
Texas farmers and ranchers benefit from federal conservation funds
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A recent poll by the National Wildlife Federation showed Texas farmers and ranchers benefit from voluntary conservation programs from the U.S. Department of Agriculture and many would like to see the programs expand.
Respondents said the funding helps improve their bottom line and protect soil and water.
Aviva Glaser, senior director of agriculture policy for the federation, said Texas producers use the programs in various ways.

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"Prescribed grazing and brush management and range planting were very popular practices," Glaser pointed out. "There's been the Working Lands for Wildlife program that has helped with the Monarch butterfly decline through voluntary measures the farmers (and) ranchers are doing with the help of this funding."
She noted only 5 percent of the more than 500 farmers and ranchers polled disagree with increasing long-term funding from the USDA.
Almost 70 percent of producers said designating funds specifically to help farmers adopt climate smart agriculture practices is a good use of federal money.
Glaser pointed out the wildlife federation has created a mapping tool which shows how much federal funding each state has received and outlines how farmers and ranchers are using it.
"That could be a range of different practices," Glaser observed. "Practices like cover crops or grazing management or it could be a conservation easement. It could be putting in a buffer strip."
More than eight in 10 producers support passage of a new Farm Bill. The legislation is supposed to be renewed every five years but the last version was passed in 2018.