Minority businesses worry they are locked out of payroll
lending program
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[April 29, 2020] By
Jonnelle Marte
(Reuters) - As the government issues a
second round of aid for small business owners, some U.S. senators,
community banking groups and minority-owned banks said they are worried
businesses owned by people of color may miss out on receiving
much-needed loans.
The Small Business Administration (SBA) reopened its Paycheck Protection
Program (PPP) on Monday for up to $310 billion in loans for businesses
affected by the coronavirus pandemic. But with many lenders carrying a
backlog of applications, the money could run out in days - not good news
for black and Hispanic owned businesses that couldn't get loans the
first time around.
"If the system is a first-come first-served system, it's going to be
very hard for the smallest to get in," said Lisa Mensah, president and
chief executive of the Opportunity Finance Network, a national
association of community development financial institutions.
Smaller businesses, especially those owned by black and Hispanic
entrepreneurs, often lack traditional banking relationships, which could
make it more difficult for them to access loans under the program.
Only 32% of small businesses with less than 500 employees owned by
Hispanics and 23% of those owned by non-Hispanic blacks had received a
bank loan within the past five years, according to a survey
https://www.fedsmallbusiness.org/
medialibrary/
FedSmallBusiness/files/2020/2020-sbcs-employer-firms-report released by
the New York Federal Reserve earlier this month.
Soon after the program launched on Monday, some community lenders said
they had issues submitting their loans. The "E-Tran" application
processing website crashed within minutes of the launch after
experiencing high volume.
The $30 billion in funds reserved for small lenders with less than $10
billion in assets was depleted by Tuesday afternoon, requiring smaller
lenders that didn't get through to compete with larger firms for loans.
Mensah's group was part of a coalition of community banking groups that
sent a letter over the weekend to the Treasury Department and the Small
Business Administration asking them to set aside $10 billion
specifically for Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs)
and minority depository institutions, which are more likely to lend in
diverse areas and those with high concentrations of low to middle income
residents.
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The New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) is seen in the financial district
of lower Manhattan during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) in New York City, U.S., April 26, 2020. REUTERS/Jeenah
Moon
Senate Democrats including Mark Warner and Chuck Schumer, sent a letter with a
similar request.
The SBA said unprecedented demand slowed E-Tran response times and it is working
around the clock to help all small businesses. Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin
said many of the issues were corrected by Tuesday.
Entrepreneurs who haven't taken out business loans before may need more help
with the application process, putting them at a disadvantage for a program that
requires speed, said Joe Neri, chief executive IFF, a CDFI that focuses on
nonprofit organizations.
Eliuth Guzman tried to get a PPP loan for her Latin catering business in Chicago
through her bank earlier this month, but was rejected because her application
did not include all the required documents.
For this round of funding, she prepared her application with guidance from
Accion, a CDFI in Chicago. As of Tuesday afternoon, Guzman was still waiting to
hear back about her request for $20,000, to cover wages for her staff of five
and rent for the commercial kitchen they cook in.
"We need this loan, we need this cash flow," said Guzman, whose sales dropped
from about 600 lunches a week to roughly 100 a week during the pandemic. "Having
this help from the government can hold me until I get back fully into the
business."
(Reporting by Jonnelle Marte. Editing by Heather Timmons and Lincoln Feast.)
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