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| | Signing Event Celebrates the Launch
of CSP in Alabama
Reward the best and motivate the rest!
--
That was the message of conservation
partners from across the state, who gathered on the beef farm of Morgan County
livestock producer Thornton Stanley, in the Wheeler Lake Watershed on July
26. Stanley
hosted the event to celebrate the launch of the Conservation Security
Program (CSP) in
Alabama.
CSP participant Thornton Stanley (c) welcomes
USDA Deputy Under Secretary Merlyn Carlson (r)
and NRCS State Conservationist Gary Kobylski to his farm for a CSP
celebration. |
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CSP is a voluntary program that provides financial and technical
assistance to promote the conservation and improvement of soil, water,
air, energy, and plant and animal life on Tribal and private working
lands. USDA Deputy Under Secretary Merlyn
Carlson, congressional representatives, local and regional dignitaries,
agency representatives, and interested others participated in the
celebration.
Wheeler Lake Watershed, encompassing eight
counties in north
Alabama and four
counties in south central
Tennessee,
was among 202 watersheds across the nation invited to participate in the
2005 CSP program. In Wheeler Lake Watershed, 56
Alabama
producers were awarded contracts amounting to $910,540.
“Thousands of
Alabama
farmers are committed to doing the hard day-to-day work of making the
right choices for the land and other natural resources that they manage.
They don’t boast about it and they don’t often get much recognition. CSP
is a step towards rewarding the work they do,” said Gary Kobylski, Alabama
NRCS State Conservationist. “Furthermore, these proven stewards are good
candidates for our nation to invest in to further improve the resources
that sustain our families, our communities and our landscapes.”
“As an agency, NRCS has helped farmers and
ranchers fix conservation problems, such as soil erosion or water
conservation, since the Dust Bowl days of the 1930s,” said Kobylski. “The
Conservation Security Program, however, represents a new direction in
conservation and agricultural policy and programs. These payments for
long-term stewardship will reward many of those who undertook conservation
on their own initiative and who care for the resources that we all share.”
CSP will be offered each year, on a rotational
basis, in as many watersheds as funding allows. For more information on
CSP and other NRCS programs visit:
http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/.
Additional Information
Thornton Stanley and
Diamond "S" Farm
<back to Wheeler Lake
Watershed CSP>
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