December 25, 2024

USDA invests in projects to expand conservation for livestock producers

Terry Cosby

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Department of Agriculture has awarded $22 million for 29 selected projects in 36 states that expand access to conservation technical assistance for livestock producers and increases the use of conservation practices on grazing lands.

USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service is funding the cooperative agreements through its Grazing Lands Conservation Initiative, which empowers partners to increase availability of grazing land technical assistance for livestock producers, including historically underserved producers, as well as Native American tribal governments.

“Privately owned grazing lands cover nearly one-third of the American landscape,” said NRCS Chief Terry Cosby.

“Through these selected projects and cooperative agreements, NRCS leverages the knowledge and expertise of partners to help livestock producers advance climate-smart agriculture, and serve producers who choose voluntary, private land conservation.”

Selected projects focus on one or more of the following priorities:

• Addressing local natural resource concerns.

• Using climate-smart agriculture and forestry practices and principles.

• Encouraging existing and new partnerships to advance the resource needs of underserved communities.

• Identifying and implementing strategies to quantify, monitor, report on and verify conservation benefits associated with grazing management systems.

• Utilizing Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledge, where applicable.

Projects include:

• The Illinois Grazing Lands Coalition will organize and lead a multi-stakeholder partnership delivering educational and peer networking opportunities for a diverse set of Illinois farmers and ranchers. These opportunities will expand grazing knowledge for existing, beginning and underserved producers, as well as interested youth, to grow adoption of climate-smart grazing practices and management systems in Illinois to address natural resource concerns.

• The Wolfe’s Neck Farm Foundation Inc. plans to expand managed grazing in New England and eastern New York through partnerships, climate-smart technical assistance and education.

• Virginia State University plans to provide outreach, training and technical assistance to underserved and veteran ranchers in Virginia on alternative grazing practices and herd management.

• Rolling Hills Resource Conservation and Development Council Inc. plans to improve grazing management in Georgia by educating producers in the art and science of grazing and introduce them to the latest technology within the grazing industry.

• The Valley Stewardship Network plans to continuing momentum in Wisconsin for conservation grazing through farmer-led watershed management initiatives, technical assistance and ecological monitoring.

• Chico State Enterprises plans to provide technical assistance and workforce development on grazing lands in northern California. Project activities include working with underserved producers to increase their participation in new and existing grazing coalitions, and create a new professional course in Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledge.

• National Grazing Lands Coalition plans to expand organizational capacity to support grazing coalitions that create local, grassroots programs across the nation and on indigenous grazing lands to target local resource concerns.

The full list of projects is available on the Grazing Lands Conservation Initiative website at https://tinyurl.com/3uvkvu4n.

More On GLCI

Funded by the farm bill, GLCI was developed as a coordinated effort to identify priority issues, find solutions and effect change on private grazing land, enhancing existing conservation programs.

NRCS is reviving and revitalizing GLCI to leverage partner capacity, expertise and technical assistance to expand the footprint of well-managed grazing systems across the country.

GLCI also supports the National Grazing Lands Coalition to help state grazing coalitions form and persist with participation from historically underserved producers and Native American tribal governments and organizations.

AgriNews Staff

AgriNews Staff

The Illinois AgriNews and Indiana AgriNews staff is in the field each week, covering topics that affect local farm families and their businesses. We give readers information they can’t get elsewhere to help them make better farming decisions.