USDA
COLLEGE STATION – The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) announced that Akiptan, Inc., the Cherokee Nation Economic Development Trust Authority (CNEDTA) and the Shared Capital Cooperative have been approved or conditionally approved as intermediary lenders through the Heirs’ Property Relending Program (HPRP).Once HPRP loans with these lenders close, these lenders will help agricultural producers and landowners resolve heirs’ land ownership and succession issues. Additionally, USDA encourages more intermediary lenders, including cooperatives, credit unions and nonprofit organizations to apply. Currently, more than $100 million of HPRP funding is available for these competitive loans.
Heirs’ property is family land that has been passed down to descendants without a will or deed to prove ownership. Without proof of ownership, it may become difficult for heirs to obtain federal benefits for farms and could force partition sales by third parties. Heirs’ property issues have long been a barrier for many producers and landowners to access USDA programs and services, and this relending program provides access to capital to help heirs find a resolution.
“Through this opportunity, heirs can formalize land ownership and succession issues, which have long prevented so many from accessing USDA programs and services,” said Kelly Adkins, Executive Director of USDA’s Farm Service Agency (FSA) in Texas. “USDA is committed to revising policies to be more equitable and this program is an instrumental part of the effort to provide opportunities to bring and keep agricultural land in agriculture and allow producers nationwide to create generational wealth.”
HPRP intermediary lenders will reloan funds to eligible heirs to resolve title issues by financing the purchase or consolidation of property interests and financing costs associated with a succession plan. This may also include costs and fees associated with buying out fractional interests of other heirs in jointly owned property to clear the title, as well as closing costs, appraisals, title searches, surveys, preparing documents, mediation, and legal services.
Intermediary lenders may make loans to heirs who:
• Are individuals or legal entities with authority to incur the debt and to resolve ownership and succession of a farm owned by multiple owners;
• Are a family member or heir-at-law related by blood or marriage to the previous owner of the property;
• Agree to complete a succession plan. These are loans and not grant and will need to be paid back at interest rates set by the lenders. Heirs may not use loans for any land improvement, development purpose, acquisition or repair of buildings, acquisition of personal property, payment of operating costs, payment of finders’ fees, or similar costs.
Who Heirs Can Contact for Additional Information Akiptan, Inc
• Service Area: Nationwide, targeting Indian Country.
• Contact: Skya Ducheneaux, (605) 964-8081 Cherokee Nation Economic Development Trust Authority (CNEDTA)
• Service Area: Producers in rural areas (as designated by USDA) of the 14 counties, in whole or in part, encompassing the Cherokee Nation Reservation. Borrower( s) must reside in the Service Area and land must be agricultural land located in the Service Area.
• Contacts: sbac@cherokee. org; Stephen Highers, (918) 207-3955; and Brian Wagman, (918) 453-5531 Shared Capital Cooperative, which has a partnership with Federation of Southern Cooperatives
• Service Area: Producers in the states of: Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi and South Carolina • Contact: Christina Jennings, (612) 767-2114; and Dania Davy, (404) 765-0991 or info@federation. coop.
Additionally, USDA will share information on farmers. gov/heirs/relending.
FSA may be able to provide additional assistance through the farm ownership and operating loan programs to assist heirs in financing other credit needs in conjunction with a HPRP loan provided by an intermediary.
While owners of heirs’ properties may lack proof of ownership or control of land, FSA provides alternative options that allow an heir to obtain a farm number. In states that have adopted the UPHPA, producers may provide specific documents to receive a farm number.
To learn more about heirs’ property, HPRP, or UPHPA, visit farmers.gov/heirs or farmers.gov/heirs/relending.