[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 88 (Friday, May 6, 2022)]
[Notices]
[Pages 27083-27087]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-09730]


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DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE

Farm Service Agency

[Docket ID FSA-2022-0005]


Notice of Funds Availability; Cotton and Wool Apparel Program

AGENCY: Commodity Credit Corporation, and Farm Service Agency; 
Department of Agriculture (USDA).

ACTION: Notification of funding availability.

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SUMMARY: The Farm Service Agency (FSA) is announcing the availability 
of $50 million for the new Cotton and Wool Apparel Program (CAWA), 
which will support the domestic markets for wool and Pima cotton by 
assisting eligible apparel manufacturers of men's and boys' worsted 
wool suits, sport coats, pants, or Pima cotton dress shirts; Pima 
cotton spinners; and wool fabric manufacturers and wool spinners. The 
COVID-19 pandemic dramatically reduced the demand for these types of 
clothing, textiles, and threads, and in turn, the market for the raw 
commodities. CAWA will assist in the development and restoration of the 
market for domestically produced cotton and wool products and 
ultimately for the underlying commodities. To be eligible for CAWA, an 
applicant must have experienced a decrease of at least 15 percent in 
calendar year 2020 gross sales or consumption of eligible products 
described in this document compared to the applicant's gross sales or 
consumption in any selected calendar years 2017, 2018, or 2019. 
Payments to eligible entities will be based on their pre-pandemic 
market share relative to other similar applicants subject to payment 
limitations. The eligibility requirements, payment calculation, and 
application procedure for CAWA are included in this document.

DATES: 
    Funding Availability: Implementation will begin May 6, 2022.
    Applications Start Date: We will accept applications for funding 
starting on May 16, 2022.
    Applications Due Date: We will accept applications for funding 
through June 17, 2022.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kimberly Graham; telephone: (202) 720-
6825; email: [email protected]. Persons with disabilities who 
require alternative means for communication should contact the USDA 
Target Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice) or (844) 433-2774 (toll-free 
nationwide).

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Background

    Since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020, millions of 
Americans transitioned from working in offices to working from home. 
Two years later, the pandemic has persisted, and many employees have 
continued to work remotely. This transition toward remote work has led 
to a dramatic decrease in consumer demand for worsted wool suits, sport 
coats, dress pants, and Pima cotton dress shirts. Manufacturers of 
these products, mainly small and medium-sized businesses, had to 
temporarily shut down or reduce their hours of production through the 
early months of the pandemic due to a dramatic decline in demand. 
Although many of these manufacturers shifted to the production of 
personal protective equipment (PPE), the industry has struggled to 
recover from a persistent and significant reduction in sales and many 
of these businesses are now struggling to avoid bankruptcy.
    Without additional support, some of these companies will cease 
operations or be unable to restore full production, negatively 
impacting American workers, the supply chain, and ultimately the market 
for domestic cotton growers and wool producers that rely on the 
American apparel manufacturing industry to support the market for their 
raw products. Like other industries, the supply chain between the 
production of raw Pima cotton or wool to the ultimate consumer has 
become globalized and does not track the origin of the raw material in 
most cases. Many imported wool and Pima cotton fabrics contain 
domestically produced raw materials and ultimately support the markets 
for those domestic agricultural commodities. By excluding synthetic 
fabrics and targeting specific apparel, CAWA further ensures assistance 
to support and rebuild key domestic and global markets for the domestic 
producers of raw Pima cotton and wool.
    In accordance with 15 U.S.C. 714c, the Secretary is using $50 
million of the Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) funds that were 
previously transferred for pandemic-related assistance to establish a 
new program to indirectly support Pima cotton and wool producers by 
providing assistance to wool and Pima cotton manufacturers and spinners 
whose consumption and gross sales of raw Pima cotton and wool in 2020 
were impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic and that filed an affidavit for 
a payment in any year from calendar year 2017 to calendar year 2021 in 
accordance with sections 12602 or 12603 of the Agriculture Improvement 
Act of 2018 (2018 Farm Bill; Pub. L. 115-34), which authorizes the Wool 
Apparel Manufacturers Trust Fund and the Pima Agriculture Cotton Trust 
Fund, respectively. CAWA is using the eligibility for the trust funds 
established in the 2018 Farm Bill because the entities that meet these 
eligibility criteria encompass the known universe of domestic apparel 
manufacturers of men's and boys' worsted wool suits, sport coats, 
pants, or Pima cotton dress shirts; Pima cotton spinners; and wool 
fabric manufacturers and wool spinners. This group of companies 
represents one of the few markets for Pima cotton and wool materials in 
the United States and an opportunity to indirectly support wool and 
Pima cotton producers. While CAWA defines eligibility partially based 
on eligibility for, and participation in, these trust funds, CAWA and 
the trust fund programs are otherwise distinct and separate with regard 
to purpose and authority. Since the entities targeted for payment in 
both CAWA and the trust funds have been determined to be the same, 
using the same base eligibility criteria, as previously demonstrated

