[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 7, Volume 6]
[Revised as of January 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 7CFR601.1]

[Page 344-347]
 
                          TITLE 7--AGRICULTURE
 
   CHAPTER VI--NATURAL RESOURCES CONSERVATION SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF 
                               AGRICULTURE
 
PART 601--FUNCTIONS--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 601.1  Functions assigned.

    The Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) is the Federal 
agency that works with private landowners to conserve their natural 
resources. NRCS employees help land users and communities approach 
conservation planning and implementation with an understanding of how 
natural resources relate to each other and to people--and how human 
activities affect those resources. The agency emphasizes voluntary, 
science-based assistance, partnerships, and cooperative problem solving 
at the community level. The mission of NRCS is to work on the Nation's 
non-Federal lands to conserve, improve, and sustain natural resources. 
The following functions support the mission.
    (a) NRCS facilitates and provides conservation technical assistance 
at the local level that helps people assess their natural resource 
conditions and needs, set goals, identify programs and other resources 
to address those needs, develop proposals and recommendations, implement 
solutions, and measure their success. The agency's role is to assist 
with:
    (1) Resource inventories,
    (2) Resource assessments,
    (3) Planning assistance, and/or
    (4) Technical assistance.
    (b) NRCS provides technical assistance through local conservation 
districts to land users, communities, watershed groups, Federal and 
State agencies, other partners, and customers.
    (c) NRCS provides assistance on a voluntary basis.
    (d) The agency's work focuses on soil, water, air, plant, and animal 
conservation including erosion reduction, water quality improvement, 
wetland restoration and protection, fish and wildlife habitat 
improvement, range management, stream restoration, water management, and 
other natural resource issues.
    (e) Through the conservation operations program, NRCS maintains a 
cadre of conservationists and interdisciplinary technical experts who 
provide landowners with advice and recommendations. Science based 
procedures and techniques are based on new knowledge and research 
provided by the Agricultural Research Service and others. NRCS developed 
and maintains a system of directives--including manuals, handbooks, and 
technical references--to institutionalize new methods, procedures, and 
standards used to deliver technical assistance at the field level.
    (f) NRCS has general responsibility for administration of the 
following programs:
    (1) Conservation operations, authorized by the Soil Conservation Act 
of 1935 and the Soil and Water Resources Conservation Act of 1977. 
Activities include:
    (i) Conservation technical assistance to land users, communities, 
units of State and local government, and other Federal agencies in 
planning and implementing natural resource solutions to reduce erosion, 
improve soil and water quantity and quality, improve and conserve 
wetlands, enhance fish and wildlife habitat, improve air quality, 
improve pasture and range conditions, reduce upstream flooding, and 
improve woodlands. Assistance is also provided to implement the highly 
erodible land (HEL) and wetland conservation (Swampbuster) provisions 
and--on a reimbursable basis--the Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP) and 
Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) in the 1985 Food Security Act, as 
amended by the Food, Agriculture, Conservation and Trade Act of 1990 and 
Federal Agriculture Improvement and Reform Act of 1996. NRCS technical 
field staff make HEL and wetland determinations and assist land users to 
develop and implement conservation plans needed

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to ensure compliance with the law. NRCS is also the lead Federal agency 
for delineating wetlands on agricultural lands for purposes of 
implementing both the provisions of the Food Security Act and Section 
404 of the Clean Water Act.
    (ii) Soil surveys that provide the public with local information on 
the uses and capabilities of their soil resource. Soil surveys are based 
on scientific analysis and classification of the soils and are used to 
determine land capabilities and conservation treatment needs. Surveys 
are conducted cooperatively with other Federal agencies, land grant 
universities, State agencies, and local units of government. NRCS is the 
world leader in soil classification and soil mapping, and is expanding 
into soil quality.
    (iii) Snow survey and water supply forecasts that provide western 
States and Alaska with vital information and forecasts of seasonable 
variable water supplies. NRCS field staff in cooperation with partnering 
organizations manually collect data from 850 remote high mountain sites. 
Data is electronically collected from an additional 600 SNOTEL 
(automated snowpack telemetry network) sites. In cooperation with the 
National Weather Service, the data is assembled and analyzed. Then, NRCS 
staff develop seasonal water supply forecasts.
    (iv) Plant Material Centers that assemble, test, and encourage 
increased plant propagation and usefulness of plant species for biomass 
production, carbon sequestration, erosion reduction, wetland 
restoration, water quality improvement, streambank and riparian area 
protection, coastal dune stabilization, and to meet other special 
conservation treatment needs. The work is carried out cooperatively with 
State and Federal agencies, private organizations, commercial 
businesses, and seed and nursery associations. After species are proven, 
they are released to the private sector for commercial production.
    (v) National Resources Inventory (NRI) that is a statistically-based 
survey designed and implemented using scientific principles to assess 
conditions and trends of soil, water, and related resources on 
nonfederal lands in the United States. The NRI captures data on land 
cover and use, soil erosion, prime farmland, wetlands, habitat 
diversity, selected conservation practices, and related attributes at 
thousands of scientifically selected sample sites in all 50 states, 
Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and some Pacific Basin locations.
    (2) Conservation programs in the Federal Agriculture Improvement and 
Reform Act of 1996, most of which are funded by the Commodity Credit 
Corporation (CCC). NRCS provides leadership and technical assistance for 
the following programs:
    (i) Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP). EQIP provides a 
single, voluntary conservation program for farmers and ranchers who face 
serious threats to soil, water, and related natural resources. 
Nationally, it provides technical, financial, and educational 
assistance, half of it targeted to livestock-related natural resource 
problems and half to more general conservation priorities.
    (ii) Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP). WRP is a voluntary program to 
restore and protect wetlands on private property. It provides an 
opportunity for landowners to receive financial incentives to restore 
wetlands in exchange for retiring marginal agricultural land.
    (iii) Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program (WHIP). WHIP is a 
voluntary program for people who want to develop and improve wildlife 
habitat on private lands. It provides both technical assistance and cost 
sharing to help establish and improve fish and wildlife habitat.
    (iv) Farmland Protection Program (FPP). This program provides funds 
to help purchase development rights to keep productive farmland in 
agricultural use. Working through existing programs, USDA joins with 
State, tribal, or local governments to acquire voluntary conservation 
easements or other interests from landowners.
    (v) Forestry Incentives Program (FIP). FIP supports good forest 
management practices on privately owned, non-industrial forest lands 
nationwide. FIP is designed to benefit the environment while meeting 
future demands for wood products. Although not funded by CCC, Section 
373 of the Federal Agriculture Improvement and Reform Act of 1996

