within 30
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1887
calendar days of the request. The
documentation to support an
adjustment due to a change in operation
capacity must show that the adjustment
to the producer’s benchmark revenue is
due to an:
(1) Addition or decrease in
production capacity of the farming
operation;
(2) Increase or decrease in the use of
existing production capacity; or
(3) Physical alterations that were
made to existing production capacity.
(f) If a producer began farming in 2020
or 2021 and did not have allowable
gross revenue in a benchmark year, the
producer may certify to an adjusted
benchmark allowable gross revenue on
form FSA–521 that represents what had
been the producer’s reasonably expected
disaster year revenue prior to the impact
of the qualifying disaster event. If
requested by FSA, documentation
required to support a producer’s
certification must be provided within 30
calendar days of FSA’s request, or the
producer will be considered ineligible
for ERP Phase 2. Acceptable
documentation must be generated in the
ordinary course of business and dated
prior to the impact of the disaster event
and includes, but is not limited to:
(1) Financial documents such as a
business plan or cash flow statement
that demonstrate an expected level of
revenue;
(2) Sales contracts or purchase
agreements; and
(3) Documentation supporting
production capacity, use of existing
production capacity, or physical
alterations that demonstrate production
capacity.
(g) The allowable gross revenue will
be based on the year for which the
revenue would be reported for the
purpose of filing a tax return, except for
the ERP Phase 1 payments specified in
paragraph (a)(12) of this section.
(h) Producers who file or would be
eligible to file a joint tax return will
certify their allowable gross revenue
based on what it would have been had
they filed taxes separately for the
applicable year.
(i) On form FSA–521, for each
applicable disaster year, producers must
indicate the percentage of their
allowable gross revenue from specialty
and high value crops and the percentage
from other crops. The percentages
certified must be equal to the
percentages that the producer would
have reasonably expected to receive for
the disaster year if not for the qualifying
disaster event.
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§ 760.1904 Time and method of
application.
(a) A completed FSA–521, Emergency
Relief Program (ERP) Phase 2
Application, must be submitted to the
producer’s recording county office by
the close of business on the date
announced by the Deputy
Administrator. Applications may be
submitted in person or by mail, email,
facsimile, or other methods announced
by FSA.
(b) Failure of an individual, entity, or
a member of an entity to submit the
following payment limitation and
payment eligibility forms within 60
days from the date of the ERP Phase 2
application deadline, may result in no
payment or a reduced payment:
(1) Form AD–2047, Customer Data
Worksheet, for new customers or
existing customers who need to update
their customer profile;
(2) Form CCC–860, Socially
Disadvantaged, Limited Resource,
Beginning and Veteran Farmer or
Rancher Certification, applicable for the
program year or years for which the
producer is applying for ERP;
(3) Form CCC–901, Member
Information for Legal Entities, if
applicable;
(4) Form CCC–902, Farm Operating
Plan for an individual or legal entity as
provided in 7 CFR part 1400;
(5) Form FSA–510, Request for an
Exception to the $125,000 Payment
Limitation for Certain Programs,
accompanied by a certification from a
certified public accountant or attorney
as to that person or legal entity’s
certification, for a legal entity and all
members of that entity, for each
applicable program year, including the
legal entity’s members, partners, or
shareholders, as provided in 7 CFR part
1400; and
(6) Form AD–1026, Highly Erodible
Land Conservation (HELC) and Wetland
Conservation (WC) Certification, for the
ERP Phase 2 applicant and applicable
affiliates as provided in 7 CFR part 12.
(c) If requested by FSA, the producer
must provide additional documentation
that establishes the producer’s eligibility
for ERP Phase 2. If supporting
documentation is requested, the
documentation must be submitted to
FSA within 30 calendar days from the
request or the application will be
disapproved by FSA. FSA may request
supporting documentation to verify
information provided by the producer
and the produce’s eligibility including,
but not limited to, the producer’s:
(1) Allowable gross revenue reported
on the ERP Phase 2 application;
(2) Percentages of the expected
allowable gross revenue from:
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(i) Specialty and high value crops;
and
(ii) Other crops; and
(3) Ownership share in the
agricultural commodities.
§ 760.1905
Payment calculation.
(a) ERP Phase 2 payments will be
calculated separately for each disaster
year. If a producer indicates that they
have expected revenue for both
specialty and high value crops and other
crops for a disaster year, a payment will
be calculated separately for:
(1) Specialty and high value crops;
and
(2) Other crops.
(b) To determine a producer’s ERP
Phase 2 payment amount, FSA will
calculate:
(1) The producer’s benchmark year
allowable gross revenue, adjusted
according to 7 CFR 760.1903, if
applicable, multiplied by the ERP factor
of 70 percent; minus
(2) The producer’s disaster year
allowable gross revenue; minus
(3) The sum of the producer’s net ERP
Phase 1 payments for the 2020 program
year, if the calculation is for the 2020
disaster year, or for the 2021 and 2022
program years, if the calculation is for
the 2021 disaster year; minus
(4) The sum of the producer’s net
CFAP payments (excluding payments
for contract producer revenue), net 2020
WHIP+ payments, and net 2020 Quality
Loss Adjustment (QLA) Program
payments, if the calculation is for the
2020 disaster year; and
(5) Multiplied by the percentage of the
expected disaster year revenue for
specialty and high value crops or other
crops, as applicable, to determine the
separate payments for specialty and
high value crops or other crops.
(c) FSA will issue an initial payment
equal to the lesser of the amount
calculated according to this section or
the maximum initial payment amount of
$2,000. If a producer has also received
a payment under ERP Phase 1, FSA will
reduce the producer’s initial ERP Phase
2 payment amount by subtracting the
producer’s ERP Phase 1 gross payment
amount.
(d) After the close of the ERP Phase
2 application period, FSA will issue a
final payment equal to the amount
calculated according to this section
minus the amount of the producer’s
initial payment. If total calculated
payments exceed the total funding
available for ERP Phase 2, the ERP factor
may be adjusted and the final payment
amounts will be prorated to stay within
the amount of available funding. If there
are insufficient funds, a differential of
15 percent will be used for underserved
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producers similar to ERP Phase 1, but
with a cap at the statutory maximum of
70 percent. For example, if the ERP
Factor is set at 50 percent, the factor
used for underserved producers will be
65 percent, but if the factor is set at 55
percent or higher, the factor for
underserved producers will be capped
at 70 percent.
(e) If a producer receives assistance
through CFAP or ERP Phase 1 after their
ERP Phase 2 payment is calculated, the
producer’s ERP Phase 2 payment will be
recalculated and the producer must
refund any resulting overpayment.
§ 760.1906 Payment limitation and
attribution.
(a) The payment limitation for ERP is
determined by the person’s or legal
entity’s average adjusted gross farm
income (income from activities related
to farming, ranching, or forestry).
Specifically, if their average adjusted
gross farm income is less than 75
percent of their average adjusted gross
income (AGI) for the three taxable years
preceding the most immediately
preceding complete tax year, a person or
legal entity, other than a joint venture or
general partnership, cannot receive,
directly or indirectly, more than
$125,000 in payments for specialty
crops and high value crops 1 and
$125,000 in payment for all other crops
under:
(1) ERP Phase 1 for program year 2020
and ERP Phase 2 for program year 2020,
combined; and
(2) ERP Phase 1 for program years
2021 and 2022 and ERP Phase 2 for
program year 2021, combined.
(b) If at least 75 percent of the person
or legal entity’s average AGI is derived
from farming, ranching, or forestry
related activities and the producer
provides the required certification and
documentation, as discussed below, the
person or legal entity, other than a joint
venture or general partnership, is
eligible to receive, directly or indirectly,
up to:
(1) $900,000 for specialty crops and
high value crops combined for:
(i) ERP Phase 1 for program year 2020
and ERP Phase 2 for program year 2020,
combined; and
(ii) ERP Phase 1 for program years
2021 and 2022 and ERP Phase 2 for
program year 2021, combined.; and
(2) $250,000 for all other crops for:
(i) ERP Phase 1 for program year 2020
and ERP Phase 2 for program year 2020,
combined; and
1 High value crops were not defined in ERP Phase
1; therefore, only ERP Phase 1 payments for
specialty crops, as defined in the ERP Phase 1
notice of funds availability, will be counted toward
the increased payment limitation for specialty and
high value crops.
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(ii) ERP Phase 1 for program years
2021 and 2022 and ERP Phase 2 for
program year 2021, combined.
(c) The relevant tax years for
establishing a producer’s AGI and
percentage derived from farming,
ranching, or forestry related activities
are:
(1) Years 2016, 2017, and 2018 for
program year 2020; and
(2) Years 2017, 2018, and 2019 for
program year 2021.
(d) To receive more than $125,000 in
ERP payments, producers must submit
form FSA–510, accompanied by a
certification from a certified public
accountant or attorney as to that person
or legal entity’s certification. If a
producer requesting the increased
payment limitation is a legal entity, all
members of that entity must also
complete form FSA–510 and provide
the required certification according to
the direct attribution provisions in 7
CFR 1400.105, ‘‘Attribution of
Payments.’’ If a legal entity would be
eligible for the increased payment
limitation based on the legal entity’s
average AGI from farming, ranching, or
forestry related activities but a member
of that legal entity either does not
complete a form FSA–510 and provide
the required certification or is not
eligible for the increased payment
limitation, the payment to the legal
entity will be reduced for the limitation
applicable to the share of the ERP Phase
2 payment attributed to that member.
(e) If a producer files form FSA–510
and the accompanying certification after
their ERP Phase 2 payment is issued but
before the deadline announced by FSA,
FSA will process the form FSA–510 and
issue the additional payment amount if
a maximum initial payment amount has
not been reached.
(f) A payment made to a legal entity
will be attributed to those members who
have a direct or indirect ownership
interest in the legal entity, unless the
payment of the legal entity has been
reduced by the proportionate ownership
interest of the member due to that
member’s ineligibility. Attribution of
payments made to legal entities will be
tracked through four levels of
ownership in legal entities as follows:
(1) First level of ownership: Any
payment made to a legal entity that is
owned in whole or in part by a person
will be attributed to the person in an
amount that represents the direct
ownership interest in the first-level or
payment legal entity;
(2) Second level of ownership: Any
payment made to a first-level legal
entity that is owned in whole or in part
by another legal entity (referred to as a
second-level legal entity) will be
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attributed to the second-level legal
entity in proportion to the ownership of
the second-level legal entity in the firstlevel legal entity; if the second-level
legal entity is owned in whole or in part
by a person, the amount of the payment
made to the first-level legal entity will
be attributed to the person in the
amount that represents the indirect
ownership in the first-level legal entity
by the person;
(3) Third and fourth levels of
ownership: Except as provided in the
second-level ownership in paragraph
(f)(2) of this section and in the fourth
level of ownership in paragraph (f)(4) of
this section, any payments made to a
legal entity at the third and fourth levels
of ownership will be attributed in the
same manner as specified in paragraph
(f)(2) of this section; and
(4) Fourth-level of ownership: If the
fourth level of ownership is that of a
legal entity and not that of a person, a
reduction in payment will be applied to
the first-level or payment legal entity in
the amount that represents the indirect
ownership in the first-level or payment
legal entity by the fourth-level legal
entity.
(g) Payments made directly or
indirectly to a person who is a minor
child will not be combined with the
earnings of the minor’s parent or legal
guardian.
(h) A producer that is a legal entity
must provide the names, addresses,
ownership share, and valid taxpayer
identification numbers of the members
holding an ownership interest in the
legal entity. Payments to a legal entity
will be reduced in proportion to a
member’s ownership share when a valid
taxpayer identification number for a
person or legal entity that holds a direct
or indirect ownership interest, at the
first through fourth levels of ownership
in the business structure, is not
provided to FSA.
(i) If an individual or legal entity is
not eligible to receive ERP Phase 2
payments due to the individual or legal
entity failing to satisfy payment
eligibility provisions, the payment made
either directly or indirectly to the
individual or legal entity will be
reduced to zero. The amount of the
reduction for the direct payment to the
producer will be commensurate with
the direct or indirect ownership interest
of the ineligible individual or ineligible
legal entity.
(j) Like other programs administered
by FSA, payments made to an Indian
Tribe or Tribal organization, as defined
in section 4(b) of the Indian SelfDetermination and Education
Assistance Act (25 U.S.C. 5304), will not
be subject to payment limitation.
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1889
§ 760.1907 Eligibility subject to
verification.
(a) Producers who are approved for
participation in ERP Phase 2 are
required to retain documentation in
support of their application for 3 years
after the date of approval.
(b) Participants receiving ERP Phase 2
payments must permit authorized
representatives of USDA or the
Government Accountability Office,
during regular business hours, to enter
the agricultural operation and to
inspect, examine, and to allow
representatives to make copies of books,
records, or other items for the purpose
of confirming the accuracy of the
information provided by the participant.
§ 760.1908
Miscellaneous provisions.
(a) If an ERP Phase 2 payment
resulted from erroneous information
provided by a producer, or any person
acting on their behalf, the payment will
be recalculated and the producer must
refund any excess payment with interest
calculated from the date of the
disbursement of the payment.
(b) If FSA determines that the
producer intentionally misrepresented
information provided on their
application, the application will be
disapproved and the producer must
refund the full payment to FSA with
interest from the date of disbursement.
(c) Any required refunds must be
resolved in accordance with part 3 of
this title.
(d) A producer, whether a person or
legal entity, that either fails to timely
provide all required documentation or
fails to satisfy any eligibility
requirement for ERP Phase 2, is not
eligible to receive ERP Phase 2
payments, directly or indirectly. An ERP
Phase 2 payment to an eligible legal
entity applicant whose member(s) either
fails to timely provide all required
documentation or fails to satisfy any
eligibility requirement for ERP Phase 2
will be reduced proportionate to that
member’s ownership interest in the
legal entity.
(e) Any payment under this subpart
will be made without regard to
questions of title under State law and
without regard to any claim or lien
against the commodity or proceeds from
the sale of the commodity. The
regulations governing offsets in part 3 of
this title apply to payments made under
this subpart.
(f) For the purposes of the effect of a
lien on eligibility for Federal programs
(28 U.S.C. 3201(e)), USDA waives the
restriction on receipt of funds under
ERP Phase 2 but only as to beneficiaries
who, as a condition of the waiver, agree
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to apply the ERP Phase 2 payments to
reduce the amount of the judgment lien.
(g) In addition to any other Federal
laws that apply to ERP Phase 2, the
following laws apply: 15 U.S.C. 714; 18
U.S.C. 286, 287, 371, and 1001.
§ 760.1909
Perjury.
In either applying for or participating
in ERP Phase 2, or both, the producer
is subject to laws against perjury and
any resulting penalties and prosecution,
including, but not limited to, 18 U.S.C.
1621. If the producer willfully makes
and represents as true any verbal or
written declaration, certification,
statement, or verification that the
producer knows or believes not to be
true, in the course of either applying for
or participating in ERP Phase 2, or both,
then the producer may be guilty of
perjury and, except as otherwise
provided by law, may be fined,
imprisoned for not more than 5 years, or
both, regardless of whether the producer
makes such verbal or written
declaration, certification, statement, or
verification within or without the
United States.
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§ 760.1910 Requirement to purchase crop
insurance or NAP coverage.
(a) Producers must report all crops
that suffered a revenue loss in whole or
in part due to a qualifying disaster event
on form FSA–522, Crop Insurance and/
or NAP Coverage Agreement.
(b) All producers who receive ERP
Phase 2 payments must file an accurate
acreage report and purchase crop
insurance or NAP coverage where crop
insurance is not available, for the next
2 available crop years. For each crop
reported according to paragraph (a) of
this section, participants must obtain
crop insurance or NAP, as may be
applicable:
(1) At a coverage level equal to or
greater than 60 percent for insurable
crops; or
(2) At the catastrophic level or higher
for NAP crops.
(c) Availability will be determined
from the date a producer receives an
ERP payment and may vary depending
on the timing and availability of crop
insurance or NAP for a producer’s
particular crops. The final crop year to
purchase crop insurance or NAP
coverage to meet the second year of
coverage for this requirement is the
2026 crop year.
(d) In situations where crop insurance
is unavailable for a crop, an ERP
participant must obtain NAP coverage.
Section 1001D of the Food Security Act
of 1985 (1985 Farm Bill) provides that
a person or entity with an AGI greater
than $900,000 is not eligible to
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participate in NAP; however, producers
with an AGI greater than $900,000 are
eligible for ERP. To reconcile this
restriction in the 1985 Farm Bill and the
requirement to obtain NAP or crop
insurance coverage, ERP participants
may meet the purchase requirement by
purchasing Whole-Farm Revenue
Protection (WFRP) crop insurance
coverage, if eligible, or they may pay the
applicable NAP service fee despite their
ineligibility for a NAP payment. In other
words, the service fee must be paid even
though no NAP payment may be made
because the AGI of the person or entity
exceeds the 1985 Farm Bill limitation.
(e) If both Federal crop insurance and
NAP coverage are unavailable for a crop,
the producer must obtain WFRP crop
insurance coverage, if eligible.
(f) For all crops listed on form FSA–
522, producers who have the crop or
crop acreage in subsequent years and
who fail to obtain the 2 years of crop
insurance or NAP coverage required as
required by this section, must refund
the ERP Phase 2 payment with interest
from the date of disbursement.
Producers who do not plant a crop
listed on form FSA–522 in a year for
which this requirement applies are not
subject to the crop insurance or NAP
purchase requirement for that year.
(g) Producers who received an ERP
Phase 1 payment for a crop are not
required to obtain additional years of
crop insurance or NAP coverage for that
crop if they also receive an ERP Phase
2 payment for a loss associated with that
crop.
PART 1400—PAYMENT LIMITATION
AND PAYMENT ELIGIBILITY
29. The authority citation for part
1400 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1308, 1308–1, 1308–
2, 1308–3, 1308–3a, 1308–4, and 1308–5; and
Title I, Pub. L. 115–123.
Subpart A—General Provisions
■
30. Add § 1400.10 to read as follows:
§ 1400.10
Notification of interests.
(a) To facilitate administration of
subparts B, C, E, and F of this part for
programs specified in § 1400.1, or any
other program as provided in individual
program regulations in this chapter, a
person or legal entity must provide
information in the manner as prescribed
by the Deputy Administrator.
(b) The information required to be
submitted under paragraph (a) of this
section must include:
(1) The name, address, valid taxpayer
identification number, and ownership
share of each person, or the name,
address, valid taxpayer identification
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
number, and ownership share of each
legal entity, that holds or acquires an
ownership interest in the legal entity;
and
(2) The name, address, valid taxpayer
identification number, and ownership
share of each legal entity in which the
person or legal entity holds an
ownership interest.
(c) Except as provided in paragraph
(d) of this section, payments to a legal
entity will be reduced in proportion to
a member’s ownership share when a
valid taxpayer identification number for
a person or legal entity that holds a
direct or indirect ownership interest of
less than 10 percent at, or above the
fourth level of ownership in the
business structure is not provided to
USDA. Additionally, A legal entity will
not be eligible to receive payment when
a valid taxpayer identification number
for a person or legal entity that holds a
direct or indirect ownership interest of
10 percent or greater at, or above the
fourth level of ownership in the
business structure is not provided to
USDA.
(d) In order to be eligible to receive
any payment specified in § 1400.1(a)(7)
or as provided by the Natural Resources
Conservation Service in individual
program regulations in this chapter, a
person or legal entity must provide
information in the manner as prescribed
by the Deputy Administrator as
identified in paragraph (b) of this
section. Paragraph (c) of this section
does not apply to the identified Natural
Resources Conservation Service
programs (programs specified in
§ 1400.1(a)(7) or any other Natural
Resources Conservation Service
program as specified in the individual
program regulations in this chapter).
Subpart B—Payment Limitation
§ 1400.107
■
[Removed]
31. Remove § 1400.107.
PART 1416—EMERGENCY
AGRICULTURAL DISASTER
ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS
32. The authority citation for part
1416 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Title I, Pub. L. 113–79, 128
Stat. 649; Title I, Pub. L. 115–123; Title VII,
Pub. L. 115–141; and Title I, Pub. L. 116–20.
Subpart A—General Provisions for
Supplemental Agricultural Disaster
Assistance Programs
§ 1416.5
■
[Removed and Reserved]
33. Remove and reserve § 1416.5.
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Subpart B—Emergency Assistance for
Livestock, Honeybees, and FarmRaised Fish Program
(iv) Animals produced or maintained
for consumption by owner.
*
*
*
*
*
34. In § 1416.102, in the definition of
‘‘eligible loss condition’’, add a sentence
at the end of the definition to read as
follows:
Subpart C—Livestock Forage Disaster
Program
■
§ 1416.102
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Eligible loss condition * * * All other
causes of losses are not covered,
including, but not limited to,
negligence, mismanagement, or
wrongdoing by the producer.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 35. Amend § 1416.103 as follows:
■ a. Add a sentence to the end of
paragraph (a); and
■ b. In paragraph (d)(6), in the first
sentence, remove ‘‘transport,’’ and add
‘‘transport’’ in its place.
The addition reads as follows:
§ 1416.103 Eligible losses, adverse
weather, and other loss conditions.
(a) * * * All other causes of loss are
not considered an eligible loss
condition, including, but not limited to,
negligence, mismanagement or
wrongdoing by the producer.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 36. Amend § 1416.104 as follows:
■ a. Redesignate paragraphs (b)(16) and
(17) as (b)(17) and (18), respectively;
■ b. Add new paragraph (b)(16);
■ c. Remove paragraph (c)(4);
■ d. Redesignate paragraphs (c)(5)
through (8) as paragraphs (c)(4) through
(7), respectively;
■ e. In newly redesignated paragraph
(c)(6), add the word ‘‘and’’ at the end;
■ f. Revise newly redesignated
paragraph (c)(7); and
■ g. Remove paragraph (c)(9).
The addition and revision read as
follows.
§ 1416.104 Eligible livestock, honeybees,
and farm-raised fish.
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*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(16) Ostriches,
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(7) Livestock that are not produced for
commercial use or those that are not
produced or maintained in a
commercial operation for livestock
products, such as milk from dairy,
including, but not limited to:
(i) Any wild free roaming livestock;
(ii) Horses and other animals used or
intended to be used for racing or
wagering;
(iii) Animals produced or maintained
for hunting; and
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37. Amend § 1416.204 as follows:
a. In paragraph (a)(1), add ‘‘ostriches,’’
after ‘‘llamas,’’;
■ b. Revise paragraph (a)(5);
■ c. Redesignate paragraphs (b)(15) and
(16) as (b)(16) and (17), respectively;
■ d. Add new paragraph (b)(15);
■ e. Remove paragraph (c)(4);
■ f. Redesignate paragraphs (c)(5)
through (9) as (c)(4) through (8),
respectively; and
■ g. Revise newly redesignated
paragraph (c)(8).
The revisions and addition read as
follows.
■
■
§ 1416.204
Covered livestock.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(5) Not have been produced and
maintained for reasons other than
commercial use as part of a farming
operation. Such excluded uses include,
but are not limited to:
(i) Any uses of wild free roaming
livestock;
(ii) Racing or wagering;
(iii) Hunting; and
(iv) Consumption by owner; and
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(15) Ostriches,
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(8) Livestock produced or maintained
for reasons other than commercial use,
including, but not limited to, livestock
produced or maintained for racing or
wagering purposes, hunting, or
consumption by owner.
Subpart D—Livestock Indemnity
Program
38. Amend § 1416.304 as follows:
a. In paragraph (c)(3), remove the
words ‘‘for livestock’’ and add ‘‘for
livestock sale or’’ in their place; and
■ b. Revise paragraph (c)(4).
The revision reads as follows.
■
■
§ 1416.304
Eligible livestock.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(4) Not be produced or maintained for
reasons other than commercial use for
livestock sale or for the production of
livestock products such as milk or eggs.
Livestock excluded from being eligible
include, but are not limited to:
(i) Wild free roaming animals;
(ii) Horses and other animals used or
intended to be used for racing or
wagering;
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1891
(iii) Animals produced or maintained
for hunting; and
(iv) Animals produced or maintained
for consumption by owner.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 39. Amend § 1416.305 as follows:
■ a. In paragraph (g) introductory text,
remove the words ‘‘if reliable’’ and add
the words ‘‘if the livestock are not
owned by the licensed veterinarian and
reliable’’ in their place;
■ b. Revise paragraph (i) introductory
text; and
■ c. In paragraph (i)(1) introductory text,
remove the words ‘‘For 2017 and
subsequent calendar years, livestock
inventory reports by livestock unit must
be provided to the local county FSA
office by the later of December 3, 2018,
or’’ and add ‘‘Livestock inventory
reports by livestock unit must be
provided to the FSA local county office
by’’ in their place.
The revision reads as follows.
§ 1416.305
Application process.
*
*
*
*
*
(i) Unweaned livestock operations
may provide proof of death by using the
LBIH.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 1437—NONINSURED CROP
DISASTER ASSISTANCE PROGRAM
40. The authority citation for part
1437 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1501–1508 and 7333;
15 U.S.C. 714–714m; 19 U.S.C. 2497, and 48
U.S.C. 1469a.
Subpart A—General Provisions
41. In § 1437.3, revise the definition of
‘‘Application for coverage’’ to read as
follows:
■
§ 1437.3
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Application for coverage means:
(1) The form specified by FSA to be
completed by a producer applying for
NAP coverage for an eligible crop that
is accompanied by the service fee or the
service fee waiver form, or
(2) Another applicable form,
designated by the Deputy Administrator
to qualify as an application for NAP,
that the producer has on file with FSA
before the deadline for application for
the coverage period which certifies they
are eligible for a service fee waiver.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 1437.6
[Amended]
42. Amend § 1437.6 as follows:
a. Remove paragraph (a)(1); and
b. Redesignate paragraphs (a)(2) and
(3) as (a)(1) and (2), respectively.