[[Page 27084]]

through participation in the trust fund programs provides for a 
streamlined delivery of CAWA. Since CAWA is a pandemic assistance 
program focused on restoring and improving a distinct market, CAWA 
participants must meet additional eligibility criteria to ensure 
assistance through CAWA is tied to demonstrable pandemic-induced market 
challenges.
    CAWA will provide assistance to several subsets of the wool and 
Pima cotton industries. There are no publicly available breakdowns of 
the relative size or degree of need among the different segments; 
therefore, USDA conducted research and leveraged appropriate industry 
resources with specific knowledge of the Pima cotton and wool apparel 
markets. USDA research and these industry resources provided the 
information necessary for USDA to determine the level of pandemic-
related market challenges for each subset of the wool and Pima cotton 
industries, along with the support needed to restore and increase these 
markets for Pima cotton and wool in the United States. This information 
was subsequently used to determine the funding levels for each industry 
subset. As a result, USDA determined that approximately $35 million 
will be available for eligible apparel manufacturers; approximately $5 
million will be available for eligible Pima cotton spinners; and 
approximately $10 million will be available for eligible wool fabric 
manufacturers and yarn wool spinners. USDA also determined that a 
minimum payment of $50,000 would be used to both ensure that each 
recipient received sufficient assistance to provide a meaningful amount 
to restore or help expand the domestic market and as a way to target 
small businesses for a proportionately larger benefit than if market 
share was used alone.
    Funds available to CCC will be used as authorized by section 5(e) 
of the CCC Charter Act (15 U.S.C. 714c(e)). As outlined above, the 
assistance to these wool and Pima cotton domestic apparel and textile 
industries will help increase and restore the domestic consumption of 
agricultural commodities in the form of raw Pima cotton and wool by 
aiding in the recovery of the domestic market for the use of Pima 
cotton and wool products. Without this assistance, several companies 
have indicated that they may cease operation or remain at lower 
production levels for a substantially longer period of time, impairing 
the demand for Pima cotton and wool materials from domestic markets. 
The specific CCC authority will be used to restore and ultimately 
improve the viability of this key domestic market for Pima cotton and 
wool materials beyond pre-pandemic levels.
    FSA is implementing CAWA as a part of the Secretary's USDA Pandemic 
Assistance for Producers initiative. While each applicant must meet the 
minimum eligibility requirement of a 15 percent decline in gross sales 
or consumption compared to pre-pandemic levels, the payments themselves 
will be based on each applicant's pre-pandemic market share and are not 
indemnities for past losses. Through CAWA, FSA will make payments to:
     Apparel manufacturers that have experienced at least a 15 
percent decrease in calendar year 2020 in gross sales of eligible 
products, when comparing calendar year 2020 gross sales to gross sales 
in any one of calendar years 2017, 2018, or 2019; gross sales is used 
in the case of apparel manufacturers because there is not a readily 
available conversion to consumption of the raw materials.
     Pima cotton spinners that have experienced at least a 15 
percent decrease in calendar year 2020 in:
    [cir] Gross sales of eligible products when comparing calendar year 
2020 gross sales to gross sales in any one of calendar years 2017, 
2018, or 2019; or
    [cir] Consumption of eligible products when comparing calendar year 
2020 consumption to consumption in any one of calendar years 2017, 
2018, or 2019; and
     Wool fabric manufacturers and wool spinners that 
experienced at least a 15 percent decrease in calendar year 2020 in:
    [cir] Gross sales for of eligible products when comparing calendar 
year 2020 gross sales to gross sales in any one of calendar years 2017, 
2018, or 2019; or
    [cir] Consumption of eligible products, when comparing calendar 
year 2020 consumption to consumption in any one of calendar years 2017, 
2018, or 2019.
    On behalf of the CCC, FSA is administering the direct payments 
under the general supervision and direction of the FSA Administrator, 
with assistance from the Foreign Agriculture Service (FAS) to ensure 
applicants are eligible.

