Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 58— - ERODIBLE LAND AND WETLAND CONSERVATION AND RESERVE PROGRAM › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - FUNDING AND ADMINISTRATION › § 3844
The Secretary may give special payments or other incentives in conservation programs to encourage new farming and ranching and to meet long-term environmental goals. Those incentives can go to beginning, socially disadvantaged, and limited-resource farmers or ranchers, to Indian tribes, and to veteran farmers. Information farmers give to get technical or financial help is not public and can’t be released except to the Justice Department to enforce the programs, to people or agencies working with the Secretary to provide help (only for that help), or as anonymous statistics. A farmer can agree to share their information. Participation or payments cannot be made conditional on giving that consent. Tenants and sharecroppers must be protected and share payments fairly, except tenants on land under an extended conservation reserve contract. The Secretary must allow approved outside technical help, and must explain in writing if the Secretary rejects that help. The Secretary must limit enrollment so no more than 25 percent of a county’s cropland is in the conservation reserve program and certain wetland easements, and no more than 15 percent is in wetland reserve easements alone, with some exceptions and ways to waive these limits. The Secretary must watch and report on program performance, make application processes simpler, and tell Congress within 1 year after the 2008 farm bill that the review is done. Within 1 year after December 20, 2018, and by October 1 each year after, the Secretary must review and fix practice cost estimates and payment rates so they encourage participation, effective practices, and reflect local differences, and must work with State technical committees. From fiscal year 2019 through 2031 at least 10 percent of conservation funds (not counting the conservation reserve program) must be used to protect drinking water sources, and higher payments for those practices may be offered but not more than 90 percent of practice costs. The Secretary should also promote pollinator habitat, may make alternative funding deals with tribes when appropriate, must not stop participants from joining environmental services markets, and may give technical help to other governments to create regulatory assurances if basic checks and audits are included.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 3844
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73