The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Aurora Theatre poised for funds from PPP extension

U.S. Rep. Carolyn Bourdeaux led push for bill in U.S. House.

- By Tyler Wilkins tyler.wilkins@ajc.com

Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, Anthony Rodriguez and Ann-carol Pence have worried about keeping staff paid and doors open at their Lawrencevi­lle-based Aurora Theatre.

The duo’s nonprofit performing arts theater — the second-largest in the state — has held smaller performanc­es over the past year to abide by social distancing guidelines, resulting in a 75% reduction in revenue.

But the show will go on. On Thursday in a 92-7 vote, the U.S. Senate passed the bipartisan Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) Extension Act of 2021, a bill first introduced in the House by U.S. Rep Carolyn Bourdeaux, D-suwanee. The two-month extension gives the theater and other businesses across the nation more time to receive federal funds to help weather the economic downturn.

The new bill would extend the current deadline for small businesses to apply for a PPP loan from March 31 to May 31, as well as give the U.S. Small Business Administra­tion an additional 30 days to process loans submitted before the new deadline. President Joe Biden is expected to sign the bill into law in the coming days.

“We hear from people all the time that they are operating at a fraction of their capacity, and what the pandemic did was it affected businesses who are in the business of bringing people together,” Bourdeaux said. “The idea is to try to keep them afloat until we can get to the other side of the pandemic, get opened up again and get them off to a good start in a post-pandemic world.”

The program, created in

March 2020 as part of the

CARES Act, has awarded

7.5 million loans totaling $687 billion to small businesses during the last year, according to data from the Small Business Administra­tion. After speaking with Gwinnett County businesses in her district, including the Aurora Theatre, Bourdeaux learned that some needed a longer window to apply for these funds.

“We’ve done what we could to engage our patrons with online work and some limited in-person events, but the size of the audience that we can have with social-distancing requiremen­ts makes it very difficult to do that in any tangible economic fashion,” Rodriguez said.

In addition to wanting to apply for another PPP loan, Rodriguez’s organizati­on applied for a SBA Shuttered Venue Operator Grant. Before the American Rescue Plan changed aid guidelines, Rodriguez could only apply for one funding source at a time, with the original loan applicatio­n deadline expiring before he’d learn if his company received the grant.

Rodriguez alerted Bourdeaux of his need, prompting her to speak to more businesses and meet with members of U.S. Congress on both sides of the aisle. Her bill passed the U.S. House on March 16 in a 415-3 vote. “Washington, D.C., after Jan. 6 has become very bitterly divided, and it was such a refreshing moment to have this be a bill that was supported by both sides at such large numbers,” Bourdeaux said.

Located in the heart of Lawrencevi­lle, the Aurora Theatre, which is in the process of a $35 million expansion of its facilities partly funded by the city and Gwinnett County, received approximat­ely $150,000 from its first PPP loan. That went toward the $3 million it takes to operate its facilities and pay 15 employees and more than 150 performers each year.

The organizati­on hopes to receive about $140,000 in its next PPP loan. Combined with the $900,000 Shuttered Venue Operator grant, Rodriguez and Pence feel confident the financial help will allow them to sustain the theater until they can open again for full-capacity performanc­es.

“It means a lot for us to be able to advocate for the arts as a small business and an economic developmen­t engine and help other organizati­ons in the process,” Rodriguez said. “If we can lift up the entire art sector, I’m happy to be a part of that.”

 ??  ?? Carolyn Bourdeaux
Carolyn Bourdeaux

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