96-33066. General Crop Insurance Regulations, Fresh Market Tomato Minimum Value Option, and Fresh Market Tomato (Dollar Plan) Endorsement; and Common Crop Insurance Regulations, Fresh Market Tomato (Dollar Plan) Crop Insurance Provisions  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 251 (Monday, December 30, 1996)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 68682-68688]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-33066]
    
    
    
    [[Page 68682]]
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
    7 CFR Parts 401 and 457
    
    
    General Crop Insurance Regulations, Fresh Market Tomato Minimum 
    Value Option, and Fresh Market Tomato (Dollar Plan) Endorsement; and 
    Common Crop Insurance Regulations, Fresh Market Tomato (Dollar Plan) 
    Crop Insurance Provisions
    
    AGENCY: Federal Crop Insurance Corporation, USDA.
    
    ACTION: Proposed rule.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: The Federal Crop Insurance Corporation (FCIC) proposes 
    specific crop provisions for the insurance of fresh market (dollar 
    plan) tomatoes. The provisions will be used in conjunction with the 
    Common Crop Insurance Policy Basic Provisions, which contain standard 
    terms and conditions common to most crops. The intended effect of this 
    action is to provide policy changes to better meet the needs of the 
    insured, include the current Fresh Market Tomato (Dollar Plan) 
    Endorsement and the Fresh Market Tomato Minimum Value Option with the 
    Common Crop Insurance Policy for ease of use and consistency of terms, 
    and to restrict the effect of the current Fresh Market Minimum Value 
    Option and the Fresh Market Tomato (Dollar Plan) Endorsement to the 
    1997 and prior crop years.
    
    DATES: Written comments, data and opinions on this proposed rule will 
    be accepted until close of business January 29, 1997, and will be 
    considered when the rule is to be made final. The comment period for 
    information collections under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 
    continues through February 25, 1997.
    
    ADDRESSES: Interested persons are invited to submit written comments to 
    the Chief, Product Development Branch, Federal Crop Insurance 
    Corporation, United States Department of Agriculture, 9435 Holmes Road, 
    Kansas City, MO 64131. Written comments will be available for public 
    inspection and copying in room 0324, South Building, United States 
    Department of Agriculture, 14th and Independence Avenue, S.W., 
    Washington, D.C., 8:15 a.m. to 4:45 p.m., est, Monday through Friday, 
    except holidays.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Linda Williams, Program Analyst, 
    Research and Development Division, Product Development Branch, Federal 
    Crop Insurance Corporation, at the Kansas City, MO, address listed 
    above, telephone (816) 926-7730.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Executive Order No. 12866
    
        The Office and Management Budget (OMB) has determined this rule to 
    be exempt for the purposes of Executive Order No. 12866, and, 
    therefore, this rule has not been reviewed by OMB.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
    
        The title of this information collection is ``Catastrophic Risk 
    Protection Plan and Related Requirements including, Common Crop 
    Insurance Regulations; Fresh Market Tomato (Dollar Plan) Crop Insurance 
    Provisions.'' The information to be collected includes a crop insurance 
    application and an acreage report. Information collected from the 
    application and acreage report is electronically submitted to FCIC by 
    the reinsured companies. Potential respondents to this information 
    collection are producers of fresh market tomatoes that are eligible for 
    Federal crop insurance.
        The information requested is necessary for the reinsured companies 
    and FCIC to provide insurance and reinsurance, determine eligibility, 
    determine the correct parties to the agreement or contract, determine 
    and collect premiums or other monetary amounts, and pay benefits.
        All information is reported annually. The reporting burden of this 
    collection of information is estimated to average 16.9 minutes per 
    response for each of the 3.6 responses from approximately 1,755,015 
    respondents. The total annual burden on the public for this information 
    collection is 2,669,932 hours.
        FCIC is requesting comments for the following: (a) Whether the 
    proposed collection of information is necessary for the proper 
    performance of the functions of the agency, including whether the 
    information shall have practical utility; (b) the accuracy of the 
    agency's estimate of the burden of the proposed collection of 
    information; (c) ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of 
    the information to be collected; and (d) ways to minimize the burden of 
    the collection of information on respondents, including through the use 
    of automated collection techniques or other forms or information 
    gathering technology.
        Comments regarding paperwork reduction should be submitted to the 
    Desk Officer for Agriculture, Office of Information and Regulatory 
    Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, Washington, D.C. 20503.
        OMB is required to make a decision concerning the collections of 
    information contained in these proposed regulations between 30 and 60 
    days after submission to OMB. Therefore, a comment to OMB is best 
    assured of having full effect if OMB receives it within 30 days of 
    publication. This does not affect the deadline for the public to 
    comment on the proposed regulation.
    
    Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
    
        Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), Public 
    Law 104-4, establishes requirements for Federal agencies to assess the 
    effects of their regulatory actions on state, local, and tribal 
    governments and the private sector. This rule contains no Federal 
    mandates (under the regulatory provisions of title II of the UMRA) for 
    state, local, and tribal governments or the private sector. Thus, this 
    rule is not subject to the requirements of sections 202 and 205 of the 
    UMRA.
    
    Executive Order No. 12612
    
        It has been determined under section 6(a) of Executive Order No. 
    12612, Federalism, that this rule does not have sufficient federalism 
    implications to warrant the preparation of a Federalism Assessment. The 
    provisions contained in this rule will not have a substantial direct 
    effect on states or their political subdivisions, or on the 
    distribution of power and responsibilities among the various levels of 
    government.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        This regulation will not have a significant impact on a substantial 
    number of small entities. New provisions included in this rule will not 
    impact small entities to a greater extent than large entities. Under 
    the current regulations, a producer is required to complete an 
    application and acreage report. If the crop is damaged or destroyed, 
    the insured is required to give notice of loss and provide the 
    necessary information to complete a claim for indemnity. This 
    regulation does not alter those requirements. The amount of work 
    required of the insurance companies delivering and servicing these 
    policies will not increase significantly from the amount of work 
    currently required. This rule does not have any greater or lesser 
    impact on the producer. Therefore, this action is determined to be 
    exempt from the provisions of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 
    605), and no Regulatory Flexibility Analysis was prepared.
    
    Federal Assistance Program
    
        This program is listed in the Catalog of Federal Domestic 
    Assistance under No. 10.450.
    
    [[Page 68683]]
    
    Executive Order No. 12372
    
        This program is not subject to the provisions of Executive Order 
    No. 12372, which require intergovernmental consultation with state and 
    local officials. See the Notice related to 7 CFR part 3015, subpart V, 
    published at 48 FR 29115, June 24, 1983.
    
    Executive Order No. 12778
    
        The Office of the General Counsel has determined that these 
    regulations meet the applicable standards provided in subsections 2(a) 
    and 2(b)(2) of Executive Order No. 12778. The provisions of this rule 
    will not have a retroactive effect prior to the effective date. The 
    provisions of this rule will preempt state and local laws to the extent 
    such state and local laws are inconsistent herewith. The administrative 
    appeal provisions published at 7 CFR parts 11 and 780 must be exhausted 
    before any action for judicial review may be brought.
    
    Environmental Evaluation
    
        This action is not expected to have a significant impact on the 
    quality of the human environment, health, and safety. Therefore, 
    neither an Environmental Assessment nor an Environmental Impact 
    Statement is needed.
    
    National Performance Review
    
        This regulatory action is being taken as part of the National 
    Performance Review Initiative to eliminate unnecessary or duplicative 
    regulations and improve those that remain in force.
    
