USDA Boosts Payments Under SDRP as Rollins Signals Fertilizer Investment Push Farmers affected by natural disasters in 2023 and 2024 who submitted claims under the Supplemental Disaster Relief Program (SDRP) will receive a second payment starting next week, according to Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins. The announcement was made during a roundtable event with Missouri farmers east of Kansas City, where Rollins emphasized the importance of the additional aid for producers seeking operating loans this spring. The SDRP, which was established after Congress allocated over $20 billion in disaster relief for weather-related losses in 2023 and 2024, will now provide farmers with double the initial aid. USDA has already disbursed $6.7 billion under the program, and the new payment factor has been raised from 35% to 70%, effectively doubling the amount producers receive. Rollins stated that this adjustment would significantly increase the financial support available to farmers and ranchers, with payments expected to begin arriving next week. The extension of the SDRP application deadline from April 30 to August 12 was also announced. Rollins explained that this extension allows more time for producers and the Farm Service Agency (FSA) to address potential changes in the program that could affect payments. USDA officials, including Undersecretary for Farm Production and Conservation Richard Fordyce, highlighted that the delay was partly due to clarifying what qualifies as a quality loss under the program. Some farmers, particularly rice growers in the Mid-South, have faced challenges selling 2024 harvests due to quality issues, preventing them from receiving SDRP payments.#trump_administration #brooke_rollins #usda #farm_service_agency #richard_fordyce
