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The federal government offers a number of different incentive
programs to encourage private landowners to participate in conservation
activities on their property. Private lands are a critical component
of conserving biodiversity across the landscape. Many private
landowners want to manage their property to benefit fish and wildlife
habitat. Incentives can make habitat conservation economically
feasible and also can serve as a reward for good stewardship.
Incentive programs for habitat conservation on private lands fall
into one or more of these categories: property
tax benefits, income tax
credits, regulatory
streamlining, direct funding,
and technical assistance.
Click here for a list of federal conservation incentive programs
in these categories:
Farm Bill programs (Natural Resources
Conservation Service)
US Fish and Wildlife Service programs (US
Department of Interior)
US Forest Service programs (US Department
of Agriculture)
Click here for types of conservation
incentive programs.
Click here for a list of Oregon's
conservation incentive programs.
Download a pdf of federal program list.
If you find any incorrect or incomplete information about these
incentive programs, please report it to chummon@defenders.org.
Federal Conservation
Incentive Programs
with the Farm Bill
(Natural Resources Conservation Service,
Farm Service Agency - US Department of Agriculture)
Agricultural Management Assistance (AMA)
Type of Program: Direct funding, Technical assistance
Purpose: This program provides cost share assistance to
agricultural producers to voluntarily address issues such as water
management, water quality, and erosion control by incorporating
conservation into their farming operations.
Who Can Participate: Agricultural producers; private land.
This program is available only in 15 States in which Federal Crop
Insurance Program participation is historically low: Connecticut,
Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Hampshire,
New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Utah, Vermont,
West Virginia, and Wyoming.
How it Works: Producers may construct or improve water
management structures or irrigation structures; plant trees for
windbreaks or to improve water quality; and mitigate risk through
production diversification or resource conservation practices,
including soil erosion control, integrated pest management, or
transition to organic farming. The NRCS develops a conservation
plan and provides technical assistance.
Agency Offering Program: Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS), Risk Management Agency (RMA), and Agricultural
Marketing Service (AMS).
Website: www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/ama/
Contact Information: Find your local NRCS office in the
local phone book or at this locator website.
------------------------
Conservation Innovation Grants (CIG)
Type of Program: Direct funding, Technical assistance
Purpose: This is a voluntary program to stimulate the
development and adoption of innovative conservation approaches
and technologies to address some of the Nation's most pressing
natural resource concerns. It leverages federal investment in
environmental enhancement and protection, in conjunction with
agricultural production. Projects need to be at a watershed or
larger scale. There are five focus areas for 2004: water resources,
soil resources, atmospheric resources, grazing land and forest
health, and wildlife habitat. The focus of the program may change
annually.
Who Can Participate: Proposed projects must involve EQIP-eligible
producers. Applications can come from non-federal government agencies,
non-governmental organizations, Tribes, or individuals.
How it Works: This program is authorized and funded within
the Environmental Quality Incentives Program. The funds are awarded
through a nationwide competitive grant process. There is a required
non-federal match of at least 50%, including half of this from
in-kind.
Agency Offering Program: Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS)
Website: www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/cig/
Contact Information: Find your local NRCS office in the
local phone book or at http://offices.sc.egov.usda.gov/locator/app
------------------------
Conservation of Private Grazing Lands (CPGL)
Type of Program: Technical assistance
Purpose: To provide accelerated and coordinated technical,
educational, and related assistance, to conserve and enhance grazing
land resources that provide economic and ecological benefits to
local communities and to the broader public.
Status: Currently, funds have not been appropriated for
this program.
Who Can Participate: Owners and managers of private grazing
land
How it Works: Technical assistance will address: grazing
land management; soil erosion; energy-efficient production; water
conservation; wildlife habitat; using plants to sequester greenhouse
gases and increase soil organic matter; and biomass energy and
raw materials for industrial products. This is not a cost share
program.
