Accepting application October 1, 2024 – March 31, 2025
Now in its 5th year, Maryland’s Conservation Buffer Initiative provides farmers with attractive incentive payments to plant streamside buffers on farmland to improve the health of local streams and the Chesapeake Bay. This program can help you turn marginal land next to streams or floodplains into a valuable asset for both your farm and local water quality. Check out MDA’s payment options:
Planting Incentives Are Still Available
Incentives to plant riparian forest buffers are available again this year. These payments are on top of the $4,000 or $4,500 per acre offered for installation. To encourage more tree planting, the new incentives include:
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- A one-time bonus payment of $1,000 per acre to install forest buffers.
- Up to $330 per acre, per year to help cover the costs associated with maintaining forest buffer viability and health for the first 5 years of the contract.
Program Highlights
Three types of buffers are eligible for funding and free technical assistance from the Kent Soil and Water Conservation District under this program: forest buffers planted next to waterways, grass buffers planted next to waterways or field ditches, and watercourse access control areas adjacent to pastures. Here’s how the program works:
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- Payment rates range from $500 an acre for existing grass buffer to a maximum of $4,500 an acre to install a riparian forest buffer with pasture fencing.
- Mowing and hay harvesting are allowed; nutrient application are not.
- Farmers receive 75% of the project cost up front, and 25% after verification of planting for enrolled land.
- An extra one-time bonus payment is offered for enrolled forest buffers.
- Annual maintenance payments are available for forest buffers during the first five years.
- Contracts are for 5 or 10 years.
- The Kent Soil and Water Conservation District provides free technical assistance to get your buffer installed.
- Application will be accepted on a first come, first-served basis.
- All work must be completed within one year of the Agreement’s signing date.
Choose Your Buffer
Grass Buffers on Watercourses – Establish a new buffer or improve an existing buffer between cropland and either an adjacent watercourse or field ditch. Buffers are herbaceous and range in width from 10 feet to 100 feet.
Forest Buffers on Watercourses – Establish a new buffer or improve an existing buffer between cropland and an adjacent watercourse. Buffers are planted with trees and shrubs and range in width from 35 feet to 100 feet.
Watercourse Access Control Area – Establish a new access control area or improve an existing access control area between an adjacent watercourse and an active livestock pasture. The conservation buffer located between the fence and the watercourse may be planted in grass or trees and shrubs. It may range in width from 10 feet to 100 feet but must be at least 35 feet wide if establishing woody vegetation. No grazing allowed in the access control area.
Qualifying Land
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- Cropland next to a stream or ditch that has an established cropping history in pasture, commodity crops or hay.
- Areas adjacent to watercourses with highly erodible or hydric soils, as determined by the local soil conservation district.
- Field ditches are not eligible to establish woody conservation buffers.
- Existing buffers or agricultural lands that are actively enrolled in state (MACS) or federal programs (CRP, CREP, EQIP, etc.) or mandated by an easement are not eligible for this program.
Program Eligibility
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- Farmers and landowners who are responsible for the management of eligible lands may apply.
- Farmers who lease land must certify an active lease for the term of the buffer, or provide an agreement from the landowner.
- Farmers and landowners must be in good standing with USDA and state cost-share programs.
- A current Nutrient Management Plan Certification is required and must be submitted with the application.
- Additional restrictions may apply.
How To Apply For A Grant
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- Contact the Kent Soil and Water Conservation District to apply for this program. You can download an application from MDA’s website.
- You will also need:
- A map that shows the location and acreage of the buffer.
- A signed Nutrient Management Plan Certification Form.
- A signed IRS Form W-9 is also required.
- Questions? Contact the Kent Soil and Water Conservation District.
For more information on the Conservation Buffer Initiative, visit the MDA webpage.