    Background
    
        FCIC proposes to add to the Common Crop Insurance Regulations (7 
    CFR part 457), a new section, 7 CFR 457.139, Fresh Market Tomato 
    (Dollar Plan) Crop Insurance Provisions. The new provisions will be 
    effective for the 1998 and succeeding crop years. These provisions will 
    replace and supersede the current provisions for insuring fresh market 
    tomatoes (dollar plan) found at 7 CFR 401.137 (Fresh Market Tomato 
    Minimum Value Option) and 7 CFR 401.139 (Fresh Market Tomato (Dollar 
    Plan) Endorsement). FCIC also proposes to amend Sec. 401.137 and 
    Sec. 401.139 to limit their effect to the 1997 and prior crop years. 
    FCIC will later publish a regulation to remove and reserve Sec. 401.137 
    and Sec. 401.139.
        This rule makes minor editorial and format changes to improve the 
    Fresh Market Tomato Minimum Value Option and the Fresh Market Tomato 
    (Dollar Plan) Endorsement's compatibility with the Common Crop 
    Insurance Policy. In addition, FCIC is proposing substantive changes in 
    the provisions for insuring fresh market tomatoes (dollar plan) as 
    follows:
        1. Section 1--Add definitions for the terms ``carton,'' ``days,'' 
    ``FSA,'' ``good farming practices,'' ``interplanted,'' ``irrigated 
    practice,'' ``planted acreage,'' ``practical to replant,'' ``row 
    width,'' ``tropical depression,'' and ``written agreement'' for 
    clarification.
        Clarify the definition of crop year to specify that the crop year 
    begins on the first day of the earliest planting period for fall-
    planted tomatoes and continues through the end of the insurance period 
    for spring-planted tomatoes.
        Clarify the definition of excess rain to specify that it is an 
    amount of precipitation that is sufficient to directly damage the crop. 
    Previous regulations defined excessive rain as a minimum of 10 inches 
    of rain within a 24-hour period. This change will provide coverage for 
    crop damage that occurs when a lesser amount of precipitation is 
    received.
        Change the definition of freeze to specify that freeze occurs when 
    low air temperatures cause ice to form in the cells of the plant or its 
    fruit to encompass conditions found in both frost and freeze.
        Change the definition of harvest to clarify and remove the term 
    marketable. Tomatoes picked from the vine are considered harvested 
    whether marketable or not.
        2. Section 3(a)--Clarify that an insured may select only one 
    coverage level (and the corresponding amount of insurance designated in 
    the Actuarial Table for the applicable planting period and practice) 
    for all the tomatoes planted in the county insured under the policy.
        3. Section 3(b)--Clarify that the amounts of insurance the insured 
    chooses for each planting period and practice must have the same 
    percentage relationship to the maximum amount of insurance offered by 
    FCIC for each planting period and practice.
        4. Section 8(c)(4)--Clarify that plum or cherry tomatoes are not 
    insurable unless allowed by a written agreement. Previous regulations 
    did not provide crop insurance coverage for plum or cherry tomatoes. 
    This change will allow expansion of fresh market tomato crop insurance 
    coverage into other areas.
        5. Section 9(b)(2)--Allow an insured to elect not to replant 
    damaged tomatoes that were initially planted within the fall or winter 
    planting periods, provided the final planting date for the planting 
    period has passed and damage occurs after 30 days of transplanting or 
    after 60 days of direct seeding. With this election, the insured may 
    collect an indemnity and that particular acreage will be uninsurable 
    for the next planting period. The insured may also elect to replant 
    such tomato acreage, collect a replanting payment under section 12, and 
    maintain the initial planting period coverage. This change incorporates 
    and standardizes procedures utilized in the fresh market vegetable 
    crops.
        6. Section 10(f)(2)--Change the calendar date for the end of the 
    insurance period from 140 days to 125 days after the date of 
    transplanting or replanting with transplants. This change incorporates 
    the actual number of days for transplanted tomatoes to reach maturity 
    and for the crop to be harvested.
        7. Section 11(a)(6)--Tropical depression has replaced cyclone as an 
    insured cause of loss. This change will standardize tropical depression 
    as an insured cause of loss among fresh market vegetable crops.
        8. Section 14(b)(2)--Modify claim for indemnity calculations by 
    providing calculations for catastrophic risk protection coverage and 
    for coverage other than catastrophic risk protection. This provision 
    includes the use of the catastrophic risk protection price election 
    equivalent to determine the total dollar of production to count for 
    indemnity purposes. This change is necessary to assure that producers 
    that are insured based on a dollar amount of insurance are indemnified 
    comparable to producers that are insured based on an actual production 
    history (APH) yield basis.
        9. Section 14(c)--Remove the provision requiring that unharvested 
    potential production in excess of 30 cartons after the second harvest 
    for ground culture tomatoes (third harvest for staked tomatoes) be 
    included in the value of appraised production to be counted. Consistent 
    with other fresh market vegetable crops, this provision will be 
    contained in the loss adjustment procedures.
        10. Section 14(c)(2)(iv)--Require the insured to continue to care 
    for acreage when the insured does not agree with the appraisal on that 
    acreage. Production to count for such acreage will be determined using 
    the harvested production if the crop is harvested, or our reappraisal 
    if the crop is not harvested.
        11. Section 14(c)(3)--Change the value to count for harvested 
    production to the dollar amount obtained by subtracting the allowable 
    cost from the price received (this resulting price must not be less 
    than the minimum value shown in the Special Provisions), and 
    multiplying this result by the number of cartons harvested. Current 
    regulations allow the value of sold production to be
    
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    as low as zero. Also, clarify that harvested mature tomatoes that are 
    damaged or defective due to insurable causes and are not marketable 
    will not be counted as production. These changes are made to assure 
    that the minimum value specified in the Special Provisions will be the 
    lowest value considered for any marketable harvested production unless 
    the insured selected the minimum value option.
        12. Section 15--Add provisions for providing insurance coverage by 
    written agreement. FCIC has a long standing policy of permitting 
    certain modifications of the insurance contract by written agreement 
    for some policies. This amendment allows FCIC to tailor the policy to a 
    specific insured in certain instances. The new section will cover the 
    procedures for and duration of written agreements.
        13. Section 16--Permit the insured to select the minimum value 
    option by electing Option I or Option II on the application. A separate 
    form no longer will be required.
    
    List of Subjects in 7 CFR Parts 401 and 457
    
        Crop insurance, Fresh market tomatoes.
    
    Proposed Rule
    
        Accordingly, for the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Federal 
    Crop Insurance Corporation hereby proposes to amend 7 CFR parts 401 and 
    457, as follows:
    
    PART 401--GENERAL CROP INSURANCE REGULATIONS--REGULATIONS FOR THE 
    1988 AND SUBSEQUENT CONTRACT YEARS
    
        1. The authority citation for 7 CFR part 401 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1506(l), 1506(p).
    
        2. Section 401.137 introductory paragraph is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 401.137  Fresh market tomato minimum value option.
    
