Pennsylvania Farmers can Benefit from New NRCS Conservation Program September 11 Webinar Briefing on Program Scheduled
Posted: February 23, 2010
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. – A newly revised conservation program for
Pennsylvania growers will reward them for adopting new environmentally
safe practices, but to be eligible producers must apply by the end of
September.
Penn State Cooperative Extension will be offering a
free webinar in partnership with the program sponsor, the USDA Natural
Resource Conservation Service (NRCS), on Friday, September 11 from 1:00
to 2:00 PM at https://meeting.psu.edu AgEnvPartnership to brief
Pennsylvania’s conservation districts, Extension, ag-consultants, and
producers with the program opportunities, benefits, and schedule.
According to Barry Franz, Pennsylvania’s assistant state
conservationist for programs, the Conservation Stewardship Program
(CSP), funded by NRCS, encourages producers to continue existing
conservation practices and rewards them for adopting new ones. CSP will
administer five-year contracts to growers and provide financial and
technical assistance to conserve and enhance soil, water, air, and
related natural resources on their land.
The program will be
available nationally on 12.8 million acres for 2010. Pennsylvania will
split its acreage into eight districts statewide in which growers will
compete with other growers within the same district for contracts. Dr.
David Biddinger, tree fruit entomologist and biocontrol specialist at
Penn State, noted that the signup period for the first round of
rankings must be completed by September 30. “Growers familiar with
other conservation programs such as Agricultural Management Assistance
(AMA) and Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) will be
filling out the same forms at their local NRCS office, but will
indicate the CSP program preference instead,” he explains. “Credit will
be given to growers for existing conservation activities in the ranking
of applications.”
CSP payments to a grower may not exceed
$40,000 in any year nor more than $200,000 over any five year period.
Estimated payments are $12 to $22 per acre with no limits on acreage.
Over 80 practices are currently available for funding across a range of
field, horticultural and other crops.
For more information on
the program, growers can contact their local NRCS office or go to the
CSP website at: https://www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/new_csp/csp.html.
The September 11 webinar briefing requires the viewer to obtain a free
“Friends of Penn State” account in advance by visiting
https://meeting.psu.edu/AgEnvPartnership. For more information on the
webinar program, contact Kristen Saacke Blunk, Director of the Penn
State Agriculture and Environment Center at (814) 863-8756.
The
Penn State Agriculture and Environment Center is a joint initiative of
Cooperative Extension and the College of Agricultural Sciences’
Environment and Natural Resources Institute working with conservation
partners throughout the state including the Natural Resources
Conservation Service, Pennsylvania Department of Environmental
Protection, State Conservation Commission, and others. The Agriculture
and Environment Partnership webinar series provides practitioners who
serve producers across the Commonwealth with timely, relevant
information about conservation research, programs and opportunities.
For more information, contact the Agriculture and Environment Center at
(814) 863-8756 or visit https://www.aec.cas.psu.edu.
Also
working in partnership, the Pennsylvania IPM program is a collaboration
between the Pennsylvania State University and the Pennsylvania
Department of Agriculture aimed at promoting integrated pest management
in both agricultural and urban settings. For more information, contact
the program at (814) 865-2839, or Web site https://www.paipm.org. To
view our archived news releases, see Web site
https://paipm.cas.psu.edu/10.htm.


