More Than A Year Later, No Trace Of $400 Million In USDA Grant To Improve Irrigation Efficiency For AZ Farmers
For those coaxing thirsty crops like alfalfa from the parched fields and withered pasturelands in Eloy, Arizona, water is as good as gold and just as scarce. Weve had nothing from the Colorado River for the last two or three years. I mean, weve had to cut back the volumes to the growers and have had to reduce acres and stuff to make it work, said Ron McEachern, former general manager of the Central Arizona Irrigation and Drainage District, which serves the Eloy area. The agricultural hub draws from the Colorado River basin through a vast canal network, but drought, overexploitation, and aging irrigation equipment are draining what little remains. We got gates that are leaking and leaking downstream, McEachern said. The water spills and it spills, and nobodys getting any use out of it.
Nearly two years ago, the irrigation district was invited to apply to a new non-competitive grant program that the U.S. Department of Agriculture under the Biden administration was launching to help farmers in areas grappling with devastating droughts. McEachern collaborated with the federal agency to identify what his team would do with the grant: replace and upgrade the 35-year-old deteriorating radial arm gates in their local canal system. The district needed the components to more precisely regulate water levels in the canals, but they are much too expensive for them to buy and install on their own. Then, in late 2024, they got the break theyd been hoping for. The Central Arizona operation was one of 18 irrigation districts spread across 12 western states initially selected to receive up to $15 million each from the USDA. The agencys Water-Saving Commodities program also earmarked grants for three tribal communities and two state associations of conservation districts. In total, the USDA planned to spend a $400 million pool of funds on the initiative.
Gloria Montaño Greene, who served during the Biden administration as Deputy Under Secretary for USDAs Farm Production and Conservation, told Grist that the idea for the program started back in 2021, as severe drought conditions enveloped agricultural powerhouse states across the country. The $400 million, according to Montaño Greene, was set to be distributed through the Commodity Credit Corporation, a financial institution used to implement specific agricultural programs established by the federal government. By the close of 2024, she said the Biden administration had entered final agreements with selected recipients and notified Congress of how they intended to use the money.
When we left the administration, we already had the signed agreements and the commitments that were going to be going through with the process, said Montaño Greene. Based on those final agreements, the money, which was structured to be either reimbursement-based or in the form of advance payments or both, depending on the agreement should have started flowing last year, as part of a five-year payment plan. Everything was done, vetted, and reviewed, said Montaño Greene. But because this money wasnt voted on by Congress, the USDA may have the authority to backtrack on its commitments under an earlier administration.
EDIT
https://grist.org/food-and-agriculture/did-the-usda-just-forget-about-400m-in-drought-aid-for-farmers/