FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Contact: Jenny Green
Communications Specialist, New Mexico Department of Agriculture
jgreen@nmda.nmsu.edu
Office: 575-646-3060
Cell: 575-202-4249
Jan. 15, 2025
Webinars for Healthy Soil Program applicants set for Jan. 23
NMDA is accepting grant applications beginning Jan 15
LAS CRUCES, N.M. – The New Mexico Department of Agriculture (NMDA) is accepting grant applications for its Healthy Soil Program from Wednesday, Jan. 15, through Wednesday, March 19 at noon, Mountain Time.
NMDA will host two webinars in January to help both applicant types prepare to complete the online application for a Healthy Soil Program grant. NMDA will host a webinar for Eligible Entities Jan. 23 from 10 to 11: 30 a.m., and another webinar for Individual Applicants Jan. 23 from 3 to 4:30 p.m. Registration is required to attend either webinar. For related information, and to register for the webinars, visit the Healthy Soil Program website.
Grant funding may be used for on-the-ground projects in New Mexico that focus on one or more of the five soil health principles: keeping the soil covered; minimizing soil disturbance on cropland and minimizing external inputs; maximizing biodiversity; maintaining a living root; and integrating animals into land management, including grazing animals, birds, beneficial insects or keystone species, such as earthworms. Projects must address one or more soil health-related resource concerns, such as erosion or compaction. Projects can last nearly 15 months, starting as early as mid-July 2025 and ending as late as late Sept. 2026.
NMDA welcomes applications for Healthy Soil Program grants from two types of applicants: Eligible Entities and Individual Applicants. While the application period is the same – Jan. 15 to March 19 – for each type of applicant, the application process and application materials for Eligible Entities are different from those for Individual Applicants.
Eligible Entities are defined in the 2019 Healthy Soil Act as “local governmental [entities] with proven land management capacity to support healthy soil” and include the state’s pueblos, tribes, and nations; acequias; land grants; soil and water conservation districts; and New Mexico State University’s Cooperative Extension Service. NMDA will also accept grant applications from other local governmental entities that manage land.
Individual Applicants are non-governmental parties, including individuals, businesses and nonprofits that are directly involved in farming, ranching or another form of land management in New Mexico. Individual Applicants must complete conservation planning with USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) by Feb. 21 in order to apply for grant funding. They also must secure project sponsorship from their soil and water conservation district (SWCD) or the New Mexico pueblo, tribe, or nation of which they are a member.
“I encourage Individual Entities and Eligible Entities in New Mexico to apply for a grant to improve their soil,” said New Mexico Agriculture Secretary Jeff Witte. “The healthier the soil is on the land you manage, the more resilient it is to drought, extreme temperatures, erosion, and noxious weeds.”
All Healthy Soil Program grant applications must be submitted online by noon Wednesday, March 19. Late, incomplete and paper applications will not be accepted or reviewed.
Visit the NMDA YouTube channel to watch several videos about how the NMDA Healthy Soil Program helped various grantees improve their soil health. You can also explore the interactive map of past Healthy Soil Program recipients on the Healthy Soil Program webpage, as well as subscribe for program updates and check out resources to prepare to apply for a grant.
The Healthy Soil Program was created in the 2019 Healthy Soil Act. The act’s purpose is to promote and support farming and ranching systems and other forms of land management that increase soil organic matter, aggregate stability, microbiology and water retention to improve the state’s soil health, yield and profitability.
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