■
■
■
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§ 1437.7
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 7 / Wednesday, January 11, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
[Amended]
43. Amend § 1437.7 as follows:
■ a. In paragraph (a), remove the words
‘‘in the administrative county office’’;
■ b. In paragraph (b) introductory text,
remove the words ‘‘request for’’ and add
the words ‘‘certification of eligibility for
a’’ in their place; and
■ c. In paragraph (g) add the words ‘‘for
any buy-up coverage elected’’ at the end
of the first sentence.
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■
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PART 1450—BIOMASS CROP
ASSISTANCE PROGRAM (BCAP)
44. The authority citation for part
1450 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 8111.
45. In § 1450.2, add a definition for
‘‘Socially disadvantaged farmer or
rancher’’ in alphabetical order to read as
follows.
■
§ 1450.2
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Socially disadvantaged farmer or
rancher means a farmer or rancher who
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
is a member of a socially disadvantaged
group. A socially disadvantaged group
is a group whose members have been
subjected to racial or ethnic prejudice
because of their identity as members of
a group without regard to their
individual qualities.
*
*
*
*
*
Gloria Montan˜o Greene,
Deputy Under Secretary, Farm Production
and Conservation, U.S. Department of
Agriculture.
[FR Doc. 2023–00005 Filed 1–9–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3411–E2–P
E:\FR\FM\11JAR2.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 7 (Wednesday, January 11, 2023)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 1862-1892]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-00005]
[[Page 1861]]
Vol. 88
Wednesday,
No. 7
January 11, 2023
Part IV
Department of Agriculture
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Office of the Secretary
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7 CFR Part 9
Farm Service Agency
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7 CFR Parts 701 and 760
Commodity Credit Corporation
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
7 CFR Parts 1400, 1416, 1437, et. al.
Pandemic Assistance Programs and Agricultural Disaster Assistance
Programs; Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 7 / Wednesday, January 11, 2023 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 1862]]
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DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Office of the Secretary
7 CFR Part 9
Farm Service Agency
7 CFR Parts 701 and 760
Commodity Credit Corporation
7 CFR Parts 1400, 1416, 1437, and 1450
[Docket ID: USDA-2021-0012]
RIN 0503-AA75
Pandemic Assistance Programs and Agricultural Disaster Assistance
Programs
AGENCY: Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC), Farm Service Agency (FSA),
and Office of the Secretary, Department of Agriculture (USDA).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This rule announces Phase 2 of the Emergency Relief Program
(ERP), which provides assistance to producers who suffered crop losses
due to wildfires, hurricanes, floods, derechos, excessive heat, winter
storms, freeze (including a polar vortex), smoke exposure, excessive
moisture, and qualifying droughts occurring in calendar years 2020 and
2021. It also announces Pandemic Assistance Revenue Program (PARP), a
new program that provides support for agricultural producers impacted
by the COVID-19 pandemic. In addition, this rule makes changes to the
Coronavirus Food Assistance Program (CFAP); the Emergency Conservation
Program (ECP); the Emergency Forest Restoration Program (EFRP); the
Emergency Assistance for Livestock, Honeybees, and Farm-Raised Fish
Program (ELAP); the Livestock Forage Disaster Program (LFP); the
Livestock Indemnity Program (LIP); the Noninsured Crop Disaster
Assistance Program (NAP); and general payment eligibility provisions.
This rule also makes a technical correction to the Biomass Crop
Assistance Program (BCAP).
DATES:
Effective date: January 11, 2023.
Comment due date: For PARP, ECP, and ERP, we will consider comments
on the information collection requirements under the Paperwork
Reduction Act that we receive by March 13, 2023.
ADDRESSES: We invite you to submit comments on the information
collection requirements. You may submit comments by any of the
following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to: www.regulations.gov and
search for docket ID USDA-2021-0012. Follow the online instructions for
submitting comments.
Mail, Hand-Delivery, or Courier: Director, Safety Net
Division, FSA, USDA, 1400 Independence Avenue SW, Stop 0510,
Washington, DC 20250-0522. In your comment, specify the docket ID USDA-
2021-0012.
Comments will be available for inspection online at https://www.regulations.gov. Copies of the information collection may be
requested by contacting Kathy Sayers or Shanita Landon, respectively
(see FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT below). You may also send comments
to the Desk Officer for Agriculture, Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, Washington, DC
20503.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For CFAP, ERP, ELAP, LFP, LIP, NAP,
PARP, and PARP information collection activity, and payment
eligibility, Kathy Sayers; telephone: (202) 720-6825; email:
[email protected]. For ECP, EFRP, and BCAP, Shanita Landon;
telephone: (202) 690-1612; email: [email protected]. Persons with
disabilities who require alternative means for communication should
contact the USDA Target Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
This rule announces ERP Phase 2 and PARP, a new program. In
addition, this rule amends the CFAP regulations to provide an
additional CFAP 2 payment for underserved producers; \1\ makes
clarifying changes based on previously implemented provisions of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 (CAA); and amends the payment
provisions for producers of swine. It also updates provisions for and
makes technical changes to the regulations for BCAP, ECP, ELAP, LFP,
LIP, NAP, and payment eligibility provisions of 7 CFR part 1400, as
described in this document.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Throughout this document, the term ``underserved farmer or
rancher'' refers to a beginning farmer or rancher, limited resource
farmer or rancher, socially disadvantaged farmer or rancher, or
veteran farmer or rancher.
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ERP Phase 2
Division B, Title I, of the Extending Government Funding and
Delivering Emergency Assistance Act (Pub. L. 117- 43) provides $10
billion for necessary expenses related to losses of crops (including
milk, on-farm stored commodities, crops prevented from planting in 2020
and 2021, and harvested adulterated wine grapes), trees, bushes, and
vines, as a consequence of droughts, wildfires, hurricanes, floods,
derechos, excessive heat, winter storms, freeze (including a polar
vortex), smoke exposure, quality losses of crops, and excessive
moisture occurring in calendar years 2020 and 2021. FSA previously
announced ERP Phase 1 through a notice of funds availability on May 18,
2022 (87 FR 30164-30172),\2\ which provided assistance for crop, tree,
bush, and vine losses through a streamlined process with pre-filled
applications using data already on file with FSA or the Risk Management
Agency (RMA), as a result of the producer previously receiving a NAP
payment or a crop insurance indemnity. This rule provides the
eligibility requirements, application process, and payment calculations
for ERP Phase 2, which is intended to address eligible crop losses not
included in ERP Phase 1.\3\ ERP Phase 2 provides assistance for
necessary expenses related to both production and quality losses of
eligible crops. Where loss information is not already on file with FSA
or RMA through NAP or Federal crop insurance, and therefore included in
ERP Phase 1, FSA has determined that the best approximation of such
losses is a producer's decrease in gross revenue, which will reflect
losses in both production and quality without requiring the more
extensive calculations and documentation required under previous
programs addressing crop losses due to disaster events.\4\ Using a
decrease in gross revenue in the calculation of ERP Phase 2 payments
also captures a producer's loss due to a qualifying disaster event
regardless of whether the loss occurs before harvest or after harvest
while the
[[Page 1863]]
crop is in storage, further streamlining the delivery of assistance.
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\2\ A clarification to the notice of funds availability for ERP
Phase 1 was published on August 18, 2022 (87 FR 50828-50830).
\3\ Additional assistance authorized by the Extending Government
Funding and Delivering Emergency Assistance Act for losses to milk
and livestock will be announced in subsequent documents to be
published in the Federal Register. FSA previously announced Phase 1
of the Emergency Livestock Relief Program (ELRP), which provided
payments to producers who faced increased supplemental feed costs as
a result of forage losses due to a qualifying drought or wildfire in
calendar year 2021 on April 4, 2022 (87 FR 19465-19470).
\4\ Assistance for crop losses that occurred prior to harvest
due to disaster events in the 2018 and 2019 calendar years was
provided through two separate programs: the Wildfires and Hurricanes
Indemnity Program Plus (WHIP+) for production losses, and the
Quality Loss Adjustment (QLA) Program for quality losses.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Decreases in gross revenue are strongly correlated to crop
production and quality losses due to disaster events. Gross revenue is
essentially the aggregation of the value of all of a producer's crops,
and a decrease in gross revenue in a year when a producer suffered a
loss due to a disaster event reflects the producer's crop losses
resulting from decreased production or from obtaining a lower price due
to a reduction in quality for that year. Previous FSA disaster
assistance programs have similarly been based on a producer's loss of
value compared to their expected value, using payment calculations
based on crop acres, price, and yield (or inventory and price for value
loss crops) as a way to estimate the value of a crop. While ERP Phase 2
uses a different calculation than previous disaster assistance programs
to capture that value loss, it accounts for crop losses in a
streamlined way that minimizes the burden on producers and improves
efficiency of application processing by FSA county offices.
ERP Phase 2 Eligibility
To be eligible for ERP Phase 2, a producer must have suffered a
loss of an eligible crop due in whole or in part to a qualifying
disaster event that occurred in the 2020 or 2021 calendar year
(referred to as the ``disaster year''). Qualifying disaster events
include wildfires, hurricanes, floods, derechos, excessive heat, winter
storms, freeze (including a polar vortex), smoke exposure, excessive
moisture, qualifying drought, and related conditions occurring in
calendar years 2020 and 2021. ``Qualifying drought'' means an area
within the county was rated by the U.S. Drought Monitor as having a
drought intensity of D2 (severe drought) for 8 consecutive weeks or D3
(extreme drought) or higher level for any period of time during the
applicable calendar year.
To receive a payment for ERP Phase 2, the eligible crop loss must
have resulted in a decrease of allowable gross revenue, as described in
the next section of this document. ``Eligible crop'' for ERP Phase 2
means a crop, including eligible aquaculture, that is produced in the
United States as part of a farming operation and is intended to be
commercially marketed. It excludes crops for grazing, aquatic species
that do not meet the definition of aquaculture, Cannabis sativa L. and
any part of that plant that does not meet the definition of hemp, and
timber.
For ERP, ``producer'' refers to a person or legal entity who was
entitled to a share in the eligible crop available for marketing or
would have shared had the eligible crop been produced and marketed. In
addition, to be eligible for ERP Phase 2, a producer must be one of the
following:
(1) Citizen of the United States;
(2) Resident alien, which for purposes of this subpart means
``lawful alien'' as defined in 7 CFR part 1400;
(3) Partnership organized under State Law;
(4) Corporation, limited liability company, or other organizational
structure organized under State law; or
(5) Indian Tribe or Tribal organization, as defined in section 4(b)
of the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act (25
U.S.C. 5304).
ERP Phase 2 Allowable Gross Revenue
In general, ERP Phase 2 payments are based on the difference in
allowable gross revenue between a benchmark year (2018 or 2019),
reflective of a typical year, as elected by the producer, intended to
represent a typical year of revenue for the producer's operation, and
the applicable disaster year (2020 or 2021). For the purposes of ERP
Phase 2, ``allowable gross revenue'' includes revenue from:
Sales of eligible crops produced by the producer, which
includes sales resulting from value added through post-production
activities (for example, sales of jam from the processing of
strawberries) that were reportable on IRS Schedule F;
Sales of eligible crops a producer purchased for resale
that had a change in characteristic due to the time held (for example,
a plant purchased at a size of 2 inches and sold as an 18-inch plant
after 4 months), less the cost or other basis of such eligible crops;
The taxable amount of cooperative distributions directly
related to the sale of the eligible crops produced by the producer;
Benefits under the following agricultural programs: 2017
Wildfires and Hurricanes Indemnity Program (WHIP), Agriculture Risk
Coverage (ARC) and Price Loss Coverage (PLC), Biomass Crop Assistance
Program (BCAP), Loan Deficiency Payment (LDP) program, marketing loan
gains (MLG) under the Marketing Assistance Loan (MAL) program, 2018 and
2019 Market Facilitation Programs (MFP), Seafood Trade Relief Program
(STRP), and the On-Farm Storage Loss Program;
CCC loans, if treated as income and reported to IRS;
Crop insurance proceeds, minus the amount of
administrative fees and premiums;
NAP payments, minus the amount of service fees and
premiums;
ELAP payments for an aquaculture crop;
Payments issued through grant agreements with FSA for
losses of eligible crops;
Grants from the Department of Commerce, National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration, and State program funds providing
direct payments for the loss of eligible crops or the loss of revenue
from eligible crops;
Other revenue directly related to the production of
eligible crops that IRS requires the producer to report as income;
For the applicable disaster year only, ERP Phase 1
payments issued to another person or entity for the producer's share of
an eligible crop, regardless of the tax year in which the payment would
be reported to IRS; \5\ and
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\5\ ERP Phase 1 allowed producers who received pre-filled
application forms to indicate shares in the crop. In some cases,
payment for a producer's share of a crop may have been issued to a
different person or entity than the producer applying for a related
revenue loss under ERP Phase 2. Applications for ERP Phase 2 must
include any ERP Phase 1 payments issued to another person or entity
for the producer's share of an eligible crop in order to prevent
duplicate benefits being issued for the same loss.
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For the benchmark year only, 2018, 2019 and 2020 WHIP+ and
QLA payments.
The allowable gross revenue will be based on the year for which the
revenue would be reported for the purpose of filing a tax return.
Producers who file or would be eligible to file a joint tax return will
certify their allowable gross revenue based on what it would have been
had they filed taxes separately for the applicable year.
If a producer decreased their operation capacity in a disaster
year, as compared to the benchmark year, the producer must certify to
an adjusted benchmark revenue on form FSA-521 that represents the
producer's reasonably expected allowable gross revenue for the disaster
year prior to the impact of the qualifying disaster event. A producer
may also certify to an adjusted benchmark revenue on form FSA-521 if
the producer did not have a full year of benchmark allowable gross
revenue or expanded their operation capacity in a disaster year,
compared to their benchmark year. If requested by FSA, producers are
required to submit documentation to support these adjustments within 30
calendar days of the request. The documentation to support an
adjustment due to a change in operation capacity must show that
[[Page 1864]]
the adjustment to the producer's benchmark revenue is due to an:
Addition or decrease in production capacity of the farming
operation;
Increase or decrease in the use of existing production
capacity; or
Physical alterations that were made to existing production
capacity.
Change in production capacity does not include crop rotation from
year to year, changes in farming practices such as converting from
conventional tillage to no-till, or increasing the rate of fertilizers
or chemicals.
If a producer began farming in 2020 or 2021 and did not have
allowable gross revenue in a benchmark year, the producer may certify
to an adjusted benchmark allowable gross revenue on form FSA-521 that
represents what had been the producer's reasonably expected disaster
year revenue prior to the impact of the qualifying disaster event. If
requested by FSA, documentation required to support a producer's
certification must be provided within 30 calendar days of FSA's
request, or the producer will be considered ineligible for ERP Phase 2.
Acceptable documentation must be generated in the ordinary course of
business and dated prior to the impact of the disaster event and
includes, but is not limited to:
Financial documents such as a business plan or cash flow
statement that demonstrate an expected level of revenue;
Sales contracts or purchase agreements; and
Documentation supporting production capacity, use of
existing production capacity, or physical alterations that demonstrate
production capacity.
FSA is providing an optional form, FSA-521A, Continuation Sheet for
Emergency Relief Program (ERP) Adjusted Revenue, to help producers
calculate their adjusted benchmark revenue if they are certifying to an
adjustment on FSA-521.
In addition to providing their allowable gross revenue for the
benchmark and disaster years, producers will certify to the percentage
of their expected allowable gross revenue from specialty and high value
crops and the percentage from other crops for the applicable disaster
year on their application form. This information is used in the payment
calculation to determine the amount applied to the separate payment
limitations for specialty and high value crops and for all other crops,
as described later in this document. The percentages certified must be
equal to the percentages that the producer would have reasonably
expected for the disaster year if the qualifying disaster event had not
occurred. For ERP Phase 2 purposes, ``specialty crop'' has the same
meaning as in ERP Phase 1.\6\ A crop may be considered a high value
crop based on either the crop itself, or how the crop is marketed. High
value crop includes any eligible crop not specifically identified as a
specialty crop or listed in the definition of ``other crop'' (that is,
cotton, peanuts, rice, feedstock, and any crop grown with an intended
use of grain, silage, or forage), and it also includes any eligible
crop, regardless of whether the crop is identified as a specialty crop
or listed in the definition of ``other crop,'' if the crop is a direct
market crop, organic crop, or a crop grown for a specific market in
which specialized products can be sold resulting in an increased value
compared to the typical market for the crops (for example, soybeans
intended for tofu production), as determined by the Deputy
Administrator for Farm Programs (Deputy Administrator).
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\6\ As defined for ERP Phase 1, ``specialty crops'' means
fruits, tree nuts, vegetables, culinary herbs and spices, medicinal
plants, and nursery, floriculture, and horticulture crops. This
includes common specialty crops identified by USDA's Agricultural
Marketing Service at https://www.ams.usda.gov/services/grants/scbgp/specialty-crop and other crops as designated by the Deputy
Administrator for Farm Programs.
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Applying for ERP Phase 2
A completed FSA-521, Emergency Relief Program (ERP) Phase 2
Application, must be submitted to any FSA county office by the close of
business on the date announced by the Deputy Administrator.
Applications may be submitted in person or by mail, email, facsimile,
or other methods announced by FSA.
Producers must also submit the following forms if not already on
file with FSA within 60 days of the ERP Phase 2 application deadline:
(1) Form AD-2047, Customer Data Worksheet, for new customers or
existing customers who need to update their customer profile;
(2) Form FSA-521A, Continuation Sheet for Emergency Relief Program
(ERP) Adjusted Revenue, if applicable;
(3) Form CCC-860, Socially Disadvantaged, Limited Resource,
Beginning and Veteran Farmer or Rancher Certification, applicable for
the program year or years for which the producer is applying for ERP;
\7\
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\7\ An individual who has filed CCC-860 certifying their status
as a socially disadvantaged, beginning, or veteran farmer or rancher
for a prior program year is not required to submit a subsequent CCC-
860 certifying their status for a later program year because an
individual's status as socially disadvantaged would not change in
different years, and their certification as a beginning or veteran
farmer or rancher includes the relevant date needed to determine for
what program years the status would apply. An entity that has filed
CCC-860 certifying its status as a socially disadvantaged,
beginning, or veteran farmer or rancher for a prior program year is
not required to submit a subsequent certification of its status for
a later program year unless the entity's status has changed due to
changes in membership. Because a producer's status as a limited
resource farmer or rancher may change annually depending on the
producer's direct and indirect gross farm sales, those producers
must submit CCC-860 for each applicable program year.
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(4) Form CCC-901, Member Information for Legal Entities, if
applicable;
(5) Form CCC-902, Farm Operating Plan for an individual or legal
entity as provided in 7 CFR part 1400;
(6) Form FSA-510, Request for an Exception to the $125,000 Payment
Limitation for Certain Programs, accompanied by a certification from a
certified public accountant or attorney as to that person or legal
entity's certification, for a legal entity and all members of that
entity, for each applicable program year, including the legal entity's
members, partners, or shareholders, as provided in 7 CFR part 1400; and
(7) Form AD-1026, Highly Erodible Land Conservation (HELC) and
Wetland Conservation (WC) Certification, for the ERP Phase 2 applicant
and applicable affiliates as provided in 7 CFR part 12.
If requested by FSA, the producer must provide additional
documentation that establishes the producer's eligibility for ERP Phase
2. If supporting documentation is requested, the documentation must be
submitted to FSA within 30 calendar days from the request or the
application will be disapproved by FSA. FSA may request supporting
documentation to verify information provided by the producer and the
producer's eligibility including, but not limited to, the producer's:
(1) Allowable gross revenue as reported on the ERP Phase 2
application;
(2) Percentages of the expected allowable gross revenue from
specialty and high value crops and other crops; and
(3) Ownership share in the agricultural commodities.
ERP Phase 2 Payment Calculation
Although producers will be able to apply for both the 2020 and 2021
disaster years, as applicable, on one form, ERP Phase 2 payments will
be calculated separately for each disaster year. If a producer
indicates that they have expected revenue for both specialty and high
value crops and other crops for a disaster year, a payment will be
calculated separately for specialty
[[Page 1865]]
and high value crops and other crops for a disaster year.
To determine a producer's ERP Phase 2 payment amount, FSA will
calculate:
(1) The ERP factor of 70 percent \8\ multiplied by the producer's
benchmark year allowable gross revenue, adjusted according to 7 CFR
760.1903, if applicable, minus
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\8\ The Extending Government Funding and Delivering Emergency
Assistance Act provides that the total amount of payments cannot
exceed 70 percent of the loss for producers who did not obtain
federal crop insurance or NAP coverage for the crop incurring the
losses.
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(2) The producer's disaster year allowable gross revenue; minus
(3) The sum of the producer's net ERP Phase 1 payments for the 2020
program year, if the calculation is for the 2020 disaster year, or for
the 2021 and 2022 \9\ program years, if the calculation is for the 2021
disaster year; minus
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\9\ For ERP Phase 1, the program year was based on the crop
year, as defined in the applicable crop insurance policy or NAP
provisions, and 2022 was included because a qualifying disaster
event occurring in the 2021 calendar year may have caused a loss of
a crop during the 2022 crop year. The program year for ERP Phase 2
is based on the disaster year (2020 or 2021) because the payment is
based on a producer's allowable gross revenue, which may include
revenue from multiple crops.
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(4) The sum of the producer's net CFAP payments (excluding payments
for contract producer revenue), net 2020 WHIP+ payments, and net 2020
Quality Loss Adjustment (QLA) Program payments, if the calculation is
for the 2020 disaster year; and
(5) Multiplied by the percentage of the expected disaster year
revenue for specialty and high value crops or other crops, as
applicable.
ERP Phase 2 payments are subject to the availability of funds. FSA
will issue an initial payment equal to the lesser of:
The amount calculated as described above; or
A maximum initial payment of $2,000.
If a producer has also received a payment under ERP Phase 1, FSA
will reduce the producer's initial ERP Phase 2 payment amount by
subtracting their ERP Phase 1 gross payment amount.\10\ If total
calculated payments exceed the total funding available for ERP Phase 2,
the ERP Factor may be adjusted and the final payment amounts will be
prorated to stay within the amount of available funding. If there are
insufficient funds, a differential of 15 percent will be used for
underserved producers similar to ERP Phase 1, but with a cap at the
statutory maximum of 70 percent.\11\ For example, if the ERP Factor is
set at 50 percent, the factor used for underserved producers will be 65
percent, but if the factor is set at 55 percent or higher, the factor
for underserved producers will be capped at 70 percent. An initial
payment to a producer will not be recalculated or reduced if the total
calculated ERP Phase 2 factored payment for that producer is less than
the initial payment amount.
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\10\ If the producer's ERP Phase 1 payment is equal to or
exceeds the producer's initial ERP Phase 2 payment amount, the
producer will not receive an initial ERP Phase 2 payment.
\11\ FSA calculates payments based on a higher payment factor
for underserved farmers and ranchers (or specific groups included in
that term) in several programs, such as ECP, ELAP, and the Tree
Assistance Program. FSA has also used higher payment factors for
these producers in several recently announced programs: the Food
Safety Certification for Specialty Crops Program, the Organic and
Transitional Education and Certification Program, ELRP Phase 1, and
ERP Phase 1. In addition, NAP provides a reduced service fee and
premium for underserved farmers and ranchers. This approach supports
the equitable administration of FSA programs, as underserved farmers
and ranchers are more likely to lack financial reserves and access
to capital that would allow them to cope with losses due to
unexpected events outside of their control.
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If a producer receives additional assistance through CFAP or ERP
Phase 1 after a producer's ERP Phase 2 payment is calculated, the
producer's ERP Phase 2 payment will be recalculated and the producer
must refund any resulting overpayment.
ERP Phase 2 Payment Limitation and Attribution
As required by the Extending Government Funding and Delivering
Emergency Assistance Act and consistent with 7 CFR 760.1507, the
payment limitation for ERP is determined by the producer's average
adjusted gross farm income (income from activities related to farming,
ranching, or forestry). Specifically, if the producer's average
adjusted gross farm income is less than 75 percent of the producer's
average adjusted gross income (AGI) for the 3 taxable years preceding
the most immediately preceding complete tax year, a producer, other
than a joint venture or general partnership, cannot receive, directly
or indirectly, more than $125,000 in payments for specialty crops and
high value crops \12\ and $125,000 in payment for all other crops
under:
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\12\ High value crops were not defined in ERP Phase 1;
therefore, only ERP Phase 1 payments to specialty crops, as defined
in the ERP Phase 1 notice, will be counted toward the increased
payment limitation for specialty and high value crops.
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(1) ERP Phase 1 for program year 2020 and ERP Phase 2 for program
year 2020, combined; and
(2) ERP Phase 1 for program years 2021 and 2022 \13\ and ERP Phase
2 for program year 2021, combined.
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\13\ For ERP Phase 1, the program year was based on the crop
year, as defined in the applicable crop insurance policy or NAP
provisions, and 2022 was included because a qualifying disaster
event occurring in the 2021 calendar year may have caused a loss of
a crop during the 2022 crop year. The program year for ERP Phase 2
is based on the disaster year (2020 or 2021) because the payment is
based on a producer's allowable gross revenue, which may include
revenue from multiple crops.
