Title 7 › Chapter 38— DISTRIBUTION AND MARKETING OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS › Subchapter I— GENERAL PROVISIONS › § 1627c
Creates the Local Agriculture Market Program to help farmers, ranchers, and food businesses build and grow local and regional markets. The program pays grants for fiscal years 2019 through 2023 to support direct sales to consumers (for example, farmers’ markets, roadside stands, CSAs, and online sales), help local food businesses that act as middlemen, fund processing, aggregation, storage, and value-added products, pay for business plans and marketing, improve regional food chains and mid-tier value chains, cut on-farm food waste, update technology, and help with food-safety certification and upgrades. Grants are generally up to $500,000. Some recipients must match federal money (either dollar-for-dollar or provide 25 percent), many grant uses cannot buy buildings or general-purpose equipment, and up to $6,500 per grant may be used to buy or upgrade food-safety equipment. The Department must simplify applications (including a short form for requests under $50,000), give priority to beginning, veteran, socially disadvantaged, and small or medium family farmers in some grants, coordinate with extension services and other agencies, offer technical help, and evaluate the program and report results to Congress no later than four years after December 20, 2018. Key defined terms (one line each): beginning farmer or rancher — as defined in section 1991(a); direct producer-to-consumer marketing — as defined in section 3002; family farm — as defined in section 1632a(a); food council — a regional group of food organizations and governments that works on food and farm issues; majority-controlled producer-based business venture — more than 50% owned and controlled by producers (includes partnerships, LLCs, LLPs, and corporations); mid-tier value chain — a local or regional network linking independent producers with businesses or co-ops to market value-added products; partnership — an agreement between eligible partners and eligible entities; Program — the Local Agriculture Market Program; regional food chain coordination — working together along the supply chain to link producers to markets; Secretary — Secretary of Agriculture; socially disadvantaged farmer or rancher — as defined in section 2003(e); value-added agricultural product — a farm product that is changed, made more valuable, segregated, used for farm-based renewable energy, or marketed as local and that expands customers and revenue for the producer; veteran farmer or rancher — as defined in section 2279(a). Funding: $50,000,000 each fiscal year from the Commodity Credit Corporation and $20,000,000 authorized each year. Of annual funds, 35% go to one group of grants, 47% to another group, 10% to partnership grants, and up to 8% may be used for administrative costs, with specific sub-reserves and caps spelled out in the law.
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Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 1627c
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60