Definitions

    The definitions in 7 CFR parts 718 and 1400 apply to CAWA, except 
as otherwise provided in this document. The following definitions also 
apply:
    Apparel manufacturers means domestic manufacturers and producers 
that use imported Pima cotton fabric (80s or higher count and 2-ply in 
warp) to manufacture men's and boys' woven Pima cotton shirts or 
domestic manufacturers and producers of men's and boys' worsted wool 
suits, suit-type jackets, or trousers that use imported fabrics 
containing 85 percent or more by weight of wool.
    Consumption means for:
     Pima Cotton--the number of pounds of Pima cotton processed 
for U.S. ring spun Pima cotton yarns measuring less than 83.33 decitex 
(exceeding 120 metric number).
     Worsted Wool--the number of pounds of wool top spun into 
worsted yarn and the number of pounds of wool yarn processed into 
worsted woven wool fabric, converted into wool top.
    Member of a controlled group means a subsidiary or otherwise 
affiliated company of a parent or holding company that has a history of 
participating in the wool and cotton trust fund programs. The applicant 
would be the parent or holding company for the purposes of this 
program.
    Deputy Administrator means Deputy Administrator for Farm Programs, 
Farm Service Agency, U.S. Department of Agriculture, or their designee.
    Gross sales means the direct sale or wholesale of eligible products 
only in dollars.
    Pima cotton spinner means a spinner that produces domestic ring 
spun Pima cotton yarns measuring less than 83.33 decitex (exceeding 120 
metric number) in single and plied form.
    Unique entity identifier (SAM UEI) means a number used to identify 
a specific entity. A System for Award Management (SAM) UEI number 
replaced the DUNS UEI number. The number can be obtained on SAM.gov, 
and is used to make payments to entities receiving government payments.
    Wool fabric manufacturers and wool spinners means domestic 
manufacturers and producers of woven worsted wool fabrics containing 85 
percent or more by weight of wool or processors of imported wool yarn, 
fiber, and top that use such wool yarn, fiber, or top to manufacture in 
the United States.
    Wool top means wool fiber used for worsted manufacturing. It has 
undergone all major preprocessing steps and is ready for yarn spinning. 
To convert wool yarn to wool top, applicants should use the following 
conversion: 1 pound of wool yarn equates to 1.11 pounds of wool top.
    United States means all 50 states of the United States, the 
District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and any other 
territory or possession of the United States.

