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ROCHESTER, N.Y., Aug 2, 2005—U.S. Department of Agriculture today
signed an agreement that will allow farmers and ranchers who need
technical assistance with soil erosion, sediment control and storm water
quality to obtain that assistance from certified technical service
providers (TSPs) or third-party vendors.
USDA-Natural Resources
Conservation Service Chief Bruce Knight signed a memorandum of
understanding (MOU) with the Certified Professional in Erosion and
Sediment Control, Inc. (CPESC) at the Soil and Water Conservation
Society’s annual conference. Knight and CPESC Executive Director David
Ward signed the three-year agreement, which recognizes certifications in
soil erosion and sediment control as well as storm water
quality.
“This MOU ensures private landowners who participate in
USDA conservation programs will receive top-notch services from CPESC
experts as these landowners plan, design and implement conservation
practices such as buffers, conservation tillage, vegetative land
stabilization and channel and stream stabilization,” said Knight.
The 2002 Farm Bill expanded the availability of technical
assistance to private landowners by encouraging the use of TSPs to assist
USDA in delivering conservation technical assistance services to
landowners.
The MOU allows CPESC to recommend its registrants to NRCS
for certification in soil erosion and sediment control and storm water
quality. They must complete CPESC’s certified programs in these two areas
to meet USDA’s performance criteria for providing conservation assistance
in soil erosion and sediment control and storm water
quality.
CPESC, headquartered in Marion, North Carolina, is a non
profit, professional international organization with over 2,000 registrants
throughout the United States as well as several countries, including
Canada. The organization was first formed in 1983 through SWCS and became
incorporated three years ago.
USDA has already signed MOUs with 13
organizations that provide for the partner organizations to recommend
qualified individuals to USDA for certification as technical service
providers in conservation planning and design, layout, installation and
checkout of approved conservation practices.
In addition to the MOU
signed today, USDA has existing agreements with the American Society of
Agronomy, Society for Range Management, Iowa State University, The
Wildlife Society, Society of American Foresters, The Irrigation
Association, University of Tennessee, National Alliance of Independent
Crop Consultants, Environmental Management Solutions, American Registry of
Professional Animal Scientists, Association of Consulting Foresters of
America, American Fisheries Society and American Forage and Grassland
Council.
USDA-NRCS certifies TSPs and lists them on a national,
web-based registry called TechReg. Farmers, ranchers and other landowners
seeking conservation technical assistance can locate a TSP through this
registry. More than 2,400 certified TSPs from across the nation are
registered. Additional information on technical service provider
assistance is available at http://techreg.usda.gov.
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