        The provisions of the Fresh Market Tomato Minimum Value Option for 
    the 1991 through the 1997 crop years are as follows:
    * * * * *
        3. Section 401.139 introductory paragraph is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 401.139  Fresh market tomato (dollar plan) endorsement.
    
         The provisions of the Fresh Market Tomato Crop Insurance 
    Endorsement for the 1991 through the 1997 crop years are as follows:
    * * * * *
    
    PART 457--COMMON CROP INSURANCE REGULATIONS; REGULATIONS FOR THE 
    1994 AND SUBSEQUENT CONTRACT YEARS
    
         4. The authority citation for 7 CFR part 457 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1506(l), 1506(p).
    
        5. 7 CFR part 457 is amended by adding a new Sec. 457.139 to read 
    as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 457.139  Fresh Market Tomato (Dollar Plan) Crop Insurance 
    Provisions.
    
        The Fresh Market Tomato (Dollar Plan) Crop Insurance Provisions for 
    the 1998 and succeeding crop years are as follows:
        FCIC policies:
    
    United States Department of Agriculture
    
    Federal Crop Insurance Corporation
    
        Reinsured policies:
    
    (Appropriate title for insurance provider)
        Both FCIC and reinsured policies:
    
    Fresh Market Tomato (Dollar Plan) Crop Provisions
    
        If a conflict exists among the Basic Provisions (Sec. 457.8), these 
    crop provisions, and the Special Provisions; the Special Provisions 
    will control these crop provisions and the Basic Provisions; and these 
    crop provisions will control the Basic Provisions.
    
    1. Definitions
    
        Acre--43,560 square feet of land when row widths do not exceed six 
    feet, or if row widths exceed six feet, the land area on which at least 
    7,260 linear feet of rows are planted.
        Carton--Twenty-five (25) pounds of the insured crop.
        Crop year--In lieu of the definition of ``crop year'' contained in 
    section 1 (Definitions) of the Basic Provisions (Sec. 457.8), crop year 
    is a period of time that begins on the first day of the earliest 
    planting period for fall-planted tomatoes and continues through the 
    last day of the insurance period for spring-planted tomatoes. The crop 
    year is designated by the calendar year in which spring-planted 
    tomatoes are harvested.
        Days--Calendar days.
        Direct marketing--Sale of the insured crop directly to consumers 
    without the intervention of an intermediary such as a wholesaler, 
    retailer, packer, processor, shipper or buyer. Examples of direct 
    marketing include selling through an on-farm or roadside stand, 
    farmer's market, and permitting the general public to enter the field 
    for the purpose of picking all or a portion of the crop.
        Excess rain--An amount of precipitation sufficient to directly 
    damage the crop.
        FSA--The Farm Service Agency, an agency of the United States 
    Department of Agriculture, or a successor agency.
        Freeze--The formation of ice in the cells of the plant or its 
    fruit, caused by low air temperatures.
        Good farming practices--The cultural practices generally in use in 
    the county for the crop to make normal progress toward maturity and are 
    those recognized by the Cooperative State Research, Education, and 
    Extension Service as compatible with agronomic and weather conditions 
    in the county.
        Harvest--The picking of tomatoes on the unit.
        Interplanted--Acreage on which two or more crops are planted in a 
    manner that does not permit separate agronomic maintenance or harvest 
    of the insured crop.
        Irrigated practice--A method of producing a crop by which water is 
    artificially applied during the growing season by appropriate systems 
    and at the proper times, with the intention of providing the quantity 
    of water needed for the insured crop to make normal progress toward 
    maturity.
        Mature green tomato--A tomato that:
        (1) Has a glossy waxy skin that cannot be torn by scraping;
        (2) Has well-formed, jelly-like substance in the locules;
        (3) Has seeds that are sufficiently hard so as to be pushed aside 
    and not cut by a sharp knife in slicing; and
        (4) Shows no red color.
        Plant stand--The number of live plants per acre prior to the 
    occurrence of an insurable cause of loss.
        Planted acreage--Land in which, for each planting period, 
    transplants or seed have been placed manually or by a machine 
    appropriate for the insured crop and planting method, at the correct 
    depth, into soil that has been properly prepared for the planting 
    method and production practice. For each planting period, tomatoes must 
    initially be planted in rows. Acreage planted in any other manner will 
    not be insurable unless otherwise provided by the Special Provisions or 
    by written agreement.
        Planting period--The period of time designated in the Actuarial 
    Table in which the tomatoes must be planted to be considered fall, 
    winter or spring-planted tomatoes.
        Potential production--The number of cartons of mature green or ripe 
    tomatoes with a classification size of 6 x 7 (2-\8/32\ inch minimum 
    diameter) or larger, that the tomato plants will or would have produced 
    per acre by the end of the
    
