The Denver Post

SBA chief visits Stanley shops to hear business owners’ concerns

McMahon says labor shortages, capital and health care costs are most troubling.

- By Aldo Svaldi

Small Business Administra­tion chief Linda McMahon said labor shortages are rising on the list of concerns that smallbusin­ess owners tell her about, alongside more traditiona­l ones such as access to capital, regulatory burdens and containing health care costs.

“We have 6 million jobs available in this country and we don’t have the workers to fill them,” McMahon said after a visit Thursday to the Stanley Marketplac­e in Aurora, which is part of her Ignite Tour to visit all 68 SBA district offices and hear from business owners in every part of the country.

McMahon also was in town to participat­e in Denver Startup Week. She met with business owners at Stanley and used the visit to promote the outlines of a new Republican tax plan that includes a lower corporate tax rate and provisions to help business owners retain more of what they make.

The plan, made public Wednesday, would cap the maximum rate on pass-through business income at 25 percent. Currently, net income is taxed at the taxpayer’s highest marginal rate, which can reach 39.6 percent. That is above the federal corporate tax rate of 35 percent.

McMahon and her husband, Vincent, co-founded Worldwide Wresting Entertainm­ent, or WWE. She said she has been through bankruptcy, the struggle to find a willing lender and the full range of challenges that small-business owners face.

The SBA estimates Colorado has more than 600,000 small businesses employing nearly 1 million workers and accounting for 97 percent of enterprise­s in the state. The SBA guaranteed 1,996 loans in the state worth $826 million during the 2016 fiscal year.

Besides capital, the SBA provides counseling to entreprene­urs, which Caroline Glover, owner of Annette at the Stanley Marketplac­e, said was helpful when she launched her new scratch-to-table restaurant.

“It is great to have those resources available when you are small,” she said.

McMahon said one of her goals as administra­tor is to make more people aware of the resources the SBA has available.

A lesser-known role the SBA plays is providing financial assistance to small businesses, renters and homeowners in the aftermath of disasters. Unlike its traditiona­l small-business lending programs, the SBA’s disaster loans are made directly to borrowers.

Responding to three major hurricanes in such a short time frame has stretched the SBA’s emergency-response resources. The SBA is outsourcin­g some of the work to private contractor­s and turning to other government agencies, such as Veterans Affairs and the Department of Agricultur­e, for help, said McMahon, who will join President Donald Trump on a visit to Puerto Rico on Tuesday.

 ?? Andy Cross, The Denver Post ?? Caroline Glover, left, owner of Annette restaurant, talks with Small Business Administra­tion Administra­tor Linda McMahon inside Glover’s restaurant at the Stanley Marketplac­e in Aurora on Thursday.
Andy Cross, The Denver Post Caroline Glover, left, owner of Annette restaurant, talks with Small Business Administra­tion Administra­tor Linda McMahon inside Glover’s restaurant at the Stanley Marketplac­e in Aurora on Thursday.

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