Agency Offering Program: Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS)
Website: www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/cpgl/
Contact Information: Find your local NRCS office in the
local phone book or at http://offices.sc.egov.usda.gov/locator/app
------------------------
Conservation Reserve Program (CRP)
Type of Program: Direct funding, Technical assistance
Purpose: To reduce soil erosion, reduce sedimentation
in streams and lakes, improve water quality, establish wildlife
habitat, restore floodplains, and enhance forest and wetland resources.
Who Can Participate: Agricultural producers with cropland
or marginal pastureland
How it Works: Farmers convert highly erodible cropland
or other environmentally sensitive acreage to vegetative cover,
to improve the quality of water, control soil erosion, and enhance
wildlife habitat. Farmers receive an annual rental payment for
the term of the 10-15 year contract. Cost sharing, up to 50%,
is provided to establish approved conservation practices.
Agency Offering Program: The program is funded through
the Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) and administered by the
Farm Service Agency, with the Natural Resources Conservation Service
(NRCS) providing technical assistance.
Website: www.fsa.usda.gov/dafp/cepd/crp.htm
Contact Information: To find your local Farm Service Agency
office, go to: http://offices.sc.egov.usda.gov/locator/app
------------------------
Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (CREP)
Type of Program: Direct funding, Technical assistance
Purpose: To provide benefits similar to the Conservation
Reserve Program (CRP), tailored to meet significant environmental
needs of individual states. There are CREP programs in about half
the states.
Who Can Participate: Landowners must meet the eligibility
criteria for the Conservation Reserve Program, plus additional
criteria to meet individual states' programs.
How it Works: State and federal partnerships provide landowners
with incentive payments, cost-share assistance, and rental payments
for installing specific long-term conservation practices on eligible
land. Landowners enter into contracts for 10-15 years and remove
certain lands from agricultural production.
Agency Offering Program: local offices of the US Farm
Services Agency; Natural Resources Conservation Service, Soil
and Water Conservation District
Website: www.fsa.usda.gov/dafp/cepd/crep.htm
Contact Information: To find your local Farm Service Agency
office, go to: http://offices.sc.egov.usda.gov/locator/app
------------------------
Conservation Security Program (CSP)
Type of Program: Direct funding, Technical assistance
Purpose: To promote the conservation and improvement of
soil, water, air, energy, plant and animal life, and other conservation
purposes on working private and tribal lands.
Who Can Participate: For the first year of the program
(2004), only 18 priority watersheds have been chosen to participate
in the United States (see www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/csp/2004_CSP_WS/
watersheds04.html). Eligibility and priority for individual
landowners/producers is based on a high level of current and planned
conservation activities.
How it Works: For the first year of the program (2004),
only 18 priority watersheds have been chosen to participate in
the United States (see http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/csp/2004_CSP_WS/
watersheds04.html). For 2005, 202 watersheds will participate
(see http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/csp/2005_CSP_WS/index.html).
Eligibility and priority for individual landowners/producers is
based on a high level of current and planned conservation activities.
Agency Offering Program: Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS)
Website: www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/csp/
Contact Information: Find your local NRCS office in the
local phone book or at http://offices.sc.egov.usda.gov/locator/app
------------------------
Conservation Technical Assistance
Type of Program: Technical assistance
Purpose: To provide technical assistance for planning
and implementing conservation systems that address diverse natural
resource issues (including USDA cost share programs and conservation
incentive programs). Other technical assistance relates to complying
with state and local requirements, complying with federal regulations
related to soil erosion and wetlands, and develop and implement
conservation plans needed to ensure compliance with the law.
Who Can Participate: Land users, communities, units of
state and local government, other federal agencies.
How it Works: Interested parties should contact their
local NRCS office.
