Title 16 › Chapter 58— ERODIBLE LAND AND WETLAND CONSERVATION AND RESERVE PROGRAM › Subchapter IV— AGRICULTURAL RESOURCES CONSERVATION PROGRAM › Part I— Comprehensive Conservation Enhancement Program › Subpart b— conservation reserve › § 3831a
The Secretary can make agreements with partners to run a Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (CREP) that helps enroll eligible land and meet conservation goals. CREP: the special conservation program. Eligible land: land that can join the program. Eligible partner: a State, a local government, an Indian tribe, or a nonprofit group. Management: the regular care an owner must do after a conservation practice is put in place, following the conservation plan. Agreements must say which conservation problems they will fix, set measurable goals, name how many acres to enroll and where, list what payments will be offered, and pick the conservation practices to be used. Partners must provide matching funds either at an amount set in negotiation (if most match money comes from governments or public partners) or at least 30 percent (if most match money comes from nonprofits). The Secretary can temporarily waive matching rules if a partner can’t pay and a waiver will still help meet the goals. Partner funds can be cash, in-kind help, or technical assistance. Cost-share payments for things like fence or water systems must reflect fair market costs and can be paid when a major part is finished. Agreements that include riparian buffers must pay for regular buffer management up to 100 percent of normal projected costs. For forested buffers, owners may plant and harvest food-producing woody plants if the plants help conservation, follow state and technical guidance, do not harm the cover, use native species within 35 feet of water, and the rental payment is reduced by the crop’s value. For drought-focused agreements, the Secretary may enroll other land if needed, allow dryland farming with best practices that cut water use, and set rental rates consistent with similar programs. Within 180 days after each fiscal year ends, the Secretary must report to Congress the status, goals, commitments, and progress for each agreement.
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Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 3831a
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60