95-29606. General Crop Insurance Regulations, Various Endorsements; Hybrid Seed Crop Insurance Regulations; and Common Crop Insurance Regulations, Various Crop Insurance Provisions  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 235 (Thursday, December 7, 1995)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 62710-62730]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-29606]
    
    
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
    Federal Crop Insurance Corporation
    
    7 CFR Parts 401, 443, and 457
    
    RIN 0563-AB43
    
    
    General Crop Insurance Regulations, Various Endorsements; Hybrid 
    Seed Crop Insurance Regulations; and Common Crop Insurance Regulations, 
    Various Crop Insurance Provisions
    
    AGENCY: Federal Crop Insurance Corporation.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: The Federal Crop Insurance Corporation (``FCIC'') hereby 
    amends the General Crop Insurance Regulations, Hybrid Sorghum Seed and 
    Rice Endorsements; the Hybrid Seed Crop Insurance Regulations; and the 
    Common Crop Insurance Regulations, Small Grains, Cotton, Extra Long 
    Staple Cotton, Sunflower Seed and Coarse Grains Crop Insurance 
    Provisions, applicable beginning with the 1996 crop year for spring 
    planted crops with contract change dates on or after the effective date 
    of this rule, by revising prevented planting coverage. The intended 
    effect of this regulation is to expand prevented planting benefits 
    available under the various policies being amended.
    
    DATES: The effective date of this rule is November 30, 1995. The 
    comment period for information collections under the Paperwork 
    Reduction Act of 1995 continues through January 8, 1996.
    
    ADDRESSES: For information collection comments submission, see 
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For further information and a copy of 
    the 
    
    [[Page 62711]]
    Cost-Benefit Analysis and Regulatory Flexibility Analysis to the 
    General Crop Insurance Regulations; Hybrid Seed Crop Insurance 
    Regulations; and Common Crop Insurance Regulations for implementation 
    of the prevented planting provisions, contact Diana Moslak, Regulatory 
    and Procedural Development Staff, Federal Crop Insurance Corporation, 
    U.S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D.C. 20250. Telephone (202) 
    254-8314.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This action has been reviewed under United 
    States Department of Agriculture (``USDA'') procedures established by 
    Executive Order 12866 and Departmental Regulation 1512-1. This action 
    does not constitute a review as to the need, currency, clarity, and 
    effectiveness of these regulations under those procedures. The sunset 
    review date established for Small Grains is July 1, 1998; Coarse 
    Grains, Cotton, Extra Long Staple Cotton and Sunflower Seed is March 1, 
    1999; Hybrid Seed is October 1, 1997; Hybrid Sorghum Seed is May 1, 
    2000; and Rice is August 29, 1998.
        This rule has been determined to be ``economically significant'' 
    for the purposes of Executive Order 12866 and, therefore, has been 
    reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget (``OMB'').
        A Cost-Benefit Analysis is completed and is available to interested 
    persons at the address listed above. In summary, the analysis finds 
    that the expected Treasury costs of these changes are expected to range 
    between $2.1 and $20.8 million. Added costs are due to higher 
    reimbursements to reinsured companies and for premium subsidies for 
    producers. The estimates assume the majority of producers will decline 
    the coverage for the substitute crop, opting instead for a reduced 
    premium on the intended crop. Nationwide, premium rates will increase 6 
    to 7 percent for the added coverage. As examples of monetary impacts, 
    this means an average increase in the producer paid premium of 20-25 
    cents per acre for wheat in the Northern Plains; 30 cents for corn in 
    Iowa; and 60-90 cents per acre for upland cotton. However, the premium 
    rate increases will not be uniform. Instead, the highest risk areas 
    (such as lowlands along rivers and similar conditions) can expect 
    greater increases in premium to cover the added risk. Producers who 
    farm such lands are expected to be the primary group that will retain 
    this added coverage and elect to pay the additional premium. The 
    changes to the prevented planting rules will provide producers with 
    added assistance in extreme weather conditions in a manner that 
    maintains the actuarial integrity of the Federal crop insurance 
    program.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
    
        The information collection requirements contained in these 
    regulations were submitted to OMB for their approval under section 
    3507(j) of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, and received emergency 
    approval through February 28, 1996. The agency is also seeking a valid 
    approval for 3 years under section 3507(d). Public comments are due by 
    January 8, 1996.
        The title of this information collection is ``Catastrophic Risk 
    Protection Plan and Related Requirements including General Crop 
    Insurance Regulations, Hybrid Seed Crop Insurance Regulations and 
    Common Crop Insurance Regulations.'' The information to be collected 
    includes: a crop insurance acreage report, an insurance application and 
    continuous contract. Information collected from the acreage report and 
    application is electronically submitted to FCIC by the reinsured 
    companies. Some respondents may provide additional information for the 
    purpose of selecting insurance options that apply to specific crops or 
    specific areas in which a crop is produced. Potential respondents to 
    this information collection are growers of crops that are eligible for 
    Federal Crop Insurance.
        The information requested is necessary for the insurance company 
    and FCIC to provide insurance, provide reinsurance, determine 
    eligibility, determine the correct parties to the agreement, determine 
    and collect premiums or other monetary amounts (or fees), and pay 
    benefits.
        All information is reported annually. The reporting burden for this 
    collection of information is estimated to average 16.9 minutes per 
    response for each of the 3.6 responses from approximately 1,750,015 
    respondents. The total annual burden on the public for this information 
    collection is 2,668,750 hours. The total annual burden has increased 
    from the 1995 requirements to reflect the paperwork burden on the 
    reinsured companies.
        Comments were invited on the information collection requirements 
    during the proposed rule stage. The comment period for information 
    collections under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 continues through 
    January 8, 1996, on 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 of information technology.
        Comments should be submitted to the Desk Officer for Agriculture, 
    Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and 
    Budget (OMB), Washington, D.C. 20503 and to Bonnie Hart, Information 
    Management Branch, Consolidated Farm Service Agency, U.S. Department of 
    Agriculture, Washington, D.C. 20250. Copies of the information 
    collection may be obtained from Bonnie Hart at the above address. 
    Telephone (202) 690-2857.
        It has been determined under section 6(a) of Executive Order 12612, 
    Federalism, that this rule does not have sufficient federalism 
    implication 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.
        The amount of work required of the insurance companies and FSA 
    offices delivering the policies and the procedures therein may increase 
    significantly from the amount of work currently required to deliver 
    previous policies to which this regulation applies. Therefore, this 
    action has been reviewed under the provisions of the Regulatory 
    Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 605) and a Regulatory Flexibility Analysis is 
    available to interested persons at the address listed above.
        This program is listed in the Catalog of Federal Domestic 
    Assistance under No. 10.450.
        This program is not subject to the provisions of Executive Order 
    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.
        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 12778. The provisions of this rule will 
    not have 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 
    requirements of the National Appeals Division under 
    
    [[Page 62712]]
    Public Law 103-354 must be exhausted before judicial action may be 
    brought.
        This action is not expected to have any significant impact on the 
    quality of the human environment, health, and safety. Therefore, 
    neither an Environmental Assessment nor an Environmental Impact 
    Statement is needed.
    
    Background
    
        Current regulations do not allow an insured producer to obtain a 
    prevented planting guarantee for one crop and plant a substitute crop 
    intended for harvest in the same crop year on the same land. By this 
    rule a producer who purchases limited or additional coverage beginning 
    with the 1996 crop year for spring crops with contract change dates on 
    or after the effective date of this rule, will be eligible to: (1) 
    Receive a prevented planting guarantee equal to 25 percent of the 
    guarantee for timely planted acreage (20 percent for hybrid seed (corn) 
    and 17.5 percent for cotton, ELS cotton, and rice) when acreage that is 
    prevented from being planted is planted to a substitute crop after the 
    10th day after the final planting date for the intended crop (10th day 
    after the latest final planting date for each specific crop insured 
    under the Small Grains Crop Provisions) and, as applicable, a 0/92 or 
    50/92 program benefit; (2) exclude eligibility for prevented planting 
    coverage when a substitute crop is planted in return for a reduction in 
    the premium; and (3) receive prevented planting coverage on double 
    cropped acreage (except for ELS cotton) if the producer can provide 
    proof that planting of a second crop (double crop) following the 
    harvest of an initial crop in the same crop year is a farming practice 
    normally followed by that producer.
        By this rule, the prevented planting provisions will also: (1) 
    Allow all insured producers to receive a 0/92 or 50/92 program benefit, 
    as applicable, and a crop insurance prevented planting guarantee equal 
    to 50 percent of the guarantee for timely planted acreage (40 percent 
    for hybrid seed (corn) and 35 percent for cotton, ELS cotton, and rice) 
    when acreage that is prevented from being planted is not planted to a 
    substitute crop; (2) eliminate the provisions that require acreage 
    eligible for a prevented planting guarantee to be prorated to all units 
    that could have been planted in the crop year; (3) change the date that 
    notice of loss is required from 3 days after the final planting date, 
    or the date the producer discovers that planting will not be possible 
    within the late planting period, to the acreage reporting date; and (4) 
    allow prevented planted acreage planted with a conserving use cover 
    crop to be hayed and grazed without affecting prevented planting 
    benefits.
        On Wednesday, November 8, 1995, FCIC published a proposed rule in 
    the Federal Register at 60 FR 56257 to revise prevented planting 
    coverage under various policies. Following publication of that proposed 
    rule, the public was afforded 15 days to submit written comments, data, 
    and opinions. A total of 14 comments were received: 3 from Regional 
    Service Offices; 5 from reinsured companies; 4 from crop insurance 
    trade associations; 1 from a grower association; and 1 from a 
    congressional office. The comments received and FCIC responses are as 
    follows:
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry 
    indicated that the proposed changes for 1996 are less than timely, as 
    1996 training and marketing activities have already begun for the crops 
    affected by the proposed rule. The comment recommends that FCIC move to 
    process the final rule as soon as practical to minimize confusion in 
    the 1996 crop year.
        Response: FCIC agrees that the 1996 prevented planting regulations 
    need to be published and implemented as quickly as possible.
        Comment: Two comments received from the crop insurance industry 
    recommended that whatever the final prevented planting provisions are, 
    they should stand for the crop year without further change.
        Response: FCIC agrees with the comment and is committed to limit 
    changes unless deemed essential.
        Comment: One comment received from the FSA stated that canola crop 
    provisions need to be included and amended to conform to the 1996 
    prevented planting changes since the canola policy has prevented 
    planting provisions.
        Response: FCIC disagrees because canola is a pilot policy that has 
    not been published in the Federal Register. No change will be made.
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry 
    noted that the term ``Consolidated Farm Service Agency'' is used in the 
    provisions and that the term used should now be ``Farm Service 
    Agency.''
        Response: FCIC agrees and has made the necessary changes.
        Comment: One comment received from the legal counsel of a reinsured 
    company stated that FCIC's proposed rulemaking is in violation of the 
    Administrative Procedure Act.
        Response: The Office of General Counsel approved FCIC's proposed 
    regulation for legal sufficiency. The short comment period was 
    necessary due to pressure to provide an adequate program to producers 
    by the applicable contract change dates. FCIC believes that adequate 
    time was given for the public to comment, based on the number and 
    length of comments received.
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry 
    indicated that administrative costs and errors and omission exposure 
    will increase at the point of sale to the extent the provisions must be 
    explained adequately.
        Response: FCIC agrees that the provisions must be clearly 
    communicated to avoid the exposures indicated in the comment. FCIC is 
    making every effort to provide the new provisions as early as possible 
    to allow adequate time for training, etc.
        Comment: Four comments received from the crop insurance industry 
    indicated the need to allow modification of the already approved 1996 
    Standard Reinsurance Agreement to recognize the increased 
    administrative and underwriting costs associated with the increased 
    benefits and potential adverse selection associated with this rule. 
    This modification, in the form of an optional amendment, would allow 
    the reinsured company the option of assigning policies with prevented 
    planting losses to FCIC or to pre-designate that such policies will 
    fall to a different fund and/or have a different retention percentage 
    than that designated in the reinsured company's plan of operation. In 
    addition, one of the comments proposes that provisions regarding excess 
    loss adjustment expense that are being considered for the 1995 crop 
    year be adopted for the 1996 Standard Reinsurance Agreement. One 
    comment indicates that the proposal may be characterized as 
    implementing into the subject policies the prevented planting benefits 
    that were administratively adopted during the 1995 crop year, and that 
    the changes made in 1995 appear to have significantly increased 
    administrative and underwriting costs. One comment stated that 
    reinsured companies must be provided with a means under the Standard 
    Reinsurance Agreement to either cede the entire premium and losses 
    associated with prevented planting to FCIC or to cede the premium and 
    losses to a risk fund other than that in which the rest of a policy is 
    placed. Until the adequacy of the rating can be tested, FCIC must bear 
    all or substantially all of the risk of loss 
    
    [[Page 62713]]
    (and any gain) associated with these policies if a company is unwilling 
    or unable to. One comment stated that FCIC has failed to minimize moral 
    hazard and has proposed a program that it expects will be adversely 
    selected against and will therefore damage the integrity and actuarial 
    soundness of the crop insurance program. Without providing private 
    insured companies with a means to cede the increased risk associated 
    with the proposed provisions entirely or almost entirely to FCIC, the 
    proposed rule would force private companies to bear losses due to 
    programmatic decisions which they had no control over.
        Response: FCIC has promulgated premium rates that reflect the 1996 
    prevented planting provisions; thus, FCIC is not compelled to provided 
    additional options to select among reinsurance funds or assume all the 
    risk associated with the program change. Promulgation of premium rates 
    prior to publication of this final rule was permissible because the 
    actuarial material also contained the premium rate that would be used 
    if this rule were not made final. The additional excess loss adjustment 
    expenses provided for the 1995 crop year were made to offset the 
    expense of loss adjustments when the Company had to re-open completed 
    claims, and to clear a considerable number of notices of loss to 
    determine if payable prevented planting claims existed. It was also 
    expected that additional expense was incurred to re-train agents and 
    loss adjusters on the prevented planting changes and loss procedures. 
    FCIC believes that administrative expense reimbursement and excess loss 
    adjustment expense provided under the Standard Reinsurance Agreement 
    effective for the 1996 reinsurance year are adequate to cover such 
    expenses for the 1996 crop year.
        Comment: One comment received from the insurance industry indicated 
    concern over whether enough premium differential is included in the 
    prevented planting rates to adequately cover prevented planting 
    payments on so called 0/92 acres. The comment indicated that providing 
    both guaranteed deficiency payments and prevented planting payments 
    invites policyholders to make an economic decision not to plant, and 
    that these decisions will adversely impact the insurer. The comment 
    indicated reservation over whether enough rate could be charged to 
    counter this adverse selection opportunity.
        Response: Guaranteed deficiency payments such as under the so 
    called 0/92 and 50/92 programs are independent of crop insurance 
    payments. Therefore, the risk of insurance against prevented planting 
    should be unaffected. However, farm management decisions can be and 
    should be made based on economics. The 0/92 and 50/92 benefits already 
    have a significant influence on producer reaction. There now is a moral 
    hazard that a producer may be influenced to collect a prevented 
    planting payment in addition to the 0/92 or 50/92 payment; however, the 
    extent of the moral hazard is unknown. That moral hazard is greatly 
    influenced by the assessment of the 0/92 and 50/92 program in any given 
    year. For example, if the guaranteed deficiency payments are decreased 
    or expected to decrease, then the 0/92 and 50/92 program payments are 
    also minimized and the moral hazard for additional prevented planting 
    payments are likely to disappear. The reverse is also true if the 
    guaranteed deficiency payments are expected to increase. Therefore, the 
    moral hazard can only be approximated by adding an additional rate to 
    counter the expected adverse selection potential of the dual payments. 
    County rates were increased based on the probability that some 
    additional losses will accrue given the influence of the so called 0/92 
    or 50/92 program.
        Comment: One comment received from the legal counsel of a reinsured 
    company indicated an inconsistency with the coverage provided and the 
    Federal Crop Insurance Reform Act of 1994 (the ``Reform Act''). The 
    Reform Act indicates that for CAT coverage a prevented planting benefit 
    will be paid only if a producer is unable to plant another crop. 
    Current crop provisions and the proposed provisions provide a prevented 
    planting benefit if a producer is prevented from planting the insured 
    crop and elects not to plant a substitute crop.
        Response: FCIC agrees that this issue must be analyzed and 
    modifications made if found necessary. However, the comment is not 
    germane to this rule because it applies to regulations already in 
    place.
        Comment: One comment received from the legal counsel of a reinsured 
    company states that the proposed provisions are in conflict with 
    section 506(o) of the Federal Crop Insurance Act (the ``Act'') which 
    directs FCIC ``to take such actions as are necessary to improve the 
    actuarial soundness of the Federal multiperil crop insurance 
    coverage.'' Reasons cited include: (1) Increased moral hazard, 
    particularly if market prices (and/or yields) are expected to be low 
    and net returns for a substitute crop or 0-50/92 benefits are expected 
    to be high; (2) elimination of provisions that required prevented 
    planting acreage to be prorated to all units that could have been 
    planted to the insured crop; and (3) the addition of provisions that 
    provide prevented planting benefits for producers who follow a double-
    cropping practice without sufficient premium to offset the risk.
        Response: In addition to maintaining an actuarially sound insurance 
    program, FCIC is mandated to maintain fair and effective coverage for 
    agricultural producers. FCIC must also make the administration of its 
    programs efficient and practical. Virtually all insurance providers 
    have indicated that previous provisions requiring proration of eligible 
    acreage were complex, unmanageable, and not fair to producers in many 
    cases. Producers have been eligible to collect deficiency payments on 
    planted acres and certain prevented planting acreage. There is no 
    justification for denying those benefits when producers are eligible 
    for crop insurance benefits provided premium rates reflect the 
    increased risk of loss. FCIC has developed premium rates for prevented 
    planting based on sound rating principles, including those prevented 
    planting situations that may develop in double-cropping areas. If data 
    is available indicating that rates are insufficient to offset the risk, 
    FCIC requests submission of such data so that it can be reviewed and 
    any necessary changes can be made.
        Comment: One comment received from a commodity group and one 
    comment received from the crop insurance industry stated that they have 
    concerns about projected premium increases. They request that producers 
    have the option of excluding prevented planting coverage in its 
    entirety. Producers need to be able to assess the rate increase before 
    purchasing crop insurance coverage to see if prevented planting 
    coverage is economically feasible for them. They stated that the 
    projected average cost increase is 6-8 percent and in some high rate 
    areas may be as much as 20 percent. Producers cannot afford another 
    premium increase.
        Response: Prevented planting coverage was made an integral part of 
    the policy following the 1993 crop year to lessen the need for ad hoc 
    disaster assistance for growers who were prevented from planting. If 
    allowed to opt out of the coverage, FCIC believes that large numbers of 
    growers would exclude the coverage. This assessment is based on the 
    experience of 1993. This would result in a great deal of pressure 
    either to institute insurance coverage after a loss has occurred or a 
    great deal 
    
