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			 To ensure ongoing support for Illinois small 
			businesses, the State of Illinois has planned future rounds of 
			funding. BIG represents the largest state-run economic support 
			program in response to the economic hardship caused by coronavirus. 
 “I’m proud to announce the first $46 million of our Business 
			Interruption Grant program has been deployed to help more than 2,600 
			small businesses in over 400 cities and towns in Illinois. That’s 78 
			of our 102 counties,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “The initial focus 
			of these grants has been on businesses that have been most severely 
			impacted by COVID-19 — those that were completely shut down in the 
			spring and those that are in COVID-impacted areas that experienced 
			property damage amidst the looting and civil unrest in June. 
			Overall, the BIG program will support thousands of small businesses 
			who have suffered losses due to the COVID pandemic, with a 
			substantial allotment set aside specifically for childcare providers 
			– an essential underpinning of our workforce for countless working 
			families.”
 
			
			 
			
 “Under Governor Pritzker’s leadership, BIG is our latest tool in 
			helping businesses with the support they need to maintain 
			operations, support their staff and focus their efforts on a safe 
			reopening in the wake of the crisis,” said Acting Director of DCEO, 
			Michael Negron. “While the first round of BIG will provide a 
			much-needed boost for thousands of businesses around the state, we 
			know there is much more we must do. Through a number of programs 
			launched in recent weeks, and with another round of BIG on the 
			horizon, we will continue to respond to the needs facing our 
			business community and work to provide assistance where it’s needed 
			most.”
 
 First round grants range from $10,000-$20,000 and may be used to 
			help businesses with working capital expenses, including: payroll 
			costs; rent; utilities; and equipment as well as other unexpected 
			costs to mitigate the impact of the pandemic, such as PPE, training, 
			and new technology. Business categories identified in the first 
			round include small businesses in industries that continue to 
			experience economic hardship due to public concerns for health and 
			safety and in areas that sustained setbacks due to property damage 
			and closures as a result of recent civil unrest.
 
 BIG round 1 grants span a diverse geography, as well as business 
			type – with more than 50 percent of grant recipients reporting they 
			are minority-owned. This breakdown includes 14 percent Black 
			business owners, 25 percent Asian-owned, and 11 percent Latinx-owned. 
			Additionally, more than 600 grants totaling $10 million for 
			downstate businesses. To ensure small businesses were given a 
			priority, grantees were required to prove annual revenues of $3 
			million or lower.
 
 More than $24 million in this first round of funding will be devoted 
			to DIAs. The General Assembly created the Disproportionately 
			Impacted Area (DIA) designation to represent areas that have been 
			significantly impacted by COVID-19 as well as other adverse economic 
			conditions. Under statute, at least 30 percent of BIG funds will be 
			distributed to DIAs. Additionally, a substantial portion of total 
			BIG funds are reserved for locations outside of Chicago and the 
			collar counties.
 
 More than 5,000 businesses applied for funding, with grantees 
			selected via random lottery. To ensure reviews were conducted with 
			an objective, equitable lens and to maximize the turnaround time on 
			application reviews, DCEO partnered with several community-based 
			grant administration partners, including Accion, Chicago Urban 
			League, Women’s Business Development Center, The Chicago Community 
			Loan Fund, Somercor and Chicago Neighborhood Initiatives.
 
 To give entrepreneurs of color who historically lack access to the 
			same level of funding and opportunities as other business owners, 
			DCEO is offering technical assistance to support businesses in 
			future rounds of BIG. DCEO will invest $1 million to expand outreach 
			capacity by working with four community navigator partners - 
			community-based organizations that will build a “hub and spoke” 
			model to engage, train and invest in expanding capacity of smaller 
			organizations to reach more business owners eligible for BIG 
			assistance.
 
			
			 
			 
 “We are pleased to work with Governor Pritzker and his team to 
			distribute grants to Chicago businesses that are in dire need,” said 
			Karen Freeman Wilson, CEO of the Chicago Urban League. “From our 
			talks with business owners, we understand that these grants are 
			often the difference between continuing to offer goods and services 
			and closure. We also understand the importance of business coaching 
			and mentorship, and we use this partnership as an opportunity to 
			continue that work with small businesses.”
 
 These partners have a demonstrated capacity to conduct outreach and 
			technical assistance to ensure more participation in future rounds, 
			particularly among minority-owned businesses, who have been 
			underrepresented in other government relief efforts so far. Outreach 
			will begin this month with the support of the following community 
			navigators:
 
 Illinois Business Immigration Coalition
 
 The Resurrection Project
 
 Chicago Urban League
 
 Greater Auburn Gresham Development Corporation
 
 “IBIC is proud to partner with Governor JB Pritzker and DCEO to 
			provide capacity building for our community-based nonprofits to 
			provide technical assistance through a community navigator model to 
			assist minority owned businesses,” said Rebecca Shi, Executive 
			Director, IBIC. “Black and Brown businesses, independent contractors 
			have been shut out of federal relief programs while continuing to 
			bear the brunt of COVID-19. A robust, state-wide technical 
			assistance program levels the playing field and ensures that 
			entrepreneurs of color not only survive but thrive through this 
			global pandemic.”
 