Agency Offering Program: Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS)
Website: www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/cta/
Contact Information: Find your local NRCS office in the
local phone book or at http://offices.sc.egov.usda.gov/locator/app
------------------------
Emergency Watershed Protection
Type of Program: Direct funding, Technical assistance
Purpose: To assist sponsors and individuals in implementing
emergency measures to relieve imminent hazards to life and property
created by a natural disaster (flood, drought, fire, or any other
natural occurrence causing a sudden impairment of the watershed).
The program is designed for installation of recovery measures.
Who Can Participate: All projects must be sponsored by
a state, city, county, or special district. The program helps
groups of people with a common problem.
How it Works: Eligible activities include removing debris
from streams, protecting destabilized streambanks, preventing
erosion, repairing conservation practices, retarding runoff, and
purchasing flood plain easements. The program covers up to 75%
of construction costs. The remaining 25% must come from local
sources and as cash or in-kind services. Funds cannot be used
to work on measures installed by another federal agency.
Agency Offering Program: Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS)
Website: www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/ewp/
Contact Information: Find your local NRCS office in the
local phone book or at http://offices.sc.egov.usda.gov/locator/app
------------------------
Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP)
Type of Program: Direct funding, Technical assistance
Purpose: To promote agricultural production and environmental
quality as compatible national goals.
Who Can Participate: Landowners with livestock or agricultural
production on eligible land. Each state will develop local priorities
for EQIP funding, based on national priorities.
How it Works: EQIP offers financial and technical help
to assist eligible participants install or implement structural
and management practices on eligible agricultural land. One to
10 year contracts provide incentive payments and cost-shares to
implement conservation practices. The NRCS can assist in the development
of a plan and must approve the plan. The cost-share for certain
conservation practices is up to 75%. Incentive payments may be
provided for up to three years to encourage producers to try practices
they may not otherwise try.
Agency Offering Program: Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS)
Website: www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/eqip/
Contact Information: Find your local NRCS office in the
local phone book or at http://offices.sc.egov.usda.gov/locator/app
------------------------
Farm and Ranch Lands Protection Program
Type of Program: Direct funding
Purpose: This program provides matching funds to help
purchase development rights to keep productive farm and ranchland
in agricultural uses.
Who Can Participate: To qualify, farmland must: be part
of a pending offer from a farmland protection program; be privately
owned; have a conservation plan for highly erodible land; be able
to sustain agricultural production (large enough, access to markets,
adequate infrastructure and support, surrounding land that supports
long-term agricultural production).
How it Works: Working through existing programs, USDA
partners with state, tribal, or local governments and other organizations
to acquire conservation easements or other interests in land from
landowners. Landowners agree not to convert the property to non-agricultural
uses. USDA provides up to 50% of the fair market easement value.
Agency Offering Program: Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS)
Website: www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/frpp/
Contact Information: Find your local NRCS office in the
local phone book or at http://offices.sc.egov.usda.gov/locator/app
------------------------
Forestry Incentives Program (FIP)
Status: On May 13, 2002, the 2002 Farm Bill de-authorized
this program, which was originally authorized in 1978 to share
up to 65 percent of the costs of tree planting, timber stand improvements,
and related practices on non-industrial private forest lands.
------------------------
Grassland Reserve Program (GRP)
Type of Program: Direct funding and Technical assistance
Purpose: This voluntary program helps landowners protect,
restore, and enhance grassland, rangeland, pastureland, and shrubland
on their property. The program focuses on maintaining grazing
on the land, conserving lands vulnerable to conversion to cropland
or other uses, and protects plant and animal biodiversity.
Who Can Participate: Landowners can have easements or
rental agreements. Operators with long-term control of the property
can use rental agreements. The minimum enrollment is usually 40
contiguous acres.
How it Works: Landowners follow a conservation plan, developed
by the NRCS or a third party, to limit their use of their lands
through conservation easements (30 years or permanent) or rental
agreements (10-30 years). Grazing, mowing, and fire (rehabilitation,
breaks, fences) are allowed. Practices that involve breaking the
soil surface are not allowed, unless approved as part of the conservation
plan. If restoration is needed, the program covers 75-90% of the
cost. The program covers all administrative costs for establishing
easements. The Commodity Credit Corporation generally holds the
easements, but another entity (state, land trust) can request
to fill this role.