    [[Page 62714]]
    of pressure for some other form of financial assistance.
        Comment: One comment received from members of the House of 
    Representatives of the United States Congress stated that most of West 
    Texas has been given a large multiperil rate increase on cotton that 
    producers simply cannot afford. They have been informed that some 
    counties have suffered as much as a 20 percent rate increase for 1996. 
    They stated that the provisions suggest that the primary benefits 
    account for a 6-7 percent rate increase even if the secondary coverage 
    is rejected. The impact analysis estimates the majority of producers 
    will decline the coverage for the alternate crop, opting instead for a 
    reduced premium on the intended crop. They stated that the prevented 
    planting benefits appear to account for at least 13 percent of the 20 
    percent rate increase. They feel the prevented planting provisions 
    should be modified to allow producers to reject all prevented planting 
    coverage in return for an additional reduction in premium in the amount 
    of the 6-7 percent FCIC claims the primary coverage for prevented 
    planting is worth. They stated that producers cannot afford a premium 
    increase to pay for prevented planting coverage they do not need. In 
    1995, West Texas experienced a rate increase that was largely absorbed 
    by a 30-42.5 percent increase in subsidy payments. The 1996 rate 
    increase will be borne by producers alone. This increase is an 
    unnecessary burden on the agricultural community.
        Response: The rate increase not associated with the 1996 prevented 
    planting program change is necessary to make the cotton crop insurance 
    program actuarially sound. Primary prevented planting benefits account 
    for only 0.2 percent to 0.4 percentage points of premium rate. 
    Therefore, growers opting out of the primary prevented planting 
    coverage would receive a very small credit. FCIC believes that basic 
    prevented planting coverage should remain an integral part of the 
    policy to ensure growers are covered in the event that prevented 
    planting occurs (also see response to comment above).
        Comment: Seven comments received from the crop insurance industry 
    and one comment received from FSA recommended amending the definition 
    of prevented planting because: (1) The definition includes reference to 
    ``most producers in the surrounding area'' and the term ``most'' is not 
    defined. As a result there is no way to apply the definition to any 
    particular policyholder when there is a dispute over whether or not 
    planting was actually prevented; (2) The day after the final planting 
    date, a producer could plant a substitute crop and receive a prevented 
    planting benefit; and (3) The provisions must require prevented 
    planting conditions to have to exist through the whole late planting 
    period before any prevented planting payment is due because: (a) 
    Prevented planting should never have been allowed for producers who 
    quit planting by the final planting date and made no effort to plant 
    within the late planting period; (b) allowing the producer to declare 
    prevented planting on the day after the final planting date defeats the 
    purpose of the late planting provision and submits the program to 
    unwarranted risk; (c) the producer may not plant an alternative crop or 
    enter into 0/92 until after the late planting period has expired for 
    the original crop and still collect a prevented planting payment (with 
    the obvious requirement that weather conditions continue to prevent 
    planting in the late planting period); (d) the prevented planting 
    payment payable when an alternative crop is planted must be reduced 
    from that level available if no alternative crop is planted; (e) in no 
    circumstance could the producer switch to an alternative crop prior to 
    the end of the late planting period and still collect a prevented 
    planting payment (they would be free to plant whatever crop they wanted 
    at any time, they just should not expect to collect a prevented 
    planting payment on the original crop if they do not go through the 
    late planting period of the original crop); and (f) moral hazards and 
    abuse are created when producers are allowed to collect a substitute 
    crop immediately after the final planting date. In most cases producers 
    will plant the crop into the late planting period as a normal practice, 
    but now we have created a disincentive to do so.
        Response: FCIC agrees that a more definitive term than ``most'' 
    should be used and has replaced it with the term ``majority'' to 
    reflect that more than 50 percent of the producers must have been 
    prevented from planting.
        This definition was designed to accommodate extremely varied 
    production areas and farming practices; including those in which 
    growers do not plant after the final planting date and those in which 
    growers often do plant a crop within the late planting period. Some 
    farming areas have relatively short growing seasons which make the 
    prospect of a successful crop doubtful if planted much beyond the final 
    planting date. Other areas have much longer growing seasons and often 
    allow a successful crop to be grown even if planted after the final 
    planting date. In both long and short growing areas, some farming 
    practices, such as the production of silage, allow a grower to plant 
    after the final planting date and still produce an acceptable crop. 
    Changing the definition to require that prevented planting conditions 
    must have existed through the end of the late planting period before 
    any prevented planting coverage would be provided would not accommodate 
    growers who normally do not plant after the final planting date.
        FCIC agrees producers should be encouraged to plant their initially 
    intended crop after the final planting date when it is practical to do 
    so. Therefore, FCIC has amended these regulations to specify that 
    prevented planting coverage will not be provided when a producer, 
    prevented from planting the initially intended crop, plants a 
    substitute crop within ten days after the final planting date for the 
    initially intended crop.
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry 
    suggested that FCIC's actuaries re-evaluate: (1) When the late planting 
    period should start (i.e., final planting date); (2) whether the late 
    planting period should be shortened; and (3) whether or not eligibility 
    for a prevented planting payment should trigger at the time that 
    shortened period is exhausted.
        Response: These evaluations are on-going. FCIC requests that any 
    person who has data affecting these matters make it available for 
    consideration.
        Comment: One comment received from a commodity group stated that 
    they oppose the lower percentage level of insurance guarantee proposed 
    for prevented planted cotton compared to other commodities. They 
    contend the criteria that should be used to determine coverage for 
    prevented planting should be applied consistently among commodities.
        Response: Data used by FCIC to determine prevented planting 
    benefits indicated cotton producers incur a larger percentage of total 
    production costs after planting than do producers of corn and other 
    grain crops. Additional post-plant costs incurred by cotton producers 
    include those for pest control and the costs associated with the 
    ginning and handling of cotton. Therefore, no change will be made. FCIC 
    is willing to work with producer groups and other interested parties to 
    review existing data to revise levels of benefits when analyses 
    indicate it is necessary.
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry 
    recommended increasing the standard 
    
    [[Page 62715]]
    prevented planting payment from the current 50 percent to 60 percent.
        Response: The prevented planting payment of 50 percent adequately 
    compensates the producer for the loss of production, taking into 
    consideration cost, not incurred. FCIC has discovered that increasing 
    the standard prevented planting payment reduces the incentive for 
    producers to plant the intended crop by the end of the late planting 
    period when it is possible and increases the cost to the program. 
    Therefore, FCIC will not change the standard prevented planting 
    payment.
        Comment: One comment received from counsel for a reinsured company 
    on behalf of the crop insurance industry stated that the Reform Act 
    contains a provision that allows a reduction in the benefit amount paid 
    to a producer to reflect out-of-pocket expenses not incurred by a 
    producer as a result of not planting, growing, or harvesting the crop 
    for which a prevented claim is made. The comment indicates that this 
    proposed rule is silent regarding this requirement for limited and 
    additional coverage, but that FCIC is required by the Reform Act to 
    include this provision for CAT coverage.
        Response: Prior to enactment of the Reform Act, prevented planting 
    production guarantees for all coverages and crops were at least 50 
    percent lower than the guarantee for a timely planted crop to avoid 
    compensating producers in excess of their actual losses and provide 
    actuarially sound coverage. This has not changed.
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry 
    stated that the inclusion of drought as an insurable peril and lack of 
    any firm definitions or procedural guidelines subjects the Company and 
    FCIC to abuse and fraud.
        Response: FCIC does not believe that inclusion of drought as an 
    insurable peril substantially subjects the company and FCIC to abuse 
    and fraud. The burden is on the producer to prove that drought 
    prevented a producer from planting. Further, the Soil Conservation and 
    Extension Services have advised producers on occasion not to plant 
    because it was so dry that planting the ground could result in severe 
    wind erosion. The rule also requires a majority of producers to be 
    affected by the cause of loss.
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry 
    recommended that in an effort to increase the incentive to plant the 
    original crop as opposed to simply collecting insurance and farm 
    program benefits, it might be advisable to consider reducing the late 
    planting period from 25 to 20 days, with the reductions in guarantees 
    over the 20 days totalling 25 percent, to leave the person with a 
    guarantee equal to 75 percent of their original level--( i.e. 1 percent 
    per day for the first 10 days and 1.5 percent per day for the second 10 
    days).
        Response: Under the current formula, the production guarantee is 
    reduced only 1 percent for each of the first ten days and 2 percent for 
    days 11-25. FCIC believes this formula provides adequate incentive for 
    producers to plant crops early in the late planting period to keep 
    their insurance production guarantee at the highest level possible. 
    Changing the length of the late planting period and the percents of 
    reduction could result in over insurance and increased crop insurance 
    indemnities. Therefore, no change will be made.
        Comment: One comment received from FSA recommended that acreage 
    that is planted to the insured crop after the late planting period be 
    designated as late planted with a 50 percent reduction in guarantee. 
    They stated that it is very confusing to have this acreage designated 
    as prevented planting.
        Response: If acreage is prevented from being planted through the 
    late planting period due to an insurable cause of loss, and is planted 
    to the insured crop after the late planting period, the acreage will 
    receive a 50 percent reduction in guarantee and must be reported as 
    prevented planting acreage. This information is needed by FCIC for 
    analytical purposes in reviewing crop insurance premium rates. 
    Therefore, no change will be made.
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry 
    recommended that the cover crop planted on prevented planting acres 
    could only be hayed or grazed by the producer's own livestock. The 
    producer could not sell hay or charge others to let livestock graze.
        Response: FCIC disagrees because it increases costs, is 
    administratively difficult to enforce, and is contrary to legislative 
    directives to simplify procedures. Therefore, no change will be made.
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry 
    indicated that the ``background'' section of the proposal indicates 
    that prevented planting acreage may be planted to a conserving use 
    cover crop that may be hayed and grazed without limitation, but that 
    the actual policy language indicates only that a cover crop not for 
    harvest may be planted. The comment suggests modifying the policy 
    language to indicate that haying and grazing is permissible if this is 
    the intent.
        Response: Paragraph 12(a)(3)(i) of the Hybrid Sorghum Seed 
    Endorsement states that prevented planting coverage is available ``if 
    the acreage is left idle for the crop year, or if a cover crop is 
    planted not for harvest. Prevented planting compensation hereunder will 
    not be denied because the cover crop is hayed or grazed * * *'' This 
    provision is also contained in a similar location in the proposed 
    regulations for other crop policies. Therefore, no change is required. 
    However, the ``background'' section will be amended to reflect that a 
    conserving use cover crop may be hayed or grazed without affecting 
    prevented planting benefits.
        Comment: One comment received from FSA stated that under the 
    provision allowing for a production guarantee of 50 percent (40 percent 
    for hybrid seed (corn) and 35 percent for cotton, ELS cotton and rice) 
    of the timely planted guarantee, prevented planting compensation should 
    not be allowed when the cover crop is hayed or grazed because the 
    producer is receiving a benefit from that crop.
        Response: FCIC agrees that some value is gained when a cover crop 
    is hayed or grazed. However, this benefit is of limited value in 
    comparison with the income that would be gained if the intended crop 
    could have been planted. In addition, the feed value obtained varies 
    widely and may be negligible in some situations. It is FCIC's opinion 
    that the administrative costs associated with keeping track of the 
    disposition of feed production outweigh any benefit that could be 
    derived.
        Comment: Eleven comments received from FSA and the crop insurance 
    industry recommended eliminating the provision which provides a 
    prevented planting guarantee equal to 25 percent of the production 
    guarantee for timely planted acres (20 percent for hybrid seed (corn) 
    and 17.5 percent for cotton, ELS cotton, and rice) when acreage that is 
    prevented from being planted is planted to a substitute crop for 
    harvest. The following reasons were given: (1) This protection was not 
    intended or mandated by the Reform Act; (2) the previous disaster 
    programs never provided this type of protection; (3) there is no budget 
    to cover the subsidy or administrative expense for this protection; (4) 
    the indemnity would be paid even if the substitute crop provided more 
    economic value than the intended crop that was prevented from planting; 
    (5) the moral risk is high; (6) there has been little demand for this 
    kind of protection from producers, insurance companies or agents and 
    if, or when, the demand occurs a ``pilot program'' should be developed 
    and 
    
    [[Page 62716]]
    implemented; (7) if a plan like this is offered it should be offered as 
    a separate policy without government subsidy and delivered by the 
    private insurance industry without any cost to the government; (8) the 
    premium for the 25 percent protection (20 percent for hybrid seed 
    (corn) and 17.5 percent for cotton, ELS cotton, and rice) has been 
    increased as much as 30 percent in some counties. This protection 
    should be offered as an option or a separate endorsement that does not 
    affect the cost of the basic protection or require the producer to sign 
    an exclusion; (9) the rating varies within a state from 5 percent to 30 
    percent for no apparent reason; (10) it puts extreme pressure on the 
    final planting date. For example, producers contemplating switching 
    from corn to soybeans would normally plant whenever they thought they 
    were better off with a normal soybean yield versus a reduced corn 
    yield, but now some producers will want to wait until the final 
    planting date for corn so they can have the prevented planting 
    guarantee when planting a substitute crop; (11) intended acres are very 
    hard to administer; (12) every crop could potentially show one crop as 
    prevented planting with a substitute crop planted (i.e. a producer 
    could report prevented planting corn with planted soybeans on field A 
    and prevented planting soybeans with planted corn on field B when the 
    producers intentions were to plant half of the fields to soybeans and 
    half to corn); (13) it encourages producers to manipulate the program 
    to the detriment of the American taxpayer; (14) acreage on which the 
    producer is able to plant a crop for harvest is not acreage that is 
    prevented from being planted; (15) the definition of ``indemnity'' in 
    the Basic Insurance Principles states, ``For insurance purposes, it 
    means that the producer is restored to approximately the same position 
    from an economic standpoint that was occupied before the loss occurred. 
    * * * Never, under any circumstances, would a gain be permitted.'' 
    Under this provision, a gain is almost a given; (16) a producer would 
    not plant two crops on the same acreage in the same crop year, except 
    for a producer who normally double crops. That is unfair to producers 
    in areas without excessive moisture who plant only one crop and may 
    receive an indemnity on only that crop, not an additional 25 percent on 
    an imaginary crop; (17) any time a producer can opt out of automatic 
    coverage, adverse selection is assured; (18) the more endorsements, 
    options, and exclusions that are added to a policy, the greater the 
    likelihood of producers being unaware of all of their policy provisions 
    and obligations which increases the appeals, litigation cases, agent 
    error and omissions occurrences, and Congressional referrals; (19) the 
    rate increases and factors that were used are inaccurate; (20) factors 
    used to decrease premium if a producer opts out of this coverage are 
    excessive; (21) the prevented planting provisions must increase the 
    incentive to plant the original crop and decrease any incentive to 
    simply not plant and collect insurance benefits; (22) adverse selection 
    will also occur as producers will be able to opt out of prevented 
    planting for a reduced charge; and (23) the most recent GAO report 
    addresses the inadequacy of the current premium rates and that the 
    programs rate structure was undermined when the Department provided 
    more benefits in 1995 under the prevented planting provision and, if 
    history is any indication, then premium rates will remain inadequate.
        Response: FCIC understands the concerns of the crop insurance 
    industry, government employees, and others. Although the Reform Act did 
    not mandate this protection, FCIC's decision to develop the proposed 
    regulations for prevented planting was based on broad policy concerns 
    that had to be considered along with actuarial concerns.
        When the present prevented planting provisions were developed for 
    the 1994 crop year, FCIC knew that changes would be needed in future 
    years as experience was gained. Many producers were prevented from 
    planting in the 1995 crop year and voiced discontent with those 
    provisions. It was concluded that there was an inconsistency in 
    coverage that resulted in three different levels of claims payments for 
    producers similarly affected by excessive moisture. Specifically, 
    producers who planted an insured crop that failed were eligible for 
    crop insurance indemnities for a loss in production; producers who were 
    prevented from planting an insured crop and did not plant a subsequent 
    crop were eligible for a crop insurance prevented planting payments, 
    but producers who were prevented from planting an insured crop and 
    planted a substitute crop were not eligible for any crop insurance 
    payments. FCIC believes that this third group should be eligible for 
    crop insurance payments to make them whole.
        To maintain actuarial integrity 1996 crop insurance premium rates 
    were recalculated to reflect the prevented planting coverage changes. 
    FCIC believes the coverage changes merely give producers another 
    insurance choice when they are prevented from planting their initially 
    intended crops. FCIC agrees producers should be encouraged to plant 
    their initially intended crop after the final planting date when it is 
    practical to do so. Therefore, FCIC is amending this regulation so that 
    when Producers are prevented from planting their initially intended 
    crop and plant a substitute crop within ten days after the final 
    planting date for the initially intended crop, a prevented planting 
    production guarantee will not be provided for such acreage. In 
    addition, FCIC believes producers will make every effort to plant the 
    crop of the greatest economic value as soon as possible. It would make 
    little sense to delay planting to receive the 25 percent prevented 
    planting payment and run the risk of not getting any crop planted. FCIC 
    believes this amendment will help maintain the actuarial soundness of 
    the prevented planting coverage.
        The proposed regulations do not provide the option to delete the 
    primary prevented planting coverage. They do provide producers the 
    option of declining eligibility for a prevented planting production 
    guarantee when a substitute crop is planted. Producers may wish to 
    delete this coverage in return for a reduction in the premium they are 
    required to pay. Based on the forgoing reasons, no change will be made.
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry 
    suggested that the option to receive prevented planting benefits and 
    plant a substitute crop should be continuous until cancelled and should 
    only be completed for producers who want the additional coverage, not 
    for producers declining the coverage.
        Response: FCIC has determined that all producers should have 
    complete prevented planting coverage unless they elect to exclude such 
    coverage when a substitute crop is planted for harvest. Experience in 
    1993 indicates that most producers were unaware of the availability of 
    prevented planting coverage when it was a separately purchased 
    coverage. Therefore, no change will be made.
        Comment: One comment received from counsel of a reinsured company 
    stated that the policy provisions should be amended to read, ``Proof 
    that you had the inputs available to plant and produce a crop other 
    than a crop you planted the past year or a crop that is part of a 
    regular rotation of the acres planted and for which you had insurance 
    with the expectation of at least producing * * *.'' 
    
