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Summary

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This legislation amends the Rhode Island General Laws regarding the Department of Environmental Management's agricultural functions. It updates and adds definitions for "agricultural land," "agricultural operations," "farm," and "farmer." A significant change is the removal of the requirement that a farmer must have earned $10,000 in gross income from farm products for the preceding four years to qualify for certain wetland regulation exemptions. Instead, the bill requires agricultural land to have a USDA Farm Tract/Farm Number and defines a farmer as a natural person owning or operating such a farm.
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Analysis

Pros for Progressives

  • Supports small-scale and startup farmers by removing the high income threshold ($10,000/year) previously required to qualify for agricultural exemptions, promoting local food systems and food security.
  • Lowers barriers to entry for historically disadvantaged individuals and community growers who may wish to start farming but cannot immediately generate significant revenue to prove legitimacy.
  • Maintains a level of oversight by requiring a USDA Farm Tract Number, ensuring that recognized agricultural land is still subject to federal identification and potential conservation standards.

Cons for Progressives

  • Potentially endangers freshwater wetlands by expanding the definition of who qualifies for exemption from environmental regulations, allowing more land alteration without strict oversight or proven commercial necessity.
  • Removes the requirement for demonstrated commercial viability (income test), which could allow wealthy landowners to use "hobby farms" as a loophole to bypass environmental protections intended to preserve community ecosystems.
  • The restriction of the definition of "farmer" to a "natural person" could complicate the legal standing of certain collective or cooperative farming models that operate under different organizational structures.

Pros for Conservatives

  • Reduces government red tape and interference by eliminating the burdensome requirement to prove specific income levels and tax filings to qualify for standard farming rights on one's own land.
  • Strengthens property rights by allowing landowners with USDA numbers to manage their land for agricultural purposes without excessive state restrictions regarding wetlands.
  • Supports the agricultural industry by broadening the definition of "agricultural operations" to include a wider range of activities, fostering economic freedom for rural residents.

Cons for Conservatives

  • Limits the definition of a "farmer" to a "natural person," which unfairly restricts the rights of family corporations, LLCs, or other business entities from accessing the same exemptions, curbing corporate freedom.
  • Increases reliance on the federal government by mandating a USDA Farm Tract Number to qualify as agricultural land, surrendering state sovereignty to federal bureaucracy.
  • Grants the state director discretion to determine "other operations" as agriculture, potentially leaving room for unelected bureaucrats to arbitrarily decide what counts as farming in the future.

Constitutional Concerns

None Likely

Impact Overview

Groups Affected

  • Farmers
  • Landowners with wetlands
  • Startup agricultural businesses
  • Department of Environmental Management
  • Environmental conservation groups

Towns Affected

All

Cost to Taxpayers

None

Revenue Generated

None

BillBuddy Impact Ratings

Importance

20

Measures population affected and overall level of impact.

Freedom Impact

30

Level of individual freedom impacted by the bill.

Public Services

10

How much the bill is likely to impact one or more public services.

Regulatory

25

Estimated regulatory burden imposed on the subject(s) of the bill.

Clarity of Bill Language

90

How clear the language of the bill is. Higher ambiguity equals a lower score.

Enforcement Provisions

50

Measures enforcement provisions and penalties for non-compliance (if applicable).

Environmental Impact

40

Impact the bill will have on the environment, positive or negative.

Privacy Impact

40

Impact the bill is likely to have on the privacy of individuals.

