USDA Montana Newsletter - February 2026
In This Issue:
USDA in Montana reminds agricultural producers of important Farm Service Agency (FSA) program dates. Contact your local service center to apply and with any questions. Visit online at farmers.gov and fsa.usda.gov/mt.
Feb. 16, 2026: Office Closure for the Federal Holiday: Washington's Birthday
Feb. 26, 2026: Deadline to register and elect coverage in Dairy Margin Coverage (DMC) program for the 2026 coverage year
March 2, 2026: Deadline to file a notice of loss and application for payment for LIP for 2025 losses.
March 2, 2026: Deadline to apply for 2025 ELAP and LFP benefits
March 16, 2026: Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program (NAP) coverage closing date for all spring crops except spring-seeded canola, garlic, rye, speltz, triticale, wheat, ALL annual & perennial grass & mixed forage, and value-loss crops. Please note that the acreage reporting date for your NAP covered crops is the earlier of the established FSA acreage reporting date for the crop or 15 calendar days before the onset of harvest or grazing of the specific crop acreage being reported.
March 20, 2026: Farm Service Agency accepting offers for Continuous CRP starting Feb. 12, 2026, through March 20, 2026.
March 31, 2026: Deadline to apply for Marketing Assistance Loans (MAL) and Loan Deficiency Payments (LDP) for Barley, Canola, Crambe, Flaxseed, Honey, Oats, Rapeseed, Seed Cotton, Sesame seed and Wheat.
April 17, 2026: Enrollment for General CRP will run from March 9, 2026, through April 17, 2026.
April 30, 2026: Deadline to apply for Supplemental Disaster Relief Program (SDRP) Stage 1 and Stage 2
May 25, 2026: Office Closure for the Federal Holiday: Memorial Day
May 31, 2026: Deadline to apply for Marketing Assistance Loans (MAL) and Loan Deficiency Payments (LDP) for corn, cotton, dry peas, grain sorghum, lentils, mustard seed, rice, safflower seed, chickpeas, soybeans sunflower seed
*Note: The Acreage Reporting Date for Spring Alfalfa Seed, all other spring seeded crops, Perennial Forage, Hemp, Grazing acreage and CRP acres is 15 days before the onset of harvest or grazing, or July 15, whichever is earlier.
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As you may have read in January, Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins appointed our FSA State Committee members, and they met for the first time earlier this month at our State Office in Bozeman. Our State Committee members are: Carl Mattson, Chair (Chester); Brian Eggebrecht, Vice Chair (Belgrade); Connie Iversen (Culbertson); and Gene Curry (Valier). Both Carl Mattson and Gene Curry served on our State Committee during President Trump’s first administration, and each member brings a wealth of knowledge of farming and ranching from across the state of Montana. We are very excited to have them on board and look forward to their monthly meetings.
This newsletter contains program and deadline information designed to benefit the farmers and ranchers of Montana. Some highlights include the recently announced enrollment periods for agricultural producers and landowners to submit offers for the Continuous and General Conservation Reserve Program (CRP).
Also, FSA is now accepting applications for assistance through the second stage of the Supplemental Disaster Relief Program (SDRP) from agricultural producers who suffered eligible non-indemnified, uncovered, or quality crop losses due to qualifying natural disasters in 2023 and 2024.
Additionally, Secretary Rollins recently announced pre-filled applications are now available online to producers with a Login.gov account who timely filed their 2025 crop acreage report for eligible commodities. If you have a Login.gov account, you can access and submit your pre-filled application from fsa.usda.gov/fba. Applying online will also likely expedite your FBA payment. You can also request your pre-filled FBA application from their FSA county office.
As always, it’s an honor to serve the farmers and ranchers in the great state of Montana.
Have a great month!
Mike Foster
State Executive Director, Montana FSA
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The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) today announced the enrollment periods for agricultural producers and landowners to submit offers for the Continuous and General Conservation Reserve Program (CRP). USDA’s Farm Service Agency (FSA) is accepting offers for Continuous CRP starting Feb. 12, 2026, through March 20, 2026. Enrollment for General CRP will run from March 9, 2026, through April 17, 2026. FSA will announce dates for Grassland CRP signup in the near future.
