Press Release- Farm Service Agency
Ohio Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program
Question and Answers
Release No. 1488.00
1. What is the Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program?
The Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (CREP) is a Federal-State
conservation partnership program that targets significant environmental effects
related to agriculture. It is a voluntary program that uses financial incentives
to encourage farmers and ranchers to enroll in the Conservation Reserve Program
(CRP) in contracts of 10 to 15 years in duration to remove land from
agricultural production.
2. What is the Ohio Lake Erie CREP?
The Ohio Lake Erie CREP is a special conservation program tailored to meet
the needs of the State. This voluntary program is designed to improve the water
quality of Lake Erie and many of the streams and rivers that feed into it.
3. What are the Goals of the Ohio Lake Erie CREP?
The Ohio Lake Erie CREP has been designed to:
- reduce the amount of sediment entering Western Lake Erie by over 2,325,000
metric tons over the next 20 years
- significantly reduce the amount of nutrients and pesticides that enter
Western Lake Erie and its tributaries
- protect over 5,000 linear miles of streams from sedimentation
- improve wildlife habitat in the project
4. What Areas are Included in the Program?
The program area is comprised of the Western Lake Erie Watershed Area.
5. What are the Benefits of the Ohio Lake Erie CREP?
CREP will provide a number of significant environmental benefits to Ohio’s
water bodies. Filter strips and riparian buffers will be planted next to
streams, rivers, and drainage ditches in order to prevent sediment and
pollutants from entering the water bodies. An estimated 5,000 linear miles of
streams will be protected. Improved water quality will result from reduced
nutrient loading, sediment loading and pesticide runoff. Forested buffers will
also help lower water temperatures and enhance wildlife habitat.
6. What Approved Conservation Practices are Eligible under the Program?
- Hardwood Tree Planting
- Wildlife Habitat Improvement
- Filter Strips
- Riparian Buffers
- Wetland Restoration
- Field Windbreaks
7. Who can Sign Up for the Ohio Lake Erie CREP and When?
Enrollment for the Ohio Lake Erie CREP will be on a continuous basis
beginning May 1, 2000. Eligible land must be within the project area and meet
the basic eligibility criteria for the CRP. Land must be either cropland or
marginal pastureland. Cropland must have been planted to crops two of the past
five years and be physically and legally capable of being cropped. Marginal
pastureland can be enrolled provided it is suitable for use as a riparian buffer
planted to trees. Lands that have an existing CRP contract or an approved offer
with a contract pending are not eligible for CREP until that contract expires.
8. What Payments are Available Under the Ohio Lake Erie CREP?
CREP participants are eligible for five types of payments: base annual rental
payments; incentive payments; maintenance payments; cost-share assistance
payments; and State lump sum one-time payments. Annual rental payments will be
based on the soil rental rate. The first three of these will be combined into a
consolidated annual CRP rental payment.
In addition to the normal cropland rental payment, the Commodity Credit
Corporation (CCC) will make a special incentive payment as follows:
- for land devoted to filter strips, 55 percent of the normal cropland
rental rate
- for land devoted to wetland restoration, riparian buffer, field windbreak,
wildlife habitat improvement or hardwood trees, 75 percent of the normal
cropland rental rate
Producers would also receive an annual maintenance payment of $5 per acre.
For example: If the normal cropland rental rate is $100 per acre, the
incentive rate for a riparian buffer would be 75 percent of 100 or $75 per acre.
In addition, the maintenance rate would be $5 per acre. The total annual payment
would be $5 per acre maintenance rate, for a total of $180 per acre.
The CCC pays up to 50 percent of the establishment cost of conservation
practices. The State may also provide up to $40 per acre for the planting of
warm season grasses.
The State also provides a one-time lump sum payment of $200 per acre for land
devoted to filter-strips and a $500 per acre lump sum payment for land devoted
to hardwood tree planting, wildlife habitat improvement, field windbreaks,
wetland restoration, and riparian buffers.
9. Who can Sign Up for the Ohio Lake Erie CREP and When?
Enrollment for the CREP will be on a continuous basis beginning May 1, 2000.
Eligible land must be within the project area and meet the basic eligibility
criteria for the CRP. Land must be either cropland or marginal pastureland as
defined under normal CRP operating procedures.
10. What is the Cost of the Program?
The estimated cost of the program is $201 million. The Federal share is $167
million and the State share is $34 million.
11. Where can People Obtain More Information about the Ohio Lake Erie CREP?
People wanting more information should contact the Farm Service Agency (FSA)
or the Natural Resources Conservation Service within their local U.S. Department
of Agriculture Service Center, or the local Soil and Water Conservation District
Office.
Information may also be obtained from the FSA web site at:
http://www.fsa.usda.gov/
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