    [[Page 62717]]
    
        Response: FCIC does not agree. The intent of prevented planting 
    coverage is to provide coverage for the intended crop for the current 
    crop year. FCIC does not intend to interfere with producers' responses 
    to market signals. Therefore, no change will be made.
        Comment: Two comments received from the crop insurance industry 
    expressed concern regarding how insurers will police provisions dealing 
    with a substitute crop and recommended clarifying the following issues 
    in the final rule. The comments state that it is difficult if not 
    impossible to determine the crop and acreage originally intended to be 
    planted and that the provisions will provide an opportunity for 
    producers to claim prevented planting on acreage originally intended to 
    be planted to a substitute crop. One of the comments further questioned 
    whether a minor oilseed crop planted by a grower participating in the 
    so called 0/92 program would be considered a substitute crop or not.
        Response: The acreage reporting provisions rely on the producer to 
    indicate the specific acreage and crop that were prevented from being 
    planted. On the surface these provisions would indicate a significant 
    vulnerability, especially with regard to the substitute crop 
    provisions. However, other provisions, including those that limit 
    maximum eligible acreage and those that reduce eligible acreage by the 
    amount of any timely and late planted acreage substantially reduce this 
    vulnerability. For example, if a producer indicates acreage is 
    prevented from being planted to corn and plants grain sorghum as a 
    substitute crop, any other acreage planted to corn on the farm would 
    reduce the amount of corn acreage eligible for a prevented planting 
    production guarantee. Likewise, the acreage planted to grain sorghum 
    would reduce the amount of any grain sorghum acreage that may have 
    originally been eligible to receive a prevented planting production 
    guarantee. Other provisions that give the insurer the right to require 
    a producer to provide proof that the inputs were available to plant and 
    produce the crop will also reduce vulnerabilities that might otherwise 
    be associated with this coverage. A minor oilseed crop may be 
    considered a substitute crop if it is planted after the originally 
    intended crop was prevented from being planted. Growers qualifying for 
    prevented planting coverage in this situation may qualify for the so 
    called 0/92 program if the minor oilseed can be planted as a substitute 
    crop under that program. Participation in the so called 0/92 program is 
    not required to be eligible for crop insurance prevented planting 
    benefits.
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry 
    expresses concern that the wording that advises the producer of the 
    choice to exclude prevented planting coverage is not prominent enough 
    in the policy. The comment also suggests, concurrent with the final 
    rule, that guidelines meeting Standard Reinsurance Agreement 
    requirements be issued addressing the form ``approved by us'' that is 
    required to opt out of prevented planting coverage when a substitute 
    crop is planted.
        Response: Provisions indicating a producer's choice to exclude this 
    coverage are contained in appropriate locations within the policy. On 
    or before the sales closing date for the intended crop, a producer may 
    ``opt out'' of prevented planting coverage when a substitute crop is 
    planted by entering the appropriate option code on the crop insurance 
    application or contract change form.
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry and 
    one comment received from FSA stated that the provision that requires a 
    producer to provide proof that they had the inputs available to plant 
    and produce a crop adds complication to the loss adjustment process and 
    likely adds little to the ability to determine the producer's intent. 
    If the provision is not eliminated, one of the comments recommends 
    issuance, concurrent with the final rule, of procedure addressing what 
    constitutes proof that the inputs were available.
        Response: Proof that the producer had the available inputes is not 
    mandatory in all cases. Such proof should be required when producers 
    are claiming they are prevented from planting a crop which they have 
    never historically planted or there are other suspicious circumstances. 
    Procedure is being drafted in the loss adjustment handbooks to include 
    what constitutes such proof. Therefore, no change is necessary.
        Comment: One comment received from FSA indicated that they did not 
    understand why producers would request deleting the prevented planting 
    provisions from a policy.
        Response: The producers would not have the option of deleting the 
    prevented planting provisions from the policy, instead they would be 
    allowed only to exclude eligibility for that portion of the prevented 
    planting coverage available when a substitute crop is planted in return 
    for a reduction in the premium rate attributed to such coverage.
        Comment: One comment received from FSA stated that it seems 
    pointless to add a requirement for producers to provide proof that they 
    had inputs available to plant and produce the intended crop because 
    seed and chemical receipts are too easily obtained by persons willing 
    to manipulate FCIC's procedures.
        Response: FCIC disagrees with the comment. Falsifying such records 
    could subject the producer, seed or chemical distributor to criminal or 
    civil sanctions. Further, inputs such as seed and chemical receipts 
    verify the intentions to plant and produce the insured crop. The 
    producer who provides false documentation is, of course, open to 
    substantial criminal and civil liability. Failure to produce this 
    evidence when requested is cause for FCIC to deny prevented planting 
    coverage. Therefore, no change will be made.
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry 
    recommended deletion of the extended insurance period provisions for 
    carry-over insureds. The comment indicated that the current sales 
    closing date of March 15 in an area with normal planting times during 
    April and May makes the likelihood of a prevented planting cause prior 
    to March 15 very remote. If the provision is not deleted, it was 
    recommended that the provision be clarified to address whether or not 
    buying up from the CAT level for 1996 falls under the first year or the 
    subsequent year provisions.
        Response: The Reform Act requires prevented planting coverage be 
    provided for the period between the sales closing date of the previous 
    crop year and the sales closing date of the current crop year. 
    Therefore, no change will be made.
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry 
    recommended that acreage of hybrid seed crops (and any other crop grown 
    under a contract) eligible for prevented planting coverage be limited 
    to the same number of acres under contract for the crop year.
        Response: FCIC agrees with the comment and has revised the hybrid 
    corn and hybrid sorghum seed crop provisions accordingly.
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry 
    recommended clarification of provisions that limit the eligible acreage 
    to the number of acres planted to the insured crop during the previous 
    crop year. Specifically, the comment asked if this provision means the 
    number of acres the producer planted the previous year or the number of 
    acres planted on the land in question; and what happens if the 
    
    [[Page 62718]]
    land changes hands from one year to the next or the producer farms 
    different land from one year to the next.
        Response: FCIC agrees that the provision may be interpreted 
    incorrectly. The intent is to limit eligible acreage within a FSA farm 
    serial number to the total number of acres planted to the insured crop 
    on the FSA farm serial number the previous crop year unless we agree to 
    a greater number. The crop provisions have been clarified accordingly.
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry and 
    two comments received from FSA question how the insurance provider was 
    to agree in writing to insure eligible acreage. They also recommended 
    that procedure be issued, concurrently with the final rule, to indicate 
    the parameters and required elements of an ``agreement in writing'' to 
    increase the number of acres that would be eligible for prevented 
    planting coverage.
        Response: Presently, it is up to the insurance provider to develop 
    a process by which they agree in writing when the producer requests to 
    increase their eligible prevented planting acreage. FCIC agrees that 
    further instructions are needed and will incorporate such instructions 
    into the 1996 Catastrophic Risk Protection Handbook and the Crop 
    Insurance Handbook.
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry 
    recommended adding language to provisions regarding determination of 
    eligible acreage that limits the eligible acreage to that indicated on 
    a ``report of intended acreage.'' The comment further suggests that 
    language be added to indicate that such report meets the criteria for 
    the agreement in writing that is necessary to exceed the printed policy 
    limitations for eligible acreage.
        Response: FCIC does not require nor prohibit the use of a ``report 
    of intended acreage.'' However, coverage and premium are based on the 
    actual acreage report filed by the producer, not the report of intended 
    acreage. Therefore, no change is made. FCIC will consider the use of 
    the ``report of intended acreage'' as an ``agreement in writing'' to 
    exceed the printed policy limitations for eligible acreage.
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry 
    stated that reference to the final planting date in the paragraph which 
    states, ``prevented planting coverage will not be provided for any 
    acreage * * * that does not constitute at least 20 acres or 20 percent 
    (20%) of the acreage in the unit'' must be clarified. They did not 
    understand if it applied to the final planting date for the planted 
    crop or the final planting date for the other crop which the producer 
    wants to declare as prevented planting.
        Response: In FCIC's opinion, this provision does not require 
    clarification. This provision requires information regarding inputs 
    only for the originally intended crop. Therefore, no change is made.
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry 
    recommended deletion of the provision that states ``Any acreage you 
    report in excess of the number of acres eligible for prevented planting 
    coverage, or that exceeds the number of eligible acres physically 
    located in a unit, will be deleted from your acreage report.'' The 
    comment suggests replacing this provision with the following: ``Any 
    acreage you report that does not qualify for prevented planting will be 
    deleted from your acreage report.''
        Response: FCIC disagrees with the comment. The recommended 
    replacement language that states ``does not qualify for prevented 
    planting'' is not specific enough regarding the eligible acres for 
    prevented planting. Producers need to understand that acreage deleted 
    from the acreage report consists of both the acreage in excess of the 
    number of acres eligible for prevented planting coverage and acres in 
    excess of the number of eligible acres physically located in a unit.
        Comment: One comment received from FSA suggested that if the 
    ``Freedom to Farm'' concept is adopted and the producer is not 
    restricted to a required number of acres of a crop, it will be 
    difficult to believe the acreage reported as ``intended to be 
    planted.''
        Response: At this time legislative changes in the farm bill are 
    uncertain and it would be premature for FCIC to make changes based on 
    assumptions. FCIC will make the necessary changes based on the law 
    ultimately enacted. The restriction with regard to prior year's planted 
    acreage continues regardless of changes in acreage bases.
        Comment: One comment received from FSA stated that the following 
    phrase ``acreage that is less than 20 acres or 20 percent of the 
    acreage in the unit will be considered intended to be planted to the 
    insured crop planted on the adjoining acreage, unless you can show that 
    you had the inputs available to plant and produce another insured crop 
    on the acreage before the final planting date,'' will allow prevented 
    planting coverage on less than 20 acres or 20 percent of the acreage in 
    the unit if a producer could prove he was going to plant that to 
    another crop. This scenario is unlikely and we are just allowing a 
    loophole for producers to get prevented planting coverage on their 
    potholes.
        Response: The proposed provisions state that, ``Prevented planting 
    coverage will not be provided for any acreage that does not constitute 
    at least 20 acres or 20 percent (20%) of the acreage in the unit, 
    whichever is less * * *'' was intended to be used only to verify the 
    crop intended to be planted on the acreage. For example, assume that a 
    producer has one section of land comprised of three separate adjacent 
    fields. The first field consists of the east \1/3\ of the section (100 
    insurable acres), the second field consists of the central \1/3\ of the 
    section (100 acres of which 85 acres are not insurable), and the third 
    field consists of the west \1/3\ of the section (100 insurable acres). 
    If the producer planted corn on the first and the third fields and is 
    prevented from planting the 15 insurable acres in the second (middle/
    adjacent) field, the 15 acres will be considered to have been intended 
    to be planted to corn, unless the producer can show that inputs were 
    available to plant and produce another crop on those 15 acres. If 
    inputs are not available for another crop, the 15 acres would not be 
    eligible for prevented planting because at least 20 acres in the unit 
    were not prevented from planting.
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry 
    stated that the language should be modified (subsection 13(d)(4)(iv)(D) 
    of the Coarse Grains Provisions) to read: On which another crop is 
    prevented from being planted, if you have already received a prevented 
    planting indemnity, guarantee or amount of insurance for such acreage 
    in the same crop year, unless you provide adequate records of acreage 
    and production showing that the acreage has a history of double-
    cropping in each of the last four crop years;
        Response: FCIC agrees with the comment and has revised the 
    provisions accordingly.
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry 
    stated that the language should be modified (subsection 13(d)(4)(iv)(E) 
    of the Coarse Grains Provisions) to read: On which the insured crop is 
    prevented from being planted, if any other crop is planted and fails, 
    or is planted and harvested, hayed or grazed on such acreage in the 
    same crop year (other than a cover crop as specified in paragraph 
    (a)(3)(i) of this section, or a substitute crop allowed in paragraph 
    (a)(3)(ii) of this section), unless you provide adequate records of 
    acreage and production showing that the acreage has a history of 
    double-cropping in each of the last four years; 
    
    [[Page 62719]]
    
