[Federal Register: December 21, 2007 (Volume 72, Number 245)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Page 72863-72878]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr21de07-14]
[[Page 72863]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Part III
Department of Agriculture
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Farm Service Agency
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
7 CFR Part 760
Emergency Agricultural Assistance, 2007; Crop Disaster and Livestock
Indemnity Programs; Final Rule
2005-2007 Livestock Compensation and Catfish Grant Programs; Final Rule
[[Page 72864]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Farm Service Agency
7 CFR Part 760
RIN 0560-AH76
Emergency Agricultural Assistance, 2007; Crop Disaster and
Livestock Indemnity Programs
AGENCY: Farm Service Agency, USDA.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This rule establishes the Farm Service Agency (FSA)
regulations for the 2007 Emergency Agricultural Assistance. The rule
implements legislation that provides funds for agricultural disaster
aid for eligible producers, specifically a Crop Disaster Program (CDP)
and a 2005-2007 Livestock Indemnity Program (LIP). For CDP, the program
applies only to 2005, 2006, and 2007 crop producers who chose to have a
Federal Crop Insurance plan of insurance or Noninsured Crop Disaster
Assistance Program coverage for the year of loss and suffered damage
due to a natural disaster. Eligible crops for 2007 must have been
planted prior to February 28, 2007. For LIP, the program applies only
to livestock producers in counties designated as a major disaster or
emergency area by the President or those declared a natural disaster
area by the Secretary of Agriculture. Counties designated disasters by
the President may be eligible even though agricultural loss was not
covered by the designation if there has been an FSA Administrator's
Physical Loss Notice covering such losses. The natural disaster
declarations by the Secretary or designations by President must have
been issued between January 1, 2005, and February 28, 2007; that is
after January 1, 2005 and before February 28, 2007. Counties contiguous
to such counties will also be eligible.
DATES: This rule is effective December 19, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Salomon Ramirez, Director, Production,
Emergencies, and Compliance Division; Farm Service Agency; United
States Department of Agriculture, STOP 0517, 1400 Independence Avenue,
SW., Washington, DC 20250-0517; telephone (202) 720-7641; e-mail
salomon.ramirez@wdc.usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
This final rule implements the agricultural assistance provisions
of the U.S. Troop Readiness, Veterans' Care, Katrina Recovery, and Iraq
Accountability Appropriations Act, 2007 (Pub. L. 110-28) (the 2007
Emergency Supplemental), enacted May 25, 2007. The 2007 Emergency
Supplemental authorizes the Secretary of Agriculture (Secretary) to
assist producers of livestock and agricultural commodities through
programs administered by FSA.
All counties, owners, contract growers, lessees, livestock, crops,
and losses, must meet the eligibility criteria provided in this rule.
False certifications carry severe ramifications. FSA will validate
applications with random spot-checks.
A payment limitation of $80,000 per program per person is
applicable to payments made under the 2007 Emergency Supplemental. The
amount of any payment for which a participant may be eligible under any
of these programs may be reduced by any amount received by the
participant for the same or any similar loss. Other restrictions apply
including, but not limited to, those pertaining to highly erodible land
and wetland conservation provisions. Livestock and crop losses that are
not weather-related are not covered.
The average adjusted gross income (AGI) limitation as administered
under 7 CFR part 1400, subpart G, applies. AGI eligibility is based on
the average of the adjusted gross incomes for the three tax years
immediately preceding the tax year for which disaster assistance is
being requested, with the exclusion of any year(s) the individual or
entity did not have income or had an AGI of zero.
Crop Disaster Program
Section 9001 of the 2007 Emergency Supplemental authorizes the
Secretary to provide assistance to crop producers for qualifying crop
quantity or crop quality losses due to damaging weather and related
conditions for one, but not more than one, of the 2005, 2006, or 2007
crop years. The 2007 Emergency Supplemental requires that assistance
for quantity losses to be made available in the same manner as provided
under section 815 of the Agricultural, Rural Development, Food and Drug
Administration, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2001 (Pub. L.
106-387) (the 2001 Appropriations Act), except that the payment rate
will be 42 percent of the established price, instead of 65 percent.
Like under section 815 of the 2001 Appropriations Act, only approved
yields based on production evidence submitted prior to the enactment of
the 2007 Emergency Supplemental will be used for the purposes of the
2005, 2006, and 2007 CDP. This is also applicable to those plans of
insurance or NAP that did not or do not have approved yields calculated
based on actual production history. FSA does not have the resources or
the knowledge to calculate those approved yields now. Additionally,
historically, FSA has not computed approved yields following enactment
of legislation authorizing similar ad hoc disaster assistance. There
are a plethora of reasons for not computing such yields now, not the
least of which is burdening participants and FSA offices with tasks
that will undoubtedly slow the dispersal of funds that Congress wanted
issued timely. There are also serious integrity issues related to
allowing, as a general matter, participants an opportunity to now in
conjunction with a loss claim application under this ad hoc
legislation, the opportunity to now alter or change their expected
level of production in the year of alleged loss. The same quantity loss
thresholds used under section 815 of the 2001 Appropriations Act are
applicable. The 2007 Emergency Supplemental provides that total
assistance provided to a participant for a crop year under the Crop
Disaster Program (CDP), together with any amount provided to the same
participant for the same crop made pursuant to any crop insurance
program or the Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program (NAP), plus
the value of the crop that was not lost, may not exceed 95 percent of
the value of the crop in the absence of a loss, as estimated by FSA.
By statute, a participant seeking financial assistance under this
rule will not be eligible for payments if the participant did not
obtain a Federal Crop Insurance Plan or NAP coverage for the crop
incurring loss for the year in which assistance is requested.
Circumstances why a participant either chose to not have such insurance
or NAP coverage are irrelevant to determination of CDP eligibility.
Those circumstances, accordingly, will not be considered under any of
the relief provisions outlined in 7 CFR part 718.
The CDP objectives are as follows:
Use crop insurance principles to the extent practicable.
Establish an equitable distribution of payments based on
the losses of each producer.
Treat producers with similar losses similarly.
Distribute payments according to the geographic location
of the losses.
Ensure that all producers are notified of program
benefits.
Eligible crops include insured crops and NAP covered crops. Insured
crops
[[Page 72865]]
are crops insured by a Federally-subsidized crop insurance policy. NAP
covered crops are crops for which crop insurance is not available, but
are covered by NAP. Under the previous CDP, crop insurance and NAP
coverage were not required for eligibility.
For quality losses, producers are eligible for assistance for
quality losses of at least 25-percent. All crops are eligible for
quality losses except for value loss crops \1\ and some specialty
crops.\2\ The total affected production for a quality loss payment
cannot exceed the expected production. Payments will be made only on 65
percent of the quantity of production.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Value loss crops ineligible for quality losses include
aquaculture, floriculture, mushrooms, ginseng root, ornamental
nursery, and Christmas trees.
\2\ Specialty crops ineligible for quality losses include honey,
maple sap, and turf grass sod.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Payment rates will be based on five broad loss levels, determined
as follows:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The following
For estimated percentages of
Level quality loss ranges established
(percentage) prices \1\ are
used:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
I............................... 25.0 and 34.9...... 30
II.............................. 35.0 and 54.9...... 45
III............................. 55.0 and 74.9...... 65
IV.............................. 75.0 and 94.9...... 85
V............................... 95.0 and 100.0..... 95
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Established prices are marketing contract prices, catastrophic risk
protection, Actual Production History prices, or 5-year average
prices.
For marketing contracts and quality loss assistance, under the CDP,
production of a commodity sold pursuant to a marketing contract is
eligible for quality loss assistance based on one or more prices
specified in the contracts. When there are multiple marketing contract
prices, a weighted average will be calculated to determine a single
blended price. Production of a commodity not sold through marketing
contracts is eligible for quality loss assistance based on the average
local market discounts for reduced quality, as determined by the
appropriate State committee of FSA.
For insurable crops, only producers who purchased crop insurance
for the affected crop during the applicable disaster year are eligible
to receive crop disaster payments. For NAP covered crops, producers
must have participated in NAP for the crop for which they are seeking
benefits in the disaster year.
Livestock Indemnity Program
Section 9002(b) of the 2007 Emergency Supplemental appropriates to
the Secretary such sums as necessary to remain available until expended
to provide assistance to livestock producers for certain livestock
deaths directly resulting from natural disasters that occurred between
January 1, 2005, and February 28, 2007, that is after January 1, 2005,
but before February 28, 2007, including losses due to blizzards that
started in 2006 and continued into January 2007. To be eligible for
assistance under the 2005-2007 Livestock Indemnity Program (LIP), the
participant must have suffered livestock loss due to an eligible
disaster event occurring after January 1, 2005, but before February 28,
2007, and the livestock must have been physically located in a county
or contiguous county having a natural disaster designated by the
President or declared by the Secretary after January 1, 2005, but
before February 28, 2007. For timely Presidential declarations that do
not cover agricultural physical loss, the subject counties may still be
eligible if the county was the subject of an approved Administrator's
Physical Loss Notice (APLN) when the APLN applies to a natural disaster
designated by the President. Livestock producers incurring livestock
losses in more than one of the 2005, 2006, and 2007 calendar years may
only select one year in which to receive assistance.
The 2005-2007 LIP is administered by FSA and funds have been
appropriated to FSA for such purpose. Therefore, it is implemented
through regulations in 7 CFR part 760. We are establishing a new
subpart J for the 2005-2007 LIP regulations.
The 2005-2007 LIP will provide assistance to eligible producers
(owners and contract growers) of eligible livestock located in a total
of 2,944 counties. These 2,944 counties refer to the total number of
declared counties, regardless of the number of times for which they
received disaster declarations after January 1, 2005, but before
February 28, 2007. The regulations will specify what makes a county
eligible. The list of eligible counties is on the FSA Web site.
The natural disasters covered by the 2005-2007 LIP include various
hurricanes, extreme heat, wildfires, and blizzards that occurred after
January 1, 2005, but before February 28, 2007.
Payments under the 2005-2007 LIP are based on the type, kind, and
weight of eligible livestock. The amount of payment that a person may
receive under the 2005-2007 LIP cannot exceed $80,000.