CRP is USDA’s flagship conservation program, providing financial and technical support to agricultural producers and landowners who place unproductive or marginal cropland under contract for 10-15 years and who agree to voluntarily convert the land to beneficial vegetative cover to improve water quality, prevent soil erosion and support wildlife habitat. The Continuing Appropriations, Agriculture, Legislative Branch, Military Construction and Veterans Affairs, and Extensions Act, 2026, extends FSA’s authority to administer CRP through Sept. 30, 2026.
Continuous CRP (Signup 65) FSA will batch Continuous CRP offers submitted by interested agricultural producers and landowners. Offers to re-enroll expiring CRP continuous acreage will be accepted on a first-come, first-serve basis. New acreage offered in continuous CRP practices will be considered for acceptance on a first-come, first-serve basis if they support USDA conservation priorities including but not limited to practices that address water quality, such as filter strips and grass waterways, and practices that restore native ecosystems or target specific resource concerns.
The first Continuous CRP batching period ends on March 20, 2026. Offers submitted after this date will be considered for acceptance in subsequent batching periods if acreage remains available.
Continuous CRP participants voluntarily offer environmentally sensitive lands, typically smaller parcels than offered through General CRP including wetlands, riparian buffers, and varying wildlife habitats. In return, they receive annual rental payments and cost-share assistance to establish long-term, resource-conserving vegetative cover.
Continuous CRP enrollment options include:
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Clean Lakes, Estuaries and Rivers (CLEAR) Initiative: Prioritizes water quality practices on the land that, if enrolled, will help reduce sediment loadings, nutrient loadings, and harmful algal blooms. The vegetative covers also contribute to increased wildlife populations.
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CLEAR30 (a component of the CLEAR Initiative): Offers additional incentives for water quality practice adoption and can be accessed in 30-year contracts.
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Highly Erodible Land Initiative (HELI): Producers and landowners can enroll in CRP to establish long-term cover on highly erodible cropland that has a weighted erodibility index greater than or equal to 20.
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Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program (CREP): Addresses high priority conservation objectives of states and Tribal governments on agricultural lands in specific geographic areas.
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State Acres for Wildlife Enhancement Initiative (SAFE): Restores vital habitat in order to meet high-priority state wildlife conservation goals.
General CRP (Signup 66) General CRP offers are submitted through a competitive bid process. After the enrollment period closes, General CRP offers are ranked and scored by FSA, using nationally established environmental benefits criteria. USDA will announce accepted offers once ranking and scoring for all offers is completed. In addition to annual rental payments, approved General CRP participants may also be eligible for cost-share assistance to establish long-term, resource-conserving vegetative cover.
Producers and landowners interested in participating in CRP should contact their local FSA county office.
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USDA Farm Service Agency (FSA) reminds you to report prevented planted and failed acres in order to establish or retain FSA program eligibility for some programs.
You should report crop acreage you intended to plant, but due to natural disaster, were prevented from planting. Prevented planting acreage must be reported on form CCC-576, Notice of Loss, no later than 15 calendar days after the final planting date as established by FSA and Risk Management Agency (RMA).
Contact your local USDA Service Center for final planting dates for your NAP crops.
Additionally, if you have failed acres, you should also use form CCC-576, Notice of Loss, to report failed acres.
For hand-harvested crops and certain perishables, you must notify FSA of damage or loss through the administrative County Office within 72 hours of the date of damage or loss first becomes apparent. This notification can be provided by filing a CCC-576, email, fax or phone. If you notify the County Office by any method other than by filing the CCC-576, you are still required to file a CCC-576, Notice of Loss, within the required 15 calendar days.
For losses on crops covered by the Non-Insured Crop Disaster Assistance Program (NAP), you must file a Notice of Loss within 15 days of the occurrence of the disaster or when losses become apparent. You must timely file a Notice of Loss for failed acres on all crops including grasses.
To file a Notice of Loss, contact your local USDA Service Center or visit fsa.usda.gov.
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Marketing Assistance Loans (MALs) and Loan Deficiency Payments (LDPs) provide financing and marketing assistance for wheat, feed grains, soybeans, and other oilseeds, pulse crops, rice, peanuts, cotton, wool and honey. MALs provide you with interim financing after harvest to help you meet cash flow needs without having to sell your commodities when market prices are typically at harvest-time lows. A producer who is eligible to obtain a loan, but agrees to forgo the loan, may obtain an LDP if such a payment is available. Marketing loan provisions and LDPs are not available for sugar and extra-long staple cotton.
