1 / 17

USDA Farm Service Agency Val Dolcini, State Executive Director

USDA Farm Service Agency Val Dolcini, State Executive Director. FSA: Serving California’s Farmers and Ranchers. 1. Rainbow over ag land - Santa Maria, CA. USDA Farm Service Agency

janae
Télécharger la présentation

USDA Farm Service Agency Val Dolcini, State Executive Director

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. USDA Farm Service Agency Val Dolcini, State Executive Director FSA: Serving California’s Farmers and Ranchers 1 Rainbow over ag land - Santa Maria, CA

  2. USDA Farm Service Agency Mission: To equitably serve all farmers, ranchers and agricultural partners through the delivery of effective, efficient agricultural programs for all Americans. 2

  3. 30 FSA County Offices in California 2,400 FSA Offices in the U.S. 3

  4. 2010 California FSA Highlights  Farm Assistance Programs and Loans: $667 million - FY 2010  Top CA counties in Program Dollars: Tulare, Fresno, Kings, Colusa, Kern, Sutter, Glenn, Butte and Merced Socially Disadvantaged Farmers / Ranchers: received 40% of loans in California 4

  5. California Agriculture At-A-Glance •81,000 farms and ranches (less than 4% of national total) •11.2% of total US crop and commodity value •$36.2 billion in total output (No. 1 state in farm-gate receipts) •Over 400 commodities, including half the nation’s fruits, nuts and vegetables •$12.9 billion in exports in 2008 to over 190 countries worldwide. •9 of 10 most productive ag counties in US (Fresno, Tulare, Kern, Monterey, Merced, Stanislaus, San Joaquin, Kings, Imperial, Ventura) 5

  6. Major FSA Programs Disaster Assistance  Price Support/Commodity Payments  Conservation and Bio-Energy  Managing Ag Credit Needs 6

  7. Disaster Assistance Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program (NAP): Provides catastrophic coverage for crops that don’t have insurance programs. Supplemental Revenue Assistance Payments (SURE): Covers farm revenue losses, replaces former “ad hoc” disaster assistance funding Tree Assistance Program (TAP): Provides cost-shares and payments to rehabilitate or restore orchards and vineyards Emergency Assistance for Livestock, Honey Bees, and Farm-raised Fish (ELAP): Currently providing benefits for Colony Collapse Disorder of Bee Colonies Livestock Indemnity Payments (LIP): Provides compensation for livestock deaths due to natural disaster Livestock Forage Disaster Program (LFP): Provides benefits for grazing feed losses 7

  8. Disaster Assistance/SURE Whole farm revenue assistance program Farm must be in a primary or contiguous county designated as a disaster county OR farm must suffer 50% revenue loss Crop insurance required for insurable crops NAP coverage required for non-insurable crops Contact your Crop Insurance Agent and County FSA office following any weather disaster! 8

  9. SURE Over $1 billion paid out nationally in 2008, but only $18 million paid out in California Criticisms  Doesn’t adequately respond to diverse farming operations (e.g. most California farms) Too complex Payments not made for approximately one year after crops harvested Doesn’t “work for everyone” (i.e. those who don’t purchase crop insurance) 9

  10. Price Support/Commodity Payments Direct and Counter-cyclical Program (DCP): provides payments (Direct and Market Price-driven payments) to established commodity crop farms Average Crop Revenue Election (ACRE) Program: producers can opt to receive revenue-based payments instead of market price driven payments Commodity Loans and Loan Deficiency Payments (LDP) price support programs assist producers in the marketing of their commodity crops, including loans and payments Dairy Programs: Milk Income Loss Contract (MILC) and Dairy Disaster Assistance provides payments to compensate for low milk prices and production losses 10

  11. Conservation and Bio-Energy Conservation Reserve Program (CRP): removes highly erodible land from production with incentives to implement approved conservation practices. More than 125,000 acres protected in CA. Emergency Conservation Program (ECP): emergency funding to rehabilitate land damaged by natural disasters or provide emergency livestock water Biomass Crop Assistance Program (BCAP): provides direct payments to owners of biomass products that are converted to energy and for the planting of such crops 11

  12. Managing Ag Credit Needs  Operating and Ownership Loans: a)by conventional ag lenders with payment guaranteed by FSA or b)direct loans for borrowers who are unable to obtain credit elsewhere. Special targets: Beginning and Socially Disadvantaged farmers and ranchers and Rural Youth. Over $117 million loaned in FY10.  Emergency Loan Program: Direct loans to assist with the recovery of production and physical losses to applicants who are unable to obtain credit elsewhere.  Conservation Loans: Low-interest loans to implement conservation measures to benefit habitat. 12

  13. 2008 Farm Bill Budget Source: Congressional Budget Office 13

  14. 14

  15. TEAM FSA – Serving California Agriculture

  16. Contact Us val.dolcini@ca.usda.gov www.fsa.usda.gov/ca 530-792-5520 16

  17. 17

More Related