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All counties eligible for disaster recovery assistance
Hamilton Square, New Jersey, July 26, 2024 – The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) is accepting
applications for the Emergency Conservation Program (ECP) and the Emergency Forest Restoration
Program (EFRP) from New Jersey agricultural producers and owners of nonindustrial private forestland
to address damage from recent severe storms that occurred Jan. 1 through June 30, 2024. The statewide
signup period for both ECP and EFRP runs July 29 through Aug. 28, 2024.
“Recovering from the impacts of natural disasters is never easy, but there’s no need to go it alone,” said
Robert Andrzejczak, State Executive Director for FSA in New Jersey. “If you have an immediate need to
clean up and restore your farm and forestland and need assistance, we’re ready to help but it’s imperative that you call our office for to determine program eligibility and restoration practice approval before you take any action.”
Emergency Conservation Program (ECP) https://tinyurl.com/436674fb
Emergency Forest Restoration Program (EFRP) https://tinyurl.com/4vn3znzj
Emergency Conservation Program
ECP provides cost-share reimbursement to producers to restore farmland to pre-disaster conditions.
Conservation concerns that were present on the land prior to the disaster are not eligible for ECP
assistance.
Approved ECP practices include fence repair and debris removal.
Approved ECP applicants can receive up to 75% of the cost of the approved restoration activity. Producers
who are considered limited resource, socially disadvantaged and beginning farmers and ranchers can
receive up to 90% cost-share. FSA is authorized to provide advance payments, up to 25% of the approved
cost share. The advance cost-share payment must be spent within 60 days from receipt of payment.
Producers with damage from qualifying natural disaster events must apply for assistance before beginning reconstructive work. FSA’s National Environmental Policy Act and environmental compliance review process is required to be completed before any actions are taken. Submitting an application after
reconstructive work has been completed may not qualify for ECP.
FSA county committees will evaluate applications based on an on-site inspection of the damaged land,
taking into consideration the type and extent of the damage. An on-site inspection does not guarantee that cost-share funding will be provided.
The 2018 Farm Bill increased the payment limitation for ECP to $500,000 per natural disaster event.
Emergency Forest Restoration Program
EFRP is a cost-share program that provides financial and technical assistance to owners of nonindustrial private forestland (NIPF) to restore NIPF land damaged by a qualifying natural disaster event.
After applications are received, local FSA county committees determine land eligibility using on-site
inspections to assess the type and extent of damage.
Financial assistance is not provided upfront but is reimbursed, at no more than 75% of the lesser of the
actual costs incurred or allowable cost, after a restoration activity is complete. If an EFRP application is
approved, the participant is expected to perform restoration and conservation practices based on the
FSA-848A Cost-Share Agreement and restoration plan provided.
The following requirements for participation in EFRP include:
- Restoration must be completed to meet the Natural Resources Conservation Service and/ or state
forestry agency technical standards. - Participants must document and keep records of all costs incurred, including costs associated with
personal labor, to complete the restoration activities. - The minimum qualifying cost of restoration is $1,000.
- The program’s payment limitation is $500,000.
In order to meet eligibility requirements, NIPF land must have existing tree cover or had tree cover immediately before the natural disaster occurred and be sustainable for growing trees.
The land must also be owned or leased by any nonindustrial private individual, group, association, corporation, or other private legal entity that has definitive decision-making authority over the land.
The natural disaster event must have resulted in damage that, if untreated, would impair or endanger
the natural resources on the land and/or materially affect future use of the land.
For more information on ECP or EFRP, please contact your local USDA service center or visit
farmers.gov/recover.