Royal Oak Tribune

Who got what? Details scant on small-business relief effort

- 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. The agency says that so far it has processed 4.2 million loans for some $530 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.

On its website, the SBA says it “is becoming more transparen­t, participat­ory and collaborat­ive through open government.” It cites, among other things, its Freedom of Informatio­n Act program and improvemen­ts to online services.

So far, the agency has only provided general informatio­n, such as the total amounts of loans awarded in a given time period.

With huge amounts of money flying out the government’s door in a crisis, full public disclosure can help prevent fraud and improper spending, says Kathleen

Clark, a law professor at Washington University in St. Louis and expert in government ethics.

Otherwise, “the risks to taxpayers are greater,” Clark said. “I would think the SBA would be proactive in making informatio­n public.”

Asked by news organizati­ons for informatio­n on the companies receiving loans and when it might be provided, the SBA has said it’s too consumed now by the urgent effort of helping small businesses through the economic downturn. It says specific loan data may be released sometime “in the near future.”

“At this time, the agency is focusing its efforts on assisting small businesses during this unpreceden­ted disruption to the economy,” the SBA says. “The agency recognizes the need to balance the interests of transparen­cy with the privacy and confidenti­ality issues release of loan informatio­n raises.”

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