Requisite Relief
What can Congress do to help small businesses hit by the hurricanes?
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2006/january/81658.html
When the hurricanes in the South wreaked devastation across the
Gulf Coast, small businesses in particular were hit hard, and many
entrepreneurs in the region fear they will not have the capital to
rebuild. Since the hurricanes, some small-business owners have
started complaining that aid designated for the region is not
reaching them. We spoke with our "Point/Counterpoint"
team, veteran New York Democratic congresswoman Nydia
Velázquez and Arizona Republican congressman Rick Renzi, about
what Congress could do to help Gulf Coast entrepreneurs
recover.
Entrepreneur: In your view, what programs would best
benefit entrepreneurs in the devastated regions?
Rep. Renzi: The best kind of short-term program is the
right combination of grants and loans. But the federal government
does not have to provide the total solution. These short-term
programs can come from private, local, state and federal
sources--directly after the hurricanes struck, grants from private
charities and the Federal Emergency Management Agency helped meet
the immediate relief needs of entrepreneurs. In the longer term,
the American Bankers Association has recommended that the SBA allow
private lending institutions to also offer SBA-backed disaster
loans. I'm open to [a] private-sector backed solution.
Rep. Velázquez: The government has to play the key
role. The SBA has to offer not only immediate disaster assistance,
but must [also] ensure these businesses are equipped for the longer
term. We have the [SBA] microloan program that'll come into
play here. The SBA needs to go back to the drawing board and lay
out a strategy of how they're going to expedite the loan
process.
There have been concerns that assistance thus far is not
reaching entrepreneurs. Do you think this is accurate, and if so,
what can Congress and the administration do to speed up the
process?
Velázquez: We had a congressional hearing with [SBA
head] Hector Barreto weeks after Katrina, and they hadn't
issued even one loan. The chairman of the [House] Small Business
Committee, as we were conducting a hearing, said we don't know
if it's worth rebuilding the region.
Small businesses are not getting [rebuilding] contracts. Many of
the same government agencies involved in the Gulf Coast rebuilding
got the lowest marks on my Small Business Contracting
Scorecard.
Renzi: There was a need in the immediate aftermath of the
hurricanes to get relief supplies down to the region as fast as
possible, and many of the contracting protections given to small
business were regrettably waived. Fortunately, the administration
recognized this as a problem and has worked to devise solutions to
the betterment of small businesses. The administration announced
that it will recompete, under regular small-business contracting
rules, the five main contracts it awarded to large businesses.
How can the federal government balance these reconstruction
needs and the broader budget, given that we are running a large
deficit?
Renzi: The Gulf region has already received the largest
emergency supplemental funding ever in response to a natural
disaster (or even 9/11), which did not require any [budget
reductions]. Future appropriations should be offset with reductions
in spending in other areas of the federal government, and tax
increases should not be considered because that would only stymie
economic growth. If we're asking the nation to bear this load
to help rebuild the Gulf region, then the entire federal budget
should be subject to an across-the-board reduction of whatever is
needed.
Velázquez: There should be no excuse not to provide
resources here.
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