Wetlands and Agriculture:
Policy Issues in the 1995 Farm Bill
Jeffrey Zinn
Senior Analyst in Natural Resources Policy
Environment and Natural Resources Policy Division
December 19, 1994
95-7 ENR
SUMMARY
Wetlands protection efforts have been a major concern for
agricultural interests since Congress enacted so-called
swampbuster provisions in the 1985 Food Security Act. Under these
provisions, all producers who alter wetlands risk losing certain
farm program benefits. Determining which sites are wetlands and
enforcement of penalties remain contentious issues. Controversy
has been heightened by confusion over how this program is related
to the principal Federal regulatory program to protect wetlands,
section 404 of the Clean Water Act, and how wetland
determinations affect land values and private property rights.
Because the 103rd Congress did not reauthorize the Clean Water
Act, some of the wetland issues raised in that debate might be
raised in the farm bill.
Another wetland protection program, the Wetland Reserve (WRP),
was enacted in the 1990 farm bill. This program, which pays
farmers to place wetlands under long-term or permanent easements,
has been far less controversial. This paper reviews the
swampbuster and WRP, as well as controversies surrounding
delineation of wetlands and relationships between private
property rights and wetland protection efforts.
SWAMPBUSTER
The Concept
Swampbuster is one of three compliance programs enacted in the
1985 farm bill. Compliance means that the availability of Federal
farm program benefits is tied to meeting certain societal goals.
Swampbuster--along with sodbuster and conservation
compliance--set the first standards to provide environmental
benefits in farm legislation.
Before these compliance programs were enacted, all soil and
water conservation programs offered through the agencies of the
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) had been based on two
criteria: voluntary participation and incentives. The programs
offer complementary incentives, including technical assistance
(conservation planning and engineering) through the Soil
Conservation Service, cost sharing payments through the
Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service, education
through the Extension Service, and loans through the
Farmers Home Administration. Also, agriculture was viewed as
unique, and was generally exempted from requirements in
environmental laws that applied to other business and industrial
sectors.
However, in the early 1980s, as farm program costs soared and
severe erosion problems were widely reported, a growing portion
of the general public, and even the farm community, responded in
opinion surveys that farmers receiving Federal assistance should
be required to meet environmental standards. Debate over
sodbuster proposals during the preceding years had exposed the
compliance concept to congressional consideration, and probably
helped prepare the way for enactment of swampbuster. Congress
surprised almost everyone by enacting swampbuster with little
debate--it was one of USDA's first conservation programs to
operate fully apart from the traditional conservation goal of
enhancing farm productivity.
Opponents and supporters alike have expressed reservations
about the swampbuster concept. Some opponents maintain that it
has changed SCS (now, the Natural Resources Conservation Service
(NRCS)) into a regulatory agency. Swampbuster supporters respond
that farm program participants have always had to meet
requirements; swampbuster merely adds another one. Each producer
still decides whether to be in compliance and be eligible for
these benefits. Further, producers who choose to be out of
compliance still have full market access. But many wetland
protection advocates also believe that swampbuster is ineffective
precisely because it is not a regulatory program. This debate,
which has both philosophic and practical dimensions, continues,
especially in regions where wetlands are concentrated.
Swampbuster Provisions
Swampbuster was enacted in 1985 and amended in 1990. Under the
1985 Food Security Act (P.L.99-198), farmers who drain and then
plant a crop on a wetland could lose specified farm program
benefits. Swampbuster defines wetlands to include three elements:
hydric soils, hydrophytic plants, and hydrology (the presence of
water). Certain wetlands are exempt, including wetlands converted
to agriculture before the date of enactment, accidentally or
artificially created wetlands, wetlands where agricultural
production is possible without altering drainage or destroying
wetland characteristics or where production has a minimal effect,
and areas where the producer follows an approved wetlands
replacement plan.
The program was amended in several significant ways in the
1990 farm bill (P.L. 101-624). This legislation requires USDA to
map all agricultural wetlands, and to establish a certification
and appeals process. The program was strengthened by changing the
initiation of swampbusting from the time that a crop is planted
to the time when conversion makes possible the planting of a
crop, and by adding six Federal farm programs to the list of
benefits that could be denied. The program was also made more
flexible . Under some circumstances, producers could lose a
limited amount of benefits (ranging from $750 to $10,000), rather
than all benefits. This graduated sanction, which a producer can
use only once every 10 years, was made available retroactively.
Also, the list of exempted wetlands was expanded, and
"minimal effects" of farming activities was clarified.
Restoring a prior converted wetland to offset losses in wetland
values, acreage, or functions, known as mitigation, is allowed in
some situations.
