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Updates from the Sheboygan County USDA Service Center

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US Department of Agriculture

Sheboygan County USDA Service Center Newsletter  -  January, 2026


USDA Announces Commodity Payment Rates for Farmer Bridge Assistance Program

USDA announced the next phase in the Farmer Bridge Assistance Program (FBA), the eligible commodity per-acre payment rates. In 2026, $12 billion will be paid to American farmers. Of that amount, $11 billion consists of one-time FBA program payments.

Eligible Row Crop Commodities and Payment Rates: 

Below are the payment rates for the FBA eligible commodities that triggered a payment.  

Commodity, Per Acre Payment Rates

  • Barley: $20.51
  • Canola: $23.57
  • Chickpeas (Large): $26.46
  • Chickpeas (Small): $33.36
  • Corn: $44.36 • Cotton: $117.35
  • Flax: $8.05
  • Lentils: $23.98
  • Mustard: $23.21
  • Oats: $81.75
  • Peanuts: $55.65
  • Peas: $19.60
  • Rice: $132.89
  • Safflower: $24.86
  • Sesame: $13.68
  • Sorghum: $48.11
  • Soybeans: $30.88
  • Sunflower: $17.32
  • Wheat: $39.35

Eligibility, Program Applications, and Crop Insurance Linkage 

FBA payments are based on 2025 planted acres, Economic Research Service cost of production, and the World Agriculture Supply and Demand Estimate Report. Double crop acres, including all initial and subsequently planted crops, are eligible. Prevent plant acres are not eligible. 

All intended row crop uses are eligible for FBA except grazing, volunteer stands, experimental, green manure, crops left standing and abandoned or cover crops. 

Crop insurance linkage is not required; however, USDA strongly urges producers to take advantage of the new risk management tools provided for in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) to best protect against future price risk and volatility. The OBBBA federal crop insurance improvements include expanding benefits for beginning farmers and ranchers, increasing coverage options, and making crop insurance more affordable. 

Specialty Crop Assistance 

Of the $12 billion being provided by the Commodity Credit Corporation Charter Act, up to $11 billion is being directed to eligible row crop producers and the remaining $1 billion of the $12 billion in assistance is reserved for specialty crops and sugar. Timelines for payments to producers of these crops are still under development and require additional understanding of market impacts and economic needs.

Producers, including specialty crop producers and stakeholder groups, can submit questions to farmerbridge@usda.gov

More information on FBA is available online at https://www.fsa.usda.gov/fba or you can contact your local USDA FSA county office.


USDA Farm Service Agency Now Accepting Applications for Second Stage of Crop Disaster, Milk Loss and On-Farm Stored Commodity Loss Assistance

USDA's Farm Service Agency (FSA) is delivering more than $16 billion in total Congressionally approved disaster relief. FSA is now accepting applications for assistance through the second stage of the Supplemental Disaster Relief Program (SDRP) from agricultural producers who suffered eligible non-indemnified, uncovered or quality crop losses due to qualifying natural disasters in 2023 and 2024.

Stage Two covers eligible crop, tree, bush and vine losses that were not covered under Stage One program provisions, including non-indemnified (shallow loss), uncovered and quality losses. Although the majority of payments from the first stage are already in the hands of producers helping them prepare for and invest in the next crop year, Stage One assistance, announced in July, remains available to producers who received an indemnity under crop insurance or the Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program (NAP) for eligible crop losses due to qualifying 2023 and 2024 natural disaster events.

The deadline to apply for both Stage One and Stage Two assistance is April 30, 2026.

Additionally, FSA is taking applications for assistance from producers who had to dump or remove milk from the commercial market and who incurred losses of eligible farm stored commodities due to qualifying disaster events in 2023 and 2024.

