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Access to Small-Business Loan Programs to Expand Under Proposed Rule

Fewer regulations will streamline applications, ensure program integrity, SBA says

WASHINGTON — Borrowers and lenders of U.S. Small Business Association-backed loans will have greater access to capital and less paperwork as a result of a proposed regulation aimed at streamlining the application process while strengthening oversight and program integrity.

“Streamlining and simplifying has been a key focus of our agency over the last few years,” says SBA Administrator Karen Mills. “The changes are the latest steps to reduce paperwork burden, with our eye on the larger goal of expanding access to capital and giving entrepreneurs and small-business owners the financial resources to grow and create jobs.”

The SBA proposes the new measures after extensive consultations with lenders and borrowers to identify the greatest challenges they face and find ways to reduce barriers to making and accessing loans, while still maintaining strict oversight.

Among the proposed changes are:

  • Eliminating the Personal Resource Test — A borrower will no longer be required to obtain a maximum level of personal finance resources for a 7(a) or 504 loan. This will streamline the loan process by eliminating complicated regulations used to determine the amount of collateral required.
  • Revising the Rule on Affiliation — Revising this rule will open access to SBA loans to businesses that, under current rules, would not qualify as a small business under SBA’s size standards by virtue of their association with other companies. It also would streamline 504 loan applications and reduce paperwork requirements for 504 and 7(a) loan applications.
  • Eliminating the Nine-Month Rule for the 504 Loan Program — This will remove a restriction that limits a business to include in its 504 project only expenses incurred nine months prior to submitting the loan application. The new rule would allow inclusion of expenses incurred at any time (e.g., projects put on hold for more than nine months due to a natural disaster).

Visit the SBA website for comprehensive information on the new rules and their potential benefits for your dry cleaning business.

The full text of the proposed rule published in the Federal Register is available here.

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Have a question or comment? E-mail our editor Dave Davis at [email protected].