Agricultural producers have new resources available to them to prepare for and recover from impacts of natural disasters on the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) new website, farmers.gov. The site has updated tools and information to help agricultural producers identify the right programs and make decisions for their operations.
“Agriculture is a risky business,” said Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue. “At USDA, we’re here to help you prepare, recover, and build long-term resilience to natural disasters. Whether you want to visit your local USDA service center or visit our new farmers.gov, we want to help you get the help you need.”
New additions to the site – being built for farmers, by farmers – include a farmers.gov portal for secure business transactions and a disaster assistance discovery tool. The discovery tool walks producers through five questions to help them identify personalized results of what USDA disaster assistance programs meet their needs. The farmers.gov portal is the first edition of a secure dashboard for producers to manage program applications and other USDA documents.
These resources are in addition to other currently available through Farmers.gov, including:
- Our mobile-friendly Service center locator, connecting users with USDA assistance at the location nearest them,
- Information about the new 2017 Wildfires and Hurricanes Indemnity Program, which provides disaster payments to producers to offset losses from hurricanes and wildfires during 2017,
- Routinely updated farmers.gov blog where producers can read stories about other farmers across the nation containing insight into how other producers address challenges in running successful agricultural operations,
- A soil health webpage, where producers can read about the soil health management practices offered by USDA, and
- An online playbook, where people can track the latest developments of the site.
USDA Secretary Sonny Perdue on Farmers.gov
Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue talks about new features and improvements on the way for the farmers.gov website.
Source: U.S. Department of Agriculture