FSA is now accepting requests for 2025 MALs and LDPs for all eligible commodities after harvest. Requests for loans and LDPs shall be made on or before the final availability date for the respective commodities.
Commodity certificates are available to loan holders who have outstanding nonrecourse loans for wheat, upland cotton, rice, feed grains, pulse crops (dry peas, lentils, large and small chickpeas), peanuts, wool, soybeans and designated minor oilseeds. These certificates can be purchased at the posted county price (or adjusted world price or national posted price) for the quantity of commodity under loan, and must be immediately exchanged for the collateral, satisfying the loan. MALs redeemed with commodity certificates are not subject to Adjusted Gross Income provisions.
To be considered eligible for an LDP, you must have form CCC-633EZ, Page 1 on file at your local FSA Office before losing beneficial interest in the crop. Pages 2, 3 or 4 of the form must be submitted when payment is requested.
Marketing loan gains (MLGs) and loan deficiency payments (LDPs) are no longer subject to payment limitations, actively engaged in farming and cash-rent tenant rules.
Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) provisions state that if your total applicable three-year average AGI exceeds $900,000, then you’re not eligible to receive an MLG or LDP. You must have a valid CCC-941 on file to earn a market gain of LDP. The AGI does not apply to MALs redeemed with commodity certificate exchange.
For more information and additional eligibility requirements, contact your local USDA Service Center or visit fsa.usda.gov.
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USDA announced the next phase in the Farmer Bridge Assistance Program (FBA), the eligible commodity per-acre payment rates. In 2026, $12 billion will be paid to American farmers. Of that amount, $11 billion consists of one-time FBA program payments.
Eligible Row Crop Commodities and Payment Rates: Below are the payment rates for the FBA eligible commodities that triggered a payment.
Commodity, Per Acre Payment Rates
- Barley: $20.51
- Canola: $23.57
- Chickpeas (Large): $26.46
- Chickpeas (Small): $33.36
- Corn: $44.36
- Cotton: $117.35
- Flax: $8.05
- Lentils: $23.98
- Mustard: $23.21
- Oats: $81.75
- Peanuts: $55.65
- Peas: $19.60
- Rice: $132.89
- Safflower: $24.86
- Sesame: $13.68
- Sorghum: $48.11
- Soybeans: $30.88
- Sunflower: $17.32
- Wheat: $39.35
Eligibility, Program Applications, and Crop Insurance Linkage FBA payments are based on 2025 planted acres, Economic Research Service cost of production, and the World Agriculture Supply and Demand Estimate Report. Double crop acres, including all initial and subsequently planted crops, are eligible. Prevent plant acres are not eligible.
All intended row crop uses are eligible for FBA except grazing, volunteer stands, experimental, green manure, crops left standing and abandoned or cover crops.
Crop insurance linkage is not required; however, USDA strongly urges producers to take advantage of the new risk management tools provided for in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) to best protect against future price risk and volatility. The OBBBA federal crop insurance improvements include expanding benefits for beginning farmers and ranchers, increasing coverage options, and making crop insurance more affordable.
Specialty Crop Assistance Of the $12 billion being provided by the Commodity Credit Corporation Charter Act, up to $11 billion is being directed to eligible row crop producers and the remaining $1 billion of the $12 billion in assistance is reserved for specialty crops and sugar. Timelines for payments to producers of these crops are still under development and require additional understanding of market impacts and economic needs.
Producers, including specialty crop producers and stakeholder groups, can submit questions to farmerbridge@usda.gov.
More information on FBA is available online at https://www.fsa.usda.gov/fba or you can contact your local USDA FSA county office.
The USDA is launching a new online portal to streamline reporting of transactions involving U.S. agricultural land by foreign persons, which can include businesses and governments, under the Agricultural Foreign Investment Disclosure Act of 1978 (AFIDA). The new online portal is part of a broader effort to strengthen enforcement and protect American farmland as USDA continues its implementation of the National Farm Security Action Plan.
The new online portal is available at afida.landmark.usda.gov. Users can access the portal with Login.gov, a sign in service that provides secure online access to participate in certain government programs and reporting requirements.
The new digital portal will gather the same information found on the current form FSA-153 and those subject to filing may still file using the current FSA-153 hard copy form if desired. However, filers should not duplicate filings by using both submission options.
