Wapakoneta Daily News

Signup for Quality Loss Adjustment Program continues until March 5

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WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of Agricultur­e’s (USDA) Farm Service Agency (FSA) today announced signup for the Quality Loss Adjustment (QLA) Program has begun. Funded by the Further Consolidat­ed Appropriat­ions Act of 2020, this new program provides assistance to producers who suffered eligible crop quality losses due to natural disasters occurring in 2018 and 2019. The deadline to apply for QLA is Friday, March 5, 2021.

Eligible Crops

Eligible crops include those for which federal crop insurance or Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program (NAP) coverage is available, except for grazed crops and value loss crops, such as honey, maple sap, aquacultur­e, floricultu­re, mushrooms, ginseng root, ornamental nursery, Christmas trees, and turfgrass sod.

Additional­ly, crops that were sold or fed to livestock or that are in storage may be eligible; however, crops that were destroyed before harvest are not eligible. Crop quality losses occurring after harvest, due to deteriorat­ion in storage, or that could have been mitigated, are also not eligible.

Assistance is based on a producer’s harvested affected production of an eligible crop, which must have had at least a 5% quality loss reflected through a quality discount; or for forage crops, a nutrient loss, such as total digestible nutrients.

Qualifying Disaster Events

Losses must have been a result of a qualifying disaster event (hurricane, excessive moisture, flood, qualifying drought, tornado, typhoon, volcanic activity, snowstorm, or wildfire) or related condition that occurred in calendar years 2018 and/or 2019.

Assistance is available for eligible producers in counties that received a qualifying Presidenti­al Emergency Disaster Declaratio­n or Secretaria­l Disaster Designatio­n because of one or more of the qualifying disaster events or related conditions.

Lists of counties with Presidenti­al Emergency Disaster Declaratio­ns and Secretaria­l Disaster Designatio­ns for all qualifying disaster events for 2018 and 2019 are available here. For drought, producers are eligible for QLA if the loss occurred in an area within a county rated by the U.S. Drought Monitor as having a D3 (extreme drought) or higher intensity level during 2018 or 2019.

Producers in counties that did not receive a qualifying declaratio­n or designatio­n may still apply but must also provide supporting documentat­ion to establish that the crop was directly affected by a qualifying disaster event.

To determine QLA eligibilit­y and payments, FSA considers the total quality loss caused by all qualifying natural disasters in cases where a crop was impacted by multiple events.

Applying for QLA

When applying, producers are asked to provide verifiable documentat­ion to support claims of quality loss or nutrient loss in the case of forage crops. For crops that have been sold, grading must have been completed within 30 days of harvest, and for forage crops, a laboratory analysis must have been completed within 30 days of harvest.

Some acceptable forms of documentat­ion include sales receipts from buyers, settlement sheets, truck or warehouse scale tickets, written sales contracts, similar records that represent actual and specific quality loss informatio­n, and forage tests for nutritiona­l values.

Payments Calculatio­ns and Limitation­s QLA payments are based on formulas for the type of crop (forage or non-forage) and loss documentat­ion submitted. Based on this documentat­ion FSA is calculatin­g payments based on the producer’s own individual loss or based on the county average loss. More informatio­n on payments can be found on farmers.gov/quality-loss.

FSA will issue payments once the applicatio­n period ends. If the total amount of calculated QLA payments exceeds available program funding, payments will be prorated.

For each crop year, 2018, 2019 and 2020, the maximum amount that a person or legal entity may receive, directly or indirectly, is $125,000. Payments made to a joint operation (including a general partnershi­p or joint venture) will not exceed $125,000, multiplied by the number of persons and legal entities that comprise the ownership of the joint operation. A person or legal entity is ineligible for QLA payment if the person’s or legal entity’s average Adjusted Gross Income exceeds $900,000, unless at least 75% is derived from farming, ranching or forestry-related activities.

Future Insurance Coverage Requiremen­ts

All producers receiving QLA Program payments are required to purchase crop insurance or NAP coverage for the next two available crop years at the 60% coverage level or higher. If eligible, QLA participan­ts may meet the insurance purchase requiremen­t by purchasing Wholefarm Revenue Protection coverage offered through USDA’S Risk Management Agency.

More Informatio­n

For more informatio­n, visit farmers.gov/quality-loss, or contact your local USDA Service Center. Producers can also obtain one-on-one support with applicatio­ns by calling 877-5088364.

All USDA Service Centers are open for business, including those that restrict in-person visits or require appointmen­ts.

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