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USDA announces sign-up
for Livestock Assistance Program and American Indian Livestock Feed
Program
U.S. Department of Agriculture,
Volusia – Seminole FSA County Office
Eligible producers may sign up at their
local USDA Service Center for USDA's Livestock Assistance Program (LAP)
and American Indian Livestock Feed Program (AILFP), announced Kenneth A
Windsor, CED of the Volusia – Seminole County Farm Service Agency. Sign-up
began March 14.
"We are pleased to be able to provide these
benefits to producers as quickly as possible," Windsor said. "Natural
disasters are unpredictable weather events that put farmers and ranchers
at risk, as they work to produce a dependable and affordable national food
supply."
These programs will provide relief to
livestock producers who have suffered grazing losses in 2003 and 2004 due
to drought, severe weather and related causes, and have limited safety net
and risk management tools available.
To speed up the process, producers may sign
up for these programs online from their home or business beginning in
April or at any USDA Service Center across the nation. To sign up online,
producers must first establish an e-authentication identity in their local
USDA Service Center. Currently, producers also may sign up online for
USDA's Farm Service Agency (FSA) Loan Deficiency Payment Program and the
Direct and Counter-cyclical Payment Program.
The LAP and the AILFP programs were
authorized by The Military Construction and Appropriations and Emergency
Hurricane Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2005 (2005 Act), to provide
disaster assistance for producers who suffered losses in 2003 or 2004.
LAP and AILFP share many of the same
eligibility characteristics, such as: A producer's grazing land (LAP) or
the tribal governed land (AILFP) must be located in a county designated as
a primary disaster county under a Presidential or Secretarial disaster
declaration. The county must have been approved as a primary disaster
county on or after Jan. 1, 2003, for a disaster occurring through Dec. 31,
2004. Assistance will not be available in contiguous counties. A county
may meet eligibility requirements for both 2003 and 2004; however, a
producer in that county may receive benefits for only one of those
calendar years. Producers may receive benefits under both LAP and AILFP
for the same year.
The 2005 Act provides that producers who
reduced the number of livestock because of a natural disaster shall not be
penalized for those reductions. If, because of a natural disaster, a
producer sold eligible livestock that were placed on grazing land (LAP) or
tribal governed land (AILFP) on or after Jan. 31, 2003, the producers will
receive compensation for the entire disaster payment period. Benefits will
be based on the number of livestock the producer would have owned if the
disaster had not occurred. For livestock that were sold in the course of
routine business, producers will receive benefits for those animals only
up to the date of sale.
Producers of dairy and beef cattle; bison
and beefalo; goats; swine; sheep; and certain equine, elk and reindeer are
now eligible to participate in both programs. Provisions of specific
eligibility for each program are as follows:
Livestock Assistance Program
The LAP is a grazing loss program that will
pay eligible livestock producers for grazing losses on a per head basis of
eligible livestock. A producer must have control of adequate grazing land
to support the eligible livestock and the producer must possess beneficial
interest in eligible livestock that have been owned or leased for at least
three months. During 2003 or 2004, a livestock producer must have suffered
a 40 percent or greater loss of grazing production for three or more
consecutive months due to natural disasters.
The 2005 Act also imposes a requirement
that limits assistance to persons with a gross revenue limit of $2.5
million, which is a change from the previous LAP. A $40,000 per person
payment limitation also applies to LAP assistance.
American Indian Livestock
Assistance Program
AILFP will provide reimbursement of
expenses for purchases of livestock feed for producers whose livestock
were on tribal-governed land at the time of a natural disaster. Payments
are made directly to the livestock owners and based on the smaller of
either 30 percent of basic feed needs, stated as the Animal Unit Day (AUD)
for eligible livestock, or the actual dollar amount of livestock feed
purchases recorded on receipts.
As in the past, tribal governments will
request to enter into a government-to-government contract for areas
meeting the loss criteria. In addition to meeting other loss criteria, the
tribal governed land must have had a loss of grazing production in excess
of 35 percent. Livestock owners will receive benefits for the actual
number of livestock that were present on tribal-governed land during the
disaster payment period in which supplemental feed was provided. USDA's
Web site,
http://disaster.fsa.usda.gov/ provides producers with one
convenient location for details on new and existing disaster assistance.