Home Drainage Maintenance Frequently Asked Questions Can anything be planted or built within the easement area?

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USDA - National Agricultural Statistics Service
National Agricultural Statistics Service provides timely, accurate, and useful statistics in service to U. S. agriculture.
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  • USDA Asks Farmers to Show Their Stewardship, Nationwide Survey to Focus on Irrigation
    Water is the source of life and the U.S. agricultural industry depends upon this precious resource to meet the world's growing need for food, feed, fiber and fuel. U.S. agricultural producers will soon have the opportunity to speak out about their water use when the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) conducts the Farm and Ranch Irrigation Survey.
  • NASS Gives Thanks to Those Farmers Counted in the 2007 Census of Agriculture This Holiday Season
    This Thanksgiving the U.S. Department of Agriculture's National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) has more than 2 million reasons to be thankful. Having received a record number of responses to the 2007 Census of Agriculture, NASS is giving thanks to all of those farmers and ranchers who fulfilled their responsibility by completing and returning their census forms.
  • USDA Corrects October Crop Acreage Estimates
    The U.S. Department of Agriculture today adjusted its official October acreage and production estimates for six field crops. USDA revised the numbers after discovering discrepancies in a Farm Service Agency (FSA) database of producer-reported crop acreage used by the National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS). NASS published the changes this morning in a corrected version of the Oct. 10 Crop Production.
Can anything be planted or built within the easement area? PDF Print E-mail
It depends.  It is always okay to plant grass in an easement area.  No man-made objects such as fencing, buildings, sheds, and landscaping, should ever placed in an easement area.  Planting trees in an easement area should also be avoided.  If objects are placed in an easement area, they can be removed at the landowner’s cost and not be replaced. If maintenance activities require the disturbance of a grassed area, the disturbed area will be regraded and seeded or sodded following completion of the maintenance activities.
 
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