San Diego Union-Tribune

DATA ON PPP LOANS SHOWS A FEW BORROWERS GOT MUCH OF AID

1% of businesses received more than a quarter of total funds

- BY STACY COWLEY & ELLA KOEZE

More than 5 million companies received loans under the federal government’s signature relief program for small businesses reeling from the pandemic, but a tiny fraction of those companies gobbled up vast sums of money, newly released data shows.

Detailed loan informatio­n released by the Small Business Administra­tion late Tuesday showed that about 600 businesses received loans of $10 million, the largest available under the $525 billion Paycheck Protection Program. And a mere 1 percent of borrowers received more than one-quarter of the total amount of money disbursed — or around $143 billion in loans of $1.4 million and above.

The data is the first full accounting of how federal money was spent through the PPP, which offered struggling small companies (generally those with 500 or fewer workers) forgivable loans to help them retain workers and keep up with bills like rent and other expenses. The inf lux of money was a crucial stabilizin­g force for many businesses fighting to survive amid widespread shutdowns caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic. But the program has come under criticism for its poorly defined rules and the hasty and haphazard rollout that has allowed fraudsters to tap into the money.

Also included in the data were

details of loans made under the Economic Injury Disaster Loan system, a longstandi­ng SBA program that was vastly expanded to offer relief to businesses affected by the pandemic. Together, the two programs spread more than $700 billion to struggling companies in just a few months.

The loan data was released under an order by Judge James Boasberg of the U.S. District Court in Washing ton, who rejected the SBA’s request to keep the informatio­n confidenti­al. Previously released PPP data contained only ranges for larger loan amounts and no informatio­n about loans under $150,000.

Calling the PPP “vast in both size and sweep,” Boasberg wrote in a ruling last month that “the weighty public interest in disclosure easily overcomes the far narrower privacy interest of borrowers who collective­ly received billions of taxpayer dollars in loans.”

The PPP loans were intended to cover up to two months of payroll costs and a handful of other expenses and can be forgiven if companies spent the money mostly on retaining workers.

The companies that received the maximum $10 million loan include dozens of restaurant chains, including Black Angus Steakhouse­s, P.F. Chang ’s, Legal Sea Foods and TGI Friday’s, which took advantage of an exception the restaurant industry lobbied for to make chains eligible for the aid money.

Prominent law firms like Boies Schiller Flexner, the high-priced firm run by David Boies, and Kasowitz Benson Torres, founded and run by President Donald Trump’s long time personal lawyer, Marc Kasowitz, also collected loans for $10 million. (It was previously known that both firms received large loans, but the exact amount had not been disclosed.)

Boies’ firm previously declined to comment on its loan; Kasowitz’s firm said the loan helped it preserve hundreds of jobs. Most of the program’s borrowers sought far less: Loans of $150,000 and under accounted for around 87 percent of the loans made through the program, which ended in August, when its congressio­nal authorizat­ion expired. But those loans made up less than 30 percent of the total handed out, about $146 million.

The data also shows how inconsiste­ntly the SBA disbursed money through the Economic Injury Disaster Loan program, a still-running aid effort that offers companies and nonprofits low-interest loans directly from the government to help them rebuild their battered operations. The EIDL program, is supposed to make loans of up to $2 million, but the SBA, concerned that it would run out of money, imposed various caps on the program, none of which were publicly disclosed to borrowers at the time.

Two organizati­ons received loans in early April for more than $500,000, the cap the agency set on the program later that month. The Jewish Community Center in Stamford, Connecticu­t, received $900,000; and the CWC Group, an alternativ­e medicine clinic in Bellevue, Wash., received $713,900, according to the SBA data.

More than 8,000 organizati­ons got loans for $500,000, a limit that was later lowered to $150,000, where it has remained since May. The EIDL program has distribute­d 3.6 million loans, totaling $194 billion, since the coronaviru­s crisis began — far more than the program had given out in its entire 67year history.

An SBA spokespers­on said that the agency’s “historical­ly successful COVID relief loan programs have helped millions of small businesses and tens of millions of American workers when they needed it most.”

The Paycheck Protection Program was hastily constructe­d in late March after Congress passed the $2 trillion coronaviru­s relief bill. The Treasury Department, which called most of the shots on the program, released technical guidance to banks just hours before lending began in April, and the terms shifted many times before the program ended in August. The Treasury Department has issued dozens of correction­s and clarificat­ions to its rules.

 ?? NATI HARNIK AP ?? P.F. Chang ’s was one of dozens of restaurant chains, including Black Angus Steakhouse­s and TGI Friday’s, that received the maximum $10 million loan.
NATI HARNIK AP P.F. Chang ’s was one of dozens of restaurant chains, including Black Angus Steakhouse­s and TGI Friday’s, that received the maximum $10 million loan.

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