Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 58— - ERODIBLE LAND AND WETLAND CONSERVATION AND RESERVE PROGRAM › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - AGRICULTURAL RESOURCES CONSERVATION PROGRAM › Part Part I— - Comprehensive Conservation Enhancement Program › Subpart subpart b— - conservation reserve › § 3831a
The Secretary may make agreements with eligible partners to run a Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (CREP). These agreements help enroll eligible land in the program and reach agreed conservation goals. CREP means that program. Eligible land means land that can join the program. Eligible partner means a State, a local government, an Indian tribe, or a nonprofit group. Management means the ongoing steps an owner or operator must take to keep or improve the plants and ground cover while the contract lasts and follow the conservation plan. Each agreement must say which conservation problems it will fix, measurable goals, how many acres to enroll, where the land is, what payments will be offered, and which conservation practices will be used. Partners must provide matching funds — an amount set in negotiation unless most matching money comes from nonprofits, in which case it must be at least 30 percent of the cost. The Secretary can temporarily waive matching rules if a partner loses the ability to pay. Agreements do not change existing contracts unless all signers agree, and parties may agree to modify agreements made before December 20, 2018. Partner funds can be cash, in-kind help, or technical help. Cost-share payments for things like stream fencing must match fair market installation costs, and payments can be made when a major part is finished. Riparian buffers may get payments for regular management up to 100 percent of normal costs. Forested buffers may include food-producing woody plants if they help conservation, follow state and technical guides, and harvesting does not harm conservation; crops near water must be native within 35 feet and the rental rate is reduced by the crop value. For drought-focused agreements, the Secretary may enroll other land if needed, allow dryland farming with best practices when it cuts water use, and set regional rental rates like similar programs. Within 180 days after each fiscal year ends, the Secretary must report to Congress on each agreement’s status, goals, commitments, and progress.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 3831a
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73