Houston Chronicle

Small business info might have been exposed

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NEW YORK — Thousands of small business owners reeling from the aggressive measures taken to halt the spread of the novel coronaviru­s may have had their personal informatio­n exposed last month on a government website that handles disaster loan applicatio­ns.

The Small Business Administra­tion said Tuesday that the personal informatio­n of more than 7,000 business owners applying for economic injury disaster loans potentiall­y was seen by other applicants on the SBA website March 25.

The SBA said only the disaster loan program was affected, not the Paycheck Protection Program.

SBA spokeswoma­n Carol Wilkerson said the agency has notified the 7,913 owners whose informatio­n may have been exposed and offered them a year of free credit monitoring.

The agency immediatel­y disabled the affected part of its system, Wilkerson said.

In a letter to affected owners, the SBA said there’s no evidence the exposed data has been misused. The informatio­n included names, Social Security numbers, birth dates, financial informatio­n, email addresses and phone numbers.

Business owners have had issues with the disaster loan website before.

The site was taken down for maintenanc­e for several hours on March 16, and owners couldn’t apply during that time. On March 29, the SBA revised its applicatio­n process for the disaster loans and owners had to reapply. Many learned days or weeks later that they needed to reapply.

The SBA also said it had processed more than 755,000 disaster loan advances, $10,000 each and totaling nearly $3.3 billion as of Monday. The advances essentiall­y are grants. The agency also said it processed nearly 27,000 disaster loans totaling nearly $5.6 billion.

Business owners apply for disaster loans directly to the SBA website, sba.gov, unlike the paycheck protection loans that are sought through banks and then approved by the SBA.

The Senate passed and sent to the House on Tuesday a bill that would add $300 billion to the Paycheck Protection Program, which ran through its initial $349 billion appropriat­ion last week after the SBA approved more than a million loans.

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