Home Historic level of funding for Virginia farmers included in new state budget
Local

Historic level of funding for Virginia farmers included in new state budget

Crystal Graham
Virginia farmer
(Photo courtesy of Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation.)

Historic levels of conservation funding for Virginia’s farmers are included in the new state budget which runs through June 30, 2023. Producers throughout the Commonwealth will benefit from expanded cost-share and tax credit opportunities.

“We are very excited about the historic level of cost-share funding for farmers in the new budget, and grateful to the General Assembly for providing it,” said Matt Wells, director of the Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation, or DCR. “We also know that we cannot meet our goals without true partnerships with our Soil and Water Conservation Districts and the agricultural community.”

Increased cost-share and tax credits

The Virginia Agricultural Best Management Practices Cost-Share Program, or VACS, is funded at a record high for the 2022-2023 program year with $123 million.

VACS is the state program that helps farms implement a range of conservation practices that protect water quality. By improving animal and soil health and reducing nutrient waste, these practices also help increase farm profitability — a key issue for producers as inflation rises.

DCR administers the state cost-share program in partnership with Virginia’s 47 soil and water conservation districts.

Farmers may receive up to $300,000 in state cost-share reimbursement for more than 70 best management practices including:

  • Cover crops
  • Nutrient management plans
  • Forested or herbaceous buffers
  • Animal waste systems
  • Livestock stream-exclusion systems

Many of these practices can often be funded through a combination of state and federal funds, reducing the farmer’s expense to less than 25 percent of the total cost.

Also available to Virginia’s farmers this year are:

  • Up to $25,000 in state tax credits for fully implemented agricultural best management practices
  • Up to $50,000 in tax credits for best management practices on lands with an approved resource management plan

To apply for funding or tax credits, farmers should contact their local soil and water conservation districts.

Streamlined paperwork for many producers

Farmers in many localities will now find it simpler to apply for funding to support multiple nutrient management and/or cover crop best practices.

Under what is sometimes called a “whole farm approach,” a producer only has to submit one cost-share application to cover all of the nutrient management practices, or all the cover crop practices, established on as much acreage as desired.

Previously, this program was only available to farmers in Essex, King and Queen and King William counties, and in the Chesapeake Bay watershed of the Eastern Shore.

This year, however, farmers in Carroll, Gloucester, Grayson, Halifax, Mathews, Middlesex, Page, Rockingham, Washington counties — and all of the Eastern Shore — may also participate.

More information on Virginia’s soil and water conservation programs may be found at https://www.dcr.virginia.gov/soil-and-water/

Crystal Graham

Crystal Graham

Crystal Abbe Graham is the regional editor of Augusta Free Press. A 1999 graduate of Virginia Tech, she has worked for nearly 25 years as a reporter and editor for several Virginia publications, written a book, and garnered more than a dozen Virginia Press Association awards for writing and graphic design. She was the co-host of "Viewpoints," a weekly TV news show, and co-host of Virginia Tonight, a nightly TV news show. Her work on "Virginia Tonight" earned her a national Telly award for excellence in television.