USDA to Begin Accepting Applications For Emergency Conservation Program Assistance In Several Wildfire-Impacted Counties
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The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Farm Service Agency (FSA) will begin accepting applications on Monday, April 27, for the Emergency Conservation Program (ECP) in several Nebraska counties impacted by March wildfires.
ECP has been authorized for implementation in these counties to address damages from
these wildfires:
Morrill Fire: Arthur, Garden, Grant, Keith and Morrill
Cottonwood Fire: Dawson and Lincoln
Road 203 Fire: Blaine, Thomas
Anderson Bridge Fire: Cherry
Ashby and Minor Fires: Grant, Garden
ECP provides cost-share and technical assistance to producers to restore farm and
ranch land to pre-disaster conditions following a qualifying natural disaster. ECP
signup in the above-listed counties begins on Monday, April 27, and ends on Friday,
June 26, 2026.
“The Farm Service Agency can help producers and landowners recover from wildfires
that impacted their operation,” said Hilary Maricle, FSA State Executive Director
for Nebraska. “If you have a need for cost-share assistance associated with debris
removal, fence repair or replacement, water structure repair or replacement, or
other restoration needs associated with these wildfires, please call your county
office about ECP.”
Approved ECP applicants can receive up to 75% of the allowable cost of the approved
restoration activity, with a maximum cost share of $500,000 per natural disaster
event.
Approved ECP practices include:
* Non-engineering practices:
* Debris removal
* Fence restoration
* Water structure restoration
* Windbreak-shelterbelt establishment
* Check with FSA before beginning other work such as:
* Repairing dams, ponds, irrigation field ditches, lined waterway or
underground outlet
* Grading, shaping or releveling
* Repairing grade stabilization structures, grassed waterways or terraces
ECP cost-share assistance can provide advance payments for up to 25% of the total
allowable cost for all ECP practices before the restoration is carried out. The
advance payment must be spent within 60 days.
Producers who lease federally owned or managed lands, including tribal trust land,
as well as state land, are eligible to participate in ECP.
Conservation concerns present on the land prior to the qualifying natural disaster
event are not eligible for ECP assistance.
Eligibility and Environmental Requirements
To allow producers to begin their recovery efforts sooner, FSA is offering
flexibilities that apply to certain non-ground disturbing practices.
FSA is waiving the onsite inspection for certain ECP practices such as the removal
of debris and repair of fencing. Additionally, FSA is waiving the requirement for
producers to obtain prior approval to conduct removal of debris and fence repair or
replacement to support critical disaster recovery efforts.
FSA is streamlining environmental compliance reviews due to the impacts of this
disaster event. However, FSA will continue to complete on-site environmental reviews
for applicants who do not meet the required conditions for non-ground disturbing
practices.
