United States Department of Agriculture
Natural Resources Conservation Service
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Kansas Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP)

Understanding EQIP in Kansas

General Information
  • The minimum length of the contract is one year past the completion of the last conservation practice; maximum term is 10 years.
  • Maximum contracts are $450,000. There is no annual pay-out limit and payments are allowed in the first year of the contract.
  • Incentive payments are limited to $50,000 per contract.
  • Cost share for limited resource and beginning farmers is set at 20 percent above established rates.
  • Application evaluation criteria consider national and state conservation priorities.
  • Contracts with animal feeding operations are required to develop and implement a comprehensive nutrient management plan (CNMP).
How does the Kansas EQIP application process work?

The EQIP application process consists of the following six steps:

  1. A person(s) submits an application to a local USDA Service Center, Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) or conservation district office.
  2. Kansas EQIP: Self-Assessment Tool for Fiscal Year 2006 must be completed and returned to the NRCS office by application period cutoff date. The Self-Assessment Tool is available from your local NRCS office.
  3. NRCS works with the applicant to develop a conservation plan.
  4. NRCS ranks each application using the statewide application evaluation criteria.
  5. The designated conservationist commits allocated funds according to ranking order, and NRCS develops contracts with those applicants.
  6. Following contract signature by NRCS and the selected participant, funds are obligated for the contract, and the participant may begin to implement the EQIP contract.
How does the ranking system work in Kansas?

The EQIP is what NRCS calls "a locally led effort." States identify priority resource concerns that support national, state, and local conservation priorities and develop a ranking system based on those concerns.

In Kansas, the natural resource concerns to be addressed by EQIP are:

  • Air Quality—Objectionable Odors (Livestock Management)
  • Forestland Health—Productivity, Health, and Vigor
  • Grazing Lands Health—Productivity, Health, Vigor; Noxious or Invasive Weeds; and Inadequate Water Supply
  • Soil Quality—Organic Matter Depletion
  • Sedimentation of Federal Reservoirs—Soil Erosion—Streambank; Water Quality—Excessive Suspended Sediment and Turbidity in Surface Water
  • Water Quality—Nutrients/Pesticides/Suspended Sediment
  • Water Quality—Confined Animal Waste
  • Water Quality—Concentrated, Non-Confined Animal Waste
  • Water Quantity—Inefficient Water Use On Irrigated Land; Aquifer Overdraft
  • Water Quantity (Quick Response Areas)—Inefficient Water Use on Irrigated Land; Aquifer Overdraft
How are funds distributed?

Allocations are made to the NRCS administrative areas for the following:

  • Air Quality
  • Sedimentation of Federal Reservoirs
  • Water Quality—Concentrated, Non-Confined Animal Waste
  • Water Quality—Confined Animal Waste
  • Water Quantity
  • Forestland Health

Allocations are made to the county level for the following:

  • Grazing Lands Health
  • Soil Quality—Organic Matter Depletion
  • Water Quality—Nutrients, Pesticides, and Suspended Sediment

All allocations are based on the extent of the resource concern.

Funds are allocated to the highest ranking applications within the area/county for the resource concern.

What should Kansas producers do if their previous EQIP applications have not been funded?

Don't be discouraged. Apply again. Applications are accepted continuously. Earlier applications may not have ranked high in priority, but that does not mean they did not have valid resource concerns. Applications will be ranked to optimize environmental benefits, and because of the increased funding level, more applications will be approved.

Kansas received over $24.8 million in Fiscal Year 2005 and 2,022 contracts were funded. More than 2,680 applications were received that totaled over $31 million. Producers who applied and did not receive funding should stop by the local NRCS or conservation district office, update their application, and have it ready for the next application evaluation period. The Kansas EQIP Self-Assessment Tool for Fiscal Year 2006 will be required for applications to be considered.

Where can producers access information about the EQIP?

Additional information can be found at the Kansas NRCS web site. Again, the best thing for producers to do is visit their local USDA Service Center and talk to the NRCS or conservation district office staff. They will be able to assist producers wanting to address local natural resource concerns. Agriculture in Kansas, north to south and east to west, is diversified.

The NRCS is listed in the telephone book under U.S. Department of Agriculture.

The information on this page may also be downloaded in Adobe Acrobat format.

Adobe Acrobat documentEQIP Fact Sheet (139 KB)

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Last Modified: 11/22/2005