About the National Farm Security Action Plan One of the key tenets of USDA’s National Farm Security Action Plan (PDF, 1.2 MB) is strengthening processes around disclosure of foreign persons who have an interest in U.S. farmland. This historic plan, announced in July 2025, calls for aggressive implementation of reforms to the AFIDA process including improved verification and monitoring of collected AFIDA data. In addition to the new portal, USDA published an Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking for AFIDA in December 2025.
About AFIDA The new portal is part of USDA’s efforts to streamline its process for electronic submission and retention of AFIDA disclosures, as initially required by the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023. Today USDA also shared its annual AFIDA report for 2024 with Congress, which is available online. The report lists foreign holdings of U.S. agricultural land as 46 million acres, as of December 31, 2024 and includes a section on land held and acquired by China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea in recent years. The data obtained from AFIDA disclosures are used in the preparation of an annual report to Congress, which is published online.
The AFIDA regulations define the term “foreign person” and specifies the information that must be included in the report. AFIDA focuses on foreign persons who hold direct or indirect interest in the agricultural land, provided those foreign persons with an indirect interest have “significant interest or substantial control” in the direct interest holder.
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Program payments may be limited by direct attribution to individuals or entities. A legal entity is defined as an entity created under Federal or State law that owns land or an agricultural commodity, product or livestock.
Through direct attribution, payment limitation is based on the total payments received by a person or legal entity, both directly and indirectly.
Payments and benefits under certain FSA programs are subject to some or all of the following:
- payment limitation by direct attribution (including common attribution)
- payment limitation amounts for the applicable programs
- substantive change requirements when a farming operation adds persons, resulting in an increase in persons to which payment limitation applies
- actively engaged in farming requirements
- cash-rent tenant rule
- foreign person rule
- average AGI limitations
- programs subject to AGI limitation
No program benefits subject to payment eligibility and limitation will be provided until all required forms for the specific situation are provided and necessary payment eligibility and payment limitation determinations are made. Payment eligibility and payment limitation determinations may be initiated by the County Committee or requested by the producer.
Statutory and Regulatory rules require persons and legal entities, provide the names and Tax Identification Numbers (TINs) for all persons and legal entities with an ownership interest in the farming operation to be eligible for payment.
Payment eligibility and payment limitation forms submitted by persons and legal entities are subject to spot check through FSA’s end-of-year review process. Persons or legal entities selected for end-of-year review must provide the County Committee with operating loan documents, income and expense ledgers, canceled checks for all expenditures, lease and purchase agreements, sales contracts, property tax statements, equipment listings, lease agreements, purchase contracts, documentation of who provided actual labor and management, employee time sheets or books, crop sales documents, warehouse ledgers, gin ledgers, corporate or entity papers, etc.
A finding that a person or legal entity is not actively engaged in farming results in the person or legal entity being ineligible for any payment or benefit subject to the actively engaged in farming rules.
Noncompliance with AGI provisions, either by exceeding the applicable limitation or failure to submit a certification and consent for disclosure statement, will result in payment ineligibility for all program benefits subject to AGI provisions. Program payments are reduced in an amount that is commensurate with the direct and indirect interest held by an ineligible person or legal entity in any legal entity, general partnership, or joint operation that receives benefits subject to the average AGI limitations.
If any changes occur that could affect an actively engaged in farming, cash-rent tenant, foreign person, or average Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) determination, producers must timely notify the County FSA Office by filing revised farm operating plans and/or supporting documentation, as applicable. Failure to timely notify the County Office may adversely affect payment eligibility.
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In this Ask the Expert, Tina Mellinger answers questions about Farm Service Agency (FSA) Youth Loans. Tina is a Farm Loan Manager in Ohio and has worked for FSA for 37 years. Her FSA farm loan team makes an average of around 50 loans each year, with around five of those being Youth Loans. Her entire career has been centered around loan-making. At the beginning of her career, she worked for Rural Development making home loans.
Tina grew up on a 50-cow dairy farm in southeastern Ohio. She earned an animal science and ag education degree from the Ohio State University.
To read the full blog, visit farmers.gov/blog/ask-expert-qa-on-youth-loans-with-tina-mellinger.
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In this Ask the Expert, Jack Carlile, Farm Loan Manager for the USDA Farm Service Agency (FSA), answers questions about farm operating loans and when producers should apply in order to secure funds for the current crop year.
