Letter to Steven Mnuchin, Secretary of the Treasury, and Jovita Carranza, Administrator of the Small Business Administration - McAdams calls for release of complete list of small business loan recipients

Letter

Date: April 28, 2020
Location: Washington, DC

Dear Secretary Mnuchin and Administrator Carranza:

I write to you with great frustration and a plea for our nation's small business owners. The
relaunch of the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) has been a failure, and you must take
immediate steps to fix this program and to provide Congress with the information necessary to
ensure transparency and true oversight of the program.

Congress provided an additional $310 billion in funding for forgivable PPP loans through the
Paycheck Protection Program and Health Care Enhancement Act (Public Law 116-139). This is
in addition to the nearly $350 billion provided under the CARES Act (Public Law 116-136). The
Small Business Administration (SBA) and Treasury announced that SBA would resume
accepting PPP applications as of 10:30am EDT yesterday morning. Since that time, I've heard
from numerous lenders that they are unable to process loans and have heard from countless small
business who are still desperately waiting for this economic lifeline. These lenders report a
broken E-TRAN system, constantly changing guidelines on how to upload loans and when the
loans are deemed approved, and a last minute notice that SBA would accept bulk submissions
and would throttle loan uploads per hour. Regardless of any supposed limit on applications per
lender per hour, the lenders I have spoken to have not been able to process even a small fraction
of their existing loan queue due to technological failures, well below the supposed hourly limit.
If lenders can't process loans, small businesses can't receive assistance. Period.

That's the critical question and concern: if Utah lenders are unable to upload and process loan
applications and Utah small businesses are still being left out in the cold, which financial
institutions are getting through and which businesses are benefiting? SBA and Treasury must
produce the list of businesses receiving this lifeline. To date, SBA and Treasury have failed to
provide relevant information to Congress to ensure proper oversight of taxpayer funds and have
failed to provide transparency to American small businesses. Even an audit snapshot from
yesterday's approvals could be illuminating in determining who is benefiting and who is not.

You owe it to taxpayers and to Congress to provide needed details on how these programs are, or
are not, working, and you should take immediate steps to improve the E-TRAN system and to
improve communication with lenders and businesses. Our nation's economy and the hardworking American business owners and employees can't afford for you to fail at this taxpayerfunded endeavor.

I look forward to your immediate response to these concerns and stand ready to work with you to
ensure true small businesses have access to this economic lifeline.

Sincerely,


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