        Response: FCIC agrees with the comment and has revised the 
    provisions accordingly.
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry 
    stated that it is currently impossible to monitor the requirement that 
    all acreage prevented from being planted be reported, especially when 
    it is small acreage and production from planted acreage will likely 
    exceed the combined guarantee. If this reporting requirement is 
    retained, guidelines must be established to be able to enforce and 
    possibly penalize, if not reported completely. Now may be the time to 
    initiate reporting of intended acreage to be planted the following year 
    at the same time that production is reported for the current crop year.
        Response: FCIC agrees that this potential exists and will continue 
    to monitor this problem and to work on a solution. However, no change 
    will be made at this time.
        Comment: One comment received from FSA suggested deleting the 
    following sentence because it is repetitious, ``If you have a 
    Catastrophic Risk Endorsement and receive a prevented planting 
    indemnity, guarantee, or amount of insurance for a crop and are 
    prevented from planting another crop on the same acreage, you may only 
    receive the prevented planting indemnity, guarantee, or amount of 
    insurance for the crop on which the prevented planting indemnity, 
    guarantee, or amount of insurance is received.''
        Response: FCIC disagrees that the provision is repetitious. For CAT 
    policies only, this provision specifically disallows more than one 
    prevented planting benefit per acre for a crop year regardless of a 
    past history of double cropping. It also prohibits a prevented planting 
    production guarantee on acreage if another crop is planted for the 
    insured crop year. Both of these benefits may be provided in certain 
    situations under limited and additional coverage. Therefore, no change 
    is made.
        Comment: One comment received from an attorney on behalf of the 
    crop insurance industry indicated that allowing both a so called 0/92 
    or 50/92 payment and a crop insurance prevented planting benefit is 
    contrary to law. The comment states that the interim rule allowing both 
    payments (published at 60 FR 35832 (July 12, 1995)) was a move back to 
    ad hoc disaster payments.
        Response: The so called 0/92 and 50/92 payments are not payments 
    for prevented planting. Producers do not have to have been prevented 
    from planting to collect 0/92 or 50/92 payments. Payments under these 
    programs are intended to compensate producers for price deficiencies 
    (i.e. the difference between the target price and the market price. 
    Since payments under the 0/92 and 50/92 programs are available for 
    producers with crop failure, it would be inconsistent to deny the same 
    benefit to producers who are prevented from planting.
        Comment: One comment received from the crop insurance industry 
    suggested that additional definitions and clarifications need to be 
    made that spell out the qualifications for double-cropped acreage such 
    as what proof is needed and how many years of records are needed. 
    Otherwise, they recommend excluding double cropped acreage.
        Response: The prevented planting provisions specify that the 
    producer must provide adequate records of acreage and production that 
    show the acreage has been double-cropped for each of the last four 
    years. Therefore, no change is necessary.
        Comment: Two comments received from the crop insurance industry 
    regarding allowing prevented planting payments on double-crop 
    situations stated that: (1) It will generate additional prevented 
    planting claims on acreage that would otherwise not be double-cropped. 
    If these provisions are retained, ``adequate records of acreage and 
    production in each of the last four years'' must be clearly defined to 
    assure that the specific acreage has a definite history of double-
    cropping; and (2) two prevented planting payments in double cropping 
    situations may add unwanted incentives to encourage the farming of 
    fragile and marginal lands in more arid regions.
        Response: FCIC does not believe that additional claims will be made 
    for acreage that would not normally be double-cropped. The crop 
    provisions clearly indicate that records of both acreage and production 
    for the previous four crop years must be provided to qualify for 
    benefits for more than one crop in a crop year. This provision should 
    discourage claims on acreage that has not been double-cropped in the 
    past. FCIC does not believe this benefit will encourage tillage of 
    fragile and marginal lands in more arid regions. Growers will not 
    double-crop this land for four consecutive years to qualify for 
    prevented planting benefits in the fifth year.
        So that these policy changes can take effect beginning with 1996 
    spring-planted crops, good cause is shown to make this rule effective 
    immediately upon filing with the Federal Register and without the 30-
    day period required by the Administrative Procedure's Act to avoid the 
    pressures on FCIC to make changes after the contract change date as a 
    result of a large number of producers being prevented from planting 
    such as occurred during the 1995 crop year which resulted in confusion 
    among producers, insurance companies, and FSA with respect to the 
    program changes and increased losses.
        Prevented planting changes to these policies were made by interim 
    rule for the 1995 crop year. Experience with those modifications 
    require certain changes which have been made by this rule. However, the 
    present policy effective for crop year 1995 fall-planted crops and 
    scheduled to be effective for 1996 spring-planted crops do not 
    adequately protect the producer who suffers a prevented planting loss. 
    The contract change date for 1996 spring-planted crops is November 30, 
    1995, and this rule must be effective for those crops. Therefore, good 
    cause is shown to make this rule effective in less than 30 days after 
    publication.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    7 CFR Part 401
    
        Crop insurance, Hybrid sorghum seed, Reporting and recordkeeping 
    requirements, Rice.
    
    7 CFR Part 443
    
        Crop insurance, Hybrid seed, Reporting and recordkeeping 
    requirements.
    
    7 CFR Part 457
    
        Crop insurance, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Small 
    grains, Cotton, ELS cotton, Sunflower seed and coarse grains.
    
    Final Rule
    
        In this document, pursuant to the authority contained in the 
    Federal Crop Insurance Act, as amended (7 U.S.C. 1501 et seq.), the 
    Federal Crop Insurance Corporation hereby amends the General Crop 
    Insurance Regulations (7 CFR part 401) by amending the Hybrid Sorghum 
    Seed (Sec. 401.109) and Rice (Sec. 401.120) Endorsements; the Hybrid 
    Seed Crop Insurance Policy (7 CFR 443.7(d)); and the Common Crop 
    Insurance Regulations (7 CFR part 457) by amending the Small Grains 
    (Sec. 457.101), Cotton (Sec. 457.104), Extra Long Staple Cotton 
    (Sec. 457.105), Sunflower Seed (Sec. 457.108), and Coarse Grains 
    (Sec. 457.113) Crop Insurance Provisions; applicable beginning with the 
    1996 crop year for spring crops with contract change dates on or after 
    November 30, 1995.
        Accordingly, 7 CFR parts 401, 443, and 457 are amended as follows:
        
    [[Page 62720]]
    
    
    PART 401--[AMENDED]
    
        1. The authority citation for 7 CFR part 401 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1506(l), 1506(p).
    
        2. Section 401.109 is amended by revising paragraphs 12(a)(3), 
    12(b), and 12(d) of the Hybrid Sorghum Seed Endorsement to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 401.109   Hybrid sorghum seed endorsement.
    
    * * * * *
    
    12. Late Planting and Prevented Planting
    
        (a) * * *
        (3) For prevented planting acreage, multiply the per acre amount 
    of insurance for timely planted acreage by:
        (i) Fifty percent (0.50) and multiply the result by the 50 acres 
    you were prevented from planting, if the acreage is eligible for 
    prevented planting coverage, and if the acreage is left idle for the 
    crop year, or if a cover crop is planted not for harvest. Prevented 
    planting compensation hereunder will not be denied because the cover 
    crop is hayed or grazed; or
        (ii) Twenty-five percent (0.25) and multiply the result by the 
    50 acres you were prevented from planting, if the acreage is 
    eligible for prevented planting coverage, and if you elect to plant 
    a substitute crop for harvest after the 10th day following the final 
    planting date for the insured crop. (This subparagraph (ii) is not 
    applicable, and prevented planting coverage is not available 
    hereunder, if you elected the Catastrophic Risk Protection 
    Endorsement or you elected to exclude prevented planting coverage 
    when a substitute crop is planted (see subparagraph 12(d)(1)(iii))).
        The total of the three calculations will be the amount of 
    insurance for the unit. Your premium will be based on the result of 
    multiplying the per acre amount of insurance for timely planted 
    acreage by the 150 insured crop acres in the unit.
        (b) If you were prevented from planting, you must provide 
    written notice to us not later than the acreage reporting date.
    * * * * *
        (d) Prevented Planting (Including Planting After the Late 
    Planting Period).
        (1) If you were prevented from planting the insured crop (see 
    subsection 13(o)), you may elect:
        (i) To plant the insured crop during the late planting period. 
    The amount of insurance for such acreage will be determined in 
    accordance with paragraph 12(c)(1);
        (ii) Not to plant this acreage to any crop except a cover crop 
    not for harvest. You may also elect to plant the insured crop after 
    the late planting period. In either case, the amount of insurance 
    for such acreage will be fifty percent (50%) of the amount of 
    insurance for timely planted acres. For example, if your amount of 
    insurance for timely planted acreage is 200 dollars per acre, your 
    prevented planting amount of insurance would be 100 dollars per acre 
    (200 dollars multiplied by 0.50). If you elect to plant the insured 
    crop after the late planting period, production to count for such 
    acreage will be determined in accordance with subsections 8b through 
    e; or
        (iii) Not to plant the intended crop but plant a substitute crop 
    for harvest, in which case:
        (A) No prevented planting amount of insurance will be provided 
    for such acreage if the substitute crop is planted on or before the 
    tenth day following the final planting date for the insured crop; or
        (B) An amount of insurance equal to twenty-five percent (25%) of 
    the amount of insurance for timely planted acres will be provided 
    for such acreage, if the substitute crop is planted after the tenth 
    day following the final planting date for the insured crop. If you 
    elected the Catastrophic Risk Protection Endorsement or excluded 
    this coverage, and plant a substitute crop, no prevented planting 
    coverage will be provided. For example, if your amount of insurance 
    for timely planted acreage is 200 dollars per acre, your prevented 
    planting amount of insurance would be 50 dollars per acre (200 
    dollars multiplied by 0.25). You may elect to exclude prevented 
    planting coverage when a substitute crop is planted for harvest and 
    receive a reduction in the applicable premium rate. If you wish to 
    exclude this coverage, you must so indicate, on or before the sales 
    closing date, on your application or on a form approved by us. Your 
    election to exclude this coverage will remain in effect from year to 
    year unless you notify us in writing on our form by the applicable 
    sales closing date for the crop year for which you wish to include 
    this coverage. All acreage of the crop insured under this policy 
    will be subject to this exclusion.
        (2) Proof may be required that you had the inputs available to 
    plant and produce the intended crop with the expectation of at least 
    producing the yield upon which your amount of insurance is based.
        (3) In addition to the provisions of section 7 (Insurance 
    Period) of the General Crop Insurance Policy (Sec. 401.8), the 
    insurance period for prevented planting coverage begins:
        (i) On the sales closing date contained in the Special 
    Provisions for the insured crop in the county for the crop year the 
    application for insurance is accepted; or
        (ii) For any subsequent crop year, on the sales closing date for 
    the insured crop in the county for the previous crop year, provided 
    continuous coverage has been in effect since that date. For example: 
    If you make application and purchase a hybrid sorghum seed crop 
    insurance policy for the 1996 crop year, prevented planting coverage 
    will begin on the 1996 sales closing date for the insured crop in 
    the county. If the hybrid sorghum seed coverage remains in effect 
    for the 1997 crop year (is not terminated or cancelled during or 
    after the 1996 crop year, except the policy may have been cancelled 
    to transfer the policy to a different insurance provider, if there 
    is no lapse in coverage), prevented planting coverage for the 1997 
    crop year began on the 1996 sales closing date.
        (4) The acreage to which prevented planting coverage applies 
    will not exceed the total eligible acreage on all Farm Service 
    Agency (FSA) Farm Serial Numbers in which you have a share, adjusted 
    for any reconstitution that may have occurred on or before the sales 
    closing date. Eligible acreage for each FSA Farm Serial Number is 
    determined as follows:
        (i) Eligible acreage will not exceed the number of acres 
    required to be grown in the current crop year under a contract 
    executed with a seed company prior to the acreage reporting date.
        (ii) Acreage intended to be planted under an irrigated practice 
    will be limited to the number of acres for which you had adequate 
    irrigation facilities prior to the insured cause of loss which 
    prevented you from planting.
        (iii) Prevented planting coverage will not be provided for any 
    acreage:
        (A) That does not constitute at least 20 acres or 20 percent 
    (20%) of the acreage in the unit, whichever is less (Acreage that is 
    less than 20 acres or 20 percent of the acreage in the unit will be 
    presumed to have been intended to be planted to the insured crop 
    planted in the unit, unless you can show that you had the inputs 
    available before the final planting date to plant and produce 
    another insured crop on the acreage);
        (B) For which the actuarial table does not designate a premium 
    rate unless a written agreement designates such premium rate;
        (C) Used for conservation purposes or intended to be left 
    unplanted under any program administered by the United States 
    Department of Agriculture;
        (D) On which another crop is prevented from being planted, if 
    you have already received a prevented planting indemnity, guarantee 
    or amount of insurance for the same acreage in the same crop year, 
    unless you provide adequate records of acreage and production 
    showing that the acreage has a history of double-cropping in each of 
    the last four years;
        (E) On which the insured crop is prevented from being planted, 
    if any other crop is planted and fails, or is planted and harvested, 
    hayed or grazed on the same acreage in the same crop year, (other 
    than a cover crop as specified in paragraph (a)(3)(i) of this 
    section, or a substitute crop allowed in paragraph (a)(3)(ii) of 
    this section) unless you provide adequate records of acreage and 
    production showing that the acreage has a history of double-cropping 
    in each of the last four years;
        (F) When coverage is provided under the Catastrophic Risk 
    Protection Endorsement if you plant another crop for harvest on any 
    acreage you were prevented from planting in the same crop year, even 
    if you have a history of double cropping. If you have a Catastrophic 
    Risk Protection Endorsement and receive a prevented planting 
    indemnity, guarantee, or amount of insurance for a crop and are 
    prevented from planting another crop on the same acreage, you may 
    only receive the prevented planting indemnity, guarantee, or amount 
    of insurance for the crop on which the prevented planting indemnity, 
    guarantee, or amount of insurance is received; or
        (G) For which planting history or conservation plans indicate 
    that the acreage would have remained fallow for crop rotation 
    purposes.
        (iv) For the purpose of determining eligible acreage for 
    prevented planting coverage, acreage for all units will be combined 
    and be 
    
    [[Page 62721]]
    reduced by the number of acres of the insured crop timely planted and 
    late planted. For example, assume you have 100 acres eligible for 
    prevented planting coverage in which you have a 100 percent (100%) 
    share. The acreage is located in a single FSA Farm Serial Number 
    which you insure as two separate optional units consisting of 50 
    acres each. If you planted 60 acres of the insured crop on one 
    optional unit and 40 acres of the insured crop on the second 
    optional unit, your prevented planting eligible acreage would be 
    reduced to zero (i.e., 100 acres eligible for prevented planting 
    coverage minus 100 acres planted equals zero).
        (5) In accordance with the provisions of section 3 (Report of 
    Acreage, Share, and Practice (Acreage Report)) of the General Crop 
    Insurance Policy (Sec. 401.8), you must report by unit any insurable 
    acreage that you were prevented from planting. This report must be 
    submitted on or before the acreage reporting date. For the purpose 
    of determining acreage eligible for a prevented planting amount of 
    insurance the total amount of prevented planting and planted acres 
    cannot exceed the maximum number of acres eligible for prevented 
    planting coverage. Any acreage you report in excess of the number of 
    acres eligible for prevented planting coverage, or that exceeds the 
    number of eligible acres physically located in a unit, will be 
    deleted from your acreage report.
        (6) If the amount of premium you are required to pay (gross 
    premium less our subsidy) for the prevented planting acreage exceeds 
    the prevented planting liability on a unit, prevented planting 
    coverage will not be provided for that unit (no premium will be due 
    and no indemnity will be paid for such acreage).
    * * * * *
    
    
    Sec. 401.109  [Amended].
    
        3. Section 401.109 is amended by revising paragraph 13(o) to read 
    as follows:
    * * * * *
    
    13. Meaning of Terms
    
    * * * * *
        (o) Prevented planting--Inability to plant the insured crop with 
    proper equipment by the final planting date designated in the 
    Special Provisions for the insured crop in the county or the end of 
    the late planting period. You must have been unable to plant the 
    insured crop due to an insured cause of loss that has prevented the 
    majority of producers in the surrounding area from planting the same 
    crop.
    * * * * *
        4. Section 401.120 is amended by revising paragraphs 10(a)(3), 
    10(b), and 10(d) of the Rice Endorsement to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 401.120  Rice endorsement.
    
    * * * * *
    
    10. Late Planting and Prevented Planting
    
        (a) * * *
        (3) For prevented planting acreage, multiply the per acre 
    production guarantee for timely planted acreage by:
        (i) Thirty-five percent (0.35) and multiply the result by the 50 
    acres you were prevented from planting, if the acreage is eligible 
    for prevented planting coverage, and if the acreage is left idle for 
    the crop year, or if a cover crop is planted not for harvest. 
    Prevented planting compensation hereunder will not be denied because 
    the cover crop is hayed or grazed; or
        (ii) Seventeen and five tenths percent (0.175) and multiply the 
    result by the 50 acres you were prevented from planting, if the 
    acreage is eligible for prevented planting coverage, and if you 
    elect to plant a substitute crop for harvest after the 10th day 
    following the final planting date for the insured crop. (This 
    subparagraph (ii) is not applicable, and prevented planting coverage 
    is not available hereunder, if you elected the Catastrophic Risk 
    Protection Endorsement or you elected to exclude prevented planting 
    coverage when a substitute crop is planted (see subparagraph 
    10(d)(1)(iii))).
        The total of the three calculations will be the production 
    guarantee for the unit. Your premium will be based on the result of 
    multiplying the per acre production guarantee for timely planted 
    acreage by the 150 acres in the unit.
        (b) If you were prevented from planting, you must provide 
    written notice to us not later than the acreage reporting date.
    * * * * *
        (d) Prevented Planting (Including Planting After the Late 
    Planting Period).
        (1) If you were prevented from planting rice (see subsection 
    11(h)), you may elect:
        (i) To plant rice during the late planting period. The 
    production guarantee for such acreage will be determined in 
    accordance with paragraph 10(c)(1);
        (ii) Not to plant this acreage to any crop except a cover crop 
    not for harvest. You may also elect to plant the insured crop after 
    the late planting period. In either case, the production guarantee 
    for such acreage will be thirty-five percent (35%) of the production 
    guarantee for timely planted acres. For example, if your production 
    guarantee for timely planted acreage is 2000 pounds per acre, your 
    prevented planting production guarantee would be 700 pounds per acre 
    (2000 pounds multiplied by 0.35). If you elect to plant the insured 
    crop after the late planting period, production to count for such 
    acreage will be determined in accordance with subsections 7b and c; 
    or
        (iii) Not to plant the intended crop but plant a substitute crop 
    for harvest, in which case:
        (A) No prevented planting production guarantee will be provided 
    for such acreage if the substitute crop is planted on or before the 
    tenth day following the final planting date for the insured crop; or
        (B) A production guarantee equal to seventeen and five tenths 
    percent (17.5%) of the production guarantee for timely planted acres 
    will be provided for such acreage, if the substitute crop is planted 
    after the tenth day following the final planting date for the 
    insured crop. If you elected the Catastrophic Risk Protection 
    Endorsement or excluded this coverage and plant a substitute crop, 
    no prevented planting coverage will be provided. For example, if 
    your production guarantee for timely planted acreage is 2000 pounds 
    per acre, your prevented planting production guarantee would be 350 
    pounds per acre (2000 pounds multiplied by 0.175). You may elect to 
    exclude prevented planting coverage when a substitute crop is 
    planted for harvest and receive a reduction in the applicable 
    premium rate. If you wish to exclude this coverage, you must so 
    indicate, on or before the sales closing date, on your application 
    or on a form approved by us. Your election to exclude this coverage 
    will remain in effect from year to year unless you notify us in 
    writing on our form by the applicable sales closing date for the 
    crop year for which you wish to include this coverage. All acreage 
    of the crop insured under this policy will be subject to this 
    exclusion.
        (2) Proof may be required that you had the inputs available to 
    plant and produce the intended crop with the expectation of at least 
    producing the production guarantee.
        (3) In addition to the provisions of section 7 (Insurance 
    Period) of the General Crop Insurance Policy (Sec. 401.8), the 
    insurance period for prevented planting coverage begins:
        (i) On the sales closing date contained in the Special 
    Provisions for rice in the county for the crop year the application 
    for insurance is accepted; or
        (ii) For any subsequent crop year, on the sales closing date for 
    the insured crop in the county for the previous crop year, provided 
    continuous coverage has been in effect since that date. For example: 
    If you make application and purchase a rice crop insurance policy 
    for the 1996 crop year, prevented planting coverage will begin on 
    the 1996 sales closing date for the insured crop in the county. If 
    the rice coverage remains in effect for the 1997 crop year (is not 
    terminated or cancelled during or after the 1996 crop year, except 
    the policy may have been cancelled to transfer the policy to a 
    different insurance provider, if there is no lapse in coverage), 
    prevented planting coverage for the 1997 crop year began on the 1996 
    sales closing date.
        (4) The acreage to which prevented planting coverage applies 
    will not exceed the total eligible acreage on all Farm Service 
    Agency (FSA) Farm Serial Numbers in which you have a share, adjusted 
    for any reconstitution that may have occurred on or before the sales 
    closing date. Eligible acreage for each FSA Farm Serial Number is 
    determined as follows:
        (i) If you participate in any program administered by the United 
    States Department of Agriculture that limits the number of acres 
    that may be planted for the crop year, the acreage eligible for 
    prevented planting coverage will not exceed the total acreage 
    permitted to be planted to the insured crop.
        (ii) If you do not participate in any program administered by 
    the United States Department of Agriculture that limits the number 
    of acres that may be planted, and unless we agree in writing on or 
    before the sales closing date, eligible acreage will not exceed the 
    greater of:
        (A) The FSA base acreage for the insured crop, including acres 
    that could be flexed from another crop, if applicable; 
    
