The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

City revisespro­gram forsmallbu­sinessaid Upcoming

Decatur, Dunwoody, Stone Mountain and others on Twitter: @ dekalbnews­now

- BILL BANKS FOR THE AJC

Earlier this week Decatur’s commission approved revision of the city’s Emergency Small Business Loan Program by in part turning it into a grant program. Additional­ly, the commission­approvedex­tending theprogram­by allowingmo­re city businesses to apply for grantmoney.

This is made possible by the $ 2,914,440 Decatur received from the Coronaviru­s Relief Fund under the Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief, and Economic Security or CARES Act. Out of that total CARES package the city is carving out $ 900,000 towards small business relief grants.

In June the city held a lottery that selected 28 businesses ( out of 45 applying) eligible for its COVID- 19 emergency small business loan program. The loans ranged from$ 5,000 to $ 25,000, with the average amount deliveredt­o loan recipients at $ 20,185.

The total amount loaned was $ 563,400, with $ 400,000 coming from the city, $ 100,000 from the Decatur Developmen­t Authority, and $ 63,400 from a Decatur Legacy Project fund raiser.

Initially businesses­were given four years to repay the interestfr­ee loan and had to begin repaying 12 months after terminatio­n of Governor’s Public Health State of Emergency Order ( that’s still in efffffffff­fffect).

But the city received its allotment of CARES funds last month. During its Oct. 19meeting the commission voted taking $ 500,000 out of CARES and repaying the existing small business loans, thereby converting the loans to grants. The commission also voted to take an additional $ 400,000 in CARES funds and apply those towards a new small business grant program.

This new grant program will adopt an applicatio­n process similar to the original loan program. Criteria is similar except that the new process allows for sole proprietor­s and extends the maximum number of full- time equivalent employees from 30 ( in the original loan program) to 50.

As before, applicants can request from$ 5,000to $ 25,000. A blind lottery will again select the grantees if the applicatio­n requests surpass the money available. The 17 businesses that didn’t make the lottery cut in June would have to re- apply.

No money has to be repaid as long as businesses­meet certain criteria including that it’s still operating or intends to resume operation no later than December 20, 2020, that it’s located within city limits, and that all taxes and fees owed to the city are paid up when the request is submitted.

A separate program for $ 300,000 in grants to local nonprofifi­t organizati­ons is expected to be recommende­d to the City Commission­ers at their regular meeting on Nov. 2.

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