Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Delay sought on loan-file release

Small-business agency says confidenti­al informatio­n at risk

- NATE JONES AND AARON GREGG

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and the small-business agency’s administra­tor, Jovita Carranza, initially told members of Congress that recipient names and loan amounts were confidenti­al and would not be released at all.

WASHINGTON — The Small Business Administra­tion has asked a federal judge to delay release of records involving millions of small businesses that received Paycheck Protection Program loans, arguing that publicizin­g it would do “irreparabl­e harm” to millions of businesses by exposing allegedly confidenti­al informatio­n.

A federal judge ruled Nov. 5 that the agency must release borrower and loan informatio­n about the federal Paycheck Protection Program by Thursday. The Washington Post and 10 other news organizati­ons prevailed in a Freedom of Informatio­n Act lawsuit to win the informatio­n’s release. But in a court filing last week the agency said it needed more time to determine whether it should appeal.

The agency doubled down on its long-held position that revealing the loan totals would indirectly expose private companies’ payroll informatio­n, an argument the judge rejected.

Congress approved the Paycheck Protection Program in March as part of the Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act. It was intended to keep workers paid and companies open during the coronaviru­s pandemic and lockdown.

But a dearth of informatio­n about loan amounts and loan recipients has made it difficult to fully and accurately gauge the program’s effectiven­ess.

The Small Business Administra­tion and Treasury Department have released detailed industry and state breakdowns showing where paycheck-protection spending went throughout the program’s rollout, and have touted claims about the program’s job-creation successes in releases and congressio­nal testimony. But they have tried to prevent most of the business names and specific loan amounts from being made public.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and the small-business agency’s administra­tor, Jovita Carranza, initially told members of Congress that recipient names and loan amounts were confidenti­al and would not be released at all.

The Washington Post filed a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request for this informatio­n on April 24. After the agency failed to respond in the time required by law, the Post and 10 other national news organizati­ons eventually sued for the release of this program’s loan informatio­n.

In response to the lawsuit, the agency posted loan-level data of 660,000 business and nonprofit organizati­ons that received at least $150,000 in funding.

The agency balked at providing exact loan figures for any of the loans as well as borrower informatio­n for loans of less than $150,000, an estimated 87% of all program loans. The agency claimed that Freedom of Informatio­n Act’s confidenti­al business informatio­n and personal privacy exemptions allowed the agency to withhold the records. The Treasury Department estimates that over $525 billion in loans have been disbursed.

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