Coastal Plains
Soil and Water Conservation District Conservation Technical Assistance Program |
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The Conservation Technical Assistance (CTA) Program provides technical assistance supported by science-based technology and tools to help people conserve, maintain, and improve their natural resources. The CTA Program provides the technical capability, including direct conservation planning, design, and implementation assistance, that helps people plan and apply conservation on the land. This assistance is provided to individuals, groups, and communities who make natural resource management decisions on private, tribal, and other non-federal lands. NRCS, through the CTA Program, provides conservation technical assistance that addresses natural resource conservation issues at the local level that are of State and national concern.
Objectives of the program are to:
Purpose of the Program is to:
The CTA Program provides the proven and consistent conservation technology and
delivery infrastructure needed to achieve the benefits of a healthy and productive
landscape, and has the following purposes:
Relation to Other Conservation Provisions and Programs
The CTA Program provides the local delivery system and the foundation technical expertise for other NRCS programs. The CTA Program is unique because it provides a substantive level of technical expertise, background and support for Federal, tribal, State, and local conservation programs. This technical base enables other NRCS programs by facilitating conservation planning, interagency coordination, technical consultations, and collaboration with decision makers. For example, Fort Bend County assists in preparing landowners and decision makers for participation in USDA conservation financial assistance and easement programs. The CTA Program also provides much of the preliminary emergency disaster technical assistance for the Agency's Emergency Watershed Protection Program. The CTA Program also is available to assist clients with maintenance of conservation plans and practices/systems that resulted through expired or completed financially-assisted contracts or projects. The CTA Program also is used to assist decision makers for conservation planning prior to the commitment or approval of a participant’s funding for financial assistance.
It is our hope that every landowner will become district cooperator. By becoming a cooperator, the landowner or user agrees to develop a conservation plan for their land and to put it into effect as quickly as possible. This can often be done by slightly modifying a farming operation, but sometimes it will require changes that are complex and take several years to put into effect. The district, in turn, agrees to help the cooperator develop and apply the conservation plan by furnishing the necessary technical assistance. Applying and maintaining the conservation plan is the responsibility of the cooperator. We hope that all landowners will take advantage of available technology to carry out a conservation program that will be enduring and beneficial to their land and the community. Developers, planning commissions, units of government or owners with small tracts of land are provided information to use in making sound land use and treatment decisions.
Summary
The working relationships that landowners and communities
have with their local NRCS staff are unique. One-on-one help through flexible,
voluntary programs occurs every day in local NRCS offices across the country.
It is the way NRCS does business, and it works. To obtain conservation technical
assistance, contact your Rosenberg USDA-NRCS
office.
Additional Information
CTA
Program Fact Sheet