 “The BIG program is essential for small businesses that continue to 
			suffer due to lack of resources throughout the pandemic and recent 
			civil unrest,” said Raul Raymundo, CEO and Co-founder of The 
			Resurrection Project. “The small and minority-owned businesses, the 
			backbone of our communities, have been left behind in federal relief 
			funding. The BIG program invests in expanding outreach capacity and 
			engaging with businesses that were hardest hit by COVID-19.”
 
 To further promote the grant opportunity to businesses around the 
			state, DCEO leveraged its statewide network of Small Business 
			Development Centers (SBDCs) as well as other community partners to 
			conduct outreach to business owners eligible for BIG assistance. In 
			recent weeks, DCEO has conducted a series of webinars, briefings and 
			1:1 business outreach to provide information to more than 5,000 
			business owners and business groups representing owners in various 
			industry sectors.
 
 The initial round of BIG grants will be followed by subsequent 
			rounds, each offering consideration to business sectors facing the 
			most extreme economic hardship as a result of COVID-19-related 
			closures or diminished operating capacity. Separately, the portion 
			the BIG program set aside for childcare providers is administered by 
			the Illinois Department of Human Services. Childcare providers may 
			apply for these funds until August 14th at this link.
 
 “I feel like my restaurant symbolizes progress for black people in 
			business showing that we can be just as successful as anyone else,” 
			said Vanetta Roy owner of Surf’s Up South Shore and Old Town in 
			Chicago. “With this grant, I will hire more people and expand food 
			service training for my employees. I’m thankful for the continued 
			support of the South Shore Chamber for getting the necessary 
			information out here, and to the State for providing this grant. I 
			will be using it to make South Shore the very best it can be!”
 
 “Having closed for most of May, this grant will allow us to regain a 
			positive cash flow, hire additional help and provide us with the 
			security we needed to renew our commercial lease,” said Ana 
			Rodriguez, co-owner of The Jibarito Stop in Chicago. “I am eternally 
			grateful for this assistance from the state of Illinois.”
 
 “The financial boost this grant provides goes beyond supporting just 
			the owners of this business, as it trickles down throughout the 
			community to employees and their families, vendors, and customers,” 
			said Katie Karcher, owner of Seasoning Bistro in Benton. “In this 
			time of need, we are so grateful to be given the opportunity that 
			the BIG grant affords us as it will ensure our business is able to 
			continue, and that we can sustain employment for our hard-working 
			employees.”
 
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            “While many businesses in the country have been 
			impacted by COVID-19, few sectors have been as affected or face as 
			long of a road to recovery than the travel agency industry,” said 
			Giselle Sanchez, owner of Mena Tours and Travel Inc in Chicago. 
			“Since our inception in 1965, our business has never experienced 
			such an extended halt. As we continue to navigate through this 
			difficult time, the opportunity to receive a Business Interruption 
			Grant from the state will not only provide our business with a much 
			needed lifeline to cover ongoing overhead expenses but will 
			subsequently position us to see this through and be ready to service 
			our longtime (eager to travel) clients once it is safe to travel 
			again.” 
 "After losing staff and having to absorb unforeseen costs with our 
			savings, this BIG grant will allow us to hire staff back,” said 
			Brittany Dickens, owner of Fierce Manes Salon in Lansing. “At Fierce 
			Manes, we know our stylists and staff depend on pay day to survive, 
			and this funding can help me do that. Next week will be our 5 year 
			anniversary and given that we can now provide more certainty for our 
			staff, we can hopefully return to our original plan of expanding.”
 
 “I've been in this business for 16 years and my goal has always been 
			to help up and coming stylists be successful in their own careers,” 
			said Stephanie Cowan, owner of Heavenly Enhanced Salon in Gurnee. 
			“With fewer clients coming in the doors, COVID-19 has definitely 
			placed an impact on our stylists who depend on their job to provide 
			for their families. Our BIG grant will allow Heavenly Enhanced Salon 
			to support our stylists in staying on the staff and continue serving 
			their customers.”
 
 “At Oasis Wellness, we seek to provide a refuge for women of all 
			ages, backgrounds and stages,” said Elizabeth Cook, Owner of Oasis 
			Wellness in Murphysboro. “Like many businesses, COVID-19 has been 
			hard for us, particularly on our staff. I am thrilled to receive a 
			BIG grant to ensure that regardless of what happens in the weeks 
			ahead, we will have ability to help cover our employees, and provide 
			spa services as long as it is safe to do so.”
 
 “My restaurant was forced to close due to the Covid-19 mandate for 
			over four months,” said Agron Ademi, owner of Harvest Restaurant in 
			Pecatonica. “This Grant helped me get my business up and running 
			again, it helped pay my restaurant utilities, order food, start 
			advertising, and most importantly it helped with my payroll to keep 
			and maintain my current staff.”
 