    [[Page 62722]]
    
        (B) The number of acres planted to rice on the FSA Farm Serial 
    Number during the previous crop year; or
        (C) One hundred percent (100%) of the simple average of the 
    number of acres planted to rice during the crop years that you 
    certified to determine your yield.
        (iii) Prevented planting coverage will not be provided for any 
    acreage:
        (A) That does not constitute at least 20 acres or 20 percent 
    (20%) of the acreage in the unit, whichever is less (Acreage that is 
    less than 20 acres or 20 percent of the acreage in the unit will be 
    presumed to have been intended to be planted to the insured crop 
    planted in the unit, unless you can show that you had the inputs 
    available before the final planting date to plant and produce 
    another insured crop on the acreage);
        (B) For which the actuarial table does not designate a premium 
    rate unless a written agreement designates such premium rate;
        (C) Used for conservation purposes or intended to be left 
    unplanted under any program administered by the United States 
    Department of Agriculture;
        (D) On which another crop is prevented from being planted, if 
    you have already received a prevented planting indemnity, guarantee 
    or amount of insurance for the same acreage in the same crop year, 
    unless you provide adequate records of acreage and production 
    showing that the acreage has a history of double-cropping in each of 
    the last four years;
        (E) On which the insured crop is prevented from being planted, 
    if any other crop is planted and fails, or is planted and harvested, 
    hayed or grazed on the same acreage in the same crop year, (other 
    than a cover crop as specified in paragraph (a)(3)(i) of this 
    section, or a substitute crop allowed in paragraph (a)(3)(ii) of 
    this section) unless you provide adequate records of acreage and 
    production showing that the acreage has a history of double-cropping 
    in each of the last four years;
        (F) When coverage is provided under the Catastrophic Risk 
    Protection Endorsement if you plant another crop for harvest on any 
    acreage you were prevented from planting in the same crop year, even 
    if you have a history of double cropping. If you have a Catastrophic 
    Risk Protection Endorsement and receive a prevented planting 
    indemnity, guarantee, or amount of insurance for a crop and are 
    prevented from planting another crop on the same acreage, you may 
    only receive the prevented planting indemnity, guarantee, or amount 
    of insurance for the crop on which the prevented planting indemnity, 
    guarantee, or amount of insurance is received; or
        (G) For which planting history or conservation plans indicate 
    that the acreage would have remained fallow for crop rotation 
    purposes.
        (iv) For the purpose of determining eligible acreage for 
    prevented planting coverage, acreage for all units will be combined 
    and be reduced by the number of rice acres timely planted and late 
    planted. For example, assume you have 100 acres eligible for 
    prevented planting coverage in which you have a 100 percent (100%) 
    share. The acreage is located in a single FSA Farm Serial Number 
    which you insure as two separate optional units consisting of 50 
    acres each. If you planted 60 acres of rice on one optional unit and 
    40 acres of rice on the second optional unit, your prevented 
    planting eligible acreage would be reduced to zero (i.e., 100 acres 
    eligible for prevented planting coverage minus 100 acres planted 
    equals zero).
        (5) In accordance with the provisions of section 3 (Report of 
    Acreage, Share, and Practice (Acreage Report) of the General Crop 
    Insurance Policy (Sec. 401.8), you must report by unit any insurable 
    acreage that you were prevented from planting. This report must be 
    submitted on or before the acreage reporting date. For the purpose 
    of determining acreage eligible for a prevented planting production 
    guarantee the total amount of prevented planting and planted acres 
    cannot exceed the maximum number of acres eligible for prevented 
    planting coverage. Any acreage you report in excess of the number of 
    acres eligible for prevented planting coverage, or that exceeds the 
    number of eligible acres physically located in a unit, will be 
    deleted from your acreage report.
        (6) If the amount of premium you are required to pay (gross 
    premium less our subsidy) for the prevented planting acreage exceeds 
    the prevented planting liability on a unit, prevented planting 
    coverage will not be provided for that unit (no premium will be due 
    and no indemnity will be paid for such acreage).
    * * * * *
        5. Section 401.120 is amended by revising paragraph 11(h) to read 
    as follows:
    * * * * *
    
    11. Meaning of Terms
    
    * * * * *
        (h) Prevented planting--Inability to plant the insured crop with 
    proper equipment by the final planting date designated in the 
    Special Provisions for the insured crop in the county or the end of 
    the late planting period. You must have been unable to plant the 
    insured crop due to an insured cause of loss that has prevented the 
    majority of producers in the surrounding area from planting the same 
    crop.
    * * * * *
    
    PART 443--[AMENDED]
    
        6. The authority citation for 7 CFR part 443 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1506(l), 1506(p).
    
        7. Section 443.7(d) is amended by revising paragraphs 17(a)(3), 
    17(b), and 17(d) of the Hybrid Seed Crop Insurance Policy to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 443.7  The application and policy.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) * * *
    
    17. Late Planting and Prevented Planting
    
        (a) * * *
        (3) For prevented planting acreage, multiply the per acre amount 
    of insurance for timely planted acreage by:
        (i) Forty percent (0.40) and multiply the result by the 50 acres 
    you were prevented from planting, if the acreage is eligible for 
    prevented planting coverage, and if the acreage is left idle for the 
    crop year, or if a cover crop is planted not for harvest. Prevented 
    planting compensation hereunder will not be denied because the cover 
    crop is hayed or grazed; or
        (ii) Twenty percent (0.20) and multiply the result by the 50 
    acres you were prevented from planting, if the acreage is eligible 
    for prevented planting coverage, and if you elect to plant a 
    substitute crop for harvest after the 10th day following the final 
    planting date for the insured crop. (This subparagraph (ii) is not 
    applicable, and prevented planting coverage is not available 
    hereunder, if you elected the Catastrophic Risk Protection 
    Endorsement or you elected to exclude prevented planting coverage 
    when a substitute crop is planted (see subparagraph 17(d)(1)(iii))).
        The total of the three calculations will be the amount of 
    insurance for the unit. Your premium will be based on the result of 
    multiplying the per acre amount of insurance for timely planted 
    acreage by the 150 insured crop acres in the unit.
        (b) If you were prevented from planting, you must provide 
    written notice to us not later than the acreage reporting date.
    * * * * *
        (d) Prevented Planting (Including Planting After the Late 
    Planting Period).
        (1) If you were prevented from planting the insured crop (see 
    subsection 18(w)), you may elect:
        (i) To plant the insured crop during the late planting period. 
    The amount of insurance for such acreage will be determined in 
    accordance with paragraph 17(c)(1);
        (ii) Not to plant this acreage to any crop except a cover crop 
    not for harvest. You may also elect to plant the insured crop after 
    the late planting period. In either case, the amount of insurance 
    for such acreage will be forty percent (40%) of the amount of 
    insurance for timely planted acres. For example, if your amount of 
    insurance for timely planted acreage is 200 dollars per acre, your 
    prevented planting amount of insurance would be 80 dollars per acre 
    (200 dollars multiplied by 0.40). If you elect to plant the insured 
    crop after the late planting period, production to count for such 
    acreage will be determined in accordance with subsection 9e.; or
        (iii) Not to plant the intended crop but plant a substitute crop 
    for harvest, in which case:
        (A) No prevented planting amount of insurance will be provided 
    for such acreage if the substitute crop is planted on or before the 
    tenth day following the final planting date for the insured crop; or
        (B) An amount of insurance equal to twenty percent (20%) of the 
    amount of insurance for timely planted acres will be provided for 
    such acreage, if the substitute crop is planted after the tenth day 
    following the final planting date for the insured crop. If you 
    elected the Catastrophic Risk Protection Endorsement or excluded 
    this coverage, and plant a substitute crop, no prevented planting 
    coverage will be provided. For example, if your amount of insurance 
    for timely planted acreage is 200 
    
    [[Page 62723]]
    dollars per acre, your prevented planting amount of insurance would be 
    40 dollars per acre (200 dollars multiplied by 0.20). You may elect 
    to exclude prevented planting coverage when a substitute crop is 
    planted for harvest and receive a reduction in the applicable 
    premium rate. If you wish to exclude this coverage, you must so 
    indicate, on or before the sales closing date, on your application 
    or on a form approved by us. Your election to exclude this coverage 
    will remain in effect from year to year unless you notify us in 
    writing on our form by the applicable sales closing date for the 
    crop year for which you wish to include this coverage. All acreage 
    of the crop insured under this policy will be subject to this 
    exclusion.
        (2) Proof may be required that you had the inputs available to 
    plant and produce the intended crop with the expectation of at least 
    producing the yield upon which your amount of insurance is based.
        (3) In addition to the provisions of section 7 (Insurance 
    Period), the insurance period for prevented planting coverage 
    begins:
        (i) On the sales closing date contained in the Special 
    Provisions for the insured crop in the county for the crop year the 
    application for insurance is accepted; or
        (ii) For any subsequent crop year, on the sales closing date for 
    the insured crop in the county for the previous crop year, provided 
    continuous coverage has been in effect since that date. For example: 
    If you make application and purchase a hybrid seed crop insurance 
    policy for the 1996 crop year, prevented planting coverage will 
    begin on the 1996 sales closing date for the insured crop in the 
    county. If the hybrid seed coverage remains in effect for the 1997 
    crop year (is not terminated or canceled during or after the 1996 
    crop year, except the policy may have been canceled to transfer the 
    policy to a different insurance provider, if there is no lapse in 
    coverage), prevented planting coverage for the 1997 crop year began 
    on the 1996 sales closing date.
        (4) The acreage to which prevented planting coverage applies 
    will not exceed the total eligible acreage on all Farm Service 
    Agency (FSA) Farm Serial Numbers in which you have a share, adjusted 
    for any reconstitution that may have occurred on or before the sales 
    closing date. Eligible acreage for each FSA Farm Serial Number is 
    determined as follows:
        (i) Eligible acreage will not exceed the number of acres 
    required to be grown in the current crop year under a contract 
    executed with a seed company prior to the acreage reporting date.
        (ii) Acreage intended to be planted under an irrigated practice 
    will be limited to the number of acres for which you had adequate 
    irrigation facilities prior to the insured cause of loss which 
    prevented you from planting.
        (iii) Prevented planting coverage will not be provided for any 
    acreage:
        (A) That does not constitute at least 20 acres or 20 percent 
    (20%) of the acreage in the unit, whichever is less (Acreage that is 
    less than 20 acres or 20 percent of the acreage in the unit will be 
    presumed to have been intended to be planted to the insured crop 
    planted in the unit, unless you can show that you had the inputs 
    available before the final planting date to plant and produce 
    another insured crop on the acreage);
        (B) For which the actuarial table does not designate a premium 
    rate unless a written agreement designates such premium rate;
        (C) Used for conservation purposes or intended to be left 
    unplanted under any program administered by the United States 
    Department of Agriculture;
        (D) On which another crop is prevented from being planted, if 
    you have already received a prevented planting indemnity, guarantee 
    or amount of insurance for the same acreage in the same crop year, 
    unless you provide adequate records of acreage and production 
    showing that the acreage has a history of double-cropping in each of 
    the last four years;
        (E) On which the insured crop is prevented from being planted, 
    if any other crop is planted and fails, or is planted and harvested, 
    hayed or grazed on the same acreage in the same crop year, (other 
    than a cover crop as specified in paragraph (a)(3)(i) of this 
    section, or a substitute crop allowed in paragraph (a)(3)(ii) of 
    this section) unless you provide adequate records of acreage and 
    production showing that the acreage has a history of double-cropping 
    in each of the last four years;
        (F) When coverage is provided under the Catastrophic Risk 
    Protection Endorsement if you plant another crop for harvest on any 
    acreage you were prevented from planting in the same crop year, even 
    if you have a history of double cropping. If you have a Catastrophic 
    Risk Protection Endorsement and receive a prevented planting 
    indemnity, guarantee, or amount of insurance for a crop and are 
    prevented from planting another crop on the same acreage, you may 
    only receive the prevented planting indemnity, guarantee, or amount 
    of insurance for the crop on which the prevented planting indemnity, 
    guarantee, or amount of insurance is received; or
        (G) For which planting history or conservation plans indicate 
    that the acreage would have remained fallow for crop rotation 
    purposes.
        (iv) For the purpose of determining eligible acreage for 
    prevented planting coverage, acreage for all units will be combined 
    and be reduced by the number of acres of the insured crop timely 
    planted and late planted. For example, assume you have 100 acres 
    eligible for prevented planting coverage in which you have a 100 
    percent (100%) share. The acreage is located in a single FSA Farm 
    Serial Number which you insure as two separate optional units 
    consisting of 50 acres each. If you planted 60 acres of the insured 
    crop on one optional unit and 40 acres of the insured crop on the 
    second optional unit, your prevented planting eligible acreage would 
    be reduced to zero (i.e., 100 acres eligible for prevented planting 
    coverage minus 100 acres planted equals zero).
        (5) In accordance with the provisions of section 3 (Report of 
    Acreage, Share, Type and Practice), you must report by unit any 
    insurable acreage that you were prevented from planting. This report 
    must be submitted on or before the acreage reporting date. For the 
    purpose of determining acreage eligible for a prevented planting 
    amount of insurance the total amount of prevented planting and 
    planted acres cannot exceed the maximum number of acres eligible for 
    prevented planting coverage. Any acreage you report in excess of the 
    number of acres eligible for prevented planting coverage, or that 
    exceeds the number of eligible acres physically located in a unit, 
    will be deleted from your acreage report.
        (6) If the amount of premium you are required to pay (gross 
    premium less our subsidy) for the prevented planting acreage exceeds 
    the prevented planting liability on a unit, prevented planting 
    coverage will not be provided for that unit (no premium will be due 
    and no indemnity will be paid for such acreage).
    * * * * *
        8. Section 443.7(d) is amended by revising paragraph 18(w) to read 
    as follows:
    * * * * *
    
    18. Meaning of Terms
    
    * * * * *
        (w) Prevented planting--Inability to plant the insured crop with 
    proper equipment by the final planting date designated in the 
    Special Provisions for the insured crop in the county or the end of 
    the late planting period. You must have been unable to plant the 
    insured crop due to an insured cause of loss that has prevented the 
    majority of producers in the surrounding area from planting the same 
    crop.
    * * * * *
    
    PART 457--[AMENDED]
    
        9. The authority citation for 7 CFR part 457 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 7 U.S.C. 1506(l), 1506(p).
    
        10. Section 457.101 is amended by revising paragraph l(p) of the 
    Small Grains Crop Provisions to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 457.101  Small Grains Crop Insurance.
    
