The Capital

Paycheck Protection Program to reopenMond­ay with new priorities

- By Lorraine Mirabella

The federal Pay check Protection Program reopens Monday for a new round of loans that includes funds set aside for smaller businesses in low- and moderate- income communitie­s and give first priority to community lenders.

The lending program, designed to keep workers on payrolls during the economic crisis precipitat­ed by the corona virus pandemic now stretching into its 11 th month, will resume for new and some existing PPP borrowers.

Community financial institutio­ns will be given first priority to offer employers the forgivable loans for at least the first part of the week, a new strategy to boost access for minority, under served, veteran and womenowned businesses, the U.S. Small Business Administra­tion said Friday.

The program, part of the $ 900 billion coronaviru­s relief package passed Dec. 21 by Congress and signed by President Donald Trump, is expected to open to all lenders soon after, but no timeline has been given.

The government said it revised the program to make it more accessible and effective than during the initial round from March to August. Businesses had complained that larger employers got loans while some smaller businesses were shut out.

“The need is really great,” said Bonnie Crockett, director of small business lending for Baltimore Community Lending, a Baltimore- based community developmen­t financial institutio­n that is prepared to help small businesses apply for the PPP program through other community lenders. “And the reason we are seeing it again is so many of these small businesses never got through the first time.”

Crockett said she expects to work with very small businesses, some with little to no staff, such as shops or restaurant­s, that need help putting together an applicatio­n. The three- decade- old Baltimore Community Lending makes business loans in the city but does not yet have approval as a PPP lender.

“One of themajor issues was just figuring out howto put it all together and understand the documents,” she said. “They felt so overwhelme­d.”

Maryland businesses received more than $ 10 billion in loans from the program in its initial rounds, according to data the U.S. Small Business Administra­tion and Treasury Department. Amongthe borrowersw­ere the Baltimore law firm Miles & Stockbridg­e, Visit Baltimore, the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, the Catholic church, numerous private schools, and developers, including David S. Brown Enterprise­s on Owings Mills and Hogan Companies, an Annapolis- based real estate group founded by Republican Gov. LarryHogan.

But some small businesses and smaller lending institutio­ns complained of missing out on the program.

The latest round of PPP, authorized through the Economic Aid to Hard- Hit Small Businesses, Non- Profits, and Venues Act, authorizes up to $ 284 billion that can be used to pay workers and other expenses through March 31. It allows some existing PPPborrowe­rs to apply for aseconddra­won a PPP loan.

Money has been set aside for specific types of lenders and borrowers, including $ 5 billion for first- and second- time borrowers through community financial institutio­ns and another $ 15 billion through insured depository institutio­ns, credit unions and farm credit system institutio­ns with assets of less than $ 10 billion.

An additional $ 35 billion is reserved for first- time PPP borrowers. And $ 15 billion and $ 25 billion will go to first- and second- time borrowers, respective­ly, who employ no more than 10 people or to borrowers in low- or moderate- income neighborho­ods for loans of less than $ 250,000.

The SBA also said this time around it will work to match borrowers with lenders who work in traditiona­lly underserve­d communitie­s.

Existing PPP borrowers will generally be eligible for an additional loan if they will use or have used the full amount for an authorized use, have no more than 300 employees and can showbusine­ss is downat least 25%.

M& T Bank, one of the larger PPP lenders inMaryland, plans to have more than 2,000 employeesw­orking to process loans, as it did last year through August, when it approved more than 6,800 loans totaling $ 1.3 billion in the Baltimore area. Those loans supported more than135,000 jobs in the region.

“We anticipate similar demand from our customers during the next round because small businesses continue to struggle and continue to need help,” Scott Graham, an M& Tspokesman, said Friday.

PNC Bank, too, said it plans to make the new funding available to eligible small business clients.

“We are currently reviewing the updated guidance provided this week by the SBA,” saidMarcey Zwiebel, a PNC spokeswoma­n. “Were main committed to doing all we can to assist our eligible small business customers, who continue to face challenges during this difficult time.”

SBAAdminis­trator Jovita Carranza called the PPP program an “economic lifeline” to millions of small businesses in a statement Friday and said that changes include more targeted relief to small businesses hurt most by COVID- 19 and a “simpler forgivenes­s process.”

Under new guidelines, borrowers can set the period covered by the loan from eight to 24weeks. Loans can be used for several new purposes, such as operations, property damage, supplier costs and worker protection expenses.

Housing cooperativ­e sand destinatio­n and marketing organizati­ons have been added to qualify as eligible borrowers.

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