Eligible livestock includes certain beef cattle, dairy cattle,
buffalo, beefalo, equine, sheep, goats, deer, swine, poultry, reindeer,
catfish, and crawfish that died as a direct result of an eligible
disaster and on the day they perished were all of the following:
Owned by an eligible owner or in the possession of an
eligible contract grower;
Maintained for commercial use as part of a farming
operation of the participant on the day they died; and
Died in an eligible county as a direct result of an
eligible disaster event during the disaster period.
Participants must provide verifiable documentation of livestock
deaths claimed.
Payments will be made to contract growers to the extent of their
contractual risk, as determined by FSA. Any compensation received by
the contract grower from the contractor for loss of income for the dead
livestock will be deducted from the contract grower's payment.
An eligible producer who received payments for disaster-related
livestock losses from the 2005 hurricanes under earlier LIPs may only
receive payments under the 2005-2007 LIP under the following two
circumstances: (1) A participant who lost livestock to subsequent
disasters in 2006 or 2007, is eligible for payments resulting from the
subsequent disasters, but must elect to declare losses and receive
payments for only one of those two years. (2) A participant with
eligible livestock who received payments for disaster-related livestock
losses from the 2005 hurricanes under an earlier LIP may also elect to
receive payments under the
[[Page 72866]]
2005-2007 LIP, however, the payment will be reduced by the amount
received for the same disaster under an earlier LIP. This second
situation is not expected to produce any payments because payment rates
under earlier programs were higher than payment rates under the 2005-
2007 LIP.
Notice and Comment
These regulations are exempt from the notice and comment
requirements of the Administrative Procedures Act (5 U.S.C. 553) and
the Statement of Policy of the Secretary effective July 24, 1971 (36 FR
13804) relating to notices of proposed rulemaking and public
participation in rulemaking, as specified in section 9005 of the 2007
Emergency Supplemental, which requires that the regulations be
promulgated and administered without regard to those notice and comment
provisions.
Executive Order 12866
This rule has been determined to be economically significant under
Executive Order 12866 and has been reviewed by the Office of Management
and Budget. A Cost-Benefit Analysis (CBA) was completed and is
available from the contact person listed above. The summary of the
anticipated economic impacts for CDP and LIP are described below.
Crops
Total crop disaster payments are expected to range from $1.6
billion to $2.0 billion. The low end of the range is estimated at $1.6
billion reflecting the probability that the more restrictive
eligibility provisions and the reduction in the quality loss threshold
may lower payments. The high end of the range is estimated at $2.0
billion reflecting the probability that the new marketing contract
provisions may increase payments.
The 2005 and 2006 payments are expected to be mainly based on the
2006 crop year because crop losses were more severe in 2006. A large
portion of 2007 payments are expected to be paid to winter wheat and
specialty crop producers affected by freezes. CDP payments for 2007
winter wheat are estimated at $190 million. CDP payments for 2007
oranges are estimated at $7 million. CDP payments for 2007 peaches are
estimated at $6 million. CDP payments for 2007 lemons are estimated at
$2 million.
The past crop disaster programs (2001/2002 and 2003/2004) had very
similar crop disaster payouts, with payments of $2.5 billion for each
program. Qualitative adjustments to the estimates were necessary
because of program changes. Program changes that are expected to cause
the estimate to be lower include:
Insurable crops that are uninsured are ineligible for crop
disaster payments;
Non-insurable crops not covered, but eligible, through NAP
are ineligible for crop disaster payments; and
Producers that will be compensated for losses of at least
25 percent quality loss.
New provisions that allow production of a commodity sold through
marketing contracts to be eligible for quality loss assistance based on
the prices specified in the contracts are expected to increase
payments.
Livestock
The value of expected claims under the 2005-2007 LIP is $14.4
million. To the extent program payments are ultimately spent on forage
or grain or affect the total supply of available livestock, the impacts
of the 2005-2007 LIP on any sector of the economy, including livestock
feed prices, livestock prices, and consumer prices, are not expected to
be measurable. However, for those participants who have suffered losses
from disasters between January 1, 2005, and February 28, 2007, and
qualify for payments under the 2005-2007 LIP, their farm income losses
will be somewhat offset or reduced by these payments, and they and
their local communities may benefit accordingly.
Most claims for losses are expected to result from conditions of
extreme heat in California and blizzards that affected Colorado,
western Kansas, two counties in northern New Mexico, and one county in
Oklahoma. There are expected to be some producers in the Gulf Coast
states who may not have applied for payments under an earlier LIP, or
who had losses from other disasters for which the county in which they
produced the livestock was declared a primary disaster county or an
adjoining county. For example, several hundred cattle are reported to
have died in Texas as a result of wildfires. Such claims are not
expected to be significant, however. Other claims may also exist among
other counties in the United States, but these are also expected to be
quite small and no information exists upon which to make estimates.
The impact of the 2005-2007 LIP is not expected to be significant
in terms of aggregate change in social welfare. FSA initially estimates
expected payments totaling $14.4 million for the 2005-2007 LIP, the sum
of approximately $13.4 million for land-based losses and $1 million for
payments to catfish and crawfish producers. The actual number of
eligible owners, contract growers, and livestock and program costs will
become more certain toward the end of signup for the program. Actual
claims are expected to be less than the estimated $14.4 million because
some persons may exceed the $80,000 payment limit, or their adjusted
gross incomes may exceed $2.5 million.
The $14.4 million is $3.3 million less than the $17.7 million paid
out under the 2005 LIP. In comparison, the 2005 LIP used a 30 percent
payout rate, compared to the 26 percent rate used in the 2005-2007 LIP,
and paid for hurricane-related losses located in States affected by
those hurricanes. If the 2005-2007 LIP payout rate was also 30 percent,
the payout amount would be $16.6 million (0.3*($14.4/.26) = $16.6), or
over $1 million less than the 2005 payout amount.
The above magnitude of difference appears reasonable in spite of
the fact that the 2005-2007 LIP is national in scope, and covers all
disasters between January 1, 2005, and February 28, 2007, including
catfish and crawfish, while the 2005 LIP only covered 9 states in the
Southeast and Gulf Coast region. First, nearly all payments under the
2005-2007 LIP are expected to cover two specific disasters: losses of
an estimated 16,000 dairy cattle from extreme heat in California and an
estimated 20,000 beef cattle lost from blizzards in the winter of 2006-
2007 that affected Colorado, Kansas, and New Mexico. Second,
participants who received payments under the 2005 LIP are not expected
to apply for payments under the 2005-2007 LIP because their payment
rates were higher under the earlier program and they cannot receive
payments under both programs without returning monies received under
the 2005 LIP.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
This rule is not subject to the Regulatory Flexibility Act since
the Farm Service Agency is not required to publish a notice of proposed
rulemaking for this rule.
Environmental Review
The environmental impacts of this rule have been considered in a
manner consistent with the provisions of the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA), 42 U.S.C. 4321-4347, the regulations of the Council
on Environmental Quality (40 CFR parts 1500-1508), and the FSA
regulations for compliance with NEPA (7 CFR part 799). The following
final rule was determined to be Categorically Excluded because it is
considered a ministerial action solely involving the transfer of
[[Page 72867]]
funds to offset disaster related losses with no site-specific or
ground-disturbing actions occurring as a requirement or an immediate
result of program implementation. Therefore, no environmental
assessment or environmental impact statement will be completed for this
final rule.
Executive Order 12372
This program is not subject to Executive Order 12372, which
requires consultation with State and local officials. See the notice
related to 7 CFR part 3015, subpart V, published in the Federal
Register on June 24, 1983 (48 FR 29115).
Executive Order 12612
This rule does not have Federalism implications that warrant the
preparation of a Federalism Assessment. This rule will not have a
substantial direct effect on States or their political subdivisions or
on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the various
levels of government.
Executive Order 12988
This rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12988. This final
rule is not retroactive and it does not preempt State or local laws,
regulations, or policies unless they present an irreconcilable conflict
with this rule. Before any judicial action may be brought regarding the
provisions of this rule the administrative appeal provisions of 7 CFR
parts 11 and 780 must be exhausted.
Unfunded Mandates
This rule contains no Federal mandates under the regulatory
provisions of Title II of the UMRA for State, local, and tribal
government or the private sector. Therefore, this rule is not subject
to the requirements of sections 202 and 205 of the UMRA.
Paperwork Reduction Act
These regulations are exempt from the requirements of the Paperwork
Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. Chapter 35), as specified in section
9005(b)(3) of the 2007 Emergency Supplemental, which provides that
these regulations, which are necessary to implement title IX of the
2007 Emergency Supplemental, be promulgated and administered without
regard to the Paperwork Reduction Act.
E-Government Act Compliance
CCC is committed to complying with the E-Government Act, to promote
the use of the Internet and other information technologies to provide
increased opportunities for citizen access to Government information
and services, and for other purposes.
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996
This rule has been determined to be Major under the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, (Pub. L. 104-121)
(SBREFA). SBREFA normally requires that an agency delay the effective
date of a major rule for 60 days from the date of publication to allow
for Congressional review. Section 808 of SBREFA allows an agency to
make a major regulation effective immediately if the agency finds there
is good cause to do so. Consistent with the provisions of 9005(c) of
the 2007 Emergency Supplemental, FSA finds that it would be contrary to
the public interest to delay implementation of this rule because it
would significantly delay assistance to the many people affected by the
disasters addressed by this rule. Therefore, this rule is effective
immediately.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 760
Dairy products, Indemnity payments, Pesticides and pests, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
0
For the reasons explained above, 7 CFR part 760 is amended as follows:
PART 760--INDEMNITY PAYMENT PROGRAMS
0
1. Revise the authority citation for 7 CFR part 760 to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 612c; Pub. L. 106-387, 114 Stat. 1549; Pub.
L. 107-76, 115 Stat. 704; Title III, Pub. L. 109-234, 120 Stat. 474;
16 U.S.C. 3801, note; and Title IX, Pub. L. 110-28.
0
2. Amend 7 CFR part 760 by adding new subparts I and J to read as
follows:
Subpart I--2005-2007 Crop Disaster Program
Sec.
760.800 Applicability.
760.801 Administration.
760.802 Definitions.
760.803 Eligibility.
760.804 Time and method of application.
760.805 Limitations on payments and other benefits.
760.806 Crop eligibility requirements.
760.807 Miscellaneous provisions.
760.808 General provisions.
760.809 Eligible damaging conditions.
760.810 Qualifying 2005, 2006, or 2007 quantity crop losses.
760.811 Rates and yields; calculating payments.
760.812 Production losses; participant responsibility.
760.813 Determination of production.
760.814 Calculation of acreage for crop losses other than prevented
planted.
