Farm Service Agency Homepage
Quick Search
Who We Are
The Administrator's Column
Our Mission & Goals
Plans & Reports
Organizational Chart
Budget & Performance Management System
2002 Farm Bill
   
About Us
Civil Rights
Employment
Contact Us
   
[Civil Rights button]

[USDA Department of Agriculture]

NOTICE!
You are entering an Official United States Government System, which may be used only for authorized purposes. Unauthorized modification of any information stored on this system may result in criminal prosecution. The Government may monitor and audit usage of this system, and all persons are hereby notified that use of this system constitutes consent to such monitoring and auditing.
news room about us services offices online forms help
About Us Home Page> About FSA

What is the Farm Service Agency?


[Thumbnail image of the FSA Vision Statement Poster] "A customer-driven agency with a diverse and multi-talented work force, dedicated to achieving an economically and environmentally sound future for American Agriculture." FSA Vision Statement

Download a PDF Printable Version of our Vision Statement Poster. (606 kb)

Stabilizing farm income, helping farmers conserve land and water resources, providing credit to new or disadvantaged farmers and ranchers, and helping farm operations recover from the effects of disaster are the missions of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Farm Service Agency (FSA).

FSA was set up when the Department was reorganized in 1994, incorporating programs from several agencies, including the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service, the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation (now a separate Risk Management Agency), and the Farmers Home Administration. Though its name has changed over the years, the Agency's relationship with farmers goes back to the 1930s.

At that time, Congress set up a unique system under which Federal farm programs are administered locally. Farmers who are eligible to participate in these programs elect a three- to five-person county committee, which reviews county office operations and makes decisions on how to apply the programs. This grassroots approach gives farmers a much-needed say in how Federal actions affect their communities and their individual operations. After more than 60 years, it remains a cornerstone of FSA's efforts to preserve and promote American agriculture.