Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 58— - ERODIBLE LAND AND WETLAND CONSERVATION AND RESERVE PROGRAM › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - AGRICULTURAL RESOURCES CONSERVATION PROGRAM › Part Part IV— - Environmental Quality Incentives Program and Conservation Stewardship Program › Subpart subpart b— - conservation stewardship program › § 3839aa–24
Make the conservation stewardship program available to eligible producers all year, with at least one ranking period in the first quarter of each fiscal year. The Department must pick at least 5 top resource concerns in a watershed or similar area in each State and set science-based stewardship goals for each concern. Money for enrollment is given to States mostly based on each State’s share of eligible land, and also taking into account how big the conservation needs are, how well the program will work there, and other factors to spread funds fairly. The Department must pay producers each year to add new conservation actions and to keep up or improve practices already on their farm. Payments are set using factors like costs, income lost, expected environmental benefits, how many priority concerns are addressed, current stewardship level, how well practices are used across the whole farm, and other appropriate factors. Payments cannot be used for building or maintaining animal waste storage or for actions that cost the producer nothing. The Department should spread payments evenly over a contract and pay, as soon as practical, after October 1 for work done the prior fiscal year. Cover crop payments must be at least 125% of the normal annual amount. Extra payments of at least 150% of the normal amount go to producers who adopt or improve resource‑conserving crop rotations or advanced grazing management. Resource‑conserving crop rotation, advanced grazing management, and management‑intensive rotational grazing are defined as practices that improve soil, water, habitat, and related benefits. A one‑time payment is available for making a comprehensive conservation plan, sized by how many priority concerns and land types it covers. No person or entity may receive more than $200,000 total from contracts during fiscal years 2019–2023 (excluding Indian tribes). The program must include outreach and help for specialty and organic producers, allow a clear way to start organic certification while in a contract, fund States to support organic transition for fiscal years 2019–2031 based on numbers of operations and acres, set rules to apply the payment cap fairly, coordinate with the environmental quality incentives program, focus on soil health, and report each year to the House and Senate Agriculture Committees on payment rates and whether expensive payments can be reduced.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 3839aa–24
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73