760.815 Calculation of prevented planted acreage.
760.816 Value loss crops.
760.817 Quality losses for 2005, 2006, and 2007 crops.
760.818 Marketing contracts.
760.819 Misrepresentation, scheme, or device.
760.820 Offsets, assignments, and debt settlement.
760.821 Compliance with highly erodible land and wetland
conservation.
Subpart J--2005-2007 Livestock Indemnity Program
760.900 Administration.
760.901 Applicability.
760.902 Eligible counties and disaster periods.
760.903 Definitions.
760.904 Limitations on payments and other benefits.
760.905 Eligible owners and contract growers.
760.906 Eligible livestock.
760.907 Application process.
760.908 Deceased individuals or dissolved entities.
760.909 Payment calculation.
760.910 Appeals.
760.911 Offsets, assignments, and debt settlement.
760.912 Records and inspections.
760.913 Refunds; joint and several liability.
Subpart I--2005-2007 Crop Disaster Program
Sec. 760.800 Applicability.
This part sets forth the terms and conditions for the 2005-2007
Crop Disaster Program (2005-2007 CDP). CDP makes emergency financial
assistance available to producers who have incurred crop losses in
quantity or quality for eligible 2005, 2006, or 2007 crop years due to
disasters as determined by the Secretary under provisions of Title IX
of the U.S. Troop Readiness, Veterans' Care, Katrina Recovery, and Iraq
Accountability Appropriations Act, 2007 (Pub. L. 110-28). However, to
be eligible for assistance, the crop subject to the loss must have been
planted or existed before February 28, 2007, or, in the case of
prevented planting, would have been planted before February 28, 2007.
Sec. 760.801 Administration.
(a) The program will be administered under the general supervision
of the Deputy Administrator for Farm Programs and will be carried out
in the field by FSA State and county committees.
(b) State and county committees and representatives do not have the
authority to modify or waive any of the provisions of this part.
(c) The State committee will take any action required by this part
that has not been taken by a county committee. The State committee will
also:
[[Page 72868]]
(1) Correct, or require a county committee to correct, any action
taken by that FSA county committee that is not in accordance with this
part; and
(2) Require a county committee to withhold taking or reverse any
action that is not in accordance with this part.
(d) No provision or delegation to a State or county committee will
prevent the Deputy Administrator for Farm Programs from determining any
question arising under the program or from reversing or modifying any
determination made by a State or county committee.
(e) The Deputy Administrator for Farm Programs may authorize State
and county committees to waive or modify non-statutory deadlines or
other program requirements in cases where lateness or failure to meet
such does not adversely affect the operation of the program.
Sec. 760.802 Definitions.
The following definitions apply to this part. The definitions in
parts 718 and 1400 of this title also apply, except where they conflict
with the definitions in this section.
Actual production means the total quantity of the crop appraised,
harvested, or assigned, as determined by the FSA State or county
committee in accordance with instructions issued by the Deputy
Administrator for Farm Programs.
Administrative fee means an amount the producer must pay for
Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program (NAP) enrollment for non-
insurable crops.
Affected production means, with respect to quality losses, the
harvested production of an eligible crop that has a documented quality
reduction of 25 percent or more on the verifiable production record.
Appraised production means production determined by FSA, or a
company reinsured by the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation (FCIC),
that was unharvested but was determined to reflect the crop's yield
potential at the time of appraisal.
Approved yield means the amount of production per acre, computed in
accordance with FCIC's Actual Production History (APH) Program at part
400, subpart G of this title or, for crops not included under part 400,
subpart G of this title, the yield used to determine the guarantee. For
crops covered under NAP, the approved yield is established according to
part 1437 of this title. Only the approved yields based on production
evidence submitted to FSA prior to May 25, 2007 will be used for
purposes of the 2005-2007 CDP.
Aquaculture means a value loss crop for the reproduction and
rearing of aquatic species in controlled or selected environments
including, but not limited to, ocean ranching, except private ocean
ranching of Pacific salmon for profit in those States where such
ranching is prohibited by law.
Aquaculture facility means any land or structure including, but not
limited to, a laboratory, concrete pond, hatchery, rearing pond,
raceway, pen, incubator, or other equipment used in aquaculture.
Aquaculture species means any aquaculture species as defined in
part 1437 of this title.
Average market price means the price or dollar equivalent on an
appropriate basis for an eligible crop established by FSA, or CCC, or
RMA, as applicable, for determining payment amounts. Such price will be
based on historical data of the harvest basis excluding transportation,
storage, processing, packing, marketing, or other post-harvesting
expenses. Average market prices are generally applicable to all
similarly situated participants and are not established in response to
individual participants. Accordingly, the established average market
prices are not appealable under parts 11 or 780 of this title.
Catastrophic risk protection means the minimum level of coverage
offered by FCIC.
CCC means the Commodity Credit Corporation.
Controlled environment means, with respect to those crops for which
a controlled environment is expected to be provided, including but not
limited to ornamental nursery, aquaculture (including ornamental fish),
and floriculture, an environment in which everything that can
practicably be controlled with structures, facilities, growing media
(including, but not limited to, water, soil, or nutrients) by the
producer, is in fact controlled by the producer.
Crop insurance means an insurance policy reinsured by FCIC under
the provisions of the Federal Crop Insurance Act, as amended.
Crop year means:
(1) For insured crops, the crop year as defined according to the
applicable crop insurance policy;
(2) For NAP covered crops, as provided in part 1437 of this title.
Damaging weather means drought, excessive moisture, hail, freeze,
tornado, hurricane, typhoon, excessive wind, excessive heat, weather-
related saltwater intrusion, weather-related irrigation water
rationing, and earthquake and volcanic eruptions, or any combination.
It also includes a related condition that occurs as a result of the
damaging weather and exacerbates the condition of the crop, such as
crop disease, and insect infestation.
Deputy Administrator means the Deputy Administrator for Farm
Programs, Farm Service Agency, U.S. Department of Agriculture or
designee.
Eligible crop means a crop insured by FCIC as defined in part 400
of this title, or included under NAP as defined under part 1437 of this
title for which insurance or NAP coverage was obtained timely for the
year which CDP benefits are sought.
End use means the purpose for which the harvested crop is used,
such as grain, hay, or seed.
Expected production means, for an agricultural unit, the historic
yield multiplied by the number of planted or prevented acres of the
crop for the unit.
FCIC means the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation, a wholly owned
Government Corporation within USDA.
Final planting date means the latest date, established by the Risk
Management Agency (RMA) for insured crops, by which the crop must
initially be planted in order to be insured for the full production
guarantee or amount of insurance per acre. For NAP covered crops, the
final planting date is as provided in part 1437 of this title.
Flood prevention means:
(1) For aquaculture species, placing the aquaculture facility in an
area not prone to flood;
(2) In the case of raceways, devices or structures designed for the
control of water level; and
(3) With respect to nursery crops, placing containerized stock in a
raised area above expected flood level and providing draining
facilities, such as drainage ditches or tile, gravel, cinder, or sand
base.
Good nursery growing practices means utilizing flood prevention,
growing media, fertilization to obtain expected production results,
irrigation, insect and disease control, weed, rodent and wildlife
control, and over winterization storage facilities.
Ground water means aqueous supply existing in an aquifer subsurface
that is brought to the surface and made available for irrigation by
mechanical means such as by pumps and irrigation wells.
Growing media means:
(1) For aquaculture species, media that provides nutrients
necessary for the production of the aquaculture species and protects
the aquaculture species from harmful species or chemicals or
[[Page 72869]]
(2) For nursery crops, a well-drained media with a minimum 20
percent air pore space and pH adjustment for the type of plant produced
designed to prevent ``root rot.''
Harvested means:
(1) For insured crops, harvested as defined according to the
applicable crop insurance policy;
(2) For NAP covered single harvest crops, that a crop has been
removed from the field, either by hand or mechanically, or by grazing
of livestock;
(3) For NAP covered crops with potential multiple harvests in 1
year or harvested over multiple years, that the producer has, by hand
or mechanically, removed at least one mature crop from the field during
the crop year;
(4) For mechanically-harvested NAP covered crops, that the crop has
been removed from the field and placed in a truck or other conveyance,
except hay is considered harvested when in the bale, whether removed
from the field or not. Grazed land will not be considered harvested for
the purpose of determining an unharvested or prevented planting payment
factor. A crop that is intended for mechanical harvest, but
subsequently grazed and not mechanically harvested, will have an
unharvested factor applied.
Historic yield means, for a unit, the higher of the county average
yield or the participant's approved yield.
(1) An insured participant's yield will be the higher of the county
average yield listed or the approved federal crop insurance APH, for
the disaster year.
(2) NAP participant's yield will be the higher of the county
average or approved NAP APH for the disaster year.
Insurable crop means an agricultural crop (excluding livestock) for
which the producer on a farm is eligible to obtain a policy or plan of
insurance under the Federal Crop Insurance Act (7 U.S.C. 1501-1524).
Marketing contract means a legally binding written contract between
a purchaser and grower for the purpose of marketing a crop.
Market value means:
(1) The price(s) designated in the marketing contract; or
(2) If not designated in a marketing contract, the rate established
for quantity payments under Sec. 760.811.
Maximum average loss level means the maximum average level of crop
loss to be attributed to a participant without acceptable production
records (verifiable or reliable). Loss levels are expressed in either a
percent of loss or yield per acre, and are intended to reflect the
amount of production that a participant would have been expected to
make if not for the eligible disaster conditions in the area or county,
as determined by the county committee in accordance with instructions
issued by the Deputy Administrator.
Multi-use crop means a crop intended for more than one end use
during the calendar year such as grass harvested for seed, hay, and
grazing.
Multiple cropping means the planting of two or more different crops
on the same acreage for harvest within the same crop year.
Multiple planting means the planting for harvest of the same crop
in more than one planting period in a crop year on different acreage.
NASS means the National Agricultural Statistics Service.
Net crop insurance indemnity means the indemnity minus the producer
paid premium.
NAP covered means a crop for which the participants obtained
assistance under section 196 of the Federal Agriculture Improvement and
Reform Act of 1996 (7 U.S.C. 7333).
Normal mortality means the percentage of dead aquaculture species
that would normally occur during the crop year.