As the Farm Loan Manager for the Cherokee County Service Center, Jack is responsible for managing the loan making and loan servicing activities for five counties in northeast Oklahoma. His office provides services for over 650 farm loan customers. Jack was raised on a cross bred cow/calf operation that his grandparents started. Over the years, each generation has added to the operation by purchasing additional pasture. The operation also grows and bales their own hay. Jack’s agriculture background and degree in agriculture economics from Oklahoma State University help him better understand the financing needs of his producers.
Who can apply for FSA Farm Loans? Anyone can apply for FSA’s loan programs. Applications will be considered on basic eligibility requirements. To apply for a loan, you must meet the following general eligibility requirements including:
- Be a U.S. citizen or qualified alien.
- Operator of a family farm or ranch.
- Have a satisfactory credit history.
- Unable to obtain credit elsewhere at reasonable rates and terms to meet actual needs.
- Not be delinquent on any federal debts.
To read the full blog visit farmers.gov/blog/ask-the-expert-farm-operating-loan-qa-with-jack-carlile.
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For 90 years, we have helped people make investments in their operations and local communities to keep working lands working, boost rural economies, increase the competitiveness of American agriculture, and improve the quality of our air, water, soil, and habitat. Learn more about NRCS.
NRCS's priorities are:
1. Preserve and Protect Agricultural Land
Goal: Reduce the loss of productive farmland and safeguard the long-term viability of America’s agricultural landscapes.
- Expand targeted conservation easement programs to slow the loss of 5,000 acres of farmland per day.
- Partner with local governments and land trusts to prioritize farmland preservation.
- Advocate for policies that incentivize keeping land in agricultural production.
- Promote regenerative practices that strengthen soil health and ensure long-term productivity and profitability.
- Integrate whole farm planning into conservation efforts to provide comprehensive support to farmers.
2. Modernize NRCS Infrastructure and Technology
Goal: Transform NRCS into a digitally agile agency that empowers staff and farmers through modern tools and systems.
- Ensure adequate broadband connectivity in every county office to eliminate digital bottlenecks.
- Integrate core software systems into a unified, cloud-based platform for in-field technical service.
- Implement a “One Farmer, One File” system to streamline data access and reduce duplication.
- Replace paper-heavy workflows with real-time digital conservation planning.
3. Recenter Field Engagement and Technical Assistance
Goal: Re-establish NRCS’s presence in the field to deliver hands-on, personalized support to farmers.
- Reallocate staff time from administrative tasks to direct, field-based service delivery.
- Train and deploy certified conservation planners quickly and effectively.
- Flip the service model: meet farmers where they are, not just in the office.
- Use mobile tools and digital platforms to co-create conservation plans on-site.
- Build the next robust generation of technical service providers to ensure producers continue receiving expert, on-the-ground support.
4. Strengthen Partnerships by Streamlining Processes and Accountability
Goal: Leverage partnerships as force multipliers while reducing internal friction to accelerate conservation outcomes.
- Accept third-party certified conservation plans that meet or exceed NRCS standards.
- Strengthen local decision-making while maintaining scientific integrity. Increase accountability while simultaneously improving responsiveness and services to producers.
- Align partner strengths to maximize measurable conservation plans for producers.
- Support on-farm partnerships that deliver Farmer First, direct-to-producer, conservation services and payments.
5. Shift to Outcome-Based Conservation and Farmer Empowerment
Goal: Measure success through outcomes and empower farmers with data, recognition, and market access.
- Move beyond acres and dollars to track real improvements in water management, soil health, and natural vitality.
- Recognize farmers as the heroes of conservation and highlight their accomplishments through data.
- Support precision agriculture and digital farming tools to enhance productivity and profit.
- Help farmers achieve their goals and receive regulatory and marketplace credit for the voluntary work they have accomplished.
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Tucked away in the hills west of Missoula, Montana, the Indreland Ranch has maintained its ranching roots, and provided a haven for wildlife for over 80 years.
In a partnership between the Five Valleys Land Trust, Missoula Open Space Bond Program, and the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service’s (NRCS) Agricultural Conservation Easement Program - Agricultural Land Easements (ACEP-ALE), Rory and Dean Indreland placed a conservation easement on 1,667 acres of their ranch protecting wildlife, agriculture, and future generations.
