S-4867-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry.
Sponsored by Michael Bennet (D-CO)
What it does
This bill would amend the Food Security Act of 1985 to create a dedicated subprogram within the existing Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) targeting small-scale agricultural producers. It would require that at least 30% of EQIP funds be reserved for this subprogram from fiscal years 2027 through 2031, with 35% of those funds going to technical assistance (including new NRCS staff hiring and training) and 65% going directly to small farms as financial assistance. The bill would also set a $2,500 minimum payment for all EQIP participants, provide a 50% payment bonus for soil health management systems on farms of 50 acres or fewer, and require outreach materials in multiple languages.
Who benefits
Small-scale farmers, ranchers, and nonindustrial private forest landowners — particularly those at or below their state's median farm or herd size. Socially disadvantaged farmers, beginning farmers (operating fewer than 10 years), veterans entering farming, limited-resource farmers, and producers in high-poverty areas would receive prioritized access. NRCS employees would benefit from new hiring and training resources. Rural communities and the broader public may benefit indirectly from improved soil health and conservation outcomes. Non-English-speaking farm operators would benefit from multilingual outreach materials.
Who is hurt
Larger agricultural operations currently competing for EQIP funds would face reduced access, as at least 30% of program funds would be reserved for small farms. States with fewer small farms relative to total agricultural activity may see a disproportionate shift in fund allocation. Existing EQIP applicants — including mid-sized farms that do not qualify as "small" — could face longer wait times or reduced payment amounts as a larger share of the funding pool is redirected. Taxpayers broadly bear the cost of any increased administrative overhead from new coordinator positions and expanded NRCS staffing.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that small farms are systematically underserved by EQIP despite representing the majority of U.S. farm operations — USDA data shows that farms with less than $350,000 in gross sales make up roughly 89% of all farms but have historically received a disproportionately small share of conservation program dollars. They contend that targeted set-asides, streamlined applications, and dedicated NRCS staff would remove the administrative barriers that prevent time- and resource-constrained small operators from participating, delivering conservation benefits — such as improved soil health and water quality — to land that is currently left out of federal programs.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that carving out a mandatory 30% funding floor for small farms reduces EQIP's flexibility to direct dollars toward the highest-impact conservation projects regardless of farm size, potentially lowering the program's overall environmental return per dollar spent. They contend that adding new coordinator positions, multilingual outreach requirements, and a $2,500 payment floor increases administrative overhead and may crowd out direct conservation payments — and that existing EQIP priority systems already allow states to target underserved producers without a rigid federal set-aside that may not reflect each state's agricultural landscape.