Person means person as defined in part 1400 of this title, and all
rules with respect to the determination of a person found in that part
are applicable to this part. However, the determinations made in this
part in accordance with part 1400, subpart B, Person Determinations, of
this title will also take into account any affiliation with any entity
in which an individual or entity has an interest, regardless of whether
or not such entities are considered to be actively engaged in farming.
Planted acreage means land in which seed, plants, or trees have
been placed, appropriate for the crop and planting method, at a correct
depth, into a seedbed that has been properly prepared for the planting
method and production practice normal to the USDA plant hardiness zone
as determined by the county committee.
Prevented planting means the inability to plant an eligible crop
with proper equipment during the planting period as a result of an
eligible cause of loss, as determined by FSA.
Production means quantity of the crop or commodity produced
expressed in a specific unit of measure including, but not limited to,
bushels or pounds.
Rate means price per unit of the crop or commodity.
Recording county means, for a producer with farming interests in
only one county, the FSA county office in which the producer's farm is
administratively located or, for a producer with farming interests that
are administratively located in more than one county, the FSA county
office designated by FSA to control the payments received by the
producer.
Related condition means, with respect to a disaster, a condition
that causes deterioration of a crop, such as insect infestation, plant
disease, or aflatoxin, that is accelerated or exacerbated as a result
of damaging weather, as determined in accordance with instructions
issued by the Deputy Administrator.
Reliable production records means evidence provided by the
participant that is used to substantiate the amount of production
reported when verifiable records are not available, including copies of
receipts, ledgers of income, income statements of deposit slips,
register tapes, invoices for custom harvesting, and records to verify
production costs, contemporaneous measurements, truck scale tickets,
and contemporaneous diaries that are determined acceptable by the
county committee.
Repeat crop means, with respect to production, a commodity that is
planted or prevented from being planted in more than one planting
period on the same acreage in the same crop year.
RMA means the Risk Management Agency.
Salvage value means the dollar amount or equivalent for the
quantity of the commodity that cannot be marketed or sold in any
recognized market for the crop.
Secondary use means the harvesting of a crop for a use other than
the intended use.
Secondary use value means the value determined by multiplying the
quantity of secondary use times the FSA or CCC-established price for
that use.
State committee means the FSA State committee.
Surface irrigation water means aqueous supply anticipated for
irrigation of agricultural crops absent an eligible disaster condition
impacting either the aquifer or watershed. Surface irrigation water may
result from feral sources or from irrigation districts.
Tropical crops has the meaning assigned in part 1437 of this title.
Tropical region has the meaning assigned in part 1437 of this
title.
Unharvested factor means a percentage established for a crop and
applied in a payment formula to reduce the payment for reduced expenses
incurred because commercial harvest was not performed. Unharvested
factors are generally applicable to all similarly situated participants
and are not established in response to individual
[[Page 72870]]
participants. Accordingly established unharvested factors are not
appealable under parts 11 and 780 of this title.
Unit means, unless otherwise determined by the Deputy
Administrator, basic unit as defined in part 457 of this title that,
for ornamental nursery production, includes all eligible plant species
and sizes.
Unit of measure means:
(1) For all insured crops, the FCIC-established unit of measure;
(2) For all NAP covered crops, the established unit of measure, if
available, used for the 2005, 2006, or 2007 NAP price and yield;
(3) For aquaculture species, a standard unit of measure such as
gallons, pounds, inches, or pieces, established by the State committee
for all aquaculture species or varieties;
(4) For turfgrass sod, a square yard;
(5) For maple sap, a gallon;
(6) For honey, pounds; and
(7) For all other crops, the smallest unit of measure that lends
itself to the greatest level of accuracy with minimal use of fractions,
as determined by the State committee.
United States means all 50 States of the United States, the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands of the United States,
and to the extent the Deputy Administrator determines it to be feasible
and appropriate, Guam, American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the Northern
Mariana Islands, and the former Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands,
which include Palau, Federated States of Micronesia, and the Marshall
Islands.
USDA means the United States Department of Agriculture.
USDA Plant Hardiness Zone means 11 regions or planting zones as
defined by a 10 degree Fahrenheit difference in the average annual
minimum temperature.
Value loss crop has the meaning assigned in part 1437 of this
title.
Verifiable production record means:
(1) For quantity losses, evidence that is used to substantiate the
amount of production reported and that can be verified by FSA through
an independent source; or
(2) For quality losses, evidence that is used to substantiate the
amount of production reported and that can be verified by FSA through
an independent source including determined quality factors and the
specific quantity covered by those factors.
Yield means unit of production, measured in bushels, pounds, or
other unit of measure, per area of consideration, usually measured in
acres.
Sec. 760.803 Eligibility.
(a) Participants will be eligible to receive disaster benefits
under this part only if they incurred qualifying quantity or quality
losses for the 2005, 2006, or 2007 crops, as further specified in this
part, as a result of damaging weather or any related condition.
Participants may not receive benefits with respect to volunteer stands
of crops.
(b) Payments may be made for losses suffered by an eligible
participant who, at the time of application, is a deceased individual
or is a dissolved entity if a representative, who currently has
authority to enter into a contract for the participant, signs the 2005,
2006, or 2007 Crop Disaster Program application. Participants must
provide proof of the authority to sign legal documents for the deceased
individual or dissolved entity. If a participant is now a dissolved
general partnership or joint venture, all members of the general
partnership or joint venture at the time of dissolution or their duly
authorized representatives must sign the application for payment.
(c) As a condition to receive benefits under this part, the
Participant must have been in compliance with the Highly Erodible Land
Conservation and Wetland Conservation provisions of part 12 of this
title for the 2005, 2006, or 2007 crop year, as applicable, and must
not otherwise be precluded from receiving benefits under parts 12 or
1400 of this title or any law.
Sec. 760.804 Time and method of application.
(a) The 2005, 2006, 2007 Crop Disaster Program application must be
submitted on a completed FSA-840, or such other form designated for
such application purpose by FSA, in the FSA county office in the
participant's control county office before the close of business on a
date that will be announced by the Deputy Administrator.
(b) Once signed by a participant, the application for benefits is
considered to contain information and certifications of and pertaining
to the participant regardless of who entered the information on the
application.
(c) The participant requesting benefits under this program
certifies the accuracy and truthfulness of the information provided in
the application as well as any documentation filed with or in support
of the application. All information is subject to verification by FSA.
For example, as specified in Sec. 760.818(f), the participant may be
required to provide documentation to substantiate and validate quality
standards and marketing contract prices. Refusal to allow FSA or any
agency of the Department of Agriculture to verify any information
provided will result in the participant's forfeiting eligibility under
this program. Furnishing required information is voluntary; however
without it, FSA is under no obligation to act on the application or
approve benefits. Providing a false certification to the government is
punishable by imprisonment, fines, and other penalties.
(d) FSA may require the participant to submit any additional
information it deems necessary to implement or determine any
eligibility provision of this part. For example, as specified in Sec.
760.818(f), the participant may be required to provide documentation to
substantiate and validate quality standards and marketing contract
prices.
(e) The application submitted in accordance with paragraph (a) of
this section is not considered valid and complete for issuance of
payment under this part unless FSA determines all the applicable
eligibility provisions have been satisfied and the participant has
submitted all of following completed forms:
(1) If Item 16 on FSA-840 is answered ``YES,'' FSA-840M, Crop
Disaster Program for Multiple Crop--Same Acreage Certification;
(2) CCC-502, Farm Operating Plan for Payment Eligibility;
(3) CCC-526, Payment Eligibility Average Adjusted Gross Income
Certification;
(4) AD-1026, Highly Erodible Land Conservation (HELC) and Wetland
Conservation Certification; and
(5) FSA-578, Report of Acreage.
(f) Application approval and payment by FSA does not relieve a
participant from having to submit any form required, but not filed,
according to paragraph (e) of this section.
Sec. 760.805 Limitations on payments and other benefits.
(a) A participant may receive benefits for crop losses for only one
of the 2005, 2006, or 2007 crop years as specified under this part.
(b) Payments will not be made under this part for grazing losses.
(c) Payments determined to be issued are considered due and payable
not later than 60 days after a participant's application is completed
with all information necessary for FSA to determine producer
eligibility for benefits.
(d) FSA may divide and classify crops based on loss susceptibility,
yield, and other factors.
(e) No person, as defined by part 1400 subpart B of this title, may
receive more than a total of $80,000 in disaster benefits under this
part. In applying the
[[Page 72871]]
$80,000 per person payment limitation, regardless of whether 2005,
2006, or 2007 crop year benefits are at issue or sought, the most
restrictive ``person'' determination for the participant in the years
2005, 2006, and 2007, will be used to limit benefits.
(f) No participant may receive disaster benefits under this part in
an amount that exceeds 95 percent of the value of the expected
production for the relevant period as determined by FSA. Accordingly,
the sum of the value of the crop not lost, if any; the disaster payment
received under this part; and any crop insurance payment or payments
received under the NAP for losses to the same crop, cannot exceed 95
percent of what the crop's value would have been if there had been no
loss.
(g) An individual or entity whose adjusted gross income is in
excess of $2.5 million, as defined by and determined under part 1400
subpart G of this title, is not eligible to receive disaster benefits
under this part.
(h) Any participant in a county eligible for either of the
following programs must complete a duplicate benefits certification. If
the participant received a payment authorized by either of the
following, the amount of that payment will be reduced from the
calculated 2005-2007 CDP payment:
(1) The Hurricane Indemnity Program (subpart B of this part);
(2) The Hurricane Disaster Programs (subparts D, E, F, and G of
part 1416 of this title);
(3) The 2005 Louisiana Sugarcane Hurricane Disaster Assistance
Program; or
(4) The 2005 Crop Florida Sugarcane Disaster Program.
Sec. 760.806 Crop eligibility requirements.
(a) A participant on a farm is eligible for assistance under this
section with respect to losses to an insurable commodity or NAP if the
participant:
(1) In the case of an insurable commodity, obtained a policy or
plan of insurance under the Federal Crop Insurance Act for the crop
incurring the losses; or
(2) In the case of a NAP covered crop, filed the required paperwork
and paid the administrative fee by the applicable filing deadline, for
the noninsurable commodity under section 196 of the Federal Agriculture
Improvement and Reform Act of 1996 for the crop incurring the losses.