[[Page 27085]]

Eligible Products

    For apparel manufacturers, eligible products are:
     Men's and boys' worsted wool suits, sport coats, or pants; 
or
     Men's and boys' Pima cotton dress shirts.
    The products must have been cut and sewn in the United States at a 
facility owned by the applicant or a member of its controlled group in 
the United States.
    For Pima cotton spinners, the eligible product is Pima cotton for 
U.S. ring spun Pima cotton yarns measuring less than 83.33 decitex 
(exceeding 120 metric number) in single and plied form.
    For wool fabric manufacturers and wool spinners, eligible products 
are:
     Yarn spun in the United States of a type used for worsted 
woven wool fabric;
     Worsted wool fabric woven in the United States; or
     Wool top spun into worsted yarn in the United States.

Eligibility

    To be eligible for a CAWA payment, an applicant must:
    (1) Have filed an affidavit for a payment in any year from 2017 to 
2021 from the trust funds authorized by sections 12602 and 12603 of the 
2018 Farm Bill.
    (2) At the time of application, be in operation or have plans to 
restart domestic operations within a reasonable timeframe as an apparel 
manufacturer, Pima cotton spinner, wool fabric manufacturer, or wool 
spinner and submit a business plan showing the use of the assistance 
determined acceptable by the Deputy Administrator.
    (3) Have had at least a 15 percent decrease in calendar year 2020, 
compared to calendar year 2017, 2018, or 2019, in:
    (a) Gross sales; or
    (b) Consumption of the eligible products, except for apparel 
manufacturers.
    (4) Be an active entity on https://SAM.gov and have a SAM UEI.
    An eligible applicant is a legal entity with production and 
facilities located in the United States.
    Any entity that did not file an affidavit for a payment in any year 
from 2017 to 2021 under sections 12602 and 12603 of the 2018 Farm Bill 
is ineligible for CAWA.
    An entity is considered eligible if it is manufacturing on the date 
of application or has plans to restart domestic operations within a 
reasonable timeframe and submits a business plan showing the use of the 
assistance determined acceptable by the Deputy Administrator. An entity 
remains eligible if it acquired a manufacturer or producer during any 
year in which gross sales or consumption is reported on an application, 
or if there is a change in ownership and the entity continues to 
manufacture the same products as a predecessor manufacturer that 
participated in a trust fund. In the case of an entity that continues 
to manufacture the same products as a predecessor manufacturer, the 
entity may use gross sales or consumption data of its predecessor in 
its application at the discretion of the Deputy Administrator.
    If an entity is under common control with another manufacturer or 
producer during any year in which sales or consumption would be 
reported on an application, any application must be submitted through 
the parent or holding company unless otherwise permitted by the Deputy 
Administrator.

