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National Conservation Practice Standards - NHCPThe table below is the current list of National conservation practices in alphabetical order by practice name, with the practice code in parentheses. The table contains links to the practice standard (available in either Portable Document Format (PDF) or MS-Word), a conservation practice information sheet and the Conservation Practice Physical Effects (CPPE) worksheet for most practices, and to job sheets for a limited number of conservation practices. The last column contains national templates for Statements of Work associated with each conservation practice. These national templates are provided in MS-Word and are for modification and adaptation by the NRCS State Offices. These Statements of Work outline deliverables for all conservation practice in the National Handbook of Conservation Practices (NHCP), as well as for comprehensive nutrient management plan development, conservation planning, and cultural resources compliance activities. There are five additional national templates for Statements of Work that are not directly associated with conservation practices: 1) Conservation Planning, 2) Comprehensive Nutrient Management Planning, 3) Cultural Resources Archival Research, 4) Cultural Resources Identification Surveys and 5) Cultural Resources Evaluations. NOTICE - National Conservation Practice standards should not be used to plan, design or install a conservation practice. You must have the conservation practice standard developed by the state in which you are working to insure that you meet all state and local criteria, which may be more restrictive than national criteria. State Conservation practice standards are available through the eFOTG (Electronic Field Office Technical Guide). If no state conservation practice standard is available in the eFOTG, you should contact the appropriate State Office or your local USDA Service Center. The national statement of work templates are to be used only by NRCS state offices to develop a statement of work for each state conservation practice standard. The state-specific statement of work documents are available through the eFOTG (Electronic Field Office Technical Guide). If no statement of work is available in the eFOTG for the conservation practice in question, you should contact the appropriate State Office or your local USDA Service Center. The conservation practice standard contains information on why and where the practice is applied, and sets forth the minimum quality criteria that must be met during the application of that practice in order for it to achieve its intended purpose(s). The conservation practice information sheet contains a photograph of the installed practice, plus a definition or description of the practice, where it is commonly used and a brief description of the conservation effects of this practice when it is properly applied. The conservation practice physical effects (CPPE) document provides guidance on how the application of that practice will affect the resources (soil, water, air, plants, animals and human) and the resource concerns associated with each of those resources. The worksheet that is on the server reflects the best estimate of the effects, either positive or negative, of that practice on the resource concerns. States are expected to edit the worksheet to show the actual effects of applying that practice in their state. The CPPE documents linked to this page are derived from the National CPPE spreadsheet. The conservation practice job sheets provide detailed guidance on the application of the practice, and contain worksheets that can be used to document the practice plan and design for a specific site. The National Handbook of Conservation Practices notices transmit updated or new National conservation practice standards. Some of the documents require Adobe Acrobat Reader, if it is not already installed on your computer. If your browser does not support tables, you may download the files directly from the FTP server. They are available as PDF files or MS-Word files. You will need to know the conservation practice number (code) to recognize the correct file to download.
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