(b) The reasons a participant either elected not to have coverage
or did not have coverage mentioned in paragraphs (a)(1) or (2) of this
section are not relevant to the determination of the participant's
ineligibility under this section. In addition, such reasons for not
having crop insurance coverage have no bearing for consideration under
part 718, subpart D of this chapter.
Sec. 760.807 Miscellaneous provisions.
(a) A person is not eligible to receive disaster assistance under
this part if it is determined by FSA that the person has:
(1) Adopted any scheme or other device that tends to defeat the
purpose of this part;
(2) Made any fraudulent representation;
(3) Misrepresented any fact affecting a program determination;
(4) Is ineligible under Sec. 1400.5 of this title; or
(5) Does not have entitlement to an ownership share of the crop.
(i) Growers growing eligible crops under contract for crop owners
are not eligible unless the grower can be determined to have a share of
the crop.
(ii) Any verbal or written contract that precludes the grower from
having an ownership share renders the grower ineligible for benefits
under this part.
(b) A person ineligible under Sec. 1437.15(c) of this title for
any year is likewise ineligible for benefits under this part for that
year or years.
(c) A person ineligible under Sec. 400.458 of this title for any
year is likewise ineligible for benefits under this part for that year
or years.
(d) All persons with a financial interest in the operation
receiving benefits under this part are jointly and severally liable for
any refund, including related charges, which is determined to be due
FSA for any reason.
(e) In the event that any request for assistance or payment under
this part resulted from erroneous information or a miscalculation, the
assistance or payment will be recalculated and any excess refunded to
FSA with interest to be calculated from the date of the disbursement to
the producer.
(f) The liability of anyone for any penalty or sanction under or in
connection with this part, or for any refund to FSA or related charge
is in addition to any other liability of such person under any civil or
criminal fraud statute or any other provision of law including, but not
limited to: 18 U.S.C. 286, 287, 371, 641, 651, 1001, and 1014; 15
U.S.C. 714; and 31 U.S.C. 3729.
(g) The regulations in parts 11 and 780 of this title apply to
determinations under this part.
(h) Any payment to any person will be made without regard to
questions of title under State law and without regard to any claim or
lien against the crop, or its proceeds.
(i) For the purposes of the effect of lien on eligibility for
Federal programs (28 U.S.C. 3201(e)), FSA waives the restriction on
receipt of funds or benefits under this program but only as to
beneficiaries who, as a condition of such waiver, agree to apply the
benefits received under this part to reduce the amount of the judgment
lien.
(j) Under this program, participants are either eligible or
ineligible. Participants in general, do not render performance or need
to comply. They either suffered eligible losses or they did not.
Accordingly, the provisions of Sec. 718.304 of this chapter do not
apply to this part.
Sec. 760.808 General provisions.
(a) For calculations of loss, the participant's existing unit
structure will be used as the basis for the calculation established in
accordance with:
(1) For insured crops, part 457 of this title; or
(2) For NAP covered crops, part 1437 of this title.
(b) County average yield for loss calculations will be the average
of the 2001 through 2005 official county yields established by FSA,
excluding the years with the highest and lowest yields, respectively.
(c) County committees will assign production or reduce the historic
yield when the county committee determines:
(1) An acceptable appraisal or record of harvested production does
not exist;
(2) The loss is due to an ineligible cause of loss or practices,
soil type, climate, or other environmental factors that cause lower
yields than those upon which the historic yield is based;
(3) The participant has a contract providing a guaranteed payment
for all or a portion of the crop; or
(4) The crop was planted beyond the normal planting period for the
crop.
(d) The county committee will establish a maximum average loss
level that reflects the amount of production producers would have
produced if not for the eligible damaging weather or related conditions
in the area or county for the same crop. The maximum average loss level
for the county will be expressed as either a percent of loss or yield
per acre. The maximum average loss level will apply when:
(1) Unharvested acreage has not been appraised by FSA, or a company
reinsured by FCIC; or
(2) Acceptable production records for harvested acres are not
available from any source.
(e) Assignment of production or reduction in yield will apply for
[[Page 72872]]
practices that result in lower yields than those for which the historic
yield is based.
Sec. 760.809 Eligible damaging conditions.
(a) Except as provided in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section,
to be eligible for benefits under this part the loss of the crop, or
reduction in quality, or prevented planting must be due to damaging
weather or related conditions as defined in Sec. 760.802.
(b) Benefits are not available under this part for any losses in
quantity or quality, or prevented planting due to:
(1) Poor farming practices;
(2) Poor management decisions; or
(3) Drifting herbicides.
(c) With the exception of paragraph (d) of this section, in all
cases, the eligible damaging condition must have directly impacted the
specific crop or crop acreage during its planting or growing period.
(d) If FSA has determined that there has been an eligible loss of
surface irrigation water due to drought and such loss of surface
irrigation water impacts eligible crop acreage, FSA may approve
assistance to the extent permitted by section 760.814.
Sec. 760.810 Qualifying 2005, 2006, or 2007 quantity crop losses.
(a) To receive benefits under this part, the county committee must
determine that because of eligible damaging weather or related
condition specifically impacting the crop or crop acreage, the
participant with respect to the 2005, 2006, or 2007 crop:
(1) Was prevented from planting a crop;
(2) Sustained a loss in excess of 35 percent of the expected
production of a crop; or
(3) Sustained a loss in excess of 35 percent of the value for value
loss crops.
(b) Qualifying losses under this part do not include losses:
(1) For the 2007 crop, those acres planted, or in the case of
prevented planting, would have been planted, on or after February 28,
2007;
(2) That are determined by FSA to be the result of poor management
decisions, poor farming practices, or drifting herbicides;
(3) That are the result of the failure of the participant to re-
seed or replant the same crop in the county where it is customary to
re-seed or replant after a loss;
(4) That are not as a result of a damaging weather or a weather
related condition specifically impacting the crop or crop acreage;
(5) To crops not intended for harvest in crop year 2005, 2006, or
2007;
(6) Of by-products resulting from processing or harvesting a crop,
such as cottonseed, peanut shells, wheat, or oat straw;
(7) To home gardens;
(8) That are a result of water contained or released by any
governmental, public, or private dam or reservoir project if an
easement exists on the acreage affected for the containment or release
of the water; or
(9) If losses could be attributed to conditions occurring outside
of the applicable crop year growing season.
(c) Qualifying losses under this part for nursery stock will not
include losses:
(1) For the 2007 crop, that nursery inventory acquired on or after
February 28, 2007;
(2) Caused by a failure of power supply or brownouts;
(3) Caused by the inability to market nursery stock as a result of
lack of compliance with State and local commercial ordinances and laws,
quarantine, boycott, or refusal of a buyer to accept production;
(4) Caused by fire unless directly related to an eligible natural
disaster;
(5) Affecting crops where weeds and other forms of undergrowth in
the vicinity of the nursery stock have not been controlled; or
(6) Caused by the collapse or failure of buildings or structures.
(d) Qualifying losses under this part for honey, where the honey
production by colonies or bees was diminished, will not include losses:
(1) For the 2007 crop, for production from those bees acquired on
or after February 28, 2007;
(2) Where the inability to extract was due to the unavailability of
equipment, the collapse or failure of equipment, or apparatus used in
the honey operation;
(3) Resulting from storage of honey after harvest;
(4) To honey production because of bee feeding;
(5) Caused by the application of chemicals;
(6) Caused by theft, fire, or vandalism;
(7) Caused by the movement of bees by the producer or any other
person; or
(8) Due to disease or pest infestation of the colonies.
(e) Qualifying losses for other value loss crops, except nursery,
will not include losses for the 2007 crop that were acquired on or
after February 28, 2007.
(f) Loss calculations will take into account other conditions and
adjustments provided for in this part.
Sec. 760.811 Rates and yields; calculating payments.
(a)(1) Payments made under this part to a participant for a loss of
quantity on a unit with respect to yield-based crops are determined by
multiplying the average market price times 42 percent, times the loss
of production which exceeds 35 percent of the expected production, as
determined by FSA, of the unit.
(2) Payments made under this part to a participant for a quantity
loss on a unit with respect to value-based crops are determined by
multiplying the payment rate established for the crop by FSA times the
loss of value that exceeds 35 percent of the expected production value,
as determined by FSA, of the unit.
(3) As determined by FSA, additional quality loss payments may be
made using a 25 percent quality loss threshold. The quality loss
threshold is determined according to Sec. 760.817.
(b) Payment rates for the 2005, 2006, or 2007 year crop losses will
be 42 percent of the average market price.
(c) Separate payment rates and yields for the same crop may be
established by the State committee as authorized by the Deputy
Administrator, when there is supporting data from NASS or other sources
approved by FSA that show there is a significant difference in yield or
value based on a distinct and separate end use of the crop. Despite
potential differences in yield or values, separate rates or yields will
not be established for crops with different cultural practices, such as
those grown organically or hydroponically.
(d) Production from all end uses of a multi-use crop or all
secondary uses for multiple market crops will be calculated separately
and summarized together.
(e) Each eligible participant's share of a disaster payment will be
based on the participant's ownership entitlement share of the crop or
crop proceeds, or, if no crop was produced, the share of the crop the
participant would have received if the crop had been produced. If the
participant has no ownership share of the crop, the participant is
ineligible for assistance under this part.
(f) When calculating a payment for a unit loss:
(1) An unharvested payment factor will be applied to crop acreage
planted but not harvested;
(2) A prevented planting factor will be applied to any prevented
planted acreage eligible for payment; and
(3) Unharvested payment factors may be adjusted if costs normally
associated with growing the crop are not incurred.
Sec. 760.812 Production losses; participant responsibility.
(a) Where available and determined accurate by FSA, RMA loss
records will be used for insured crops.
[[Page 72873]]
(b) If RMA loss records are not available, or if the FSA county
committee determines the RMA loss records are inaccurate or incomplete,
or if the FSA county committee makes inquiry, participants are
responsible for:
(1) Retaining or providing, when required, the best verifiable or
reliable production records available for the crop;
(2) Summarizing all the production evidence;
(3) Accounting for the total amount of unit production for the
crop, whether or not records reflect this production;
(4) Providing the information in a manner that can be easily
understood by the county committee; and
(5) Providing supporting documentation if the county committee has
reason to question the damaging weather event or question whether all
production has been accounted for.
