Federal News
USDA Provides Wildfire Disaster Assistance in Texas
March 18, 2026
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) is actively offering a suite of disaster assistance programs to agricultural producers in Texas affected by recent wildfires. These programs include financial aid, technical support, and loan options designed to help producers recover losses related to livestock, honeybees, farm-raised fish, and damaged trees. Local Farm Service Agency (FSA) offices are the primary points of contact for producers to report damages and apply for assistance. This initiative involves coordination among USDA agencies including FSA, the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), and the Risk Management Agency (RMA), emphasizing on-the-ground damage assessments and tailored recovery strategies.
- Why this matters: Procurement professionals should be aware of increased demand for services and supplies related to wildfire recovery in Texas agriculture, including technical assistance and financial program administration.
- The involvement of multiple USDA agencies indicates opportunities for contractors specializing in disaster recovery, agricultural support services, and program implementation.
- Organizations supporting agricultural producers can leverage this assistance framework to align their offerings with USDA program requirements and local recovery efforts.
- Timely engagement with local FSA offices in Texas is critical for effective delivery and coordination of assistance programs.
Once producers are safely able to determine and report their losses or damages, our local Farm Service Agency staff can help producers with program applications related to wildfire recovery.
— Dan Hunter, State Executive Director for FSA in Texas
Our staff will work one-on-one with landowners to make assessments of the damages and develop methods that focus on effective recovery of the land.
— Kristy Oates, NRCS State Conservationist in Texas
Agencies
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Farm Service Agency, Natural Resources Conservation Service, USDA Risk Management Agency