Not the soil conservation district, but do with the USDA (dept of agriculture) and the Texas Parks and Wildlife department. I'm on the fence as to whether it is worth while. They do have money and they will assist on projects, both equipment, guidance, and funding wise, but they have projects they want to implement and with particular procedures. In my case, the goal matched one of their programs so they were interested, but we hit a snag about tilling. (I want the notill, they wanted bare soil). We had a couple of "discussions" back and forth and I was ready to pull out but finally arrived at a compromise. They are providing chemicals, a seeder, and some funding. We provide all the labor, fuel, tractor, seeds, etc. and we have to do an annual report for 2 years and have a 10 year commitment to the program. If we do anything else with the acreage in those 10 years I have to reimburse them their costs. They also have a minimum of 25 acres for their programs, BUT they have excess funds so they are funding smaller projects - mine is planned for about half of that.
on edit: We are not in the EQIP program, USDA has several that might apply. Be sure you mention "new producer" if you are actually getting into farming or ranching and have your place checked for "highly erodibale soils". The reimbursement rate is higher.