(c) In determining production under this section, the participant
must supply verifiable or reliable production records to substantiate
production to the county committee. If the eligible crop was sold or
otherwise disposed of through commercial channels, production records
include: commercial receipts; settlement sheets; warehouse ledger
sheets; load summaries; or appraisal information from a loss adjuster
acceptable to FSA. If the eligible crop was farm-stored, sold, fed to
livestock, or disposed of in means other than commercial channels,
production records for these purposes include: truck scale tickets;
appraisal information from a loss adjuster acceptable to FSA;
contemporaneous diaries; or other documentary evidence, such as
contemporaneous measurements.
(d) Participants must provide all records for any production of a
crop that is grown with an arrangement, agreement, or contract for
guaranteed payment.
Sec. 760.813 Determination of production.
(a) Production under this part includes all harvested production,
unharvested appraised production, and assigned production for the total
planted acreage of the crop on the unit.
(b) The harvested production of eligible crop acreage harvested
more than once in a crop year includes the total harvested production
from all these harvests.
(c) If a crop is appraised and subsequently harvested as the
intended use, the actual harvested production must be taken into
account to determine benefits. FSA will analyze and determine whether a
participant's evidence of actual production represents all that could
or would have been harvested.
(d) For all crops eligible for loan deficiency payments or
marketing assistance loans with an intended use of grain but harvested
as silage, ensilage, cobbage, hay, cracked, rolled, or crimped,
production will be adjusted based on a whole grain equivalent as
established by FSA.
(e) For crops with an established yield and market price for
multiple intended uses, a value will be calculated by FSA with respect
to the intended use or uses for disaster purposes based on historical
production and acreage evidence provided by the participant and FSA
will determine the eligible acres for each use.
(f) For crops sold in a market that is not a recognized market for
the crop with no established county average yield and average market
price, 42 percent of the salvage value received will be deducted from
the disaster payment.
(g) If a participant does not receive compensation based upon the
quantity of the commodity delivered to a purchaser, but has an
agreement or contract for guaranteed payment for production, the
determination of the production will be the greater of the actual
production or the guaranteed payment converted to production as
determined by FSA.
(h) Production that is commingled between units before it was a
matter of record or combination of record and cannot be separated by
using records or other means acceptable to FSA will be prorated to each
respective unit by FSA. Commingled production may be attributed to the
applicable unit, if the participant made the unit production of a
commodity a matter of record before commingling and does any of the
following, as applicable:
(1) Provides copies of verifiable documents showing that production
of the commodity was purchased, acquired, or otherwise obtained from
beyond the unit;
(2) Had the production measured in a manner acceptable to the
county committee; or
(3) Had the current year's production appraised in a manner
acceptable to the county committee.
(i) The county committee will assign production for the unit when
the county committee determines that:
(1) The participant has failed to provide adequate and acceptable
production records;
(2) The loss to the crop is because of a disaster condition not
covered by this part, or circumstances other than natural disaster, and
there has not otherwise been an accounting of this ineligible cause of
loss;
(3) The participant carries out a practice, such as multiple
cropping, that generally results in lower yields than the established
historic yields;
(4) The participant has a contract to receive a guaranteed payment
for all or a portion of the crop;
(5) A crop was late-planted;
(6) Unharvested acreage was not timely appraised; or
(7) Other appropriate causes exist for such assignment as
determined by the Deputy Administrator.
(j) For peanuts, the actual production is all peanuts harvested for
nuts, regardless of their disposition or use, as adjusted for low
quality.
(k) For tobacco, the actual production is the sum of the tobacco:
marketed or available to be marketed; destroyed after harvest; and
produced but unharvested, as determined by an appraisal.
Sec. 760.814 Calculation of acreage for crop losses other than
prevented planted.
(a) Payment acreage of a crop is limited to the lesser of insured
acreage or NAP covered acreage of the crop, as applicable, or actual
acreage of the crop planted for harvest.
(b) In cases where there is a repeat crop or a multiple planted
crop in more than one planting period, or if there is multiple cropped
acreage meeting criteria established in paragraph (c) or (d) of this
section, each of these crops may be considered separate crops if the
county committee determines that all of the following conditions are
met:
(1) Were planted with the intent to harvest;
(2) Were planted within the normal planting period for that crop;
(3) Meet all other eligibility provisions of this part including
good farming practices; and
(4) Could reach maturity if each planting was harvested or would
have been harvested.
(c) In cases where there is multiple-cropped acreage, each crop may
be eligible for disaster assistance separately if both of the following
conditions are met:
(1) The specific crops are approved by the State committee as
eligible multiple-cropping practices in accordance with procedures
approved by the Deputy Administrator and separately meet all
requirements, including insurance or NAP requirements ; and
(2) The farm containing the multiple-cropped acreage has a history
of successful multiple cropping more than one crop on the same acreage
in the same crop year, in the year previous to the disaster, or at
least 2 of the 4 crop
[[Page 72874]]
years immediately preceding the disaster crop year based on timely
filed crop acreage reports.
(d) A participant with multiple-cropped acreage not meeting the
criteria in paragraph (c) of this section may be eligible for disaster
assistance on more than one crop if the participant has verifiable
records establishing a history of carrying out a successful multiple-
cropping practice on the specific crops for which assistance is
requested. All required records acceptable to FSA as determined by the
Deputy Administrator must be provided before payments are issued.
(e) A participant with multiple-cropped acreage not meeting the
criteria in paragraphs (c) or (d) of this section must select the crop
for which assistance will be requested. If more than one participant
has an interest in the multiple cropped acreage, all participants must
agree to the crop designated for payment by the end of the application
period or no payment will be approved for any crop on the multiple-
cropped acreage.
(f) Benefits under this part apply to irrigated crops where, in
cases determined by the Deputy Administrator, acreage was affected by a
lack of surface irrigation water due to drought or contamination of
ground water or surface irrigation water due to saltwater intrusion. In
no case is a loss of ground water, for any reason, an eligible cause of
loss.
Sec. 760.815 Calculation of prevented planted acreage.
(a) When determining losses under this part, prevented planted
acreage will be considered separately from planted acreage of the same
crop.
(b) For insured crops, or NAP covered crops, as applicable,
disaster payments under this part for prevented planted acreage will
not be made unless RMA or FSA, as applicable, documentation indicates
that the eligible participant received a prevented planting payment
under either NAP or the RMA-administered program.
(c) The participant must prove, to the satisfaction of the county
committee, an intent to plant the crop and that such crop could not be
planted because of an eligible disaster. The county committee must be
able to determine the participant was prevented from planting the crop
by an eligible disaster that:
(1) Prevented other producers from planting on acreage with similar
characteristics in the surrounding area;
(2) Occurred after the previous planting period for the crop; and
(3) Unless otherwise approved by the Deputy Administrator, began no
earlier than the planting season for that crop.
(d) Prevented planted disaster benefits under this part do not
apply to:
(1) Acreage not insured or NAP covered;
(2) Any acreage on which a crop other than a cover crop was
harvested, hayed, or grazed during the crop year;
(3) Any acreage for which a cash lease payment is received for the
use of the acreage the same crop year, unless the county committee
determines the lease was for haying and grazing rights only and was not
a lease for use of the land;
(4) Acreage for which the participant or any other person received
a prevented planted payment for any crop for the same acreage,
excluding share arrangements;
(5) Acreage for which the participant cannot provide verifiable
proof to the county committee that inputs such as seed, chemicals, and
fertilizer were available to plant and produce a crop with the
expectation of producing at least a normal yield; and
(6) Any other acreage for which, for whatever reason, there is
cause to question whether the crop could have been planted for a
successful and timely harvest, or for which prevented planting credit
is not allowed under the provisions of this part.
(e) Prevented planting payments are not provided on acreage that
had either a previous or subsequent crop planted in the same crop year
on the acreage, unless the county committee determines that all of the
following conditions are met:
(1) There is an established practice of planting two or more crops
for harvest on the same acreage in the same crop year;
(2) Both crops could have reached maturity if each planting was
harvested or would have been harvested;
(3) Both the initial and subsequent planted crops were planted or
prevented planting within the normal planting period for that crop;
(4) Both the initial and subsequent planted crops meet all other
eligibility provisions of this part including good farming practices;
and
(5) The specific crops meet the eligibility criteria for a separate
crop designation as a repeat or approved multiple cropping practice set
out in Sec. 760.814.
(f)(1) Disaster benefits under this part do not apply to crops
where the prevented planted acreage was affected by a disaster that was
caused by drought unless on the final planting date or the late
planting period for non-irrigated acreage, the area that was prevented
from being planted had insufficient soil moisture for germination of
seed and progress toward crop maturity because of a prolonged period of
dry weather;
(2) Verifiable information collected by sources whose business or
purpose is to record weather conditions, including, but not limited to,
local weather reporting stations of the U.S. National Weather Service.
(g) Prevented planting benefits under this part apply to irrigated
crops where adequate irrigation facilities were in place before the
eligible disaster and the acreage was prevented from being planted due
to a lack of water resulting from drought conditions or contamination
by saltwater intrusion of an irrigation supply resulting from drought
conditions.
(h) For NAP covered crops, prevented planting provisions apply
according to part 718 of this chapter.
(i) Late-filed crop acreage reports for prevented planted acreage
in previous years are not acceptable for CDP purposes.
Sec. 760.816 Value loss crops.
(a) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this part, this section
applies to value loss crops and tropical crops. Unless otherwise
specified, all the eligibility provisions of part 1437 of this title
apply to value loss crops and tropical crops under this part.
(b) For value loss crops, benefits under this part are calculated
based on the loss of value at the time of the damaging weather or
related condition, as determined by FSA.
(c) For tropical crops:
(1) CDP benefits for 2005 are calculated according to general
provisions of part 1437, but not subpart F, of this title.
(2) CDP benefits for 2006 and 2007 are calculated according to part
1437, subpart F of this title.
Sec. 760.817 Quality losses for 2005, 2006, and 2007 crops.
(a) Subject to other provisions of this part, assistance will be
made available to participants determined eligible under this section
for crop quality losses of 25 percent or greater of the value that all
affected production of the crop would have had if the crop had not
suffered a quality loss.
(b) The amount of payment for a quality loss will be equal to 65
percent of the quantity of the crop affected by the quality loss, not
to exceed expected production based on harvested acres, multiplied by
42 percent of the per unit average market value based on percentage of
quality loss for the crop as determined by the Deputy Administrator.