Implementation
Responsibility for implementation is shared by several
agencies. NRCS is the lead agency; it works with producers to
identify wetlands. It also visits a portion of all designated
wetlands each year to determine if producers are violating
swampbuster. NRCS transmits the names of violators to the
agencies administering the programs to determine whether farm
program benefits will be denied. Producers can appeal a
swampbusting determination.
Implementing swampbuster has placed pressure on NRCS. The
agency had limited wetlands expertise on staff in 1985. Extensive
training programs have reduced those limitations. The program
continues to require a large amount of staff time to carry out
the various responsibilities. NRCS estimates that wetland work
will cost about $108 million annually over the next 5 years, and
that it will require about 25 percent of all field staff time
devoted to conservation technical assistance.
Initial implementation was so controversial that Congress held
several oversight hearings in 1987 and 1988. Defining what is a
wetland and delineating sites that meet the definition, remains
contentious. NRCS has interpreted the law's general wetland
definition into operational definitions that distinguish six
types of wetlands. These definitions are based on factors such as
whether or when the wetland was altered, the degree to which it
still exhibits or has the potential to exhibit wetland
characteristics, and cropping history. When the definition is
applied on the ground, many sites are delineated that do not fit
the public's image of a wetland because either no water is
visible or typical wetland vegetation is lacking. Adding further
complexity, some wetlands that are isolated from larger water
systems, such as prairie potholes and playas, are also treated
differently from wetlands that are part of river systems.
Swampbuster responsibilities have made NRCS a major player in
Federal wetland programs. The major Federal wetland regulatory
program, the section 404 program under the Clean Water Act, is
administered by the Army Corps of Engineers. Under the 404
program, permits are issued for the discharge of dredged or fill
material. The assumption by many in the farm community that
swampbuster is related to the section 404 program has caused
considerable confusion. But basically the two programs are
distinct from each other. Further, section 404 includes a
provision that explicitly excludes "normal farming
activities" from permit requirements.
Policy Issues
Major issues now revolve around determinations, delineations,
and enforcement. NRCS suspended making new determinations
(deciding whether a site is a wetland) and delineations (locating
the boundaries of wetlands) for general inventories of wetlands
in 1991, in response to a concern that national legislation might
force the field staff to revise earlier determinations, adding to
the agency workload and creating further confusion for farmers.
Now, determinations and delineations are made as requested or
needed. NRCS anticipates resuming the more encompassing
determination effort in the very near future, and funding was
provided for that effort in FY 1995 appropriations.
This effort will be resumed because the Administration has
made the NRCS responsible for making all determinations on
agricultural lands, even in support of the section 404 regulatory
program. In an August 1993 policy announcement, the Clinton
Administration endorsed NRCS as the lead Federal agency for
making all wetland determinations on agricultural lands. On
January 6, 1994, USDA, the Corps of Engineers, the Department of
the Interior, and the Environmental Protection Agency signed a
Memorandum of Agreement designating NRCS as the lead agency. This
agreement is strongly endorsed by the agriculture community.
Several environmental groups, however, believe that the NRCS will
not adequately protect agricultural wetlands.
Resolution of a current controversy over delineating wetlands
on the ground will affect the section 404 program and could
affect swampbuster. Congress is awaiting a National Academy of
Science report on delineating wetlands, expected in early 1995,
before addressing this issue. It is important to note that the
swampbuster program operates under its own regulations,
promulgated in 1987, and will not necessarily be affected by
congressional action in response to the National Academy report.
Since enactment, supporters and opponents of program
implementation have debated the sufficiency and consistency of
enforcement. According to USDA statistics compiled by the
Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service (ASCS), the
agency responsible for paying commodity program benefits, a total
of 686 farms have lost benefits because of non-compliance through
1992. In 1992, 156 farms lost $1.66 million in benefits. This
amount is an extremely small percentage of the total paid in
1992, $8.2 billion. Critics believe that this small percentage
(.02 percent) reflects lax enforcement. Supporters of agriculture
point out that the program is not yet fully implemented, and that
wetland losses has generally slowed because of swampbuster (and
other Federal wetland protection initiatives). USDA data also
show that the number of penalized violators has tended upward; no
data for 1993 is available.
Consistent enforcement was a serious problem during the first
few years of the program. Most swampbuster violations in the
early years were concentrated within a few States, and within
those States, most were concentrated within a few counties. While
wetlands do not occur uniformly across the landscape, where
wetlands are concentrated does not appear to reflect patterns of
violations. For example, Minnesota has 165 farms where ASCS
benefits were denied, while neighboring North Dakota has only 29.
NRCS has stated that it is addressing this problem, and Congress
has chosen not to intervene thus far.
WETLAND RESERVE PROGRAM
The Wetland Reserve Program (WRP) was enacted in the 1990 farm
bill. This program allows farmers to bid to enroll farmed
wetlands and buffer areas into a long term or permanent easement.
