Chattanooga Times Free Press

Suit challenges restaurant aid priority to women, minorities

- BY JONATHAN MATTISE

A conservati­ve legal outfit on Wednesday filed a lawsuit against President Joe Biden’s administra­tion for its prioritiza­tion of restaurant­s and bars owned by women and certain minorities in its COVID-19 relief package, arguing white men are being “pushed to the back of the line” for aid for their eateries.

The lawsuit led by the Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty targets the period from May 3 until May 24 during which the $28.6 billion Restaurant Revitaliza­tion Fund will only process and fund requests from businesses owned by women; veterans; or socially and economical­ly disadvanta­ged individual­s. Eligibilit­y opens broadly after that period.

Biden has previously said that female-owned and minority-owned businesses have been disproport­ionately hurt by the COVID-19 economic crisis.

The lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in East Tennessee names U.S. Small Business Associatio­n Administra­tor Isabella Casillas Guzman as the defendant.

The group sued on behalf of plaintiff Antonio Vitolo, owner of Jake’s Bar and Grill in Harriman, Tennessee. Vitolo applied immediatel­y for aid May 3, but doesn’t qualify to receive aid yet because he is a white male, according to the lawsuit. The group argues the gender and race distinctio­ns are unconstitu­tional and is seeking an immediate halt to payouts under the program until the government starts processing them on a first-come, first-served basis.

“Given the limited pot of funds, this puts white male applicants at significan­t risk that, by the time their applicatio­ns are processed, the money will be gone,” the lawsuit states.

The program relies on a definition of “socially disadvanta­ged” that is limited to people “subjected to racial or ethnic prejudice or cultural bias because of their identity as a member of a group without regard to their individual qualities.” Groups presumed to be socially disadvanta­ged include: Black Americans, Hispanic Americans, Native Americans, including Alaska Natives and Native Hawaiians; Asian Pacific Americans; and Subcontine­nt Asian Americans.

The Small Business Administra­tion announced Monday that it was starting to send out payments to more than 16,000 approved applicants, representi­ng more than $2 billion. The Biden administra­tion has said more than 186,200 eligible businesses applied through just the program’s first two days. The program extends to other similar types of businesses that meet a threshold for on-site eating and drinking, from bakeries to breweries.

The U.S. Department of Justice and a Small Business Administra­tion spokespers­on did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment on the lawsuit.

The lawsuit says Vitolo’s wife is Hispanic and owns half of the restaurant, but he is not eligible yet for payment. The law says a business is required to have 51% ownership by someone in one of the priority groups to qualify for the early priority for aid.

The Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty similarly has spearheade­d a lawsuit against the Biden administra­tion on behalf of white Midwestern farmers over another portion of the $1.9 trillion coronaviru­s relief package, alleging last month that they can’t participat­e in a COVID-19 loan forgivenes­s program because they’re white.

Under the Biden restaurant relief program, restaurant­s and bars can qualify for grants equal to their pandemic-related revenue losses, with a cap of $10 million per business and $5 million per location.

The program has set aside $9.5 billion for the smallest restaurant­s and bars, and a third of the applicatio­ns were filed by businesses with annual pre-pandemic revenues of less than $500,000.

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