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    insurance period, assuming normal growing conditions and practices.
         Practical to replant--In lieu of the definition of ``Practical to 
    replant'' contained in section 1 of the Basic Provisions (Sec. 457.8), 
    practical to replant is defined as our determination, after loss or 
    damage to the insured crop, based on factors, including but not limited 
    to moisture availability, condition of the field, marketing windows, 
    and time to crop maturity, that replanting to the insured crop will 
    allow the crop to attain maturity prior to the calendar date for the 
    end of the insurance period (inability to obtain plants or seed will 
    not be considered when determining if it is practical to replant).
        Replanting--Performing the cultural practices necessary to replace 
    the tomato seed or transplants and then replacing the tomato seed or 
    transplants in the insured acreage with the expectation of growing a 
    successful crop.
        Ripe tomato--A tomato that has a definite break in color from green 
    to tannish-yellow, pink or red.
        Row width--The widest distance from the center of one row of plants 
    to the center of an adjacent row of plants.
        Tropical depression--A system identified by the U.S. Weather 
    Service as a tropical depression, and for the period of time so 
    designated, including tropical storms, gales, and hurricanes.
        Written agreement--A written document that alters designated terms 
    of this policy in accordance with section 15.
    
    2. Unit Division
    
        (a) A unit as defined in section 1 (Definitions) of the Basic 
    Provisions (Sec. 457.8), (basic unit) will be divided by planting 
    period.
        (b) Unless limited by the Special Provisions, these basic units may 
    be further divided into optional units if, for each optional unit you 
    meet all the conditions of this section or if a written agreement for 
    such further division exists.
        (c) If you do not comply fully with these provisions, we will 
    combine all optional units that are not in compliance with these 
    provisions into the basic unit from which they were formed. We will 
    combine the optional units at any time we discover that you have failed 
    to comply with these provisions. If failure to comply with these 
    provisions is determined to be inadvertent, and the optional units are 
    combined into a basic unit, that portion of the premium paid for the 
    purpose of electing optional units will be refunded to you for the 
    units combined.
        (d) All optional units established for a crop year must be 
    identified on the acreage report for that crop year.
        (e) The following requirements must be met for each optional unit:
        (1) You must have records, which can be independently verified, of 
    planted acreage and production for each optional unit for at least the 
    last crop year in which the insured crop was planted;
        (2) You must plant the crop in a manner that results in a clear and 
    discernable break in the planting pattern at the boundaries of each 
    optional unit;
        (3) You must have records of marketed production or measurement of 
    stored production from each optional unit maintained in such a manner 
    that permits us to verify the production from each optional unit, or 
    the production from each unit must be kept separate until loss 
    adjustment is completed by us; and
        (4) Each optional unit must be located in a separate legally 
    identified section. In the absence of sections, we may consider parcels 
    of land legally identified by other methods of measure including, but 
    not limited to Spanish grants, railroad surveys, leagues, labors, or 
    Virginia Military Lands, as the equivalent of sections for unit 
    purposes. In areas that have not been surveyed using the systems 
    identified above, or another system approved by us, or in areas where 
    such systems exist but boundaries are not readily discernable, each 
    optional unit must be located in a separate farm identified by a single 
    FSA Farm Serial Number.
    
    3. Amounts of Insurance and Production Stages
    
        (a) In addition to the requirements of section 3 (Insurance 
    Guarantees, Coverage Levels, and Prices for Determining Indemnities) of 
    the Basic Provisions (Sec. 457.8), you may select only one coverage 
    level (and the corresponding amount of insurance designated in the 
    Actuarial Table for the applicable planting period and practice) for 
    all the tomatoes in the county insured under this policy.
        (b) The amount of insurance you choose for each planting period and 
    practice must have the same percentage relationship to the maximum 
    price offered by us for each planting period and practice. For example, 
    if you choose 100 percent of the maximum amount of insurance for a 
    specific planting period and practice, you must also choose 100 percent 
    of the maximum amount of insurance for all other planting periods and 
    practices.
        (c) The amount of insurance available under the catastrophic risk 
    protection plan of insurance will be specified in the Actuarial Table.
        (d) The production reporting requirements contained in section 3 
    (Insurance Guarantees, Coverage Levels, and Prices for Determining 
    Indemnities) of the Basic Provisions (Sec. 457.8), do not apply to 
    fresh market dollar plan tomatoes.
        (e) The amounts of insurance per acre are progressive by stages as 
    follows:
    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                    Percent of                                                                      
                                    amount of                                                                       
                                    insurance                                                                       
                Stage                per acre    Length of time if direct seeded     Length of time if transplanted 
                                     that you                                                                       
                                     selected                                                                       
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    1............................           50  From planting through the 59th     From planting through the 29th   
                                                 day after planting.                day after planting.             
    2............................           75  From the 60th day after planting   From the 30th day after planting 
                                                 until the beginning of stage 3.    until the beginning of stage 3. 
    3............................           90  From the 90th day after planting   From the 60th day after planting 
                                                 until the beginning of the final   until the beginning of the final
                                                 stage.                             stage.                          
    Final........................          100  Begins the earlier of 105 days     Begins the earlier of 75 days    
                                                 after planting, or the beginning   after planting, or the beginning
                                                 of harvest.                        of harvest.                     
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (f) Any acreage of tomatoes damaged in the first, second, or third 
    stage to the extent that the majority of producers in the area would 
    not normally further care for it, will be deemed to have been 
    destroyed. The indemnity payable for such acreage will be based on the 
    stage the plants had achieved when the damage occurred.
    