About the Indreland Ranch Their grandfather purchased the property in 1944, coming to the Missoula Valley from central Montana. From the beginning, the family has utilized the ranch’s grasslands, creek-bottom meadows, and timber stands to produce beef cattle, raise hay, and harvest timber.
The ranch provides habitat and migration routes for wildlife. Bordering both U.S. Forest Service and private conservation lands, the ranch’s location enables species such as elk, grizzly and black bears, and wolves to migrate across western Montana.
Protecting the ranch has been a lifelong dream for Rory. At just 19, he bought a portion of the ranch from his father.
“That’s when I realized that it might not be here forever. Ever since I’ve asked, what can we do to try and save it? That was one of the reasons why I pursued an easement.” Rory Indreland
A Ranch With it All The ranch is unique in that it offers a multitude of benefits to the landscape. It offers exceptional wildlife habitat and corridor connectivity, supports local agriculture, and provides scenic open space visible from Missoula, a city with a population of approximately 75,000 to 78,000 and continuing to grow as a major regional hub for Montana.
Benefits of the Conservation Easement Conservation easements allow and encourage continued restoration and management of the resources but prevent uses that are not consistent with protecting the habitat from future development.
Agricultural conservation easements permanently protect the land’s agricultural viability, preventing conversion to nonagricultural uses and creating a stable foundation for long-term regenerative agricultural systems that benefit the environment, support rural economies, and ensure the safety of our nation’s food supply.
ACEP-ALE helps private and tribal landowners, land trusts, and other entities such as state and local governments protect croplands and grasslands on working farms and ranches.
“One of NRCS’s top priorities is to preserve and protect agricultural land to reduce the loss of productive farmland and safeguard the long-term viability of America’s agricultural landscapes.” Gayle Berry, NRCS State Conservationist for Montana
What Was Accomplished As the community of Missoula continues to grow, it is essential to protect open space, including crucial wildlife habitat and corridor connections, riparian areas, and forest and agriculture land.
Through the vision of the Indreland family, the multi-generational ranching heritage of western Montana will be protected in perpetuity.
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USDA NASS is currently conducting the 2025 Organic Survey to collect data on organic production, marketing practices, income, and expenses in the U.S., and the 2025 Local Food Marketing Practices Survey to collect data on the marketing of locally and regionally produced agricultural food products.
In late-February and early March, USDA NASS will collect data for the March Agricultural Survey asking producers their planting intentions for the 2026 crop year and the amount of grain stocks held on their farming operations as of March 1. Results from this survey will be published on March 31, 2026 in the Prospective Plantings report and the Grain Stocks report.
Also beginning in February and continuing through April, USDA NASS will conduct the final phase of the Agricultural Resource Management Survey, to collect data on farm finances, operator characteristics, and farm household information. Farm operators are asked to provide data on farm operating expenditures, capital improvements, assets, and debt for agricultural production. In addition, operators are asked to provide data on farm-related income, government payments, the source and amount of off-farm income, and characteristics of themselves and their household. Farm organizations, commodity groups, agribusinesses, Congress, and the USDA use information from this survey to evaluate the financial performance of farm/ranch businesses and to make policy decisions affecting agriculture.
Thank you to Montana farmers and ranchers for taking the time to respond to NASS surveys. To find results of NASS surveys, please visit https://www.nass.usda.gov.
If you have any questions or concerns, please contact Rodger Ott, Regional Director, USDA NASS Mountain Regional Field Office, at 1-800-392-3202.
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Montana
USDA Farm Service Agency PO Box 670 Bozeman, MT 59771
Phone: 406.587.6872 Fax: 855.546.0264 Web: www.fsa.usda.gov/mt
State Executive Director: MICHAEL FOSTER
State Committee: CARL RAABE MATTSON | Chair GENE RAYMOND CURRY | Member BRAIN DALE EGGEBRECHT | Member CONSTANCE IONE IVERSEN | Member
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USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service
10 East Babcock Street, Room 443 Bozeman, MT 59715-4704 Phone: 406-587-6811 Fax: 855-510-7028 Web: nrcs.usda.gov/montana
State Conservationist: GAYLE BARRY
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USDA Risk Management Agency-Billings Regional Office
P.O. Box 80114 Billings, MT 59108 Phone: 406-657-6447 Fax: 406-657-6573 Email: RSOMT@usda.gov Web:www.rma.usda.gov/rmalocal/montana
Acting Regional Director: ALEXA TALKINGTON
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