The program goal is to enroll 1 million acres by 1996.
Participants also receive 75-percent cost-share payments to
assist in restoring the wetland and reimbursement for overhead
costs associated with registering the easement with the land
title. So far, USDA has sought only permanent easements.
Both the Bush and Clinton Administrations have sought
substantial funding for this program, but Congress has moved more
slowly. In FY 1992, the Bush Administration sought funding to
enroll 150,000 acres. Congress responded by providing funds to
enroll up to 50,000 in acres in 9 specified States. Producer
interest greatly exceeded 50,000 acres. Almost 50,000 acres were
accepted; the largest number of acres were in Mississippi and
Louisiana.
In FY 1993, the Administration sought full funding for WRP,
but this was eliminated in the appropriations conference
committee. In FY 1994, the Administration proposed funding of
$370 million; Congress instead provided more than $65 million to
enroll up to 75,000 acres in 20 States. In other FY 1993
legislation, a portion of the $60 million appropriated for USDA's
Small Watershed Program in response to the 1993 Midwest floods is
being used to enroll inundated land. An initial signup returned
an estimated 25,000 acres to wetlands, and a second signup is
being held through December of 1994.
For FY 1995, the Clinton Administration proposed $283 million
to enroll up to 300,000 acres in the WRP, but Congress authorized
less than $100 million. Also, during the second session of the
103rd Congress, legislation was enacted (P.L. 103-393) that is
designed to expand interest in the WRP by making wetlands already
covered under another agricultural wetland protection effort, the
Water Bank Program, eligible for the WRP as Water Bank contracts
expire.
Like any new program, the WRP has suffered a variety of
start-up and growing pains. For example, there is some
disagreement over what has actually been accomplished by this
program. While ASCS offered bids on 50,000 acres in 1992,
easements on only about 33,000 acres had actually been registered
in local land records by May, 1994. This included an additional
17,000 acres added after the Federal Government extended its bid
offers beyond the original January 31, 1994 deadline for filing.
The 33,000 acres represents about half the acres on which offers
had been made. Producers whose bids were accepted in 1994 have
until March of 1995 to have their bids registered, or the Federal
offer will be withdrawn. Other questions have to do with aspects
of program administration, with the costs to the Federal
Government of implementing the program, and with how to deal with
regional wetland differences. The American Farmland Trust and the
Soil and Water Conservation Society, two organizations interested
in aspects of agriculture, have made suggestions to improve the
program based on reviews of its implementation.
OTHER WETLAND ISSUES
The wetland protection issue has been caught up in a broader
debate over protection of private property rights. Grass roots
citizen efforts to oppose Federal regulations that allegedly
reduce or eliminate property values have expanded. If this view
gets a favorable response in the courts, then the overall Federal
wetland protection effort could be reduced or redirected. Because
swampbuster is a compliance program rather than a regulatory
program, property rights challenges to it are unlikely to be
considered directly by the courts. Nevertheless, it could be
affected by any broader wetland program changes responding to
property rights concerns.
The future of swampbuster also will be viewed within the
context of general trends in both farm policy and wetland
protection policy. If farm policy continues to evolve toward more
limited commodity programs with greater reliance on the market
place (and less on production controls), then swampbuster (and
the other compliance programs) could become irrelevant to a
growing portion of producers. Compliance supporters likely will
seek some new supplemental approaches to protect wetlands. The
fruits of this search might show up not only in a 1995 farm bill,
but also in reauthorization of the Clean Water Act and other
legislation. These revisions could include some changes to
Federal wetland toward agriculture.
Swampbuster's future also is related to the agricultural
community's ability to influence adjustments to environmental
policy, including wetlands. Legislation introduced in the 102nd
and 103rd Congresses, and generally supported by the agricultural
community, would have made NRCS the lead agency for all wetland
matters that relate to agriculture, and would have codified the
Corps' current regulatory exemption for permits under section 404
for prior converted cropland. The first of these proposals has
now been accomplished through administrative action. Wetland
protection advocates are likely to oppose any efforts that give
USDA agencies a stronger role in wetland protection efforts,
citing agriculture as the biggest cause of wetland losses in
recent decades.
Currently, the national wetland policy situation is
complicated by the shared but distinct responsibility for
wetlands protection among Federal agencies, and other unresolved
debates, such as whether all wetlands should be protected
equally and whether activities other than dredging and filling
should be regulated by the Federal government. The center of
today's bipartisan debate is between protection of wetlands and
protection of property rights, with the focus on how to delineate
wetland areas. Data on changing rates of conversion for various
uses, and on the effectiveness of Federal wetland protection
policies will be key contributions that will help to define the
outcome of this debate.
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