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Funding Available for Texas Grassland Owners
Temple, Texas, July 27, 2009 – Grassland owners in south Texas, the
area hardest hit by the state’s drought, will be given priority consideration to
participate in USDA’s Grassland Reserve Program (GRP), a $4.2 million
conservation program in Texas.
“While GRP is open to anyone who owns grassland, we are giving priority
consideration to drought areas so ranchers can protect their land resources
through rental agreements or perpetual easements,” said Don Gohmert, state
conservationist for the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) in
Texas.
Extreme or exceptional drought has been designated in 78 counties in south Texas
by the U.S. Drought Monitor. Landowners in these counties can sign-up for GRP to
be compensated to defer cattle grazing until grassland conditions improve.
“Areas in South Texas are the driest in the entire country based on USDA’s
Drought Monitor,” said Juan Garcia, Farm Service Agency (FSA) state executive
director for Texas. “By enrolling in GRP, landowners can defer grazing, protect
their land, and receive compensation.”
GRP is a continuous sign-up program, but landowners are encouraged to apply as
soon as possible to be eligible for the 2009 funding cycle, which ends in
September.
The NRCS and FSA administer GRP, a voluntary program reauthorized in the 2008
Farm Bill to protect grazing uses and other related conservation values by
restoring and conserving eligible grasslands and certain other lands through
rental agreements and easements.
The enrollment options for GRP include:
- Rental agreements – 10, 15, or 20-year duration, USDA pays 75 percent of the
grazing value in annual payments for the length of the agreement.
- Permanent easements – USDA makes payment based on the fair market value of the
property less the grazing value.
Land that is privately owned is eligible for GRP. The land must be grassland for
which the predominant use is grazing. Land that has been historically dominated
by grassland and provides habitat for animal or plant populations of significant
ecological value, or land that contains historical or archeological resources is
eligible. Land previously enrolled in the Conservation Reserve Program is
eligible for GRP. Publicly owned land is not eligible or land already under
protection from conversion to non-grazing uses is also not eligible.
For more information about GRP and conservation programs that may be available
for conservation technical and financial assistance, visit the nearest USDA
Service Center or visit the NRCS Texas Web site at
www.tx.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/GRP.
Contact
Mark
Habiger, 254-742-9881
Lori Valadez,
254-742-9811
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