 “I'm glad to see this new round of assistance to small businesses 
			hit by COVID, especially those in disproportionately impacted 
			areas,” said Majority Leader Greg Harris. “This new broader effort 
			adds to our first rounds of business assistance, plus assistance to 
			hospitals, healthcare centers and other small businesses that we are 
			helping through these difficult times.”
 
            
			 
             
 “These grants will go a long way to help businesses struggling from 
			the COVID-19 outbreak,” said State Senator Celina Villanueva 
			(D-Chicago). “They’re especially important for the many business 
			owners who couldn’t qualify for federal aid in communities like the 
			one I represent.”
 
 “I am excited to see a specific focus on communities that have been 
			decimated by unrest and disinvestment,” said State Representative 
			Curtis Tarver (D-Chicago). “Access to capital is critical to any 
			business and I hope this provides a lifeline to small businesses and 
			the communities that support them.”
 
 “Our small businesses are continuing to fight hard to adapt and 
			survive during the continuing pandemic,” said State Representative 
			Dan Brady (R-Normal). “These grants are an investment in their 
			future, and the future of our local communities.”
 
 "Small businesses are the lifeblood of my community and of our 
			state,” said State Representative Will Guzzardi (D-Chicago). “They 
			need this grant money to survive, and I'm proud of our state for 
			doing everything we can to keep these businesses afloat during times 
			of unprecedented hardship."
 
 “COVID-19 arrived quickly in our community, and small businesses 
			have been severely impacted by this pandemic,” said State Senator 
			Scott Bennett (D-Champaign). “As we work to address this public 
			health crisis, it’s critical that we continue to give local 
			businesses the resources they need to survive this crisis. State 
			resources like the BIG program can help these businesses as we 
			continue to navigate this pandemic.”
 
 “I am so happy that businesses in my district received $3 million in 
			Business Interruption Grants,” said State Senator Mattie Hunter 
			(D-Chicago). “First businesses in my community were devastated by 
			COVID-19, then civil unrest and looting. My heart goes out to them 
			for all the hardships they’ve faced these past several months. 
			People put their whole lives into their businesses, and deserve to 
			see their hard work pay off. They are more than deserving of these 
			grants, and I hope it offers them a chance to get back on their 
			feet.”
 
 “I fought for and helped craft this effort to ensure that areas that 
			have been disproportionately impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic are 
			able to receive support to keep their small businesses open,” said 
			Senate Majority Leader Kimberly Lightford. “Almost $900,000 is going 
			directly to businesses in my district, and I am thankful that those 
			owners are finally seeing some relief.”
 
            
			 
             
 “It was one of my priorities during session to ensure we were able 
			to provide support to those businesses that have been struggling 
			throughout this pandemic,” said Assistant Majority Leader Tony Munoz 
			(D-Chicago). “My district is home to so many businesses owned by 
			people of all backgrounds, and it’s important to preserve the 
			cultural and economic contributions they make to Chicago and 
			Illinois.”
 
 “These grants will help Illinois Quad Cities businesses through the 
			difficult time COVID-19 has brought,” said State Representative 
			Michael Halpin (D-Rock Island). “I am proud that the General 
			Assembly acted swiftly to pass BIG legislation, and look forward to 
			additional rounds of this important program.”
 
 “The Business Interruption Grant program is an example of what is 
			possible when legislators do their job and create tangible solutions 
			to the problems facing our state,” said State Senator Andy Manar 
			(D-Bunker Hill). “Government is supposed to work for those we 
			represent first and foremost, and I’m proud that we are doing 
			everything possible at the state level to help our small business 
			community stay afloat.”
 
 “Many of our community's most important local businesses have been 
			struggling as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the folks who 
			run these places or work there are living in a constant state of 
			worry that they'll wake up tomorrow without a job because the doors 
			had to close for good,” said State Representative Robert Peters 
			(D-Chicago). “The grants from DCEO - which will award nearly $1.8 
			million dollars to area businesses with almost half of that slated 
			toward Black-owned businesses - will provide much needed relief to 
			the businesses and their employees and will prevent the permanent 
			closure of many fixtures of our community.”
 
 “The BIG program means so much for the small businesses in my 
			district, many of which began experiencing the financial impact of 
			the pandemic even before the Stay at Home order went into effect,” 
			said State Representative Theresa Mah (D-Chicago).
 
 Since March, DCEO has launched over $300 million in programs to 
			assist businesses experiencing losses as a result of the COVID-19 
			public health emergency—including the Business Interruption Grants 
			(BIG) program, the Downstate Stabilization Grant Fund, the 
			Hospitality Emergency Grant Program, and the Fast Track capital 
			program. While more than 1,000 grants have been released as a result 
			of these programs, through BIG, an estimated thousands more small 
			businesses will benefit from critical relief dollars. Additionally, 
			to aid businesses experiencing damage from looting and civil unrest, 
			DCEO will soon launch the application for Rebuild Distressed 
			Communities – providing $25 million to help with capital repairs.
 
 Illinois businesses can follow DCEO on social media @IllinoisDCEO 
			for regular updates on business resources and programs.
 
            [Office of the Governor JB Pritzker] |