California Receives $10 Million More for Wetlands Conservation
Applications are Due July 2nd for Next Ranking
DAVIS, Calif., May 19 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- More funding is now available for California's farmers and ranchers to voluntarily restore and enhance wetlands. The USDA's Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) in California is receiving an additional $10 million for the Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP) this year.
"Since California has lost over 90 percent of its historic wetland habitat, this increase in funding offers even more opportunities for wetlands conservation," said Ed Burton, NRCS State Conservationist in California. "Wetlands improve water quality, prevent flooding and soil erosion, recharge groundwater and provide critical wildlife habitat."
The $10 million is in addition to the $12.5 million already received this year. WRP, reauthorized in the 2008 Farm Bill, is a voluntary program that provides agricultural producers and other private landowners compensation for land placed in conservation easements, and cost-share funding for restoring and enhancing wetlands.
Applications for the next ranking cycle are due at local USDA Service Centers by July 2, 2010. However, NRCS offices are accepting WRP applications throughout the year.
"WRP can provide agricultural producers an alternative to the difficulties of farming wet, marginal land," Burton said. "Plus, many landowners enjoy the recreation opportunities their wetlands offer them."
WRP includes permanent easements that pay 100 percent of the easement value and restoration costs, and 30-year easements that pay up to 75 percent of the easement value and restoration costs. WRP also offers 10-year restoration agreements to restore wetlands without placing an easement on enrolled acres; NRCS pays up to 75 percent of the restoration costs. With all enrollment options, landowners maintain title to the land and control access.
To date, over 250 private landowners in California have enrolled more than 100,000 acres of land into WRP, accounting for one acre in every four of California's functioning wetlands and hosting over 180 species of birds. Nationwide, about 2.2 million acres are enrolled in WRP, with this latest round of funding expected to add another 75,000 acres.
For more information on WRP, producers can contact their local USDA Service Center or visit www.ca.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/wrp.html.
NRCS is celebrating its 75th year of "helping people help the land." Since its inception in 1935, NRCS has worked in partnership with private landowners and a variety of local, state and federal conservation partners to deliver conservation based on specific, local needs.
SOURCE USDA - Natural Resources Conservation Service
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