Agency Offering Program: Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS) and Farm Service Agency (FSA), in cooperation with
Forest Service (USFS)
Website: www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/GRP/
Contact Information: Find your local NRCS office in the
local phone book or at http://offices.sc.egov.usda.gov/locator/app
------------------------
Rural Abandoned (Coal) Mine Program (RAMP)
Type of Program: Direct funding, Technical assistance
Purpose: To reclaim the soil and water resources of rural
lands adversely affected by past coal mining practices, to protect
people and the environment.
Who Can Participate: Individuals or groups of landowners.
This program is available in Alabama, Arkansas, Indiana, Kansas,
Kentucky, Maryland, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania,
South Dakota, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, and Wyoming.
How it Works: This program provides technical and financial
assistance to land users who voluntarily enter into 5- to 10-year
contracts for reclamation of up to 320 acres of eligible abandoned
coal-mined lands and waters. The land user involved prepares a
reclamation plan with assistance from the NRCS. Funding is provided
from the Abandoned Mine Reclamation Fund, which all active coal
mining operators pay into, at a rate of 35 cents per ton of coal
produced from surface mining and 15 cents per ton of coal produced
by underground mining.
Agency Offering Program: Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS)
Website: www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/ramp/
Contact Information: For contact information in each state,
go to http://offices.sc.egov.usda.gov/locator/app
------------------------
Soil and Water Conservation Assistance
Type of Program: Direct funding, Technical assistance
Purpose: To encourage farmers and ranchers to voluntarily
address threats to soil, water, and related natural resources,
including grazing land, wetlands, and wildlife habitat. The program
will also help landowners comply with federal and state environmental
laws and make beneficial, cost-effective changes to cropping systems,
grazing management, nutrient management, and irrigation.
Who Can Participate: SWCA is available nationwide, but
only in areas that are not designated as priority areas for the
Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP), Wetlands Reserve
Program (WRP), and Conservation Reserve Program (CRP). Applicants
must own or control the land.
How it Works: NRCS will work with the landowner to develop
a (required) conservation plan. NRCS will determine eligible practices
using a locally led process. There is a five to ten year contract
period. The maximum total payment per participant shall not exceed
$50,000. The federal cost share is 75% of the cost of an eligible
practice.
Agency Offering Program: Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS)
Website: www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/swca/
Contact Information: Find your local NRCS office in the
local phone book or at http://offices.sc.egov.usda.gov/locator/app
------------------------
Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP)
Type of Program: Direct funding, Technical assistance
Purpose: To offer landowners an opportunity to establish
long-term conservation and wildlife practices and protection,
to protect, restore, and enhance wetlands.
Who Can Participate: Owners of land with a history of
agricultural use with wetlands that are restorable as beneficial
for wildlife. Wetlands converted since 1985 are not eligible.
How it Works: Landowners voluntarily retire marginal land
from agriculture, limiting the land's use permanently while retaining
it in private ownership. There are three options: (1) permanent
conservation easement (NRCS pays for the easement plus 100% of
restoration costs), (2) 30 year conservation easement (NRCS pays
75% of the value of the easement plus 75% of restoration costs),
or (3) cost-share restoration agreement (NRCS pays 75% of restoration
costs). The land can be used for hunting, fishing, and other uses
that are compatible with providing wetland functions.
Agency Offering Program: Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS)
Website: www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/wrp/
Contact Information: Find your local NRCS office in the
local phone book or at http://offices.sc.egov.usda.gov/locator/app
------------------------
Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program (WHIP)
Type of Program: Direct funding, Technical assistance
Purpose: To assist landowners who want to establish and
improve aquatic or upland wildlife habitat. Projects with declining
wildlife species are prioritized.
