Foreign persons must report U.S. Agricultural Land Holdings
Published 12:09 pm Saturday, February 5, 2011
Lee Crawford, executive director of the United States Department of Agriculture’s Farm Service Agency in Freeborn County, reminds foreign people with an interest in agricultural lands in the U.S. that they are required to report their holdings and any transactions to the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture.
Crawford said any foreign person who acquires, transfers or holds any interest, other than a security interest, in agricultural land in the U.S. is required by law to report the transaction no later than 90 days after the date of the transaction.
Foreign investors must file Agricultural Foreign Investment Disclosure Act reports with the FSA county office that maintains reports for the county where the land is located. Crawford said failure to file a report, filing a late report or filing an inaccurate report can result in a penalty with fines up to 25 percent of the fair market value of the agricultural land.
For AFIDA purposes, agricultural land is defined as any land used for farming, ranching or timber production, if the tracts total 10 acres or more.
Disclosure reports are also required when there are changes in land use. For example, reports are required when land use changes from nonagricultural to agricultural or from agricultural to nonagricultural. Foreign investors must also file a report when there is a change in the status of ownership such as owner changes from foreign to non-foreign, from non-foreign to foreign or from foreign to foreign.
Data gained from these disclosures is used to prepare an annual report to the President and Congress concerning the effect of such holdings upon family farms and rural communities in the United States.
For more information regarding AFIDA and FSA programs, contact the Freeborn County FSA office at 507-373-7960 or visit the USDA website at http://www.usda.gov.