USDA authorized emergency grazing of Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) acres during the primary nesting season in North Dakota, South Dakota, and Montana in the counties meeting D2 or greater, as indicated by the US Drought Monitor. Since that time the drought has continued to deepen and the forecast is for hot, dry weather in the upcoming week in the northern plains. As such, USDA is authorizing emergency grazing of CRP for any county in which any part of its border lies within 150 miles of a county approved for emergency grazing of CRP.
In addition, for any county in which any part of its border lies within 150 miles of any county approved for emergency grazing of CRP, USDA will allow CRP contract holders who hay their acreage according to their mid-management conservation plan to donate their hay to livestock producers. CRP contract holders still have the ability to sell their hay with a 25 percent reduction in their annual rental payment as they’ve been fully authorized to do in the past.
Emergency haying is not authorized at this time. USDA will continue to monitor conditions and will consider expanding emergency authority if conditions worsen.
Eligible CRP participants can use the acreage for grazing their own livestock or may grant another livestock producer use of the CRP acreage. There will be no CRP annual rental payment reductions assessed for acres grazed.
The map to the right shows the counties approved for CRP emergency grazing and the donation of hay under mid-contract management authority, is available at: https://www.fsa.usda.gov/programs-and-services/conservation-programs/conservation-reserve-program/emergency-haying-and-grazing/index.
Producers must contact FSA for written approval prior to beginning any emergency CRP activity.
To take advantage of the emergency grazing provisions, producers should contact their local USDA Service Center. Visit http://offices.usda.gov.