The amount of payment will be an additional 10 or 15 percent of your prevented planting payment issued under your multi-peril policy, depending on the plan of insurance of your multi-peril policy. Producers with Yield Protection/Actual Production History and Revenue Protection with Harvest Price Exclusion will receive 10 percent. Producers with Revenue Protection will receive 15 percent.
No. A crop that was prevented from being planted in 2018 that had a final planting date in the 2018 calendar year is not eligible for prevented planting disaster payments. The legislation authorizing prevented planted disaster payments is specific to crops that would have been planted in the 2019 calendar year.
Yes. Prevented planting disaster payments are available nationwide.
Your insurance provider will begin processing payments as early as mid-October 2019. As more claims are processed, further payments will be issued near the middle of each subsequent month.
RMA received commitments from the country’s 14 AIPs to deliver the top-up payments:
- ACE Property and Casualty (Rain and Hail) Insurance Company
- American Agri-Business Insurance Company
- American Agricultural Insurance Company
- CGB Insurance Company
- Church Mutual Insurance Company
- Country Mutual Insurance Company
- Farmers Mutual Hail Insurance Company
- Great American Insurance Company
- Hudson Insurance Company
- NAU Country Insurance Company
- Producers Agricultural Insurance Company
- Rural Community Insurance Company
- Stratford Insurance Company
- XL Reinsurance America Inc.
No. Prevented planting disaster payments are only available for crops with existing prevented planting payments.
Benefits may be available depending on your eligibility as specified in the Wildfire and Hurricane Indemnity Program Plus (WHIP+) program or other Farm Programs. You should inquire at your local USDA Service Center or visit the Farm Service Agency website at www.fsa.usda.gov to find out more information.
Yes. The Disaster Relief Act requires all participants who receive a disaster payment to purchase crop insurance or NAP, for the crop in the county, for the next 2 available crop years. Producers may meet the requirement by purchasing Whole-Farm Revenue Protection crop insurance, if eligible. Producers that fail to meet this requirement must refund all payments for the crop in that county, including interest.
Yes, if you receive a prevented planting disaster payment for a crop you must purchase crop insurance for that crop in that county for the next two crop years, but you may transfer to a new insurance company or agent. If crop insurance becomes unavailable for the crop in the county you are required to purchase a NAP policy instead.
Yes, you may insure with any company or agent. You simply must maintain coverage for the crop in the county.
It depends on who receives the payment and whether they continue to farm. If the person (including legal entities) who receives the payment plants the crop in the county, then they must purchase crop insurance for the next 2 crop years. If the person who receives the payment does not plant the crop in the county, then there is no requirement. For example, a spouse that assumes the policy and continues to farm must still purchase insurance. An estate that ceases to engage in farming would not be required to buy insurance.