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2006 Environmental Quality Incentive Program

Local Work Group Summary for Silver City

Introduction:

The Silver City Field Office is located in the town of Silver City, county seat of Grant County, in the southwestern part of New Mexico.  The field office provides assistance to the Grant and San Francisco Soil and Water Conservation Districts (SWCD) with a combined total of 4.3 million acres.  Approximately 35% are state and private lands and 65% federal lands.  There are a wide variety of landscapes ranging from 4,400 feet up to 11,000 feet elevation.  Annual precipitation ranges from 10 inches in the southern desert to over 20 inches in the mountains.  Soils are extremely variable and complex.  They range from deep loamy soils in the two major river valleys and broad alluvial slopes to shallow rocky soils in the foothills and mountains.  Vegetation ranges from the black grama, tobosa and dropseeds, yucca, Mormon tea, and mesquite of the desert grassland type up to ponderosa pine, piņon ricegrass, mountain brome and mountain muhly of the ponderosa pine type.  The present economy of the area is based on agriculture with less emphasis on the mining and logging activities of the past.

Local Work Group:

The Grant and San Francisco SWCDs held a combined Local Work Group Meeting October 17, 2005, in the NRCS conference room, 2610 North Silver Street, Silver City, New Mexico.  Invitations were sent out to federal, state, and local agencies.  Fifteen participants were in attendance and provided input in developing the FY 2006 EQIP  plan.

Priority Resource Concerns:

The Local Work Group reviewed the EQIP 2005 program and decided no changes were needed for this year and to continue the program as it was set up last year.  Last year, the Local Work Group selected soil erosion, water quality, and water quantity as higher priority resource concerns and proposes to recommend higher cost-share rates for selected practices to accomplish their objectives.  The local work group does not intend to limit landowners from addressing other resource concerns utilizing the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP).  This represents the results of a district mailing to cooperators and a tabulation of the feedback comments from a couple of years ago with no changes recommended for this year.

Funding Considerations:

The Local Work Group decided to continue to allocate monies received to the two districts based on the same acreage figures used to determine the state allocation to the Silver City Service Center as done last year.  Initially, both districts will use 55% of the available funds for rangeland practices and 45% for all other practices.  These funds are interchangeable if not otherwise obligated.  Unobligated funds within the districts are also interchangeable. 

Cost Docket:

The southwest area wide county cost docket will be used.  Most of the cost shared practices will use the average cost (AC) payment method

Please refer to the links for the cost docket and eligible practices to view the final approved practices, cost share rates and practice component costs.

Eligible Practices:

The Local Work Group discussed the "New Mexico Approved Practice List for EQIP" and recommended using the list as last year. 

Please refer to the links for the cost docket and eligible practices to view the final approved practices, cost share rates and practice component costs. 

Cost Share Rates, Incentive Payments and Caps:

The Local Work Group recommended using higher cost share rates on brush management, wells, livestock watering facilities, livestock pipelines, erosion control practices, prescribed burns, and streambank stabilization.  The State Conservationist did not approved an increase in cost share rates for any practices FY 2006

The Local Work Group recommends an Incentive Payment to be paid to cooperators planning a prescribed burn on private and state lands.  The payment would be based on a need to defer the pasture from all grazing by domestic animals during the growing season and the following months prior to the planned burn in order to have sufficient fine fuels to carry a prescribed fire.  Payments would be made on an animal unit month (AUM) basis for the acreage to be burned covering the period of the growing season through the month of the actual burn.  This is generally July through April or May of the following year.  Payment would be made upon the completion of the prescribed burn.  The Local Work Group suggests using the rates presently used by the USDA Forest Service in this same area.  The Animal Unit Month Value Coefficients used in estimating market values for private lands has been used since 1983 and is updated annually.  The calendar year 2004 coefficient for this area is $13.40 per AUM.  The coefficient in effect at the time the cost docket is developed would lock in the price for the period of the contract.

Cost Share Rates for Limited Resource Producers:

A cost share rate of 90%, for the first $30,000, will be used for all applicants who self-certify they meet the Limited Resource Producer criteria.  After $30,000 the rate approved for non-limited resource producers will be used.

Cost Share Rates for Beginning Farmers/Ranchers:

Cost share rates for those applicants who self-certify they meet the Beginning Farmer/Beginning Rancher (BR/BR) criteria will be fifteen (15) percent higher than the rate established for non-BF/BR applicants for each practice within a Field Office/Local Work Group area (for the first $30,000).  After $30,000 the rate approved for non-BF/BR will be used.

Please refer to the links for the cost docket and eligible practices to view the final approved practices, cost share rates and practice component costs. 

Ranking Criteria:

The New Mexico - Silver City Field Office, FY 2005 Ranking Criteria Worksheet - Grazing Lands will be used including attachment for riparian and grazed forest if needed (see attachment 1).  The New Mexico - Silver City Field Office, FY 2005 Ranking Criteria Worksheet - Irrigated Cropland will be used as appropriate (see attachment 2).  The Ranking Criteria Worksheet is used to rank each application impartially and prioritize the applications for available funding to be contracted.

Please refer to the links for the ranking criteria to view the final approved criteria.

Timelines, Evaluation Periods:

All applications and any supporting documentation must be submitted by January 27, 2006. 

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