Water Quality and Animal
Feeding Operations in Arizona: A Producer's Notebook
.
Natural Resource Conservation
Districts
Arizona’s
Natural Resource Conservation Districts
Soon after the Dust Bowl days, it became evident
to President F.D. Roosevelt that the federal government should provide
assistance to agricultural producers to conserve natural resources.
However, President Roosevelt also realized that local landowners
were more able to guide conservation efforts than folks in Washington
D.C. In 1938, President F.D. Roosevelt proposed a "Model State
Soil Conservation Districts Enabling Law" to develop local
conservation district boards that would guide the technical and
financial assistance offered by the federal government through the
Soil Conservation Service (now, the Natural Resources Conservation
Service). Arizona enacted the law March 17, 1941. In 1972 the Arizona
Legislature renamed Soil Conservation Districts to Natural
Resource Conservation Districts (NRCD) and began financial assistance
through the Arizona State Land Department. There are currently
thirty-one NRCDs that have been established under state law. In
addition, there are nine conservation districts that were established
under tribal law. These conservation districts work closely with
the USDA-Natural Resources Conservation
Service (NRCS) to provide conservation programs to agricultural
producers and education to their communities.
The Agua Fria-New River, Buckeye Valley, and
Gila Bend NRCDs service West Maricopa County. They provide irrigation
management assistance programs and educational programs. In addition,
they have recognized the need to assist Animal Feeding Operations
(AFOs) to address new regulations. Through the West Maricopa Geographical
Priority Area (GPA) Local Work Group (LWG) the three districts are
working with NRCS, Farm Service Agency, and the County Committee
to provide technical assistance and educational materials to AFO
owners and operators.
As in the past, the Natural
Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) works with private landowners
to conserve the land and to preserve our natural resources. Today,
the work is done through conservation districts. The set of strong
principals that NRCS has traditionally used to work with the private
landowner is as relevant today as it was to Hugh Hammond Bennett,
the Father of conservation, when he dreamed of the concept in the
late 1920s and early 1930s.
A career soil scientist in the United States
Department of Agriculture, Bennett became convinced that soil erosion
was a national menace and that its solution lay in tailoring conservation
practices to fit the capability of the land and the needs of the
landowners.
Bennett realized that a simple solution for
all situations was not realistic and would be fruitless. The crops,
the land, and the climate were so diverse that contributions from
specialists in agronomy, forestry, soil science, biology, engineering
and social sciences were needed to fulfill the conservation methods
that he envisioned. These specialists worked with farmers to find
solutions that benefited the land and fulfilled the landowners’
aspirations.
The Soil Erosion Service (SES), born out of
the"Dust Bowl" of the 1930s, created an awareness of the
need for conservation. SES, the predecessor to the Soil Conservation
Service which preceded today’s Natural Resources Conservation Service,
began working with farmers in the mid-west to transform the square,
eroding fields into the present day conservation showplace of contouring,
stripcropping, and terracing. This wise use of the land has benefited
the soil, air, and water, as well as plant, animal, and human life.
The passage of the Soil Conservation Act,
in April of 1935, hastened the nationwide carpeting of the land
with soil conservation projects. On August 4, 1937, recognition
of the first conservation district in North Carolina, established
a method for the Service to assist farmers in the conservation districts
throughout the land. Locally elected citizens, who make up the conservation
districts, set local priorities, goals and developed conservation
plans to address their problems.
The principles founded in the 1920s and 1930s
can be easily adapted to any discipline of agriculture. They have
withstood the test of time and are just as effective today as when
first introduced:
- Assess the resources on the land, the conservation
problems and opportunities
- Draw on various sciences and disciplines
and integrate all their contributions into a plan for the whole
property.
- Work closely with land users so that the
plans for conservation mesh with their objectives.
Through implementing conservation on individual
properties, we contribute to the overall quality of the life in
the watershed or region.
Environmental
Quality Incentives Program (EQIP)
EQIP is a program designed to assist farmers
facing serious threats to soil, water, and related natural resources.
It provides technical, financial, and educational assistance primarily
within locally identified priority areas where significant natural
resource concerns have been identified. Contracts are offered that
provide financial incentives for conservation practices that address
erosion control, manure management, pest management, and others
which will help to improve and maintain the health of natural resources.
Key Provisions:
Provides technical assistance, cost-sharing
and incentive payments, and educational assistance to cooperators
who enter into conservation contracts of five to ten year terms;
Cooperators are eligible for up to 75% of
project costs; $10,000 in any fiscal year; or $50,000 over the
life of the contract;
Ranks applications using a numerical points
system designed to identify and select proposals that offer the
greatest environmental benefits per program dollar;
Authorizes the USDA to request assistance
of state agencies as well as other governmental and private resources
to aid in providing technical assistance for the development and
implementation of structural practices;
Fifty percent of program funding is dedicated
to livestock-related conservation;
Up to 35% may be spent outside of established
Geographic Priority Areas (GPA).
Eligibility:
Participation is limited to persons who
are engaged in livestock or agricultural production;
Enrolled lands must be cropland, rangeland,
forestland, or other farm or ranch land where the program is delivered;
Participation for AFOs is limited to operations
with less than 1000 animal units.
How To Apply:
Applications are accepted throughout the year
and are ranked and selected during designated periods. For further
information or to obtain an application form, contact your local
USDA Service Center, NRCD, or NRCS field office. NRCS field offices
are located in 22 communities around Arizona and are listed in the
phone book under U.S. Government, Department of Agriculture.
Arizona's
Natural Resources Conservation Service Offices
State Office
3003 N. Central Avenue
Suite 800
Phoenix, AZ. 85012
602-280-8801
Field Offices
Phoenix
12409 W. Indian School Road
Building B, Suite 201
Avondale, AZ 85323
623-535-5055
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Buckeye
220 N. 4th Street
Buckeye, AZ. 85326
623-386-4631 |
Casa Grande
115 E. First Street
Suite D
Casa Grande, AZ. 85222
520-836-2048 x3 |
Chandler
18256 E. Williams Field Rd.
Suite 1
Higley, AZ. 85236
480-988-1078 x3 |
Tucson
4650 N. Highway Dr.
Tucson, AZ. 85705
520-887-8520 x3 |
Willcox
656 N. Bisbee Avenue
Willcox, AZ. 85643
520-384-2229 x3 |
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Agua Fria - New River Natural Resource Conservation
District |
West
Maricopa Watershed Project
The West Maricopa Watershed activities have
helped urban and rural communities protect, improve and develop
the water and land resources in the watershed of approximately 240,000
acres. In 1997, Agua Fria – New River Natural Resources Conservation
District and Buckeye Valley Natural Resources Conservation District
requested assistance from the USDA – NRCS to help to reduce the
potential for nitrated contamination of the regional ground water
supply from animal waste runoff by containing and managing the waste
on site.
Conservation land treatment practices were
installed through long-term contracts with project participants.
Four dairies benefited from the program in 1998, eight dairies participated
in 1999 and three dairies participated in 2000.
Practices include components of complete animal
waste management systems, such as waste storage facilities (sumps,
separators, ponds and lagoons), as well as needed waste transfer
components (pipelines and ditches). Associated management practices
include waste utilization, irrigation water management, and nutrient
and pest management.
Participation in the project is voluntary.
For more information, please contact the NRCS in Phoenix 602-353-0378
Ext 3 or Buckeye 623-386-4631.
Page updated 7/02
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