Hurricane Season Ends and FSA Offices Reopen

Hurricane Season Ends and FSA Offices Reopen

Bob Larson
Bob Larson
From the Ag Information Network, I’m Bob Larson with your Agribusiness Update.

**With the 2025 hurricane season nearly complete, it appears the East Coast, and especially the Southeast, escaped the impact of a landfalling hurricane for the first time in a decade.

Alex DaSilva, Lead Hurricane Expert with AccuWeather, says Chantal made landfall as a tropical storm and Hurricane Erin brought rain in August without making landfall.

The last year a hurricane did NOT make direct landfall to the U.S. was 2015.

**In a move aimed at easing frustration among producers, the USDA reopened approximately 2,100 Farm Service Agency county offices.

Each reopened office is staffed with two employees, open five days a week, to provide limited but essential services like disaster aid, crop-insurance sign-up, farm loans and safety-net program assistance.

Ag Secretary Brooke Rollins emphasized reopening these offices is a critical step toward delivering on earlier commitments to farmers, including billions in disaster relief.

**USDA is launching a major disaster-relief effort under its Supplemental Disaster Relief Program, deploying roughly $21 Billion in aid to farmers affected by adverse weather in 2023 and 24.

This funding addresses a variety of losses.

Stage 1 prioritizes producers with previously indemnified losses through crop insurance, streamlining their application process.

A Stage 2 rollout is expected to cover shallower or uninsured losses, broadening access to those who didn’t receive full compensation previously.

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