The Day

Small Business Administra­tion slow to release recipients of aid.

- By MARCY GORDON

Washington — A small, overlooked federal agency is shoulderin­g a massive relief effort for the nation’s small businesses and their workers left reeling by the pandemic.

The Small Business Administra­tion has committed to auditing every sizable emergency loan it approves.

But six weeks after the $600 billion-plus program was launched, the agency has yet to make public the recipients of taxpayer aid.

A signature piece of Congress’ multitrill­ion-dollar pandemic rescue, the unpreceden­ted lending program is targeted to help small employers stay afloat and preserve jobs in a cratering economy losing tens of millions of them.

“Our swift action supported or saved 30 million American jobs at least,” President Donald Trump said at a White House event on small business late last month with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and SBA Administra­tor Jovita Carranza.

Managing the program fell to the SBA, an agency with some 3,200 employees and an $819 million annual budget that’s one-tenth the size of the Commerce Department’s. On at least two occasions last month, the SBA’s computer system slowed under the crush of loan applicatio­ns, creating a bottleneck. As of early May, the agency says, it had processed more than 3.8 million loans for some $500 billion in awards.

The need for a detailed public accounting of the small-business relief program is amplified by controvers­y over how it has unfolded since early April. It’s important as a way for the public to know whether the program is working as Congress intended.

Several hundred publicly traded companies received hundreds of millions of the low-interest, potentiall­y forgivable loans. They tapped the federal aid despite their likely ability to get the money from private financial sources. Some had market values well over $100 million, and many had executives earning millions annually.

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