Source: USDA, 6/30/22 Specialty
crop producers can now benefit from greater flexibility to use their own
records to meet crop insurance reporting requirements. The U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) is announcing revisions that will make it easier for specialty
crop producers and others who sell through direct marketing channels to obtain
insurance, report their annual production, and file a claim.“Farming and ranching are inherently complex and often challenging occupations, so anything and everything we can do to streamline processes and requirements are essential,” said Marcia Bunger, Administrator of USDA’s Risk Management Agency (RMA). “Crop insurance plays a critical role in a farmer's operation and how they manage their risk and we’re here to help. Optimizing reporting requirements for direct marketers or vertically integrated operations will help make insurance easier and more accessible for countless producers, including those who grow specialty crops and are an important part of our local and regional food systems.” Changes
include: =
A
new marketing certification that allows producers to self-identify if they will
not have disinterested third-party records, when required, and enables them to
use their own supporting production records. This will benefit direct marketers
and vertically integrated producers since they often do not have disinterested
third-party records. = Allowing producers to use their own records,
thereby limiting the need for Approved Insurance Providers (AIP) preharvest
appraisals as a supporting record. Before these
changes, RMA generally required disinterested third-party records and AIPs may
have conducted preharvest appraisals as a supporting production record. These updates also improve transparency in the producer’s policy by adding production reporting definitions, listing the 30-day appeal deadline for good farming practice determinations,
clarifying where a producer can find information in the policy, and updating
terminology to be consistent across the policy. These revisions and other
updates come through the Crop Insurance Reporting and Other Changes Final Rule published today by the Federal Crop
Insurance Corporation. This Final Rule will update the Common Crop Insurance
Provisions Basic Provisions, Area Risk Protection Insurance Basic Provisions,
and includes changes to individual Crop Provisions. Twenty Crop Provisions will
be publicly released on June 30, 2022. More Information Specialty crops and
their producers are a priority at RMA. Federal crop insurance coverage for
specialty crops has grown steadily over the past 15 years with individual crop
insurance programs now available for dozens of specialty crops. These latest updates and
flexibilities build on other RMA efforts to simplify reporting requirements for
specialty crop producers and better serve those who sell through direct
marketing. RMA implemented changes to Whole-Farm Revenue Protection for the
2021 crop year that streamline revenue reporting for producers who direct
market two or more commodities. Additionally, the new Micro Farm option was
rolled out beginning with the 2022 crop year specifically for producers who
sell locally, including direct marketing. It reduces reporting requirements,
providing more access to the program. Crop insurance is sold and
delivered solely through private crop insurance agents. A list of crop insurance
agents is available at all USDA Service Centers and online at the RMA Agent Locator. Learn
more about crop insurance and the modern farm safety net at rma.usda.gov.
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