Who Can Participate: WHIP provides assistance to conservation
minded landowners who are unable to meet the specific eligibility
requirements of other USDA conservation programs.
How it Works: NRCS works with the participant to develop
a wildlife habitat plan. WHIP agreements between generally last
from 5 to 10 years. The program provides up to 75% cost sharing.
Participants voluntarily limit future use of the land for a period
of time, but retain private ownership.
Agency Offering Program: Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS)
Website: www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/whip/
Contact Information: Find your local NRCS office in the
local phone book or at http://offices.sc.egov.usda.gov/locator/app
Notes: The Salmon Habitat Restoration Initiative is authorized
under WHIP in 5 states (Alaska, California, Maine, Oregon, Washington).
Landowners have flexible options for 1 to 15+ year agreements.
Projects include riparian restoration, fish passage barriers,
restoring gravel spawning beds, and reducing agricultural runoff.
------------------------
If you find any incorrect or incomplete information about these
incentive programs, please report it to chummon@defenders.org.
Federal Conservation Incentive
Programs
with the US Fish and Wildlife Service
(US Department of Interior)
Landowner Incentive Program (LIP)
Type of Program: Direct funding; Technical assistance
Purpose: To support on-the-ground projects that enhance,
protect, or restore habitats that benefit "species-at-risk"
on privately owned lands.
Who Can Participate: Private landowners, individually
or as a group, can submit project proposals. Groups (e.g. land
conservancies or trusts, watershed councils, community organizations,
or conservation organizations) working with private landowners
or on trust lands are also eligible. In their proposal, these
groups need to identify landowners who have confirmed their intent
to participate.
How it Works: This program is a competitive grant program
that establishes partnerships between federal and state governments
and private landowners. States review landowner applications and
submit a package of proposals to for federal funding. The state
provides technical and financial assistance to private landowners.
Landowners or partners provide a 25% non-federal match or in-kind
contribution.
Agency Offering Program: This program is funded by the
US Fish and Wildlife Service (US FWS) and administered by state
wildlife agencies.
Website: http://federalaid.fws.gov/lip/lipguidelines.html
------------------------
North American Wetlands Conservation Act Grants Program
(NAWCA)
Type of Program: Direct financial assistance
Purpose: To support the long-term protection of wetlands
and associated uplands habitats needed by waterfowl and other
migratory birds in North America. Projects must support long-term
wetlands acquisition, restoration, and/or enhancement.
Who Can Participate: Organizations and individuals who
have developed partnerships to carry out wetlands conservation
projects
How it Works: A standard grant proposal is a 4-year plan
of action supported by a NAWCA grant and partner funds to conserve
wetlands and wetlands-dependent fish and wildlife through acquisition
(including easements and land title donations), restoration and/or
enhancement, with a grant request between $51,000 and $1,000,000.
Small grants (up to $50,000) are administered separately. Partners
must provide at least a 1:1 non-federal match to the grant. Match
is eligible up to 2 years prior to the year the proposal is submitted
and through the project period.
Agency Offering Program: US Fish and Wildlife Service
(USFWS)
Website: http://www.fws.gov/birdhabitat/Grants/NAWCA/index.shtm
Contact Information: Standard Grants proposals: david_buie@fws.gov,
(301) 497-5870. Small Grants proposals: keith_morehouse@fws.gov,
(703) 358-1888. General office number: (703) 358-1784.
------------------------
Partners for Fish and Wildlife (PFW)
Type of Program: Direct funding; Technical assistance
Purpose: To support voluntary restoration of wetlands
and other fish and wildlife habitats on private land through public-private
partnerships. Projects are designed to restore native habitat
to as near a natural state as possible.
