USDA Extends Deadline to May 17 for Producers to Certify 2018 Crop Production for Market Facilitation Program Payments
WASHINGTON,
April 29, 2019 – USDA extended the
deadline to May 17 from May 1 for agricultural producers to certify 2018 crop
production for payments through the Market Facilitation Program (MFP), which
helps producers who have been significantly affected by foreign tariffs,
resulting in the loss of traditional exports. USDA’s Farm Service Agency (FSA)
extended the deadline because heavy rainfall and snowfall have delayed harvests
in many parts of the country, preventing producers from certifying acres.
Payments will be
issued only if eligible producers certify before the updated May 17 deadline.
The MFP provides
payments to producers of corn, cotton, sorghum, soybeans, wheat, dairy, hogs,
fresh sweet cherries and shelled almonds. FSA will issue payments based on the
producer’s certified total production of the MFP commodity multiplied by the MFP rate
for that specific commodity.
“Trade issues,
coupled with low commodity prices and recovery from natural disasters, have
definitely impacted the bottom line for many agricultural producers,” said FSA
Administrator Richard Fordyce. “The MFP payments provide short-term relief from
retaliatory tariffs to supplement the traditional farm safety net, helping
agricultural producers through these difficult times. Weather conditions this
fall, winter and early spring have blocked many producers from completing harvest
of their crops, and we want to make sure producers who want to finalize their
MFP application have an opportunity.”
Producers can
certify production by contacting their local FSA office
or through farmers.gov.
About the Market Facilitation Program
U.S. Secretary of
Agriculture Sonny Perdue launched the trade mitigation program to assist
farmers suffering from damage because of unjustified trade retaliation by
foreign nations. FSA implemented MFP in September 2018 as a relief strategy to
protect agricultural producers while the Administration works on free, fair and
reciprocal trade deals to open more markets to help American farmers compete
globally. To date, more than $8.3 billion has been paid to nearly 600,000
applicants.
The MFP is established
under the statutory authority of the Commodity Credit Corporation Charter Act
and is administered by FSA.
More Information
For more
information, contact your local FSA office
or visit www.farmers.gov/mfp.
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