And some of the owners of liquor and tobacco businesses that received SBA-backed
loans continue in the industry — despite the lender writing off the loan and the
federal government apparently paying for them.
For example, a questionably named Thornton, Colorado, bar, Whiskey Dick’s,
obtained an SBA-backed loan in 2007 for nearly $300,000 to buy the building that
would house the establishment, bankruptcy records and a SBA loan charge-off
database show.
About three years later, the lender had to charge-off more than $200,000 of the
loan, and the owners filed for bankruptcy, according to bankruptcy records and
the database Watchdog.org obtained under the Freedom of Information Act.
But Whiskey Dick’s former owners, Keith Winyard and Sharon M. Plettner, are
apparently still in the bar business; their 2009 and 2010 bankruptcy filings
showing they each own 50 percent in Winyard Enterprises, which does business as
Streets of London Pub in Denver, according to incorporation records.
The bankruptcies that apparently cleared most of the SBA-backed debt show the
Whiskey Dick’s loan as “debt personally guaranteed by Debtor,” court documents
read, and the bankruptcies note the Pub ownership stake.
National Taxpayers Union president Pete Sepp questioned how tenaciously the
banks and the SBA go after people who take out the federally backed loans but
don’t pay them back — especially if they can own a similar business in the same
metro area.
“The IRS has been known to hound taxpayers over a lot less,” he said. “Did
somebody calculate the core costs and whether it was worth the time and effort
to go after the assets, or was that calculation never even made?”
Sepp also questioned why taxpayers are backing loans for businesses that other
government agencies are spending money to fight.
“In some cases it might be employees exercising less than good judgment; in
other cases it might be the rules,” he said.
SBA officials did not respond to repeated requests for an interview, but the
National Association of Development Companies president Barbara Vohryzek, whose
members lend 504-backed SBA loans, said the Treasury department will go after
other assets, if it’s cost-effective.
“It is really hard to go after personal and corporate guarantees, and often by
the time you go to court the assets are moved,” she said, adding the SBA-loan
guarantee program is valuable in creating business opportunities for women,
minorities and veterans.
Jeffrey L. Hill, the trustee in the Plettner bankruptcy, said the bankruptcy was
a personal one not a business one.
“If they own stock (in another business) we determine what’s the value of the
stock what is the value of the assets compared to the liability,” he said,
adding there were very few assets to pay entities Whiskey Dick’s owed. “If
there’s no net value, then there’s little we can do.”
Whiskey Dick’s was one of more than 600 drinking establishments that received
government and taxpayer-backed loans since 2009 but failed to pay back a total
of $60 million, which the SBA and lenders had to write off, according to the
charge off database.
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RELATED: Wineries, country clubs also get SBA guaranteed loans
that don’t perform
Additionally, liquor stores funded by the SBA loans defaulted on
more than $77 million and tobacco businesses defaulted on nearly
$2.5 million on federally backed loans in the past six years,
analysis of the database shows.
This happens as other government agencies spent tax and public money
fighting tobacco and alcohol. A study by the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention says states spent about $38 million last year
on tobacco prevention, and tobacco use costs the economy $289
billion in medical costs and lost productivity. The National
Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism alone spent nearly $460
million fighting alcohol abuse.
Vohryzek conceded the federal government often works at cross
purposes, but that’s the price of freedom — as opposed to central
planning.
“It happens all over government — we subsidize the ag sector and
people eat too much so we have to fight obesity,” she said. “There
are a lot of oxymorons in this country, but that’s what makes it
great. There’s freedom, and public policies can contradict each
other.”
Overall, the database shows more than $8.7 billion in charge-offs on
SBA-backed loans since taxpayers started to subsidize about $835
million of the defaults. The 2016 fiscal budget year is the first
since the Great Recession that SBA loan guarantee defaults will
again be funded solely by a fee on lenders, according to news
reports and NADCO.
The SBA loan database didn’t detail how much of the write-offs are
paid by the SBA and taxpayers. The SBA only generally funds a
maximum of 90 percent of the loans depending on loan type and
amount. SBA officials said they did could not provide records of SBA
guarantee payments but provided a database of information from
lenders who report the charge-offs.
“This information is collected by the lenders from SBA loan
applicants who provide it on a voluntary basis,” wrote William
Brown, SBA Freedom of Information Act analyst. “Since the
information is provided by the loan applicants on a voluntary basis,
it is not necessarily inclusive of all SBA borrowers, nor is its
accuracy checked by the Agency.”
Federal figures show default rates on SBA-backed loans are usually
in the low single digits.
Openthebooks CEO Adam Andrzejewski, whose website featured a
database of all SBA loans guarantees issued but that database didn’t
contain charge-off information, said government agencies need to get
on the same page on what policies to fund.
“This is a great example of government hypocrisy and inefficiency,”
he said of loans going to liquor and tobacco businesses while other
agencies are fighting smoking and alcohol abuse. “It’s not only
wasteful, it’s contradictory.”
Neither Winyard nor Plettner returned calls left at the pub and on
personal phone numbers, though an employee confirmed Winyard owns
the establishment, which, on a recent weekend evening, was filled
with patrons.
As far as Winyard and Plettner’s Whiskey Dick’s venture, the
bankruptcy closing records show the SBA received about $2,000 from
their assets, or roughly 1 percent of what was owned.
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