UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — The Center for Agricultural Conservation Assistance Training, administered by Penn State Extension, has contracted with Herbert, Rowland & Grubic Inc., an infrastructure consulting firm operating in Pennsylvania and surrounding states with more than 60 years of experience in civil engineering and a reputation for innovative water quality solutions.
This partnership is aimed at boosting the conservation workforce’s capacity to implement best management practices, ultimately improving and protecting soil health and water quality in Pennsylvania. The firm will assist in establishing certification requirements, providing training, and supervising certified conservation professionals for the installation of projects statewide.
Penn State’s College of Agricultural Sciences established the center in 2023 in partnership with the Pennsylvania State Conservation Commission and the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service.
“Our new center is enthusiastically working alongside our conservation partners in the state to continue making it easier for farmers to take advantage of the programs that can benefit their farm operations and support their commitment to environmental stewardship, soil health and water quality,” said Jennifer Fetter, Penn State Extension water resources program leader and director of the center.
The center is funded by the State Conservation Commission through its Agriculture Conservation Assistance Program, which was created through the Clean Streams Fund established in the fiscal 2022-23 state budget. Additional support is provided by USDA-NRCS through its Conservation Technical Assistance Program.
A core service the center offers is technical assistance for implementing conservation best management practices in agriculture, noted Justin Challenger, director of financial and technical assistance programs at the State Conservation Commission.
“The commission is hoping the new contract will allow the center to provide more professional engineering technical assistance to the state’s 66 county conservation districts who implement the [Agriculture Conservation Assistance] program locally,” he said. “This new contract with the long-established, well-respected firm of Herbert, Rowland & Grubic will greatly enhance the center’s ability to provide technical assistance and training.”
While Pennsylvania allocates funds for agricultural conservation projects, the state faces challenges in designing and building projects due to a shortage of agricultural engineers — who currently must sign off on projects. Such projects include laying out fences for rotational grazing, installing pipelines for watering troughs in pastures, and designing grassed waterways to manage stormwater in crop fields.
“Those are practices we’d like to see more ag conservation professionals across the state be able to do themselves over time, so they aren’t waiting in line for an engineer,” Fetter said.