Bill Status

Current Status

Held
Comm Passed
Floor Passed
Law

History

• 01/14/2026 Introduced, referred to House Environment and Natural Resources

Bill Text

SECTION 1. Sections 2-1-20 and 2-1-22 of the General Laws in Chapter 2-1 entitled "Agricultural Functions of Department of Environmental Management" are hereby amended to read as follows:
2-1-20. Definitions.
As used in this chapter;
(1) “Agricultural land” means land on which agricultural operations are being conducted, or is suitable for agriculture operations, is under the control of a farmer, and has a USDA Farm Tract/Farm Number.
(2) “Agricultural operations” includes any commercial enterprise that has as its primary purpose horticulture and production of field crops of all types, viticulture, viniculture, floriculture, forestry, stabling of horses, dairy farming or aquaculture, or the raising of livestock, including for the production of fiber, furbearing animals, poultry or bees, and all such other operations, uses, and activities as the director, in consultation with the chief of the division of agriculture, may determine to be agriculture, or an agricultural activity, use or operation.
(1)(3) “Area subject to flooding” shall include, but not be limited to, low-lying areas that collect, hold, or meter out storm and flood waters from any of the following: rivers, streams, intermittent streams, or areas subject to storm flowage.
(2)(4) “Area subject to storm flowage” includes drainage swales and channels that lead into, out of, pass through, or connect other freshwater wetlands or coastal wetlands, and that carry flows resulting from storm events, but may remain relatively dry at other times.
(3)(5) “Bog” means a place where standing or slowly running water is near or at the surface during normal growing season and/or where a vegetational community has over fifty percent (50%) of the ground or water surface covered with sphagnum moss (Sphagnum) and/or where the vegetational community is made up of one or more of, but not limited to nor necessarily including all of, the following: blueberries, and cranberry (Vaccinium), leatherleaf (Chamaedaphne calyculata), pitcher plant (Sarracenia purpurea), sundews (Droseraceae), orchids (Orchidaceae), white cedar (Chamaecyparis thyoides), red maple (Acer rubrum), black spruce (Picae mariana), bog aster (Aster nemoralis), larch (Laris laricina), bogrosemary (Andromeda glaucophylla), azaleas (Rhododendron), laurels (Kalmia), sedges (Caryx), and bog cotton (Eriophorum).
(4)(6) “Buffer” means an area of undeveloped vegetated land adjacent to a freshwater wetland that is to be retained in its natural undisturbed condition, or is to be created to resemble a naturally occurring vegetated area.
(5)(7) “Department” means the department of environmental management (DEM).
(6)(8) “Director” means the director of the department of environmental management or his or her duly authorized agent or agents.
(9) “Farm” means a parcel of land or other defined place, together with any attendant buildings, including dwellings, structures, machinery and equipment, tools and supplies, which is used for agriculture operations.
(10) “Farmer” means a natural person who is either the owner of a farm or a principal operator of a farm and who engages in agricultural operations.
(7)(11) “Floodplain” means that land area adjacent to a river or stream or other body of flowing water which is, on the average, likely to be covered with flood waters resulting from a one- hundred (100) year frequency storm. A “one-hundred (100) year frequency storm” is one that is to be expected to be equaled or exceeded once in one hundred (100) years; or may be said to have a one percent (1%) probability of being equaled or exceeded in any given year.
(8)(12) “Freshwater wetlands” includes, but is not limited to, those areas that are inundated or saturated by surface or groundwater at a frequency and duration to support, and that under normal circumstances do support a prevalence of vegetation adapted for life in saturated soil conditions. Freshwater wetlands includes, but is not limited to: marshes, swamps, bogs, emergent, and submergent plant communities, and for the purposes of this chapter, rivers, streams, ponds, and vernal pools.
(9)(13) “Jurisdictional area” means the following lands and waters, as defined herein LC003924 - Page 2 of 9 except as provided for in § 2-1-22(k), that shall be subject to regulation under this chapter:
(i) Freshwater wetlands;
(ii) Buffers;
(iii) Floodplains;
(iv) Areas subject to storm flowage;
(v) Areas subject to flooding; and
(vi) Contiguous areas that extend outward:
(A) Two hundred feet (200′) from the edge of a river or stream;
(B) Two hundred feet (200′) from the edge of a drinking water supply reservoir; and
(C) One hundred feet (100′) from the edge of all other freshwater wetlands.
(10)(14) “Marsh” means a place wholly or partly within the state where a vegetational community exists in standing or running water during the growing season and/or is made up of one or more of, but not limited to nor necessarily including all of, the following plants or groups of plants: hydrophytic reeds (Phragmites), grasses (Cramineae), mannagrasses (Glyceria), cutgrasses (Leersia), pickerelwoods (Pontederiaceae), sedges (Cyperaceae), rushes (Juncaceae), cattails (Typha), water plantains (Alismataceae), bur-reeds (Sparganiazceae), pondweeds (Zosteraceae), frog’s bits (Hydrocharitaceae), arums (Araceae), duckweeds (Lemmaceae), water lilies (Nymphaeceae), water-milfoils (Haloragaceae), water-starworts (Callitrichaeceae), bladder-worts (Utricularia), pipeworts (Eriocaulon), sweet gale (Myrica gale), and buttonbush (Cephalanthus occidentalis).
(11)(15) “Near or at the surface” mean within eighteen (18) inches of the surface.
(12)(16) “Pond” means a place natural or man-made, wholly or partly within the state, where open-standing or slowly moving water is present for at least six (6) months a year.
(13)(17) “River” means a body of water designated as a perennial stream by the United States Department of Interior geologic survey on 7.5 minute series topographic maps and that is not a pond as defined in this section.
(14)(18) “Setback” means the minimum distance from the edge of a freshwater wetland at which an approved activity or alteration may take place.
(15)(19) “Stream” means any flowing body of water or watercourse that flows long enough each year to develop and maintain a channel and that may carry groundwater discharge or surface runoff.
