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 › § 3835
Does not allow a new conservation contract for land that changed owners in the 1-year period before the contract starts, unless the new owner got the land by will or succession after a death, got it before January 1, 1985, the Secretary finds it was not bought to join the program, or the change was a foreclosure and the previous owner redeems the mortgage under state law. A new owner may keep an existing agreement. A person who does not own the land can still sign a contract if they have farmed the land for at least 1 year before the contract date or since January 1, 1985 (whichever is later) and control the land during the contract. If the owner or operator sells or transfers the land during a contract, the new person can keep the contract, make a new one, or opt out. The Secretary may change a contract if the owner agrees and the change helps run the program, helps move land to a beginning, veteran, or socially disadvantaged farmer to return land to production with sustainable methods, or meets other program goals. The Secretary can also allow part of the land to be used to grow crops for a year under set conditions. The Secretary may end a contract if the owner agrees and the Secretary decides it is in the public interest, but must give the House and Senate Agriculture Committees 90 days’ written notice before ending all such contracts. In fiscal year 2015, a participant whose contract has lasted at least 5 years may end it at any time with reasonable notice. Ending early does not remove responsibility for past violations. Some kinds of land cannot be ended early, including filterstrips, waterways, riparian strips, windbreaks, shelterbelts, land with an erodibility index over 15, hardwoods, many wildlife and wetland habitats, land with erosion or flood-control structures, wellhead protection areas, lands under conservation easements, certain streamside buffers, and land in the conservation reserve enhancement program. Early termination takes effect when the Secretary approves it; rental payments for that fiscal year are prorated. A person who asked to end a contract may later bid to re-enroll the land. If the land returns to farming, conservation rules similar to nearby land apply but must not be tougher than those for other land. When a contract is changed to help transfer land to a beginning farmer, veteran, or socially disadvantaged farmer, the Secretary must allow that person, starting 2 years before contract end, to work on conservation improvements and begin organic certification. At contract end, the contract holder must sell or lease the land to that farmer, who must make a conservation plan and may enroll in EQIP or the conservation stewardship program when they take possession. The land gets priority for EQIP, conservation stewardship, or agricultural conservation easements, and the contract holder may keep annual payments for up to 2 more years after termination if not a family member. If the program has room under its acreage cap, the covered farmer may reenroll certain continuous conservation practices that are part of an approved plan. The Secretary will not count entering EQIP or conservation stewardship and starting practices in the year before contract end, or beginning organic certification in the 3 years before end, as breaking the contract. The Secretary may also end or change a contract if the land goes into the agricultural conservation easement program.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 3835
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73