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Consider Options Before Breaking Out CRP Acres
Temple, Texas, May 8, 2008 – Officials with the USDA Natural Resources
Conservation Service (NRCS) are urging farmers to consider USDA compliance and
program eligibility before converting Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) acres
to cropland production.
“More than 1 million acres in Texas covered under CRP contracts will expire in
the next year and a half, and we could see a lot of land use changes, especially
in the Panhandle region,” said Don Gohmert, NRCS state conservationist for
Texas. “We want landowners to understand options available to them and what they
need to do to remain in compliance for USDA programs.”
Conservation compliance, which began with the 1985 Farm Bill, is still in
effect. Compliance means that farmers need to control erosion on highly erodible
land, which includes CRP acres, in order to stay eligible for USDA program
benefits, including farm loan programs, disaster assistance, commodity price
supports, and conservation programs.
According to NRCS, the most common ways farmers get out of compliance with USDA
is by eliminating soil-conserving crops, such as forage species, and adding a
tilled crop, such as corn or cotton. When the farmer changes his soil cover from
permanent grass to annually-tilled crops, he/she should always consider
conservation compliance when planning their rotations, in addition to commodity
prices.
“The lure of high crop prices may have landowners considering plowing up
grassland and planting it to a commodity crop,” Gohmert said. “Not only are
there compliance issues to consider, but landowners should also look at what is
best for the land.”
According to Lori Ziehr, NRCS state agronomist, much of the land enrolled in CRP
was classified as highly erodible, meaning it is susceptible to wind and/or
water erosion. “That soil has not changed over the years the land was in CRP,”
she said. “If those acres are returned to cropland, landowners will need to take
certain measures to ensure those acres will not erode beyond a level that the
soil can tolerate.”
For example, Ziehr said that a certain percentage of the field may need to be
planted to high residue crops each year or that contour windstrips be left at
certain intervals to prevent erosion. In some cases, she said, fields may
already have terraces that need to be maintained to remain in compliance and
help lower the potential for erosion.
Before a landowner takes any action at all, Ziehr encourages them to visit their
local NRCS field office to find out what a compliance plan would entail and if
there are any financial cost-share programs to help off-set some of the
conservation costs. “A landowner has more options when his land is still in
grass,” she said. “Grazing former CRP acres is another option to consider.”
CRP is a voluntary program through which farmers and ranchers plant grasses
and trees on marginal cropland acres in exchange for rental payments. The USDA
Farm Service Agency administers CRP; NRCS provides technical assistance for the
program. Contact
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