Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 58— - ERODIBLE LAND AND WETLAND CONSERVATION AND RESERVE PROGRAM › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER VII— - AGRICULTURAL CONSERVATION EASEMENT PROGRAM › § 3865a
Defines the key words used for the program that protects farmland and wetlands through easements. Agricultural land easement: an interest in land that protects its natural and farm use while letting the owner keep farming. Buy-protect-sell transaction: an agreement where an eligible group that owns or will buy land holds the easement, then sells the land to a farmer at no more than agricultural value plus reasonable costs, and must transfer the land either at once or within 3 years (the time can be extended if the Secretary agrees); if the group fails to transfer as promised, it must repay the Federal share in full. Eligible entity: a State or local agency, an Indian tribe, or a nonprofit that is set up and operated for conservation and has the required tax-exempt status. Eligible land: private or tribal land that qualifies as agricultural land (cropland, rangeland, grassland, pasture, certain nonindustrial private forest, or other land that protects grazing or meets local policy) or as wetlands and related areas that can be restored or add wildlife benefits (including some farmed wetlands, flooded cropland if a State pays 50% of cost, riparian links, and other wetlands that increase value), and nearby land needed to make an easement work. Monitoring report: a document the easement holder prepares that shows whether the land follows the easement rules. Program: the agricultural conservation easement program. Wetland reserve easement: a deeded reserved interest that spells out what rights go to the Secretary and what rights stay with the landowner.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 3865a
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73