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Future of CRP

The cap was $300 an acre . I just had some go in at $300/acre for 15 years .

Trees—oak, plum, spruce, pine . They will more than likely be there for more than 15 yrs!
Mine got signed up by the previous owner- $72 an acre . He had no clue what he was going when he signed up stuff and really made a mess of my piece. Tempted to buy it out so I can enroll it differently but really not cost efficient.
 
Mine got signed up by the previous owner- $72 an acre . He had no clue what he was going when he signed up stuff and really made a mess of my piece. Tempted to buy it out so I can enroll it differently but really not cost efficient.
Is it possible (@ $72acre) that he enrolled pasture ? Riparian buffer plan ?

That seems awfully low for crop ground !
 
Is it possible (@ $72acre) that he enrolled pasture ? Riparian buffer plan ?

That seems awfully low for crop ground !
So I was told the farmer never recorded the acres- so no history- but the farmer recorded his acres (the amounts of acres never matched apparently)
 
For the past 20 years The national crp acreage cap trends down during a republican administration typically. During a democratic administration the cap slightly goes up and typically higher rental rates and Incentive payments above and beyond.
The kicker has been that the minimum ebi score to get into general crp has been reduced by over 25% in recent years. Many states have had 99% re-enrollment due to the lower minimum ebi score. So in another words...almost everything that is offered is accepted. If you can sign up then almost everything has been accepted nationally. Sure a few offers don't qualify, but it is very rare. That needs to change.

The minimum score needs to go back up. That would leave highly productive and minimally erosive soils would be less likely to be enrolled, while allowing the highest erosive soils to be enrolled. Another change that needs to happen is soil rental should not be based on productivity ,but soil loss. That would reduce incentive to enroll high quality soils. This would help young farmers and meet objectives.
 
The problem is once acres are converted to income producing acres they will never go back to idle. Land today simply costs to much. Acres that get cleaned up and farmed long enough then go to CRP will most likely go back into production of some kind unless crop insurance is also completely changed.
 
I don't think the program should be canned completely, but I think there should be some restrictions on what can be enrolled in the program. I have several neighbors and people I know that put 80+CSR2 farms in the program because they didn't want to deal with people the check just comes. This is hurting the young producers in my area, not only are they competing with the well established producer, but competing against their own tax dollars.

Here's an example, so if it's 70CSR2 and up it doesn't qualify. Sub 70CSR2 farms can qualify. You could move that number down to 65CSR2 and down. I believe heavily sloped ground C slopes or worse should qualify regardless of CSR2. In my corner of Iowa C slopes are very steep prime for Erosion.

I think if some common sense restrictions were applied to the CRP program I don't think there would be much resistance to that.

I think some farms might even hit the market if they didn't qualify for CRP anymore. People want to hit the easy button.
BINGO was his name oooooooo
 
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