Coweta farmers get
drought relief The U.S.
Department of Agriculture's Farm Service Agency
state executive director, Hanson Carter, has
announced that Georgia farmers in 21 eligible
counties, including Coweta, will soon receive
about $870,200 through the Pasture Recovery
Program to help re-establish forage crops on
pastures that were severely damaged by drought in
1999.
These
funds will help producers recover from the
effects of the severe 1999 drought by
rehabilitating valuable pasture land and
providing feed for livestock, said Carter.
Eligible
land included pasture normally grazed by
livestock, but so damaged by drought that seeding
was required to re-establish the forage crop. FSA
county offices will issue payments after farmers
have completed the planting practice for the
re-established forage crop. A lot of
planting will occur this fall, to replace the
fescue damaged last year, said Carter.
The
Pasture Recovery Program was announced by
Secretary of Agriculture Dan Glickman March 13,
and FSA conducted a sign-up from March 20 to June
23.
Since
producer demand (nationally) exceeded the amount
of funds available by approximately $14 million,
a national factor was applied to all requests.
All eligible producers will receive about 73.5
percent of the amount they qualified for under
PRP. Georgia FSA originally requested close to
$1.2 million for PRP.
Additional
information on the Pasture Recovery Program can
be found on the Farm Service Agency's web site at
http://www.fsa.usda.gov.
FSA's
mission is to help stabilize farm income and to
provide credit to new or disadvantaged farmers,
help them resume their operations following a
disaster, and help them conserve land and water
resources.
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