Houston Chronicle

McConnell seeks quick PPP rules changes for small firms

- By Erik Wasson and Mark Niquette

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell will attempt to expedite approval of changes to the popular Paycheck Protection Program aimed at giving small businesses more flexibilit­y in using the money from the fund, according to Senate aides.

McConnell is seeking to move the bill, passed by the House last week, by unanimous consent in the Senate if no senators raise objections to a notice to lawmakers, according to the aides.

The bill would extend the eight-week period when proceeds must be spent for loans to be forgiven to 24 weeks or until the end of the year, whichever comes first. Businesses also would have as long as five years, instead of two years, to repay any money owed on a loan and could use a greater percentage of proceeds on rent and other approved non-payroll expenses.

Businesses, especially in the restaurant and hospitalit­y industry, that are only recently getting the green light to reopen say they need more time to distribute pay.

“I hope and anticipate the Senate will soon take up and pass legislatio­n that just passed the House by an overwhelmi­ng vote of 417-1 to further strengthen the Paycheck Protection Program so it continues working for small businesses that need our help,” McConnell said on the Senate floor Monday.

It is not yet clear if all senators will agree to the bill without changes.

Senate Small Business Chairman Marco Rubio, a Florida Republican, said in a statement last week that some provisions in the House bill “could create an unintended disincenti­ve to rehiring and create new and serious burdens for PPP borrowers in terms of forgivenes­s.”

The House bill, H.R. 7010, would lower to 60 percent the current requiremen­t that 75 percent of a loan be used on payroll. Restaurant­s and other small businesses have said they want flexibilit­y to spend more on overhead expenses, especially in high-rent areas.

Rubio said the House language creates a problem for companies that use less than 60 percent of a loan on payroll.

The current PPP program allows partial loan forgivenes­s if a company uses less than 75 percent of a loan for payroll, but the House bill appears to state that none of the loan would be forgiven if the 60 percent threshold isn’t met.

The program currently requires that for a PPP loan to be forgiven, at least 75 percent must be spent on payroll during the eight weeks after funds are received. If that percentage isn’t met, or a firm reduces head count or salaries, the amount forgiven is reduced and must be repaid in two years at 1 percent interest.The idea was to help businesses keep employees on payrolls amid stay-at-home orders so they would be ready to reopen and workers aren’t thrown out of jobs.

The timing on legislativ­e action matters because last Friday started the period when firms that got funding when the program launched on April 3 could start applying with their lenders to have their loans forgiven. The dollar amount of new PPP loan approvals has stalled with about $130 billion remaining in the second round of funding because loans are being canceled. That includes businesses returning money amid concerns they won’t be able to spend it during the eight-week forgivenes­s period or with SBA promising to audit loans to ensure borrowers properly certified they were “necessary.”

As of last Friday evening, SBA reported that almost 4.5 million loans had been approved worth $510.2 billion — which was almost $300 million less than the net amount the day before and more than $3 billion less than through May 16, despite the number of loan approvals increasing during that time. The SBA and Treasury Department, which oversee the program, haven’t provided a comprehens­ive accounting of cancellati­ons, which include duplicate loans. Some returns are from larger publicly traded companies that sent back hundreds of millions of dollars following outrage over their getting aid at the expense of mom-and-pop stores, prompting an SBA vow to audit all loans of more than $2 million.

Even as the economic damage from the pandemic continues to hit hard across the U.S., executives at the largest U.S. banks, speaking on the condition of anonymity, have said that they don’t foresee demand for loans picking up again without major changes to the program.

Besides concerns about the eight-week and 75 percent payroll rules, advocates also said SBA and Treasury were late in issuing rules on how to calculate loan forgivenes­s — leaving businesses confused and concerned about whether they’d have to repay all or part of loans they couldn’t afford.

 ?? Patrick Semansky / Associated Press ?? Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell wants to fast-track changes in PPP loan rules for small businesses.
Patrick Semansky / Associated Press Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell wants to fast-track changes in PPP loan rules for small businesses.

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