(16)(20) “Swamp” means a place, wholly or partly within the state, where ground water is near or at the surface of the ground for a significant part of the growing season or runoff water from surface drainage collects frequently and/or where a vegetational community is made up of a LC003924 - Page 3 of 9 significant portion of one or more of, but not limited to nor necessarily including all of, the following: red maple (Acer rubum), elm (Ulmus americana), black spruce (Picea mariana), white cedar (Chamaecyparis thyoides), ashes (Fraximus), poison sumac (Rhus vernix), larch (Larix laricina), spice bush (Lindera benzoin), alders (Alnus), skunk cabbage (Symplocarpus foetidus), hellebore (Veratrum viride), hemlock (Thuja canadensis), sphagnums (Sphagnum), azaleas (Rhododendron), black alder (Ilex verticillata), coast pepperbush (Clethra alnifolia), marsh marigold (Caltha palustris), blueberries (Vaccinium), buttonbush (Cephalanthus occidentalis), willow (Salicaceae), water willow (Decodon verticillatus), tupelo (Nyssa sylbatica), laurels (Kalmia), swamp white oak (Quercus biscolor), or species indicative of marsh.
(17)(21) “Vernal pool” means a depressional wetland basin that typically goes dry in most years and may contain inlets or outlets, typically of intermittent flow. Vernal pools range in both size and depth depending upon landscape position and parent materials. Vernal pools usually support one or more of the following obligate indicator species: wood frog (Lithobates sylvaticus), spotted salamander (Ambystoma maculatum), marbled salamander (Ambystoma opacum), and fairy shrimp (Eubranchipus spp.) and typically preclude sustainable populations of predatory fish.
2-1-22. Procedure for approval by director — Notice of change of ownership — Recordation of permit.
(a) Application for approval of a project to the director of environmental management shall be made in a form to be prescribed by the director and provided by the director upon request. Prior to the application, a request may be made for preliminary determination as to whether this chapter applies. A preliminary determination shall be made by the director only after an on-site review of the project and the determination shall be made within thirty (30) days of the request. This chapter shall be determined to apply if a significant alteration appears to be contemplated and an application to alter a freshwater wetland, buffer, or floodplain will be required. Within fourteen (14) days after receipt of the completed application accompanied by plans and drawings of the proposed project, the plans and drawings to be prepared by the registered professional engineer to a scale of not less than one inch (1") to one hundred feet (100'), the director shall notify all landowners whose properties are within two hundred feet (200') of the proposed project and the director will also notify the city or town council, the conservation commission, the planning board, the zoning board, and any other individuals and agencies in any city or town within the borders of which the project lies that may have reason, in the opinion of the director, to be concerned with the proposal. The director may also establish a mailing list of all interested persons and agencies who or that may wish to be notified of all applications.
(b) If the director receives any objection to the project within forty-five (45) days of the LC003924 - Page 4 of 9 mailing of the notice of application from his or her office, the objection to be in writing and of a substantive nature, the director shall then schedule a public hearing in an appropriate place as convenient as reasonably possible to the site of the proposed project. The director shall inform by registered mail all objectors of the date, time, place, and subject of the hearing to be held. The director shall further publish notice of the time, place, date, and subject of the hearing in one local newspaper circulated in the area of the project and one statewide newspaper, the notices to appear once per week for at least two (2) consecutive weeks prior to the week during which the hearing is scheduled. The director shall establish a reasonable fee to cover the costs of the investigations, notifications and publications, and hearing and the applicant shall be liable for the fee.
(c) If no public hearing is required, or following a public hearing, the director shall make his or her decision on the application and notify the applicant by registered mail and the applicant’s attorney and any other agent or representative of the applicant by mail of this decision within a period of six (6) weeks. If a public hearing was held, any persons who objected, in writing, during the forty-five (45) day period provided for objections shall be notified of the director’s decision by first-class mail.
(d) In the event of a decision in favor of granting an application, the director shall issue a permit for the applicant to proceed with the project and shall require the applicant to pay a permit fee of one hundred dollars ($100). The permit may be issued upon any terms and conditions, including time for completion, that the director may require. Permits shall be valid for a period of one year from the date of issue and shall expire at the end of that time unless renewed. A permit may be renewed for up to three (3) additional one-year periods upon application by the original permit holder or a subsequent transferee of the property subject to permit, unless the original permit holder or transferee has failed to abide by the terms and conditions of the original permit or any prior renewal. The director may require new hearings if, in his or her judgment, the original intent of the permit is altered or extended by the renewal application or if the applicant has failed to abide by the terms of the original permit in any way. In addition, in the event a project authorized by a permit was not implemented by the permit holder or transferee because approval of the project by a federal agency, for which application had been timely made, had not been received or a federal agency had stopped the project from proceeding, prior to the expiration of the permit, the permit holder or transferee may apply for a renewal of the permit at any time prior to the tenth (10th) anniversary of the original issuance, and the application shall be deemed to be an insignificant alteration subject to expedited treatment. The request for renewal of a permit shall be made according to any procedures and form that the director may require.