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If at least 75 percent of the producer's average AGI is derived
from farming, ranching, or forestry related activities and the producer
provides the required certification and documentation, as discussed
below, the producer, other than a joint venture or general partnership,
is eligible to receive, directly or indirectly, up to:
(1) $900,000 for specialty crops and high value crops combined for:
(i) ERP Phase 1 for program year 2020 and ERP Phase 2 for program
year 2020, combined; and
(ii) ERP Phase 1 for program years 2021 and 2022 and ERP Phase 2
for program year 2021, combined; and
(2) $250,000 for all other crops for:
(i) ERP Phase 1 for program year 2020 and ERP Phase 2 for program
year 2020, combined; and
(ii) ERP Phase 1 for program years 2021 and 2022 and ERP Phase 2
for program year 2021, combined.
The relevant tax years for establishing a producer's AGI and
percentage derived from farming, ranching, or forestry related
activities are:
(1) 2016, 2017, and 2018 for program year 2020; and
(2) 2017, 2018, and 2019 for program year 2021.
To receive more than $125,000 in ERP payments, producers must
submit form FSA-510, accompanied by a certification from a certified
public accountant or attorney as to that person or legal entity's
certified AGI. If a producer requesting the increased payment
limitation is a legal entity, all members of that entity must also
complete form FSA-510 and provide the required certification according
to the direct attribution provisions in 7 CFR 1400.105, ``Attribution
of Payments.'' If a legal entity would be eligible for the increased
payment limitation based on the legal entity's average AGI derived from
farming, ranching, or forestry related activities but a member of that
legal entity either does not complete a form FSA-510 and provide the
required certification or is not eligible for the increased payment
limitation, the payment to the legal entity will be reduced for the
limitation applicable to the share of the ERP Phase 2 payment
attributed to that member.
If a producer files form FSA-510 and the accompanying certification
after their ERP Phase 2 payment is issued but
[[Page 1866]]
before the deadline announced by FSA, FSA will process the form FSA-510
and issue the additional payment amount if a maximum initial payment
amount has not been reached.
A payment made to a legal entity will be attributed to those
members who have a direct or indirect ownership interest in the legal
entity, unless the payment of the legal entity has been reduced by the
proportionate ownership interest of the member due to that member's
ineligibility. Attribution of payments made to legal entities will be
tracked through four levels of ownership in legal entities as described
in Sec. 760.1906.
Like other programs administered by FSA, payments made to an Indian
Tribe or Tribal organization, as defined in section 4(b) of the Indian
Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act (25 U.S.C. 5304), will
not be subject to payment limitation.
ERP Phase 2 Miscellaneous Provisions
If an ERP Phase 2 payment resulted from erroneous information
provided by a producer, or any person acting on their behalf, the
payment will be recalculated and the producer must refund any excess
payment with interest calculated from the date of the disbursement of
the payment. If FSA determines that the producer intentionally
misrepresented information provided on the producer's application, the
application will be disapproved and the producer must refund the full
amount of any payments to FSA with interest from the date of
disbursement.
ERP Phase 2 Requirement To Purchase Crop Insurance or NAP Coverage
All producers who receive ERP Phase 2 payments are statutorily
required to purchase federal crop insurance, or NAP coverage where crop
insurance is not available, for the next 2 available crop years (Pub.
L. 117-43, 135 STAT. 357) as described in this section and as
determined by the Secretary. To identify which crops suffered losses
that resulted in a revenue loss due to a qualifying disaster event,
producers must complete form FSA-522, Crop Insurance and/or NAP
Coverage Agreement. For each of those crops, a producer must file an
acreage report and obtain federal crop insurance or NAP, as may be
applicable:
(1) At a coverage level equal to or greater than 60 percent for
insurable crops; or
(2) At the catastrophic level or higher for NAP crops.
The timing for the requirement to purchase federal crop insurance
or NAP for the next 2 available crop years will be determined from the
date a producer receives an ERP payment and may vary depending on the
timing and availability of crop insurance or NAP for a producer's
particular crops. The final crop year to purchase crop insurance or NAP
coverage to meet the second year of coverage for this requirement is
the 2026 crop year.
In situations where federal crop insurance is unavailable for a
crop, a producer must obtain NAP coverage. Section 1001D of the Food
Security Act of 1985 (1985 Farm Bill) provides that a person or entity
with an AGI greater than $900,000 is not eligible to participate in
NAP; however, producers with an AGI greater than $900,000 are eligible
for ERP. To reconcile this restriction in the 1985 Farm Bill and the
requirement to obtain NAP or crop insurance coverage, a producer may
meet the purchase requirement by purchasing Whole-Farm Revenue
Protection (WFRP) crop insurance coverage, if eligible, or they may pay
the applicable NAP service fee despite their ineligibility for a NAP
payment. In other words, the service fee must be paid even though no
NAP payment may be made because the AGI of the person or entity exceeds
the 1985 Farm Bill limitation.
If both federal crop insurance and NAP coverage are unavailable for
a crop, the producer must obtain WFRP crop insurance coverage, if
eligible.
For all crops listed on form FSA-522, any producer who has the crop
or crop acreage in subsequent years and who fails to obtain the 2 years
of crop insurance or NAP coverage required as specified in this
document, must refund the full amount of any ERP Phase 2 payments with
interest from the date of disbursement. Any producer who does not plant
a crop listed on form FSA-522 in a year for which this requirement
applies is not subject to the crop insurance or NAP purchase
requirement for the crop for that year.
Producers who received an ERP Phase 1 payment for a crop are not
required to obtain additional years of crop insurance or NAP coverage
for that crop, to the extent the producer is already complying with the
requirement in connection with an ERP Phase 1 payment, if they also
receive an ERP Phase 2 payment for a loss associated with that crop.
PARP
Secretary Tom Vilsack announced the USDA Pandemic Assistance for
Producers initiative on March 24, 2021. Through that initiative, USDA
is reaching a broader set of producers than in previous COVID-19
assistance programs, with a specific focus on strengthening outreach to
underserved producers and communities and small and medium agricultural
operations. PARP, a new program administered by FSA, is part of that
initiative.
PARP will use funding authorized by the Consolidated Appropriations
Act, 2021 (CAA; Pub. L. 116-260), which provides funding to prevent,
prepare for, and respond to the COVID-19 pandemic by providing support
for agricultural producers, growers, and processors impacted by
coronavirus. This rule establishes PARP to respond to the COVID-19
pandemic by providing support for eligible producers of agricultural
commodities who suffered an eligible revenue loss in calendar year 2020
due to the COVID-19 pandemic. PARP is intended to provide assistance to
a wide variety of agricultural producers, including those who produced
agricultural commodities that were not eligible for CFAP 1 and 2 (7 CFR
part 9).
For PARP, ``producer'' refers to a person or legal entity
(including a general partnership or joint venture) who was in the
business of farming to produce an agricultural commodity in calendar
year 2020, and who was entitled to a share in the agricultural
commodity available for marketing or would have shared had the
agricultural commodity been produced and marketed. ``Producer'' also
includes cattle feeder operations, which were not eligible for CFAP 1
and CFAP 2. To be eligible for PARP, a producer must:
Have been in the business of farming during at least part
of the 2020 calendar year; and
Have had at least a 15 percent decrease in ``allowable
gross revenue'' \14\ for the 2020 calendar year, as compared to:
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\14\ ``Allowable gross revenue'' is explained later in this
section of this document.
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[cir] The 2018 or 2019 calendar year (similar to the benchmark year
for ERP Phase 2), reflective of a typical year, as elected by the
producer, if they received allowable gross revenue during the 2018 or
2019 calendar years; or
[cir] The producer's expected 2020 allowable gross revenue, if the
producer had no allowable gross revenue in 2018 and 2019.\15\
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\15\ PARP provides assistance to participants whose allowable
gross revenue for the 2020 calendar year was at or below 85 percent
of the ``benchmark'' allowable gross revenue. This uses the same
maximum level of coverage available under RMA's Whole Farm Revenue
Program (WFRP), coverage that requires 15 percent or more decrease
in revenue to trigger a payment.
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In addition, to be eligible for PARP, a producer must be one of the
following:
[[Page 1867]]
A citizen of the United States;
A resident alien, which for purposes of this subpart means
``lawful alien'' as defined in 7 CFR part 1400;
A partnership organized under State Law;
A corporation, limited liability company, or other
organizational structure organized under State law;
An Indian Tribe or Tribal organization, as defined in
section 4(b) of the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance
Act (25 U.S.C. 5304); or
A foreign person or foreign entity who meets all
requirements as described in 7 CFR part 1400.
For PARP, ``agricultural commodity'' means a crop, aquaculture,
livestock, livestock byproduct, or other animal or animal byproduct
that is produced as part of a farming operation and is intended to be
commercially marketed. It includes only commodities produced in the
United States, and commodities produced outside the United States by a
producer located in the United States and marketed inside the United
States. It excludes:
Wild free-roaming animals;
Horses and other animals used or intended to be used for
racing or wagering;
Aquatic species that do not meet the definition of
aquaculture;
Cannabis sativa L. and any part of that plant that does
not meet the definition of hemp; and
Timber.
As provided in Sec. 9.304, allowable gross revenue for PARP
includes revenue from:
Sales of agricultural commodities produced by the
producer, including the sales resulting from value added through post-
production activities (for example, sales of jam from the processing of
strawberries);
Sales of agricultural commodities a producer purchased for
resale, less the cost or other basis of such commodities;
The taxable amount of cooperative distributions directly
related to the sale of the agricultural commodities produced by the
producer;
Benefits under certain federal agricultural programs and
disaster programs (excluding conservation programs, CFAP 1 and 2, 2020
program year ERP, the Pandemic Livestock Indemnity Program (PLIP), and
the Spot Market Hog Pandemic Program (SMHPP));
CCC loans, if treated as income and reported to IRS;
Crop insurance proceeds;
Payments issued through grant agreements with FSA for
losses of agricultural commodities;
Grants from the Department of Commerce, National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration and State program funds providing direct
payments for the loss of agricultural commodities or the loss of
revenue from agricultural commodities;
Revenue from raised breeding livestock;
Revenue earned as a cattle feeder operation;
Other revenue directly related to the production of
agricultural commodities that IRS requires the producer to report as
income; and
For 2020 allowable gross revenue, payments under the
Pandemic Market Volatility Assistance Program regardless of the
calendar year in which the payment was received.
An optional worksheet is available to assist producer's in
computing their revenue from the sources listed above. Producers who
file or would be eligible to file a joint tax return will certify their
revenue based on what their revenue would have been had they filed
taxes separately for the applicable year. Revenue earned as a contract
producer of an agricultural commodity is not included in allowable
revenue for PARP.
If a producer did not have a full year of revenue for 2018 or 2019
or physically expanded their operation in 2020, the producer may
certify to an adjusted 2018 or 2019 allowable gross revenue on form
FSA-1122A. Producers must provide documentation to support the adjusted
amount within 30 calendar days of submitting their PARP application.
The documentation must show that the producer added production capacity
to the farming operation, increased the use of existing production
capacity, or made physical alterations to existing production capacity
that would have resulted in increased revenue in 2020. Increases in
production capacity do not include crop rotation from year to year,
changes in farming practices such as converting from conventional
tillage to no-till, or increasing the rate of fertilizers or chemicals.
If a producer did not have allowable gross revenue in 2018 and 2019
but was in the business of farming in 2020, the producer must certify
on form FSA-1122A as to what had been their reasonably expected 2020
allowable gross revenue prior to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Producers must provide documentation to support their expected 2020
allowable gross revenue within 30 days of submitting their PARP
application. Acceptable documentation must be generated in the ordinary
course of business and dated prior to the impact of the COVID-19
pandemic and includes, but is not limited to, financial documents such
as a business plan or cash flow statement that demonstrates an expected
level of revenue; sales contracts or purchase agreements; and
documentation supporting production capacity, use of existing
production capacity, or physical alterations that demonstrate
production capacity.
PARP Application Process
FSA will accept PARP applications until the date announced by the
Deputy Administrator. To apply for PARP, producers must submit a
complete FSA-1122, Pandemic Assistance Revenue Program Application, in
person, by mail, email, facsimile, or other method announced by FSA to
any FSA county office.\16\ Applicants must also submit all of the
following items, if not previously filed with FSA:
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\16\ The FSA county office locator can be found through the
``Find Your Local Service Center'' section on: https://www.farmers.gov/.
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Form AD-2047, Customer Data Worksheet, for new customers
or existing customers who need to update their customer profile;
Form CCC-860, Socially Disadvantaged, Limited Resource,
Beginning and Veteran Farmer or Rancher Certification, applicable for
the 2020 program year, if the applicant is an underserved farmer or
rancher; \17\
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\17\ For PARP, socially disadvantaged groups include the
following: American Indians or Alaskan Natives, Asians or Asian-
Americans, Blacks or African Americans, Hispanics or Hispanic
Americans, Native Hawaiians or other Pacific Islanders, and women.
Form CCC-860 is not required for underserved farmers and ranchers to
receive a payment; however, failure to submit form CCC-860 will
result in an producer's payment being calculated using a lower
payment factor. Also, see footnote 7.
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Form CCC-901, Member Information for Legal Entities, if
applicable;
Form CCC-902, Farm Operating Plan for an individual or
legal entity as provided in 7 CFR part 1400;
Form CCC-941, Average Adjusted Gross Income (AGI)
Certification and Consent to Disclosure of Tax Information, for the
2020 program year for the producer, including the legal entity's
members, partners, shareholders, heirs, or beneficiaries as provided in
7 CFR part 1400;
Form FSA-1123, Certification of 2020 Adjusted Gross
Income, if applicable;
Form FSA-1122A, Pandemic Assistance Revenue Program (PARP)
Application, if applicable;
Form AD-1026, Highly Erodible Land Conservation (HELC) and
Wetland Conservation (WC) Certification, for the
[[Page 1868]]
PARP applicant and applicable affiliates as provided in 7 CFR part 12.
The required eligibility forms specified above must be submitted no
later than 60 days from the PARP application deadline. When the
producer does not timely submit the required eligibility forms, or when
a member of a legal entity who is required to submit AD-1026 has not
done so, FSA will not issue a payment to the producer. When any other
required eligibility forms are not timely submitted for a member of a
legal entity, FSA will reduce the payment based on that member's
ownership share of the legal entity.
In addition, producers must provide documentation within 30
calendar days of submitting the FSA-1122, if applicable, to verify:
The producer's certified expected 2020 allowable gross
revenue; and
The physical expansion of a producer's operation in 2020.
If requested by FSA, the producer must provide additional
documentation that establishes the producer's eligibility for PARP. If
any supporting documentation is requested, the documentation must be
submitted to FSA within 30 days from the request or the application
will be disapproved by FSA.
PARP Payment Calculation
The PARP payment calculation is based on the difference in a
producer's revenue compared to a prior ``benchmark'' year. Producers
who had allowable gross revenue in 2018 or 2019 will elect which of
those years is most reflective of a typical year to use as a benchmark
for the purposes of calculating a PARP payment. FSA will determine the
result of the producer's 2018 or 2019 allowable gross revenue, minus
the producer's 2020 allowable gross revenue, multiplied by a payment
factor. The adjusted 2018 or 2019 allowable gross revenue, as described
above, will be used for producers who did not have a full year of
revenue for 2019 or increased their operation size in 2020. The payment
factor will be 90 percent for underserved farmers and ranchers who have
filed CCC-860 certifying their status for the 2020 program year.\18\
The payment rate for all other producers will be 80 percent. The PARP
payment will be equal to the result of that calculation minus any 2020
program year ERP payments and pandemic assistance received by the
producer under CFAP 1 and 2 (not including any CFAP 2 payments for
contract producer revenue), PLIP, and SMHPP. If a producer receives
assistance through any of those programs after their PARP payment is
calculated, their PARP payment will be recalculated and the producer
must refund any resulting overpayment to FSA.
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\18\ See footnotes 7 and 11.
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If a producer was in the business of farming in 2020 but did not
have allowable gross revenue in 2018 and 2019, then the payment
calculation will be equal to the producer's expected 2020 allowable
gross revenue minus the producer's actual 2020 allowable gross revenue,
multiplied by a payment factor of 90 percent for underserved farmers
and ranchers who have filed the form CCC-860, or 80 percent for all
other producers. As described above, the PARP payment will be equal to
the result of that calculation minus any assistance received by the
producer under CFAP 1 and 2 (not including any CFAP 2 payments for
contract producer revenue), 2020 program year ERP, PLIP, and SMHPP, and
the PARP payment will be recalculated if the producer receives
additional payments under those programs. Those producers must provide
documentation to support their certification of their expected 2020
allowable gross revenue within 30 days of submitting their PARP
application or they will be ineligible for payment.
PARP payments will be issued after the application period ends.
PARP payments are subject to the availability of funds and may be
factored if total calculated payments exceed the available funding.
PARP payments are not subject to offset.
PARP Payment Limitation, Average AGI Limitation, and Attribution
PARP payments are subject to a per person or legal entity payment
limitation of $125,000. USDA may establish a lower maximum payment
amount per person, legal entity, or member of a joint venture or
general partnership after the application period has ended if
calculated payment amounts exceed available funding. Similar to the
manner in which payment limitations are applied in the major commodity
and disaster assistance programs administered by FSA, payments will be
attributed to an individual through the direct attribution process used
in those programs. The total payment amount of PARP payments attributed
to an individual will be determined by taking into account the direct
and indirect ownership interests of the individual in all legal
entities participating in PARP.
A producer, other than a joint venture or general partnership, is
ineligible for payments if the producer's average AGI, using the
average of the adjusted gross incomes for the 2016, 2017, and 2018 tax
years, is more than $900,000, unless the producer's AGI for 2020 is
$900,000 or less. To be eligible for payment, a producer whose average
AGI for 2016, 2017, and 2018 exceeds $900,000 but whose 2020 AGI is
$900,000 or less must submit form FSA-1123 and provide a certification
from a licensed CPA or attorney affirming the producer's 2020 AGI is
not more than $900,000. With respect to joint ventures and general
partnerships, this AGI provision will be applied to each member of the
joint venture and general partnership.
To be eligible for payment and facilitate administration of payment
limitation, payment attribution, AGI, and rules applicable to foreign
persons, producers that are a legal entity must provide the names,
addresses, valid taxpayer identification numbers, and ownership share
of each person or each legal entity that holds or acquires a direct or
indirect ownership interest in the legal entity. Payments to a legal
entity will be reduced in proportion to a member's ownership share in
cases where a person or legal entity holds less than a 10 percent
direct or indirect ownership interest and fails to provide a taxpayer
identification number to USDA.
PARP General Requirements
General requirements that apply to other FSA-administered commodity
programs also apply to PARP, including compliance with the provisions
of 7 CFR part 12, ``Highly Erodible Land and Wetland Conservation.''
The regulations in 7 CFR part 1400, subpart E, are applicable to
foreign persons and legal entities containing members, stockholders, or
partners who are not U.S. citizens or resident aliens that own more
than 10 percent of the legal entity. In order for a foreign person to
receive a PARP payment, the person must provide land, capital, and a
substantial amount of active personal labor to the farming operation,
as required by Sec. 1400.401(a), and comply with the other
requirements of subpart E.
Additionally, United States Federal, State, and local governments
(including public schools) are not eligible for PARP payments.
Appeal regulations specified in 7 CFR parts 11 and 780 and
equitable relief and finality provisions in 7 CFR part 718, subpart D,
apply to determinations under PARP. The determination of matters of
general applicability that are not in response to, or result from, an
individual set of facts in an individual
[[Page 1869]]
producer's application for payment are not matters that can be
appealed. Such matters of general applicability include, but are not
limited to, eligibility criteria, the payment calculation, and payment
rates.
In the event that any application for a PARP payment resulted from
erroneous information reported by the producer, the payment will be
recalculated, and the producer must refund any excess payment to USDA,
including interest to be calculated from the date of the disbursement
to the producer. If FSA determines that the producer intentionally
misrepresented information provided on their application, the
application will be disapproved and the producer must refund the full
payment to FSA with interest from the date of disbursement. Any
required refunds must be resolved in accordance with debt settlement
regulations in 7 CFR part 3.
CFAP
USDA established CFAP to assist producers of agricultural
commodities marketed in 2020 who faced continuing market disruptions,
reduced farm-level prices, and increased production and marketing costs
due to COVID-19 under authority provided by the Coronavirus Aid,
Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act; Pub. L. 116-136) and
sections 5(b), (d), and (e) of the CCC Charter Act (15 U.S.C. 714c(b),
(d), and (e)). USDA implemented CFAP through two rounds of payments
(CFAP 1 and CFAP 2), administered by FSA. CFAP 1 was implemented
through a final rule published in the Federal Register on May 21, 2020
(85 FR 30825-30835), with corrections published in the Federal Register
on June 12, 2020 (85 FR 35799-35800), July 10, 2020 (85 FR 41328-
41330), August 14, 2020 (85 FR 49593-49594), and September 21, 2020 (85
FR 59174-59175), and documents published in the Federal Register on May
22, 2020 (85 FR 31062-31065), June 12, 2020 (85 FR 35812), July 10,
2020 (85 FR 41321-41323), and August 14, 2020 (85 FR 49589-49593). USDA
implemented CFAP 2 through a final rule published in the Federal
Register on September 22, 2020 (85 FR 59380-59388). USDA also published
a final rule in the Federal Register on January 19, 2021 (86 FR 4877-
4883), to provide additional assistance for certain commodities under
CFAP 1 and CFAP 2, but suspended implementation of that rule on January
20, 2021, to allow further evaluation of the assistance offered through
CFAP. A final rule published on August 27, 2021 (86 FR 48013-48018),
revised the CFAP 2 application deadline, amended provisions for
contract producers, and allowed producers of sales-based commodities to
use 2018 sales for their payment calculation.
FSA is issuing an additional CFAP 2 payment to underserved farmers
and ranchers.\19\ These payments will be issued under the same
authority as the producers' previous CFAP 2 payments, using CCC funds
as authorized by sections 5(b), (d), and (e) of the CCC Charter Act (15
U.S.C. 714c(b), (d), and (e)), except for payments for tobacco which
will use remaining funds authorized by the CARES Act. As provided in
Sec. 9.203(p), the additional payment will be equal to 15 percent of a
producer's previous CFAP 2 payment, subject to CFAP 2 payment
limitation provisions in Sec. 9.7.\20\ Contract producers are not
eligible for this additional payment because CFAP 2 payments to
contract producers were authorized and funded through the CAA, which
specified that those payments could ``cover not more than 80 percent of
revenue losses.'' Previous CFAP 2 payments to contract producers were
already calculated to have covered 80 percent of contract producers'
revenue losses.
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\19\ See footnote 11.
\20\ This additional CFAP payment is similar to FSA's
administration of ELRP Phase 1 and ERP Phase 1, which provided a 15
percent increase for payments to underserved producers and Congress
has directed for underserved producers in some permanent disaster
programs a 15 percent higher payment rate (Emergency Livestock
Assistance Program or Emergency Conservation Program). Consistent
with those programs, 15 percent has been determined as the increased
rate for underserved producers.
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As specified in Sec. 9.4(e), CCC-860, Socially Disadvantaged,
Limited Resource, Beginning and Veteran Farmer or Rancher
Certification, must be on file with FSA with a certification applicable
for the 2020 program year to receive the additional payment.\21\
Producers who have not previously certified to their status for the
2020 program year may submit CCC-860 until the date announced by the
Deputy Administrator to be eligible for the additional payment.
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\21\ See footnote 7 for an explanation of how long an
underserved producer's certification remains valid and the
requirement to file CCC-860 in subsequent years.
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The final rule published on January 19, 2021, included a provision
for an additional CFAP 1 payment for hog and pig inventory owned
between April 16, 2020, and May 14, 2020, based on a rate of $17 per
head. USDA suspended implementation of that provision and, after
further review, USDA has determined that it will not issue the
additional CFAP 1 payment for hog and pig inventory. To provide
assistance to hog producers, FSA implemented the Spot Market Hog
Pandemic Program (SMHPP), which provided targeted assistance to
producers who sold hogs through a spot market sale from April 16, 2020,
through September 1, 2020, the period in which those producers faced
the greatest reduction in market prices due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Producers of hogs and pigs may also be eligible for PARP as previously
discussed in this rule if they suffered an eligible revenue loss in
2020.
FSA previously implemented mandatory provisions of CAA that provide
additional assistance for producers of cattle, price trigger crops, and
flat-rate crops. Cattle payments are based on inventory owned between
April 16, 2020, to May 14, 2020, based on a producer's previously filed
CFAP 1 application, multiplied by the following payment rates per head:
$14.75 for slaughter cattle--mature cattle, $63 for slaughter cattle--
fed cattle, $7 for feeder cattle less than 600 pounds, $25.50 for
feeder cattle 600 pounds or more, and $17.25 for all other cattle.
Payments for flat-rate and price-trigger crops, as defined in Sec.
9.201, are equal to the eligible acres of the crop included on a
producer's CFAP 2 application, multiplied by a payment rate of $20 per
eligible acre. This rule amends the payment calculations for cattle in
Sec. 9.102(c), price trigger crops in Sec. 9.203(a), and flat-rate
crops in Sec. 9.203(b) for consistency with CAA to reflect these
additional payments. FSA already issued these payments and producers
were not required to take any additional action to qualify. These
payments were subject to existing CFAP payment limitations and
eligibility requirements.
