The Columbus Dispatch

New round of small business aid available

- Mark Williams

Ohio businesses can start applying for the second round of coronaviru­s loans, part of the $900 billion stimulus plan approved by Congress last month.

The goal this time is to provide aid to businesses owned by women, minorities, veterans and other underserve­d communitie­s.

Of the $900 billion, $284 billion is committed to a new round of forgivable Paycheck Protection Program loans being administer­ed by the Small Business Administra­tion.

Like the previous PPP loans, the money is meant to be used to cover payroll and other expenses for up to five months.

The new round of funding is meant to help businesses continue to manage through the pandemic, said Megan Sellheim of SBC Small Business Advising in Columbus.

“A lot of businesses have taken steps to adapt by cutting expenses or reducing their team, or they’re stepping in as owners and doing more work themselves,” she said. “But that can take businesses only so far. Not every business can pivot to something else and replace all that revenue.”

Sellheim said businesses interested in a loan should reach out to their bank or, if they got a loan in the first round, go back to the bank that previously helped them. If their bank can’t help with the PPP loans, the bank probably can refer the business to a bank that can, she said.

Community financial institutio­ns, including the Ohio-based Economic &

Community Developmen­t also can help.

This round of funding expands the pool of eligible businesses to include the self-employed and others that didn’t qualify in the first round, she said.

The expansion of the loan program comes after the program received some criticism in the first round because affluent people, profession­al teams and

Institute, musicians (including the central Ohio band Twenty One Pilots) received forgivable loans. Some companies returned them.

Businesses that have received a loan already are eligible for a second loan as long as they have no more than 300 employees and can show a 25% drop in revenue between comparable quarters in 2019 and 2020.

First-time borrowers can draw up to $10 million; second-time borrowers are capped at $2 million.

“The historical­ly successful Paycheck Protection Program served as an economic lifeline to millions of small businesses and their employees when they needed it most,” Jovita Carranza, administra­tor of the Small Business Administra­tion, said in a statement.

Beyond payroll, loans can be used to cover expenses for operations, property damage, costs for suppliers and worker protection.

The first round of PPP loans helped support 51 million workers with more than 70% of the loans going to businesses with fewer than 10 employees, according to the SBA. The average loan size was $101,000. mawilliams@dispatch.com @Bizmarkwil­liams

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