Who Can Participate: Private land (any land not in state
or federal ownership)
How it Works: Landowners must provide a 1:1 non federal
match (including in-kind). Landowners agree to retain the restoration
projects for at least 10 years, and otherwise retain full control
of their land. High priority projects address one of more of these
criteria: benefit migratory birds, migratory fish, or threatened
and endangered species; high priority areas identified by state
fish and wildlife agencies and other partners; are located near
National Wildlife Refuges; reduce habitat fragmentation.
Agency Offering Program: US Fish and Wildlife Service
(USFWS)
Website: http://ecos.fws.gov/partners/viewContent.do?viewPage=home
Contact Information: For a contact in your area, go to
http://www.fws.gov/partners/HowToPartner/altcont.html
------------------------
Private Stewardship Program (PSP)
Type of Program: Direct funding
Purpose: To provide grants and other assistance on a competitive
basis to individuals and groups for voluntary conservation efforts
to benefit federally listed, proposed, or candidate species, or
other at-risk species on private lands.
Who Can Participate: Private landowners and groups and
organizations that partner with landowners. Lands owned or leased
by organizations may be eligible if the conservation actions go
beyond measures and plans already in place or otherwise required.
How it Works: A proposal needs to describe the conservation
efforts to be undertaken, provide a plan for how and by whom the
work will be implemented, describe the land where the work will
be done, and explain the benefits for the targeted at-risk species.
A 10% non-federal match (cash or in-kind) is required.
Agency Offering Program: US Fish and Wildlife Service
(USFWS)
Website: http://endangered.fws.gov/grants/private%5Fstewardship/
Contact Information: privatestewardship@fws.gov,
503-231-6241
------------------------
If you find any incorrect or incomplete information about these
incentive programs, please report it to chummon@defenders.org.
Federal Conservation Incentive
Programs
with the US Forest Service
(US Department of Agriculture)
Forestry Incentives Program (FIP)
Status: This program was consolidated into the Forest
Land Enhancement Program (FLEP).
------------------------
Forest Land Enhancement Program (FLEP)
Status: Due to the extreme fire season of 2003, $50 million
of the FLEP funds were transferred to the Forest Service for fire
suppression costs. In the 2004 Interior Appropriations budget,
$40 million was not repaid. In the 2005 President's budget, the
remaining $40 million is being cancelled. This leaves FLEP with
no funds for future years. Any FLEP funds remaining in the states
may be spent in accordance with federal and state program rules.
Type of Program: Direct funding, Technical assistance
Purpose: To provide educational, technical, and cost-share
assistance to help private forest landowners implement their sustainable
forestry management objectives.
Who Can Participate: Non-industrial private forest landowners.
There is no limit to the amount of forest land owned by an individual,
as long as the person qualifies as a non-industrial private forest
landowner.
How it Works: This program is administered through each
state, and is optional in each and voluntary for landowners. Each
state develops priorities for how the funds will be used, including
minimum and maximum acres, aggregate payment, use for technical
and educational assistance, and practices that receive cost-share
assistance. Landowners need a forest management plan to be eligible
for cost-share assistance. The cost-share practices are usually
limited to 1,000 acres per year per landowner. Cost share rate
is 50-70%.
Agency Offering Program: US Forest Service and state forest
agencies
Website: www.fs.fed.us/spf/coop/programs/loa/flep.shtml
Contact Information: To locate your state forester's office,
go to www.stateforesters.org/SFlist.html.
Notes: This program consolidates and replaces the Forestry
Incentives Program (FIP) and Stewardship Incentives Program (SIP).
------------------------
Forest Legacy Program (FLP)
Type of Program: Direct funding, Technical assistance
Purpose: To support state efforts to protect environmentally
sensitive private forest lands from being converted to nonforest
uses, by developing and carrying out state forest conservation
plans.