This rule amends the general CFAP provisions to clarify how FSA
will handle applications when the taxpayer identification number for a
person or legal entity that holds a direct or indirect ownership
interest in a business structure is not provided to USDA. To receive a
CFAP payment, a person or legal entity must provide their name,
address, and taxpayer identification number to USDA. In addition,
consistent with most other FSA programs, a legal entity must provide
the name, taxpayer identification number, address and ownership share
of each person or legal entity that holds or acquires a direct or
indirect ownership interest in the legal entity; however, the previous
CFAP rules did not specify how the failure to provide such information
would affect the producer's payment eligibility. Previously, FSA had
implemented this requirement by determining that the
[[Page 1870]]
producer was ineligible for payment. Rather than determining the
producer ineligible for payment, in cases where a person or legal
entity holding less than 10 percent direct or indirect ownership
interest does not submit a taxpayer identification number, FSA will
reduce the producer's payment in proportion to a member's ownership
share when the taxpayer identification number for a person or legal
entity that holds a direct or indirect ownership interest of less than
10 percent at, or above, the fourth level of ownership in the business
structure is not provided to USDA as provided in Sec. 9.7(i).
Additionally, a legal entity will not be eligible to receive payment
when a valid taxpayer identification number for a person or legal
entity that holds a direct or indirect ownership interest of 10 percent
or greater at, or above the fourth level of ownership in the business
structure is not provided to USDA as provided in Sec. 9.7(i). USDA is
making this change because many farm operations suffered sales losses
and had increased marketing costs in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic,
and the ability to receive a partial CFAP payment will assist those
operations in managing those losses and costs. USDA is not reopening
the CFAP application period; this change only affects how FSA will
process CFAP applications currently on file.
This rule also updates references throughout 7 CFR part 9, subparts
A through C, to refer specifically to those subparts rather than part 9
due to the addition of subpart D for PARP.
ECP, EFRP, and BCAP
The Agricultural Credit Act of 1978 (16 U.S.C. 2201), amended by
section 2403 of the Agriculture Improvement Act of 2018 (Pub. L. 115-
334), authorizes ECP, and generally authorizes payments to farmers and
ranchers to rehabilitate farmland damaged by certain natural disasters
and to implement emergency water conservation measures in periods of
severe drought. The ECP regulations are in 7 CFR part 701, subpart B.
Prior to this rule, land owned or controlled by the United States
or States, including State agencies or other political subdivisions,
was specified in the regulation as ineligible for cost share. This rule
amends the general ECP provision at Sec. 701.105 to allow eligibility
of that land under certain conditions. The intent of this change is to
allow producers who lease Federal and State land the opportunity to
participate in ECP. This is consistent with the previous operational
policy, which allowed payments as specified in the FSA Handbook 1-
ECP.\22\
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\22\ See https://www.fsa.usda.gov/internet/FSA_File/1-ecp_r06_a01.pdf.
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This rule also corrects a typographical error in a section number
to redesignate Sec. 718.128 to be Sec. 701.128. Prior to this rule,
the ECP regulation authorized advance payment only for fence repair or
replacement. This rule further amends Sec. 701.128 to allow advance
payments for all ECP practices. Consistent with the authorization for
fence repair or replacement, ECP will provide advance payments of up to
25 percent of the cost for all ECP practices before the restoration is
carried out. In the event this cost share assistance is not spent
within 60 calendar days of being issued, the participant will be
required to refund the advance cost-share payment. To reflect these
changes, we are revising the section heading of Sec. 701.128 to
``Advance Payment.''
Additionally, this rule clarifies the duplicate benefits provisions
in Sec. 701.111. The language was modified to further define
parameters surrounding restoration activities being performed on the
same piece of land. This will ensure that other Federal program-related
benefits do not cover the same or similar expenses so as to create
duplicative payments on the same piece of land and that any other
Federal cost-share payments would not result in paying more than is
authorized for ECP.
This rule also makes minor technical amendments to the existing ECP
and EFRP regulations. Specifically, this rule:
Adds the definition of ``Socially disadvantaged farmer or
rancher'' and, within that definition, defines ``Socially disadvantaged
group'' in Sec. 701.2 to be consistent with the definition (7 U.S.C.
2279(a)) used in its authorizing legislation instead of defaulting to
using the definition in Sec. 718.2 and makes the same technical
correction in Sec. 1450.2 for the BCAP regulation;
Removes outdated provisions, specifically removing: 7 CFR
701.44, 701.45, and 701.150 through 701.157;
Adds the definition for ``Forestland,'' removes the
definition of ``Commercial forestland,'' and corrects the definition of
``Non-industrial private forestland'' to remove the words ``commercial
forest'' in Sec. 701.102.
Recognizes Public Law 117-180, the Continuing
Appropriations and Ukraine Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2023,
Division G, section 104(k)(3)(A) authorizing 100 percent Federal
assistance for the cost of damages to producers associated with the
``Hermit's Peak/Calf Canyon'' Fire. This rule is amending the
regulations in 7 CFR 701.126, 701.127, and 701.226 to authorize the
Secretary to waive the maximum limitations to the maximum extent
otherwise allowed by law.
Supplemental Agricultural Disaster Assistance Programs
This rule makes discretionary changes to ELAP, LFP, and LIP to
amend what is considered eligible livestock. Previously, livestock that
were maintained for pleasure, roping, pets, or show were ineligible
under ELAP, LFP, and LIP. This rule removes those restrictions in
Sec. Sec. 1416.104, 1416.204, and 1416.304 because FSA recognizes that
animals maintained in a commercial operation for those purposes have
value and could be available for marketing from the farm. In addition,
FSA is clarifying that horses and other animals used or intended to be
used for racing or wagering are considered ineligible livestock for
ELAP, LFP, and LIP.
This rule also amends Sec. Sec. 1416.104 and 1416.204 to remove
the restriction on ostrich eligibility for LFP and ELAP. FSA is making
this change because ostriches satisfy more than 50 percent of their net
energy requirement through the consumption of growing forage grasses
and legumes; therefore, they are considered ``grazing animals,'' as
defined in Sec. Sec. 1416.102 and 1416.202, for the purpose of LFP and
ELAP. This change is effective for the 2022 program year for both LFP
and ELAP. ELAP requires a notice of loss to be filed within 30 days of
when the loss is first apparent. Because that deadline may have passed
for producers' 2022 losses related to ostriches that occurred prior to
publication of this rule, FSA is extending the deadline for those
notices of loss through February 10, 2023.
This rule removes and reserves Sec. 1416.5, which provides policy
related to equitable relief determinations under ELAP, LFP, LIP, and
the Tree Assistance Program (TAP). These programs are already subject
to the general equitable relief provisions in 7 CFR part 718, subpart
C; therefore, the provisions in Sec. 1416.5 are unnecessary. Equitable
relief for these programs will be administered in a manner that is
consistent with other FSA programs to which part 718 applies. This rule
also makes minor clarifications and technical corrections to the
definition of ``eligible loss condition'' in Sec. 1416.102 and to
Sec. Sec. 1416.103(a), 1416.103(d)(6), 1416.304(c)(3), 1416.305(g),
and 1416.305(i).
NAP
FSA is amending the NAP regulations to update provisions related to
[[Page 1871]]
applications for coverage. This rule updates the definition of
``application for coverage'' and 7 CFR 1437.7(a) to reflect that the
application for coverage may be filed in any FSA county office, rather
than only in the producer's administrative county. The definition of
``application for coverage'' is also amended to provide flexibility as
FSA reviews ways to streamline the application process for underserved
farmers and ranchers who are eligible for catastrophic coverage without
paying a service fee.
Following the change to the regulation, FSA intends to designate
the CCC-860 to be an application for catastrophic coverage for NAP if
filed before the deadline for application for the coverage period. The
catastrophic coverage for underserved producers, once in effect, will
be treated as continuous coverage for all eligible crops as long as the
producer's certification is valid.\23\ Once the applicable status
expires, a producer will need to apply for NAP coverage by the deadline
and pay the applicable service fee. Many underserved producers have
previously filed a certification of their underserved status with FSA,
and those producers will be considered as having timely applied for
catastrophic coverage for the 2022 crop year if the certification was
filed before the deadline for application for the NAP coverage period.
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\23\ See footnote 7 for an explanation of how long an
underserved producer's certification remains valid and the
requirement to file CCC-860 in subsequent years.
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As provided in 7 CFR 1437.2(e), the Deputy Administrator may
authorize State and county committees to waive or modify deadlines in
cases where lateness or failure to meet such other requirements does
not adversely affect the operation of NAP; therefore, FSA is amending 7
CFR 1437.6(a) to remove an unnecessary provision related to
applications filed after the deadline. This rule also makes minor
clarifications in 7 CFR 1437.7.
Payment Eligibility
Notification of interest requirements in Sec. 1400.107 provide
that an entity is ineligible for any payment under any program listed
in Sec. 1400.1, including certain programs administered by the Natural
Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), when the names and taxpayer
identification numbers for members holding an ownership interest in the
legal entity are not provided to FSA. FSA has determined for the
programs that it administers that prohibiting payments to a legal
entity when member information is provided for some, but not all
members, may adversely impact a farm operation's sustainability during
times when farm program payments may be a large portion of the farm's
income. FSA recognizes that names, addresses, valid taxpayer
identification numbers, and ownership shares are important elements
necessary to facilitate administration of FSA's rules for payment
eligibility and establishing maximum payment limitations for each
program. However, if a valid taxpayer identification number is not
provided for a member of a legal entity, FSA is still able to make
applicable determinations of eligibility and establish a maximum
payment limitation for the legal entity and its other members.
With this rule change, for programs administered by FSA, FSA will
reduce the payment to a legal entity in proportion to a member's
ownership share in cases where a person or legal entity holding less
than a 10 percent direct or indirect ownership interest fails to
provide a valid taxpayer identification number, instead of prohibiting
any payment to the legal entity. Additionally, a legal entity will not
be eligible to receive payment when a valid taxpayer identification
number for a person or legal entity that holds a direct or indirect
ownership interest of 10 percent or greater, at or above the fourth
level of ownership in the business structure, is not provided to USDA.
This change will allow the legal entity to earn a partial payment based
on the ownership shares of the members whose valid taxpayer
identification numbers are submitted in cases where a member or members
holding less than a 10 percent interest do not submit a valid taxpayer
identification number.
NRCS has determined that such change in the notification
requirements is not appropriate for the programs it administers. Unlike
the intended purposes of FSA program payments, NRCS conservation
program payments are not intended to provide economic support,
including in times of disaster, to keep operations economically viable.
Rather, they are payments made to reimburse a participant for costs
incurred by a participant to voluntarily implement conservation
practices and activities or payments made for the conveyance of a
conservation easement. Therefore, for the programs NRCS administers,
the participant is ineligible to receive any payment specified in Sec.
1400.1(a)(7) or as NRCS provides in individual program regulations if
the participant fails to provide: (1) the name, address, valid taxpayer
identification number, and ownership share of each person; or (2) the
name, address, valid taxpayer identification number, and ownership
share of each legal entity, that holds or acquires an ownership
interest in the legal entity.
For programs administered by FSA that are subject to the provisions
of Sec. 1400.107, this change will be effective for the current and
subsequent program years. FSA is also making this change retroactive to
the 2020 program year, subject to funding availability, because many
farm operations suffered income losses in 2020 due to the COVID-19
pandemic, and the ability to receive a partial payment under the
applicable programs will assist those operations in managing those
losses. FSA is not reopening sign up periods for programs with payments
that could be affected by this change; it will only affect the way
payments are processed for legal entities that previously filed
applications. Because the notification of interest provisions are
general provisions that are applicable to part 1400, subparts B, C, E,
and F, FSA is also moving the notification of interest requirement from
Sec. 1400.107 in subpart B, Payment Limitation, to Sec. 1400.10 in
subpart A, General Provisions.
Notice and Comment and Effective Date
The Administrative Procedure Act (APA, 5 U.S.C. 553(a)(2)) provides
that the notice and comment and 30-day delay in the effective date
provisions do not apply when the rule involves specified actions,
including matters relating to benefits or contracts. This rule governs
pandemic assistance and disaster assistance payments to certain
commodity producers and therefore falls within the benefits exemption
for ERP, PARP, ECP, BCAP, and the disaster assistance programs.
As specified in 7 U.S.C. 9091, the regulations to implement the
ELAP, LIP, LFP, and NAP are:
Exempt from the notice and comment provisions of 5 U.S.C.
553, and
Exempt from the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. chapter
35).
As specified in 16 U.S.C. 3648, the regulations to implement EFRP
are exempt from the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. chapter 35).
This rule is exempt from the regulatory analysis requirements of
the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-612), as amended by the
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (SBREFA).
The requirements for the regulatory flexibility analysis in 5 U.S.C.
603 and 604 are specifically tied to the requirement for a proposed
rule by section 553 or any other law; in
[[Page 1872]]
addition, the definition of rule in 5 U.S.C. 601 is tied to the
publication of a proposed rule.
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) designated this rule as
major under the Congressional Review Act (CRA), as defined by 5 U.S.C.
804(2). Section 808 of the CRA allows an agency to make a major
regulation effective immediately if the agency finds there is good
cause to do so. The beneficiaries of this rule have been significantly
impacted by the COVID-19 outbreak and disaster events, which has
resulted in significant declines in demand and market disruptions. USDA
finds that notice and public procedure are contrary to the public
interest. Therefore, even though this rule is a major rule for purposes
of the Congressional Review Act, USDA is not required to delay the
effective date for 60 days from the date of publication to allow for
Congressional review. Accordingly, this rule is effective upon
publication in the Federal Register.
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
Executive Order 12866, ``Regulatory Planning and Review,'' and
Executive Order 13563, ``Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review,''
direct agencies to assess all costs and benefits of available
regulatory alternatives and, if regulation is necessary, to select
regulatory approaches that maximize net benefits (including potential
economic, environmental, public health and safety effects, distributive
impacts, and equity). Executive Order 13563 emphasized the importance
of quantifying both costs and benefits, of reducing costs, of
harmonizing rules, and of promoting flexibility. The requirements in
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 for the analysis of costs and benefits
apply to rules that are determined to be significant.
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) designated this rule as
economically significant under Executive Order 12866 and therefore, OMB
has reviewed this rule. The costs and benefits of this rule are
summarized below. The full cost benefit analysis is available on
regulations.gov.
Cost Benefit Analysis Summary
The cost-benefit analysis covers the unrelated programs or program
changes, which are included in this rule, that largely address pandemic
assistance or natural disaster assistance.
The accompanying rule announces Phase 2 of the Emergency Relief
Program (ERP), which addresses eligible crop losses not included in ERP
Phase 1. ERP is authorized in the Extending Government Funding and
Delivering Emergency Assistance Act (Pub. L. 117- 43), which provided
$10 billion for expenses related to losses of crops (including milk,
on-farm stored commodities, crops prevented from planting in 2020 and
2021, and harvested adulterated wine grapes), trees, bushes, and vines,
as a consequence of droughts, wildfires, hurricanes, and other events
occurring in calendar years 2020 and 2021. Targeted outlays for ERP
Phase 2 are $1.2 billion; a pro-rate in payments is likely as gross
outlays are projected at $1.5 billion (see Table 1).
Two programs--including a new pandemic assistance program and
additional assistance for underserved producers--address COVID-19
losses. Prior rules associated with the COVID-19 pandemic, CFAP 1, CFAP
2, and CFAP 2: Producers of Sales-Based Commodities and Contract
Producers, assisted producers of agricultural commodities marketed in
2020 who faced continuing market disruptions, reduced farm-level
prices, and increased production and marketing costs due to COVID-19.
The additional costs are associated with declines in demand, surplus
production, or disruptions to shipping patterns and marketing channels.
In implementing the pandemic related programs, USDA determined that
additional assistance was necessary:
PARP will assist producers with revenue loss resulting
from the COVID-19 pandemic for eligible agricultural commodities.
Payments will be made on a whole farm basis and not on a commodity-by-
commodity basis. The aggregate allocation for PARP is targeted at $250
million; a pro-rate in payments is likely as gross outlays are
projected at $2.7 billion (Table 1).
CFAP 2 recipients who are underserved (beginning, limited
resource, socially disadvantaged, and veteran farmers and ranchers),
excluding contract producers, will receive a 15-percent top-up payment.
Net outlays are estimated at $325 million (Table 1). As few underserved
producers are likely to have AGI issues or reach the payment limit,
gross and net outlays are assumed to be identical.
The other changes relate to existing FSA programs or requirements:
Expanded Eligibility of Animals in Livestock Disaster
Programs--This rule makes discretionary changes to ELAP, LFP, and LIP
to amend the definition of eligible livestock. Previously, animals that
contributed to the commercial viability of an operation and were
maintained for the purposes of pleasure, roping, hunting, pets, or
show, as well as animals intended for consumption by an owner, lessee,
or contract grower, were ineligible for ELAP, LFP, and LIP. This rule
removes those restrictions. Estimated net outlays (accounting for AGI
considerations, payment limits, and other reductions) are $17.7 million
annually.
Flexibility in Non-Insured Crop Disaster Assistance
Program (NAP) Enrollment for Underserved Producers--FSA is updating NAP
provisions regarding program flexibilities for underserved producers.
For example, the ``application of coverage'' is amended to provide
flexibility as FSA reviews ways to streamline the application process
for underserved farmers and ranchers. Net outlays are estimated at $4.3
million annually (identical to the gross outlay estimate).
Notification of Interest Changes--Prior to this rule, a
legal entity was ineligible for farm programs when the names and valid
taxpayer identification numbers for all members holding an ownership
interest in the entity were not provided to USDA. Now, a legal entity
can receive a partial payment in cases where a person or legal entity
holding less than a 10 percent direct or indirect ownership interest
fails to provide a taxpayer identification number. Net outlays are
estimated at $3.7 million annually.
ECP Expansion to Public Lands (that is, Federally- and
State-owned Land)--ECP provides payments to farmers and ranchers to
rehabilitate farmland damaged by certain natural disasters and to
implement emergency water conservation measures in periods of severe
drought. ECP eligibility on public lands has not been included in the
regulation until now. ECP coverage of public lands has been FSA policy,
as specified in the FSA handbook, for many years, however, and FSA
staff in the field have provided ECP assistance to both public and
private lands since at least the 1990s. As a result, no increase in net
outlays is expected.
ECP and EFRP and the Hermit's Peak/Calf Canyon Fire--
Section 104(3)(A) of the Continuing Appropriations and Ukraine
Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2023 authorizes the Federal government
to pay 100 percent of the ECP and Emergency Forest Restoration Program
(EFRP) cost for damage associated with the Hermit's Peak/Calf Canyon
Fire. This fire burned over 340,000 acres from April 2022 to June 2022
and was the largest wildfire in recorded history in New Mexico. The
cost-share rate for both ECP and EFRP, prior to this legislation, was
generally 75 percent regardless of location. The legislation
[[Page 1873]]
applies only to the locale of the Hermit's Peak/Calf Canyon Fire. The
expected net cost is $22.5 million for FY 2023.
Gross outlays for these items are estimated at $4.5 billion (see
Table 1). After taking into account AGI considerations and payment
limitations, as well as the targeted caps on ERP Phase 2 and PARP
spending, net outlays are estimated at $1.8 billion. ERP Phase 2
accounts for about two-thirds of expected total net outlays.
FSA will administer all programs in Table 1. Producers must fill
out paperwork to participate in these programs, and the associated
administrative costs are estimated at $18.4 million. Note that ERP
Phase 2, PARP, and the Hermit's Peak/Calf's Canyon ECP/EFRP fire item
use exclusively appropriated funds.
Table 1--Estimated Gross and Net Outlays for the Pandemic Assistance and Agricultural Disaster Assistance
Programs Rule for FY 2023
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gross estimated Net estimated Implementing
Item outlays in 2023 outlays agency Funding source
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Item 1--Emergency Relief $1.504 billion $1.2 billion..... FSA.............. Extending Government
Program (ERP) Phase 2. \a\. Funding and
Delivering Emergency
Assistance Act.
Item 2--PARP................... $2.662 billion 250 million...... FSA.............. CAA.
\b\.
Item 3--15 Percent Top-Up for 325 million...... 325 million...... FSA.............. CCC net transfer
Underserved Recipients of CFAP except for the
2 Payments. tobacco portion,
which is from the
CARES Act.
Item 4--Recreational Animals 19.5 million..... 17.7 million..... FSA.............. CCC.
and Livestock Disaster
Programs.
Item 5--Flexibility in NAP 4.3 million...... 4.3 million...... FSA.............. CCC.
Enrollment for Underserved
Producers \d\.
Item 6--Notification of 3.7 million...... 3.7 million...... FSA.............. CCC.
Interest Changes.
Item 7--ECP and Public Lands... No change in cost No change in cost FSA.............. CCC.
Item 8--ECP and EFRP and the 24.2 million..... 22.5 million..... FSA.............. Continuing
Hermit's Peak/Calf's Canyon Appropriations and
Fire \c\. Ukraine Supplemental
Appropriations Act,
2023.
--------------------------------------
Total...................... 4.54 billion..... 1.82 billion.....
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ This estimate uses the 50-percent loss scenario. Note that both 2020 and 2021 losses are expected to be paid
in FY 2023. The significant difference between gross and net outlays is because the targeted amount for ERP
Phase 2 spending is $1.2 billion.
\b\ This estimate represents the most plausible scenario but, as discussed below, gross estimated outlays could
be considerably higher. Note that the significant difference between gross and net outlays is because the
targeted amount for PARP spending is $250 million.
\c\ The difference between the gross and net amount is due to adjusted gross income (AGI) considerations,
payment limitations, and other reductions.
\d\ This estimate uses the 20 percent increase-in-participation scenario.
Note: Benefits associated with items 4 through 7 continue in FY 2023 and in perpetuity in each FY beyond.
Payments associated with Items 1, 2, 3, and 8 are assumed to be paid in FY 2023 and to not continue beyond.
Environmental Review
The environmental impacts of this final rule have been considered
in a manner consistent with the provisions of the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA, 42 U.S.C. 4321-4347), the regulations
of the Council on Environmental Quality (40 CFR parts 1500-1508), and
because USDA will be making the payments to producers, the USDA
regulation for compliance with NEPA (7 CFR part 1b).
Although OMB has designated this rule as ``economically
significant'' under Executive Order 12866, ``. . . economic or social
effects are not intended by themselves to require preparation of an
environmental impact statement'' when not interrelated to natural or
physical environmental effects (see 40 CFR 1502.16(b)). The pandemic
assistance and disaster assistance programs were designed to avoid
skewing planting decisions. Producers continue to make their planting
and production decisions with the market signals in mind, rather than
any expectation of what a new USDA program might look like.
This rule includes discretionary amendments for ECP and EFRP.
Accordingly, the discretionary provisions of this action are covered by
the Categorical Exclusion, in 7 CFR 799.31(b)(2)(iii) for minor
amendments or revisions to previously approved actions and Sec.
799.31(b)(3)(i), for the issuance of minor technical corrections to
regulations.
The rule implements discretionary amendments for BCAP, CFAP, ELAP,
LIP, LFP, NAP, and PARP. The discretionary aspects are to improve
administration of the programs and clarify existing program
requirements. The change to BCAP is a technical clarification and does
not alter the impacts or alternatives previously considered in the BCAP
Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement and Record of Decision
dated June 2010. FSA is providing the disaster assistance under ELAP,
LIP, LFP, and NAP to eligible producers. The discretionary provisions
would not alter any environmental impacts resulting from implementing
the mandatory changes to those programs. Accordingly, these
discretionary aspects are coved by the following Categorical Exclusion:
in 7 CFR 799.31(b)(6)(vi) safety net programs administrated by FSA. ERP
Phase 2 is a new regulation, which is a benefit program providing
assistance after specific natural disasters; therefore, similar to the
other programs discussed in this paragraph, ERP Phase 2 has similar
discretionary aspects that are coved by the following Categorical
Exclusion: in 7 CFR 799.31(b)(6)(vi) safety net programs administrated
by FSA.
Through this review, FSA determined that the proposed discretionary
changes in this rule fit within the categorical exclusions listed
above. Categorical exclusions apply when no extraordinary circumstances
(Sec. 799.33) exist. Therefore, as this rule presents only
discretionary amendments that will not have an impact to the human
environments, individually or cumulatively, FSA will not prepare an
[[Page 1874]]
environmental assessment or environmental impact statement for this
rule; this rule serves as documentation of the programmatic
environmental compliance decision for this federal action.
Executive Order 12988
This rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12988, ``Civil
Justice Reform.'' This rule will not preempt State or local laws,
regulations, or policies unless they represent an irreconcilable
conflict with this rule. For the payment eligibility regulation
changes, payments will be adjusted retroactively, starting in January
2020, as discussed above in the Payment Eligibility section, above. For
the ELAP regulation changes, payments will be made retroactively
starting at January 1, 2021, as discussed in the Cost Benefit Analysis
Summary section, above. Before any judicial actions may be brought
regarding the provisions of this rule, the administrative appeal
provisions of 7 CFR parts 11 and 780 are to be exhausted.
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.
USDA has assessed the impact of this rule on Indian Tribes and
determined that this rule does not, to our knowledge, have Tribal
implications that required Tribal consultation under Executive Order
13175 at this time. If a Tribe requests consultation, the USDA Office
of Tribal Relations (OTR) will ensure meaningful consultation is
provided where changes, additions, and modifications are not expressly
mandated by law. Outside of Tribal consultation, USDA is working with
Tribes to provide information about pandemic assistance, agricultural
disaster assistance, and other issues.
Unfunded Mandates
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA, Pub. L.
104-4) requires Federal agencies to assess the effects of their
regulatory actions of State, local, and Tribal governments or the
private sector. Agencies generally must prepare a written statement,
including cost benefits analysis, for proposed and final rules with
Federal mandates that may result in expenditures of $100 million or
more in any 1 year for State, local or Tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or to the private sector. UMRA generally requires agencies
to consider alternatives and adopt the more cost effective or least
burdensome alternative that achieves the objectives of the rule. This
rule contains no Federal mandates, as defined in Title II of 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.