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    4. Contract Changes
    
        In accordance with section 4 (Contract Changes) of the Basic 
    Provisions (Sec. 457.8), the contract change date is April 30 preceding 
    the cancellation date.
    
    5. Cancellation and Termination Dates
    
         In accordance with section 2 (Life of Policy, Cancellation, and 
    Termination) of the Basic Provisions (Sec. 457.8), the cancellation and 
    termination dates are July 31.
    
    6. Report of Acreage
    
        In addition to the requirements of section 6 (Report of Acreage) of 
    the Basic Provisions (Sec. 457.8), you must report on or before the 
    acreage reporting date contained in the Special Provisions for each 
    planting period:
        (a) All the acreage of tomatoes in the county insured under this 
    policy in which you have a share; and
        (b) The row width.
    
    7. Annual Premium
    
        In lieu of the premium amount determinations contained in section 7 
    (Annual Premium) of the Basic Provisions (Sec. 457.8), the annual 
    premium amount for each cultural practice (e.g. fall direct seeded 
    irrigated) is determined by multiplying the final stage amount of 
    insurance per acre by the premium rate for the cultural practice as 
    established in the Actuarial Table, by the insured acreage, by your 
    share at the time coverage begins, and by any applicable premium 
    adjustment factors contained in the Actuarial Table.
    
     8. Insured Crop
    
        In accordance with section 8 (Insured Crop) of the Basic Provisions 
    (Sec. 457.8), the crop insured will be all the tomatoes in the county 
    for which a premium rate is provided by the Actuarial Table:
        (a) In which you have a share;
        (b) That are:
        (1) Planted to be harvested and sold as fresh market tomatoes;
        (2) Planted within the planting periods designated in the Actuarial 
    Table;
        (3) Grown under an irrigated practice;
        (4) Grown on acreage covered by plastic mulch except where the 
    Special Provisions allows otherwise;
        (5) Grown by a person who in at least one of the three previous 
    crop years:
        (i) Grew tomatoes for commercial sale; or
        (ii) Participated in managing a fresh market tomato farming 
    operation;
        (c) That are not:
        (1) Interplanted with another crop;
        (2) Planted into an established grass or legume;
        (3) Grown for direct marketing; or
        (4) Plum or cherry type tomatoes, unless allowed by written 
    agreement.
    
    9. Insurable Acreage.
    
        (a) In lieu of the provisions of section 9 (Insurable Acreage) of 
    the Basic Provisions (Sec. 457.8), that prohibit insurance attaching if 
    a crop has not been planted in at least one of the three previous crop 
    years, we will insure newly cleared land or former pasture land planted 
    to fresh market tomatoes.
        (b) In addition to the provisions of section 9 (Insurable Acreage) 
    of the Basic Provisions (Sec. 457.8):
        (1) You must replant any acreage of tomatoes damaged during the 
    planting period in which initial planting took place whenever less than 
    50 percent of the plant stand remains: and
        (i) It is practical to replant;
        (ii) If, at the time the crop was damaged, the final day of the 
    planting period has not passed; and
        (iii) The damage occurs within 30 days of transplanting or 60 days 
    of direct seeding.
        (2) Whenever tomatoes initially are planted during the fall or 
    winter planting periods and the conditions specified in sections 
    9(b)(1) (ii) and (iii) are not satisfied, you may elect:
        (i) To replant such acreage and collect any replant payment due as 
    specified in section 12. The initial planting period coverage will 
    continue for such replanted acreage.
        (ii) Not to replant such acreage and receive an indemnity based on 
    the stage of growth the plants had attained at the time of damage. 
    However, such an election will result in the acreage being uninsurable 
    in the subsequent planting period.
        (3) We will not insure any acreage which, in the preceding planting 
    period was planted to tomatoes (except as allowed in sections 9(b) (1) 
    and (2)), peppers, eggplants, or tobacco unless the soil has been 
    fumigated or otherwise properly treated.
    