[[Page 72875]]
(c) This section applies to all crops eligible for 2005, 2006, and
2007 crop disaster assistance under this part, with the exceptions of
value loss crops, honey, and maple sap, and applies to crop production
that has a reduced economic value due to the reduction in quality.
(d) Participants may not be compensated under this section to the
extent that such participants have received assistance under other
provisions of this part, attributable in whole or in part to diminished
quality.
Sec. 760.818 Marketing contracts.
(a) A marketing contract must meet all of the conditions outlined
in paragraphs (b), (c), and (d) of this section.
(b) A marketing contract, at a minimum, must meet all of the
following conditions:
(1) Be a legal contract in the State where executed;
(2) Specify the commodity under contract;
(3) Specify crop year;
(4) Be signed by both the participant, or legal representative, and
the purchaser of the specified commodity;
(5) Include a commitment to deliver the contracted quantity;
(6) Include a commitment to purchase the contracted quantity that
meets specified minimum quality standards and other criteria as
specified;
(7) Define a determinable quantity by containing either a:
(i) Specified production quantity or
(ii) A specified acreage for which production quantity can be
calculated;
(8) Define a determinable price by containing either a:
(i) Specified price or
(ii) Method to determine such a price;
(9) Contain a relationship between the price and the quality using
either:
(i) Specified quality standards or
(ii) A method to determine such quality standards from published
third party data; and
(10) Have been executed within 10 days after:
(i) End of insurance period for insured crops or
(ii) Normal harvest date for NAP covered crops as determined by
FSA.
(c) The purchaser of the commodity specified in the marketing
contract must meet at least one of the following:
(1) Be a licensed commodity warehouseman;
(2) Be a business enterprise regularly engaged in the processing of
a commodity, that possesses all licenses and permits for marketing the
commodity required by the State in which it operates, and that
possesses or has contracted for facilities with enough equipment to
accept and process the commodity within a reasonable amount of time
after harvest; or
(3) Is able to physically receive the harvested production.
(d) In order for the commodity specified in the marketing contract
to be considered sold pursuant to the marketing contract, the commodity
must have been produced by the participant in the crop year specified
in the contract, and at least one of the following conditions must be
met:
(1) Commodity was sold under the terms of the contract or
(2) Participant attempted to deliver the commodity to the
purchaser, but the commodity was rejected due to quality factors as
specified in the contract.
(e) The amount of payment for affected production, as determined in
Sec. 760.817(b), sold pursuant to one or more marketing contracts will
take into consideration the marketing contract price as determined by
FSA.
(f) County committees have the authority to require a participant
to provide necessary documentation, which may include, but is not
limited to, previous marketing contracts fulfilled, to substantiate and
validate quality standards in paragraph (b)(9) of this section and
marketing contract price received for the commodity for which crop
quality loss assistance is requested. In cases where the county
committee has reason to believe the participant lacks the capacity or
history to fulfill the quality provisions of the marketing contract the
county committee will require such documentation.
Sec. 760.819 Misrepresentation, scheme, or device.
(a) A person is ineligible to receive assistance under this part if
it is determined that such person has:
(1) Adopted any scheme or device that tends to defeat the purpose
of this program;
(2) Made any fraudulent representation under this program;
(3) Misrepresented any fact affecting a program or person
determination; or
(4) Has violated or been determined ineligible under Sec. 1400.5
of this title.
Sec. 760.820 Offsets, assignments, and debt settlement.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, any
payment to any person will be made without regard to questions of title
under State law and without regard to any claim or lien against the
crop, or proceeds, in favor of the owner or any other creditor except
agencies of the U.S. Government. The regulations governing offsets and
withholdings found at part 1403 of this title apply to any payments
made under this part.
(b) Any participant entitled to any payment may assign any payments
in accordance with regulations governing the assignment of payments
found at part 1404 of this title.
(c) A debt or claim may be settled according to part 792 of this
chapter.
Sec. 760.821 Compliance with highly erodible land and wetland
conservation.
(a) The highly erodible land and wetland conservation provisions of
part 12 of this title apply to the receipt of disaster assistance for
2005, 2006, and 2007 crop losses made available under this authority.
(b) Eligible participants must be in compliance with the highly
erodible land and wetland conservation compliance provisions for the
year for which financial assistance is requested.
Subpart J--2005-2007 Livestock Indemnity Program
Sec. 760.900 Administration.
(a) The regulations in this subpart specify the terms and
conditions applicable to the 2005-2007 Livestock Indemnity Program
(2005-2007 LIP), which will be administered under the general
supervision and direction of the Administrator, FSA.
(b) FSA representatives do not have authority to modify or waive
any of the provisions of the regulations of this subpart.
(c) The State FSA committee will take any action required by the
regulations of this subpart that the county FSA committee has not
taken. The State FSA committee will also:
(1) Correct, or require a county committee to correct, any action
taken by such county committee that is not in accordance with the
regulations of this subpart; or
(2) Require a county committee to withhold taking any action that
is not in accordance with this subpart.
(d) No delegation to a State or county FSA committee will preclude
the Deputy Administrator for Farm Programs from determining any
question arising under the program or from reversing or modifying any
determination made by a State or county FSA committee.
Sec. 760.901 Applicability.
(a) This subpart establishes the terms and conditions under which
the 2005-2007 LIP will be administered under Title IX of the U.S. Troop
Readiness, Veterans' Care, Katrina Recovery, and Iraq Accountability
Appropriations Act,
[[Page 72876]]
2007 (Pub. L. 110-28) for eligible counties as specified in Sec.
760.902(a).
(b) Eligible livestock owners and contract growers will be
compensated in accordance with Sec. 760.909 for eligible livestock
deaths that occurred in eligible counties as a direct result of an
eligible disaster event. Drought is not an eligible disaster event
except when anthrax, as a related condition that occurs as a result of
drought, results in the death of eligible livestock.
Sec. 760.902 Eligible counties and disaster periods.
Counties are eligible for agricultural assistance under the 2005-
2007 LIP if they received a timely Presidential designation, a timely
Secretarial declaration, or a qualifying Administrator's Physical Loss
Notice (APLN) determination in a county otherwise the subject of a
timely Presidential declaration, or are counties contiguous to such
counties. Presidential designations and Secretarial declarations will
be considered timely only if made after January 1, 2005, and before
February 28, 2007. Eligible counties, disaster events, and disaster
periods are listed at http://disaster.fsa.usda.gov.
Sec. 760.903 Definitions.
The following definitions apply to this subpart. The definitions in
parts 718 and 1400 of this title also apply, except where they conflict
with the definitions in this section.
Adult beef bull means a male beef bovine animal that was at least 2
years old and used for breeding purposes before it died.
Adult beef cow means a female beef bovine animal that had delivered
one or more offspring before dying. A first-time bred beef heifer is
also considered an adult beef cow if it was pregnant at the time it
died.
Adult buffalo and beefalo bull means a male animal of those breeds
that was at least 2 years old and used for breeding purposes before it
died.
Adult buffalo and beefalo cow means a female animal of those breeds
that had delivered one or more offspring before dying. A first-time
bred buffalo or beefalo heifer is also considered an adult buffalo or
beefalo cow if it was pregnant at the time it died.
Adult dairy bull means a male dairy breed bovine animal at least 2
years old used primarily for breeding dairy cows before it died.
Adult dairy cow means a female bovine animal used for the purpose
of providing milk for human consumption that had delivered one or more
offspring before dying. A first-time bred dairy heifer is also
considered an adult dairy cow if it was pregnant at the time it died.
Agricultural operation means a farming operation.
Application means the ``2005-2007 Livestock Indemnity Program''
form.
Application period means the date established by the Deputy
Administrator for Farm Programs for participants to apply for program
benefits.
Buck means a male goat.
Catfish means catfish grown as food for human consumption by a
commercial operator on private property in water in a controlled
environment.
Commercial use means used in the operation of a business activity
engaged in as a means of livelihood for profit by the eligible producer
to apply for program benefits.
Contract means, with respect to contracts for the handling of
livestock, a written agreement between a livestock owner and another
individual or entity setting the specific terms, conditions, and
obligations of the parties involved regarding the production of
livestock or livestock products.
Controlled environment means an environment in which everything
that can practicably be controlled by the participant with structures,
facilities, and growing media (including, but not limited to, water and
nutrients) and was in fact controlled by the participant at the time of
the disaster.
Crawfish means crawfish grown as food for human consumption by a
commercial operator on private property in water in a controlled
environment.
Deputy Administrator means the Deputy Administrator for Farm
Programs, Farm Service Agency, U.S. Department of Agriculture or the
designee.
Doe means a female goat.
Equine animal means a domesticated horse, mule, or donkey.
Ewe means a female sheep.
Farming operation means a business enterprise engaged in producing
agricultural products.
Goat means a domesticated, ruminant mammal of the genus Capra,
including Angora goats. Goats are further defined by sex (bucks and
does) and age (kids).
Kid means a goat less than 1 year old.
Lamb means a sheep less than 1 year old.
Livestock owner means one having legal ownership of the livestock
for which benefits are being requested on the day such livestock died
due to an eligible disaster.
Non-adult beef cattle means a bovine that does not meet the
definition of adult beef cow or bull. Non-adult beef cattle are further
delineated by weight categories of less than 400 pounds, and 400 pounds
or more at the time they died.
Non-adult buffalo or beefalo means an animal of those breeds that
does not meet the definition of adult buffalo/beefalo cow or bull. Non-
adult buffalo or beefalo are further delineated by weight categories of
less than 400 pounds, and 400 pounds or more at the time of death.
Non-adult dairy cattle means a bovine livestock, of a breed used
for the purpose of providing milk for human consumption, that do not
meet the definition of adult dairy cow or bull. Non-adult dairy cattle
are further delineated by weight categories of less than 400 pounds,
and 400 pounds or more at the time they died.
Poultry means domesticated chickens, turkeys, ducks, and geese.
Poultry are further delineated by sex, age, and purpose of production
as determined by FSA.
Ram means a male sheep.
Sheep means a domesticated, ruminant mammal of the genus Ovis.
Sheep are further defined by sex (rams and ewes) and age (lambs).
Swine means a domesticated omnivorous pig, hog, and boar. Swine are
further delineated by sex and weight as determined by FSA.
Sec. 760.904 Limitations on payments and other benefits.