Federal Assistance Programs
The titles and numbers of the Federal Domestic Assistance Programs
found in the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance to which this rule
applies are:
10.051--Commodity Loans and Loan Deficiency Payments
10.054--Emergency Conservation Program
10.069--Conservation Reserve Program
10.087--Biomass Crop Assistance Program
10.088--Livestock Indemnity Program
10.089--Livestock Forage Disaster Program
10.091--Emergency Assistance for Livestock, Honeybees, and Farm-Raised
Fish Program
10.092--Tree Assistance Program
10.112--Price Loss Coverage
10.113--Agriculture Risk Coverage
10.130--Coronavirus Food Assistance Program 1
10.132--Coronavirus Food Assistance Program 2
10.143--Pandemic Assistance Revenue Program
10.451--Noninsured Assistance
10.912--Environmental Quality Incentives Program
10.917--Agricultural Management Assistance
10.964--Emergency Relief Program
Paperwork Reduction Act
As noted above, the regulations to implement the EFRP, ELAP, LIP,
LFP, and NAP changes are exempt from PRA as specified in 7 U.S.C.
9091(c)(2)(B) and 16 U.S.C. 3846(b)(1).
For ECP and BCAP, there are no changes to the information
collection activities approved by OMB under control number 0560-0082.
In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, the PARP
information collection activity was submitted to OMB for emergency
approval. FSA will collect and evaluate the application and other
required paperwork from the producers for PARP. The forms are described
above in the PARP Application Process section. Following the 60-day
public comment period provided by this rule, FSA intends to request 3-
year OMB approval to cover the PARP information collection request.
Title: PARP.
OMB Control Number: 0560-New.
Type of Request: New Collection.
Abstract: This information collection is required to support PARP
information collection activities to provide payments to eligible
producers who, with respect to their agricultural commodities, have
been impacted by the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. The information
collection is necessary to evaluate the application and other required
paperwork for determining the producer's eligibility and assist in the
producer's payment calculations. The forms are included in the request.
For the following estimated total annual burden on respondents, the
formula used to calculate the total burden hour is the estimated
average time per response multiplied by the estimated total annual
responses.
Estimate of Respondent Burden: Public reporting burden for this
information collection is estimated to average 0.51385 hours per
response, including the time for reviewing instructions, searching
existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and
completing and reviewing the collections of information.
Type of Respondents: Producers or farmers.
Estimated Annual Number of Respondents: 313,901.
Estimated Number of Responses per Respondent: 1.6550.
Estimated Total Annual Responses: 519,506.
Estimated Average Time per Response: 0.51385 hours.
Estimated Annual Burden on Respondents: 266,947 hours.
Also, FSA is requesting comments from all interested individuals
and organizations on a new information collection associated with ERP
Phase 1 and 2. The emergency request was approved for the ERP Phase 1
using OMB control number 0560-0309. The emergency request was approved
for the ERP Phase 2 using temporary OMB control number. The ERP Phase 2
will be merged with the approved 0560-0309 information collection
request. ERP is for the producers who suffered
[[Page 1875]]
losses of crops, trees, bushes, and vines due to wildfires, hurricanes,
floods, derechos, excessive heat, winter storms, freeze (including a
polar vortex), smoke exposure, excessive moisture, qualifying drought,
and related conditions occurring in calendar years 2020 and 2021. FSA
needs to disburse the payments to the eligible producers to cover the
losses of crops, trees, bushes and vines, and the payments will
seriously assist the producers not to consider making business
decisions to lose the farm business.
Title: ERP Phase 2.
Type of Request: New.
Abstract: ERP is for the producers who suffered losses of crops,
trees, bushes, and vines due to wildfires, hurricanes, floods,
derechos, excessive heat, winter storms, freeze (including a polar
vortex), smoke exposure, excessive moisture, qualifying drought, and
related conditions occurring in calendar years 2020 and 2021. FSA needs
to disburse the payments to the eligible producers to cover the losses
of crops, trees, bushes and vines, and the payments will seriously
assist the producers not to consider making business decisions to lose
the farm business.
For the following estimated total annual burden on respondents, the
formula used to calculate the total burden hour is the estimated
average time per response multiplied by the estimated total annual
responses.
Estimate of Respondent Burden: Public reporting burden for this
information collection is estimated to average 0.54492 hours per
response, including the time for reviewing instructions, searching
existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and
completing and reviewing the collections of information.
Type of Respondents: Producers or farmers.
Estimated Annual Number of Respondents: 48,402.
Estimated Number of Responses per Respondent: 2.085.
Estimated Total Annual Responses: 100,918.
Estimated Average Time per Response: 0.54492 hours.
Estimated Annual Burden on Respondents: 54,992 hours.
Also, FSA is requesting comments from all interested individuals
and organizations on a new information collection associated with CFAP
2. The emergency request was approved under a temporary OMB control
number and will merge with CFAP 2 under the OMB control number 0560-
0297.
Title: CFAP 2.
Type of Request: New.
Abstract: This information collection is required to support CFAP 2
information collection activities to provide payments to eligible
producers who, with respect to their agricultural commodities, have
been impacted by the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. The information
collection is necessary to evaluate the application and other required
paperwork for determining the producer's eligibility and assist in the
producer's payment calculations.
For the following estimated total annual burden on respondents, the
formula used to calculate the total burden hour is the estimated
average time per response multiplied by the estimated total annual
responses.
Estimate of Respondent Burden: Public reporting burden for this
information collection is estimated to average 0.0999 hours per
response, including the time for reviewing instructions, searching
existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and
completing and reviewing the collections of information.
Type of Respondents: Producers or farmers.
Estimated Annual Number of Respondents: 96,973.
Estimated Number of Responses per Respondent: 1.
Estimated Total Annual Responses: 96,973.
Estimated Average Time per Response: 0.0999 hours.
Estimated Annual Burden on Respondents: 9,697 hours.
FSA is requesting comments on all aspects of this information
collection to help FSA to:
(1) Evaluate whether the collection of information is necessary for
the proper performance of the functions of FSA, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
(2) Evaluate the accuracy of the FSA's estimate of burden including
the validity of the methodology and assumptions used;
(3) Enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected; and
(4) Minimize the burden of the collection of information on those
who are to respond, including through the use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology.
All comments received in response to this document, including names
and addresses when provided, will be a matter of public record.
Comments will be summarized and included in the submission for Office
of Management and Budget approval.
USDA Non-Discrimination Policy
In accordance with Federal civil rights law and U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) civil rights regulations and policies, USDA, its
Agencies, offices, and employees, and institutions participating in or
administering USDA programs are prohibited from discriminating based on
race, color, national origin, religion, sex, gender identity (including
gender expression), sexual orientation, disability, age, marital
status, family or parental status, income derived from a public
assistance program, political beliefs, or reprisal or retaliation for
prior civil rights activity, in any program or activity conducted or
funded by USDA (not all bases apply to all programs). Remedies and
complaint filing deadlines vary by program or incident.
Persons with disabilities who require alternative means of
communication for program information (for example, braille, large
print, audiotape, American Sign Language, etc.) should contact the
responsible Agency or USDA TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 or (844)
433-2774 (toll-free nationwide). Additionally, program information may
be made available in languages other than English.
To file a program discrimination complaint, complete the USDA
Program Discrimination Complaint Form, AD-3027, found online at https://www.usda.gov/oascr/how-to-file-a-program-discrimination-complaint and
at any USDA office or write a letter addressed to USDA and provide in
the letter all the information requested in the form. To request a copy
of the complaint form, call (866) 632-9992. Submit your completed form
or letter to USDA by mail to: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Office of
the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue SW,
Washington, DC 20250-9410 or email: [email protected].
USDA is an equal opportunity provider, employer, and lender.
List of Subjects
7 CFR Part 9
Agricultural commodities, Agriculture, Disaster assistance,
Indemnity payments.
7 CFR Part 701
Disaster assistance, Environmental protection, Forests and forest
products, Grant programs--agriculture, Grant programs--natural
resources, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Rural
[[Page 1876]]
areas, Soil conservation, Water resources, Wildlife.
7 CFR Part 760
Dairy products, Indemnity payments, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
7 CFR Part 1400
Agriculture, Grant programs--agriculture, Loan programs--
agriculture, Natural resources, Price support programs.
7 CFR Part 1416
Administrative practice and procedure, Agriculture, Disaster
assistance, Fruits, Livestock, Nursery stock, Seafood.
7 CFR Part 1437
Acreage allotments, Agricultural commodities, Crop insurance,
Disaster assistance, Fraud, Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
7 CFR Part 1450
Administrative practice and procedure, Agriculture, Energy,
Environmental protection, Grant programs-agriculture, Natural
resources, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Technical
assistance.
For the reasons discussed above, this final rule amends 7 CFR parts
9, 701, 760, 1400, 1416, 1437, and 1450 as follows:
PART 9--PANDEMIC ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS
0
1. The authority citation for part 9 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 714b and 714c; Division B, Title I, Pub.
L. 116-136, 134 Stat. 505; and Division N, Title VII, Subtitle B,
Chapter 1, Pub. L. 116-260.
0
2. Revise the heading for part 9 to read as set forth above.
Subpart A--CFAP General Provisions
0
3. Revise the heading for subpart A to read as set forth above.
Sec. 9.1 [Amended]
0
4. Amend Sec. 9.1 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (a) introductory text, remove the words ``This part
specifies'' and add ``Subparts A through C of this part specify'' in
their place, and remove the words ``payment made under this part'' and
add ``CFAP payment'' in their place;
0
b. In paragraph (c), remove the words ``this part'' each time they
appear and add ``subparts A through C of this part'' in their place;
and
0
c. In paragraph (d), remove words ``the programs of this part'' and add
``CFAP'' in their place.
0
5. Amend Sec. 9.2 as follows:
0
a. In the introductory text, remove the words ``this part'' and add
``subparts A through C of this part'' in its place;
0
b. In the definition of ``NOFA'', remove the words ``under this part'';
and
0
c. Add a definition for ``Ownership interest'' in alphabetical order.
The addition reads as follows:
Sec. 9.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
Ownership interest means to have either legal ownership interest or
beneficial ownership interest in a legal entity. For the purposes of
administering CFAP, a person or legal entity that owns a share or stock
in a legal entity that is a corporation, limited liability company,
limited partnership, or similar type entity, and shares in the profits
or losses of such entity is considered to have an ownership interest in
such legal entity. A person or legal entity that is a beneficiary of a
trust or heir of an estate who benefits from the profits or losses of
such entity is also considered to have an ownership interest in such
legal entity.
* * * * *
Sec. 9.3 [Amended]
0
6. Amend Sec. 9.3 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (a), remove the words ``this part'' and add ``subparts
A through C of this part'' in their place; and
0
b. In paragraph (b)(2), remove the words ``this part means'' and add
``subparts A through C of this part means'' in its place.
0
7. Amend Sec. 9.4 by adding paragraph (e) to read as follows:
Sec. 9.4 Time and method of application.
* * * * *
(e) To receive an additional payment under Sec. 9.203(p), a
producer must submit form CCC-860, Socially Disadvantaged, Limited
Resource, Beginning and Veteran Farmer or Rancher Certification, with a
certification applicable to the 2020 program year by the date announced
by the Deputy Administrator.
0
8. Amend Sec. 9.7 as follows:
0
a. In paragraphs (b), (c), (d), and (e)(2)(ii) and (iii), add the words
``subparts A through C of'' before the words ``this part'' each time
they appear;
0
b. In paragraph (h), remove the words ``This part applies'' and add
``Subparts A through C of this part apply'' in their place; and
0
c. Add paragraph (i).
The addition reads as follows.
Sec. 9.7 Miscellaneous provisions.
* * * * *
(i) To be eligible to receive a CFAP payment and facilitate
administration of paragraphs (d) and (e) of this section, a person or
legal entity must provide their name, address, and taxpayer
identification number to USDA. In addition, a legal entity must provide
the name taxpayer identification number, address and ownership share of
each person or legal entity that holds or acquires a direct or indirect
ownership interest in the legal entity. CFAP payments to a legal entity
will be reduced in proportion to a member's ownership share when the
taxpayer identification number for a person or legal entity that holds
less than a 10 percent direct or indirect ownership interest at, or
above, the fourth level of ownership in the business structure is not
provided to USDA. Additionally, a legal entity will not be eligible to
receive CFAP payments when a valid taxpayer identification number for a
person or legal entity that holds a direct or indirect ownership
interest of 10 percent or greater, at or above the fourth level of
ownership in the business structure, is not provided to USDA.
Subpart B--CFAP 1
Sec. 9.101 [Amended]
0
9. Amend Sec. 9.101, in the definition of ``All other cattle'', by
removing the word ``part'' and adding ``subpart'' in its place.
0
10. Amend Sec. 9.102 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (c) introductory text, remove the word ``two'' and add
``three'' in its place;
0
b. In paragraph (c)(1), remove the word ``and'';
0
c. In paragraph (c)(2), remove the period and add ``; and'' at the end
of the paragraph;
0
d. Add paragraph (c)(3);
0
e. In paragraph (d) introductory text, remove the word ``three'' and
add ``two'' in its place;
0
f. In paragraph (d)(1), add the word ``and'' at the end of the
paragraph;
0
g. In paragraph (d)(2), remove ``; and'' and add a period in its place;
and
0
h. Remove paragraph (d)(3).
The addition reads as follows.
Sec. 9.102 Calculation of payments.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(3) Cattle inventory owned between April 16, 2020, to May 14, 2020,
multiplied by:
(i) $14.75 for slaughter cattle--mature cattle;
[[Page 1877]]
(ii) $63 for slaughter cattle--fed cattle;
(iii) $7 for feeder cattle less than 600 pounds;
(iv) $25.50 for feeder cattle 600 pounds or more; and
(v) $17.25 for all other cattle.
* * * * *
Subpart C--CFAP 2
0
11. In Sec. 9.201, add definitions for ``Beginning farmer or
rancher'', ``Limited resource farmer or rancher'', ``Socially
disadvantaged farmer or rancher'', ``Underserved farmer or rancher'',
and ``Veteran farmer or rancher'' in alphabetical order to read as
follows:
Sec. 9.201 Definitions.
* * * * *
Beginning farmer or rancher means a farmer or rancher who has not
operated a farm or ranch for more than 10 years and who materially and
substantially participates in the operation. For a legal entity to be
considered a beginning farmer or rancher, at least 50 percent of the
interest must be beginning farmers or ranchers.
* * * * *
Limited resource farmer or rancher means a farmer or rancher:
(1) Who is a person whose:
(i) Direct or indirect gross farm sales did not exceed $180,300 in
each calendar year for 2017 and 2018 (the relevant years for the 2020
program year); and
(ii) Total household income was at or below the national poverty
level for a family of four in each of the same two previous years
referenced in paragraph (1)(i) of this definition; \24\ or
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ Limited resource farmer or rancher status can be determined
using a website available through the Limited Resource Farmer and
Rancher Online Self Determination Tool through Natural Resources
Conservation Service at https://lrftool.sc.egov.usda.gov.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(2) That is an entity and all members who hold an ownership
interest in the entity meet the criteria in paragraph (1) of this
definition.
* * * * *
Socially disadvantaged farmer or rancher means a farmer or rancher
who is a member of a group whose members have been subjected to racial,
ethnic, or gender prejudice because of their identity as members of a
group without regard to their individual qualities. For entities, at
least 50 percent of the ownership interest must be held by individuals
who are members of such a group. Socially disadvantaged groups include
the following and no others unless approved in writing by the Deputy
Administrator:
(1) American Indians or Alaskan Natives;
(2) Asians or Asian-Americans;
(3) Blacks or African Americans;
(4) Hispanics or Hispanic Americans;
(5) Native Hawaiians or other Pacific Islanders; and
(6) Women.
* * * * *
Underserved farmer or rancher means a beginning farmer or rancher,
limited resource farmer or rancher, socially disadvantaged farmer or
rancher, or veteran farmer or rancher.
* * * * *
Veteran farmer or rancher means a farmer or rancher:
(1) Who has served in the Armed Forces (as defined in 38 U.S.C.
101(10) \25\) and:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ The term ``Armed Forces'' means the United States Army,
Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, Space Force, and Coast Guard,
including the reserve components.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(i) Has not operated a farm or ranch for more than 10 years; or
(ii) Has obtained status as a veteran (as defined in 38 U.S.C.
101(2) \26\) during the most recent 10-year period; or
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ The term ``veteran'' means a person who served in the
active military, naval, air, or space service, and who was
discharged or released under conditions other than dishonorable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(2) That is an entity and at least 50 percent of the ownership
interest is held by members who meet the criteria in paragraph (1) of
this definition.
* * * * *
Sec. 9.202 [Amended]
0
12. Amend Sec. 9.202 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (a), remove the words ``this part'' and add the words
``subpart A of this part and this subpart'' in their place; and
0
b. In paragraphs (b)(4) and (d)(2), remove the words ``this part'' and
add the words ``subpart A of this part and this subpart'' in their
place.
0
13. Amend Sec. 9.203 as follows:
0
a. Add paragraph (a)(5);
0
b. In paragraph (b), add a sentence at the end of the paragraph;
0
c. In paragraphs (f)(2) and (h)(2), remove the word ``part'' and add
the word ``subpart'' in its place; and
0
d. Add paragraph (p).
The additions read as follows.
Sec. 9.203 Calculation of payments.
(a) * * *
(5) An additional payment will be issued for price trigger crops
equal to the eligible acres of the crop multiplied by a payment rate of
$20 per acre.
(b) * * * An additional payment will be issued for flat-rate crops
equal to the eligible acres of the crop multiplied by a payment rate of
$20 per acre.
* * * * *
(p) An additional payment equal to 15 percent of a producer's CFAP
2 payment calculated according to paragraphs (a) through (k) of this
section will be issued to producers who have certified their status as
an underserved farmer or rancher, applicable to the 2020 program year,
on CCC-860, Socially Disadvantaged, Limited Resource, Beginning and
Veteran Farmer or Rancher Certification.
0
14. Add subpart D, consisting of Sec. Sec. 9.301 through 9.310, to
read as follows:
Subpart D--Pandemic Assistance Revenue Program
Sec.
9.301 Applicability and administration.
9.302 Definitions.
9.303 Producer eligibility requirements.
9.304 Allowable gross revenue.
9.305 Time and method of application.
9.306 Payment calculation.
9.307 Adjusted gross income limitation, payment limitation, and
attribution.
9.308 Eligibility subject to verification.
9.309 Miscellaneous provisions.
9.310 Perjury.
Subpart D--Pandemic Assistance Revenue Program
Sec. 9.301 Applicability and administration.
(a) This subpart specifies the eligibility requirements and payment
calculations for the Pandemic Assistance Revenue Program (PARP). FSA is
administering PARP to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic by providing
support for eligible producers of agricultural commodities who suffered
an eligible revenue loss in calendar year 2020 due to the COVID-19
pandemic. To be eligible for PARP payments, participants must comply
with all provisions under this subpart.
(b) PARP is administered under the general supervision and
direction of the Administrator, Farm Service Agency (FSA).
(c) The FSA State committee will take any action required by this
subpart that an FSA county committee has not taken. The FSA State
committee will also:
(1) Correct, or require an FSA county committee to correct, any
action taken by such county FSA committee that is not in accordance
with the regulations of this subpart; or
(2) Require an FSA county committee to withhold taking any action
that is not in accordance with this subpart.
(d) No provision or delegation to an FSA State or county committee
will preclude the FSA Administrator, the Deputy Administrator, or a
designee or other such person, from determining any question arising
under the programs of this subpart, or from reversing or
[[Page 1878]]
modifying any determination made by an FSA State or county committee.
(e) The Deputy Administrator has the authority to permit State and
county committees to waive or modify deadlines (except deadlines
specified in a law) and other requirements or program provisions not
specified in law, in cases where lateness or failure to meet such other
requirements or program provisions do not adversely affect operation of
PARP.
Sec. 9.302 Definitions.
The following definitions apply to this subpart. The definitions in
part 1400 of this title apply, except where they conflict with the
definitions in this section.
2017 WHIP means the 2017 Wildfires and Hurricanes Indemnity Program
under 7 CFR part 760, subpart O.
Agricultural commodity means a crop, aquaculture, livestock,
livestock byproduct, or other animal or animal byproduct that is
produced as part of a farming operation and is intended to be
commercially marketed. It includes only commodities produced in the
United States, or produced outside the United States by a producer
located in the United States and marketed inside the United States. It
excludes:
(1) Wild free-roaming animals;
(2) Horses and other animals used or intended to be used for racing
or wagering;
(3) Aquatic species that do not meet the definition of aquaculture;
(4) Cannabis sativa L. and any part of that plant that does not
meet the definition of hemp; and
(5) Timber.
Applicable pandemic assistance includes payments received directly
by an applicant under the following programs:
(1) The Coronavirus Food Assistance Program (CFAP);
(2) The Pandemic Livestock Indemnity Program (PLIP); and
(3) The Spot Market Hog Pandemic Program (SMHPP).
Application means the PARP application form.
Aquaculture means any species of aquatic organisms grown as food
for human or livestock consumption or for industrial or biomass uses,
fish raised as feed for fish that are consumed by humans, and
ornamental fish propagated and reared in an aquatic medium. Eligible
aquacultural species must be raised by a commercial operator and in
water in a controlled environment.
ARC and PLC means the Agriculture Risk Coverage (ARC) and Price
Loss Coverage (PLC) programs under 7 CFR part 1412.
BCAP means the Biomass Crop Assistance Program under 7 CFR part
1450.
Beginning farmer or rancher means a farmer or rancher who has not
operated a farm or ranch for more than 10 years and who materially and
substantially participates in the operation. For a legal entity to be
considered a beginning farmer or rancher, at least 50 percent of the
interest must be beginning farmers or ranchers.
Cattle feeder operation means an operation that intensely feeds
cattle on behalf of another person or entity for finishing purposes and
is compensated based on feed, yardage, or weight gain of the cattle.
CCC means the Commodity Credit Corporation.
CFAP means the Coronavirus Food Assistance Program 1 and 2 under 7
CFR part 9, subparts A through C, excluding assistance for contract
producers specified in Sec. 9.203(l) through (o).
Contract producer means a producer who grows or produces an
agricultural commodity under contract for or on behalf of another
person or entity. The contract producer does not have ownership in the
commodity and is not entitled to a share from sales proceeds of the
commodity. The term ``contract producer'' does not include cattle
feeder operations.
Controlled environment means an environment in which everything
that can practicably be controlled by the producer with structures,
facilities, and growing media (including but not limited to water,
soil, or nutrients), is in fact controlled by the producer, as
determined by industry standards.
County means the county or parish of a state. For Alaska, Puerto
Rico, and the Virgin Islands, a county is an area designated by the
State committee with the concurrence of the Deputy Administrator.
County committee means the FSA county committee.
Crop insurance means an insurance policy reinsured by Federal Crop
Insurance Corporation under the provisions of the Federal Crop
Insurance Act, as amended, or a private plan of insurance.
Deputy Administrator means Deputy Administrator for Farm Programs,
Farm Service Agency, U.S. Department of Agriculture, or their designee.
DMC means the Dairy Margin Coverage Program under 7 CFR part 1430,
subpart D.
ELAP means the Emergency Assistance for Livestock, Honeybees, and
Farm-Raised Fish Program under 7 CFR part 1416, subpart B.
ERP means the Emergency Relief Program, which was administered in 2
phases:
(1) ERP Phase 1, administered according to the notice of funds
availability published in the Federal Register on May 18, 2022 (87 FR
30164-30172) and the clarification to the notice of funds availability
that was published on August 18, 2022 (87 FR 50828-50830); and
(2) ERP Phase 2, administered according to 7 CFR part 760, subpart
S.
Farming operation means a business enterprise engaged in the
production of agricultural products, commodities, or livestock,
operated by a person, legal entity, or joint operation, and that is
eligible to receive payments, directly or indirectly, under this
subpart. A person or legal entity may have more than one farming
operation if the person or legal entity is a member of one or more
legal entity or joint operation.
Foreign entity means a corporation, trust, estate, or other similar
organization that has more than 10 percent of its beneficial interest
held by individuals who are not:
(1) Citizens of the United States; or
(2) Lawful aliens possessing a valid Alien Registration Receipt
Card.
Foreign person means any person who is not a citizen or national of
the United States or who is admitted into the United States for
permanent residence under the Immigration and Nationality Act and
possesses a valid Alien Registration Receipt Card issued by the United
States Citizenship and Immigration Services, Department of Homeland
Security.
Hemp means the plant species Cannabis sativa L. and any part of
that plant, including the seeds thereof and all derivatives, extracts,
cannabinoids, isomers, acids, salts, and salts of isomers, whether
growing or not, with a delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol concentration of
not more than 0.3 percent on a dry weight basis, that is grown under a
license or other required authorization issued by the applicable
governing authority that permits the production of the hemp.
IRS means the Department of Treasury, Internal Revenue Service.
LDP means the Loan Deficiency Payment programs in 7 CFR parts 1421,
1425, 1427, 1434, and 1435.
Legal entity means a corporation, joint stock company, association,
limited partnership, irrevocable trust, estate, charitable
organization, or other similar organization including any such
organization participating in a business structure as a partner in a
general partnership, a participant in a joint venture, a grantor of a
revocable trust,
[[Page 1879]]
or as a participant in a similar organization. A business operating as
a sole proprietorship is considered a legal entity.