    10. Insurance Period
    
        In lieu of the provisions of section 11 (Insurance Period) of the 
    Basic Provisions (Sec. 457.8), coverage begins on each unit or part of 
    a unit the later of the date we accept your application, or when the 
    tomatoes are planted in each planting period. Coverage ends at the 
    earliest of:
        (a) Total destruction of the tomatoes on the unit;
        (b) Abandonment of the tomatoes on the unit;
        (c) The date harvest should have started on the unit on any acreage 
    which will not be harvested;
        (d) Final adjustment of a loss on the unit;
        (e) Final harvest; or
        (f) The calendar date for the end of the insurance period as 
    follows:
        (1) 140 days after the date of direct seeding or replanting with 
    seed; and
        (2) 125 days after the date of transplanting or replanting with 
    transplants.
    
    11. Causes of Loss
    
        (a) In accordance with the provisions of section 12 (Causes of 
    Loss) of the Basic Provisions (Sec. 457.8), insurance is provided only 
    against the following causes of loss that occur during the insurance 
    period:
        (1) Excess rain;
        (2) Fire;
        (3) Freeze;
        (4) Hail;
        (5) Tornado;
        (6) Tropical depression; or
        (7) Failure of the irrigation water supply, if caused by an insured 
    cause of loss that occurs during the insurance period.
        (b) In addition to the causes of loss excluded in section 12 
    (Causes of Loss) of the Basic Provisions (Sec. 457.8), we will not 
    insure against any loss of production due to:
        (1) Disease;
        (2) Insect infestation; or
        (3) Failure to market the tomatoes, unless such failure is due to 
    actual physical damage caused by an insured cause of loss that occurs 
    during the insurance period.
    
    12. Replanting Payments
    
        (a) In accordance with section 13 (Replanting Payment) of the Basic 
    Provisions (Sec. 457.8), a replanting payment is allowed if, due to an 
    insured cause of loss, more than 50 percent of the plant stand will not 
    produce tomatoes and it is practical to replant.
        (b) The maximum amount of the replanting payment per acre will be 
    the result obtained by multiplying $175.00 by your insured share.
        (c) In lieu of the provisions contained in section 13 (Replanting 
    Payment) of the Basic Provisions (Sec. 457.8), limiting a replanting 
    payment to one each crop year, only one replanting payment will be made 
    for acreage planted during each planting period within the crop year.
    
    13. Duties in the Event of Damage or Loss
    
        In addition to the requirements contained in section 14 (Duties in 
    the Event of Damage or Loss) of the Basic Provisions (Sec. 457.8), if 
    you intend to claim an indemnity on any unit you must also give us 
    notice not later than 72 hours after the earliest of:
    
    [[Page 68687]]
    
        (a) The time you discontinue harvest of any acreage on the unit;
        (b) The date harvest normally would start if any acreage on the 
    unit will not be harvested; or
        (c) The calendar date for the end of the insurance period.
    
    14. Settlement of Claim
    
        (a) We will determine your loss on a unit basis. In the event you 
    are unable to provide separate acceptable production records:
        (1) For any optional unit, we will combine all optional units for 
    which such production records were not provided; or
        (2) For any basic unit, we will allocate any commingled production 
    to such units in proportion to our liability on the harvested acreage 
    for each unit.
        (b) In the event of loss or damage covered by this policy, we will 
    settle your claim by:
        (1) Multiplying the insured acreage in each stage by the amount of 
    insurance per acre for the final stage;
        (2) Multiplying each result in section 14(b)(1) by the percentage 
    for the applicable stage (see section 3(e));
        (3) Total the results of section 14(b)(2);
        (4) Subtracting either of the following values from the result of 
    section 14(b)(3):
        (i) For other than catastrophic risk protection coverage, the total 
    value of production to be counted (see section 14(c)); or
        (ii) For catastrophic risk protection coverage, the result of 
    multiplying the total value of production to be counted (see section 
    14(c)) by:
        (A) Sixty percent for the 1998 crop year; or
        (B) Fifty-five percent for 1999 and subsequent crop years; and
        (3) Multiplying the result of section 14(b)(4) by your share.
        (c) The total value of production to count from all insurable 
    acreage on the unit will include:
        (1) Not less than the amount of insurance per acre for the stage 
    for any acreage:
        (i) That is abandoned;
        (ii) Put to another use without our consent;
        (iii) That is damaged solely by uninsured causes; or
        (iv) For which you fail to provide acceptable production records;
        (2) The value of the following appraised production will not be 
    less than the dollar amount obtained by multiplying the number of 
    cartons of appraised tomatoes times the minimum value per carton shown 
    in the Special Provisions for the planting period:
        (i) Potential production on any acreage that has not been harvested 
    the second time for ground-culture tomatoes (the third time for staked 
    tomatoes);
        (ii) Unharvested mature green tomatoes (unharvested production that 
    is damaged or defective due to insurable causes and is not marketable 
    will not be counted as production to count);
        (iii) Production lost due to uninsured causes; and
        (iv) Potential production on insured acreage that you intend to put 
    to another use or abandon, if you and we agree on the appraised amount 
    of production. Upon such agreement, the insurance period for that 
    acreage will end when you put the acreage to another use or abandon the 
    crop. If agreement on the appraised amount of production is not 
    reached:
        (A) We may require you to continue to care for the crop so that a 
    subsequent appraisal may be made or the crop harvested to determine 
    actual production (If we require you to continue to care for the crop 
    and you do not do so, the original appraisal will be used); or
        (B) You may elect to continue to care for the crop, in which case 
    the amount of production to count for the acreage will be the harvested 
    production, or our reappraisal if the crop is not harvested.
        (3) The total value of all harvested production from the insurable 
    acreage will be the dollar amount obtained by subtracting the allowable 
    cost contained in the Special Provisions from the price received for 
    each carton of tomatoes (this result may not be less than the minimum 
    value shown in the Special Provisions for any carton of tomatoes), and 
    multiplying this result by the number of cartons of tomatoes harvested. 
    Harvested production that is damaged or defective due to insurable 
    causes and is not marketable, will not be counted as production to 
    count.
    