    * * * * *
    
    1. Definitions
    
    * * * * *
        (p) Prevented planting--Inability to plant the insured crop with 
    proper equipment by the latest final planting date designated in the 
    Special Provisions for the insured crop in the county or the end of 
    the late planting period. You must have been unable to plant the 
    insured crop due to an insured cause of loss that has prevented the 
    majority of producers in the surrounding area from planting the same 
    crop.
    * * * * *
        11. Section 457.101 is amended by revising paragraphs 12(a)(3), 
    12(b), and 12(d) to read as follows:
    * * * * *
    
    12. Late Planting and Prevented Planting
    
        (a) * * *
        (3) For prevented planting acreage, multiply the per acre 
    production guarantee for timely planted acreage by:
        (i) Fifty percent (0.50) and multiply the result by the 50 acres 
    you were prevented 
    
    [[Page 62724]]
    from planting, if the acreage is eligible for prevented planting 
    coverage, and if the acreage is left idle for the crop year, or if a 
    cover crop is planted not for harvest. Prevented planting 
    compensation hereunder will not be denied because the cover crop is 
    hayed or grazed; or
        (ii) Twenty-five percent (0.25) and multiply the result by the 
    50 acres you were prevented from planting, if the acreage is 
    eligible for prevented planting coverage, and if you elect to plant 
    a substitute crop for harvest after the 10th day following the 
    latest final planting date for the insured crop. (This subparagraph 
    (ii) is not applicable, and prevented planting coverage is not 
    available hereunder, if you elected the Catastrophic Risk Protection 
    Endorsement or you elected to exclude prevented planting coverage 
    when a substitute crop is planted (see subparagraph 12(d)(1)(iii))).
        The total of the three calculations will be the production 
    guarantee for the unit. Your premium will be based on the result of 
    multiplying the per acre production guarantee for timely planted 
    acreage by the 150 acres in the unit.
        (b) If you were prevented from planting, you must provide 
    written notice to us not later than the acreage reporting date.
    * * * * *
        (d) Prevented Planting (Including Planting After the Late 
    Planting Period).
        (1) If you were prevented from planting the insured crop (see 
    subsection 1(p)), you may elect:
        (i) To plant the insured crop during the late planting period. 
    The production guarantee for such acreage will be determined in 
    accordance with paragraph 12(c)(1);
        (ii) Not to plant this acreage to any crop except a cover crop 
    not for harvest. You may also elect to plant the insured crop after 
    the late planting period. In either case, the production guarantee 
    for such acreage will be 50 percent (50%) of the production 
    guarantee for timely planted acres. In counties for which the 
    Special Provisions designate a spring final planting date, the 
    prevented planting guarantee will be based on your approved yield 
    for spring-planted acreage of the insured crop. For example, if your 
    production guarantee for timely planted acreage is 30 bushels per 
    acre, your prevented planting production guarantee would be 15 
    bushels per acre (30 bushels multiplied by 0.50). If you elect to 
    plant the insured crop after the late planting period, production to 
    count for such acreage will be determined in accordance with 
    subsections 11(c) through (e); or
        (iii) Not to plant the intended crop but plant a substitute crop 
    for harvest, in which case:
        (A) No prevented planting production guarantee will be provided 
    for such acreage if the substitute crop is planted on or before the 
    tenth day following the latest final planting date for the insured 
    crop; or
        (B) A production guarantee equal to twenty-five percent (25%) of 
    the production guarantee for timely planted acres will be provided 
    for such acreage, if the substitute crop is planted after the tenth 
    day following the latest final planting date for the insured crop. 
    If you elected the Catastrophic Risk Protection Endorsement or 
    excluded this coverage, and plant a substitute crop, no prevented 
    planting coverage will be provided. For example, if your production 
    guarantee for timely planted acreage is 30 bushels per acre, your 
    prevented planting production guarantee would be 7.5 bushels per 
    acre (30 bushels multiplied by 0.25). You may elect to exclude 
    prevented planting coverage when a substitute crop is planted for 
    harvest and receive a reduction in the applicable premium rate. If 
    you wish to exclude this coverage, you must so indicate, on or 
    before the sales closing date, on your application or on a form 
    approved by us. Your election to exclude this coverage will remain 
    in effect from year to year unless you notify us in writing on our 
    form by the applicable sales closing date for the crop year for 
    which you wish to include this coverage. All acreage of the crop 
    insured under this policy will be subject to this exclusion.
        (2) Proof may be required that you had the inputs available to 
    plant and produce the intended crop with the expectation of at least 
    producing the production guarantee.
        (3) In addition to the provisions of section 11 (Insurance 
    Period) of the Common Crop Insurance Policy (Sec. 457.8), the 
    insurance period for prevented planting coverage begins:
        (i) On the sales closing date contained in the Special 
    Provisions for the insured crop in the county for the crop year the 
    application for insurance is accepted; or
        (ii) For any subsequent crop year, on the sales closing date for 
    the insured crop in the county for the previous crop year, provided 
    continuous coverage has been in effect since that date. For example: 
    If you make application and purchase insurance for wheat for the 
    1996 crop year, prevented planting coverage will begin on the 1996 
    sales closing date for the insured crop in the county. If the wheat 
    coverage remains in effect for the 1997 crop year (is not terminated 
    or cancelled during or after the 1996 crop year, except the policy 
    may have been cancelled to transfer the policy to a different 
    insurance provider, if there is no lapse in coverage), prevented 
    planting coverage for the 1997 crop year began on the 1996 sales 
    closing date.
        (4) The acreage to which prevented planting coverage applies 
    will not exceed the total eligible acreage on all Farm Service 
    Agency (FSA) Farm Serial Numbers in which you have a share, adjusted 
    for any reconstitution that may have occurred on or before the sales 
    closing date. Eligible acreage for each FSA Farm Serial Number is 
    determined as follows:
        (i) If you participate in any program administered by the United 
    States Department of Agriculture that limits the number of acres 
    that may be planted for the crop year, the acreage eligible for 
    prevented planting coverage will not exceed the total acreage 
    permitted to be planted to the insured crop.
        (ii) If you do not participate in any program administered by 
    the United States Department of Agriculture that limits the number 
    of acres that may be planted, and unless we agree in writing on or 
    before the sales closing date, eligible acreage will not exceed the 
    greater of:
        (A) The FSA base acreage for the insured crop, including acres 
    that could be flexed from another crop, if applicable;
        (B) The number of acres planted to the insured crop on the FSA 
    Farm Serial Number during the previous crop year; or
        (C) One hundred percent (100%) of the simple average of the 
    number of acres planted to the insured crop during the crop years 
    that you certified to determine your yield.
        (iii) Acreage intended to be planted under an irrigated practice 
    will be limited to the number of acres for which you had adequate 
    irrigation facilities prior to the insured cause of loss which 
    prevented you from planting.
        (iv) Prevented planting coverage will not be provided for any 
    acreage:
        (A) That does not constitute at least 20 acres or 20 percent 
    (20%) of the acreage in the unit, whichever is less (Acreage that is 
    less than 20 acres or 20 percent of the acreage in the unit will be 
    presumed to have been intended to be planted to the insured crop 
    planted in the unit, unless you can show that you had the inputs 
    available before the final planting date to plant and produce 
    another insured crop on the acreage);
        (B) For which the actuarial table does not designate a premium 
    rate unless a written agreement designates such premium rate;
        (C) Used for conservation purposes or intended to be left 
    unplanted under any program administered by the United States 
    Department of Agriculture;
        (D) On which another crop is prevented from being planted, if 
    you have already received a prevented planting indemnity, guarantee 
    or amount of insurance for the same acreage in the same crop year, 
    unless you provide adequate records of acreage and production 
    showing that the acreage has a history of double-cropping in each of 
    the last four years;
        (E) On which the insured crop is prevented from being planted, 
    if any other crop is planted and fails, or is planted and harvested, 
    hayed or grazed on the same acreage in the same crop year, (other 
    than a cover crop as specified in paragraph (a)(3)(i) of this 
    section, or a substitute crop allowed in paragraph (a)(3)(ii) of 
    this section) unless you provide adequate records of acreage and 
    production showing that the acreage has a history of double-cropping 
    in each of the last four years;
        (F) When coverage is provided under the Catastrophic Risk 
    Protection Endorsement if you plant another crop for harvest on any 
    acreage you were prevented from planting in the same crop year, even 
    if you have a history of double cropping. If you have a Catastrophic 
    Risk Protection Endorsement and receive a prevented planting 
    indemnity, guarantee, or amount of insurance for a crop and are 
    prevented from planting another crop on the same acreage, you may 
    only receive the prevented planting indemnity, guarantee, or amount 
    of insurance for the crop on which the prevented planting indemnity, 
    guarantee, or amount of insurance is received; or
        (G) For which planting history or conservation plans indicate 
    that the acreage would have remained fallow for crop rotation 
    purposes.
        (v) For the purpose of determining eligible acreage for 
    prevented planting coverage, 
    
    [[Page 62725]]
    acreage for all units will be combined and be reduced by the number of 
    acres of the insured crop that are timely planted and late planted, 
    if the late planting period is applicable. For example, assume you 
    have 100 acres eligible for prevented planting coverage in which you 
    have a 100 percent (100%) share. The acreage is located in a single 
    FSA Farm Serial Number which you insure as two separate optional 
    units consisting of 50 acres each. If you planted 60 acres of the 
    insured crop on one optional unit and 40 acres of the insured crop 
    on the second optional unit, your prevented planting eligible 
    acreage would be reduced to zero (i.e., 100 acres eligible for 
    prevented planting coverage minus 100 acres planted equals zero).
        (5) In accordance with the provisions of section 6 (Report of 
    Acreage) of the Common Crop Insurance Policy (Sec. 457.8), you must 
    report by unit any insurable acreage that you were prevented from 
    planting. This report must be submitted on or before the acreage 
    reporting date for spring-planted acreage of the insured crop in 
    counties for which the Special Provisions designates a spring final 
    planting date, or the acreage reporting date for fall-planted 
    acreage of the insured crop in counties for which the Special 
    Provisions designates a fall final planting date only. For the 
    purpose of determining acreage eligible for a prevented planting 
    production guarantee the total amount of prevented planting and 
    planted acres cannot exceed the maximum number of acres eligible for 
    prevented planting coverage. Any acreage you report in excess of the 
    number of acres eligible for prevented planting coverage, or that 
    exceeds the number of eligible acres physically located in a unit, 
    will be deleted from your acreage report.
    * * * * *
        12. Section 457.104 is amended by revising paragraph 1(n) of the 
    Cotton Crop Provisions to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 457.104  Cotton crop insurance provisions.
    
    * * * * *
    
    1. Definitions
    
    * * * * *
        (n) Prevented planting--Inability to plant the insured crop with 
    proper equipment by the final planting date designated in the 
    Special Provisions for the insured crop in the county or the end of 
    the late planting period. You must have been unable to plant the 
    insured crop due to an insured cause of loss that has prevented the 
    majority of producers in the surrounding area from planting the same 
    crop.
    * * * * *
        13. Section 457.104 is amended by revising paragraphs 12(a)(3), 
    12(b), and 12(d) to read as follows:
    * * * * *
    
    12. Late Planting and Prevented Planting
    
        (a) * * *
        (3) For prevented planting acreage, multiply the per acre 
    production guarantee for timely planted acreage by:
        (i) Thirty-five percent (0.35) and multiply the result by the 50 
    acres you were prevented from planting, if the acreage is eligible 
    for prevented planting coverage, and if the acreage is left idle for 
    the crop year, or if a cover crop is planted not for harvest. 
    Prevented planting compensation hereunder will not be denied because 
    the cover crop is hayed or grazed; or
        (ii) Seventeen and five tenths percent (0.175) and multiply the 
    result by the 50 acres you were prevented from planting, if the 
    acreage is eligible for prevented planting coverage, and if you 
    elect to plant a substitute crop for harvest after the 10th day 
    following the final planting date for the insured crop. (This 
    subparagraph (ii) is not applicable, and prevented planting coverage 
    is not available hereunder, if you elected the Catastrophic Risk 
    Protection Endorsement or you elected to exclude prevented planting 
    coverage when a substitute crop is planted (see subparagraph 
    12(d)(1)(iii))).
        The total of the three calculations will be the production 
    guarantee for the unit. Your premium will be based on the result of 
    multiplying the per acre production guarantee for timely planted 
    acreage by the 150 acres in the unit.
        (b) If you were prevented from planting, you must provide 
    written notice to us not later than the acreage reporting date.
    * * * * *
        (d) Prevented Planting (Including Planting After the Late 
    Planting Period).
        (1) If you were prevented from planting cotton (see subsection 
    1(n)), you may elect:
        (i) To plant cotton during the late planting period. The 
    production guarantee for such acreage will be determined in 
    accordance with paragraph 12(c)(1);
        (ii) Not to plant this acreage to any crop except a cover crop 
    not for harvest. You may also elect to plant the insured crop after 
    the late planting period. In either case, the production guarantee 
    for such acreage will be thirty-five percent (35%) of the production 
    guarantee for timely planted acres. For example, if your production 
    guarantee for timely planted acreage is 700 pounds per acre, your 
    prevented planting production guarantee would be 245 pounds per acre 
    (700 pounds multiplied by 0.35). If you elect to plant the insured 
    crop after the late planting period, production to count for such 
    acreage will be determined in accordance with subsections 11 (c) and 
    (d); or
        (iii) Not to plant the intended crop but plant a substitute crop 
    for harvest, in which case:
        (A) No prevented planting production guarantee will be provided 
    for such acreage if the substitute crop is planted on or before the 
    tenth day following the final planting date for the insured crop; or
        (B) A production guarantee equal to seventeen and five tenths 
    percent (17.5%) of the production guarantee for timely planted acres 
    will be provided for such acreage, if the substitute crop is planted 
    after the tenth day following the final planting date for the 
    insured crop. If you elected the Catastrophic Risk Protection 
    Endorsement or excluded this coverage, and plant a substitute crop, 
    no prevented planting coverage will be provided. For example, if 
    your production guarantee for timely planted acreage is 700 pounds 
    per acre, your prevented planting production guarantee would be 
    122.5 pounds per acre (700 pounds multiplied by 0.175). You may 
    elect to exclude prevented planting coverage when a substitute crop 
    is planted for harvest and receive a reduction in the applicable 
    premium rate. If you wish to exclude this coverage, you must so 
    indicate, on or before the sales closing date, on your application 
    or on a form approved by us. Your election to exclude this coverage 
    will remain in effect from year to year unless you notify us in 
    writing on our form by the applicable sales closing date for the 
    crop year for which you wish to include this coverage. All acreage 
    of the crop insured under this policy will be subject to this 
    exclusion.
        (2) Proof may be required that you had the inputs available to 
    plant and produce the intended crop with the expectation of at least 
    producing the production guarantee.
        (3) In addition to the provisions of section 11 (Insurance 
    Period) of the Common Crop Insurance Policy (Sec. 457.8), the 
    insurance period for prevented planting coverage begins:
        (i) On the sales closing date contained in the Special 
    Provisions for the insured crop in the county for the crop year the 
    application for insurance is accepted; or
        (ii) For any subsequent crop year, on the sales closing date for 
    the insured crop in the county for the previous crop year, provided 
    continuous coverage has been in effect since that date. For example: 
    If you make application and purchase a cotton crop insurance policy 
    for the 1996 crop year, prevented planting coverage will begin on 
    the 1996 sales closing date for the cotton crop in the county. If 
    the cotton coverage remains in effect for the 1997 crop year (is not 
    terminated or cancelled during or after the 1996 crop year, except 
    the policy may have been cancelled to transfer the policy to a 
    different insurance provider, if there is no lapse in coverage), 
    prevented planting coverage for the 1997 crop year began on the 1996 
    sales closing date.
        (4) The acreage to which prevented planting coverage applies 
    will not exceed the total eligible acreage on all Farm Service 
    Agency (FSA) Farm Serial Numbers in which you have a share, adjusted 
    for any reconstitution that may have occurred on or before the sales 
    closing date. Eligible acreage for each FSA Farm Serial Number is 
    determined as follows:
        (i) If you participate in any program administered by the United 
    States Department of Agriculture that limits the number of acres 
    that may be planted for the crop year, the acreage eligible for 
    prevented planting coverage will not exceed the total acreage 
    permitted to be planted to the insured crop.
        (ii) If you do not participate in any program administered by 
    the United States Department of Agriculture that limits the number 
    of acres that may be planted, and unless we agree in writing on or 
    before the sales closing date, eligible acreage will not exceed the 
    greater of:
        (A) The FSA base acreage for the insured crop, including acres 
    that could be flexed from another crop, if applicable;
        (B) The number of acres planted to cotton on the FSA Farm Serial 
    Number during the previous crop year; or 
    
    [[Page 62726]]
    