Limited resource farmer or rancher means a farmer or rancher:
(1) Who is a person whose:
(i) Direct or indirect gross farm sales did not exceed $180,300 in
each calendar year for 2017 and 2018 (the relevant years for the 2020
program year); and
(ii) Total household income was at or below the national poverty
level for a family of four in each of the same two previous years
referenced in paragraph (1)(i) of this definition; \1\ or
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Limited resource farmer or rancher status can be determined
using a website available through the Limited Resource Farmer and
Rancher Online Self Determination Tool through Natural Resources
Conservation Service at https://lrftool.sc.egov.usda.gov.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(2) That is an entity and all members who hold an ownership
interest in the entity meet the criteria in paragraph (1) of this
definition.
LFP means the Livestock Forage Disaster Program under CFR part
1416, subpart C.
LIP means the Livestock Indemnity Program under 7 CFR part 1416,
subpart D.
Minor child means a person who is under 18 years of age as of June
1, 2020.
MFP means the 2018 Market Facilitation Program under 7 CFR part
1409, subpart A, and the 2019 Market Facilitation Program under 7 CFR
part 1409, subpart B.
Milk Loss Program means the Milk Loss Program under 7 CFR part 760,
subpart Q.
MLG means a marketing loan gain under the Marketing Assistance Loan
programs in 7 CFR parts 1421, 1425, 1427, 1434, and 1435.
MPP-Dairy means the Margin Protection Program for Dairy under 7 CFR
part 1430, subpart A.
NAP means the Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program under
section 196 of the Federal Agriculture Improvement and Reform Act of
1996 (7 U.S.C. 7333) and 7 CFR part 1437.
On-Farm Storage Loss Program means the On-Farm Storage Loss Program
under 7 CFR part 760, subpart P.
Ownership interest means to have either legal ownership interest or
beneficial ownership interest in a legal entity. For the purposes of
administering PARP, a person or legal entity that owns a share or stock
in a legal entity that is a corporation, limited liability company,
limited partnership, or similar type entity where members hold a legal
ownership interest and shares in the profits or losses of such entity
is considered to have an ownership interest in such legal entity. A
person or legal entity that is a beneficiary of a trust or heir of an
estate who benefits from the profits or losses of such entity is also
considered to have a beneficial ownership interest in such legal
entity.
Person means an individual, natural person and does not include a
legal entity.
PLIP means the Pandemic Livestock Indemnity Program announced in
the notice of funds availability published on July 19, 2021 (86 FR
37990-37994).
PMVAP means the Pandemic Market Volatility Assistance Program
administered by USDA's Agricultural Marketing Service.
Producer means a person or legal entity who was in the business of
farming to produce an agricultural commodity in calendar year 2020, and
who was entitled to a share in the agricultural commodity available for
marketing or would have shared had the agricultural commodity been
produced and marketed. For PARP, ``producer'' also includes cattle
feeder operations.
Socially disadvantaged farmer or rancher means a farmer or rancher
who is a member of a group whose members have been subjected to racial,
ethnic, or gender prejudice because of their identity as members of a
group without regard to their individual qualities. For entities, at
least 50 percent of the ownership interest must be held by individuals
who are members of such a group. Socially disadvantaged groups include
the following and no others unless approved in writing by the Deputy
Administrator:
(1) American Indians or Alaskan Natives;
(2) Asians or Asian-Americans;
(3) Blacks or African Americans;
(4) Hispanics or Hispanic Americans;
(5) Native Hawaiians or other Pacific Islanders; and
(6) Women.
TAP means the Tree Assistance Program under 7 CFR part 1416,
subpart E.
SMHPP means the Spot Market Hog Pandemic Program announced in the
notice of funds availability published on December 14, 2021 (86 FR
71003-71007).
STRP means the Seafood Trade Relief Program announced in the notice
of funds availability published on September 14, 2020 (85 FR 56572-
56575).
Underserved farmer or rancher means a beginning farmer or rancher,
limited resource farmer or rancher, socially disadvantaged farmer or
rancher, or veteran farmer or rancher.
United States means all 50 States of the United States, the
District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and any other
territory or possession of the United States.
Veteran farmer or rancher means a farmer or rancher:
(1) Who has served in the Armed Forces (as defined in 38 U.S.C.
101(10) \2\) and:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ The term ``Armed Forces'' means the United States Army,
Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, Space Force, and Coast Guard,
including the reserve components.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(i) Has not operated a farm or ranch for more than 10 years; or
(ii) Has obtained status as a veteran (as defined in 38 U.S.C.
101(2) \3\) during the most recent 10-year period; or
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The term ``veteran'' means a person who served in the active
military, naval, air, or space service, and who was discharged or
released under conditions other than dishonorable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(2) That is an entity and at least 50 percent of the ownership
interest is held by members who meet the criteria in paragraph (1) of
this definition.
WHIP+ means the Wildfires and Hurricanes Indemnity Program Plus
under 7 CFR part 760, subpart O.
Sec. 9.303 Producer eligibility requirements.
(a) To be eligible for PARP, a producer must:
(1) Have been in the business of farming in the 2020 calendar year;
(2) Have had at least a 15 percent decrease in allowable gross
revenue for the 2020 calendar year, as compared to the:
(i) Actual allowable gross revenue for the 2018 or 2019 calendar
year, whichever is reflective of a typical year, as elected by the
producer, if the producer had allowable gross revenue in the 2018 or
2019 calendar year; or
(ii) Producer's expected allowable gross revenue for the 2020
calendar year, if the producer had no allowable gross revenue for the
2018 and 2019 calendar years; and
(3) Meet all other requirements for eligibility under this subpart.
(b) To be eligible for a PARP payment, a producer must be a:
(1) Citizen of the United States;
(2) Resident alien, which for purposes of this subpart means
``lawful alien'' as defined in part 1400 of this title;
(3) Partnership organized under State Law;
(4) Corporation, limited liability company, or other organizational
structure organized under State law;
(5) Indian Tribe or Tribal organization, as defined in section 4(b)
of the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act (25
U.S.C. 5304); or
[[Page 1880]]
(6) Foreign person or foreign entity who meets all requirements as
described in 7 CFR part 1400.
Sec. 9.304 Allowable gross revenue.
(a) For the purposes of this subpart, ``allowable gross revenue''
includes revenue from:
(1) Sales of agricultural commodities produced by the producer,
including sales resulting from value added through post-production
activities;
(2) Sales of agricultural commodities a producer purchased for
resale that had a change in characteristic due to the time held (for
example, a plant purchased at a size of 2 inches and sold as an 18-inch
plant after 4 months), less the cost or other basis of such
commodities;
(3) The taxable amount of cooperative distributions directly
related to the sale of the agricultural commodities produced by the
producer;
(4) Benefits under the following agricultural programs: ARC and
PLC, BCAP, DMC, LDP, MFP, MLG, and MPP-Dairy;
(5) CCC loans, if treated as income and reported to IRS;
(6) Crop insurance proceeds;
(7) Federal disaster program payments under the following programs:
2017 WHIP, ELAP, LFP, LIP, NAP, Milk Loss Program, On-Farm Storage Loss
Program, STRP, TAP, and WHIP+;
(8) Payments issued through grant agreements with FSA for losses of
agricultural commodities;
(9) Grants from the Department of Commerce, National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration and State program funds providing direct
payments for the loss of agricultural commodities or the loss of
revenue from agricultural commodities;
(10) Revenue from raised breeding livestock;
(11) Revenue earned as a cattle feeder operation;
(12) Other revenue directly related to the production of
agricultural commodities that IRS requires the producer to report as
income and
(13) For 2020 allowable gross revenue, payments PMVAP regardless of
the calendar year in which the payment was received.
(b) Allowable gross revenue does not include revenue from sources
other than those listed in paragraph (a) of this section, including but
not limited to, revenue from:
(1) Applicable pandemic assistance;
(2) Sales of commodities that are excluded from ``agricultural
commodities,''
(3) Resale items not held for characteristic change;
(4) Income from a pass-through entity such as an S Corp or limited
liability company;
(5) Conservation program payments;
(6) Any pandemic assistance payments that were not intended to
compensate for the loss of agricultural commodities or the loss of
revenue from agricultural commodities due to the pandemic (for example,
payments to provide assistance with the cost of purchasing personal
protective equipment, retrofitting facilities for worker and consumer
safety, shifting to online sales platforms, transportation, worker
housing, or medical costs);
(7) Custom hire income;
(8) Net gain from hedging or speculation;
(9) Wages, salaries, tips, and cash rent;
(10) Rental of equipment or supplies; and
(11) Acting as a contract producer of an agricultural commodity.
(c) If a producer did not have a full year of revenue for 2018 or
2019, or increased their production capacity in 2020 compared to 2018
or 2019, the producer may certify to an adjusted 2018 or 2019 allowable
gross revenue on form FSA-1122A. Increases in production capacity do
not include changes due to crop rotation from year to year, changes in
farming practices such as converting from conventional tillage to no-
till, or increasing the rate of fertilizers or chemicals. Documentation
required to support such an adjustment must be provided within 30
calendar days of submitting their PARP application and demonstrate that
the producer:
(1) Had the production capacity to support the expected full year
revenue;
(2) Added production capacity to the farming operation;
(3) Increased the use of existing production capacity; or
(4) Made physical alterations to existing production capacity.
(d) If a producer did not have allowable gross revenue in 2018 and
2019, the producer must certify on form FSA-1122A as to what had been
their reasonably expected 2020 allowable gross revenue prior to the
impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Documentation required to support the
producer's certification must be provided within 30 calendar days of
submitting the producer's PARP application. Acceptable documentation
must be generated in the ordinary course of business and dated prior to
the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and includes, but is not limited
to:
(1) Financial documents such as a business plan or cash flow
statement that demonstrate an expected level of revenue;
(2) Sales contracts or purchase agreements; and
(3) Documentation supporting production capacity, use of existing
production capacity, or physical alterations that demonstrate
production capacity.
(e) A producer who does not provide acceptable documentation
described in paragraph (c) or (d) of this section within 30 calendar
days of submitting their application is not eligible for an adjustment
to their 2019 allowable gross revenue or to have their payment
calculated using an expected 2020 allowable gross revenue, as
applicable.
(f) Except as provided in paragraph (a)(13) of this section, the
allowable gross revenue for a specific calendar year will be based on
the calendar year in which that revenue was received by the producer.
(g) Producers who file or would file a joint tax return will
certify their allowable gross revenue based on what it would have been
had they filed taxes separately for the applicable year.
Sec. 9.305 Time and method of application.
(a) A completed PARP application under this subpart must be
submitted to any FSA county office by the close of business on the date
announced by the Deputy Administrator. Applications may be submitted in
person or by mail, email, facsimile, or other methods announced by FSA.
(b) Failure of an individual, entity, or a member of an entity to
submit the following payment limitation and payment eligibility forms
within 60 days from the PARP application deadline, may result in no
payment or a reduced payment:
(1) Form AD-2047, Customer Data Worksheet, for new customers or
existing customers who need to update their customer profile;
(2) Form FSA-1122A, PARP Application, if applicable;
(3) Form CCC-860, Socially Disadvantaged, Limited Resource,
Beginning and Veteran Farmer or Rancher Certification, if applicable;
(4) Form CCC-901, Member Information for Legal Entities, if
applicable;
(5) Form CCC-902 Farm Operating Plan for an individual or legal
entity as provided in 7 CFR part 1400;
(6) Form CCC-941, Average Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) Certification
and Consent to Disclosure of Tax Information, for the 2020 program year
for the person or legal entity, including the legal entity's members,
partners, or shareholders, as provided in 7 CFR part 1400;
[[Page 1881]]
(7) Form FSA-1123, Certification of 2020 Adjusted Gross Income
(AGI), if applicable; and
(8) Form AD-1026, Highly Erodible Land Conservation (HELC) and
Wetland Conservation (WC) Certification, for the PARP applicant and
applicable affiliates as provided in 7 CFR part 12.
(c) If requested by USDA, the producer must provide additional
documentation that establishes the producer's eligibility for PARP. If
supporting documentation is requested, the documentation must be
submitted to USDA within 30 calendar days from the request or the
application will be disapproved by USDA. FSA may request supporting
documentation to verify information provided by the producer and their
eligibility including, but not limited to, the producer's:
(1) Allowable gross revenue reported on the PARP application; and
(2) Ownership share in the agricultural commodities.
Sec. 9.306 Payment calculation.
(a) If the producer's allowable gross revenue for 2020 decreased by
at least 15 percent compared to the producer's allowable gross revenue
for 2018 or 2019, as elected by the producer:
(1) FSA will calculate:
(i) The producer's 2018 or 2019 allowable gross revenue, as elected
by the producer and as adjusted according to Sec. 9.304(c), if
applicable; minus
(ii) The producer's 2020 allowable gross revenue; multiplied by
(iii) A payment factor of:
(A) Ninety (90) percent for underserved farmers or ranchers, who
have submitted form CCC-860 certifying they meet the definition for at
least one of the applicable groups; or
(B) Eighty (80) percent for all other producers; and
(2) The producer's PARP payment will be equal to the result of the
calculation in paragraph (a)(1) of this section minus the producer's
applicable pandemic assistance, and 2020 program year ERP payments.
(b) If a producer did not have allowable gross revenue in 2018 and
2019 and the producer's allowable gross revenue for 2020 decreased by
at least 15 percent compared to the producer's expected 2020 allowable
gross revenue:
(1) FSA will calculate:
(i) The producer's expected 2020 allowable gross revenue, as
specified in Sec. 9.304(d), minus
(ii) The producer's actual 2020 allowable gross revenue;
(iii) Multiplied by a payment factor of:
(A) 90 percent for underserved farmers or ranchers who have
submitted form CCC-860 certifying they meet the definition for at least
one of the applicable groups; or
(B) 80 percent for all other producers; and
(2) The producer's PARP payment will be equal to the result of the
calculation in paragraph (b)(1) of this section minus the producer's
applicable pandemic assistance, and 2020 program year ERP payments.
(c) If a producer receives assistance through 2020 program year ERP
or any program included under applicable pandemic assistance after
their PARP payment is calculated, their PARP payment will be
recalculated and the producer must refund any resulting overpayment.
(d) Payments calculated according to this section are subject to
the availability of funds and may be factored if total calculated
payments exceed the available funding.
Sec. 9.307 Adjusted gross income limitation, payment limitation, and
attribution.
(a) To be eligible to receive a PARP payment and facilitate
administration of paragraphs (b) through (f) of this section, a person
or legal entity must provide their name, address, valid taxpayer
identification number, and ownership share to USDA. In addition, a
legal entity must provide the name, address, valid taxpayer
identification number, and ownership share of each person or legal
entity, that holds or acquires a direct or indirect ownership interest
in the legal entity. PARP payments to a legal entity will be reduced in
proportion to a member's ownership share when a valid taxpayer
identification number for a person or legal entity that holds less than
a 10 percent direct or indirect ownership interest, at or above the
fourth level of ownership in the business structure, is not provided to
USDA. Additionally, a legal entity will not be eligible to receive PARP
payments when a valid taxpayer identification number for a person or
legal entity that holds a direct or indirect ownership interest of 10
percent or greater, at or above the fourth level of ownership in the
business structure, is not provided to USDA.
(b) The $900,000 average adjusted gross income limitation
provisions in 7 CFR part 1400 relating to limits on income for persons
or legal entities, including members of legal entities, joint ventures,
and general partnerships applies to PARP. The average adjusted gross
income will be calculated for a person or legal entity based on the
2016, 2017, and 2018 tax years. If the person's or legal entity's
average adjusted gross income exceeds $900,000, the applicant is
ineligible for PARP except as provided in paragraph (c) of this
section.
(c) A person or legal entity that does not meet the average
adjusted gross income requirements described in paragraph (b) of this
section, may otherwise meet the adjusted gross income requirements,
provided the person's or legal entity's 2020 adjusted gross income, as
defined under 26 U.S.C. 62 or comparable measure, is not more than
$900,000. Except for general partnerships and joint ventures, a PARP
applicant that is a person or legal entity, including members holding
an ownership interest in the legal entity, is required to:
(1) Certify, on a form that is approved for that purpose by the
Deputy Administrator, that their 2020 adjusted gross income or
comparable measure is not more than $900,000; and
(2) Submit a certification from a licensed CPA or attorney
affirming the person's or legal entity's 2020 adjusted gross income is
not more than $900,000.
(d) Members of general partnerships and joint ventures not meeting
the income requirements described in paragraph (b) of this section may
otherwise meet the income requirements, provided the member's 2020
adjusted gross income, as defined under 26 U.S.C. 62 or comparable
measure, is not more than $900,000. The member is required to provide
the information described in paragraphs (c)(1) and (2) of this section.
(e) A person or legal entity other than a joint venture or general
partnership cannot receive, directly or indirectly, more than $125,000
under PARP. USDA may establish a lower maximum payment amount per
person, legal entity, or member of a joint venture or general
partnership after the application period has ended if calculated
payment amounts exceed available funding. Payments made to a PARP
applicant who is a joint operation, including a joint venture or a
general partnership, may not exceed the amount determined by
multiplying $125,000 (or the reduced maximum payment limitation, if
applicable) by the number of persons or legal entities that comprise
the first-level membership of the joint operation.
(f) A PARP payment made to a legal entity will be considered in
combination with other PARP payments attributed to every person or
legal entity with a direct or indirect ownership interest in the legal
entity. The maximum limitation described in paragraph (e) of this
section for a legal entity is determined based on payments to the legal
entity and members who are an individual person or a legal entity. If a
member's combined PARP payments
[[Page 1882]]
reach the maximum payment limitation when summed from all businesses in
which the person or legal entity has an ownership interest, then
subsequent payments to the legal entity will be reduced by the
proportionate ownership interest of the member. A payment to a legal
entity will be attributed to those members who have a direct or
indirect ownership interest in the legal entity, unless the payment of
the legal entity has been reduced by the proportionate ownership
interest of the member due to that member's ineligibility. Attribution
of payments made to legal entities will be tracked through four levels
of ownership in legal entities as follows:
(1) First level of ownership: Any payment made to a legal entity
that is owned in whole or in part by a person will be attributed to the
person in an amount that represents the direct ownership interest in
the first-level or payment legal entity;
(2) Second level of ownership: Any payment made to a first-level
legal entity that is owned in whole or in part by another legal entity
(referred to as a second-level legal entity) will be attributed to the
second-level legal entity in proportion to the ownership of the second-
level legal entity in the first-level legal entity; if the second-level
legal entity is owned in whole or in part by a person, the amount of
the payment made to the first-level legal entity will be attributed to
the person in the amount that represents the indirect ownership in the
first-level legal entity by the person;
(3) Third and fourth levels of ownership: Except as provided in the
second-level ownership in paragraph (f)(2) of this section and in the
fourth level of ownership in paragraph (f)(4) of this section, any
payments made to a legal entity at the third and fourth levels of
ownership will be attributed in the same manner as specified in
paragraph (f)(2) of this section; and
(4) Fourth-level of ownership: If the fourth level of ownership is
that of a legal entity and not that of a person, a reduction in payment
will be applied to the first-level or payment legal entity in the
amount that represents the indirect ownership in the first level or
payment legal entity by the fourth-level legal entity.
(g) Payments made to a PARP applicant that is an Indian Tribe or
Tribal organization, as defined in the section 4(b) of the Indian Self-
Determination and Education Assistance Act (25 U.S.C. 5304), are not
subject to:
(1) AGI requirements described in paragraphs (b) through (d) of
this section;
(2) Payment limitation described in paragraph (e) of this section;
and
(3) Attribution of payments described in paragraph (f) of this
section.
(h) Payments made directly or indirectly to a person who is a minor
child will not be combined with the earnings of the minor child's
parent or legal guardian.
Sec. 9.308 Eligibility subject to verification.
(a) Producers who are approved for participation in PARP are
required to retain documentation in support of their application for 3
years after the date of approval.
(b) Participants receiving PARP payments must permit authorized
representatives of USDA or the Government Accountability Office, during
regular business hours, to enter the agricultural operation and to
inspect, examine, and to allow representatives to make copies of books,
records, or other items for the purpose of confirming the accuracy of
the information provided by the participant.
Sec. 9.309 Miscellaneous provisions.
(a) If a PARP payment resulted from erroneous information provided
by a producer, or any person acting on their behalf, the payment will
be recalculated and the producer must refund any excess payment with
interest calculated from the date of the disbursement of the payment.
(b) If FSA determines that the producer intentionally
misrepresented information provided on their application, the
application will be disapproved and the producer must refund the full
payment to FSA with interest from the date of disbursement.
(c) Any required refunds must be resolved in accordance with part 3
of this title.
(d) The regulations in 7 CFR part 718, subpart D, and 7 CFR parts
11 and 780 apply to determinations made under this subpart.
(e) A producer, whether a person or legal entity that either fails
to timely provide all required documentation or fails to satisfy any
eligibility requirement for PARP, is not eligible to receive PARP
payments, directly or indirectly. A PARP payment to an eligible legal
entity applicant whose member(s) either fails to timely provide all
required documentation or fails to satisfy any eligibility requirement
for PARP will be reduced proportionate to that member's ownership
interest in the legal entity.
(f) Any payment under this subpart will be made without regard to
questions of title under State law and without regard to any claim or
lien against the commodity or proceeds from the sale of the commodity.
The regulations governing offsets in part 3 of this title do not apply
to payments made under this subpart.
(g) For the purposes of the effect of a lien on eligibility for
Federal programs (28 U.S.C. 3201(e)), USDA waives the restriction on
receipt of funds under PARP but only as to beneficiaries who, as a
condition of the waiver, agree to apply the PARP payments to reduce the
amount of the judgment lien.
(h) The provisions in 7 CFR 718.3, 718.4, 718.5, 718.6, 718.8,
718.9, 718.10, and 718.11 are applicable to multiple programs and apply
to PARP.
(i) In addition to any other Federal laws that apply to PARP, the
following laws apply: 15 U.S.C. 714; 18 U.S.C. 286, 287, 371, and 1001.
Sec. 9.310 Perjury.
In either applying for or participating in PARP, or both, the
producer is subject to laws against perjury and any resulting penalties
and prosecution, including, but not limited to, 18 U.S.C. 1621. If the
producer willfully makes and represents as true any verbal or written
declaration, certification, statement, or verification that the
producer knows or believes not to be true, in the course of either
applying for or participating in PARP, or both, then the producer may
be guilty of perjury and, except as otherwise provided by law, may be
fined, imprisoned for not more than 5 years, or both, regardless of
whether the producer makes such verbal or written declaration,
certification, statement, or verification within or without the United
States.
PART 701--EMERGENCY CONSERVATION PROGRAM, EMERGENCY FOREST
RESTORATION PROGRAM, AND CERTAIN RELATED PROGRAMS PREVIOUSLY
ADMINISTERED UNDER THIS PART
0
15. The authority citation for part 701 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 2201-2206; Sec. 101, Pub. L. 109-148, 119
Stat. 2747; and Pub. L. 111-212, 124 Stat. 2302.
Subpart A--General
0
16. Amend Sec. 701.2 in paragraph (b) as follows:
0
a. Remove the definition of ``Commercial forest land'';
0
b. Add the definition of ``Forestland'' in alphabetical order;
0
c. In a definition for ``Nonindustrial private forest land'', remove
the words ``commercial forest''; and
[[Page 1883]]
0
d. Add a definition for ``Socially disadvantaged farmer or rancher'' in
alphabetical order.
The additions read as follows:
Sec. 701.2 Abbreviations and definitions.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
Forestland means land that is at least 120 feet wide and 1 acre in
size and at least 10 percent covered by live trees of any size.
* * * * *
Socially disadvantaged farmer or rancher means a farmer or rancher
who is a member of a socially disadvantaged group. A socially
disadvantaged group is a group whose members have been subjected to
racial or ethnic prejudice because of their identity as members of a
group without regard to their individual qualities.
Sec. Sec. 701.44 and 701.45 [Removed and Reserved]
0
17. Remove and reserve Sec. Sec. 701.44 and 701.45.
Subpart B--Emergency Conservation Program
0
18. Amend Sec. 701.105 as follows:
0
a. Remove paragraphs (b)(1) and (2);
0
b. Redesignate paragraphs (b)(3) through (13) as paragraphs (b)(1)
through (11), respectively;
0
c. Add paragraph (d).
The addition reads as set forth below.
Sec. 701.105 Land eligibility.
* * * * *
(d) Additional provisions making Government-owned land eligible is
specified in Sec. 701.106.
0
19. Add Sec. 701.106 to read as follows:
Sec. 701.106 Government-owned land.
(a) State-owned land. When land is owned by a State, whether it is
eligible for cost share is as specified in this paragraph (a) in
addition to the requirements in Sec. 701.105.
(1) If an eligible person or legal entity has a lease for the
State-owned land that allows cost share, and files a cost share request
for the State-owned land, the land is eligible for cost share if, as
determined by FSA, the:
(i) Eligible person or legal entity will directly benefit from the
practice; or
(ii) The land will remain in agricultural production throughout the
established practice life span.
(2) If an eligible person or legal entity files a cost-share
request for State-owned land, the land is ineligible for cost share if,
as determined by FSA, the:
(i) Practice is for the primary benefit of the State or State
agencies; or
(ii) Eligible person or legal entity is prohibited by the lease
from accepting cost-share.
(b) Federally-owned farmland. When land is federally owned, whether
it is eligible for cost-share is as specified in this paragraph (a), in
addition to the requirements in Sec. 701.105.
