Title 16 › Chapter 58— ERODIBLE LAND AND WETLAND CONSERVATION AND RESERVE PROGRAM › Subchapter VII— AGRICULTURAL CONSERVATION EASEMENT PROGRAM › § 3865a
Defines the key words used in the agricultural conservation easement program. An "agricultural land easement" is an interest put on eligible land to protect natural resources and keep it as farmland while still letting the owner farm. A "buy-protect-sell transaction" is a deal where an eligible group holds an easement on land it owns or will buy, promises to sell the land to a farmer at no more than agricultural value plus reasonable costs, and must transfer the land before or when the easement is taken or within 3 years (the Secretary can allow more time). If the group does not transfer as promised, it must repay the federal share of the easement cost. An "eligible entity" is a state or local agency, an Indian tribe, or certain tax-exempt conservation nonprofits. "Eligible land" is private or tribal land that fits the program. For agricultural easements, that includes land with a pending easement offer or a buy-protect-sell deal, land with good soils or historic resources, land that protects grazing or furthers state/local policy, and types like cropland, rangeland, grassland, pasture, or some private forests. For wetland reserve easements, it includes restorable farmed or converted wetlands, certain flooded cropland or grassland (with a 50 percent cost-share in one case), farmed wetlands in the conservation reserve program, riparian links, and other wetlands that add value. "Monitoring report" is the easement holder’s compliance report. "Program" means this easement program. A "wetland reserve easement" is a deeded interest that lists rights given to the Secretary and rights kept by the owner.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 3865a
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60