Who Can Participate: Private forest owners
How it Works: This voluntary program supports acquisition
of conservation easements, legally binding agreements transferring
a negotiated set of property rights from one party to another,
without removing the property from private ownership. To qualify,
landowners are required to prepare a multiple resource management
plan as part of the conservation easement acquisition. Most conservation
easements restrict development, require sustainable forestry practices,
and protect other values. The federal government may fund up to
75% of program costs, with at least 25% coming from private, state,
or local sources. In addition to gains associated with the sale
or donation of property rights, many landowners also benefit from
reduced federal or state taxes.
Agency Offering Program: US Forest Service and state forestry
agencies
Website: www.fs.fed.us/spf/coop/programs/loa/flp.shtml
Contact Information: To locate your state forester's office,
go to www.stateforesters.org/SFlist.html.
Notes: This program is available in some states, starting
up in others, and unavailable in some.
------------------------
Forest Stewardship Program (FSP)
Type of Program: Technical assistance
Purpose: To provide technical assistance, through state
forestry agencies, to nonindustrial private forest owners to encourage
and enable active long-term forest management to provide timber,
wildlife habitat, watershed protection, recreational opportunities
and many other benefits for landowners and society, both now and
in the future.
Who Can Participate: Non-industrial private forest landowners
who are committed to the active management and stewardship of
their forested properties for at least ten years. Minimum ownership
10 acres.
How it Works: Landowners develop comprehensive, multi-resource
management Forest Stewardship plans that provide information and
strategies to manage their forests for a variety of products and
services to sustain forest health and vigor. The FSP is not a
cost share program. Cost-share assistance for plan implementation
may be available through other programs such as the Forest Land
Enhancement Program.
Agency Offering Program: US Forest Service and state forestry
agencies
Website: www.fs.fed.us/spf/coop/programs/loa/fsp.shtml
Contact Information: To locate your state forester's office,
go to www.stateforesters.org/SFlist.html.
------------------------
Healthy Forests Reserve Program (HFRP)
Status: This program has $2,500,000 appropriated nationwide
for FY 2006, but it is not clear how or when it will be distributed
Type of Program: Direct funding, Technical assistance
Purpose: To provide financial assistance for private forest
landowners to protect, restore, and enhance forest ecosystems
to promote the recovery of endangered species, improve biodiversity,
and enhance carbon sequestration.
Who Can Participate: Private forest landowners with rare
species.
How it Works: The landowner has three choices of agreements
with associated cost-share rates: 10-year agreements (50% of conservation
easement value plus 50% of restoration costs), 30-year easements
(75% of conservation easement vlaue plus 75% of restoration costs),
or 99-year easements (75-100% of conservation easement value plus
100% of restoration costs). The landowner, US Forest Service,
and US Fish and Wildlife Service develop a conservation plan that
benefits rare species and receive cost-share assistance in implementing
the plan and, in the case of easements, for the reduction in property
value due to the easement. Safe Harbor assurances are available
to landowners to allow habitat restoration for rare species without
fear of increased regulation.
Agency Offering Program: US Forest Service and Natural
Resources Conservation Service.
Websites: www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/HFRP/ProgInfo
www.fs.fed.us/projects/hfi/field-guide/web/page20.php
------------------------
National Timber Tax Website
Type of Program: Technical assistance
Purpose: To answer specific questions and interpret complex
laws regarding the timber taxes.
Who Can Participate: Timber owners, accountants, attorneys,
consulting foresters, and other professionals who work with timberland
owners.
How it Works: Users can browse information on the web
regarding timber tax laws, programs, and strategies. Landowners
also organize and maintain complete records of their timber transactions
with this web application.
Agency Offering Program: A consortium of public and private
forestry organizations.
Website: www.timbertax.org
Contact Information: question@timbertax.org
------------------------
Stewardship Incentives Program (SIP)
Status: This program was consolidated into the Forest
Land Enhancement Program (FLEP).
------------------------
Download a pdf of federal program list.
If you find any incorrect or incomplete information about these
incentive programs, please report it to chummon@defenders.org.
Updated 6-27-06
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