(e) The original permittee or subsequent transferee shall notify the director, in writing, of LC003924 - Page 5 of 9 any change of ownership that occurs while an original or renewal permit is in effect by forwarding a certified copy of the deed of transfer of the property subject to the permit to the director.
(f) A notice of permit and a notice of completion of work subject to permit shall be eligible for recordation under chapter 13 of title 34 and shall be recorded at the expense of the applicant in the land evidence records of the city or town where the property subject to permit is located and any subsequent transferee of the property shall be responsible for complying with the terms and conditions of the permit.
(g) The director shall notify the person requesting a preliminary determination and the person’s attorney, agent, and other representative of his or her decision by letter, copies of which shall be sent by mail to the city or town clerk, the zoning board, the planning board, the building official, and the conservation commission in the city or town within which the project lies.
(h) The director shall report to the general assembly on or before February 1 of each calendar year on his or her compliance with the time provisions contained in this chapter.
(i) Normal farming activities shall be considered insignificant alterations and, as normal farming activities, shall be exempted from the provisions of this chapter in accordance with the following procedures:
(1) Normal farming and ranching activities are those carried out by farmers as defined in this title on agricultural land, including plowing, seeding, cultivating, land clearing for routine agriculture purposes, harvesting of agricultural products, pumping of existing farm ponds for agricultural purposes, upland soil and water conservation practices, and maintenance of existing farm drainage structures, existing farm ponds and existing farm roads are permissible at the discretion of farmers in accordance with best farm management practices which assure that the adverse effects to the flow and circulation patterns and chemical and biological characteristics of freshwater wetlands are minimized and that any adverse effects on the aquatic environment are minimized.
(2) In the case of construction of new farm ponds, construction of new drainage structures, and construction of new farm roads, the division of agriculture shall be notified by the filing of a written application for the proposed construction by the property owner. The application shall include a description of the proposed construction and the date upon which construction is scheduled to begin, which date shall be no earlier than thirty (30) calendar days after the date of the filing of the application. The division of agriculture shall review such applications to determine that they are submitted for agricultural purposes and to ensure that adverse effects to the flow and circulation patterns and chemical and biological characteristics of freshwater wetlands are minimized and that any adverse effects on the aquatic environment are minimized and will not LC003924 - Page 6 of 9 result in a significant alteration to the freshwater wetlands. Pursuant to this review, the division shall notify the applicant, in writing, whether the proposal is an insignificant alteration. This notice shall be issued not later than thirty (30) days after the date that the application was filed with the division. In the event notice is given by the division as required, the application shall be conclusively presumed to be an insignificant alteration. If no notice is given as required, or if an application is approved as an insignificant alteration, the applicant may cause construction to be done in accordance with the application, and neither the applicant, nor the applicant’s agents or employees who cause or perform the construction in accordance with the application, shall be liable for any criminal, civil, administrative or other fine, fee, or penalty, including restoration costs for violations alleged to arise from the construction.
(3) The division of agriculture shall, in coordination with the agricultural council’s advisory committee, adopt regulations for subdivision (i)(2), and shall determine whether a proposed activity, other than an activity listed in subdivision (i)(1), constitutes a normal farming activity, or involves the best farm management practices. In making such a determination, the division of agriculture shall consider the proposed activity on a case-by-case basis, relative to the characteristics of the particular jurisdictional area in which the activity is proposed, and shall consider whether the activity incorporates best farm management practices and ensures that adverse effects to the flow and circulation patterns and chemical and biological characteristics of freshwater wetlands, buffers, and floodplains are minimized and that any adverse effects on the aquatic environment are minimized in each instance.
(4) Except as otherwise provided for farm road construction, filling of freshwater wetlands conforms to the provisions of this chapter.
(j) For the purposes of this section, a “farmer” is an individual, partnership, or corporation who operates a farm and has filed a 1040F U.S. Internal Revenue Form with the Internal Revenue Service, has a state farm tax number, and has earned ten thousand dollars ($10,000) gross income on farm products in each of the preceding four (4) years.
(k) For the purposes of this section as applicable to normal farming and ranching activities specified in §§ 2-1-22(i)(1) and (i)(2) above, freshwater wetlands shall be defined as: freshwater wetlands, floodplains, areas subject to storm flowage, areas subject to flooding as defined in § 2-1- 20 and the land area within two hundred feet (200′) of a flowing body of water having a width of ten feet (10′) or more during normal flow; the area of land within one hundred feet (100′) of a flowing body of water having a width of less than ten feet (10′) during normal flow; and the area of land within fifty feet (50′) of a bog, marsh of one acre or greater, swamp of three (3) acres or greater and pond not less than one quarter (¼) acre in extent. These areas shall also serve as the LC003924 - Page 7 of 9 jurisdictional area.

SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage.

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