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ILLINOIS WEATHER

Deadline Nears for Insuring Double Crop Soybeans



The USDA’s Risk Management Agency (RMA) reminds producers in Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio that for the 2023 crop year there may be options for insuring double crop soybeans and grain sorghum in counties where the Following Another Crop (FAC) practice is not available. In support of the President’s and Secretary’s commitments, the Springfield Regional Office is simplifying and expanding options to insure Following Another Crop (FAC) acreage in areas that don’t offer coverage.

Producers intending to plant soybeans after wheat or other small grains in counties where double crop insurance coverage is not available will have the option to insure the soybeans using a Blanket Written Agreement. The Blanket Written Agreements are a standardized written agreement offer prebuilt by RMA that can be accessed by your crop insurance company. They provide the terms and conditions of insurance that you can insure your FAC soybeans without going through an extensive underwriting process. You have until the sales closing date of March 15 to request coverage using a Blanket Written Agreement. If you miss the March 15 deadline and are requesting coverage for the first time, you may request a type/practice written agreement through your agent until the July 15 acreage reporting deadline. In addition, producers also have the option to request coverage for soybeans planted into wheat or other small grains using a relay cropping practice.

Brian Frieden, RMA’s Springfield regional office director said. “If you’re looking at relay cropping or double cropping in counties without coverage, please contact your crop insurance agent for details on requesting a written agreement to provide coverage and any applicable deadlines.”

RMA has also published additional details, including frequently asked questions, maps, and other material specifically related to the expansion effort and more general information about double cropping.

RMA’s expansion of double cropping is part of a broader effort to help producers boost production and address global food insecurity. USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service is also improving opportunities for nutrient management. This includes targeting funding, increasing program flexibilities, launching a new outreach campaign to promote nutrient management’s economic benefits, and expanding partnerships to develop nutrient management plans.

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Categories: Illinois, Crops, Soybeans

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