SURE Program Available for 2008 Crop Losses
Jan 12, 2010 12:02 PM, By Kent Thiesse
The 2008 Farm Bill included a new Supplemental Agriculture Disaster Assistance Program (SURE), or so-called permanent disasterprogram, which was initiated for the 2008 crop year. The new disaster program is intended to replace the need for passage of frequent ad-hoc disaster programs after a natural disaster occurs. SURE is the primary piece of the new federal disaster program for crop producers, and is available to all eligible producers in any county that was declared as a disaster county by the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture in 2008, including all contiguous counties. The SURE program covers all crops, whether insurable by federal crop insurance or the NAP program, and covers both production losses and crop quality losses, provided that producers were signed-up for federal crop insurance or the NAP insurance coverage for the 2008 crop year. Sign-up for the 2008 SURE program payments for eligible producers started on Jan. 4, 2010, at county Farm Service Agency (FSA) offices.
SURE Details
Many crop producers in the Upper Midwest will be eligible for SURE program payments for the 2008 crop year, due to the fact that several counties in Minnesota, Iowa, North and South Dakota, Wisconsin and other states were declared disaster counties in 2008, or are contiguous counties. Here are the details for the 2008 crop year:
SURE Eligibility – Producer must have one or more of their farm units in a county that was declared a USDA federal disaster area, including all contiguous counties, for the 2008 crop year. In addition, a producer in one of the designated disaster counties, or contiguous counties, must have at least a 10% crop loss (by definition) on one crop in order to be eligible for 2008 SURE payments. Producers in other counties could also be eligible for the SURE program for 2008 if their total actual production for 2008 was less than 50% of normal production.
Minnesota Counties Eligible – Cook, Lac Qui Parle, Mahnomen and Wilkin counties received primary disaster declarations in 2008. The following Minnesota counties are SURE eligible for 2008 due to being contiguous counties for disaster declarations: Becker, Big Stone, Chippewa, Chisago, Clay, Clearwater, Faribault, Fillmore, Freeborn, Grant, Houston, Kittson, Lake, Marshall, Martin, Mower, Norman, Otter Tail, Polk, Swift, Traverse, Washington and Yellow Medicine.
Other States – In Iowa, all counties are eligible for the SURE program in 2008, except some counties in northwest and west-central Iowa. All counties are eligible for SURE in North Dakota, about half of the counties in South Dakota and all Wisconsin counties, except a few counties in the western part of the state. A complete listing of eligible counties for the 2008 SURE program is available on the USDA FSA Disaster Assistance Programs Web site.
Crop Insurance Requirement – Producers must have carried crop insurance (minimum of CAT insurance coverage) on all eligible crops for 2008, and have must carried NAP insurance coverage on all non-crop insurance crops for 2008, in order to be eligible for SURE program payments for 2008. About 90% of producers carry crop insurance coverage on their corn and soybean acres; however, a much smaller percentage of producers carry crop insurance on wheat, barley, oats and other small grain crops, or on minor crops. A relatively small percentage of producers also carry NAP insurance on alfalfa and other forage acres. All forage acres and other NAP crops that make up at least 5% of the total farm gross revenue, excluding pasture acres, must have been insured by NAP coverage for 2008 in order to be eligible for SURE payments on corn and soybeans.
2009 ARRA Impacts – The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) of 2009 amended provisions to provide potential added financial assistance for producers that are eligible for the SURE program for the 2008 crop year. Producers with federal crop insurance policies at 70% or greater production coverage at 100% price coverage are eligible for a SURE guarantee of 120% of the crop insurance revenue guarantee (the normal SURE guarantee is 115%). There are also added SURE incentives through ARRA for producers who took advantage of crop insurance buy-ins and NAP insurance purchases for the 2008 crop year.
SURE Program Guarantees – The SURE program is a revenue guarantee program, similar to many crop insurance revenue products, without the increasing harvest revenue if crop prices increase during the growing season. If a given eligible farm’s actual crop revenue is less than the guaranteed revenue, the SURE program will pay 60% of the difference. The actual crop revenue includes the value of the crop harvested, crop insurance indemnity payments and other USDA payments. All payments under the SURE program are based on the sum of the total revenues for all crops in all counties for an FSA farm unit.
SURE Program Guarantee: Sum of all crop insurance guarantees x 115 % (120 % with ARRA provisions)
- For example: $520,000 of total insurance coverage x 1.20 equals a $624,000 SURE guarantee. The maximum SURE guarantee is 90% of the expected crop value for the year.
SURE Program Yields: The higher of the crop insurance APH Yield or the FSA counter-cyclical program (CCP) payment yield.
SURE Program Actual Revenue: Actual harvested bushels of each crop x the 12-month USDA average market price of the crop (Sept. 1 to Aug. 31 for corn and soybeans)
+
Crop Insurance Indemnity Payments (including prevented planting payments)
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15 % of USDA direct payments, CCPs and LDPs (only direct payments for most crops in 2008)
Producer Responsibilities – Eligible producers must enroll in the SURE program for the 2008 crop year at their county FSA office, starting Jan. 4, 2010, in order to be eligible for potential SURE payments. Producers in all designated USDA disaster counties and contiguous counties should check with their county FSA office for details. The FSA office will already have access to most 2008 crop acreage and crop yield information through FSA and crop insurance information. However, producers will be responsible to provide that data on other crops, or in the cases were verification is not adequate.<
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