        (C) One hundred percent (100%) of the simple average of the 
    number of acres planted to cotton during the crop years that you 
    certified to determine your yield.
        (iii) Acreage intended to be planted under an irrigated practice 
    will be limited to the number of acres for which you had adequate 
    irrigation facilities prior to the insured cause of loss which 
    prevented you from planting.
        (iv) Prevented planting coverage will not be provided for any 
    acreage:
        (A) That does not constitute at least 20 acres or 20 percent 
    (20%) of the acreage in the unit, whichever is less (Acreage that is 
    less than 20 acres or 20 percent of the acreage in the unit will be 
    presumed to have been intended to be planted to the insured crop 
    planted in the unit, unless you can show that you had the inputs 
    available before the final planting date to plant and produce 
    another insured crop on the acreage);
        (B) For which the actuarial table does not designate a premium 
    rate unless a written agreement designates such premium rate;
        (C) Used for conservation purposes or intended to be left 
    unplanted under any program administered by the United States 
    Department of Agriculture;
        (D) On which another crop is prevented from being planted, if 
    you have already received a prevented planting indemnity, guarantee 
    or amount of insurance for the same acreage in the same crop year, 
    unless you provide adequate records of acreage and production 
    showing that the acreage has a history of double-cropping in each of 
    the last four years;
        (E) On which the insured crop is prevented from being planted, 
    if any other crop is planted and fails, or is planted and harvested, 
    hayed or grazed on the same acreage in the same crop year, (other 
    than a cover crop as specified in paragraph (a)(3)(i) of this 
    section, or a substitute crop allowed in paragraph (a)(3)(ii) of 
    this section) unless you provide adequate records of acreage and 
    production showing that the acreage has a history of double-cropping 
    in each of the last four years;
        (F) When coverage is provided under the Catastrophic Risk 
    Protection Endorsement if you plant another crop for harvest on any 
    acreage you were prevented from planting in the same crop year, even 
    if you have a history of double cropping. If you have a Catastrophic 
    Risk Protection Endorsement and receive a prevented planting 
    indemnity, guarantee, or amount of insurance for a crop and are 
    prevented from planting another crop on the same acreage, you may 
    only receive the prevented planting indemnity, guarantee, or amount 
    of insurance for the crop on which the prevented planting indemnity, 
    guarantee, or amount of insurance is received; or
        (G) For which planting history or conservation plans indicate 
    that the acreage would have remained fallow for crop rotation 
    purposes.
        (v) For the purpose of determining eligible acreage for 
    prevented planting coverage, acreage for all units will be combined 
    and be reduced by the number of cotton acres timely planted and late 
    planted. For example, assume you have 100 acres eligible for 
    prevented planting coverage in which you have a 100 percent (100%) 
    share. The acreage is located in a single FSA Farm Serial Number 
    which you insure as two separate optional units consisting of 50 
    acres each. If you planted 60 acres of cotton on one optional unit 
    and 40 acres of cotton on the second optional unit, your prevented 
    planting eligible acreage would be reduced to zero (i.e., 100 acres 
    eligible for prevented planting coverage minus 100 acres planted 
    equals zero).
        (5) In accordance with the provisions of section 6 (Report of 
    Acreage) of the Common Crop Insurance Policy (Sec. 457.8), you must 
    report by unit any insurable acreage that you were prevented from 
    planting. This report must be submitted on or before the acreage 
    reporting date. For the purpose of determining acreage eligible for 
    a prevented planting production guarantee the total amount of 
    prevented planting and planted acres cannot exceed the maximum 
    number of acres eligible for prevented planting coverage. Any 
    acreage you report in excess of the number of acres eligible for 
    prevented planting coverage, or that exceeds the number of eligible 
    acres physically located in a unit, will be deleted from your 
    acreage report.
    * * * * *
        14. Section 457.105 is amended by revising paragraph 1(l) of the 
    ELS Cotton Crop Provisions to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 457.105  Extra long staple cotton crop insurance provisions.
    
    * * * * *
    
    1. Definitions
    
    * * * * *
        (l) Prevented planting--Inability to plant the insured crop with 
    proper equipment by the final planting date designated in the 
    Special Provisions for the insured crop in the county. You must have 
    been unable to plant the insured crop due to an insured cause of 
    loss that has prevented the majority of producers in the surrounding 
    area from planting the same crop.
    * * * * *
        15. Section 457.105 is amended by revising paragraphs 12(a)(2) and 
    12 (b) through (h) to read as follows:
    * * * * *
    
    12. Prevented Planting
    
        (a) * * *
        (2) For prevented planting acreage, multiply the per acre 
    production guarantee for timely planted acreage by:
        (i) Thirty-five percent (0.35) and multiply the result by the 50 
    acres you were prevented from planting, if the acreage is eligible 
    for prevented planting coverage, and if the acreage is left idle for 
    the crop year, or if a cover crop is planted not for harvest. 
    Prevented planting compensation hereunder will not be denied because 
    the cover crop is hayed or grazed; or
        (ii) Seventeen and five tenths percent (0.175) and multiply the 
    result by the 50 acres you were prevented from planting, if the 
    acreage is eligible for prevented planting coverage, and if you 
    elect to plant a substitute crop for harvest after the 10th day 
    following the final planting date for the insured crop. (This 
    subparagraph (ii) is not applicable, and prevented planting coverage 
    is not available hereunder, if you elected the Catastrophic Risk 
    Protection Endorsement or you elected to exclude prevented planting 
    coverage when a substitute crop is planted (see subsection 
    12(b)(2))).
        The total of the two calculations will be the production 
    guarantee for the unit. Your premium will be based on the result of 
    multiplying the per acre production guarantee for timely planted 
    acreage by the 100 acres in the unit.
        (b) If you were prevented from planting ELS cotton (see 
    subsection 1(l)), you may elect:
        (1) Not to plant this acreage to any crop except a cover crop 
    not for harvest. You may also elect to plant the insured crop after 
    the final planting date. In either case, the production guarantee 
    for such acreage will be thirty-five percent (35%) of the production 
    guarantee for timely planted acres. For example, if your production 
    guarantee for timely planted acreage is 600 pounds per acre, your 
    prevented planting production guarantee would be 210 pounds per acre 
    (600 pounds multiplied by 0.35). If you elect to plant the insured 
    crop after the final planting date, production to count for such 
    acreage will be determined in accordance with subsections 11(c) 
    through (f); or
        (2) Not to plant the intended crop but plant a substitute crop 
    for harvest, in which case:
        (A) No prevented planting production guarantee will be provided 
    for such acreage if the substitute crop is planted on or before the 
    tenth day following the final planting date for the insured crop; or
        (B) A production guarantee equal to seventeen and five tenths 
    percent (17.5%) of the production guarantee for timely planted acres 
    will be provided for such acreage, if the substitute crop is planted 
    after the tenth day following the final planting date for the 
    insured crop. If you elected the Catastrophic Risk Protection 
    Endorsement or excluded this coverage, and plant a substitute crop, 
    no prevented planting coverage will be provided. For example, if 
    your production guarantee for timely planted acreage is 700 pounds 
    per acre, your prevented planting production guarantee would be 
    122.5 pounds per acre (700 pounds multiplied by 0.175). You may 
    elect to exclude prevented planting coverage when a substitute crop 
    is planted for harvest and receive a reduction in the applicable 
    premium rate. If you wish to exclude this coverage, you must so 
    indicate, on or before the sales closing date, on your application 
    or on a form approved by us. Your election to exclude this coverage 
    will remain in effect from year to year unless you notify us in 
    writing on our form by the applicable sales closing date for the 
    crop year for which you wish to include this coverage. All acreage 
    of the crop insured under this policy will be subject to this 
    exclusion.
        (c) Proof may be required that you had the inputs available to 
    plant and produce the intended crop with the expectation of at least 
    producing the production guarantee.
        (d) In addition to the provisions of section 11 (Insurance 
    Period) of the Common Crop Insurance Policy (Sec. 457.8), the 
    insurance 
    
    [[Page 62727]]
    period for prevented planting coverage begins:
        (i) On the sales closing date contained in the Special 
    Provisions for the insured crop in the county for the crop year the 
    application for insurance is accepted; or
        (ii) For any subsequent crop year, on the sales closing date for 
    the insured crop in the county for the previous crop year, provided 
    continuous coverage has been in effect since that date. For example: 
    If you make application and purchase an ELS cotton crop insurance 
    policy for the 1996 crop year, prevented planting coverage will 
    begin on the 1996 sales closing date for the insured crop in the 
    county. If the ELS cotton coverage remains in effect for the 1997 
    crop year (is not terminated or cancelled during or after the 1996 
    crop year, except the policy may have been cancelled to transfer the 
    policy to a different insurance provider, if there is no lapse in 
    coverage), prevented planting coverage for the 1997 crop year began 
    on the 1996 sales closing date.
        (e) If you were prevented from planting, you must provide 
    written notice to us not later than the acreage reporting date.
        (f) The acreage to which prevented planting coverage applies 
    will not exceed the total eligible acreage on all Farm Service 
    Agency (FSA) Farm Serial Numbers in which you have a share, adjusted 
    for any reconstitution that may have occurred on or before the sales 
    closing date. Eligible acreage for each FSA Farm Serial Number is 
    determined as follows:
        (1) If you participate in any program administered by the United 
    States Department of Agriculture that limits the number of acres 
    that may be planted for the crop year, the acreage eligible for 
    prevented planting coverage will not exceed the total acreage 
    permitted to be planted to the insured crop.
        (2) If you do not participate in any program administered by the 
    United States Department of Agriculture that limits the number of 
    acres that may be planted, and unless we agree in writing on or 
    before the sales closing date, eligible acreage will not exceed the 
    greater of:
        (i) The FSA base acreage for the insured crop, including acres 
    that could be flexed from another crop, if applicable;
        (ii) The number of acres planted to ELS cotton on the FSA Farm 
    Serial Number during the previous crop year; or
        (iii) One hundred percent (100%) of the simple average of the 
    number of acres planted to ELS cotton during the crop years that you 
    certified to determine your yield.
        (3) Acreage intended to be planted under an irrigated practice 
    will be limited to the number of acres for which you had adequate 
    irrigation facilities prior to the insured cause of loss which 
    prevented you from planting.
        (4) Prevented planting coverage will not be provided for any 
    acreage:
        (i) That does not constitute at least 20 acres or 20 percent 
    (20%) of the acreage in the unit, whichever is less (Acreage that is 
    less than 20 acres or 20 percent of the acreage in the unit will be 
    presumed to have been intended to be planted to the insured crop 
    planted in the unit, unless you can show that you had the inputs 
    available before the final planting date to plant and produce 
    another insured crop on the acreage);
        (ii) For which the actuarial table does not designate a premium 
    rate unless a written agreement designates such premium rate;
        (iii) Used for conservation purposes or intended to be left 
    unplanted under any program administered by the United States 
    Department of Agriculture;
        (iv) On which another crop is prevented from being planted, if 
    you have already received a prevented planting indemnity, guarantee 
    or amount of insurance for the same acreage in the same crop year;
        (v) On which the insured crop is prevented from being planted, 
    if any other crop is planted and fails, or is planted and harvested, 
    hayed or grazed on the same acreage in the same crop year, (other 
    than a cover crop as specified in paragraph (a)(2)(i) of this 
    section, or a substitute crop allowed in paragraph (a)(2)(ii) of 
    this section);
        (vi) When coverage is provided under the Catastrophic Risk 
    Protection Endorsement if you plant another crop for harvest on any 
    acreage you were prevented from planting in the same crop year. If 
    you have a Catastrophic Risk Protection Endorsement and receive a 
    prevented planting indemnity, guarantee, or amount of insurance for 
    a crop and are prevented from planting another crop on the same 
    acreage, you may only receive the prevented planting indemnity, 
    guarantee, or amount of insurance for the crop on which the 
    prevented planting indemnity, guarantee, or amount of insurance is 
    received; or
        (vii) For which planting history or conservation plans indicate 
    that the acreage would have remained fallow for crop rotation 
    purposes.
        (5) For the purpose of determining eligible acreage for 
    prevented planting coverage, acreage for all units will be combined 
    and be reduced by the number of ELS cotton acres timely planted. For 
    example, assume you have 100 acres eligible for prevented planting 
    coverage in which you have a 100 percent (100%) share. The acreage 
    is located in a single FSA Farm Serial Number which you insure as 
    two separate optional units consisting of 50 acres each. If you 
    planted 60 acres of ELS cotton on one optional unit and 40 acres of 
    ELS cotton on the second optional unit, your prevented planting 
    eligible acreage would be reduced to zero. (i.e., 100 acres eligible 
    for prevented planting coverage minus 100 acres planted equals 
    zero).
        (g) In accordance with the provisions of section 6 (Report of 
    Acreage) of the Common Crop Insurance Policy (Sec. 457.8), you must 
    report by unit any insurable acreage that you were prevented from 
    planting. This report must be submitted on or before the acreage 
    reporting date. For the purpose of determining acreage eligible for 
    a prevented planting production guarantee the total amount of 
    prevented planting and planted acres cannot exceed the maximum 
    number of acres eligible for prevented planting coverage. Any 
    acreage you report in excess of the number of acres eligible for 
    prevented planting coverage, or that exceeds the number of eligible 
    acres physically located in a unit, will be deleted from your 
    acreage report.
        (h) Late planting provisions are not available under these crop 
    provisions.
    * * * * *
        16. Section 457.108 is amended by revising paragraph 1(l) of the 
    Sunflower Seed Crop Provisions to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 457.108  Sunflower seed crop insurance provisions.
    
    * * * * *
    
    1. Definitions
    
    * * * * *
        (1) Prevented planting--Inability to plant the insured crop with 
    proper equipment by the final planting date designated in the 
    Special Provisions for the insured crop in the county or the end of 
    the late planting period. You must have been unable to plant the 
    insured crop due to an insured cause of loss that has prevented the 
    majority of producers in the surrounding area from planting the same 
    crop.
    * * * * *
        17. Section 457.108 is amended by revising paragraphs 13(a)(3), 
    13(b), and 13(d) to read as follows:
    * * * * *
    
    13. Late Planting and Prevented Planting
    
        (a) * * *
        (3) For prevented planting acreage, multiply the per acre 
    production guarantee for timely planted acreage by:
        (i) Fifty percent (0.50) and multiply the result by the 50 acres 
    you were prevented from planting, if the acreage is eligible for 
    prevented planting coverage, and if the acreage is left idle for the 
    crop year, or if a cover crop is planted not for harvest. Prevented 
    planting compensation hereunder will not be denied because the cover 
    crop is hayed or grazed; or
        (ii) Twenty-five percent (0.25) and multiply the result by the 
    50 acres you were prevented from planting, if the acreage is 
    eligible for prevented planting coverage, and if you elect to plant 
    a substitute crop for harvest after the 10th day following the final 
    planting date for the insured crop. (This subparagraph (ii) is not 
    applicable, and prevented planting coverage is not available 
    hereunder, if you elected the Catastrophic Risk Protection 
    Endorsement or you elected to exclude prevented planting coverage 
    when a substitute crop is planted (see subsection 13(d)(1)(iii))).
        The total of the three calculations will be the production 
    guarantee for the unit. Your premium will be based on the result of 
    multiplying the per acre production guarantee for timely planted 
    acreage by the 150 acres in the unit.
        (b) If you were prevented from planting, you must provide 
    written notice to us not later than the acreage reporting date .
    * * * * *
        (d) Prevented Planting (Including Planting After the Late 
    Planting Period)
        (1) If you were prevented from planting sunflowers (see 
    subsection 1(l)), you may elect:
        (i) To plant sunflower seed during the late planting period. The 
    production guarantee for such acreage will be determined in 
    accordance with paragraph 13(c)(1); 
    
    [[Page 62728]]
    