(1) If an eligible person or legal entity files a cost-share
request on federally owned farmland, the land is eligible if all of the
following apply:
(i) An eligible private person or legal entity is farming or
ranching the farmland;
(ii) An eligible person or legal entity has a lease that does not
prohibit cost-share;
(iii) The practice will primarily benefit nearby or adjacent
privately owned farmland of the eligible person or legal entity
performing the practice;
(iv) A person or legal entity performing the practice has
authorization from a Federal agency to install and maintain the
practice;
(v) The Federal land is the most practical location for the
eligible practice; and
(vi) During a drought, the practice will primarily benefit the
livestock owned or managed by the eligible person or legal entity
performing the practice.
(2) If an eligible person or legal entity files a cost share
request on federally-owned land, the land is ineligible if the
practices performed on these lands are for the benefit of land owned by
a Federal agency.
(c) Federal or State agency. For the purposes of this subpart,
private persons or legal entities exclude Federal and State agencies.
0
20. Amend Sec. 701.111 by revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 701.111 Prohibition on duplicate payments.
(a) Duplicate payments. Participants are not eligible to receive
funding under ECP on the same piece of land for which the participant
has or will receive funding under any other Federal or State program
that covers the same or similar expenses so as to create duplicate
payments, or, in effect, a higher rate of cost share than is allowed
under this part.
* * * * *
0
21. Amend Sec. 701.126 by adding paragraph (d) to read as follows.
Sec. 701.126 Maximum cost-share percentages.
* * * * *
(d) The Secretary may waive the maximum limitations described in
paragraphs (a) through (c) of this section to the maximum extent
allowed by law.
0
22. Amend Sec. 701.127 by designating the undesignated paragraph as
paragraph (a) and adding paragraph (b) to read as follows.
Sec. 701.127 Maximum ECP payments per person or legal entity.
* * * * *
(b) The Secretary may waive the maximum limitations described in
paragraph (a) of this section to the maximum extent allowed by law.
0
23. Amend Sec. 701.128 by revising the section heading and paragraph
(a) to read as follows.
Sec. 701.128 Advance payment.
(a) With respect to a payment to an agricultural producer for any
eligible ECP practice, the agricultural producer has the option of
receiving up to 25 percent of the projected payment, determined based
on the applicable percentage of the fair market value of the cost of
the practice, as determined by FSA, before the agricultural producer
carries out the restoration.
* * * * *
Sec. Sec. 701.150 through 701.157 [Removed]
0
25. Remove Sec. Sec. 701.150 through 701.157.
Subpart C--Emergency Forest Restoration Program
0
26. Amend Sec. 701.226 by adding paragraph (c) to read as follows.
Sec. 701.226 Maximum cost-share percentages.
* * * * *
(c) The Secretary may waive the maximum limitations described in
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section to the maximum extent allowed by
law.
Farm Service Administration
Chapter VII
PART 760--INDEMNITY PAYMENT PROGRAMS
0
27. The authority citation for part 760 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 4501 and 1531; 16 U.S.C. 3801, note; 19
U.S.C. 2497; Title III, Pub. L. 109-234, 120 Stat. 474; Title IX,
Pub. L. 110-28, 121 Stat. 211; Sec. 748, Pub. L. 111-80, 123 Stat.
2131; Title I, Pub. L. 115-123, 132 Stat. 65; Title I, Pub. L. 116-
20, 133 Stat. 871; Division B, Title VII, Pub. L. 116-94, 133 Stat.
2658; and Division B, Title I, Pub. L. 117- 43, 135 Stat. 344.
0
28. Add subpart S to read as follows.
Subpart S--Emergency Relief Program
Sec.
[[Page 1884]]
760.1900 Applicability and administration.
760.1901 Definitions.
760.1902 Producer eligibility requirements.
760.1903 Allowable gross revenue.
760.1904 Time and method of application.
760.1905 Payment calculation.
760.1906 Payment limitation and attribution.
760.1907 Eligibility subject to verification.
760.1908 Miscellaneous provisions.
760.1909 Perjury.
760.1910 Requirement to purchase crop insurance or NAP coverage.
Subpart S--Emergency Relief Program
Sec. 760.1900 Applicability and administration.
(a) This subpart specifies the eligibility requirements and payment
calculations for Phase 2 of the Emergency Relief Program (ERP). ERP
provides payments to producers who suffered eligible crop losses due to
qualifying disaster events, which include wildfires, hurricanes,
floods, derechos, excessive heat, winter storms, freeze (including a
polar vortex), smoke exposure, excessive moisture, qualifying drought,
and related conditions occurring in calendar years 2020 and 2021.\1\ To
be eligible for ERP Phase 2 payments, participants must comply with all
provisions under this subpart.
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\1\ ERP Phase 1 was administered according to the notice of
funds availability published in the Federal Register on May 18, 2022
(87 FR 30164-30172). A clarification to the notice of funds
availability for ERP Phase 1 was published on August 18, 2022 (87 FR
50828-50830).
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(b) ERP is administered under the general supervision and direction
of the Administrator, Farm Service Agency (FSA).
(c) The FSA State committee will take any action required by this
subpart that an FSA county committee has not taken. The FSA State
committee will also:
(1) Correct, or require an FSA county committee to correct, any
action taken by such county FSA committee that is not in accordance
with the regulations of this subpart; or
(2) Require an FSA county committee to withhold taking any action
that is not in accordance with this subpart.
(d) No provision or delegation to an FSA State or county committee
will preclude the FSA Administrator, the Deputy Administrator, or a
designee or other such person, from determining any question arising
under the programs of this subpart, or from reversing or modifying any
determination made by an FSA State or county committee.
(e) The Deputy Administrator has the authority to permit State and
county committees to waive or modify deadlines (except deadlines
specified in a law) and other requirements or program provisions not
specified in law, in cases where lateness or failure to meet such other
requirements or program provisions do not adversely affect operation of
ERP.
Sec. 760.1901 Definitions.
The following definitions apply to this subpart. The definitions in
parts 718 and 1400 of this title apply, except where they conflict with
the definitions in this section.
2017 WHIP means the 2017 Wildfires and Hurricanes Indemnity Program
under 7 CFR part 760, subpart O.
Administrative fee means the amount an insured producer paid for
catastrophic risk protection, and additional coverage for each crop
year as specified in the applicable crop insurance policy.
Application means the ERP Phase 2 application form.
Aquaculture means any species of aquatic organisms grown as food
for human or livestock consumption or for industrial or biomass uses,
fish raised as feed for fish that are consumed by humans, and
ornamental fish propagated and reared in an aquatic medium. Eligible
aquacultural species must be raised by a commercial operator and in
water in a controlled environment.
ARC and PLC means the Agriculture Risk Coverage (ARC) and Price
Loss Coverage (PLC) programs under 7 CFR part 1412.
Average adjusted gross farm income means the average of the person
or legal entity's adjusted gross income derived from farming, ranching,
or forestry operations for the 3 taxable years preceding the most
immediately preceding complete taxable year.
(1) If the resulting average adjusted gross farm income is at least
66.66 percent of the average adjusted gross income of the person or
legal entity, then the average adjusted gross farm income may also take
into consideration income or benefits derived from the following:
(i) The sale of equipment to conduct farm, ranch, or forestry
operations; and
(ii) The provision of production inputs and services to farmers,
ranchers, foresters, and farm operations.
(2) The relevant tax years are:
(i) For the 2020 program year, 2016, 2017, and 2018; and
(ii) For the 2021 program year, 2017, 2018, and 2019.
Average adjusted gross income means the average of the adjusted
gross income as defined under 26 U.S.C. 62 or comparable measure of the
person or legal entity. The relevant tax years are:
(1) For the 2020 program year, 2016, 2017, and 2018; and
(2) For the 2021 program year, 2017, 2018, and 2019.
BCAP means the Biomass Crop Assistance Program under 7 CFR part
1450.
Beginning farmer or rancher means a farmer or rancher who has not
operated a farm or ranch for more than 10 years and who materially and
substantially participates in the operation. For a legal entity to be
considered a beginning farmer or rancher, at least 50 percent of the
interest must be beginning farmers or ranchers.
Benchmark revenue means allowable gross revenue for the benchmark
year. If a producer began farming in 2020 or 2021 and did not have
allowable gross revenue in either 2018 or 2019, the benchmark revenue
is the producer's reasonably expected allowable gross revenue for the
disaster year prior to the impact of the qualifying disaster event.
Benchmark year means the 2018 or 2019 tax year, as elected by the
producer.
Buy-up NAP coverage means NAP coverage at a payment amount that is
equal to an indemnity amount calculated for buy-up coverage computed
under section 508(c) or (h) of the Federal Crop Insurance Act and equal
to the amount that the buy-up coverage yield for the crop exceeds the
actual yield for the crop.
Catastrophic coverage has the same meaning as in 7 CFR 1437.3.
CCC means the Commodity Credit Corporation.
Certifying agent means a private or governmental entity accredited
by the USDA Secretary for the purpose of certifying a production,
processing, or handling operation as organic.
CFAP means the Coronavirus Food Assistance Program 1 and 2 under 7
CFR part 9, subparts A through C, excluding assistance for contract
producers specified in Sec. 9.203(l) through (o).
Controlled environment means an environment in which everything
that can practicably be controlled by the producer with structures,
facilities, and growing media (including but not limited to water,
soil, or nutrients), is in fact controlled by the producer, as
determined by industry standards.
County means the county or parish of a state. For Alaska, Puerto
Rico, and the Virgin Islands, a county is an area designated by the
State committee with the concurrence of the Deputy Administrator.
County committee means the FSA county committee.
Coverage level means the percentage determined by multiplying the
elected yield percentage under a crop insurance
[[Page 1885]]
policy or NAP coverage by the elected price percentage.
Crop insurance means an insurance policy reinsured by the Federal
Crop Insurance Corporation under the provisions of the Federal Crop
Insurance Act, as amended.
Crop insurance indemnity means the payment to a participant for
crop losses covered under crop insurance administered by RMA in
accordance with the Federal Crop Insurance Act (7 U.S.C. 1501-1524).
Deputy Administrator means Deputy Administrator for Farm Programs,
Farm Service Agency, U.S. Department of Agriculture, or their designee.
Direct market crop means a crop sold directly to consumers without
the intervention of an intermediary such as a registered handler,
wholesaler, retailer, packer, processor, shipper, or buyer (for
example, a crop sold at a farmer's market or roadside stand), excluding
crops sold for livestock consumption.
Disaster year means the calendar year in which the qualifying
disaster event occurred (that is, 2020 or 2021).
Disaster year revenue means the allowable gross revenue for:
(1) The 2020 or 2021 tax year, as elected by the producer, for the
2020 disaster year; and
(2) The 2021 or 2022 tax year, as elected by the producer, for the
2021 disaster year.
(3) Producers must choose consecutive tax years if they are
applying for both the 2020 and 2021 disaster years (that is, they may
choose 2020 tax year revenue for the 2020 disaster year, and 2021 tax
year revenue for the 2021 disaster year; or they may choose 2021 tax
year revenue for the 2020 disaster year, and 2022 tax year revenue for
the 2021 disaster year).
ELAP means the Emergency Assistance for Livestock, Honeybees, and
Farm-Raised Fish Program under part 1416, subpart B, of this title.
Eligible crop means a crop, including eligible aquaculture, that is
produced in the United States as part of a farming operation and is
intended to be commercially marketed. It excludes:
(1) Crops for grazing;
(2) Aquatic species that do not meet the definition of aquaculture;
(3) Cannabis sativa L. and any part of that plant that does not
meet the definition of hemp; and
(4) Timber.
Farming operation means a business enterprise engaged in the
production of agricultural products, commodities, or livestock,
operated by a person, legal entity, or joint operation, and that is
eligible to receive payments, directly or indirectly, under this
subpart. A person or legal entity may have more than one farming
operation if the person or legal entity is a member of one or more
legal entity or joint operation.
FCIC means the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation, a wholly owned
Government Corporation of USDA, administered by RMA.
Hemp means the plant species Cannabis sativa L. and any part of
that plant, including the seeds thereof and all derivatives, extracts,
cannabinoids, isomers, acids, salts, and salts of isomers, whether
growing or not, with a delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol concentration of
not more than 0.3 percent on a dry weight basis, that is grown under a
license or other required authorization issued by the applicable
governing authority that permits the production of the hemp.
High value crop means:
(1) Any eligible crop not specifically identified as a specialty
crop or listed in the definition of ``other crop''; and
(2) Any eligible crop, regardless of whether it is identified as a
specialty crop or listed in the definition of ``other crop,'' if the
crop is a direct market crop, organic crop, or a crop grown for a
specific market in which specialized products can be sold resulting in
an increased value compared to the typical market for the crops (for
example, soybeans intended for tofu production), as determined by the
Deputy Administrator.
Income derived from farming, ranching, and forestry operations
means income of an individual or entity derived from:
(1) Production of crops, specialty crops, and unfinished raw
forestry products;
(2) Production of livestock, aquaculture products used for food,
honeybees, and products derived from livestock;
(3) Production of farm-based renewable energy;
(4) Selling (including the sale of easements and development
rights) of farm, ranch, and forestry land, water or hunting rights, or
environmental benefits;
(5) Rental or lease of land or equipment used for farming,
ranching, or forestry operations, including water or hunting rights;
(6) Processing, packing, storing, and transportation of farm,
ranch, forestry commodities including renewable energy;
(7) Feeding, rearing, or finishing of livestock;
(8) Payments of benefits, including benefits from risk management
practices, crop insurance indemnities, and catastrophic risk protection
plans;
(9) Sale of land that has been used for agricultural purposes;
(10) Payments and benefits authorized under any program made
available and applicable to payment eligibility and payment limitation
rules;
(11) Income reported on Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Schedule F
or other schedule used by the person or legal entity to report income
from such operations to the IRS;
(12) Wages or dividends received from a closely held corporation,
Interest Charge Domestic International Sales Corporation (IC-DISC), or
legal entity comprised entirely of family members when more than 50
percent of the legal entity's gross receipts for each tax year are
derived from farming, ranching, or forestry activities as defined in
this document; and
(13) Any other activity related to farming, ranching, and forestry,
as determined by the Deputy Administrator.
IRS means the Department of Treasury, Internal Revenue Service.
LDP means the Loan Deficiency Payment programs in 7 CFR parts 1421,
1425, 1427, 1434, and 1435.
Legal entity means a corporation, joint stock company, association,
limited partnership, irrevocable trust, estate, charitable
organization, or other similar organization including any such
organization participating in a business structure as a partner in a
general partnership, a participant in a joint venture, a grantor of a
revocable trust, or as a participant in a similar organization. A
business operating as a sole proprietorship is considered a legal
entity.
Limited resource farmer or rancher means a farmer or rancher:
(1) Who is a person whose:
(i) Direct or indirect gross farm sales did not exceed:
(A) $180,300 in each calendar year for 2017 and 2018 (the relevant
years for the 2020 program year); or
(B) $179,000 in each of the 2018 and 2019 calendar years for the
2021 program year;
and
(ii) Total household income was at or below the national poverty
level for a family of four in each of the same two previous years
referenced in paragraph (1)(i) of this definition; \1\ or
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\1\ Limited resource farmer or rancher status can be determined
using a website available through the Limited Resource Farmer and
Rancher Online Self Determination Tool through Natural Resources
Conservation Service at https://lrftool.sc.egov.usda.gov.
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[[Page 1886]]
(2) That is an entity and all members who hold an ownership
interest in the entity meet the criteria in paragraph (1) of this
definition.
LFP means the Livestock Forage Disaster Program under CFR part
1416, subpart C.
MLG means marketing loan gains under the Marketing Assistance Loan
program provisions in 7 CFR parts 1421, 1425, 1427, 1434, and 1435.
Minor child means a person who is under 18 years of age as of June
1, 2020.
MFP means the 2018 Market Facilitation Program under 7 CFR part
1409, subpart A, and the 2019 Market Facilitation Program under 7 CFR
part 1409, subpart B.
NAP means the Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program under
section 196 of the Federal Agriculture Improvement and Reform Act of
1996 (7 U.S.C. 7333) and 7 CFR part 1437.
On-Farm Storage Loss Program means the On-Farm Storage Loss Program
under 7 CFR part 760, subpart P.
Organic crop means a crop that is organically produced consistent
with section 2103 of the Organic Foods Production Act of 1990 (7 U.S.C.
6502) and grown on acreage certified by a certifying agent as
conforming to organic standards specified in 7 CFR part 205.
Other crop means cotton, peanuts, rice, feedstock, and any crop
grown with an intended use of grain, silage, or forage, unless the crop
meets the requirements in paragraph (2) of the definition of ``high
value crop.''
Ownership interest means to have either legal ownership interest or
beneficial ownership interest in a legal entity. For the purposes of
administering ERP Phase 2, a person or legal entity that owns a share
or stock in a legal entity that is a corporation, limited liability
company, limited partnership, or similar type entity where members hold
a legal ownership interest and shares in the profits or losses of such
entity is considered to have an ownership interest in such legal
entity. A person or legal entity that is a beneficiary of a trust or
heir of an estate who benefits from the profits or losses of such
entity is also considered to have a beneficial ownership interest in
such legal entity.
Person means an individual, natural person and does not include a
legal entity.
Premium means the premium paid by the producer for crop insurance
coverage or NAP buy-up coverage levels.
Producer means a person or legal entity who was entitled to a share
in the eligible crop available for marketing or would have shared had
the eligible crop been produced and marketed.
Program year means:
(1) For ERP Phase 2, the disaster year; and
(2) For all other programs, the program year as defined in the
applicable program provisions.
Qualifying disaster event means wildfires, hurricanes, floods,
derechos, excessive heat, winter storms, freeze (including a polar
vortex), smoke exposure, excessive moisture, qualifying drought, and
related conditions.
Qualifying drought means an area within the county was rated by the
U.S. Drought Monitor as having a drought intensity of D2 (severe
drought) for eight consecutive weeks or D3 (extreme drought) or higher
level for any period of time during the applicable calendar year.
Related condition means damaging weather and adverse natural
occurrences that occurred concurrently with and as a direct result of a
specified qualifying disaster event. Related conditions include, but
are not limited to:
(1) Excessive wind that occurred as a direct result of a derecho;
(2) Silt and debris that occurred as a direct and proximate result
of flooding;
(3) Excessive wind, storm surges, tornados, tropical storms, and
tropical depressions that occurred as a direct result of a hurricane;
and
(4) Excessive wind and blizzards that occurred as a direct result
of a winter storm.
Socially disadvantaged farmer or rancher means a farmer or rancher
who is a member of a group whose members have been subjected to racial,
ethnic, or gender prejudice because of their identity as members of a
group without regard to their individual qualities. For entities, at
least 50 percent of the ownership interest must be held by individuals
who are members of such a group. Socially disadvantaged groups include
the following and no others unless approved in writing by the Deputy
Administrator:
(1) American Indians or Alaskan Natives;
(2) Asians or Asian-Americans;
(3) Blacks or African Americans;
(4) Hispanics or Hispanic Americans;
(5) Native Hawaiians or other Pacific Islanders; and
(6) Women.
Specialty crops means fruits, tree nuts, vegetables, culinary herbs
and spices, medicinal plants, and nursery, floriculture, and
horticulture crops. This includes common specialty crops identified by
USDA's Agricultural Marketing Service at https://www.ams.usda.gov/services/grants/scbgp/specialty-crop and other crops as designated by
the Deputy Administrator.
Substantial beneficial interest (SBI) has the same meaning as
specified in the applicable crop insurance policy. For the purposes of
ERP Phase 1, Federal crop insurance records for ``transfer of coverage,
right to indemnity'' are considered the same as SBIs.
STRP means the Seafood Trade Relief Program announced in the notice
of funds availability published on September 14, 2020 (85 FR 56572-
56575).
Underserved farmer or rancher means a beginning farmer or rancher,
limited resource farmer or rancher, socially disadvantaged farmer or
rancher, or veteran farmer or rancher.
United States means all 50 States of the United States, the
District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and any other
territory or possession of the United States.
U.S. Drought Monitor means the system for classifying drought
severity according to a range of abnormally dry to exceptional drought.
It is a collaborative effort between Federal and academic partners,
produced on a weekly basis, to synthesize multiple indices, outlooks,
and drought impacts on a map and in narrative form. This synthesis of
indices is reported by the National Drought Mitigation Center at https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu.
Veteran farmer or rancher means a farmer or rancher:
(1) Who has served in the Armed Forces (as defined in 38 U.S.C.
101(10) \2\) and:
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\2\ The term ``Armed Forces'' means the United States Army,
Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, Space Force, and Coast Guard,
including the reserve components.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(i) Has not operated a farm or ranch for more than 10 years; or
(ii) Has obtained status as a veteran (as defined in 38 U.S.C.
101(2) \3\) during the most recent 10-year period; or
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The term ``veteran'' means a person who served in the active
military, naval, air, or space service, and who was discharged or
released under conditions other than dishonorable.
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(2) That is an entity and at least 50 percent of the ownership
interest is held by members who meet the criteria in paragraph (1) of
this definition.
WHIP+ means the Wildfires and Hurricanes Indemnity Program Plus
under 7 CFR part 760, subpart O.
Sec. 760.1902 Producer eligibility requirements.
(a) To be eligible for ERP Phase 2, a producer must have suffered a
loss in
[[Page 1887]]
disaster year allowable gross revenue, as compared to the benchmark
allowable gross revenue, due to necessary expenses associated with
losses of eligible crops due in whole or in part to a qualifying
disaster event that occurred in the 2020 or 2021 calendar year.
(b) To be eligible for an ERP Phase 2 payment, a producer must be
a:
(1) Citizen of the United States;
(2) Resident alien, which for purposes of this subpart means
``lawful alien'' as defined in part 1400 of this title;
(3) Partnership organized under State Law;
(4) Corporation, limited liability company, or other organizational
structure organized under State law; or
(5) Indian Tribe or Tribal organization, as defined in section 4(b)
of the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act (25
U.S.C. 5304).
Sec. 760.1903 Allowable gross revenue.
(a) For the purposes of this subpart, ``allowable gross revenue''
includes revenue from:
(1) Sales of eligible crops produced by the producer, which
includes sales resulting from value added through post-production
activities that were reportable on IRS Schedule F;
(2) Sales of eligible crops a producer purchased for resale that
had a change in characteristic due to the time held (for example, a
plant purchased at a size of 2 inches and sold as an 18-inch plant
after 4 months), less the cost or other basis of such eligible crops;
(3) The taxable amount of cooperative distributions directly
related to the sale of the eligible crops produced by the producer;
(4) Benefits under the following agricultural programs: 2017 WHIP,
ARC and PLC, BCAP, LDP, MLG, MFP, the On-Farm Storage Loss Program, and
STRP;
(5) CCC loans, if treated as income and reported to IRS;
(6) Crop insurance proceeds for eligible crops, minus the amount of
administrative fees and premiums;
(7) NAP payments for eligible crops, minus the amount of service
fees and premiums;
(8) ELAP payments for an aquaculture crop;
(9) Payments issued through grant agreements with FSA for losses of
eligible crops;
(10) Grants from the Department of Commerce, National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration and State program funds providing direct
payments for the loss of eligible crops or the loss of revenue from
eligible crops;
(11) Other revenue directly related to the production of eligible
crops that IRS requires the producer to report as income;
(12) For the disaster year only, ERP Phase 1 payments issued to
another person or entity for the producer's share of an eligible crop,
regardless of the tax year in which the payment would be reported to
IRS; and
(13) For the benchmark year only, 2018, 2019 and 2020 WHIP+ and QLA
payments.
(b) Allowable gross revenue does not include revenue from sources
other than those listed in paragraph (a) of this section, including but
not limited to, revenue from:
(1) Federal assistance programs not included in paragraph (a) of
this section;
(2) Sales of livestock, animal by-products, and any commodities
that are excluded from ``eligible crops'';
(3) Resale items not held for characteristic change;
(4) Income from a pass-through entity such as an S Corp or limited
liability company;
(5) Conservation program payments;
(6) Any pandemic assistance payments that were not for the loss of
eligible crops or the loss of revenue from eligible crops;
(7) Custom hire income;
(8) Net gain from hedging or speculation;
(9) Wages, salaries, tips, and cash rent;
(10) Rental of equipment or supplies; and
(11) Acting as a contract producer of an agricultural commodity.
(c) A producer is required to certify to an adjusted allowable
gross revenue for the benchmark year on FSA-521 if the producer had a
decreased operation capacity in a disaster year for which they are
applying for ERP Phase 2, compared to the benchmark year.
(d) A producer may certify to an adjusted allowable gross revenue
for the benchmark year on FSA-521 if either of the following apply:
(1) The producer did not have a full year of revenue for 2018 or
2019; or
(2) The producer had expanded their operation capacity in a
disaster year for which they are applying for ERP Phase 2, compared to
the benchmark year.
(e) Change in operation capacity does not include crop rotation
from year to year, changes in farming practices such as converting from
conventional tillage to no-till, or increasing the rate of fertilizers
or chemicals. If requested by FSA, producers are required to submit
documentation to FSA to support adjustments described in paragraphs (c)
and (d) of this section within 30 calendar days of the request. The
documentation to support an adjustment due to a change in operation
capacity must show that the adjustment to the producer's benchmark
revenue is due to an:
(1) Addition or decrease in production capacity of the farming
operation;
(2) Increase or decrease in the use of existing production
capacity; or
(3) Physical alterations that were made to existing production
capacity.
(f) If a producer began farming in 2020 or 2021 and did not have
allowable gross revenue in a benchmark year, the producer may certify
to an adjusted benchmark allowable gross revenue on form FSA-521 that
represents what had been the producer's reasonably expected disaster
year revenue prior to the impact of the qualifying disaster event. If
requested by FSA, documentation required to support a producer's
certification must be provided within 30 calendar days of FSA's
request, or the producer will be considered ineligible for ERP Phase 2.