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extended the program under discretionary appropriations.
    (3) Resource Conservation and Development (RC&D) Program, authorized 
by Section 102 of the Flood and Agriculture Act of 1962 (Pub. L. 87-702) 
and Sections 1528-1538 of the Agriculture and Food Act of 1981 (Pub. L. 
97-98). This program is initiated and directed at the local level by 
volunteers who involve multiple communities, various units of 
government, municipalities, and grassroots organizations. RC&D is a 
catalyst for civic-oriented groups to share knowledge and resources in a 
collective attempt to solve common problems. The program offers aid in 
balancing the environmental, economic, and social needs of an area.
    (4) Rural Abandoned Mine Program (RAMP) and other responsibilities 
assigned under the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977 
(Pub. L. 95-87). Under RAMP, NRCS provides technical and financial 
assistance to landowners to reclaim certain abandoned coal-mined lands. 
This assistance can be used to reclaim these lands for approved uses, 
which include pasture, range, woodland, cropland, noncommercial 
recreation, and wildlife habitat. The program's first priority is to 
protect public health, welfare, safety, and property from hazards caused 
by past surface coal mining or by surface effects of deep mining.
    (5) Watershed surveys and planning, authorized by the Watershed 
Protection and Flood Prevention Act (Pub. L. 83-566, Section 6 (16 
U.S.C. 1001-1008)). The 1996 appropriations act combined the Small 
Watershed Planning and the River Basin Surveys and Investigations 
programs into a new program called the Watershed Surveys and Planning 
Program. The program involves cooperation with other Federal, State, and 
local agencies to conduct watershed planning, river basin surveys and 
investigations, flood hazard analysis, and floodplain management 
assistance, which aid in the development of coordinated water resource 
programs, including the development of guiding principles and 
procedures.
    (6) Watershed and flood prevention operations include several 
activities. Watershed operations are authorized by the Flood Control Act 
of 1944 (Public Law 78-534) and the Watershed Protection and Flood 
Prevention Act of 1954 (Public Law 87-566) and amendments; both of which 
are addressed by 7 CFR 622. Since 1998, the appropriations act for the 
Watershed Protection and Flood Prevention Act (Public Law 83-566) has 
included funds, not to exceed a specified amount, that may be used for 
Public Law 78-534 projects.
    (i) Publc Law 83-566 and Public Law 78-534, jointly called the Small 
Watershed Program, authorize the Secretary of Agriculture to cooperate 
with State and local agencies to plan and carry out works of improvement 
for flood prevention; for the conservation, development, utilization, 
and disposal of water; and for the conservation and proper use of land 
in watershed or sub-watershed areas. Under Public Law 83-566, these 
areas shall not exceed 250,000 acres. There is no acreage limitation 
under Public Law 78-534.
    (ii) The Small Watershed Program provides for cooperation with State 
and other public agencies (called project sponsors) in the installation 
of planned works of improvement and land treatment measures in 
authorized watershed projects. Eligible measures include flood 
prevention, water conservation, recreation, agricultural water 
management, floodplain easements, municipal and industrial water, and 
rural water supply.
    (7) Emergency Watershed Protection (EWP) Program, authorized by 
Section 216 of Public Law 81-516, 33 U.S.C. 701b-1, and Section 403 of 
the Agriculture Credit Act of 1978 (Public Law 95-334, 16 U.S.C. 2203), 
as amended by Section 382 of the Federal Agriculture Improvement and 
Reform Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-127, 110 Stat. 888, 1016). EWP 
provides assistance to reduce an imminent threat to life and property 
caused by a sudden impairment of a watershed from a natural disaster. 
Emergency work includes such measures as removing debris from streams, 
stabilizing streambanks, repairing levees, critical area stabilization, 
and purchasing floodplain easements. Technical and financial assistance 
is available to sponsoring local organizations (units of government, 
Indian tribes and tribal organizations, and organizations formed by 
State law) for this disaster

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recovery work. Sponsors are required to provide the local share of the 
costs; obtain real property rights, water rights, and permits; and do 
any needed operation and maintenance.