    15. Written Agreements
    
        Designated terms of this policy may be altered by written agreement 
    in accordance with the following:
        (a) You must apply in writing for each written agreement no later 
    than the sales closing date, except as provided in section 15(e);
        (b) The application for a written agreement must contain all 
    variable terms of the contract between you and us that will be in 
    effect if the written agreement is not approved;
        (c) If approved, the written agreement will include all variable 
    terms of the contract, including, but not limited to, crop type or 
    variety, and premium rate;
        (d) Each written agreement will only be valid for one year (If the 
    written agreement is not specifically renewed the following year, 
    insurance coverage for subsequent crop years will be in accordance with 
    the printed policy); and
        (e) An application for a written agreement submitted after the 
    sales closing date may be approved if, after a physical inspection of 
    the acreage, it is determined that no loss has occurred and the crop is 
    insurable in accordance with the policy and written agreement 
    provisions.
    
    16. Minimum Value Option
    
        (a) The provisions of this option are continuous and will be 
    attached to and made a part of your insurance policy, if:
        (1) You elect either Option I or Option II of the Minimum Value 
    Option on your application, or on a form approved by us, on or before 
    the sales closing date for the initial crop year in which you wish to 
    insure fresh market tomatoes (dollar plan) under this option, and pay 
    the additional premium indicated in the Actuarial Table for this 
    optional coverage; and
        (2) You have not elected coverage under the Catastrophic Risk 
    Protection Endorsement.
        (b) In lieu of the provisions contained in section 14(c)(3), the 
    total value of harvested production will be determined as follows:
        If you selected Option I of the Minimum Value Option, the total 
    value of harvested production will be as follows:
        (i) For sold production, the dollar amount obtained by subtracting 
    the allowable cost contained in the Special Provisions from the price 
    received for each carton of tomatoes (this result may not be less than 
    $2.00 for any carton of tomatoes), and multiplying this result by the 
    number of cartons of tomatoes sold; and
        (ii) For marketable production that is not sold, the dollar amount 
    obtained by multiplying the number of cartons of such tomatoes on the 
    unit by the minimum value shown in the Special Provisions for the 
    planting period (harvested production that is damaged or defective due 
    to insurable causes and is not marketable will not be counted as 
    production).
        (2) If you selected Option II of the Minimum Value Option, the 
    total value of harvested production will be as provided in section 
    16(b)(1), except that the dollar amount specified in section 
    (16)(b)(1)(i) may not be less than zero.
        (c) This option may be canceled by either you or us for any 
    succeeding crop year by giving written notice on or before the 
    cancellation date preceding
    
    [[Page 68688]]
    
    the crop year for which the cancellation of this option is to be 
    effective.
    
        Signed in Washington, D.C. on December 20, 1996.
    Kenneth D. Ackerman,
    Manager, Federal Crop Insurance Corporation.
    [FR Doc. 96-33066 Filed 12-27-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3410-FA-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
12/30/1996
Department:
Agriculture Department
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Proposed rule.
Document Number:
96-33066
Dates:
Written comments, data and opinions on this proposed rule will be accepted until close of business January 29, 1997, and will be considered when the rule is to be made final. The comment period for information collections under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 continues through February 25, 1997.
Pages:
68682-68688 (7 pages)
PDF File:
96-33066.pdf
CFR: (3)
7 CFR 401.137
7 CFR 401.139
7 CFR 457.139