SDRP Stage Two Program Details

SDRP Stage Two provides assistance for eligible crop, tree, bush and vine losses not covered under Stage One, including:

  • Non-Indemnified Losses (Including Shallow Losses)
    • Insured losses through federal crop insurance that did not trigger a crop insurance indemnity.
    • Losses with NAP coverage that did not trigger a NAP payment.
  • Uncovered Losses (Uninsured Losses)
    • Includes losses that were not insured through federal crop insurance or NAP.
  • Quality Losses
    • Includes quality losses to commodities indicated by:
      • A decrease in value based on discounts due to the physical condition of the crop supported by applicable grading factors
      • A decline in the nutritional value of forage crops supported by documented forage tests. 
    • Producers will certify to an SDRP quality loss percentage.

FSA is establishing block grants with Connecticut, Hawaii, Maine, and Massachusetts that cover crop losses; therefore, producers with losses on land physically located in these states are not eligible for SDRP program payments. 

For information on program eligibility and to download an application checklist, visit fsa.usda.gov/sdrp.

More information will be provided in early 2026 regarding a separate enrollment period for quality losses covered by SDRP Stage One as well as for insured producers in Puerto Rico who were not included in Stage One because data was not available when pre-filled applications were mailed.

Milk and On-Farm Stored Crop Loss Assistance

The Milk Loss Program provides up to $1.65 million in payments to eligible dairy operations for milk that was dumped or removed without compensation from the commercial milk market because of a qualifying natural disaster event in 2023 and/or 2024.

Producers who suffered losses of eligible harvested commodities while stored in on-farm structures in 2023 and/or 2024 due to a qualifying natural disaster event may be eligible for assistance through the On-Farm Stored Commodity Loss Program, which provides for up to $5 million to impacted producers.

The deadline to apply for milk and on-farm stored commodity losses is Jan. 23, 2026. Information and fact sheets for both programs are available online at fsa.usda.gov/mlp for milk loss and fsa.usda.gov/ofsclp for on-farm stored commodity losses.

To make an appointment to apply for any of the programs above, call the Sheboygan County FSA Office at 920-467-9917 ext 2.


Submit Loan Requests for Financing Early

The Farm Loan team in Sheboygan County is already working on operating loans for spring 2026 and asks potential borrowers to submit their requests early so they can be timely processed. The farm loan team can help determine which loan programs are best for applicants. 

FSA offers a wide range of low-interest loans that can meet the financial needs of any farm operation for just about any purpose. The traditional farm operating and farm ownership loans can help large and small farm operations take advantage of early purchasing discounts for spring inputs as well expenses throughout the year. 

Microloans are a simplified loan program that will provide up to $50,000 for both Farm Ownership and Operating Microloans to eligible applicants. These loans, targeted for smaller and non-traditional operations, can be used for operating expenses, starting a new operation, purchasing equipment, and other needs associated with a farming operation.  Loans to beginning farmers and members of underserved groups are a priority.

Other types of loans available include:

Marketing Assistance Loans allow producers to use eligible commodities as loan collateral and obtain a 9-month loan while the crop is in storage. These loans provide cash flow to the producer and allow them to market the crop when prices may be more advantageous.  

Farm Storage Facility Loans can be used to build permanent structures used to store eligible commodities, for storage and handling trucks, or portable or permanent handling equipment. A variety of structures are eligible under this loan, including bunker silos, grain bins, hay storage structures, and refrigerated structures for vegetables and fruit. A producer may borrow up to $500,000 per loan.

To make an appointment, call the Manitowoc County Farm Loan Team at 920-683-5119 ext 2.  


 

USDA Service Center

1926 Eastern Ave Plymouth WI 53073

Phone: 920-467-9917
Fax: 855-733-0182

FSA County Executive Director

Vicky Mueller
vicky.mueller@usda.gov

FSA Farm Loan Manager

Kelli Youngbeck
kelli.youngbeck@usda.gov

NRCS District Conservationist

Michael Patin
michael.patin@usda.gov

RMA, Regional Compliance Office

651-290-3304

rsomn@rma.usda.gov

FSA County Committee Members-

Stan Meinnert, Chair;  Stacy Limberg, Vice-Chair; Jeremie Jensema, member

 

 

 

 


This email was sent to mufhandu.o.itsol@blogger.com using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of: Farmers.gov · 1400 Independence Avenue SW · Washington, D.C. 20250 GovDelivery logo

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