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Congress Provides Small Businesses Much-Needed, Additional Relief

The impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, while still evolving, continues to take toll on the civil engineering profession – especially when it comes to maintaining and operating small businesses. The Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act, passed in late March, created the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), allocating $349 billion for low-interest loans that can be forgiven in full if used for qualified expenses, such as wages and salaries. However, the historic, detrimental impacts of the pandemic caused the Paycheck Protection Program to be oversubscribed, and on April 16th the Small Business Administration (SBA) announced that they exhausted all funding for the program.

America’s small businesses require aid in order to survive the pandemic. As a response to the SBA announcement and to expand small-business aid,  Congress passed this week a $484 billion supplemental bill: the Paycheck Protection Program Increase Act of 2020. The legislation includes:

 

The bill also includes:

 

But what exactly is the PPP and does your small business qualify for this program or another federal program aimed at protecting small businesses?

The PPP is designed to provide a direct incentive for small businesses to keep employees. All business types are eligible— including nonprofits, sole proprietors and other self-employed individuals— provided that they employ up to 500 people and meet other SBA eligibility requirements. Small businesses that receive a loan will have that loan fully forgiven if the money is used to keep employees on the payroll for eight weeks and they must only use the funds for their intended purpose. Outside of payroll, allowable uses also include paid sick or medical leave, insurance premiums, rent, mortgage interest, or utility payments. The maximum benefit for any small business is 250% of the employer’s average monthly payroll, excluding salaries greater than $100,000, for a maximum benefit of $10 million. Those small businesses interested in the program can apply through any existing SBA 7(a) lender or through any federally insured depository institution, federally insured credit union, or the Farm Credit System. The PPP is intended to be available through June 30, 2020, however the new round of funding is also expected to be quickly utilized.

So, what if your small business is unable to access the PPP? Other resources available to small businesses include:

 

Additionally, as your small business is navigating these unchartered waters, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration continues to provide enforcement guidance to employers. So far in April 2020, OSHA released several enforcement memoranda concerning COVID-19.

Finally, as Congress continues to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic, ASCE supports economic relief and investments in our nation’s infrastructure, as well as for small businesses throughout the country. ASCE will continue to urge Congress and the Administration to use future economic stimulus packages to invest in both the nation’s infrastructure and that workforce that the nation’s infrastructure relies on.