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USDA SIGNS TECHNICAL SERVICE PROVIDER AGREEMENT WITH THE IRRIGATION ASSOCIATION
Sylvia Rainford (202) 720-2536
WASHINGTON, May 8, 2003—The U.S. Department of Agriculture today announced a
cooperative partnership with the Irrigation Association that will help producers
manage their water resources more efficiently.
The 2002 Farm Bill expanded the availability of technical assistance to private
landowners by encouraging the use of third parties—called technical service
providers—to assist USDA in delivering conservation technical assistance
services to farmers, ranchers and others.
USDA and the Irrigation Association signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU)
at a ceremony held today at USDA headquarters in Washington D.C. Bruce Knight,
chief, USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service, and Adam Skolnik, president
of the Irrigation Association, signed the MOU.
The five-year agreement allows the Irrigation Association to recommend
agricultural certified irrigation designers to USDA. These designers must
perform work that meets USDA standards and specifications for effective water
management.
“The Irrigation Association’s rigorous certification procedures will help our
farmers and ranchers receive quality assistance in irrigation design and system
evaluation,” Knight said. “In many regions of our nation, farmers and ranchers
need effective irrigation design assistance to ensure their operations will
remain profitable. To that end, Irrigation Association specialists will provide
a very valuable service for USDA.”
Knight said the Irrigation Association’s expertise becomes even more critical to
USDA as it implements the Ground and Surface Water Conservation (GSWC) provision
of the Environmental Quality Incentives Program. This provision provides
financial assistance for producers to improve irrigation systems and enhance
their efficiency. Though irrigated land can be found in all states, most of the
irrigated acreage is concentrated in the West, which faces considerable water
conservation needs.
The certified specialists will be placed on a national, web-based registry
called TechReg that is available to landowners, farmers, ranchers and others
seeking conservation technical assistance. So far, the registry has about 400
certified TSPs and 432 pending applications.
Additional information on technical service provider assistance is available at
http://techreg.usda.gov. Information on
the 2002 Farm Bill can be found at
www.usda.gov/farmbill.
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