Conservation Security Program (CSP). This
ruling holds that the Conservation Security Program is substantially similar
to the type of programs described in section 126(a)(1) through (8) of the
Code within the meaning of section 126(a)(9). As a result, all or a portion
of cost-share payments received under the CSP is eligible for exclusion from
gross income to the extent permitted by section 126.
Is the Conservation Security Program (CSP) within the scope of § 126(a)(9)
so that cost-share payments received under the CSP are eligible for exclusion
from gross income to the extent permitted by § 126?
The CSP, authorized under the provisions of §§ 1238-1238C
of the Food Security Act of 1985, Pub. L. No. 99-198, 99 Stat. 1354, as amended
by the Farm Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002, Pub. L. No. 107-171,
116 Stat. 134, 16 U.S.C. §§ 3838-3838c, is a voluntary program
that supports ongoing conservation stewardship of agricultural lands by providing
financial assistance to agricultural producers who maintain and enhance natural
resources. The CSP is administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture
(USDA). An agricultural producer who wishes to participate in the CSP must
enter into a long-term conservation security contract with the USDA’s
Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS). The CSP is available to agricultural
producers owning private agricultural land (including cropland, grassland,
prairie land, improved pasture land, rangeland, land under the jurisdiction
of an Indian tribe, or forested land that is an incidental part of an agricultural
operation). The NRCS, using the USDA’s Commodity Credit Corporation,
provides contract payments that may include (1) an annual stewardship component
for the existing base level conservation treatment; (2) an annual existing
practice component for maintaining existing conservation practices; (3) a
one-time new practice component for additional needed practices; and (4) an
enhancement component for exceptional conservation effort and additional conservation
practices or activities that provide increased resource benefits beyond the
prescribed level. Payments for practices included in the existing practice
and new practice components are limited, under 16 U.S.C. § 3838c,
to 75 percent (or, in the case of a beginning farmer or rancher, 90 percent)
of the average county costs of the practices for the 2001 crop year. Payments
under the stewardship component are not limited to the taxpayer’s costs
but are instead a percentage of the rental rate applicable to the land, as
determined by the NRCS. Payments under the enhancement component may be based
either on an activity’s cost or on its expected conservation benefits.
The Secretary of Agriculture has determined that payments under the
CSP are primarily for the purpose of conserving soil and water resources or
protecting and restoring the environment. In addition, the Secretary of Agriculture
has informed the Treasury Department that USDA believes the CSP is a small
watershed program.
Under § 126(a), gross income does not include the excludable
portion of payments received under certain conservation programs set forth
in § 126(a)(1) through (8). Section 126(a)(9) provides that a small
watershed program administered by the Secretary of Agriculture also is eligible
for § 126 treatment if the Secretary of the Treasury determines
that the program is substantially similar to the type of programs described
in § 126(a)(1) through (8). See § 16A.126-1(d) of the
Temporary Income Regulations Relating To The Partial Exclusion For Certain
Cost-Sharing Payments for rules permitting the Commissioner to make these
determinations and announce them in the Internal Revenue Bulletin and for
the definition of “small watershed.”
If the Commissioner has determined that a program is substantially similar
to the types of programs described in § 126(a)(1) through (8), taxpayers
receiving cost-share payments under that program must determine what portion
of the cost-share payments is excludable from gross income under § 126.
Under § 126(b), the excludable portion of a payment is limited
to the portion that (1) is determined by the Secretary of Agriculture to be
made primarily for the purpose of conserving soil and water resources, protecting
or restoring the environment, improving forests, or providing a habitat for
wildlife, (2) does not substantially increase the income derived from the
property, and (3) is not properly associated with a deductible expense. Payments
in the nature of rent or compensation for services do not qualify for the
exclusion. See § 126(b) and § 16A.126-1, relating to
the partial exclusion of certain cost-share payments, to determine what portion
of the cost-share payments is excludable from gross income under § 126.
The Internal Revenue Service accepts USDA’s conclusion that the
CSP is a small watershed program. Accordingly, the CSP will be treated for
purposes of § 126 as a small watershed program administered by the
Secretary of Agriculture. In addition, the Commissioner has determined that
the CSP is substantially similar to the type of programs described in § 126(a)(1)
through (8).
Payments for practices included in the existing practice and new practice
components are limited to a percentage of the average county costs of the
practices and qualify as cost-share payments. The cost-share payments received
under the existing practice and new practice components of the CSP are eligible
for exclusion from gross income to the extent permitted by § 126.
Payments under the stewardship component are based on the rental rate
applicable to the land and are not cost-share payments that are excludable
from gross income.
Payments under the enhancement component qualify as cost-share payments
if they are based on an activity’s cost rather than on its expected
conservation benefits. The cost-share payments received under the enhancement
component are eligible for exclusion from gross income to the extent permitted
by § 126. Payments under the enhancement component based on the
activity’s expected conservation benefits rather than on its cost are
not cost-share payments and are not excludable from gross income.
See § 126(b) and § 16A.126-1 to determine the extent
to which cost-share payments under the existing practice, new practice, and
enhancement components are excludable from gross income under § 126.
The principal author of this revenue ruling is Jennifer C. Bernardini
of the Office of Associate Chief Counsel (Passthroughs & Special Industries).
For further information regarding this revenue ruling, contact Jennifer
C. Bernardini at (202) 622-3120 (not a toll-free call).
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