Chattanooga Times Free Press

Trump’s budget priorities set small businesses strategizi­ng

-

Priorities laid out in President Donald Trump’s budget message have some small business owners strategizi­ng how they might benefit from a big boost in defense spending, and others thinking about how to make up for revenue they could lose to cuts in grant programs and subsidies.

While Trump’s plan, released March 16, is far from the final word on the subject, he has called for a $54 billion increase in the Pentagon’s budget. He has proposed cuts elsewhere, such as the Environmen­tal Protection Agency and the Commerce Department, and no funding at all for 19 agencies including the National Endowment for the Arts.

Department­s and agencies across the government have programs that benefit small companies or offer them contractin­g opportunit­ies.

“It’s the opening bid in the negotiatio­ns,” says David Primo, a professor of political science and business at the University of Rochester. The formal request that will go to Congress is expected in May, and even that version will be subject to negotiatio­ns among lawmakers.

Still, the proposal does give small business owners a sense of Trump’s goals for the rest of his term.

Here’s a look at how business owners believe Trump’s objectives could affect them.

AN END TO SUBSIDIES?

Air Choice One would lose revenue if the administra­tion succeeds in ending funding for the Essential Air Service program, says Shane Storz, the company’s CEO. The St. Louis-based carrier gets federal subsidies under the program aimed at making it easier for people who live in rural areas to catch flights nearer their homes.

The company has 56 subsidized flights a day, sending eight-seater turboprops carrying about 2,000 passengers a month to seven small cities in Iowa, Illinois, Michigan, Tennessee and Arkansas. The federal program subsidizes 60 percent to 70 percent of the cost of Air Choice One’s flights, Storz says. If the program’s funding is reduced or eliminated, the airline would have to cut flights, forcing many passengers to drive two or more hours to an airport served by a major airline.

“We get a lot of elderly travelers who don’t want to drive,” Storz says.

Air Choice One’s subsidized flights run at 80 percent of capacity, a number consistent with major carriers. Storz is trying to increase ridership so the subsidized routes can be sustained even if funding is cut. The Trump administra­tion says ending funding entirely would save the government $175 million.

“If the program ended, it would hurt tremendous­ly,” Storz says.

MORE DEFENSE SPENDING, HIGHER SALES

Inquiries about Frontline Selling’s sales management software shot up after the call for higher defense spending was released, co-owner Mike Scher says. His customers, technology providers to government contractor­s and subcontrac­tors, are hoping for a jump in sales under the budget plan and from Trump’s call during a speech to Congress for $1 trillion in government and private spending on infrastruc­ture.

“They believe that’s going to come to fruition,” says Scher, whose company is based in Alpharetta, Ga., an Atlanta suburb. “They’re ramping up their business.”

That has already helped Frontline Selling. Scher expects that his company’s first-quarter revenue will rise 10 percent to 15 percent from a year ago, and there’s a growing backlog of orders to fill. He’s optimistic enough about government spending that he plans to hire five employees in the next quarter, increasing his staff to 55.

ARTS FUNDING CUTS MEAN LESS BUSINESS?

The possibilit­y that the National Endowment for the Arts might lose all its funding has Shaun Breidbart concerned that some nonprofit theaters where he puts on stand-up comedy shows may take longer to pay him or even close.

Any funding cut could mean individual­s and organizati­ons lose grants from $10,000 to $100,000. Many theaters where Breidbart has shows get some of their operating budgets from those grants. Executive directors of some theaters have already told him that if they lose grant money, they might not be able to give him a deposit on signing a contract.

And if Breidbart doesn’t get those deposits, which can be several thousand dollars, he cannot pay other comedians who appear with him.

He’s also afraid if the NEA is eliminated, “that when I show up at a theater to do a show, I discover the theater is closed.”

 ?? PHOTO BY JEFF ROBERSON/AP ?? Air Choice One CEO Shane Storz flies small planes to destinatio­ns in the Midwest and participat­es in the Department of Transporta­tion’s Essential Air Service subsidy program.
PHOTO BY JEFF ROBERSON/AP Air Choice One CEO Shane Storz flies small planes to destinatio­ns in the Midwest and participat­es in the Department of Transporta­tion’s Essential Air Service subsidy program.
 ??  ?? Joyce Rosenberg
Joyce Rosenberg

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States