United States Department of Agriculture
Natural Resources Conservation Service
North Carolina Go to Accessibility Information
Skip to Page Content




North Carolina NRCS Programs

Updated 11/26/2012

All producers interested in Farm Bill programs should act now for applications to be considered by the ranking deadlines of January 18, 2013 and February 15, 2013.

An active Conservation Plan must be in place in order for applications to be considered for Farm Bill Conservation Programs.

NRCS's natural resources conservation programs help people reduce soil erosion, enhance water supplies, improve water quality, increase wildlife habitat, and reduce damages caused by floods and other natural disasters. Public benefits include enhanced natural resources that help sustain agricultural productivity and environmental quality while supporting continued economic development, recreation, and scenic beauty.

Conservation Technical Assistance Program and Activities 

Environmental Improvement Programs

Stewardship Programs

Water Resources Programs

Easement Programs

Community Assistance Programs and Activities

Technical Processes, Tools, and Other Technical Resources

Conservation Issues and Strategies

Resource Inventory and Assessment

Compliance, Appeals, Mediation, Relief

International Programs

Fiscal Year 2009 Program Allocation Formulas and Methodologies

This document requires Adobe Acrobat.
Fiscal Year 2009 Program Allocation Formulas and Methodologies (PDF, 856KB)

National Programs & Services Page


The following documents require Adobe Acrobat, Microsoft Word, or Microsoft Excel

Eligibility and Your Land (PDF; 650 KB) (Last Modified 5/25/2010)


Locally Led Conservation Icon

Locally Led Conservation

Conservation has always been a cooperative effort that includes federal, state, and local conservation agencies, but more importantly it includes leadership and input from local individuals.

 


Cover of Farm Bill Brochure

 2008 Farm Bill