U.S. Sens. John Thune (R-S.D.) and Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), members of the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry, reintroduced (Feb 1, 2023) the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) Improvement Act. This legislation would bolster CRP by improving access to grazing, maximizing enrollment options for producers, and addressing implementation issues following the 2018 farm bill.
“After hearing firsthand from South Dakotans, it is clear that we need to keep working to ensure that CRP continues to be an effective option for producers and landowners,” said Thune. “This common-sense legislation would help advance the multiple-use benefits of this conservation program, including wildlife habitat and livestock forage potential.”
“The Conservation Reserve Program helps equip our farmers with the tools to conserve and improve soil, water quality, and wildlife habitat,” said Klobuchar. “This bipartisan legislation makes common-sense improvements to CRP that will strengthen conservation practices and landowner enrollment in this vital program.”
“CRP has successfully met many of its objectives since its inception, but leaving grasslands set idle is not the healthiest way to manage them,” said Eric Jennings, president of the South Dakota Cattlemen’s Association. “Our native species, that the CRP acres are seeded to, evolved over the past hundreds of years with animals such as cattle grazing and utilizing them. It is important for the health of the grass species and the soil beneath them to continue to have animals grazing them to stimulate growth and deposit nutrients back into the soil with their manure. Along with the benefits cattle provide to the grass and soil, having the water and fence infrastructure in place would provide a huge benefit to cattle producers during times of drought. Having the infrastructure in place would allow producers to utilize the CRP acres for drought mitigation instead of having to sell their cows. We applaud Senators Thune and Klobuchar’s efforts to provide cost share dollars to build the infrastructure necessary to put cattle back on these lands.”
“We greatly appreciate Senators Thune and Klobuchar for their continued leadership on enhancing the Conservation Reserve Program,” said Julia Peebles, manager of agriculture and sustainability for Ducks Unlimited. “Expanding flexibility and incentivizing farmers and ranchers to utilize this historically successful, voluntary program will benefit the conservation of waterfowl and other wildlife while helping private landowners get the most out of their land.”
The CRP Improvement Act would:
- Make CRP grazing a more attractive option by providing cost-share for the establishment of grazing infrastructure – including fencing and water distribution – on all CRP practices and contracts if grazing is included in the approved conservation plan;
- Increase the CRP annual payment limitation from $50,000, which was established in 1985, to $125,000 to account for inflationary and rising land value pressures and provide landowners with more CRP enrollment options to ensure resources are appropriately conserved;
- Reinstate mid-contract management cost-share payments for activities that are not related to haying or grazing; and
- Permanently establish the State Acres for Wildlife Enhancement practice under Continuous CRP.
Thune, who has helped write four farm bills throughout his time in Congress, will continue introducing farm bill proposals ahead of the current bill’s expiration in September 2023.
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