Carl Josefy Emphasizes Important Producer FSA Deadlines and Program Info

Listen to KC Sheperd’s full conversation with Carl Josefy.

Farm Director, KC Sheperd, caught up with Carl Josefy, the Executive Director for the Jackson County FSA, and talked about deadlines producers need to be aware of, FSA programs, and more.

“We’ve got a hard deadline coming up on July 17th,” Josefy said. “That will be the acreage reporting deadline for all spring and summer crops, your CRP (Conservation Reserve Program), your fruits and vegetables, pecans, grass acres, and any other cropland, even if you didn’t utilize it for anything, it needs to be reported as idle so that all of your acres are reported for the year.”

Another hard deadline, Josefy said, is July 14th.

“Friday, July 14 is the deadline for producers to sign up for the ERP (Emergency Relief Program) phase two and the PARP (Pandemic Assistance Revenue Program) programs,” Josefy said. “ERP is the Emergency Relief Program phase two, which was intended for those producers who may or may not have gotten the payment under ERP phase one for disasters that occurred during 2021 and or 2022.”

ERP is a revenue-based program, Josefy said, and producers will need to visit with their accountants, their CPA, an attorney, or whoever does their taxes to see if they qualify for that program.

“PARP is a program that is also a revenue program that is only applicable for the 2020 crop year,” Josefy said. “It is also a program that looks at the loss of revenue when compared to 2018 and 2019, but it is it’s only for the pandemic that has that occurred during 2020 when we first came out with the COVID issue and all the things that affected markets for livestock and crops.”

The revenue that counts under one program, Josefy said, may not be the revenue that counts under another.

“There’s a lot of detail in each program that producers need to know about, and the safest way to look at those would be to look at the fact sheets there that are available online or go into your local FSA county office and ask for the fact sheets that describe each one of those programs,” Josefy said. “It varies from county to county, from state to state, so every producer needs to be on their own and look at those programs.”

There have been some changes that are occurring for those producers who are reporting their acres by Monday, July 17th, Josefy said, because when producers report their summer crops, sometimes they have more acres or fewer acres of those summer crops than they did in the previous year.

“When they have that situation, sometimes that will affect their shares on their contract that they participate with the Agricultural Risk Coverage and Price Loss Coverage Program,” Josefy said. “Again, that’s a county-by-county producer-by-producer situation. There’s no set way to look at that except to look at the number of acres reported when they come in to report those spring and summer crops.”

Josefy encourages producers to get in touch with their local FSA office as soon as possible to meet those deadlines, which is critical for FSA eligibility as well as crop insurance.

“They have the same acreage reporting deadline as FSA, meaning that you’ve got to have your acreage reported with FSA and your crop insurance agent at the same time,” Josefy said.

If a producer reports their acres with FSA, Josefy said the FSA can send that report to the crop insurance agent.

Josefy also talked with Sheperd about what producers need to do who have faced damage to their livestock due to storms.

“If you have that situation, the very first thing you need to do is document it and maybe even have a witness document it with you,” Josefy said. “Documentation could include pictures and or video of the dead animals.”

The loss needs to be recorded preferably within 15 to 30 days, Josefy said.

“You can call the office and just phone us right when you notice the loss occurred, and we’ll document it, and then you’ve got a record,” Josefy said. “Once that’s occurred, then later on, you can provide us with your beginning inventory of your livestock.”

Josefy offered plenty more insight on programs available for livestock and crop producers in his conversation with Sheperd. Click the listen bar above the story to listen to all the details!

Verified by MonsterInsights