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Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP) in New Jersey
The
Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP) is a voluntary program
that provides technical and financial assistance to eligible landowners
to address wetland, wildlife habitat, soil, water, and related natural
resource concerns on private lands in an environmentally beneficial and
cost-effective manner. The program provides an opportunity for
landowners to receive financial incentives to enhance
wetlands in
exchange for retiring marginal land from agriculture.
The following documents require
Adobe Acrobat.
WRP 2009 Fact Sheet (174 kb)
Applying for Financial Assistance (67 kb)
Application Documents
Benefits
WRP participants benefit by:
- Receiving financial and technical assistance in return for restoring and
protecting wetland functions and values;
- Seeing a reduction in problems associated with farming potentially
difficult areas; and
- Having incentives to develop wildlife recreational opportunities on their
land.
Wetlands benefit New Jersey by providing fish and wildlife habitat;
improving water quality by filtering sediments and chemicals; reducing
flooding; recharging groundwater; protecting biological diversity; as well
as providing opportunities for educational, scientific, and recreational
activities.
Eligibility
Land is not eligible if it is owned by any governmental entity. To offer a
conservation easement, the private landowner must have owned the land for at
least 7 years prior to enrolling it in the program, except in certain
circumstances. To participate in a restoration cost-share agreement, the
private landowner must show evidence of ownership. To be eligible for WRP,
land must be restorable and be suitable for wildlife benefits. This
includes:
- Wetlands farmed under natural conditions;
- Farmed wetlands;
- Prior converted cropland;
- Farmed wetland pasture;
- Farmland that has become a wetland as a result of flooding;
- Riparian areas which link protected wetlands;
- Pasture or production forest land where the hydrology has been
significantly degraded;
- Lands adjacent to protected wetlands that contribute significantly to
wetland functions and values; and
- Previously restored wetlands that need long term protection.
Uses of WRP Land
Participants voluntarily limit future use of the land, but retain private
ownership. On acreage subject to a WRP easement, participants control access
to the land and may lease the land for hunting, fishing, and other
undeveloped recreational activities.
NRCS and the landowner jointly determine the restoration plan for the
wetlands, but the landowner is required to implement the restoration plan
with NRCS financial assistance.
How to Apply
Landowners may file an application for a conservation easement or a
restoration agreement at any time during the year. Applications are grouped
for ranking when funds are available, normally once per year. Applications
(form AD-1153) are available at any USDA
Service Center office.
Applicants must indicate if the application is for an easement or
restoration agreement. Easement applicants must also provide a copy of the
deed when applying.
Enrollment Options
Permanent Easement: The landowner receives the lowest of the three values as
an easement payment: the site value based on a market analysis, a geographic
area rate cap established by the NRCS State Conservationist or the landowner
offer.
The Geographic Rate Caps for 2009 in New Jersey are:
- Annually tilled dry cropland, pasture land or permanent hay land: $6,000
per acre
- Specialty cropland or irrigated cropland: $9,000 per acre
- Woodland: $2,000 per acre
USDA pays 100 percent of the restoration costs and maintenance activities,
and all costs associated with recording the easement
in the local land records office.
Restoration Cost-Share Agreement: This is a minimum 10-year agreement to
re-establish degraded or lost wetland habitat. USDA pays 75 percent of the
cost of the restoration activity and maintenance of the habitat for the term
of the agreement.
Restoration payments are limited to a maximum of $50,000 per person per
year. In addition, landowners must be in compliance with Highly Erodible
Land and Wetland conservation provisions of the 1985 Farm Bill, as amended,
on all land they farm and with the Adjusted Gross Income provisions of the
2008 Farm Bill.
After Restoration, Then What?
NRCS and its partners continue to provide assistance to landowners after
completion of restoration activities. This assistance may be in the form of
reviewing restoration measures, clarifying technical and administrative
aspects of the easement and project management needs, and providing basic
biological and engineering advice on how to achieve optimum results for
wetland dependent species.
At any time, a participant may request that additional activities be
evaluated to determine if they are compatible uses for the site. This
request may include such items as permission to cut hay, graze livestock, or
harvest wood products. Compatible uses are allowed if they are fully
consistent with the protection and enhancement of the wetland.
Form AD 1153 Application (108 kb)
Form AD 1026 HELWC -
Highly Erodible Land Conservation (HELC) and Wetland Conservation (WC)
Certification (165 kb)
Form AD 1199a NFC -
Direct Deposit Sign Up (109 kb)
Form CCC 901 - Members Form (258 kb)
Form CCC 926
- Adjusted Gross Income (259 kb)
Form FSA 211 - Power of Attorney (360 kb))
Contact:
Janice Reid, Assistant State Conservationist for Programs (732) 537-6042
< Back to Programs
Last Modified:
June 04, 2009
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