Illinois restaurants can now apply for revitalization fund grants
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[May 04, 2021]
By Kevin Bessler
(The Center Square) – Illinois restaurants
and bars reeling from the COVID-19 pandemic are getting more relief.
Affected businesses can now apply for Restaurant Revitalization Fund
grants from the U.S. Small Business Administration.
The $28.6 billion federal program provides restaurants, bars, caterers
and other eligible establishments grants equal to their pandemic-related
revenue losses.
It is similar to the Paycheck Protection Program in some ways, as loans
are forgivable. The PPP was broader while the Revitalization Fund is
designed to help restaurants and bars with COVID-related expenses.
Unlike the Paycheck Protection Program, which required businesses to
spend the loan within 24 weeks, businesses have two years to use funds
they get under the Restaurant Revitalization Fund program.
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The Restaurant Revitalization Fund will have an
immediate impact on Illinois’ hardest hit restaurants and bars and
will help boost the recovery of our local economies,” said Sam Toia,
president and CEO of the Illinois Restaurant Association.
Toia notes that the fund is aimed at helping smaller, independent
businesses that own 20 or fewer locations and not intended for
national chain operations.
The industry has been hit particularly hard during
the past year. Between February 2020 and March 2021, Illinois lost
nearly 103,000 eating and drinking place jobs. And the recovery has
been slow. Eighty percent of Illinois restaurant operators say total
sales volume in March 2021 was lower than it would normally be in
the absence of COVID-19.
For the first three weeks of the program, the SBA is only processing
applications from women, veterans, and socially and economically
disadvantaged people.
Toia said he doesn’t believe the fund will last very long, and has
asked lawmakers to be prepared to replenish the funds.
“Independent restaurants are important to all our cities and towns
throughout the country because restaurants are the soul of every
neighborhood, so we definitely are feeling that this could go very
fast,” Toia said. |