Acceptable documentation must be generated in the ordinary course of
business and dated prior to the impact of the disaster event and
includes, but is not limited to:
(1) Financial documents such as a business plan or cash flow
statement that demonstrate an expected level of revenue;
(2) Sales contracts or purchase agreements; and
(3) Documentation supporting production capacity, use of existing
production capacity, or physical alterations that demonstrate
production capacity.
(g) The allowable gross revenue will be based on the year for which
the revenue would be reported for the purpose of filing a tax return,
except for the ERP Phase 1 payments specified in paragraph (a)(12) of
this section.
(h) Producers who file or would be eligible to file a joint tax
return will certify their allowable gross revenue based on what it
would have been had they filed taxes separately for the applicable
year.
(i) On form FSA-521, for each applicable disaster year, producers
must indicate the percentage of their allowable gross revenue from
specialty and high value crops and the percentage from other crops. The
percentages certified must be equal to the percentages that the
producer would have reasonably expected to receive for the disaster
year if not for the qualifying disaster event.
[[Page 1888]]
Sec. 760.1904 Time and method of application.
(a) A completed FSA-521, Emergency Relief Program (ERP) Phase 2
Application, must be submitted to the producer's recording county
office by the close of business on the date announced by the Deputy
Administrator. Applications may be submitted in person or by mail,
email, facsimile, or other methods announced by FSA.
(b) Failure of an individual, entity, or a member of an entity to
submit the following payment limitation and payment eligibility forms
within 60 days from the date of the ERP Phase 2 application deadline,
may result in no payment or a reduced payment:
(1) Form AD-2047, Customer Data Worksheet, for new customers or
existing customers who need to update their customer profile;
(2) Form CCC-860, Socially Disadvantaged, Limited Resource,
Beginning and Veteran Farmer or Rancher Certification, applicable for
the program year or years for which the producer is applying for ERP;
(3) Form CCC-901, Member Information for Legal Entities, if
applicable;
(4) Form CCC-902, Farm Operating Plan for an individual or legal
entity as provided in 7 CFR part 1400;
(5) Form FSA-510, Request for an Exception to the $125,000 Payment
Limitation for Certain Programs, accompanied by a certification from a
certified public accountant or attorney as to that person or legal
entity's certification, for a legal entity and all members of that
entity, for each applicable program year, including the legal entity's
members, partners, or shareholders, as provided in 7 CFR part 1400; and
(6) Form AD-1026, Highly Erodible Land Conservation (HELC) and
Wetland Conservation (WC) Certification, for the ERP Phase 2 applicant
and applicable affiliates as provided in 7 CFR part 12.
(c) If requested by FSA, the producer must provide additional
documentation that establishes the producer's eligibility for ERP Phase
2. If supporting documentation is requested, the documentation must be
submitted to FSA within 30 calendar days from the request or the
application will be disapproved by FSA. FSA may request supporting
documentation to verify information provided by the producer and the
produce's eligibility including, but not limited to, the producer's:
(1) Allowable gross revenue reported on the ERP Phase 2
application;
(2) Percentages of the expected allowable gross revenue from:
(i) Specialty and high value crops; and
(ii) Other crops; and
(3) Ownership share in the agricultural commodities.
Sec. 760.1905 Payment calculation.
(a) ERP Phase 2 payments will be calculated separately for each
disaster year. If a producer indicates that they have expected revenue
for both specialty and high value crops and other crops for a disaster
year, a payment will be calculated separately for:
(1) Specialty and high value crops; and
(2) Other crops.
(b) To determine a producer's ERP Phase 2 payment amount, FSA will
calculate:
(1) The producer's benchmark year allowable gross revenue, adjusted
according to 7 CFR 760.1903, if applicable, multiplied by the ERP
factor of 70 percent; minus
(2) The producer's disaster year allowable gross revenue; minus
(3) The sum of the producer's net ERP Phase 1 payments for the 2020
program year, if the calculation is for the 2020 disaster year, or for
the 2021 and 2022 program years, if the calculation is for the 2021
disaster year; minus
(4) The sum of the producer's net CFAP payments (excluding payments
for contract producer revenue), net 2020 WHIP+ payments, and net 2020
Quality Loss Adjustment (QLA) Program payments, if the calculation is
for the 2020 disaster year; and
(5) Multiplied by the percentage of the expected disaster year
revenue for specialty and high value crops or other crops, as
applicable, to determine the separate payments for specialty and high
value crops or other crops.
(c) FSA will issue an initial payment equal to the lesser of the
amount calculated according to this section or the maximum initial
payment amount of $2,000. If a producer has also received a payment
under ERP Phase 1, FSA will reduce the producer's initial ERP Phase 2
payment amount by subtracting the producer's ERP Phase 1 gross payment
amount.
(d) After the close of the ERP Phase 2 application period, FSA will
issue a final payment equal to the amount calculated according to this
section minus the amount of the producer's initial payment. If total
calculated payments exceed the total funding available for ERP Phase 2,
the ERP factor may be adjusted and the final payment amounts will be
prorated to stay within the amount of available funding. If there are
insufficient funds, a differential of 15 percent will be used for
underserved producers similar to ERP Phase 1, but with a cap at the
statutory maximum of 70 percent. For example, if the ERP Factor is set
at 50 percent, the factor used for underserved producers will be 65
percent, but if the factor is set at 55 percent or higher, the factor
for underserved producers will be capped at 70 percent.
(e) If a producer receives assistance through CFAP or ERP Phase 1
after their ERP Phase 2 payment is calculated, the producer's ERP Phase
2 payment will be recalculated and the producer must refund any
resulting overpayment.
Sec. 760.1906 Payment limitation and attribution.
(a) The payment limitation for ERP is determined by the person's or
legal entity's average adjusted gross farm income (income from
activities related to farming, ranching, or forestry). Specifically, if
their average adjusted gross farm income is less than 75 percent of
their average adjusted gross income (AGI) for the three taxable years
preceding the most immediately preceding complete tax year, a person or
legal entity, other than a joint venture or general partnership, cannot
receive, directly or indirectly, more than $125,000 in payments for
specialty crops and high value crops \1\ and $125,000 in payment for
all other crops under:
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\1\ High value crops were not defined in ERP Phase 1; therefore,
only ERP Phase 1 payments for specialty crops, as defined in the ERP
Phase 1 notice of funds availability, will be counted toward the
increased payment limitation for specialty and high value crops.
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(1) ERP Phase 1 for program year 2020 and ERP Phase 2 for program
year 2020, combined; and
(2) ERP Phase 1 for program years 2021 and 2022 and ERP Phase 2 for
program year 2021, combined.
(b) If at least 75 percent of the person or legal entity's average
AGI is derived from farming, ranching, or forestry related activities
and the producer provides the required certification and documentation,
as discussed below, the person or legal entity, other than a joint
venture or general partnership, is eligible to receive, directly or
indirectly, up to:
(1) $900,000 for specialty crops and high value crops combined for:
(i) ERP Phase 1 for program year 2020 and ERP Phase 2 for program
year 2020, combined; and
(ii) ERP Phase 1 for program years 2021 and 2022 and ERP Phase 2
for program year 2021, combined.; and
(2) $250,000 for all other crops for:
(i) ERP Phase 1 for program year 2020 and ERP Phase 2 for program
year 2020, combined; and
[[Page 1889]]
(ii) ERP Phase 1 for program years 2021 and 2022 and ERP Phase 2
for program year 2021, combined.
(c) The relevant tax years for establishing a producer's AGI and
percentage derived from farming, ranching, or forestry related
activities are:
(1) Years 2016, 2017, and 2018 for program year 2020; and
(2) Years 2017, 2018, and 2019 for program year 2021.
(d) To receive more than $125,000 in ERP payments, producers must
submit form FSA-510, accompanied by a certification from a certified
public accountant or attorney as to that person or legal entity's
certification. If a producer requesting the increased payment
limitation is a legal entity, all members of that entity must also
complete form FSA-510 and provide the required certification according
to the direct attribution provisions in 7 CFR 1400.105, ``Attribution
of Payments.'' If a legal entity would be eligible for the increased
payment limitation based on the legal entity's average AGI from
farming, ranching, or forestry related activities but a member of that
legal entity either does not complete a form FSA-510 and provide the
required certification or is not eligible for the increased payment
limitation, the payment to the legal entity will be reduced for the
limitation applicable to the share of the ERP Phase 2 payment
attributed to that member.
(e) If a producer files form FSA-510 and the accompanying
certification after their ERP Phase 2 payment is issued but before the
deadline announced by FSA, FSA will process the form FSA-510 and issue
the additional payment amount if a maximum initial payment amount has
not been reached.
(f) A payment made to a legal entity will be attributed to those
members who have a direct or indirect ownership interest in the legal
entity, unless the payment of the legal entity has been reduced by the
proportionate ownership interest of the member due to that member's
ineligibility. Attribution of payments made to legal entities will be
tracked through four levels of ownership in legal entities as follows:
(1) First level of ownership: Any payment made to a legal entity
that is owned in whole or in part by a person will be attributed to the
person in an amount that represents the direct ownership interest in
the first-level or payment legal entity;
(2) Second level of ownership: Any payment made to a first-level
legal entity that is owned in whole or in part by another legal entity
(referred to as a second-level legal entity) will be attributed to the
second-level legal entity in proportion to the ownership of the second-
level legal entity in the first-level legal entity; if the second-level
legal entity is owned in whole or in part by a person, the amount of
the payment made to the first-level legal entity will be attributed to
the person in the amount that represents the indirect ownership in the
first-level legal entity by the person;
(3) Third and fourth levels of ownership: Except as provided in the
second-level ownership in paragraph (f)(2) of this section and in the
fourth level of ownership in paragraph (f)(4) of this section, any
payments made to a legal entity at the third and fourth levels of
ownership will be attributed in the same manner as specified in
paragraph (f)(2) of this section; and
(4) Fourth-level of ownership: If the fourth level of ownership is
that of a legal entity and not that of a person, a reduction in payment
will be applied to the first-level or payment legal entity in the
amount that represents the indirect ownership in the first-level or
payment legal entity by the fourth-level legal entity.
(g) Payments made directly or indirectly to a person who is a minor
child will not be combined with the earnings of the minor's parent or
legal guardian.
(h) A producer that is a legal entity must provide the names,
addresses, ownership share, and valid taxpayer identification numbers
of the members holding an ownership interest in the legal entity.
Payments to a legal entity will be reduced in proportion to a member's
ownership share when a valid taxpayer identification number for a
person or legal entity that holds a direct or indirect ownership
interest, at the first through fourth levels of ownership in the
business structure, is not provided to FSA.
(i) If an individual or legal entity is not eligible to receive ERP
Phase 2 payments due to the individual or legal entity failing to
satisfy payment eligibility provisions, the payment made either
directly or indirectly to the individual or legal entity will be
reduced to zero. The amount of the reduction for the direct payment to
the producer will be commensurate with the direct or indirect ownership
interest of the ineligible individual or ineligible legal entity.
(j) Like other programs administered by FSA, payments made to an
Indian Tribe or Tribal organization, as defined in section 4(b) of the
Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act (25 U.S.C.
5304), will not be subject to payment limitation.
Sec. 760.1907 Eligibility subject to verification.
(a) Producers who are approved for participation in ERP Phase 2 are
required to retain documentation in support of their application for 3
years after the date of approval.
(b) Participants receiving ERP Phase 2 payments must permit
authorized representatives of USDA or the Government Accountability
Office, during regular business hours, to enter the agricultural
operation and to inspect, examine, and to allow representatives to make
copies of books, records, or other items for the purpose of confirming
the accuracy of the information provided by the participant.
Sec. 760.1908 Miscellaneous provisions.
(a) If an ERP Phase 2 payment resulted from erroneous information
provided by a producer, or any person acting on their behalf, the
payment will be recalculated and the producer must refund any excess
payment with interest calculated from the date of the disbursement of
the payment.
(b) If FSA determines that the producer intentionally
misrepresented information provided on their application, the
application will be disapproved and the producer must refund the full
payment to FSA with interest from the date of disbursement.
(c) Any required refunds must be resolved in accordance with part 3
of this title.
(d) A producer, whether a person or legal entity, that either fails
to timely provide all required documentation or fails to satisfy any
eligibility requirement for ERP Phase 2, is not eligible to receive ERP
Phase 2 payments, directly or indirectly. An ERP Phase 2 payment to an
eligible legal entity applicant whose member(s) either fails to timely
provide all required documentation or fails to satisfy any eligibility
requirement for ERP Phase 2 will be reduced proportionate to that
member's ownership interest in the legal entity.
(e) Any payment under this subpart will be made without regard to
questions of title under State law and without regard to any claim or
lien against the commodity or proceeds from the sale of the commodity.
The regulations governing offsets in part 3 of this title apply to
payments made under this subpart.
(f) For the purposes of the effect of a lien on eligibility for
Federal programs (28 U.S.C. 3201(e)), USDA waives the restriction on
receipt of funds under ERP Phase 2 but only as to beneficiaries who, as
a condition of the waiver, agree
[[Page 1890]]
to apply the ERP Phase 2 payments to reduce the amount of the judgment
lien.
(g) In addition to any other Federal laws that apply to ERP Phase
2, the following laws apply: 15 U.S.C. 714; 18 U.S.C. 286, 287, 371,
and 1001.
Sec. 760.1909 Perjury.
In either applying for or participating in ERP Phase 2, or both,
the producer is subject to laws against perjury and any resulting
penalties and prosecution, including, but not limited to, 18 U.S.C.
1621. If the producer willfully makes and represents as true any verbal
or written declaration, certification, statement, or verification that
the producer knows or believes not to be true, in the course of either
applying for or participating in ERP Phase 2, or both, then the
producer may be guilty of perjury and, except as otherwise provided by
law, may be fined, imprisoned for not more than 5 years, or both,
regardless of whether the producer makes such verbal or written
declaration, certification, statement, or verification within or
without the United States.
Sec. 760.1910 Requirement to purchase crop insurance or NAP
coverage.
(a) Producers must report all crops that suffered a revenue loss in
whole or in part due to a qualifying disaster event on form FSA-522,
Crop Insurance and/or NAP Coverage Agreement.
(b) All producers who receive ERP Phase 2 payments must file an
accurate acreage report and purchase crop insurance or NAP coverage
where crop insurance is not available, for the next 2 available crop
years. For each crop reported according to paragraph (a) of this
section, participants must obtain crop insurance or NAP, as may be
applicable:
(1) At a coverage level equal to or greater than 60 percent for
insurable crops; or
(2) At the catastrophic level or higher for NAP crops.
(c) Availability will be determined from the date a producer
receives an ERP payment and may vary depending on the timing and
availability of crop insurance or NAP for a producer's particular
crops. The final crop year to purchase crop insurance or NAP coverage
to meet the second year of coverage for this requirement is the 2026
crop year.
(d) In situations where crop insurance is unavailable for a crop,
an ERP participant must obtain NAP coverage. Section 1001D of the Food
Security Act of 1985 (1985 Farm Bill) provides that a person or entity
with an AGI greater than $900,000 is not eligible to participate in
NAP; however, producers with an AGI greater than $900,000 are eligible
for ERP. To reconcile this restriction in the 1985 Farm Bill and the
requirement to obtain NAP or crop insurance coverage, ERP participants
may meet the purchase requirement by purchasing Whole-Farm Revenue
Protection (WFRP) crop insurance coverage, if eligible, or they may pay
the applicable NAP service fee despite their ineligibility for a NAP
payment. In other words, the service fee must be paid even though no
NAP payment may be made because the AGI of the person or entity exceeds
the 1985 Farm Bill limitation.
(e) If both Federal crop insurance and NAP coverage are unavailable
for a crop, the producer must obtain WFRP crop insurance coverage, if
eligible.
(f) For all crops listed on form FSA-522, producers who have the
crop or crop acreage in subsequent years and who fail to obtain the 2
years of crop insurance or NAP coverage required as required by this
section, must refund the ERP Phase 2 payment with interest from the
date of disbursement. Producers who do not plant a crop listed on form
FSA-522 in a year for which this requirement applies are not subject to
the crop insurance or NAP purchase requirement for that year.
(g) Producers who received an ERP Phase 1 payment for a crop are
not required to obtain additional years of crop insurance or NAP
coverage for that crop if they also receive an ERP Phase 2 payment for
a loss associated with that crop.
PART 1400--PAYMENT LIMITATION AND PAYMENT ELIGIBILITY
0
29. The authority citation for part 1400 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1308, 1308-1, 1308-2, 1308-3, 1308-3a,
1308-4, and 1308-5; and Title I, Pub. L. 115-123.
Subpart A--General Provisions
0
30. Add Sec. 1400.10 to read as follows:
Sec. 1400.10 Notification of interests.
(a) To facilitate administration of subparts B, C, E, and F of this
part for programs specified in Sec. 1400.1, or any other program as
provided in individual program regulations in this chapter, a person or
legal entity must provide information in the manner as prescribed by
the Deputy Administrator.
(b) The information required to be submitted under paragraph (a) of
this section must include:
(1) The name, address, valid taxpayer identification number, and
ownership share of each person, or the name, address, valid taxpayer
identification number, and ownership share of each legal entity, that
holds or acquires an ownership interest in the legal entity; and
(2) The name, address, valid taxpayer identification number, and
ownership share of each legal entity in which the person or legal
entity holds an ownership interest.
(c) Except as provided in paragraph (d) of this section, payments
to a legal entity will be reduced in proportion to a member's ownership
share when a valid taxpayer identification number for a person or legal
entity that holds a direct or indirect ownership interest of less than
10 percent at, or above the fourth level of ownership in the business
structure is not provided to USDA. Additionally, A legal entity will
not be eligible to receive payment when a valid taxpayer identification
number for a person or legal entity that holds a direct or indirect
ownership interest of 10 percent or greater at, or above the fourth
level of ownership in the business structure is not provided to USDA.
(d) In order to be eligible to receive any payment specified in
Sec. 1400.1(a)(7) or as provided by the Natural Resources Conservation
Service in individual program regulations in this chapter, a person or
legal entity must provide information in the manner as prescribed by
the Deputy Administrator as identified in paragraph (b) of this
section. Paragraph (c) of this section does not apply to the identified
Natural Resources Conservation Service programs (programs specified in
Sec. 1400.1(a)(7) or any other Natural Resources Conservation Service
program as specified in the individual program regulations in this
chapter).
Subpart B--Payment Limitation
Sec. 1400.107 [Removed]
0
31. Remove Sec. 1400.107.
PART 1416--EMERGENCY AGRICULTURAL DISASTER ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS
0
32. The authority citation for part 1416 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Title I, Pub. L. 113-79, 128 Stat. 649; Title I,
Pub. L. 115-123; Title VII, Pub. L. 115-141; and Title I, Pub. L.
116-20.
Subpart A--General Provisions for Supplemental Agricultural
Disaster Assistance Programs
Sec. 1416.5 [Removed and Reserved]
0
33. Remove and reserve Sec. 1416.5.
[[Page 1891]]
Subpart B--Emergency Assistance for Livestock, Honeybees, and Farm-
Raised Fish Program
0
34. In Sec. 1416.102, in the definition of ``eligible loss
condition'', add a sentence at the end of the definition to read as
follows:
Sec. 1416.102 Definitions.
* * * * *
Eligible loss condition * * * All other causes of losses are not
covered, including, but not limited to, negligence, mismanagement, or
wrongdoing by the producer.
* * * * *
0
35. Amend Sec. 1416.103 as follows:
0
a. Add a sentence to the end of paragraph (a); and
0
b. In paragraph (d)(6), in the first sentence, remove ``transport,''
and add ``transport'' in its place.
The addition reads as follows:
Sec. 1416.103 Eligible losses, adverse weather, and other loss
conditions.
(a) * * * All other causes of loss are not considered an eligible
loss condition, including, but not limited to, negligence,
mismanagement or wrongdoing by the producer.
* * * * *
0
36. Amend Sec. 1416.104 as follows:
0
a. Redesignate paragraphs (b)(16) and (17) as (b)(17) and (18),
respectively;
0
b. Add new paragraph (b)(16);
0
c. Remove paragraph (c)(4);
0
d. Redesignate paragraphs (c)(5) through (8) as paragraphs (c)(4)
through (7), respectively;
0
e. In newly redesignated paragraph (c)(6), add the word ``and'' at the
end;
0
f. Revise newly redesignated paragraph (c)(7); and
0
g. Remove paragraph (c)(9).
The addition and revision read as follows.
Sec. 1416.104 Eligible livestock, honeybees, and farm-raised fish.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(16) Ostriches,
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(7) Livestock that are not produced for commercial use or those
that are not produced or maintained in a commercial operation for
livestock products, such as milk from dairy, including, but not limited
to:
(i) Any wild free roaming livestock;
(ii) Horses and other animals used or intended to be used for
racing or wagering;
(iii) Animals produced or maintained for hunting; and
(iv) Animals produced or maintained for consumption by owner.
* * * * *
Subpart C--Livestock Forage Disaster Program
0
37. Amend Sec. 1416.204 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (a)(1), add ``ostriches,'' after ``llamas,'';
0
b. Revise paragraph (a)(5);
0
c. Redesignate paragraphs (b)(15) and (16) as (b)(16) and (17),
respectively;
0
d. Add new paragraph (b)(15);
0
e. Remove paragraph (c)(4);
0
f. Redesignate paragraphs (c)(5) through (9) as (c)(4) through (8),
respectively; and
0
g. Revise newly redesignated paragraph (c)(8).
The revisions and addition read as follows.
Sec. 1416.204 Covered livestock.
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(5) Not have been produced and maintained for reasons other than
commercial use as part of a farming operation. Such excluded uses
include, but are not limited to:
(i) Any uses of wild free roaming livestock;
(ii) Racing or wagering;
(iii) Hunting; and
(iv) Consumption by owner; and
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(15) Ostriches,
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(8) Livestock produced or maintained for reasons other than
commercial use, including, but not limited to, livestock produced or
maintained for racing or wagering purposes, hunting, or consumption by
owner.
Subpart D--Livestock Indemnity Program
0
38. Amend Sec. 1416.304 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (c)(3), remove the words ``for livestock'' and add
``for livestock sale or'' in their place; and
0
b. Revise paragraph (c)(4).
The revision reads as follows.
Sec. 1416.304 Eligible livestock.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(4) Not be produced or maintained for reasons other than commercial
use for livestock sale or for the production of livestock products such
as milk or eggs. Livestock excluded from being eligible include, but
are not limited to:
(i) Wild free roaming animals;
(ii) Horses and other animals used or intended to be used for
racing or wagering;
(iii) Animals produced or maintained for hunting; and
(iv) Animals produced or maintained for consumption by owner.
* * * * *
0
39. Amend Sec. 1416.305 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (g) introductory text, remove the words ``if reliable''
and add the words ``if the livestock are not owned by the licensed
veterinarian and reliable'' in their place;
0
b. Revise paragraph (i) introductory text; and
0
c. In paragraph (i)(1) introductory text, remove the words ``For 2017
and subsequent calendar years, livestock inventory reports by livestock
unit must be provided to the local county FSA office by the later of
December 3, 2018, or'' and add ``Livestock inventory reports by
livestock unit must be provided to the FSA local county office by'' in
their place.
The revision reads as follows.
Sec. 1416.305 Application process.
* * * * *
(i) Unweaned livestock operations may provide proof of death by
using the LBIH.
* * * * *
PART 1437--NONINSURED CROP DISASTER ASSISTANCE PROGRAM
0
40. The authority citation for part 1437 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1501-1508 and 7333; 15 U.S.C. 714-714m; 19
U.S.C. 2497, and 48 U.S.C. 1469a.
Subpart A--General Provisions
0
41. In Sec. 1437.3, revise the definition of ``Application for
coverage'' to read as follows:
Sec. 1437.3 Definitions.
* * * * *
Application for coverage means:
(1) The form specified by FSA to be completed by a producer
applying for NAP coverage for an eligible crop that is accompanied by
the service fee or the service fee waiver form, or
(2) Another applicable form, designated by the Deputy Administrator
to qualify as an application for NAP, that the producer has on file
with FSA before the deadline for application for the coverage period
which certifies they are eligible for a service fee waiver.
* * * * *
Sec. 1437.6 [Amended]
0
42. Amend Sec. 1437.6 as follows:
0
a. Remove paragraph (a)(1); and
0
b. Redesignate paragraphs (a)(2) and (3) as (a)(1) and (2),
respectively.
[[Page 1892]]
Sec. 1437.7 [Amended]
0
43. Amend Sec. 1437.7 as follows:
0
a. In paragraph (a), remove the words ``in the administrative county
office'';
0
b. In paragraph (b) introductory text, remove the words ``request for''
and add the words ``certification of eligibility for a'' in their
place; and
0
c. In paragraph (g) add the words ``for any buy-up coverage elected''
at the end of the first sentence.
PART 1450--BIOMASS CROP ASSISTANCE PROGRAM (BCAP)
0
44. The authority citation for part 1450 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 8111.
0
45. In Sec. 1450.2, add a definition for ``Socially disadvantaged
farmer or rancher'' in alphabetical order to read as follows.
Sec. 1450.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
Socially disadvantaged farmer or rancher means a farmer or rancher
who is a member of a socially disadvantaged group. A socially
disadvantaged group is a group whose members have been subjected to
racial or ethnic prejudice because of their identity as members of a
group without regard to their individual qualities.
* * * * *
Gloria Monta[ntilde]o Greene,
Deputy Under Secretary, Farm Production and Conservation, U.S.
Department of Agriculture.
[FR Doc. 2023-00005 Filed 1-9-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3411-E2-P