June 15, 2021
Manchin, Capito Urge SBA To Speed Up Relief For Struggling Live Venues
Washington, DC – Today, U.S. Senators Joe
Manchin (D-WV) and Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV) led 54 bipartisan Senators in
urging Small Business Administrator Isabella Casillas Guzman to quickly
distribute the Shuttered Venue Operators Grant (SVOG) program funding to
struggling live entertainment venues. This program was created over six months
ago in order to support our struggling venues, but the program funding hasn’t
made it to the businesses in need.
The Senators said
in part,
“The Save Our Stages Act, now the Shuttered Venue Operators Grant (SVOG)
program, was created to prevent widespread closures of venues that have been
devastated by the loss of revenue due to the COVID-19 pandemic. As supporters
of the SVOG program, we urge you to take immediate action to ensure that the
relief reaches eligible applicants without further delay. With each passing
day, more independent businesses are forced to shutter permanently or file for
bankruptcy.”
The letter can be
read below or in full here:
Dear
Administrator Guzman:
The
Save Our Stages Act, now the Shuttered Venue Operators Grant (SVOG) program,
was created to prevent widespread closures of venues that have been devastated
by the loss of revenue due to the COVID-19 pandemic. As supporters of the SVOG program,
we urge you to take immediate action to ensure that the relief reaches eligible
applicants without further delay.
With
each passing day, more independent businesses are forced to shutter permanently
or file for bankruptcy. Landlords and banks are no longer permitting deferrals
and are pressing for immediate payment of past due accounts; businesses are
receiving eviction notices; mom-and-pop businesses are being forced to sell.
It
has been nearly six months since Congress passed the Save our Stages Act,
nearly two months since the second launch of the program, and 51 days since the
Small Business Administration (SBA) began receiving applications. We urge you
to immediately take steps to ensure the funds are distributed to qualified
applicants.
The
SVOG program is unique, with necessary restrictions built in to ensure taxpayer
funding goes only to eligible applicants in need. Under the terms of the law,
the SVOG program requires the award of funding to eligible applicants who meet
the simple requirements of the program. In this context, the insistence on
strict compliance with competitive grant rules has created unnecessary delays
in funding. Similarly, restrictions that SBA has placed on communication with
grant applicants are unnecessary and have prevented the agency from providing
administrative support to individual applicants that could have streamlined the
application review process. Bureaucratic process cannot stand in the way of
getting these desperately needed funds out the door.
Further
delays are unacceptable and would have irreversible consequences for these
industries. In an effort to keep our constituents informed and ensure our small
businesses receive the support they were promised, we respectfully request you
provide us with the following information:
1.
The
number SVOG awards that have been approved;
2.
The
number of SVOG grants that have been disbursed to recipients;
3.
The
amount of SVOG funding that has been disbursed;
4.
The
number of applications with holds;
5.
The
number of first-priority applicants that have received an award notice;
6.
What
SBA is doing to update small business owners on the status of their
applications;
7.
What
SBA is doing to ensure applicants are not incorrectly associated with
similar-named individuals and entities on the List of Excluded
Individuals/Entities (LEIE);
8.
What
SBA is doing to correct false DNP designation notices sent to thousands of
applicants;
9.
SBA’s
justification for breaking grant awards, regardless of size, into multiple
disbursements; and
10.
SBA’s
timeline for subsequent disbursements and what grantees need to do to receive
them.
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