[StBernard] Snowe, Landrieu Introduce Small Business Disaster Relief Bill

Westley Annis westley at da-parish.com
Thu Feb 15 22:19:14 EST 2007


Snowe, Landrieu Introduce

Small Business Disaster Relief Bill
Legislation reduces red tape for SBA loans.



WASHINGTON - U.S. Senator Olympia J. Snowe, R-Maine, Ranking Member and
former Chair of the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship,
and Senator Mary L. Landrieu, D-La., a committee member, today introduced
the Private Disaster Loan Act. This legislation provides the Small Business
Administration (SBA) with the resources necessary to help small businesses
and homeowners recover in the wake of a disaster, such as the 2005
hurricanes Katrina and Rita.

"Victims of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita faced six to eight month delays
waiting for SBA to approve their loans - and even longer to receive their
cash," Sen. Landrieu said. "It is clear that we need to reform, streamline
and strengthen the SBA with better tools to prepare for the next disaster.
The bill allows local lenders and credit unions to make direct loans to
disaster victims, with an SBA guarantee. This commonsense solution will
quickly free up cash for disaster victims and remove the endless red tape
that is hampering our recovery."

"With the SBA at the forefront of disaster relief efforts, it is essential
that we find ways to ensure that this country's 25 million small businesses
have a resource they can depend on when disaster strikes," Sen. Snowe said.
"We learned all too well after the 2005 Gulf Coast hurricanes, it is
critical for government programs to run smoothly and efficiently when called
upon to aide disaster victims. We can all agree that that there were
significant deficiencies with the SBA's disaster response effort, and I
believe that we can all agree that this vital legislation will support the
SBA in its continuing efforts to ensure those deficiencies are eliminate."

The Private Disaster Loan Act would create a new type of disaster loan,
which would be issued by private banks with a partial Federal guarantee
(rather than being directly provided by the Federal government). Under the
proposal, these Private Disaster Loans would have the following
characteristics:

. The loans will be made by private banks, which will have to apply for
eligibility. The SBA will provide a guarantee for the loans, and can set the
specifics of eligibility criteria.

. The program will be available to make loans for businesses under the
following circumstances: a business will be eligible if the parish or county
in which the business is located was declared a disaster area anytime in the
last 24 months. The business will not have to show a nexus between its need
for a loan, and the disaster that occurred. It will be enough to be located
in that parish or county. The business does not have to have been located in
the county before the disaster.

. Maximum loan size will be $2 million.

. Maximum term will be 25 years, if collateral is involved; otherwise,
the maximum term for uncollateralized loans will be 15 years.

. The maximum guaranty will be 85 percent, no matter the size of the
loan.

. SBA guaranty fee, which is 2 - 3.5 percent for regular 7(a) loans,
will be zero

. There will be a loan origination fee, paid to lenders by the SBA
using appropriated funds, of an amount previously negotiated between the SBA
and the lender.

. The program will be authorized to use funds appropriated for the
standard disaster loan program, and such appropriations will be used to
reduce the interest rate in the program by up to 3percent. In other words,
if enough appropriations are available, the interest rates charged by banks
will be subsidized so that they are reduced by 3 percent. If less
appropriations are available, the rates may only be reduced by 2 percent,
1.5 percent, zero, etc.

. The size standard used to determine a borrower's eligibility will
be that currently used in the 7(a) program or that used in the 504 loan
program (the bank may choose on a case by case basis).

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