Application Process

    FSA will accept applications from May 16, 2022, through June 17, 
2022. To apply for CAWA, eligible applicants must submit a completed 
form CCC-917, Cotton and Wool Apparel Program (CAWA) Application. 
Applications may be submitted to the FSA National Office by email to 
[email protected]. All applicants must be an active entity on https://SAM.gov and are required to enter their SAM UEI number on the 
application form to receive payment.
    The program requires the applicant to show a 15 percent or greater 
reduction in calendar year 2020 when comparing calendar year 2017, 
2018, or 2019 to calendar 2020, for:
     Apparel manufacturers, gross sales of eligible products.
     Pima cotton spinners, either:
    [cir] Gross sales of eligible products, or
    [cir] Consumption of eligible products.
     Wool fabric manufacturers and/or spinner, either:
    [cir] Gross sales of eligible products, or
    [cir] Consumption of eligible products.
    The applicant only needs to report the applicable percentage 
decrease on the CCC-917 but should be prepared to provide actual 
calculations and documentation upon request.
    Eligible apparel manufacturers will report gross sales of eligible 
products for the year of their choice during calendar years 2017, 2018, 
or 2019 on form CCC-917. These data will be used to approximate each 
company's pre-pandemic market share relative to other applicants in 
order to calculate the proportionate share of funding within the 
apparel manufacturer funding category after an initial flat-rate 
payment is made to each eligible entity and subject to payment 
limitations.
    To estimate the pre-pandemic market share and calculate 
proportionate payment shares within the other funding categories, Pima 
cotton spinners, wool spinners, and wool fabric manufacturers must 
report total consumption on form CCC-917 for calendar year 2017, 2018, 
or 2019. When reporting consumption, a wool yarn spinner will report 
the total number of wool top pounds processed, and a wool fabric 
manufacturer will convert total pounds of wool yarn processed into wool 
top and then report the total number of wool top pounds processed.
    FSA will cross-check applicant information with the most recent 
affidavits on file with FAS for the trust funds. If there is not a 
match, applicants will be required to provide documentation to verify 
they are authorized to represent the eligible entity, executed in 
accordance with any State laws that designate what officers, members, 
or managers are authorized signatories for signature authority on the 
form CCC-917. Documentation may include, but is not limited to, 
corporate charter, bylaws, articles of organization, partnership 
papers, signed corporate minutes, or resolution of the corporation's 
board of directors.
    Gross sales and consumption are based on the applicant's 
certification and are subject to spot check.
    If requested by FSA, the applicant must provide supporting 
documentation to verify the accuracy of information provided on the 
application, including to substantiate the gross sales or consumption, 
and documentation that demonstrates the application is not for an 
entity that is under common control with another manufacturer or 
producer during any year in which gross sales or consumption are 
reported on an application. If any supporting documentation is 
requested, the documentation must be submitted to FSA within 30 days 
from the request or the application will be disapproved by FSA. 
Supporting documentation should be maintained for a period of 3 years.

Payments

    For all eligible applicants, the payment amount will be calculated 
as follows:
     A payment of $50,000;
     Plus, a proportionate share of the remaining balance of 
funds in the applicant's funding category based on each applicant's 
pre-pandemic market share adjusted for payment limitations.

[[Page 27086]]

    The funds available for eligible apparel manufacturers, Pima cotton 
spinners, and wool fabric manufacturers and wool spinners are as 
follows:
     Approximately $35 million will be available for eligible 
apparel manufacturers. Eligible apparel manufacturers will receive a 
minimum payment of $50,000 plus the proportionate share of the balance 
of funds available based on pre-pandemic market share measured by gross 
sales and adjusted for remaining applicants in the funding category as 
entities reach the payment limit. Payments will be capped at $8 million 
per applicant.
     Approximately $5 million will be available for eligible 
Pima cotton spinners. Eligible Pima cotton spinners will receive a 
minimum payment of $50,000 plus the proportionate share of the balance 
of funds available based on pre-pandemic market share measured by 
consumption and adjusted for remaining applicants in the funding 
category as entities reach the payment limit. Payments will be capped 
at $2.5 million per applicant.
     Approximately $10 million will be available for eligible 
wool fabric manufacturers and wool spinners. Eligible wool fabric 
manufacturers and wool spinners will receive a minimum payment of 
$50,000 plus the proportionate share of the balance of funds available 
based on pre-pandemic market share measured by consumption and adjusted 
for remaining applicants in the funding category as entities reach the 
payment limit. Payments will be capped at $5 million per applicant.
    Within each funding category payments will be determined using the 
same procedures. First, the $50,000 minimum payment will be allocated 
to each eligible applicant, and then the remaining available funding 
will be apportioned. For example, if there are 20 eligible apparel 
manufacturer applicants, minimum payments would total $1 million. 
Second, the remaining funding within each funding category will be 
allocated proportionately based on each entity's pre-pandemic market 
share. This is calculated based on either relative gross sales or 
consumption, depending on funding category, reported in three pre-
pandemic years, 2017, 2018, or 2019. Applicants can choose the year of 
gross sales or consumption reported for this market share calculation, 
but the proportionate shares will be calculated without regard for 
which of the three years is reported by each entity. In other words, 
within each of the three categories, the total across all eligible 
applicants will be a sum of the individual submissions and not broken 
down by year. An entity's total payment will be capped by applicable 
payment limitations. Once an entity reaches a payment limitation, that 
entity's proportional share of funding above the payment limit will be 
reallocated to any entities in that funding category that have not 
reached the payment limitation based on their proportional pre-pandemic 
market shares. Continuing the earlier example, there would be $34 
million remaining in the apparel manufacturer category after the 
minimum per entity payment of $50,000. Therefore, if an entity has a 30 
percent pre-pandemic market share ($10.2 million), it would receive 
$7,950,000 from the proportionate funding (in addition to the $50,000 
that every eligible applicant receives) and the remaining $2,250,000 of 
its share above the payment limitation would be reallocated based on 
the proportional pre-pandemic market shares of any entities that have 
not yet reached the payment limitation in the apparel manufacturer 
funding category.

