Title 7 › Chapter 100— AGRICULTURAL MARKET TRANSITION › Subchapter II— PRODUCTION FLEXIBILITY CONTRACTS › § 7211
The Secretary must offer a production flexibility contract to eligible owners or producers on farms that have eligible cropland. In return for yearly payments, the person who signs the contract must follow conservation and wetland protection rules, follow planting flexibility rules, and use the land only for farming or related uses — not for nonfarm commercial or industrial purposes, as the Secretary decides. People who can sign include owners who take on crop risk and various kinds of renters, with rules depending on the lease. Share-rent producers can sign only if the owner signs the same contract. Cash renters with leases ending on or after September 30, 2002 can sign without the owner. Cash renters with leases ending before September 30, 2002 can sign but the owner may also sign, and the owner’s consent is needed if less than all of the land is enrolled. An owner whose lease expires before September 30, 2002 can sign only if the tenant refuses, and payments to that owner start after the lease ends. Being insured for 1996 catastrophic crop loss does not affect eligibility. The Secretary must protect tenants’ and sharecroppers’ interests. Land counts as eligible only if it had contract acreage and met certain past program or conservation reserve conditions from 1991–1995 or had a CRP contract that ended or was ended on or after January 1, 1995, or was released by the Secretary between January 1, 1995 and the date shown in section 7212(a)(2). Owners or producers may enroll all or part of eligible cropland and may later reduce the acres enrolled, subject to the lease rules above.
Full Legal Text
Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 7211
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60