        (ii) Not to plant this acreage to any crop except a cover crop 
    not for harvest. You may also elect to plant the insured crop after 
    the late planting period. In either case, the production guarantee 
    for such acreage will be fifty percent (50%) of the production 
    guarantee for timely planted acres. For example, if your production 
    guarantee for timely planted acreage is 900 pounds per acre, your 
    prevented planting production guarantee would be 450 pounds per acre 
    (900 pounds multiplied by 0.50). If you elect to plant the insured 
    crop after the late planting period, production to count for such 
    acreage will be determined in accordance with subsections 12 (c) 
    through (e); or
        (iii) Not to plant the intended crop but plant a substitute crop 
    for harvest, in which case:
        (A) No prevented planting production guarantee will be provided 
    for such acreage if the substitute crop is planted on or before the 
    tenth day following the final planting date for the insured crop; or
        (B) A production guarantee equal to twenty-five percent (25%) of 
    the production guarantee for timely planted acres will be provided 
    for such acreage, if the substitute crop is planted after the tenth 
    day following the final planting date for the insured crop. If you 
    elected the Catastrophic Risk Protection Endorsement or excluded 
    this coverage, and plant a substitute crop, no prevented planting 
    coverage will be provided. For example, if your production guarantee 
    for timely planted acreage is 900 pounds per acre, your prevented 
    planting production guarantee would be 225 pounds per acre (900 
    pounds multiplied by 0.25). You may elect to exclude prevented 
    planting coverage when a substitute crop is planted for harvest and 
    receive a reduction in the applicable premium rate. If you wish to 
    exclude this coverage, you must so indicate, on or before the sales 
    closing date, on your application or on a form approved by us. Your 
    election to exclude this coverage will remain in effect from year to 
    year unless you notify us in writing on our form by the applicable 
    sales closing date for the crop year for which you wish to include 
    this coverage. All acreage of the crop insured under this policy 
    will be subject to this exclusion.
        (2) Proof may be required that you had the inputs available to 
    plant and produce the intended crop with the expectation of at least 
    producing the production guarantee.
        (3) In addition to the provisions of section 11 (Insurance 
    Period) of the Basic Provisions (Sec. 457.8), the insurance period 
    for prevented planting coverage begins:
        (i) On the sales closing date contained in the Special 
    Provisions for the insured crop in the county for the crop year the 
    application for insurance is accepted; or
        (ii) For any subsequent crop year, on the sales closing date for 
    the insured crop in the county for the previous crop year, provided 
    continuous coverage has been in effect since that date. For example: 
    If you make application and purchase a sunflower seed crop insurance 
    policy for the 1996 crop year, prevented planting coverage will 
    begin on the 1996 sales closing date for the insured crop in the 
    county. If the sunflower seed coverage remains in effect for the 
    1997 crop year (is not terminated or cancelled during or after the 
    1996 crop year, except the policy may have been cancelled to 
    transfer the policy to a different insurance provider, if there is 
    no lapse in coverage), prevented planting coverage for the 1997 crop 
    year began on the 1996 sales closing date.
        (4) The acreage to which prevented planting coverage applies 
    will not exceed the total eligible acreage on all Farm Service 
    Agency (FSA) Farm Serial Numbers in which you have a share, adjusted 
    for any reconstitution that may have occurred on or before the sales 
    closing date. Eligible acreage for each FSA Farm Serial Number is 
    determined as follows:
        (i) If you participate in any program administered by the United 
    States Department of Agriculture that limits the number of acres 
    that may be planted for the crop year, the acreage eligible for 
    prevented planting coverage will not exceed the total acreage 
    permitted to be planted to the insured crop.
        (ii) If you do not participate in any program administered by 
    the United States Department of Agriculture that limits the number 
    of acres that may be planted, and unless we agree in writing on or 
    before the sales closing date, eligible acreage will not exceed the 
    greater of:
        (A) The FSA base acreage for the insured crop, including acres 
    that could be flexed from another crop, if applicable;
        (B) The number of acres planted to sunflower seed on the FSA 
    Farm Serial Number during the previous crop year; or
        (C) One hundred percent (100%) of the simple average of the 
    number of acres planted to sunflower seed during the crop years that 
    you certified to determine your yield.
        (iii) Acreage intended to be planted under an irrigated practice 
    will be limited to the number of acres for which you had adequate 
    irrigation facilities prior to the insured cause of loss which 
    prevented you from planting.
        (iv) Prevented planting coverage will not be provided for any 
    acreage:
        (A) That does not constitute at least 20 acres or 20 percent 
    (20%) of the acreage in the unit, whichever is less (Acreage that is 
    less than 20 acres or 20 percent of the acreage in the unit will be 
    presumed to have been intended to be planted to the insured crop 
    planted in the unit, unless you can show that you had the inputs 
    available before the final planting date to plant and produce 
    another insured crop on the acreage);
        (B) For which the actuarial table does not designate a premium 
    rate unless a written agreement designates such premium rate;
        (C) Used for conservation purposes or intended to be left 
    unplanted under any program administered by the United States 
    Department of Agriculture;
        (D) On which another crop is prevented from being planted, if 
    you have already received a prevented planting indemnity, guarantee 
    or amount of insurance for the same acreage in the same crop year, 
    unless you provide adequate records of acreage and production 
    showing that the acreage has a history of double-cropping in each of 
    the last four years;
        (E) On which the insured crop is prevented from being planted, 
    if any other crop is planted and fails, or is planted and harvested, 
    hayed or grazed on the same acreage in the same crop year, (other 
    than a cover crop as specified in paragraph (a)(3)(i) of this 
    section, or a substitute crop allowed in paragraph (a)(3)(ii) of 
    this section), unless you provide adequate records of acreage and 
    production showing that the acreage has a history of double-cropping 
    in each of the last four years;
        (F) When coverage is provided under the Catastrophic Risk 
    Protection Endorsement if you plant another crop for harvest on any 
    acreage you were prevented from planting in the same crop year, even 
    if you have a history of double cropping. If you have a Catastrophic 
    Risk Protection Endorsement and receive a prevented planting 
    indemnity, guarantee, or amount of insurance for a crop and are 
    prevented from planting another crop on the same acreage, you may 
    only receive the prevented planting indemnity, guarantee, or amount 
    of insurance for the crop on which the prevented planting indemnity, 
    guarantee, or amount of insurance is received; or
        (G) For which planting history or conservation plans indicate 
    that the acreage would have remained fallow for crop rotation 
    purposes.
        (v) For the purpose of determining eligible acreage for 
    prevented planting coverage, acreage for all units will be combined 
    and be reduced by the number of sunflower acres timely planted and 
    late planted. For example, assume you have 100 acres eligible for 
    prevented planting coverage in which you have a 100 percent (100%) 
    share. The acreage is located in a single FSA Farm Serial Number 
    which you insure as two separate optional units consisting of 50 
    acres each. If you planted 60 acres of sunflower seed on one 
    optional unit and 40 acres of sunflower seed on the second optional 
    unit, your prevented planting eligible acreage would be reduced to 
    zero (i.e.,100 acres eligible for prevented planting coverage minus 
    100 acres planted equals zero).
        (5) In accordance with the provisions of section 6 (Report of 
    Acreage) of the Basic Provisions (Sec. 457.8), you must report by 
    unit any insurable acreage that you were prevented from planting. 
    This report must be submitted on or before the acreage reporting 
    date. For the purpose of determining acreage eligible for a 
    prevented planting production guarantee the total amount of 
    prevented planting and planted acres cannot exceed the maximum 
    number of acres eligible for prevented planting coverage. Any 
    acreage you report in excess of the number of acres eligible for 
    prevented planting coverage, or that exceeds the number of eligible 
    acres physically located in a unit, will be deleted from your 
    acreage report.
    * * * * *
        18. Section 457.113 is amended by revising paragraph 1(n) of the 
    Coarse Grains Crop Provisions to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 457.113  Coarse grains crop insurance provisions.
    
    * * * * *
    
    1. Definitions
    
    * * * * * 
    
    [[Page 62729]]
    
        (n) Prevented planting--Inability to plant the insured crop with 
    proper equipment by the final planting date designated in the 
    Special Provisions for the insured crop in the county or the end of 
    the late planting period. You must have been unable to plant the 
    insured crop due to an insured cause of loss that has prevented the 
    majority of producers in the surrounding area from planting the same 
    crop.
    * * * * *
        19. Section 457.113 is amended by revising paragraphs 13(a)(3), 
    13(b), and 13(d) to read as follows:
    * * * * *
    
    13. Late Planting and Prevented Planting
    
        (a) * * *
        (3) For prevented planting acreage, multiply the per acre 
    production guarantee for timely planted acreage by:
        (i) Fifty percent (0.50) and multiply the result by the 50 acres 
    you were prevented from planting, if the acreage is eligible for 
    prevented planting coverage, and if the acreage is left idle for the 
    crop year, or if a cover crop is planted not for harvest. Prevented 
    planting compensation hereunder will not be denied because the cover 
    crop is hayed or grazed; or
        (ii) Twenty-five percent (0.25) and multiply the result by the 
    50 acres you were prevented from planting, if the acreage is 
    eligible for prevented planting coverage, and if you elect to plant 
    a substitute crop for harvest after the 10th day following the final 
    planting date for the insured crop. (This subparagraph (ii) is not 
    applicable, and prevented planting coverage is not available 
    hereunder, if you elected the Catastrophic Risk Protection 
    Endorsement or you elected to exclude prevented planting coverage 
    when a substitute crop is planted (see subsection 13(d)(1)(iii)).)
        The total of the three calculations will be the production 
    guarantee for the unit. Your premium will be based on the result of 
    multiplying the per acre production guarantee for timely planted 
    acreage by the 150 acres in the unit.
        (b) If you were prevented from planting, you must provide 
    written notice to us not later than the acreage reporting date.
    * * * * *
        (d) Prevented Planting (Including Planting After the Late 
    Planting Period).
        (1) If you were prevented from planting the insured crop (see 
    subsection 1(n)), you may elect:
        (i) To plant the insured crop during the late planting period. 
    The production guarantee for such acreage will be determined in 
    accordance with paragraph 13(c)(1);
        (ii) Not to plant this acreage to any crop except a cover crop 
    not for harvest. You may also elect to plant the insured crop after 
    the late planting period. In either case, the production guarantee 
    for such acreage will be fifty percent (50%) of the production 
    guarantee for timely planted acres. For example, if your production 
    guarantee for timely planted acreage is 30 bushels per acre, your 
    prevented planting production guarantee would be 15 bushels per acre 
    (30 bushels multiplied by 0.50). If you elect to plant the insured 
    crop after the late planting period, production to count for such 
    acreage will be determined in accordance with subsections 12(c) 
    through (g); or
        (iii) Not to plant the intended crop but plant a substitute crop 
    for harvest, in which case:
        (A) No prevented planting production guarantee will be provided 
    for such acreage if the substitute crop is planted on or before the 
    tenth day following the final planting date for the insured crop; or
        (B) A production guarantee equal to twenty-five percent (25%) of 
    the production guarantee for timely planted acres will be provided 
    for such acreage, if the substitute crop is planted after the tenth 
    day following the final planting date for the insured crop. If you 
    elected the Catastrophic Risk Protection Endorsement or excluded 
    this coverage, and plant a substitute crop, no prevented planting 
    coverage will be provided. For example, if your production guarantee 
    for timely planted acreage is 30 bushels per acre, your prevented 
    planting production guarantee would be 7.5 bushels per acre (30 
    bushels multiplied by 0.25). You may elect to exclude prevented 
    planting coverage when a substitute crop is planted for harvest and 
    receive a reduction in the applicable premium rate. If you wish to 
    exclude this coverage, you must so indicate, on or before the sales 
    closing date, on your application or on a form approved by us. Your 
    election to exclude this coverage will remain in effect from year to 
    year unless you notify us in writing on our form by the applicable 
    sales closing date for the crop year for which you wish to include 
    this coverage. All acreage of the crop insured under this policy 
    will be subject to this exclusion.
        (2) Proof may be required that you had the inputs available to 
    plant and produce the intended crop with the expectation of at least 
    producing the production guarantee.
        (3) In addition to the provisions of section 11 (Insurance 
    Period) of the Common Crop Insurance Policy (Sec. 457.8), the 
    insurance period for prevented planting coverage begins:
        (i) On the sales closing date contained in the Special 
    Provisions for the insured crop in the county for the crop year the 
    application for insurance is accepted; or
        (ii) For any subsequent crop year, on the sales closing date for 
    the insured crop in the county for the previous crop year, provided 
    continuous coverage has been in effect since that date. For example: 
    If you make application and purchase insurance for corn for the 1996 
    crop year, prevented planting coverage will begin on the 1996 sales 
    closing date for corn in the county. If the corn coverage remains in 
    effect for the 1997 crop year (is not terminated or canceled during 
    or after the 1996 crop year, except the policy may have been 
    canceled to transfer the policy to a different insurance provider, 
    if there is no lapse in coverage), prevented planting coverage for 
    the 1997 crop year began on the 1996 sales closing date.
        (4) The acreage to which prevented planting coverage applies 
    will not exceed the total eligible acreage on all Farm Service 
    Agency (FSA) Farm Serial Numbers in which you have a share, adjusted 
    for any reconstitution that may have occurred on or before the sales 
    closing date. Eligible acreage for each FSA Farm Serial Number is 
    determined as follows:
        (i) If you participate in any program administered by the United 
    States Department of Agriculture that limits the number of acres 
    that may be planted for the crop year, the acreage eligible for 
    prevented planting coverage will not exceed the total acreage 
    permitted to be planted to the insured crop.
        (ii) If you do not participate in any program administered by 
    the United States Department of Agriculture that limits the number 
    of acres that may be planted, and unless we agree in writing on or 
    before the sales closing date, eligible acreage will not exceed the 
    greater of:
        (A) The FSA base acreage for the insured crop, including acres 
    that could be flexed from another crop, if applicable;
        (B) The number of acres planted to the insured crop on the FSA 
    Farm Serial Number during the previous crop year; or
        (C) One hundred percent (100%) of the simple average of the 
    number of acres planted to the insured crop during the crop years 
    that you certified to determine your yield.
        (iii) Acreage intended to be planted under an irrigated practice 
    will be limited to the number of acres for which you had adequate 
    irrigation facilities prior to the insured cause of loss which 
    prevented you from planting.
        (iv) Prevented planting coverage will not be provided for any 
    acreage:
        (A) That does not constitute at least 20 acres or 20 percent 
    (20%) of the acreage in the unit, whichever is less (Acreage that is 
    less than 20 acres or 20 percent of the acreage in the unit will be 
    presumed to have been intended to be planted to the insured crop 
    planted in the unit, unless you can show that you had the inputs 
    available before the final planting date to plant and produce 
    another insured crop on the acreage);
        (B) For which the actuarial table does not designate a premium 
    rate unless a written agreement designates such premium rate;
        (C) Used for conservation purposes or intended to be left 
    unplanted under any program administered by the United States 
    Department of Agriculture;
        (D) On which another crop is prevented from being planted, if 
    you have already received a prevented planting indemnity, guarantee 
    or amount of insurance for the same acreage in the same crop year, 
    unless you provide adequate records of acreage and production 
    showing that the acreage has a history of double-cropping in each of 
    the last four years;
        (E) On which the insured crop is prevented from being planted, 
    if any other crop is planted and fails, or is planted and harvested, 
    hayed or grazed on the same acreage in the same crop year, (other 
    than a cover crop as specified in paragraph (a)(3)(i) of this 
    section, or a substitute crop allowed in paragraph (a)(3)(ii) of 
    this section), unless you provide adequate records of acreage and 
    production showing that the acreage has a history of double-cropping 
    in each of the last four years;
        (F) When coverage is provided under the Catastrophic Risk 
    Protection Endorsement if 
    
    [[Page 62730]]
    you plant another crop for harvest on any acreage you were prevented 
    from planting in the same crop year, even if you have a history of 
    double cropping. If you have a Catastrophic Risk Protection 
    Endorsement and receive a prevented planting indemnity, guarantee, 
    or amount of insurance for a crop and are prevented from planting 
    another crop on the same acreage, you may only receive the prevented 
    planting indemnity, guarantee, or amount of insurance for the crop 
    on which the prevented planting indemnity, guarantee, or amount of 
    insurance is received; or
        (G) For which planting history or conservation plans indicate 
    that the acreage would have remained fallow for crop rotation 
    purposes.
        (v) For the purpose of determining eligible acreage for 
    prevented planting coverage, acreage for all units will be combined 
    and be reduced by the number of acres of the insured crop timely 
    planted and late planted. For example, assume you have 100 acres 
    eligible for prevented planting coverage in which you have a 100 
    percent (100%) share. The acreage is located in a single FSA Farm 
    Serial Number which you insure as two separate optional units 
    consisting of 50 acres each. If you planted 60 acres of the insured 
    crop on one optional unit and 40 acres of the insured crop on the 
    second optional unit, your prevented planting eligible acreage would 
    be reduced to zero (i.e.,100 acres eligible for prevented planting 
    coverage minus 100 acres planted equals zero).
        (5) In accordance with the provisions of section 6 (Report of 
    Acreage) of the Common Crop Insurance Policy (Sec. 457.8), you must 
    report by unit any insurable acreage that you were prevented from 
    planting. This report must be submitted on or before the acreage 
    reporting date. For the purpose of determining acreage eligible for 
    a prevented planting production guarantee the total amount of 
    prevented planting and planted acres cannot exceed the maximum 
    number of acres eligible for prevented planting coverage. Any 
    acreage you report in excess of the number of acres eligible for 
    prevented planting coverage, or that exceeds the number of eligible 
    acres physically located in a unit, will be deleted from your 
    acreage report.
    
        Done in Washington, DC, on November 27, 1995.
    Kenneth D. Ackerman,
    Manager, Federal Crop Insurance Corporation.
    [FR Doc. 95-29606 Filed 11-30-95; 4:56 pm]
    BILLING CODE 3410-08-P
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
11/30/1995
Published:
12/07/1995
Department:
Federal Crop Insurance Corporation
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
95-29606
Dates:
The effective date of this rule is November 30, 1995. The comment period for information collections under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 continues through January 8, 1996.
Pages:
62710-62730 (21 pages)
RINs:
0563-AB43: Common Crop Insurance Regulations, Various Crop Provisions (Coarse Grains, Cotton, ELS Cotton, and Sunflower Seed); General Crop Insurance Regulations, Various Endorsements
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/0563-AB43/common-crop-insurance-regulations-various-crop-provisions-coarse-grains-cotton-els-cotton-and-sunflo
PDF File:
95-29606.pdf
CFR: (8)
7 CFR 401.109
7 CFR 401.120
7 CFR 443.7
7 CFR 457.101
7 CFR 457.104
More ...