Provisions Requiring Refund to FSA

    In the event that any application for a CAWA payment resulted in an 
incorrect payment due to erroneous information reported by the 
applicant, the payment will be recalculated, and the applicant must 
refund any excess payment to FSA, including interest, to be calculated 
from the date of the disbursement to the applicant. If, for any reason, 
FSA determines that the applicant misrepresented the gross sales or 
consumption difference, the application will be disapproved, and the 
applicant must refund the full CAWA payment to FSA, with interest, from 
the date of disbursement. Any required refunds must be resolved in 
accordance with 7 CFR part 3.

Miscellaneous Provisions

    All applicants must provide the name and address of the entity 
along with their active SAM UEI. Provisions of 7 CFR 718.6, which 
address ineligibility for benefits for offenses involving controlled 
substances, apply to CAWA. Appeal regulations specified in 7 CFR parts 
11 and 780, and equitable relief and finality provisions specified in 7 
CFR part 718, subpart D, apply to determinations under CAWA. The 
determination of matters of general applicability cannot be appealed if 
they are not in response to, or result from, an individual set of facts 
in an individual participant's application for payment. Such matters of 
general applicability include, but are not limited to, the 
determination of applicable time periods and the payment calculation 
for CAWA.
    Participants are required to retain documentation in support of 
their application for 3 years after the date of approval. Participants 
receiving CAWA payments or any other person furnishing such 
documentation to USDA must permit authorized representatives of USDA or 
the Government Accountability Office, during regular business hours, to 
enter the participant's business and to inspect, to examine, and to 
allow representatives to make copies of books, records, or other items 
for the purpose of confirming the accuracy of the information provided 
by the participant.
    Applicants have a right to a decision in response to their 
application. If an applicant files a late CAWA application, the 
application is subject to the following conditions:
     A late CAWA application will be considered a request to 
waive the deadline.
     Requests to waive or modify program provisions are at the 
discretion of the Deputy Administrator. The Deputy Administrator has 
the authority to waive or modify application deadlines and other 
requirements or program provisions not specified in law in cases where 
the Deputy Administrator determines it is (1) equitable to do so; and 
(2) where the lateness or failure to meet other requirements or program 
provisions do not adversely affect the operation of CAWA.
     Applicants who request to waive or modify CAWA program 
provisions do not have a right to a decision on those requests.
     The Deputy Administrator's refusal to exercise discretion 
on requests to waive or modify CAWA program provisions will not be 
considered an adverse decision and is, by itself, not appealable.
    The regulations governing offsets in 7 CFR part 3 apply to CAWA 
payments.
    In either applying for or participating in CAWA, or both, the 
applicant is subject to laws against perjury (including but not limited 
to 18 U.S.C. 1621). If the applicant willfully makes and represents as 
true any verbal or written declaration, certification, statement, or 
verification that the applicant knows or believes not to be true, in 
the course of either applying for or participating in CAWA, or both, 
then the applicant may be found to be guilty of perjury. Except as 
otherwise provided by law, if guilty of perjury the applicant may be 
fined, imprisoned for not more than 5 years, or both, regardless of 
whether the applicant makes a verbal or written declaration, 
certification,

[[Page 27087]]

statement, or verification within or outside the United States.

