Biden to revise small business loans to reach smaller, minority firms
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[February 22, 2021] WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden will launch changes on Monday to
the main U.S. coronavirus aid program for small businesses to try to
reach smaller, minority-owned firms and sole proprietors left behind in
previous rounds of aid.
Biden administration officials said that for two weeks starting on
Wednesday, the Small Business Administration will only accept
applications for forgivable Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans from
firms with fewer than 20 employees to ensure that they are not crowded
out by larger firms.
The changes, to be formally announced by Biden on Monday afternoon, come
as small business bankers say demand for Paycheck Protection loans is
slowing as firms reopen. The White House released a fact sheet outlining
the changes on Monday morning.
When the PPP was launched in April 2020 at the height of coronavirus
lockdowns under a $3 trillion relief bill, its initial $349 billion ran
out in two weeks. Congress approved another $320 billion in May, but the
program expired in August with about $130 billion in unused funds.
The program was re-launched on Jan. 19 with $284 billion in new funds
from a coronavirus aid bill passed at the end of December, and a Biden
administration official said about $150 billion of PPP money is still
available.
But Biden administration officials said there are still many minority
and very small firms in low-income areas that have not been able to
receive aid.
The changes aim to make it easier for firms with no employees -- sole
proprietors, independent contractors, and self-employed people such as
house cleaners and personal care providers -- that could not qualify
previously because of business cost deductions.
The Small Business Administration will revise the rules to match the
approach used to allow small farmers and ranchers to receive aid, the
businesses said.
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People walk past a business that is closing following the outbreak
of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in the Manhattan borough of
New York City, New York, U.S., August 17, 2020. REUTERS/Carlo
Allegri//File Photo
The officials said the program will also set aside $1 billion for businesses
without employees in low- and moderate-income areas, which are 70% owned by
women and people of color.
The SBA will provide new guidance making it clear that legal U.S. residents who
are not citizens, such as green card holders, cannot be excluded from the
program. The Biden Administration will also eliminate exclusions that prohibit a
business owner who is delinquent on student loans from participating in the
program.
Business owners with non-fraud felony arrests or convictions in the previous
year are excluded from the program. However, Biden administration officials said
they will adopt bipartisan Senate proposals to remove this restriction, unless
the applicant is currently incarcerated.
According to the White House fact sheet, the Biden administration is also
improving the program's operations by strengthening and streamlining fraud
checks, revamping the loan application and government web sites that communicate
with small businesses, talking more with borrowers about their needs, and
deepening the government's relationship with lenders.
(Reporting by David Lawder; Additional reporting by Lisa Lambert; Editing by
Jacqueline Wong and Chizu Nomiyama)
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