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Politics

D.C. Delegation urges SBA to include more MS businesses in ‘Paycheck Protection Program’

Courtesy of TeleSouth Communications Inc.
Courtesy of Senator Roger Wicker’s Office

The entire Mississippi congressional delegation, which includes U.S. Senators Roger Wicker, R-Miss., and Cindy Hyde-Smith, R-Miss., and U.S. Representatives Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., Steven Palazzo, R-Miss., Trent Kelly, R-Miss., and Michael Guest, R-Miss., today sent a letter to U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) Administrator Jovita Carranza requesting the SBA issue new agency guidance to include more Mississippi small businesses in the federal Paycheck Protection Program.

Under the current guidance that SBA has issued to lending institutions, significant numbers of employees in Mississippi could be left without support from the Paycheck Protection Program because of the method that SBA is using to count employees for small businesses.

“These workers are the ones who will bear the brunt of negative impacts if the businesses they work for do not receive the same treatment as those defined under SBA’s current small business rules. Their companies should have a chance to apply,” the delegation wrote.

The Paycheck Protection Program, which was included in the recently passed Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, is designed to encourage small businesses of all types to keep their workers on the payroll. The delegation is asking SBA to address discrepancies between SBA’s definition of small businesses and the definition used by the Department of Labor to implement other federal programs designed to mitigate the impact of the coronavirus outbreak on the economy.

Today was the first day that eligible entities could apply for the low-interest loans, which are fully forgivable if employers use the loans to support payroll, rent, mortgage interest, or utilities. Interested businesses can visit the SBA website for more information on how to apply.

The full text of the delegation’s letter is below:

Dear Administrator Carranza, 

We write to call your attention to small businesses in the State of Mississippi and across the United States who will be excluded from participation in the Paycheck Protection Program because of the joint ownership affiliation rules provided by the Small Business Administration (SBA). 

We are concerned about a discrepancy in the treatment of affiliated businesses under the Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA; P.L. 116-127) and the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act; P.L. 116-136).  Given the severe constraints businesses are facing, we ask that the Department of Labor (DOL) and SBA apply linear small business definitions as they relate to guidance or regulations to which small businesses are subject.

Based on the interim final rule released on April 2, 2020, SBA intends to apply the affiliation rules under CFR 121.103 for the purposes of determining whether or not an employer has over 500 employees.  Under that regulation, SBA looks at ownership, and all employees of all businesses owned by the same owner(s) are counted.  In DOL’s Question and Answer with respect to the FFCRA, DOL chose to adopt the “integrated employer test” under CFR 825.104 to determine whether two or more entities are separate or combined for the purposes of determining the number of employees.  

SBA’s affiliation rules are customarily used to determine whether an owner’s application for loans under the Small Business Act should be granted.  When making a loan for the benefit of an owner, it is appropriate to consider the owner’s total financial capabilities, including any joint ownership. The Paycheck Protection Program, however, was adopted to protect employees, including those who work for a business with less than 500 people but may fall under a larger subsidiary or affiliation.  These workers are the ones who will bear the brunt of negative impacts if the businesses they work for do not receive the same treatment as those defined under SBA’s current small business rules.  Their companies should have a chance to apply.

We ask that SBA issue additional guidance either to waive the current affiliation rules or, in the alternative, to at least adopt the integrated employer test under CFR 825.104 with respect to small businesses applying to receive loans under the Paycheck Protection Program. 

Sincerely,

Roger F. Wicker, United States Senator
Cindy Hyde-Smith, United States Senator
Bennie G. Thompson, Member of Congress
Steven Palazzo, Member of Congress
Trent Kelly, Member of Congress
Michael Guest, Member of Congress

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