(a) A participant may receive benefits for livestock losses for
only one of the 2005, 2006, or 2007 calendar years as specified under
this part.
(b) A ``person'' as determined under part 1400 of this title may
receive no more than $80,000 under this subpart. In applying the
$80,000 per person payment limitation, regardless of whether 2005,
2006, or 2007 calendar year benefits are at issue or sought, the most
restrictive ``person'' determination for the participant in the years
2005, 2006, and 2007, will be used to limit benefits.
(c) The provisions of part 1400, subpart G, of this title relating
to limits to payments for individuals or entities with certain levels
of adjusted gross income apply to this program.
(d) As a condition to receive benefits under this subpart, a
participant must have been in compliance with the provisions of parts
12 and 718 of this title and must not otherwise be precluded from
receiving benefits under any law.
(e) An individual or entity determined to be a foreign person under
part 1400 of this title is not eligible to receive benefits under this
subpart.
[[Page 72877]]
Sec. 760.905 Eligible owners and contract growers.
(a) To be considered eligible, a livestock owner must have had
legal ownership of the eligible livestock, as provided in Sec.
760.906(a), on the day the livestock died.
(b) To be considered eligible, a contract grower on the day the
livestock died must have had:
(1) A written agreement with the owner of eligible livestock
setting the specific terms, conditions, and obligations of the parties
involved regarding the production of livestock; and
(2) Control of the eligible livestock, as provided in Sec.
760.906(b), on the day the livestock died.
Sec. 760.906 Eligible livestock.
(a) To be considered eligible livestock for livestock owners,
livestock must be adult or non-adult dairy cattle, beef cattle,
buffalo, beefalo, catfish, crawfish, equine, sheep, goats, swine,
poultry, deer, or reindeer and meet all the conditions in paragraph (c)
of this section.
(b) To be considered eligible livestock for contract growers,
livestock must be poultry or swine as defined in Sec. 760.903 and meet
all the conditions in paragraph (c) of this section.
(c) To be considered eligible, livestock must meet all of the
following conditions:
(1) Died in an eligible county as a direct result of an eligible
disaster event;
(i) After January 1, 2005, but before February 28, 2007;
(ii) No later than 60 calendar days from the ending date of the
applicable disaster period, but before February 28, 2007; and
(iii) In the calendar year for which benefits are being requested.
(2) The disaster event that caused the loss must be the same event
for which a natural disaster was declared or designated.
(3) Been maintained for commercial use as part of a farming
operation on the day they died; and
(4) Before dying, not have been produced or maintained for reasons
other than commercial use as part of a farming operation, including,
but not limited to, wild free roaming animals or animals used for
recreational purposes, such as pleasure, hunting, roping, pets, or for
show.
(d) In those counties in Sec. 760.902, the following types of
animals owned by a livestock owner are eligible livestock:
(1) Adult beef bulls;
(2) Adult beef cows;
(3) Adult buffalo or beefalo bulls;
(4) Adult buffalo or beefalo cows;
(5) Adult dairy bulls;
(6) Adult dairy cows;
(7) Catfish;
(8) Chickens, broilers, pullets;
(9) Chickens, chicks;
(10) Chickens, layers, roasters;
(11) Crawfish;
(12) Deer;
(13) Ducks;
(14) Ducks, ducklings;
(15) Equine;
(16) Geese, goose;
(17) Geese, gosling;
(18) Goats, bucks;
(19) Goats, does;
(20) Goats, kids;
(21) Non-adult beef cattle;
(22) Non-adult buffalo/beefalo;
(23) Non-adult dairy cattle;
(24) Reindeer
(25) Sheep, ewes;
(26) Sheep, lambs;
(27) Sheep, rams;
(28) Swine, feeder pigs under 50 pounds;
(29) Swine, sows, boars, barrows, gilts 50 to 150 pounds;
(30) Swine, sows, boars, barrows, gilts over 150 pounds;
(31) Turkeys, poults; and
(32) Turkeys, toms, fryers, and roasters.
(e) In those counties in Sec. 760.902, the following types of
animals are eligible livestock for contract growers:
(1) Chickens, broilers, pullets;
(2) Chickens, layers, roasters;
(3) Geese, goose;
(4) Swine, boars, sows;
(5) Swine, feeder pigs;
(6) Swine, lightweight barrows, gilts;
(7) Swine, sows, boars, barrows, gilts; and
(8) Turkeys, toms, fryers, and roasters.
Sec. 760.907 Application process.
(a) To apply for 2005-2007 LIP, submit a completed application to
the administrative county FSA office that maintains the farm records
for your agricultural operation, a copy of your grower contract, if you
are a contract grower, and other supporting documents required for
determining your eligibility as an applicant. Supporting documents must
show:
(1) Evidence of loss,
(2) Current physical location of livestock in inventory, and
(3) Physical location of claimed livestock at the time of death.
(b) The application must be filed during the application period
announced by the Deputy Administrator.
(c) A minor child is eligible to apply for program benefits if all
eligibility requirements are met and one of the following conditions
exists:
(1) The right of majority has been conferred upon the minor by
court proceedings or statute;
(2) A guardian has been appointed to manage the minor's property,
and the applicable program documents are executed by the guardian; or
(3) A bond is furnished under which a surety guarantees any loss
incurred for which the minor would be liable had the minor been an
adult.
(d) The participant must provide adequate proof that the death of
the eligible livestock occurred in an eligible county as a direct
result of an eligible disaster event during the applicable disaster
period. The quantity and kind of livestock that died as a direct result
of the eligible disaster event may be documented by: purchase records;
veterinarian records; bank or other loan papers; rendering truck
receipts; Federal Emergency Management Agency records; National Guard
records; written contracts; production records; Internal Revenue
Service records; property tax records; private insurance documents; and
other similar verifiable documents as determined by FSA.
(e) Certification of livestock deaths by third parties may be
accepted only if both the following conditions are met:
(1) The livestock owner or livestock contract grower, as
applicable, certifies in writing:
(i) That there is no other documentation of death available;
(ii) The number of livestock, by category determined by FSA, were
in inventory at the time the applicable disaster event occurred; and
(iii) Other details required for FSA to determine the certification
acceptable; and
(2) The third party provides their telephone number, address, and a
written statement containing:
(i) Specific details about their knowledge of the livestock deaths;
(ii) Their affiliation with the livestock owner;
(iii) The accuracy of the deaths claimed by the livestock owner;
and
(iv) Other details required by FSA to determine the certification
acceptable.
(f) Data furnished by the participant will be used to determine
eligibility for program benefits. Furnishing the data is voluntary;
however, without all required data program benefits will not be
approved or provided.
Sec. 760.908 Deceased individuals or dissolved entities.
(a) Payments may be made for eligible losses suffered by an
eligible participant who is now a deceased individual or is a dissolved
entity if a representative, who currently has authority to enter
[[Page 72878]]
into a contract, on behalf of the participant, signs the application
for payment.
(b) Legal documents showing proof of authority to sign for the
deceased individual or dissolved entity must be provided.
(c) If a participant is now a dissolved general partnership or
joint venture, all members of the general partnership or joint venture
at the time of dissolution or their duly authorized representatives
must sign the application for payment.
Sec. 760.909 Payment calculation.
(a) Under this subpart separate payment rates are established for
eligible livestock owners and eligible livestock contract growers in
accordance with paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section. Payments for
the 2005-2007 LIP are calculated by multiplying the national payment
rate for each livestock category, as determined in paragraphs (b) and
(c) of this section, by the number of eligible livestock in each
category, as provided in Sec. 760.906. Adjustments will be applied in
accordance with paragraphs (d) and (e) of this section.
(b) The 2005-2007 LIP national payment rate for eligible livestock
owners is based on 26 percent of the average fair market value of the
livestock.
(c) The 2005-2007 LIP national payment rate for eligible livestock
contract growers is based on 26 percent of the average income loss
sustained by the contract grower with respect to the dead livestock.
(d) The 2005 payment calculated under 2005-2007 LIP for eligible
livestock owners will be reduced by the amount the participant received
under:
(1) The Livestock Indemnity Program (subpart E of this part);
(2) The Aquaculture Grant Program (subpart G of this part); and
(3) The Livestock Indemnity Program II (part 1416, subpart C of
this title).
(e) The 2005 payment calculated under 2005-2007 LIP for eligible
livestock contract growers will be reduced by the amount the
participant received:
(1) Under the Livestock Indemnity Program (subpart E of this part);
(2) For the loss of income from the dead livestock from the party
who contracted with the producer to grow the livestock; and
(3) Under the Livestock Indemnity Program II (part 1416, subpart C
of this title).
Sec. 760.910 Appeals.
The appeal regulations set forth at parts 11 and 780 of this title
apply to determinations made pursuant to this subpart.
Sec. 760.911 Offsets, assignments, and debt settlement.
(a) Any payment to any participant will be made without regard to
questions of title under State law and without regard to any claim or
lien against the commodity, or proceeds, in favor of the owner or any
other creditor except agencies of the U.S. Government. The regulations
governing offsets and withholdings found at part 792 of this chapter
apply to payments made under this subpart.
(b) Any participant entitled to any payment may assign any payment
in accordance with regulations governing the assignment of payments
found at part 1404 of this title.
Sec. 760.912 Records and inspections.
Participants receiving payments under this subpart or any other
person who furnishes information for the purposes of enabling such
participant to receive a payment under this subpart must maintain any
books, records, and accounts supporting any information so furnished
for 3 years following the end of the year during which the application
for payment was filed. Participants receiving payments or any other
person who furnishes such information to FSA must allow authorized
representatives of USDA and the General Accountability Office, during
regular business hours, to inspect, examine, and make copies of such
books or records, and to enter upon, inspect and verify all applicable
livestock and acreage in which the participant has an interest for the
purpose of confirming the accuracy of information provided by or for
the participant.
Sec. 760.913 Refunds; joint and several liability.
In the event there is a failure to comply with any term,
requirement, or condition for payment or assistance arising under this
subpart, and if any refund of a payment to FSA will otherwise become
due in connection with this subpart, all payments made in regard to
such matter must be refunded to FSA together with interest and late-
payment charges as provided for in part 792 of this chapter.
Signed in Washington, DC, December 18, 2007.
Teresa C. Lasseter,
Administrator, Farm Service Agency.
[FR Doc. 07-6153 Filed 12-19-07; 9:03 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-05-P