Customer small business financing solutions delivered through a single, online application.
Loan Types
Free access to multiple funding solutions
See funding solutions from 75+ nationwide lenders with a single application.
Gauge how accessible business financing is to small businesses.
Learn about business loans
Customer stories
Meet Heather Beck, Owner and Founder of K9 Lifeline and Heather's Heroes.
Apply for financing, track your business cashflow, and more with a single lendio account.
Home Business Loans How to Call Your Senator and Representative About SBA Loans
Small businesses need help more than ever. The coronavirus pandemic has wrought intense economic hardship for Main Street businesses across America. With the rapid spread of the disease and orders in many areas for nonessential businesses to close, there’s little they can do about it.
Luckily, the SBA and the federal government have stepped up to the plate to offer low-interest, potentially forgivable loans through the Paycheck Protection Program. Loan applications opened on April 3, 2020.
Due to overwhelming demand since applications opened, it’s anticipated that by the end of the week, the SBA will reach the $350 billion cap set for PPP loans. To meet the needs of small businesses in the US, the budget for PPP loans needs to be increased—and quickly.
Congress is debating an increase in allocated funds. Because we live in a democracy and we know that nothing speeds up the government like a little bit of external pressure, we’re providing you with everything you need to know to call your senator or representative and ask that the SBA get its act together.
Several factors are contributing to why borrowers may be waiting on PPP loans. The biggest challenge is that the amount appropriated for PPP loans 3 weeks ago has proved to be insufficient to meet the financial needs of American small businesses.
While $350 billion might have seemed sufficient 3 weeks ago, the coronavirus pandemic has swiftly evolved. With the US economy essentially ground to a halt, the vast majority of the country’s 30 billion small businesses have suffered from the coronavirus pandemic. If each small business in America received an equal share in the appropriated PPP loan funds, it would not be nearly enough.
Congress needs to increase funding for PPP loans and they need to do it quickly.
When you call your senator or representative’s office, a legislative assistant will answer the phone. You can choose to request a response, in which case the phone call will be longer because they will have to add you to the response database.
We recommend that you say that you do not need a response. It saves time, your call will be tallied, and then you can move on with your day.
Here’s exactly what you can say when calling your senator or representative about PPP loans and the SBA:
That’s it. That’s all you need to say.
If you’ve been following our CEO, Brock Blake, lately, you know he hasn’t been shy about taking to Twitter to put pressure on the SBA and Treasury to fix what is broken in the PPP process. You can add your voice to the public pressure by tweeting your experience at the SBA and your senators or representatives to encourage them to increase funding for PPP loans.
We hope that the SBA will remedy this gridlock soon, and the more voices we have in this fight, the sooner that’s likely to happen.
Applying is free and won’t impact your credit.
Mary Kate Miller is a writer based in Chicago, IL. She specializes in covering finance (personal and business), investing, and real estate. Her mission in life is to give readers the confidence and the knowledge needed to grow their wealth by making financial topics more accessible. When she's not writing about topics like business loans, you can find her playing armchair financial advisor to the Real Housewives.
Subscribe to our weekly newsletter for industry news and business strategies and tips
Subscribe to our weekly newsletter for industry news and business strategies and tips.