Paperwork Reduction Act Requirements

    In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act, the information 
collection request that supports CAWA was submitted to OMB for 
emergency approval. OMB approved the 6-month emergency information 
collection under OMB control number 0560-0308. The CAWA Program will be 
available for up to 6 months for making the payments to the eligible 
apparel manufacturers, Pima cotton spinners, and wool fabric 
manufacturers and wool spinners that have experienced a decrease of at 
least 15 percent in gross sales or consumption in calendar year 2020, 
compared to any one of calendar years 2017, 2018, or 2019.

Environmental Review

    The environmental impacts have been considered in a manner 
consistent with the provisions of the National Environmental Policy Act 
(NEPA, 42 U.S.C. 4321-4347), the regulations of the Council on 
Environmental Quality (40 CFR parts 1500-1508), and the FSA regulation 
for compliance with NEPA (7 CFR part 799).
    As previously stated, CAWA will provide payment to the eligible 
apparel manufacturers, Pima cotton spinners, and wool fabric 
manufacturers and wool spinners that experienced a decrease of at least 
15 percent in gross sales or consumption in calendar year 2020, 
compared to any one of calendar years 2017, 2018, or 2019. The limited 
discretionary aspects of CAWA do not have the potential to impact the 
human environment as they are administrative. Accordingly, these 
discretionary aspects are covered by the FSA Categorical Exclusion 
specified in 7 CFR 799.31(b)(6)(vi) that applies to safety net 
programs.
    No Extraordinary Circumstances (Sec.  799.33) exist. As such, the 
implementation of CAWA and the participation in CAWA do not constitute 
major Federal actions that would significantly affect the quality of 
the human environment, individually or cumulatively. Therefore, FSA 
will not prepare an environmental assessment or environmental impact 
statement for this action and this document serves as documentation of 
the programmatic environmental compliance decision for this Federal 
action.

Federal Assistance Programs

    The title and number of the Federal assistance programs, as found 
in the Assistance Listing,\1\ to which this document applies is 10.149, 
Cotton and Wool Apparel Program (CAWA).
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    \1\ See https://sam.gov/content/assistance-listings.
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USDA Non-Discrimination Policy

    In accordance with Federal civil rights law and U.S. Department of 
Agriculture (USDA) civil rights regulations and policies, USDA, its 
Agencies, offices, and employees, and institutions participating in or 
administering USDA programs are prohibited from discriminating based on 
race, color, national origin, religion, sex, gender identity (including 
gender expression), sexual orientation, disability, age, marital 
status, family or parental status, income derived from a public 
assistance program, political beliefs, or reprisal or retaliation for 
prior civil rights activity, in any program or activity conducted or 
funded by USDA (not all bases apply to all programs). Remedies and 
complaint filing deadlines vary by program or incident.
    Persons with disabilities who require alternative means of 
communication for program information (for example, braille, large 
print, audiotape, American Sign Language, etc.) should contact the 
responsible Agency or USDA TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 or (844) 
433-2774 (toll-free nationwide). Additionally, program information may 
be made available in languages other than English.
    To file a program discrimination complaint, complete the USDA 
Program Discrimination Complaint Form, AD-3027, found online at https://www.usda.gov/oascr/how-to-file-a-program-discrimination-complaint and 
at any USDA office or write a letter addressed to USDA and provide in 
the letter all the information requested in the form. To request a copy 
of the complaint form, call (866) 632-9992. Submit your completed form 
or letter to USDA by mail to: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Office of 
the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue SW, 
Washington, DC 20250-9410 or email: [email protected].
    USDA is an equal opportunity provider, employer, and lender.

Zach Ducheneaux,
Administrator, Farm Service Agency.
[FR Doc. 2022-09730 Filed 5-5-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-05-P